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Band, new rel PAM CLARK Staff Writer After a year of study. the University has decided to add a new rehearsal hall for the band Top nationally ROTC ra Col. Joe Swanger, Air Force ROTC commander, ranks the USC ROTC as thirtieth in the nation in tal production of second Uutenants. "We rank right in the top nationally," he stated. ROTC is the largest source of officers for the United States Air Force. Candidates follow a two year or four year program which lead to a second lieutenants commission in the service. The voluntary program, along with the Air Force Academy, Airman Education and Command School, and the Officer Training School, was compared to a "pipeline" by Captain R. C. Duchesne, USC ROTC information officer. "Air Force headquarters controls the number of officers produced by the four sources," he stated. "New officers are fed into the service as others retire." According to Swanger and Dushesne, the ROTC curriculum is "A remarkab NOW Submarine San Beer POSSESSION & CONSL SE T 1632 SUMT ER ST REE T Dow ntown "HILARIOS .are the oddest couple since Ja and their 'marriage' is just as fu When GIRLS Is he? Or isn't he' Only his draftbhoard and his girlfriend know fo'r sure. choir t( iearsalJ and choirs to the existing Mc Master College. This project is headed by Thomas Faris, Director of Campus Planning and Harold Brunton, vice president for business af fairs. nked high co-ordinated with the University. Also, no Air Force officer may instruct at a university unless okayed by that university. English de adds new Black Literature and Medieval Romance will be just a couple of new subjects added to the University's English curriculum next semester. Black Literature in America (English 441) will be taught by Professor James William Luck. Dr. David Byrd will be teaching English 503. Medieval Romance. According to Dr. Byrd, the course will be concerned with the development of Romance and with the Arthurian Legend, The Legend of Parzival and the Holy Grail and Tristan and Yseult. There will be a great deal of reading involved in this course. lefilm .1 N.'.C-TV tToday Show) AN ALUFA Aff"STS FILM A Frank Perry, -Aide Prodwctma. SHOWS 1t30 - 3:30 5:0-730-9:30 1wiches and Pizza on Tap 'MPTION PERMIT NO. 234 UPS 25c PHONE RESTAURANT 254.9674 LOUNGE 254.9552 J S ... Co..ahs...n Ca.., *ck Lemmon and Walter Mattha. yuhave like these... -WHAT DO Y DO ABOUT THE DRAFT BOARD? w Rest ric ted No One Under 17 Today get all In the past, the band and choirs have used the Columbia Hall ballroom, the Naval Armory, and the women's old gym for practice. According to Mr. Brunton, the project is needed to replace these presently inadequate practice facilities. The constant increase of students makes the new hall a necessity. Brunton said that bids have been accepted for the $150,000 project, one third of which is federally funded. There are eleven contractors bidding for the proposed structure which is designed by the ar chitects, Califf and Player. partment courses English 404 Studies in British Literature will be taught by George Lindstram whose main topic will be Joseph Conrad. English 449, Studies in American Literature will be taught by Professor Joseph Katz whose class will concentrate on Theodore Dreiser. Studies in Comparative Literature (English 488) will be mainly concerned with the development of realism. Professor Ross Roy will teach this course. English 518, Studies in Irish Literature is being taught by Mrs. Caroline Faulk whose main theme will be William Buttler Yeats. There will also be an in dependant study course (English 495), where students involved in this course will with the help of a professor, select a topic and write several papers on that topic. The students will not attend classes but will be given some materials to read on the subject. Junior English 398H and Senior English 498 will be mainly tutorial. There will also be two new Honors English courses taught next spring which will be English 413H (Shakespheare's comedies) taught by George L. Geckle and Johnson and His Circle (English 413H) taught by George Brauer. Underground films shown Thc University Union Films Committee will present a series of Underground Films starting this Friday, Oct. 31 at 9 p.m. in the Assembly Room of Russell House. Several experimental and un derground American films from Grove Press will comprise the first program. There will be an in troduction for each film, with a short discussion following after the show. This program will only be open to students, faculty and staff of the University. All