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Connecticut College Digital Commons @ Connecticut College 1964-1965 Student Newspapers 3-11-1965 ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 Connecticut College Follow this and additional works at: hp://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/ccnews_1964_1965 is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Newspapers at Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1964-1965 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. e views expressed in this paper are solely those of the author. Recommended Citation Connecticut College, "ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17" (1965). 1964-1965. Paper 3. hp://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/ccnews_1964_1965/3
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Page 1: ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 · 2016. 12. 22. · ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 ... 3

Connecticut CollegeDigital Commons @ Connecticut College

1964-1965 Student Newspapers

3-11-1965

ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17Connecticut College

Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/ccnews_1964_1965

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Newspapers at Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. It has beenaccepted for inclusion in 1964-1965 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. For more information, please [email protected] views expressed in this paper are solely those of the author.

Recommended CitationConnecticut College, "ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17" (1965). 1964-1965. Paper 3.http://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/ccnews_1964_1965/3

Page 2: ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 · 2016. 12. 22. · ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 ... 3

CONNCENSUSCONNECTICUT COLLEGE

Vol. 5O--No. 17Price 10 centaNew London, Conneetteut, Thnrsday, March II, 1965

Jean Torsen '65 Distinguished HumanitiesBilllRC Conference Opens Today,As Woodrow Wilson Scholar Offers Grants, Authorities on Law to Speak

L . A ts liThe Relevancy of Irrelevancyoans In r ot International Law in Contem-porary World Politics" is the top-ic of the College's annual confer-ence on world affairs to be heldhere this weekend.

Jean Torsen, a senior at Con-necticut College, has oeen award.ed a Woodrow Wilson NationalFellowship to support her fitstyear of graduate study. She plansto do graduate study leading tothe Ph.D. and to enter a. careerin college teaching. The FordFoundation's first grant in 1958dramatically enlarged the pro-gram.Over 11,000 faculty-nornlnated

college seniors in the UnitedStates and Canada competed forthe grants, and Miss Torsen wasone of the 1,395 chosen. She isa classics major and is conduct-ing an independent reading pro-gram in Virgil.Winning a Woodrow Wilson

Fellowship is one of the mostprized academic distinctions givento college seniors. The programbegan in 1945 on a small scale atPrinceton University. In 1946, Mr.Charles Shain became a memberof the fellowship program. Threeother college presidents have wonthe award.In addition to receiving full

tuition and tees tor the flrst yearof study at the graduate school

by Susan ScrantonSenator Claiborne Pell (D.

Rhode Island), Chairman of thesenate Special Subcommittee onArts and Humanities, has propos-ed a bill to establish a NationalHumanities Foundation. T hiscommission is designed to "devel-op and promote a broadly con-ceived policy of support for tilehumanities and the arts."A Conn Census reporter asked

Mr. Livingston Biddle, Special As-sistant to Senator Pell, if itwould be possible, under The PellBill, to receive assistance in orderto build a Music and Arts Build-ing, such as the one presentlyproposed by Connecticut College.Mr. Biddle replied, "Not underthe present bill, as it stands, go-ing into committee, but perhapsit would be possible by the timethe bill comes out of committee."Subcommittees of both the Senateand the House of Representativesscheduled hearings on the blll dur-ing the period Fehruary 23-26_Mr. Biddle added further that

the point of the bill as far as col-leges were concerned was to "es-tablish a program of grants to in-stitutions of learning." The bill,he said, would "stimulate privategiving to the arts." ~e founda-tion would be "slmllar to the NewYork State Council on the Arts,"which etlmulated private dona-tion to the arts there.The foundation, in accordance

with The Pell 'Bill, will establisha Board comprising twenty memobers to be appointed by the Pres-ident; in addition, the UnitedStates Commissioner of Educa-tion, the Librarian of Congress,-the Secretary ot the Smithsonian,and the Chairman of the Nation-al Council of the Arts will serveon the Board.The functions of the foundation

as presen tly proposed in The PellBill, are broad, and the founda-tion could be expanded to includemany fields connected with thehumanities. The foundation will"establish a national policy of thepromotion of scholarship, edufa-tlon, research, and the creativework, and performance, in the hu-manities and arts."The foundation could be of as-

sistance to scholars and teachersof a small liberal arts collegesuch as Connecticut. The pro-posal will "award scholarshipsand graduate fellowships, includ-

See HPell"-Page 7

'46 and '65 Woodrow WIlson Fellows Charles E. Shain and JeanTorse n,

of his choice, a Woodrow WilsonFellow also is awarded a stipendof $1,800 plus dependency allow-ances.

Honorable mention for thisaward have been accorded fourConnecticut College seniors, In-cluding Cecilia Holland, ElizabethParsons, Sarah Tehan and DianeWillen. They were among the1,242 selected, file majority ofwhom are expected to receive al-ternate awards from other sources.Cecilia Holland, a History major,is pursuing an honors study en-titled "Albsolutism," which in-volves case studies of five coun-tries and the construction of, a"pure type" model. Diane Willen,also a History major, is conduct-ing an Honors study on "Bis-marck, the Liberals and the Prus-sian Constitutional Conflict, 1862.-1855." Sarah Tehan, a psychologymajor, has completed an inde-pendent study of "The Effects ofRace on Academic Achievement."She is currently finishing a studyon verbal learning. Beth Parsonsis conducting a study on "TheOperas of Joseph Haydn." She Isa music history major.

Kanter, Schein, Lane ElectedClass Presidents for '65 -'66

Sandee Kanter, Britta Scheinand Kay Lane were elected presi-dents of the classes of '66, '67 and'68 respectively in campus elec-tions held last week.

Sendee, an economics majorfrom Beverly, Mass., will workwith Sandy Jones as vice presi-dent, Toni Gold as secretary and

Civil Rights ClubIn Selma, Alabama, Americans

were driven from the polls bytear gas, clubs, beatings, and gun-fire. In Selma, Alabama, Ameri-cans who tried to exercise their"guaranteed" rights are today ly-ing in hospital beds sufferingfrom the brutality of law enforce-ment there. But in Selma, too,Americans are continuing, in theface of brutality, to demonstratefor their rights as Americans andthey are being joined by clergy-men, wives of congressmen, doc-tors, civil rights leaders, and oth-er concerned Americans from allregions of this country.

The Connecticut College CivilRights Club supports the aclivi-

Karen Schoepfer, treasurer. She ties Civil Rights org~tions insucceeds Judy Stickel, recently Selma,. Alabama, and will demon-elected president of the student strate Its support in '3 march togovernment. the United States Post Office in

New London; If you, too, wouldOther '66 officers chosen were: like to express your concern for

A.A. representative, Linda Law- those suffering the terror, via-ton; song leader, Linda Johnson; Ience, and brutality of justice insocial chairman, Sue Mikldesen; Alabama, won't you join us in ourSee IIClass P:resldents"-Page 6 march at 4:00 today at Fanning?

Sandee Kant.er, Britta Jo Schein, and Kay Lane ...presidents ot theclasses of '66, '67, and '68.

"

Four distinguished speakerswill participate in the conferencesponsored by the InternationalRelations club and scheduled forthe main lounge of Crozier-Williams.

The conference will give spe-cific attention to particular doc-trines or rules of internationallaw in relation to the chan~es ininternational politics from theperiod before World War IT to thepost war period. Considerationwill be given such topics as thelegal implications of Americanpolicy in CUba, Berlin, and VietNam.

Professor Quincy Wright, well·known author and authority oninternational law, will speak on"International Law and Interna-tional Conflicts" Friday eveningat 8 o'clock. Mr. Abram Chayneswill examine the importance ofinternational law today, on Sat-urday at 10:30 a.m. Dr. Edgar vonSchmidt- Pauli, Consul General of'the Federal Republic of Germany,will discuss contemporary Ger-man foreign policy in the Middle

Abram Chaynesday on "Jnternational Law-TheView from the Common Lawyer."The former legal adviser to theDepartment of State, Mr. Chaynesholds degrees from Harvard uni-versity, where he was studenteditor of the Harvard Law Re-view and later professor of law.He has worked in a legal capa-city with Chester BOWles, formergovernor of Connecticut, andwith the late Supreme Court Jus.tice Felix Frankfurter.Dr. von Schmidt-Pault will dis-

cuss contemporary foreign policyin the Middle East in an informalsession with interested personsFriday afternoon in the mainlounge.He was formerly director of

the executive office of the StateSecretary in the German foreignoffice, the chief career official inthe Gennan diplomatic service.Prior to holding that position, hewas a member of the legal divi-sion of the Foreign Office.A panel discussion on Saturday

afternoon at 1 :30 will completethe weekend conference. Par-tiel-pating will be Professors Wrightand Chaynes, along with Dr. vonSchmIdt-Pauli and Mr. Robert T.Huang of the Republic of China.Mr. Huang was senior Profes-

sional Officer for his country atthe United Nations from 1946 to1962.

All interested persons are in-vited to attend the conference,the fifth in a series of annualconferences sponsored by theLR.C_

Robert T. Huang

East at 4 o'clock Friday after-nOOD.Professor Wright has distin-

guished himself both in public af-fairs and in the academic field. Hehas assisted the United States gov-ernment in legal matters in varl-ous capacities, including that oftechnical adviser to the Americanmembers of the Nuremberg Mil-itary Tribunal in 1945.He has lectured at universities

in Europe, India and Africa, andis currently professor of pub-lic affairs at the University of Vir-ginia and professor emeritus inthe field of international relationsat the University of Chicago.at his many publications, three

or the best known are A Study otWar, International Law and theUnited Nations and ContemporaryInternational Law.-Mr. Chaynes, the second fea-tured speaker, will speak Satur- Dr. Edg.... von Schmidt-Paoli

INTERNATIONAL LAW WEEKENDSchedule of Events

01:00p.m., Friday, Mer ch 12 Dr, Edgar Von Schmidt-PauliLecture and Question session on German Foreign Polley

8:00 p.m., Friday, March 12 Professor Quincy WrIght"International Law and International Conflict"

10:30 a.m., Saturday, March L'l Mr. Abram Chayes"International LaW-The View of the Common Lawyer"

1:80 p.m., saturday, March 13 Panel Discussion(Main speakers plus Mr. Robert T. Huang)

Page 3: ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 · 2016. 12. 22. · ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 ... 3

Page Two CODnCeD8U8Thursday, March II, 1965

Con nee n sus Ministry of Disturbanceby Bunny BertoIette least that the college coulddo ls

Established 1916 If I should dle before I'mhome issue helmets and combat boots.Pubu.h~ by the students ot conneeueut Collegeevery Thursday through· Please have this carved on my So you miss the boat to Bermuda.

