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STATE LIBRARY Q C t ° QCT 10 S2 -:• a c-; *! t»J OO p- •-: Q o cr ""Connecticut Daily Campus t-i Sewing Storrs Since 1896 ***«, Cfl u-g w Oi. h5 3 Hi VOL. CXVII, No. 7 STORRS. CONNECTICUT MONDAY, SEPT. 24, 1962 PJ tr* Winter Weekend aH £ Interviews To Select Daily Campus Elects Chairman Of Affair New Board Members Last Thursday night at its first meeting- of the year the Daily Campus Board of Interviews for the chairman of informal dance in the Student Directors elected two members of the Board to fill the vacancies left by the Business Winter Weekend are being held Union Ballrom comprise the act- today, tomorrow, and Wednesday ivities Saturday night. Sunday Manager and the Feature Editor. accoitling to Dag Holtgreen, pro- there is a Jazz Concert and Dol- Elected to the past of Feature Editor was Madge English, Spencer B, a seventh gramming vice-president of the phinelte Show. Snow displays semester English major in Arts and Sciences. Miss English was the Feature Editor of Student Union Board of Gov- built 'by each living unit decor- the Hartford EVafcfcfn pirjTtrvftrf-one year and was a member of the Daily Campus feature ernors. Today and Wednesday ate the Campus during the entire staff last year. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John English-of Johnson Street Interviews will be from 6:30 p.m. weekend and prizes are awarded to 8 p.m. in room 312 Commons. for Uie best ones in Middletown. She replaces John Atticks who resigned the position when he left Tomorrow the interview schedule school. is from 2:00 p.m. to 4 p.m. in maturity Needed Filling the vacancy left by the same room. Approximately $5,000-$6,000 is James Bannon when he re- All interested students are spent for Winter Weekend," signed last spring is John urged to sign up for an interview stated Mr. Holtgreen. "That Is Purtill of Sigma Alpha Ep- at the Control Desk in the Stu- why we need a mature and re- dent Union. sponsible person to fill the pos- silon. Purtill is a seventh ition of chairman." semester Accounting Major. qualifications He is the son of Mr. and The Winter Weekend chairman Interviewers Named Mrs. John S. Purtill, Si\. of must be at least a third semester In addition to Mr. Holtgreen, Glastonbury. Previously he student with a q.pr. Tile editor there will be three other inter- of the Daily Campus, the editor was on the sports staff and of the Nutmeg, station managsr viewers. Miss Gretchen Myers, rei>orted tennis and swim- of WHUS, or members of the program consultant of the Stu- ming news for two years. Stuoent Senate are not eligible. dent Union, Sandra Matava, Linda Devonshire and Pete president of the Board of Gover- Date Set nors, and a member of the Board. Kierys, both of the news February 22, 23, and 24 1963, The recommendations of the in- staff, were appointed Staff- •re the dates set for Wintei terviewing committee will be dis- members-at-large until after Weekend. The chairman must cussed by the Board of Gov- the heeling sessions, at which ernors, who will make the final oversee .the events scheduled for JOHN PURTILL time the News Staff will hold the three day period. selection. MADGE ENGLISH Business Manager elections. Feature Editor Specific Duties Unregistered Campus Photo—1 lowland Miss Devonshire has been Campus Photo—Howland Te specific duties of the chair- a reporter for one year. Ki- man include choosing chairmen Beginning Uxlaj September 24. erys is both a reporter and continue for six weeks.. All students interested in writing of these sub-committees royalty, the Security Department will Assistant News Editor. for the paper will be expect- Olympics, displays. Sunday after- Shock all ears on ranipus. Cars Dr. Max Putzel of the De- noon concert, Friday night semi- ed to attend the heeling meet- found in Student Parking lot partment of English will forir.al, and Saturday night dance. serve in an advisory capacity ings and to take an exam. The general chairman must work which are not properly registered for the CDC. He has been Present members of the with these people and their in- or on which a decal is not dis- the advisor to the Hartford.BOD are Joseph Marfuggi, dividual committees to insure a pl.i.wd will be tagged. The tine Smooth-flowing program. Branch paper for over four Editor-in-Chief; Roseanne for unregistered ears is $10. Stu- j years and was a profession- Cocchiola. Managing Editor; Weekend Events dents are reminded that driving 1 a.1 journalist for nine years. JNed Parker. City Editor: Di- Tlio semi-formal dance Friday on campus between the hours of ! Also decided at this meet- anne Rader, News Editor; evening in the Auditorium is the 7:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. is not per- , ing was the date for the be-j Wayne Mortberg. Sports Edi- opening event of Winter Week- mit teed tars must be parked in end. Saturday morning there is a I ginning of the heeling train- tor; Evelyn Marshak. Senior brunch in the HUB followed by | the students lots to which they in sessions for the fall se-1 Associate; John Howland, Olympic games in the Field i have been aligned during these mester. Heeling will begin ' Photography Editor: and Jer- House. A basketball game and an ' hours. Monday, October 8, and will re Krupnikoff, Adv. Manager.