future showings of Underground films are scheduled for the last Friday of each month with shows in Nov., Jan., Feb., March., and April of this school year. HELP WMF- Sophomore to graduate student, part-time position available as manager for on-campus advertising market research and sales promotion programs. Liberal fees will provide a steady income all year. If interested call (collect) 404-892 1881. Atlanta, Georgia. HELD OVER 4 Second Week ow 0e1Z Law Henry Herlong Jr. of Edgefi student at the University of Sot inmate concerning a legal prof University's Law students parti Corrections Clinic program. Students jail Beginning this semester university law students are being put in jail as part of their course work. Third year law students are offering their services to inmates. The USC Law School is one of the first schools in the country to provide this practical experience according to Prof. W. S. McAnich. In cooperation with the Department of Corrections, the students set up office hours at various institutions during'which Form( Former Dean Dies Miss Viana McCown, 84, first dean of the USC School of Nursing, died Oct. 20 in her home in Pon tiac, Ill. She served as dean from 1944 until her retirement in 1957. Miss McCown ende ied the Viana McCown Lectureship in Nursing at USC and was made an honorary life member of the USC Alumni Association in 1964. Funeral ser vices were h'id in St. Joseph, Ill. with burial in Mayview, Ill. Yearbook Convention Approximately 200 students and advisors met on campus Oct. 23 for the first statewide convention of the yearbook division of the South Carolina Scholastic Press Association. Keynote speaker was Charles Nolan, Taylor Publishing Co., Dallas, Texas, who spoke on "Let's Get Back on the Right Track." Graduate Study "Graduate Study Opportunities for Minority Group Students," a book including 300 entries from professional and graduate schools throughout the country, is free to undergraduate students and available for $1.00 to organizations and other individuals. Interested students should write to Intensive Summer Studies Program, 1907 Yale Station. New Haven, Con necticut 06520. D)ebaters Win The USC debate team won first place in the second annual Junior Gao nittoa Tunmn latwekn t ansi-Fa ailers eld, S.C., a third-year law ith Carolina, confers with a ilem. Herlong is one of the cipating in the law school's ed for class time the prisoners can com to them for advice on legal matters. "One of the side benefits of the program," McAnich said," is that it opens the students' eyes to what are often very real instances of injustice which are generally overlooked by the traditional casebook study of law." According to McAnich the program is a great boost for prisoner morale in addition to being a progressive step in legal education. News rc r flursi Sam McDowell, Jim Pittmon, Taylor Brittain and Bobby Stepp compiled a team record of 11 wins vs. 3 defeats. The four -man team defeated Georgia, the University of Florida and Florida State University.. History Committees The History, Department'has establisheA'two faculty-studlient committees to evaluate and advise the performance of the depart ment. Members of the History Faculty and Graduate Students Committee are: Professors R. H Wienefeld, Chairman, R. A. Rempel and E. H. Beardsley; graduate students John Lupold, E. B. Hannum, Holmes Eleazer and William Shirley. The History Faculty and Undergraduate Students Committee consists of Professors C. W. Coolidge, Chairman, H.H. Lumpkin and J.S. Wilson; history major students Karen Banov, James Corley, Submit4 The Universtiy Union Arts Committee is sponsoring a Christmas Card Design contest. Last year the contest was started and the card was printed for the use of the Union which sent the card to other Student Unions across the United States. This year according to Judy Pearce, chairman of the Com mittee, the contest has been ex panded. The card must represent a At the movies. Ar lo's with M "Alice's Restaurant" is quite a dis padded version of Arlo Guthrie's f years ago, which only proves that A didn't make his song two hours loi Unfortunately, film makers like Ar last two hours so that theaters can audiences can get the feeling that th The result is that a film that could h. a song becomes a destorted look audience the feeling of having read written by an uninteresting person. I tend to think that the real Arlo C than the Arlo Guthrie that's portray< to believe that this is "all real" by SL terminal illness and the presence of ( must come to the conclusion that eith on Maybe I'm missing the