~:~W:n~uep year trom september to June, except durin&, mId·yean and tombstone: Better that than have your b~t.second cJu. entry authorized at New London. Connecticut. Her heavenly journey was begun tered little body shipped home m---------.:------------.:----------, In the wild stampede for the 4:41. a crate!

She ran the race but died in vain. The sad thing about the wholeHer epitaph-HI missed the train." situation is that those who man-There is nothing llke a battle age to avoid the iast-mtnute scram-

to the death to make one really ble are no better off than theirappreciate those twelve sweet mangledIrtends.Reducedto blith-

' •• 1.1.11 • 11110 .... a. ,...fUHt • UII r ....IlCI.cD I· dL L ' days of spring vacation. For many ering idiocy by three hour res anof us, there is a good chance that a paper, on top of packing. andwe might begin relaxing en route m a kin g travel reserv~tions,-strapped to a stretcher in the they're lucky if they can pick upback of an ambulance. Nail polish the phone to call a cab. You'll seewill fix a run in a stocking, but 'them Thursday walkin~ aroundit won't do much for a run in the campus: glassy-eyed, sUltc~e ~nleg! one hand and both feet gomg. illThis pre-vacation madness is opposite directions. And babbling

remtntscent of the the good 01' to themselves-babbling away,days at the stockyards in Chicago. happy as pigs in a puddle. Prob-We're kept here until 3:50 on Prt- ably never make it off the hill,day and then it's "head 'em up poor souls. Not. without rollerand move 'em out." I should risk skates and a good swift kick.my life for three credits? If we Spring Vacation, Sure is a nicemust have calendar days, then the idea, wasn't it?

Member.(~UU,"II , ••• U'IU.~ AIIU·CITIIIIl. lY

National Advertising Service, Inc.Colleee Publishers Bep.rMeDtattve

18 East 50 st. New York, N. Y.

Aeeoeiated Collegiate PreeaIntercollegiate Preu

Edltol'-in--ChlefJanet Matthews

Jl<anaclD~ Edit.,Anne Taylor

'" Edltorial StallAaaht&Qt Manacinl' BcUtol' Button Brush '67News EdItor Rae Downes '67Feature EdItors Tessa Miller '66. Lealie White '66i-W EdItor Mary McCarty '66

eup EdItors Wendy James '68. Betsy North '66AdverlislniaD Mary Ann Campbell, Fran WattenbergBusine.. ace· carol Davis '65C1I'CUlatlOD Anne xeer '65. Dinsmore Fulton '68Es:chao.ces Carolyn Shimkus '65, Suzie Mainzer '68MlnJstry of Disturbance Bunny Bertotette '65C&rtoonlate Susan Freiberg '66, Sue Bristol '68

Senior BoardNancy Baum '65, Sally Higgins '65, Nancy HerrIck '66, Karen Kunstler '65,Marge Tuppllng '65, Cynttua MIller '66, vtrgtnta Chambers '65, Sandy Hol-land '65, Joan Lebow '65.

StaftKate Curtis, LIzzie Dean, Carolyn Lewis, Merry Usher. Marianna Kautman,Allce Daghltan, Joan Kowal, Reggie Gambert, Chrlstlne Schreyer, MOlly Hage-boeck, Joan Lebow, Barb Johnston Mary d'Esopo, Jann Mackenzie. SherryBauman, Adele LlpotskybeGlnger Puder, Pat Altobello, Maureen McCrea,Ann Par-trow, Judi Green rg. Letters to the Editor

To the Editor:The conversation on campus re-

garding narcotics has been color-ed by a tone of shock. That agirl at Connecticut College shouldresort to such a stupid experi-ment and blight the name of ourcampus is the primary concern

On a crisp Friday during next year's football season a of many. Those .expressing theplatfonn of Connecticut College girls will be waiting for the hope that the experiment is In·New Haven railroad. And they will continue to wait. The dlvidual, however, are completelyNew Haven will have ceased to exist. ignoring the real Issue, the under·For years we have been saying, "Some day the New Haven lying cause of the ;ndlvidualact..11 t "B As college students, we should beWI sop. ut we never believed it. The time has come to aware that drug addiction,like al.

consider the issue seriously. coholism, is a sickness, and .thatThe bankrupt line has been losing money steadily under underlying the continual need f~r

its trusteeship management; it has requested the ICC to al- narcotics is an insecurity or emo.low it to abandon a third of its service to New York City. tional dlsorder. .Clearly the New Haven will gradually be forced to eliminate The college. student today 1SII' . I th·· dun d e r consIderable pressurea passenger service, un ess some Ing IS one. which causes him extreme tensionIn Hartford and Washington hearings are open and nU-1and anxiety. For those of us who

merous proposals are being presented. The alternative solu- are lucky enoughto be emotional·tions must not disregard the New Haven's service value to Iy secure becausewe are support·the whole northeast corner of the country. ed by family and friends, ~nd forN t I N Y k d C . t b R I those of us who findmeanmgando on y ew or an OI;mectIcu, ut hode S- conviction in our work, there is no

and and Massachusetts-and Marne I and New Jersey-are need to seek anti-social outletsconcerned with the flow of goods and people which the New Some students however ar~Haven provides. These vital streams of travel and com- lacking stability and a se~se ofmerce must not be allowed to dry up. identity; some are not supportedThe long-term solution of the New Haven Railroad and by family and friends. If serious,

the long-tenn health of New England and New York rest their insecurities might result Inh

. f h . a nervous breakdown alcoholismon t e. cooperatIOn 0 t e states served by the "aI!ro~d. -r:he or addiction. ' 'authorrty should be a supra-stat-: age-ncy, semI-publIc, With The fact that the girl who ex·power to own and operate the raIlroad and sell bonds to the perimented with marijuana wentpublic. These bonds would finance the purchase and improve- to >the infirmary may denotements of the New Haven, and would be underwritten by Fed- "sense" on her part, but more im-eral funds. The states and Washington should underwrite portant it reminds us that narcot·operating deficits for a temporary transition period only. ic addlction is not a crime b,~t a

.. . SIckness. Does the college rIseThe cooperative ~uth?rlty co~ld undertake th~ exp-:nslve above"mono or Asian fiu?

program of. moderruzatIOn and !mprovement whIch Will en- As young adulls, we should beable the raIlroad to compete With other methods of trans- aware that progressive narcoticsportation. With imaginative management, the New Haven legislation ;s desperateiy needed.could again become a profitable organization. Not the weak addicts, but theThis combination of temporary subsidy plus long tenn ?ushers~those who maken~cot.I . . th h· h ffi . I . H rtf d d ICSavailable, are the crmunals.p ann~ng IS e course.w IC our 0 CIa S In a or an Our attitudes are important Ad·W~shmgton must take If they are to rescue the New Haven dIction can be raised to the levelRallroad.-L.W. of alcoholism-I.e., regarded not:'as a crime but as a disease----only

if public opinion is favora!>le. Wemust reaot neither with shock norwith ideas of morality but mustlook for the cause of the prob-lem. Only then can we recognizeour responsibility.

Hilary H. Harrington '65

Editorial • • •

No Exit

Off KeyLast week's list of Phi Beta Kappa awards was impres-

sive; it also had a secondary significance. Of the two largestdepartments on campus, one was heavily represented, _theother was not represented at all.This is certainly not to say that this very large department ~~:sh~~~\OnfUSed two Issues

has no students worthy of academic honors. Indeed, that is here"that of a girl who ls experi·the very problem. menting with marijuana, as in thePhi Beta Kappa is detennined to a great extent, by the campus case) and that of the 'ha·utward evidence of the students academic work, i.e., grades. bitual drug addlct,who needs theo drugs perhaps for the reasons youBut many of our professors insist that "grades have no mean- state. We were not talking abouting." One of the professors in the department so conspicu- narcotics addicts in our editorial,ously absent said recently, "Oh, I know what an A is, and we were talking of a girl led toI'm usually sure of the D's, and F's. But the B's could be experiment "by those who makeC's and the C's could be B's." With such uncertainty, many narcotics available."professors choose to give the C. In a recent interview, Dr. Hail,

the campus physician! pointedAnd it is the C grade, the one given casually, to the stu- out that not all medlcal doctors

dent who has gotten A's and B's at other schools in equiva-i are convinced that addiction, orlent courses, or even more significant, those who have gotten alcoholism.. for that matter. startshonors grades in advanced courses in other fields at Con- as_a medIcal problem. Dr. Hall

. k h t d ... t f h' 'sald, "They becomemedIcalprob·nectlcut College, that eep~ t . ese s u en.., ou 0 onor pro- lems, but the question is, lnltlally,grams, out of honorary SOCIeties,out of graduate schools. IIs their addlcti~nan illne~s,or IsIs it fair that any department do this to its own students? 1t caus<;dby socl~i,legIslative,and

f th· t h· th t th d moral madequacles?"Are our faculty t~at uns,:,re 0" "elr e.ac?mg a ey are I Dr. Hall continued that marl·not say a student s work IS of A qualIty. juana is "technically not addic-At Yale earlier this year a study was done of grading tive." Marijuana Is a habituating. . d ts· At C t· t C II drug, one that creates a psycho-dIscrepancIes between .epartmen . . onnec ICU 0 •e~e lo~icaldependence;there ar,. usu·a record of all grades In all courses IS kept. Granted, It IS ally no withdrawal symptomsdifficult to evaluate In"ading differences, but when the re-Iwith habituating dru~s. On thesuits show so blatantly, it is time to look c1osely.-A.K.T. other hand, she said, the addIcting

drugs cause physiological depend-ence, including withdrawal symp-1:oms.Here, she stressed, we are talk-

ing about an experimenter, a"daredevil" attempt; and "experi-mentation and addiction are twocompletely different Issues." Yes,involvement with drugs can be asickness, Dr. Hall said, byt "ithappens to be a crime as well. Wemay not ;think tllat is fair, orright, or reasonable, but it is acrime."Certainly, Miss Harrington, we

must look for the "cause of theproblem,'! even when the case is,as in this one, a matter of experi-mentation. It is fine to say that"we must react neither withshock nor with ideas of morality"when we are discussing addiction,when we are talking about a per-son who physiologically needs adrug. But :here we are talkingabout a "daredevil'! attempt, a de-fiance of law."Suppose the cause of the prob-

lem lies within the field of moral-ity," Dr. Hall said. "Then you'dbetter look at morality. I don'tthink we should be afraid to men-tion morals.'!Granted, the problem of narcot-

ics needs wider understanding.Bu1: the tirst step to understand·ing the problem is separating theissues. You make a tine plea forthe narcotics addict and the al-coholic, but we weren't talkingabout either of them. We wereconcerned with an experimenteron the college campus, a girl whodefied law and common sense,and then dropped her experiment.The breaking of law is a moral

problem, Miss Harrington, es-pecially when common sensebacks up the law.By dropping the experiment

vhe girl showed that her ownsense triumphed, and by triumph.ing, helped the administration ofthe law; for her testimony willcertainly help to convict the realcriminals! the pushers. And forthat you should be happy.

