The new building of UCs Laboratory school, above, will be dedicated next Thursday.(Photo by Berger)PenwlWil * H •< -* ^ •Fraternity rush opensFraternity rush smokers, for returning and transfer students,will begin next Monday. Smokers begin at 7:30 pm and end at10 pm. Smokers are scheduled for the following days;Monday, October 24Phi Sigma Delta 5625 S. Woodlawn avenueKappa Alpha PhI 4762 S. Ellis avenueTuesday, October 25Phi Kappa N 5555 S. Woodlawn avenuePhI Upsiloii 5639 University avenueWednesday, October 26Delta Upsllon 5714 S. Woodlawn avenueAlpha Delta Phi 5747 S. University avenueThursday, October 27Phi Delta Theta 5625 S. University avenuePhi Gamma Delta 5615 S. University avenueFriday, October 28Zeta Beta Tau 5554 S. Woodlawn avenueBeta Theta Pi 5747 S. University avenue Study apartment-dormsThe use of apartments asan extension ot the dormitorysystem was discussed a weekago Thursday by the Boardof trustees. The board au¬thorized an extensive study todetermine the possibility of theUniversity buying or rentingapartment buildings for studentuse.Since all first year under¬graduates will be required tospend four years living in Uni¬versity managed residences andsince men must now spend twoyears in the dorms, an increasein available housing units ismandatory. The use of apart¬ ment buildings would solve this them. Women would have th«problem, and provide a satisfac- same hours system currentlytory variety in the present hous- applied in the dorms. “We feeling system according to Assis- that a housing head can make atant Dean of Student James E. real contribution to communityNewman. living,” Newman explained.Some 300-350 additional beds Newman added that in an idealwill be needed next year, accord- system, the fraternities woulding to John Netherton, Dean of aiso have housing heads but thatStudents. Despite the recent he did not see how this could beopening of the first Pierce achieved on this campus. Neth-tower, there was a slight short- erton is currently interested inage of rooms this fall. The see- the idea of -older transfer .stu*ond Pierce Tower cannot possi- dents living in the fraternitiesWy be completed before the be- jn order to provide some sort ofginning of the next school year, guidance to the younger mem-In order to provide facilities hers,for all the students who now h that the apart*must live in university houses, ^ . •- , , .either apartments or hotel wil1 «votv* hito a sort ofrooms must be procured for community. He sees little ad*next year, or students whose vantage In apartment livingresidence is not required must where the residents of one unitbe removed from the dorms. ^ kBM, redden* rf'„ Pla" “ „de!:ra',le the unit across the hall.“In principle, Netherton ex¬plained, “I believe that housing “Each building unit should b#Vol. 69 — Ho. 45 University of Chicago, October 21, 1960Fraternities to vote onnew plan for fall rushThe Inter-fraternity coun¬cil has tentatively voted tointroduce a plan of open rush¬ing during the Fall quarter forentering students. A prelim¬inary vote was taken on thismeasure at the regular IF meet¬ing last Tuesday evening, withi lie final vote to be mailed innext week after each fraternityhas its Monday night chaptermeeting.IF rules now prohibit a fra¬ternity member from approach¬ing any entering student regard¬ing pledging until Winter quar¬tet. Transfer students may berushed at any time in the fall.The new legislation will not af¬fect transfer rushees but ifpassed finally will make first-v ear men eligible for rush for aperiod extending from Friday ofthe fifth week until the Sundayfollowing Thanksgiving. Underthe proposed plan, the fifth weekwould be deyoted for sqookersfor 1st year students.There will then be a lapse ofapproximately three weeks dur-ng which rush will once more*e illegal. Pledge cards may not»e signed until the end of thelist week of the Winter quartersmokers as under the currentsystem. ber of the faculty who has volun¬teered to receive second-year fra¬ternity men in his home for in¬formal entertainment one eve¬ning this quarter. It is hopedthat the undergraduates willhave a chance to find informa¬tive discussion on academic andextra-curricular activities withtheir faculty fellow.DU's protestThe representatives from DeltaUpsilon went on record as havingbeen miscounted in their - votetwo weeks ago to protest the ad¬ ministration’s new housing rule.The DU's wanted to make clearthat they had voted with the ma>jority of the council to write aletter denouncing the fact thatentering students must agree tolive in a University supervisedbuilding for two yeras after en¬trance.Joel Snyder of.'Phi Sigma Deltaannounced that the rushing bro¬chure is ready for printing. Thispamphlet will describe the fra¬ternity system to entering men. some proportion of our resident Provided with at least one ade*unmarried students m apart- Qua<e lounge. even at the ele¬ment buildings can be a desir- of *°me remodelling and,able addition to the Student wh<?rG necessary, the absorptionhousing program, not only from of hvin?“nits' accordinga quantitative but also front a to Netherton “This space shouldqualitative point of view. - ** sufficiently spacious to be“This would apply to under- **** scene of periodic meetings ofgraduate as well as graduate wthe residents of the build-students.” “'S* tBecause the study has but be- Co*t lowerg»m many common questions as To the extent that the a paidto the apartment plans cannot ment units for unmarried stt*be answered at this time. It is dents could be offered as rela*not known, for example, whether tively low-cost accommodations^the proposed apartment build- i.e., at the lower end of theings will be “co-educational” or range of rentals in the Univen*whether the different sexes will sity’s own housing system, andhave different buildings. “Could also to the extent that theyIt be worked out, a mixed apart- would offer opportunity of ecoivment building might be quite omy through home cooking, theyproductive,” commented Alan would meet the kind of felt needSimpson, dean of the college. met in the past by such unitsNo limits have been set as to - . . .the minimum maximum size ot as Gates-Blake, where housinga building, although Newman contracts for room without boardhas earlier commented that he have been available, and somawould regard 25 as being a min- cooking privileges offered in in*imum number. ' prevised kitehens in the base.Whatever their size, the build-ings would have Residence ment’ Thus one member of th*Heads, members of the Univer- administration views the neaKsiyt housing stafft living in plan.Fleming at UC for dedicationDeans decline commentDeans Netherton and Newmanhave declined any comment untilthey are officially informed ofthe action by the IFC.Ansel Edidin of Phi SigmaDelta explained that effectivelythis will mean that fraternitiesmay be as ambitious about therushing period as they wish. Theonly nights that a fraternity maynot invite an entering student toits house are the nights of Inter¬fraternity ball, the Inter-clubpref dinner, and the Interfra-ternity beer bust.Edidin pointed out that therewould still be no rush during thefirst month of the quarter, whilenew students are still becomingacclimated to University life.Also includt I in the IF min¬utes was an announcement fromKent Kirwan, assistant directorof student activities, that 12 Rus¬sian students will be visiting thecampus next month and will behoused in the fraternity chapterhouses. Assistant dean of stu¬dents Max Putzel and Mrs. A.Frank, a representative of thenational student exchange pro¬gram are handling the program•or the University.James Newman, director ofstudent activities, was on handi0 announce the faculty fellowprogram in which the fraternitysystem will participate. Each fra¬ternity will be assigned a mem* Arthur S. Fleming, US sec¬retary of health, education,and welfare, will speak at thededication of UC’s new$2,500,000 University highschool building at 8:15 pmnext Thursday.Other guests at the dedicationwill include donors to the Univer¬sity High School campaign, pres¬ent and former members of thefaculty of the University of Chi¬cago pre-collegiate schools, fac¬ulty of the Graduate School ofEducation, and officers and trus¬tees of the University.A reception and dinner forabout 400 persons at the Guad-rangle club will precede the ded¬ication. Tours of the new build¬ing, at 5834 South Kenwood Ave¬nue, will be conducted at 7:30 pmand at 9:45 pm on Thursday.Facilities in use A canteen-cafeteria student ac¬tivities area.22 classrooms equipped for useof audio-visual equipment, in¬cluding origination and receivingof closed circuit television pro¬grams.School sets standardsThe University high school hasbeen setting standards forschools throughout the world formore than a half-century.Educators, including JohnDewey, William Rainey Harper,Francis Whalen Parker, andHenry Holmes Belfield, createdthe high school as a model forsecondary school education In1903. ments of philosophy, psychology,and pedagogy, was most instru¬mental in founding the Univer¬sity High School.It was founded to test Ms edu¬cational theories, and was a com¬plete break with traditionalschools. Dewey had to combatstrong criticisms in Ms programot education by practical appli¬cations.John Dewey, who came to UCin 1894 as head of the depart¬ He believed h» eliminating thebreak between the home and thechild's first contact with th$school. Instead of beginning edu¬cation with the 3 r’s, Deweytaught basic and simplified •occu¬pations of life.The child was to become partof a group, not a competing indi¬ vidual. He was to learn to liwhis present life, instead of justpreparing for adult life.In school, the child was to bechallenged to solve problems cre«atively and independently. Deweyeliminated memorization and rot#learning.Discipline self-imposedDiscipline was self imposed bythe problem the student had setfor himself. There were no prizesand false incentives.The teacher was to work to¬wards the child’s growth, consid¬ering his strengths, aptitude^and limitations. The teacher, fur¬thermore, had to challenge thechild with stimulating problems.The teacher, in addition, was to(Continued on page 111The school’s 600 students havebeen using its facilities since thefall term began.Roy A. Larmee, director of pre-collegiate education at UC, said,“The dedicatory celebration willmark the completion of an ideato provide the latest facilitiesavailable for the developmentand operation of a teaching-learning laboratory space for sec¬ondary education. It is a steppingstone to our greater purpose—the best possible education fewchildren.”UC graduate students in educa¬tion practice teaching at the Uni¬versity High School.The building includes the fol¬lowing features to help educatescientists, scholars, and teachers,as well as high school students:A 20,000 volume library withan independent study laboratory,sound-proof conference rooms forteachers, and student workrooms.Six rooms for the developmentandr testing of new teachingideas.Seven new science laboratories.A foreign language laboratory.-': ■ y'x"' - ‘ ')*’/ \ • VYPSL give classesA fall series of classes on current topics conducted by theYoung Peoples Socialist league (YPSL) will begin Saturday,October 22, at 3 pm in the Ida Noyes East lounge.The classes will be offered every second Saturday for theeight weeks thereafter, under thesupervision of University profes¬sors. The first class is entitled,“Marx’s Philosophy as a contem¬porary ideology and as an analyt¬ical tool in the understanding ofhistory.” The meetings are opento all interested students.“This presidential campaignwith all its fanfare about “newfrontiers,” “great debate,” “hoursof crises,” etc. has not providedthe American people with anysharply outlined political alterna¬tives,” stated Bob Brown, chair¬man of YPSL at the University.“It is this atmosphere of ‘me-tooism’ that I feel is causing moreand more young people to seekelsewhere for answers,” Brownwent on, in explaining the rea¬sons for the formation of theclasses. “The basic issues havenot been discussed in the cam¬paign and therefore it is in thisspirit that we offer classes as amore meaningful political actthan discussing personalities.”Other topics to be discussed inthe forthcoming classes will be:“Socialist politics: Nature ofAmerican capitalism and the re¬lationship between the workingclass and social change and therole of the Socialist movement inthe United States”; “The relation¬ship between the colonial revolu¬tions and the cold war: Does theCuban revolution represent thenext stage in the colonial revolu¬tion? an examination of Amer¬ican capitalism and its foreignpolicy in underdeveloped nations,”“An historical analysis of the rev¬olution of the Soviet state: Do the Khrushchevist reforms alter thenature of the Russian state?”Another series of classes washeld by the YPSL two summersago with George Rawick, a Uni¬versity instructor in Social Sci¬ence, as one of the lecturers. Theseries was termed a “success” byBrown. At least fifty people at¬tended those classes and some la¬ter joined the YPSL. Brown em¬phasized, however, that the pur¬poses of the classes is not to tryto recruit members.Classes on other subjects willbe held during the winter quarter.These will be primarily for YPSLmembers, but others are welcometo attend.The classes will begin withsome introductory comments bythe professor leading the class.Then the class will discuss thetopic. Reading for the first classwill be “Socialism, Utopian andScientific” by Frederick Engels.YPSL’s other educational activ¬ities on the campus include thesponsoring of guest lecturers andthe sale of socialist literature.These activities are geared to thecampus as other YPSL chaptersgear their programs to the par¬ticular region in which they oper¬ate. Tax questions "watered-down"high school biology textbooks(Editors note — As chairman of UC’s Darwin centennial last year, Sol Tax became acquainted u'iththe problems of teaching Darwin's theory. In this article and in today's panel discussion in Mandelhall announced on page 11, Mr. Tax is concerned with one of these problems.)by Sol TaxMost of US suppose that the It there is a law against the it is what makes sense out of bkTennessee “Monkey Trial” teaching of evolution the school ology. We wondered why highkilled off any bad effects of ^fi,ciaIs ucannot, accuept a. <ext' scfh°ols sti11 do tcac* Partthe law aeainst teaching evo- book whlch descnbes *>»°logy of the answer all over the coun-tne law against teacning evo- evolutionary try may well be the laws on thewas a law that was “reoealed bv terms- If lt mentlons evolution statute books of a few states.r.j. 1 ., T th . , thiJVnr, if t at all, it must be as a “theory” The presence on campus ofthought about the Scopes trial at tha* is at ^ an alternative to John Scopes is an opportunity toIn f.ntii a literal reading of the Book of ask how true this all is. Howall until the Darwin Centenn.al Genesjs * watered down are the textbooks”What does the publisher do? And if science teaching is indeedHe can publish scientifically crippled not alone in a few statesvalid textbooks and “skip” these but even far beyond — then weIn making the film I worked s^ateSj or can publish a wa- should ask whether we do notwith Britanica Films personnel fere(j down edition for these need- a new -Scopes trial. Johnwho make biology films for high stad€s a]one; both solutions are Scopes was convicted and fined,school students; and I talked to economically difficult in a highly and the case allowed to fade outeducators and text-book publish- competitive field. Or—and this is of public consciousness. Theers. As one should around a uni- by far the easiest—he can water higher courts have not had anverslty, I learned something new: down and skim over the evolu- opportunity to judge the consti-there are several states in which tionary facts of life for every- tutionality of the law. In 1925 thethere are laws against the teach- This is especially tempting court in Tennessee could not por¬ing of evolution, and those laws because in every state there are mit the testimony of scientists,deprive high school students in people who prefer not to face Science testified amply last yeare\ery state in the ebuntry of sojonfifjc facts and school per- in Mandell hall. Could what schol-part of their education in bnd- who wouId just as soon ars know be put now in the bal-°®’y* not fight with them. anee against the myths of the ig-A publisher who brings out in the Centennial last year it noranthigh school textbooks wants to became clear that biologists no This is a question T hope thatsell them. School boards have to longer doubt that evolution is a the panel this afternoon mightadopt, or at least approve them, fact, not a vague theory: Indeed, answer.last year, when of course noth¬ing concerning evolution couldbe kept out of mind.Socialism is man's hope: Frommcampuscharacter: “Democratic socialism isthe only answer to the futureof man,” said Erich Frommspeaking last Sunday in Man-del hall. Dr. Fromm said that herealized that this theory was inconflict with some psychologicaltheories but that it did fit withsome especially Marx, whom hecalled “the most unknown, dis¬torted, and misunderstood au¬thor.”Dr. Fromm’s theory includessocialism as the only way torthe realization of man. “Social¬ism, said Dr. Fromm, must beradical. To be radical is to go tothe roots and the root is man.Today things are in the saddleand ride man. Sociolists want to put man, the total, creative, realman, back into the saddle.’”Dr. Fromm discussed the prob¬lem of industrialization and thoseforces which tend to make theworkers produce more. The prob¬lem he was concerned about waswhen production rate and theGifts for AII OccasionsKOGA GIFT SHOPImported ond Domestic Dry GoodsChinaware - Jewelry - KimonosSandals - Greeting CardsLay-AwayMisa Koga 1203 E. 55 St.*1U 4-6856 Chicago 15, 111. as a “highly materialistic societywhere the quest is not for knowl¬edge but for money. Our societyis bureaucratic and man has be¬come prisoner of his own cir¬cumstances.” He explained thebiblical term idolatry as thestudy and worship by man ofthat which he has made himself.The communist countries ofRussia and China do not provideany answer for Dr. Fromm. Hebelieves Russia lost the spirit ofthe revolution when Lenin diedand Trotsky left Russia. Thenext period of development in¬cluded Stalin’s crimes and thebuilding up of state capitalism.Fromm described Russia as a bureaucracy and the most reac¬tionary, conservative policestate.” He does not think thatthey are socialist but ratherstate capitalism or a super car¬tel. \The aims of socialism accord¬ing to Fromm are to make a “so¬cial organization which producesfor you and not for profit.” Hebelieves socialists “have a deepfaith in man” and a vision for :.new society that will “put manback into the self.”Dr. Fromm spoke under theauspices of the Young PeoplesSocialist league, the youth or¬ganization of the Socialist Party-Social Democratic federation.conditions of workers come into versity.conflict. He said that we “chose Powell, a Democrat, will be-the highest profit value as op- come chairman next year of theposed to the highest human important House Committee onvalue.” Education and Labor. ThroughPowell will speakHarlem Congressman Adam Clayton Powell will talk withfaculty members and students today at a luncheon in theBurton-Judson dining hall. He plans to discuss federal aidto education, urban renewal and oher topics of interest topersons connected with the Uni- —education, urban renewal and la¬bor must reach the House floor.At 3 pm Powell will attend acocktail reception sponsored byBLACKSTONETORTPride 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!(COOPER'S INCORPORATED -KENOSHA. WIS.tyockey€> BRANDbriefsCHICAGO MAROON • Oct, 21, 1960TAhSAM-Y&NCHINESE . AMERICAN/ ..RESTAURANTSpecializing in 'CANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 4.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TARE OUT1318 Eat* 63rd St. BU 8-9018 Chester llmvles . . .Political Debate . • .Renaissance SocietyTalk it over at themediaFromm described our society this committee all bills on aid to f°r Kennedy in the Al¬pha Delta house. At the receptionhe will continue his discussionswith faculty members and stu¬dents, and meet with BarrattO’Hara, Democratic Congress¬man from the UC area, and Dem¬ocratic candidate for States At¬torney Daniel Ward.John Young, administrative as¬sistant to Powell, said the NegroCongressman in stopping at UCand about thirty-five other uni¬versities in all parts of the coun¬try in an effort to learn moreabout student and faculty opin¬ion on various federal aid to edu¬cation measures and other mat¬ters that concern universities.Young added that Powell will becampaigning for Senators Ken¬nedy and Johnson en route.r— •••mm „i ■■ ■*Open Nightly 7:30 — Saturday All AfternoonSunday from 10 a.m.30% OFF On QualityDRY CLEANINGAll work done by o regular Chicago Wholesaler whose plant servesothor retail stores in addition to his own outlet?. You get this servicebeaouVe of our non-profit policy and low overhead.Trousers . 50c Shirts 50cJackets . . 50c Dresses 95cSuits . . . . 95c Suits 12 piece) . . 95cTopcoats ' 1.00 Light Coat 95cOvercoats 1.10 H*avv Coat . . . . 1.10Yen’ 20% Off on 411 LaundryUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERReynolds Club BasementHours: 11:00- 1:00 — 3:30 - 5:00 If you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou¬blesome problem.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.BU 8 6711*sMal *'Pressure groups** oppose A-test banPauling predicts end ot war in speech here** Humanity is now in a won¬derful time, a time when warwill be eliminated,” said LinusPauling Monday evening inMandel hall.Pauling, Nobel prize win-professor of chemistry at the structiveness of today’s weapons,would be devastating.“Present hydrogen weapons areas much as 20 million times as de¬structive as the most powerfulCalifornia Institute of Technolo¬gy, spoke as part of a nation-widecrusade for peace. Pauling, whowas sponsored by the StudentPeace Union, was originallyscheduled to speak in the Breast¬ed hall auditorium, but an unex¬pectedly large turnout necessitat¬ed a transfer to the larger Mandelhall.His lecture was preceded by aten minute speech by Morris Frie-dell. acting chairman of SPU,who described the work of hisorganization in promoting peace.The UC branch of SPU is one of4<) branches in the country.Nobody benefits from warPauling began his address bysaying, “Nobody benefits fromwar, which is a great immorality.Kven the victorious nations loseeconomic ground in a war andnow the only alternative to peaceis total destruction. Even the mostpressing issues between nationsmust henceforth be settled bynegotiation.“The world and the US are nowalso in the gravest danger of theirhistory,” Pauling continued.“There is an enormous dangerfrom a nuclear accident, whetherit he mechanical or psychological.A single bomb dropped anywherein the world would set off an un¬controllable chain reaction of re¬taliatory bombing all over theworld which, because of the de¬ blockbuster of World War II. The$80,000 worth of conventional ex¬plosive, fissionable, and fusion-able material in a hydrogen bombcan generate a temperature of 59million degrees capable of de¬ stroying an area 20 miles in dia¬meter.