Student Protest Movements Take More Organized Form 1 There will be no Berkeley this year, though Brooklyn College might come close to it, according to the November issue of a national magazine for students. MODERATOR magazine claims most administrators have learned their lesson and are not apt to leave themselves open for protest of the kind that rocked California's Berkeley campus last year. The magazine explained in its November cover story that major protest might break out at Brooklyn College, "where President Gideonse won fame last year for his authoritarian, anti-communist, monolithic, and frequently mono-syllabic response to student initiatives." THE ARTICLE, titled "Besides Berkeley, and Beyond," comes a year after the Berkeley troubles and attempts to put what happened there and elsewhere in perspective. It sorts out the major causes of campus protest—publish-or-perish and the speaker ban — and discusses them at length. CITY COLLEGE of New York, where a Committee for University Reform is being formed to obtain student participation in the formulation of educational policy; Pennsylvania State University; Among those places where Moderator expects protest may break out this year are: San Jose State, where activist sentiment is aroused by low faculty salaries; Rider College, where students plan to test the speaker ban with the aid of several allegedly communist speakers; the University of Wisconsin, where activists may protest if the legislature raises tuition; where activists will push for representation on two university committees; and the University of Rochester, where students may protest against a tuition increase and for better accommodations for non-fraternity members. Moderator concludes that this year, "protest generally will be carried out in an atmosphere of controlled give-and-take. Student activists will plan their protests more carefully and will present their proposals in a well-documented, organized manner. Administrators will be more receptive to student initiatives, and better prepared to consider acting upon student suggestions." Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 20,1965 Enjoy Your Favorite PIZZA & OLD TIME MOVIES Such former greats as Laurel and Hardy W. W. Campbell—Shown every hour on the hour, - Char-broiled Hamburgers * Chicken Spaghetti * Shrimp 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 (Varsity Theatre, Oct. 27 & 28) "La Boheme" On Records at Bell's Music Co., Inc. 925 Mass. VI3-2644 Philosophy Chairman Studies at Columbia Richard T. DeGeorge, chairman of the Philosophy Department, who is on leave from KU, is working as a Senior Research Fellow in the Russian Institute at Columbia University. During this semester, he will lecture in the philosophy department and teach one graduate course. As soon as he finishes a book on Soviet ethics and morality next semester, he then will begin work on a book on Marxism and existentialism. --only-October 27 and 28,1965 AN ACTUAL PERFORMANCE! Through breathtaking new techniques in film making and highest fidelity sound. TECHNICOLOR $ ^{\textcircled{*}}$ FROM WARNER BROS. Premiere Performances 4 Times Artistic Director and Conductor, Herbert von Karajan Production Designed and Directed by Franco Zeffirelli Matinees 2 p.m. Evenings 8 p.m. ADVANCE TICKETS ON SALE Tickets Available Now! Varsity - Granada Theatres, Eve. 6:30-9:30 Bell's Music Co., 925 Mass. St. For Further Information Call VI 3-1065 --will read the poetry of Mrs. Natalie Calderwood DYLAN THOMAS Thursday, 4:30 p.m. Music Room of Kansas Union FREE COFFEE