"Do not ask, what I'conn can Ho for you . . ." The Pied Piper leads them by the hand a( the Annual Pied KEN GOLDBERG , , , AH Wet Piper Parade Friday. Campus Photo—Howland Campus Photo—Howland Campus Thoto—Laughrej PAGF TWO CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS MONDAY, SEPT. 24, 1962 Washington Merry - Go - Round Connecticut By Drew Pearson Teddy Kennedy, the president's younger the Boston Herald-Traveler—where It wag brother, has won the Massachusetts Dem- before the big payola probe. ocratic primary lor the senate, bu; it will All this is going to leave scars and will be the costliest political battle of the Ken- hurt the fine leadership President Ken- Daily Campus nedy family's costly career. nedy has shown on other fronts. The cost will not be merely in money, One member of the Kennedy family who which will be considerable, but in scars. isn't leaving scars is Mrs. Rose Kennedy, The cash outlay, if ever investigated in now 72 and the mother of nine, who is the way the old-time senate dug into the sweetly, effectively campaigning for her MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1962 relatively modest primary expenditures of youngest son. They have written a great William A. Vare, Republican boss of Penn- speech for Rttse, and she knows how to sylvania, or Frank Smith, the Sam Insull deliver it. candidate in Illnois, would unseat Teddy. "They said Jack was too young. But I Vare and Smith, both Republicans, spent think he's doing a good job—don't you?" a reported $200,000 and $100,000 respective- There is a careful pause during which ly in their primaries and were refused the crowd reacts in the afirmative to the senate seats in the 1920's. mother of the president. Both Democrats and Republicans joined "And they said Bobby was too young in rebuffing them. Today the Democrats to be attorney general. But I think he's do- control the Senate so there isn't much ing a good job, too—don't you?" Deadly Yun' chance of a Senate probe of Kennedy Another pause, and more approval family expenditures in Massachusetts. from the crowd. But ihe political scars will be more Rose Kennedy has another effective line With a screeching of rubber tires and the roar of pow- expensive, not only in Massachusetts, but in the Irish Catholic. Italian Catholic. Po- erful motors, Uconn male students "peal out" of South outside. People don't like the idea of a lish Catholic State of Massachusetts. Campus nightly. It appears that these collegians all have dynasty which, many believe, will see one "Teddy thought of joining the church^- racing blood in their veins and should be on a track instead brother after the other climb to power. as a bishoo." says his mother. "And then of a street. They don't like a royal family pitching in this beautiful creature came along." she all its resources, political and otherwise, to points to young Mrs. Kennedy. "Can you Every night at 10:30 (or 1:30 on weekends) the boys, put across its crown prince, esnecially in blame him for changing his mind?" attempt to turn the short stretch fromSouth to North Cam- a state which once started the revolt So it goes with the new royal family pus into a Connecticut version of the Indianapolis Speed- against a British royal family at Concord In Massachusetts. way. As soon as the date for the night is dropped off, the and at Lexington. Another Scion heroes race for their cars. Then the "fun" begins. Hie Family la Hisrh Gear Another Scion of another onetime royal They don't like the general picture of family. Prof. H. Stuart Hughes of Har- Cars roar forward, as the drivers jockey for position. brother-in-law Steve Smith serving as cam- vard, has rolled up remarkable support Straightaways become dueling grounds, with the drivers paign manager for Teddy, or brother Bobby even though running as an independent. To passing each other on the right, on the left, or whichever in the Justice Department appointing get on Ihe ticket as an independent, Pro- way the opportunity presents itself. The contest stakes are Teddy's public relations man, Hal Clancy, fessor Hii"h<*e required 72.500 signatures. high: getting to Lou's before the rush, or finding a parking ex-managing editor of the Boston Herald- He got 119437—almost 47.000 more than place behind the house instead of in the lots. Traveler, to a plush-paying job as a direc- he needed—either a tribute to his anti-war tor of General Aniline and Film Corp., the position or a sign or resentment against All of this must be great sport for the male driving German-sized property now owned by all the Kennedy's. . population at the University. If not, the same scene wouldn't the taxpayers; and they don't like the When the Kennedv machine started to be repeated night after night. Some evening, though, the reports of the president himself calling prove that h|s signatures were phony, re- fun will come to as abrupt a halt as these roaring cars some- friends in Boston for Teddy when he has action was bad. Here was a youngster times make. other, more important things to absorb him kinked out of Harvard for cheating, now in Berlin and Cuba. lr-<-incr to nrwva that a Harvard professor A pedestrian will be left lying bleeding and dying in Those in the know also don't like the ch^ftcd The Konnedvs could find no the road or three or four cars will smash into a gruesome way in which a choice TV station, channel ph--nv signatures, hastily dropped the in- heap of mangled metal. Then the fun will be over. Then, 5, has been dangled m mid-air over Boston V<»c fixation. perhaps, the student drivers will realize that speeding cars newspapers -especially over the Republi- H"2h«s is the grandcon of Charles and crowded college campuses don't mix. Then, sadly, it can Herald-Traveler—until the Massachu- Fvana Hifhes. governor of New York, setts election is over. Channel 5 figured in Chief Justice of the United States, and a will be too late. sensational hearings before the Harris Penublican who came even closer than payola committee, when such influence- Dewev or Nixon to becoming president of pulling was demonstrated under Kisen- the United States. He went to bed in No- hower that the courts took it away from vember. 1916 certain that he had defeated the Herald Traveler. Wood row Wi'son. He woke up in the morn- Now, that same stanch Republican pa- ing to find he hadn't. Welcomed Efforts per is supporting Teddy Kennedy, while His grandson is not running on his its ex-mar.aglng editor does puplicitv for family's coattails, however. His grand- him— at the same time he's paid hy all the father, as Secretary of State, initiated the We should add the Student Union Board of Governors taxpayers M a General Aniline and Film Hai-ding bovcott of the new Bolshevik gov- to our list of people to be commended for their efforts in director. So. shortly after the election, ernment. Professor Hughes is running on welcoming the Class of 1966 to Uconn. watch channel 5, despite previous court a platform of coexistence and better co- orders, drop neatly back into the arms of operation with Russia. The thirteen Board members returned to campus on September 9 and worked all week to prepare the Student Union programs, carrying out plans which were made last spring and throughout the summer. CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS The Board organized a variety of events for the fresh- men, including the Dean's Reception, the HUB Open House Serving Storrs Since 1896 and Casino Night. The programs planned by the BOG high- lighted the week's events and served as a fitting introduce JOSEPH MARFUGGI tion for the Gass of '66. > Editor-in-Chief We are pleased with the enthusiasm and efficiency dis- played by the 1962-63 Board of Governors and hope that it ROSANNE COOOHIOLA JOHN PURTILL JERRY KRUPNIKOFF will continue throughout the entire season of HUB activi- ties. Managing Kditor Business Manager Advertising Manager

