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Special Program Marks Jewett Anniversary

run from Jewett celebrates its tenth an- This exhibit, which will nlversary on Fit, Oct. 18 with the Oct. 19-Nov. 19 will have a sense of exhibit, 'The to opening a new of fun and games appropriate , Lenders to the exhibition include special Fantastic in Art," and a a building only a decade old. There the Busch Reisinger Museum, the Arte evening performance, "The will be a wide variety of styles, Fogg Museum of Art, the At Work in Jewett." subjects and countries represented Museum of Fine Arts, the Museum open The events on Friday are in the exhibition, from such well- of Art in Springfield, Mass. and by special invitation to the mem- known nineteenth century masters the Smith College Museum of bers of the Board of Trustees, the as Redon, Ensor and Bresdin, to Art. Numerous private collectors Board of Directors, The Alumnae less familiar Renaissance, baroque have also loaned objects to the Association and the National De- and rococo printmakers who creat- College. velopment Fund. Mrs. David Gai- ed delightful fantasies of crabs in In the evening, the program will ser, benefactor of the Jewett Art armor jousting with each other, begin with a lecture-demonstra- Center and a Trustee of the Col- bulterfies fighting wars and carry- tton of early musical instruments lege, and other members of the ing off their wounded on stretch- at Wellesley by Owen Jander, as- Jewett family will attend the cele- ers, and Images of men made up sistant professor of music. Per- bration. Members of the Friends of everyday farm implements, in- formances by students of music of Art committee, alumnae, and geniously arranged. after a brief inter- friends of the College who have will follow and, of shown Interest In nrt nnd music A special fenture of the exhibi- mission, performances work hnvp nlso boon Invited, tion will be several cbscb with old still in progress will be given. An open limine will be held In bonks opened to their strange nnd Madrigals and Dance Group will Jewntt on Friday nflernoon for suggestive Illustrations. Startling perform and the Experimental these speclnl guests, nt which time Jtixl aposll Inns, new focuses on Theater will present a reading of thoy will meet art and music familiar objects, will try to re- a scene from Ibsen's Hedda Oabler. majors. Members of the faculty mind the viewer of the presence of Jewett will reopen to the general will greet the visitors in the main the irrational In the everyday, its public on Sat., Oct. 19, and gallery gallery where "The Fantastic in beauty and its fun. Throughout the talks will be given by volunteers Student Loin to "The Fantastic In Art." (photo by Lynn Tucker 71) Art" will be exhibited. exhibition a selection from the during the exhibition's stay here. WELLESLEY NEWS

WELLESLEY, MASS., OCTOBER 17, 1968 College Hears Proposals, Administrative Promises

by Ann Sherwood '69 ams, president of the College, ap- student. She called for student ex- on this campus." the president pro- that there will be no mistake," she

proached the podium. Miss Adams ploltntlni) (l f pus- Central to the agenda and con- the recruitment mlscd, reminding students of their added, -"it cannot be accomplished centration of Wellesley's third All- addressed the front-running Issues slbllltles. elnlmlng, "You are the necessary contribution of time and " , three weeks flexibility College meeting of the current aca- with a candid promise ot people who have to proselytize .. . Intents, and the accompanying The severaI hundred students demic year was a set of proposals —of the acccsslbillly of "real" who must have the conviction, learning process. Miss Adams con- calling for noticeable changes in leaves of absence, of a five-year strength and commitment to say eluded with the implication that present reacted to the administra- three now-vital areas: admissions, program, of an ability to search out that 'Wellesley is good.' " most of the student vision and pro- tive response with a standing ova- recruitment, and curriculum. and detect the uniquely-qualified There will be a summer program posals would be implemented. "So tion. Chaired by Nancy Scheibner '69, the meeting faltered at one junc- ture, when parliamentary proce- Uday Shankar and His Troupe of Hindu Dancers To Present The Living India' dure seemed to preclude both by Loulso Weli-h '71 the hnslc movements, Including fifi Arts In Lnndnn. His talent In chor- ern India; and the Sari, tradi- thoughtful evaluation and a deci- a Mudras, or hand positions, and cogrophy and dance discovered tional dance of Kaihakali style sive vote on the proposals. Hillary Uday Shankar and his troupe of was the the music. The most Important by Pavolve 1923. Soon after, Rodham '69 moved that the ongo- Hindu dancers will appear at in he of the Malabar Coast, part of Hindu civilization is the returned to India to organize the Ticket! i Required ing meeting be conducted with the Alumnae Hall Oct. 21 at 8 pm, in dance. Hindu dance. Tickets will available Wed. purpose of establishing a consensus a performance made possible by be Teacher of Culture The program will include and Thurs., 17. among the community and a com- the Marjorie Copland Baum Fund. a Oct. 16 and Faculty, Shankar has spent most of his dance drama, "Prakriti and Anan- staff members, non-resident mitment to the proposals set forth. This fund was given by Alvin H. and of his life trying to tench the world nbout da," n love story with witchcraft, students may obtain tickets in proposals Baum In memory wife, o The were ultimately Ihe member of the clnss of 1f!27, In culture of India. He is GR. He it n il mnny traditional Indian Room 34G Greei i Weds, Thurs, and approved by voes of "yea," "nay," order that rnnjor culturnl events spool his childhood nt Ihp court of dntlCPs, such as the Mnnlpurl Rasa, Frl„ Oct. 16, 17, and 18. Guest and "maybe," with "maybe's" be- Ihe might be Mnhnrajrih of Jnhnlwnr, nnd he im Invocation to I^ord Krishna; the tickets will be : ivailable on Friday ing especially vocal on the second- presented on enmpus, During their tour of the Unllod studied nt the ll-iynl College of Assam, a folk dance of northeast- and Monday. ary issues of finances and the hir- States, the Shankar group will per- ing of a black administrative offi- form music nnd dance which ex- cial. Especially strong positive en- press "the Jiving India," according dorsements were given to the pro- Senior Class Adopts 'Upward Bound' Project to Shankar. He employs the tech- posed structural and attitudinal niques and styles of ancient Hindu changes concerning admissions, re- dances, but he tries to relate Plans Financial cruitment, and compensatory edu- them Aid and Student Participation to the changing events of todny. cation. The summer program, Up- by Lindsay Miller 'OR long project Is something for can experience from 12:30 2 ward Bound, also received resound- Indian Orrhmtrn new — pm, our class," explained Wendy Judge and leaders for recreation (volley- ing approval The musicnl accompaniment will The Upward Hound program nt '09, clnss president. "With the ball, football, basketball) from 2- The open Senate meeting or Oct. be played on 3(1 Instruments, Inclu- Wellesley Is Retting n push for- hocking of many people in the 4 pm. 22 is to be a focal point for each ding the sitar, the sarod, the tabla, ward from the senior class. class, the officers decided to offer A Trip of the interests and activities im- and the thanpura. Some 150 members of the class our collective support to Upward One short-range goal is to sup- plicit in the student-articulated pro- Shankai's dancers are all Brah- of "69 have voluntcred to help Bound. We felt that this project port a field trip for the boys this posal. The Board of Trustees and mins. They are allowed to perform with the Saturday program for 3U would be more significant to the fall, probably on Oct. 2G. Money the Board of Admissions have been here by special permission from Cambridge high school boys. Other College and to ourselves than just from the bake sale and the class invited to attend the meeting in the Indian government, as it re- seniors are working on fund-rais- donating a tree or some other gift treasury, if necessary, will be used their official capacities. Students gards Shankar as a distinguished ing projects In order to sponsor at the end of our four years here." to finance the excursion. will be free to question these rep- part of Hindu culture. special excursions thin fall and to The class's long range goal de- resentatives and to discuss with New Intercut In lndln support a summer Upward Bound The seniors are dividing their the pends on the successful establish- them programs under consider- Shankar's tour of the United program at Wellesley, If it can be effort into three phases — immed- ation. ment of an Upward Bound pro- States is due to the tremendous established. iate, short-range and long-range. Another announcement from rise of interest in Indian culture gram at Wellesley for the summer Candlelit Bakeeale Alan Schechter, assistant profes- in the six years since his last tour. The immediate suport began of 1969. pro- sor of political science, notified the Many musicians, such as Yehudi Last Friday night the class earn- Sat., Oct. 5, when the all-day pro- "If the plans for a summer try gathering of a proposal of the Menuhin and the Beatles, have ed over $100 at a bake sale at The gram got under way. Seniors were gram go through, the class will man- Board of Admission to Academic made this Interest rise. Thing at MIT. Seniors sold cookies among the volunteers in a variety to help with money nnd explained "So Council that two students sit on The Hindu music is over .1,000 and popcorn — by candlelight — of positions — tutors for the aca- power," Wendy. ex- the Board of Admission to act In years old. The most ancient record on the fifteenth floor of MIT's demic clnsses in the morning, host- mnny people in the class have policy-making capacities. of the art and technique of dunce Green nuildlng, in a room over- esses in the dorms for lunch, lead- pressed a real enthusiasm in Up- As students began to filter out is the Fifth Veda of Brahma. Sllva, looking the Charles. ers for interest groups such as art, ward Bound that we feel we have of the chapel, Miss Ruth M. Ad- the Indian god of dnnce, taught men "Undertaking a large-scale, year- music, journalism, and Afro-Ameri- a personal stake in its success." Pago Tiro WELLESLEY NEWS Thursday, October 17, 1968 What Next? The Reader Writes

