��<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-16"?><mets xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.loc.gov/METS/ http://schema.ccs-gmbh.com/metae/mets-metae.xsd" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns="http://www.loc.gov/METS/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:MODS="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3" xmlns:mix="http://www.loc.gov/mix/" xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:mets="http://www.loc.gov/METS/"><structMap><div ID="DIVL1" TYPE="Newspaper" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL2" TYPE="VOLUME"><div ID="DIVL3" TYPE="ISSUE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL4" TYPE="TITLE_SECTION" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL5" TYPE="HEADLINE" ORDER="1" LABEL="THE BROWN DAILY HERALD"></div><div ID="DIVL6" TYPE="TEXTBLOCK" ORDER="1" LABEL="Vol. 67, No. 48"></div><div ID="DIVL7" TYPE="TEXTBLOCK" ORDER="1" LABEL="PROVIDENCE, R. I., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1957"></div><div ID="DIVL8" TYPE="TEXTBLOCK" ORDER="1" LABEL="Rainy and windy"></div></div><div ID="DIVL9" TYPE="CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL10" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL11" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL12" TYPE="OVERLINE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Distributes Questionnaire"></div><div ID="DIVL13" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="IDC Seeks Student Opinion About West Quadrangle"></div></div><div ID="DIVL14" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL15" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL16" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL17" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="All independents yesterday received an Interdormitory Council questionnaire concerning the possibility of a housing system next year in the. West Quadrangle, according to Robert Selig  58, chairman of the Quad Committee."></div></div><div ID="DIVL18" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL19" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="The questionnaire was prepared by the IDG committee on the West Quadrangle and will determine to a large extent the committee s report. Among IDC members on the West Quadrangle are: Selig, Henry Kelly  60, Richard Claiborn  59, John Oliver  59, John Russo  59, Wayne Stork  59, Ira Schneifer  60, Philip Hollman  60, Harry Canning  58, and Bruce Barton  60.  The committee is divided at present,  Kelley commented,  and"></div></div><div ID="DIVL20" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL21" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="its report will be greatly influenced j by student opinion, as reflected in the questionaire s results. So all independents are urged to thoughtfully consider their answers.  The main inquiry on the questionaire is concerned with the opinion on the acceptance of a housing system, but there are also corollary questions regarding the type of system favored, or the extent to which the students in a dormitory should be allowed to pass on the individuals requesting space in that dormitory.  The questionnaires should be turned in to respective dormitory presidents,  Kelly continued,  who will give them to a mmeber of the IDC committee. It is imperative that they be handed in as soon as possible  he added. The committee is expected to hand in its report  within the next two weeks,  Kelley said. Last year an IDC committee was organized to deal with housing in the West Quadrangle, but there was no consideration of a house system as such.  They Since the quadrangle has been put into operational use, a number of complaints have been heard concerning noise, placement of students in houses of their choice, and related items. The report is designed to air such complaints and if possible, mitigate them."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL22" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL23" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL24" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Junior Class Will Sponsor Wriston Talk"></div></div><div ID="DIVL25" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL26" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL27" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL28" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Dr. Henry M. Wriston, president emeritus, will speak at a dinner sponsored by the junior class on Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. in the Refectory."></div></div><div ID="DIVL29" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL30" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Before coming to Brown, Wriston was president of Lawrence College in Appleton, Wisconsin. He has served as president of the North Central Association of Colleges and in 1948 he was elected the first president of the Association of American Universities. He has served as president and director of the Council of Foreign Relations and is a trustee of the World Peace Foundation and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. At Brown one of his major &quot;accomplishments was the building of the multi-milliondollar quadrangle. A selection of 26 speeches and excerpts of speeches by Wriston, delivered during his 18 years as Brown president, has been assembled in a volume entitled  Wriston Speaking , just published by the Brown University Press."></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL31" TYPE="ILLUSTRATION" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL32" TYPE="IMAGE" ORDER="1" LABEL=""></div><div ID="DIVL33" TYPE="CAPTION" ORDER="1" LABEL="President Emeritus Wriston"></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL34" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL35" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL36" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Russia, Poland Are Described By McConnell"></div><div ID="DIVL37" TYPE="SUBHEADLINE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Cites Conversations, Describes Morale"></div></div><div ID="DIVL38" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL39" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL40" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL41" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="In two speeches yesterday, Allen McConnell, assistant professor of Political Science, narrated a number of experiences and impressions he received while spending 30 days in Russia and five days in Poland this past summer. Warsaw Rebuilt Before an audience of 50 at the International Relations Club meeting, McConnell told first of the restoration, of the city of Warsaw. As the evacuating Nazis had razed it to the ground,  the decision to rebuild this city   he said,  was really a heroic one.   It is an astonishing example of a people determined to preserve its tradition.  Leningrad, the speaker s favorite Russian city, was described in detail in his earlier talk to the History Club. Among the historic places he visited were Lenin s apartment and the Winter Palace."></div></div><div ID="DIVL42" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL43" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="; Now commemorating its 250th j anniversary since its costly founi dation by Peter the Great, Lenin| grad, McConnell said, is unique in : having at certain seasons, nights without darkness, or what are called  white nights.  Throughout his travels, McConj nell observed that many in the ! population, in addition to teachers ! and professionals, were able to | speak good English, j Another traditionally Russian | widespread habit is reading.  Ev- I erybody reads,  McConnell stated, ; as he went on to tell about the i characteristic noticed was the I time he saw Little Women being J read by a worker in the subway, j Regime Decried ; As a considerable part of his ! time was spent visiting universities i in Moscow and Leningrad, MeCon; nell stated that a number of students he talked to in private were vehemently against the government . . . and not only, because of the material shortages. He re; lated how one student pointed to the ministry of culture building and exclaimed,  there is the enemy!  Asked why, he answered  because they lie!  Such bitterness, however, rarely means that the protestor would be actually willing to revolt. Most agree that there is no way out, except by a bloodbath. And this, said the speaker, they do not want."></div></div><div ID="DIVL44" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL45" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="Because the students he talked to believe their newspapers and are nothing but lies, McConnell said they were genuinely surprised when he told them the U. S. has no commercial jet liner. This is what their papers had told them, and they therefore had disbelieved it."></div></div><div ID="DIVL46" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL47" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="McConnell noted that, in spite of Russia s technological achievements, its jet liners, and the new hotels he saw being built, Russia still faces great material problems. The general shabbiness of the cities and the people is obvious. Russia, McConnell commented, has a definite national pride, based on cultural rather than racial foundations. They do have  a feeling of inferiority  in regards to many of America s achievements. But they feel certain, McConnell said, that they will catch up with us. At any rate,  their respect for American technology, at least last summer, was very high. "></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL48" TYPE="ILLUSTRATION" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL49" TYPE="IMAGE" ORDER="1" LABEL=""></div><div ID="DIVL50" TYPE="CAPTION" ORDER="1" LABEL="Daily Herald Photo by Lum DK. ALLEN McCONNELL talking before the International Relations Club last night on his summer travels to Russia and Poland."></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL51" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL52" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL53" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="We Need to Work at Faith Raulierson Says In Chapel"></div></div><div ID="DIVL54" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL55" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL56" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL57" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL=" We must not only learn to get to outer space but also we must learn to live together,  said Calvin H. Raulierson in yesterday s chapel."></div></div><div ID="DIVL58" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL59" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Raulierson, who is assistant executive director of the United Negro College Fund, spoke in behalf of the Brown Charities Drive s annual appeal."></div></div><div ID="DIVL60" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL61" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL=" Until May 17, 1954, the Negro had no choice but to accept the fact that he would be discriminated against in the South by law and custom and in the North by subtleties,  Raulierson said.  We must push back the barriers of misunderstanding and suspicion between Negro and white alike,  he added."></div></div><div ID="DIVL62" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL63" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="The United Negro College Fund was organized to give the Negro a chance for education; last year the fund helped approximately 30,000 young men and women, he added. The colleges that are part of the UNCF are designed to be similar to small New England Colleges; they are, he said,  A probing satellite of education in an orbit of segregation,  and added  that the mission of these institutions is to invite all to study with no discrimination on the school s part.  He finished by saying,  We have common faith and deep belief in the democratic process. But, faith is not enough, we must work at it and The United Negro College Fund is one way to accomplish this. "></div></div><div ID="DIVL64" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL65" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Raulierson is an instructor of Political Science at Lincoln University and a lecturer on government at Brooklyn College. He is also research analyst in the President s Committee on Fair Employment Practice; associate director of research of Who s Who In The United Nations; and Director of Cooperative Intercollegiate Examination Programs."