“In addition, there is gravedanger from the radioactivity ofsuch a bomb. There is ten timesenough radioactivity in an area often thousand square miles aroundthe explosion site of a 20 mega¬ton bomb within a few hours ofdetonation, to kill everyone inthat area.It would take only three hun¬dred 20 megaton bombs to killeveryone in the country exceptfor a few million people in thenorthern Rocky Mountain area.Pauling assured “The US iswell ahead of the USSR in thearms race. This country possesses115,000 nuclear weapons of alldescriptions, or as much as thirtytimes enough destructive force tokill everyone in Russia. The Rus¬sians have only 15 times enoughnuclear power to kill everyone inthis country.Could create mutants“In addition to the world’s pres¬ent capacity to destroy itself,thousand megaton bombs so de¬structive that six could kill everyperson in the US are possiblesoon. Testing such a bomb wouldcause one million grossly defec¬tive mutants in America’s nextgeneration of children.”Pauling also said, “There canbe no possibility of a country ini¬tiating nuclear war without beingdestroyed in turn. The countrythat strikes first may have tenmillion survivors against fivemillion in the losing country.“On the other hand, to counter¬balance these statistics some ef¬forts for peace are being made,such as the agreement of the USand Great Britain for a unilateralBowles talks tomorrow in MandelStudents will have an opportunity to hear Chester Bowles address a mixed audience ofstudents, faculty members, and residents of the Hyde Park community, tomorrow after¬noon at 3:15, in Mandel hall, on the topic of foreign affairs. Illinois Congressman, BarrattO’Hara will speak briefly before Mr. Bowles.Bowles, the top Democratic advisor on foreign policy, was chairman of the Democraticplatform committee and has been mentioned as a probable Secretary of State if SenatorKennedy is elected. He began his — — —activity in international affairsin 1046 as a member of the Dem¬ocratic advisory council on For¬eign policy, the American Afri¬can society, and the AmericanNational commission for theKN'PISCO conference in Paris.Later, he became internationalchairman of the United NationsAppeal for children, and a mem¬ber of the Asia Association. From1951 to 1953 he was the AmericanAmbassador to India and the firstAmerican Ambassador to Nepal.In addition to his experience inforeign affairs, Bowles hasheld numerous domestic posi¬tions. In 1943 Franklin D. Roose¬velt appointed him the Adminis¬trator of the Office of price ad¬ministration, and from 1948 to1951 Bowles served as Governor°f Connecticut. He was a mem-t**r of the Board of trustees of the Rockefeller foundation, andof the Board of directors of theWoodrow Wilson foundation. In1950 ,he was awarded the Frank¬lin Delano Roosevelt award forthe fight against racial discrimi¬nation.Bowles has also lectured atmany colleges and universities,among them, Harvard, Univer¬sity of California at Berkeley,Yale, and Bryn Mawr where hedelivered the Anna Howard Shawmemorial lectures from 1953 to1954. His publications includeseveral books and articles on pol¬itics and international affairsamong which are: Tomorrowwithout fear, 1946, The new di¬mensions of peace, 1955, andAmerican polities in a revolu¬tionary world, 1956. Presently,Bowles is a representative from Connecticut, although he declinedto seek re-election since hewished to devote his full time tothe Kennedy campaign.Walter Johnson, chairman ofthe history department, will in¬troduce Bowles to the audience,and Tony Cordesman, chairmanof Students for Kennedy in Illi¬nois, and a co-chairman of theUC Students for Kennedy, willact as chairman.The Bowles speech is part ofan effort on the part of UC Stu¬dents for Kennedy to reach notonly students, but adults in thecollege and in the neighboringcommunity, according to Dave'Greenstone, co-chairman of UCStudents for Kennedy. He addedthat this has been one of the ma¬jor efforts of Students for Ken¬nedy.GET A FREE TRAVEL POSTER ONBOOKING YOUR AIRLINE RESERVATIONSBEFORE NOVEMBER 15atftlarco Bolo Utraotl BerniceTravel Advisers Since 1276No Charge for Our ServicesTickets On All Airlines Student ToursSki Trips Budget Rent-A-CarSteamship and Freighter Tickets Hotel ReservationsOpen Doily 10 o.m. - 6 p.nt.J AI*o Mon. Eves.1658 E. 55th St. BU 8-5944 test ban starting October 30, 1959.Negotiations with Russia for per¬manent cessation of nuclear testshave been going on for two yearsnow in Geneva and are virtuallycomplete except for a prolongeddeadlock over such minor mat¬ters as the number of inspectionsto be held annually and the selec¬tion of nations to be asked to par¬ticipate in the agreement.“This country is partly toblame for the failure to agree be¬cause of pressure groups like theAtomic Energy Commissionwhich are opposed to sanity andmorality in the form of a testban. Among those opposed to atest ban are such distinguishedand influential scientists as Sr.Edward Teller. Teller seems toaccept the inevitability of nuclearwar and favors a $100 billion fall¬out shelter program which heestimates would save 75 per centof the people in the country inthe event of war.” According toPauling, Teller cites Nelson D.Rockefeller as the country’s lead¬ ing expert on the biological ef¬fects of high energy radiation.Pauling’s own estimate is that theprogram would save no morethan five to 15 per cent.Pauling also cRed Dean Maniouof Notre Dame university as oneof those opposed to cessation ofnuclear testing. In a recent tele¬vision appearance with Paulingand Dr. Erich Fromm, Manionsaid that he would be willing tosacrifice 60 million Americans tobe able to destroy all the Russiansbecause the Russians are godless.Pauling and Fromm retorted thatthey, too. are godless, and Manionexpressed the wish that theywould die along with the 60 mft-lion.Pauling concluded by assertingthat the peace movement mustbecome not “a little polite move¬ment but a great movement.” Hisaid, “We must forget national¬ism, militarism, and economic e»ploitation, that we will succeed,but we must fight to succeed. Ibelieve that we are going to win.*He was given a standing ovation.PHI SIGMA DELTA SMOKER7:30 p.m. October 24, 1960All Second Year and Transfer StudentsCordially Invited5625 S. Woodlqwn (MEMO FROMJ. EDWARD FEINWhy it pays to ownlifelong security beforeyou re on your ownMany college graduates today enjoy the peace of minothat comes from knowing that their families are pro¬tected by life insurance. Among these graduates arethose who are saving many dollars because they tookout their insurance while still at school... thereby tak¬ing advantage of the low premiums offered by NewYork Life.Included in the program are several different types ofplans. And because of the non-hazardous nature of yourstudent occupation and your age, low premiums aremade possible. In addition, under my personal arrange¬ment you can defer payment of the premium until afteryou graduate.You’ll And it a good idea to get all the facts on NewYork Life's student insurance program and why it wttlpay you to get started before you graduate.Send for your free copy of the informative booklet;“It’s Your Move, Joe ...”write ... phone ... or visitJ. EDWARD FEINCampus RepresentativeNew York LifeInsurance Company134 S. USolleOct. 21, 1960 • CE 6-5438CHICAGO MAROON • 3u>NKoch couse for ThoughtU of Illinois reviewsdismissal procedure Case dismissed Againststudent pamphleteerCharges were dropped Wednes- ney and Miss Romero’s lawyers,day against 18 year old Dolores provided by the American CivilRomero, a first year student at Liberties Union (ACLU), askedthe University of Illinois. that the charges of litering and(UPS) The University of to defend himself before a prop- tee of the College of Liberal Miss Romero was arrested hi trespassing on CTA property beIllinois Senate resolved Mon- er*y elected committee of his Arts and Sciences because a let- Chicago last August while distrib- dropped. This was done, over thedav that its Committee on Peers P™wr to any suspension, ter Written by him to The Daily uting anti segregation pamphlets objections of attorneys for theAradomir* Frppdnm rpfnrmn arK* *n anY case Prior to a rec- Illinois discussing pre marital sex ^ property owned by the Chicago CTA.fcUe the University Sudide^to ommendation for a discharge.” relations, “raised considerable Authority (CTA) in Chi- The «*** of Ra,Ph Wright Jr.,^ Koch was suspended from his doubt as to his sense of academic J ransit Autnonty 'tiA) a 22 year-old senior at Roosevelt»»ith duties on April 7 on recommen- responsibility and hence as to his C*K°s Coop. university who was arrested withBoth the Illinois State’s attor- Miss Romero, has been continueduntil November 16.Joe) Sprayragen, staff counselfor the ACLU, commented:"The action of the State’s at¬torney in ordering the ease dis¬missed as well as the editorialsupport of the Chicago Sun Timesdation of the executive commit- further usefulness as a teacher.’Conference slates protestwith the generally accepted pro¬cedure in faculty dismissal pro¬ceedings.This acrion is seen -as a directresult of criticism about themethod of dismisal of Leo Koch,former associate professor of bi¬ology at Illinois. ^ ^ ^ .It follows a statement by the A nation-wide civil rights demonstration has been called for this coming election day by are^mpresrfve^ciemoiMtration.sofBoard of Trustees on September the Student Non-violent Co-ordinating committee (SNCC). This was a major action emerg- the community’s sentiment that it21 which said, "if the provisions jng fr0m the three-day SNCC conference held last weekend in Atlanta, Georgia. is no crime to distribute civilof the University Statutes deal- Representatives from 47 protest areas in 17 southern states attended the conference as rights literature.”ing With dismissal of faculty voti delegates. Many northern students also attended as observers. Two UC students Sprayragen said that the casemembers are not considered to DresenU John Hodges Roper and Vivian Scott. involved a more complex issuebe proper and adequate, the "g.e„j^nUttiveTf rom»evTral — — than the fart that the students’Board is willing to consider sug- . n7h “These are the three political caucuses filled out the weekend, actions look place on public prop-gested changes in them.” The NalionaTstudrttt assortation points wbieh must be at the een- “One topic not discussed at At- erty. "There are free speechThe reformulated sections are (j^SAt The National Urban ter of the project: (1) We demand lanta was the importance of the lights which are even attached toto be presented at a Senate meet- ^ ’ National Scholarship and immediate action on civil rights NSA-Woolworth conference held private property,” said Spray-2 T7* 1 #1/>1 ' © ’ R At.« ui/Aamiaiio t iiict nrlnr tn thn QMPP mootiniv vr.mg in February, 1&61 Service Fund for Negro Students, from the victorious candidate. (2) just prior to the SNCC meeting, ragen.We demand a real voting bill and Two representatives from SNCC The CTA had claimed itsa defeat of the bi partisan coali- had been invited to this New York property was "private,” evention. (3) W’e assert that th& vote meeting, but failed to arrive. though it is a public agency.At this meeting four of the na- The two students were arrestedgroup ofout a statement which effectively about twenty was picketing in‘The demonstrations should endorses the sit-ins as having frontThe resolution is in line with and the NAACP.the report of the Committee on The call for the national demonAcademic 1 reedom of the Sen- Oration reads as follows: . h 5 »mi rrucial ri«ht in aate which unanimously recom- "There is a widesnread feeline- S a ”as,c an” ‘ ruoal ri„lit in a — — ---mended on May 13 that "the a„ ,evels of the Civil Rights °n® U‘ mUSt *** Honal vmrlety chaln atorea worked on August 6 while aStatutes of the University be re- movement that there is no clear exer<lsed-vised as to assure amember that, in case of a disl . nin ” . „ ‘ ... , tiay. incy SMOU1U HlVUlve A mail'll o.iil.v nmiiimb III*- siures 10 ontieular, an adequate opportunity (usually a City Hall area build-‘First, it serves notice on the jng) jn ea(>h area. As many wellAL SAX TIRE CO.Announces . • .SPECIALDISCOUNTSU OF C STUDENTSAND FACULTYWe CorryA Full Line OfFOREIGN &SPORTS CARTIRES facultv V ,_ _r. “I he demonstrations should endorses the sit-ins as having front of the OTA platform en-a dis ‘’hou‘e ,n this election yea . occur on the afternoon of election been a good thing and which ver- trance to the State Street Wool-* J ™ ° *" day. They should involve a march bally commits the stores to an worth Co. store in ChicagoAs members of the Chicagoreturn, the stores asked that stu- Youth Committee for Civil rights,„ „ dents, instead of boycotting a on- they were passing out circularsvictorious presidential candidate known adults (civil rights lead- operating corporation, assist in urging people not to stop in Wool-that civil rights action must occu- ers trade unionists, writers, en- the process of integration. After worth’s while segregation inpy a priority place on the agenda, tertainment figures, etc.) as can this meeting, there was doubt as southern Woolworth stores eon-“Secondly, it constitutes a basic fo0 contacted should march in the to what sort of Northern activity tinues. Police were called afterchallenge to the bi-partisan coali- ]ine. There should be a brief NSA would endorse this year. the group refused to disperse atRichard Rettig, president of the request of CTA officials, andExpertWheel BalancingBroke WorkFront EndAlignmentU.S. ROYALJbnRide TIRESTYREXother sizes proportionately low priced6.00-16 7.10*152for»2|90 2 for *27 MPlus tax and treadable tires•TYREX is a collective trade-mark ofTyrex, Inc.FREE IHSmiATlOHThis week only!Drive in —Free ParkingUSI m runAL SAX TIRE CO.6052 Cottage GroveDO 3-5554 tion of Dixiecrats and reactionary picket and, if at all possible, aRepublicans. In the debate over street meeting.” NSA, was to have brought up this Wright and Miss Romero wereMost of the time at the general conference and its resulting state- arrested.. , n , nference was devoted to pro- ment at the SNCC, but it was not According to Y’irgil E. Gunloek,more fiercely (and successfully) cedural matters, especially what discussed in any general plenary CTA chairman, the two were "in-umra o rna 1 vntincr vifthtc ni’fU'P. u i i :i.: c *i . _ _ . . .the 1960 Civil Rights Act thethree points which they contested conference was devoted to proweie a real voting lights pio<e- (he nature and composition of the nor jn (he Northern caucus. It is terfering with passengers comingdure, Section III of the 1957 BUI, general coordinating committee not known whv this failed to out of the station and adding toond o/dmn AM VAATIAn YYIl lim. _t l J i Tl cl 11_ . J f J _ Jand action on Section XXII, limiting debate."Third, it ties in with the earn should be. It was finally decidedthat each of the Southern statesshould have two delegates andpaign announced by Martin Lu- one vote, that six former mom-ther King, Roy Wilkins, and A. bors of the committee should bePhilip Randolph to “get out the re-elected and that certain nation-vote.” The demonstrations should al organizations should have arelate two themes: (1) We who vote.can vote and speak and march are NSA, which last year declineddoing so because we realize that a seat on the SNCC claiming thatthese are precious, democratic NSA participation would subvertrights and (2) We are using these the spontaneous indigenous na- come to the floor.Cap andLindauer the litter in the subway.’’Gown to publish;is named editorrights to win them for the millions of citizens i/i the South who accepted a vote,are disenfranchised. ture of the committee, this yearshdrt cuts...for\any style ... Cap and Gown will be pub- Its editor, Ted Lindauer, is alished this year — probably first year student in the lawNumerous addresses and state by the second week of May. sch°o1-Lindauer was selected editor ofCap and Gown by the office ofi Student Activities during O-weekafter an informal discussion. Lor¬raine Hall is the assistant editorand Jack Blomstrom is businessmanager.A shift of emphasis for the '61edition is planned. Many moreaspects of the academic world ofthe University are to be includedthan is customary. Although themajor event of Cap and Gown1960 was given to student activi¬ties and social events on campus,the forthcoming edition will beconcerned with probing into theplans and functions of the divi¬sions and the College.In dealing with areas such asbiology, the medical sciences, law,and business, the progress of stu¬dents will be followed from regis¬tration to graduation. "A subtleand interesting technique for pre¬senting this type of approach” ispromised and is in the planningstage.Makes your haircut fit your head!SHORT C U TS M C_> !_ T o M4 O CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 21, 1960 No mofter how you like your hair cut-you'll look betterwhen you use Short Cur. This new, non-greasy hoir groomodds body to the hoir fibers, mokes your haircut fit yourheod. Keeps hair near, ond helps condition your scalp intothe bargom. Takes 2 seconds, costs o tost .50 P'u5 )0,SHORT CUTHAIR GROOM li 'ear C ontact oLerUtibyDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 I. 55th 5t. HY 3-8372Clubs get rooms Government forms new boardsto confer with administrationAn apartment to be usedfor meeting rooms, coffeedates, and storage for theUniversity women’s clubs hasbeen made available by theAdministration, Dean Nether-ton announced at Inter-dub RushTea last Tuesday.This announcement came as asurprise to both club membersand rushees and provided the cli¬max to a series of speeches madeby the Club presidents introduc¬ing the prospective rushees to theclub system and its policies.Maxine Blau, president of DeltaSigma and chairman of Inter-Club council has been workingclosely with the Administration in an effort to secure these rooms,“and I was very pleased and sur¬prised to discover that we novyhave rooms specifically for ouruse. I am syre that all club mem¬bers join me in thanking the ad¬ministration for this step in ourbehalf,” commented Miss Blau.Said Esoteric president CaroleQuinn, “We have -felt the need ofa permanent meeting place wecan call “home” for a long tirne.Our two rooms are only a start,but we will acquire more as weneed them. Now that we havethese rooms, clubs have facilitiesfor expanding; clubs can increasetheir membership, and we hopethat more clubs will come oncampus.” Student consultant boards, designed to increase communication between certain Univer¬sity administrative offices and the students, are being set up by Student government incooperation with the dean of students’ office, according to SG president Jim Thomason.Students interested in expressing their opinions on policies and services offered by vari¬ous university offices will be given the opportunity through the establishment of the elevennew boards.Each of the boards will consist to make suggestions for the im ice, and Student Housing,of at least three students and provement of services. Thomason hopes that some de¬will meet with the heads of the Current plans call for the es- gree of continuity from year toappropriate University officers tablishment of separate boards year can be developed. “Thisabout once every two weeks. consulting with the following would prevent the needless recur-University administrators will University offices; Bursar, Book- renee of past discussions andhe able hi explain changes in pol- store, Registrar, Admissions,k*y before announcing them to Athletics, Financial Aid. Library,the campus as a whole and stu- Personnel, Residence Halls anddents will have the opportunity Commons, SKident Health Serv-Republicans probe ward politicsJohn Ea*t, Republican com¬mitteeman of the fifth ward,spoke about ward and precinctpolitics to the UC Young Re¬publican club last Tuesdaynight. Forty people attended the meeting held at 'Ida Noyes.One important technique inpolitics is to get out and see thepeople, East informed. This willbe the main job for interestedstudents. By canvassing as manyprecincts as possible, the non-Fellowships availableWoodrow Wilson fellowships are available to graduating stu¬dents. primarily in the humanities and social sciences. Althoughthe program is designed to encourage college seniors of out¬standing ability to study for advanced degrees, with facultyjobs as their goal, those who receive awards are not asked tocommit themselves to college teaching, but merely to “con¬sider it seriously.” Each fellow receives a $1,500 stipend forliving expenses, plus full tuition, and family allowance.No applications are accepted directly from students. Everycandidate for the award must be nominated by a facultymember.Realty company policyconfuses UC studentsThe University Realty Com¬pany apparently can’t makeup its mind whether or not ithas any apartments for rent.The University of Chicago ownsat this time $1,604,250 (marketvalue' worth of stocks and bondsin the closed corporation, whichrents and manages apartmentbuildings, some of which it owns,and others, owned by UC andother private establishments andindividuals.Because of the University’sdouble connection with the cor¬poration, and because of the factthat many of the apartments are•« Hyde Park, University City’spolicy on renting affects students.Vet, conflicting opinions exist ash» what this policy actually Is.Accoitiing to a student who con¬tacted them a week ago, Universi¬ty City informed him that apart¬ments near the university werebeing held for faculty members,but they would be available to thegeneral public in about a week.Earlier the same day, the officehad reported to another prospec¬tive renter that there were sev¬eral available apartments in theneighborhood.The corporation did say theybiut a selection of “suitable” apart¬ments for Negroes, reported aNegro girl who called them aboutmi apartmentUniversity City has only twoapartments listed for single stu¬dents in the Student Housing Of¬fice. The word “pooh” is penciledmi both cards. When the corpora¬ tion was contacted and asked ifthey had any apartments avail¬able for single persons (withoutmention of the listed apartments)they replied they had none. existent voters can be elimin¬ated.“You and I are faced with thesame problem. You, on the cam¬pus, and I, on the outside, arebeset by an awful lot of peoplewho call themselves bberals. Idon’t know what they think aliberal is but my definition issomeone who minds his owndamn business and that’s how Ilive my life,” East continued.“Since this is mainly a demo¬cratic area, you are bound tohave many rebuffs but here andthere you will meet a devotedRepublican who will be glad tosee you. You may not pick up avote but he’ll know that he’snot standing alone and perhapswill volunteer to help,” he con¬cluded.“Our object is to offer effectiveopposition to the Democrats,” ex¬plained Willard Ayres, treas¬urer of the club and in chargeof precinct work. “We want towork for an honest election andwipe out the estimated 200,000falsely registered voters in Chi¬cago.