To the College I want to say something about My hopes are that the recent events The functions of an All-College meeting are many. The latest the term "risk candidate." This and the very appropriate student Wellesley attempt at pervasive communication culminated eight days To the students of Wellesley dangerously ambiguous term which reaction to them will not deter has of intensive student involvement, thought and commitment. And College; been in general use in college Dean Melvin from continuing to boards of admission does not refer provide imagination and initiative the results of the meeting may well be the realization of that vision I believe that there is one point to any risk on the part of the col- to our committee and that her be- put forth in the form of concrete and immediate proposals. of agreement among all the people lege which accepts a student who havior since October 7 will be ack- who attended the meeting In the That there is a promise that changes can be and will be insti- has had unconventional prepara- nowledged by the community Chapel on Monday afternoon, Octo- and tuted is encouraging — and even exciting. That there is a demand tion. It refers to the risk of life- serve as a model for us alL ber 7, It was expressed by a stu- for continuing involvement and commitment on the part of students damaging failure for the student Sincerely, dent who spoke at the noon rally herself. Although I am not a mem- Stephen D. London is evident. That there remain greater visions to be expressed, initia- on the following day: "Miss Mc- ber of the Board of Admission at assistant professor of ted, and fulfilled is an understatement. Pherrln should have stayed in her the present time, I have Berved on sociology seat." For the moment, however, the task is the efficient and effective it recently enough to speak with implementation of those proposals embraced at Tuesday's meeting by I have asked the editors of News some assurance of the continuing the Miss Adams: the active recruitment to go hand-in-hand with an en- to publish this letter because I effort to spot able and well-moti- To Defense larged and extending admissions policy,*the necessary flexibility for wont to correct the false impres- vated candidates who have not had To the editor: sion of views created leaves of absence and curricular extensions to five years, and the my by my the benefit of good schooling. The It was a shock to read that a abortive attempt reality of a summer Upward Bound program. The issues beg for at speech and be- college community at large believes friend of mine, who during the past cause I feel that I owe some ex- that the number of enactment — if not in three weeks, in time that the May 8 Com- such students 20 years has participated actively planation uf my trouble-making in- is much smaller than it actually mittee tactics are not repeated, in time that student momentum and is, In various efforts to eliminate so- trusion to die faculty I think, and etudents precisely because well-mo- cial injustice, was essentially concern is not dissipated in discouragement. And the temperament of view'- who have worked tivated to re-establish young people of high native cd as a racist in a the College at this time begs for further initiative — not only on the recent letter to broken lines of communication dur- intelligence are able to compensate the News. Mrs. individuals connected in their many ways to Harold Melvin and part of students and ing this past week. for the inadequacies of their pre- her husband, who is an Episcopal the College, but on the part of its leadership. vious training without I was on leave during most of self-destruc- minister, have poured both person- tive strain. Since While the announced intentions of the Board of Admission, as last year und out of the country carefully selected al and professional energies into students directed lo Academic Council, indicate a move in Ihc right direction, at the lime of the Ethos proposals from very poor rural efforts directed toward establish- schools have been oble to they are inadequate. Students in a policy-making capacity should be imil the funnntlon uf llio Com- make ing social justice. In Mr. Melvin's flue records at Wellcsley with able to enforce that policy. Any assumption that Undents miphl he mil lOO <>f Muy H. Reading hi New* no first parish In Dorchester in 1951, more special allowance than o maintain the necessary confidence involved in admissions Lhn rmjuostn at tlio black ntuilruin re- a sociological shift was occurring unable to duced ami the College'* program for the freshman as bluck people began moving into is completely unfounded. reHpouno uf it procedures year and lime when European newspapers no more help than they a white neighborhood. The Melvins Miss did not address many criti- have received from And in her response, Adams were full of accounts of the bat- their regular in- welcomed this change as good for structors, cal points of the current proposals. These omissions should not ne- tles on other American college there is good reason to their parish and the entire com- believe that carefully gate their importance, nor preclude their enactment. We remain campuses, 1 got the impression that selected stu- munity, and both worked tirelessly dnts from distressed that the administration has responded to the needs of this Wellesley faculty, students and Ad the schools of the inner and effectively on the attendant city will meet with College only under intense student pressure. We cannot forget Foun- ministration wore working Intel- equul success. social problems. Later their com- llgoiitly, When I said something to this ef- ders Forum, the unsanctioned printing of the Ad Hoc Committee rapidly and In an III urns- mitment took them to Brazil, reci in the mooting (unintelligible, report, the Fthos demands and threatened hunger' strike: nor enn plirie of mutual trust to cranio where for several years they work- no iloubl, since I lelt a vlnbln iiliui ul action. trapped in u ed in an economically depressed we ignore the last ten days. When 1 nightmare by that time) I came back lo Hits cnmpun in Sep- was not area. Upon their return home, they assured that we can anticipate ihc demands of to- advocating that Let us be tember, I found my colleagues In we muddle along chose to work in a poverty level not only In the old morrow, that we can count on community leadership — the administration giving top amateur way just be- parish !n Fall River instead of a cause student frustrations — to achieve the direction Wellcsley must be priority to pluns for the integra- we have had a measure of more comfortable one in the su- success willing to take. tion of the college community on with it in the past. I think burbs of Boston. Fall River at that it very which many of them had worked important that we learn time was in a severe economic de- more sophisticated throughout the summer In oddillon techniques for pression which had arisen in re- evaluating lo their regular ehurcs— training unconventional candi- sponse to the movement of major dates ami I hope Hint we No Apples recruiters, mooting wllh the Coin- can have Industries out of that city. n program of mlftco of May H, carrying on the compensatory train- Since May, when our local crisis ing HOfU'Ch for black personnel, answer- which will enable us to have a concerning the position of black ing requests for Information about student body more fully represent- people at the College arose, Mrs. During the past three years students have agitated and organiz- the new program. ative of the varied population of Melvin has, as the newiy appointed the better at There was dis- ed, argued and petitioned for every major change for our country. appointment that It had not been Dean of Students, dedicated herself Wellesley College. From