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL66" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL67" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL68" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Pineaii Arrives in US for Conference; Girard Receives Suspended Sentence"></div></div><div ID="DIVL69" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL70" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL71" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL72" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="WASHINGTON, NOV. 18. (UP)   French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau arrived here yesterday to confer with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles in an effort to heal the rift in allied unity over U.S.-British arms shipments .to Tunisia."></div></div><div ID="DIVL73" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL74" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="In a planeside news conference after a flight from New York, Pineau said his government wants  to reinforce Atlantic solidarity that was compromised  by the arms shipments. The action angered French officials and aroused a storm of protests from the French public."></div></div><div ID="DIVL75" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL76" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Pineau reiterated his government s chief complaint that the munitions sent to Tunisia, a former French protectorate, may be slipped across the border to arm anti-French rebels in neighboring Algeria. Girard Freed MAEBASHI, JAPAN, TUESDAY, NOV. 19. (UP)  Army Specialist William S. Girard was convicted of manslaughter for the death of Mrs. Naka Sakai, and was given a three year suspended prison sentence."></div></div><div ID="DIVL77" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL78" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="The sentence, pronounced by District Judge Yuzo Kawachi, in effect let the 22-year-old soldier off scott free since the Army has said he will be returned to the United States in about two weeks  time."></div></div><div ID="DIVL79" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL80" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="The lenient sentence by the three-judge Japanese tribunal rejected a prosecution demand for a flat sentence of five years at hard labor."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL81" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL82" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL83" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Chisholm s Book ,  Philosophical Study 9 Recently Published by Cornell Press"></div></div><div ID="DIVL84" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL85" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL86" TYPE="AUTHOR" ORDER="1" LABEL="by Stephen M. Haas"></div><div ID="DIVL87" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL88" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL=" Perceiving: A Philosophical Study,  a book by Dr. Roderick M. Chisholm, chairman of the department of philosophy at Brown University, has recently been published by the Cornell University Press. Professor Chisholm, while on leave on a Howard Foundation grant during 1955-56, completed this book which now appears in the Cornell series on Contemporary Philosophy.  Perceiving: A Philosophical Study  is also being published in England by the Oxford University Press."></div></div><div ID="DIVL89" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL90" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Chisholm, a Brown graduate, has previously written articles which have appeared in such magazines as Mind, The New England Journal of Medicine, Philosophy of Science, and Philosophical Studies. He is also a member of the Board of Editors of  Philosophy and Phenomenological Research  and was President of the Inter-American Congress of Philosophy which was held in Washington, D. C. in July. He is at present serving as Secretary of the Inter-American Society of Philososphy."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL91" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL92" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL93" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Open Houses Changed"></div></div><div ID="DIVL94" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL95" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL96" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL97" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="The fraternity open-houses origanlly scheduled for Thursday of this week are to be held Wednesday evening instead. The Interfraternity Council has decided to change the date in order to avoid conflict with the Class of 1959 dinner on Thursday night."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL98" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL99" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL100" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Cammarian Club Representation System Topic of Discussion, Trotter Announces"></div></div><div ID="DIVL101" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL102" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL103" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL104" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Cammarian Club representation will be the topic for discussion at tonight s meeting of the student governing organization in their Faunce House club room, President Michael Trotter  58, announced. The Lobstermen will resume their debate on a committee report by Manuel Kyriakakis  58, submitted last month, which recommended a revision in the present system of representation from the classes - at - large, extra-curricular activities, athletic teams, the Interdormitory Council, the Interfraternity Council, and Plantations House."></div></div><div ID="DIVL105" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL106" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="The committee report proposed a system with representation from the classes, IFC, IDC, and commuters; and that the remainder of the club be composed of seventeen members, each residing in a housing unit of approximately 100 students. Housing units would be divided according to the physical plan of the quadrangles. Last week, George McCully  60, proposed that the housing unit representation be taken care of by appointments of classes-at-large members to each unit. This would alleviate the need of both March and October elections of the club, he stated."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL107" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL108" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL109" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Resident Fellows"></div></div><div ID="DIVL110" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL111" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL112" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL113" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Dr. Harcourt Brown, professor of French, will speak on  The Skeptical Humanist  during the Resident Fellows  Luncheon at noon in the President s Dining Boom of the Sharpe Refectory."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL114" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL115" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL116" TYPE="OVERLINE" ORDER="2" LABEL="Off the Cuff"></div><div ID="DIVL117" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="2" LABEL="On Oxford and Brown"></div></div><div ID="DIVL118" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL119" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL120" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL121" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="2" LABEL="A spirit has moved me to write about Oxford and Brown, to contrast the two, and perhaps reveal a few of the basic differences between them �%  their failings and their virtues   and to clear up some rather shaking misconceptions about England, and its educational system. At Oxford and Cambridge is centered the cream of the English intelligensia in every field of academic and research work, though London has made very great strides, and is only a little way behind, and in some fields equally good. We have in England fifteen universities at the most, and it is, therefore, only a very minute proportion of the population who can attend. In England it is felt that a university education is wasted on the mass of the people, and being theoretically less democratic than the Americans, we have no scruples about limiting ourselves in this higher education. The question of money also arises, since endowments are all too scarce, and few are rich enough to give them, and the State is in no position to subsidize any more universities, being taken up with defence and maintaining some kind of standard of living. I would agree that we need more universities, that many are being deprived of something from which they would greatly benefit, but the chance of expansion is now impossible, and whereas in the past the wealthy elite went to Oxford and Cambridge, it is increasingly becoming an elite of intelligence. More and more the universities, and particularly Oxford and Cambridge (the seat of the Upper Class in the past) are accepting people from every class, provided they have the intelligence, and the number of State scolarships increase every year. We are learning from America, so they say. America gives as many people as possible a university education, being naturally more democratic, and whether it is wasted on the majority is a matter of conjecture, but there are hints that State universities are not all that could be desired, and rumours of football scholarships. Therefore, your intelligensia is. distributed, if not evenly. In England it is highly concentrated and specialized. At Oxford and Cambridge the competition for the few places is very strong, and increases each year as the high-schools improve, and produce more potential university men. Oxford and Cambridge or London are every intellectual person s dream of attainment; there, are collected the most brilliant men, and also the men with ideas and personality in England. At Oxford, students are not accepted purely on academic grounds; the colleges look for personality, ideas, versatility, and general stimulation and intelligence, and ten percent of the University does not drop out every year. The professors are all men of immense intellect, practically all engaged in research., all topclass scholars, who have gained their positions with difficulty. These universities naturally attract the best brains in the country, and a professor is held in great esteem, far more so than here. And what of life at Oxford? The courses at Oxford are usually three-year, though you can take as long as you like to pass your degree. You specialize in one subject throughout, but to say that students from Oxford are narrow is to fail to understand the place as it is, and the atmosphere that exists. The average Oxford student is infinitely broader than the average Brown student, because he has broadened himself, and read far more widely. There is tremendous intellectual stimulation there, and a very real desire to learn, for its own sake, and to do research in other fields, of interest. Oxford is not a means to the job which pays the most, as one suspects many Brunonians regard Brown   an arts degree will not greatly aid an Oxford student to get a better job at first. Academically you are treated as mature adults. You see your tutor once a week, and he prescribes books to read, advises good lectures, and sets essays, and you are free to work or not. You take one exam after your first year, and then no more till your finals; thus the tyranny of the hour-exam does not exist. People at Oxford work, not because they have to, but because of the atmosphere and their own intellect. The Oxford cmapus is alive with intellectual life and individualism .Conformity is frowned upon, and everyone is a person with something of his own, something different, to contribute to the whole, and he is never afraid to say or do what h esincerely believes in: he is the right kind of rebel. Societies, newspapers and clubs are of every kind and description, often respectable, often invigoratingly subversive. The campus is alive with ideas and. thinking, and also with parties and good living. The rich young set exists, though already dying. Oxford always has something new and exciting to offer, organizations come and go, and everyone is an individualist, determined to make his mark."