A.K.T.r

To the Editor:We have establishedour objec·

tive criterion for evaluating ateacher, effectiveness. But whatwei forget is that students are awhole mass of subjective entities.While a teacher may not be ef-fective for some stUdents, he orshe is effective for others. Theword "effectiveness" becomes onlya relative tenn. Therefore Ithink we ought to leave the t~ach.ers alone. If teachers were· able tobe manipulated,and I don't thinkthe majority are this way, wemight end up disappointedby Ourown tampering.

Cynthia iFuIIer '66----To the Edltor:In reply to the controversy cur-

rently raging over the quality ofteaching and the student's part indetennining this nebulous qual-ity:There is no doubt that student

opinion cannot be taken as the0.nly criterion for judging effec-tlvely the success of a professor.ynder the tradition· of academicIndep~ndence. however, the stu.odent IS the only person in directcontact with a professor in hisrole in the classroom. I do not dis.pute the advisab~ity,in fact the

necessity, of faculty and adrnlnls,trative opinion in judging schol-arship. But scholarship, I believe,should not be the sole aim of ourprofessors; and hopefully it is not.Rather, the college professorshould be an integrated beingcomposed of botJ: scholarshipand effective 'teaching. To discov-er the degree of success on a pro-fessor'S part, obviously otherscholars in his field, as well ashis students, must be questioned.To this latter end, I offer a

suggestion: professors could berequired to distribute,as doesMr. Holden among others, a com-prehensive questionnaire evaluat-ing quality and quantity of boththe work and tile teacher. Al-though the tabulated results couldonly be submitted to the adminis-tration on a voluntary basis, Ibelieve the suggestions and com-mendations would be invaluableto the individual professors. Nat-urally. some comments would re-fiect little thinking by the stu-dent, but the professor should beable to distinguish between inaneand serious criticism. It is myopinion that a required 'Critiqueof each course would be an ef-fective initial step towards a morerepresentative view of the ef-fective professor. For whetheror not an individual professor vol·unteered his results to the admin-istration, he himself would! learnhis strengths and weaknesses inthe classroom rol~.

1 Ellen Glascook '67

To the Editor:Needless to say, I shall be de-

lighted that our numbers will bedecreased next year; I shouldonly hope tilat the rejects bethose who fail to understandthat Connecticut College is not acistern timidly set 'Out to catchthose who fall from the "Heaven-ly seven." It is time that this·college has become one of tfue topprestige academic schools in thecountry, but this fact should notbe used to stimulate a picky, com-petitive sensitivity with thoseschools which :have long been inthe limelight. The aim of Con-necticut College should be at alltimes the internal perfection of itsexcellence as an academic institu-tion, not the beautification of aproduct dropped on the collegemarket.I cannot help but feel that al·

though the editors of our papermay in fact be HHeavenly Seven"rejects, the greater number of ourstudent body is not. Since Con~necticut was 'the ·first choice notonly for myself but also for manyof my colleagues, some of whomwere accepted by more than oneof the llSeven Sisters" I feel gross-ly misrepresented. It is not unusu~al that those who have oncebreathed the air of !heavenlygreatness should acquire an in-feriority complex that spreads notonly throughout their own livesbut even to the college with wbic!h.they associate, but is unfair to as-sume that all the students ofConnecticut College suffer thesame delusion. Speaking· on be-half of the students who were in-telligent enough to choose Con-necticut out of sincere admirationfor the school, I am thoroughlydisgusted with the college inferior·ity complex ·that has been foistedon us all. I would not have ap-pliedhere had I thought it were asecond rate institution. Lastweek's editorial was 'an insult tothe abilityof all students present.ly enrolledhere.On the question of "more se-

lective" standards I would sub-mit that the best student bodiesare obtained not through exclusi-vis tic, rigid scales of achievement,but.rather through a jUdicialbal·ancmg of the record the inter·view, and the refere~ces of theapplicant. A great academic in-stitution must begin with talent·ed faculty, but at the same time!t.must acquire a group of ·prom·lsmg and curious students. Theway to do this is not throughquantitative competition of highschool achievement but ratherthr~ugh a more perceptive ap·praIsal of individual undevelopedpotential. I must agree with tileedItors on one point, however,that the standards of admission atConnecticut in the past have beenweak. Surely, if girls attend herewho consider Connecticut a sec-ond rate, "safe" school, the col·

See ~'Letters"-Pa,ge 8

Page 4: ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 · 2016. 12. 22. · ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 ... 3

Tburaday, March 11, 1965 CoaaCea.a. Page'I'hree

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The news that Connecticut will course in "Studies in American -..-: -return next year to a smaller Fiction." Both of these coursesPlans For New French' Hall freshman class Is welcome news will concentrate on four or five =-;--:-__ -.,_-..,.__ S_Il_F'-_to many students, who feel that writers, and will be open to jun- This does not include junIors or

P. R· d P the college expansion caused by iors or seniors, with the current seniors taking the latter courserogressmg at apl ace over,acceptance has been accom, American LIterature course as an an elective.

panied by a decrease in effective- prerequisite or parallel.The formulation of plans for a converse in French and improve ness. Beginning French students will The History Department has

new French-speaking corridor on their skills. It is even more gratifying ,to find themselves spending four dropped its course on "Frenchthe first floor of Knowlton house The physical arrangement of learn that despite the decreased hours rather than a mere three History from the Renaissance tois progressing at a rapid pace as Grace Smith has been a consider. enrollment, the curriculum 'has in t:he classroom each week. The 1715," but to satisfy all 'historianscampus interest in the revitalized able hindrance to the project, said been expanded. The new cata- second year course, 103·104, has they will now offer a semesterpr.oject heightens. Mr. Williston. While Grace Smith logue indicates many new courses been dropped. The French Study course on the "Evolution of Euro-Fourteen students will live in students have not been sufficient, as well as deeper studies of ai, Seminar topics for next year will pean A b sol uti s m, 1500-1715,"

the corridor, which features a Iy separated from the English, ready existing courses, 'be "Contemporary LIterature," which focuses on Spain, France,stepped.up effort at improvIng the speaking students in the dorm!, The departments which have and the "Age of Enlightenment" and Germany, as well as a courselanguage skills of the members tory, the arrangement of the been most strongly involved in In the IWian Department ele- on the "Diplomatic HIstory of thefurough every day French conver, Knowlton first floor will allow for the change are English, Govern, mentary students will have four United States," Changes have beensallon, a convenient concentration of the ment,and HIstory, However, ai- hours of classes a week, Italian made in the Advanced Study

Mr, James Willis'ton of the Fren,ch students ,in one area. most every department 'has a majors will also be ·taking some Seminars, mostly concerning the

E ht f th I h h aI" I k" tra f 't years offered. However, a new

French faculty is organizing the 19. 0 e glr s w 0 ave - new 00 . ex courses, or a requlIemen seminar topic has been introducednew corridor and spearheading ready SIgned up are .members of In the Art Department many has now been added: two semesterefforts to interest girls who will the class of 1968, while three are students will be happy to learn courses must be taken outside the for the second semester of next'work together in making the pro- me~bers of the class, of 1967, It that the "Introduction to Art HIs, department from a choice Includ, ;:~~\~~~~es in Modern ChInaject a success. :Mr. Williston spoke IS hoped that the SIZe of the tory," noW a semester course, ing specific courses in art, class-enthusiastically of the progress group and the physical arrange- will be extended to two semesters. ics, Latin, French, history, and Philosophy students will findthat has been made so far in a ment of the dormitory will aid in The first semester will cover the philosophy. "Continental Rationalism" drop-recent interview. establishing the lIesprit de corps" prehistoric period up to the Mid- The requirement of four hours ped from the course listings. A

essential to the success of such dle Ages, including the Orient. of class per week for elementary new course will be substitutedThe prominent feature of rthe an undertaking. The second semester will treat the language students will hold for entitled "American Philosophy."

new corridor will be the residen- The eleven girls who have 31- Renaissance up to the present the German Deparbnent also. The The seminar topic for next yearcy of a French student who will ready signed up are Deane Han- time. Both semesters may be course in Advanced Conversation will be "Ordinary Language Phl-serve as a hostess and as a friend cock, Lia Hadjiyannakis, Mary elected separately. The format of will now be offered only one se- losophy."to the members of the corridor. King, Sherry Bauman, Stephanie the course will also be different; mester, but full credit will beTentative aITangements have been Barrett, Leslie Guyton, JoAnna there will be two lectures weekly, granted for this semester. The Psychology deparbnent hasmade to engage Miss Francoise Berkman and Wendy .peter, 1968; plus one discussion ~tion week· The Government Department added a new course to its pro-Deflassieux of Paris who is pres- Elizabeth Deane, Pat Wyatt and ly. The requirement for Studio has dropped two courses, I'Politi- gram, "Perceptual Processes."ently finishing a license at the Sor- Joan Lacouture, 1967. Art majors has been increased cal Development in Central Afri- In <theRussian Department thebonne. Miss Deflassieux will be Three places in the donn are from one semester of Art History ca," and lIpolitics of International "Advanced Conversation andable to converse frequently with still open, said Mr. Williston, who to two. Integration!' However, a new Composition" course (211,212)the girls and help them to in· pointed out that the prospective The Child Development Depart- course has been added, "Compar- will be offered for both semesterscrease their fluency. She will also member does not have to be ei- ment will now offer an Individual ative Government: Politics of De- and will meet five hours weekly~arrange French dinners and teas ther fluent or a French major, but Study program both semesters. In veloping Areas." "Constitutional Finally, the Sociology Depart·for the members and interested should be able to express herself addition, the 201-202 course will Law" will be given annually, and ment will omit for next year itsoutsiders.' to a certain extent. have a new title, another lecture Advanced Study Seminars will be course on "Primiti\~.e C~tures" ~French.speaking people from "It takes a lot of good will t.o hour will be added per week, and introduced. The topics for next order to offer a SpecIal course,

the New London area will be in- make this a 'Success," he said, add- a full year's credit will now be )Tear will be "Comparative Gov- "India: Social Institutions andvited to attend dinners with the ing that the members will have given_ ernment and Politics." and II:golit· Problems." This will only be ofter·members, along with other French some say in the formation of final The English Department is ex- ical Theory: Hegel and Marx." A ed flrst semester, and will be openstudents who wish to participate arrangements for the day-to-day panding its program in American further change has been made, re- to all juniors and seniors. It will!in these affairs. Mr. Williston functioning of the project. Literature. First semester, a quiring the introductory course be taught by Dr. Fatima Shuja·stated that he would like to see Interested students are welcome course will be offered in "Studies in American government as a at, who will come to Connecticutthe arrangement of frequent teas to contact Mr. Williston for any in American Poetry." The sec- prerequisite for the introductory College next year as the visitingopen to all students who wish to further information. ond semester, will have a new comparative government course. lecturer from India

