eranForward Dan Eby scores on a one-hand jump shot inMaroon victory over MIT last Saturday night,I team forfeits UC scores its last point of the season, in the first halfTuesday's game with Washington university.The UC Basketball teampnded its most successful sea¬son in history with a resound¬ing thud, as the team lost aforfeit to Washington univer¬sity at St. Louis Tuesdaynight, two to nothing. The finalrecord for the season was eight¬een victories and four losses.A i Washington the game wastied 29-29 at the half when coachjoe Slampf decided not to leadhis eagers back onto the floor forthe second portion of the game.Stampf was protesting what hefelt were unfair decisions on thep.,rt of the two referees. Moreparticularly, he felt that one ofthe referees in particular was laxin calling the Washington teamon traveling and double dribbling.At one point in the game he calledfrom the sides: “Come tm, let’scall those” for which effort hereceived a technical foul.During the half Stampf In¬formed the officials that the Chi¬cago team would continue to playthe game only if one referee wereremoved from the game. Theroach of the Washington Bearsdid not go along with this demand,and so Stampf and his teamwalked out in protest.Stampf himself was unavailablefor comment. His wife referredall requests for information toWally Hass, director of the UCathletic department.Hass cautioned that this inci¬dent will not hurt UC relationswith Washington, for he has al¬ready scheduled a game with theBears, in Chicago, next season."I think if we were doing it overagain, we would have returnedfor the second half of the game,”Hass added.Members of the team contacteddid not seem too happy about thetec hnical defeat, but were guardedin their statements. Three mem¬bers of the team were playingtheir last game, and were reportedunhappy about the anti-climaticend of their college basketball ca¬ reer, but one of them explained:“Joe is the coach, if he doesn’twant to play, we don’t play.”The general feeling amongteam members was that Chicagocould have won the game, andwould have, had it been played toib conclusion.Last Saturday the Maroons de¬feated Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology in a home game, 57-46. It was the final appearancefor four year senior veterans Cap¬tain Gary Pearson, Mitchell Wat¬kins, and Clarence Woods.Pearson was high scorer in thegame with 18 points and alsograbbed 15 rebounds to continuehis team-leading pace. Watkinsmatched Pearson’s rebound totaland tallied 12 points, while Woods, although he fouled out "early inthe second half, received a stand¬ing ovation from the crowd for hisperformance.Pearson was high scorer andtop rebounder for the season,scoring 287 points. Jerry Torenplaced second with 232 while Wat¬kins was third with 207.The athletic department alsoannounced that Captain Pearsonhas been nominated by the Uni¬versity to be included in the 1960edition of the Who’s Who in smallcollege basketball.They have sent allstatistics on Gary to the editorsof the publication and further de¬cision on whether he will appearin the book will be up to thetors.Vol. 69, No. 25 University of Chicago, March 4, 1960SC will aid Southern strikersVoting to send $160 to stu¬dents recently fined in Nash¬ville Tennessee for disorderlyconduct during a non-violentdemonstration against racialdiscrimination in Southernchain department stores, StudentGovernment in its Tuesday meet¬ing expressed sympathy with thestrikers.Other actions of the TuesdaySG Assembly meeting includedestablishment of a system bywhich organizations would be able to request reservation of alreadyoccupied rooms in case of con¬flicts, passage of a bill providingfor expulsion of negligent com¬mittee and department members,and approval of a bill requestingthe administration to assufne theexpenses involved in sending UCdelegates to the National Studentassociation (NSA).Gail Paradise (College), SGNSA committee chairman, andMaroon editor Neal Johnston(College) proposed that the As¬sembly in accordance with NSA’s organization of a national move¬ment in suport of students re¬cently arrested in Nashville, sendtelegrams to the Nashville mayor,Ben West, Nashville police com¬missioner Hosey, and Diane Nash,of Fiske university, leader of thestudent demonstrators.Protest against student arrestJohnston stated that NSA’s re¬quest asked for protests to thearrest of the students who wereconducting a peaceful demonstra¬tion, and for opposition to the non-arerst of the students’ antago-Congressman Ruess starts billto change selective service actA bill leading to the estab¬lishment of an alternative tothe Selective Service has beenintroduced in the House ofRepresentatives, and is cur¬rently in committee. The planwould permit a young man toserve his period of obligation tohis country by working on devel¬opment projects in underdevel¬oped countries. To avoid attract¬ing opportunists interested onlyin draft exemption, corps mem¬bers would be excluded from vet¬erans benefits. If passed the bill itself wouldnot create such a program, butrather would call for the studyof such a program. It was en¬tered in the house by Congress¬man Henry Ruess (D. Wiscon¬sin). In the Senate it is beingbacked by Richard Newberger ofOregon,Plan called "meaningful"Editors of the Colorado Dailyhave cited the plan as “construc¬tive and meaningful — Youth’schance to serve our country andthe world.” Queen’s college, N. Y., called it.“one of the more exciting andworthwhile bills before this ses¬sion of Congress; “and the UtahDaily Chronicle stated that it is“certainly woi’thy of considera¬tion.”Editorial presentation of theplan at Colorado brought astormy letter from one veteranwhich, in turn, drew irate retortsfrom several other undergradu¬ates.Veteran Kenneth Green statedthat, though he did not questionthe program’s overall objective,he did question the source of mo¬tivation which would prompt peo¬ple to join. “I believe that theaverage non-ROTC college man—at least on this campus—lias littlesense of patriotic responsibility,and that he detests the idea ofhaving to serve in his country’sarmed forces.”While he agreed that a sense ofpurpose is not always inspired byservice in the armed forces, hestated that “the fact remains thatmen have to be trained to fightso that if difficulties arise, theycan be recalled through the com¬pulsory reserve program.Veteran benefits are overratedFinally, he doubts the effective*ness of excluding corps membersfrom veteran benefits, since hefeels such benefits are overrated.“Since the Korean, conflict, vet-benefits have been greatlydecreased, and because of variousemploye compensation programs,the average veteran in peace-timeservice seldom has to take advan¬tage of veteran benefits.”Green’s letter brought vigorousretorts from several students. Tohis comment that the non-ROTCman doesn’t want to serve, onestudent replied: “Yes, Ken, I de¬test the Idea of serving in mycountry’s armed forces. This is my last year of a long four yearhaul, and I would like to usewhat little I have learned. Do youthink the army will give me achance to do so? I already knowhow to dig ditches, peel potatoes,wash dishes and shine shoes. Ofcourse, I’m a little rusty at bath¬ing dogs and greeting dinnerguests of officers.”Next war fought with missilesAnother student, Warren Hern,questioned the real value of train¬ing fighting men, reasoning that,“The next war will not only usemissiles instead of manpower . . .but it will be over before the Pen¬tagon could go through the redtape of calling us back to serviceanyway.”Besides, said Hern, “The impor¬tant war is the Cold War that’sgoing on now . . . the War that’sfighting over men’s minds. Itsammunition is food, clothing,medical care and freedom, andits battlefields are the rice pad¬dies of Southeast Asia, the jun¬gles of Africa and all places inthe world threatened by Com¬munism. The Point Four YouthCorps is one of the best weaponswe could use.” nists. NSA was maintaining thatthe students’ right to protest hadbeen violated by their arrest.Paul Hoffer (Medical School)proposed an-amendment to theresolution, which was passed bythe Assembly. The amendment re¬quired the Government to send$160 to pay the fines imposed onfour of the demonstrating stu¬dents. Three Negro students werefined $50 each for disorderly con¬duct by the Nashville courts lastMonday. One white student dem¬onstrator was fined $10.Further action by the Assem¬bly concerning the Nashville in¬cident involved sending letters tothe more than ten Nashville col¬leges and universities expressingsympathy with the demonstratorsand advocating support fromother Nashville students.“In order to solve some of themost pressing problems of stu¬dent activities” the assemblyvoted to establish a system underwhich a room reservation by astudent organization could bechanged up to ten days prior tothe time of the reservation.Organisations place reservationAn organization requestingsuch a change from the Commit¬tee on Recognized Student organi¬zations, two weeks previous tothe date of the reservations, andshowing*both a sufficient needfor the reservation and an alter¬native reservation for the groupor groups challenged may effecta change of reservation if CORSOapproves thier request. Every at¬tempt will be made by CORSO toeffect a voluntary settlement bythe organizations involved.The resolution also provides forroom reservation in emergencycases. A number of extra roomswill be provided in such instances,any guard fees to be assumedjointly by Student activities andStudent Government.The Assembly also mandatedCORSO to request statementsfrom all organizations concern¬ing what facilities not now avail¬able they consider essential forstudent acitvities.Parties can tell policyThe Maroon would like to in¬vite all campus political partiesintending to run candidates inthis spring’s Student Governmentelections to submit policy state¬ments concerning candidacy ontheir tickets, general party posi¬tion, etc.Such statements will be in noway considered as political plat¬forms, or definitive, statements ofall stands to be taken in the forth-mmmm coming elections. We are issuingthis invitation simply to permitall parties to interest candidates,and to present some preliminarystatement of their various posi¬tions to the campus before theirfinal platforms are constructed.Any party wishing to have sucha statement printed in nextweek’s Maroon is asked to submitit in typed form before nextWednesday at 5 pm.US still supports dictatorshipsED. NOTE The following ar- against alleged US affection for the president; Anastasio, a mili- their political differences, how- In response to my request forticle, by James L. Busey of the dictators would have had some tary man, is head of the National ever, all anti-Somoza leaders, and an explanation of this long tenure,University of Colorado, appeared impact by now on oyr diplomatic or Armv aP 9en*ra^ Americans I have in- Wallace W. Stuart, deputy diroe-in the NATION of February 27, practices in this hemisphere. K * terviewed on the subject, charge tor of personnel, I>epartnient oftinder the title of “Mission to Annarontlv not at least in Critics of the Somoza s differ that US Ambassador Thomas E. State, wrote me on December 16.Somozaland” It is reprinted here App t y T’ ai politically among themselves. Dr. Whelan is inextricably involved His “explanation” was that “allin view of the general lack of Nicaragua. . Vasquez, president of the Junta with the dynasty. ambassadors are appointed by theinformation on this subject in Next to the bizarre Trujillo ty- Revolucionaria, obviously taking "oroDaoanda aaent" pres,dent* by *«d with the eon-the daily press. ranny (since 1930) in the so-called his cue from Castro, promises to p , 3, 3 . sent of the Senate, and are eom-t-v^, Dominican republic, the Somoza shoot all Nicaraguans who have l*1 Chamorro s book, it is al- by him to ‘serve dur-Oie Ollld suppose the De- famjjy dictatorship over Nicar- contributed in “greater or lesser leged that- Ambassador Whelan ^he pleasure of the Presidentpartment of State must have agua, established in 1937, is the degree” to support of the Somoza has participated in social func- of the u„lted states’”; thatlearned something from the oldest in the new world. The two regime, and to include Commu- tions in a salon looking out upon Whelan was appointed by Presi-f-i , flni„n(Tiomon*(, co-rulers of the country are Luis nists in a seven member coalition the cages which confined some of dent Truman on July 28, 1951fairly recent entanglements Anastasio s^za and his broth- cabinet. Dr. Enrique Lacayo Far- Somoza’s political opponents Wld reappointed by Presidentof Ambassador Smith with er, Anastasio Somoza, Jr., who fan, of the Union Nacional Oposi- Emilio Borge Gonzalez, exiled Msenhower on February 26, 1953•the Batista regime. It would have shared power since the as- tora, is as determined as anyone professor of law of the University and that Whelan «continues tobe reasonable to expect that Latin sassination of their father in Sep- to be rid of the Somoza rule, but of Leon, wrote in a scholarly servc as AmbassadorAmerica’s frequent protests tember, 1956. Luis, a civilian, is is more conservative. Whatever Costa Rican quarterly that Mr.Whelan “acts as a propagandaagent for the Somoza brothers.”Time, in its issue of October 1,Torch editor replaced to Nicar¬agua at the ‘pleasure of the Presi¬dent of the United States.’ ” Stuartconcluded by writing that “I hope, .. . « . that this information will be help-l^. described ^the Ambassador fu| jn exp|alnlnff the len(r(h 'fAinhasador Whelan’s service inNicaragua.” Most Latin Amiri-as “a poker-playing personalfriend of Somoza” (the referenceA new editor, Marcia Jenkins, was placed in charge of the Roosevelt University newspap- was to the assassinated dictator). panfstT would sav that the <vx-er, the Torch, last week after the former editor Henrietta Kraft was discharged by the dean There are two curious facts pianation” was not particularlyof students. In the wake of resignations from three of Roosevelt’s trustees, the editorial about our diplomatic represents helpful.change produced many cries of ‘politics’ and much debate as to why the change was made. h°n in Nicaragua. The first has p t ______ . ,The dean of students, George Watson, denied the charges of playing politics, explaining pllysica!rI?fa~ioil * 109'that Miss Kraft was removed from her office because of poor grades; many students have ^ ^ Jmaintained that Kraft’s position '* our Embassy there. The second There may be some personalis related to Ambassador Whel- reason why Whelan must remainagainst the restoration of the oldAuditorium theatre, a projectsupported by Edward Sparling, At this time Miss Kraft’s part of the staff would be metgrades were below the required with a severe disciplinary action.2.0 but the rule was waived. It K|0f "political pawn"nil , , „,QC . . ^ .ol was later discovered that her eo- One Torch staff member claimsRU president, was instiumental editor was ineligible for the office thatin removing her from her posi- because he would be in his firstsemester at Roosevelt,became sole editor. in Nicaragua: if so, it would seemthat the United States Govern¬ment could find some other usefulemployment for him in Managua.Or it may be relevant that Dr.Guiddermo Seville Sacasa, Nioar-tion as editor.The editor of the Torch is se¬lected by a Student Activities an’s long tenure of office.A few foreign embassies, notablythe French and Dominican, arewithin a short distance of the se¬curity area of La Loma, but most. . „ . any resentment against the are jn other areas of the city,n his first new editor has died down and the jsj0t so the Embassy of the United aKua Ambassador to the T’niled» and she staff is ready to resume its nor- states, which occupies a large States, is the dean of the Wash-mal work of putting out a paper, building within the restricted *n£ton diplomatic corps. Still,. r j The editor of the Torch is given Editor-in-chief Jenkins insists circle of La Loma not over twen- there is no protocol requiring theboard composed of eight students a full tuition scholarship and $55 that her appointment was just ty feet from the home of Senora reciPr°cal retention of Whelan inand eight faculty members. Dead- per issue. The editor is solely re- fining an empty hole, and that Somoza With the reservation that Managua; and in any case, if thisSP,°nsi,b!S for f^,to"aI ““•‘e”- sho is not a political pawn. Eisenhower is no Somoza, it is indwd a ,ac,or. is• a th?,T°rch <itr' Th* ■“■•‘vittes office as though the Nicaraguan Em- * ‘.oLiwaolo Wim tU T*- an ediional criticizingthe ,t R^vrit whifh handled the bassy in the United States wereT ihe e l t, ?.u Hn wrsf dac.lsIon to renovate the long daIdt mechanics of this shift was „n- situated on the President’s Gettys-ed'tor of the Pier mint. Universe Chicago auditorium located with- der orders from the Dean of stu- burg farm. To all appearancesty of Illinois at Navy Pier paper, ,n the building. The editorial, dents to answer no questions, and the its B-e.ha.ci/ in i.who was planning to transfer to which contained several errors of were thus unavailable for com-Roosevelt. fact, met with stormy reception mp„t,j on the part of the student activi- Another consequence of theties board. This hoard attempted proposed auditorium renovationto appoint a co-editor to alternate were the resignations of the vice-campuscharacter:BLACKSTONETORTPride of the law school,Blackstone has never lost amoot trial. But there’s noth¬ing moot about his prefer¬ences in dress. He finds thatwhen he’s comfortable, hecan trap a witness and swaya jury like Clarence Darrow.So he always wears Jockeybrand briefs while preparinghis briefs. Exclusive Jockeytailoring gives him a bonusof comfort he gets in no otherunderwear. Fine Jockeycombed cotton is more ab¬sorbent, smoother fitting, too.To look your best, feel yourbest, take a tip from Tort.Always insist on Jockeybrand briefs, $1.25. Yourcampus store has them now!coopers inco»po«atco • kenosha. wis. either an outbuilding of the So¬moza estate, or vice versa.Tenure suspiciousIf the location of our embassy nothing to prevent personnel offivers from saying so.It may be that the Ambassadoris quite popular with the Somozafamily, and that the Nicaraguangovernment wants him to stay."Explain or correct"No rational person expects anambassador to be openly hostileto the regime to which he is aeissues with Kraft but the plaq president of the university and seems odd. the tenure of our Am- credited. But in Nicaragua wewas abandoned after the talk.Grades too lowWednesday, February three trustees. bassador is even odder. ThomasWells D. Burnette, vice presi- F. Whelan has served in ManaguaOnMiss Kraft was informed 5,that dent of the university in chargeof fund raising, said he was leav-since her grades had not been ‘"S,his S°SIU,ons jn we<?ks ina “forced resignation.Burnette said the decision wasraised to 2.0 during the first semester of the year, her appoint¬ment as editor of the paper wascancelled. She was’ told to stopwork on the paper immediately. .4 , , . ,.An issue was due in three days, me? ^at ?ur"et!eJ?ad been firedand she insisted on completing or bad submit*ed his resignation,work on it. After this was pub- °th?.rs who submrtted theirresignations were Robert Poliak,Leo A. Lerner, and William H.Stapleton. have a clear-cut case of the Unit-States obdurately retaining onewhom Central Americans widelybelieve is playing footsy with ahated dictatorship. On the factof the Smith-Batista revelations,and the widespread Latin Ameri-lished, she did begin work on theissue of February 22. (The Torchis published every second Mon¬day.)The Student Activities boardwent ahead with the selection ofa new editor, by-passing the newseditor who had applied for theposition to select Marcia Jenkins,a Junior who transferred this fallto Roosevelt from Maryland. Shehad never worked on the Torchstaff.One disgruntled member of thepaper claimed that the Activitiesboard was determined to selectno one who had known and/orfight be influenced by HenriettaKraft.Watson justifies choiceThis was denied by Watson, aUC alumnus who claimed that theBoard had decided that upper-class status and a good academicrecord were more important thanexperience on the paper. Thus,Jenkins was elected over thesophomore news editor.Miss Kraft has been ordered tostay out of the Torch office byDean Watson. At the same time,Watson cautioned the staff thatany attempt at sabotage on the longer than any other US diplomatic chief-of-mission has servedat his present post anywhere onearth. Whelan, a Republican fromNorth Dakota, was appointed toreached Monday at a conference Managua by a Democratic Presi- ran impression that this is prewith Dr. Ecjward J. Sparling, uni- dent, Harry Truman. The unusual cisely the way the United Statesversity president. Sparling de- appointment needed some expla- conducts itself with dictators, thenation, and Time (August 6,1951) State - Department should eitheroffered one: Truman wanted toreward Republican Senator Wil¬liam Langer of North Dakota forhaving furnished crucial support. explain or correct the Nicaraguandinlomatic situation.Or if that is Imposible, wemight at least move our embassyto some other part of Managua.Concludeinterracial new study ofhousing plansA new study of interracial housing gives evidence that the percentage of white resi¬dents in integrated projects tends to remain stable. The conclusion of the study PrivatelyDeveloped Interracial Housing, financed by a grant from the Fund for the Republic, is thatthe notion that interracial developments become predominantly Negro over the years iscontrary to fact. The study written by George and Eunice Grier also describes a rentaldevelopment which changed from predominantly Negro to a proportion of about two-thirds white and one-third Negro. ~ ~sity of California, Berkeley, California.