The f . Cyril Harvey's 0 aaxUll of some of the most irnpressi e . m')' early years: "During my early growth period, my 'mother and father, aIon with my and aunt, influenced me greatly by in- ti e and otherwise-during hi fonnati y . He a : "So hen my paren insi ed that I take piano from Da . ,the . er of the famous soprano Ella Bell Da . , I practiced than . Davis required of her udcnts. Dur­ in this period most parents made great sacrifices to give their children an oppor­ tunity to play a musical . nstrument, to help round 0U1 their education. I oom- posed a couple of short that my father ronsider me to Paris to udy. This kind of encouragement· very important bcca i nourishes self -eonfl- dence." etball for Rochel High School, the t 0 facto that helped me to e eel ere practicin by moonlight ·th my other in our yard until all hours of the night and the upport my coach Daniel O'Brien, ga me hen my 0 teammates plotted against me. E ery person thi e tra ind of encouragement from par­ en and teachers. Cyril Harvey contin speaking of t various roles which . paren playa! and of the influences of hi teachers_·r11ft-- U Y father tau me that you learn from e pericnce, and . nee most per­ ience-that of the human race-. in the , it i imperati that-you read, read, and read! y father quoted to me from c. Wright . , boo , The Power Elite. He paraphrased the eminent . . by sayio that what kilo does to man in clarifying hat be i and th ti him fn:e-that is the persono/ ideal of kilo • added t kilo l- ed does to a group, or to a civilization, in r eaJing it human meani , and ti t free-that i the ocial kilo ledge. The ory of Cyril Harvey' ear ennOOlC� and MI· �zed According to Cyril Harvey, freedom . mor than a e of . or a e of mind. To him, freedom· a ife- Pf1 • lt i the r and determina . to set life free for r seetmlg freedom from the D()[.aat� to illusionary or f; . f: and f- defeati pract. on t part of others. ( ontinued on IO.) ,