■y0l 69 — No. 46 University of Chicago, October 28,Flemming speaks at UCEmphasizing the need topursue excellence in educationin the United States, the Hon¬orable Arthur S. Flemming,Secretary of Health, Educa¬tion and Welfare under thepresent administration, addressedofficials and faculty members ofthe University of Chicago andthe University high school, trus¬tees of the University, patrons,md members of the Hyde Parkcommunity at the dedication ofthe new University high schoolbuilding last night.Flemming was introduced byFrancis S. Chase, dean of thegraduate school of education, whoafiieiated at the proceedings. W.Harnett Blakemore, Dean of theDisciples Divinity House and As¬sociate Dean of Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel gave the invoca¬tion which was followed by ashort welcome by R. WendellHarrison, Acting Chancellor ofthe University. Roy A. Larmee,l hrcctor of pre-collegiate educa¬tion. followed Flemming's ad¬dress with a presentation of thebuilding.In his speech, Flemming out¬lined those areas in which basicweaknesses in our educationalsystem are a detriment to thegrowth of our country and effec¬tive operations of our govern¬ment. He supplemented this a-n a lysis of our country’s need forexcellence in education with thepresent administration's view of the government's role In aidingeducation.In the specific areas of com¬munication, social sciences, andhumanities and art, we do nothave sufficient numbers of quali¬fied personnel to undertake thework of our nation, both hereat home and in its relations withother countries of the world. Heurged that we must insist thateach American be able to com¬municate effectively in his ownlanguage. In addition, Flemmingurged a knowledge and under¬standing of the concept of free¬dom underlying our institutionsshould be had by every Americanif he is to effectively assume hiscivic duties.He pointed out that excellencemust also be encouraged in thearts and humanities, for the origi¬nal and creative mind contrib¬utes much to the vitality and pro¬gress of the community,Flemming believes that federalaid—and in a larger scale thanat present—is necessary to pro¬vide the facilities required if weare to pursue excellence in theareas mentioned. By matching fi¬nancial grants to states the fed¬eral government will help removethe economic obstacle to neededclassroom construction.No federal aid under the pre¬sent plan is given to increaseteacher’s salaries. Flemmingpointed out, however, that wemust provide resources to educa¬tional institutions to obtain and Jerome G. Kerwin, UC professor of political science andformer dean of students in the division of social sciences,has announced that he will retire from teaching at UC atthe end of this quarter. Kerwin said that his future plansare indefinite.Jerome G. Kerwinwill retire soonIFC may modify new rush planThe Interfratemity council(IFC> may have to modify itsweek-old plan for Autumniiiarter rushing of first-yearstudents before the plan receivesfinal approval from a group ofCollege administrators, including• lean of students John P. Nether-ton.Notherton stated yesterday thatthe Dean’s office has “neither ac¬cepted nor rejected” the IFC rush¬ing proposal, since there are stillcertain points that must be dis¬cussed with the Council’s rushcommittee. • The Dean said that a meetingwith the rush committee will clar¬ify issues such as: the amount oftime rushees will be allowed tospend in any one house.The new rules were adopted bythe IFC last Monday night, asUC’s ten fraternities split theirvotes 5-5, necessitating a tie-break¬ing vote by IFC president AnselEdidin.The plan provides for threeweeks in the Autumn quarter de¬voted to rushing of first-year stu¬dents, including one week ofsmokers. All first-year rushing retain excellent teachers. vFederal taxes and personal con¬tributions are available sourcesfor funds for building new class¬rooms and increasing teachers’salaries. Flemming also proposedthat income tax laws be revisedto provide tax reduction on tui¬tion payments.Considering the dedication ofthe new University high labschool an Inspiring occasion,Flemming said that in the view¬point of education, this is Amer¬ica at its best. The Universityof Chicago and the Universityhigh school have traditionallysettled for nothing less than thebest in education. He pointed outthat here are examples of thepursuit of excellence in educa¬tion. He pointed out that theseare the examples of the pursuitof excellence in education.The modern structure, designedby Perkins and Will, furthers theoriginal purpose of the founders-of the school to provide the latestfacilities available for ^he devel¬opment and operation of a teach¬ing-learning laboratory for sec¬ondary education.The 2.5 million-dollar buildinghas 22 classrooms, seven sciencelaboratories, a foreign language _ __ . . . .laboratory, sound-proof confer- Jerome Kerwin will retire explained that he won't be 65, theence rooms for teachers and stu- at the end of this quarter, University’s compulsory retire-dents, student work rooms, a can- after 37 years in the depart- ment age, until October, 1961,teen - cafeteria student - activities ment of Political science However, he will terminate his UCarea, and a 20,000 volume library,. Professor Kerwin who has teaching career this year> becaus*K *«"» • T Quadrangle with J^te^d aa deai ot " ude^SSaid Kerwin: “I propose to da-vote myself to writing and teach¬ing—where as yet I don’t know.I've put the question of my futureout of my mind until the Winterquarter when I will have time towould then cease, until a week of in the University for at least one think.”smokers in the Winter quarter, quarter. (This being a provision While specializing in medievalCurrently, no rushing of first of the rules already enacted by political philosophy, Kerwin hasyear students is allowed in the the IF council); devoted much of his study to cur-Autumn quarter. «2) That the fifth week of the rent religious and political prob-Netherton stated that, if the Autumn quarter be a week of lems. His books include Catholiothree weeks of rushing are as smokers for entering students, but Viewpoint on Church and State,open as our present Winter Quar- that entering students not be al- Federal Water Power Legislation,ter rush, the administration will lowed to sign pledge cards during Schools and City Government, andnot approve the plan. The actual their first quarter of registration, The Great Tradition,use of the three-week Autumn but be allowed to pledge only aftefc Kerwin is widely respected asrush period will be discussed with the second week of smokers, an authority on the problem ofIFC’s rush committee, Netherton which will be held the second full Catholicism and government. Heremarked. week in the Winter quarter; was the University’s first CatholieThe IFC resolution, which • “3) That from Saturday of the faculty member when he waswould initiate first-year smokers fifth week of the Autumn quarter, hired in 1923.on Monday, November 7, is print- and until the first Sunday after ' Asked about the University’sed below: Thanksgiving day, the fraternity compulsory retirement age of 65^That the rushing rules of the houses be open to all students but Kerwin stated: “I suppose the ad-Interfraternity council be revised that all houses be closed after six ministration must be pretty rigor-to read: pm on the evenings of IF Ball, ous about enforcing the age of re-“1) That the fourth week of the IC Pref dance, and the Interfra- tirement. Otherwise, they wouldAutumn quarter be a week of ternity Beerblast, to be reopened be faced with nasty decisionssmokers for transfer students and at nine am on the following morn- about who could stay and whostudents who have been registered ing.” couldn’t.”(Continued on page 12) in the division of social sciences,Korean demonstration leaderswill be guests of UniversityThree of the Korean stu¬dents who led the successfulanti-Rhee demonstrations inSouth Korea last Spring willbe guests of honor at a receptionin Ida Noyes at 4 pm this after¬noon.The Korean students are repre¬sentatives of the “All Korea Stu¬dents Committee for DemocraticGovernment and Fair Elections,”It was formed in July of thisyear after the overthrow of theRhee regime in April. The imme¬diate purpose of the organizationwas to insure that the new gov¬ernment was chosen fairly by thepeople.There Is no national union of students in Korea; this committeeis expected to develop into a fullfledged student association.One of the members of thisdelegation, Park Sang Won, waschosen to . read the demands of thestudents before the parliamentbuilding on the eve of the revo¬lution. The other two, Sohn ChinYoung and Kang Chi Won alsoplayed key roles in the studentdemonstrations.They are on their way homefrom the ninth International Stu¬dent conference (ISC) which washeld in Klosters, Switzerland. TheISC is an assemblage of studentsrepresenting students from al¬most every country of the worldwith the exception of those ofthe eastern block. It meets everyyear to discuss problems whichare common to students the world_ over. It also sponsors internation¬al student projects such as workcamps,, regional seminars, etc.The conference this year accepteda South Korean delegation forthe first time.The three students are being^sponsored in this by the UnitedStates National Student associa¬tion.All three students are under-graduates. Two are students ofinternational affairs; and one.Park, is majoring in economictheory. They all attend universi¬ties in Seoul. They are interestedprimarily in explaining the Kor¬ean revolution to American -stu¬dents, and also want to learnmore about the United States.The reception in their honorhas been arranged by Studentgovernment.Chester Bowles, foreign policy advisor to Senator John F.| Kennedy, spoke at UC on Saturday. Story on page three.^ (Debate teaching DarwinJohn T. Scopes, defendantin the Tennessee “monkeytrial” 36 years ago, debatedthe teaching of Darwin’s the¬ory of evolution in Americanschools today with severalUniversity of Chicago professors.The discussion was held last Fri¬day at Mandel hall on the occasionof the first showing of a docu¬mentary film madq at the Dar¬win centennial celebration held atthe University last year.The pane! participants, in ad¬dition to Scopes, were Sol Tax,professor of anthropology andeditor of Current Anthropology,who moderated the discussion,Harry Kalven, Jr., professor inthe University of Chicago lawSchool, Everette C. Olson, profes¬sor and chairman of the geologydepartment, Joseph J. Schwab,William Rainey Harper, profes¬sor of Natural Sciences in theCollege and professor in the edu¬cation department, Malcolm P.Sharp, professor in the Univer¬sity of Chicago law school, andWilliam A. Wood, sales managerfor the University of ChicagoPress.“Publishers of text books havepreconceptions about what teach¬ers and the public will like or dis¬like which are not backed by fieldresearch,” Schwab stated in ex¬planation for some of the self¬censorship publishers use whenproducing a text book on a pos¬sibly controversial subject.'These books must be sold allover the country and thereforecan’t antagonize any portion ofthe country,” Wood pointed out."Laws against teaching anythingWhich might be considered in con¬flict with what is said in the Bibleare in effect today in Tennessee,Oregon, and Mississippi.Wood explained that in orderto avoid this controversy even instates where no law exists onttiis question, but where the com¬ munity might react unfavorablyto the teaching evolution, euphem¬isms are used. Evolution becomes“the change of life through theyears” and “the development, ofthe dog from his original stateas a wolf.”It has become therefore morethe word “evolution” which is ob¬jected to than the theory itself.“I don’t know why we liberalsimpose the use of the word “evo¬lution,” Schwab said, “if the sub¬ject is being taught. Even if it’sbeing taught by way of euphem¬isms.”Text books are often bought forpublic schools by state boardswhich are open to pressure fromoutside sources.It is mostly the laymen, or asSchwab called them, the “curb¬stone religionists,” who are ac¬tive in protesting the teaching ofevolution in the schools. The of¬ficial church groups have not, by and large, condemned this sub¬ject being taught.Scopes was brought to trial in1924 for teaching Darwin’s theoryof evolution. He explained thathe was then a substitute teacherand had purposely violated a lawwhich had just been passedagainst teaching anything con¬trary to a literal interpretation ofthe Bible.“I hope that I don’t ever haveto go through something like thatagain,” he said referring to thetrial.“The passing of that law mighthave been a first step in the pro¬cess which would have led even¬tually to letting the governmentdecide what should be taught inthe schools,” Scopes said.However, the ridicule the coun¬try’s newspapers heaped upon thetrial discouraged many statesfrom introducing the same kindof law. The law was passed inthe first place through the effortsof William Jennings Bryan, whospearheaded an organization ofFundamentalists and hoped tohave every state pass such a law.He was also, at the time, astrong political power in the Dem¬ocratic party.“A change of law would notchange things as much as wemight hope,” Sharp said of the at¬tempt that might be made tochange the law in the stateswhere such a law exists.It was pointed out by Woodthat the textbook publishersmight be freer in printing whatthey wish on the subject andmore effectively first, because ofthe increase in the school agepopulation new books on biologywill be sold, and second becausea lot more emphasis is now beingput upon the political leanings ofother text books than on thisproblem Today, in spite of thecovers, most textbooks beingused are almost as old - as thetrial. Church could acceptbirth control drugA birth control drug which would regulate a woman'sovulation would probably be morally acceptable to theRoman Catholic church, stated the Reverend John A. OiB?research professor of theology at the University of NotreDame, in a Redbook magazinearticle.O’Brien said that although it istoo early to pass final judgment,the use of such a drug "would ap¬pear to be entirely legitimate.”Alan F. Guttmacher, chief obste¬trician and gynecologist at NewYork’s Mount Sinai hospital, pre¬dicts in the same article that itis likely that such a drug “willbe found in the next decade.”"If a pill or an injection canbe found which will make anywoman discharge the egg [ovu¬late] 70 or 80 hours after its ad¬ministration, the couple’s sex lifethen can be regulated so that in¬tercourse will not be carried outduring the vulnerable period crea¬ted by the drug. This would makethe rhythm method work in everyinstance. Such a technique wouldprobably be acceptable to theCatholic Church.”Father O'Brien and Dr. Gutt¬macher are two of more than 40religious and medical authoritieswho responded to a question fromR'dbook asking whether there isa realistic hope of reconciliationbetween Catholics and Protestantson birth control and how it maybest be sought.The article reports that althoughexperts were almost unanimous infeeling that a reconciliation oftheological viewpoints in the nearfuture is out of the question, mosto' them felt that some aceomoda-tior in practice is already takingplace.Liberal Catholic elements, recog¬nizing that the use of contracep¬ tive devices is accepted by an ove*.w.