(The University of CaliforniaPress is publishing three of the<£vo eke if® BRANDbriefs• CHICAGO MAROON • March 4, 1960 “Almost two-thirds of theknown communities built with adeliberate intent to attract an in¬terracial market have a majorityof whites,” they state. “In onlya small number of these was thewhite majority obtained by quo¬tas or other occupancy controls.In most it was the natural resultof market forces.”The Griers are research spe¬cialists who have collaboratedon several other nationallyknown studies of housing andIntergroup relations. They livein one of the large successfully integrated projects described intheir book.The Griers’ research was forthe Commission on Race andHousing, an organization of dis- immediately totinguished private citizens whosethree-year investigation was fi¬nanced through a $305,000 grantfrom the Fund for the Republic.Their work, published today by scientific evidence in an area ofnational controversy. The first,Property Values and Race, byLuigi Laurenti, was released lastweek; another, Studies in Hous-the University of California ln* Minority Groups, co-ediPress, is one of five books pre- ted b^ Nathan Glazer — who inpared by the Commission’s re¬search staff, which was headedby Dr. Davis McEntire, professorof Social Welfare at the Univer-all the Free Press booksTHE GREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 East 57th HY 3-5829Chicago's mosf complete stockof quality paper bocks also co-author with David Ries-man of The Lonely Crowd andFaces In The Crowd, and Dr. Mc¬Entire, will be published nextweek).The Griers’ study was designedto study the successes and prob-Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRISTEy«c •» a mined Glasses fittad113t C. <3 MY 3-5352lik'.. ; ““ ’ - .#■. |r .1;'. If***; "Vlr^K^VaJ)p ;?|UC students demonstrateA national protest over recent bilt university staged a protest,student arrests in the South has sit-down strike at three chainbt,(m called by the National Stu- stores in Nashville. In the Southassociation. These demon- Negroes are served at departmentstrations are scheduled for noon store lunch counters, but theySaturday. All of the nearly five ar^ allowed to sit downhundred NSA member schools ^u ~~ JTii e s e demonstrations havebeen going on throughout theSouth, especially in North Caro¬lina.The 100 Nashville demonstra¬tors were all arrested and held in¬communicado overnight in jail. Student Government, the Maroonand the Student Representativeparty. A demonstration protest¬ing the arrest of the 100 studentswas held in front of the Wool-worth store at 211 South Statestreet. Some fifty UC studentsparticipated.The nation-wide demonstrationswere not too successful Monday,few schools meeting NSA’s re¬quest, and so they have beenrescheduled for this Saturday.*have been asked to hold demon¬strations. The. UC NSA-commit-tee has been placed in charge ofthe Chicago area schools.All students interested areasked to assemble in the IdaNoyes main lounge at 11:15 amSaturday. The demonstration willbe held in front of City hall.The NSA specifically asked thatdemonstrations not be held infront of Woolworth stores.The particular event whichprompted this request occured stration scheduled for the follow-last Saturday when IDO students ing day which was last Monday, ^,'fTrespassing.'ThrNashvilie'sTwhorn Fisk university and Vander- At UC, telegrams were sent by dents finaily charged andconvicted of disorderly conduct.Last Tuesday night, StudentGovernment voted to send $160to cover part of the fines as¬sessed against these Fisk andVanderbilt students.Several other groups are alsoThey were originally booked on The largest protest is expected incharges of trespassing. New York City, where some twoundaj, evening NSA officers thousand students in the Metro-alerted member schools of the de- politan New York region are ex-velopments and asked that tele- pected to converge on Washing-grams be sent to the mayor and ton square at noon tomorrow,police commissioners of Nashville. NSA decided not to protest inf possible they wanted a demon- front of Woolworth’s becauseWoolworth’s dropped the chargesWoolworths picketedin segregation protestThe Chicago committee for racial equality, with the sud- Plannln2 to protest Saturday,port of several UC students, picketed the F. W. Woolworth ter of the NAACP.store at 928 E. 63rd street last Saturday. It was the thirdsuch picket against Woolworth stores conducted by the com¬mittee, which is a branch of the ——— — ists, Lord Denning of Whitchurch, contrasted the func¬tions of the British and USMean wliileTthe Vit-down strikes highest courts in a speech atcontinue in the South. In Ala- the Law school auditoriumLord Denning speaksbama, yesterday, nine students last Tuesday. His appearance waswho led such a strike were ex- one of the series of major eventsWoolworth counters ceases, or un- pelled from a state supported marking the dedication of thetil it becomes apparent that wte school at the request of the Gov- University’s new Law center.cannot influence the national man¬agement.” He reported that thecommittee will probably picket aKress store tomorrow. ernor of the state. “These ring¬leaders have no right to endangerthe peace of the citizens of thisstate,” he explained. Lord Denning is one of the fivemen who hear appeals brought tothe House of Lords, the highestcourt in the United Kingdom. Hisnational Congress of racial equal¬ity (CORE).Committee chairman MarvinCeynar said that the picketing,which is part of CORE’S nationalcampaign against Woodworth andKress stores, is “intended to dem¬onstrate to the chain store man¬agement that its clientele opposesthe lunch counter segregationpolicy it follows in its southernstores.”About fifteen committee mem- .. „ -bers and sympathizers carried on the College News conference, Channel 7, at 2:30 pm. She will be one of five college stu- stitutional He said this Dolievsigns and passed out leaflets to dents interviewing Illinois Senior Senator Paul Douglas. keeps the British courts “out ofthe public urging it not to patron- Douglas is a Democrat now finishing his second term in the Senate and will be up for elec- the area of political controversy."izo Woolworth stores and explain- tion next in January. He has served as Senator since 1949.ing the “equivocal policies of the Miss Byers previously appeared on the program January 10, at which time she interchain. Although some shoppers viewed Illinois Senator Everett — 'S-G president on televisionOne of Britain’s leading jur- speech was the fourth in theErnst Freund lecture series, thefirst of which was given bySupreme Court Justice FelixFrankfurter. The occasionmarked the first use of the Lawcenter’s new $4,100,000 auditori¬um.In his speech, Lord Denningsaid that the US Supreme Courtoften makes decisions that are“more legislative than judicial.”Such policy-making decisions, heexplained, result from the Ameri¬can judicial tradition which allowsthe Supreme Court to overruleacts of Congress by declaringthem unconstitutional.In Britain, he pointed out, thelegislature is supreme. There theMaureen Byers, president of Student Government, will appear on television this Sunday S°u,rts do not have the power to” -- - •• — - - -- J declare acts of Parliament uncon-ignored the picket line, most re¬spected it. The two hour demon¬stration was entirely without in¬cident.Fred Fields, a member of thecommittee, said that the 63rdstreet store manager did not op- Dirksen.The topic of the coming inter¬view will be the case of civilrights in the South. It is offeredas a sequel to last week’s pro¬pose the picketing, and displayed gram which telecast an interview“considerable sympathy for our of Georgia’s Senator Richardmotives.”The committee had previouslypicketed two Woolworth loopstores with what Ceynor termed“considerable success.” “We in¬tend to continue the pickets,” saidCeynor, “until segregation at Russell by several students onthe same topic. As Miss Byersput ttT “Last week Russell pre¬sented the southern point of view,this week Douglas will presentthe liberal northern point ofview.” Concerning the current civilrights dispute and how it affectsstudents, Miss Byers was askedwhat she thought of Tuesdaynight’s SG resolution to advance160 dollars for the payment offines levied against southern stu¬dents jailed for demonstratingagainst segregation. She said, “Iwouldn’t have supported it if Ihad been in a position to vote;since I was in the chair it was im¬possible to express my opinion onthe issue. I am, however, verystrongly in favor of sending tele¬grams to the mayor and policecommissioner in Nashville. I washappy to see that motion concern¬ing telegrams passed. It’s not thatI don’t think that Governmentcan afford 160 dollars, it’s justthat I don’t think that the actionwill have the effect intended.”When asked about her opin¬ions concerning Douglas’ standon the recent labor bill, Miss► <* Bicycles, Ports, Accessories <* special student offer <| AGE CYCLE SHOP \| 1621 e. 55th st. J Byers said that she thought Doug¬las’ stand for compromise wasadmirable. Douglas had been op¬posed to the Landrum-Griffin billand spoke for the modification of17 sections.Miss Byers was elected to Gov¬ernment two years ago as an ISLcandidate; last year ISL votedher chairman of the asembly. Sheis also a member of Nu Pi Sigma,a National Student associationdelegate and a charter memberand secretary of the Greater Chi¬cago Zither, Sackbut and Rebecgreat books discussion group. Lord Denning went on to ex¬plain that the US courts have thepower of interpreting the Consti¬tution. Sometimes, he said, theymust decide cases which the Con¬stitution does not specificallycover. In such cases the judgesmust “fill in the gaps” in the Con¬stitution, and hence they actuallymake new laws.Britain, on the other hand, doesnot have a written constitution.The British judges decide cases onthe precedents set by previousdecisions, rather than on an inter¬pretation of a constitution or alaw. This tradition prevents theBritish judges from having tolegislate to “fill in gaps.”Have You Discovered Enrico for Lunch?Chuck Wagon BuffetMONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY• soup & salad • chicken• lasagne • saladsALL YOU DESIRE —$1.25Cafe Enrico & Qallery1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5535 HY 3-5300Demonstrators picket the 63rd street Woolworth store.GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOLSponsored by the University of Arizona in cooperation with professorsfrom Stanford University, University of California and Guadalajara, itwill offer in Guadalajara, Mexico, June 29 to August 7, courses in art,folklore, geography, history, language, and literature. $240 coverstuition, board and room.For more information, please write toProfessor Juan B. RaelBox 7227, Stanford University, Calif. DARWIN CENTENNIAL SPEECHES IN MIMEO FORMavailable at the Bookstore for a limited time only10c to 78c a copy, depending on lengthShapley, Emiliani, Kortlandt, Waddington, Dobzhanskyand many othersNot all speeches but a great number still available whilequantities last.University of Chicago Bookstore58TH AND ELLISMarch 4, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Si the Chicago maroonfounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and Intermittently during the summer quarter,by students of the University of Chicago. Inquiries should be sent to the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall,. 1212 E. 59thStreet. Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus.Subscriptions by mall. $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5. Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material. 4 pm.Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pm Wednesday before publication.All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the individual opinions of the authors.Senate bill to establishPoint Four Youth Corps Editors' columnStampf’s leadership wasunthinking, unfortunateWould you rather spend two years in thearmy doing the things one traditionally doesin. the army, or two years in an underde¬veloped country working for the social, cul¬tural, scientific and economic advancementof that country? This question might becomea real one if the efforts of congressman Reuss ofWisconsin to establish a Point Four Youth Corpsare successful. As students we should do every¬thing possible to further the success of this pro¬gram. The University, as a highly respected edu¬cational institution, should not be lax in adding itsinfluential voice to the effort.The bill in question, H.R. 9638 (which is printedin full on page two of this issue) would call uponthe President to find a University, foundation, orother group which would be willing to make astudy of the possibility of creating such a socialservice corps, quite possibly as an alternative tothe draft.This “Corps” would make use of the greatwealth of educated young adults, who now facetwo years in the armed forces doing work com¬pletely incommensurate with their talents. It takesno college degree to shine a car, file thousands offorms, or walk a patrol path, yet there are a mul¬titude of young soldiers wearing khaki with asheepskin degree in one pocket and a potato peelerin the other.On the other hand it does demand a trained mindto teach the future leaders of an emerging coun¬try what the business of civilization is all about.The personnel of this Point Four Youth corpswould train the future doctors, writers, scientists,government workers, social workers, radio tech¬nicians. farmers and so forth. This would be a jobwell worth the efforts and work of the moderncollege trained young adult.The job would not be pleasant; it certainly would not be the “world cruise” it might soundlike. In fact two years in the modern army wouldcertainly be more comfortable than two years inthe interior of Ghana. But the real challenge is inthe Ghanas and not in the Paris islands and theGreat Lakes.But there is much work to be done in makingthis possibility an actuality: the initial bill mustbe approved, the study must be made, the PointFour program itself must then be created. It isour hope that the University of Chicago will beinstrumental in all of this.We hope that students will write to their repre¬sentatives and senators, will write to the HouseCommittee on Foreign affairs which is currentlyconsidering the bill, advocating the measurestrongly.We hope that the Faculty Senate will urge Con¬gress to pass H.R. 9638. We hope that the Boardof Trustees will make its opinion felt. We hopethat Chancellor Kimpton, acting as president ofthe Association of American Universities, willurge the other schools of the country to supportthe measure. We have seen the strength of theacademic world when it is aroused: witness thedispute over the affidavit of disbelief in the Na¬tional Defense Education act.We hope that the University of Chicago willfreely volunteer to make the study the House billrequests. We can think of few more valuable ef¬forts. And finally, all this accomplished, we hopethat Congress will create this very Point FourYouth corps.Millions have been spent, through the NationalDefense Education act. It is now time to use thiseducation for the defense of the country. We canthink of few ways in which the country could bebetter defended than through the kind of peace¬ful, social work which would be done by thisPoint Four Youth corps. Last Tuesday there occurred anexample of a rare sort of leader¬ship. Rare at least on this campus.Basketball coach Joe Stampf, aformer Maroon star himself, ledhis team off the floor to a tech¬nical defeat.Stampf was unhappy over whathe regarded as unfair and preju¬dicial decisions on the part of oneof the games referees. Under¬standably angry, Stampf reactedby quitting, seeing no relief fromthe referees. After this almostunparalleled decision, Wash¬ington university was declaredvictors, 2-0.In our eyes, this is an exampleof the worst sort of sportman- ship. The act bears little relation¬ship to UC’s excellent athleticpolicy. This walk out will be re¬membered in athletic circles andit will not redound to our credit.Stampf could not have beenthinking of his University as hewalked off the basketball floor.Nor could he have been thinkingof the three seniors who wereplaying their last game for theschool, an unfinished game whichbecame a farce. We sincerely hopethat in the future Coach Stampfwill think a little more before heacts.Neal JohnstonLance HaddixSouthern studentsmust be supportedin protest strikesRoosevelt Torch censored?Has the Roosevelt Universi¬ty newspaper, the Torch, beencensored? Although deniedrather plausibly by GeorgeWatson, Dean of Students atRoosevelt, it looks rather likecensorship to us.The editor of the Torch, Hen¬rietta Kraft, has been removedfrom office and told not to reap¬pear by the Dean of Students atthe Loop day school. The reasonused for dismissal was a poorgrade average, yet the editor’sgrade average is no worse thanit was at the time the rule waswaived to appoint her in the firstplace.A new editor, Marcia Jenkins,has been elected — a girl in herfirst year at Roosevelt who hadnever worked on the Torch and isquite unfamiliar with the techni¬ cal- problems of putting out anewspaper. The girl had trans¬ferred this year to Rooseveltfrom the University of Maryland.Several staff members were by¬passed in picking the new editoron the grounds that they werenot upper classmen. The new edi¬tor did not know the old editoras did the staff members who ap¬plied. It goes without saying thatthe new editor couldn’t be influ¬enced by the old one. This doeslook a little suspicious.Miss Jenkins was appointed bythe same Student Activities boardwhich had attempted to oust theformer editor earlier this year forprinting an editorial condemningRoosevelt for-its policies on therestoration of the old Auditorium.It is significant that three ofRoosevelt’s trustees resigned overa dispute arising from this same auditorium, and that they re¬signed at the same time MissKraft was being fired, or rather,removed.It seems significant that thenew editor has completely re¬versed the Torch’s