></div></div><div ID="DIVL122" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL123" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="2" LABEL="Brown has a great community spirit, and feeling of friendliness, which greatly impressed me, but it lacks much besides. Intellectual stimulation is little, and isolated, and not fostered. Almost every student works for grades, and hour-exams, and the A.B., and the fact that he gets an education in the process is less important; learning for its own sake rarely exists. One would at least expect some intellectual societies in what is reckoned to be one of the better universities   my prep school in England had eleven or twelve, all very much alive   but I have found only one or two here. Anything intellectual or individual is considered effected. And everywhere uniformity, and conformity, throttles vitality and inindividualism, producing the good Brown student, who treads the middle of the narrow path, another number in a place of numbers."></div></div><div ID="DIVL124" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL125" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="2" LABEL="In part it is the fault of the students, but also it is the fault of U. H. If academically we were treated more maturely, if research were encouraged, and independent thought and work, we might be more stimulated and mature; if we were not restricted, we might flourish. In passing I should like to say, that to me. the Ivy League means conformity, snobbery, an inferiority complex, and stuffy conventionalism. The constitutional Americans constitutionalize everything on campus, whereas the very essence of many organizations should lie in their freedom. Why should societies be dictated to by the Cam Club, which knows very little about most things? Why should they decide what the Debating Union should do? The campus has been so confined and constricted that to me it is apathetic, and in many ways dead, and everything tinged with a breaking away from tradition is condemned. The deans tell us in Chapel to be individualists, to become intellectually stimulated, but when we attempt to follow their advice, the answer is No! No! No! They indeed seem to produce yet another mass-produced Brown undergraduate. The paternal hand of U. H. stretches out to protect the innocent students. Are we children, I have asked? If U.H. would practice what it so loudly preaches from the pulpit, many of their criticisms would be answered, and Brown would be a better place, not dull and dead as it is now. Coming from England these things have struck me with great force, and they have shaken me. If U.H. fails to become more liberal, I shall regret not having blown them up on November 4th. U.H. is full of stuffy, conventional conservatism, and Brown has far to go to reach the intellectual atmosphere of Oxford.  Richard Ormond"></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL126" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL127" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL128" TYPE="OVERLINE" ORDER="2" LABEL="On the Aisle"></div><div ID="DIVL129" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="2" LABEL="Orchestral Plaudits"></div></div><div ID="DIVL130" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL131" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL132" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL133" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="2" LABEL="The Brown University Orchestra played its first concert of the season Sunday afternoon at Alumnae Hall. It was a spirited and satisfying program, highlighted by some refreshing novelty, and appreciated by an all too small Brown audience. Although there were many moments of excellence, first mention must go to an extraordinary performance of the Cimarosa-Benjamin Concerto for Oboe and Strings. As soloist a young man named George Turrell turned in one of the most remarkable amateur performances this reviewer has ever heard, playing with musicianship, good tone, accuracy, and above all   impeccable style. Jim James  58 was the soloist in Mozart s B-flat Concerto, originally scored for bassoon, but performed here on the trombone. James strove diligently to adapt his instrument and technique to the delicate and florid demands of the score. He was most successful in the closing portion of the Andante, but one missed the trills and lighter tone that the composer must have intended. In general, the orchestra under Martin Fischer, was in good shape. The shadings may not be too subtle, but the spirit is sufficient to compensate for any technical shortcomings. The ambitious program also included a loud performance of Bach s Third Brandenberg Concerto, an adequate one of Brahm s lovely A Major Serenade, and closed with a clean, lively, and solid account of Handel s Concerto Grosso No. 5 ."></div></div><div ID="DIVL134" TYPE="AUTHOR" ORDER="2" LABEL="- Martin Bemheimer"></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL135" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL136" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL137" TYPE="OVERLINE" ORDER="3" LABEL="Disappointment Prevails"></div><div ID="DIVL138" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="3" LABEL="Soccer Team Compiles 2-6-1 Record"></div></div><div ID="DIVL139" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL140" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL141" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL142" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="In a typically exciting Ivy League soccer game Friday, the Bruin hooters concluded their season with a 2-1 loss to Harvard. This leaves Brown with a disappointing 2-6-1 record for the season, and sixth place in the league standings. Princeton, by defeating Yale 2-1 this week, has clinched the league title. The Bruins, led by Captain Les Silverstein, showed great spirit, but ran up against a series of injuries and bad breaks which spelled the difference between a winning and a losing season. Coach Joe eKnnaway remarked that he  was disappointed with the team s performance, but it was a terrific league this year. Most of the games were close and could have gone either way.  This point can easily he seen in that the losses to Harvard, Yale and MIT were all by scores of 2-1. Many players saw action for the Bruins this season. Many of these were seniors and have played their last game for Brown. In this category we find Captain Les Silverstein, Barrie Phelps, Mike Strem, Gar Patrick, Dick Seid, Lud Miller, Tom Rodes and Bob Blakely."></div></div><div ID="DIVL143" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL144" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Most of the work at fullback was done by Paul Woodhouse and Phelps. Rodes also would have seen a great deal more action had he not been injured early in the season."></div></div><div ID="DIVL145" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL146" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="The team s greatest strength could be found at the halfback positions. Dick Ramsden, Silverstein and Miller were the regulars, with Bob Pearson, Dick Press and Pat Gallagher acting as their replacements. Gallagher, converted to defense after Silverstein s injury, was a standout both as a forward and as a halfback. The forwards who saw the most action were Seid, Strem, Patric, Pete Goldman, Arnie Hetzer, Jim McMorris, Sal Arena and Bill Van DenToorn."></div></div><div ID="DIVL147" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL148" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="The opening 2-0 loss to Wesleyan was a poorly played game which illustrated the inexperience of both teams. It served as a boon to the Bruin team, however, since it fought very hard in the Yale game and almost came out victorious."></div></div><div ID="DIVL149" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL150" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Brown gained itself a 1-0 lead only to see the Elis score two quick goals which decided the contest. It was in this game that Ed Ginsberg, a junior goalie, replaced Roy Smith in the Bruin nets. He was to continue there for the rest of the season."></div></div><div ID="DIVL151" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL152" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="The Brown and White showed steady miprovement and reached their peak in the following two games against Dartmouth and Penn, winning both games. TJ-Conn, however, had other ideas and played Brown to a 0-0 tie. This game proved very costly to Brown as Mike Strem, who had jumped into the lead in the Ivy League scoring race, injured his ankles and was handicapped for the rest of the season."></div></div><div ID="DIVL153" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL154" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="The Princeton game found the Bruins outclassed by the finest team in the league. They fought gamely throughout, but fell 8-0 to the onslaught of the well-polished Tigers. Traveling next to MIT, the players found themselves once again in a close contest, finishing on the short end of a 2-1 score. This game also hurt Brown, as Captain Silverstein and Pete Goldman were injured. Friday's Harvard game was one that the Bruins wanted to win. The Bruins were unsuccessful in trying to salvage a disappointing season, losing 2-1."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL155" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL156" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL157" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="3" LABEL="Cub Harriers Finish 4th In IC4A Meet at N. Y."></div></div><div ID="DIVL158" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL159" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL160" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL161" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="The Brown freshman cross country team, paced by its ace, Bob Lowe, finished fourth in the IC4A meet of the nation s top harriers held in New York yesterday. Lowe, hampered badly by a sore throat, finished 6th at 15:09, only 13 seconds behind winner George Verdisco of Georgetown University. Brown finished with a team total of 117 behind Penn State 73, Manhattan 59, and Syracuse, the winner, with a score of 52. Other Brown finishers were Pete Green 26, Dirk Vanderblue 34, Bill Schwab 39, Dave Rolfe 42, Jim Trafton 46, and Jerry Huetz 48."></div></div><div ID="DIVL162" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL163" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Credit must also be given to Brown s two varsity entries, sophomores Vince MacDonald and Bill MacArdle. Although their final positions, 56 and 62 respectively, are not very impressive at firse glance, their top flight performances can be appreciated when it is taken into consideration that they faced the nation s top competition, and that they were beaten by only two other runners from New England."></div></div><div ID="DIVL164" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL165" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Michigan State s varsity ran away with both team-and individual honors with its number one runner, Crawford Kennedy, placing first."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL166" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL167" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL168" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="4" LABEL="Court Committee"></div></div><div ID="DIVL169" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL170" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL171" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL172" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="All undergraduates interested in the Student Court Investigating Committee are reminded that they must sign up in Dean Moulton s office no later than 5 o clock Thursday, November 21. Members of all four classes are eligible."