-elming majority of American^including a high proportion <4Catholics, are coming to the co*.elusion under such circumstances,the moral precepts of a mino-itygroup should not be written intothe law, the article said. Protes¬tant clergymen, on the other hand,while strongly defending the mo¬rality of contraception, were foundto be cooperating increasingly withCatholics concerned over rapidlyrising birth rates in attempting toperfect simple reliable birth con¬trol means acceptable to the Ro-man Catholic Church.Redbook reports that the birthcontrol pill, progestin, recentlyapproved by the Food and DrugAdministration is not acceptableto Catholic theologians because rtprevents ovulation in the woman.The Reverend William J. Gibbons,a Jesuit sociologist, explains: "Theinducing of infertility in man orwoman by means of drugs, e\»-nthough only temporary, is regard¬ed by the Church as objectionablewhen done for contraceptive pur¬poses.”The drug describee by Gutt¬macher, however, would permit awoman to regulate her fertileperiods rather than induce infer¬tility.For the time being a philoso¬phical reconciliation on birth con¬trol seems unlikely. However,there is growing recognition onboth sides of the importance offamily planning, combined withrespect for individual religious be¬liefs and conscience.campuscharacter: Councils investigate served meals planPSAMUELPSYCHEA thinking man’s thinkingman, Psamuel finds thatthoughts come easiestwhen he is most comfort¬able.That’s why he alwayswears Jockey brand T-shirts. He likes the waythe fine combed cottonfeels next to his skin. Helikes the way the twin-stitched, nylon-reinforcedcollar keeps its shape.And he likes the full-pro¬portioned body and extralong tail that never creeps.You, too, will like your¬self better when you enjoythe comfort of Jockeybrand T-shirts. Yourfavorite campus storehas them. $1.50COOPER’S, INCORPORATED ■ KENOSHA. WIS.tyockeu® BRAND mT-shirts House Councils in the Univer¬sity Dormitory System have thisweek been asked to investigateplans for served meals in thedorms, to take effect as soon asa practiced system can be devised.Joseph H. Aaron, ’27The ConnecticutMutual Life InsuranceCompany of HartfordSince 1846, over 100 years, hassafeguarded your fomily.135 S. LaSalle St.Suite *25 RA C-IOtitlARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Refinishing ofShoes and Handbags• Colors matched • Toes cut out• Vamps lowered • PlatformsremovedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHeels changed — Any style —Any colorBackstraps Removed and Springa-lators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55»h St.2 • CHICAGO MAROON' • Ocf. 28, 1960— —: i : Action on this matter has beendelayed until now to enable thecatering staff to resolve the in¬evitable difficulties which alwaysconfront them at the start of anew quarter.The Councils have been askedto sound student feelings in thehouses and then discuss theirproposals with members of Stu¬dent Housing, announces JohnHuntoon.Decisions to implement the planwill not be made unless housecouncils agree, and there is no question of compelling studentsto accept served meals, he said.This comes in the wake of astatement by James E. Newman,Assistant Dean of Students, in amessage to entering students on“The University House System,”which caused widespread indig¬nation at the beginning of thequarter.Newman then said: “This yearwe will revive the pleasant cus¬tom of served dinners. For thepresent, dinner will be served onSundays and on one week night,iDR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometristin theNew Hyde Park Shopping Centerot1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644Eye Examination* Contact LensesNewest styling in framesStudent Discount and we look forward to this addi¬tion to our life in common. Din¬ner is always somewhat more for¬mal, incidentally, than breakfastor lunch; women are expected towear skirts, and men are ex¬pected to wear coats and ties atthat meal. This dress is requitedwhen dinner is a served meal.”Some students feel that thisnew announcement seems to befar less dictatorial and more dem¬ocratic than Newman’s plan.However, the Director of Stu¬dent Housing denied that by thewidespread talk of boycotting themeals and refusing to wear thestipulated dress, had been a fac¬tor in influencing the decision.“It is not a matter of imposing aprogram,” he said.Maroon reporters have beenunable to contact anyone who re¬members the “pleasant custom”which Dean Newman is trying torevive.. ' X;:AIRLINE SEATS ARE GOING FASTFOR THANKSGIVING AND CHRISTMASFREE TRAVEL POSTER FOR BOOKING BEFORE NOV. 15atJllarco J9olo ttraoel 3ertticeTravel Advisers Since 1276Me Charge for Our ServicesTickets On All Airlines Student ToursSki Trips Budget Rent-A-CarSteamship and Freighter Tickets Hotel ReservationsOpen Doily 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.; Also Mon. Eves. -1058 E. 55lh St. HI 8-5944Powell: NY lost by COPHarlem RepresentativeAdam Clayton Powell publiclythanked Henry Cabot Lodgeand Norman Vincent Pealefor “handing over New Yorkto the Democratic party.” Powell Bowles scores policyor pet sons of negro blood or he is In favor of a minimum wage - _ ... , , . ..extraction or to any person but voted against a $.75 minimum Eu9*"e Vinogradoff sires of all peoples to be inde-of the Semitic Race, blood or wage law even when Robert Taft Democratic foreign policy Pendent*origin, which racial descrip- voted in favor of it.” In relation expert Chester Bowles Criti- We shou,d aid Peoples becausetion shall be deemed to in- to this he called Nixon the “great cized the “lack of DrODer they seek 600,10,1110 growth underelude Armenians, Jews, He- pretender” and said that he did orientation” in the ronHimt of their own management aadbrews, Persians and Syrians.” not believe there was a new foreign affairs L the n^sent ad1 because we ean_“buy them” intoNixon. • y Pu ? L d' tho sPh°r° of US influenee. Heministration in a speech at Man- „n;j ^ . TTC _Powell also presented the vot- del hall last Saturday. d that no danger to US nation-ing record of the United States Bowles said the Republicans situnder Lodge, in the United Na- entranced by the gyrations of iad _p.tions. During this time Lodge Soviet premier Nikita Khruschev «u?voted against freedom or ab- and, as a result, fail to recognize i ..Zstained during those elections a the deeply rooted needs and aspi- hack ward countries attain nmZtotal of 38 times. These elections rations of the newly independent »rnw*h prOS*were mainly for independence of African and Asian peoples. Pe y sAfrican and Asian countries. “Republican policy is nothing Bowles felt that five pointPowell reminded those present more than a reaction to condi- °ure-alls should not be thethat these nations now had equal tions set by the Soviets and their method of implementing foreignvoting power w i t h the United satellites,” Bowles maintained. In- Policy. “Such crash programs canStates. stead of this crisis-to-crisis reac- ordV used for a few weeks atPowell then answered any ques- tion by the US, Bowles advocated a. !*me’ otherwise we will, losetions that the reporters had. a re-examination of both the US s.lght of the underlying aspira-When asked if he felt the Demo- position throughout the world tlo'?sA . lch moJiv?ie, Africanscratic party could enact their civil and the desires of people in un- and Asians to seek aid from what-rights platform over dixiecrat op- derdeveloped countries. ever source tkey can.position he replied, “There is no w. °n the Problems ot Cuba andlonger a solid south. If there were Marions want freedom the Congo, Bowles explained thatsecret ballots in the House of He said we ™ust recognize that the present lack of long rangeRepresentatives half of the South- bundreds of millions of people re- goals taking into account the im-ern dixiecrats would vote for civil ceptly freed by the decline of portant and underlying needs ofrights motions.”Adam Clayton Powell at his press conference last Friday.On the left is Gene Vinogradoff, a co-chairman of UC Stu¬dents for Kennedy. colonialism do not want to be economically primitive countries“They are prisoners of their C0“ld "°‘ bbt,‘>r“‘Pl,at.C ?ubhf ■ „ to them, either condition offers crises. He said the thing to do is' ea-HaHem" aidI PoT "otbi"e but ,he ^ extension of avoid such crises in the future.e„ea.,soH^rrihaT,dheTou,'dPSu^ "u^7S '££*55 "* dea' ^ PrMe"‘ ““ *port Rep. James Roosevelt’s bill °ng Igl t0 overmrow-to abolish the House Committee step at a time until they can be‘Indeed,” said Bowles, “these resolved,peoples not only wish to remain _ , .. . . ..i free, but also have a perfect right Cuban policy harmfulP expressed concern over to do so » Such desires should He claimed that the time forhe starvation tactics being not ^ considered as anti-Ameri- effective action in Cuba is longmade this statement during a He also quoted Nixon’s voting u s e d in Fayette and Haywood can sentiments but as aspirations passed when we have to institutevisit to UC last Friday. record in Congress, where he counties and said that his party wbjcb we ourselves once cham- an economic blockade; such aAt a press conference held in voted against fair employment would do something in Congress pj0ned jn ajj parb5 Qf the world, blockade, he said, can do little to»e Alpha Delta Phi fraternity practices bills. According to Pow- to make the right to vote avail- th_f th. IT<; chrtll1H reconcile the exison Un-American Activities.Anti-HUAC group canvassesthe Alpha Delta Phi fraternity practices Dins. According to Pow- He argued that the US should reconcile the existing differenceshouse, Powell explained that ell, “Nixon says he is for educa- situa?on lik^this He wal sor aid these countries in both eco- ^tween Castro and the US, butmCn tuSZuJ-Z* Mo" *»ut broke the tie against the prised that more people, especial- nomic and social development * ^ther Mtto^meri^^W— * *» — b“ >y white people V?e „of eon- 56.15? ^“e to™says he is in favor of civil rights cerned or did not know about a„d low interest loans! Only then, than ^ood'but voted against the Fair Em- what was happening in these Bowles claimed, will the US again After his forty minute speechployment Practices bill; he says counties. become identified with the de- Bowles met with CongressmanBarratt O’Hara (Democrat fromUCs district) and Mrs. PaulDouglas at a cocktail receptionin the Quadrangles club. Therehe answered questions put to himThe Students for the Aboli- that the first night of canvassing between two groups of faculty ^ students and faculty members,voting to eliminate discrimination fjon 0f House Committee (the canvassing began Monday) members, or ask some ACLUin executive positions. 0n Un-American Activities Proved rather successful. One people to speak.”When Henry Cabot Lodge was has begun canvassing the P°rs;on camf back w^h ovf.r At their last meeting, on Oc-in New York city he claimed that Hyde Park neighborhood in the JhlFty signatures on the peti- tober 18, the Committee playedil he was elected there would be hope of getting voters to support lon' . tapes of the San Francisco Hear-a Negro in the Cabinet. A state- their drive to pursuado Congress- ^Committee plans to con- ings of the House Un-Americanment was released immediately man O’Hara to vote for the abo- tinue canvassing the neighbor- Activities committee. These tapesbv the Republican national com- lition of the Committee hood until the weather beeomes also included reports of the stu-miitee saying that this statement “The canvassers are asking the to° cold to continue. They say dent protest which took place atwas not true and that Lodge had voters to write letters to Con- that they also hoP° to distribute these hearings. (These tapes wrtlno right to make this statement, gressman O’Hara and to sign our material and ask for support in be played on WUCB at 10.00 onstate and probably the electiontor Nixon and Lodge.Powell explained that introduc¬ing the religion issue into theranqmign was harmful to Nixon.“We New Yorkers recoil fromanything that looks or smells ofbigotry," said Powell. He also saidthat now liberal New Yorkerswould realize the necessity forPowell said that he did not petition which calls for the abo- the dormitories,know it the Democrats would put lition of the Committee; each “Besides the canvassing^ oura Negro in the cabinet. “Negroes person contacted will be given plans are rather indefinite, saidas well as all Americans should informative material concerning Arthur MacEwan, chairman ofbe entitled to a job or position the Committee,” stated Len the Committee. We still hope tobased on education, capabilities Freidman, who is in charge of hold a large rally in November,and experience rather than be- the canvassing program for the but as of yet have no definitecause they’re Negroes, Poles or organization. speakers. Perhaps at our nextLithuanians.” Freidman declared, “We feel meeting we will stage a debateUsing documented proof Powellattempted to show the “true”character and opinions of bothVice-President Nixon and Lodge.He first presented a photostatiecopy of a document, entitled’ Prom the Nixons’ Deed."One part of this deed, signed byRichard and Patricia Nixon, con¬tained (his provision:No part of this land shallever be used or occupied by,or sold, demised, transferred,conveyed unto,, or in trustfor, leased or rented or givento negroes or to any person November 2.) GUITARSBANJOSMANDOLINSTHEFRET SHOP5535 DorchesterMl 3-3459THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree l7.C. DeliveryTerry ’s1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045^25^ For Your Cameraregardless of oge or conditionas trade-in on purchase of aNEW AGFATHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue D. S. Passmore, Manager CLOTHES FOR CLASSCorduroy 3-Pc. Suits —Reversible Vests $24.95Corduroy Sport Coots $12.95Corduroy Pants $ 5.95Wool Flannel Slacks from $ 9.95Wool Sweaters from $ 4.95Pullover Corduroy Shirts .$ 5.95Sport and Dress Shirts $ 3.95(Arrow - Manhattan)D & G CLOTHES SHOPMonday, Thursday, Fridoy, Saturday 'HI 8:30 p.m.40 Years in the Neighborhood851 East 63rd“Our price* can’t be beat . . •it’s smart to bay for less.*9Oct. 28, 1960 • CHICAGO M A RO ON * 3i I I !Tabor lectures on CubaRobert Tabor lectured on Cuba, Friday, October 21, at 4:30, in Ida Noyes library.According to Tabor the Cuban revolution was created'by the miserable people, not byFidel. Tabor considers Fidel as one of the people.Tabor said that the Cuban revolution brought these people into the daylight. ^Peoplein such regions as the siestra Maestra,” said Tabor, “were living under very primitive con¬ditions, and were virtual slaves. Now these people, whom I consider the basis of the newCuban society have a higher ; — —standard of living. They have cutting the gasoline supply committee. He is former CBS cor-schools and better houses.Tabor stated that after the rev¬olution the Cuban peasants weresurprised to read in the newspa- eame. Cuba couldn’t exist without respondent. His speech was de-oil, so she was -forced to obtain it livered under the auspices of thefrom the Soviet Union. Young Socialist alliance.