position onthis question and is now quite insupport of the Roosevelt admin¬istration’s policies concerning therestoration.It seems pretty clear that MissKraft’s removal can at best beonly partly ascribed to her faultygrades. Our whole case would bemuch easier were the Torch abetter paper than it is, were MissKraft’s editorials not quite so con¬fused, and were her grades a lit¬tle better.The fact, however, remains:this affair was almost certainlycensorship. A h d censorship isa very bad thing.Up or Out law needs changing The Northern liberal is oftenadmonished to put himself in theplace of the Southern white, to at¬tempt to emphasize with menwhose racial prejudices havebeen ingrained since birth. Butseldom if ever is the white South¬erner asked to conceive the frus¬tration of the liberal who dailysees tenets and principles of hispolitical system mocked in thesouth, yet finds himself incapableof effecting the changes in thesocial system which he regardsas obligatory.This frustration has recentlyexploded in a series of sympathyprotest demonstration on the partof Northern students. We mustalign ourselves with these demon¬strators.Recent events in the Southernstates are inexcusable. In the besttradition of the non-violent paci¬fists, many Negro and a fewwhite students have been protest¬ing the unwritten law which pre¬vents Negroes from sitting downat a department store lunchcounter. They have been protest¬ing just by sitting down, and nomore.As a result they have beenbeaten, arrested, persecuted,jailed, fined. In Nashville, Satur¬day, a white mob created a riotwhen 100 Negro students satdown. The police responded by ar¬resting the Negro students. Thewhite mob was allowed to dis¬perse.The Negro demonstrators as¬suredly expected all of this. OneFisk student almost triumphantlyannounced: “We will fill theirjails!” They have also expectedthe support of the liberal North,a moral and financial support. This we owe them.Several student protests havebeen held on or about campus.Most of them have been in frontof Woolworth stores. This is notcompletely just, for the Woolworth chain is not responsiblefor the Southern situation. Wool-worth’s was selected becausethere was no other good place,and a protest somewhere wasnecessary. A more reasonabledemonstration, however, has nowbeen scheduled.The five h q n d r e d memberschools of the National Studentassociation have all been askedto stage a peaceful, gPneral dem¬onstration this Saturday at noon.Some two thousand students areexpected to participate in theNew York demonstration.The Chicago protest will beheld in front of City hall. All tenarea schools are expected to co¬operate. The group from the UCeampus will leave Ida Noyes at11:15 am, Saturday. We urge allChicago students to participate'.It is difficult for the liberal toconsole himself with the oftenexpressed assertion that, giventime the South will internallyevolve into an unbiased socialstate. It is diffieult to ask thesouthern Negroes, a group madesecond-class citizens by men con¬stitutionally their peers, to waitwhile the Southern bully educateshimself. It is difficult for eithergroup to put up with the myriadof injustices which seem, now. tobe an intrenched part of theSouthern system. The least wecan do, perhaps all we can do,is protest. That is what we hopea great many of us will be doingSaturday.The University should change its by-lawsconcerning academic promotions to allowfaculty members who do not have tenure toaccept administrative posts without endang¬ering their academic status. Under the presentsystem it is almost suicidal for an instructoror assistant professor to act as a Dean or as anadvisor. The current regulation deprives thesemen of an opportunity for close contact with stu¬dents; it deprives students of counselors who werenot too long ago students themselves.What needs to be changed is the present “Up orOut” rule. It is found in section 13 (a) (1) of theStatutes of the University. One may serve as aninstructor for only four years; at the end of thisperiod he must either be promoted to assistant pro¬fessor, or be released from the University. Suchpromotions are made by academic deans of thefaculty.The normal term of appointment for an assistantprofessor is three years. He may be reappointedto a second three year term as assistant professor.At the end of six years he must either be pro¬moted to associate professor or be released. Theappointment must be approved by the chancellorand the dean of the faculties, for the associate pro¬fessor has tenure, and after awarding that rank,the University cannot normally release him.The basis for promotion at this school is scholar¬ ship. The faculty is expected to research and pub¬lish. “Publish or perish” is a real threat at thisschool, for this is the single major academic cri¬terion upon which a non tenure faculty member’scareer will hinge.Basically this is a sensible rule. It is arguablethat in the College, excellence in teaching is a suf¬ficient substitute for excellence in scholarship, butall in all the by-law is an accurate index of com¬petence. It enables the University easily to releaseits non-productive faculty.But the rule makes no provision for the non¬tenure faculty which would like to take time outfor administrative work. A deanship is a full timejob, leaving little room for research. An instructorhas a maximum of ten years to write the bookwhich will earn him his tenure promotion. Wherewill he find the time to serve as administrator?On the other hand, if he docs serve as Dean andproves himself invaluable to the University in thatcapacity, he will probably be promoted anyway,without having shown himself capable of qualityscholarship which is demanded from all otherfaculty members.The whole problem would be easily solved bygiving the instructor or assistant professor who isserving in an administrative post an extension onhis “up or out” time limit.• March 4, 1960 Editors-in-chiefNeal Johnston. Lance HaddixManaging editorOzzie ConklinBusiness Manager Advertising ManagerWilliam G. Bauer W. Brooks BernhardtNews editor Ken PierceFeature editor . ./. Jay GreenbergPhotography coordinator Steve CarsonCulture editor Maggie StinsonSports editor Maitland GriffithCalendar editor Marjorie MundtEditorial staff: Maureen Byers, Hiram Caton, Jeanne Crawford, Bert CoKler,Debby Dinitz, Dorothy Dorf, Francesca Faikenstein, Meryl Goldman, Jacque¬line Friedman. Maitland Griffith, Matthew Hirschorn, John Juskevice, CloirMorgan, Marjorie Mundt, David Noble, Tony Quagliana, Avima Ruder,Kitty Scoville, Jim Thomason, Tamer Varga.Photographers: .... Alan Berger, Gerry Elmon, Ginny Hill, Sidney SeolineCartoonist: ; Arnold PerryCirculation Mgr.; * Nathon Sw.ft‘ « •" • ■ • <;■ '• . i ■/praise civil rights stand Disagreeneat* Sirs!Not because I happen to beft Spaniard, but because Ithink student publications likeMaroon should stand for civilrights in the most clear and ex¬plicit way, be they violated hereo, abroad, I thank you for pub¬lishing the letter of the two Span¬ish clandestine student organiza¬tions.I do not agree with all thepoints expressed by my country¬men. but I thoroughly agree withthe general spirit of the letter.I think they are right and Amer¬ican students should do some actof public solidarity with the col¬leagues who live under the last Fascist dictatorship of Europe. Iknow that American studentshave many problems to solve firstat home, and that they have toface them right now, as we cansee by what is happening in theSouth. Nevertheless, if Americawants the Spanish people not tomisunderstand what America isand means, in spite of the presentpolicy of certain men in this coun¬try toward the shameful regimeof the Iberian Peninsula, some ac¬tions should be tried by groupslike the students. We will all gainwith it.There are mistakes in the Eng¬lish of this letter. Excuse me.Name WithheldThere is no defense;indeed, we are doomed Dear Editors:I was rather interested inthe letter written by Mr. Cohncommenting on the crime ratein the University area pub¬lished in the Feb. 19 Maroon.I can offer no excuses for 2515reported'crimes in this area dur-ing«1958, but I do feel that Mr.Cohn’s conclusion that the Uni¬versity area merely identifies it¬self with greater Chicago, themodern Sodom, where crime paysoff, is unjust.Too many American and for¬eign students now resident in Chi¬cago have imbibed this city’scrime reputation. I realize thatgangster intramural crime in the’20s popularized by Hollywoodand traditional rural dislike ofthe big city has blackened Chi¬cago’s name. But let us look atpresent-day facts comparing usto other American urban centersand see if the continuance of Chi¬cago’s unique fame is justified.Deal’ Editors:“Name Withheld” of Feb.26, states that “unless we findways to stop the ill effectswhich (biological weapons) mightcause, we are to be doomed bytheir power.’’ Well, then indeedwe are, for this is not what theU. S. military is trying to do. Itis developing retaliatory chemi¬cals. so we can kill an attackerwhen il kills us. The military con¬cedes that there is no defenseagainst biological warfare andmissies, although they now boastof an anti-missle missle whichmay or may not work. War De¬partment policy is to develop ourp o w e r of retaliation, a policywhich may work for a while.But C. Wright Mills, in TheCauses of World War III, showsthat with more and more nationsdeveloping more and more atomic,bacteriological, and chemicalweapons of increasing powers ofdestruction, and with the in¬creased use of automation in set¬ting off these weapons, the prob¬ability that one of these weapons will be set off against a foreignpower by accident, however smallthis probability may be in a singleinstance, nevertheless approachescertainty as the number of pos¬sibilities for accidents increases.“Name Withheld” thinks thatan alternative solution to thearms race, such as unilateral dis¬armament, would be risky. I fullyagree. But would it not be betterto take a risk rather than to ac¬cept the virtual certainty of worlddestruction by following the pres¬ent course of military develop¬ment?Since “Name Withheld” is ig¬norant of what the War Depart¬ment is doing. I am not surprisedthat he arrives at a false conclu¬sion, I would suggest that hemight keep himself better in¬formed on military developmentsand what is being done aboutthem by a continued and morecareful reading of the SPU Bulle¬tin.Mike Muench(not representing SPU) The following * statistics aretaken from “Uniform Crime Re¬ports, United States, 1958 Edition”issued by the Federal Bureau ofInvestigation on Sept. 2, 1959:Rate of major crimes per 100,-000 population in metropolitanareas. (Definition of majorcrimes: murder, non - negligentmanslaughter, forcible rape, rob¬bery, aggravated assault, bur-Error notedTo the Editor: -Miss U of C, Dottie Sue Fisher,was the candidate of THIRDFLOOR NORTH HOUSE, not of2nd floor as stated in today’s arti¬cle. A correction of this error willbe most appreciated.Very truly yours, ,Nancy BarnettAssistant Head Resident3rd Floor North HouseP. S.: We are very proud of Dot-tie Sue!Notes high tuition, new UCDear Editors:Instead of sending you anunfriendly note, complainingof campus problems, I thoughtI would merely inform you ofa few items that you mighthave overlooked in you (sic)weekly coverage.The big thing in UC these daysis the high tuition rates the Uni¬versity is charging students. Infact, if things keep going up here,the place will look more like aNavy missile base rather than acollege. But the truth is, that therates are high. I have even heardthat two penniless gargoyles onHarper Library have given noticeto the administration. And along¬side the Virgil and Dante headsoutside of Classics, the adminis¬tration is installing the busts ofRockefeller and Louis Wolfson.I hear that the University isusing most of our money for realestate. In fact, the Universityowns so much land now, that theState Department has alreadybuilt an embassy on UniversityAvenue, and the United Nationshas a jeep with a white flag pa¬trolling 55th St. But the tuitionrates are certainly high; if a stu¬dent hasn’t a scholarship or arich Arabian uncle, his brain willgo begging. I’ve even heard thatSatan, aware of the hot situation, entry in Who’s Who of 1961. Thisis the only school in the world thatnow gives courses on BreakingCrumpets with Mrs. WinthropRockefeller, Homburg - Tipping.Successful Cane-Swinging. Avoid¬ing Starving Beggars on Mich¬igan Avenue, and Telling the Dif¬ference Between a Blue-Blood anda Four-Flusher.Someday Harvard, we will bewith you. Go, Go, UC.But as a final noteworthy item,I have discovered that the Admin¬istration now calls College .Quar¬terly Grades the Ultima Thule ofintelligence. The next step is tobe required attendance at classes.This is what the Fogies and fol¬lowers of McGuffey’s First Read¬er have been crying for, for twen¬ty years. The next thing they willwant is that students take downin short-hand every one of theirgolden words. It used to be, whenI was in the College, that when Isensed in my instructors a ses¬sion of Army Reminiscences orForeign Countries I Have Knownor What Is Wrong with Dadaism,coming on, I would remain homeplaying cribbage with the mice in my apartment — who, by theway, have some fascinating gos¬sip about some of our crackpotscholars — and be just contented.But now it seems that all mustbe at beck and call, like a ward-heeler at a Party picnic.Which reminds me of a conver¬sation I overheard in Wieboldtone day, where two shabby stu¬dents were standing exchangingaphorisms. For ten minutes theywatched young men in BrooksBros. Suits dance by, gawked atdamsels with furs by I. J. Foxparade on, and were amazed attwo Distinguished Service Profes¬sors rushing by, throwing gold-plated ballpoint pens in theirwake. One bearded boy turned tothe other and muttered: “Youknow, I feel like a water-buffaloat the zoo who has been replacedby a well-groomed llama.”Aristotle Schwartz(Last of the Smart Kids)P. S. — I can easily be reachedon Michigan Avenue. I’m thestreet-sweeper reading “The Ideaof a University,” (sic) by Hart,Schaffner and Marx.Writes to praise articleshas a booth in the lobby of the * « •Ad Bldg, promising free tuition if ©21 clXOMllC test detectiononly students will sign on the fire¬proof contract.Of course we all know the bene¬fits that Chancellor Kimpton hasbestowed on our fair school. Whyhe has put UC back in the SocialRegister. Instead of giving de¬grees, now the administrationgives grads a one-year member¬ship in the North Shore CountryOlub, and down-payment on an To the Editors:This letter is just to speakout in favor of the articles inthe “Maroon” that have beenappearing by William Casparyand Robert March. I feel thatarticles on topics such as CBR andbomb detection are interestingand important Most people onthis campus hardly ever thinkabout these problems. If one per¬ son, as a result of reading thesearticles, thinks about these problems that are facing us today,then this would be sufficient rea¬son for printing them. As for my¬self, I find articles such as theseinformative and feel that articlesof this nature can create a publicawareness that cannot be harm¬ful.Peter L. Oppenheimer with crime letterglary, larceny over $50, autotheft.)Los Angeles, Calif., 2,507.6; St.Louis, Mo., 1,634.5; Columbia,S.C., 1,365.2; Atlanta, Ga., 1,336.1;Birmingham, Ala., 1,212.2; NewYork, N.Y., 1,145.3; Washington,D.C., (includes Alexandria, Arling¬ton, and Fairfax Counties, Va.,Montgomery County, Md.), 981.5;Chicago, Ill., 943.5; Philadelphia,Pa., (includes Bucks, Chester, Del¬aware, Montgomery, and Philadel¬phia Counties, Pa.; Burlington,Camden, and Gloucester Counties,N. J.), 916.8.One can readily see that the Chicago crime rate is less thanthat of the nation’s capital, thelargest city in the United States,three southern cities, a westerncity, and another midwestern city.Please don’t generalize from HydePark with its many transient resi¬dents to the outlying neighbor¬hoods with their mostly perma¬nent residents; nor call this cityof over four million a modernSodom when compared only withsmall agricultural towns fromwhich many of Chicago’s criticsstem.Sincerely,James J. Divita"AN EMBARRASSMENT OF RICHES’*Twinkly, lovable old Dr. Wagstaff Sigafoos, head of chemistryat the Upper Rhode Island College of Science and Palmistry,cares naught for glory and wealth. All he cares about is to workin his laboratory, to play Mozart quartets with a few cronies,to smoke a good Marlboro, and to throw sticks for his faithfuldog Trey to fetch.So when, after years of patient research, Dr. Sigafoos dis¬covered Reverso, a shaving cream which causes whiskers togrow inward instead of outward, thus enabling a man to biteoff his heard instead of shaving it, it never even crossed hismind that he had come upon a key to fame and riches; he simplyassigned all his royalties from- Reverso to the college and wenton with his quiet life of working in the laboratory, playingMozart quartets, smoking good Marlhoros and throwing sticksfor his faithful dog Trey. (Trey, incidentally, had died someyears earlier but habit is a strong thing and Dr. Sigafoos tothis day continues to throw sticks.)As everyone knows, Reverso turned out to be a madly success¬ful shaving cream. Royalties in the first month amounted to$290,000, which came in mighty handy, believe you me, becausethe college had long been postponing some urgently neededrepairs—a lightning rod for the men’s dormitory, new hoops forthe basketball court, leather patches for the chess team’s elbowsand a penwiper for the Director of Admissions.In the second month royalties amounted to an even milliondollars and the college bought Marlboro cigarettes for allstudents'and faculty members. It is interesting that the collegechose Marlboro cigarettes though they could well have affordedmore expensive brands. The reason is simply this: you can paymore for a cigarette but you can’t get a better flavor, a bettersmoke. If you think flavor went out when filters came in, trya Marlboro. The filter cigarette with the unfiltered taste. You,too, can smoke like a millionaire at a cost which does no violenceto the slimmest of budgets. Marlhoros come in soft pack ocflip-top box and can be found at any tobacco counter. Million¬aires can be found on yachts.But I digress. We were speaking of the royalties fromReverso which continue to accrue at an astonishing rate—nowin excess of one million dollars per week. The college is doing allit can to spend the money; the student-faculty ratio which usedto be thirty students to one teacher is now thirty teachers toone student; the Gulf Stream has been purchased for theDepartment of Marine Biology; the Dean of Women has beengold-plated.But money does not buy happiness, especially in the colleg*world. Poverty and ivy—that is the academic life—not powerand pelf. The Upper Rhode Island College of Science andPalmistry is frankly embarrassed by all this wealth, but I ampleased to report that the trustees are not taking their calamitylying down. Last week they earmarked all royalties for a crashresearch program headed by Dr. Wagstaff Sigafoos to developa whisker which is resistant to Reverso. Let us all join in wish¬ing the old gentleman success. ®l#eo M“ Sl,ulm“* * *The sponsors of this column can"t offer you money but theycan offer you fine smoking flavor—with or without titter. Ifyou favor filters try a Marlboro. If non-filters are your pleas-ure pick a Philip Morris.Mardi 4, 1960 • ; CHI C A G O ...MA ft Q ON . •- r «-* ■£' v 4*. 3* S*. ^ ' **• *•* *« A » F LRichard Nixon meets the pressThis i« an imaginary pressconference written and deliv¬ered by James A. Wechsler, ofthe New York Post, to the 2ndAnnual Student Editors’ confer¬ence, held in New York city lastweek."Once again NBC brings youan unrehearsed press conferencewith a noted American. This timeour guest is Vice President Nixon,sometimes mentioned as a candi¬date for the Republican nomina¬tion. With us tonight are fouroutstanding newsmen. Their ques¬tions do not reflect a point ofview (most of them don’t haveany), but are simply their at¬tempt to get a story (without do¬ing any work)."Seated around the table areLawrence Spivac, May Craig ofthe Portland Press Herald, Ros-coe Drummond of the ChristianScience Monitor, and W. H. Law¬rence of the Times."Brooks: ‘I see that Mr. fipi-vaek happens to have the firstquestion.’ Spivack: Mr. Vice President,you were once very critical of theTruman - Acheson administrationand even said: "Wouldn’t it benice to have a Secretary of Statewho will stand up to the Com¬mies?” How do you reconcile thatwith this administration’s meet¬ings with Kruschev and its otherdealings with the Soviet leaders?Nixon: (Who is this bum ... hedoesn’t even work for a newspa¬per; who puts him on this show?)Mr. Spivack, as our great presi¬dent would say, I’m delighted youasked that question. I can onlyanswer by saying that I meantwhat I said then, and I meanwhat I say now . . . consistency, itwas once said, is the hobgoblin ofsmall minds, and I am proud tosay that this Administration hasbeen able to see the big picture,the picture that truly counts, andthat is why, even as we mobilizeall our resources to combat athe¬istic materialistic communism, weare doing everything in ourpower to save the peace of theThe Stite/lSlOck SCRIBE'is the Ball Point madeto write best on PAPER! world so that American boys willnot once again have to waste theirblood in Korea, where, as I havesaid at times, they were led bythe Truman Acheson policy, butlet’s add as I have also said atother times that I applaud Mr.Truman’s decision to act there.... I am sorry to give so briefan answer to your question.Mrs. Craig: Mr. Vice President,you said recently that moreschools and teachers were anurgent, urgent need, but whenyou had to break a tie vote in theSenate, you voted against the keyaid-to-education bill.Nixon: (Why doesn’t that dameget a new hat?) Mrs. Craig, Ihave no apologies to make for myrecord or that of this Administra¬tion, in the field of education.From the time that I was a smallhoy, I have been for it ... in fact,only the other day I had a letterfrom an old teacher of mine inWhittier, in which she enclosedan old report card showing ... Ihope you will not consider thisimmodest . . . that my record forpunctuality was the best in myclass, and that she thought thisrevealed just how deeply I hadalways valued education. And so1 say to her, and to teachers all over the land, we Republicansknow the job you are doing andan apple to all teachers. And weintend to give you all the help wecan without laying the heavyhand of bureaucracy over yourschoolrooms.Mrs. Craig: But Mr. Nixon —Nixon: (Can’t she ever shutup?) Yes, Mrs. Craig.Mrs. Craig: Do you —Nixon: Mrs. Craig, I should liketo go on and on and on on thissubject, but I am sure there isother ground ...Brooks: If I may interrupt, Ican see that Roscoe Drummondhas a question.Drummond: Mr. Nixon, youhave said, on more than one occa¬sion, that you believe, if I maycoin a phrase, that politicsshould stop at the water’s edge.But aren’t you troubled by thetestimony of some of our defenseofficials that the missile gap isgrowing, and may steadily getworse? I do not mean to questionthe sincerity and wisdom of thePresident, but aren’t these factsthat must be faced?Nixon: (Those damned Chris¬tian Scientists.) Mr. Drummond,I have long admired your work,and I can only say, as I did the1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & QalleryCheese Small 12"1.30 Combination . . . Smoll 12"...2.25Sausage .* ....1.65 Mushroom . . . . 2.00Anchovy .... 1.65 Shrimp 2.25Pepper & Onion. . . . .1.50 Bacon & Onion . . 2.00Free Delivery on All Pitta to 11C StudentsAttention Chow Hounds!Special every Tuesday night — all the fried chickenyou can eat . . . $1.95 other day, that I wish the opposi-tion party would stop playing thenumbers game. (That ought toshut them up.)Lawrence: There are persistentreports that Governor Rockefellerisn’t giving up, and is just wait¬ing for something to go wrongwith your campaign to becomeactive again.Nixon: (He’s telling me . .those Times men pretend to heso impartial, but they’re alwaysstirring up trouble.) Mr. Law¬rence, just let me digress for amoment to say how much I re¬spect the Times, and I can thinkof no institution more importantto the freedom of the press thanthe one you represent, and I canremember as a young man howit was my ambition to be even alowly copy boy on that newspa¬per, until circumstances overwhich I had little control led meto run for Congress. And now inanswer 'to your question, I shallnot, of course, try to speak forMr. Rockefeller, but I can onlyrepeat again what I have saidbefore, and that is that Mr. Rocke¬feller has a great role to play inour party and in the future his.tory of our country. (Over mydead body.)Brooks: Now one quick ques¬tion from Mrs. Craig.Mrs. Craig: Are you reallyplanning to put more humor intocampaigning? There was a recentreport that you are looking for aghost writer who can make yousound funny.Nixon: I think my words to¬night speak for themselves.Brooks: I’m sorry I must inter¬rupt. Next week Meet the Presswill bring you another hard hit¬ting interview with another dis¬tinguished, forthright politicalleader, Sen. Lyndon Johnson.Here is a piece of paper.Clip it out and try thistest: write on it withan Stik/ijttook and allother ball point pens,and by golly you’ll seewhat we mean.Stfajtiuofi SCRIBE *1.69l»M tm Ck6 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 4, I960 • •• • • • • • • • •This year,fly home In the quiet comfortof United's DC-8 Jet MalnllnerThere's no better way to travel any¬where than a United Jet Mainliner®.The DC-8 is fast, of course. Itwhisks you coast to cotlst in a fewshort hours. But it is more than fast.It is quiet and smooth . . . flies upwhere the air is serene and peaceful... with hardly a vibration from thepowerful engines.The DC-8 Jet is comfortable, too.It has big, wide aisles that even agiant football tackle can roam in,casually. The DC-8 seats, largest onany jet, have air vent, light andBEST OF THE JETS...PLUS UNITED’S EXTRA CARE stewardess call buttons built rightin—no reaching overhead. Your tripin this superb aircraft is topped offwith United’s extra care service thatmakes you feel like a king whetheryou fly de luxe Red Carpet® or eco¬nomical Custom Coach Service.Try the best—fly United’s DC-8.Fly it home; then for a really bigtreat, fly to Hawaii for a wonderfulvacation. Economical Custom Coachand United tour prices make it pos¬sible on a moderate budget. See aTravel Agent or call any United AirLines office.**MT MAIN LI N S R, BY DOUOLASJohn Callahan, director of Blackfriar's upcoming produc¬tion, Silver Bells and Cockle Shells, suffers through a re¬hearsal. Chicago is'most segregated city'The Chicago Housing authority (CHA) may be contributing in at least two ways to up¬holding Chicago’s reputation as “the most residentially segregated city in America” accord¬ing to a claim made recently the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in their annualreport on the state of rights of minorities in Illinois.Pointing out that the US Commission on Civil Rights had confirmed Chicago’s position inthis regard last September, the study maintained that by building new public housing onlyin Negro areas, and by referring *only white applicants to certain year. Carbondale, Murphysboro, patients able to pay for their careprojects, CHA has contributed to an(j Normal were cited as cities are shunted from private to over-the vicious housing pattern in denying equal access to housing, loaded public hospitals, and theChicago. But at the same time, jn addition, there is still school recent outbreak of anti-Semiticthe ACLU reported that in only segregation in southern Illinois, acts in the Chicago area. In con-one case in the past year — at though it has shown signs of de- elusion, the Chicago board4338 West Jackson boulevard — creasing. ^ of Education is called upon todid violence threaten upon the en- The report also deplored the strengthen its human relationstrance of a Negro family into an continuing discrimination in Cook program, which was reduced dur-all-white neighborhood, and this county hospitals, where Negro ing the current school year,time the police acted decisivelyEnrollment hits 7701by arresting and prosecuting theinstigators.But the most significant devel¬opments within the past year,according to the ACLU, were in The total enrollment at the University of Chicago is 7701,the suburbs, chiefly in Deerfield, marking an increase of 2.18 percent over the enrollment atprivate* development2 corporation this time last year, the office of the registrar reported lastcontemplating integrated housing ^ ^ ^ un<Jergraduafes and 350g graduates. TheUS will contribute *16,500to WUS to aid refugeesA* a contribution to the intensified World Refugee Year are being contested in court, and unuexgiauuates ana ooyo graduates. meoffset the Tin ted States Covernment has announced a llfiloo in Park Forest, where the out- physical sciences department has an undergraduate enroll-eftoit, the United States Government has announced a 5j>lo,500 { th attempted entrance ment of 599, larger than that of *contribution to World University service for its assistance of a Negro family is stiH uncer- any other department. Nbxt is the thirty-eight graduates are regis-program for Hong Kong refugee ^ & ^ ^ competitive tain. In addition, there was evi- sK^a'sc}*nces department with tered in the Theological school.students. B P * examination. Of the four students dence of restriction against Jews ?26, tbe humanities with 399 and enrollment for the h..cine<for basic maintenance costs for a °f the four students ^^^/N^Tilletefal^iT tte department" of "biological ^he enrollment for the businessemail number of exceptionally who have awarded scholar- as well as Negroes in several sud ( with 6 school is 41 undergraduates andsmall number of exceptionally shi ps two will stud t Yale uni. urbs, notably Kenilworth and SC?ufa^haf^nees division 297 graduates, for the law school,brilliant students, who have been verslty and ,WQ a, kinceton unl. Lake Forest. h^ever tas mSe gmduate stu 62 undergraduates and 334 gradu-Other areas of Illinois also were dents than has any other division atef’ for the library school, onehaving difficulties in the past with 869 The bioi0gical and phys- undergraduate and 57 graduates,ical sciences have 499 and 480 and f?r tbe Social service admin¬s' ■ ■ I*# #1 graduates respectively, and the lstratlon, 208 graduates. Sixty-oneReport finds beliefs falseversifyawarded WUS scholarships by versify. (The Asian Student, SanPrinceton and Yale universities Francisco.)department of humanities has 426 undergraduates are engaged in agraduates. Three hundred and tutorial studies program.(Cont. from p. 2> opers have had to make special projects centered aroundloms of housing designed for ini- sa,es efforts to secure the number problems’ expected to arise in thetial interracial occupancy. The of white residents they wished, phase of actual occupancy. How¬ards* research revealed that Interestingly enough, the Griers ever, the Griers found, this phaseseveral common myths about were 4 °1 d hy developers that is the one in which least prob-Negro preferences for housing members of organizations to pro- lems really arise. The primary |jare not suported by evidence mote racial equality were not difficulties occur in the earlier =jfrom the interracial tracts. Con- noticeably better prospects than phases of land acquisition, fi- 3trarv to common belief Negroes the population at large. Nor are nancing, and recruiting of occu- |I™ wSStoTJTCommute, longer.higher Inoome famine, better pant,. §distances than comparable whites prospects than lower income =in some cases. They do not have families. In fact, several develop-a preference for more conserva- CTS think that tlie experience oftive house designs. While it is in non-segregated publictrue that New York Negroes do housing may be an important fac-not seem to like multi-story apart- tor in getting people used to in-because ofments — perhapsmemories of the failure of alarge-scale project of that typein Harlem in the 1930’s — Ne¬groes in Chicago and other citiesdo not have significant objectionsto this type of housing.Interracial developers haveusually been able to find inter¬ested and qualified Negro buyers,the report states. (However, wordof mouth advertising was gener¬ally better than usual means,since Negroes do not seem torespond to newspaper ads—prob¬ably because properties listed areso often not available to them,lit some cases, however, devel- terracial living.Fears concerning interracial MODEL CAMERAWholesaleCatalogue Prices onCameras. Projectors, Recorders1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 gwiimiiiiiitHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiititiiiiiiimiiitiiiiiiiitimiiiiiiiiimimiiiimiiiiiitmiiiitmiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiHHHe§ Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood §iTROWtAL r/WT UNUSUAL FOOD |DELIGHTFUL 1ATMOSPHERE (POPULAR 1PRICES 1I^iviiiiifiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiii)mtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii(iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiigIf you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou¬blesome problem.PETERSON MOVINCAND STORAGE CO.ion E. 55th St.BU 8-6711 YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TOSPRING 1960 ORIENTATION SERIESLIBERAL RELIGION — UNITARIANISMWilliam Wallace Fenn House —— 5638 Woodlawn Avenue8:00 P.M. — Thursday EveningsThursday, March 3, 1960MAN AND THE UNIVERSE Leslie T. PenningtonThursday, March 10, 1960VALUES — ABSOLUTE OR RELATIVE?John F. Hayward and Leslie T. PenningtonThursday, March 17, 1960MAN'S ENCOUNTER WITH MAN Randall HiltonThursday, March 24, 1960WHY A CHURCH?Sidney Mead and Leslie T. PenningtonSponsored by the Channing-Murray Club and the First Unitarian ChurchTRANSPORTATION FROM THESE MEETINGS AVAILABLE‘ifOCiAPT.Cheerful, newly decorated, attrac¬tively furnished apartment. Sate,fireproof deluxe elevator building.Doorman. Night watchman. Maidand linen service available. Rea¬sonable monthly rates from $87.50. Shows: 9; 11; 1:00JOSH WHITEJANINE and NICOFrench Folk-SingersTHE GATE OF HORN753 N. Dearborn SU 7-2833 COTYlOenl IM7 IMS COCA-COLA COMPANYDoiit just sit there!You'll enjoy today's copy of this publicationmuch more if you'll get up right now and getyourself an ice-cold bottle of Coca-Cola.(Naturally, we’d be happier, too!)BE REALLY REFRESHEDBotHed under authority of The Coca-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.March 4, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Faculty discussesIn the February 26 issue ofthe Maroon* an editorial wasprinted criticizing the Univer¬sity for a polity of “educa¬tional paternalism,” whichwas considered “most distress-tag.* Mentioned in the editorialwere women’s hours regulations,the policies of the Student Activ¬ities office, and the single-F rule. The reaction of the Universityfaculty and administration to theeditorial was mixed. James New¬man, director of student activi¬ties, felt that the "Examples usedin the editorial do not substan¬tiate the case. For example, thehours regulations have not beenchanged recently. There is cer¬tainly no ‘creeping paternalismS-F-A Court will meetThe Student-Faculty-Administration court will sit on Tues¬day, March 8, to consider the two petitions brought beforeit by the Assembly of Student Government. The cases will beheard in the Court room of the old Law school (now knownas Business East Middle) at 4 pm.The first petition asks the Court for a declaratory judg¬ment regarding the right of the Student Activities office toask a student organization for more than a certain amountof necessary information about the speaker which <he organ¬ization wishes to sponsor.The second petition requests a constitutionality ruling on aproposed amendment to the Student Code. The amendmentdeals with deferred rush in the fraternity system on campus.The six student justices are Leon Kass, Roger Bernhardt(chief justice), F. Jay Pepper, Phil Epstein, Peter Langrock,and Phil Hoffman. The other justices are Donald Meikeljohnof the College faculty, Margaret Perry, associate director ofadmissions, and Harry Kalven of the Law school. there. Nobody questions the nec¬essity of the faculty setting up acurriculum which they feel is inthe student’s best interest. In theactivities office, we follow a pol¬icy which we believe is in the bestinterest of students, and I don’tsee why this should be consideredpaternalistic either."Kermit Eby, professor of poli¬tical science, had different reac¬tions to the editorial. He said,“As a father I disagreed withRobert Hutchins only on theproblem of institutional respon¬sibility; however, at thp sametime, I believe in intellectual free¬dom. This leaves me undecidedas to how much control the Uni¬versity should exercise over thestudentA professor who wished to re¬main anonymous disagreed, say¬ing, "If the students don’t do thework—throw them out. This isexactly what paternalism isn’t. board. However, this paternalismdoes exist to some extent in theUniversity, and where it does Ibelieve that It is harmful.“If students show that they canlive without this paternalism, andI believe that the students herehave shown that they can, thenthey should not have it forcedupon them. Ie feel that thereshould be cooperation betweenthe students and the administra¬tion. However, once a studentpasses the age of 17, the develop¬ment of his maturity is hinderedif he is not treated as an adult.”John Netherton, dean of stu¬dents, did not like the editorial.Netherton said, "The editorialstruck me as harmless fun. Butsince you ask, I will put on astraight face and say that it isnot so much a question of dis¬agreeing with it as of seeingthrough it. It is part gag and partcirculation stunt. If the bit about as the"wild experimentation*heart of research and thus of theUniversity, for example, is nottongue-in-cheek, then my nameis Moleville. For the rest, youstimulate what they call readerinterest by taking a deliberatelyexaggerated position in order toprovoke controversy. In this caseI think it misses fire by becom¬ing funny again. The silly sink-or-swimism of your writer’stheory of learning, as he grum¬bles laisse* faire, caveat emptor,root hog or die, has indeed onlya Molevillian place in our liberalcampus newspaper. In that up-side-down world where the stu¬dent who fails all his courses forthe year learns more than if hadsurvived, the college itself be¬comes only a paternalistic ob¬stacle to auto-didacticism.“It would be paternalistic of meto pretend to take the editorialseriously when I don’t"On the hours question, the Uni¬versity is in loco parentis in rela¬tion to a student. If the studentsdon’t like it here, let them leave.Sure, it is fine to say that a stu¬dent should experiment, but it istoo costly if the experimentationwill result in a girl getting preg¬nant.” Dr. Milton Friedmanspeaks to ConcernEllen Coughlin Beauty SalonSI95 Lake Park Ave.SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Men. • Snt. — 9 m.m. - 1J p.m.Ml 3-20G0 Professor Milton Friedman attacked federal aid to educa-Gerhard Meyer, associate pro- tion recently in a speech before Concern, a student anti-apathyfessor of economics, felt that the group. “Federal aid leads inevitably to federal control,” saidtrends in the University were not Friedman, “and hence it should be avoided as much as pos-"George Playe (dean of under-graduate students) reversed him- unfai^amf ridkufous^ta ask 'the Is like a bank in that it cannoise f on t e question o t e - fe(jeraj government to give away be expected to lend money tcboard, at the point when it was money with no strings attached, complete strangers unless the)getting to look very bad for the The government, said Friedman, can prove that they are goocrisks.Friedman defended the NDE/loyalty oath as being a perfecSENSATIONAL RECORD BARGAIN!12" IP VINYLSpecially FrostedRCA CustomRecord*Just releasedfor VICEROY—the CigarettewithA THINKINGMAN’S FILTERt.