the administration, we only expected hon- Jeanette possible to meet all the goals set McPherrln to this problem. I believe wc are esty, receptivity, and reasonableness. From the faculty, we have for September but there was satis- particularly fortunate to have, at editorial of last Feb. 8) for more — for rein- hoped and asked (see faction in the things achieved and this time, a Dean of Students commitment. To Be Continued forcement, guidance, and In the ground-work for future ac- whose experience extends beyond the academic, actions The- response has been neglible. complishment laid by the Com- To the editor: and wnose inlllccor Muy 8, the Hoonl of Ad- I wish to commend the News over many years have demonstra- faculty indifference to the fate of last Ma^'s ten pro- Present mission, and the student recruiters, for Its statements In the October ted her commitment to social and Only one public statement posals sustains the disappointing record. No member of the administration 10 editorial criticizing the "pro- economic justice. Council has not even of faculty support is in evidence. Academic who had worked on the program gress" of the May 8 Committee and Helen A. Padykula will selected its faculty representative to the committee which ad- spoke grudgingly of his or her part the attitudes expressed at the Oct- professor of biology minister the Martin Luther King Fund. or showed any lack of sympathy ober 7 chapel meeting. with the goals of the program, Both Faculty participation in formulating and endorsing the new issues demand the atten- Incidental Facts October 15 All-College Meeting Then came the meeting of Octo- tion of the entire Wellesley Com- broader proposals presented at the editor: munity. With effort To the very necessity for student attempts to ber 7. As my colleagues spoke I renewed and was once again lacking. The with a sense of commitment is I would like to take issue the area of admis- realized that they weren't getting there revise cramped anachronistic policies, at least in your reporting of "The Wellesley across, but I thought It was be- no reason why the College cannot sions, stems in part from faculty negligence. Incident." The author of any cause the formal style of their implement the remaining points of organ, that article mentioning specific names It is Academic Council, the faculty decision-making prepared speeches prevented them the May 8 agreement before the has a responsibility to see that she elects one-half of the members of the Board of Admission. And it is from expressing the conviction and end of the semester. I am hopeful has the facts. Your article was not to which that Board and its policies are officially enthusiasm that had shown through that the events of the past few- Acadenrc Council factual. two students with no policy-en- the rambling, unedited accounts days will generate such a response. responsible. Adding to the Board of First, Black Awareness Day was However, even after such action forcing power will neither discharge faculty responsibilities nor rem- the summer Ihey hud given to me. sponsored by the history depart- It wasn't Is taken the memory of the Octo- edy Admission defects. until members of Fit hos ment of the high school. The Wel- ber 7 meeting will remain. As a hr>KMii li> reply Hint I realized of- lesley Committee Against Racism far as we can gather, no member of Aenilniie Council has member of the Mny 8 Committee So roiwp had been given. Prom their aided the program only in the last year's motion to reconsider the "secrecy I touud Dean Melvln's speech a yet urged untabling unsworn I gained the Impression raising of funds. The program was not to discuss particularly unsettling clause." This means that our faculty is still obligated 11ml these Hidden In were convinced event. As a NOT released to the committee with students any structural or curricular matters which come be- thut Wellesley had refused to con- committee member, she proposed prior to presentation. some of the most imaginative and fore Council — let alone to permit students to have a voice in the sider black candidates for teaching Secondly, Mr. Pemberton Min- advanced programs we discussed, academic framework in which they must operate. positions, had tried to limit the ster did NOT commission the but at the number of black students to a Monday meeting she Theatre Company of Boston for This fall Miss Adams announced the establishment of a Struc- token representation, and that this lapsed Into a stereotypic pattern of any production. He was not noti- tural Revision Committee which would allow its student members, communication. view of Hie past was responsible However, Mrs. fied in advance of what the Thea- administration, and trustees, to recommend Melvln's along with faculty, for Ihelr Inability to believe In subsequent discussion with tre Company would produce. He faculty has not yet elected the two changes in Wellcsley's framework. The the reality nf the present move to- student members of the was asked if the education sub- its representatives to the committee, ward integration. Committee demonstrated that she committee would help raise money realized the nature of her uninten- for Black Awareness Day since the understand that Academic Council by nature moves slowly. This was why I felt impelled to We tional words. If we could all follow school and Student Council had of large deliberative body. But we tell what we tried to do, be- We have come lo expect such any had her response by attempting to com- not raised enough. This he pro- inaction. lieving that nobody cannot accept parliamentary procedure as an excuse for had and some- prehend our subconscious ethno* ceeded to do. This was the entire body must make it clear that, how- extent of his incapable of initiating, supporting, centrism and lack of human un- involvement. If bur faculty is collectively ever Inept and unsophisticated our faculty as individuals must put forth derstanding, this particular event Thomas Fitzsimmons also de- and instituting change, then the efforts, we have wanted more In Ihc Chapel will have a positive serves fairer treatment than that and work for needed programs. black students ot Wellesley us long effect. given by News. As drama coach ns 1 have known the College. When A few faculty members have undertaken admirable community I am not writing this letter as ot the high school he was asked people started to walk out I knew projects. Wc applaud those who teach Saturday Upward Bound u plea Lo absolve u colleague, nor to introduce the TCB without classes. We arc encouraged that some professorr. have met with I had given offense, but I didn't am I offering to apologize for her. (Continued on pngo 8) majors in their departments to evaluate and revamp courses and ap- know how until I was told after proaches. the meeting that the black stu- dents thought I was advocating faculty's own self-interest to act This is not enough. It is in the the practices of the past as a model WELLESLEY NEWS insUtutional re- with an informed vision of necessary attitudinal and for the future. This Is not true. The Owned, operat and publlihed wet \ Thursday, September Ihrouith May liv- construction at Wellcsley College. numcrlcol goals for student re- by the Wellei iallava New*, office cruitment set by the Committee Teleph 333-0543 and 1 lon 1300 to stu- We arc not asking that the faculty put aside their academic con- of Muy 8 seem right to me and I K> office copies: cerns. We request, Bubicrlptlnni |S 00 rather, that our teachers i attend to the institution believe that with contemporary in and through which they teach — and that they too act to chance know-how they will not be difficult jt oeceuarily Ibote of it for the better. to meet. WELLESLEY NEWS Page Three Thursday, October 17, 1968 CooperDefendsHumphreyat , CandidatesNight ,