“Khrushchev threatened to At the conclusion of this lec-pers that Castro was accused of sonfj rockets to Cuba, only after ture tentative plans to set up abeing a communist Most of the wp threatened to send the Fair Play for Cuba committee atpeople, Tabor said, didn’t know ]yjarjnes to Cuba,what the word communist meant Tabor has been to Cuba, and UC were made.The Fair Play for Cuba com-Cuba is a sovereign countiy^ his lecture was based on his ob- rnittee is an independent nationalorganization. It was organized inApril, I960. Waldo Frank is theTabor said, and she has the right Nervations,to receive aid from the SovietUnion. Tabor is the- executive secre-Tabor stated that to the Cubansthe only peril in the world is theUnited States.Tabor said, “If you don’t wantrockets over Cuba, the place toput pressure on is the UnitedStates government. Put pressureon General Motors, United Fruit,Nixon and Kennedy. Nixon andKennedy should be hanged. I feelthat the United States govern¬ment does not represent me. Noone ever consulted me about thecandidates.”Tabor gave a brief history ofCuba’s foreign relations."A long time before there wastalk' about Cuba’s being a com¬munist beachhead,” Tabor said,"Wayne Morse, speaking as therepresentative of the leadingsugar state, suggested that thesugar quota be cut."This year the serious threat tary of the Fair Play for Cuba chairman. Enrollment increasesAn increase of 3.31 per cent over last year in the. numberof students on the quadrangles was announced by WilliamVan Cleve, University registrar. The registrar’s office ex¬pected an enrollment of 6010 for this year; 6016 had regis-tered by October 7.A comparison of figures for the orpasod over 1959 by 2 98 DPracademic years 1959 to 1961 901, ... ' *shows that the increase of grad- ’ graduateyates has been ahead of the in- schools show an increase of 12 76crease of undergraduates. (Fig- per cent to 1458 and the divisionsures for earlier years do not pro- .showed a drop of 1.51 per rentvifle an dependable base because to ^ There hcontinual reorganizations of the . . . _ . . neCollege have chan.ged the defini- anx,el> that increased tuiiiontions of an undergraduate stu- would lower registration in ihedent.) This trend must be re- fall, as it seemed to in the semes-versed if the goal of a balanced teFf but this proved unfoundeduniversity, with as many under-graduate students as graduates, ^ • OUISe 'Cris¬is to be realized. trat ion, including the DowntownThe College enrollment in- Center, is 9006.Calls Chicago 'most segregated cityrThDkc1367 E. 57th St. HY 3-5151Record of the WeekJOANBAEZFolk SongsVRS 9078 $3.99 Welton Taylor described theformation of Negro ghettos inChicago, the nation’s most segre¬gated large city. He spoke inBrent House, the UC Episcopalstudents’ center, on Sunday eve¬ning.Taylor is chairman of the Chi¬cago chapter of the Episcopal So¬ciety for Cultural and RacialUnity. A microbiologist by pro¬fession, he is currently Supervi¬sor of Clinical Microbiology atthe Children’s Memorial Hospitalin Chicago. He was formerly onthe medical faculty at the Uni¬versity of Illinois.President cites ChicagoTaylor began by stating, “Chi¬cago is outstanding for havingbeen declared by the President’scommittee on human relations themost segregated city in the USwith a population over 500 thou¬sand. Negroes are now fourth orfifth class citizens in Chicago.This situation in the city owes its origin to the formation of ghettosconsisting of people of the saYneracial, cultural, and religiousbackgrounds. The first Negroesin Chicago, who were mostlyfreed slaves and of the lowesteconomic order, formed such aghetto."There is nothing essentially vi¬cious about the inception of aghetto,” Taylor continued. “Theghetto situation does not becomevicious until it is so well estab¬lished as to be a social cancer, butby then the only people who wishthe dissolution of the ghetto areits inhabitants.“The need for a Negro ghettoin Chicago ceased 25 years agowhen Negroes became assimilat¬ed, but the ghetto continues toexist because slums are the mostprofitable form of real estate.Slums/are so profitable becauseof crowding and depreciation. Alarge number of rooms at lowrent is more profitable than a. TRAVEL THE FOUR WINDSon SKI's to ZERMATTand PARIS for*598.50Call Barbara or Maxine at CE 6-2321or drop in to see us at 8 S. Michigan small number of rooms at highrent, and as slum buildings de¬teriorate the taxes on them dim¬inish.“The formation of slums is avicious cycle,” he went on. “TheNegro does not make slums, butinherits them. And as the dwell¬ings around a slum are* aban¬doned because of its proximitythey are bopght at high prices,divided into smaller apartments,and rented to Negroes. /Ghetto area doubles“In (he past 20 years the ghettoarea of Chicago has doubled sothat the city now contains thesecond largest populations of Ne¬groes, Mexicans, Chinese. Japa¬nese, Philippines, and PuertoRicans of any city in the US.“Finally,” Taylor said, “fiveyears ago a mayor’s commissionon human relations was formedwith a staff of four men. Thiscommission has done very little,for it is powerless to take anyaction other than to make recom¬mendations. Now, Negro groupsin Chicago are beginning to formneighborhood committees to fightsegregation.” Such a group isthe Chatham Avalon Park Com¬munity Council, of which Tayloris the president. This organiza¬tion, which has an annual budgetof $5000, publishes a newspaper and js active against segregationin its neighborhood in severalother ways.Taylor also discussed the wavsin which a Negro can attempt tobecome a first class citizen. “Thisis very difficult,” he said, “forthe idea that a Negro is an in-ferior person is a vicious c\ ole.He seems inferior because he hasbeen denied opportunity to Vx-rterhimself. But because he is ap¬parently inferior he is not likelyto be given such a chance.Negro problem great"To get ahead the Negro mustget out of the ghetto, but he rando this only with the greatest dif¬ficulty, because whenever a Negro moves into a white neighbor¬hood everyone else moves out.”Taylor, in proposing a remedyfor segregation, asserted that itis immoral. Hence, part of the re¬sponsibility of Christians for abetter world is the elimination ofsegregation. Taylor concludedthat segregation will be fdiminal-ed w hen C h r 1 s t ia n s overcometheir apathy towards it.He spoke in place of the Rev,James Edden, rector of St. Thom¬as’ church in Chicago, who wasto have spoken on "SegregatedHousing in Chicago” but was un¬able tou keep his engagement be¬cause of illness.Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL For PRINTING Call JAY!OFFSET if LETTERPRESS * MIMEOGRAPHINGDAILY U. OF C. PICKUPS.... JAY Leller &. Printing* Service3-0802 1950 East 75th Street~T7me to feed theM v samxm •*»The best tobacco makes the best smoke! |R. J. Rtynoldi Tobacco Co., Wlnatou-Saleni. N. C.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 28, I960 ni'UvAf.t If V S BETA SMOKERFritlnv, Orlohrr 2# _ 7:30-10California editors resign posts in feudocrats and Young Republicans,Th<? entire editorial board a recount, the tatter question Berkeley.Of the Daily Californian, stu- *ain the necessary 2/3’s The editor of the San Francisco and the Student CiviYYiberTie^dent newspaper on the Berke- aj"my’ • University newspaper offered Union. This group is led by Curtislev campus, resigned last The controversy continued to boil Wednesday to share his news- Gans, former editor of the NorthMonday following a three-day V? prinIuIn a Ietter lo llie editor, paper with Silver, publishing one Carolina Daily Tar Heel and pastbattle between the paper and Jr *uSSnlanl. *OI,m£r Chair- issue for both campuses, but^ this national affairs vice president ofBerkeley’s strident governmentconcerning editorial control ofthe paper. This move was fol¬lowed by mass resignations fromall campus student publicationsin retaliation against actions tak¬en by the Executive Committee(ExCom) of the Associated Stu-d1in addition to the Daily Cali- cause latter were so pre- SLATE, the campus Young Dem- support Tigar, there was almostf«,man's’entire news staff, the ^P^ous f* to express aneditors of the year book, literary Plt11on on 10 editorial page!man of the National Executive idea was vetoed by the San Fran-committee of the National. Stu- cisco administration whereupondent association wrote that “those the San Francisco editor also re-who would foster an intellectual, signed,depression at Berkeley, having Committee formspreviously succeeded in stigma- In the meantime, other Cal stu-tizing the political social action dents have formed the Californiagroups, are at present unleash- Committee for Freedom and In- USNSA.Preparations are under wayfor a student initiative constitu¬tional amendment which wouldreturn control of the Daily Cal toits old staff and establish perma¬nently an independent press..uni; ui i..c ulu- . . . ... — Gans reports that while mostnts University of California at m.Kf! *nveetive a* the editorial dependence of the Student Press; Cal students seemed to disap-staff of the Daily Californian be- it includes representatives from prove of the paper’s decision to total disapproval of the ExComaction. He is expected over¬whelming victory on the initia¬tive petition. (Tigar, incidentally,lost the election.)USNSA commentsUSNSsA has issued a statementcondeming ExCom action as aviolation of the principle of pressautonomy. The student associa¬tion also upheld the paper’s ri^htto endorse a candidate.Silver, the editor who first re¬signed, reports that the new in¬dependent paper seems to beflourishing, but that money andsupport are desperately needed.magazine, humor magazine andengineering publication resignedin protest of the ExOom’s “Inter¬ference” with the campus paper.These events grew out of a eon- Candidate whines“One candidate for ASUC rep¬at large, Rod Briggs, spent his Russian students visit UCTwelve Russian exchange ica Antiqua Society of New York,entire allotted time at last Fri- students will arrive.on campus Saturday morning the mem-.... day s candidates’ forum whining next Thursdav for a nnp uwk bers of the group will have anti.'Vfi-sy arising from an editorial how unIair it was ,to, ,he |)aUj. ‘ta ’ l th® II^i„°r*t!’ne WeeK optional tour ot the campus andappearing October 14 in which £a| had endorsed Mike Tigar J;, . . . the urban redevolpment projectsthe Daily endorsed a specific can- (and not Briggs) and proclaiming The visitors will be housed in the area. Opportunities fordelate for the position of repre- that jf elected he would prevent fraternities on campus and meetings with persons of profes-sentative at large in an all that sort of nonsense from hap- W*U attend classes on campus as sional interest will be provided,campus student government pening in the future. wed as visit other points of in- The same afternoon there will beelection, Mike Tigar. Tigar is “When challenged by a student ^eres* *n the city. These 12 Sov- a meeting with the group of stu-president of SLATE, the minor- jn the audience for advocating *ets are of an original party dents from UC as well as an op-ity party on campus. suppression of the press, Briggs Russians who are on tour in portunity to address this group- SLATE spurs action insisted that his intent was not the United States. The other half and discuss subjects of mutual in-SLATE has been most active in to suppress the Daily Cal, only to °[ tbf grouP is currently touring terest.control it'” the East Coast.Last Friday evening and Sat- The students will arrive by busurday, ExCom and the Editorial on 3 November at 5:15 pm fromBoard held several informal Dearborn, Michigan. They willAmerican Activities committee meetings in an attempt to resolve then proceed to their hosts’student demonstrations in San the problem. A temporary agree- houses which are Alpha DeltaFrancisco. The Daily Californian nient allowed ExCom 15 inches Phi, Beta Theta Pi, Delta Upsilon,has iieen editorially sympathetic °T space in the paper to explain Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Sigmaorganizing “student action’’ af¬fairs at California. This state widestudent party did much to pro¬duce last year’s anti House Units position regarding the paper’sright to endorse candidates.Saturday, ExCom again met inemergency session and decidedwith most SLATE policies.This was the first time that thepaiK'r had ever endorsed a stu¬dent candidate.Rod Briggs, a candidate for thesame office, called the paper'sbacking of Tigar “unjustified”and declared a candidate must“lie on good terms with the edi¬tor" to get an endorsement.Many other officers of the stu¬dent government disliked thepaper’s action. Technically, theDaily Californian is published by Com the right to select the pa-the Student government. per’s editor, and one makingLast Friday, a week after the ExCom responsible for the pa-daily editorial appeared, ExCom per’s conduct, policies and affairs,called a session to consider action At this point editor Silver an-against the publication. With no nouncod his resignation,debate, the student government Most of his staff and all tlieSiis|»emicd the paper’s by-laws editors on the paper followedand moved into executive session Silver. ExCom, in the person ofto consider suspension of the student body president George Most speak English -Most of the students in the So¬viet group can speak Englishfairly well. Saturday evening halfof the group will have dinnerwith two families and attend aconcert of the Evanston Sym¬phony orchestra. The other halfwill have the evening free withoptional dinner invitations if de¬sired.Sunday morning will be freeDelta and Psi Upsilon. Each ofthese houses will accommodate2 students.Though the party had w'antednot to suspend the staff, but to *° v*sit and talk to factory time for the group while in therevise the papier’s by-laws. workers, it was learned that no afternoon they may visit the ArtTwelve new by-laws >vore pro- manufacturer in Chicago who institute, the Museum of Scienceposed and consideration was ad thus far has been approached will and Industry, or the Chicago His-ceriatum, that is each proposal Perniit the party of Soviets to tour torical society. That evening therewas voted upon, and after • all its buildings. These include Bell will be a reception and dinner bytwelve, the entire group would ami Howell Camera company, the the Experimenters association.Ford Motor company, several On Monday, November 7, thenewspaper staff.Daily editor Dan Silver ques¬tioned the right of the closedheating. He demanded reconsid- be voted upon.The first two changes gave Excerns which have been contactedfor permission.After a Thursday evening tourof the downtown area, the groupwill visit Hyde Park’s Consumer'sCooperative on Friday morning.The Soviets will then lunch at theNorthern Trust Bank and thenvisit at their convenience withMarshall Field’s departmentstore, the Merchandise Mart, andthe Sun-Times newspaper. Thatevening half of the group willhave dinner with two UniversityLink, took over publication of theDaily Californian. The Businessstaff remained with the Daily.Silver and most of the old stafforation of the suspension of the began publishing their own daily auSi^a^ncert'ofby laws as well as the decision to newspaper, the Independent Cali-tnove into executive session. On fornian at 2153 Vine Street in meat packers, and smaller con- group will visit the Chicago Boardof Trade which is * the centralcommodity and grain exchangefor the United States. They mayalso tour by car to the sights ofspecial architectural interests. Aluncheon and panel discussion bythe Urban league of Chicago willconstitute the afternoon’s activi¬ties as well as discussions withthe civic leaders of the Negro inAmerican society. That eveningwill be free time and those stu¬dents with adequate English-speaking ability may visit a cof¬fee house with a satirical thea- Tuesday will be the day forvisits to the Armour Research in¬stitute, the Dunbar Vocationalschool, and a lunch at a Chicagosettlement house. That afternoonthe Soviets will visit the Roose¬velt University Labor Educationcenter. Being election night theymay visit political party head¬quarters and watch television re¬ports of election results if theywish. On Wednesday, November9, the Russian students will de¬part by bus for Beloit at 2 pm.Guest list notedThe unofficial list of visitors’names are: Aziz Yahjaogle, Ag¬aev, age 28, teacher; Victor Fed¬orovich Dedysh, age 28, engineer;Anatoly Bogdanovich Golovko,age 28, executive; Eduard Aram¬ovich Hagagort?van, age 30. com¬poser; Igorj Alexandrovich Kaz-anski, age 28, journalist; Ivan Igo¬revich Kostin, 28, scientist; RemikOganesevich Markaryan, 26. ar¬chitect; Jury Pavlovich Platonov,31, engineer; Ivan tAndrevich Pok-ryshkin, 31, engineer; TatjanaVas-iljevna Salnikove, 26, executive;Azad Agakerim Ogly Shafirov,30, journalist; Alexandr Nikolae¬vich Slavinsky, 30, architect; JuryNikolaevich Verchenko, 30, teach¬er.