«A SMOKINGMAN'S TASTE IWHAT A RECORD!!10 GREAT JAZZ NUMBERSMartians* Lullaby March Of The ToysRoyal Garden Blues Just A MoodShine On Harvest MoonErroll’s Bounce St. James InfirmaryCiribiribin Tin Roof BluesWhen The Saints Go Marching In —and 2 VICEROY Cigarette packages IPLAYED BY YOUR FAVORITE ARTISTSBenny Goodman Louis ArmstrongErroll Garner Shorty RogersDuke Ellington’Red NorvoBuck Clayton Hurry! Hurry! Get this truly great jazz record at alow, low price, while the limited supply lasts! Recordfeatures your top favorite Jazz Instrumentalists—thewinners* in a national popularity survey of AmericanCollege and University Students. Send for Campiis JazzFestival today. Use coupon below!Jonah JonesBen WebsterBob ScobeyVic DickensonRex StewartDukes of Dixielandi <-• BROWN * WILLIAMSON TOBACCO, CORPORATIONBox 355lovl«vlllo 1, KentuckyPlease nend me poatpaid__record(s) of the Special VICEROYCAMPUS JAZZ FESTIVAL. Enclosed is $1.00 (no stamps, please)and 2 empty Viceroy packages for each record ordered.Name.Address-City .Zone-State.College or University.Tbis offer good only in U.S.A. Not valid in states where prohibited,taxed or otherwise restricted—expires June 30, i960.Ol966, BSOWH * WIM.IAMSON TOMCCO COSPs example of legitimate federal con¬trol over the use of federal funds.“As long as you have federal aid,”he said, "you must have federalcontrol; the loyalty oath is aperfectly fair and expedient pro¬vision for governing the use offederal money."He agreed with members ofConcern, however, that the affi¬davit is unnecessary, and com¬plimented Concern on its effortsto have it repealed. The affidavit,Friedman said, is not unfair toanyone, for the government hasthe right to impose any restric¬tions it wants on the use of itsmoney. But the inclusion of theoath in the NDEA makes anyadditional provision "unnecessaryand inexpedient.”The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 Eaet 57th St.MU 4-9236Y*o*eEUROPEI LEASE o NEW CorPURCHASE o NEW Car*Rent a Late Model Car 1VOLKSWAGEN SIMCAMERCEDES RENAULTHILLMAN PORSCHE’with Repurchase Plan available |... or bring if home with you.The pleasant, economical way totravel in Europe. We moke all ar¬rangements for the Plan you prefer.Write for full detailsRound Trip Steamer $400 up |Round Trip Air $408.60 upChoice of Over 10OStudent Class Tours t JLfQTravel Study Tours *Conducted Tours **See your local travel agent torfolders and details or write us.UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq , Cambridge. Mats.* • C H I CACO MAROON • March 4, 1960New dorm rocks 'n' rollsby Jay Creenberg and Ken PierceUC’s “beat generation” has discovered a new beat—the driving beat of rock ’n’ rollmusic. The new beat has not yet won out over beards and modem jazz, but its mentionis no longer anathema to UC s avant garde, and in fact almost 100 intellectual jitterbug-gers have been practicing the latest steps for the past three, weeks in the lobby of the Newdormitory. .Although some of the participants in the “record hop” were reluctant to have theirnames mentioned in the Maroon, ———— — —they were 1?l°re™a" tal* about lt intelligently” One present, Kerry Pataki said, “Iexpound their views onthe inner bearded student who refused to think that it is a good thing. Itm e a n i njr r have his name mentioned, said, is a source pf expression which is,, tWs moves my soul.” After sorely needed on this campus in^5* cjfX?rSherd nafhir" thinklnS for a tew moments, he addition to thought. There is a: *dded’ "”**•" safety factor built in here, due towho rali^ the jitterbugging a At about 12:30 am an im- the fact that the participants are“healthy influence J* felt pr0mptu trio formed to assist the aware of the fact that they are inIt was a beautiful mixing of the rec0rded music. The trio featured a dormitory. What does rock ‘n’two cultures. However, when one student beating on a table, roll do for me? Well, it makes mepressed for an explanation, uai- one beating on an inverted ash- tap my feet and ruminate, in thatber refdsed tfi name the cultures tray, and one on an erect ash order of course.”to which he was referring. tray. Mike Gessel, the group’sJoe Adle, the only member of table man,, said, “I can’t talk,the group wearing an ivy league man, like you could never corn-suit, with white shirt and tie, prehend what this does for me.”felt that the party was “Kicks, a Of a group of 10 abstainerscheap high.” Kent Kirwan, grad-. from the festivities, Verdeanuate political philosophy major, Brane was the most vocal. Saidagreed with Adle, calling the ses- Brane, “This is entirely high is the way Alan Simpson, deansion “stimulating to the lower school stuff. They have a right of the College, describes UC.part of the soul.” to listen to this stuff, but this Appearing on the T.V. pro-Perhaps explaining the philo- wild gyrating shows an imma- gram “College Days” last week,sophy of those who were less turity inherent in their nature, both Simpson and Charles O’Con-willing or able, to express their I mean, this is Africa!” Least nell, director of admissions, ori*Simpson appears on TV“A Civilized, friendly place”you __ _ ,you talk about Elvis it’s like Zen, to talk to me.”man, I mean you can’t reallyB-J schedulesdinner danceThe annual Burton-Judsondance will be held this Saturdayat 8:30 in the Judson ballroom.Music by the Jimmy Newportband, dinner in the Judson lounge,and a corsage are included in the$2.50 bid.Refreshments will be servedafter the dance on the secondfloor of the Judson lounge. TheBudton-Judson Council of HousePresidents expects about eightycouples to attend the evening’sentertainment.EUROPEWe'll see the usual PLUS.You're not herded around.A college tour that's different.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia, Box 4Pasadena, California 30% OFF On QualityDRY CLEANINGAlt work done by a regular Chicago Wholesaler whose plant servesether retail stores in addition to his own outlets. You get this servicebecause of our non-profit policy and low overhead.Shirts 50cDresses 95cTrousers 50cJackets 50cSuits 95cTopcoats 1.00Overcoats 1.10 Suits (2 piece).. .95cLight Coat 95cHeavy Coat .1.10JVew! 20% Oft on All LaundryUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERReynolds Club BasementHoun: 11.00 - 1 sOO — 3-.J0 - 5:00NIGHTMAREANYONE?HORROR in »JUGULAR VEINClassic talcs of terror SPOOKen fromthe heart (with the RIGHT kind ofbackground music, of corpse).This 12* LP Record is perfect for•eances, funerals, executions andother joyous occasions.SO • *. get in the micro-groove—-bethe death of the party! Horrificallypriced at $3.98 postpaid.Adapted from Edgar Alton Poe’i, **Th» Ml end«» Pendulum," end, "The Tell-Tole Htoff‘NIGHTMARE, Dept. P,1«7 Creadwoy, New York If, H. Ys 'ACCENT ESTFRANCAIS...AIR FRANCE 4fM^/live outdoors in the sun, toss cares into the sea,Go native h la Roman or Greek!You can skin dive, sail, or water skf—Ah for only 40 bucks a week!HOW? WHERE'? WHEN?Send coupon * John Schneiderfor fascinating details l A,R FRANCE' 683 Rfth lvMU* NflW York 22' NeW York„ • Please send m» literature on special student travel ideal.on the •‘fantastic’1 • ujM[rCLUB MEDITERRANEE •plan. • ADDRES8:• SCHOOL••#•••v*t#f a whole sweep of knowledge.” Asecond tradition of the Collegeis residential living.O’Connell explained the admis¬sions policy to the T.V. audience.Admission is based partially onhibh school record which shouldshow between an A and a B aver¬age “not without perhaps someC’s” added O’Connell. UC students rate higher than the nationalaverage on their Scholastic Apti¬tude tests, stated O’Connell indescribing the second factor takeninto consideration. Finally, theadmissions board studies those“intangibles” such as “the desireto succeed, motives, and theability to make a reasonable con.tribution to student life.”After showing slides of theSumming up the views of those campus, Simpson described dis¬tinctive characteristic of UC. UCis “a small college in the heartof a great university.” Its seconddistinction is based on its loca¬tion in the city: “It perhapssounds snobbish,” said Simpson,“but the difference is between cos¬mopolitanism and provincialism.At UC," he continued, “a wholerange of illiberal and unsophisti¬cated thinking is impossible.” Heexplained finally, “The Universityof Chicago is the only school Iknow where you can get fun outof athletics without making it abusiness.”UC’s finest tradition, Simpsonsaid, is the program of generaleducation. The two-year coursein natural sciences, social sciences,and humanities is based on theprinciple that “every studentr ought to have an introduction to YOU ARE INVITED —to a free lecture on Christian Science entitled:"CHRISTIAN SCIENCE:The Joy of Living by Divine Authority"to be given by John D. Pickett, C.S., of Chicago, Illinois, amember of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church,The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass.,in the East Lounge ofIDA NOYES HALL — 1212 East 59th Street8:00 P.M. Friday, March 4, 1960Sponsored by Christian Sciatica Organization a* the University of ChicagoTouch system or hunt-and-peck—Results are perfect withEATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTypewriter PaperWhatever your typingtalents, you can turn outneat, clean-looking work thefirst time, with Eaton’sCorrasable Bond Paper.Reason why: Corrasable hasa special surface—it eraseswithout a trace. Just the flickof an ordinary pencil eraserand typographical errorsdisappear. No smears, nosmudges. Saves time, temperand money!Corrasable Is available In several weights —from onion¬skin to heavy bond. In handy 100-sheet packets and 60G-aheet ream boxaa. A fine quality paper for all your typedassignments. Only Eaton makea erasable Corrasable.EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDA Berkshire Typewriter PaperEATON PAPER CORPORATION {JR PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTSMarch 4, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9• Coming events on quadrangles •Friday, 4 March Saturday, 5 MarchSeminar (Institute lor computer re¬search), 1945 am. Research institutes.“Recent computer developments inthe United Kingdom.”The Eucharist according to the Lu¬theran use, 11:30 am, Bond chapel.Jazz club, 2:30 pm, Ida Noyes library.Come to listen or to play.Lecture, Norman Walt Harris memorialfoundation on International relations,3:30 pm. Social sciences 172. Sir An¬drew Cohen, head of the United King¬dom delegation to the trusteeshipcouncil of the United Nations, willspeak on “Africa in the modernworld.”Maroon staff meeting, 4 pm, Ida Noyeshall, east lounge. All Maroon staffmembers and anyone interested injoining the staff are invited to attend.Track meet, 6 pm, Field house. UC andthe Midwest conference.Chicago intercollegiate swimming cham¬pionships, 7:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Sabbath service, Hillel foundation, 7:45pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue.Lecture (Christian Science organiza¬tion), 8 pm, Ida Noyes hall, eastlounge. “Christian Science: the joy ofliving by divine authority.”Lecture series, “Works of the mind”(University College), 8 pm, 64 EastLake street. “The nature of Shake¬spearean tragedy.”Motion picture, 8 and 10 pm, Judsondining hall. “Ten Days That Shookthe world” (Russian film).Oneg Shabhat, Hillel foundation, 8:30pm. 5715 Woodlawn avenue. Discussionof weekly biblical reading.Quadrangle Club Revels. “South SideStory,” 8:30 pm, Mandel hall. Recorder society, 1 pm, Ida Noyes hall.B - J dinner dance: dinner, 7-8 pm;dance, 8:30-12:30; Burton lounge. Bid,$2.50; meal, RH and C.Chicago intercollegiate swimming cham¬pionships, 7:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Quadrangle Club Revels, “South SideStory, 8:30 pm, Mandel hall. music by the University choir, Rich¬ard Vikstrom, director of chapel mu¬sic. conducting.UC Symphony orchestra concert, 8:30pm, Mandel hall. Program Includesworks by Handel, Prokofiev, Haydn,and Dvorak. Trinity college, following by an in¬formal coffee hour.Television series, "All things consid¬ered.” WTTW (Channel 11), »:30 pm.“The woman worker.” tarianism,” 8 pm, Fenn house urnWoodlawn avenue. John Hayward »,??Leslie Pennington will lead* “dfe.°n "™ues-absolute*^!Monday, 7 March Wednesday, 9 March Friday, 11 MarchSunday, 6 MarchRadio broadcast, “FaitJi of our fathers,”WON, 8:30 am. The Reverend CanonTheodore O. Wedel, warden, the Col¬lege of Preachers, Washington cathe¬dral.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, and11 am, De Sales house, 5735 Univer¬sity avenue.Episcopal Communion service, 9:30 am,Bond chapel.Lutheran Communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel.Sikh study circle. 10 am. 829 East 60thstreet. Monthly religious meeting; allwelcome.University religious service, 11 am,Rockefeller memorial chapel. TheReverend W. Barnett Blakemore, dean.Disciples Divtnitk house, and associ¬ate dean, Rockefeller memorial chapel.Concert, “Three Bach cantatas,” 3 pm.Bond chape). The Bond chapel choirand members of the Chicago Sym¬phony orchestra, Richard Vikstrom,director of chapel.Carillon concert. 4:30 pm. Rockefellermemorial chapel. James R. Lawson,chapel carlllonneur.Bridge club, 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes hall.Master point night; admission, 50cents.Radio broadcast, “The sacred note.”WBBM. 8:15 pm. A program of choral Art exhibition. “Paintings by KathrynKlein Levin,” 10 am-5 pm. Mondaythrough Friday, University Press, sec¬ond floor.Art exhibition, “Contemporary portraitsby Chicago painters and sculptors,”10 am-5 pm, Monday through Friday;1-5 pm, Saturday: Good speed 108.Seminar (Industrial Relations centerand graduate school of business i. 3pm. Industrial Relations center. 1225East 60th street. "Emergency strikelegislation.”Botany club, 3:30 pm. Botany 106. “Bo-tonlcal Interests of physicians and theapplication of botany to pharmaceuti¬cals.” -Lecture series, “Advances in basic bi¬ology,” 5 pm, Billings hospital P-117.“Mechanisms of enzyme action.”Motion picture, 7 and 9 pm. Interna¬tional house. “Chaplin Festival 'C' ”(American film).Television series, "A matter of sleep,”WBKB (Channel 7), following the lastscheduled program, Monday throughFriday. Nathaniel Kleitman, profes¬sor, department of physiology, con¬sultant. Religious service (Divinity school), 11:90am. Bond chapel.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellermemorial chapel. James R.'* Lawson,chapel carlllonneur.Evensong (Episcopal), 5:05 pm, Bondchapel.Hillel foil) dance group, 7:30 pm, 5715Woodlawn avenue.Thursday, 10 MarchEpiscopal Communion service, 11:30 am,Bond chapel.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship, 12noon, Swift 202, Prayer meeting.Lecture (Department of psychology),2 pm. Swift commons. “Issues of sci¬entific explanation In psychology.”Microbiology club, 4 pm. Ricketts north,room 1. “Studies on the nature of‘Endamoeba histolytica.’ ”Zoology club, 4:30 pm, Zoology 14. “Re¬search at the zoo.’“Lecture series, “Liberal religion—Uni- Litany with sermon according to u..Lutheran use, 11:30 am, Bond chape*Jazz club, 2:30 pm. Ida Noyes libra, vCome to listen or to play. yMarmm staff meeting. 4 pm. Ida Move*hall, east lounge. All Maroon staffmembers and anyone Interested i,Joining the staff are Invited to attendSabbath services, Hillel foundation 7 «pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue. ’ ’ sDames club, 8 pm, Ida Noyes hall a„evening of swimming, games, and refreshments.Motion picture, 8 and 10 pm, Judsondining hall. “From Here to Eternity"(American film). uyOneg Shabhat, Hillel foundation 810pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue Discus¬sion of weekly blgllcal reading.University concert, 8:30 pm, Mandelhall. Music by Shapero, Carlton Tom¬kins. Mozart, Mendelssohn, Ravel, andHindemith will be played by Levinand McGraw, piano duetlsts.Tuesday, 8 March ClassifiedCLADIS restaurant1527 E. 55th DO 3-9788Wa Specialize in Well-Balanced Meals atPopular Prices, and Midnite SnacksOPEN ALL NICHT — ORDERS TO GO The Eucharist according to the Lu¬theran use, 11:30 am. Bond chapel.Meeting of the council of the Univer-versity Senate, 3:40 pm, Businesseast 106.Colloquium (Institute for the studyof metals), 4:15 pm, Research Insti¬tutes 211. “Some studies of high-pressure polymorphism.”Lecture (Graduate library school club),7:30 pm, Judd hall, common room.“Anthropological studies In Polyne¬sia.”Inter-varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30pm, Ida Noyes hall, room 213. Lecture-discussion by Gunnar Urang, dean of For rentTwo apartments, one four room andone three-room, both with private bath.Furnished. Clean and comfortable. Pri¬vate entrance. Located at 53rd and EUls.Call for appointment after 5:30 at eitherBU 8-2757 or MU 4-5990.Lucky Strike s Dr. Frood is askedWhy Are Today’s Students MoreSerious, Dedicated, Industrious?Dear Dr. Frood: In your day, collegestudents were all rah-rah and raccooncoats. Today's student is more respon¬sible, more dedicated, more industrious.What accounts for this big change?StudiousDear Stu: Today’s world is more com¬plex, more challenging. Ideologies clash.Our planet grows smaller. The cold warstrikes fear into our hearts. There is ashortage of raccoons,C0> cO*Dear Dr. Frood: I am disgusted withmy classmates. All they think about iswomen and parties. How can I get themto talk about important things?SeriousDear Serious: Throw a large party.Invite plenty of women. Then, aroundmidnight, say something important, like“We’re out of beer.’*«?> *0*Dear Dr. Frood: Modern girls go tocollege for four years. Then they getmarried and don’t even know how tochange diapers. What is this leading to?Old-FashionedDear Old-Fashioned: Self-sufficientbabies.© A. T.10 • CHICAGO MAROON Dear Dr. Frood: Why doesn't every¬body smoke Lucky Strike?Lucky SmokerDear Lucky: Why doesn’t everybody getstraight “A’s”?*0* •O* *o*Dear Dr. Frood: Grandfather's will pro¬vided a rather handsome allowance onthe stipulation that I showed “the cour¬age and strength of character” to stay incollege. Frankly, however, I am tired ofcollege. I have been here 40 years. Isthere any way 1 can quit and still collect?SeniorDoor Senior: Your question brings up aconsiderable number of legal problems,with interesting technical ramifications.Having given file matter much thought, Ihave this suggestion: enter Law School. Dear Dr. Frood: Here are two portraitsof Beethoven. One was done by an oldmaster. The other by a student Whichis the masterpiece?Art LoverDear Art: The one on the left is the.master’s work. The stroke is deft, clean,authoritative. Every detail is authenticBeethoven, even the gesture of keepinghis composing hand warm.«0»Dear Dr. Frood: Has college ever reallyhelped anyone in business?PracticalDear Practical: Of course. Think howcollege has helped the people who makepennants, footballs, fraternity pins.COLLEGE STUDENTS SMOKEMORE LUCKIES THANANY OTHER REGULAR!When it comes to choosing their regular smoke,college students head right for fine tobacco.Result: Lucky Strike tops every other regularsold. Lucky’s taste beats all the rest becauseL.S./M.F.T.