Berkeley Stimulates Interest Dr. David T. Rice EmphasizesFocus:lrnpendingResignations Humanism of Byzantine Art

by Leslie White for reasonable regulation of the by Sharon ){yen in 1204, but in tact only bThe Berkeley campus ot the time! place and manner of con- til egan

University of California contin- ducling political activity on the Dr. David Talbot Rice, 01 the His emphasis was on the ele-~es to be the scene of widespread c~.pu~. Finally it stated that no U.rUversity of ~dinborough, began ment of humanism in the art ofinterest, The free speech contro- dlsclplinary measures be used his first public lecture in the Byzantium-the intimacy, the viv-versy which disrupted the cam. against me':lbers of the Univers- United States, "I'm alarmed at idness-in contrast to the monu-pu:s last fall is at its lowest point Ity commwuty for activities prior my reporte.d capab~ties; I have mental, austere works of earlierthis semester. Attention is now fa. to December 8. no recollection of having published periods. He supplemented hiscused upon the impending resig- The telegram was sent in re- that many books!" He smiled at points by showing the subtletiesnations of Clark Kerr, president sponse to informational m~te~al the audience and put on his glass- of color and highlights, the blend-of the University and Martin Mey- received by Dr. Gordon Christian- es. eel tones and clear lines of thiserson, acting Chancellor of Berke- sen, Chairman of .~e Chemistry "I've conquered my first alarm period's art in slides; each indi-ley. department. In addition to a. com- -at speaking at dinner tonight, vidual slide was shown withStudent agitation, some observ- blet~~~t of the Be!ke1ey issue, but I still have to speak now." others to show contrasts and deli-

ers feel, may have had a part in r. I ansen received a letter In spite of his warnings, Dr. cate differences in periods.the resignation decisions. The from. a Berkeley professor re- Rice far exceeded the high expec- Although the lecture on re1ig-Student demonstrations were dl- questing that. supporters of the tations of the wide-spread audl- ious fresco and mosaic work wasrected again st admi , tr tl t faculty's solution send a telegram ence of faculty students fromllllS a rve a _ stating this a val .' aimed! primarily, at art students,tempts to place restrictions on D Christi ppro . d D Phili Connecticut, Yale, and Wesleyan, Dr. RIce as a speaker and scholarcampus political activities. GOl~be g Asa:~n ~ /- 1 and townspeople. He sought to certainly filled and exceeded the

1Thte consttroversy which beg~ PSYChOrOgY,co~ta~ed ~o~~f~c~- ~~~v~~~a\h~Y:::~ktino~~te dFridannkostexpectations for a Phi Beta Kap-

as serne er reached a peak In ty whom they felt would be in- pa convocation lecturer.Decerp.ber . ,":"hen• 800 students teres ted. Despite the two-day J G .ffin A h f 'BI kstaged a slt,m demonstrallon in time limit, they were able to reach • rl S, ul or 0 ac Like Me'the mam adnUTIlstration building. twenty·seven people. They re- R I Hi C . fGovernor Edmund Brown ordered celved no refusals, Others would e ales S rosslng 0 Color Barrierpolice authontIes to remove the have signed, Dr. Christiansen said, b Ca I ' -students. f if the two had been able to reach U , Y ro yn French fusion, and hate of a hostile worldThi~ incident exercised signifi- them. Don t even bother, you can that the "white" man ,thought he

cant mfluence not only on Berke- The telegram was sent to .Mr. never Im~w 'What it is like to be knew and understood. He told ofley students and faculty. Respons- Edward W. Carter, Chairman of a Negro. returning to 1frIedoorstep of ae~ .came from colleges and univer- the Board of Regents. John Howard Griffin received church in which he had once beensltIes throughout the country. THE UNDERSIGNED MEM- this answer from many Negro very hospitably received. He wasTwenty.seven Connecticut College BERS OF THE FACULTY OF leaders when trying to investi- driven away with shouts of UAni-faculty members contributed their CONNECTICUT COL LEG E gate the rising rate of suicidal mal, Filth ... " by the same mansupport. J 0 I N THEIR COLLEAGUES tendencies among Southern Ne- who had once welcomed him. HeIn a telegram sent in December OF THE BERKELEY DIVISION groes. But Griffin refused to ac- told of tne humiliation of apply·

to ,the Board of Regents of the OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAL cept this answer. He decIded to ing for jobs over the telephone,University of California, the twen. !FORNIA rn URGING THAT cross the barrier, the wall, ,the jobs which he was very well quali·,ty.seven confirmed the proposi. THE BOARD OF REGENTS AC- single factor-skin pigment- fled to fill, only to arrive and findlions introduced by the Commit. CEPT THE SOLUTION TO THE which divides humanity into two that the position had suddenlytee on Academic Freedom of the FREE SPEECH CONTROVERSY groups, colored and white. "been filled!' He told of having toBerkeley Division of the Academ, OFFERED BY THE ACADEMIC The powerful story which Grif, ~~~;~asut.ntil8:30 one night to findic Senate. SENATE: ACADEMIC FREE, fi tId' BI k Lik M ~,Th A d

'S nom ac e e was Griflln did not gl've any solu,e ca erruc enate, composed DOM, INCLUDING THE FREE- f th I' d b th h

f f It dur er exp ame y' e aut or tion because the problem Whl'chhe

o acu y, eans, and directors, en, DOM TO SPEAK ON POLITI, ItS t d St B ard'd d h

as a ur ay at . ern s discussed was not a Negro prob,orse t e propositions Clinorder CAL ISSUES, FOR STUDENTS h' h h I H I tedt d th

' 'S Ig , SC 00 . e re a an ex· lem but a human problem. How,o en e • , . crlSlS , .. and to A WELL AS FACULTY IS OF' hi h nl h't

t' penence w coy a w 1 e man ever he made each person m' the

crea e a campus enVIronment ~hat PARAMOUNT IMPORTANCE u1d k th h'tco rna e ano er w 1e man audience dramatl'cally aware ofencourages students to exercise TO THE WELL BEING OF THE b I' b 't df

e leve or even egm 0 un er- how I,'llie he really understood,ree and responsible citizenship AMERICAN EDUCATIONAL t d G ifII h' ed th t 't, th U' 't . s an. r n emp aS1Z a 1 Griflln compared Amerl'ca today

'Ill e mverSI y and m the com- SYSTEM. nl h· skin' t h'-~'t t I " was 0 y IS plgmen w lUI to Nazi Germany, where evil aI,mum y a arge... Gordon Christiansen, Paul Gar- h It ed HI "h b 'd" tTh S

' e a er. s y n accen, most. triumphed mhile good'~,e enate proposed that disci- rett Pierre DeGuise Llo"idJEast· hlS' I th h' aI h' t ", ~~

I. ,,~' . c 0 es, ' IS person IS ory pIe rem"ned silent. He remm'd·

p mary: measures in the area of man, John Kent Bernard Mur· 'th th ~, remaI.ned e same as e "white" ed us that we ,'n the North cannotpolitical. activity be determined by stein, James Purvis, Lester Reiss, John Howard Griffin.a comm;tt~e of the Academic Sen- Trudy Smith, Peter Seng, Rich- disown the South, nor can we per-ate. This lIDportant move would ard Wiles, James Williston Otello Yet the l<black" John Howard petuate the stereotype of thetr<;tn.sfer~urisdiction from the ad- Desiderato, Philip Goldberg, Kon_IG-=r_ifII_n_t_o_ld_O_f_t_h_e=f,..ru_s_tr_a_t_io_n..;,_co_n_'~"m,...:y_s_te_r_i_o=us='='_So_u_t_h_e_rn_N_e.::g_ro_.__

ml1llstration to the faculty who rad Bieber, Sheldon Ebenholtz, C ul S Chheld .this power until 1921. Allce Johnson, Richard LowiM, urric urn to ee anges·The Sena.te also declared that Nelly Murstein, Mason Record, ' ,

the UniverSIty should not attempt Dorothy Richardson Ernes,t DR· Cto regulate the content of political Schiesinger, Jane To~ey, Bernice epartrnents eVlSe oursesspeech or po~tical advocacy on Wheeler, George Willauer, Dancampus. A thIrd proposal called Bechter, Philip Jordan~

Page 5: ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 · 2016. 12. 22. · ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 ... 3

P-.Foar ConnCenaaa Thuraday, March 11, 1965

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Page 6: ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 · 2016. 12. 22. · ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 ... 3

Thursday, March 11, 1965 CODDCeDaDa Pap FlY.! ! ;tf' ,,,, !i # ! ! I • ""'1m i.E i ! I , I ! • I .l. i • ,I t:=, i i.1 ! t , j , , • I ! Ii' , ! I • I ._esp ••• lit pi .:; ! j , • ••• jJji., •I ; _ !' I ... j i

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An American In Washington. ByRussell Baker. Irreverent guideto survival in the nation's cap-ital. Witty, thoroughly tested ad· Rellectlons of a Jacobite. Byvice on how to drop names, pick" Louis Auchincloss. The brilliantup a luncheon tab, face a Con- novelist reflects on all that is notgressional committee and even readable, relevant and entertain-hoW "press flesh" (greet a vis- lng in the unmanageable pile ofitor) a la Lyndon Johnson. modern fiction. Critical essays onPub. at $3.95 Sale .99 Tolstoy. James, Joyce, Dostoyev.-

sky and many others, plus a pen-etrating study of the novel ofmanners from George Eliot toJohn O'Hara.Pub. at $4.00 Sale .99