of lieves in arresting looters, wants seemed apparent that the audi' More than two hundred people Webster, Cambridge Republican who vote out of the politics to abolish capital punishment; ence, now mostly active ACA par- from Wellesley and surrounding City Chairman and President of frustration. Concluding that the election a choice between Nixon promises to appoint some- ticipants from all over Eastern areas attended "Presidential Can- the International Datapower Cor- 1968 was politics of joy and the politics one 'quite different.' " Humphrey, Massachusetts, was violently anti- didates Night" at Wellesley Jr. poration, represented Richard the of confidence, Webster received Cooper maintained, does not cry Humphrey, moderately anti-Nixon, High, on Thurs., Oct. 10. The pro- Nixon; and Charles H. McGlue, out for "less court-made law, and anti-academia, and strongly bellig- five times Democratic State Chair- hearty applause, gram was sponsored by the East- 1 more cop-made law," but searches '' erent. On this note, Presidential ern Massachusetts Chapter of the man and twice Massachusetts Rep- 0aiy Real Cholce instead for the root causes of Candidates Night concluded. Americans for Constitutional Ac- presentative, spoke for George — crime, concerns himself with the ~ z tion as one of a monthly series of Wallace. Introduced himself "not Cooper importance of pay, training, and meetings to present for discussion a professional politician, but, Student Letter Tiger Wallace as status of police, an effective Fed- contemporary political and social like you in the audience, a con- eral Court system, and a better questions. first, McGlue compared To Nixon Seeks Speaking cerned citizen of Wellesley," and penal system. Mr. Gilbert J. Stubbs, chapter Wallace to the Detroit Tigers: at Uion presented his reasons for be- questioned Nixon's approach chairman of the ACA, introduced first making little notice and then Moving that the Humphrey-Muskie He Position Oil IsSUeS peace; his conspicuous the speakers for the evening, each coming from behind to "grab the ticket was the "only real choice": to world his Viet- by Ann Sherwood '69 representing one of the three ma- title." According to McGlue, Wal- Democratic silence on position on the nrst _ concern for the nam War; his calls to end the public letter jor contenders for the Presidency. lace sees three Issues as crucial in par ty; second, concern for the Re- A to Richard M. Wellesley's John Cooper, assistant the 1968 campaign: constitutional publican Party; and third, a deep cold war; his desire to open an Nixon represents the effort of a negotiation," and professor of history, spoke for interpretation, budgetary consider- cnncern for America. Addressing "era of compared Committee of Concerned Students Hubert Humphrey; William H. ations, and the "requirements of himself to the pro-Nixon argument these promises with the Republl- to influence the tone and direction na- can's call for more missiles, his of the final weeks of the national some of the professors" in the rs p (m qo(l hy Walter Llppmann and tion's colleges and universities. He BomP dknfTectcd Democrats—that plan for a world-wide contronta- presidential campaign. The stu-