— Lucky Strike means fine tobacco.TOBACCO AND TASTE TOO FINE TO FILTER!Product of %^/mjexiean — cJo&uxo- is our middle name• • March A, 1960 Pleasant room with hot and c<Jld waterIn faculty home, 5300 block Greenwood$8 a week or baby-sitting. MI 3-1043Choice 1 and 2 room units avaUablenow. Clean and spacious rooms. Nicelyfurnished. Moderate rentals. Studentneighbors. See Mrs. Violet Tapia, 6042S. Ingleside Avenue, BU 8-2757, after5:30 p.m. 6040-2 S. Ingleside Ave.: Moderatel'priced 1 and 2 rm. apartments— somiwith private bath. Clean and comfortable. Pleasant surroundings. See Restdent Manager, Mrs. Leo Tapia, afte5:30 p.m., or call BU 8-2757.Two rooms, partly furnished, near 55tiand Blacks tone. $82.50, gas and electric¬ity included. VI 2-1176, after 6 pmWantedYoung man to share large apartmentwith 2 of same. Good trans. & fullprivileges. Call BU 8-8219, 4-10 pm.ServicesSewing, alterations, hems. DO 3-1550.Typing. Reasonable. Prompt service. CallNO 7-7799.PersonalCreative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.Nee# ride for 2 to Washington DC orvicinity, leaving late March 18th. oranytime March 19th. Contact room 378,International House.EUROPE 1960If you are planning a trip toEurope in 1960, you may wish tocheck on the following:1. Lowest air fares by scheduledairline, e.g.f round-trip for twoNew York - London $689.44.Free advice on European hotelsond transportation.2. Purchase or rental of any Euro¬pean make car, also in connec¬tion with student flight.3. Choice of two all-expense, es¬corted tours: Tour I: 12 coun¬tries, 48 days. Depart viaCunard Line on June 10. Italyand Scandinavia OberammergauPassion Play. $1095.Tour II: 10 countries, 40 days.Round trip by air. 13 days inItaly. This tour starts from theU. of Chicago campus. $1125.For full information call or writeMr. Arne Brekke, 6009 S. Wood¬lawn Ave., Chicago 37, III. BUtter-field 8-6437. Campus agent forIcelandic Airlines. Five years ofexperience in European travel.ForPRINTINGroll JAY!★ OFFSET PRINTINGFast, Economical ServiceYour Plates or OursIBM or VarityperPreparation★ MIMEOGRAPHINGOne Stencil or a ThousandNeat and CompleteLETTERPRESS PRINTINGMULTIGRAPHINGADDRESSINGMAILINGCallHY 3-0802Daily U. of C. PickupsJAYLETTER & PRINTING SERVICE1950 East 75th StreetUC debaters to meet Yeshiva IF holds electionThe University of Chicago and Yeshiva University of New York will debate the question:Resolved—That Congress should be given the power to reverse Supreme Court decisions,on Tuesday, March 8, at 7933 South Yates Avenue, at 8:00 pm.Supporting the resolution will Eugene Vino- —,.radoff and Gary Greenberg of the University ofChicago; and opposing the resolution will be Law¬rence Halpern and Martin Gordon, one of five two-man units of Yeshiva’s Debating Society whichwill be touring the country between March 6and 14. tEditor Jack Fishbein of the Sentinel, Irv Kup- cinet the “Kup” of the Chicago Sun-Times, andDr. Milton Rakov, Assistant Professor of PoliticalScience at the University of Illinois will judgethe debate.There will be a nominal admission charge for thedebate with a social hour and refreshments fol¬lowing to which all are invited. Ansel Edidin of Phi SigmaDelta was elected presidentof the Inter-Frat&rnity Coun¬cil at a closed meeting held inthe Delta Upsilon house lastTuesday night. Dave Emin ofDelta Upsilon was elected secre¬tary, and F. Jay Pepper of PhiDelta Theta won the position oftreasurer.Dean announces quarterly scheduleThe following schedule ofexaminations was released bythe office of the Dean of Stu¬dents this week. Informationon any examinations not in¬cluded may be obtained fromthe instructor.Anthropology 111—Wednesday, March16 12:30-2:30, Walker Seminar room, »Art: Art 180—Friday, March 18, 8-10am, Classics 10; Art 210—Friday, March18, 10:30-12:30, Goodspeed 101.Biology: Biology 112—Friday, March 18,4-6 pm, Mandel hall; Biology 114—Thursday, March 17, 8-10 am, Classics10; Biology 202—Friday, March 18. 8-10ani; Botany 106, laboratory examina¬tion—Thursday, March 17.Chemistry: Chemistry 106 — Wednes¬day, March 16, 8:30-10 30, Kent 107 andRosenwald 2; Chemistry 221—Tuesday.March 15, 10:30-12:30, Kent 107; Chem¬istry 224—Wednesday, March 16, 8:30-10 30. Kent 103; Chemistry 262—Friday,March 18. 9-10 am. Kent 103.Chinese civilization — Wednesday.March 16, 1:30-2:30. Classics 10.Economics: Economics 202—Wednes¬day, March 16, 10:30-11:30, Social sci¬ences 105; Economics 220—Wednesday.March 16, 8:30-10:30, Social sciences 105.Education: Education 203 — Friday,March 18, 8-10 am, Judd 110; Education270 — Thursday, March 17, 1:30-3 pm,Judd 111.English: English 102—Monday. March14. 3-6 pm, Kent 107 and Cobb 110;English 105—Monday, March 14, 3-6 pm,Cobb 305 and Cokk 406; English 105-6(oomnrehenslve) — Monday. March 14,3-6 pm. Rosenwald 2, Eckhart 133; Eng¬lish 204 (Education 2881 — Tuesday.March 15. 8-10 am. Classics 16; English216—Monday, March 14, 12:30-2:30, Clas¬sics 16: English 233—Tuesday, March 15.8-10 am. Classics 11: English 235—Tues¬day, March 15, 8-10 am, Wieboldt 102:English 237—Friday. March 18, 8-10 amClashes 20: English 240 — Wednesday.March 16. 8:30-10:30, Classics 18; Eng¬lish 251—Tuesday. March 15. 10:30-12:30,Classics 11; English 262 — Thursday.March 17, 1:30-3:30. Classics 18: English285 —Friday, March 18, 10:30-12:30 —Classics 18: English 297—Monday, March14 9:30-11:30, Classics 16.French: French 101—Thursday, March17. 8-10 am. Cobb 406; French 102—Tues¬day. March 15, 4-6 pm, Cobb 110 andJudd 126; French 102-3 (comprehensive)Wednesday, March 16. 8:30-11:30. Cobb415: French 202—Tuesday, March 15, 4-6pm, Classics 10; French 205—Thursday.March 17 8-10 am. Wieboldt 102; French208—Wednesday, March 16. 8:30-10:30,Classics 16: Fernch 211— Friday, March18. 10:30-12:30, Classics 16: French 259—Thursday, March 17, 10:30-12:30, Wle?boldt 202; French 269—Monday, March14, 12:30-2:30, Classics 411.Geography 282—Thursday, March 17.10:30-12 :30, Rosenwald 28.German: German 102 Tuesday, March15, 4-6 pm, Mandel hall; German 235—Friday, March 18, 8-10 am. Wieboldt203; German 237—Monday. March 14,8 30-10:30, Wieboldt 203.Greek 102—Friday, March 18, 8-10 am,Cobb 415. History: History 132 (quarterly) —Wednesday, March 16, 3-5 pm, Mandelhall; History 131-2 (comprehensive)—Wednesday, March 16, 3-6 pm, Cobb 110;History 212—Monday, March 14, 9:30-11:30, Social sciences 105; History 232—Wednesday, March 16, 10:30-11:30, Socialsciences 302; History 272—Wednesday,March 16, 8:30-10:30, Classics 10.Humanities: Humanities 112 —Tues¬day, March 15. 1:30-3:30, Mandel Halland Cobh 110; Humanities 122, Thurs¬day, March 17, 10:30-12:30, Mandel Hall;Humanities 202 — Tuesday March 15,1:30-2:30, Judd 126; Humanities 207—Tuesday, March 15, 1:30-2:30, Lexing¬ton 5; Humanities 212—Tuesday, March15, 1:30-2:30, Cobb 101; Humanities 222—Tuesday, March 15, 1:30-2:30, Cobb 102;Humanities 282 (History 301)—Thurs¬day, March 17. 1:30-3:30, Classics 10.Ideas and Methods: Ideas and Meth¬ods 202—Monday, March 14, 12:30-2:30,Swift 204; Ideas and Methods 252—Fri¬day. March 18. 4-6 pm. Swift 204.Indian civilization — Monday, March14, 12:30-2:30. Classics 10.Islamic civilization—Monday, March14, 8:30-10:30, Classics 18,Italian: Italian 102—Friday, March 18,8-10 am, Classics 34; Italian 202—Mon¬day, March 14, 8:30-10:30, Cobb 46.Latin 102—Friday, March 18, 10:30-12:30, Cobb 415.Linguistics 225—Wednesday, March 16,8:30-10:30, Classics 411.Mathematics: Mathematics 101 —Wednesday, March 16, 12:30-2:30, Cobb107; Mathematics 102—Friday, March 18,1:30-3:30, Mandel hall; Mathematics 103—Firday, March 18, 10:30-12:30, Cobb305; Mathematics 151—Friday. March 18,1:30-3:30, Cobb 110 and Classics 10; Mathematics 152 — Friday, March 18,1:30-2:30, Rosenwald 2 and Eckhart 133.Meteorology: Meterology 213—Thurs¬day, March 17, 10:30 - 12:30, RyersonNorth 276; Meterology 253 — Friday,March 18, 10:30-12:30, Ryerson North 276.Music: Music 152—Friday, March 18,10:30-12:30, Music 201: Music 202—Wed¬nesday, Marcll 16, 12:30-2:30, Music 101;Music 212—Monday, March 14, 8:30-10:30,Music 101; Music 222—Friday, March 18,8-10 am, Music 101; Music 243—Wednes¬day, March 16, 3-5 pm, Music 101.Philosophy: Philosophy 201—Monday,March 14, 3-5 pm, Judd 126; Philosophy206—Friday, March 18, 10:30-12:30, Swift204; Philosophy 235—Tuesday, March 15,8-10 am. Swift 204.Physical sciences: Physical sciences106—Monday, March 14, 8:30-11:30, Kent107; Physical sciences 202—Thursday,March 17, 1:30-3:30, Cobb 102.Physics: Physics 112—Monday, March14, 12:30-2:30, Eckhart 133; Physics 112(Physical sciences comprehensive) —Monday, March 14, 10:30-11:30, Ryerson352; Phsics 122—Wednesday, March 16,12:30-2:30. Eckhart 133; Physics 132—Monday, March 14, 8:30-10:30, Eckhart133; Physics 216 — Friday, March 18,10:30-12:30, Eckhart 133; Physics 226—Thursday, March 17, 8-10 am, Eckhart133; Physics 236—Friday, March 18, 8-10 am, Eckhart 133.Psychology: Psychology 203—Tuesday,March 15, 11:30-1 pm, Rosenwald 27;Psychology 212—Friday, March 18, 10:30-12:30, Psychology 210; Psychology 241—Thursday, March 17, 10:30-12:30^ Psy¬chology 210.Russian: Russian 102—Tuesday, March15, 4-6 pm, Rosenwald 2; Russian 282—Thursday, March 17, 8-10 am. Classics 20, Russian 285—Thursday, March 17,8-10 am. Classics 10; Russian 289 (Hu¬manities 291) — Thursday, March 17,10:30-12:30, Classics 18; Russian 291—Thursday, March 17, 1:30-3:30, Wieboldt102.Social sciences: Social sciences 022—Tuesday, March 15, 8-10 am, Mandelhall; Social sciences 032 — Thursday,March 17, 1:30-3:30, Kent 107 and Cobb110; Social sciences 112 — Thursday,March 17, 1:30-3:30. Mandel hall; Socialsciences 115 (quarterly) — Thursday,March 17, 1:30-3:30, Social sciences 122;Social sciences 115-6 (comprehensive )*—first session: Thursday, March 10, 1:30-2:30, Rosenwald 2, second session;Thursday, March 17, 1:30-4:30, Rosen¬wald 2.Sociology: Sociology 203 — Friday,March 18, 10:30-12:30, Abbot 101; Soci¬ology 244—Tuesday, March 15, 10:30-12:30, Cobb 110.Spanish: Spanish 102—Tuesday, March15, 4-6 pm, Swift 106; Spanish 202—Wednesday, March 16, 12:30-2:30, Cobb416; Spanish 208 — Friday, March 18,10:30-12:30, Classics 11.Statistics 200, section 02—Wednesday,March 16, 3-5 pm. Classics 20.Zoology 205—Thursday, March 17, 1-4:30, Zoology 43. Edidin took office immediatelyafter his election. His term willrun until March, 1961. Upon re¬ceiving the gavel he said, “I wishto express my thanks to my fel¬low members of the IFC for elect¬ing me their president. I shall domy best to perpetuate the vitalfunction which the council servesin the University community.”Asked to comment about the up¬coming Student-Faculty court pro¬ceedings involving Student Gov¬ernment’s desire to pass uponrushing rules, Basil DeMuir, theoutgoing president said, ‘‘As yet,I have received no official notifi¬cation of the proceedings involv¬ing us, but the council will havea representative present at thecourt to determine what actionthe IFC should take.”The IFC chose Tuesday as theday upon which to release its newrules for intramural eligibility.Each fraternity is to submit aquarterly leport of the actives,pledges, and associates who areon its books. Those on the listswill be eligible for participationin a contest if they havi* not re¬ceived a letter in that particularsport.In the pest, certain bevies hawsbeen &<cused of recruitirg members for their teams on a whole¬sale basis from students in thegraduate schools who were notmembers of any fraternity.rUniversal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearFlop pocket wash & wear ivy league trousers — Wash & wear dressshirts — camping equip. — Complete line of keds footwear — trenchcoats — luggage and trunks.1144 East 55th st. DO 3-957210 % reduction with this coupon ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage & meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.Fire & Theft InsuranceMalpractice InsurancePhone or writeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986Hyde pork's first cofeespressoopen daily till 1open weekends till 21369 East 57th StreetTAhSAM-YfcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen DailyIt iJL to lt;34 P.M.ORDERS TO TARE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 See The Dinah Shore Chevy Show in color Sundays, NBC-TV—The Pat Boone Chevy Showroom weekly, ABC-TVSIX-PASSENGERCAR ORSTATION SEDAN...CORVAIR IS BOTH! 8 wonderfully useful folding Mat makes everyCorvair two cars in one. Just one quick flip and yonincrease the luggage and pared space to 28.9 cubicfeet And just as simply, you’re back to comfortablesix-passenger capacity. It’s standard equipment... and extraordmarfly practical.Corvair does car-pool duty with the biggestand best of them. Going to work or school orout for the evening, you’ve got a genuinesix-seater. As for carting around piles of stuffinstead of people, just look at Corvair’s station- eedan load space with the rear seat folded. Andwhen that’s full you can start on the trunk.Corvair, you see, is no ordinary compactear. No others are so versatile, so ingeniouslyengineered—with independent suspension atall four wheels, an air-cooled rear enginethat never needs water or antifreeze. You justcan’t compare anything else coming outthese days with a Corvair. Drive one ... soon.For economical 001*1/311*transportation CdtVHOtfTThis is the Corvair 700 4-Door SedanDrive it—it's fun-tastic! See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer for fast delivery, favorable deals., March 4, 1960 • CHICAGO MARO ON • 11!‘ *Newman discusses dorm neckingby Avina RuderSpecial meetings to discuss stu¬dent behavior in the New dormIdbby were held last night in thelounges of West, East and Northhouse, by Jim Newman, assistantdean of students.•‘I’ve never seen so many wom¬en in my entire life” said New¬man to the West house group,and “I wish we had somethingmore pleasant to discuss.” New¬man first mentioned the peculiarenvironment of the New dormscentral unit which was plannedas a lounge for residents and hasbecome a public place, more likea hotel lobby than a living room.He proceeded to say that evenif it were a living room the thingsgoing on there would not be ap¬propriate.Some behavior distastefulAfternoon naps, picnics, and“the area of love making” wereconsidered by Newman as unac¬ceptable behavior no matter whatthe reason. “I’m told there is adistinction between necking andpetting that is known to eachone of you. It is normal to wanta physical relationship with aperson, it is the deepest way ofcommunicating with someoneelse, but there is a human wayof going about this. There aredegrees of intimacy that are best carried on in private, and by mar¬ried couples only.“Sex between unmarried peoplecan have dire consequences. Itcreates physical, sociological andmoral problems. We can’t toleratepawing, the removal of clothing,or lying down on benches, floors,or steps. You all know when theboundary is passed between asimple good night kiss and along drawnout demonstration. We’re not trying to stop neckingbut anyone who persists in thisoffensive behavior will be dis¬ciplined.“If anyone chooses to disregardthis warning they will have tosuffer the consequences. We don’twant you to feel that we are try¬ing to restrict your rights to per¬sonal freedom. This is not a mat¬ter of freedom, what’s been goingon in the'central unit shows lackPresent job opportunitiesPhilip Martinez, director, personnel department, Kalamazoopublic schools, Kalamazoo, Michigan will interview in our officeThursday morning, March 10. Estimated teacher needs for1960-61: Early elementary (approximately 30), later elemen¬tary (approximately 30) girl’s physical education, high schoolphysics, social studies with a master’s degree, mathematics, Eng¬lish — junior high and senior high, general science, high schoolvocal music, instrumental music with strings, elementary musicand special education (mentally handicapped and physicallyhandicapped). Persons interested in interviews may call ^IissMathews at Midway 3 0800, extension 3286 no later than March7. The office is located in room 200, Reynolds club.A representative of the Metropolitan Life Insurance companywill visit the office of vocational guidance and placement onMarch 8 to interview men for the Advanced Training program.This program, which combines formal training with job experi¬ence. is designed to lead into management positions in theCompany’s home office in New York city. Interview appoint¬ments may be arranged through L. S. Calvin, room 200, Reyn¬olds club. of awareness of self respect andof respect for others.”After Newman finished his lec¬ture he asked if there were anyquestions. A girl commented “Iagree that this behavior was badtut you’ve got to understand thatthere’s no place to talk alone witha boy .” Newman answered, “I'llagree that there’s a definite needfor a space in this campus whereboys and girls can be togetherprivately, We’re not trying to berestrictive.”Newman then said that suchsteps were being taken as openingthe lounges on Friday nights andletting boys and girls use dormcooking facilities on Sunday eve¬nings. The girl then added “Evenif you open lounges and recrooms there is still no place fora boy and a girl to be alone any¬where.”Asked about effectSomeone else then asked New¬man if he felt that the loungewas not suited to this sort ofactivity or whether he was con¬cerned about the effect upon theindividuals involved. Newman an¬swered that both had been takeninto account. “First of all, thecentral unit is a public place andsecondly such things are degrad¬ing. I’m embarrassed at some ofthe behavior that’s going on hereand I’m sure that it has damag-THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWO1518 E. 63rd IF supports Phi Psi“Phi Psi should have beengranted the victory at the re¬cent track meet, as the housewas disqualified on a meretechnicality.” This was the de¬cision of the Inter - Fraternitycouncil at its meeting last Tues¬day night.The Council was consideringappeal of Phi Kappa Psi thatChuck McGraw, director of in¬tramural athletics, had actedwrong in declaring four Phi Psi’sineligible to compete. The coun¬cil in presenting to Phi Psi thefavorable decision, promised to present its favorable findings ina letter to McGraw.Despite the sympathy of thecouncil, however, Phi Psi will notreturn to Intrafraternity athleticsuntil and unless McGraw actuallyreverses his decision, and de¬clares Phi Psi the winner of themeet. The fraternity will, instead,compete in divisional athletictournaments. ing effects upon the students hrvolved.”The girl asked whetherthe object of the restrictions wasmerely to drive these students outof the dorms. Newman answered“It’s not just the effect thatit has on the people in the dormswe’re worried'about, but the behavior itself.” Someone then saidthat if people wanted to sit downthere, in a public place and makefools of themselves, she thoughtthey should be allowed to. Shesaid that it wasn’t fair to theresidents of the dorm to use dormfacilities such as the lounge andthe rec room for coeducationalpurposes.Another girl said that whatmost people want is merely aplace to sit down after a date andsay goodnight. She added that ifoverindulgence is to be disciplined “Where are you going todraw the line? I disapprove asmuch of those who give detailedaccounts of the activities in thelobby as of those who furnishedthe material for these accounts."Staff in hard positionNewman said “Let me say thatthis whole situation has put thestaff in the position of discipli¬narians. We won’t spy but if penpie persist in this behavior theywill be reprimanded. Kissing,holding hands, or putting yourarm about someones shouldersis acceptable behavior. But suchthings as pawing, and disrobingare neither acceptable or permis¬sible. If you have any ideas onwhat to do about this problemgive them to a member of housecouncil.”He concluded his talk by say¬ing “I’d like to say again thatthere is endless room for flex-ability and for planning to makethis a more homelike place, butthere are certain restrictionswhich must be imposed in anycase.”'B' track team wins meetKQDL KROSSWORD No. 7ACROSS1. The sack4. The woman youleft behind8. Part of a lake12. Yours and mine13. Yours and mineand all the rest15. Old college16. Winnings attennis?17. Short change19. Girl in“Lilac Time”20. Era’s cousin21. Soak flax22. Kind of active23. Give in24. Fresco’sfirst name25. Bug-in-a-rug-like28. Soreness32. Polly’slast name33. No cigarettelike a Kool37. Ever loving39. Valedictoriancondition40. Changes start¬ing in Nevada42. New (prefix)43. Arranged anevening’sentertainment(3 words)44. Blank space45. Hollywood VIP46. Sparkle47. French -conjunctions DOWN1. Boring part ota brother2. London, Paris,Rome, etc.3. Tree sickness4. The M agic ota Kool5. Ex-governor’snickname6. Was introducedto7. Air RaidPrecautions(abbr.)8. Nothing’s asas Kool9. When yourheart's ___10. Ready for*■ Salome's dance11. It’s good forthe heir14. Short year18. Neck23. Earthy cleavage25. Hivy leagues26. A Friday diet27. African country,you goose29. When it’s timefor a ,change to Koots30. In this place31. Calls a haltlegally33. Maria'slast name34. Dodge35. Infant’s firstposition36. German city38. Man on his mark41. SeventhGreek letter 1 2 n 4 5 6 ■ 9 10 1112 " 141517 18 *AP IE VC ?U K< 3DL 120/ fcNUUGH TUkrack this?" ■ ”22 1 L:24 m25 26 27 28 29 30 3132 33 34 35 3637 38 3940 o 41 4243 4445- 1 u L 47When your throat tellsyou its time for a changeyou needa real change...YOU NEED THE, °F KGDL/ CiQaRCTTCS• 1900. Drown * WlllitniMa Tobacco Cor*.