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL173" TYPE="SECTION" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL174" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL175" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="4" LABEL="BROWN BRIEFS"></div></div><div ID="DIVL176" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL177" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL178" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="4" LABEL="Official Bulletins"></div></div><div ID="DIVL179" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL180" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL181" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL182" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="LAW SCHOOL: All students interested in law school, can have a personal interview with Dean John E. Coons, Assistant Dean of the School of Law, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, TODAY, Tuesday, November 19, 1957. For an appointment, go to Dean Moulton s office, Room 205, University Hall, or telephone Ext. 202. Westcott E. S. Moulton Associate Dean of Students LAW SCHOOL: All students interested in law school, can have an interview with Professor Talbott, Professor of Law, The Law School, Rutgers University, on Monday, November 25, 1957. There will be two group meetings with Professor Talbott. The first is at 9:30 a.m. and the other at 10:30 a.m. For an appointment, go to Dean Moulton s office, room 205, University Hall, or telephone extension 202. Westcott E. S. Moulton Associate Dean of Students"></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL183" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL184" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL185" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="4" LABEL="Organizations"></div></div><div ID="DIVL186" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL187" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL188" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL189" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="DAILY HERALD: There will be a meeting of the &gt; entire staff of the Daily Herald tonight in the offices at 7:30. Attendance is mandatory. BRIDGE CLUB: The winners of this week s tournament were as follows: north-south; First  Hugh Fryer and Dick Wegman; Second Karl Ahlenius and Ed Rossetti. Eastwest; First Siddy Smith and Walter Main; second Carl Youngdahl and Burt Raphael. BROWN BAND: All members who still have ticket stubs from the Harvard football gone should get them to Mike Weston AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. Take them to him at room 342, Kappa Sigma, or mail them to him at Box 2360. Be sure that your name is on them. FHBG ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE: Meeting in the Faunce House Board of Governors  board room at 5:00 p.m. today. ATTENTION BROWN-PEMBROKE SKI CLUB MEMBERS: Open house at Art Palmer s tonight from 7:00 to 9:30 p.m. See sk; styles and equipment for the coming winter. Membership cards must be shown or signed up for at the door. Refreshments. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: Regular meeting Tuesday in the Faunce House Memorial Room at 5:00 p.m. All are welcome."></div></div><div ID="DIVL190" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL191" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="AMATEUR RADIO CLUB: Meeting at 7:15 p.m. in the shack."></div></div><div ID="DIVL192" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL193" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="UNIVERSITY CHORUS: Delivery of formal suits tonight at 8:15 in the Music Department. Bring any problems, complaints, and checks. If unable to pick up your suit at this time, see Marty Bernheimer, 238 Wayland."></div></div><div ID="DIVL194" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL195" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="BROWN CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION: There will be am eeting of the Social Action Commission in the Faunce Memorial Room at 5:00 p.m. today. The candy sales drive will be oi'ganized and final details arranged. LI.BER BRUNENSIS: There wil be a dinner in the President s Dining room at 6:15 p.m. today. Dean Mouton will be the speaker. Please bring your meal tickets."></div></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL196" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL197" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL198" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="4" LABEL="Daily Herald"></div></div><div ID="DIVL199" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL200" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL201" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL202" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="There will be a meeting of the entire staff of the Daily Herald tonight at 7:30 in the offices. Attendance is mandatory."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL203" TYPE="SECTION" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL204" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL205" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL206" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="2" LABEL="SHOWING TODAY fit C A r * 0 03 0 % fa * &lt;v * � yo^ w OUR TRAVELING REPRESENTATIVE MR. SUMMER LEE Exhibiting at Tlie Slaeraton-Biltmore Hotel Tuesday, November 19th STORES AT: 341 Madison Avenue, New York 262 York Street, New Haven 82 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge COAST TO COAST TRAVEL EXHIBITS"></div><div ID="DIVL207" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="2" LABEL="m m V WE 1st! mm 'V s v ! MA T *2266"></div><div ID="DIVL208" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="2" LABEL="FOUL WEATHER JACKET at $13.95 and NAVY TYPE SHOES at $5.95 for Brown Men only RUDY'S ARMY and NAVY STORE 147 Washington Street"></div><div ID="DIVL209" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="2" LABEL="AN OPEN LETTER TO THE FRATERNITIES AND HOUSES AT BROWN November 19, 1957 Social Chairmen Brown University Providence, Rhode Island Gentlemen: It's KNIGHT'S for BEVERAGES. We offer complete party service. And we mean COMPLETE party service. Call us at MA 1-8397 and check our prices. You'll be glad you did. How you SAVE in time. Of course, there is PROMPT DELIVERY SERVICE. Very truly yours, HERB KNIGHT P.S. We exist at 361 Broadway."></div><div ID="DIVL210" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="s&amp;t"></div><div ID="DIVL211" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="257 Thayer Street (across from the Avon) For Early Christinas Shoppers Now Featuring: Handmade Scottish Jewelry Imported Wool Taffeta Neckties Wool Hose Fair Isle &amp; Shetland Sweaters Hundreds of other Scots imports   Visit our Interesting Shop."></div><div ID="DIVL212" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Hffll Hi B illlil I i m"></div><div ID="DIVL213" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="H9"></div><div ID="DIVL214" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Emm"></div><div ID="DIVL215" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL=""></div><div ID="DIVL216" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="I JAMES CAGNEY DOROTHY MALONE Man of a Thousand Faces JOCK MAHONEY LUANA PATTEN Joe Dakota Starts Wed: Doris Day  Pajama Game&quot;"></div><div ID="DIVL217" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Hurry! Hurry!! Hurry!!! See the Performing Bear (Drinks Coca Cola) at LIGGETT-AVON PHARMACY Cor. Thayer &amp; Meeting"></div><div ID="DIVL218" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="R.I.S.D. THEATRE presents 66 i WEIGHT L smamm by JACQUES DEVAL All the magic of the theatre caught in a drama of haunting beauty. November 22-23, 3:30 p.m. R. I. School of Design Auditorium Market Square, Providence Tickets: $1.00 and 75c Reservations: DE 1-3507, ext. 253"></div><div ID="DIVL219" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="TUNNEL. ORf&gt;, Z2? A THAYER ROV GRAND OPENING Cleaning Specials H Suit $.89 H Overcoats .89 Sport Jackets $.50 3 Suit Coat .50 Quick, Courteous Service L Ay mm , SECTIO n H"></div><div ID="DIVL220" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Now! The one cigarette in tune with America s taste /"></div><div ID="DIVL221" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="rad� has a]l you want!"></div><div ID="DIVL222" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="the tobacco, the tip... and the taste!"></div><div ID="DIVL223" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="The tobacco you want . . . only the choicest grades of quality tobacco. And it s all 100% natural tobacco! The tip you want ... exclusive T-7 filter, developed especially for Hit Parade, lets you have your flavor, too! The taste you want . . . the freshest, liveliest taste of any filter cigarette. Get new Hit Parade today! New crush-proof box or familiar pack"></div><div ID="DIVL224" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="SAN FRANCISCO: |� In this famous city |� of the Golden Gate, and all || around the U. S. A., ||| more people j are smoking Hit Parade II! � A.T. Co."></div><div ID="DIVL225" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="CLASSIFIED FOR SALE Pentron Dual-track, dual-speed, portable tape recorder. $65 or best offer. Joseph Hayden, 206 Hegeman B. TE 1-9131. FOR SALE 62/100 Karat flawless, full cut diamond. Jeweler's appraisal at $500. Will sell for $325. Write Box 613. Will Contact. TYPING SERVICE Students: Let me relieve you of typing notebooks, term papers, theses and reports. For information, call Wl 1-0526 anytime. HELP WANTED -PART TIME JOBS-MALE. Earn $35- $50 for 10-20 hours weekly. Hours arranged to fit schedule. Apply 1:30 Tuesday, November 19, at room 413 Faunce House. Your Fraternity and House Parties call for the best, so CALL FOR: CLOVER CLUB BEVERAGES for the next one PROMPT DELIVERY Phone GA 1-0085"></div><div ID="DIVL226" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="Kjsgl! H �% mm AMERICAN - &amp; CHINESE FOODS The BROWN BEAR RESTAURANT Corner of Benevolent &amp; Brook Streets"></div><div ID="DIVL227" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL=""></div><div ID="DIVL228" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="in COLOR and ClNeimSeoPE"></div><div ID="DIVL229" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="/winner f " i^AWARD! Original Screen Pl�yl "></div><div ID="DIVL230" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="Eastman Color"></div><div ID="DIVL231" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="CINEMA-"></div><div ID="DIVL232" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="f WHAT'S SO CQLLE&amp;/&amp;r� ) i aqovt \HOT�-a Mew VORKBR? LfaG/AA/S iv. S/A/GLe so aou&amp;jL�. $-RSO UOLLSSGJATE R&amp;GSGTET, m smr/o^"></div><div ID="DIVL233" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="elusive things are NOT easily captured by B10WN PHOTO LAB capture your distinctive personality in truly Ivy tradition &quot;the PERSONAL Christmas gift 1"></div><div ID="DIVL234" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="ADAMS Co. 99 Washington St., Downtown Providence Open Tues. and Thurs. 'til 9 P.M. 12&quot; LP's-3�T� �If �&amp;sr Entire Stock of Reg. $3.98 lieeerds THREE LISTENING BOOTHS MmM CO QH ALL RECORDS GUARANTEED *IUW jlA.dtJ TV   RADIO   PHONOGRAPH SERVICE"></div><div ID="DIVL235" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="a I!! / -"></div><div ID="DIVL236" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="A lot of man ...a lot of cigarette  He gets a lot to like filter, flavor , flip-top box  The works . A filter that means business. An easy draw that s all flavor. And the flip-top box that ends crushed cigarettes. (MADE IN RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, FROM A PRIZED RECIPE)"></div><div ID="DIVL237" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="V, NEW 'SELF-STAmi Just &amp;mf&gt;l the iah tfcw / and the cigarettes pop vp. No digging. No trouble. POPULAR FILTER PRJCE"></div></div></div></div></div></div></div></div></structMap></mets>��<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-16"?