THE MICHIGAN DAILY 4 THE PRICELESS LO I $5.98 )OK r ' MACSHORECASC r To Evaluate ACWR Aims A meeting of students interest- ed in expanding the international civil service of the UN 'will be held at 4:15 p.m. today in Aud. A. The meeting sponsored by the International Center will feature addresses by Alan and Judith Gus- kin, both graduate students. The Guskins are among the leaders of the Americans Committed To World Responsibility. In addition to the Guskins, who will outline the objectives and history of the ACWR, Arthur Millne of the International Center will address the assembly. He will view the movement from the standpoint of one connected with international affairs. Guskin said the meeting had gained added significance in the light of Sen. John F. Kennedy's announced support' of a youth corps, which he gave in a speech in California last night. A similar declaration of policy on the part} of Vice-President Richard M. Nixon is now being sought. Means, of direct action by stu- dents to implement the proposals will be covered at the meeting, Guskin said. Student Panel To Study Book ,The, ugly American-True or False?" will be the topic of a panel discussion at 7:30, p.m. to- day in Aud. B. The discussion is sponsored Jointly by ISA and SGC as part of International Week; it will ana- lyze the picture of American for-, eign policy presented in Lederer and Burdick's best selling book, "The Ugly American."a Prof. Harold Jacobson of the political science department willI moderate the panel of five inter- national students and Miss Eliza- beth Reid, an Australian journal-I ist who Just returned from AfricaI and the Far East..3 By RALPH KAPLAN "The crucial issue of this elec- tion will be whether Senator Ken- nedy can win over more Eisen- hower Democrats than he will lose normally-Democratic, Protestants," Prof. Warren E. Miller of the political science department said yesterday. Prof. Miller, speaking at a luncheon meeting of the student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, explained that most voters decide how they will vote on the basis of party allegiances acquired long before the nominations. Recent elections, since Democrats are the majority party, have been decided by how many Democrats deviate to the Republican candidate. Seven Categories The University's Survey Re- search Center of which Prof. Mil- ler is program director, has divid- ed the national population into seven categories of party affilia- tion. These are strong, weak, and leaning to one party or another, plus the independents. The Center made its first study of. the voting population in 1952. At this time it discovered that 47 per cent of the people identified themselves with the Democratic party as opposed to 27 per cent identifying with the Republicans. "Because of this, President Eisenhower's two victories make him a unique political figure," Prof. Miller said. "Had Eisen- hower been a different type of political leader than he is, it is possible that his personal popu- larity could have brought about a switch in basic party loyalties similar to the change President Roosevelt brought about," Prof. Miller added. ' In a survey made by the Survey Research Center in March, 1960, the only deviation from the 1952 results was a switch to the in- MILLER SAYS: Changing Loyalties May Sway Election 1 F V }f I T r r r WARREN MILLER .. . studies election Sweet and lovely - that's you in this lacy, lacy version of MACSHORE'S sissy shirt! The feminine, soft styling is so right for you! Open or closed, the convertible Italian collar - the wing cuff three quarter sleeves are the very height of fashion. So easy to care for in DRIP DRY Dacron and cotton broadcloth. Frothy White only. Sizes 30 to 38. BARNARD'S Campus Casuals 1111 So. University Phone NO 3-2605 U Classified Advertising Number Is Now NO 2-4786 Boy Meets Witch I (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf," "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis," etc.) dependents. Independent support grew from 5 to 11 per cent and this was apparently due to the decline of people leaning towards the Democrats from 10 to 6 per cent. Forty-six per cent identified with the Democrats in the spring of 1960 as opposed to 26 per cent with the Republicans. "This means that if Kennedy wins it shows he is the condidate of the majority party while if Nixon wins it is a more impressive triumph because of his more di- verse support," Prof. Miller com- mented. Nominal Democrats "If Kennedy wins no more than 85 per cent of the nominal Demo- crats he will have