.77 EACHBlood and Thunder. By DwIghtTaylor, The wild, crazy world ofshow business In the early 1900'sdescribed with charm and huma;by son of Immortal actress Lau-rette Taylor and playwrightCharles A. Taylor.Pub. at $4.50 Sale .77

JI9 EACH

My War With Oommunlam. ByMiguel Ydigoras Fuentes. Intro.by Adolf A. Berle. Guatamala'sPresident-In-exile describes meth-ods used by Castro In hls IIrst at-tempt at Latin-America conquest.Orig. $5.00 Sale .99

FrancIs Bacon. By CatherineDrinker Bowen. Intimate portraitof the career and lifelong conftlctbetween Bacon's grand lntellec-tual visions and his wily schemesfor political self-advancement, setagainst the pomp and gUtter ofQueen Elizabeth's court. Dlus.Pub. at $6.00 Sale .77

The Long Reach-Harvanl ~y.By Peter French. Penetratinglook at a famous American In-stitution-its competitive environ-ment, the role it plays in our na-tional affairs. 1962 pub., with tenJ·f.K. references In the Index.Pub. at $4.00 Sale .99

The Congo Story - To Katangaand Back. By C. C. O'Brien. Irishdiplomat's exciting, eye-witnessaccount of the UNs actions afterthe Katanga secession. TshombeVS. Lumbumba; mercenaries, mls-slonartes, tribal chiefs and "Onu-sians" (UN forces); the real slg-nificance of the explosive eventsthat are stili unfolding today.mus. Pub. at $5.95 Sale m

Reporting the Wars. By Joseph J.Mathews. Colorful history of warreportage from the NapoleonicWars through World War II.Traces evolution of news gather-ing and transmission trom earlybattle descriptions to modernnhoto-journallsm. Illus.Pub. at $6.50 Sale .99

Chess Victory, by Fred Reinfeld.Shows you, move by move, howto checkmate your opponent bril-liantly and consistently.Pub. at $2.50 Sale .99

The Profumo Affair - Anatomyof a Scandal. By CUve Irving. Thestory of Christine Keeler, Dr.Ward, Profumo, Captain Ivanov,snarl of sex, politics and espion-age. 'Pub. at $3.95 Sale .77

The McLandress Dimension. ByMark Epernay. Fiendishly funnyspoof on the "American Socio-metric Peerage." John KennethGalbraith Is reputed to be the witbehind the uEpernay" pseudonym.Pub. at $3.75 . Sale .77

Yesternlorrow: Notes on Man'sProgress. By Kurt W. Marek (C.W. Ceram). Amazing speculationson art, literature, religion, sex,language, science and technology.Pub. at $3.50 Sale .77

Broadway - The Great WhlteWay. By Allen Churchill. Spec·tacular story, 1900 to 1919. Re-creates lives and careers ofMaude Adams, Nora Bayes, Web-er & Fields. George M. Cohan,scores of others. mus.Pub. at $4.95 Sale JI9

"George," by Emlyn Williams.Frank, funny. fascinating auto-biography of celebrated actor-playwrlght·dlrector.Pub. at $5.95 Sale .77

S. N. Behrman's Portrait of Max.Brilliant biography of Max Beer-bohm, the great drama critic andwit, intimate of the leading fig-ures of late 19th century Eng-land. Illus.Pub. at $6.00 Sale .77

Lucan's PharsalJ.a.-Dramatic Ep-isodes of the Civil Wars. Trans.by Robert Graves. Brings to life,in sensational detail. the historicstruggle between Pompey andCaesar, and the riotous reign ofNero.Pub. at $4.00 Sale .99

A Churchill Canvas. By JohnSpencer Churchill. Colorful mem-oirs of nephew of Sir Winston.Intimate portraits of Sir Winston,Aunt Clementine, Cousins Sarah& Randoloh. 45 photos.Pub. at $5.75 Sale .77

Edwin Forrest: First Star of theAmencan Stage. By R. Moody.Colorful life of famous actorwhose eccentricities, romances,and fantastic repertoire made himAmerica's biggest boxoffice drawfrom 1826 to 1872. 30· plates.Pub. at $6.95 Sale .99A Doctor's Life of John Keats, by

Walter A. Wells, M.D. A fasclna·ting' contribution to Keats schol·arship, demonstrating the pro-found effects of his years of med·ical training and tragic illness onhis personality, love life andverse.Pub. at $3.95 Sale .77

The Name on the WaD. ByCharles R. Cammell. Delightfulvisits to the historic Londonhomes of Dryden, Gainsborough,Sheridan, Blake, Coleridge, By·{'on, others. mus.Pub. at $5.00 Sale .99

Tora"eDeV's Letter.--A Selection,by Edgar H. Lehrman. An Insptr-ing sejf-portralt of one of Rus-sia's greatest writers, taken fromhis letters to the great liguresof his time-Tolstoy, de Maupas-sant, Henry James, FIaubert, etal. Writing candidly from thestorm center 01 the literary, mer-al and political feuds of Isth-cen-tury Europe, Turgenev describeshis loneliness, torment and self-exile, his work, and his lifelong,hopeless attachment to Mme.vtardot. Illus.Pub. at $5.00 Sale JI9

C. Northcote Parkinson - Eaatand West. Distinguished Irlston-an's perceptive analysis of theEast-West conflict, demonstratingthe alternating lise and declineof great ctvtllzatlons In eachsphere.Pub. at $5.00 Sale L'TI

Yankee Reporten, 1861·11165,byEmmet Crozier. The Clvtl War asseen through the eyes of the he-roic men who, in the thick 01 ev·ery battle from Bull Run to Oet-tysburg, wrote Amence'e historyas it happened. A "must" forCivtl War bulrs.Pub. at $6.00 Sale L98

Letter to Pbllemon. By Francesand Winthrop Neilson. Tauntwith the excitement and pagean-try of ancient Rome--a journeyfrom disbelief and doubt to a trt-umph of taith-a narrative surg-Ing with passion and glowingwith spiritual insight - a storybased on a letter written by theApostle Paul.Pub. at $3.75 Sale .99

Osbert Lancaster's Signs of theTImes. The most entertaining andsignificant work of England'sleading socio-politlcal cartoonist.This collection covers the years1939·1961 and shows the fullrange of his devastating wit andwonderfully satirical pen.Pub. at $5'00 Sale JI9

SIngapore: The Japanese Version,by Colonel Masanobu Tsuji. Theincredible account of the Japan-ese Army's 70-day Blltzkrleg ofthe Malayan Peninsula, from thepre-Pearl Harbor planning stagesto the fall of Singapore and Itsbeleaguered garrison, as told bythe officer who engineered thecampaign. Includes the completetext of the Japanese jungle man-ual. 42 lIIus., 11 maps.Pub. at $5.50 Sale .99

Lyof Tolstoy: An Anthology. Ed.with introduction by Chnrles R.Joy. Gold nuggets from the en-tire corpus of Tolstoy's writingsincluding "War' and Peace,""Anna Karenlna," shorter works,diaries, notes, articles, etc. Ar-ranged by categories, these se-lections offer an unprecedentedpicture of the great novelist'sthoughts on everything from artand lov.e to the social order andGod.Pub. at $4.95 Sale 1.98

The Whlte House and Ills Thirty-Three Families. By Amy La Fol·lette. A magniflcent 150-year cav-alcade of high poUtical and per-sonal drama in the most famoushouse in the nation, beginningwith John and Abigail Adams tothe pomp and gUtter of the Ken-nedy years. Here is a treasury ofAmericana with over 300 never-to-be-.torgotten photographs, rareetchings and drawings and filledwith intimate and unexpectedglimpses of our Presidents andFirst Ladles and the hentage theyhave left on our Executive Man·sion. "White House history .••at last has been notably enrichedby Its IIrst picture-text .book."-Charles Poore, New York Times.9xl2. Pub. at $12.50 Sale 5.95

The American Year. Ed. by Hen·ry Hill Collins, Jr. Magnificentcollection of writings on natureacross America through the fourseasons, by Audubon, Thoreau,Burroughs, Muir, Mark Twain,John Wesley Powell, JosephWood Krutch, E. B. White, Ra·chel Carson and others. 48 pagesof illustrations from Currier &tves prints.Pub. at $10.00 Sale 4.98

The Yale Football Story. By TimCohane, Fifty yard-line vtew ofall the great Blue games, playsand players, including scores androsters of all Yale elevens since1872. Photos.Pub. at $6.00 Sale .99

The 'Prodlgal Rake: Memoirs ofWi11Iam Hickey. Ed. by. PeterQuennell. An 18th century roguenarrates his experiences and trav-els in bawdy detail. "Rivals insheer lust for life Boswell's 'Lon-don Journal'."-Saturday Review.Illus. Pub. at $6.50 Sale .99

,Rothschild's A Casual View ofAmerlal.. Ed. by Sigmund Dla-mond. Collection of highly-per-ceptive letters by young Salomonde Rothschild, written during hisAmerican sojurn, 1859-61. _Pub. at $3.75 Sale .99

The Mediaeval Mystics of Eng·land. Ed. with an Intor. by EneColledge. Inspiring selections.With a long introductory essayon the manner and meaning ofthe mystic's search-- for unionwith God.Pub. at $4.95 Sale .99

Dragon Bones in the YellowEartiL ByJames & Irving Crump.The story of the amazing arche-ological finds In China In thiscentury. How "dragon" bones inapothecaries' shops led to suchmomentous discoveries as PekingMan, the Shang Clty·State, andthe treasure-rich tombs of An-yang with their priceless revela·tions of prehistoric Chinese cul-ture. Pub. at $4.00 Sale .99

Primitive Song. By C. M. BowraBy collecting and analyzing thesongs of today's Pygmies, Eski·mos, Andamanese and Bushmen,a noted scholar has produced--amasterful study of the originsand development of the earliestforms of poetry known to man.Scores of translated examples,many unusual photo-illustrations.Pub. at $6.50 Sale .99

A Matter of LIfe aDd Death, byVirgilia Peterson. Explosively re-vealing self-portraIt-the movingtestament of an intellectually-gifted woman whose search foridentity led her through heaven-and hell. uThe frankest auto-biography since Rousseau's Con·fessions"-William L. Shirer.Pub. at $5.00 Sale .99