NED PARKER City Editor

News Editor: Dianne Rader Senior Associate: Evelyn Marshak Sports Editor: . . Wayne Mortber- Photo. Editor: John How land Feature Editor: .. Madge English Circulation Mrr.: .... John Purtill Copy Editor: . Peggy Karbovanec News Staff: Russ Mercer, Linda Dev onshire, Michael Glennon, Jan Katz, Pete Jtierys, Harriet Shapiro, Sue Scott, Irene Popp Sports Staff: Gene Aleska, Chris Lee, Mike Luckey, Leigh Montville, Connecticut Daily Campus Feature Staff: Jim Cicarelli, Joe Boyiinski, Tom Demers, Chas. Mirsky, Everett Frost, Tom Osborne, " Betty Palaima, Jules Samodia, Bob raaaaaea' aally while tha UairanK* la la ■«■■!■■ *«erai Sahara*** mad Saa- aara. Katrrrd aa aeeaa* cau aaartar at tha aaat tlan. Starra, Caaa, March Cain, Jinny Shaw # la IMS. ana>r act at March. 1ST*. Maaiaer a* tha aaaafaataj CaatacfcMa rrcna. Circulation Staff: Gloria Hedges, Bob Demarest, Walt Twachtman, Joe «<*«at«4 In aairrti.lar ar tha Natteaal Aarrrtaaiac Service lac Editorial aa* BastaeM afflew lacated la tha StaaVat Tjaiaa IMMtac. Varrarait* at Taglia, Jim De Rosa Canatrtlrat. Starrs. Caaa. Hahaeriker: aaiitlahU Freai New* Serrlca. Safe- Photopool: William Brevoort, Lawrence Fogelson, William Jose, Arlena •rnation rates: *S.»» atr SAawster. t*.M par year, rriatea by tha West ■artfera PsMlshlac Ca. West Hartfara. Caaa. Kessinger, Sally Sanford, Charlotte JV1 at Donald, Albert Pilvels, Ronald Simmons, Arlene Strok, Marcia Laughrey, Jack Kennedy CONNFCTim rr

MONDAY, SEPT. 24, 1962 CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS PAGE THREE Campus-Wide Drive For BOG Staffers The Student Union Board of Governors is conducting a cam- pus-wide drive for new members on the eight Union committees. Newman Club Approximately two hundred stu- dents have signed up for one or more of the following committees Guest O'Brien since the drive began during Freshman Week: social, recrea- Guest speaker at the first New* tion, cultural, special events, pub- man Club meeting of the new licity, personnel, research and school year to be held at St. evaluation, and public relations. Thomas Aquinas Chapel Hall thU The committee chairmen, who began planning the year's work evening will be the Rev. James during the summer, are schedul- J. O'Brien. Father O Brien, at ing organizational meetings dur- present, is pas'or of St.John's ing the next two weeks. Students John's Parish in Montvi lie, Conn, are urged to attend these meet- He is a familiar figure to many ings even if they have no signed students on the Uconn campus as up previously at the Student Un- he served as Relig:ous Counselor ion display in the lobbby. tothe Catholic studi-nts for many The publicity committee has set years. In January of this year ha its first meeting for Wednesday was transferred to St, J V.in's by YALE TELEGRAM: All this week stu- telegram is to show the team that it has evening at 7:00 p.m. in room 315, Bishop Hines. dents may sign the Yale Telegram for the support of the student body. It is Commons. At this rime methods During his nineteen years on the low, low price of 10 cents. The tele- hoped that this support will spur the for publicizing up-and-coming Campus, Father O'Brien devel- gram will be sent to the Uconn football team on to the first victory over Yale dances, a lecture series, an 1890's oped the Newman Aposlolate at team immediately prior to the Yale by a Connecticut team since 1885. Have concert .and a foreign students's Srorrs. Healso Mrved as National game on Saturday. The purpose of the you signed up yet? coffee will be discussed. Newman Club Che plain from Tonight at 7:00 p.m. in room 1946-1948. Father O'Brien will 315 Commons, the Personnel speak to the Newman Cljb on Committee will meet. An informal "The Student and Ne-.'Tnp.n " Program: For Additional Teachers coffee giving all new Unoin com- The meeting will begin at 7:30 mittee members a chance to talk p.m. with a business meeting pre- The Wood row Wilson National Awards will be announced by Samuelson. Massachusetts Instit- with the Board of Govenrors and ceding Father 0"BrIen't task. Of- Fellowship Foundation has -an- December 1. 1962." ute of Technology, Economics. to meet each other, will be this ficers and committee chairmen nounced a new fellowship pro- Selection "We expect that the program committee's first project. will be introduced and students gram aimed at stepping up the Selection of awardees will be will demonstrate to the academic made by committees of distin- will have a chance to join th» pace of producing college teach- profession that good graduate various committees. All st.*lents ers. Dr. Alan D. Ferguson, in guished faculty in each field of students can complete a high Charge of the program, stated study. Chairmen of the selection quality course of doctoral studies Sam Plans both new and returning a e ".n- that this first large-scale effort committees in their respective in four year or less," Dr. Fer- vited to attend to leirn ibort of its kind is made possible by disciplines will be: Dr. David M. guson added. "If four years some of the different aspects 61 a recent grant from the Ford Potter, Stanford University, His- should become the norm, we will the Newman Apostolate. Foundation. tory; Dr. Arthur Friedman, Uni- be able to produce more college Open House versity of Chicago, English; Dr. teachers than before, and by ac- The Woodrow Wilson Disserta- Robert Gervasoni, President of tion Fellowships offer financial Edgar S. Furnniss, Jr., Princeton celebrating their training we will University, Political Science; Dr. make the whole profession attrac- the University Chapter of the TXI Reports aid to advanced graduate' stu- Society for the Advancement of | dents seeking the Ph. D. degree. Henri Peyre, Yale University, tive to larger numbers of candi Modern Languages; Dr. Paul A. dates." Management announced that The awards will provide recip- SAM's annual "Meet the Dean ients complete financial independ- Night" will be held on Wednes- KSK Merger ence during the time they are day September 26 at 8 p.m. in completing their final doctoral The national officers of 1*ieta Dean Harold Hewitt Outlines Room 122 in the School of Busi- degree requirements. Up to 200 ness Administration. Xi and Kappa Sigma Kappa awards will be made annually at Dean Lawrence J. Ackorman Fraternities signed a met per a total cost of $500,000. Pharmacy Job Opportunities will be the guest speaker and his agreement on August 20, 1U62, Awards will be limited to form- topic will be concerned with the after Kappa Sigma Kapj>a'9 er Woodrow Wilson Fellowship Job opportunities in pharmacy and lively evening is promised. future of the School of Business House of Delegates unanimously winners studying in Humanistic in the hospital, manufacturing, There will be refreshments fol- and its role in the community. approved the agreement of their or Social Science fields. Only stu- research and teaching areas were lowing the meeting, which be- Dean Ackerman has been ac- convention in Detroit The chap- gins at 7:00 pan. dents who give promise of com- outlined this week by a leading tive in for many years and has ters of Theta Xi had earlier au- pleting the Ph. D. in four years thorized their Grand Lodge to educator. Dr. Harold Hewitt, Dean Hewitt is a member of been of service to the organ- or less will be considered. The the board which was organized ization. enter into the agreement. program seeks to demonstrate Dean of the College of Pharmacy, two years ago by Lederle Labor- Following Dean Ackerman's The newly combined Fraternity that this is an adequate length of at the University of Connecticut atories, a leading producer of speech students will have an op- preserved the name and badge time for this work. Currently detailed the trend in pharmacy prescription drugs, to recognize portunity to meet and talk im- of Theta Xi Fraternity, which the average time for degree com- practice at a meeting of the Le- pharmacy's growing responsibil- foi-mally with the Dean. Refresh- was founded in 1864 at Renselaer pletion in these fields is from six ity in the advancement of the ments will be served. Polvtechnic Institute in Troy, to eight years. derle Pharmacy Consulting quality and scope of medical SAM plans an active program New York. The pledge pin, Under a trial-run, 24 awards Board. care, and to assist Lederle in for its members this year. Some name of the manual (The have already been made. Dr. Fer- serving pharmacy, physicians highlights of this year's program Quest), and flower were brought guson stated. and the public. The 12 member will include field trips to varuous into the Fraternity from Kappa "The Foundation began experi- board is comprised of distin- industries and firms in the state Sigma Kappa, which was founded menting with the program last Campus Gods guished representatives from all and pannel discussion that will at the Virginia Military Instit- spring," Dr. Ferguson said. "We phases of pharmacy throughout cover topics in the current busi- ute in 1867 and reorganized at received 78 applications, made 24 the country. ness world. the Uniersity of Virginia in 1935. awards, rejected 31 and are keep- On Trial Develop New Drags ing the others in a pending status Colleges tend to erect idols, Dr. Robert P. Parker. Lederls AM 670 KM 9».5 until they qualify fully. Now wc and on Thursday of this week, 1:58 Sign On 1:58 Sign On are ready to launch a full-scale general manager, told the group NUTMEG CHRISTIAN FEL- the competition to develop new 2:00 CBS News WHUS 2:00 Concert in competition. The deans of eighty- 2:05 Music Hall the Afternoon three graduate schools have been LOWSHIP is going to examine drugs has forced the drug indus- 2:30 Dimension asked to nominate candidates. some of them. Philosophies and try "to maintain an unparalled 2:35 Music Hall goals are greatly altered during rate of technological advances 3:00 CBS News Radio with untold benefits to the pub- 3:05 Music Hall 3:00 Concert in the collegiate sojourn, and it can lic." He noted that despite the be safely stated that aU of us 3:30 Dimension the Afternoon fact that pharmaceutical re- 3:35 Music Hall are affected by such diverse at- search is undergoing a period of Schedule titudes as materialism and scien- particularly rapid development, 4:00 CBS New» Photopool tism. The campus is filled with 4:05 Music HaU its objectives are still the same: 4:30 Dimension such dieties as status and pop- "The diagnose, prevention and 4:00 Concert in ularity. One of today's major 4:35 Music Hall the Afternoon cure of disease, and the allevia- 5:00 CBS News Baals is the perversion of real tion of symptoms of disease." love. 5:05 Music Hall Meeting Campos Godn' Trial 5:30 Relax Hillel Classes 6:30 WHUS Evening Report Mr. Stanley Rock, the New SIMULCAST England staff member of Inter- Registration for Hillel study 6:45 Lowell Thomas Guest Star Varsity Christian Fellowship, groups will be held tonight at 6:55 Sports Time will deal with just such concepts Monday, 6:45 7:30 at Hillel. Classes offered .7:00 The Dean Sponks. Dean Hewitt as tliese in his lecture "Campus 7:30 Gods On Trial," Thursday eve- are Basic and Conversational Georgetown Forum ning in the Community House. Hebrew, Jewish religion, Bible, .8:00 The World Tonight This Week At The U.N. 8:15 Music Unlimited Union Rm. 215 Public Invitac Jewish History and Judaism and 10:00 All That Jazz The public is invited, and the Christianity. 10:10 Brothers Four floor will be open to questions Time for the classes will be 10:30 Nite Owl Sign Off and discussion following the lec- set according to requests oi those 1:00 A.M. Sign Off ture—an interesting, dynamic. attending. PAGE FOUR CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS MONDAY, SEPT. 24, 196? • Department official, Michael Can- The Lantern Interpretation field, "Since this marriage," it 'Tanks A Lot said, "so far has not been nulli- In Linden, New Jersey, 12-year- fied by the Vatican." It said "the old Robin Harvan is planning all Of Reality situation of Stanislaw Radziwill is sorts of things he's going to do even more complicated since he In The Closet By Jules Samodai when his tank arrives. That's has been married already twice right—tank. The boy's always Just as in all other forms of art, previously ..." had a yearning. He even wrote Mi. i ,• is abstract in the art of The Express predicted that ef- President Kennedy last year to For Four Years writing:. Abstract art does t# t try forts of the Radziwills to have the ask for one, but he got turned to carry an idea across, instead it Vatican annul the Bouvier-Can- down. Now Robin's located a tank Enquire if a thing be necessary field marriage "will be crowned he can have—in an auto wrecking attempts to awaken some type of with success." yard in Williamsport, Ohio. Especially