><mets xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.loc.gov/METS/ http://schema.ccs-gmbh.com/metae/mets-metae.xsd" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns="http://www.loc.gov/METS/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:MODS="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3" xmlns:mix="http://www.loc.gov/mix/" xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:mets="http://www.loc.gov/METS/"><structMap><div ID="DIVL1" TYPE="Newspaper" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL2" TYPE="VOLUME"><div ID="DIVL3" TYPE="ISSUE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL4" TYPE="TITLE_SECTION" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL5" TYPE="HEADLINE" ORDER="1" LABEL="THE BROWN DAILY HERALD"></div><div ID="DIVL6" TYPE="TEXTBLOCK" ORDER="1" LABEL="Vol. 67, No. 48"></div><div ID="DIVL7" TYPE="TEXTBLOCK" ORDER="1" LABEL="PROVIDENCE, R. I., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1957"></div><div ID="DIVL8" TYPE="TEXTBLOCK" ORDER="1" LABEL="Rainy and windy"></div></div><div ID="DIVL9" TYPE="CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL10" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL11" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL12" TYPE="OVERLINE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Distributes Questionnaire"></div><div ID="DIVL13" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="IDC Seeks Student Opinion About West Quadrangle"></div></div><div ID="DIVL14" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL15" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL16" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL17" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="All independents yesterday received an Interdormitory Council questionnaire concerning the possibility of a housing system next year in the. West Quadrangle, according to Robert Selig  58, chairman of the Quad Committee."></div></div><div ID="DIVL18" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL19" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="The questionnaire was prepared by the IDG committee on the West Quadrangle and will determine to a large extent the committee s report. Among IDC members on the West Quadrangle are: Selig, Henry Kelly  60, Richard Claiborn  59, John Oliver  59, John Russo  59, Wayne Stork  59, Ira Schneifer  60, Philip Hollman  60, Harry Canning  58, and Bruce Barton  60.  The committee is divided at present,  Kelley commented,  and"></div></div><div ID="DIVL20" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL21" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="its report will be greatly influenced j by student opinion, as reflected in the questionaire s results. So all independents are urged to thoughtfully consider their answers.  The main inquiry on the questionaire is concerned with the opinion on the acceptance of a housing system, but there are also corollary questions regarding the type of system favored, or the extent to which the students in a dormitory should be allowed to pass on the individuals requesting space in that dormitory.  The questionnaires should be turned in to respective dormitory presidents,  Kelly continued,  who will give them to a mmeber of the IDC committee. It is imperative that they be handed in as soon as possible  he added. The committee is expected to hand in its report  within the next two weeks,  Kelley said. Last year an IDC committee was organized to deal with housing in the West Quadrangle, but there was no consideration of a house system as such.  They Since the quadrangle has been put into operational use, a number of complaints have been heard concerning noise, placement of students in houses of their choice, and related items. The report is designed to air such complaints and if possible, mitigate them."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL22" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL23" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL24" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Junior Class Will Sponsor Wriston Talk"></div></div><div ID="DIVL25" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL26" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL27" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL28" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Dr. Henry M. Wriston, president emeritus, will speak at a dinner sponsored by the junior class on Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. in the Refectory."></div></div><div ID="DIVL29" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL30" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Before coming to Brown, Wriston was president of Lawrence College in Appleton, Wisconsin. He has served as president of the North Central Association of Colleges and in 1948 he was elected the first president of the Association of American Universities. He has served as president and director of the Council of Foreign Relations and is a trustee of the World Peace Foundation and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. At Brown one of his major &quot;accomplishments was the building of the multi-milliondollar quadrangle. A selection of 26 speeches and excerpts of speeches by Wriston, delivered during his 18 years as Brown president, has been assembled in a volume entitled  Wriston Speaking , just published by the Brown University Press."></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL31" TYPE="ILLUSTRATION" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL32" TYPE="IMAGE" ORDER="1" LABEL=""></div><div ID="DIVL33" TYPE="CAPTION" ORDER="1" LABEL="President Emeritus Wriston"></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL34" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL35" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL36" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Russia, Poland Are Described By McConnell"></div><div ID="DIVL37" TYPE="SUBHEADLINE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Cites Conversations, Describes Morale"></div></div><div ID="DIVL38" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL39" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL40" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL41" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="In two speeches yesterday, Allen McConnell, assistant professor of Political Science, narrated a number of experiences and impressions he received while spending 30 days in Russia and five days in Poland this past summer. Warsaw Rebuilt Before an audience of 50 at the International Relations Club meeting, McConnell told first of the restoration, of the city of Warsaw. As the evacuating Nazis had razed it to the ground,  the decision to rebuild this city   he said,  was really a heroic one.   It is an astonishing example of a people determined to preserve its tradition.  Leningrad, the speaker s favorite Russian city, was described in detail in his earlier talk to the History Club. Among the historic places he visited were Lenin s apartment and the Winter Palace."></div></div><div ID="DIVL42" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL43" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="; Now commemorating its 250th j anniversary since its costly founi dation by Peter the Great, Lenin| grad, McConnell said, is unique in : having at certain seasons, nights without darkness, or what are called  white nights.  Throughout his travels, McConj nell observed that many in the ! population, in addition to teachers ! and professionals, were able to | speak good English, j Another traditionally Russian | widespread habit is reading.  Ev- I erybody reads,  McConnell stated, ; as he went on to tell about the i characteristic noticed was the I time he saw Little Women being J read by a worker in the subway, j Regime Decried ; As a considerable part of his ! time was spent visiting universities i in Moscow and Leningrad, MeCon; nell stated that a number of students he talked to in private were vehemently against the government . . . and not only, because of the material shortages. He re; lated how one student pointed to the ministry of culture building and exclaimed,  there is the enemy!  Asked why, he answered  because they lie!  Such bitterness, however, rarely means that the protestor would be actually willing to revolt. Most agree that there is no way out, except by a bloodbath. And this, said the speaker, they do not want."></div></div><div ID="DIVL44" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL45" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="Because the students he talked to believe their newspapers and are nothing but lies, McConnell said they were genuinely surprised when he told them the U. S. has no commercial jet liner. This is what their papers had told them, and they therefore had disbelieved it."></div></div><div ID="DIVL46" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL47" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="McConnell noted that, in spite of Russia s technological achievements, its jet liners, and the new hotels he saw being built, Russia still faces great material problems. The general shabbiness of the cities and the people is obvious. Russia, McConnell commented, has a definite national pride, based on cultural rather than racial foundations. They do have  a feeling of inferiority  in regards to many of America s achievements. But they feel certain, McConnell said, that they will catch up with us. At any rate,  their respect for American technology, at least last summer, was very high. "></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL48" TYPE="ILLUSTRATION" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL49" TYPE="IMAGE" ORDER="1" LABEL=""></div><div ID="DIVL50" TYPE="CAPTION" ORDER="1" LABEL="Daily Herald Photo by Lum DK. ALLEN McCONNELL talking before the International Relations Club last night on his summer travels to Russia and Poland."></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL51" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL52" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL53" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="We Need to Work at Faith Raulierson Says In Chapel"></div></div><div ID="DIVL54" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL55" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL56" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL57" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL=" We must not only learn to get to outer space but also we must learn to live together,  said Calvin H. Raulierson in yesterday s chapel."></div></div><div ID="DIVL58" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL59" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Raulierson, who is assistant executive director of the United Negro College Fund, spoke in behalf of the Brown Charities Drive s annual appeal."></div></div><div ID="DIVL60" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL61" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL=" Until May 17, 1954, the Negro had no choice but to accept the fact that he would be discriminated against in the South by law and custom and in the North by subtleties,  Raulierson said.  We must push back the barriers of misunderstanding and suspicion between Negro and white alike,  he added."></div></div><div ID="DIVL62" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL63" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="The United Negro College Fund was organized to give the Negro a chance for education; last year the fund helped approximately 30,000 young men and women, he added. The colleges that are part of the UNCF are designed to be similar to small New England Colleges; they are, he said,  A probing satellite of education in an orbit of segregation,  and added  that the mission of these institutions is to invite all to study with no discrimination on the school s part.  He finished by saying,  We have common faith and deep belief in the democratic process. But, faith is not enough, we must work at it and The United Negro College Fund is one way to accomplish this. "></div></div><div ID="DIVL64" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL65" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Raulierson is an instructor of Political Science at Lincoln University and a lecturer on government at Brooklyn College. He is also research analyst in the President s Committee on Fair Employment Practice; associate director of research of Who s Who In The United Nations; and Director of Cooperative Intercollegiate Examination Programs."