“An example of what can bedone is the effort of Jim Mc¬Gregor, publicity chairman. He and a friend canvassed for threehours and found 122 people onvoting lists who had died, movedor registered at an addresswhich did not exist."Another speaker, Bernard E.Epton, Republican candidate forthe second congressional dis¬trict, discussed the national is¬sues of peace and economic sta¬tus. He attributed the peace ofthe past eight years to a Repub¬lican administration and ex¬pressed their concern about jobopportunities open to studentsupon graduation.Setting up a mock ward is thenext project of the club. Thiswill serve three purposes; train¬ing people in politics at thislevel, helping the regular partymachinery, and affording aplace to express ideas and meetpeople.Pamphlets endorsing thestraight Republican ticket andindividual candidates for nation¬al and local offices were distrib¬uted. Visitors were invited tofill out membership cards. James Thomason, presi¬dent of student government,and inceptor of the consult¬ant boards.would enable the boards to con¬centrate on current problems,"he said.Students who are interested inserving on any of the variousconsultant boards should makewritten application to Studentgovernment by Tuesday, Octol»er25. In addition all applicants arerequested to present themselvesfor an interview at the Govern¬ment office in Ida Noyes hallfrom 1 to 5 pm today or 1 to 5pm on Tuesday.1411 E. 53rd FR 4-5525 —HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing Our Hors d'oeuvres TableFree Delivery to U.C. StudentsON ALL PIZZAComplete ltalian-American RestaurantCHEESE 1.30SAUSAGE 1.65ANCHOVY 1.65PEPPER and ONION 1.50SHRIMP 225COMBINATION 2.25SPECIAL!Vi Fried Chicken 1-25LimitedINTRODUCTORY OFFERwith this couponC OFF ON _25 ALL PIZZA lime t* feed theBETA SMOKERFrMny, Ortoher 211 7:20-101 BY ESCAPEDf^piurcC 1 CONVICTS! | THE Rf0«T TASTE BECAUSE\fceroys got fl¬at MendsO >*0»N 4 TOftACea C044Oct. 21, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON 0 JMaroon endorses SenatorIn this election year, the Maroonfeels that it is a newspaper’s rightand obligation to endorse a presiden¬tial candidate. In making its choice,the Maroon has chosen to look at thecandidates not only from the point ofview of a student, but from that of a citi¬zen as well.We feel that Senator John F. Kennedyjte the candidate best suited for the presi¬dency of the United States.In this and the following two issues,the Maroon will try to evaluate the presi¬dential campaign in as many of its aspectsas space will permit. We will begin thisweek with an examination of the candi¬dates on the education issue, the issuewhich, perhaps most directly effects thestudents of the University of Chicago.We believe that Senator Kennedy is theman who will do most to satisfy the needsof students and of education in general.On the college level Kennedy has donea great deal to provide badly needed aidw>ule Vice President Nixon has done vir¬tually nothing. In 1958 the DemocraticCongress passed the National DefenseEducation Act, providing low - interestloans to more than thirteen hundred col¬leges and universities and loans and fel¬lowships to many times that number ofIndividual students. Several hundred UCstudents benefitted directly from this actwhen they received NDEA loans andscholarships.Senator Kennedy, as chairman of theSenate Subcommittee on Education, pro¬vided the leadership necessary to securethe NDEA’s passage: he conducted thesubcommittee’s hearings, helped draft theact itself, and became its floor managerWhen it reached the Senate. No leadership whatsoever was provided by PresidentEisenhower or Vice President Nixon.The NDEA, according to Harvard’sPresident Nathan Pusey (a Republican),was the most important legislation con¬cerning education since the Land GrantCollege acts passed in the 1860’s.It becanie apparent, late in 1958, how¬ever, that tne oath and affidavit containedin the NDEA were construed by manyleading educators to be unwarranted in¬fringements of students’ freedom. On thisbasis 35 universities, including UC, with¬drew from the loan and scholarship pro¬grams established by the act. The Maroonsupported the withdrawal of UC, but hasalways felt tnat the NDEA as a wholefurnished a great amount of badly neededaid to higher education.Furthermore, Senator Kennedy immedi¬ately took the initiative in attempting torepeal both the oath and the affidavitwhich colleges found objectionable. Hepointed out that a Republican, SenatorKarl Mundt of South Dakota, had insertedthe affidavit while only a handful of Sen¬ators were on the floor. In 1957 Kennedy’sattempt to repeal the oath and affidavitwas blocked when his bill was voted backinto committee by a narrow margin. In1960 Senator Kennedy again sought therepeal of the affidavit, both by re-intro¬ducing a modified version of his previousbills and by writing repeal of the affi¬davit into the Democratic platform.While Senator Kennedy was upholdingfederal aid to colleges and universitieswithout federal controls, the Eisenhower-Nixon administration was doing nothing.During the first four years of the Republi¬can administration, not a single bill to aidhigner education was introduced by anyRepublican. During the last four yearsseveral Republicans did offer amendments and alternatives to Democratic proposals,but all of them provided substantially re¬duced amounts of money. Vice PresidentNixon never asserted any leadership inbehalf of any bill to help higher educa¬tion; even on the question of repeal ofthe NDEA oath and affidavit, he ex¬pressed sympathy only half-heartedly ina short, three paragraph letter to thepresidents of three universities (one ofwhom was Chancellor Kimpton).On aid to education in general the per¬formance of Vice President Nixon and theRepublican party has been equally lament¬able. In 1953 and 1954 the administrationoffered no proposals for aid to elementaryor secondary schools. But both PresidentEisenhower and Vice President Nixon,campaigning in 1952, had cited time andaghin the need for school aid bills. Imme¬diately after being elected (11/9/52),President Eisenhower said he would in¬itiate aid bills because “one million, sevenhundred thousand American boys andgirls’’ were “without any school facilities.”In 1955 the administration finally of¬fered a school construction bill, but ex¬perts testified at committee hearings thatit would take more than two years forany schools to be started under the pro¬visions of the bill. State school superin¬tendents were virtually unanimous in feel¬ing that the bill would be of no help to anystate school construction program.Not until 1959 did Republicans againmake a real attempt to pass an aid to edu¬cation bill. This time they introduced alimited measure to help finance bonds forschool construction, but again education¬al experts felt it would be of little help.They pointed to the unfortunate fact thatRepublican “tight” monetary policies hadforced interest rates on school bonds upmore than 90 per cent in seven years. In the last session of Congress occurredthe now-famous defeat of a bill proposing$1.1 billion a year for four years to beused for school construction and/orteachers’ salaries at the discretion of thestates. The vote in the Senate was tied44-44 when Vice President Nixon defeatedthe measure by voting “nay.”Senator Kennedy, on the other hand,has consistently pushed for federal aid toschool construction, federal support ofteachers* salaries, and federal loans andscholarships to students. As was demon¬strated by his attempt to repeal the NDEAoath and affidavit, Senator Kennedy hasstrongly resisted any attempt to estab¬lish any sort of governmental controls ofeither colleges and universities or stateand local school systems.At the present time wc realize that boththe Democratic platform and the Repub¬lican platform call for aid to education;both Senator Kennedy and Vice PresidentNixon speak in favor of aid to educationtime and again on their campaign trails.But we remember Vice President Nixon’s“support” of federal aid both in 1952 andin 1956; the record plainly demonstratesthat he did not keep his campaign promisesthen, and we have no reason to believethat he will do so now.Senator Kennedy, on the other hand,has made federal aid to education a majorpart of his platform in every campaignhe nas fought; when elected, he has spoilsored many a?d to education bills. TheNDEA alone would be sufficient to showthat his record is far superior to Nixon's,and we have no reason now to believethat he will discontinue his strong supportof aid to education bills.From the student’s point of view, then,we believe that Senator Kennedy willmake by far the better president.the Chicago maroon Letterfounded ■—1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and Intermittently during the summer quarterby 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 mail, $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 publicationAll unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signed•dltorlal material represents the Individual opinions of the authors.Is dorm policy permanent?Some years ago the Univer¬sity of Oklahoma, expecting asharp increase in enrollment,entered an elaborate buildingprogram throwing up dormitorieson the right and on the left. Un¬fortunately this splurge of stu¬dents did not emerge and theadministration of that school wasstuck with myriads of empty beds.Now, an empty dormitory isnot just useless; it is also expen¬sive. In addition to the costs ofupkeep and maintenance, an emp¬ty dorm yields no money to paythe contractor, the architect, theelectrician and the landscaper.This situation could not continue,and so, rather reluctantly, the Ok¬ lahoma administration issued anedict requiring residence in Uni¬versity dormitories.The officials of our college havefrequenty stated that they lookforward to a college with an en¬rollment in the neighborhood of4000. We recently have heard thatthis is to be a residential college,with almost all students living onthe campus. To provide livingspace for 4000 students will re¬quire a considerable program ofdormitory building. Yet groundhas not been struck for the con¬struction of the second half ofPierce Tower, though Chicago isabout to buy quite a few apart¬ment buildings. Chicago attracts intelligent stu¬dents because there are intelligentmen ruling its destinies. Could itbe that these men have concludedthat should Chicago build dormi¬tories for 4,000 students it wouldbe committed to a policy of re¬quired residence for years tocome.Perhaps the reason we see nosudden rush toward new dormconstruction is that the UC ad¬ministration does not wish to com¬mit itself to the idea of a resi¬dential college. If this be so, andthe case is indeed not settled, itwould be unfortunate if the stu¬dent protest against this policyshould taper off. *Irrational facet of dorm rules:assistants have unlimited hoursAll undergraduate womenunder the age of twenty-oneliving in the dormitories mustobserve the University’s hourssystem. Essentially, under thissystem, a girl is allow tostay out until midnight everynight plus an extra four hoursdistributed throughout the week.There is an exception to thisrule: assistant housing heads aregranted unlimited hours.The Housing Office regardsthis as a privilege commensuratewith the responsibility of beinga housing assistant. The officeholds that these girls haveenough self-discipline to properlyregulate their own hours and liv¬ing habits.We agree with this fully. Wewould certainly hope that thesegirls are so responsible and self-contained and self-controlled. Wehave no complaint with this spe¬cial privilege; rather we objectto be being a privilege confined to employees of the housing of¬fice. Surely these are not the onlyUC women, who are not yettwenty-one, who are capable ofsurviving the horrors of HydePark without the aid of an hourssystem.We cannot but regard this asbeing anything but a further ex¬ample of the totally irrationalnature of the present hours sys¬tem.No woman under hours is everallowed out after three in themorning. “There is no reason foran undergraduate woman to beout after 3 am,” the director ofstudent housing has explained.True enough, apparently, exceptfor university employees who ob¬viously have good reasons for be¬ing out after this arbitrary witch¬ing hour.The Housing office has identi¬fied one group of girls as beingsufficiently mature to handlethemselves. No one would botherarguing that these are the only Club president saysthat ‘letter9 is untrueThis is a response to theletter printed in the last issueof the Maroon which was sup¬posedly written by “The mem¬bers of Delta Sigma and Esote¬ric.” I should like to have it madeknown that this letter was com¬posed by two girls, Maroon staffmembers, each of whom is also amember of one of the aforemen¬tioned clubs, and was printedwithout the consent or foreknowl¬edge of the other club girls con¬cerned with the event.The letter condemned the pub¬licity given by CBS to a tug-of-war involving two girls’ clubs andtwo fraternities. It does not rep¬resent the opinion of most ofthose who took part in the event.I do not believe that the eventitself nor the publicity It receivedis at all detrimental to the Uni-CHICAGO MAROON • ‘ Oct. 21, 1960L versity’s reputation as a “commu¬nity of scholars.”It seems to me that the Administration does not feel coverage ofsuch a “frivolous” event hasruined, or could have ruined, UC'simputation as an institution oe-voted to intellectual pursuits.“The man in the street” is cogni¬zant of the fact that this is not atypical activity indulged in by UCstudents.The University’s image can boneither soiled nor desecrated by alittle muddy water from Botanypond. On behalf of Delta SigmaI do not regret the publicity thatthe tug-of-war received.Maxine BlauPresident of Delta SigmaChairman of Inter-ClubCouncilgirls so mature. Nor is it likelyto expect an argument to the ef¬fect that freedom comes onlythrough UC employment. Whythen should the housing officerefuse to grant a similar freedomto similarly mature female stu¬dents? In all due bemused amaze¬ment, we do not know.In the past we have character¬ized the housing office policy onhours as being arbitrary (as inthe use of age as a criteria forresponsibility), as being patern¬alistic (even in the face of par¬ents who would willingly granttheir children unlimited hours),as being antiquated (severalschools seem to manage withoutany hours system), and as beingunnecessary.In all honesty, these were de¬batable points and we could com¬prehend disagreement. But wefrankly cannot see how anyonecould characterize the facet „un¬der current d!"c ""'on as beinganything but irrational. Editor-in-chiefNeal JohnstonBusiness manager Advertising managerWilliam G. Bauer Phil GasteyerManaging editorKen PierceEditor emeritus Lance HaddixAssistant to the editor Maureen ByersAssistant managing editor Avima RuderEditorial secretary Caryle GeierNews editor .... . . .Jay GreenbergNational news editor Gene VinogradoffInteractional news editor Al DowtyCulture editor John DietmannSecretary to the culture editor Dotty SharplessSports editor .....Chuck BernsteinCopy editors /...John Juskevice, Marjorie MundtResearch editor Carole QuinnCalendar editor . % Donna BergPhotography coordinator ...Al BergerCirculation manager ....;Nate SwiftBusiness office manager Joan HelmkinClassifieds manager Maurice ZeitlinEditorial staff: Bert Cohler, Debby Dinitz, Roger Downey, Dave Kahn, ArtMacEwan, Pat Maynard, Dave Nelson, Mickey Seligson, Jim Thomason,Steve Westheimer.Photography stoff: Danny Lyon, John Osgood, Nate Swift.Sports staff: Mike Canes, Mike Eisenberg, Judy Shapiro.— -LettersThomas corrects editorialT assume that there is a con-mat ion between the leadingeditorial in last week’s Maroonand a news story in the issueoi the preceding week based onan interview with me concerningthe substitution of quarterlygrades of record for the tradi¬tional comprehensive examina¬tion in Humanities 201 2 3, for¬merly Humanities 3. The infer*once that this is a sign of thewithering away of the principleof comprehensive examinationsin the “new” College is. I believe,a distortion of the facts if not anabsolute contradiction of facts. Iam certain that the General Hu¬manities Staff entertains no no¬tion of abandoning the principleot comprehensive examinationsm Humanities 111-12-13 or Hu¬manities 124-125-126.I doubt that the editors of theMaroon cherish the principlewith any greater zeal than themembers of the HumanitiesStaff. Moreover, despite the deci¬sion to make grades in Humani¬ties 201-2-3 at the end of eachquarter grades of record, I be¬lieve that we have preservedsomething of the most importantelement of the comprehensiveprinciple by making the work ofeach succeeding quarter depend¬ent upon all that has preceded it.Perhaps a brief look at the his¬tory of the principle of compre¬hensive examinations as it hasbeen administered in the Collegesince its adoption in 1931 willcorrect some unfortunate impres¬sions conveyed by your editorial.From the very beginning thecomprehensive system appliedonly to those courses which wereoffered to aid students in com¬pleting their common general re¬quirements for a Bachelor’s de¬gree. Humanities 201-2-3 is nolonger among those courseswhich constitute the basic gen¬eral studies courses in the Col¬lege. Like O.M.P. and the old So¬cial Science 3, it will be for theforseeable future an electivecourse except where it may berequired as a part of a divisionalm departmental degree program.The fact that a student maynow take one, two or three quar¬ters of the sequence necessarilymeans that for some studentseach quarter must In* a grade ofrecord. I may privately lamentthe fact that Humanities 201-2-3is iio longer required of all stu¬dents, hut I and the Staff arecompelled to deal with facts cre¬ated by circumstances beyondour control. This year, to be sure,the majority of students regis¬tered in 201 are required to com¬plete the sequence as a part ofeiirriculum requirements in forcewhen they entered the College.This Spring, however, a largenumber will be taking 201 underits other title, Humanities 126;and for nearly all of them, it willhe a terminal quarter and mustbe a grade of record.This is not the place to explainthe reasons for the identity of2<ll and 126. They are not rele¬vant to the main issue. The basic reason can be traced to the miti¬gation device, which I will notdignify by naming it a principleand which I consider an unmiti¬gated evil. I do want to makeclear, however, that no studentmay elect Humanities 202 whohas not taken 201 tor 126) normay he take 203 without takingthe preceding quarters. Both in¬struction and all assignmentsand tests which form the basisof the grade of record will pre¬suppose the student’s familiarityof what has gone before. For thisreason the final grade in Human¬ities 203 will be in principle acomprehensive grade.It is well to make a clear dis¬tinction between the principleunderlying comprehensive exam¬inations and the applications ofthe principle. Nothing in the prin¬ciple specifies how many hoursshall he given to an examination,whether tlie test shall be objec¬tive or essay, or whether it mustall he given on one day and atthe end of any specified time. Itmay well he divided into partsof different kinds given at differ¬ent times. It may cover two orfour or six quarters work asreadily as three. Indeed it is notbeyond possibility that at somefuture date the faculty might de¬cide to give one comprehensiveexamination covering the basicfive or six quarters in the re¬quired humanities program.Grades of record might bo keptfrom quarter to quarter for*transfer purposes; but the finalgrade might well be the test overthe whole of the basic humani¬ties requirement. I say this notbecause it is at present a prob¬ability but only that it is possiblewithin the principle of a compre¬hensive examination.Finally, in the interests of his¬torical accuracy and good jour¬nalism. I would like to correctsignificant errors of fact in thehistorical account of comprehen¬sive examinations in this College.It is correct to say that com¬prehensive* were introduced inthe thirties (1931-1932 to In*exact). It Is not correct to saythat degree requirements werestated in terms of oomprehen-sives at that time. Only those re¬quirements which formed thegeneral education program wereso stated. The balance of a stu¬dent’s degree requirements werestated in terms of courses re¬quired for a major and what evertests a department or divisionchose to adopt as supplement¬ary to the course requirements. After 1942, when the Bachelor'sdegree was awarded upon com¬pletion of the fourteen compre-hensives, degree requirementswere stated in terms of compre¬hensive* rather than courses. Butthe Maroon is in error when itsays that comprehensive* werenot “lied” to courses. At all timesthey were. A student did nothave to register for the courseto which the comprehensive wastied. He could register for theexamination and prepare inde¬pendently; hut there was at notime a variety of courses bywhich he might prepare for anyone comprehensive. I have a setof comprehensive examinationsfor the only general humanitiescourse offered from 1931 to 1942,also the syllabus for the course.You are invited to see for your¬self whether or not the courseand examination were tied to¬gether.The Maroon is also in error insaying that the exams wereneither written nor administeredby the faculty. They were; andin those early days most of themwere wholly objective. The fac¬ulty wrote the questions andthey scored the answers! Theidentity of the student was, ofcourse, always concealed. I amnot sure about the editor’s inten¬tion in saying that a comprehen¬sive measured the “total grasp”of a field. Certainly this was nottrue of any single comprehen¬sive in the humanities. I doubtthat is literally possible. At anyrate from 1931 to 1942 one largearea of the humanities was ig¬nored in the humanities compre-hensives. The area was music.The Maroon has a proper re¬gard for many virtues of what itcalls the “old college”. This isfine and I respect it. But it seemsto me that the image of the oldcollege is becoming somewhatblurred. I suppose the term re¬fers to the College circa 1942-1954. But before that there wasthe “old, old college” (1931-42)and before that there was the“old, old, old college” (pre-1931).There are many members of thefaculty who rememl>er the “oldcollege” and the “old, old col¬lege”, either as students or asfaculty members. And there area few ancients around who re¬member the College before 1931.Come around some day. Let ustell you more about each ofthem.Russell Thomasprofessor of humanitiesFence has a purposeNeither students, faculty,nor administrators realize thetrue importance of the fencebetween Lexington andBreasted, the real purpose of thesticks and chains which block offthe incipient paths people tread:they are there to make our Uni¬versity great.One day, during the early yearsof her existence, an English visi¬tor stood with William RaineyHarper amidst the new battle- men ted towers, surveyed the bar¬ren fields in between, and said toChicago’s first President, “Some¬day when you have lawns asgreen and rolled as ours at Oxfordand Cambridge, then you will bea great university.”Ever since these words werespoken the Department ot Buildings and Grounds has been striv¬ing towards this ideal. Shall wenot lend our cooperation?Henry Etzkowitz^ixon campaignAfter reading John Weich-<t\s stirring defense of Mr.Nixon’s campaign againstJerry Voorhis, I felt that Mr.Weieher let his own sense of fairflay unnecessarily restrict his ar¬guments. If, instead of stickingnarrowly to certain phases of thedispute at hand he had allowedhimself to draw parallels with Mr.Nixon’s unimpeachable conduct init is other campaigns assuredlyniuch light would have been shed.Therefore I suggest that instead01 belaboring the Voorhis issue,"■e move on to Mr. Nixon’s sena-b't ial race against Helen G. Dou-tfJas As a starting point we might take the eleven relevent para¬graphs from Morris H. Rubin sarticle “The Case Against Nixon”as it appeared in the October issueof The Progressive. Mr. Rubanseems to be able to find manyparallels between Mr. Nixon’scampaigns. (But then can Mr.Nixon help it if he always findshimself running against a Com¬munist sympathizer?) At anyrate, Mr. Rubin claims to haveseen a most interesting piece ofNixon campaign literature whichbegins. “Many persons have re¬quested a comparison of the vot¬ing records for CongresswomanHelen Douglas and the notoriousCommunist Party liner, Con¬gressman V’ito Marcantonio . . .' citediand which ends, “Remember!The United States Senate voteson ratifying international treat¬ies and confirming Presidentialappointments. Would Californiasend Marcantonio to the UnitedStates Senate?” In between wasthe much demanded comparison,somewhat stuffed with omis¬sions.Rather than droning on, I willjust mention Mr. Rubin's conclu¬sion, “Nixon defeated Mrs. Doug¬lass—in large measure becausehe succeeded in making the biglie prevail.”I am sure all Maroon readerswould be interested in hearingMr. Nixon’s side of this story.C. Clark Kissinger OuCtwqns withMac Station(Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf”/‘The ManyLoves of Dnbie Gillis”, etc.)’’HOME SWEET HOMECOMING”A great number of people have been asking me lately, “Whatis Homecoming?” but I have been so busy trying to find outwhy tny new sports car leaks that I haven’t had time to answer.1 am now pleased to report that I finally discovered why mysports car leaks—I have been driving it upside down—and soI am ready today to turn my attention to Homecoming.Let’s begin with definitions. Homecoming is a weekend whenold grads return to their alma maters to watch a football game,visit old classrooms and dormitories and inspect each other’sbald spots.The weekend is marked by the singing of old songs, the slap¬ping of old backs and the frequent exchange of such greetings- as “Harry, you old polecat!” or “Harry, you old porcupine!”or “Harry, you old rooster!” or “Harry, you old wombat!”As you can see, all old grads are named Harry.It is not just old grads who hehave with such liveliness duringHomecoming; the faculty also comports itself with unaccus¬tomed animation. Teachers laugh aud smile and pound backsand keep shouting “Harry,you old Airedale!” This unscholarlybehavior is carried on in the hope that old grads, in a transportof bonhomie will endow a new geology building.The old grads, however, are seldom seduced. By game timeon Saturday their backs are so sore, their eyeballs so eroded,their extremities so frayed, that it is impossible to get a kindword out of them, much less a new geology building.Even the football game does not improve their tempers.