y _. , .... ._Y_. __ .. - - r NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED: Women's Rifle Club Open To Coeds Forum Dis cwsses Free Press Members of the Women's Ath- letic Association sponsored Rifle Club are busy making plans for this year. They invite all interested wo- men to join them in such activi- ties as a skeet shoot, shoulder-to- shoulder matches with other col- legiate teams, matches with the Men's Rifle Team and postal matches with other schools. ( Co-Managers Joann Gobel, '60,, and Rosann Gobett, '61N, also mention that the members of the club work for National Rifle As- sociation awards. No experience is necessary to become a member of the club and all equipment is furnished by the University, including ammunition. The organization is well quali- fied for carrying on their activi- ties because several of the mem- bers have gained championships in the rifle field. Coach Nancy Newman is a National Rifle Asso- ciation instructor with three na- tional records and Miss Gobel is the Women's InternationalbOff Hand Champion. A Rifle Club meeting will be held tonight at 7:00 at the Wo- men's Athletic Building and all students interested in joining the club should attend the meeting. Sawyer To Speak To Grad Students Prof. Ralph A. Sawyer, dean of the graduate school, will discuss election results and consequences of the banning of nuclear tests during the graduate coffee hour from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. tomor- row in the West Lounge of the Rackham Building. All graduate students are in- vited to participate in the discus- sion. This is one of a series of graduate student mixers given throughout the school year. -Daily-Peter Anderson WOMEN'S RIFLE CLUB-Members of the club take a look at the equipment that is available for use by the organization. During the year the club has a number of activities which they take part in and it also plans activities with the Men's Rifle Club. Triangles Tap From 'neath the heels of dusty feet, Within the vitals of the Arch, The Great Bronze Seal called loyal men In the dead of night to march. So came the men of TRIANGLES. Once more beneath the pointed spires New faces toiled with fear; The seal of Triangles again shone bright, Cleansed with blood and fear. So came: David Beste, Michael Hoyles, Ronald Peters, William Skinner, and William Roman. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS ASSOCIATION GENERAL ASSEMBLY MEETING WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5 ... 7:30 P.M. UNION CONFERENCE ROOM THIRD FLOOR All Members of I.S.A. are requested to attend. Use Daily Classifieds! To Discuss Opportunities In Language For all undergraduates inter-, ested in employment dealing with a foreign language a meeting will be held at 4:00 p.m. on Nov. 6, in Rm. 2528 of the Frieze Build- ing. The meeting will be on the order of a panel discussion between peo- ple representing fields in which language majors can find employ- ment in government, education and in private industry. The panel discussion will be followed by a 40 minute question and answer, period. Instead of being a meeting in which information can be obtained concerning specific jobs, the dis- cussion will be about the oppor- tunities that can be offered. Mary Dow, career counselor for the Bureau of Appointments, re- marked that the meeting is very informal, and she hopes that all will feel free to participate. The panel discussion is spon- sored by the Bureau of Appoint- ments in connection with the Romance Languages. By THOMAS TURNER eMpRained that each of these top- An Arab free press, Man's 'cre- ics was assigned to a student, whc ation of God, and off-shore li fnits has done research on the topic are topics under discussion in 1 ;tu- and will introduce general discus- dent Government Council's Na- siort on it. tional and International Comr nit- Sunday afternoon, for example tee Forums. .the students present discussed Ahmed Bel-Khodja, Grad., of "'What is the best service a free Tunisia, who directs the fort Imsp, pi can offer the Arab world?' - -J ournalism student Azzat Saf- f oun, Spec., introduced the topic, Persecution No Free Press (n debate which followed,.Bel Itkodja pointed out that there is Of Pasternajk r io free press in the Arab world tod ay. The rest of the session was ad Tra 1c deoted to organization for dis- cW;sion next week on the other 0 topics National and Interna- By THOMAS KABAKEJ J tional Chairman Carol Holland, "The persecution of Bori, 2 ?as. '60, said. ternak by the Soviet goveran tent The previous Sunday's