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL66" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL67" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL68" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Pineaii Arrives in US for Conference; Girard Receives Suspended Sentence"></div></div><div ID="DIVL69" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL70" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL71" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL72" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="WASHINGTON, NOV. 18. (UP)   French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau arrived here yesterday to confer with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles in an effort to heal the rift in allied unity over U.S.-British arms shipments .to Tunisia."></div></div><div ID="DIVL73" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL74" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="In a planeside news conference after a flight from New York, Pineau said his government wants  to reinforce Atlantic solidarity that was compromised  by the arms shipments. The action angered French officials and aroused a storm of protests from the French public."></div></div><div ID="DIVL75" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL76" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Pineau reiterated his government s chief complaint that the munitions sent to Tunisia, a former French protectorate, may be slipped across the border to arm anti-French rebels in neighboring Algeria. Girard Freed MAEBASHI, JAPAN, TUESDAY, NOV. 19. (UP)  Army Specialist William S. Girard was convicted of manslaughter for the death of Mrs. Naka Sakai, and was given a three year suspended prison sentence."></div></div><div ID="DIVL77" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL78" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="The sentence, pronounced by District Judge Yuzo Kawachi, in effect let the 22-year-old soldier off scott free since the Army has said he will be returned to the United States in about two weeks  time."></div></div><div ID="DIVL79" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL80" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="The lenient sentence by the three-judge Japanese tribunal rejected a prosecution demand for a flat sentence of five years at hard labor."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL81" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL82" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL83" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Chisholm s Book ,  Philosophical Study 9 Recently Published by Cornell Press"></div></div><div ID="DIVL84" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL85" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL86" TYPE="AUTHOR" ORDER="1" LABEL="by Stephen M. Haas"></div><div ID="DIVL87" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL88" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL=" Perceiving: A Philosophical Study,  a book by Dr. Roderick M. Chisholm, chairman of the department of philosophy at Brown University, has recently been published by the Cornell University Press. Professor Chisholm, while on leave on a Howard Foundation grant during 1955-56, completed this book which now appears in the Cornell series on Contemporary Philosophy.  Perceiving: A Philosophical Study  is also being published in England by the Oxford University Press."></div></div><div ID="DIVL89" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL90" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Chisholm, a Brown graduate, has previously written articles which have appeared in such magazines as Mind, The New England Journal of Medicine, Philosophy of Science, and Philosophical Studies. He is also a member of the Board of Editors of  Philosophy and Phenomenological Research  and was President of the Inter-American Congress of Philosophy which was held in Washington, D. C. in July. He is at present serving as Secretary of the Inter-American Society of Philososphy."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL91" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL92" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL93" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Open Houses Changed"></div></div><div ID="DIVL94" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL95" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL96" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL97" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="The fraternity open-houses origanlly scheduled for Thursday of this week are to be held Wednesday evening instead. The Interfraternity Council has decided to change the date in order to avoid conflict with the Class of 1959 dinner on Thursday night."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL98" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL99" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL100" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Cammarian Club Representation System Topic of Discussion, Trotter Announces"></div></div><div ID="DIVL101" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL102" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL103" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL104" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Cammarian Club representation will be the topic for discussion at tonight s meeting of the student governing organization in their Faunce House club room, President Michael Trotter  58, announced. The Lobstermen will resume their debate on a committee report by Manuel Kyriakakis  58, submitted last month, which recommended a revision in the present system of representation from the classes - at - large, extra-curricular activities, athletic teams, the Interdormitory Council, the Interfraternity Council, and Plantations House."></div></div><div ID="DIVL105" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL106" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="The committee report proposed a system with representation from the classes, IFC, IDC, and commuters; and that the remainder of the club be composed of seventeen members, each residing in a housing unit of approximately 100 students. Housing units would be divided according to the physical plan of the quadrangles. Last week, George McCully  60, proposed that the housing unit representation be taken care of by appointments of classes-at-large members to each unit. This would alleviate the need of both March and October elections of the club, he stated."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL107" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL108" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL109" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="1" LABEL="Resident Fellows"></div></div><div ID="DIVL110" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL111" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL112" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="1"><div ID="DIVL113" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="1" LABEL="Dr. Harcourt Brown, professor of French, will speak on  The Skeptical Humanist  during the Resident Fellows  Luncheon at noon in the President s Dining Boom of the Sharpe Refectory."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL114" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL115" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL116" TYPE="OVERLINE" ORDER="2" LABEL="Off the Cuff"></div><div ID="DIVL117" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="2" LABEL="On Oxford and Brown"></div></div><div ID="DIVL118" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL119" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL120" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL121" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="2" LABEL="A spirit has moved me to write about Oxford and Brown, to contrast the two, and perhaps reveal a few of the basic differences between them �%  their failings and their virtues   and to clear up some rather shaking misconceptions about England, and its educational system. At Oxford and Cambridge is centered the cream of the English intelligensia in every field of academic and research work, though London has made very great strides, and is only a little way behind, and in some fields equally good. We have in England fifteen universities at the most, and it is, therefore, only a very minute proportion of the population who can attend. In England it is felt that a university education is wasted on the mass of the people, and being theoretically less democratic than the Americans, we have no scruples about limiting ourselves in this higher education. The question of money also arises, since endowments are all too scarce, and few are rich enough to give them, and the State is in no position to subsidize any more universities, being taken up with defence and maintaining some kind of standard of living. I would agree that we need more universities, that many are being deprived of something from which they would greatly benefit, but the chance of expansion is now impossible, and whereas in the past the wealthy elite went to Oxford and Cambridge, it is increasingly becoming an elite of intelligence. More and more the universities, and particularly Oxford and Cambridge (the seat of the Upper Class in the past) are accepting people from every class, provided they have the intelligence, and the number of State scolarships increase every year. We are learning from America, so they say. America gives as many people as possible a university education, being naturally more democratic, and whether it is wasted on the majority is a matter of conjecture, but there are hints that State universities are not all that could be desired, and rumours of football scholarships. Therefore, your intelligensia is. distributed, if not evenly. In England it is highly concentrated and specialized. At Oxford and Cambridge the competition for the few places is very strong, and increases each year as the high-schools improve, and produce more potential university men. Oxford and Cambridge or London are every intellectual person s dream of attainment; there, are collected the most brilliant men, and also the men with ideas and personality in England. At Oxford, students are not accepted purely on academic grounds; the colleges look for personality, ideas, versatility, and general stimulation and intelligence, and ten percent of the University does not drop out every year. The professors are all men of immense intellect, practically all engaged in research., all topclass scholars, who have gained their positions with difficulty. These universities naturally attract the best brains in the country, and a professor is held in great esteem, far more so than here. And what of life at Oxford? The courses at Oxford are usually three-year, though you can take as long as you like to pass your degree. You specialize in one subject throughout, but to say that students from Oxford are narrow is to fail to understand the place as it is, and the atmosphere that exists. The average Oxford student is infinitely broader than the average Brown student, because he has broadened himself, and read far more widely. There is tremendous intellectual stimulation there, and a very real desire to learn, for its own sake, and to do research in other fields, of interest. Oxford is not a means to the job which pays the most, as one suspects many Brunonians regard Brown   an arts degree will not greatly aid an Oxford student to get a better job at first. Academically you are treated as mature adults. You see your tutor once a week, and he prescribes books to read, advises good lectures, and sets essays, and you are free to work or not. You take one exam after your first year, and then no more till your finals; thus the tyranny of the hour-exam does not exist. People at Oxford work, not because they have to, but because of the atmosphere and their own intellect. The Oxford cmapus is alive with intellectual life and individualism .Conformity is frowned upon, and everyone is a person with something of his own, something different, to contribute to the whole, and he is never afraid to say or do what h esincerely believes in: he is the right kind of rebel. Societies, newspapers and clubs are of every kind and description, often respectable, often invigoratingly subversive. The campus is alive with ideas and. thinking, and also with parties and good living. The rich young set exists, though already dying. Oxford always has something new and exciting to offer, organizations come and go, and everyone is an individualist, determined to make his mark."