“Hmmph!” they snort as the home team completes a 101-yardmarch to a touchdown. “Do you call that football? Why, backin my day, they’d have been over on the first down! ByGeorge, football was football in those days—not this namby-pamby girls’ game that passes for football today! Take a lookat that bench—50 substitutes sitting there. Why, in my day,there were 11 men on a team and that was it. When you brokea leg, they slapped a piece of tape on it and you went right backin. Why, I remember the big game against. State. Harry Siga-foos, our star quarterback, was killed in the third quarter. Imean, lie was pronounced dead. But did that stop old Harry?Not on your tintype' Back in lie went and kicked the winningdrop kick in the last four seconds of play, dead as he was. Backin my day, they played football, by George!”Everything, say the old grads, was better back in their day—-everything except one. Even the most unreconstructed of theold grads has to admit that back in his day they never had asmoke like Marlboro—never a cigarette with such 3 lot to like—never a filter so easy drawing, a flavor so mild yet hearty, soabundant, so bountiful—never a choice of flip-top box or softpack.So. old grads, young grads, and undergrads, why don’t yousettle back and have a full-flavored smoke? Try Marlboro, thefiltered cigarette with the unfiltered taste, and Homecomingwill be a happy occasion and the sun will shine and the air willbe filled with the murmur of wings and no man’s hand will l>eraised against you. © I960 Mas 8huion««* * *At Homecoming time—or any time—try Marlboro’s unfil¬tered companion cigarette—mild, fiavorful Philip Morris...Regular size or king size Commander—a brand new and happyexperience in smoking! Hacea Commander—welcome aboard'.^hiittiiiiiHiitiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiitmiiiiiiiiiiiiitiniiitiiimiiiiiiMiiittiiiiiimiiitiiiiiittitttttiiHittttgNow Featuring A Buffet LuncheonS £§ Monday through Friday11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.| $1.35 — ALL YOU CAN EAT — $1.35(3scC^| |for Reservation* SHORELAND HOTELCall Bl 8-2300 5454 South Shore Drive ii iattendant will park your carilllHHMfNtlltHlllltlltlllHIlHIIUHIIHHIIIIIIItiHUHillilUiUillUIUUUlUiHIIINUUHIliiililllllHMimilMIIUIIIIMMMiSOct. 21, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 71LettersGirl Scouts, squirrelscause Billings chaosThe following story wastold to me by a friend. Itseems that he was passingthrough Mandel hall the otherday and he saw a certain femaledoctor from Billings Hospitalchasing a group of Girl Scoutsout of the building. My friendasked the doctor why she waschasing the Girl Scouts out. “Pro¬pagandists,” she replied harshly,“they’re trying to undermine thewhole Student Health Service.**“That is ridiculous," my friend re¬torted, “they only came to sellGirl Scout cookies; the Girl Scoutsprobably never even heard of theStudent Health Service.” Cookies,shnookies,” cried the doctor; "Justlook at this,” she said, pulling a small box from behind her back.My friend looked, shocked. Under¬lined in crayon on the top of thebox was the following slogan,"... It was such fun feeding alittle squirrel on our way home.”My friend turned to explain to thedoctor that it was all some inno¬cent misunderstanding. The doc¬tor, however, had spied two smallheads peeping in the main door¬way and was starting in pursuit.“Beat it,” she cried, “or I’ll giveyou all polio shots.”My friend says the squirrelslike the mint cookies much betterthan the sandwich cookies. Hesays that next year the Scoutsshould come out with LadyFingers.Ron Bacardi Is HUACWith the advent, of the newschool year, we at the U. of C.have witnessed the rise of an¬other new group of “liberal”organizations. Paramount inthis fall's group is the com¬mittee to abolish the House Un-American Activities Committee.The members of this organizationclaim that their group is foundedwith the purpose of removingfrom the American scene the lastremnants of the McCarthy era.Few people today (with the pos¬sible exception of the ChicagoTribune) will argue about the per¬nicious nature of this House Com¬mittee.The U of C. student, lookingfor a flag to rally ’round, haschosen a cause which was decidedby the country seven years agowhen McCarthy was censured bythe Senate. The House and SenateCommittees on Un-American Ac- group ‘liberal9?tivities were simply effects of atime of social uncertainty inAmerica. With the passage of timethis uncertainty has been resolved,and correspondingly the Houseand Senate Committees havewithered, not through the actionsof liberals but because of a gen¬eral change in the outlook of so¬ciety. These changes may havebeen implemented by liberal ac¬tivities, but the actual act of cen¬suring McCarthy was effected bya Republican controlled, conserva¬tive Senate. It is because of thegeneral lack of esteem in whichthis committe is held by the restof the population that I am ledto question the motives of theU of C group which opposes it.The true liberal concerns him¬self, not with the specifics of im¬plementing action after a generaltrend has been set, but with theoriginating of the trend itself. Itis the role of the conservative (as In the case McCarthy) to Implement the actions required by theoutlook of the society.It is somewhat traditional forthe young U of C student to con¬fuse the meaning of liberal andconservative. In the forties andearly fifties, when the issue wasactually the protection of civilliberties under the attack of Wal¬ter, McCarthy, and McCarren, theU of C “liberal” retreated to thethirties to refight the battle oforganized labor. Today he has retreated to the safety of the earlyfifties. Now he is free to say whathe wishes concerning civil liberties, for seven years ago historyjustified his stand.If the people in these avanigarde organizations are membersbecause of a sincere wish to betterthe cause of liberal thought andaction, I urge them to consider thecauses of the present decade, notthe last, l.e., birth control or thePaton notes Africa's problems role of the government in the nation’s economy. If, however, themembers of these essentially con“Western dominance inAfrica cannot continue, andwe are living to see its end,”said Alan Paton, presidentof the African Liberal party,in a discussion of the prob¬lems of African nations Mondayat 4:30 pm in Brested hall.He opened his speech by statingthat our present interests are fo¬cussed on Africa in general, andSouth Africa in particular.Paton divided present day Afri¬can problems into three cate¬gories. The first is the desire ofAfrican nations to be free of anyexternal domination and to re¬main free. Secondly, African na¬tions are determined to becomemodern nations of the world.They need to wipe out illiteracy,poverty, and disease.The third and worst problem isthe African’s resentment to pastarrogance of the whites. The Afri¬can’s hostility towards this is ex¬tended to things which are irrele¬vant to past mistreatment, suchas western ideas, the westernchurch, western democracy, whiteskin, missionaries and the UN.Paton said that the greatestcontribution that the UnitedStates could make towards theAfrican cause would be to elim¬inate all forms of racial discrimi¬nation at a faster rate than theyare now doing. This, he continued,would comfort those Africanswho wish to eliminate racial seg¬regation in Africa.“Another problem,** accordingto Paton, “is the need of the newcountries, such as Mozambiqueand Ambola, for education. Thisneed was the cause of many ofthe recent difficulties in the Bel¬gium Congo.”Paton stated there is also theproblem of how much aid Africa should receive through the UN,and how much she should receivethrough individual countries.Paton pointed out that part ofthe lack of confidence, assurance,and faith in African government,shown by the countries of theworld is due to the newness ofAfrican independence,” Patontold the audience.“There are four reasons whywe should help Africa: to expiateour guilt, to pay back our ma¬terial debt, to be completely altru¬istic, and to take care of our ownself-interest by perpetuating ourcherished ideas of freedom anddemocracy.”“The West brought both bless¬ings and curses to Africa,” Patonsaid. “But the blessings of med¬icine, communication within Afri¬ca and with the rest of the world,order, and diminishment of tribalwarfare are poor arguments touse for the west in Africa Unlay.Africans remember the curses ofthe color bar, the arrogant rulersand the slave trade.”Paton stated that the popula¬tion of South Africa is 15,000,<XK).Of these people there are 10,000,-000 black Africans, 3,000,000 whiteAfricans, 1,500,000 coloured peo¬ple and 500.000 Indians. Of the3,000,000 white Africans, 2,000,000are Afrikaans’ speaking. Thecoloured people are descendantsof Malay slaves, Hottentots andWhites.Paton stated that South Africais ruled by five sixths of the Afri¬kaans’ speaking Whites. Thesepeople are members of the Afri¬can Nationalist party. Paton re¬ferred to them as his “bosses.”Among the tilings they tell himare where he may live and whatkind of a job he may have.MIIIU.AXandHis 14 piece ja/* bandOCTOBER 19 - OCTOBER 23atThe Home of Progressive JazzSUTHERLAND HOTEL47th at DrexelNo Admission, Cover or Entertainment TaxSun. thru Fri., 10 P.M. to 4 A.M.Sat., 10 P.M. to 5 A.M.SPECIAL STUDENT NIGHTThiir**., Oc(. 27Beveroge .75cLe« McCann coming October 26CHICAGO M^OON • Oct. 21, 1960 Paton stated, “I would like tosee the white people come to theirsenses, but I don’t think that thiswill happen. I believe that one ofthree things will happen whichwill bring South Africa to herknees.” The first thing is thatsomeday everything will blow up.The second thing is that the pres¬sure of hostile African nationswould, in the future, be exertedon South Africa. Nations such asGhana, Malay and India would re¬fuse to trade with South Africa.However, this would not be effec¬tive, as most of Africa’s trade is with the West. The third possibil¬ity is that the oil countries wouldrefuse to send oil to South Africa,the shipping companies would re¬fuse to send ships to South Africaand the gold countries would re¬fuse to buy gold from SouthAfrica.He urged everyone to contrib¬ute money to help the new Afri¬can nations. He further specifiedthat money should be contributedto the American Committee onAfrica. This money would be usedby their defense and aid fund. servative bodies join only to maketheir life on campus more interesting, I request that they stopattempting to classify those of uswho understand their actions, reactionary, and acknowledge theirtrue motives. Though they mayfind this somewhat embarrassing,I am certain that Messrs. New¬man and Netherton would be honored by being requested to nrrange activities for them whichdo not burden the rest of us.Sidney WeissmanPercy to lecture hereCharles H. Percy, alumnus and trustee of the University of Chicago and chairman ofthe 1960 Republican Platform committee, will be the first speaker of the annual “My Lifeand Yours” informal discussion series for undergraduate students. This first session willbe held Thursday, October 27, in the East lounge of Ida Noyes hall at 8:30 pm.Admission will be limited to the first fifty students who sign up in Dean Simpson'soffice by 3:00 pm Tuesday, October 25, and students specially chosen by faculty membersbecause of their interest in the ■speaker and the subject, accord- the field of public service Council, held the chairmanshiping to Dean Simpson.The size of the meeting is be¬ing limited to about a hundredpeople In order to make it possi¬ble to have discussions with thespeaker. Efforts will be made byDean Simpson however, to seethat a maximum number of in¬terested students will be able toattend at least one of the ninesessions planned for this year.Percy attended the Universityof Chicago under Bell and How¬ell's cooperative training pro¬gram. Upon graduating in 1941,Percy joined the company andat the age of 23 became a mem¬ber of its Board of Directors andpresident of the company at theage of 29. In 1949 Percy wasnamed one of the ten outstand¬ing young men in the UnitedStates by the United States Jun¬ior Chamber of Commerce.1510 DR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometristin theNew Hyde Park Shopping CenterE. 55th St.Eye Examinations Percy has been a member of the of the Board of the Ford FoundaUnited States Department of tion’s fund for Adult Education,Commerce’s Business Advisory and was a member in the Boardof World Brotherhood, Inc.lie has acted as PresidentEisenhower’s Special Ambassador at Presidential Inauguralceremonies in Peru and Bolivia.While attending the University,Percy was made University Mar¬shal to Robert Maynard Ifuteh-ins, was president of Alpha DeltaPhi and the Interfraternity Coun¬cil. He also was elected presidentof Owl and Serpent and Captainedthe University's championshipwater polo tram.Angus Wilson, British novelistand short story writer, author of“Anglo-Saxon Attitudes,” “TheWrong Set”, “These Darling Do¬dos”, and “The Middle Age ofMrs. Eliot”, will be the nextspeaker in this year’s series onNovember 10.The “My Life and Yours”series, which was started lastyear, has had as guest speakersMorris Carnovsky, actor; SenatorWilliam Benton, John Crowe Ran¬som, poet; Lord Denning ofWhitchurch, an English jurist;Irving Kristol, editor; Ralph El¬lison, novelist and Leo Rosten,journalist.Charles Percy, UC trus¬tee, will deliver the “MyLife and Yours" lecturenext Tuesday.DO 3-7644Contact LensesNewest styling in framesStudent DiscountTHE NEWCAFE CAPRIJ«63 E. 71si StreetFeaturing Espresso Coffee and Continental SpecialtiesFolk Singing and Art ExhibitsHours: Saturdoy—II A.M. to 3 A.M.Sunday — 2 P.M. to MidnightClosed MondayTuesday thru Thursday — 6 P.M. to MidnightFriday —6 P.M. to 2 A.M. Next Summer EuropeIs Yours At A Low PriceIf You Book NowNo Charge for Our ServicesMarco poloTRAVEL SERVICESince 12761K58 E. 55th St. HU 8*5944Deportment heads named Renewal exhibit openAn exhibit of “The New Hyde Park — Redevelopment of aThree new professors are heading the departments of philosophy, English, and classics. Neighborho°d” has been put on display at Carson Pirie ScottManly H. Thompson, Jr., associate professor and departmental counselor of the depart- ^n(|^p0^Pany °r'State street. The program will be sponsoredment of philosophy%.l head the phi.4>phy department. Arthur FHeTman profesX of & 'SUP'S™™*?.Board of the Cit^ °f Chicago,the English department, and Richard Burere. professor of sion. the Hyde Park-Kenwood entrance, until October 29th.b3 m P • Community conference, The Uni- The seven-panel exhibit hasManly Thompson. Jr., associate Greek, has been chairman for studies at Aihens. She plans to versity of Chicago and Webb & nearly 60 photographs contribu-professor, has been named chair- twenty four years. She has writ- Burere has been at UC since Knapp. ted by organizations and institu-man of the department of phuos- ten the 2 volume book Admini.s- 1937, and has worked alongside The exhibit, tracing the prog- tions in the Hyde Park area.ophy^ThompsOn^succeeds Profes- trillion of Justice from Homer to Miss Smith. He will continue to ress of urban renewal in the These seven panels are devotedEducation, Recreation, Shop-, _ . ping and Transportation, The1940. * teach in the future. zine. 7th floor, near the Wabash street People, Religious Life and Pub-Thompson received hip under-sor Charner Perry, who has Aristotle, and is active in the act as editor of the Classical Phil- Hyde Park-Kenwood neighbor- toheaded the department since American School of Classical logy, a national classics maga- -hood.; will be on display on the piteach in the future. zine. 7th floor, near the V~Blind girl says UC is 'huge'graduate and graduate degreesfrom UC, and has been a mem¬ber of the faculty since 1949when he was an assistant pro¬fessor. lie Agency Participation.The Hyde Park-Kenwood re¬newal program covering 900acres is the first and largest ofits kind in the United States.Although legally blind, Eileen Crowley, a first-year undergraduate student, says she hasThompson is author of The no trouble finding her way around. She has found both interest and acceptancePragmatic Philosophy of C. S. on the part of the students and the faculty.Pierce and of a number of techni- According to Eileen, people at the University of Chicago “accept you for what you thinkcal articles and reviews for pro- .rather than who you are or what you are.” Legally blind means that although she hasfcssional journals. He is cur- some peripheral, or side vision, she is reguired to carry a white cane when she is not with can aPPfv for tuition loans to beLoans availableThe last day on which studentsrently completing a monograph a group,on Metaphysics for the Humani- Comingties council at Princeton.Arthur Friedman has sue-* from Calumet Highschool in Chicago, Eileen finds was class soloist at graduation,the University “huge.” “I thought but does not know yet what ae-my high school was big,” she tivities she would like to join ateeoded Walter Blair as chairman said. She added that the Univer- Chicago.of the department of English, sity campus is beautiful to her Through the Interclub council,Blair, now in Europe, was chair- with all its old, buildings and ivy. Eileen is supplied with peopleman of the. department for nineyears. The job is for a three yearperiod.Friedman has done all of histeaching at UC, and has been onthe faculty since 1935.Richard Burere, professor of es. A special study room wasequipped with tape recorders andBraille typewriters, and Eileenreturned there to study after re¬ceiving her assignments in class.At the University, she attends used in autumn quarter 1960 isOctober 28. Applications may bepicked up in the Office of Finan¬cial Aid, Administration 201, anyweekday from 8:30 to 5 pm.Interest on those loans is min¬imal, according to the Office ofis the chiming of the bells in she may tape\them. She also hasRockefeller chapel. “They create people who help read her matha community within a commu- assignments to her. However,nity, and unify the campus into she still needs someone to helpsomething that belongs to you her on Saturdays, and would likealone,” she said. anyone who wants to volunteer toEileen has played the piano by call her at the new dormitory,Latin, is succeeding Gertrude ear for nine years, and has had room 2411.Smith as chairman of the depart¬ment of classics.Miss Smith, a professor of a year of lessons at the American In high school Eileen was partConservatory. She participated m of a special division for blind stu-mauy high school activities and dents, but attended regular class-The best thing about the campus who read her assignments so that her classes -and discussions and Financial Aid, and in most casesthe loans do not accrue. interestuntil the student is out of college.The personnel office, also in theAdministration Building, worksclosely with the /Office of Finan¬cial Aid in helping students findjobs to help pay costs at the uni¬versity.Coggeshall speaks“A virile, free society nur¬tures curiosity, and only menand women who can ask the'right questions at the righttime — and sometimes even thewrong questions at the wrongtime — can be successful.”