Sixty Days That Shook the West-The Fall of France, 1940. ByJacques Benoist-Mecbin. Monu-mental study of the Wehrmach'sblitzkrieg across the low coun·tries and France. 600 pages othigh drama, living historY. andprollles of the major diplomaticand military ligures. Maps.Pub. at $7.95 Sale 3.98

New England Abolitionists-TheBold BrahrnaDs, by Lawrence La·der. Exciting history of NewEngland's men ,and women whofought so desperately with wordsand weapons against slavery.Photos.Pub. at $5.00 Sale .99

mGHEB PRICED BOOKSAndre Glde's Last Work--&> BeIt. Trans. by Justin O'Brien. Therenowned stylist and thinker can·didly examines his own emotionalproblems and the dlflleulties Inhis marriage as well as the stateof the French theater, life In It·aly and Russia. and the achieve-ments of writers ranging fromHorace to Peguy.Pub. at $3.75 Sale 1.49

Greek Mythology. By Fellx GuIr-and. Gorgeo1,lsly·il1ustrated vol·tune with over 220 reproductionsof Greek vase paintings. classical<;culpture, etc., 24 In rich color.Not only explains the myths butdynamically relates them to thespirit and aspirations of Greekcivtllzatlon. 8,.x1l Special %.98

Art aDd Outrage. A correspond·ence between Henry Miller. Law-rence Durrell and Alfred Perles.Lively fascinating exchange ofletters. casting a strong light onMiler's enigmatic and astoundingcharacter.Pub. at $2.25 Sale .99

THE BOOKSHOPNow Thru March 25th

_._. '_" l_..=J· ~! .. " ' ...... !=.! j •.• ,

Page 7: ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 · 2016. 12. 22. · ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 ... 3

Page Six ConnCenouo Thuroday, March 11, 1965

Lack of Originality Main Flaw Agent 000 Investigates CaseOf A E h ib. . L A II by Pat AlrobeIlo portation would be on the up-rt X l It In yman yn It was a new case for Lepre surge. The unscrupulous mob was

Conn, Special Agent 000, feared relentlessly gOU1gto take advan-by Susan GemeinbanIt interesting member of the group. by international crime rings and tage of the sad state o! our stu-

A traveling art exhibition from His juxtaposition of large areas currently associated with your dents who were growmg morethe city of Berlin will be at the 01 primary color produces an et- own Campus Weekly. Suavely at. bemuddled by the day un~er theLyman Allyn Museum until feet not unlike that achieved by tired. in his Kelly green Brooks pressures of pre-recess midtermsMarch 29. the American, James Brooks. The suit, Lepre slipped into his tur- and. papers .. Lea.rrll?g of past ex.The failure of the artists exhib- landscapes and figure studies done bine Stutz Bearcat and headed periences WIth strike ~umors .0!l

iting in The Spirit of New BerUn by Manfred Bluth retain the sur- for the Land of the Yalemen. It Campus, the group decided to mi-show, lies in the fact that they realistic atmosphere acquired seemed as though a ~roup of tiate_ such a tale and to offer carhave few original ideas. They are from his studies with Max Ernst questionables in that CIty were sen:ce to dejected student~ for aslick, overworked, second genera- His Arid Landscape has a very planning to capi~alize on the no~nal fee. Of course, this p~~tion Abstract Expressionists. Ab- romantic, dream-like quality. The plight of a certain New London paid sum and the cars wostract Expressionism had mean- most violent colorist in the show transportation service.. never be seer:rby the downtroddening for the post World War II is Walter Stohrer. Negress IV and With the coming af Sprmg va- scholars agam.generation and the 'SO's, but it is April are impulsively emotional cation, th.e dependenc.e of colleges Lepre, however, cou~d not he~pno longer meaningful in the art and painted with extremely coarse (our fall" Connecticut among but break up the evil plot-t eworld of the '60's. yellows and reds. However, a them) in the area on that trans- See "Lepre"-Page 8Fred Thieler, Kurt Bartel, and number of his structural devices

Hann Trier, contemporary Ger- are borrowed quite directly from Can' They Improve Educationman artists, from Berlin are ex- Hans Hoffmann.amples of the Taehisme or coleur The work of the sculptors asso- B FO 0 0 AhI T h ?active movement which is, in es- cia ted with 'the New Berlin show y Irmg ur e eac ers.sence, a European version of is much more difficult to assess.American Abstract Expression- The sculpture has a sense of vi- by Jeff Greenfield be protected from the politicalism. By definition, the tachiste re- tality and aesthetic sensitivity Collegiate Press Service pygmies who seek to exploit non-duces the process of painting to which the painting lacks. The There is a story familiar to conformity with all the glee of aits most fundamental components, sculptors are quite conservative many academicians,' about a one- cretinous child squashing a but.the raw materials themselves and in their methods, 'however, and time colleague of theirs, named terfly.the imprints of the artist's awn are also derived in a converted Jesus of Nazareth. He roamed Whether these men publish vol-expressionistic devices. Thieler's sense from action' painting. Ber- through small communities, en. urnes or not a word must, in aTryptooon 63 is a real action paint- nard Heiliger and Karl-Heinz gaging in an earnest effort to ere- sane society, be absolutely Irrel-ing, crea ted in the medium of col- Droste have done the most in- ate a dialogue between himself evant. Some of ehem are prolific;lage in reds and whites, and very teresting pieces. Heiliger's bronze and his students. He inspired, he others write not at all. For areminiscent of an early Pollock. Phoenix n seems to turn its or- excited, he stimulated. But he did university to establish a systemHarm Trier's work has been some- ganic mass into energy through not publish; SO they crucified' him. which overlooks these men, andwhat questionably compared to the thrust of its antennae-like pro- More words have been written superimposes a mechanical cri-Monet's late water color studies. jections. Droste's reliefs, also in about the "publish or perish" con- terion in judging the effectivenessHis Vortex 1962 and Swimming bronze have interestingly textur- troversy than about any other of these extraordinary men, is forhave little of the original spon- ed sur'faces, all of which appear campus topic save sex and. riots that university to slit its owntaneity of Monet, nor do they 'have to 'have direct references to na- -two issues which are explored throat. .as much of his sensitivity to color ture. Hartung, Baumann, Sax, and not for their importance to educa- Tenure-the shield of the aca-relationships. Kurk Bartel is pos- Szmanski all impart a sense of tion, but because they tlttllate the demic-is meaningless if it doessibly the most interesting of the vitality and organic unity in spaoe. outside world. I do not propose not go to those who teach well.three. His Ametrlc Bodies and Their appeal' stems from the fact any weighty analysis or sophisti- And as I write these words aKnots of Light m are composed that they are pleasantly conserva- cated probe of the issue. I vvish to small group of students in Newof light oriental like spots and tive, but they contain none of the state what is perhaps the obvious, Haven are engaged. in an all-patches ~hich gjV~ an almost im· interest attributed to the great ex- and leave it to those who run our night vigil protesting the failurepressionistic effect perimentation in materials which academic fortresses to explain to grant tenure to a man namedHans Jaenisch is probably the characterizes .the '60's. why they do not recognize the Richard Bernstein. He is a 32

slickest painter in the show. At Taken individually, many of the obvious. year.old philosophy teacher atfirst glance, his technique of us- paintings have an -intrinsic qual- 'Dhe single greatest fault of the Yale who has won the'admirationing ink washes on crumpled pa- ity of capability and purpose, but American educational experience and respect of his students. He isper is interesting, but it is nIti- they ultimately can not be judged is its failure to provide a medium being fired.mately little more than a gim- out of contem. Taken in context for excitement of the mind. Paul It is obvious-trivial-patentlyroick. l they are definite1y not original Goodman says it; Clark Kerr, a clear--->that good teachers andThe other painters, Bachmann, and not completely meaningful to victim of his own prophecies, has great teachers make a great uni-

Bergmann, Bluth, and Stohrer are the art world of the '60's. As stat- said it; James Conant has said it; versity. It is obvious-foolishly,all derivatives of members of ed before, it is more difficult to and every educational ob§erver childishly simple-that a manthe New York School or with assess the meaningfulness of the takes this premise as his point of who kindles the spark of curiositysomeone associated with the sculpture in relation to t!h.e most reference. in his students is wor,th 50 sehol-School. Hermann Bachmann's ol1s contemporary sculptors, but it ap- Yet within this diseased envir- arly articles on Phallic Math in theseem to be a more delicate, lyrical pears that without the sculpture, onment there are pockets of hope. Later Work of Henry James andversion of a combination of Mark the show would be little more They are the small minority of a dozen books on Immanuel KantRothko and Franz Kline. In ibis than a slick, polished presentation men who honor the profession of and the War of 1812. It is obviousbest work the grays and whites of an old tradition. It seems un· teaching. They do not accept the -nearly tautol9gous-that thehave an almost ethereal quality, fortunate that the New Spirit of givens of the world; they do not good and great teachers shouldwhile in his worst painting the Art in Berlin is about the same manipulate the. stale premises of be desired by colleges and univer-colors look muddy and scrubbed. as the Old Spirit of Art in New society; they do not teach because sHies.Gerhart Bergmann is the most un· York. ~hey are forced to; they teach be- You will not improve American::::::=-:":=:::::::::::''::'''::''~;;---;:-"7.--"7-----;--:;:-;----1 cause they love it education by firing your goodJ A uilh's 'AntI'gone' Next These men challenge the giv- teachers. You will not make anean no ens; they formulate concepts educated citizenry a realIty by im-

o YaI P . which outrage and dare an open posing a foolish and wrongheadedConnectIcut, e resentatlon mind; tbey explore the conclu· standard which does not rellectsions-however absurd or shock· the precious individuality of those