whole point of Arlo Guthrie and his ballad. Est film "a film about young people ar Arthur Penn wanted Arlo to becom there for the only purpose of providin. a character with whom to identify If this is so. I find the film highly off more than a series of worthless vig purpose than that of exploiting the hi named Arlo Guthrie. Alice May Brock is opening s( Restaurants. probably with plastic hi the deal: this film has grossed over $1 may be becoming a sour grape. bu especially for a certain group of the p to their credit except that they are " find it to be the most abominable forn the film is far from garbage. The p good. so is that of Arlo's mother. anc liberals there's Pete Seeger playing photography has a grainN cinema ve However. Arthur Penn directs with with programmed audience reactions handling of such "scences de regu( graveyard and a pointless motorcycl and perspiration. In all the film is very uneven and mend listening to the record rig deai Kristhina Kiehl, Donald Schenker and Wescoat Sandlin. Freshman Registers Freshman registers are now b)eing distributed Wednesday through Friday of this week. Steve Cannon, president of the :lass, said "Some of the registers iave been paiW for, but got picked jp. And for thd convenience ofthe ;tudents they can be picked up 'rom 1-5 p.m. the remainder of the veek at the Russell House across rom the information desk." Church Oneness As a demonstration of their 'oneness in (nrist" the Lutheran ;tudent Center and the Catholic tudent Center sponsored a joint leformation Service Sunday night it the Christian Ecumenieal 'enter. According to Father ecard entri mniversity motif. Perhaps a Irawing of Russell House or mother building. The card will be >rinted and sold to students who nay wish to send it to friends. There will be a $25 design plus he prestige gained by having your e'sign1 sold Deadline for the contest is Nov. The Union is notified that you are orking on a design, the deadline may be extended. Designs should be turned in to The film th the readers < SI Persons under 18 wil 1.3.5L7.9 .. Ballad ario Beguirestain appointment. It is simple a bloated, antastically original ballad of a few rIo knew what he was doing when he 1g. ,thur Penn have to make movies that show them at 1, 3, 5. 7, and 9; and Ly are getting their money's worth. ive been a brilliant short illustrating it Arlo's personal life, giving the the pages of an uninteresting diary uthrie is a more interesting person A on the screen, but since we're led ich scenes as Woody Cuthrie's long )fficer Olie "begin" officer Olie, we er Arlo is a clod or we are being put of the film by looking at it in terms ablishment critics have called this d a beautiful way of life." Maybe a sort of hippie everyman who is the "very-now-hip audience" with ensive, because it becomes nothing nettes of hippie life with no other ppie way of life and a human being >on a nation-wide franchise of :pies and benevolent cops as part of .000,M) in a week of engagements. I t when films like these are made opulation (young people) with little with it" and appeal to that group. I i of exploitation possible. Of course. erformances of Alice and Ray are for the old generation of left-wing his banjo in a hospital room. The rite quality with abyssmal results. a theatrical flair the many scenes (which are much too many i but his ur" as a musical interlude in a e race, show a lack of inspiration quite boring in places. I'd recom or eating somewhere else. dies Bonaventure Brown the Folk service was essentially the same as the regular service except that it had a more youthful interest. The sermon between most of the people in the congregation and the clergy. The dialogue was spiced with many varied opinions and at times became rather excited. The reaction of the people in the [t-ongregation' to this service ranged from "artificial" and "timid" to "Interesting" and ".enthusiastically alive.' There were approximately 60 people in attendance. Blood D)rive Today is the last day of the Kappa Sigma blood drive for the fall semester, located in front of the Russell House 1-7 p.m. Trophies will be given to the fraternity. sorority and ROTC unit donating the most blood. es soon the Student Union office or to Kiki Stillwell Winners will be chosen by a committee consisting of members of the Arts Committee, Art Department. Russell House Director, and the Publicity office. Therefore students, faculty and admtraiiIsrtion will participate in the select ion Winners will be announced about one week after the deadline. at shocked )f PLAYBOY KEIR DULUE ~NTA BERGER . ROUIA TA a I