if it be common emotion in the surveyor, the read- We particularly ask you— er, or the listener. Tlierefore: IN- When a thing continually occurs— Not on that account find it natural TERPRETATIONS OF REAL- ITY. Let nothing be called natural In an age of bloody confusion The stream was clear and the Ordered disorder, planned caprice, fish danced on the water. I flew over them and put some in my with And dehumanized humanity, lest all things pouch before the Bear came. The On Campus Be held unalterable! Bear always came in the evening, Bertold Brecht before the snow fell, and caught (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many By EYERET FROST some colored fish to sing for him. Loves of Dobie GUlis", etc.) te rebellion seldom transcends I saw him come down the path Sept ember is considering-what-it- and hid in a rock. He sat down In means-to-be-a-student monlh. It is the campus. Instead these stu- dents tend to withdraw from the the water and made music. All the a part of the organized machinery colored fish swam to him and ol getting under way. Even if you "accepted" campus life and live in their own—usually intellectual jumped into his music. He went WRITE? YOU'RE WRONG don't mean any of it. Like buying away then. I followed him and books you don't intend to read. —world. The essential agreement of staying out of the hair of the watched as he painted the fish on In the recent furor over the assassination of President McKinley, More than a third on the society is therefore kept. his cave wall and taught them to campus is considering it sing. Then the Bird came and it may have escaped your notice that a nationwide study of the I am convinced, however, that asked the Bear to paint them on writing ability of American college students has just been . from the point of view of a col- it cannot work that way. What lege student for the first time. I the Bird's beak. Then he took published. the society does has a profound two tail feathers from the Bird. The survey reveals an astonishing fact: that when students think it is a "fitting way of begin effect on us, not only as students, ning this new column which, when Then all the other Birds would have completed their'freshman year and are no longer required but as citizens. The draft is one, come and give the Bear two tail to take English, their writing skill progressively declines until 1 am through. I hope will in some rather unpleasant, example of way act as a justification for its feathers and he would paint fish we come to the fantastic situation where graduating seniors this. The very existence of state- on their beak. If they didn't have actually are poorer writers of English than incoming freshmen! existence. run university is another ex- any more feathers, the Bear '■"he student occupies a rather ample. And we as citizen-stu- Many theories have been offered to account for this incredible would eat them. When he was fact. Some say that seniors know less English than freshmen privileged position in American dents could have a more profound finished, the Bear made music society. He is set off a short dis- effect on the society. and grew some trees to eat. I because all seniors major in French. This is not true. No more than 94 percent of seniors major in French. How about th« tance from its treadmill for a pe- From bis privileged vantage hid in a fish and watched the riod of four years for the osten- point, the student tonight to take Bear teach all the others to other six percent? sible purpose of doing those an interest in and, indeed, find a sing. When I wouldn't sing, he Well sir, of the other six percent, half—or three- percent- things about which the mindless voice in a troubled world — a came up to me and cut my tail take physics, a;id it is not hard to understand how these poor truisms mouthed about college world torn by fear, of asserting off. Then I made smoke, lots of souls grow rusty in English when all they ever say is "E equals are always said: and for the less individuality, of fear of nuclear de- smoke, and burned the fish. The MC squared." ostensible purpose of enhancing Bear broke his music and went Of the remaining three percent, two-thirds—or two percent- his position both socially and st ruction, or fear of antagonistic ideologies. Students can and must to lie in the stream. I made him major in whaling, and their English too grows feeble with economically in that society when smoke too and flew away into the he makes his inevitable return to find a voice in the midst of this disuse. Whalers, as we all know, do not speak at all except to fear. They can\ reflect upon and sun while the Bear slowly sank it. Unfortunately there has come into the bottom of the stream. shout, "Thar she blows!" maybe twice a year. to be sort of an unwritten agree- take a stand on some of these is-, Of the one percent remaining, it cannot be fairly said that sues, and thereby affect them. ment between thta society and but knowledge in the making," they are poor writers. The fact is, we don't know what kind of the student and between that so- Happily this process has already writers they are. Why not? Because they never write. And why begun. A growing number of stu- it will be the function of this ciety and the college administra- column to attempt to focus on the don't they ever write? Because this remaining one percent of attempts of students to find their American college students are enrolled at the University of voice, to discuss what that voice Alaska, and never take their mittens off. , should be, to present alternative (Incidentally, I received quite a surprise upon first visiting "voices," and to discuss the situa- Alaska two years ago when I was invited to Juneau to crown v,n> tion in which we find ourselves. ... ™,,„ on what this position should be. the Queen of the Annual Date Palm Festival. Frankly I ex- The pressures are subtle. The]™ (lispal.ily in views between We shall focus, as well, on cam- society via the administration re- Qne hJtQ *ef,ect but briefly on pus issues in the belief that these wards those students who do the are inextricably wound 'round our students who have backed Gold- views of the former problems. In approved thing in the approved water and those who have backed manner—become editors of cam- doing so, we shall attempt to "let pus newspapers, fraternity broth- Stevenson to recognize this. nothing be called natural, .-. . lest ers, student ofticials, etc. Inevi- Acting in agreement with Mil- all things be held unalterable." tably some s'udents rebel. But ton that "opinion in good men is CROSSWORD PUZZLE *"•*»«•*•****•**+ Vatican Accused «Efe

