Thursday, July 1, -195 THE TAU HEEL' Controversial Test Considered Useful By DEMONT ROSEMAN JR. .A personality test, caught in the cross fire of a congres sional subcommittee hearing after 22 years of apparently good behavior, is considered a reputable and valuable clin ical and research tool by a UNC psychiatrist. He uses it routinely for stu dents who come to him with emotional problems, - . .And it will be given this fall for the second consecu tive year to all incoming freshmen here. But, says Dr. Clifford B. Reifler, "I can't over-empha-si?e the fact that we do not use the test to make adminis trative decisions, ."It is not for screening or admission, but for research on problem prevention." One of the major criticisms of the suddenly controversial Minnesota Multiphasic Person ality Inventory (MMPI) is that results of the test are being used in some instances to de cide if an applicant for a job is qualified or if an employe should be discharged from his job. The federal government now taking a skeptical look at the practice has been using psychological tests since World War II to measure the "fitness for duty" of some of its em ployees. "To make an arbitrary cut off point for the MMPI test below a certain point you fail and above you pass and to make an administrative deci sion solely on this basis is an inappropriate use of the test as originally designed," Reifler maintains. "With our present state of knowledge, any one test is not a sufficient criterion for a de cision affecting a person's life. "The test should be weighed with a lot of other pertinent in formation which then should be analyzed by skilled and competent experts." Reifler, an instructor in psychiatry at the UNC School of Medicine and director of psychiatric services for the UNC Student Health Service, uses the 556-item MMPI quiz in two ways. It is a "clinical tool." All students seeking psychiatric counseling take the test. "The test gives me a lot of information which I might get from a patient by talking with him over a long period of time," Reifler says. "But doing it that way would take considerably more time, often more than the student with an immediate problem has." "With an interview and a patient's history, the test helps me get an additional perspec tive. "We don't use the test in any administrative sense, only in a clinical sense, much in the way a medical specialist would use an X-ray or a blood count." Another use of the MMPI here is for research. "We want to find out, if we can, what the answers to the test actually relate to in a per son's personality," said Reif ler. "We want to know what the test tells us about sick or well people, what it may have to do with such things as academ ic achievement or under achievement as well as with such different illnesses as cor onary artery disease or men tal depression." Last fall, for the first time, all entering freshmen here were given the MMPI as part of pre-registration. "No ' one . is accepted or kicked out on the basis of this test," it is Emphasized again. What .about the charges that psychological testing is a "rep rehensible invasion of pri vacy?" - 4The use of the test, not the test itself, might b an rva sion o! privacy," replies Reifler. ;'The use of the test is not a problem here. A student's anonymity is preserved by at tributing 1 his . test to a code number. .And none of the items in" the. test are ever searched out to see how a particular stu dent answered a particular question." i For 'Private Lives9 Plavmakers Select Cas Director Kai Jurgensen has announced the cast . of "Pri vate Lives," a Noel Coward comedy to be presented - by , the Carolina Playmakerj June 8 to 11 in Graham Memorial lounge. Two veteran Playmakers, Martha Noll and -William M. -Hardy, an associate professor in the Department of -Radio, Television, and Motion Pictures, have been east in the leading roles in Coward's farcical ballet comedy. , - - ,The play revolves around two , honeymoon couples who occu-; py adjoining terrace suites in . a French hotel. The groom of one couple is the ex-husband , of the bride in the adjoining suite. Tar Heel Baskctballers Plan 25-Game Schedule A 25 game basketball sched ule will be played by UNC next winter, it was announced yesterday by Athletic Director C. P. Erickson. "This is the most games we have played during the season since 1957," said Erickson. "It is quite an attractive card and one which will demand the most of our athletes." Coach Dean Smith, who will have three members of last season's starting five