></div></div><div ID="DIVL122" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL123" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="2" LABEL="Brown has a great community spirit, and feeling of friendliness, which greatly impressed me, but it lacks much besides. Intellectual stimulation is little, and isolated, and not fostered. Almost every student works for grades, and hour-exams, and the A.B., and the fact that he gets an education in the process is less important; learning for its own sake rarely exists. One would at least expect some intellectual societies in what is reckoned to be one of the better universities   my prep school in England had eleven or twelve, all very much alive   but I have found only one or two here. Anything intellectual or individual is considered effected. And everywhere uniformity, and conformity, throttles vitality and inindividualism, producing the good Brown student, who treads the middle of the narrow path, another number in a place of numbers."></div></div><div ID="DIVL124" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL125" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="2" LABEL="In part it is the fault of the students, but also it is the fault of U. H. If academically we were treated more maturely, if research were encouraged, and independent thought and work, we might be more stimulated and mature; if we were not restricted, we might flourish. In passing I should like to say, that to me. the Ivy League means conformity, snobbery, an inferiority complex, and stuffy conventionalism. The constitutional Americans constitutionalize everything on campus, whereas the very essence of many organizations should lie in their freedom. Why should societies be dictated to by the Cam Club, which knows very little about most things? Why should they decide what the Debating Union should do? The campus has been so confined and constricted that to me it is apathetic, and in many ways dead, and everything tinged with a breaking away from tradition is condemned. The deans tell us in Chapel to be individualists, to become intellectually stimulated, but when we attempt to follow their advice, the answer is No! No! No! They indeed seem to produce yet another mass-produced Brown undergraduate. The paternal hand of U. H. stretches out to protect the innocent students. Are we children, I have asked? If U.H. would practice what it so loudly preaches from the pulpit, many of their criticisms would be answered, and Brown would be a better place, not dull and dead as it is now. Coming from England these things have struck me with great force, and they have shaken me. If U.H. fails to become more liberal, I shall regret not having blown them up on November 4th. U.H. is full of stuffy, conventional conservatism, and Brown has far to go to reach the intellectual atmosphere of Oxford.  Richard Ormond"></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL126" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL127" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL128" TYPE="OVERLINE" ORDER="2" LABEL="On the Aisle"></div><div ID="DIVL129" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="2" LABEL="Orchestral Plaudits"></div></div><div ID="DIVL130" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL131" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL132" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL133" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="2" LABEL="The Brown University Orchestra played its first concert of the season Sunday afternoon at Alumnae Hall. It was a spirited and satisfying program, highlighted by some refreshing novelty, and appreciated by an all too small Brown audience. Although there were many moments of excellence, first mention must go to an extraordinary performance of the Cimarosa-Benjamin Concerto for Oboe and Strings. As soloist a young man named George Turrell turned in one of the most remarkable amateur performances this reviewer has ever heard, playing with musicianship, good tone, accuracy, and above all   impeccable style. Jim James  58 was the soloist in Mozart s B-flat Concerto, originally scored for bassoon, but performed here on the trombone. James strove diligently to adapt his instrument and technique to the delicate and florid demands of the score. He was most successful in the closing portion of the Andante, but one missed the trills and lighter tone that the composer must have intended. In general, the orchestra under Martin Fischer, was in good shape. The shadings may not be too subtle, but the spirit is sufficient to compensate for any technical shortcomings. The ambitious program also included a loud performance of Bach s Third Brandenberg Concerto, an adequate one of Brahm s lovely A Major Serenade, and closed with a clean, lively, and solid account of Handel s Concerto Grosso No. 5 ."></div></div><div ID="DIVL134" TYPE="AUTHOR" ORDER="2" LABEL="- Martin Bemheimer"></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL135" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL136" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL137" TYPE="OVERLINE" ORDER="3" LABEL="Disappointment Prevails"></div><div ID="DIVL138" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="3" LABEL="Soccer Team Compiles 2-6-1 Record"></div></div><div ID="DIVL139" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL140" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL141" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL142" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="In a typically exciting Ivy League soccer game Friday, the Bruin hooters concluded their season with a 2-1 loss to Harvard. This leaves Brown with a disappointing 2-6-1 record for the season, and sixth place in the league standings. Princeton, by defeating Yale 2-1 this week, has clinched the league title. The Bruins, led by Captain Les Silverstein, showed great spirit, but ran up against a series of injuries and bad breaks which spelled the difference between a winning and a losing season. Coach Joe eKnnaway remarked that he  was disappointed with the team s performance, but it was a terrific league this year. Most of the games were close and could have gone either way.  This point can easily he seen in that the losses to Harvard, Yale and MIT were all by scores of 2-1. Many players saw action for the Bruins this season. Many of these were seniors and have played their last game for Brown. In this category we find Captain Les Silverstein, Barrie Phelps, Mike Strem, Gar Patrick, Dick Seid, Lud Miller, Tom Rodes and Bob Blakely."></div></div><div ID="DIVL143" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL144" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Most of the work at fullback was done by Paul Woodhouse and Phelps. Rodes also would have seen a great deal more action had he not been injured early in the season."></div></div><div ID="DIVL145" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL146" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="The team s greatest strength could be found at the halfback positions. Dick Ramsden, Silverstein and Miller were the regulars, with Bob Pearson, Dick Press and Pat Gallagher acting as their replacements. Gallagher, converted to defense after Silverstein s injury, was a standout both as a forward and as a halfback. The forwards who saw the most action were Seid, Strem, Patric, Pete Goldman, Arnie Hetzer, Jim McMorris, Sal Arena and Bill Van DenToorn."></div></div><div ID="DIVL147" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL148" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="The opening 2-0 loss to Wesleyan was a poorly played game which illustrated the inexperience of both teams. It served as a boon to the Bruin team, however, since it fought very hard in the Yale game and almost came out victorious."></div></div><div ID="DIVL149" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL150" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Brown gained itself a 1-0 lead only to see the Elis score two quick goals which decided the contest. It was in this game that Ed Ginsberg, a junior goalie, replaced Roy Smith in the Bruin nets. He was to continue there for the rest of the season."></div></div><div ID="DIVL151" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL152" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="The Brown and White showed steady miprovement and reached their peak in the following two games against Dartmouth and Penn, winning both games. TJ-Conn, however, had other ideas and played Brown to a 0-0 tie. This game proved very costly to Brown as Mike Strem, who had jumped into the lead in the Ivy League scoring race, injured his ankles and was handicapped for the rest of the season."></div></div><div ID="DIVL153" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL154" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="The Princeton game found the Bruins outclassed by the finest team in the league. They fought gamely throughout, but fell 8-0 to the onslaught of the well-polished Tigers. Traveling next to MIT, the players found themselves once again in a close contest, finishing on the short end of a 2-1 score. This game also hurt Brown, as Captain Silverstein and Pete Goldman were injured. Friday's Harvard game was one that the Bruins wanted to win. The Bruins were unsuccessful in trying to salvage a disappointing season, losing 2-1."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL155" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL156" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL157" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="3" LABEL="Cub Harriers Finish 4th In IC4A Meet at N. Y."></div></div><div ID="DIVL158" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL159" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL160" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL161" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="The Brown freshman cross country team, paced by its ace, Bob Lowe, finished fourth in the IC4A meet of the nation s top harriers held in New York yesterday. Lowe, hampered badly by a sore throat, finished 6th at 15:09, only 13 seconds behind winner George Verdisco of Georgetown University. Brown finished with a team total of 117 behind Penn State 73, Manhattan 59, and Syracuse, the winner, with a score of 52. Other Brown finishers were Pete Green 26, Dirk Vanderblue 34, Bill Schwab 39, Dave Rolfe 42, Jim Trafton 46, and Jerry Huetz 48."></div></div><div ID="DIVL162" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL163" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Credit must also be given to Brown s two varsity entries, sophomores Vince MacDonald and Bill MacArdle. Although their final positions, 56 and 62 respectively, are not very impressive at firse glance, their top flight performances can be appreciated when it is taken into consideration that they faced the nation s top competition, and that they were beaten by only two other runners from New England."></div></div><div ID="DIVL164" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="3"><div ID="DIVL165" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Michigan State s varsity ran away with both team-and individual honors with its number one runner, Crawford Kennedy, placing first."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL166" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL167" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL168" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="4" LABEL="Court Committee"></div></div><div ID="DIVL169" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL170" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL171" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL172" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="All undergraduates interested in the Student Court Investigating Committee are reminded that they must sign up in Dean Moulton s office no later than 5 o clock Thursday, November 21. Members of all four classes are eligible."