t Soviet Students for HHH focused much of Ills nrioen-niinulc uppm-l of Nl: the gn iuii with the Union and dents, mostly former supporters China, his desire to delay the speech on the erosion of the Demo- hut Ills eleclion would result In and of Kennedy, McCarthy and Rocke- Nuclear Non-Proliferatlon Treaty, Pose Enthusiastic cratic leadership In Massachusetts 'Miirtislon, dlsnrrny, and Impntrnce feller, have prepared a letter that and decried the "steady detach- >nly to he corrected four years "The world is still a dangerous cites recent speeches of the Re- Coalition at Rally ment of government from the peo- hence with a Democratic return to place," Cooper went on, "we need publican candidate and asks for ple." Charging that proportional power—Cooper denounced th more than llnger-shaking." To the amplification and enunciation of by Sue Irving '71 representation wus "pro-Russian," hind of reasoning as "basicallly Vice President's plea to "vote your his views on what they consider to maintained that hopes, not your hates," Cooper the vital issues; law About 250 cheering students McGlue what irresponsible." He agreed that be and order, America needs Is control of added his own: "Vote your faith, black capitalism, student dissent, greeted Vice President Humphrey n Nlxnn victory would lend to "n government "on the hauls of cities, colnsflnl moss," of not your feara," and the war In Vietnam. when he arrived at the Sheraton hut of the liven towns, and counties." Ilo nrguoil the American people nnd Iho fa to Excerpts taken from speeches Boston Wed. Oct. 10 to speak to LowKoy, Uut . , . that "busing Wellesley students lo of Hip world. Strong, oiTorllvo the National Association of Retail Nixon has made In the course of Roxbury and vlce-veinu 1h tic* pnillrn exist "only when you nonil- far, Druggists. The number of "Peace Thus the program had pro- the campaign have in common moiallzlng," because such pro- nnte strong candidates, men who grossed in a relatively With Humphrey" signs and the low-key their perhaps-forced liberal and grams are invariably followed by take a stand and present solutions fashion, without disturbance. dovish qualities. "concerned lack of any heckling on this second But The "reformers who want to set up —Humphrey-Muskie, not Nixon- with the introduction of a question students" are hoping to convince trip to Boston noted what seemed regional schools and then you Agnew." period, many, including most of Nixon that these views need re- a significant turning point in the won't have anything to say about the few students present, began iteration In order that they have Humphrey campaign. The students, coopers concern for the Ttepub- where your money goes." Making , to filter out of the auditorium, credibility and influence in the re- many of them members of the new lc"n Pnr, ln lf)nfl Btp from hl " a direct appeal lo the bulk of his y ™ Tlie level of audience partlcipa- mainder of the campaign, Student Coalition for l,r,,pf Humphrey, lM in(M - 'o»'»wlnir thn John- audience, McGltio pronounced tho - t Lou then deteriorated to cryptic The letter, currently posted for waited, cheering and clnpplng until iiiIhIIcIo III at "there worn Wallace program as "prngPHnlvo," Individual comments from audi- signatures in the El Table, reads: invited upstairs where they Mini something wan happen- mobbed because the Alabaman "takes ence members, and the questions "We have heard your call for the the Vice President ing. a i I rhnnco for realignment when he ap- of the middle-class" and represents gradually became more and more meaningful participation of our peared. Unable to speak because nnrt change," for example, Jn of the "thinking of people in" this pointed. There was a burst of ap- generation in the public affairs of this, he returned to the hall tlie incipient prominence of Repub. to and this country who pro- plause when McGlue referred to our country. Many of us are faced deliver his formal Means like Percy, Lindsay, Brooke, address. duce the wealth and pay the the League of Women Voters as with the dilemma of having be- and Rockefeller. "But the bright Most of the students sat on the taxes." the "Plague of Women Vultures," Heved In and supported men who mall and waited 0."" rall* d '" he continued, ". quietly for about He put partial blame for his f. and approving laughter as the were not chosen to be Presidential Nixon got it with the help of 45 minutes for the Vice President 'itchover from the Democratic Wallnce speaker referred again nominees. Strum Thurmond and n 'Southern " to return. He spoke to them for Party lo the American •Independ- and again lo "Tricky Dick." The We have examined the follow- ent Parly slrntegy' nnd Agnew got Ihe noil," 10 to 15 minutes before leaving for on the "know-ll-nll pro- i|iicfltlon of Nixon's alleged "secret ,n R positions which you have taken fessors who arc reiterating Cooper hastened in clnrlfy any Im- his next appointment. whal letter to Wail Street" was Intro- on issues that we believe to be of they heard twenty years ago about plied comparison of Nixon Humphrey spoke of the Import- duccd; Webster denied It; and ,he highest national priority and Karl Marx" Goldwatcr-"Nixon Isn't Gold- ance of ending the hate In America and on "deadweights when Cooper maintained that he believe that, for the most part, in- . there is a great differ- and McCarthy, McGovern, and believed it, dicate a potential for creative lead- of ending the war. In mention- ence between citing the New York the Americans for Democratic them; the difference ing Senator Muskie, the Vice Presi- Ac- Times as a reference, the response ersni P- But, we further believe tion," remarking between an honest, forthright re- dent emphasized that that "the Demo- from the audience lnat vour solutions to these criti- he had chosen actionary and an adroit political was spontan- crats haven't won a fight since cal r0D'ems need reiteration his running mate on his own. He operator." eous moans and hostile comments. P and they came in." expansion was very candid about the lack of ments. in the remaining weeks of the campaign. We suggest that funds which Is so pronounced in Unity Tho Roots As queries concerning METCO, your campaign move in this direc- this campaign and of his desire Vlotnam, crime ln the Streets, The keynote of "Nixon nnd 1nlk lot tlon." "to make up In youthpower what Webster's speech Agnew a was nhnut law and order, and rlght-to-work laws came to Students interested in supporting I can't get In mediapower." Republican unity, apparently but they are because "this country fuzzy when talking about solu- the floor, each speaker answered this movement, should sign the Perhaps the statement In which cannot af- tinns ." he said. on behalf of his candidate, often public he most emphasized ford to follow the policies of the He further as- letter posted in the El a difference merely elaborating Johnson - Humphrey Administra- sai 'ed Nixon's criticism of Attor- on his previous Table. Signatures may also be reg- between his campaign and that of presentaUon. tion." He felt that the nation nev General Ramsey Clark. "Clark fstered with Ann Sherwood. Sever- his opponent was, "If ideas can do could "not afford a forty billion fnvors strong gun control laws, be- To this reporter, however, it ance (235-9089). it, we'll win; If money can do it, dollar a year war," in which "lives my opponent will win, and if you are being lost because the Admin- can do It, America will win." istration won't give our soldiers After Humphrey left, the stu- military support nor will It nego- dents departed. Some had been Expert Repairs Custom Designing tiate." He did not, however, en- there five hours. lighten his fairly receptive audi- ence on Nixon's solution to the CASTING NOTICE Declaring that the nation's Casting for Peter Welss's Marat/ poor "don't need unfulfilled promises or Sade, this year's first Wellesley RICHARD unavailable Federal funds, (but) M-^bic College Theatre production, will private funds, private begin energies," JEWELERS next week. Try-out read- the Cambridge attorney spoke In ings In tho director's office ln general terms of Nixon's general Alumna© Hall will be- Mob., Oct plans for a welfare program— "In- 21, from 7:S0—10:00, and Tue*., centives for families to stay to- Oct. 22, from 2:30—5:30 and gether," a "temporary expedient, 7:30—10:30. Oall-backs not 43 Central Street will be a way of life," aimed at "re- Wed,, Oct. 23, at 7:30. If storing dignity, none not destroying It." of these Wellesley times Is convenient, an Webster chose not to include appointment can be made by Wallace in his political attacks, calling claiming 237-2730 tho Theatre Office <23fc that "he Is not going to win," 0320, ext. 462> or the director'* and that Wallace "Is a living lesson home (235-H89IS). that bad leadership and mis- trust can win 20% of the voters CLOTHES CUPBOARD Student Print Rental Collection The Boston Wellesley College Completely revamped collec- Club Is sponsoring its 18th an- tion of framed, original nine- nual Clothes Cupboard sale next teenth and twentieth century ANDREW'S REXALL PHARMACY week. The sale In Alumnae Hall prints of literary as well as ar- ballroom will be open to tho tistic Interest. Don't miss the 539 Washington St. college community on Wed., Oct. chance to enliven your walls for 23, 12:30—5:00; Thura., Oct. 24, tho entire year for only $3.00. Wellesley Square 10:00—5:00; and Friday, Oct. The collection now Includes 25, 10:00—4:00. In addition to prints by Picasso, Manet's etch- on assortment of used clothing ed profile portrait of Baudelaire, and household Items, there will Mlro's bright colored fantasies, bo new merchandise for sale. Oldenburg's "All Kind of Love," The Pink Elephant THE REXALL 1c SALE IS BACK IN TOWN! Boutique will a Daumler cartoon, Chagalla, feature articles of special value, Calders, Japanese prints, nnd including figurines STARTS THURS., OCT. 17 THROUGH SAT., OCT. 26 nnd small single prints by Laurenoln, .Torn, oriental nigs. There will be fine Glacomottl nnd Paul Jenkins. qualify ladles wear ln the The works will bo loaned oat French Shop. Free Delivery Call 235-1001 Proceeds will go to students Oct. 23rd., starting Anytime to the Wellesley College Devel- at 9:30 am in the Main Corridor opment Fund. of Jewett Arts Center. . .