After a short recess during tam, as the Page; Dody Cross, ing or dangerous-of a new idea. who impart knowledge to others. Swhich Compet plays were pro- as Eurydice; Carla Meyer as Is· They are the saviors of the You will not make a great coun- ON £AMPUduced, Robert Cohen and comp~ny mene; and Susie Endel, as tthe very institutions which do not try by killing your great teach- dare back on the stage, working Nurse. The stage manager is Kay recognize them, because they ers. And the lingering, nagging Every Tuesday and Fri ayt-owaro the opening night of An· Rothgeb and her assistant Andria teach people 'how to think. question is: why are you doing it? ~tigone, by Jean Anou11h. Luria. Mr. Cohen has designed These men are to be cherished. ROY _.JU:1II6"Rhythm, articulation, and pas- the scenery, Mia Braden, the cos· They are not to be made over, ROCCO'S BEAUTY SALON __... ~-

sion" is the watchword as the tumes. they are not to be molded, they Now Located at 80 Broad Street ~ I_JA ~- u.~ambitious cast of Yale and Con- Antigone is a play of words; it are not to be taught to think like Street Level. ~ ~cu=:CM'''necticut students embarks on a is through description that the ob- the rest They are to be let alone; Ample Parking

new theatrical presentation. Helen server experiences the climactic ~an~d~'~S~h~o~rt~~of~m~0~le~S~ti~'n~g~C~h~il~dr~e~n~~;:::~;:~44~3~'~2~13~8~;:::~;:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Epps as Antigone and Mike Det- action. Willi only two weeks to go or robbing poor-boxes, they are tomold as Creon heaq the cast of before the opening performancethe one act play. Also included tbe talented cast must meet thein the cast list are: Roger Shoe- challenge of expressing the in-maker as the First Guard; Dave tensity of the drama so basic to SArmst~ong, as the Second Guard; the play. Anouillh's modern inter- ctaRAfi~Bob Spell, as the Third Guard; pretation of the classic Greek dra· '11 r- I.UHenry Weil, as the Chorus; Bill rna will be given in Palmer Audi-Hannay as Haemon; Judith Wile, toriwn on April 9 and 10 under IIas the 'Messenger; Pamela Gjet- the auspices of Wig and Candle.

Class Presidents and Liz Martin; compet play di-rector, Marcia 80ast. ~

(Contlllaed from Pap One> Kay Lane of Verona, New Jer- ~competitive play director, Lynn sey will serve as presIdent of the U.S.JROUTE 1 AND 95 NEW LONDON. CONNKastner. class of 1968, with the aid of new. I.

Jane Brown and Joan Bucciar· ly elected Vice President Ann ~;::===========;:=============================~.elli will represent the senior class Warner. She succeeds Jadeon the Honor Court. Schappals. Annabelle Morgan and.Eritta Jo Schein, American his- Karen Young were elected Hon-

tory major of Pittsburgh, Pa., or Court justices.will succeed Jo Ann Hess as Carol Caruso was chosen sec-president of the class of 1967. retary and Sue Gehrig, treasurerCarol Friedman was elected. vice in elections held Wednesday aft.president, Anne Holbrook, secre- emoon.tary; Sue Cohn, treasurer.The class elected Dana Freed·

man and Heather Woods as itsHonor Court justices.Other officers chosen were: So-

cial chainnan, Lilian Balboni;song leader, Rosemary Koury;A.A. representative, Carolyn An-derson; librarians, Rae Downes

Civil Rights GroupTutors New LondonHigh School Pupils

Judy GreenbergEradication of poverty is one of

the major goals of both the CivilRights movement and the John-son Administra tion.The Civil Rights group on cam-

pus realizes that deprivationtakes its effect not only on thephysical well-being ~f a person,but also on his emotional and m-tellectual stabllity. It Is the lattereffect of poverty, the lack of intel-lectual stimulation, that the Con-necticut College Tutorial Projectsunder the Civil Rights Club is at-tempting to counteract.The Tutorial Project enlists

members of all classes to devoteone hour per week to the tutoringof New London High School stu-dents in an academic subject. Eli-gible for such tutoring are highschool students who, in their sub-ject, received a grade below C;their college counterpart must beon point.The tutoring sessions 'are held

in the late afternoon in spaceprovided by the YWCA. The mostfrequently studied subjects areEnglish, mathematics, and French.The program, now, in its t~ird

year has a dual purpose. FITstis that of benefitting the highschool student, who, uninterestedin his classwork, might respondbetter to the attention and enthusi-asm of a contemporary. Secondis the experience and opportunityprovided for the Connecticut stu-dent who posseses an interest inteaching and sharing her knowl-edge and interest.'Dhe philosophy behind the pro-

gram is that a student will oftenrespond better to one _who isnearer his age and is interestedin him as an individual. The em-phasis on the one-to-one relation-ship helps to fill a gap made byovercrowded classes in which theteacher cannot personally com-municate with each of his stu-dents.The results are often not strik-

ing. Some students will maintainan unreachable at·titude and willnot improve. Yet, any improve-ment, even in one student, willmake the program worthwhile.

Places are going qUickly on theBOAC lIights to London- and Paris!

Make your reservations soon. '):auas a Conn. College student or fac·ulty member are eligible for thesereduced fares. •For information:

Ruth CrutchleyEmily Abbey Hoose

Ext. 420 . Box 1322 . Ph. 443·9919

RESTAURANT. MOTOR INN

CHOOSE THE FINEST ACCOMMODATIONS FOR YOUROUT OF TOWN GUESTS. STUDENT RATES, LODGING- DINNERS - SORORITY INITIATIONS, FOR RES-ERVATIONS CALL AREA CODE 203 442-0631

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INDIVIDUAL HEAT & AIR CONDITIONINGLARGE SWIMMING POOL

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443-7395OITO AIMEITI

Ladies' and Genilemen'oCu.tom Tailoring86 State Street

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Thu~sday, March n, 1%5ConnCen8UI Page Seven

PellSmoking ProblemIgnites Prevention!he college fire prevention com.

n;lttee met Tuesday atternoon todiscuss the problem of smoking. Accordin~ to l,'C" Book regUl~.tton, smoking 1S prohibIted Inclass.rooms ~ith the exception ofevening semmars and classes thatmeet In faculty offices. Every stu-dent has the responsibility toobey. lie" Book regulations con.cerrung fire prevention meas-ures. The faculty also 'has beenask~ to 'comply with studentsmoking rules. It was stated thatf~cu1ty members have neither theright nor the privilege to smokem classrooms or to extend thisfreedom to their students. IConnecticut College is not im- ~

mune to fire or the possibility offire damage. Last year the stage~nd curtains of Palmer Auditor.ium were badly damaged by a I

sudden blaze during the rehears. Ial for a theatrical production.Also, small fires have occurredin dormitories because of studentneglect.Ashtrays were removed from Mr. Albert Zuckerman of the

Thames because o.f the ffre hazard Yale Drama School will speak oncaused by the use of turpentine Ithe topic, "Russian Influences onand other flammable materials. the Ame~can Theatre" wednes-Despite this preventive action day evening, March 17, at 7:30 instudents continued to smoke and the .student lo.un~e.littered the building with ashes His talk will mclude three as·and butts. hours alter the janItors haveThe problem. of cleanliness also cleaned and set the rooms in ord-

exists In Fanmng, Bill, and Newer.London Halls. Clas~rooms, stair· It is hoped that present con-we~s, and .1avat~rIes are made ditions resulting lrom smokingunsIghtly wIth discarded butts. will improve with future studentStudents use these buildings for and faculty compliance with col-study purposes during evening lege regulations.

Albert J. Zuckennan

Connecticut Yankee Motor Inn & Restaurant

150_Restaurant and Lounp

Dancln& NIghtly except SondaywMeetIn& and Banquet Bouma

(Special Winter Student Guest Rates)

Exit 74 Conn. Turnpike, Niantic, Conn.Telephone. 739-5483

Dr. Albert Zuckerman of YaleD <eonUnued from Pa.. One)rama School to Speak Here lng post-doctoral fellowships andgrants for research."

. . . The Pel! Bill also proposes topeets of Ru~slan Influence. He will "assist by institutional grants,discuss the influence that Russ~an loans, and other means of assist.theate: has had on sU~h major anee, public and other non-profitjheatrlCal figures as Ella Kazan, organizations, concerned with en-oshua Logan, Harold Clurman, couraging and developing schcl-and Lee Strasberg and the innu- ars and teachers in the human}.~nceof Che~ov's plays on ~er. ties and the arts, and artists, inJc~n playwrights such ,as Clitford order to enable each institution too ets. and Arthur Miller. The develop its own program of reofounding f!f. the Mosco~ Art The- search and instruction in the hu-~terJ Its ViSIt to the United ~tates manities and the arts; and to Inlt-m 1923, and, ~e great effect It ha:s iate and promote by contracts oron the tec~ques of tht: Ameri- other arrangements. includingcan theater will also be discussed. grants, loans, and other rorms of.Mr. Zuckerman, who describes assistance, programs for improve-

hIS own plays as "realistic social ment of teaching in the humant-dramas in the tradition of Ibsen ties and arts."and Miller," teaches playwriting The foundation will not be ofand dramatic literature at Yale profound consequence immediate-Drama School. He received his ly. The budget operating in theB.A.. degree f~om Princeton Unl- fiscal year ending June 30, 1966,verstty and his MFA and DFA would appropriate ten million dol-from Yale University. lars to the foundation. The nextHis plays have been produced year the appropriation would be

by Yale Drama School and per. twenty million dollars. However,formed off Broadway in New after June, 1967, the appropria-York, in Washington, D. C., and tion remains as yet unfixed.in Danville, Kentucky. One 'of hisplays was published in Best ShortPlays of 1958-9. He has recentlyfinished a three act play, To Be-come a Man, and the first draft 01a fantasy-comedy. Having writtenhalf a dozen book reviews for theSunday New York Times BookReview section, he plans to writea Ibook from his dissertation,"Shakespeare's Parody Tech·niques."Presently executive director of

the Connecticut Commission onthe Arts, Mr. Zuckerman has also

B II R been employed as a high schoole OW, oethke Win National Awards teacher, a newspaper columnist,

a naval officer, and a foreign of-Saul ~ellow, Louis Fisher! Ela· made out of a sense of duty. Writ- fleer. His current position is with

nor Clark, Dr. Norbert WIener, ers still living are under much a committee of citizens whoseand. Theodore Roethke received stiffer competition and judges hes· task it is to survey the culturalNatlonal Book Awards Tuesday as itate to Ibonor them' resources of the state and towriters of "the most distinguish· '. make recommendations to en-ed bookS written by Americans Mr. Jackson, w~o receIved ~e rhance the cultural clImate of theand published in the United States O. Henry Award m 1962 for 'hIS state.in 1964." short" story liThe English Gar- -;:::;;;:::;;;;;::;:;;::;:;::;;::;:;::;:;::;;:::::;::::::;:;::::;;'William Meredith of Connecti. dens, also ~ee1:s that these C'

cut Gollege was among the eight awards are artifiCIal and tend to·authors nominated for tile pOetry wards a conune.rcial venture onaward. His book that was judged the part of pub1i:Shers. Too oftenis The Wreck of the Thresher. a good author will get an .awardHerzog brings to Saul Bellow based on a poor boo~, as ID. the,

his second National Bool,t Award. case ?f James Bal~wm. Agam, .aThe awards to Dr. Norbert Wien. superlOr author will no~ get Iter and Theodore Roethke are ?ecause la poor book 18 beingbased on works published post. Judged.humously. The list is conservative, Mr.David Jackson, Instructor 01 Jackson finds, because none of

Creative Writing 'here, laments the books included were writtenthat these awards are so much a to bring the author quick famematter of timing. He feels that or money. The books all haveposthumous awards are often lasting quality.

