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A 'Rationality of creativity* topic of lecture Professor Ian C. Jarvie, Department of Philosophy at York University in Pennsylvania, will present a paper entitled "The Rationality of Creativity" at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Room 125 of the nursing building. Refreshments will be served at 3:45p.m. Discussion will follow the paper. || TRUST THE PEOPLETI WALLACE I NEEDS I YOU I 1^779^6500^1 STUD! TUFSr TAC j ALLY $4.00 PER P $7.50 PER C ! TIPPY'S TACC V V \ ? ? . ^ ... * * *\ <?. r/v . . % % *\S' Events? works at 8 p.m. tonight in Be Auditorium in the business a ministration building. T1 program is sponsored by tl Union s ideas ana Issues Coi mittee and is open to all students. ' v\.' Ji HHffi t(?tejM| James Dickey ?;ppru H "* WI )AY 5 - 9 p.rr :os&be ou can (WITH THIS AD) ERSON OUPLE > HOUSE IN K fESTERN AUTO Of ^ V ' ' ' :1k Dickey, famous for his book d- Deliverance, will be making his he first public appearance on campus lie since September. The poet and Ti- novelist will read parts of the screenplay he wrote for the upI coming television production of Jack London's Call of the Wild and sections from his long poem "The Zodiac," which will be published bv DnilhlpHflV hnnUc nnvt foil _ ^ 1IV A I 1 CI 11 . An afternoon diversion on the Russell House patio from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday will be palm reader Juston Pomeroy who will '4tell it like it is" whether your palm determines that you will inherit $1 million next week or get your girlfriend pregnant. ?u: ?? ' - I in una same spnere 01 tortune telling, the committee will also present handwriting analyst JeanneDrew from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 3 on the patio. The Association of Afro American Students will present its seventh annual Black Week Feb. 29 ^ through March 6. Some festivities I planned include: -Feb. 28 - The Black American U :SORRY: : NO = | : TAKE ! ER :?MISi HOLD :-MART PLAZA j if hl?\/lKit: ! g|| k W i r - EBK I ^ +*m Mn w, *ng2ia . :::Y.V.y.V?V?V.\Y.V. vY.V.\ s ,vwlivi i?'.??' Law Students Association Be honoring attorney Matthew Peri at the Carolina Inn for $10 p< couple. -March 1 - A talent show at p.m. in Booker T. Washingtc Auditorium. Admission is $1. -March 2 - A seminar entitle "Do Black People have a role i America's Bicentennial" i Russell House Room 307 at 4 p.n -March 3 - Mr. and Miss Blac USC Contest at 8 p.m. in th Capstone Campus Room. - March 6 - A South Carolir Alliance of Black Students coi ference at 9:30 a.m. in the Russe House Theatre. The union's Ideas and Issues an Student Television committees v, show the videotape "Lenny Bruc Without Tears," rarely see fOOtaCe Of his nPPfnrmonon, ^ ? ? * w A AAA H A A U ? arrests and trials, today an Tuesday in the Russell Hous Theatre and from Wednesday t Friday in the Golden Spur at 7 an 8:30 p.m. The 90-minute videotap is free for students. Also, the Department of Foreig Languages and Literature wi show the Brazilian movie Vida Sec as in Room 107 of the nursin building at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday wit no admission charge. Vidas Secas, directed by Do Santos, is a classic film of Brazi based on a novel of the same titl by Graciliono Ramos. It deals wit the problems of drought an poverty in northeastern Brazi Tho film ' i.iv. iimi luiuoca UM me me 01 peasant family driven by drough who are forced to walk t exhaustion through an arid lane This is a powerful, tragic movi about one of the real problem area of Brazil. The film has Englis subtitles. The German Club will sponso the film Warum Lauft lierr F Amok at 2 p.m. Tuesday in th Russell House Theatre. The plo .v. v.* wirv AW%Y\ raYvraoMBwior* Yi From Page 6 til sounds similar to that of Peter ry Bogdonovich's Targets where a er middle class German man, supposedly with a content and secure 8 family life, kills his wife, child and >n visiting neighbor. The 88-minute f J1 ftr-fc tit n rt Jl ??. A. ?. J t- ? " iiiiii was UirCLlCU Dy K.W. ?d Fassbinder in 1970. It has English in subtitles. in For the theatre addict, there will n. be two performances on the USC camDus in thp npvt 4 - ?..W *V?f TTVtlVO. ie The Union's Cultural Series in conjunction with the S.C. Open ia Road Ensemble (SCORE) will i- present John Dos Passos' USA at 8 11 p.m. Tuesday in Booker T. Washington Auditorium, id A touring professional theatre 'ill company sponsored by the S.C. Arte mrolonl Pnnr?n ' v <u vo V/UIIU1II331U11, ov/uniii is me n first phase of an official state 5, theatre. USA was adapted for the ;d stage by the author and Paul Shyre ;e and was produced in 1959 at the o Martinique ineatre on Broadway, d The play, set in the early 20th j e century, traces the life of a young public relations executive through n a hectic period of American 11 history. Admission for USC is students is free. g . A racial crisis in a small h southern town is the central issue in Blues for Mr. Charlie, the fifth >s production this year by the 1, Department of Theatre and e Speech. h The play will run March 3 d through 6 in Drayton Hall Theatre. I. Tickets for USC students arp ii a and can be purchased at the it Drayton Hall box office between o noon and 5 p.m. Monday through 1. Saturday. Curtain time is 8:15 p.m. e Written by James Baldwin, s Blues for Mr. Charlie,is about the h murder of a black man by a white mon f?f? 1 ' * man auu UIC HlUlctl CT1S1S DOtfl r black and white citizens must face. * Conference p Iiu conjront illiteracy A conference on "Confronting f K A T W A?r o ? /N n ? ^ u 1 ? Iiuc unci avjf v/i i?is?r ruuicius, Programs, Prospects" will be sponsored by the USC College of Education and the Department of English on March 27. Designed for English teachers at all levels, the conference will focus on such questions as who needs to write, must we leave language alone, who can we blame, what nKnut CnkAlnntl/. A 1 - rn A. Iauuui jviiuiaani; /ifJiuuuc i tJbl scores and why can't Johnny write. A $2 registration fee is required and persons interested in attending should contact Dr. Elizabeth Haynes of the USC College of Education. The conference program will be held in the auditorium of the Williams-Brice building beginning with a 10 a.m. session on "Confronting the Literacy Crisis." The speaker will be Roger W. Shuy with Georgetown University and the Center for Applied Linguistics in Washington, D.C. A 2 p.m. session will deal with "Problems, Programs, Prospects." Leading a panel discussion will be Bruce Cantrell, director of the USC Writing ILaDoratory, Doris Clanton, secondary language arts coordinator with the Greenville County School system and Tom Parks, state English consultant with the m state Department of Education. t