ACROSS I-Senior \t 1 A Of Applying (abbr.) R W &■ TJO M 1-Intertwine 9-Cravat • 0 r ■AMAI B EL ••• ^tWwUsh tout Mt w& ^Q'.v|»-|t ||> I*; wb 23-Blemish (colloq.) ter-in-law. I soon found out why: because mittens notwithstanding, they 25-GoM coin of 30-Time gone could still smoke Marlboro Cigarettes, still enjoy that rich Moslem* • by JO-PasBlonate 47-Emmet Legalized Connection 27-Skld 32-Born 40-South 49-Mountain In mellow flavor, that fine, clean Selectrate filter, that truly soft US-Equality 33-Evcrgreen American Crate The Warsaw Evening Express, soft pack, that truly flip-top flip-top box—and that, friends, 29-Inlet tree rodent 60-Transgree- Express Wisczorny, said "Every- .11-At thia place 35-Fragrant slon will make anybody bappy, mittens notwithstanding. In fact, 32-Catch nleoreain 41-Rlver In one remembers very well the 36-Carnivoroua Siberia 52-A continent Alaskans are the happiest people I have ever met in the whole 33-Wampum 43-Shiging bird (abbr.) campaign which certain Vatican 34-Fruit drink mammal 44-Mau'a name 53-Symbol for United States—except, of course, for the Alaskan vendors of 3r>-I.amprey 38-Part of tantalum circles, the Italian church hier- 36-MiiM' .il "to be" 45-Poiaon Marlboro Cigarettes, who have not been paid in many years— Instrument archy and the clerical press ini- 37-Small vall.y tiated against Sophia Loren only indeed, never—because how can anybody dig out coins to i>ay Si-Rntboataata for the reason that she wanted for cigarettes when he is wearing mittens?) (eolkxi.) 40-Rlver In to legalize her connection with But I digress. What are we going to do about this deplorable Italy film producer Carlo Ponti . . ." condition where college students, having completed Freshman 42-Pronoun 43-Alcohollc The paper continued: English, become steadily less proficient in the use of the lan- beverage guage? The answer is simple. We will make them take Fresh- 44-Measure of Sins of Powerful weight man English all through college. In fact, we won't let them take (abbr.) "It apppears, however, these 4«-Collection of anything else I This solution, besides producing a nation of facta same circles discreetly excuse graceful writers, will also solve another harrowing problem: 48-Bogged down similar 'sins' of the powerful "of In mud where to park on campus. If everybody takes nothing but BO-Ocean this world." A glaring example of Freshman English, we can tear down all the Bchools of law, Gl-Dellberatlon this is the fact that Vatican cir- M-Pllaater medicine, engineering, and whaling, and turn them into parking 65-One. no cles do not protest a single word matter which not do they condemn the mar- lots. Can't weT • use ism •*.*». 56-Olrle name riage concluded by the 29-year- DOWN old Caroline Lee Bouvier, sister 1-Obligatory of the U.S. President's wife, with action 47-year-old Stanislaw Radziwill. J-Dealgnated The makers of Marlboro, who sponsor this column, plead 1-VesMl'a Complicated Situation guilt) to being among those Americana whose writing skill curved The newspaper said that, under U not mil it might be. However, we like to think that me planking canon law, Princess Lee Radzi- 4-Pronoun tobacconists we know a thing or two. Won't gou4rg ue and 6-Mock blow will of London "continues to be erne If gou agree? • -Slave the wife" of a former U.S. State T-Worm Dlatr. by United iyndlcaie. Inc. MONDAY, SEPT. 24, 1962 CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS PAGE FIVE Kennedy Given Authority Present Resolution Legitimatizes By New Free Trade Bill Foreign Regimes In Cuba By GORDON SMITH AP erlands and Luxembourg had Washington, Sept. 21- h sary to turn back the pages of James Meredith. The battle over the 64-year-old Governor who has Curran charges that U.S. ship- cut in all U.S. tariffs, which com- Meredith's enrollment shifts to vowed to go to jail rather than history to four years ago. pares with authority for only 20 owneis have had an interest in It was in 1958 that Senator Meridian, Mississippi where a fed- allow the University to be inte- trade with Cuba, Red China, and per cent cuts won by Eisenhower eral judge will hold a contempt grated. Previous court orders in other Communist countries, de- Harry Byrd steered an embat- four years ago. tled trade bill through the Sen- hearing for three top officials of the Meredith case were directed spite embargoes declared by the In order to insure thtt the presi- the University. ate at the request of President at University officials. United States. dents authority is effective, the Governor Ross Barnett person- Eisenhower. Victory won, the Senate adopted a provision per- Virginia Democrat commented, ally refused yesterday to admit mitting him to count Britain as a Meredith, but the Justice Depart- "I don't believe it will be poss- member of the Common Market ment bypassed the Governor and '% a* .»«ible to get legislation like this even if she does not join. In this otsked Federal Judge Sidney Mize through ever again." way, Britain can be included to cite the school's top officials But Senator Byrd was to see it when negotiations with the Com- for contempt. happen again, the passage Wed- mon Market start, likely early Barnett, acting on authority nesday of a bill with such sweep- next year. granted him at the last minute ing tariff-cutting powers that it Undersecretary of State George by the state college board, per- made the 1958 measure look ane- Ball summed up this new round sonaly acted as registrar. In re- mic. The question naturally arises: of bargaining by saying that we fusing Meredith admission, the What happened in the past four should find in Europe trading op- Governor defied three federal years to make this possible?" portunities of a kind not dreamed courts which had ordered the ne- Several factors were involed, of a few years ago. He pointed gro's enrollment. Meredith's immediate plans but senators who worked long out that most Europeans are weeks on the bill agree that one were not disclosed. A justice de- only beginning to enjoy the con- pa rtment spokesman says Mere- development overshadowed all sumer goods Americans have others. The dominant factor was known for years such as auto- the phenomenal growth and suc- mobiles, electric refrigerators and cess of the European Common air conditioning. Market. The 1958 Treaty of Rome, which laid the foundation for the Safety First! Eix-nation free trading area, al- It was cold yesterday in Wake- ready was signed when the Eisen- field, England, so Barbara Smith hower Bill was passed, but the wore a pair of ski pants to her significance of the Rome agree- job in a shirt factory. Mainte- ment was not apparent at the nance mechanics complained, and time. when Barbara refused to change into a skirt, got themselves Realization came, however, by moved to another part of the fac- 1961, when the administration tory. Seems the sight of a 23- went to work on its trade pro- year-old brunette walking around gram and its startling success of in tight slacks was a safety risk. the common market was appar- The mechanics were afraid they'd ent. By then, France, West Ger- have an accident while they were many, Italy, Belgium, the Neth- watching her.