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL173" TYPE="SECTION" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL174" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL175" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="4" LABEL="BROWN BRIEFS"></div></div><div ID="DIVL176" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL177" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL178" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="4" LABEL="Official Bulletins"></div></div><div ID="DIVL179" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL180" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL181" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL182" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="LAW SCHOOL: All students interested in law school, can have a personal interview with Dean John E. Coons, Assistant Dean of the School of Law, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, TODAY, Tuesday, November 19, 1957. For an appointment, go to Dean Moulton s office, Room 205, University Hall, or telephone Ext. 202. Westcott E. S. Moulton Associate Dean of Students LAW SCHOOL: All students interested in law school, can have an interview with Professor Talbott, Professor of Law, The Law School, Rutgers University, on Monday, November 25, 1957. There will be two group meetings with Professor Talbott. The first is at 9:30 a.m. and the other at 10:30 a.m. For an appointment, go to Dean Moulton s office, room 205, University Hall, or telephone extension 202. Westcott E. S. Moulton Associate Dean of Students"></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL183" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL184" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL185" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="4" LABEL="Organizations"></div></div><div ID="DIVL186" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL187" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL188" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL189" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="DAILY HERALD: There will be a meeting of the &gt; entire staff of the Daily Herald tonight in the offices at 7:30. Attendance is mandatory. BRIDGE CLUB: The winners of this week s tournament were as follows: north-south; First  Hugh Fryer and Dick Wegman; Second Karl Ahlenius and Ed Rossetti. Eastwest; First Siddy Smith and Walter Main; second Carl Youngdahl and Burt Raphael. BROWN BAND: All members who still have ticket stubs from the Harvard football gone should get them to Mike Weston AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. Take them to him at room 342, Kappa Sigma, or mail them to him at Box 2360. Be sure that your name is on them. FHBG ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE: Meeting in the Faunce House Board of Governors  board room at 5:00 p.m. today. ATTENTION BROWN-PEMBROKE SKI CLUB MEMBERS: Open house at Art Palmer s tonight from 7:00 to 9:30 p.m. See sk; styles and equipment for the coming winter. Membership cards must be shown or signed up for at the door. Refreshments. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: Regular meeting Tuesday in the Faunce House Memorial Room at 5:00 p.m. All are welcome."></div></div><div ID="DIVL190" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL191" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="AMATEUR RADIO CLUB: Meeting at 7:15 p.m. in the shack."></div></div><div ID="DIVL192" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL193" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="UNIVERSITY CHORUS: Delivery of formal suits tonight at 8:15 in the Music Department. Bring any problems, complaints, and checks. If unable to pick up your suit at this time, see Marty Bernheimer, 238 Wayland."></div></div><div ID="DIVL194" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL195" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="BROWN CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION: There will be am eeting of the Social Action Commission in the Faunce Memorial Room at 5:00 p.m. today. The candy sales drive will be oi'ganized and final details arranged. LI.BER BRUNENSIS: There wil be a dinner in the President s Dining room at 6:15 p.m. today. Dean Mouton will be the speaker. Please bring your meal tickets."></div></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL196" TYPE="ARTICLE" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL197" TYPE="HEADING" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL198" TYPE="TITLE" ORDER="4" LABEL="Daily Herald"></div></div><div ID="DIVL199" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL200" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL201" TYPE="PARAGRAPH" ORDER="4"><div ID="DIVL202" TYPE="TEXT" ORDER="4" LABEL="There will be a meeting of the entire staff of the Daily Herald tonight at 7:30 in the offices. Attendance is mandatory."></div></div></div></div></div><div ID="DIVL203" TYPE="SECTION" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL204" TYPE="BODY" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL205" TYPE="BODY_CONTENT" ORDER="2"><div ID="DIVL206" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="2" LABEL="SHOWING TODAY fit C A r * 0 03 0 % fa * &lt;v * � yo^ w OUR TRAVELING REPRESENTATIVE MR. SUMMER LEE Exhibiting at Tlie Slaeraton-Biltmore Hotel Tuesday, November 19th STORES AT: 341 Madison Avenue, New York 262 York Street, New Haven 82 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge COAST TO COAST TRAVEL EXHIBITS"></div><div ID="DIVL207" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="2" LABEL="m m V WE 1st! mm 'V s v ! MA T *2266"></div><div ID="DIVL208" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="2" LABEL="FOUL WEATHER JACKET at $13.95 and NAVY TYPE SHOES at $5.95 for Brown Men only RUDY'S ARMY and NAVY STORE 147 Washington Street"></div><div ID="DIVL209" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="2" LABEL="AN OPEN LETTER TO THE FRATERNITIES AND HOUSES AT BROWN November 19, 1957 Social Chairmen Brown University Providence, Rhode Island Gentlemen: It's KNIGHT'S for BEVERAGES. We offer complete party service. And we mean COMPLETE party service. Call us at MA 1-8397 and check our prices. You'll be glad you did. How you SAVE in time. Of course, there is PROMPT DELIVERY SERVICE. Very truly yours, HERB KNIGHT P.S. We exist at 361 Broadway."></div><div ID="DIVL210" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="s&amp;t"></div><div ID="DIVL211" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="257 Thayer Street (across from the Avon) For Early Christinas Shoppers Now Featuring: Handmade Scottish Jewelry Imported Wool Taffeta Neckties Wool Hose Fair Isle &amp; Shetland Sweaters Hundreds of other Scots imports   Visit our Interesting Shop."></div><div ID="DIVL212" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Hffll Hi B illlil I i m"></div><div ID="DIVL213" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="H9"></div><div ID="DIVL214" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Emm"></div><div ID="DIVL215" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL=""></div><div ID="DIVL216" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="I JAMES CAGNEY DOROTHY MALONE Man of a Thousand Faces JOCK MAHONEY LUANA PATTEN Joe Dakota Starts Wed: Doris Day  Pajama Game&quot;"></div><div ID="DIVL217" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Hurry! Hurry!! Hurry!!! See the Performing Bear (Drinks Coca Cola) at LIGGETT-AVON PHARMACY Cor. Thayer &amp; Meeting"></div><div ID="DIVL218" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="R.I.S.D. THEATRE presents 66 i WEIGHT L smamm by JACQUES DEVAL All the magic of the theatre caught in a drama of haunting beauty. November 22-23, 3:30 p.m. R. I. School of Design Auditorium Market Square, Providence Tickets: $1.00 and 75c Reservations: DE 1-3507, ext. 253"></div><div ID="DIVL219" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="TUNNEL. ORf&gt;, Z2? A THAYER ROV GRAND OPENING Cleaning Specials H Suit $.89 H Overcoats .89 Sport Jackets $.50 3 Suit Coat .50 Quick, Courteous Service L Ay mm , SECTIO n H"></div><div ID="DIVL220" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="Now! The one cigarette in tune with America s taste /"></div><div ID="DIVL221" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="rad� has a]l you want!"></div><div ID="DIVL222" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="the tobacco, the tip... and the taste!"></div><div ID="DIVL223" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="The tobacco you want . . . only the choicest grades of quality tobacco. And it s all 100% natural tobacco! The tip you want ... exclusive T-7 filter, developed especially for Hit Parade, lets you have your flavor, too! The taste you want . . . the freshest, liveliest taste of any filter cigarette. Get new Hit Parade today! New crush-proof box or familiar pack"></div><div ID="DIVL224" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="3" LABEL="SAN FRANCISCO: |� In this famous city |� of the Golden Gate, and all || around the U. S. A., ||| more people j are smoking Hit Parade II! � A.T. Co."></div><div ID="DIVL225" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="CLASSIFIED FOR SALE Pentron Dual-track, dual-speed, portable tape recorder. $65 or best offer. Joseph Hayden, 206 Hegeman B. TE 1-9131. FOR SALE 62/100 Karat flawless, full cut diamond. Jeweler's appraisal at $500. Will sell for $325. Write Box 613. Will Contact. TYPING SERVICE Students: Let me relieve you of typing notebooks, term papers, theses and reports. For information, call Wl 1-0526 anytime. HELP WANTED -PART TIME JOBS-MALE. Earn $35- $50 for 10-20 hours weekly. Hours arranged to fit schedule. Apply 1:30 Tuesday, November 19, at room 413 Faunce House. Your Fraternity and House Parties call for the best, so CALL FOR: CLOVER CLUB BEVERAGES for the next one PROMPT DELIVERY Phone GA 1-0085"></div><div ID="DIVL226" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="Kjsgl! H �% mm AMERICAN - &amp; CHINESE FOODS The BROWN BEAR RESTAURANT Corner of Benevolent &amp; Brook Streets"></div><div ID="DIVL227" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL=""></div><div ID="DIVL228" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="in COLOR and ClNeimSeoPE"></div><div ID="DIVL229" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="/winner f " i^AWARD! Original Screen Pl�yl "></div><div ID="DIVL230" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="Eastman Color"></div><div ID="DIVL231" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="CINEMA-"></div><div ID="DIVL232" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="f WHAT'S SO CQLLE&amp;/&amp;r� ) i aqovt \HOT�-a Mew VORKBR? LfaG/AA/S iv. S/A/GLe so aou&amp;jL�. $-RSO UOLLSSGJATE R&amp;GSGTET, m smr/o^"></div><div ID="DIVL233" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="elusive things are NOT easily captured by B10WN PHOTO LAB capture your distinctive personality in truly Ivy tradition &quot;the PERSONAL Christmas gift 1"></div><div ID="DIVL234" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="ADAMS Co. 99 Washington St., Downtown Providence Open Tues. and Thurs. 'til 9 P.M. 12&quot; LP's-3�T� �If �&amp;sr Entire Stock of Reg. $3.98 lieeerds THREE LISTENING BOOTHS MmM CO QH ALL RECORDS GUARANTEED *IUW jlA.dtJ TV   RADIO   PHONOGRAPH SERVICE"></div><div ID="DIVL235" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="a I!! / -"></div><div ID="DIVL236" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="A lot of man ...a lot of cigarette  He gets a lot to like filter, flavor , flip-top box  The works . A filter that means business. An easy draw that s all flavor. And the flip-top box that ends crushed cigarettes. (MADE IN RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, FROM A PRIZED RECIPE)"></div><div ID="DIVL237" TYPE="ADVERTISEMENT" ORDER="4" LABEL="V, NEW 'SELF-STAmi Just &amp;mf&gt;l the iah tfcw / and the cigarettes pop vp. No digging. No trouble. POPULAR FILTER PRJCE"></div></div></div></div></div></div></div></div></structMap></mets>