This card saves youmoney at Sheraton

Here's how to get yours:r----------------------·I Dear Sheraton: Send me an appli~8tion for a free Sheraton I"I student ID card for room rate dIscounts at Sheratons all Ilover the world. II Name II SI,eet II City Siale Zip II. Send 10 COLLEGE RELATIONS DIRECTOR, II Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D. C. 20008 II 95 Sheraton Hotels &Motor Inns IL ~

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Stevie Pierson '67Badminton ChampInLadies' SinglesStevie Pierson, the recently

elected Speaker 01 the House ofRepresentatives, won the Con-necticut Slate "C" Ladles' SInglesBadminton Tournament last weekend.-.stevie was "seeded number one"in the tournament, according toMiss Brett, a process which in-sures the tournament of havingits best players In the finals.Stevie won the Ladies' Singles

event 12·10, U·S, against JaneFarr, 01 Newton, Connecticut, agraduate of Southern ConnecticutState Teachers College. She wasjoined by Robin Richmond, classof 1966, in the semi-finals of thedoubles, losing only to the win-ners of the event.The trophy lor the Ladies' Sin-

gles was won last year by DebbyWillard, a senior at ConnecticutCollege, who presented it to the1965 winner.Of the flfty-flve entrants in the

tournament, seven were fromConnecticut College; besIdes Ste-vie and Robin, Betsy Rawson '67,Cathy Maddock '67, 'Debby Oam-

Dr. Herbert Gesork, president mons '68, Kathy Bohmfalk '68 andof Andover Newton TheolOgiCalIK=:=ar;;l;;a~Le=:=f:re;;n;;;;'68;;;;e:n;;t;;e;;red.;;;;;;.;;;;;;=school, will speak at Vespers In I'Harkness chapel Sunday at 7 p.m. CAP ITO L T H I'- ATE RDr. Gesork, who spoke at ~he l\"larch 12 - l\"larch 19

college in November 01 1963, is a 2 Alfred Hitchcock Thrillersmember of the Board of Preacl1- PSYCHOers at Harvard University and a with Antony Perkinsfellow of the American Academy VERTIGOof Arts and Sciences. He Is also witha member of the Department of James Stewart and Kim NovackInternational Relations 01 theNational Council of Churches. InMarch 1956, :he was one of a dele-gation of American churchmenwho visited Soviet Russia.Prior to becoming president of

Andover Newton TheologicalSahool in 1950, Dr. Gesork wasprofessor of social ethics at theTheological School at WellesleyCollege. -Dr. Gesork was born and edu·

cated. In Germany, where he wasGeneral Secretary of the GennanBaptist Yourh Movement until itsdissolution by the Hitler regime,which he opposed. Two bookswhich he wrote in German werebanned by the Nazis.Dr. Gesork holds honorary de-

grees from Bucknell" University,Colgate University, Colby Collegeand Emerson College.

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DARTMOUTH COLLEGE1965 Summer Term

Liberal arts-50 courses in humanities, sciences social. 'scIences.

Congregation of the Arts - drama, music, painting,sculpture, Composers·in.residence - Zoltan KodalyErnst Kreuek, Rose Lee Finney. '

JUNE 27· AUG. 27 - CO·EDUCATIONALUndergraduates, graduates and qualified secondarystudents.

•For Intonnation Send Coupon Below to

Darbnouth CoUege, P. O. Box 833, Hanover, N. H.'idSlMtuflt

",.,. ,.,. ,.. ..-I........ ta 4oaIJ.l1

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I endOM 251 to COYerpoltale andI hudlins. Send Bidette PD1'M"P&ck.I Kmple. and lita.lure.IN.... ·1, Addr.. 1ICity' 7<tnL--State-- IL ,. J

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Please send summer term in1onnation to:

Name

Address

Page 9: ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 · 2016. 12. 22. · ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 17 ... 3

Page Eight ConnCenaua Thursday, March 11, 1965

The Eleanor ShopYarna and Rental Library

Telephone 442-37239'Union Street

Imported & DomestieYarna

Fre6 Knitting l,..truc';o,..Wednesdaya and Friday.

9:30. 12:00Espert Finuhing and

Blocking

effective, One possible alternative :Lepreis to instigate a system of frisk: (Continued from Page Six)ing and purse perusal. A search coming dates being what they are.warrant could be obtained from His Irish intuition is strongest

around 81. Patrick's Day (a reo.the New London police depart- Minder for those who only haveMento Another alternative is to a crazy calendar that gives pho-abolish the searchers. This act ney holidays to celebrate anywould be in keeping with the time) which is this Wednesday,

To the Editor: college's desire to economize March 17! What's more, the firstmistake of the conspirators was S dB'

"1 dreamed my notebooks were wherever possible, to choose March 15 as the day to tu ents to egInbeing apathetically pawed as I . put the plan into action. Lepre, H d E hstood remotely by l!le library door A more constructive approach being an intelligent man of let- owar XC angein 'my Maidenform bra stuffed to. the problem of book defacement ters, immediately recognized .thewith twenty pages snipped from might ~e to revamp the college Ides of March as a traditional Three Connecticut stu dentsthe N.E.D." Although Maiden- law which says that honor court date for diabolical schemes. have been chosen to participatefonn bra artistry usually takes may suspen~ ?r expel a student in the spring vacation exchangeplace in dream sequences, con- for such. activity. If the s.tudent So as Lepre Conn left the Conn to Howard University.cealment of material slashed wer~ subjected ~o au.tomati~ sus- Census office with shillaIah in Philippa Carrington '66, Janefrom-library books and periodicals pension and/or if tJ:iS particular green-gloved hand for Spring Va- Silver '68, and Toby Sambol '68,is ridiculously easy under the rule were .emPI:asized d~rmg cation in Ireland (not having to will live in the main quadranglepresent police system. An argu- freshman ?Tle.ntatI<?n,an attitude worry about Calendar days), he on the northwest Washingtonment rcr. the searchers is that might be Instilled in the student wished everyone a Happy St. campus. Each girl, accompaniedthey serve indirectly as a psych" WhICh would last through her Pat's Day and disclosed the hor- by her "hostess," will 'have thelogical conscience pinching de- college years. At any rate, the rible New Haven plotters-s-a jeal- opportunity to participate in thevice; this theory was disproved ~earchers are useless and I would ous group of Yalies who were not academic and social life of thewith the defacement of several like to see them expunged from invited to the fabulous Mid-Win· campus, as wen as frequent tripseconomics journals earlier in the the college community. ter Weekend and were seeking re- about the capital city.year. The searchers are totally in. Cynthia Fuller '66 venge, seeing no future hope for This spring exchange has met

:::-_-=- __ = ---.::-,-__ -==--=--=-=-=---=--=---:,',-W..,i;:-n.::g..:-D-i-n.::g--:,in..,Vl,-'_ta_t;:;io;:;n;:-s_,_---;:_----:;- with more enthusiasm than everbefore on the Connecticut cam-Student Representatives Hold Mock Legislature in Hartford pus, Any girl interested in acting

" as a "hostess" to Howard stu-The Connecticut Intercollegiate the meeting of the legislature, necticut College delegation are an dents, who will complete the ex-

Student Legislature is convening which began yesterday and will amendment to the Motor Vehicle change by visiting this campusin Hartford this week. continue un~il Saturday. noon. Act and a proposal for teaching April 12·20, should contact KarinStudents will Use the chambers Several bi,lls are assigned to communism in public schools. Kunstler or Naomi Silverstone.

of the Senate and the House of each delegation. The members of Now is also the time to consid-Representatives in the capitol the delegations, known. as "bill Committee meetings he 1d er participation in the exchangebuilding Delegates from eighteen proponents," make a motion to act Th d ft f 11 program for next, semester. How- Barbershop Quartet ReelConnecticut universities and col- on the bills which pass through urs ay a ernoon were o. ow· ard, Fisk in Nashville, or Spell-leges, including twenty girls from the actual legislative process. . ed by a banq~et, caucus, mee~~gs man are all possibilities. Any girl "KEEP AMERICAConnecticut College, are attending The bills assigned to the Con- and the election of the preslding interested in a change of pace as SINGING"F;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;; officers. Legislature meetings are well as a fascinating experience \'=============:!,)

planned for Friday and Saturday. -should contact her dean NOW. . ...

Letters --:,----------- .Second semester tryouts for

the Modern Dance Group wlIIbe held Thursday, March 18,at 7 o'clock in the Dance Stu-dio. New members of thegroup will participate in theFive Arts Weekend perform-ance.

(OonUnued.from Pap Two)lege itself is not realizing itsgreatest chances in acquiring adynamic and sincere student body,

Emily TIschler '67

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GARDE THEATREStarts Friday

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SEE EUROPE WITH MARGARET W. HOYTThis summer for the thirteenth. time I will take a group of

college gtrlsr abroad. This is not a run-of-the-mill tour at allbut a unique way for girls to see Europe for the first time.Purposely planned to allow enough time for bike trips, riding,skating, sailing, climbing, water skiing, shopping, swimming,exploring. The strain of traveling is lessened by using our ownselected motor-coach--our "house on wheels" for the summer.No rushing to meet deadlines and no toting of suitcases.

Europe is so familiar to me now, that I can open many anexciting door for the girls who go with me. Independence ofaction is stressed, within the framework of the trip.

Pertinent statistics: Depart July 1st on the favorite Italianline 'ship, the Cristoforo Colombo; return by TWA jet August24th. Price $2390 inclusiv.e from N. Y. This covers everythingIncluding tips. 1 will be glad to send you ali details, girls:names from previous tours and interview all who are, Inter-ested.

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