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Opening Weekend UconnVAceto Is Key Conferenc Chatter By NED PARKER To Successful Season The first big Saturday of the season in is in BY WAYNE MORTBERG the quintet to see action at the good sasson. In 1961 the quarter-, position during the 1961 season. backs comleted only 25 of 84* the record books with six Uconn opponents seeing action in games The key to Uconn's success He came out for the team in the passes good for 430 yards and that may tell a lot about the coming season for the Huskies. this season will rest with the middle of the season at the sug- three touchdowns. However 12 balance that the Huskies can gestion of former Uconn and Uconn aerials were intercepted, The most important game was the Yan Con opener between the achieve between their running Tony Pignatello, an old high an alarming statistic. University of Main Bears and the University of Massachusetts. and passing attack. Connecticut school teammate in Verena, New At halfback the Huskies are has been noted for its running Last year this game was concelled because of a virus among the Jersey. strongest and deepest with a host prowess and a weak aerial attack of returning lettermen. Dave Kor- players of the Umass team Later when it was played over the Gaffney finally broke into the the past few seasons. Consequent- lineup in the Huskies 37-0 rout ponai appears to have nailed Thanksgiving weekend both teams were undefeated in conference ly their opponents prepared for of Rhode Island and completed down the starting position at plav. After soundly drubbing Uconn the Redmen from Amherst the inevitable Uconn running two of two passes for 29 yards. right halfback. Koronai who is re- game. Lacking the element of were given more than a slight edge. However the surprising Maine He also played briefly in the fin- garded as the outstanding all- surprise, the Huskies found their ale against Holy Cross. around back on the team aver- team that barely eeked out a 2-0 win over the Huskies upset the offense stifled. Seely gained 56 yards in 15 car- aged 5-7 yards a carry in his Redmen to gain the Beanpot. This year it was Umass' turn. Though An excellent example of this ries V as a halfback, but when sophomore season in 1961. type of situation was the '61 Yale the Redmen held the defending champion Black bears scoreless in Redmond was injured Ingalls game. In that encounter, the two converted him into a . Left Half a 10-0 win Saturday. squads appeared evenly matched Seely has experience at the pos- At Jeff halfback, a torrid bat- as tiiey battled to a scoreless first Flr*t Rnng; . . . ition which he played in hign tle is being waged by big junior half tie. The FJi grabbed the lead school. Sean Sgrullctta and senior Tonp in- the third quarter On Ed The Maine win was the first rung in the ladder to the top of The top three quartc I icks Magaletta. Sgrulletta averaged Kaake s 28-yard field goal and 4.3 yards per carry last year and the conference for the Redmen. Most of the preseason picks have finally won the battle 18-0 on two from last season are not avail- able at the position for varied led the Huskies in scoring witn Uconn and Umass both in the running with Maine given the dark- touchdowns in the last quarter. reasons. Joe Klimas who saw the four touchdowns and 28 points. horse role. Thus far this has been the case but the 1(W) score of But the point of the story Is Magaletta is making a comeback that the earns were much more most action dropped out of the game clearly shows that either Maine is stronger than 'pre- school, Jim Muldowney was in- after suffering a knee injury evenly matched than the .final which knocked him for the sea- viously supposed or the Redmen are not as strong as they have score would indicate. Defensively eligible because he is not a full time student since he needs only son after the second game. .■. been rated. Both teams are "young" according to the press fa- the Huskies played a fine game, but let down just a little in the a few credits to graduate, and Another contender is Ken Lu- cilities of the schools but then what team in the conference isn't? fourth period because the of- Gerry McDonough is new at full- ciani \,'> averaged 6.1 yards per The facts remain that Umass still has star halfback Sam Lussier fense just could not move. On back, i an attempt including a 64 yard as well as the nucleus of a championship caliber team around him. offense, the passing attack was It is at this position that Uconn scamper into paydirt against almost non-cxistant meaning that needs improvement to have a Rhode Island. The only other conference teams to see action -were Rhode the Yale defense set itself for the Island and Vermont. The illfated Rams, despite material from corps of Uconn runners. last year's fine frosh team, were shutout by the Huskies from One Two Punch Ingalls thought he had* a one- Open only to students of Northeastern. Although Rhody lost 2S-0 don't count them out since two punch answer to this Uconn the Rams may well play the spoiler role in the conference this year. deficiency in Lou Their team is more powerful than this score indicates as recently Acete and Jack Redmond, but a U. of CONN. dislocated hip has removed Red- 1 shown in a scrimmage with powerful Boston University. mond from the scene for the re- The Vermont Catamounts, playing a full conference schedule mainder of the season. for the first time, should take over Rhody "s roll as the. doormat Thus Uconn's fortunes will rise or fall with Acete the All-State of the conference. But more importantly they should be an easy high school player from Ham- notch in the win column for the other conference teams. All but den, Aceto was who is an excel- Uconn that is. In spite of last year's 2-7 record there is no rational lent student was a highly sought YECEROY for putting a team of Vermont's calibre on the Uconn schedule. after performer at the termin- Nobody would get anything' but Machavellian satisfaction out of ation of his high school career a Uconn win over Vermont. The Catamounts incidently were de- reportedly could have gone to feater by AIC 14-7 Saturday. Yale if he chose. Some say he was sold on coming to Uconn by Football Contest 1 BatwaM Down's Leigh 27-0 the fact that he could earn the distinction of being remembered Closes October 3rd Another Uconn foe Deleware, perennial power house in the as the quarterback to lead the Middle Atlantic Conference, continued its winning ways with a 27-0 Huskies to their first victory ever drubbing of Leigh. Clint Ware, a fourth string halfback contributed Yale. to the win with two tallies and a couple of pass . Aceto was a student on Uconn's freshmen team last year and new- Boston University, another sore spot on the schedule, was upset finds himself as fhe number one in the final 25 seconds by Buffalo. Buffalo field general John signal-caller on the varsity. The Stoffa connected on an aerial in the final secr/nds to give Buffalo two challengers for the backup a 27 23 win. The TD was the third in the last ten minutes as the spot behind Acete are Doug Gaf- Bisons came from behind for the upset. The Buffalo team has fney and' Dick Seely, a converted First Prize...*100°° been replaced on this year's Uconn schedule by Delaware. halfback. ^

i». in • ii ..... •t MONDAY, SEPT. 24, 1962 CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPlfe PAGE SEVEN Army Downs Wake Forest As Grid Season Opens