.So spoke Lowell T. Coggeshall,vice president of medical affairsat the University of Chicago, inan address yesterday to the sec¬ond National Youth Conferenceexperience would better qualify on the atom at the Museum ofher for that job. Science and Industry.New political group formsA new political organization, the Young Americans for Freedom, was founded on cam¬pus last week. The group also announced that R was sponsoring a lecture by Austrianjournalist and author, Brik v. Kuehnelt-Leddihn, on “The African turmoil — from Cape¬town to Algiers,” Sunday, October 23, at 4 pm in Social Science 122.Kuehnelt-Leddihn is the Munich correspondent for the National Review, as well as afrequent contributor to Modem Age, Commonweal, America, The Journal of the Historyof Ideas, Journal of Central Eu-ropean Affairs, and numerousEuropean publications. A world strengthened and preserved m ganization intends to sponsor atraveler, he has just completed their independence from central- series of lectures by prominenta tour of the African continent, ized governmental and commer- authors and speakers, as well asHis books range from anti-totali- rial domination, and that human to challenge organizations of dif-tarian novels, written in the liberty be recognized as some- ferent persuasions to panel de- then studies in her room withthe aid of a tape recorder an<cfa Braille typewriter.Classes are completely differ¬ent from what she is accustomed.There is much more discussionand classes^- “delve into thingsmore deeply and technically.” Sheis taking three subjects, whichinclude English, humanities, andmathematics. Since she has neverbeen taught to write, Eileen re¬cords lectures on her tape record¬er and takes class notes on aportable* Braille slate. From theslate she later transcribes thenotes onto her Braille typewriter.Planning a major in history,E’leen would like to teach eitherhigh school or college. She is notsure whether she will teach blindchildren, but thinks that her own1930's, to treatises on politicaltheory, such as Liberty or Equal¬ity. He considers himself a “Neo-Liberal in the Central Europeansense,” in the tradition of deTocqueville, Jacob Burkhardt, andMontalembert.The president of the now group.John P. McCarthy, a graduatestudent of history, stated that theaim of the group was to furthercertain political and social princi¬ples which, he maintains, haveboon too long noglectod in Amer¬ican academic circles. Amongthese are: that the West shouldmake full use of its power in in¬fluencing the outcome of the Coldwar; that the area of dispute inthe Cold war and in the negotia¬tions connected with it includenot just territory within the per¬imeter of the free world; thatthose private institutions whichhumanize life, such as the family,• he Church, the private associa¬tion, the academic community, be thing derived prior to the positive bates. A publication is also con-legislative or administrative fiat templated.of the managerial state. Admission to the lecture onTo further these ideas the or- Sunday is free of charge.THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree U.C. DeliveryTerry ’s1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 feet fftfc ft.MU 4-9296Eye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptom«t«ef1132 E. 55th Streetat University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372 Mf btipM |Mi 3-3113Mars nrcastrol lubricantstucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspireUi &. michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespecialists fc speed tuningcustom engine Ihstafefewsdutch .gear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coactovodtM (astir MG psychiatrist2306 e. 71st st.Chicago, Mlinois Z' NOT A SIGN OF A SLIP-UP!Typing errors disappear like magic when you use Eatoh’sCorrasable Bond. Never a trace of the word that waserased; errors can be flicked off Corrasable’s special surfacewith an ordinary pencil eraser. Saves re-typing, time andmoney. And the sparkling new whiteness gives all typinga new brilliance. You can’t make a mistake getting, Eaton’s Corrasable. (Rhymes with erasable.)Eaton's Corrasable Rond is -available in light, medium, heavyand onion skin weights. Inconvenient 100-sheet packetsand 500-sheet ream boxes. ABerkshire Typeivriter Paper,backed by the famousEaton name.Made only by EatonEATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTypewriter PaperBATON PAPER CORPORATION .* JJJ • PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTSOct. 21, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9-jStudent Government MeetingsAll meetings will occur m the Student Government Officein Ida Noyes Hall except the Assembly which will meetin Business East North.GROUPElection andRulesCommittee AGENDAIndependence ofNSA CommitteeVacancies inAssembly andCourt TIMEFriday, October 212:30 pmV ‘ -tCommittee onRecognised ’StudentOrganizations Recognition ofOrganizationsDiscriminationin StudentOrganizations Tuesday, October 254:00 pmNationalStudentAssociationCommittee1 Discrimination inVoting RightsNationafScholarshipService andFund for NegroStudents Saturday, October 221:30 pmCommunityRelationsCommittee Housing File Monday, October 247:30 pmStudent-FacultyRelationsCommittee Student FacultyAcademic Aff sBoa rdFaculty FellowsProgramDisciplinarySystemDean's List Tuesday, October 254:30 pmAssemblyMeeting CommitteeReports Tuesday, October 257:30 pmCampusActionCommittee StudentConsultantBoardsCodification ofWomen's HoursRegulations Thursday, October 274:30 pmForeignStudent. AffairsSeminar Thursday, October 277:30 pmTHE BOOK NOOKIn the Hyde Park Shopping CenterCurrent Fiction & Non-FictioniArt Books Children's BooksPaperbacks20% oh Perxonalfeerf Chris/ma* Card*Lnlil JXorrmbrr INSA brings student hereA leadership program for foreign students administered by the National Student asso¬ciation (NSA) is in operation at the University this year. Miguel Rotblat, an Argentinian,is now studying in the economics department under the auspices of this program. The Uni¬versity of Chicago was selected by NSA as one of the participating institutions in theForeign Student Leadership Project (FSLP). Each year NSA brings fifteen students whoare leaders in student organizations in their countries to this country to study in Americanuniversities and participate in ———student activities. through a grant, from the Ford In addition it is hoped that theDuring his stay on the campus foundation which was renewed project will contribute to the de-Rothlat will observe and take last yeai. Part of the expenses velopment of National Unions ofp»r. St,den. government, NSA Student, which are representativethe participating institution and aspirations of students inin some cases by the Student other countries,government.The project was originally setin Philadelphia and attended the up to provide insights for Anier-National Student congress in can Students into the problemsMinneapolis. At the. completion of students elsewhere and to pro-Vof his year on this eampus he vide foreign student leaders withwill attend an evaluation eonfer- an understanding of student lifeenee with the oilier participants jn the United States to encourageand reoresetnatives from each ofthe participating campuses.activity on campus and otherstudent organizations. Prior tohis arrival here he spent sometime at the national NSA officeRot bait is the second FSLPstudent to study at the Univer¬ an appraisal of the value andweak points of various societies,and to provide an opportunity forparticipation in a wide range ofsity. During 1956-57, Saburo Su- student self-government situationszuki of Japan was on this'cam¬pus. so as to give experience in prob¬lem solving under various circuit*FSLP was established in 1955 stances.unusualOne of many unusual projects at theLawrence Radiation Laboratory — the onlynational laboratory active in virtually allphases of the atomic energy program.ON NOVEMBER 11Lawrence Radiation Laboratory staff memberswill be on campus to answer your questionsabout a career in nuclear research^They will interview outstanding:chemists electronic engineersphysicists mechanical engineersmetallurgists ceramic engineersmathematicians chemical engineersCall your placement office for an appointment*LAWIiENCE RADIATIONLABORATORYof the University of CaliforniaBerkeley & Livermore, California(Ban Francisco AreaJHOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRojnd-O-Beef and WafflesOpen front Dawn' to Dawn 1342east 53 st. Miguel Rotblat, an Ar¬gentinian, is currently atUC under the auspices ofthe National Student associ¬ation.Tory IIA is the first of a series of test reactorsbeing developed under the Lawrence RadiationLaboratory’s nuclear Ramjet program.A reactor for ramjet propulsion must operatg,at high power levels yet be of minimum sizeand mass. Its design must consider the very highpressure drop across its length, the stress loadsdue to flight maneuvering, and the extremely high radiation flux level which itself leads tosevere heat transfer and radiation damage prob¬lems. Because the operating temperature exceedsthat at which most conventional structural ma¬terials fail, the core itself consists of bundledtubes of sintered uranium and beryllium oxidefabricated with central holes for continuous airpassage.Hobnail Oxfordo fresh approachin shirtings...The special weave ol hobnail ox¬ford accents the texture of this finefabric . . . the authentic roll of theclassic button-down is perfectly in¬terpreted in the Sussex B D.Offered in stripings of muted mas¬culine tones as well os solid colors.cum laude collection-ARROW~102 deported for protestTwo British exchange stu¬dents studying at the Univer¬sity of California have beenforced to leave the UnitedStates, and are currently on theirway back to England.The visas of Christopher Baconand Mary Macintosh were not re¬newed as a result of their partici¬pation In a San Francisco studentprotest last May, directed againstlocal hearings of the House Com¬mittee en Un-American Activities(HU AC)."Bacon defied law and orderwhen he refused to follow policeorders (during the demonstra¬tion). We sent him out of thecountry because we don't toleratethat kind of conduct of visitors tothis country,” said Cecil W. Ful-lilove, deputy director of the SanFrancisco Immigration office.Fullilove said that the Immigra¬tion office is empowered to dc-termine whether a foreign stu¬dent “engages in any activity in-consistent with his role as a non¬immigrant,” and “Bacon’s partici¬pation (in the demonstration) wasnot In keeping with his role as astudent.”Bacon and Miss Macintosh werearrested and charged with incitinga riot and resisting arrest, alongwith 58 other students. These< harges were subsequently drop¬ped, after the students had waivedtheir right to file suit against thearresting officers.The student protest against thethree-day HU AC hearings hasl»cen the subject of much contro¬versy. Participators in the demon¬strations claim that police usedlire hoses and nightsticks in aneffort to disperse approximately’*.000 students who were sitting Scopes at UC todayMARCO POLOTRAVEL SERVICESince 12761658 E. 55th BU 8-5944Joseph N. Aaron, ’27The CoiinwcirufNttlual Life InsiiranreCompany of HartfordSince 1846, over 100 yeors, hossafeguarded your family.135 S. LaSalle Si.Suite »‘>5 HA tt-IO<iO'Disc1367 E. 57th St. HY 3-5151•RECORD of the WEEKRichterMussorgsky: "Picturesat an Exhibition"andProkofiev: "SonataNo. 7"Artia 154—$3.99ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Refinuhing ofShoet and Handbagg• Colon matched • Toes cut ou*• Vamps lowered • PlatformsremovedEQUIPPED TO repair ladies-narrow HEELSHeals changed — Any style —Any colorBockstrape Removed and Springa-•otors inserted —- Sheas stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St. down in sullen protest at not he- attacked the students with hosesiog allowed Into the crowded and clubs and without any warn- John G. Scopes will attend ology and education, Malcolm T.chamber to witness the hearings, ing, the students reacted by sit- the world premier of the of- Sharp, professor of law, and Wil-However, police and the un-American Activities Commit toeclaim that the incident was the re¬sult of the students being led intoviolent action by “hard core Com¬munist agitators.” They claim thatthe incident was a “student riot”;Hie students refer to the incidentas a case of “police brutality.”According to one of the studentleaders. ”... when the police ting down, putting their hands in ficial movie of' UC’s Darwintheir pockets, and refusing to centenial celebration, at 4:00pm, today, in Mandel hall.move . . . students allowed them¬selves to be dragged down 60stone.steps by police.”Bacon lias been cited as playinga paramount role in trying tokeep demonstrators calm and or¬derly as they became excited,after being denied access to theHU AC public hearings. A panel discussion, “The Scopesease of 1924,” will follow.Panel members will be Scopesdefendant in the Tennessee“monkey trial*” Harry KalvenJr., professor of law, Everett C.Olsen, professor of Geology, Jo¬seph J. Schwab, professor of bi- liam A. Wood/ sales manager ofthe University Press.Wood will discuss the effortsof textbook publishers to avoidstating theory in high school bi¬ology texts, as this would violatestate laws against the teachingof evolution.The public is invited to boththe movie and the panel discus¬sion. Admission is free.Building will be dedicated(Continued from page 1 >become a helper and a leader,working with the group.The student was to use pre¬vious experiences as steppingstones, so he could go from onerelated activity to another.Now, between 98 percent and100 percent of the Universityhigh school graduates go on tocollege.In last year’s National MeritScholarship competitions, thejunior class’ median'score wasin the nation’s upper 4 per cent.Nearly one-quarter of the classhas won recognition in the mostrecent competition.An average of 1000 to 1500 vis¬itors visit the school yearly. Last year, representatives from 49countries conferred wiih teafrhersand administrators and observedprograms.The principal of UniversityHigh School is 38 year old Wil¬lard Congreve, who was ap¬pointed in September. While atUC, he ranked highest in a groupof 300 who took a Chicago prin¬cipal’s examination. Congreve re¬ceived a bachelor’s degree fromChicago Teachers college, a mas¬ters degree in music from North¬western university in 1947, anda PhD from UC in 1957.Professor Francis S. Chase, 61,is dean of the graduate school ofeducation and chairman of thedepartment of education at UC.He holds bachelors and masters degrees from the University ofVirginia and his PhD from UC.He joined the UC faculty in 1949,was appointed professor of edu¬cation in 1951, chairman of thedepartment in 1954, and dean ofthe school in 1958.Larmee, 40, was appointed di¬rector of pre-collegiate educationat UC in 1957. He holds bache¬lors and masters degrees fromthe University of Michigan. In1957, he became an assistant pro¬ fessor in the school of educationat UC as well as the director ofpre-collegiate education.Alumni of University highschool include loaders such asEdward Tatem; Nobel Prize win¬ner i n medicine, Ned Rorem,composer; Katherine Kuh, art ex¬pert; James H. Douglas, Jr., Sec¬retary of the Air Force RobertMerriam, Presidential assistant;Albert Pick, Jr., hotelman; andHarold Florsheim, manufacturer.PAUL’S HARDWARE & PAINT SUPPLYHyde Park's Laryest Hardware StareSTUDENT DISCOUNT906 E. 55th Ml 3-9754LUCKY STRIKE PRESENTS:DI29R.DR: FrSOD :DR. FROOD'S THOUOHT FOR TH* DAY: Itl CollegC, the Onlyprivileged class is the one with unlimited cuts.4)973J 10 9 80 J985+ 43 - v mmmmm mm m+ KQ10V AK70 K 643+ 865f~ NORTH I + A 8 6 45 S?63£ ^ 0 10 2u. SOUTH _J * J 109 7 2+ J52<?Q5420 A Q 7+ AKQDear Dr. Frood: Here is a controversial bridge hand played ata recent college tournament. The contract was six no-trump.Some say declarer should have played the Fiskill Convention,squeezing West while end-playing East. Others, however, saya straight dummy reversal and a trump coup would bring homethe contract. What would you do with a hand like this?A'O TrumpDEAR NO TRUMP: In our club, successful play would requireslapping the Jack, whistling at the Queen and quickly saying“Sir Hinkum Dinkum Fuzzy Duster” when the one eyed Kingis played. Dear Dr. Frood: How can a nice girl tell whethera boy is sincere—or just a wolf—when he asksfor a kiss?Nice GirlDEAR NICE: Ask to see his teeth.Dear Dr. Frood: Everybody laughed when I brought mymother to the Homecoming Dance. What's so funnyabout that? r ,treshmanDEAR FRESHMAN: She’s probably a very funny woman.Dear Dr. Frood: Like every normal college man,smoke Luckies. The other day I met this characterwho smoked something else. I want to know how aguy can be stupid as that and still get into college., Lucky FanDEAR LUCKY: Obviouslyyour college is very easyto get into. Dear Dr. Frood: I am 20 years old and I am about to marrya very nice, well-to-do man. He is 92 years old. Do youthink the gap in our ages will affect our happiness?FianceeDEAR FIANCEE: Not for long.“IF YOU DON’T SMOKE LUCKIES,” SAYS FROOD, “YOU OUGHT TO HAVE YOURHEAD EXAMINED!” And Frood ought to know. His head has been examinedseventy-three times. (And phrenologists are still wondering where he got the goodsense to smoke Luckies.)CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change!Product of — c/v&eeo « our middU namtCM r. cw,Oct. 2k 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • U■ '%& pf' Iff*®*Russian civ course added to college listA new college course, Intro¬duction to Russian Civiliza¬tion, is being offered this yearbv the department of socialsciences. It is being taught by-Thomas Riha and Meyer Isen-berg.According to Riha, it had beenpromised to the .students since1957. ed that they found it difficult toobtain good translations of Rus¬sian works in large enough num¬bers. They hope that, by nextyear, the library will stackenough assigned and supplemen¬tary readings.The administration has modeledthis course on the other non-west¬ern civilization courses, whichThe course is a three quartersequence. The first quarter coversRussian history and culture fromthe year 1000 to the time of Peterthe Great, when Russia was acompletely closed country.The second quarter covers theperiod from Peter the Great tothe Russian Revolution. Thestudy of Russian literature willbe included in this quarter.The third quarter covers thesoviet period.According to Isenberg andRiha, the students have been tre¬mendously enthusiastic about thecourse. However, they feel thatthey have sensed a slight “baffle¬ment” among the students. Thisis due to the fact that studentsare currently studying an earlierperiod of history than is empha¬sized in Western history courses.The College course, History ofwestern civilization, is a desirableprerequisite for this course, ac¬cording to the instructors, sincemany topies cannot be fullv un¬derstood without a firm back¬ground in Western history.- When organizing this course,the department of social sciencearranged for weekly lectures tohe given by specialists in differ¬ent fields.The staff has organized a sylla¬bus as the core of reading for thiscourse. Isenberg and Riha report- were started six years ago.Seek ski leaderThe Outing club of the Univer¬sity of Chicago is seeking personswho are interested in skiing andwho would like to lead a skiingtrip this coming winter.Openings are available for in¬terim trips, Christmas andspring, as well as for weekendtrips. Interested persons mustbe 21 or over and show an abilityto handle responsibility to qualify.Leaders get a substantial reduc¬tion in trip costs on longer trips.Fur further information callTom Bolland, FA 4-2369 or seeHarold Lucas, Central Informa¬tion desk. ' in statistical methods in epidemi¬ology, demographic methods inpublic health, dental epidemiolo¬gy, sources of data of epidemio¬logic study, biostatistics, bioas¬says, medical research design,statistical methods in research onvarious diseases, and other re¬lated fields.Landahl will also provide tech¬nical advice to the National Ad¬visory Health council of the Na¬tional Institutes of Health and,through the Council, to the Sur¬geon General of the Public Healthservice on matters pertaining tothe research training problems ofthe nation. t+ie US Office of Education.New project approvedAn educational research projectto be conducted by The Universityof Chicago has been approved by Lawrence G. Derthick, commis¬sioner of education, explained thatthe two year study will be con¬cerned with the “development ofbasic attitudes and values towardGovernment and Citizenship dur¬ing the elementary school years.”Dr. Robert D. Hess, associate pro¬fessor of Human development andeducation and Dr. David Easton,professor of political science willbe directors of the project.The Federal Government willprovide a total of $136,119 in sup¬port of this program, and TheUniversity of Chicago will alsocontribute to the cost by provid¬ing services and facilities.This local study is part of thenational cooperative researchprogram which was launched in July 1956. Approximately $3,300..000 is available for the currentfiscal year.This particular project is theninth study to be supported atThe University of Chicagothrough the Cooperative researchprogram under the supervision ofDr. Roy M. Hall and Dr. DavidL. Clark.Six UC faculty memberswin research fellowshipsLandahl gets postHerbert Daniel Landahl, profes¬sor. committee on mathematicalbiology, University of Chicago,has been appointed to serve afour-year term on the AdvisoryCommittee on Epidemiology andBiometry of the National Insti¬tutes of Health, US Public Healthservice.As a member of the CommitteeLandahl will review applicationsfor training grants in the fieldsof epidemiology and biometry.The program supports researchtraining for predoctoral and post¬doctoral trainees, and medical anddental students in their freevtime,University of Chicago Women's ClubsRushing Schedulet 'interclub Council, on behalf of the four women'sclubs on campus — Delta Sigma, Esoteric, Mortar¬board, and Quadranglers — invites all Universitywomen 17 and over to participate in its fail rusk.Rush «TeaTuesday, October 183:30 pm to 5 pmFirst Rush Parties — open to alt rusheesMortarboard Monday, October 24Quadranglers Tuesday, October 25Delta Sigma Wednesday, October 26Coffee HoursThursday, October 27 to Friday, November 4S • ' . " ' ' ' • ‘ .Second Rush Parties — by invitation onlyDelta Sigma Thursday, November 3Mortarboard Monday, November 7Quadranglers Wednesday, November 9Esoteric Thursday, November 10Preferential Dinner and DanceSaturday, November 12 Six University of Chicagofaculty members have won1960-61 fellowships to theCenter for Advanced Studyin the Behavioral Sciences atStanford, California.They are: Carl Christ, associateprofessor of economics; Jacob W.Getzels, professor of education;Richard P. McKeon, prof' ssor ofphilosophy, Charles F. Grey dis¬tinguished service professor; LeoStrauss, professor of political sci¬ence. Robert M. Hutchins distin¬guished service professor; Her¬bert A. Thelen, professor of edu¬cation; David L. Wallace, associ¬ate'professor of statistics.They will spend this academicyear, developing research tech¬niques and exploring fiew ideas inthe behavioral sciences.The fellowships were an¬nounced September 1 by Ralph W„Tyler, director of the Center andformer dean of the division of so¬cial sciences.Of the 52 fellowships awardedthis year, six are from the Univer¬ sity of Chicago: five from Yale,four from the University of Mich¬igan, four from the University ofCalifornia at Berkeley. Eisenstadt speaksAs part of the Hillel Public Lee-ture Series. Samuel N. Eisenstadt,chairman of the Sociology department of the Hebrew University inJerusalem and a visiting profossor of sociology at the Universityof Chicago, will speak in the Raymond Karasik House. 5715 Woodlawn avenue on Monday, October24 at 8 pm on the topic “Ideaoiogyand Social Structure in Israel.”Professor Eisenstadt is the author of many books among whichare: The Absorption of Immi¬grants, a study of Israeli im¬migration in comparison withother famous immigrations, andFrom Generation to Generation,a study of the formation and thesocial structure of adolescentgroups, the motives for s u r hgroupings, and the roles playedby the participants.For PRINTING Call JAY!OFFSET if LETTERPRESS ★ MIMEOGRAPHING. DAILY U. OF C. PICKUPSCanHY 3-0802 JAY Letter A Printing Service1950 East 75th StreetLOW COST AUTO INSURANCEfor full information PhoneOA 4-2183DON LINDBURG5020 Woodlawn! 