WELLESLEY NEWS Thursday, October 17, 1968 Page Four Wallace Performs in Boston; Hecklers Steal His Spotlight

by nearly THIS Wallace country, or IS thli by Sue Wing '71 and shapes, signs created Wallace country?' i tl- Wallace mind: This reporter had heard that ^f^J^f^j' —"NOOOOOOOOOO! " and LeMaj- in extremely literary-' "Wallace^ George Wallace —"Wallace will probably call this 1984"; metrical— ' If you liked Hit- effective speaker. She heard that ." his most successful rally . . ler, you'll like Wallace"; third party Preside roll from American In- P°etic "All the way wilh Curtis (Drum didate received considerable crowd \ dependent Parly bnnd; appeurs, framed by American flags, In a don t sacrit ce human ci gnity, ized school busing during his visit the jumbo 5'xlO' blaze of flashbulb glory. Thunder- and . to Boston on Tues., Oct. 8. WHDH ous applause, very first and last c ccl "George Hitler, of }' assured her of the existence the l ! . rows. Another round of "sleg hell" f"™dly fascist Wallace fans on the hill of the at from more verbal middle.) who cheered Th7crowd7'later estimated Boston Common, _ — Ah m happy to be back in . . . when the candidate promised, "Not -"Go.horne, go home, go home, rotunda^ffi.^Jfiand back ™*?Jup the hill, but • dime of your money is going, ne |he majority of those closest to to be used to bus anyone anywhere limber mc *e..speaker, jpoinpa those . - want," and of the mat- _ you don't iff any ^of yo JmM ^ ,„ lhten anta Wallace for dog-catch (photo by Lynn Tucker 71) ;nough to leap over the outside Girls" who sported — ." ronly "Wnllace . , were ". . . go . . . home of ring of permanent benches, — dresses flashing with dozens —(from east side) "... you' In on enthusiastic V-signs) ". . . you are certainly Ir students, That is where this repor- for President" buttons. . "Wallace sick, you're sick, you're . . . have never in life minority In the is why, —"Ah mah made tell- ter was stationed which — reporter assumes they're ". . hell no. . This —(and now, in unison) g° a statement against anyone be- " • we won't go never gotten assigned to get a news story, she truth, having . . . . . sick he11 - ing the , . you're home 2° cause of what they believe, and n° • ended up reviewing a play. prove otherwise. . . . . you're must not stay a chance to . . . you're sick furthermore cannot and Curtain Up — Presi- ." By 5 pm, as local businesses "When ah become the —"Gimme a P!" "PI" in Vietnam . . ." " Boylston St. -Crowd: (at unspoken signal, fln- dent . . — — (louder) . . .no, we won't go i letting out, the "Gimme an I!"— — " V-sign, in . pig, pig, pig . . . . . rotunda was already ringed by stu- gers raised in shaken " . . you're . — "Ah'm willing to live and let . HELL NO, WE WON'T GO ." — dis- time to . . .) "peace, peace, pence go ...... go home. ." " ... on some campuses it's said dents waving black flags and pig home live . .

. (and, alternately) slog hell, just got hero. trlbutlng leaflets condemning . . —"YOU go home—I -"Gimme a G!" that we should lose the war in ." ." ." sieg heil. sieg heil . . I saying . . ." Vietnam . "George Wallace, Enemy of the As was —"When ah become President . . — ." . pence, , . Working Man," and by spectators —Announcer Chaving spoken for " . . peace, peace —"Whaddya got?" —"PIIIIGG!" (firecracker explodes stage right; sizes nearly ten minutes to a less than (Photographers on press podium !" " plainclothesman leaning agiinst in a variety of shapes and -"louder ! ! "PIG ! ! signs in variety of sizes attentive audience) "Ah say, is wildly swivollng equipment to zoom — pig. tree three yards from this reporter shaking a " . . . pig ... pig . . pig, is visibly shaken' plff - . — turn hack control of public " . . . when ah become Presi- Support of Doves, ichnnl system to the people of "lent , Young Dems Urge Ml! 'lis — ~- " ." • always shaking North . . . pig , . pig . . " .'* "OK, Hull's enough, gnng; let Vietnamese flags . . ." — ." him go a few more sentences - " . home . . go home . . go . . — (suddenly) "Black Power! Black Helen Patterson Asks Wellesley Aid —(Hiding in west)" . . . pig . . pig." — Power!" " . . . powers not delegated to " (crowd directs their attention to Working within the electoral As vice-president of the Massa- help from Boston area colleges, the states . . - trcetop for Hous- (swelling) "... PoacE, PcaCK, from which tall black man, system, but at the state and local chusetts Federation Fair £jpr hcndn,ll!ir(Prfl arc on lit. !) ." his fist clenched, Is shouting) characterized aspirations at ing and Equal Righls, she helped PeACK PEACE . . levels, | n Newton Highlands, hui Rome — « —"He's the President of our " BLACK rOWKIt ! last week's first Young Democrats lobby for low-cost housing and work will lip coiiIIhupiI at her con nlry ..." "... speech, speech, speech, meeting. The group is not endors- rent RUpnUwnl programs ttw (miiio, III Midland Rom I, 2 blocks — " . . . speech , . . peace . . . PEACE, . go , ponce , . homo . . ing Vice-President Hubert Hum- Wellesley, ami feels thnt llin Mas- im Dover Road by Hip Wellrntoy pence . ." PEACE, PEACE . phrey for President, but YD's pros- sachusells Committee Against DIs- g„|f course, Vnlunloors may cull — ." —(interval alternating ". . . entitled to respect . of "sieg ident Bobbi Lindberg '70 urged crimination should Inflict stiffer 23f)-2r»7(> for further information, — ', "...... heil" home" s, 's, peace you're . "go "no, no" campaign work for liberal peace penalties upon racist realtors, peace

Mrs. Patterson, a Radcliffo gra- . . . ." not candidates throughout New Eng- sick . go . . peace . . home. to mention "Racist!" "Fascist Action in Education duate in chemistry, received her friends . pig!", "Three cheers for Wallace! land. One of these, Mrs. Helen R. Mah