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57 th to.MU 4-9236trlcal performance.SCHOLARLY BOOKSonHISTORY and LITERATUREBOUGHT AND SOLDHours: 2 PM to 9 PM Every Day including SundayJoseph O’Cara, Bookseller1360 East 53rd St. DO 3-4035 Jimmy’sand the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and. Woodlawn Ave. Eye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetat University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372SRPin cooperation with the Folklore SocietypresentsSONNY TERRY and BROWNIE McGHEEH|MANDEL HALLSATURDAY, OCT. 29th•t 8:90 p.m.*LJ0 OeneraV admits to* $2.00 Reserved STUDENT SPECIALSPIZZA (ANY COMBINATION) $f.2S to $4.25LARGE BUCKET $079oi Toasted, Golden Brown toteCki Thi* Will Feed a Family of Five\#ssl wSVEPI Very EconomicallyAll Party Buckets Now IncludeCrisp French Fries & Creamy Cole SlawSMALLER BUCKET *2 29* Bucket O'Shrimp ..$2.45• Bucket ORibs ....$4.79/1636 East55th StreetCallBU 8-8440 • Shrimp A Ribs ....$5.69• Ribs A Chicken ...$5,89e Fast HomeF Deliverylb • Carry-OutService ,1851 East87th StreetC allRE 1-9393 Beacons§»y$hopImported TweedsWest of England Saxonies,Shetlands & Cromwells. Ex¬tra longs to size 44, $65.$75.00 value. .. $599*Vest Optional608 N. MICHIGANOct. 28, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5■•t A ) id JV Kennedy best on urban renewalLast week, the Maroon concludedthat Senator Kennedy would do themost to satisfy the needs of studentsand of education in general.This week we wish to extend our sup¬port of Senator Kennedy on the basis ofhis record on urban renewal, aid to de¬pressed areas and other domestic issuesof vital importance.It should be evident to every UC studentthat the community of Hyde Park has,during the last several decades, fallenprey to the “creeping blight” that turnsfashionable residential centers into slumareas. Philadelphia, Boston, New York,Chicago indeed every major United Statescity — has been victimized by the sameurban degeneration. It presents one of themajor domestic problems in the UnitedStates.•Senator Kennedy and the entire Demo¬cratic Party have long held that federalaction is the only effective means of halt¬ing this “creeping blight.” The costs ofurban renewal programs broad enough torestore hundreds of blocks in U. S. citiescannot be borne by either municipal or state governments; when state and fed¬eral programs alone are put into opera¬tion, inadequacies always result: in NewYork slum clearance projects have suc¬ceeded in demolishing hundreds of tene¬ments but the people who lived there havenot been supplied with adequate-low costhousing. They are forced to move, but cando nothing except create more slum areas, Again, states and localities cannot af¬ford the relief necessary; nor can theyarrange for the introduction of new indus¬tries and the building and reopening ofmills. In West Virginia the problem offinance, is especially acute: state revenueshave been drastically reduced because somuch of the population can earn only asub standard income.whatever section of the city they occupy. As- in urban renewal, depiessed aieasIn 1959 Democrats in the House andSenate proposed a $900 million, two-yearprogram for slum clearance and urbanrenewal. But President Eisenhower, wor¬ried more about money than about thisneed of U. S. cities, termed the proposal“excessive.” >The Republican Congressmen, respond¬ing to this attack, succeeded in cutting theappropriation to $650 million; .this re¬duced it to 50% of the total needed, andrendered the program ineffective.Chronically depressed areas furnish therural counterpart to urban degeneration.West Virginia, Pennsylvania, and manycoal producing states are filled with townsand villages “closed down” by the failingof a mine, the departure of a mill, or thedecline of an industry. relief has long been a major plank of theDemocratic party. Yet the Republican ad¬ministration, while .(through the com¬ments of Labor Secretary Mitchell)acknowledging the magnitude of the prob¬lem,. has consistently opposed measuresto alleviate it. „ •<»In 1958 the Democrats passed a bill pro¬viding a substantial amount of depressedarea relief. The President vetoed it.In 1960 the Democrats repassed a sim¬ilar bill, only to have Eisenhower veto itagain. But the Democrats succeeded inoverriding the veto, thereby providing thefirst major relief bill since the Republi¬cans took office.In light of this record we cannot under¬stand how Nixon can tell West Virginiansthat the Republicans alone really “want to do something about depressed areas.”In the field of public housing the Demo¬crats have sponsored bills calling for theconstruction of 47,000 units and, underthreat of a veto, 37.000 units.Again, the administration has recog.nized the need for public housing as thecomments of Labor Secretary Mitchellshow. Yet the Democrats had to passthree public housing bills before Eisen¬hower signed one.On other public works projects theDemocrats have consistently proposedneeded programs while the Republicans,though admitting that something had tobe done, have consistently opposetj them.Highway construction, TVA and otherpublic power projects, and pollution clear¬ance are good examples.Senator Kennedy, then, offers the bestprograms for meeting our domestic prob¬lems, and the Democratic Party as a wholehas consistently offered effective pro¬grams which the Republicans have eitherdefeated, vetoed, or ignored. Not onlystudents, but citizens in general will bene¬fit most from the election of Senator Ken¬nedy.the Chicago maroonfounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University ot 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 campusSubscriptions by mall. $3 per year Office hours: 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, 4 pm.Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pm Wednesday before publicationAll unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the Individual opinions of the authors.Should boycottThe question of whether Northern studentsshould continue their sympathy demonstrationpicketing outside' those variety stores which con¬tinue to have segregated branches in the Southhas once again appeared as a real issue. Just be¬cause of its reality and its vitality, it is importantthat it not be clouded with false and spurious con¬troversies.Two weeks ago five NSA officers met with fiverepresentatives from four of the variety chainsinvolved. It was made clear to all concerned,thatthe NSA officers did not feel that they could speakfor all northern students; nor was it claimed thatthey could control the future course of the North¬ern demonstrations. In fact, NSA had requestedtwo representatives from the Student non-violentcoordinating committee to attend the meetingUnfortunately, they could not come.Instead the five officers presented themselvesas vitally interested students, who, to some extent,could speak in concert with the wishes and inter¬ests of Northern and Southern students. NSA didconsider the possibility of withdrawing its supportof the Northern demonstrations, but was neverin a position to attempt to cancel the Northernpickets. In point of fact, the association rejectedthis position.Yet the problem remains. Should Northern stu¬dents engage in an economic boycott?Woolworth’s and its peers were originally se¬lected for the best of reasons. Negroes could standand be served at the same counters where whiteswere sitting; the black and white races could beshoulder to shoulder. One could sit and the othercould not. The totally irrational indignity of thissituation defied conservative arguments. Therecould be no defense of this intolerable situation.The indigenous and spontaneous protests of theearly sit-in period resulted in wave after wave ofnational publicity and world wide sympathy. Abetter site for a sit-inf could not be found. In aspirit of awe, unswerving respect and total sym¬pathy, the northern student did what he could: he be stopped?collected monies, he petitioned, he publicized, andhe picketed the northern branches of the offendingchains.Many students, even those in the Northernpicket lines, had misgivings about these sympathystrikes. The Northern stores were fairly autono¬mous; the national chain was more correctly aloose federation; the dime store outlets, in theNorth, had been fully integrated for years. Butthe situation allowed neither time nor room forsuch misgivings, and the students acted.But the situation has changed somewhat. Sincethe sit-ins began stores have been integrated in 112cities. No student has been arrested for sit-inactivity on the basis of a Woolworth complaint.The officials constructed this convincing brief forthemselves: We, as a corporation, have respondedto your complaint. We are attempting to integrateas rapidly as is feasible and practical. Is it just tocontinue to subject a friendly institution to con¬tinued economic boycott while other stores withmuch more insidious policies remain untouched?One must note that at the conclusion of the NSA-Woolworth meeting the chains issued a publicstatement which committed them to an activepolicy of desegregation, and that this statementwas released in the South as well as the North.If, indeed, these companies are sincere in theirstatement, if they fully intend to continue rapiddesegregation, then perhaps further Northernpickets are unnecessary and unjust. On the otherhand, it is possible that their statement is insin¬cere, that all their prior actions have resultedfrom student pressure, and that once this pressureis relaxed, progress will slow down.At no time has any responsible student organiza¬tion suggested the elimination of student protestactivity, rather the suggestion has been for aredirection of that activity.The problem is a real one both practically andmorally. It must be met head-on and answeredwith full satisfaction. In all honesty we must con¬fess at this time that we do not have that answer. New IFC rush planis improper, unwiseThe ten UC fraternities havevoted to institute an Autumnquarter rush for first year stu¬dents; men will not be allowedto pledge until Winter quarter,but the second half of Fall quar¬ter will be devoted to obtainingindividuals willing to sign pledgecards in January. In the past,under the rules of the Inter-Fra¬ternity council, first year stu¬dents could not be rushed untilJanuary.We find this sudden andabrupt decision improper and un¬wise bn two distinct counts.First, we strenuously object tothe timing of this proposal. Evenwere we in sympathy with thenew plan, we question whetherit should be put into effect thisFall. Little time has been de¬voted to working out the myriadof practical problems which willconfront the houses.There is no good reason fornot waiting until next year tochange the rush schedule.But this is of scant and sec¬ondary importance when com¬pared with our principle objec¬tion. The question of timing isone internal to the fraternity sys¬tem and of but academic interestto the rest of the campus.But, the question of rush is it¬self not confined to the fraterni¬ties; it affects the entire cam¬pus. In the past under the de¬ferred system first year studentshad an entire quarter to accli¬mate themselves to the campus,to adjust to the kind of workschedule that academic excel¬lence demands, to observe the ex¬isting social institutions foundhere without necessarily com¬mitting themselves to those in¬stitutions. The new plan willchange all that.Interested students will, now find themselves submerged in afraternity swirl shortly after ar¬riving on campus. Theoretically,rush is to be accomplished andcompleted in three intensiveweeks, followed by a three week'hands off’ period during whichthe ten houses are expected toignore their prospective pledges.Anyone who expects this to workis either naive or unobservant.The houses cannot be expectedto drop the rather expensive andtime consuming process of first-year rush right in the middle."Dirty rushing” is commonplaceeven now, when no rushing offirst year students is allowed. Asa consequence, rush will continuesub' rosa through till Christmas.This is a great waste of timeboth for the fraternity men do¬ing the rushing and for the stu¬dents being rushed. It providesan attractive alternative to thebothersome business of academicadjustment, an attractive nui¬sance which mushrooms greatly.This new rule has broad impli¬cations. It will affect the frater¬nities. It will affect the first-yearmen. Thereby it will affect theentire campus.The rule is unnecessary for thefraternities; it will not produceany larger pledge classes. Ratherit will seriously complicate theeducational development of thefirst year men involved. It wouldseem likely that this current dovelopment will be followed byFall quarter pledging. How longwill it be before rush follows im¬mediately on the heels of Orien¬tation week? We appreciate theIF council’s wish to present the“case for fraternities” to all UCstudents. However, we wouldurge the IF council to reconsiderthis particular action, for thesake of fraternities, and for thegood of the campus as a whole.IRP requests policy statement,but its charges are nonsensicalThe Independent Revolutionaryparty (IRP), formerly the Im¬perial Revolutionary party, hasrecently requested a statementof Maroon policy on its futuretreatment of the party in ques¬tion.The Maroon does not hold tothe idea of equal space for allpoints of view; some points ofview strike us a total nonsenseand we catagorically refuse toburden our pages or our readerswith irrelevant trash. One of thefunctions of any editor, or ofany journalist for that matter, isto determine that which is of sig¬nificance. We must go on recordas regarding IRP as being insig¬nificant.IRP has a conception of stu¬dent government which seems toexist independent of history, re-6 • CHICAGO MA ality, politics, productivity, andpracticality. A specific instanceof this general ignorance can befound in IRP’s latest piece ofparty literature.The IRP officers seem to befrothing at the mouth over Stu¬dent government’s paying forNeal Johnston’s last trip to Eu¬rope. Now, in point of