'CHlZZTtiLkAktwL• /'America’s Original Total Abstainers' Insurance INSURANCE CO.Compony Neil Komesar (2nd fromright), president of theGarg - Griffen club, chainthe group's first meeting ofthe quarter at the meeting,plans for the year were die-cussed and prospective UCcheerleaders were inter¬viewed.GUITARSBANJOSMANDOLINSTHEFRET SHOP5535 DorchesterMl 3-3459i •American Friends Service Committee PresentsA Striking IPratna• 6 WHICH WAYTHE WIIYB”by Philip C. LewisPror'wt'etf Jatwe* F. Griffith tlanagcmrM"Guaranteed to jolt any viewer who is complacent aboutthe way the world is heading." '—Philadelphia InquireriVi. ON. 21 — 8:15 — Snn. ON. 23International HouseL Tickets: $1.20; $2.20, On sale at Co-Op Credit UnionOr at the door. THE LUTHERAN CAMPUS PARISHAT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOHoly Communion Every Sunday at 10 a.m. MODEL CAMERAWhole taleCatalogue Prices onCameras, Projectors, Recorders1342 I. 55th HY 3-9259HILTON CHAPEL, 58th and UniversityThe Rev. Wayne Saffen, PastorOffice: Chapel House, 5810 S. WoodlaweMl 3-0800, Ext. 3392 TEL RES. DE 71004th MontiChicago’s LongRun Musical HitMlcn»cAO°* Ncurcsr,HAPPY MEDIUM901 N. RUSH St.OOWHSTAWt ROOM3 ttm MMyi Tim. tat. tiM t IhMw Tit* • Witt Nun ta.ltn MM t UMfit IW.MII UM Im to*. ItIMI MS.MAIL OlOEtt HOW12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 21, 1960- j:■L Dof.y Bender. 75. whoGd.: .ft Kelly •old (*Ke meantvote for Nixon and I’ve ....' lifel Kelly or Kennedy,nwide broadcast that hehout the old of the Southltis against Him. * Forth-why, he salehoped to beHH. Vfome«>:Divi.iotelephone I ;«»*. etlelterecruit, who f# now 01llxon campaigner. .irnal-Constitution phot' V tV •New cancer findingreported by UC manA University of Chicagocancer researcher has re¬ported that a striking differ¬ence has been observedbetween the fate of a female sexhormone in sexual tissues and inother body tissues.Elwood V. Jensen, professor Inthe Ben May laboratory for can¬cer research at UC said that theestrogenic hormone, estradiol, re¬tains its chemical identity in ani¬mal sexual tissues which are stim¬ulated to grow while other tissuesquickly convert the estradiol intodifferent compounds.Jensen delivered his reportTuesday afternoon, October 18thio the 13th Annual Scientificmeeting of the Detroit Instituteof Cancer Research at the DavidWhitney house of the WayneCounty Medical Society, Detroit.These findings provide insightinto the mechanism of hormonalcontrol of growth, a problemwhich this laboratory of The Uni¬versity of Chicago has been study¬ing for the past 10 years as alead to more effective cancertreatment.A form of radioactive hydrogeni carrier-free tritium) was usedby Jensen and his associates totag estrogen and study its me¬tabolic fate in experimental ani¬mals. In order to carry out thisresearch, the Jensen group devel¬oped special methods which areable to measure and IdentifyQuantities of estrogen as small asone pieogram — a trillionth of agram. Such sensitivity is neces¬sary since estrogenic hormonesexert their biological effects inwhat Jensen calls "fantasticallysmall doses.” On the other hand, growth-re¬sponsive sexual tissues, such asuterus, vagina and pituitary, ab¬sorb and retain the hormone foras long as six hours, with practi¬cally all of the estradiol remain¬ing in its original chemical form.Theorizing that cellular mem¬branes may be the sites of actionof the hormone on sexual "tar¬get” tissue cells, the group pres¬ently is determining where thehormone becomes localized with¬in the cellular structure, and ex¬actly what it does there to pro¬mote tissue growth. The above is engraved directly from a Nixon-Lodge newsletter. The Maroon passes iton without comment.Park, 21, teaches at UC SRP sponsors show“I wish to stress that I amnot an infant prodigy,” saidAndrew Park, 21-year-old Ox¬ford graduate, now a Chicagolaw school instructor, when ques¬tioned on his present position.Park, who instructs and tutorslegal techniques and writing tofirst year law students, is en¬gaged under the Bigelow teach¬ing fellowship for one year.Three fellow Englishmen, Chris¬topher Roson, Andrew Pugh, andAnthony Dick accompanied himunder the same plan.The present English univer¬sity system enables a student tocomplete his degree programs inthree years. Park does not con¬sider his youthful predicamentunusual as he was able to spec¬ialize in law throughout his un¬dergraduate career at Oxford.He pointed out that English uni¬ versities do not normally employthe liberal arts and general studycourse curriculum, believing thatsuch subjects have been ade¬quately covered in the final twoyears of grammar or publicschool. He was therefore ableto complete his law degree read¬ings by this summer.Neither was he affected by thecurse of so many American stu¬dents. The nature of his workat the University of Chicago un¬der a new British governmentruling excuses him from thepresent two-year national servicerequirement.Impressions of America and ofUC? — On the whole, good. Onecomplaint: While taking dinnerwith a group of friends at Yale,he ordered a beer — the waiterrefused as he was unable to pro¬vide proof of his age! Sonny Terry and BrownieMcGhee, internationally fa¬mous folk singers especiallyknown for their treatment ofthe blues, will appear at Mandelhall on Saturday, October 29, at8:30 pm.Both performers began theircareers in noteworthy ways. Ter¬ry, taking a walk one night downa dark country road and playinghis harmonica, was heard by astranger. The stranger was a fieldagent for a large national record¬ing company, scouring the deepSouth for new material. Beforethe evening was over, Terry had arecording contract and a chanceto appear in Carnegie hall.McGhee started singing andplaying his guitar in cellar placescalled "hole-in-the-wall taverns,”in "jook joints,” the early roadhouses that were bush league sporting houses, and in the bighouses that looked like mansions,"but there were always two ormore ways to get in — or out.”Terry and McGhee are the onlyAmerican folk singers to haveappeared in two Broadway hits.They were seen in "Finian’s Rain¬bow” and "Cat on a Hot TinRoof.” In 1959-60, Terry and Mc¬Ghee toured India for the Inter¬national Cultural program of theUnited States, and they will maketheir third appearance in Englandat the London Folk Festival inApril of this year.The blues singers are being pre¬sented by the Student Representa¬tive party (SRP) in cooperationwith the Folklore society. Ticketsare $1.50—general admission and$2-reserved seats at the Mandelbox office.IE CHEF DEFAMILLEest conscient de sea rea-ponsabilit£s envers sa fa-mille. II d^tient done unprogramme d’assurance-vieSun Life spdciBquementcouyU pour prendre »oinde son Spouse et de seaenfants.Ralph J. Wood Jr., *48I N. LaSalleFR 2-2390 Chicago, III.FA 4-6800Je reprdsente la Cotnpagnied’assurance-vie Sun Life duCanada. Nos plans moaernespeuvent tire adaptds d vosFropres besoins. Puis-je avoiroccasion de vous exposerquelques-uns de ces plans?Sans obligation, dvidemment.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE.COMPANY OF CANADAThe scientific team, includingDrs. Herbert I. Jacobsen, JamesW. Flesher, and Narendra N. Sa¬ha, observed that in non-sexualtissues, such as liver, kidney, ad-real, muscle, bone and blood, thehormone seems to be quicklyeliminated, with the maximum in-corporation of hormone reachedwithin 10 to 15 minutes after theestradiol is injected into the ani¬mal. Within 15 minutes, the liverhas changed the estradiol into avariety of different compounds.Bicycles, Ports, Accessoriesspeciol Student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 e. 55th st.Here's how the DUAL FILTER DOES IT?Tareyton has the taste—Dual Filterdoes it! 1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL,., definitely proved to make the taste of a cigarette mild andsmooth.. 02. with a pure white outer filter. Together they select and balancethe flavor elements in the smoke. Tareyton's flavor-balance givesyou the best taste of the best tobaccos.NEW DUAL FILTERProduct of J'/rruuiitan \Jt — Jafrvseo is our twiddle name Tareyton© * * «*•Filters forflavor-finest flavor by far!Frank Seno's run will be staged Sundayby Fred DolinrEditor's note — The Sons ofSeno vcill hold their fifth annualFrank Seno run at Stagg fieldSunday, at 2 pm.Everyone is familiar withthe great people of our time.We have heard names likeGeorge Washington, Abra¬ham Lincoln, Alexander Gra¬ham Bell, Albert Einstein, andFrank Seno, to name but a few.These men have contributedgreatly to the development of hu¬manity, and are the idols of mil¬lions of people the world over.Because men like these have ac¬quired such fame, stories abouttheir lives have been told and re¬told.Since the life stories of menlike these are exaggerated. It isnow time to relate the actuallife story of perhaps the greatestAmerican, past or present, FrankSeno.Frank was born in 1918 in Car¬michael. Montana. Carmichael isa small town, population 1341,where the chief and only indus¬try is the mining of copper.Frank’s father, grandfather, andgreat grandfather were all cop¬per miners and Frank’s futurewas planned along these lines.As a child, however. Frankshowed exceptional talent inother directions. He learned towalk at the age of 10 monthsand had a remarkable ability forcatching things. His parents hadhigh hopes for him but were dis¬appointed when he consistentlyfailed to make use of or develophis talents. He would sit insideand not catch a thing for weeksat a time. No matter how hardhis family tried, they could notinduce Fi-ank to catch things andsoon forgot about Frank’s talent.Frank was the fourth of elevenchildren and his parents had ahard time making ends meet.Soon after entering high school,he was pressured to quitting andgoing to work, but he displayeda strong will of his own. Realiz¬ing the importance of an educa¬tion, he refused to quit, but gotan after school job at a grocery.One afternoon, lie stopped towatch Carmichael high’s footballteam practice. Suddenly a ballwas kicked toward him. Frankleapt high into the air and made -a spectacular catch. The coachperceived the great talent ofFrank Seno and convinced himto come o^f for the team, and heplayed right half-back for threeyears. He was a solid performer, but never really did anything toattain fame or be rememberedby. After graduation, he got ajob in the mines, but soon ac¬cepted a football scholarship toMontana State,Frank was happy at MontanaState. His football playing wasmore than adequate but againnothing spectacular. When he re¬ceived a diploma, he again wentto work in the mines, but hadjust started when he received atelegram informing him that theChicago Cardinals had draftedhim as their 48th draft choice.Frank played for six seasons(1940-45) without doing anythingto achieve a permanent niche inthe game. But in the third gameof the 1946 season, Frank was tohave his day. The Cards met theleague favorites, the New YorkGiants, on October 20, 1946. Itwas a dark, rainy day, and themuddy water on the ComiskeyPark gridiron was ankle deep.The Giants, averaging 241pounds per man. lined up to kickoff. Frank Seno, standing on hisgoal line, took four steps back¬ ward and gathered in the boom¬ing kick. He looked for hisblocking, but it wasn’t there andthe New York line was bearingdown on him. In a burst of speedhe sped past five Giants, dodgeda sixth and seventh and headedfor the sidelines. Two moreGiants dived at him, but missedas he ran past mid-field. Cuttingtoward the other sideline, he es¬caped the clutching hands of an¬other Giant and with lightningspeed went by the last and overfor the touchdown.For the first time in his lifeFrank was famous. He had donethe impossible with a greathuman effort. Frank Seno wasnow the holder of the NFL recordfor the longest kickoff return—103 yards.Frank was now famous. Themoney was rolling in every timehe endorsed a new product andthe mention of his name madethe heart pound in every footballfan from coast to coast. At theend of the year, Frank retiredinto private business where, tie-cause of his great fame, he was made head of the Cariwichaelcopper mines.The next ten years went bysmoothly for Frank. He workedhard and carried the burden offame gracefully. In 1956 a galaparty was planned to celebratethe tenth anniversary of Frank’sstupendous accomplishment. Theentire Conral-Hilton hotel in Chi¬cago was rented for the occasion,and a big cake, the size of thegridiron, was baked with Frank’sgreat run traced on top. EvenFrank’s poor uncle came all theway from Spain, where he hadsold his house to get the money.Frank was in all his glory andhis picture was on the cover ofevery magazine in the country.One week before the great eventFrank arrived in Chicago, whereit was estimated that over 100,000people turned out to meet him.On the same day the ChicagoBears were playing the GreenBay Packers up in City stadium.With 50 seconds left in the gamethe Bears scored tlieir sixthtouchdown and kicked of toGreen Bay. which was hopelessly behind. Al Carmichael took H inthe end zone and raced to atouchdown. The crooked GreenBay officials, wanting the recordfor Green Bay, shortened themeasuring chains and said it w asa 104 yard return.Needless to say, the party forFrank was cancelled. Frank wasbroken. He was no longer fatnous, for he no longer held theNF’L record for the longest kickoff return. His uncle, needless tosay, was somewhat aggravatedsince he had sold his house.The rest is common knowledgeFrank lost his job. He wentdown hill and started drinkingThe last that was heard of himwas that he was a dishwasheiin the Psi U house at UC.A few of the more reverentialstudents at Chicago think thata man of Frank Seno’s remarkable talent should still be honoredand respected. Perhaps all themore, since he is now a formoiNFL record holder. Thus evenyear the Sons of Seno hold aFrank Seno Day in which the\reenact his now legendary run,Scholars will study doomed valleyA five-year crash programby archaeologists to study theEgyptian Nubian valley be¬fore backwaters of the Aswandam flood the area was explainedby Dr. John A. Wilson, head ofthe Oriental institute.Dr. Wilson called the UNESCO-sponsored project “the greatestboost to archeology since the dis¬covery of King Tut’s tomb” ina speech he delivered to the Cit¬izens Board of the University ofChicago at the Sheraton-Blaek-stone hotel Thursday, October 13.The international effort will ex¬plore and excavate in a 180-milestretch of the Nile. Inscriptionswill be copied and detailed photo¬graphs will be taken wheneverthe original material cannot besaved.All work must be completedrapidly; the lower sections of thevalley will be flooded in threeyears and the entire area will beunder water in five years. Wilsonstated that most of the area hadnever been explored and littleprevious excavation has beendone; the archaeologists literallydon’t know where to begin.The archaeologists do knowthat they must save the 21 an¬cient temples in the area. Mostof these, including Beit-ali, which3000 SUMMER ServiceJOBS IN EUROPEA S 1 S EUROPEAN SAFARI AdventureFreedomAcculturationwrit<“ to: RomanceAmerican Student Information ServiceJahnstrasse 56a, Frankfurt/Main, Germany Inexpensive is in the twelve-mile area the Ori¬ental institute will cover, can beout apart and re-assemhled onhigher ground. Pfiilae, one of thefinest temples, will require athree to five million dollar damto preserve it.Even more beautiful, and moredifficult to preserve, is Abu-sim-bel. Ramses II built this collosusin 1265 B.C. to honor himself andhis wife Nefertari. In one cliff hehad carved a temple dedicated toher. In the other were carved four67-foot statues of Ramses withrows of statues around them, sur¬rounded by beautiful carvings.The cost of building a damaround Abu-simbel may be ashigh as 60 million dollars, if itcan be done at all. Wilson toldthat even if a dam is erected, wa¬ter seeping through the groundmay erode Abu-simbel’s flakingsandstone.Other thajn the temples, thearchaeologists don’t know whatthey will find in the valley. Per¬haps it will be evidence of ahypothosized third race w li i o hwas destroyed as it tried to settlein the area, or maybe they willfind remains of African groupswho tried to travel into Asia.Moil probably, Wilson said, theywill find nothing more enlighten¬ing or exciting than chips of pot¬tery. He hoped, however, that theE g y p 11 a ti government wouldshow its gratitude to the interna¬tional effort by later allowing them to work in more promisingterritory.Whatever they find, the archae¬ologists will have to overcomemany hardships. Tents cannot beused in the area because the sandcannot support them against thewhipping night winds, all foodand labor must be flown in, andthe climate (120 degrees in sum¬mer) is often unbearable.Dr. Wilson was surprised at thegreat public interest shown in theproject, partly caused by an arti¬cle “SOS from the temples ofNubia” in the July Reader’s Di¬gest. He has received many appli¬cations from people wanting toaccompany the expedition, buthad to turn them all down be¬cause there is no time to trainworkers and because the supplydifficulties require that partiesbe kept to 12-14 people.Although the main topic of Wil¬son’s talk was the effort in the Nubian valley, he spoke brieflyon his recent Moscow trip to theInternational Congress of Orientalists.In the past, Wilson stated, tincongress "had been strictly a fa^tidious, logomachial, long - haiiand egghead conference of scholars — until the Soviet Union captured it. . . . They went all out tomake a sales pitch to the people^of Asia and Africa.“The Soviet strategy backfiredin two ways. In the first place,their lack of cordiality certainhdrove us of the West into eachother’s arms, so that I now feelcloser to the French or West Getmans in my field. In the secondplace there was one big lack aithe congress: an intended hugedelegation from Red China nevetshowed up. This seriously damaged the Russian claim of solidarity with the peoples of Ari.iand Africa.”Peace drama stagedA second Hyde Park per¬formance of the peace dramaWhich way the wind has beenset. Performances will be atInternational house, 1414 E. 59thstreet, on Friday, October 21 andSunday, October 23. at 8:15 pm.The drama, in a new formcalled DoeuDrama, deals withrr»f «rww wwwwwww’rww w wwwwwwwwywwNrwwwwww ww^ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches;ravioli beef,mostacciofi sausage & meatballFree tPeUrery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th $t.Not fht*.- a student wH*•todies drowsily no matterhow much sleep he pete. TMe I Pertptcaclov* •. ••harpI NSDoz keep* you•wake and alert— safelylIT you find studying sometimes eoporific (and who doesn’t?) the wordto remember is NoDoiq. NoDo* alerts you with a safe and accural*amount of caffeine- the saute refreshing stimulantin coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-formingNoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable.So to keep perspicacious duriug study, and *<>: '*exams—and while driving, too— fc>- *£always keep NoDoz in proximity.safe stay awake tablet — ava'laole everywhete. taottiet hue product of Grave laboretorle WANTEDStudent* of the t niversilv of Chiengoboth men and wooienFor Fart-Time Employmentin nod around ChicagoSet Your Own Time and HoursPay Above AverageApply 200 Iteynolcls ( lullTue*., Oct. 25th— 10:00 a m. to 2:00 p.m.Ask for Mr. O'Donnell Stanley Home Products the quest for peace in the nuclear age. The play unfolds in aseries of shorl scenes taken fromthe history of the nuclear ageand presents alternative coursesto the arms race. The production is sponsored by the American Friends Service commit leeas part of its program of odueation for peace. The performances in Hyde Park are part ofa nationwide tour by a companyof professional actors. A similaitour held last year won criticalacclaim as a drama, and arousedconsiderable controversy overthe points of view presentedThe Philadelphia Inquirer saidthe play was “guaranteed to joltany viewer who is complaceniabout the way the world is heading. Philip Lewis manages t<>put his point across like a slapIn the face, and yet all this isnot completely grim. There ishumor, always intentional, andgentle, endearing touches thatsoften the impact.”The title of the play is takenfrom a statement by GeneralJames Gavin, testifying beforea congressional committee, answering questions about the elfects of the US launching a nuclear attack in the event of waiGavin said, “Current planningestimates run on the order olseveral hundred million dealhsthat would be either way, dcpending on which way the windblew. If the wind blew to th<southeast, they would be mostlyin the USSR, although the>would extend into the Japanesrand perhaps down into the Philippine area. If the wind blew theother way, they would extendwell hack up into Western Europe.”14 • CHICAGO MAROON t Oct. 21, 1960Arms race will alter existenceIf the arms race continuesfor many more years the eva¬cuation of US cities, massconstruction of shelters and r"life underground” may be¬come necessary for mostAmericans, according to a spe¬cial report, Community of Fear,issued by the Center for the studyof Democratic Institutions.Authors of the report are Har¬rison Brown, professor of geo¬chemistry of California Instituteof Technology, and James Real, aconsultant to the Center. Dr.Brown has written extensively onthe problems of human survivaland nuclear war. He is author ofThe Challenge of Man’s Future,and The Next Hundred Years.Report one of manyThe Center was founded lastyear in Santa Barbara, Californiaby the Fund for the Republic. TheBrown Real study is one of a sc¬ries arising from the Center’sStudy of war and the democraticsociety.Reinhold Niebur, vice presi¬dent of Union Theological Semi¬nary and a consultant to the Cen¬ter. writes in a foreword that“what is implied in this study isnot the proposition that the Rus¬sians can, or cannot, he trusted;or that the defense of values ofour Western civilization againstCommunist power is, or is not asimple task. The implication isconfined to the simple convictionthat we are involved in a rarewhich neither we nor the Rus¬sians can win.Recovery possible ton bomb were detonated overLos Angeles, for instance, “therewould be virtually no survivorsof the blast and fire.”The report says, “In any event,it is evident that individual metro¬politan areas are extremely vul¬nerable to thermonuclear attack.It is also clear that any programdesigned to decrease the vulner¬ability of these areas would hedifficult to put into effect andextremely expensive."Rationally, were we to makevigorous efforts to survive a largescale nuclear war, we would for¬get about our existing cities, rec¬oncile ourselves to the loss oftheir inhabitants, and concentrateour efforts in other areas.”Brown and Real are skepticalabout the deterrent effect of pres¬ent U. S. retaliatory forces. Theydeclare that "the rapid upsurgein Soviet missile capabilities iscreating a situation in which thethreat of massive reprisal by theU. S. is rapidly losing credence.. . . Our strategic force will notIn itself he an effective deterrentto a first strike by the SovietUnion.”But if the U. S. does passthrough the present critical pe¬riod without a war, "then thefulfillment of our current majorgoals, coupled with Soviet reac¬tions to our actions, will probablygive rise to a situation in whichboth the Soviet Union and theU. S. possess powerful and invul¬nerable retaliatory missileforces.”The writers do not feel that anymajor international war can belimited in scope of weapons: a so- called “limited war” would “esca¬late” into a large one.