a slight edge in a real tiff-hanging election," Prof. Miller said. "If the defection is any larger than this Nixon may win," Prof. Miller added. "Even if the defection is as large as 17 per cent, however, the vast major- ity of votes will still have been based on allegiances acquired be- fore the nominations," he said. President Dwight D. Eisen- hower was able to win in 1956 despite the majority of Democrats because he won about 25 per cent of the Democrats who voted, Prof. Miller said. Religious Issue "Civil rights will not be as im- portant an issue this year as the religious question," he said. "The religious issue, combined with the racial one, will hurt Ken- nedy in the South but it remains to be seen just how much defec- tion from the Democrats it will cause," Prof. Miller said. "The religious issue nationally is more likely to hurt Kennedy with Democratic Protestants than it will help him with Republican Catholics," be commented. Drive To Support Fresh Air Camp The annual bucket drive to raise money for the University's Fresh Air Camp is slated for today and tomorrow, Issac Schultz, '63, vice- president of the Junior Interfra- ternity Council announced yester- day. Schultz noted that JIFC, Junior Interquadrangle Council, Junior Panhellenic and Junior Assembly are copperating on the campus project. THE PARTY WEEKEND: ITS CAUSE AND CURE With the season of party weekends almost upon us, my mail of late has been flooded with queries from young inmates of women's colleges wishing to know how one conducts one's self when one has invited a young gentleman for a weekend, so let us today take up this burning issue. Well, my dear girls, the first thing to remember is that your young gentleman is far from home and frightened. Put him at his ease. You might, for instance, surprise him by having his mother sitting in a rocker on the station platform when he gets off the train. Next, what kind of corsage should you send your young gentle- man? Well, my beloved maidens, orchids are always acceptable. So, indeed, are phlox and delphinium. In fact, most any flora will serve. Do try, however, to avoid carnivorous plants. If you find, my esteemed fillies, that your local florist has run out of stock, do not be dismayed. Make a corsage out of paper. But pick good, stiff, durable paper-twenty dollar bills, for example. Remember at all times, my fond wenches, to show your young gentleman courtesy and consideration. Open doors for him, walk on the traffic side of the path, assist him to the punch bowl, zip his parka, light his Marlboros. (What, you ask, if he doesn't smoke Marlboros? Ridiculous, my precious nymphs! Of course, he smokes Marlboros! Don't you? Don't I? Doesn't everybody who knows a hawk from a handsaw? What other cigarette gives you such a lot to like? Such easy-drawing filtration? Such unfiltered taste? Such soft pack or flip-top box? No other, my sweet minxes, no other. Marlboro stands alone, and any man worthy of you, my estimable damsels, is bound to be a Marlboro man.) -Daily-Larry Vanice BELL, BOOK AND CANDLE-John Van Druten's comedy, "Bell, Book and Candle," opens at 8 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre. Commemorating Halloween week, this second Civic Theatre production of the year presents the antics of witches, warlocks and a familiar character named Pyewacket in a super- natural farce. The play runs through Saturday night. If you will follow the simple instructions stated above, my good lasses, you will find that you have turned your young gentleman into a fast and fervent admirer. There is nothing quite like a party weekend to promote romance. I am in mind of a party weekend some years ago at Miss Pomfritt's Seminary for well-born females in West Linotype, Ohio. Serafina Sigafoos, a sophomore at this institution, majoring in napkin folding, sent an invitation to a young man named Fafnir Valve, a junior at the Joyce Kilmer School of Forestry, majoring in sap and boles. Serafina had been ape for Fafnir since high school, but Fafnir preferred a girl named Gelia Fleshwound, the high school drum majorette who once threw a baton so high she impaled a south- bound mallard. Anyhow, Serafina sent an invitation to Fafnir, and he came, and she showered him with kindness and cuff links, and then he went away, and Serafina sat anxiously by the mailbox, wondering whether she would ever hear from him again. Sure enough, two weeks later she got a letter: "Dear Serafina, Can you let me have fifty bucks? Yours, Fafnir." 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