fact, NealJohnston has never been to Eu¬rope, nor has student governmentever paid for any of his tripsanywhere. The source of the con¬fusion is clear.Last February Johnston at¬tended an editor’s conference atthe Overseas Press club in NewYork City. His expenses were paidby USNSA, the Chicago Maroonand the Student Activities office.Through a clerical error part ofthis was placed on the Govern-ROON • Oct. 28, 1960 ment budget by the auditor ofstudent accounts. This error wasnoted and corrected in the SGbudget. The situation was furtherelucidated by SG president JimThomason at the last governmentmeeting.Now, we can forgive IRP thiserror just as easily as we can for¬get IRP in general.Incidentally, at last count therewere two Maroon staff membersholding ISL seats in government,and tv,o holding SRP seats. Thisdoes r,ot seem remarkably unbal¬anced to us.Quite a bit of space in this is¬sue has been devoted to the some¬what regretable activities of IRP.In the future we intend to adhereto a strict policy of devoting justas much space to IRP as IRP de¬serves. Editor-in-chiefNeal JohnstonBusiness manager Advertising managerWilliam G. Bauer - Phil GasteyerManaging editor 'Ken PierceEditor emeritus Lance HaddixAssistant to the editor Maureen ByersAssistant managing editor Avima RuderEditorial secretary Caryle GeierNews editor V .Jay GreenbergNotional news editor ,. .Gene VinogrodofiInternational 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 , 7 Donna BergPhotography coordinator Al BergerLettersFaculty group backs NixonKi'llow' members of theuniversity community:We would like to tel! youwhy we personally are sup-[M,Pting Nixon for President.F irst of all, we are completelyconvinced that he has the prao-ii,-al ability, the personal integ-, UV and the sincere determinationto li\ e up to the following state-m(>nt made bv him. "The politiealleader is Important ... It Is hisresponsibility ... to determinewhat he believes to be in the bestinterest of the country, and thent,. take strong positions and to,, V to win the people over to hispoint of view. If leaders do not(to that, the country will drift inUs policies into following masst[linking that will in some in¬stances represent the lowest commen denominator."Wo are convinced that Nixon ishighly intelligent and constantlyseeking to broaden and deepenhis understanding, and is realisticboth as to choice of feasible goalsand as to means to accomplishthem. He invites outside ideas, andhas expressed his intention to callm and consult university mem¬bers in various fields. Hence‘ Scholars for Nixon and Lodge.**Nixon’s viewpoint as a progres¬sive conservative appeals to us. Tnother words, conserve what issound and good, but continuallylook for long-range improvementradical improvement if desir¬able. but cautiously and realis¬tically. shunning ill-founded nos¬trums. Nixon is especially againstthe notion that large governmentstanding is a cure-all, and insiststhat each spending proposal bejustified on its own merits. Hebacks sound fiscal and monetarypolicies to prevent the gross in¬justices of inflation.With reference to science.Nixon has said: "We should nottie out scientists to the specificinventions which military men orpolitical leaders deem desirable.The greatest advances have beenmade not when scientists havebeen told to restrict themselves tocertain objectives but when they have had complete freedom toexplore the unknown."Nixon recognizes very clearlythe essential importance and pastunderemphasis on the economicand ideological aspects of foreignaid. His reports on his foreigntravels also show his keen appre¬ciation of the need in our foreignpolicy for greatly increased under¬standing and sympathy in dealingwith other countries. On the otherhand, he has himself studied theideas and tactics of communismand is thoroughly prepared todeal with them realistically.See Earl Mazo’s 35-eent paper¬back Richard Nixon of which theISL rebutsOpen letter to thestudent body:The Independent Studentleague (ISL), the majorityparty in Student government,greatly resents the latest at¬tempt by the IndependentRevolutionary party (IRP) todiscredit the elected representa¬tive body of the students of theUniversity of Chicago. T thereforetaka this opportunity to correctthe gross misrepresentation cir¬culated by IRP during the lastweek.T will direct my first commentsto the question of the compositionof Govern men I. Student govern¬ment Is the representative bodyof the students of the University.Representation in this body is ap¬portioned annually on the basis ofcurrent enrollment of the divi¬sions of the University. In the col¬lege three parties submit slates.It often occurs that no candidatewill receive a simple majority andthe election is decided on the basisof plurality.ISf, has HO per cent of the seatsin the college l>ecause HO |**r centof our college slate received morevotes than any other slate. Offi¬cial government figures assessthe ISL representation in the As¬sembly as follows (IRP estimatesin brackets): 34 seats (3H); per- New York Times says: "Far andaway the best Nixon study todate—the most detailed and themost penetrating has now beenturned in by Earl Mazo.” The bookis based on exhaustive studies andon Interviews with many hun¬dreds of people, including manyof the most prominent Democratsand Republicans.Emmet B. BayWalter L. Baily, Jr.William BurrowsWalter FacklerLawrence M. CravesFrank H. KniqhtRobert S. MuilikenIRP letterrentage of seats 66 (7f>); per cent-age of votes 42 (3B).In each graduate and divisionalschool where during the past yearonly two parties submitted slates,the apportionment of seats is com¬parable to the proportion of votes.This is illustrated by the followingfigures:^ of vote % of seatsISL 59:3 57.5SRP 19.9 18.2INI) 20.8 24.3In addition to responding to themajor question concerning Gov¬ernment composition, I would liketo submit a few remarks dealingwith some of the other distortionsthat apepared in the latest IRPcampaign letter.The filling of vacancies is nota constant concern of Govern¬ment. Government has seated onlyone student this year, and al¬though eight vacancies remain itneeds to be pointed out that fiveof these vacancies were due toresignations of students who havenot returned to the University.ISL is deeply concerned thatonly twenty per cent of thecampus votes in elections andwishes to encourage the studentsof the University to take an in¬creased interest in its governmentand welcomes all students whowish to take a more active part.Lincoln Ramirexpresident of ISLiTSCteA* T &trS Ci§AS \rs VASELINE HAIR TONIC•VAMUM* II » HMI8TIH9 WAMMMlt 9' «HM£»»9«9M>W»'» '"»•do girls go to your head?Or do they just go? If so try ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic-madespecially for men who use water With their hair tonic(and who doesn’t!) .‘Vaseline’ Hair Tome s 100% pure,light grooming oil replaces oil that water removes. Itwill not evaporate — will stay clear and clean. Yolooks great, stays neater longer. Just a little does a lot! OnCamjms withMaxShulman(Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The ManyLoves of Dobie GiUis", etc.)A FRAT TO REMEMBEREvery year, as we all know, the Benevolent and ProtectiveOrder of Collegiate Fraternities awards a highly coveted prizeto the fraternity house which, in its judgment, has done themost to promote and enhance the fraternity way of life. Theprize this year—eight hundred pounds of white putty—goes tothe Sign* Phi Nothing chapter of the South Dakota Collegeof Dentistry and Renaissance Art.The award this year is exceptionally richly deserved, for theSigna Phi Nothing house is the very model of all a fraternityshould be. It is, first of all, a mast attractive house physically.The outside walls are tastefully covered with sequins. Runningalong the upper story is a widow’s walk, with a widow stationedevery three feet. Moored to the chimney pot is the Graf Zeppelin.Indoors, the house gives an impression of simple, casual charra.The chapter room is furnished in homey maple and chintz,with a dash of verve provided by a carp pool three hundred feetin diameter. A waterspout rises from the center of the pool withthe housemother bouncing on the top.Members’ rooms are gracious and airy and are provided withbeds which disapj>ear into the wall—permanently. Each roomalso has a desk, a comfortable ebair, a good reading lamp, anda catapult for skeetshooting. Kidney-sha|>ed desks are avail¬able for kidney-sliaped members.Perhaps the most fetching feature of the house are the packsof Marlboros stacked in heaps wherever one goes. If one wishesto settle back and enjoy a full-flavored smoke, one needs onlyto reach out one’s hand in any direction and pick a pack ofMarlboros—soft pack or flip-top box —and make one’s self com¬fortable with a filtered cigarette with an unfiltered taste—thattriumph of the tobacconist’s art, that paragon of smokes, thatacme of cigarettes, that employer of mine —Marlboro!The decor, the grace, the Marlboros, all combine to makeSigna Phi Nothing a real gas of a fraternity. But a fraternityis more than things; it is also people. And it is in the peojilede|>artment that Signa Phi Nothing really shines.Signa Phi Nothing has among its members the biggestBMOCs on the entire campus of the South Dakota College ofDentistry and Renaissance Art. There is, for instance, WilliamMakepeace Sigafoos, charcoal and bun chairman of the annualStamp Club outing. Then there is Dun Rorin, winner of lastyear’s All-South Dakota State Monopoly Championsliip, 1X5Pound Class. Then there is Rock Schwartz, who can sleep stand¬ing up. Then there is Treviblant Placebo, who can crack fiecatmin his armpits. Then there is Ralph Tungsten, who went baldat eight.But why go on? You can see what a splendid bunch of chansthere is in Signa Phi Nothing, and when one secs them at thehouse in the cool of the evening, ail busy with their tasks —some picking locks, some playing Jacks-or-Better, some clippingPlayboy—one’s heart fills up and one’s eyes grow misty, andone cannot but give three cheers and a tiger for Signa PhiNothing, fraternity of the yearlAnd while you're cheering, how about a huxzah for the new¬est member of the Marlboro family of fine cigarettea—unal¬tered. mild, delightful Philip Morris king-size CommanderlHave a Commander—welcome aboardlRAMSEYLEWISweek-nights $1.50iri. & sat. $2.00Opening Wednesday, Nov. 2ndHERBIE MANN SEXTETFirrt Set 8 p.m.Dearborn St. at Division• ■■■■■-» 1 ■ - - — 1Oct. 28. 1960 •' CHICAGO MAROON • TLetterHUAC committee’s ‘liberalism’ defendedThe battle against con- economy is indeed not very vac- tee on campus was a refreshingformitv from its beginnings uous. It is rather evident that the change of pace. In terms of tra-nT nrZt has Z a author has had little t0 do with ditional politicS’ we have beonJ? .T1® P.™what he calls essentially conserv- living through the decade of thefight against inertia, compla- Rtiye bodies> With weissman’s "Great Apathy.” The most char-cency and intolerance. The way of i00king at political reality, acteristic form of expression ofwords men fight and die for the Southern sit-ins would never this apathy has been in the senseare the coins of politics, where- have been started or carried on of impotence, on the part of theby much usage they are soiled jn such magnificent manner, and individual in the face of the ap-and by many manipulations de- the movement to abolish the paratus of the state. As a resultbased. The words Liberal and Con- House Un-American Activities there is a profound moral inertia,servative have come to mean Committee would never have got-whatever anyone wants them to ten off the groundDon't praise conservatives retreat from political commit- thousands of students and teach-freedoms of thought, press, asso- dividuals, the Committee haselation still is being waged. The brought itself under the scorn ofHouse Un-American Activities all "Liberal” thinking people.Committee carries on in the spirit Through the years the committeeof reaction has operated in such a mannerPerhaps the San Francisco stu- that merely being called beforerent protests were merely a small the Committee has subjected in.radical outburst against the com- dividuals to social ostracism, lossmittee. All the evidence points to of jobs and a general characterquite a different conclusion. The defamation.sensitivities of hundreds and ,Debases Constitutionmean.It is with the conception of theTrue liberal” that this writermust take strong exception. It surely was not the Conserva¬tives who have made these strug-Weissman exhibits a thoroughly T7"Sr^»Dmiiro7ethef“»n«rn? <* tn.e Liberate tZughout i" oriminaiiiy the xoeia. neurosisin his appraisal of the concerns ... and inarticuiated frustrations —ment, failure to engage the idealism of youth, and a slowing downof dynamic of social change.On the other hand, there havebeen the scarcely-concealed injus¬tices and inequalities, the increase and dissention wherever it trav-ers were severely tried when the By seeking to destroy thoseHouse Committee came to Cali- freedoms which we hold dejir,fornia to investigate subversion the Committee has debased andin the California school system, perverted the American constitu-The Committee seeks to sow fear tion. In effect it has said, we canof the tine liberal. He makes themistake that all basically con¬servative people make. He dicho¬tomizes the thoughts and actionsof people and attempts to sepa¬rate them with a semantic twist¬ing of the operational meaningof the word Liberal.Initiation not enoughOf course the Liberal must ini- this country. . ... . . .Fundamentally it would seem d°IM? addu ts and Beats’ gang els. It tried in San Francisco, andwas magnificently rebuffed. Itwas the untiring work of the Lib-that the author has both the conflicts and race riots. Perhaps eral Berkeley and Bay Area stu-heart and the brain ot a Con- only » minority react in this way, dents which sent the Committeeservative. I say this not as amere epithet, but with a cleardefinitive meaning of Conserva¬tive in mind. His mind cringes atthe mention of the word "change.”He wants to do something tomake his life purposeful, but but the possibility of harnessingthis latent aggression on a muchwider scale is always there. Thesit-ins were a warning. Sometimes dictate to you, what you are (<>think and write; oppose us, amiwe shall destroy your character,home and family. Weissmanthinks that McCarthyism is stilla battle of the fifties. The Rill ofRights is as good a cause as theworld has ever known. But, likethe poor, it is always with us andgets shoved aside in favor oftiate activity, but is this all? It basically he fears the unbalanc¬es indeed a narrow frame of ref- ing strains of uncertainty in ac- rerence that relegates the work of tion. Therefore he merely sits on of human energy and sympathy committee has attempted to stiflethe very basic ideas which arethe foundation of our society. Bypacking,Methods cause doubtsThe method of operations with,, .... . „ - c.j.. which the committee has oper-the protest lx Just against; .gainst number ot things which sewn at some gw,.,,not lung as in the rock and roll gives rlsc £ doubts as (0 its moment more vttak They neversincerity. Acting as a trial court Ta v? T!’"we can catch a ,wlth all the social sanctions and slty of the freedoms are most ,,,,glimpse ot the immense potential ostraclsm at ,hcir disposal), the |H,rtant w« al,ut t*1™1 ott-' ' J " There are some among us. Itake it Weissman is one, who takethe Bill of Rights for granted.nothingriots.”SometimesLiberals to merely sitting in his the sidelines and raises his voice, draining away for the lack ofthought laboratories spinning out echoing glib generalities. channels of expression; unutil- ^ ^“trends.” The distinctions made After spending one year on the ized yearnings for something pos- p.Ashing the names of the* sub- Weissman says that McCarthyismby the writer are indeed so crude, Chicago campus as a graduate itive with which to identify one- poene(j victims, use of informers, is dead. Perhaps he has been liv-that one wonders whether his student, and being appalled at the self Sometimes in beat poetry it ... .concern with birth control and apathy and lack of idea conflict, spills over into the frenzy of thethe Governments role in the the organization of the Commit- impotent verbal assassin;I was really lostwithout my newEsterbrook “101” pen!Ski-time or study-time, there’s no friend like theEsterbrook "101” fountain pen. Rescues you from anynumber of difficult situations. It’s a different type ofcartridge pen. It carries 2 cartridges of liquid ink ... oneIs a spare... so there’s no need to run out of ink—atany altitude!New, but still gives you 32 pen points to choose from,so you’re bound to find one that’s right for your person¬ality. Or, think of the fun you'll have switching—penpoints or personalities—until you find the one you like best.Schuss down to your dealer’s and pick up thoEsterbrook “101” Renew Point Fountain Pen, today. Thecost; just $1.95. 