“We should recognize the like¬lihood that any future war thatis of appreciable size will involvethe use of nuclear weapons atsome sta*re, no matter what dis¬armament controls have been in existence prior to the outbreak ofthe war.War produces race"Even were the nations of thewortd to carry out successfully aprogram of total nuclear disarm¬ament, including the elimination of long range missiles, the knowl¬edge needed to manufacture suclUweapons would remain. Once a‘conventional’ war broke out,there would almost certainly be afrantic race upon the part of theparticipants to manufacture theweapons once again.”Concert is 'encouraging'by Robert H. McMahanThe series of chamber mu¬sic concerts, sponsored by themusic department of the Uni¬versity of Chicago had anencouraging opening nightlast Friday, October 14, atMandel hall. The performing art¬ists were a group called the NewYork String Sextet, consisting ofplayers such as Paul Doktor andBenar Heifetz who have gainedwide reputations in solo andchamber work. Organizations ofthis kind are a valuable additionto the ranks of small instrumen¬tal groups, where the more usualpatterns are the name stringquartets and wind quintets. Thereis an important if not extensiveliterature calling for a larger andmore varied instrumentationranging from six strings up tothe Hindemith kammerorchester.The opening work, the Sextetin Eb Op. 24, No. 5 by Lfligi Boc¬cherini is one of sixteen by thecomposer whose essays in thisform marked the beginning of awhole line of Sextets, includingpieces by Brahms, Dvorak, Tchai¬kovsky, Schonberg, and Martinu. This piece in four movements isweightier than some of its pred¬ecessors in Op. 24, but is, still in¬nocuous enough to have provideda good warm-up for both the at¬tention of the audience, and theco-ordination of the ensemble.The Mozart G Minor Quintet(K. 516) which followed put a dif¬ferent tone on the affair. In acomplete contrast to the familiarBudapest-plus-Trampler rendition,the performance Friday eveningwas briskly paced and subtly col¬ored. This marvelous piece pro¬duces its maximum effect whenallowed to speak freely withoutundue exaggeration of its expres¬sive nature. Their approach tothe music avoided the romanticextreme but did not relapse eitherinto an academic ennui.After intermission the artistsput forth the major effort of theevening, the Brahms Sextet No. 1in Bb Op. 18. In this work thegroup shaped their style to suitthe various aspects of the compo¬sition. The first movement wastranquil in outlook, flowing alongwith a Scubertian grace. A strongcontrast was the Andante, astormy set of variations in D Mi¬nor. Here, the instrumentalists poured it on with heavy accentsand brilliant technical work;rapid scales by the cellos an oc¬tave apart, etc., help in sustaininginterest in what is fundamentallya rather ordinary idea. The Scher¬zo was moderate in conception,lacking, a little of the flash onemight have expected from the Al¬legro Molto tempo indication. Theplayers termed it a respite fromthe Andante, however, turningthereby with more emphasis tothe final movement. Though■“marked Grandioso, this Rondodevelops an involved contrapuntaltexture in the middle sections.Here the sound of the six per¬formers began to take on the di¬mensions of a symphonic ensem¬ble. A rapid and smartly executedcoda brought the work and theconcert to a close; the audienceapplauded with enthusiasm, call¬ing the players back severaltimes.The attendance Friday suggeststhe forthcoming season to be thebest in recent years. There arestill, however, a few seats left farthe subsequent concerts, which in¬clude the Pro Musica, Valenti, theJ u i 11 i a r d Quartet, BethanyBeardslee, and the Vienna Octet"The pic of man’s journey up¬ward into the light will haveended.”In our present vulnerable state,the report says, even a "minimal”nuclear attack, directed againstU. S. retaliatory air and missilebases, might cost nearly 60 mil¬lion lives.The report, forecasting that bythe mid-60’s ballistic missiles willform the bulwark of U. S. andSoviet striking forces, examinesthe probable effects of nuclear at¬tacks on this country with bombspresently available. If a ten mega-“In the light of our best esti¬mates of current Soviet offensivecapabilities, were an all-out attackto be made upon us today, recov¬ery might be possible,” says thereport. "Again this question Is de¬batable. Were the attack to takeplace in five years and were weto make no preparations, recov¬ery would be extremely doubt¬ful. . . ."Presumably preparation mightexpedite recovery from such anattack. For this reason we canexpect great emphasis to beplaced during the next few yearson programs aimed at decreasingthe vulnerability of our popula¬tion and expediting post-attack re¬covery. The next phase of thearms race will almost certainlyinvolve grent emphasis upon thearea of civilian defense.“If the arms race continues, asit probably will, its future patternseems clear in broad outline. As aresult of the emergence of thecurrent capabilities for killingand destroying, programs will bestarted aimed at the evacuationof cities, the construction of fall¬out shelters in regions outside themajor metropolitan areas, andthe construction of limited under¬ground shelters. . . .“Eventually most human lifewill be underground, confrontedby arsenals capable of destroyingall life over the land areas of theearth. . . .“Once Ihe shelter program isunderway, it will constitute a sig¬nificant retreat from the idea ofthe obsolescence of war. Once thepeople are convinced that theycan survive the present state ofthe art of killing, a broad and sig¬nificant new habit pattern willhave been introduced and accept¬ed, one grotesquely different fromany we have known for thousandsof years — that of adjusting our¬selves to the idea of living inholes. . . .Its what's up front that countsUp front is I FILTER-BLEND | and only Winston has itlRich, golden tobaccos specially selected and speciallyprocessed for full flavor in filter smoking.R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem. N. C.WINSTON TASTES GOOD lik? a cigarette should!are available?would I work?1SIGN UP NOW FOR AN INTERVIEW!What would my first usstgm I be?BASIC TOAMERICA’SPROGRESS•I BROADWAY. NEW YORK fl, N. YDIVISIONS: BARRETT * GENERAL CHEMICAL . NATIONAL ANILINEPLASTICS ANO COAL CHEMICALS . 5EMET.SOLVAY « SOLVAY PROCESS .hemical’Friday, 21 OctoberChicago Gynecological Society Clinicalmeeting, 9 am-I2:30 pm SurgicalClinic, 1:45 pm-4:30 pm. Dora DeLeehall,Lecture (Department of Geography), 4pm. Rosenwald 41, “Agriculturalgeography of Malaya.’’ Robert Ho, de¬partment of geography, University ofMalaya.Lecture series: Personality Theory (de¬partment of psychology), 4 pm. SocialScience 122, “Traits and motives: thetheories of Allport and Murray,” Sal¬vatore R. Maddi, Instructor, depart¬ment of psychology.Maroon Staff meeting, 4 pm, Maroon of¬fice. Ida Noyes 303. All staff membersand Maroon seminar participants areurged to attend. All those interestedin joining the staff are welcome.Motion picture, 8 and 10 pm. Burton-Judson courts. “The Last Ten Days.**Lecture (Department of Art). 8 pm. So¬cial Science 122, “Architecture yester¬day and today.” Jan Reiner, architect.Lecture, 8 pm. La Rabida sanitarium."Rheumatic fever facts and fallacy,”Dr Alton Goldblum professor emeri¬tus and former head of the depart¬ment of pediatrics. McGill University.Social dancing. 9 pm. Ida, Noyes theatre,sponsored by the International houseassociation. Admission: students, 50cents: others, $1.Saturday, 22 OctoberVarsity Cross-Gountry Meet, 11 am.Washington park. Chicago vs. Univer¬sity of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.Recorder Society. 1 pm. Ida Noyes, in¬struction from 1 to 1:30 pm and thengroup playing.United Christian Fellowship. 1 pm.Chapel house. Autumn Retreat, leaveChapel house for Druce Lake camp.Theme: The Identity of a ChristianPerson. Return Sunday afternoon. Callextension 3393 for information.Methodist Couples club, 6:45 pm, 5631S. Dorchester avenue. Pot-lUck supperat the home of Chaplain Cole. After¬wards there will be a program anddiscussion of the Quemoy-Matsu issueof the presidential campaign. If in¬terested call HY 3-2944.Radio series: The Sacred Note. WBBM.11 pm. A program of choral music bythe University choir. Richard Vik-strom. director of Chapel Music, con¬ducting.Sunday, 23 OctoberRadio series: Faith of Our Fathers,WGN. 8:30 am. The Reverend JamesI McCord, president, Princeton Theo¬logical Seminary.Roman Catholic Masses, 8:30. 10. andII am. DeSales house.Episcopal Services. 9:30 am. Bond chap¬el. Holy Communion. Lutheran Communion Service, tO mu,Thorndike Hilton chapel.University Religious Service, 11 am.Rockefeller Memorial chapel. The Rev¬erend B. Davie Napier, Holmes Pro¬fessor of Old Testament Criticism andInterpretation. Yale Divinity school.Organ Recital, 3 pm. Rockefeller Memo¬rial chapel. Works by Walther, Cou¬perin. Bach. Franck. Langlais. Reger.Edward Mondello, organist of the Uni¬versity.Carillon Recital. 5 pm. RockefellerMemorial chapel. Daniel Robins, Uni¬versity carlllonneur.United Christian Fellowship worshipservice, 5:30 pm, Thorndike Hiltonchapel.Supper - Discussion meeting. 5 :30 pm,Brent house. Episcopal Student cen¬ter, 5540 S. Woodlawn avenue. Dis¬cussion 6:30 pm, “Segregated Housingin Chicago," led by Dr. Walton Tay¬lor, chairman. Episcopal Society forCultural and Racial Unity, Chicagochapter.United Christian Fellowship. 6 pm.Chapel house, buffet supper.Bridge Club, 7:15 pm, Ida Noyes lounge.Duplicate bridge will be played. Be¬ginning or experienced individuals orpartnerships are invited. ACBL masterpoints will be awarded.Faith and Thought Seminar (for under¬graduates). 7:30 pm, United ChristianFellowship. Chapel house. “NewTestament faith today,” led by theReverend Harold Walker. Jr., adviserto the United Christian Fellowship.Methodist Graduate Fellowship. 7:30pm. Seminar room. Chapel house. 5810S. Woodlawn avenue. This fall semi¬nar is entitled “The Crisis of Faith”and will attempt to explore the his¬torical roots of the mood of mean¬inglessness which pervades contempo¬rary culture. Everyone is welcome. pur. M a n d a , Nagarjunakitida, andLahore.”Lecture (Hillel foundation), 5715 Wood-luwn avenue, 8 pm. “Ideology and so¬cial structure In Israel," Samuel N.Eisenstadt. Hebrew university. Israel;vilsting professor of sociology.Motion picture, 8 pm. Internationalhouse, “Munna" from India.Tuesday, 25 OctoberTelevision -series: Seminar Sixty,WBBM-TV, 6:30 am. "The Newspaper.”Fern.Daniel Ward, Democratic candidate forstate’s attorney, 4 pm. Ida Noyes li¬brary. Ward will speak.Colloquium (Institute for the Study ofMetals), 4:15 pm, Research Institutes211. “Classical transport in a modelof a semiconductor containing im¬purities,” H. L. Frisch, visiting pro¬fessor. Institute for the Study ofMetals and department of chemistry.Hug Ivri (Hebrew Conversation), 4:30pm. Hillel foundation.Pre-med Club, 4:30 pm, Abbott 133, lec¬ture on “Medical Education."Lecture (Department of Radiology). 5pm. Billings hospital, room M-137.“Encephalography and Ventriculog¬raphy in Postier Fossa Tumors.” Dr.Giovanni Ruggiero, chief, neuroradi¬ology service, Hospital de la PttleParis.Glee club. 7 30 pm. Ida Noyes theatre,rehearsal.Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. 7:30pm. Ida Noyes hall, lecture-discussionled by the Reverend Allan Redpath,pastor of Moody Memorial church.A Political Discussion (Alpha KappaKappa Fraternity), 8 pm. Billings hos¬pital. room P-117. “Medical Care forthe Aged.” Republican and Demo¬cratic speakers. ber. National Science Foundation fac¬ulty fellow, professor of statistics,Roosevelt college.Carillon Recital, 5 pm. RockefellerMemorial chapel. Daniel Robins.Episcopal services, 5:05 pm. Bond chap¬el. Evensong.Israeli folk dancing, 7:30 pm, Hillelfoundation.Symphony Orchestra, 7:30 pm, Mandelhall, rehearsal.Discussion. 8 pm. William Wallace Fennhouse. 5638 S. Woodlawn avenue. “TheLiberal Church—The Needs It Meets’*led by Dr. and Mrs. Randall Hilton.Dr. Hilton is dealt, of the AbrahamLincoln center. The series is spon¬sored by the First Unitarian churchand the Channing-Murray foundation.Thursday, 27 OctoberTelevision series:Seminar Sixty, WBBM-TV, 6:30 am. “The Poster.”13th Annual Federal Tax Conference(University of Chicago law school andUniversity College). 9 am, Auditoriumof the Prudential building, Michiganavenue and Randolph drive.Episcopal services, 11:30 am. Bond chap¬el,, Holy Communion. Mademoiselle contest representative3:30 pm, Ida Noyos library. On* at lb/:editors from Mademoiselle magaviin,'-will explain the rules and purpose ofStheir editors contest.Lecltirp (Microbiology club), 4 pm. Rick-3etts North 1. “Studies on the symiie^Jsis of protein in streptococci,** EugeniFox, assistant professor, departmentof microbiology.Lecture (department of geography), tpm. Rosenwald 41. “Land-Use Patternsin Singapore and Klang Valley." Rob-5ert Ho. department of geogruthy. Untilverslty of Malaya.Friday, 28 OctoberTelevision series: Seminar Sixty, WBBM |TV. 6 30 am "Popular Taste and Gra-fphlc Arts.” Fern.I.ecture series: Personality Theory (de¬partment of psychology). 4 pm. Social!Science 122. “Self-actualization Pro -cesses in Personality Development JpJohn M Butler, associate profess* >:department of psychology and Oom:g?mittee on Human DevelopmentMotion Picture, S and 10 pm. Burton-\Judson Courts. “The Captain's Para-3dtse.” v5Monday, 24 October P,?*0*?’Television series: Seminar Sixty,WBBM-TV. 6:30 am. “Why Cuthbert* Couldn't Read.” Alan M. Fern, as¬sistant professor of the humanities inthe College.Lecture (Calvert club). 3:30 pm. Cobb110 “The humanist tradition in liter¬ature.” Dr George N. Shuster. Presi¬dent. Hunter college and US Repre¬sentative to UNESCO.Hillel foundation. 5715 S Woodlawnavenue. 3:30 pm, elementary Yiddishclasses.Lecture series: Personality Theory (de¬partment of psychology). 4 pm. SocialScience 122. “Psychoanalytic Theoryof Personality: III.” Dr. Heinz Kohut,professorial lecturer, department ofpsychiatry.Films on Medieval India. 7 pm. Rosen¬wald 2. “Historic Kingdoms and Citiesof South Asia seen through the archi¬tectural monuments of Jaipur, Blja- Teievision series:Seminar Sixty. WBBM-TV, 6:30 am, “The Magazine.” Fern.13th Annual Federal Tax Conference(University of Chicago law .school andUniversity College), 9 am, Auditoriumof the Prudential building. Michiganaven.ie and Randolph drive. HartSpivel. Chief Counsel. United StatesInternal Revenue service, and DavidA. Lindsay, General Counsel of theTreasury. «Lecture series (Graduate School of Busi¬ness), 1:30 pm. Breasted hall. "Belland Howell, Competing In an Era ofInnovation.” Peter G Peterson, execu¬tive vice-president. Bell and Howell.Faculty and University Board meetings:Precolleglate Education, 3 pm, Ad¬ministration 202Hebrew classes, 3:30 pm Hillel founda¬tion, second feection. 4 30 pmSeminar (department of statistics), 4pm. Eckhart 207. “Some examples ofstatistical analysis encountered inoperations research studies," Jack Sil- • Classified •pers. etc., a specialty IBM WBemtttv-typewriter used HY 3-3149. evenings *£)For rentLost and found JFive-Room Apartment near Universityand Ray school. First floor. Share porch,yard, basement with one family. Avail¬able now. MI 3-3459. An Aquahlue Parakeet with band on leg-Found In Lexington hall. Write MaroonBox 200.Private Room with Bath and Hoard inexchange for baby-sitting and dinnerdishes. South Shore area. Female pre¬ferred FA 4-0329 Help wantedMarynook, 8564 University avenue.Owner architect, 6 room, brick ranch,garage, paneled study, custom book¬cases. patio, brick barbecue, central air-conditioning, gas heat, garbage disposal.Many architectural features. Must seeto appreciate. 4'2%. 30-year mortgage.By owner. ES 5-7543. Russian Tutor Wanted In order to buildreading vocabulary. MU 4-7503For soleHi-Fi Equipment: Scott Stereo tunerShine sm212 stereo arm and cart , professional turntable ESL prof, arm and'stpreo cart. All brand new or silghrivused DO 3-2684 1ServicesStudent Wife will Baby-Sit, two chil¬dren. mornings or one all day in my Personalshome f!7 50 week DO 3-8836 Creative Writing Workshop. PL i-8377>J<Sewing: Alterations, Hents. BU 8-6001. Here’s a daisy to all the “QV*—TYieo ''Typing. Reas. MI 3-5218. dosla.Public Stenographer: Doctors and Pro¬fessional work, manuscripts, term pa- Patrick Me I.ad; you can buy bank your:soul for 75c—Fred.AlOOOR IS OPEN AT ALLIED CHEMICAL...AND THIS MAN CAN GIVE YOU THE FACTSYou'll, want to note the date below. Our interviewer will be on yourcampus then, ready to answer your questions about a career in thechemical industry . .. and to point out the advantages of pursuingthat career at Allied.You'll find it worth your while to get the facts about a company thathas twelve research laboratories and development centers, overone hundred plants, and a nationwide network of sales offices. It’sworth learning all you can about a company that makes over threethousand different products-chemicals, plastics, fibers-with newones coming along every year.Come prepared to ask our interviewer what you want to know: Whatkinds of jobs? Which products? What opportunities for advance¬ment? Which location?ALLIED CHEMICAL CAMPUSINTERVIEWsT'^^TUirTlA future for those with Advanced Degrees in Chemistry IIUWb I ||Sports NewsPsi U, East II win openerBeating out the defendingchampion* will be the maintask confronting the fraterni¬ties and college houses in thisgear’s intramural football season.Both Psi Upsilon and East II,jast year’s winners, scored im¬pressive wins in their openinggames.Psa U breezed by Delta Upsilon42 0, bat must expect rough oppo¬sition from Phi Delta Theta andalso Phi Kappa Psi, whichknocked off Alpha Delta Phi 31-0in their season’s opener.East II, competing in the bluedivision of the house league, de¬feated Shore.y N.R 18-0 to servenotice that they will he toughairain this year. In the red divi¬sion, East III, with wins of 24-0over Henderson S.W. a n d 28-0 over Shorey S.W., look like Hieteam to beat.The Law School Mudders arethe early favorite to win the di¬visional league. The M u d d e r sopened their season with a 31-0victory over F A Q.In the “B” league, made tip ofteams from the college houses,fraternities, and divisions, LinnHouse should dominate play. Linnopened with a 19-0 triumph overthe Psi Upsilon B's.Other intramural activities re¬cently gotten under way are theall-Universily golf and tennistournaments. The golf tourneywill be run on a handicap basis,while a single-elimination tourna¬ment will bo conducted in tennis.Faculty-Student softballAt 1:30 there was some doubtLarge crowds turned out to observe the San FranciscoForty-Niners, members of the National Football league,practice tor their game with the Chicago Bears, at StaggField. that enough teachers would showup to play in the annual faculty-student softball game. Two hourslater there was no doubt in any¬one’s mind that the faculty hadindeed arrived. They trounced theyoung upstarts 22-3.Beating the students is a tra¬dition with ihe faculty. The lasttime anyone can recall their notwinning was last year, when thegame was called on ^account ofrain.The game, which was held Sat¬urday behind Burton - Judson,showed ihe faculty’s superiorityfrom the start. They jumped offto a seven-run lead in the first in¬ning on hits by Taylor, Streeter,Rosenthal, Wood, Ashin, Theo-haris, and again by Taylor.Twelve men batted in the inning.The faculty scored three runs ineach of the next three innings.The students, who didn’t evenget a man on base till the third,scored their first run on Wallen’sfourth-inning home run. T h i smade the score 16-1.The other two runs for thestudents came in the seventh onGoldberger’s single, Wallen’s dou¬ble, and two sacrifices. In themeantime, the faculty had fourruns and led 20-3. Two more fac¬ulty runs in the last two inningsfinished the rout.A strong hitting attack, greatlyassisted by the students’ poorfielding, gave the faculty com¬plete domination of the game.They had men on base in everyInning, and failed to score only inthe sixth. The students went downin'order five times. Every man onthe faculty team drove in at leastone run, with Rosenthal battingin four and Lane and Ashin,g driv¬ing in three btp-h.The students did earn one dis¬tinction: they had the only bare¬footed third baseman in the game,Elvin Bishop, from Tulsa, Oklaho¬ ma. Even this couldn’t hide theholes in the students’ defense.Confident after their victorySaturday, faculty members arethinking of organizing a team forthe spring softball league.Runners win again -On Tuesday the cross-countryteam recorded their second winof the season, defeating WrightJunior college 19-40. Pat Palmerled the way, finishing the three-mile race in 15:55.5. Vic Neill wassecond, but did not count in thescoring, because all juniors andseniors were not considered eli¬gible for competition with a jun¬ ior college. Bernie Sanders wasnext, then John Bolton, and SteveSackett. Tom Clarke followed, butlike Neill, did not count. DennisRusche, Joe Olive, Larry Cohen,who also did not count, and DickGeiger were the next men scoringfor Chicago.The Maroons are now 2-4 forthe season, and must at leastequal last season’s 2-8 record. Thenext race will be tomorrowa.gainst the University of Wiscon¬sin at Milwaukee. The course jsan oval mile, located in Washing¬ton park, on the eastern border,near 57th street. The race beginsat 11 o’clock.Faculty-studentball game scoresFaculty AB R HGraham Taylor, SCP 6 2 4Fred Siegler, CF 4 12Bob Streeter, 2B 6 3 3Moss Rosenthal, IB 5 4 3Stephan Wood. 3B 5 4 4Hugh Lane, LF 5 2 4Mark Ashin, SS 6 4 5Bob Ashenhurst. RF 6 13Athan Theoharis, C 5 12Stuart Tave P 5 12 Vidas Nechimas SS 2 0 0Elvin Bishop, 3B 10 0Bob Seibert, IB 2 0 0Jim Kinzie, RF 3 0 1Chuck Gordon.P 2 0 136 3 5Runs by inningsFaculty 733 310 311—22Students 000 100 200— 3Dick Dolnich, SCF 10 0Students AB R HMike Watson.SS 2 0 0r •> Blumberg.C 4 0 0- > Goldberger, P 4 10Wallan, C 4 2 2lie, IB 2 0 0Yimoyines, 2B 3 0 0terz, 3B 10 0racobson, LF 4 0 1v. .i Berg, RF 10 0 MARCO POLOTRAVEL SERVICESince 12761658 E. 55th BU 8-5944□ □□ C TNE GREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 East 57th HY 3-5829Chicago's most- complete stockof quality paper backsCITIZENKANEDIRECTED BY AND STARRING ORSON WELLESWITH JOSEPH COTTON AND AGNES MOOREHEADCitizen Kane covers 70 years Hi the life of CharlesFoster Kane, a great yellow journalist. At the time ofits release, the fictional Citizen Kane was rumoredto be a biography of the then living William Ran¬dolph Hearst. Mr. Hearst was said to have requestedthat the lilm be withheld. >“It is probably the most original, exciting, andentertaining picture yet made in this country,**Anthony Bower, The Nation.“Only this century of Fitzgerald and Hemingway could have produced Citizen Kane ... a penetratingglimpse into the abyss of twentieth century con¬sciousness,” R. D. Hartman, New York Post.“Probably Welles’ most famous performance, cer¬tainly his finest,” Edwin Goldmark, American Guild.Chosen One of the World's 12 Best—Brussels Exposition, 1958In Mandol Hall, 57th and UniversitySaturday, October 22 At 8 p.m.