Vlt?*vs — . . bh Middlebury College, " sieg heil . . .° M.A. fmm and heil, sieg sieg. —Nyay, nyay, nyay!" and consid- Patterson, addressed the College , top priority, again with ments as has spent six years doing medicai lab friends . erably more picturesque expression

pr h nsis on working relationships research. Her husband Is n pro- "Ya nny, George? of sentiment.—Finally, it is Brieflnes were oresented for" "P I»t realiz- the Inner city and the I thfee cSida.es- D™if Iloch ™w fesaor at Iltrwm, Medici Sc ed that the candidate has indeed s ',bu '' ,s When questioned numit who also conduct., nrlynto surgical — don't New Hampshire, running for U.S. „ " ... we want to cast oi left the podium, The crowd dis- '»» Wellesley High fumr over Le- practice will, n Huston hospital. allies nut; they v> perses.) House of Representatives (Mr. need us. and ." 8 S Sh h haV'! <'° u 111 need . Hoeh distinguished himself at the ™° ° !! " »n° «• them The play would have been fun- ^i.?™ .."^ , !"™L °.!^ I 5L —'* called that she had been in favor freshman ; at Middlebury and . . Democratic National Convention . no . hell, no, we won't g nier if some of the players hadn't of its Presentation, and was dis- a sophot . by being arrested after discovering who is at Harvard. . . hell no, we won't go,., hell known their lines so well. appointed when the school and the he could gain access to the hall community failed to handle the with a Dartmouth identification issue in a construclve manner, card.'; Paul O'Dwyer, Senatorial Goldman Addresses Area Rally, candidate from New York; and A member of the Commission Chandler Stevens, an independent on Church and Race, Massachu- running for U.S. Congress from the s *tts Council of Churches, she has Massachusetts third district. also been involved with the work- The three are viewed as har- board °f the Boston School Protests Soviet Anti-Semitism bingers of the New Politics, in the Volunteer Program. At the Col- Eugene McCarthy tradition. lege last year, she acted in an Stu- by Mary Enterllnc '70 since Stalin no one has been government encourages travel to dent representatives asked vol- advisory capacity for Ethos. for Choruses of "Havn Nagilah" beaten or executed merely for be- Spain, another country with which nteers to help these men. Details Other Issues rang over the Roston Common on Ing Jewish, and that until 1967, it has no diplomatic relations. are available at the El Table, Patterson's plalfoi Sunday aflernoon as area Jews Soviet Jews could visit Israel as Zionism Gross Roots Effort includes stands for ellmli held n rnlly In support of Russian I. ists md were al- "The official state policy is to In relation to the campaign for punishment, the Institution of n Jews, featured speaker was Mar- lowed to emigrate. urge the reconciliation of families the Massachusetts State Senate, Synngoguca state graduated Income tax, Im- shall Goldman, associate professor Restored in Armenia," stated Goldman. "Yet Mrs. Patterson emphasized, "The his proved mental and public health of economics at Wellesley. On trip this summer, Gold- the government is infuriated by more we do at the grass roots ask only they man observed that are programs, alleviation of the trans- "We that be synagogues this kind of appeal by Jews." level, the better the position we'll treated as other groups," Goldman being restored. He realized this Jewish calendars are allow- portation crisis, automobile insur- No be in after four years, should the declared and asked that they be may be only for foreign tourists ed in the Soviet Union," Goldman ance reform, and regional plan- unthinkable happen in November." allowed their own literature in but the local Jews benefit. commented, "so that even the cele- ning for the Charles River Basin. The sharp, articulate mother of Ihelr own language, Ihelr right to Yet, there are only four or five bratlon of this holiday depends on The major emphases of her cam- four is excited about pulling an ellgk synagogues In the pnslern European word of mouth. I've seen the boot- however, ureas upset on her incumbent opponent, paign, rest In Hip \„ Hi pnrl of Russia. In the synagogue lecged calendars—hand-copied and of rights, rnlr housing, human mid i Kiev, conservative David II. I-ocltc of ramlll broken up In nit hough he already knew passed on." rducntlonn! progress. She relates Wellesley. She is optimistic, as the Ilio answer, Goldman asked If ll Prayers, Songs these Issues to dlssallsfncllon newly formed district or Welles- her wns the only synagogue and was A short prayer service on the with the type ley, Weston, Dedham, Needham, of lty In prised when an old Jew answer- steps of the Massachusetts State which bringing up "There are two House began the rally, and then the and sixty per cent of Newton con- this past summer with his family, ^ —one here and cmmren on • upstairs." participants marched across the tains thirty per cent r?3ch of Re- - Goldman stated that he has seen As recent examples of Commons to Parkman Bandstand publicans, Democrats and Indepen- Campaign Problems nnti-scmitism for himself and anti-semi- tfsm, Goldman cited Premier where Goldman spoke. Israeli sing- dents. Victory, she predicts, will The major handicap she feels In heard about it from Soviet Jews, Aleksel Kosygln's dfscovery of ing and dancing followed his rely upon getting the vote out. the campaign is a late start, hnv- About 400 people, mostly youths, 'dirly llltle Jew from Galatla" at oYess. Pushes Human Rights ing become a nominal candidate gathered for the rnlly, n meeting with Czech officials. A petition was circulated which With an impressive backlog of only after Labor Day. She offered held In this country In occordnnce During demonstrations In Russia asked that the Jews in the Soviet experience in human rights groups, the use of her name to prevent with relehratlons In the streets of against Ihe occupation of Czechos- Union be recognized as a minority she describes herself as having a the Republicans from running on Russia every year by Jews—mostly lavakia, police arrested five or six nationality and that their rights grasp college students—on Simchat Tor- on what is happening in the uncontested race, and found her- h °™ aS """" RUSSian be ™5tored - urban crisis, particularly as it re- hl'ThVhoUday of\hT Giving' "of ™ ( self with 1,000 votes in excess of order i Specifically, Torah. Goldman declared, to incite other Rus- the petition asked that lates to the suburbs. Mrs. Patter-' those needed in a write-in for the ns against Jews. the use all Demonstrations do have an ef- government means to son was an organizer of METCO, primary on September 17. There is discrimination," Gold- end antl-semltlsm and the propa- which buseb students between Rox- fect." n declared In the Interview, ganda against Israel which has fill- bury and Wellesley High School, ^"^"^^ ^^S^SmS ul It takes peculiar forms." As cd the mass media since the six «"> organizational llnd.n.lons rear" dence of Inconsistency In Soviet days* of war, that the Jews be al- J, ^I^to refpond to eTtabhSmestablishmentnt of bus serviceT)^from ^ Tu^ . I'oliey, life lrif, tno | r nom iSi Sho hns cn. , I , he pointed lt that lowed to live a communal and becn lf ,,1( y W( ro t om | ct ely the Roxbury to the Route 128 Indus- stopped '° he permitted their own educa- durscil by n nmnher o( McCnrUiy ,! Ivi howeve" there wKn't Government 11 travel to trial complex to promote employ- Israel because It ™< grou[JSi a]ons wim MasaQCllul be government antl-semltlsm." In has > diplomatic ment mobility, relations Pax, and hopes to enlist student his speech. Goldman noted that with Israel. Yet, the familie i