return ing, faces the usual task of meeting seven Atlantic Coast Conference foes plus some of the nation's top intersectional squads. Among the non - conference foes with promise of great strength are Vanderbilt, Utah, West Virginia Ohio State, Flor ida and NYU. Teams which have been played in past his tory now returning to the schedule are Princeton (NCAA semi - finalist), William & Mary and Richmond. Florida State appears on the card for the first time ever. "I believe the ACC will be the best balanced league in recall," Smith said. "We open against Clemson. They have everyone returning. We played one of our best games against them last year at Charlotte and won by only two points." West Virginia and Utah will be played in doubleheader fashion at Raleigh on Dec. 30 and 31. N. C. State is the other participating club in the two night affair. The Tar Heels will meet Princeton in Greensboro on Dec. 27, while Florida is slated for Dec. 18 at Charlotte. The Queen City will also host the North - South doubleheader once again. Top returning letterman for the Tar Heels will be Bob Lewis, who averaged 20 points per game as a sophomore. Tom Gauntlett, a frontcourter, and guard Johnny Yokley were reg ulars in late season. The brightest newcomer is stylish Larry Miller. He averaged 33 points as a freshman. Who, Where And When Dec. 1 Clemson Clemson Dec. 4 William & Mary Chapel Hill Dec. 6 Ohio State Columbus Dec. 8 Richmond - Chapel Hill Dec. 11 Vanderbilt Nashville Dec. 16 Florida State Chapel Hill Dec. 18 Florida Charlotte Dec. 27 Princeton Greensboro Dec. 30 Utah Raleigh Dec. 31 West Virginia Raleigh Jan. 3 Maryland Chapel Hill Jan. 5 Wake Forest Winston-Salem Jan. 8 Duke Chapel Hill Jan. 12 N. C. State Chapel Hill Jan. 15 Virginia .... Charlottesville Feb. 3 Wake Forest Chapel Hill Feb. 5 Maryland College Park Feb. 7 South Carolina Chapel Hill Feb. 9 NYU New York Feb. 12 VPI Chapel Hill Feb. 15 N. C. State Chapel Hill Feb. 18 Clemson Charlotte Feb. 19 South Carolina Charlotte Feb. 22 Virginia Chapel Hill Feb. 26 Duke Durham Mar. 3, 4, 5 ACC Tournament The Hardys, who were last seen together in a Playmaker production of "Rain" when they were both doing graduate work in dramatic art, will por tray the formerly married cou ple who can not live together happily and yet are utterly miserable when separated. Playing the wide-eyed, baf fled young bride married to a man in love with his first wife will be Phyllis Rice f Quaker Hill, Conn. Miss Rice, a stu dent at George Washington University, recently appeared as Catharine in the school the ater's production of "Sudden ly Last Summer. Other members of the cast include Alan Pickrell of Em ory, Va., and Gisele Lamar que of Nice, France. Mr. Pick rell, who teaches dramatic art at Emory and Henry College, has appeared in Nashville the atre productions of "My Fair jLady," "The Fantasticks," "J.B.," "Guys and Dolls," "The Rainmaker" and "Send Me No Flowers." Miss Lamra que, who will appear as a French maid, has been seen in a WUNC television produc tion of Tennessee Williams' "Moony's Kid Don't Cry." . Setting and lighting ior "Pri- . vate Lives'! will be done by ? Nathan Garner, -a graduate as -eistant in dramatic art. The state-manager for the produc tion is Ronald Spainhour, a graduate student in dramatic , art. The play win run for four nights in the Graham Memor ial lounge. Admission is free. Operation Headstart j DrCarl Brown of the School bf Education will lead a dis cussion on Operation Head start at the Binkley Baptist Church supper study program at 6 p.m. Sunday. Operation Headstart, a pro gram designed to give pre 6chool cultural enrichment to children from lower income homes will be in full swing next Monday. Rides are available in the morning at 9:30 and 9:43 a.m. to attend a discussion of Har vey Cox "Secular City" and at 10:30 a.m. for the morning worship service. OFF GOMES THE EXCISE TAX! D0VII GO RECORD PRICES! V few s4 D0VI1 ;: mvh til ( j DOWN 1)1 THE All LP Albums- All LP Albums formerly 3.98, now only $2.84 All LP Albums, formerly 4.98, now only 3.S9 All LP Albums, formerly 5.98, now only 134 All 45 rpm records, formerly 98c, now only .......... 79c, and one of your choice free with ten. RECORD BAR Cor. Church & Parrish Sts. Downtown Durham 108 Henderson St. Chapel Hill DISCOUNT PRICES EVERY DAY Have you heard Soon there'll be RECORD BAR number three? Watch for big grand opening , . , At Wellons Village soon. CO & CO UJ LftJ 3 a C3 TRAUEL-OH mm mfi 2 s O O r CM a GO u O GO UJ GO UJ .9 CO eo i O CM a I0T0RCYCIE GO