—One Showing OnlyAdmission — 56cUNIVERSITY CINEMAWUCB program guide UT announces tryoutstor new '8:30f seriesWUCB broadcasts at 640 kilocycles am. When they are not programming their own pro¬ductions, they rebroadcast the programs of Chicago's fine arts station, WFMT, 98.7 mega¬cycles FM.1**59mFriday, October 211:30 am The Morning Show1*00 pm Beethoven—SymphonyNo. 3 in E flat. op. 55.Handel — Four oratorioarias.Schubert—Sonata in A forViolin and Piano, op. 162.Stravinsky — Symphoniesof Psalms.The Debate, part four.WUCB joins WFMT. whichjoins NBC to present thelast in the series of debatesbetween John Kennedyand Richard Nixon.10:00 Lalande—Symphonies desSoupers du Roy (Suite No.4 for OrchestralMendelssohn — CompleteIncidental music to Shake-s p e a r e ’ s Midsummer’sNight’s Dream.11:00 Delius — Paris (the Songof a great city)Beethoven—Sonata No. 21in C for piano, “Wald-stein.” 8:168:30S8:008:15 Prokofieff — Concerto No.1 in D for Violin, op. 19.Sunday, October 237:00 pm Pet i t — Les QuatreVents (the Four Winds).Brahms — Concerto No. 2in B flat for Piano, op. 83.This Week at the UNHaydn — Sonata No. 34 inE for Piano.Mahler — Eight Songs forSoprano.Hindemith — Symphony,“Die Harmonie der Welt”(1951).Shakespeare—Othello withPaul Robeson, Uta Hagen,and Jose Ferrer.•Monday, October 247:30 am The Morning Show7:00 Handel — Concerto in Bflat for Organ, op. 4. No. 6.Haydn — Quartet in d forStrings, op. 76, No. 2.Barber-^Symphony No. 1,op. 9.Marty’s Night OutMovies and theatre, re¬ viewed by Marty Rabino-witz. .Commentary — WilliamKelleyClaude le Jeune — Songsand Madrigals..Boccherini — Concerto mB flat for Cello.Milhaud — Concertinod’Automne, from the FourSeasons.Mozart—Concerto in A forClarinet, K. 622.10:80 Gliere — Symphony No. 3in b, op. 42, “Ilya Mouro-metz.”11:00 Somethin’ Else — modernjazz with Mike Edelstein.Tuesday, October 257:30 am The Morning Show7:00 pm Strauss — Death andTransfiguration, op. 24.Wolf - Songs on poems ofMichelangelo.Bloch — Concerto GrossoNo. 1 for Piano and Strings(19251.8:00 Jazz for the Layman9:009:308:008:308:458:00 9:00REPORT FROM CUBACARLTON BEALESWorld Famous Authority on Latin AmericaChairman, National Fair Play for Cuba CommitteeROBERT TABER -Former CBS Correspondent; Executive ‘Secretary,National Fair Play for Cuba CommitteePublic invitedAdmission $1 —Students 50c8 p.m., Fri., Oct. 21 - 32 W. Randolph Hall, C2Auspices: Fair Play for Cuba CommitteeP.O. Box 4555, Chicago 80, III.S R Pin cooperation with the Folklore SocietypresentsSONNY TERRY and BROWNIE McGHEE$1.50 General admission INMANDEL HALLSATURDAY, OCT. 29that 8:30 p.m.$2.00 Reserved seatsCAGO MAROON Oct. 21, 1960 10:0011:00 Bach—French Suite No. 5in G.Bartok — Contrasts, forClarinet, violin and piano.Debussy — Quartet in g,op. 10.Piston—Symphony No. 3,We Come for to SingFolk music, with JohnKim and Mike Wolfson.Thursday, October 277:30 am The Morning Show7:00 pm Mozart—Don Giovanniwith Cesare Siepi as theDon.A ConcertJazz till Midnightwith Mike Goran.9:3011:00 University theatre, under itsnew directors Bill Alton andFrank Marero, has announceda fall quarter production ofthe Tonight at 8:30 series.The program will include anoriginal one act. The Revolt ofSixtus Borden, by Ompr Shapliand directed by Neal Johnston;and one of Checkov’s comedies,directed by William Bezdek. Read¬ings will be held from 6:30 pm to10 pm, October 24 and 25 in theReynolds club theatre. Those in¬terested in trying out for theCheckov should come up to thetheatre before 8 pm. The fallquarter Tonight at 8:30 will bepresented December 1-4 in theReynolds club theatre.Plans are also being made forthe winter quarter 8:30 series, and anyone interested in directinga show should submit his scrip sto the student board of directorsbefore November 6. S c r i p ( sshould lie brought to the theatreor given to Ira Fistell, Rick Ames,or Maggie Stinson.Frank Marero will hold read¬ings for UTs next three-act production, The Seagull, by AntonCheckov on November 15 and 16from 2-5 and 8-11 pm in the Rey¬nolds club theatre. The show willbe produced in Mandel hall Feb¬ruary 9-12.Shaws’ Heartbreak House, UT’sfirst show directed by Bill Alton,will be presented November 10-13as the first of five Mandel hallproductions this year. Tickets willbe on sale at the Reynolds clubdesk.Phoenixfreedom essay on studentis "outstanding rrwith John Brink.Africa TodayA lecture by Alan Paton.the South African authorof “Cry, the Beloved Coun¬try.”10:00 Bach Toccata and Fuguefor Organ in F.Sibelius—Symphony No. 1in E, op. 39.11:00 Fat City Folk Music,live and recorded, withNorm Linke.Wednesday, October 267:30 am The Morning Show7:00 pm Street Scene(complete music)Music of the Worldwith George F. HawkSG ReportA weekly review of eventsin Student Governmentand the National StudentAssociation.Commentary — WalterMl ale.Borodin—Symphony No. 2in b. by Carole Quinn and Avima RuderExhibit A in the 1960 case “Literati versus Phoenix” has been submitted at local news¬stands. It is an exhibit for the plaintiff. Annually Phoenix rises from its ashes in October;it retires in June setting itself, but not the world, on fire.This\year, however, the purpose and content of Phoenix have been changed. Gone, forthe most part, are the onerous“college humor’’ articles that tary with pictures, from the note- “Erudition” is the most amazplagued the magazine in'the past Vw,ks Qf cari Sandburg, is a fine ing thing to appear in Phoenix intwo years. Gone, too, are the sly pieoe Qf writing. The photos, due recent years. What is it? Doscribstatistical swipes at campus insti- to problems of composition and ing an artist’s struggle with histutions (Ad building coffee content as well as production, do creative medium (paint and can-breaks, fraternities, etc.) whose not corne off nearly so well. vas in the story; pen and ink inappearance in Phoenix was al- T nseudo-avante ^arde the story’s execution), it has noways a bewilderment. poI^J'The Shade-and-Whero moaning nor humor.The one outstanding contribu- Boulevard Divides” are pre- Phoenix has tried hard in thistion is Tyler Thompson’s essay sented. “The Shade” fails to evoke first issue of the year, and it ison student freedom, a well-con- any sort Gf image, feeling, or far better than the products ofsidered and well.-written common- philosophical implication. What- last season’s “struggle with thetary on the gradual loss of inde- eyer aufhor of “Where are Muse.” However, Phoenix has apendence of students and studentorganizations in recent years. Boulevard Divides” may have to long way to go before it is worthyApproaching the subject in a rea- say is obscured completely by a of being called a literary magasonable manner, he considers the veneer of artiness. zine. We hope it makes it.interests of the administration aswell as those of the student.“Creativity vs. IQ,” an articlereprinted from the public rela¬tions office University of ChicagoReports, is a dull dissertation ona fascinating subject. Althoughthe subject is “creativity,” thearticles itself exhibits no sign ofthis quality. Written in a dry andpedestrian tone, it is inappropri¬ate for the pages of a literarymagazine, such as Phoenix strivesto be.Three cartoons by Greg Hodg¬son appear: one is quite funny,one is trite, and one is boring.Flip a quarter to decide which iswhich when you get your copy ofPhoenix.“Art in Hyde Park,” a commen- Government will presentBergman's 'Brink of Life'“Brink of Life,” a film by Ingmar Bergman, will be pre¬sented in the International house auditorium on Friday,October 28, at 8 and 10 pm. ^Student Government (SG) willsponsor the showing.“A film by Ingmar Bergman isalways a cinematic event andoften a surprising one,” said JohnScheurman, public relations direc¬tor for SG. “ ‘Brink of Life’ ful¬fills all expectations, and Mr.Bergman’s reputation has certain¬ly been enhanced by its release.”SCHOLARLY BOOKSonHISTORY and LITERATUREBOUGHT AND SOLDHours: 2 PM to 9 PM Every Day including SundayJoseph O'Gara. Bookseller1360 East 53rd St. DO 3-4035MEDINAH TEMPLE Sun., Oct. 308:30 p.m.Tickets: $4.40, $3.30, $2.20 atHyde Park Co-Op Credit UnionBox Office Open 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. The setting of the film, whichhas been described as a “near-doc¬umentary," is a maternity hospi¬tal; its story is of three womenawaiting the birth of their children. “One of the women,”Scheurman noted, '‘is an intellec¬tual, looking toward the child tosave her crumbling marriage. Sheloses it through a miscarriage.One of the other women, an un¬married adolescent, has alreadytried an unsuccessful self-abor¬tion, and the third, presented asthe essence of maternal womanhood, loses her child in protractedlabor in a chilling, almost terrify¬ingly realistic sequence.”Eva Dahlbeek was awarded thebest actress award by the Cannesfilm festival for her portrayal ofone of the women, and Bergmanwas cited with the best directoraward.A Gerald McBoing-Boing shortsubject, described by SG person*nel as “delightful” will also beshown during the evening. Admission is 65 cents.Folklore Society'sFirst Wing-Ding of the YearIda Noyes East Lounge, 8:30 p.m-Friday, Oct. 21stSongleader: Bernie SchatxGet In TheMedicia moet pleasant coffee houseHabitFrench Breakfast Sunday tO-11376 E. 53rdCulture VultureThe price one pays to maintain a stance of cultured aloofness is counted out with miserly precision in the coin of politicalvnawareness. The vulture's self-system is tangent to the so-called real world only at these points which flatter his ego andonhance his seW-rmage as a sort of undergraduate Max Beerbohm. But who can live for any significant amount of time in aeuphoric dream? Reality intrudes in its numerous vulgar and Philistine guises. Case in point. We are, for those of you who•hare the bird's peculiar myopia, presently engaged in America's quadrennial dialectic when tweedle-dee and tweedle-dum—— locked in mortal combat — prove that cabbages can become kings. This point was sharply impressed on the bird's psycheby a rather earnest young man. Appearing at the edge of the nest one afternoon last week, this gentleman described himselfas a Goldwater Republican and an ordained minister of the new conservatism who would welcome an opportunity to rescuealmost anyone on #w campus from^the cesspool of effete intellectualism and welfare statism. The bird remarked, and thereby•hamefully displayed his ruptured poise, that it sounded like the same old jazz to him. Tempers and invectives rose to theboiling point. Earnest, young man: "Harry Truman plays piano in a bawdy house in East St. Louis." Not feeling particularlypartisan or informed enough to defend Mr. Truman the bird resorted to a little character assassination of his own. "Eisen¬hower makes James Buchanan look like a wild-eyed radical."The apolitical bird took flight posing all manner of rhetorical questions to himself — such as, "Whither America" and"Where, 0 where is that special angel who watches over the fortunes of fools and the United States?"On campusTheotreA dearth of talent has drivenseveral directors to the thin edgeof violence. Brilliant fantasies ofstages crowded to the gunwales(a beautiful mixed metaphor)with warm bodies all crying to betrained, molded are the stuff hisdreams are made of. Fortunate isthe director whom this blessingfalls upon and wise is the one whoprepares for the lean years whileluxuriating in the fat ones. UTdirector, Bill Alton, appears to bea prudent marl, cognizant of theuntapped resources embodied inthe entering class and the mel¬lowed fund of erffrerience of theupperclassmen. Utilizing this larg¬ess UT ip now preparing a seriesof workshops in acting, directing,stagecraft, and playreading. Allregistered students interested inattending one or more of suchsessions are invited to leave theirname, address and phone numberin the UT box at the Reynoldsclub desk. Interested parties arerequested to include class sched¬ules as well.Out of these training seminars,and hopefully many other places,will come the creative impetusand the personnel for TQnight at8:30, UT’s experimental season inthe winter quarter. 8:30 is studentproperty and our one outlet forincipient Stanislavskys. The stu¬dent board of directors of UT, IraFistell, Maggie Stinson, and RickAmes, therefore takes some pridein announcing that scripts willnow be accepted for considerationfor this year’s 8:30. Depending onthe quality and quantity of mate¬rial submitted the season willprobably be two or three week¬ends in late January. So if you’vegot that urge to direct, choose ashow and get it up to the theatreoffice and into the hands of oneof the aforementioned leadeis be¬fore November 6. The vulture willsoon be hawking morocco-boundeditions of My Life in Art.Tonight—Oct. 21 at 8:15—theAmerican Friends Service Com¬mittee will present Which Waythe Wind at International house.The production is billed as a docu¬mentary in play form and hasbeen touted as a powerful, inci¬sive look at our times. Ticketsmay be obtained at the Co-op inthe Hyde Park shopping center.The Company of the Four’s pro¬duction of The Prodigal opened'■ast weekend at John Woolmanhall in the Unitarian church. Al¬together it’s quite an honor forClark theatre«:lork & madison*r 2-284350 an specialv collegeprice®t oil times* ladies day every fridayall gals admitted for 25e* different double feature daily* open 7:30 a m.late show 4 p.m. »* write in for free program guide Hyde Park to have a play of thiscaliber both in production andcontent performed within its bor¬ders. There will be performancesagain this weekend, nightly at 8and Saturday at 6 and 9:30.CinemaGotterdamerung, horst wessel,and thousand year reichs formthe background of BJ’s film to¬night. Happy Adolf and his syn-chophants plan a small weddingparty for just the immediate fam¬ily. The scene is the cozy Schickle-gruber bunker under the busystreets of what was once Berlin.However the Russians—a notori¬ous group of party-poopers—aredetermined to end a world war.In a fit of pique Adolf and matetake quick hemlock cocktails. Thewar ends, so does the film, and sodo a number of other things. It’scalled The Last Ten Days andaren’t we glad that they didn’t livehappily ever after. Eight and 10pm in the Judson dining room.International house presentsMunna Monday night. This Indianfilm is a bitter indictment of thecaste system as it destroys an or¬phaned boy who cannot be adopt¬ed because his caste is unknown.Eight o’clock in the assembly hall.Everybody seems to be gettinginto the movie-sponsoring busi¬ness. Student Government hastabled its current major topic ofdebate—something about runningguns to South Africa—in order topass along a little birth controlpropaganda. The famous Swedishmystic, Ingmar Bergman, is beingsponsored by SG as it presents hishospital-tested melodrama, Brinkof Life. International house onFriday, October 28 at 8 and 10 pm.University Cinema will showOrson Welles’ Citizen Kane inMandel tomorrow evening, Octo¬ber 22, at 8 pm. The film is abouta poor little rich boy who getsricher and more drunk withpower as he grows older until hefianlly dies muttering "rosebud.”Who or what is rosebud? William Randolph Hearst didn’t enjoy thefilm because it was all about Wil¬liam Randolph Hearst. Fifty centsadmission.MusicThe vulture is traditionally un¬moved by folk music either theauthentic or unauthentic variety.The bird’s tin alloy ear is nothaunted by any earthy melodiesout o^pur vast cultural and eth¬nic heritage. Then why does thestodgy bird plan to attend SRPand Folklore Society’s BrownieMcGhee and Sonny Terry concertnext Saturday? Simply, thesegentlemen are not — repeat — arenot phonies. The beard and handleset flip—that is the word, isn’tit?—over this ensemble; lacka-day, the bird must, perforce, jointhem. Mandel on October 29 at8:30.Way out in the rarefied stratainhabited by titans — you know,Bach and that group — EdwardMondello has consented to guideus this Sunday along the magickeyboard of Rockefeller Chapel’smonster organ. Sorry, the birdgot carried away. Seriously, Mon¬dello has selected a program ofWalther, Bach, Franck, Couperinapd Reger for his solo debut asUniversity organist. The vulturehad the opportunity to hear Mon¬dello play at a charming weddingthis summer. His concert will bethe musical high point of theweek. Sunday, October 23 at 3 inRockefeller Chapel. No charge.^LecturesYPSL (democratic socialists) isa group that the vulture alwaysviews with a certain twinge ofenvy. Their concern over the fateof western man is seemingly in¬exhaustible and a source of con¬stant joy to a despondent birdwho can barely simulate,a yearlyinterest in the world series. To¬morrow, October 22, YPSL willpresent the first lecture in itsseries on socialism — “Marxistphilosophy as a contemporary ide¬ology.” Ida Noyes at 3 pm. Off campusTheatreMort Sahl, Mort Sahl, Mbrt Sahlis not a trio, nor has he beenknown to treat before the massedarmor and infantry of mediocrityand squareness. Waving his ban¬ner which is inscribed with thelatin motto in hoc scintillentsquermis I don’t think you’reso hot either) he advances be¬yond the avant garde and intothe heart of the matter—the mat¬ter being geneally why is thisworld so damn lousy. Sunday,October 30 at 8:30 in the Medinahtemple.-Marceau and troupe leave Chi¬cago tomorow night. The bird isa bit tired of repeating the obvi¬ous, but once more, missing Mar¬ceau is like disparaging that littleflame of humanity which we flat¬teringly assume we all possess.The Blackstone.The bird made a grab-bag of allthe shows currently on stage inChicago, placed them all in hissize two hat, and drew one out.Leonard Spiegelgass’ comedy,Majority of One at the Erlangerwas directed by Dore Schary. Itstars Gertrude Berg and CedricHardwicke and is the best of apretty rum lot. Over the Schu¬bert Fiorello! is a sheer delightfor all New Yorkers and would-be New Yorkers. There are mo¬ments when the bird considersChicago the best of all possibleworlds. -Next Friday the Goodman’s im¬ port from Stratford, Canada, TheTaming of the Shrew by — whoelse—W. Shakespeare will beginits run.iMusicThe Chicago symphony withoutmaestro Reiner at the helm—hehas the grippe—will bring in an¬other pianist, Guiomar Novaes toreplace pretty-boy Cliburn whodeparts after today’s concert forparts unknown. With the pianistwill be an extra added attraction,Robert La Marchina, a cellist.Next Thursday and Friday at Or¬chestra hall.The Sutherland Lounge onDrexel and 47th has long occupieda hollowed niche in the vulture’sheart. Here the jazz afivionada cansip refreshing beverages and baskin the presence of the great artistsof our time. All at sane prices;the only wild commodity is themusic. Next Thursday, October 27is college night with reducedprices. Heading the bill thru the23rd is the incomparable GerryMulligan and his large band. Andlike bring your I-D; you'must, re¬peat, you must be 21 and prove it,like.CinemaIt seems that every large metro¬polis has its share of sociologicalproblems, bad streets, no play¬grounds, trjuancy, and, alas, pros¬titution. Tokyo shares this fateas can easily be discovered byviewing the Hyde Park’s currentattraction, The Street of Shame.NOW PLAYING"A LESSON IN LOVE"An Ingmar Bergman ProductionDearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1753Specral student rote for oil performances seven days o weekJust Show Cashier Your i.D. Card(ilrilHOUSE1 DONALD BYRD QUINTETfeaturingPEPPER ADAMSand /MJT 3week-nights $1.50fri. & sat. $2.00Opening WednetdagRAMSEY LEWIS TRIOFirst Set 8 p.m. #Dearborn St. at Division L.AKE //park AT SJrD : N O 7 • 9 O 7 1tine (A-yde park theatreto theatre: east on 55th to BC tracks onlake park avenue: then north to 53rdstudent rate 65c any performanceupon presenting identification cardA JAPANESE IMPORTfiAdcttkoKyo...Star of"Teahouse of the August Moon"and "Gate of Hell"HI _I StrreetofShakeSensational story of a girlfrom Tokyo's Yoshiwara District....AndA BRITISH BEST“THE UNHOLY FIVE" THEY WERECALLED-LED BY AN EVIL GENIUS IThe "Professor” The "Major” "Louis” "Harry” "One Round”The hit suspense thrill- s |er of the year—-as rPnnthe master-mind of a A Ojdesperate King whosemillion dollar bankrobbery backfired!Starring ALEC GUINNESS as "The Professor'and PETER SELLERS as "Harry"O t-t 21 I960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 19THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue D. S. Passmore, ManagerSPECIAL PURCHASEMASTERPIECE BRUSH STROKEREPRODUCTIONS$1.98 ea.SelectionsVP 284VP 442VP220. Gauguin: Ta Matete (24x18)VP221. Utrillo: Parisian Suburb (80x24)VP226. Murillo: The Pastry Eaters (16x20)VP260. Utrillo: Small Hostelry (30x24)VP261. Utrillo: Montmartre in Winter (30x24)VP284. Picasso: Harlequin at Mirror (18x24)VP288. Klee: Sinbad the Sailor (20x16) \VP290. Degas: Laundress (24x20)VP29I. Rousseau: Jungle Scene with Setting (84x18)VP292. Rouault: Small Magician (18x24)VP298. Picasso: Maternity (18x24)VP302. Picasso: Pierrot (18x24) •VP304. Vail Gogh: Restaurant de Sirene (24x201VP307. Foujita: Cafe (20x24)*VP308. Gasser: Peaceful Harbor (24x20)VP327. Soyer: Dancers at Rest (20x24).VP335. Philipp: Girl in Blue (30x24)VP336. Cezanne: La Midi de France (30x24)VP337. Renoir: The Skiff (30x24)VP360. Foujita: Quai Aux Fleurs (24x20)VP367. 17th Century Map of North ami South America (24x1111VP385. Van Gogh: Sunflowers (18x24)VP398. Picasso: Still Life, Antique Head (24x181VP403. Monet: Tulips in Holland (24x18)VP404. Picasso: Juan les Pins (30x24)VP412. Utrillo: Eglise de Strins (30x24)VP442. Utrillo: Rue de Mont-Cenis (24x20)VP444. Bradbury: Ebb Tide (24x18)VP454. Utrillo: Lapin Agile in Winter (30x24)VP455. Van Gogh: Gypsy Camp (24x20)VP461. Renoir: La Loge (18x24)VP48L Bradbury: Shelter Bay (24x18)VP494. Shumaker: Mountain Retreat (24x18)VP496. Shumaker: Autumn Reflections (24x181VP515. Picasso: Mother and Child (16x20)VP520. Picasso: White Clown (18x24)VP554. Wood: Majestic Peaks (24x18)VP556. Wood: Mountain Stream (24x18)VP557. Utrillo: Winter in Paris (30x24)VP558. Braque: Pink Table (30x24)VP567. Sallman: Head of Christ (16x20)VP592. Picasso: La Casserole Emaillee (24x181VP593. Vermeer: The Letter (16x20)VP602. Renoir: Moulin de la Galette (24x20)VP607. Modigliani: Woman with Red Hair (14^x21)VP608. Picasso: The Lovers (18x24)VP609. Renoir: Girl with Watering Can (18x241VP611. Derain: Harlequin (16x20)VP612. Utrillo: Mont St. Michel (24x20)VP613. Picasso: The Tragedy (1434x24)VP680. Braque: I* Jour (24x18)VP68o. Feininger: The Church (18x24)VP712. Gauguin: Femmes de Tahiti (24x18)VP715. Goya: Senora Sabasa Garcia (18x24)VP716. Utrillo: The Street (24x18)VP7J9. Cezanne: Fruit and Jug (24x18)VP721. Goya: Bull Fight (20x16)VP724. Dufy: Jockeys (24x18)VP725. Renoir: In the Meadow (24x18)VP736. de Holesch: Chargers (24x18)VP737. de Holesch: Courtship (18x24)VP758. Vlaminck: Village Landscape (24x18)VP763. Renoir: Lady with a Parasol (20x16)VP788. Marc: Sheep (20x16)VP798. Vermeer: The Milkmaid (20x24)VP799. Picasso: Citron et Orange (20x18)VP803. Van Gogh: House at Auvers (18x24)VP815. Utrillo: Sacre Coeur (20x24)VP823. Van Gogh: La Berceuse (20x24)VP914. Bullfight Prints Faces Right (18x24)VP915. Bullfight Prints Faces Left (18x24)VP407; Picasso: Nature Morte (30x24)VP734. Utrillo: Faubourg Parisien (24x20)VP812. Degas: Absinthe Drinkers (18x24) VP 719 ^VP 73720 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 21,1960• ’ t! '---