Thursday, October 17, 1968 WELLESLEY NEWS Page Five Raisin Hell Breaks Loose

by Barbara Schlaln '89 unjust and Inappreciative. "Virtu- "Sometimes she has to kill a mare Wcllesley A Junior Show can osity" was delightful; "Hades is a daily," "Ou sont ]es gloutons?", be one of the most delightful tra- Hell of a Place" was one of the and "the Latest Trot Poll " are ditions in a school suffering from cleverest and catchiest numbers to not even up to Paar. dearth of tradition, or it can emerge in four years' worth of Foggy Fun rank iong the deadliest. And Junior Shows and Pudding Thca- Nor will rambling lists of Shaw's what or thinks of it depends to tricals; the and uninhibited lyrics pluys or famillur landmarks of a large extent on what and rendition of 'The Wine or Drown, Princeton, Harvard et. al. mands of it. Life" created one of those happily (notable exception: Wigglesworlh, Hope lurks eternal In the hu- rousing moments when the audi- of course) qualify for anything but man breast, apparently, for, de- ence is hi > much fun as the a Boo-In, though there were some spite the disappointments of the cast, which is to say a great deal, joyful, seemingly accidental peark last two years, this reviewer ar- Strained Moments —eg "I've had courae'e (hee rived at Raisin Hell with visions With the exception of "Fire and hee)." of One Knight's Stand dancing Ice" (somehow in a chorus marching No critic, no matter how de- her head. One Knlgbt's Stand it down the aisles remains effective), manding, would expect Helen wasn't, but, glory (he be to the Cape rest of the score was, In vary- Hayes from n Junior Show and Committee, it wasn't Frecwheelln', ing degrees, unremarkable, though Ann Flcam-y's Klcxcx has thls'ono'a either faulty - perftinnuiices murn.il any full iidmlnillon for her ustonlsh- Hell at WelleBley potential iippruelutlun of M.nys like Ing ablllly to deliver all those puns Suspension of disbelief Is a "Heaven Out of Hull" and "Is with a straight race. If not for her thing entirely apart from the not There an 0o,y flrea ' Ortmy. Answer." The lyrics, near-extraordinary stage presence ' y ' (photo by Lynn Tucker 71) unreasonable desi when kind audible, were cleverer than Nancy Bellcoe was a devilish of inner cohesiveness. What was average. Satan, although she expectedly be- Marilyn Crandall's choreography GIFTS disappointing ahout Raisin Then there INCREASE Hell was the script. One came bogged down in the inane was mol'e than adequate, although was that its near-magnificent •an just The Wellesley College Develop- envision the Cape Com- expressions of unrequited love. ,nerc was the usual problem with opening act was dissipated in nlttee having ment Fund reports a significant a a contest to see who Timlin Llngoa overdid a rather discontinuity between dance und flood of not-terribly-funny puns. lould insert Increase in alumnae giving and thu most puns Into tlio niipuiflu movie, duate." as do all of Rachel's t,,.i.rgences Odd But True into normality. "Rachel, Rachel" at its best lets SAVE! For her rcul interest as a char- SAVE! SAVE! us see the humanity behind what acler lies In her ability to accept is stiflingly petty in Rachel's so- limitations, to put hope on the ciety, and Rachel herself, creating shelf, to LOWEST CHRISTMAS RATES TO CALIFORNIA be almost unable to ac- an oppressive sense of its reality, cept love when It comes to her, and but also expanding the viewer's to suppose that It was unreal any- LOS ANGELES or SAN FRANCISCO sympathies and leading him to ac- way when It goes. She gets some cept a more complicated view of satisfaction from her school child- Complete Round Trip Fare No Other Charges life. ren, and some subtle revenge in Film is perhaps the form that her quiet imaginings and mutter- — ALSO FLIGHTS TO SAN DIEGO — can render ennui, ugliness and ings, and when the flatness- movie tqkes her GROUP the dulling anguish FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20th RETURN: SUNDAY. 5, that out of her splnsterly setting JANUARY 1969 •'rises from the und DEPARTURES; SATURDAY, DEC. 21it character's in- makes her blossom (or any day between Jan. 1 and Jan. 19 ability to Int., u compe- express himself—most tent and normal wonnn, it loaus easily, escaping the hazard lis MEET PEOPLE IN THE CALIFORNIA that small but beguiling magic. RUSH the film itself becomes boring Undertaker's Daughter This movie creates . . . MIXED a state TRAVEL . . of mind A grosser fault arising from GROUPS . by miring the a pat audience in slowly- view of her gagging character lies In the M.l.T. trivia, focusing on small movie's heavy — WELLESLEY — HARVARD — RADCLIFFE but reliance on flash- always present horrors that backs to Rachel's childhood. few Rachel has to put up A BRANDEIS — TUFTS — PINE with and of these MANOR — SIMMONS arc effective In h ^ifiht en- BABSON — WHEELOCK — and others. SPACE IS LIMITED — RESERVE YOUR SEAT NOWI DOWN Call: 491-0050 ask for WITH Miss Sherman

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by Botsy Bowman '71 servative feelings toward recent will try to decide if the American

William F. Buckley, Jr. on "How political events. A correspondent press is telling it like it is, exam- Are We Doing?" on who has covered the events In ining convention and election cov- "Black Power and Civil Rights"? Vietnam since 194$, David Shoen- erage on Dec. 1. Believe it or not, these speakers brun talked about "The United The Forum feels that the dls- and many others are among the States and Vietnam" on Oct. 6. cussion it offers under acknowl- well-knowns who will speak at the Last Sunday, the Forum presented edged leaders is one of the "safety- Ford Hall Forum this fall. for the first time a pint'] of four valves of democracy." It also of- What is the Ford Hall Forum? widely read critics — 21 Hot Nor- fers Boston citizens and students It is an assembly of interested ton of the Sunday Record-Amcri- a chance to listen to qualified men citizens who want to hear a speak- can Advertiser, Deac Rossell, mov- ar,d women speak, a chance to er discuss a topic of current in- le critic for Boston After Dark, "ea r individual members' opinions, teiest and then talk about them- Percy Shain, TV editor, and Mic- and mos t of a ", a chance to quest- selves. The Forum me?!s every hael Steinberg, music critic, both loi) others' views and clarify their Sunday night at 8 pm at Jordan for the Boston Globe. This panel own - Hall in Boston. The program is in discussed the question "Do the its 61st season this year. Regular Lively Arts Reflect Today's Money Available memberships are available for five ciety?" dollars. Other members of the au- Fururo ProRrain IFor Scholarships dience may make a contribution at The Forum's program for the Four scholarships, established the do t >f they wish. rest of the fall rends like a Who's by Wellesley's trustees and called Not ICnlorliiliiiiient Who llsl In current events. Dick the Trustee Scholarships, are avail- According to Its own lltornLurp, Cregnry will speak this Sunday, able to distinguished members of 3500 "ihc Forum in not n deliberative lot lowed on Oct. 27 hy the Rev. the senior class for study in the Hssembly, It Is not