meeting is not only a great personal tr ge- was far more lively, with debate dy, but also a great tragedy for on peventive warfare, industrial- Russian literature," Robert M-' igi zation of the Arab world, and bo- doff of the Slavic languagf is de- hemianism. partment said yesterday. Preventive warfare was dis- During the 13 years he sp ent ; in cussed in terms of Israel's 1956 Russia as a foreign corre ,poi id- invasion of Egypt, Miss Holland ent, Magidoff became acqu- 1nted said. with Pasternak as well as se veral Since the Arabs were numeri- other Russian writers and n lusi- cally superior, one student main- cians. tained, this invasion could be con- "I believe Pasternak is the sidered preventive warfare. greatest living Russian p set," War Debated Magidoff said. "He is not the f irst, Granted that there is such a nor will he be the last Rus. sian thing as preventive warfare, an- to be martyred for literature.' other student countered, "can it Causes Shock be successful?" The Soviet regime's action, in A Lebanese student pointed out this matter has been a cause "of that Israel did not attain her ob- shock and soul searching for F .us- jective in 1956 but only aroused sian writers in general," accot ling further animosity. Pope Pius XII to Magidoff. once declared that he did not ap- "This incident represents a ' i !ail. prove of preventive war because ure on the part of the Soviet re- it only heightened tension, this gime to win a man of talerkt ; to student continued. its cause. Pasternak is a @ =ceat.. From this point the participants representative of the arts, a g reats went off on a tangent, discussing citizen and a man of great ca Dur- the right of Israel to exist as a age." said Magidoff. Mid-Eastern state. The Russians have not I iad Limited warfare does exist, the freedom of expression in gele. ra- students present decided, but it is tions, either under the py -esr -t. outmoded. government or when the C izars Discuss Arab Unity ruled. Because of this, liters ture Discussion on Arab unity and has had a special place in :aRus- industrialization centered on the sian life, he said. "The me n' of diversity of the Arab community. letters found ways of circumx si nt, One student compared the sac- ing the strict censorship % l tich rifices individual nations would was imposed on them," Mag i toff have to make in joining to those said, of the components of Austria- Authors Discuss Ethics Hungary before World War One. "Russian authors have been the Bel-Khodja said complete poli- only ones who could discuss the tical union seems impossible, but great issues of life and ethics.''] 'he the individual countries are ready Russians have a saying that ti -eir for industrialization now. authors are 'the conscience of t he Egypt, he said, cannot be econ- people'," he commented. "Not it omically independent, nor can the seems that they have lost t. he seesthat ee they have st td eindividual North African nations. greatest conscience they have hi ul since Tolstoy died. GibbS girls "Dr. Zhivago" was the first work by Pasternak to attract i- get ternational attention. "Not on is it a great work of art, but it is event a greater probing into th e moral and ethical issues of th e Russian people," he said. Pasternak to Remain Magidoff said he thought Pa ternak would rather remain i n Russia as an "untouchable" rath - er than leave. "He will be reject - ed by the community - no on e will dare have anything to do wit a hin additin to this, Pastern k Epecial Course for College Women. has been expelled by the writer s Residences. Write College Dean union. ke has no means of mak- . for GIBBS GIRLS AT WORK. ing a livelihood. "The governmeni doesn't care what will happen t > 9 katarnic * him. He is quite old now ancdI§!-VVs doesn't have much longer to go SECRETARIAL "This tragedy transcends th incident. It is an episode in the BOSTON 16, MASSACHUSETTS, 21Marlborough St. NEW YORK 17, NEW YORK . . 230 Park Ave. historic struggle of the . Russiar 4 WTCLAIR, NEW JERSEY . 33 Plymouth St. people for expression." I V'RCVIDENCE 6, RHODE ISLAND, 155 Angel St. 1 . t -a X br - You are invited to a special showing of Paris-inspired COCKTAIL FASHIONS TUESDAY, NOV. 4 Outstanding originals, exclusively Jacob- son's, featuring pure silk, failles, chiffons and organzas-imported laces and lames --solid colors and prints . . . beautifully embroidered and appliqued. 39.95 to 69.95. An inspiring dress collection from which to select your favorite style and color. Informal modeling from 10 a.m. to'5 p.m. I. L i a a a lil A I 0