5 colors. Available in squeeze-fill, toolSdt^dwo/i•T.lf. Th« Zstcrbrcok Pen Co. Mi* BhtorbrooV "KM**1.95Other Esterbrookslightly higher The apathy and conformity Inthinking which is prevalent inour society is fundamentally aproduct of thinking of such peo¬ple as Weissman. Political actionof the kind which initiates vastsocial changes, is certainly notgoing to be implemented by mensuch as J O. Eastland, ChairmanWalters or the rest of their ilk.It is the fight of the true Liberalto bring the struggles to themasses of our society, not merelypointing out trends, but takingpositive leadership and fightingfor the ends of the Liberal demo¬cratic society.Unfortunately the censure ofMcCarthy did not settle the issue.The fight to protect the basic the Committee has made a mock- in a vacuum for the pastery of the freedoms for which number of years.Americans have died to protect. When the American people al-By turning the use of the First low a Committee to wander theand Fifth Amendments into a length and breadth of our land,supposed Communist coverall, the setting up standards of thought,Committee has committed a and telling us what we can orcrime against the American peo- cannot think or write, then Ipie. The merits of the First and think it is a time for action. AllFifth Amendments were clearly power to the newly organizedseen by our founding Fathers as student committee on campus,a vital bulwark against a period The students of America haveof Governmental political sup- dignity and are ready to fightpression. The safeguards which for their rights, their libertiesthese amendments afford people and their needs. A nation ofof all political beliefs, are the which that can bo said is a nationfounding stones of our Democra- in which the Democratic spirit istic society. Seek to tamper with alive.these values, and you seek to it is not any specific plan, orsubvert the very values which law or campaign that matters athas made our country so great. this time, but rather the LiberalBy seeking to pry into the Democratic spirit itself. It is thatthought and private beliefs of in- above all that has been attacked,. debased and perverted by theHouse-unAmerican ActivitiesCommittees. That is why we mustall do our utmost to see that thisevil festering sore in the Demo¬cratic body politic is eradicated.Where do you stand, Mr. Weiss¬man?One of Mr. Weissman s''conservative'' liberalsThe case of the typing paperthat erased without a trace —or,EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTypewriter PaperIt's a cinch to "rub out”ty ping errors and leave no"clues”, when you useEaton’s Corrasable BondPaper. Never smears, neversmudges—becauseCorrasable’s like-magicsurface ..'. erases without atrace! (A flick of the wristand a pencil eraser putsthings right!) This finequality bond paper gives ahandsome appearance to allyour work. It’s a perfectcrime not to use it!Erasable Corrasable is available In all the weights youmight require—from onionskin to heavy bond. In con¬venient 100-sheet packets and 600-sheet ream boxes.A Berkshire Typewriter Paper, backed by the famousEaton name.EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDMade only by EatonEATON PAPER CORPORATION :‘E) PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS8 • CHICAGO MAROON Oct. 28, 1960 THETHRIFTYMANttnows that a little »et asideeach day can pay rich di¬vidends for his family inthe event of his earlydeath, or in his own retire¬ment years, through themedium of life insurance —Sun Lif« insurance, vf2M9Sk.Ralph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LaSalle Chicago, III*FR 2-2390 • FA 4-68007 reprfifid tie Sun Ltfe A#-turatice Company of Canada.Our modem pliant can betailored to fit your own in¬dividual needs. May I dit¬toes tome of these plans withItauf You will be under ttaobligation in any way.SUN UFE OF CANADAJ Wt*r Contact jCchrDr. Kid RoMNbMMOptowOriit1132 1. 55«h $t. HV 3-8372TAhSAM-YMNCHINESE . AMWHCANRESTAURANTSpMMliiing inCilVroiVESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpeu Dailyn A WL to 10:90 PJMLOHOMM VO TASK OWE13’8 lot* 63fd St. 841 8-9018 VILLAGE APARTMENTS 5 RoomDuplex£L.H Sow Leasing frr Thwe Who QualifyChatham Park Village i*» a privately ownedgroup of apartment homes on a beautifultwenty-three acre site in the midst of Chicago’sexclusive Chatham Park.BEAUTIFULLY LANDSCAPED — 63 vine co*.ered buildings. Unlimited parking on the Vil¬lage’s private streets. Garages available.ALL ELECTRIC KITCHENS—JANITOR SERVICECHOICE OF RENTALS5 room Duplex $130.00 $135.004 room Town House (2 bedrooms $122.004 room Town House (1 bedim., w/DR) $1IP.OO3% room Garden Apartment .. $110.003 room Town House $ 98.00MODEL APARTMENTby Parian Quinlan, A.I.D. •* Open Daily737 Cm* 83rd PW TRiongle 4-7400•Good idea'Most students favor plan I College is a P'cnicto use apartments-dormsA majority of students seem to favor the new apartment dormitory plan being inves¬tigated by the administration, in light of the present policy whereby students are requiredto live on campus — for two years in the case of men and for four years in the case ofwomen. The plan is that the University would provide apartments as well as dormitoriesfor accommodations. Residence — :The Danforth fellowshipprogram has been establishedI-!" wouldaS?emain and^the bT? °" ,dea that 14 pro there Bh®uldn’t »** any house-heads would remain ana me Vided ^ additiona, freedom ln heads or ,lours».SanH ^Tnforccd em I**6, stuJeVt8 ,ife’ and tha‘ Ann Hilyer, a transfer from the. MaPid^n ‘ a first vear JJnlv«f^ity8 Wipervising the hous- University of Iowa, commented,nf the Unilersmv ffeat<Hl the r<*al Purpose of “I wouldn’t want to live in it. The„n kooDinc the mandate^ aparJmen{ ,Hvin5’ and that th<* Purpose of living in an apartmentmsists on keeping the ma y a|M»rtment-doriiutories would pro is for greater independence andresuUmtial ru^ then the Urn- ^ Iittle except a physloal if its systematized by the Uni¬versity apartments wo d change from dormitory life. versity that defeats the purpose.”m°depa? cJiklto a third vear Gene , Vinogradoff, a second Pointing to what she thoughtand Pat Conklin, a th nfl year year student) commented, -‘‘I was the ludicrousness of the sit-transfer student for n O n, think it-s an unfortunate result uation, Myrna Helmar, a thirdcs lKK-d this opinion saying, of a poor policy (i e f requiring year student, said. “It’s a silly1. ■ th students to live on campus). The idea. I can’t see living in an apart-n<*w system (i.e., living in t e roason j wanted to move to an ment with househeads and andorms or our year . apartment was lo get away from hours system; and walking inOi n-i sw * n s < the forced communalism in the late at night and finding a ma-pltm woii ( pnni e <<«ss!tr dorms and the resulting lack of tron in the hallways and havingvariety to present University su- privacy/. A second year biology to punch a timeclock.”pervised accommodations. major remarked, “It’s not goingAn Assistant residence head ^ make any difference, if youcommented, If they re going to jjve jn a university supervisedcv)mp<‘l girls to live on campus dweiiing, whether it’s an apart-foi four years, then I think ment or a dormitory. I’d rathertticy’re a good idea. They li pio- my own apartment.” Avide accommodations which are simj]ar opinion was voiced byless expensive and whose condi- Stanley Brandes, a first year stu-tvms are more conducive to dent. “The administration will , . , , ,privacy, than the dormitory still ^ able to reKulate the lives to interest well-trained menAnother assistant house head, of the students living there, and into higher education. Ap-finding nothing objectionable in tbjg isn-t apartment living.” proximately 100 men who aredie four year residence plan, ’ preparing for college teachingstated. “If they want the plan to toLdmn resultod* I™ are granted awards every year-be effective, accommodations * Only three candidates may beshould be made available that are ’ a r , ye4ar nominated from the UniversityIMS expensive and more tome ““ ‘h*‘ p1*" of Chi. ago... than New Doniih, but It’s really 1 V' UK 'hk< uomfortable) than a e p • ^ wonderful aa idea. If Selection is made on the basisent dormitory systems.” ... 7 . * ’ !. . . , _, , L.,.xAlix Cromelin, a third year there are 8oln8 *° ^ apartments of outstanding academic ability,transfer from Manhattanville col¬lege. felt that “it’s a great ideaif it would increase the chancesfor single rooms.” Cynthia Gor¬don, a third year student whotransferred to USC and back tothe University of Cchicago, favor¬ing the idea, remarked, “I don’tlike the new Dorm arrangement;everything is all alike. If youapproach an apartment or a placelike Green hall, it seems to meit’s more like a home.”Richard Mandel, a first yearstudent, thought that the planwas “a worthwhile compromisebetween dormitory and apartmentliving,” but did not know, “if itwill necessarily improve the situ¬ation.” In regard to the greatervariety of the plan, Bill Weber,a second year student, said,“Frankly, I think it would be amarvelous thing in the ease ofpeople who have room and boardscholarships, since it would offeranother alternative to the dormsand fraternity houses.”Opposition to the pfcwn wan Getting an early start for their daily day-long picnic,Marji, Earl, Dave, and Maxine check their supplies in thelobby of the New Dorm. The kids know that there's plentymore upstairs. They also know that once you start on apicnic, there's no turning back.Danforth fellowships availablepersonality congenial to the class¬room, and integrity of character.(Consideration is given to appli¬cants of a non-Christian faithprovided they are willing to par¬ticipate actively in a predomin¬antly Christian program.)The Danforth Fellow may usehis fellowship at any accrediteduniversity in the United States.He may carry other national fel¬lowships concurrent with his ap¬pointment; however, he begins as a Danforth Fellow withoutstipend until the other appoint¬ment lapses.The appointment is made fopone year with expectation for an¬nual renewal if the graduate rec¬ord is distinguished and the re¬lationship proves mutually agree¬able. The Danforth Foundationoffers financial assistance ac¬cording to need for four year#of graduate study.NEXT SUMMER EUROPE IS YOURSAT A LOW PRICE — IF YOU BOOK NOWffiarco |?oloHCraOEl £>croiccSince 1276NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICESlO E. 55th SU Blr 8-5944 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE REVEALS COII AS“A VERY PRESENT HELP”Yom are cordially invited to attend this free lactwre byOTTO G. ZIEGENHAGEN, C.S.B.Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church,The First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, MassachusettsMONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1960 at 8:00 P.M.in SWIFT HALL COMMON ROOM .ALL ARE WELCOMESponsored by Christian Science Organizationot The University of ChicagoWard. Adamowski debate here YSPL letDaniel P. Ward and Benja¬min S. Adamowski, the can¬didates for Cook countystate’s attorney, locked intheir first public debate in Man-del hall Monday night. The de¬bate was sponsored by theLeague of women voters of Chi¬cago.Each candidate had seven min¬utes for an opening statement.Ward, former dean of the DePaullaw school, said that the incum¬bent Adamowski had “the worstprosecution record in county his¬tory.” He noted that over 2,100Indictments had been thrown outof court as technically inade¬quate. Ward also cited Adamow-ski’s conviction record of 49.6per cent on contested cases asunjustifiably low.Adamowski, the Republicanstate’s attorney, claimed 82 percent of his indictments resultedin convictions. He complained ofinconsistent judicial findings inthe same cases by differentjudges. Adamowski asserted hewas “playing politics with (his)office” on behalf of the commu¬nity.In the question and answerperiod that followed, Adamowski,a Democrat until 1954, stated thathe switched parties to “uncoverdirt in' city hall.” Ward in an¬swer to a later question madethe following suggestions for im¬proving the quality of justice in Cook county: 1) Remove theState’s attorney from politics, 2)Improve prosecuting procedure,3) Recruit talented young attor¬neys 4to the State’s attorney’s of¬fice, and 4) Obtain greater co¬operation between the State’s At¬torney and the police and federalauthorities.Adamowski, when asked to ex¬plain his objections to Superin¬tendent of police Wilson, statedthat Wilson had been illegally em¬powered as superintendent( Adamowski has complained thatWilson,, formerly of California,hasn’t met thp residence require¬ments). Ward in rebuttal saidAdamowski had looked with fa¬vor at others out of state candi¬dates considered for superintend¬ent, but not at Wilson.When asked why he hadn’t-ob¬tained any convictions in the po¬lice scandal- cases, Adamowskistated that the judge had thrownout some of his indictments andhe was waiting for a state Su¬preme court ruling on the judge’saction. He said, “We expect toget a reversal from the Supremecourt.” Adamowski implied that *the judge’s action had been une¬thical. He later defined “Cookcounty justice” as the “trick ofdefense in jumping around thedifferent court rooms till theyget what they want. . . .”In answer to another questionWard said he believed the State’sAttorney and county judges should be removed from politics.Adamowski in rebuttal said thata nonpartisan State’s Attorney isimpossible in predominantlyDemocratic Cook county.Ward was scheduled to speakto the Students for Daniel P.Ward at Ida Noyes on Tuesdayafternoon. The address was can¬celled because of an inadequateturn-out.Adamowski has said that Wardis the Democratic machine can¬ didate and hence a pawn of themayor. When questioned abouthis responsibility to the Demo¬cratic machine and to city hallWard said: “I accepted (the nomi¬nation) on two conditions . . .1) that I have complete respon¬sibility for the office whichmeans complete autonomy, and2) I have the right of selection ofall personnel.” Ward said hedidn’t have to ask for these con¬ditions. George Rawick, former in.structor of social sciencesUC and presently assistantprofessor at Montcleif Stalecollege in New York, led *group class of 40 people in a claston socialism last Saturday aft*-*,noon at Ida Noyes. This class,sponsored by the Young People*Socialistic league, is the first <4a series of four. It dealt wiiMarxist philosophy as a conte TIRP attacks .Maroon, GovernThe Independent Revolutionaryparty (IRP) has announced itsplans for the coming year in thefollowing release, distributed lastweek to University students.