• CHICAGO MAROON ♦ March 4; I960 The university “B” trackteam met Wilson junior col¬lege and Elmhurst college in atriangular meet at the field-house last Saturday. Both UCand Elmhurst participants hadsome good performances. UC hadtoo much depth for its opponentsand won the meet with 55 xfzHave a WORLD of FUN!V\ Travel with fITAUnbefievobfe low CostEuropei 60 Ooyt n!m. *'•<” $675Orient143-65 Oeys,^L,from $999Many loaf I focfwdtocolfoffo crwfilAlto low-toil trips to Monk.$169 up. South Amorito $699 up,Hawaii Study Tour S39$ up oodAround tho World $189$ up.A ok Your Travel Ap.nl points, Elmhurst scored 45*4points and Wilson 10 points.Event winners for UC wereDennis Rusche with a 4:48 mile,Pat Palmer with a fine 2:15.6clocking in the 880 yard run, PeteJoseph in the broad jump withan 18’10*2,; jump, and Dave Northrop in the Polevault at 1T4”.George Lejnieks and Pete Jo¬seph placed second and third inthe 60 yard dash; Dennis O’Learyplaced second in the 70 yard highhurdles and third in the lowhurdles; Gary Augustine was sec¬ond in the 880; Jim Musgrave andRay Krueger were second andthird in the shot put; JustineJohnson was second in the broadjump and high jump, and JerryWhite placed third in both thehigh jump and the pole vault.\27th Ymt*IVAWORIO TRAVEL Jtt So. HlchlfM Aoo.(kitof* 4. NA MJ57 JW.OT (Contact oCeniaikrDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingFour barbers workingLadies' haircutting\Floyd C. ArnoldProprietor SOS EJ0BS 00OSH0E3 SO000S00EiEBd 0SD0HEE1S0□□□msSBamHI HDO 0S30SB EEEB0ESOB00HEEBO00E00 D0OssmsaEBna sheBnSE 0EJ0E1 0SBU3M5W TOOK.c Sieu >ova*JHl OA.HOTX7NS |—Gymnasts win 3-way meetThe UC gymnastic team de¬feated the University of Wiscon¬sin 58-54 and Ball State college60.5-51.5, for the first Maroonw ins of the season, Saturday Feb¬ruary 27, at Bartlett gymflasium.Coach Kreidler was given a shoul¬der ride by the jubilant Maroongymnasts.First places against Ball Statewere won by George Andros inthe still ring and Joe Kuyperswho captured firsts in the freeexercise, trampoline and tumb¬ling events, and was high scorerwith 33 points.In the meet with Wisconsin,Kuypers placed first in the tram¬poline and tied for first in thelumbling. First year student JoeStevenson won the horizontal barcompetition while team captainKen Driessel took first in theparallel bars. George Andros wonthe still rings as he finished hislast year of intercollegiate gym¬nastic competition. Vic Mlotokand Ed Manniko placed in bothmeets for Chicago.Although the Maroon gymnastsfinished with a 2-5 season record,all team members except Androswill return next year.Midwest meet is SaturdayThe tenth annual UC-Midwest-ern conference indoor track meetwill be held at the field houseFriday, March 4, at 6:30 pm.a program of eight individualevents and five relays. UC willhost to Beloit, Carleton, Coe, Cor-Eleven teams will participate innell, Knox, Lawrence, Monmouth,Ripon and St. Olaf colleges. The UC track club relays willbe held Saturday, February 5,with preliminaries at 3:30 pmand the finals at 7 pm. 200 entriesare expected, from Notre Dame,Western Michigan, Marquette,Loyola, Kansas State of Emporiaand other schools in the fourstate area.Badminton tourney startsThe badminton tournamentstarted Monday night, February29 as 35 entrants*from the houseleague and 26 men from the fra¬ternity league competed.Burt Olson, Phi Delta Thetaand Robin Kirby, Psi Upsilonhave reached the semi-finals inthe All-University handball tour¬nament. Robert Graham and BuzzLundeen from Harkness and VicMlotok of East III are involvedin the finals for the house leaguechampionship.Volley ball competition beginsnext quarter. Entries are dueMarch 15, in the Intramural of¬fice.108 men entered the free throwcontest which promises tight com¬petition.Fencing season endsThe UC fencers concluded theirseason with a quadrangular meetin Columbus, Ohio against OhioState, Iowa and Fenn college.In their first engagement, theswordsmen made a fine showingagainst Fenn losing 18-9, to theunusually strong Clevelanders. Inepee, Ron Shelton turned in afine performance, winning two ofhis three bouts. Elliot Lilien ad¬ ded three points to the Maroontotal in saber by defeating all theFenn competitors. Once again theChicago f o i 1 s m e n, who haveshown consistent improvementthroughout the season, foundthemselves outclassed and wereable to pick only one win by JimMilgram, against the 8 Fenn vic¬tories in this weapon.Against Ohio State, anotherrepresentative effort was turnedin a team whose depth far ex¬ceeded our own. Once again Chi¬cago lost, 18-9. In this meet, Shel¬ton picked two more wins, Lilienwon two out of three and thefoil team won 2 bouts, for the sec¬ond time this season.However, against the Univer¬sity of Iowa, the tired Maroonscould not do anything right andthe second place Big Ten finish¬ers walked away with an embar¬rassing 26-1 victory. The singleChicago tally was made by JohnKolar in sabre.The University of Chicago B-team basketballers finished theirseason last Saturday nightagainst Thornton Junior Collegewith a hard-earned 65-55 victory.This win gave Coach Ron Wan-gerin’s “Bees” a respectable 11-1record for the ’59-’60 season.The young Maroons were facedwith perhaps their toughest oppo¬sition of the year Saturday. How¬ever, they scrapped hard in thefirst half of the game and grab¬bed a ten-point, 32-22 lead at half¬time behind the shooling of cen¬ter Gene Ericksen, forward LarryCostin, and guards Larry Lissand Merle Lahti, who accountedfor 28 of the points between them.But at the start of the secondperiod, the “Bees” suddenly werestunned by a zone defense whichthey couldn’t seem to break and,quickly, Thornton tied the scoreat 40-40. But, this is as far asthe visitors could move. TheMaroons discovered that theycould hit Ericksen when he wasopen along the baseline and thebig 6'7" pivot dropped in fourshort jump shots in a row tohelp renew the ten-point Maroonmargin. After that, Thorntoncouldn’t come close again* Erick¬sen was high scorer for the hostswith 18 points, followed by Lisswith 16, Costin with 12, and Lahti Jack Merskin attempts to prevent the escape of his op¬ponent from Western Michigan in last Saturday's meet atBartlett gym.B' Basketball team winsgame honors with 20 points.The only B-team loss of theseason was in the second matchwith Purdue Extension in Gary,Indiana, when the Maroons wereupset by a pair of 6'6" pivot menand were defeated 74-66. ForwardFred Paulsell was high point manfor the season for the “Bees”with his 114-point total. However,Ericksen's 109 points in one fewergame gave him the top average.Good support was received fromLahti with 98 points, Costin with91, and forward Ted Romoserwith 88. Liss tallied 77, centerMike Winter had 55, and guardA1 Devitt scored 35 points toround out the “Bees” scoring.Wrestlers loseThe UC wrestling team wasdefeated by Western Michiganuniversity 24-8 in the last meet of the season, Saturday, February27 at Bartlett gym.Fred Hoyt, 123 pounds, won hismatch by default and team cap¬tain Warren Pollans, 177 pounds,won his match by a decision toaccount for the Maroons eightpoints.Coach Benston considered thisa good season in spite of the 3wins, 6 losses and 1 tie recordbecause a number of the squadmembers were wrestling for thefirst time in inter collegiate com¬petition. Promise was shown inthe development of several newmen, Fred Hoyt, Dave Silver, PhilMetzger and Jack Merskin. Vet¬erans Ron Chutter, Warren Pol¬lans and Bob Sonnenberg, whomissed being undefeated by onepoint this season, were a definiteasset to the team.with 11. Guard John Tivdal tookGary Augusfine breaks the tape to give the Maroons' arelay victory over rivals from Chicago area colleges in a meetthis past Saturday at the Field house.NOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Dawn to Dawn 1342east 53 st.QUINTETTENO ENTERTAINMENT TAXNO ADMISSIONNO COVERJAZZ CONCERT TUESDAYPARKING BY ATTENDANTLast Show 3:15 A.M. . . . Saturday 4:15 A.M.SUTHERLAND47TH dr DREXEL after every shaveSplash on Old Spice After Shave Lotion. Feel yourface wake tip and live! So good for your skin...so good for your ego. Brisk as an ocean breeze,Old Spice makes you feel like a new man. Confident.Assured. Relaxed. You know you’re at your bestwhen you top off your shave with Old Spice! ]00 AFTER SHAVE LOTIONby SHULTONplus IonMarch 4, I960 • CHICAGO MA R O O N • 13 i•Marathon has varied fareLast Friday and Saturday, WUCB the campus radio station broadcast its third consecu¬tive eighth annual marathon from the Reynolds club. The marathon, which ran 27 hours,raised about $80 which will be used to expand the station’s record library.The marathon began at seven in a humorous way with a few shrill beeps caused by anaccidental “fast forward” of Chancellor Kimpton’s introductory address tape. At eleven,the unpredictable “Anything Goes” program (a weekly WUCB feature) was broadcast. Theplayedclassical music changed the pre¬vious comic mood. However, therewere occasional interruptions ofrequests for Elvis Presley and aFerrai warming up.Saturday afternoon several liveperformances by the recording so¬ciety, the campus bellringers, andthe Reynolds south lounge jazzgroup, were broadcast. Saturday evening there was ahuman interest feature, ’’This isyour life” celebrating stationmanager John Schuerman’s birth¬day, in which a small town boyf r o m “Twitch-crick, Colorado”makes good in the big city as sta¬tion manager of a nationwideradio network.Social anthropology studies culturescommunity,’fields to usiprogram played its usual con¬glomeration of recorded musicwhich included such selections asthe World War II favorite“There’s a Rose That Grows inNo Man’s Land,” Tom Leher’s“Poisoning Pigeons in the Park,”Little Richard singing rock ’n’roll, embellished by the frenziedscreams of new-college women inthe background. In addition, therewas a “‘You are there” drama¬tization of “world war one doesn’thappen” in which by an ironicturn of events, Walter Cronkitewas assassinated in Sarejava,crowd of 30,000, improvised by As people become more Part of the culture he s studying,nine people, provided background aware of the relationship be- Slontn^ For'aTan and ,hen movesThere were two playreadings of tween the social behavior pat- who studies an ant hill is a god and then movesexcerpts from the past Black- jerns a socjetv and its Dhvsi- compared to the ants, but study-fnar’s musical “Alpha Centuri” terns or a society ana its pnysi * an, youYe studying materialand the UT comedy “The Gam- cal environment, anthropology ^ you^f.biers,” as well as Alice Schaeffer emerges as an increasingly im- «The anthropologist does bringmusical ^healnt UndefcTass ” P°ltant area of stu<*’ Social a"’ his own* bias to the communityHutehin’s farewell address tothe University was played. Hestressed that the college graduateshould not be warped into con¬formity with current opinion, butshould seek to mold his environ¬ment to meet his ideals.Between programs, in order toencourage contributions for therecord libarry, there were recordrequests from listeners costing25 cents and thought provokingadvertisements such as. “hey kidsdon’t you want to be the first inyour cell block to give money toWUCB?”In the early morning hours, Roger Downey directs "Sancho Lanza and his Flugel horn.one which opens upthem for a seasonon, or one thathas run out of land and needs away of feeding its citizens otherthan off the soil.“An anthropologist presentsthese people with some alterna-thropology in particular is con¬cerned with the cultural and fam¬ily structures within communi¬ties.“But social anthropologists areborn not made,” says Eric Wolf,professor of anthropology in UC.“Unless a person can see themanufacture of bark skirts, themaking of pottery in the largercontext of their importance to thesociety, this is a very tedious dis¬cipline. I believe that anthropol¬ogy is fascinating, but again, Iwas born believing this.”“Anthropology studies a humanculture, and the anthropologist isrsMEFpRicTino'cOiiElI for pimples, acne, face sickness. Time and again cheap prica remedies JI have been tried and found wanting. Why? Because it takes more II effective ingredients than cheap price remedies can give yaw to clear wp I| your skin of these ailments. ClARIMACIN is not a cheap-price remedy. || Discovered by a famous skin specialist, ClARIMACIN contains • effective |R medically approved ingredients, a deep working cleanser and a built-in RR massager — a complete 3-way treatment kit. It mutt clear your face In flR 10 days or it costs you nothing. Sold on money back guarantee. Don't |R throw your money away on cheap price remedies. Save it and get |R CLARIMACIN at:IIIIIIII Parks Pharmacy, 6357 W. Cermak Rd., BerwynHarasek Pharmacy, 6401 W. 43rd St., BerwynBob Hoft Drugs, 6830 Windsor Ave., BerwynBlack s Pharmacy. 3001 W. Montrose Ave., ChicagoChesta Pharmacy, 4143 S. Archer, ChicagoHarding Pharmacy, 3933 W. Fullerton Ave., ChicagoKsiazek Drugs, 1900 E. 87th St., ChicagoMulay Pharmacy, 3400 W. 79th St., ChicagoRosen Pharmacy, 2958 W. Devon Ave., Chicago _Scott Pharmacy, 3549 W. Devon Ave., ChicagoPavlicek Drugs, 5539 W. Cermak Rd., CiceroRothe Pharmacy, 1900 S. Cicero Ave., CiceroJablonski Pharmacy, 6501 Pershing Rd., StickneyBoffa Drugs, 3359'W. Chicago Ave., Chicago he’s investigating,” said Wolf,and he does emphasize those fea¬tures which are of most interestto him. Every anthropologist doesmake a census of the communityhe’s studying, and does establishthe family relationships; such as,when a couple marries do theylive with the wife’s family, thegroom’s, or go out on their own.But beyond these relationships,the study of a culture is a per¬sonal interpretation.“This in a way is an advantage,for some people are so blunt thatthey can ferret out facts that amore sensitive person wouldnever find, and at the same time,some people are so sensitive thatthey can establish an empathywith the culture they’re studyingalmost immediately. They seemto tune in on the same wavelength, and thus can sense thespirit of the people, apart fromtheir external activities. Sendingboth of these types to study a cul¬ture, they complement one anoth¬er and the final record we have ofthe society is a proportioned view,“Anthropologists can help acommunity change its manner ofliving when forced to for physicalreasons,” Wolf continued. “As anexample, take a “slash and burn tives to their past ways and mayalso aid them in establishing newtraditions and reinterpreting theirold ones,” Wolf stated. “Often adeposed culture which immi¬grates, because of a lack of goodland or perhaps because of perse¬cution, to an entirely alien civili¬zation, has a second apparentlynew life. There is an efflorescentglow of decay when the old groupestablishes neighborhood clubs,and people of the same back¬ground discover that they havemany things in common. But thenthe whole thing collapses whenthe children grow up and for eco¬nomic, for social reasons, wish toassimilate themselves in theirnew environment. “A government which wishes toturn its country into an industrial rather than -rural society,”Wolf continued, “may call an an¬thropologist in to find out how toget the people off the soil and intothe mills. A Dutch anthropologisthas discovered the exact amountof land needed by a family to liveon while too little for them to liveoff of. This forces them to workin industry. The Indonesian gov¬ernment required this informa¬tion.”Wolf added that this type of an¬thropology which believes in ad¬vising and improving the mannerof living of a given tribe is calledAction anthropology. “Dependingon the immediate conditions Action anthropology can advise, orcan force a given tribe to changeits way of life. In the case of In¬donesia, land was taken awayfrom the people and they arebeing forced to become indus¬trial.”UC symphony orchestrawill give winter concertThe UC Symphony Orchestra, directed by H. Colin Slim,will give its winter quarter concert this Sunday evening inMandel hall.The program includes “the Suite” from Handel’s WaterMusic, written in 1715 for a royal •procession on the Thames. Handelmade use of a large number ofwind instruments in order to havePROGRESSIVE PAINT b HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Paint & Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th itdark50 theatredark and madisonfr 2-2845for college studentsat all timesjust present your i.d. cardto the cashierin a r c ItSUNDAY6) a Sunday film guildprogram:jean gabin in “grand illus-sion” (voted 1 to 6 top filmsof all time at the BrusselsFair)chaplin, marie dressier, ma-bel normand, keystone cops“tillie’s punctured romance”13) a Sunday film guild pro¬gram: kirk douglas, gertrudelawrence, jane vvman Intennessee williams’“glass menagerie”julie harris, shelley winters,laurence (‘room at the top’)harvey “i am a camera”20) a Sunday film guild pro¬gram: lana turner, fernandolamas, thomas gomez, rich-ard haydn in franz lehar’s“merry widow”howard keel, ann blythvie damone, dolores gray‘kismet”27) a Sunday film guild pro¬gram: Ingmar bergman’s“the magician” (a remark¬able film Indeed! . . .Saturday Review)rlchard burton, clare bloom,mary ure “look back in an¬ger” (1 of year’s top 5 im¬ports . . . Films In Review) MONDAY7) mamie van doren“vice raid”cameron mitchell“inside the mafia”exposing world’smost viciouscrime syndicate! TUESDAY1) ruth romanPatricia neal —leif ericksoneleanor parker“three secrets”John drew barry-more, lita mtlan“never love astranger”8) rod steiger“across the bridge”14) victor matureyvonne de carlo _“timbuktu”peter cushing asSherlock holmes In“hound of thebaskervilles”21) Jeff chandlerfess parker“the jayhawkers”george nader“nowhere to go”28) curt Jurgensbrlgitte bardot“and god createdwoman”christlanne marvel(miss universe)“adam and eve” leslle nellsencolleen millersummer nite” ‘hot15) grace kellypaul douglasstewart granger“green fire”david brianmarsha hunt“no place to hide”22) raymond burrJohn Cassavetes“affair in havana”spencer tracy“the last hurrah”(‘Tracy at his best. . . ’ N.Y. Times)29) anthony qulnn“the ride back”dorothy dandrldgebroderlck crawford“the decks ran red” if open 7:30 a.m.late show 4 a.m.if different double feature dailyif write in for free program guideWEDNESDAY2) robert taylorstewart grangerlloyd nolandebra paget“the last hunt”mickey spillane’s“my gun is quick”9) jane wymangregory peck“the yearling”dewey martinshelley winterskeenan wynn“tennessee champ”16) gene kellyrod taylor“crest of the wave”victor mature“china doll”23) clare bloomCharles boyerCharlton hestonyul brynner“the buccaneer”John paynemona freeman“hold back the nite”30) cary grantbetsy drake “roomfor one more”joan crawforddavid briandennls morgan“this woman isdangerous” Thursday3) tyrone powerpiper laurle “mis-sissippi gambler”david wayne &tom ewell inbill mauldln’6“up front”10) audie murphy“the guns offort petticoat”cornel wildegeorge sandersann francis“the scarlet coat”17) alan laddVirginia mayor“the iron mistress”john Irelanddorothy malone“security risk”24) James masonrod steigeringer stevens“cry terror!”george naderVirginia mayo“Congo crossing”31) john saxonesther williams “un¬guarded moment”dana andrewsjeanne crain“duel in the jungle” if "little gol-lery for gals only"if ladies day every Fridayall gals admitted for only 25cif Sunday Film Guild programsFRI. <Ladies Day) SATURDAY4) fred alienmarllyn monroe“we’re not married”jean simmonsdan o’herllhyrhonda flemlng“home before dark”LADIES’ DAY!Gals 25c11) anna magnanlhurt lancaster intennessee williams’“the rose tattoo”eartha kittsammy da vis, Jr“anna lucasta”Ladies Day! Gals 25c18) lucille ball“longf long trailer”greer garsonrobert ryanbarry sullivan“her twelve men”Ladies Day I Gals 25c25) peter Ustinovbogart, aldo ray“we’re no angels”howard keelbetty button “annieget your gun”Ladies Day! Gals 25capr. 1) Jane russellralph meeker ’’fuzzypink nightgown”errol flynndorothy malone “toomuch, too soon”(dlana barrymorestory)Ladies Day! Gals 25c 5) Steve reevesbruce cabot“goliath and thebarbarians”robert taylor“house of theseven hawks”12) leslle caron, dirkbogarde & alastalrsim in g. b. shaw’s“the doctor’sdilemma”m. brando, v. letgh“a streetcarnamed desire**19) john millsCharles coburn“town on trial”Ingrid bergmancurt Jurgens“inn of the 6thhappiness”26) ava gardneranthony franclosa“the naked niaja”curt Jurgensdorothy dandrldge“tamango”apr. 2) audie mur¬phy, joan evans“no name on th«bullet”glna lollobrlgidnfrank slnatra“never so few” the music heard "more thantwenty paces off.” The originallytwenty pieces in the suite werecut to six, in the standard arrangement made by Harty in1922.Featured in the program willbe William Spady, co-winner ofthe Concerto contest sponsoredlast quarter by the orchestra.Spady will play the Concerto forTrumpet and Orchestra in E flatby Haydn. The other two piecesin the program are Prokafieff’sPeter and the Wolf, narrated byRoger Downey, and The Sym¬phony No. 4 in G major, by Dvo¬rak.The concert will be held in Man-del hall, Sunday, March 6 at 8:30pm. Admission is free.NOMINATEJOSEPH D.LOHMANDemocratic CandidateFor GOVERNOR%withIDEASandENERGYAS WELL AS VOTESVoluittaers Witfi Above, Call:Lohman for Governor Headquarter*30 N. Dearborn CC 6-118114 • CHICAGO MAROON .