'AP) — The Chinese bandits ed pass. Gursky raced 77 yards game without Paul Dietzel and should have stayed home. Ne- have landed at West Point but for his and Powell pounded 52. scores and tossed his frist college its was hard to tell the difference. braska pounded out a 53 to 0 vic- pass for a touchdown as West don't panic, gentle people, they Villanova made it two in a row With Charlie McClendon at the tory. have no offensive weapons. this fall by crushing Virginia controls State raced through Texas surprised Texas Tech, 30 to 27. Coach Paul Dietzel made them Military, 24 to 0, with quarter- Texas A.&M., 21-0. TCU Tops Kansas famous at Louisiana State and back Rickie Richman passing for Glynn Griffing, the Mississippi A sophomore from Lehman, when he moved to West Point The quarterback of Texas scores. At Newton, Massachu- ace, led the Rebels to a hard-won Christian, Sonny Gibbs, is 67 and Pennsylvania, Joe Lopasky, this year he refused to junk setts, it was Boston College over 21-7 decisicn over Memphis State. scored all three touchdowns as them. That's no joke, son. when he engineers a touchd. • Detroit, 27 to 0, and the story Jerry Yost was in a hurry as it stands up. Sonny passed 12 Houston battered Baylor, 19 to 0. Only Defense there is that , who he- lifted West Virginia to a 260 yards to Tom Magoffin for the It gave new head coach Bill Yeo- The bandits play only on de- coaches Boston, coached at De- win over Vanderbilt He passed troit last year. Wonder if they only touchdown as TCU opened man of Houston a successful fense and were in their usual for two scores and ran for a with a 6 to 3 decision over Kan- launching. break-up-the-party mood yester- changed the signals. third. sas. day as Dietzel made a successful Maryland first had to beat itself The Air Force Academy opened Kansas showed an admirable play in its new three and one-half debut as Army coach. The Cadets 'Bania Over Georgia and then Southern Methodist but do-or-die spirit. With mere sec- marched through, over and Alabama appears ready to make managed to turn the trick, 7-0. million dollar stadium in Colo- onds left the Jayhawkers had the rado and did the job right. The around Wake Forest, 40-14. a determined defense of its 1961 Repeatedly set back by penalises bail on the TCU five yard «Vie. We don't know how the gen- nationalrh ampionship. in the first half, the Terps made Falcons flew over Colorado State They refused to go for a point- University, 34 to 0. Oddly erals, past and present, who grad- 'Kama battered Georgia, 35 to the only score of the game in the blank field goal which woujd uated from West Point feel about second, Dick Shiner bursting enough, the fliers made all five 0, in the opener and turned loose have given them a tie. Instead touchdowns on the ground. the Chinese bandits. But the cur- a sophomore quarterback named through from the SMU four. they went for broke, and that's rent corps of cadets like them , whom coach Paul It was Roger "up and over" as how they wound up. A -pass failed At Laramie, Wyoming, Bob3y tine. Every time the bandits ran Bryant has been praising ex- North Carolina State edged North and TCU had the victory. Santiago was the difference as on the field Saturday, the Ca- travagantly. Carolina, 7-6. The winning point Oklahoma had a winning debut New Mexico ruined Wyoming's dets put on special red hats. Paul may have been right. All was the result of a conversion by by almost the same score against Western Athletic Conference De- Oh yes, Army has two other Namath did was to pass for three Roger Moore. Syracuse. Oklahoma won that btu, 25 to 21. Santiago ran 57 units, the regulars and the "go" touchdowns and rack up 215 one, 7 to 3, as Joe Don Looney yards for a touchdown with a team. They attended to the scor- yards offensively before Bryant Penalties went on a wild 60-yard gallop for kickoff return and passed 60 ing with Joe Blackgrove, Art took him out in the third period. Indiana was so charged up for a touchdown with two minutes yards for another score. Lewis and John Seymour starring. Georgia Tech got a lift from its opening game with Kansas to play. Utah State picked off two fum- quarterback Billy Lothridga and State that it's a wonder the bles in mid air and turned them Texas took a while to' get heat- into touchdown gallops of 100 Penn State Wins clobbered Clemson, 26 to 9. Hoosiers didn't go into orbit. ed up Saturday night in its open- Lothridga passed for three scores They drew 189 yards in penal- and 68 yards against Idaho. That c The consensus favorite to be er at Austin, Texas, with the Uni- made it easy for state which won lops in the East, Penn State, and then decided to vary things ties, on 16 calls, but still re- versity of Oregon. The Longhoms a little. He scored the fourth tained enough enthusiasm to send the game, 45 to 7. trampled Navy, 41 to 7. Al Gur- were traling 13 to 3 midway of Arizona State of Tempe jolted sky and Junior Powell starred for himself. three backs across for touch- downs and a 21-0 victory over the third period when they sud- Wichita, 21 to 10: Arizona beat the Lions with a pair of touch- denly clicked. They clicked for 22 Brigham Young, 27 to 21« Utah downs each. Each made a long l-si 21-0 Kansas State. points in the next 12 minutes and surprised the University of Colo- touchdown run with an intercept- Louisiana State played its first An 18-year-old sophomore rado. 37 to 21. named Don Meyers made his walked to the dressing room at 1 In the televised game of the collegiate football debut for the end of the game with a 25 t THE CHICKEN COOP 13 victory. day, Southern California downed Northwestern and our question Duke. 14 to 7. The payoff Play BARBECUED CHICKENS TO GO is; what will he do for a encore? Arkansas Wins WHOLE $1.69 HALF $.99 QUARTER $.65 The starting quarterback for was a 51-yard touchdown pass All he did Saturday in his in- from Bill N'elsen to Hal Bedsole HAMBURGERS $.15 augural game was to complete Arkansas, Billy Moore, who only late in the second quarter. LOCATED ON STORRS RD.—RIGHT OFF CAMPUS 20 passes in 24 tries for 75 yards. weighs 176 pounds, ran for one This was Duke's third invasion CALL GA 9-5925 WE DELIVER He passed for two scores, made touchdown and scored another in of Southern California, twice a touchdown himself, and twice the first half to get the Razor- against the Trojans and once completed passes for conversions, backs off in front aginst Okla- against U-C-L-A, and each time eor»«iOHt © IMI. rxi COO-COIA COM»«N». COC« con MO com »« nwnme T«.OI«.»I»I worth two points each. homa State. Then, he had the the Blue Devils have lost. Maybe By the way. Northwestern won wind knocked out of him and Ar- they should invite California the game, defeating South Car- kansas rushed in another quar- teams to Carolina. BETWEEN FRIENDS... olina, 37 to 20. Those completions terback who is even smaller than Jchnny Roland, a sophomore There's nothing like a Coke! tied the Northwestern record, set Moore. That would be Billy Gray, halfback, scored three touch- 20 years ago by the great Otto who weighs only 164. He passed downs in his first varsity game Graham. Myers might have as Missouri whipped California, broken it but was taken out of for three touchdowns and Ar- 21 to 10. the game with four minutes left, kansas won the Dell game, 34 to The University of Washington probably on the "too much, too 7. Huskies outgained the Burly soon'' theory. Pistol Pete Pedro is back in the Boilermakers of purdue but they South Dakota rolled down to news again. The whirling dervish also outfumbled them. The re- Nebraska yesterday but they from West Texas State made two sult a 7-7 tie.

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It has been brought to the attention of the I.F.C. that many Freshmen and Transfer Students were unable to register for Fraternity Rush last week. To alleviate this situation, the I.F.C. wishes to announce that any Freshman or Transfer Student who still wishes to Rush this Semeste r may do so AT ANY TIME THIS WEEK at any one of the Fraternity Houses.

The Rush Period began last Thursday Evening with Open House Parties. Each of these Fraternities will remain open dur- ing this ENTIRE WEEK for those who failed to register last week with the I.F.C. and are still interested in the Fraternity Program.

I personally want to take this opportunity to encourage each of you to visit the various Fraternity Houses to determine for yourself the merits of the Fraternity Program on this Cam- pus. MoeFradette President, Interfraternity Council