“If every student saw atleast one Student Governmentmeeting,” the statement be¬gins, “IRP would win in alandslide—Old Folk saying.”"Every year, due to the propa¬ganda machine at the disposalof our opponents, IRP is forcedto justify its existence to the en¬tering student and the campusas a whole. This has never beentoo difficult."Starting as an oppositionparty two years ago, IRP re¬ceived 18 per cent of the all-Uni- versity vote without running can¬didates in the divisions. Last year,running under the same condi¬tions, IRP received 24 per centof the college (22 per cent Univ.)vote and elected a member to theassembly. The composition of SGaccording to seating and vote per¬centage is as follows:seats % of seats % of votesISL 38 »% 38%SRP S 29%IRP 1 s% 22%Ind. 4 1% u%LUCKY STRIKE PRESENTS!De9R.DRi ROOD:OR. FROOO S THOUGHT FOR THi DAY: Early tO bed OTldearly to rise is an excellent way to avoid people.is HiDear Dr. Frood: What should I look for first wbfcn Ilook for a wife?SearchingDEAR SEARCHING: Her husband. mDear Dr. Frood: Our son has been in college threemonths, and we haven’t heard a word from him.Not even a post card. I don’t want him to think I amtoo demanding or overprotective, but frankly I amworried. What should I do?Worried Mother Dear Dr. Frood: Don't you agree that every collegeman has the right, in fact, the duty, to stand up andspeak out for the things he believes in? Tomorrow1 am going straight to the college president andtell him, politely but firmly, what is wrong here —the inferior teaching, the second-rate accommoda¬tions, the bad food. My friends think I am wrong todo this. What do you think? DeterminedDEAR DETERMINED: I applaud your spirit, youngman! Had I been able, I would have commendedyou in a more personal letter. However, you forgotto leave a forwarding address.DEAR WORRIED: Why worry after only three monthsin college? He’s still learning how to write.Dear Dr. Frood: I am six foot five, 225 pounds,handsome, tanned, muscled, a good athlete. But Ican’t get along with girls because I can never thinkof anything to say. What do you suggest?BrawnyDEAR BRAWNY: “Me Tarzan, you Jane.” y s t - wt $ m mmmm wm#Dear Dr. Frood: I am puzzled by the Lucky Strikeslogan: “Remember how great cigarettes used totaste? Luckies still do.” I’ve been sitting here forhours, thinking, thinking, thirtking, but for the lifeof me I can’t remember. What should I do aboutthis?DEAR FORGETFUL: I sug¬gest you lean back, relax,and light up a Lucky Strike.I’m sure it will all comeback to you—who you are,what you were, where youlived, everything. ForgetjultFROOD FAD SWEEPS COLLEGES! They laughed when Dr. Frood started the newcollege craze of enjoying a Lucky while hanging from a coat rack But now every¬body is doing it! Smoking Luckies, that is. Today college students smoke moreLuckies than any other regular. Reason: With or without coat rack, Luckies deliverthe greatest taste in smoking today.CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change!C) *■ T. C*.,tO • CHICAGO MAROON Product of• Oct. 28, 1960 C7\.— &&XJOEO- is our middle name ection. |delegates is re.unconnectedHocnifnfor'■•'1“Obviously something is wrongwhen a party which gets 38 percent of the vote receives 75 percent of the seats. Likewise otherobservations point out the ineffi¬ciency, unrepresentativeness, care¬lessness and down-right sillinessof the present structure. These are:1. Only 25 per cent of the cam.pus votes in an election.2. None of the delegatessponsible (SG iswith the campus) despite Messrs.Kim and Friedman’s kind offerto represent the whole Univc-«ity. ’3. Despite the above the gov^ernment insists on blaming the!students and taking stands onsuch issues as Brooklyn Collegeand hospital strikes.4. Items like "Expense for *Neal Johnson trip to Europe” ap¬pear on the SG budget.5. The government is constant^ly concerned with filling vacan¬cies of students who have r*.signed or quit out of just plainboredom. 27 out of a possible 51 .members showed up for the lastmeeting.6. Although the college caststwo thirds of the vote, it receivesbut 40 per cent of the delegates.“Other abuses and recent oc¬currences include:1. An attempt by ISL to limitdebate to three minutes in orderto make use of their balloon likemajority.2. The gradual welding toge¬ther of ISL and SRP has ohliteia-ted any real differences in thetwo parties. ISL has recently*.*SG elecTuesday, Student Govern¬ment elected four studentsto vacancies to the student-faculty-administration court,,announced support of a cam¬paign to supply food and clothing!to Negro residents of Fayette andHaywood counties, directed theNSA-AF committee to work wiihStudent non-violent coordinatingcommittee in a demonstration atthe polls on election day, and ap¬proved a bill making the opera¬tions of the NSA-AF committeeautonomous.In the court elections, LeonKass, a third year medical student,was reappointed to a one yearterm on the SFAC. Gary Stoll Asecond year law student; MichaelWolfson, a first year political sci¬ence student; and Jean Kwon, astudent of mathematics were new¬ly elected members of the court.Stoll was elected as president ofthe court.SG came out in support of Ne¬groes in Fayette and Haywoodcounties in Tennessee, who are be¬ing subjected to an almost totaleconomic boycott by certain ele¬ments of the white community be¬cause of their attempt to registerJim Thomason, president of Sat Tuesday's meeting.porary ideological and analyticaltool in understanding history.RawN'k began by tracing thehistory in the utopian socialismbeginning with England’s puritanrevolution in the 17th century. Theleft wing of this revolution, in¬spired by regions seal and the op¬portunity to break through theold institutions, conceived of a so-^ city where all men were brothershi Christ and ineiuded equal shar-n Ing In thetr creed. The left wingof the Trench revolution had manyof the same ideas.Later, as the tradition deve¬loped "in England, Robert Owen,, a textile manufacturer moved bymoral concerns, started to formu¬late a utopian plan. This he putinto operation in his own factory.In France, Fourier was one of theleaders of a group that favoredthe construction of a rational so-ment, ISL policiesr voted at least two (more will fol¬low) representatives of the dis¬integrated Student Representa¬tive Party into the assembly.SRP is nothing more than abranch of the new ISL. The op¬position in the Assembly nowcomes from the IRP member anda small group of Grad, students.3. Three IRP sponsored billsto alleviate these conditions, oneof which was designed to allowfor proportional representation onthe executive council, were irre¬sponsibly defeated.“4. Another IRP sponsored pro¬posed to assure fairer coverageof the election (no party beingeffectively able to cope with aMaroon staff stacked with poli¬tical opponents) was again de¬feated. (The editor of the Maroonis a former ISL, and none of thenames of those publishing theelection i^sue were in the paperdue to the top-heavy ISL major¬ity on the editorial staff.) Thisbill was not designed to censurethe Maroon, but merely to getit to state its policy and live upto it, neither of which they didin last year’s election. Incident¬ally this bill was reported favor¬ably out of the Campus Actioncommittee (unanimously) andthen defeated 25-4 with the ISLcaucas having instructed their.> . .court erring members of that commit¬tee anew in the meantime. Fur¬thermore Jim Thomason nowpresident of the Assembly termedthe election issue “most unfor¬tunate," and ISL’s admitted tothe IRP member that it wasbiased and promised to send aletter to the editor reminding himof this and asking for equal cov¬erage. This too has not been done.We wonder why."In the face of these and otherabuses IRP will m the future asthey have in the past offer a com¬prehensive program. It will ap¬pear in its brand new 60 61 formsoon. Till then we invite you tosee a meeting or attend our cau¬cus, soon to be announced." Sale will provide aidStudents and faculty will beamong the bargain hunters atthe UC Lab School Clothing ^alewhen it opens its doors Mondayat 8 am. The Sale, at Sunny gym,5823 Kenwood, continues throughthe day until 5 pm, and again from 8 am to 1 pm on TuesdayNovember 1st.The 26th semi-annual eventwill provide tuition aid for LabSchool students. Many facultyand student wives will be amongthe 300 workers.to vote. SG ip conjunction withISL, SRP, and other campus or¬ganizations moved to organize acampaign to collect money andfood to help support these citizensas long as the boycott is in effect.SG also declared support of theStudent non-violent coordinatingI committee, an organization pledg¬ed to non-violent direct action to¬ward the elimination of all discri¬minatory practices, and directedthe NSA-AF committee to work inconjunction with other organiza¬tions for a demonstration at thepolls on election day to protest1 discrimination against Negro.vot¬ers in the South. $15 was providedr for posters, leaflets, and mime<v*> * graphing materials necessary for1 carrying out such a demonstration.In another action, the National1 Student Association-academic free¬dom committee was given powerto take independent action appro¬priate to the implementation ofUSNSA policy. This bill gives thecommittee power to work as anindependent unit, provided it doesnot directly contradict assemblypolicy. The assembly, though, stillretains the power of reviewing allactions of the NS A-Academic free¬dom committee.of Student Government, presides dety, A German group also hadthe idea of constructing a societyin the period that led to the Revo¬lution of 1848. The one hundredor more socialistic communitiesin the US at the end of the 19thcentury were also mentioned."Paraphrasing Marx, Rawiekwent on to say that “Men distin¬guish themselves from animals bywhat they create with nature. Itis when men begin to make toolsthat they become men. Growth ofcontrol over his environment reallydistinguishes man from non-man."Referring to our farm surplusproblem, he said that “as man be¬came more and more human andmore and more efficient, povertyof a certain sort becomes known.Before, it was the force of naturethat defeated man; now men donot starve because of an act ofGod but because there is food inthe market but they cannot pur¬chase it."When men observe that theirinstitutions no longer give mangreater control over nature butbring greater catastrophe, theybegin to talk and find commonproblems.Rawiek explained that^Marx toldutopianists [those that appealedto man’s rationality and handeddown a plan for an ideal society],“that you haven’t really told uswhat to do."JACK SAVED HIS COMPANY *10,000ON HIS FIRST ASSIGNMENTWhile Jack Trabert was in college he hadaome definite career ideas. He knew what hewanted—a job with a payoff for good judgmentand hard work.With a B.S. in Business Administration fromthe University of Nebraska, Jack knew he couldlook in many directions. And he did. He talkedto 20 companies. And then in August, 1957,joined Northwestern Bell, in Omaha, Nebraska.His chance to show what he could do wasnot long in coming. On his first assignment Jackcame up with answers that made it possible tohandle long distance calls made at night in the- Omaha area with less force and equipment than- was needed under the old system. This resultedin a $10,000 annual saving.Next, Jack worked on a training and devel- )opment program for "mark sensing” —a newmethod for mechanized processing of long dis¬tance charges.Today, Jack has an important role in plan¬ning and developing telephone facilities to keeppace with Omaha’s ever-increasing need for longdistance services.Jack puts it this way—“If a guy can keephis average up, there are places to go in thisoutfit. A man doesn’t have to wait around foropportunity to knock—he has all he can handleright from the start.”If you want a job in which you're given a chance.to show your stuff, and held strictly accountable foryour decisions, right from the start—then you'llwant to visit your Placement Office for literatureand additional information.'College is a picnic'A quick romp across the grass bring Tricia, Pete, Vern,and Betty Jo to the Admissions office. The fun-filled fourjust want an advance peek at the kids who are their fourthyear picnic.“Our number one aim is to have in allmanagement jobs the most vital, inteUligent, positive and imaginative menwe can possibly find.”>Frederick R. Kappel, PresidentAmerican Telephone & Telegraph Co. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIEStfurer analyses MarxOct. 