•! March 4# i960Culture VultureSince everybody is beefing about the so-called buffalo wallow between the New Dorm and Lexington, this bird has decidedto take pity on his poor earth-born companions and fellow mortals, and add his two cents worth. And in considering the matter,I have come to the conclusion, (I usualy do, come to conclusions, that is, about once a week*,especially when I have to grindA. _ . & A M D n L n ■ A B mm am m A t »A A ^ L JL A. ft. ^ - I J I ■ _ I m _ _ _ I _ _ _ t - ■ _ ^fll aL -1. I 8— _ M.out an introduction^ that Robert Burns' poem about the fieldmouse makes the best paraphrase for the wallow that I have yetcome across. To whit: Wee *lc®h't cowerin' timorous beastie, Och what a panic's in thy breastie, tha need na slip ad splashsae hasty, if B & G will fix that pig-sty. But they wad be laith to rin and help thee, Wi' a load of gravel. I'm truly sorry theirdominion Can not break nature's mud-cohesion, but justifies our ill-opinion, And makes us swear at them, our red-tape boundcompanions and fellow victims. This could go on and on, but it would probably be as sticky going as the wallow itself, so, onwith the culture.On campusTheatreSince I seem to have said atleast ten times that UniversityTheatre’s next production, TheYellow Loves, by Howard Sack-ler is about a late nineteenth cen-utry poet, Tristan Corbiere, andhave said just about everythingelse there is to say about the pro¬duction itself, I shall now proceedto Tristan himself. He was calledone of the Damned Poets of thatage, loved the sea, ,but becauseof a rheumatic heart and a col¬lapsed lung, was unable to be afisherman as was his father be¬fore him, and wrote some verybitter poetry about the sea, him¬self, and anything else that tookhis fancy. He had a cocker span¬iel. as did all good Bretons, andcalled him Tristan II because thedog was ugly, and so was Tristan,at least according to himself. Inan epitaph which he wrote forhimself, he said that he “lived,learning how to die, and died,learning how to live.” UniversityTheatre’s production of The Yel¬low Loves will run in Mandel hallMarch 17-20. Tickets are availableat the Reynolds club desk andat University Theatre, on thethird floor of the Reynolds club.Blackfriars is organized. Mira-bile dictu. Not only are they or¬ganized, they are actually progres¬sing. They have all seventeensongs written and orchestrated,they have three dance sequencesplanned, publicity going greatguns, and in general, are gettingup steam for the production oftheir show, Silver Bells andCockle Shells. The book was writ¬ten by Martin Rabinowitz and isabout wiles, woman, and witch-chaft in Hollywood. Blackfriars isslated for production sometimein the middle of April, in Mandelhall.The University of ChicagoQuadrangle Club Revels, in otherwords, the faculty review, is go¬ing on this weekend in Mandelhall. The show is called South'Side Story, which could meanany number of things, as far asplot goes. But it is almost cer¬tainly something about Univer¬sity life, or at least, I should thinkit would be. The sets were de¬signed by Harold Hayond, andare what is usually called, newand different. At any rate, theyare extremely interesting, becausethey consist of a half dozen tri¬angular flats, painted modernis-tically, (because I can’t think ofa better word to describe them)and flown so that they are hungby one corner, lashed by the twoothers, and then moved around todifferent positions for the scenechanges. Most interesting, andquite effective. Tickets are $3.00,and are available at the Quad¬rangle club. MusicThe University of Chicago Sym¬phony orchestra, a fine soundin’name for a fine soudin' and up-standin’ orchestra, will give itswinter quarter concert this Sun¬day in Mandel hall at 8:30. Con¬ducted by H. Colin Slim, the or¬chestra will play the Suite fromHandel’s Water Music, Dvorak’sSymphony No. 4 in G major,Haydn’s Concerto for Trumpetand Orchestra, with soloist, Wil¬liam Spady; and Prokofieff’sPeter and the Wolf, narrated byRoger Downey. The last perform¬ance was quite ambitious andquite good. This time, there aremore performers, new instru¬ments, (two tympani and a doublebass) and a good program. Whatmore could any one want? Be¬sides, it’s free. of indecision, conflicting plans,and ambitions. Next week, B-Jwill show From Here to Eternity.The Ten Days that Shook theWorld will be shown in the Jud-son dining hall, at 8 and 10 pm.International House is showingA Charlie Chaplin Festival. Thisone, which goes by name of“C,” includes “The Count,” “OneA.M.,” "Behind the Screen,” and“The Immigrant.” Next week,Int house will show Alastair Sim,George Cole, and Joyce Grenfell,in The Bells of Saint Trinian’s.Int. house films hold forth onMonday evenings in the EastLounge at 7 and 9 pm. program will include Mozart’sSymphony No. 34, and Mahler’sNinth symphony.There are all sorts of peoplegiving recitals in the next twoweeks, and since all of them arefamous in one way or another, Ihad better list them so you cantry for tickets before they’re allsold out.Off campusTheatreUniversity Concerts are spon¬soring Levin and McGraw, pianoduetists, in Mandel hall, March31 at 8:30. The program will in¬clude Shapero’s Sonata (1941);Two Elizabethan Keyboard Duets,by Carlton and Tomkins; Mozart’sTheme and Variations in G, K.501 (1786); Mendelssohn’s AllegroBrillante, opus 92 (1841); MaMere l’oye, by Ravel (1908); andHindemith’s Sonata (1938). Tick¬ets are available at the Music de¬partment.AitThe Little gallery on 57th streetwill show an exhibition called“We the People” during March.It consists of real and imaginarypeople as shown by various art¬ists in various media. Shown withpictures by Paul Klee, Roualt,and Toulosse - Lautrec, will beworks by Harold Haydon, associ¬ate profesor of art in the college,Max Kahn, Lilly Oppenheimer,and a number of other South Sideartists.Motion picturesB-J Cinema is showing The TenDays that Shook the World thisweek. The Film was directed bySergei Eisenstein and is about theRussian Revolution of 3917, theideas behind it, and the progressof history. The picture starts'withthe European war, and followsthe Kerensky regime, and thefinal ten days after eight months As far as legitimate, drama-typetheatre goes, there ain’t no suchanimal this week, but there areone or two shows that are fun.Show Business, starring CarolChanning Le Quat’ Jeudis, andWally Griffin, is a review withsongs, dances, and snappy patter.Le Quat’ Jeudis do patter songs,with lots of good lines, and excel¬lent timing. Carol Channing isCarol Channing, and sings theway Carol Channing sings. If youcan make any sense Out of that,you’ll get the idea, and if not, itdoesn’t mater. She’s good. WallyGriffin does night club routines,at least he has when I’ve seenhim. His jokes are a trifle blue,but usually come off quite well.All in all, seeing Show Businessis an entertaining way to spendan evening.The only other show that Ican find is the review at theSecond City, which is alwaysgood, inexpensive, and what I be¬lieve is called “new and different.”The Second City group has someof the Compass and Playwrightpeople in it, and are famed fortheir clever bits and improvisa¬tions. The Second City review isdirected by Paul Sills, who by theway, directed University The¬atre’s production of Measure forMeasure last year. Second Cityholds forth at 1842 N. Wells.MusicSir John Barbirolli is the guestconductor of the Chicago Sym¬phony orchestra this week. His Violinist Nathan Millstein willgive a recital in Orchestra hall,Saturday, March 5 at 8:30. Tick¬ets: $2-5. His program has notyet been announced.Van Cliburn, winner of the Mos¬cow International Music Festivalcontest (or words to that effect)or the best young pianist, willgive his recital March 7 at 8:30in the Opera house. For some rea¬son, probably because they thinkhe’ll sell, the Opera house peopleare charging outrageous prices($2.20-$7.70) for their tickets. Vul-turally, I think it’s a crime, andculturally, I think performerslike Dame Myra Hess, who iscoming next week, and Serkin,who was here last week, are muchmore worth the money, and havemuch less gall, not that they haveany at all, but I have to be gram¬matical and syntactical. But then,aj someone up and coming, Isuppose he can get away with it.Andres Segovia, who playsclasical guitar, will be at Orches¬tra hall, Sunday, March 13 at 3:30pm. Admission: $2-5. Pianist Dame Myra Hess willgive a recital at Orchestra hall,Tuesday, March 15, at 8:20 pm.Tickets: $1.55-$5.00. Her programhas not yet been announced.Alexander Tcherepnin, compos¬er-pianist, will give a lecture-re¬cital, Wednesday, March 16 at8:15 in the Third Unitarianchurch, 301 N. Mayfield. Admis¬sion: $2.Dieter Kober will conduct theChicago Chamber orchestra in aGallery concert this Sunday inFullerton hall. The program in¬cludes Romances numbers 1 and2 for violin and orchestra byBeethoven; and Schubert’s Sec¬ond Symphony. The concert willbe given in gallery 50 at 3:30 atthe Art Institute. Admission:free.The New York City opera com¬pany is presenting three operasthis weekend, at the Opera house.Friday night, Julius Rudel willconduct Phyllis Curtin, RichardCassily, and Norman Treigle inCarlisle Floyd’s Susannah. Sat¬urday night, the opera is Doug¬las Moore’s The Ballad of BabyDoe, conducted by Emerson Buck-ley, with Beverly Sills, FrancisBible, Walter Cassel, and JoshuaHecht. Kurt Weill’s Street Scene,with Elizabeth Carron, WilliamChapman, Jay Clements, andFrank Porreta, conducted byJulius Redel, is the Saturdayopera.LAKE PARKLAKE fj P ARK AT 53 rd : N O 7 • 9 O 7 1the {A-yde park theatreShe PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433PolicesHevenu familial etProtectionhypothecaire48Representative» Ralph J. Wood Jr.,[ IN. LaSalle Chicago, III.I TR 2-2390 • FA 4-6800j SUN LIFE ASSURANCE[ ^ ineifi ear hsspitd l clinicMl 3-3113We Are Moving To:2306 E. 71st ST.DATE: March 1stNEW PREMISES: Crandon Garage Held Over — Three Days Only!“A Masterpiece...nothing short of miraculous... all of Bergmans skillsare on view in The Magician’which all in all is a superbmotion picture”—The New Yorker “Rich in Comedyand melodrama as well asdeep philosophical thought... it is a thoroughly excit¬ing film." — Bosley Crow-ther, N.Y. Times.m INGMAR BERGMAN Smm— and —"f “Wonderfully Wocky Charocfers'' . . . N.Y. TimesI "nt smallest sHoiwONEiRlH,»»MARGARET("Blithe Spirit")RUTHERFORD (tarrinflBIU (“Wet Ceordit")TRAVERSPETER(“Mouse Thot Roared")SELLERSStarts Monday, March 7th—Four Days OnlyReguert Repeat ShowingThe New Yorker: "One of the best pictures of recent years/'Saturday Review: Jules Dassin's "Rififi," wos a bog of tricks comparedto his "He Who Must Die" . . .FOREIGN FILM OF YEAR”-C.-ewfAer, N. V. TimetJULES DAS$W$|/j)lftS IT’TI who ntuSV dienlooMANYCROOKS and —A good crazy, brisk farce comedy. . . agitate Terry-Thomas, theBritish comic, with scene-chewingmaterial and you get some of thefiercest conniptions on the con¬temporary screen."—New York Times.STARRINGTERRY THOMASGEORGE COLEBRENDA DE BANZIEM^rcn 4> \9Q0, •, CH.I C £ <? 0 MAROONr-.ft:;-'Placement bureau aids in job selectionby Dorothy DorfA large university is oftenimpersonal, and students whowish jobs in their fields aftergraduation or undergraduateswho are not sure of a majorand do not know in whichfields they would do best, oftendon’t know whom to consult. Thedepartment of Vocational Guid¬ance and Placement handles thesedifficulties at UC.“The title of our office has beenused for 30 years and has a longand honorable history,” said Mrs.Ruth O. McCarn, director. “Vo¬cational is the term for what is'now called educational guidanceor information about opportuni¬ties in the professions, business,teaching, and industry.“We cooperate with the Univer¬sity’s departments and profes¬sional schools, in operating aplacement service which is avail¬able without charge to studentswho have completed three quar¬ters or eight courses at the uni¬versity.“Most of the positions we fillare for students interested in theteaching profession. The oppor¬tunities in this field are sothat the student can specify whatstate and city he or she wisheswork in and we can place themthere,” said Mrs. McCarn. “Thereis a man in Ghana now who willbe back soon and has written usasking for a teaching position insuch and such a place. We’re surewe can find him one and willnotify him of our vacancies.“Teachers are placed at alllevels, from kindergarten to col¬lege deans, though we don’t han¬dle too many of the latter. Peo¬ple are placed years after theygraduate, and often we will beasked to look up the credentialsof a man who graduated here 25years ago,” said Mrs. McCarn.Last year 125 industries andbusinesses sent representatives tothe bureau looking for prospec¬tive employes. “In fact, peoplemajoring in chemistry, physics,or mathematics are in such de¬mand that our difficulty is to keep them in school long enoughfor them to get a degree. For ex¬ample, the head of a math de¬partment in a college that needsanother mathematician on itsstaff, will write to a friend in themath department at anotherschool and ask him to recommendthe top Phd candidates,” com¬mented Mrs. McCarn. for and find satisfying and im¬portant Women are marryingyoung today, having children ear¬ly in life and then going back towork when the children are inschool or grown up. They shouldplan to do something skilled andsomething which they find in¬teresting rather than to rely onoffice work. It is very importantRuth McCarn, director of Vocational Guidance and place¬ment bureau. own working hours, establish anoffice from her home, and makea very good income even If sheonly works when the children arein school,” said Mrs. McCarn.In addition to placing graduatestudents in jobs, the bureaumakes available listings of fel¬lowships and scholarships avail¬able for graduate studies in col¬leges across the nation. “For thelast year we’ve been putting outa series of bulletins notifying stu¬dents of the scholarships avail¬able in their areas. There hasbeen a big response with manypeople coming in to find out theopportunities open to them. Afterall, few today can afford graduateschool entirely on their own,”commented Mrs. McCarn. “As anexample, UC has established anew two year program for a mas-sters degree in the field of teach¬ing. The department offers schol¬arships in varying amounts forthe first year of study in one often subject fields, and in the sec¬ond year there is a paid appren¬ticeship and continued work inuniversity courses.“We offer undergraduate stu¬dents vocational counseling whichconsists of about three and one-half hours of interest tests andpersonal interviews in an attemptto show them in what fields theirabilities lie, and to help themchoose a major. The process of“I’d especially like to emph-size that all these fields are opento women, and companies wouldbe glad to take on women accord¬ing to the many studies made ofwomen in the labor market Thereare many interesting things inthe world of work that women,if they knew about, could qualify vocational guidance enables thestudent to find out more abouthimself and to gain informationabout vocations. I urge studentsin their second year who are stillundecided to come in and takethese tests. They help prevent agreat deal of wasted effort,” saidMrs. McCarn.As a special service for under¬graduates, the bureau has putout a bulletin in conjunction withthe Personnel office telling of op-portun ities available for summerwork. The listing includes neigh,boring camps, Federal agencies,actuarial work, and state civilservice jobs. This bulletin alongwith the announcements of schol.arships and fellowships which areavailable for graduate work maybe picked up at the office of Vo¬cational Guidance and Placementlocated in Room 200, in the Reyn¬olds club. Appointments for voca¬tional guidance may be made ina neighboring office.Students are registered withthe bureau after they have com¬pleted three quarters or eightcourses at the university. LowelCalvin does business and industryinterviews. Miss Dolores Novoselis responsible for interest testingand placement for women. MissGrace Mathews does teacherplacement interviews. “We urgeall graduating students to register with us,” said Mrs. McCarn.to believe that the work you aredoing is important and necessary.“For example, my dentist Is awoman, and this is very rare inthe United States, though in mostEuropean countries, Scandinavia,and Slavic nations, the majorityof dentists are women. This is afield In which one can pick her Crad fellowships availableMany opportunities for graduate study in 1960-61 with fi¬nancial aid are available to UC students. Among the manyfellowship and assistantship offers on file in the Office ofVocational Guidance and Placement are these: The Rotaryfoundation fellowships for Inter-national understanding for one search assistantships in “the prin-academic year of graduate study, ciPal fields ot University study.”the Alfred P. Sloan National fel- Additional information aboutlowships ,„r prospective teachersof secondary school math and sci- ate financial aid opportunities, isence, available only at Harvard, available in the Office of Voca-and the University of Rhode tional Guidance and Placement,Island, Graduate fellowships, director Ruth McCarn, in roomteaching assistantships, and re- 202 in the Reynolds club.16 • New cigarette paper "air-softens" every puff!Now even the paper adds to.Salem's springtime freshness ISalem's amaxing newHIGH POROSITY paper''air-softens" everyInvisible porous openingsblend just the right amount of air witheach pufF to give you a softer, fresher,even more flavorful smoke. An important break-through in Salem'sresearch laboratories brings you thisspecial new High Porosity paper whichbreathes new freshness into the flavor.Each puff on a Salem draws just enough Crested hr B. 3. Beynoldi Tobacco Companyfresh air in through the paper to make thesmoke taste even softer, fresher, moreflavorful. If you’ve enjoyed Salem’s spring¬time freshness before, you’ll be even morepleased now. Smoke refreshed, smoke Salem!NOW MORE THAN EVER • menthol fresh • rich tobacco taste • modern filter, tooSalGm refreshes your tasteCHICAGO M A R 0 0 N • March 4, 1960