28, I960 • C H I C A GO MAROON • ITThe new University high school building dedicated yesterday by Arthur FlemmingUniversity officialsmeet to outline plansThe top officers of the University will be meeting thisweekend to outline the long range plans, goals and needs ofthe University. The twelve officers involved will be ledthrough their agenda by R. Wendell Harrison, acting Chan¬cellor of the University.One of the key concerns at this needs, housing supply and demand,meeting will be planning the bud- athletic programs, the neighbor-get for the next academic year: in- hood and neighborhood appropria-come and expenditure. Incident to tions, the physical plant of the col-this, will be the discussion of fur- lege, the Center for continuing en-ther tuition increases. rollment, the Library, the Compu-— , .. , , ter research center, faculty sala-Conference site switched ries and non_academic Varies.In the past these conferences Additional items are: The En-have been held at Chancellor cyclopeadia Britannica, govern-Kimpton’s summer home in Michi- ment contracts, other incomegan, thus they have been called items, budget underwriting, thethe Lakeside meetings. This fall, development program, federal aidhowever, the meetings will be at to education, tuition increases, re- School building dedicatedZion, Illinois, which is quite afew miles inland.Louis Coggeshall will attend thesemi annual conference for thefirst time. He recently resigned asDean of the division of biologicalscience to accept a full time ap¬pointment in the Chancellor's of¬fice.Items on the partial and inform¬al agenda include: borrowing, en¬rolment, the student body, capital tirement policy, tenure appoint¬ment policy, and the master cam¬pus planning and space utilizationreports.Varied discussionsOther entries on the agenda are:a UC owned and operated radiostation, the development of Uni¬versity College [the downtown ex-tentionl, fraternity housing and itsameloriation, and names for thenew buildings. (Continued front page 11the existing pre - collegiate andgraduate - education buildings inthe Kimbark - Kenwood block be¬tween E. 58th and E. 59th streets.Lying east to west, the buildingis connected to Blaine hall by acovered passage way. It lies par¬allel to Blaine and Belfield halls.Approximately 6 6 0 studentshave been using the school build¬ ing since its opening in Septem¬ber of this year. The school hasa total capacity of about 800.Several unique features of thearchitectural and structural design of the U high addition dem¬onstrate the experimental andoperative functions of the school.For instance, one wing of thebuilding houses a suite of sixrooms partitioned from eachother by removable soundproofwhenyoulookataknotdoyouwanttountieit?. /If you'rs the type who en]oyt unraveling tough problems. . . who finds It hard to resist any shallsnge . . . you'rsapt to discover unique satisfaction end opportunity inthe dynamle field of electronic deta processing.The marketing of data processing systsms Is challengingand fascinating. After eomprehenelve training, you workwith management exeoutivee in diverse industries, studytheir business or scientific problems, flgurs out the solu¬tions hy use of date processing systems, and assist theCustomer in putting the solutions Into effect.Electronic data processing offers great opportunities foroutstanding, technically trained young men with a flair for business. It’s a nsw professional occupation offeringunusual opportunities for personal and financial growth.There are openings throughout the country in the market*ing of systems or direct sales.If you are a candidate for a bachelor's or advanced degreein engineering, science, mathematics, or business, seeyour placement director for additional information aboutIBM and arrange for an interview. If you prefer, feel freeto write or call mei* - ■ v*Mr. J. J. Kail, Branch Manager, IBM, Corporation,9413 8. Western Avenue, Chicago 20, III., PR 9 8000 lead “wall.’' These "walls’’ areremoved when necessary to pro¬vide one large room — the size ofan entire wing. Similar in opera¬tion are two three-room suites.These rooms may be used foreither instructional or assemblypurposes — or for any othersimilar purpose.Instead of employing “home¬rooms" as more-or-iess permanentbases for teachers, instructors ineach of the math, social sciences,language arts, foreign languages,phyical sciences, and biologicalsciences departments have perm¬anent offices located together msections separate from the sur¬rounding classrooms and labs.These sections, with the twostaircases at either end, he withinthe closed rectangle formed bythe classrooms, lockers, and lab¬oratories. The students them¬selves have no homerooms assuch although grade level groupsmeet once a week.The spacious laboratory-class¬rooms for the physical and bio¬logical sciences are each equippedwith a work room for the experi¬ments too detailed and extensiveto be carried on easily in the in¬structional rooms. The biologicalsciences department has even a“growing” room for controlledplant-life studies.Mr. Congreve, principal of theU high lab school, pointed outwith pride the immediate successof the innovations in library-study methods. The library itselfis a source of pride with its ex¬tensive paper-back collection, 20.-000 volume open-shelf and refer¬ence-shelf sections, and a smallbut popular area containing cata¬logues and literature from col¬leges and universities throughoutthe country. But Mr. Congreveseemed most pleased with enthu¬siasm of the students in using tofull capacity the individual sound¬proof study rooms and partitionedstudy sections along two sides ofthe laijge library. He remarkedthat each student is scheduled atleast one study period four daysa week in the library. “They arepermitted maximum freedom toutilize whatever part of the li¬brary they wish during this peri¬od,” he concluded.The internal architecture iscomposed primarily of straightlines and right angles, each roombeing rectagular in shape. Utilityand flexibility via simplicity witha maximum of space and lightseem to have been the architec¬tural ends of the design. Neutraltones of gray, beige, and off whitepredominate the color scheme.Yellow enamel blocking is usedon the walls facing the stairwaylandings — this, with the blue,gray, and yellow metal and syn¬thetic fiber chairs, and tables off¬set the typical institution “mono-tones.”’ The external architectureincorporates the vertical linesand peaked arches of the Gothic-type structures prevalent in theUniversity area. Thus, the build-ing presents no gross contradic¬tion to the eye despite its moderntheme.You naturally have a bottar eh anas to growwitit a growth aompeny.IBM will interview on November 22 The Griffin-Gargoyles UC's pepclub will be holding tryouts forcheerleading in Bartlett gym Fri¬day, October 28 ot 3:45.The purpose1 of this organisa¬tion is to stimulate active interestin UC athletic events. Anyone whois interested will be welcome attryouts.• CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 28, I960\Why it pays to ownlifelong security beforeyou're on your own!Many college graduates today enjoy the peace of mindthat 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.w y ■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 find it a good idea to get all the facts on NewYork Life’s student insurance program and why it willpay 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. LaSalleOct. 28, 1960 • CE 6-5435CHICAGO MAROON • 13TriedRegularFilter TriedCigarettes? OtherMentholCigarettes?NOW! Come Up...All The Way Upto the MENTHOL MAGICof KOOL!When your laste tells youit'8 time for a change,remember: Only Kool—no regular filter cigarette*,no other menthol cigarette—£ives you real Menthol Magicl©mo. srowm a whuamsom toescco cobpopauow |wt mark of ouautv in tobacco froductsDeadline approachesThe final date for submit¬ting applications for threeNational Science foundation(NSF) fellowships will beDecember 19. Application ma¬terials may be obtained from theFellowship office, National Acad¬emy of Sciences — National Re¬search council, 2101 Constitutionavenue, N.W, Washington 25,D.C.The Foundation plans to awardabout 150 post-doctoral fellow¬ships to persons planning to en¬ter upon or continue post-doctoralstudy in the sciences. These fel¬lowships will be awarded in themathematical, physical, medical,biological and engineering sci¬ences, anthropology, psychology,and the following social sciences:geography, mathematical econom¬ies, econometrics, demography, in¬formation and communicationtheory, experimental and quanti¬tative sociology, and the historyand philosophy of science.Selection of the fellows will bebased on academic records, let¬ters of recommendation, andother appropriate evidences ofscientific competence. The fel¬lows will be required to devotefull time to scientific study and/or research at the post-doctorallevel. The twelve month stipendwill be $4500 plus travel allow¬ances and dependency allowancesfor married men.Approximately 50 North At¬lantic Treaty Organization(NATO) fellowships will be ad¬ministered by NSF this year.NATO maintains this program topromote the progress of scienceand to establish a closer contactbetween the scientists in variousnations. It is expected that re¬cipients of these awards, in near¬ly all eases, will plan to studyabroad in a country that is amember of NATO. The awardsare not restricted, however, tostudy in a NATO country andconsideration will be given tothose planning to study else¬where.Awards are limited to thosewho have received their doctor¬ates. The applicants to this pro¬gram must submit transcripts of their college and university rec¬ords and an oath and affidavitattesting to their loyalty and al¬legiance to the United States. Thestipend for a NATO PostdoctoralFellow will be $4500 for a fullyear.The Organization for EuropeanEconomic Cooperation (OEEC)is sponsoring a fellowship pro¬gram that the NSF will also ad¬minister in the United States.The aim of this program is toassist scientific and technical in¬stitutions of the member coun¬tries to Incorporate the mostrecent scientific developments in¬to their advanced teaching andresearch programs. The programwill cover most fields of scienceand technology; awards will notbe made for work in I he socialsciences or medicine. In view of the sponsorship ofthis program, it is expected thatrecipients of these awards willplan to study in a country thatbelongs to or is co-operating withthe OEEC. However, the awardsare not restricted to study !nthese countries and considerationwill be given to those who forexceptional reasons plan to studyelsewhere.The nomination of an individ¬ual for an OEEC senior visitingfellowship will be made by hisinstitution. Applicants must pre¬sent an outline of the proposedactivities program and a state¬ment showing how the programultimately will strengthen thenominating institution. Theaward will consist of a $10 a daysubsistence allowance plus traveland dependency allowances. 'College is a picnic'No one care who's watching when he's having fun —least of all Walt, Sue, Cal, and September, Walt wants toinvite everyone in Harper to the picnic.45 high school seniors get early UC admissionForty-five high school sen¬iors have already been admit¬ted to the entering class of1961, according to CharlesO’Connell, director of admissions.This was done as part of thethree year old “early decision”program; Chicago is one of al¬most 100 schools participating inthe program.An applicant for early decisionmust apply to the single collegeof his choice before his senioryear in secondary school. Thevarious schools co-operate in en¬suring that the student appliesto but one school. In the early fall of his senior year he is in¬formed whether his applicationhas been accepted or rejected.The UC admissions office, likemost admissions offices, has re¬cently been plagued with theproblem of multiple application.In order to ensure admission toa good school with competitiveadmission procedures,' many stu¬dents apply to many differentschools. Thus a school neverknows whether a given applicantreally wants to matriculate.The applicant for early deci¬sion selects the single school hewishes to attend; the school knows that the applicant is abso¬lutely serious. The applicant isinformed of his acceptance or re¬jection sufficiently early to en¬able him to apply elsewhere.This year 92 students applied,almost twice as many as appliedlast year. Geographically, the ap¬plications paralleled the normaldistribution of the class withsome 30 coming from Illinois.The 45 who were accepted mustmake a final decision during the next few weeks. They must makea fifty dollar deposit on theirtuition.The great majority will acceptthe proffered admission and de¬posit the money, according toO’Connell.Even after doing this, however,these prospective students mightchange their minds. They mayapply to other schools, but indoing so forfeit their fifty dol¬lars.Organizations must registerwith COR SO committeeAH student organizations must register by October 31if they wish to use any University facilities.Forms are available at the Student Activities office,Ida Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street.Committee on Reorganized Student OrganizationsStudent Government PAUL’S HARDWARE & PAINT SUPPLYHyde Park's Largest Hardware StoreSTUDENT DISCOUNT906 E. 55th Ml 3-9754MEMO FROMJ. EDWARD FEINUniversity establishes new professorshipOn Monday the Universityof Chicago announced theestablishment of the Ferdi¬nand Schevill Distinguished Serv¬ice professorship in the Humani¬ties.The new professorship was madepossible by a generous gift froman anonymous alumna, a friend oflate Ferdinand Schevill and ofLawrence A. Kimpton, recently re¬tired Chancellor of the University.Originally the endowment hadHOBBY HOUSEwe speciolize inRound-O-Beet and WafflesOpen from Down to Down been made in the form of a be¬quest, but it was changed to anoutright gift at the time of Kimp-ton’s resignation, in acknowledg¬ment of his services.The new grant provides that thechair should be awarded to “a per¬son who has attained distinctionas a scholar and teacher withinthe field of the humanistic disci¬plines, including history.” It isexpected that an appointment willbe made soon, to begin with theRESTAURANT1342ea*t 53 *♦.15th ANNUAL REFORMATIONVESPERS AT ROCKEFELLER CHAPELSunday. Oefober SO. at 7:30 P.W.“The Reformation in a Revolutionary Age"The Rev. Wayne Saffen, PreacherNew Lutheran Chaplain at U.C.MUSICConcordia Teachers' College Senior Choir of River ForestThomas Gieschen, DirectorP*«f4 Bouman, Organist, from Grace Lutheran ChurchRiver ForestA oorifton concert of 8aroque Music wit! precede the ReformationVespers from 7:00 - 7:30 P M bv Daniel Robins, new Rockefelleroordtoneur.Sponsored l>y the Lotheron Council ot the Ueivewty of Chico90 next academic year.Glen Lloyd, chairman of theBoard of Trustees of the Univer¬sity said upon accepting the gift:“It has been said of the humani¬ties that they ‘are concerned withthe understanding and apprecia¬tion ot those products of the hu¬ man spirit which have moved theminds of men over the ages! Itis in this spirit that this gift hasbeen given to the University ofChicago. We accept the obligationssuch faith imposes.”R. Wendell Harrison, actingTheatre series castsCasts for the Autumn quar¬ter student-directed, student-produced play series, “To¬night at 8:30.” have beenannounced by University theatre.“The Private Life of the MasterRace” by Bert Brecht, “The Mar¬riage Proposal” by Anton Che-kov, and “The Brafting of SextusBorden” by Omar Shapli will beperformed December 1-4 in theReynolds club theatre. “The Marriage Proposal is tech¬nically a farce,” explained BillBe/.dek, who is directing. “It isthe second or third play thatChekov wrote, and has to do withan older man who decides tomarry. He chooses his next doorneighbor, and the developing loveinterest is superimposed on theestablished neighborly bickering.The cast includes Indira Berndt-son and Martin DiMoscatl.Harry Henderson reads for the Autumn quarter tonight at8:30 series. chancellor of the University ofChicago, said the new chair sym¬bolizes the University's intentionsfor expanded humanistic studies.He continued: “The humantiesexist because of abiding humanconcern about the highest scholar¬ly and cultural capacities of man.'*chosenRick Ames, Keith Anderson,Alice Engstrom, John Hartigan,Carol Horning, Farrell Madoni,and Eve Twose are among thosefeatured in “The Private Life ofthe Master Race”, which is “anepisodic play”, according to di¬rector Maggie Stinson.“Each scene of the play,* MissStinson continued, “is totally dis¬connected from the others, andconsequently each actor will beperforming several rotes in thecourse of the show.”“The Drafting of Sextus Borden” will be premiered by Uni¬versity theatre this quarter. JohnDiotmann stars as Sextus Bor¬den. “a sincere pacifist who receives a draft notice”, commenteda member of UTs student board.“He searches for a moral lineof action within the context ofthe farcical milieu of the play.”Carol Horning, Farrell Madoni,and Keith Anderson will also appear in Shapli's play.This year marks the first time .that “Tonight at 8:30” is beingpresented in the Autumn quarter, and. consequently, the firsttime that two student-producedand directed series will be performed in one year. The winterquarter “Tonight at 8:30” will bepresented early next quarter.A DOOR IS OPEN AT ALLIED CHEMICALYou'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 pursuing{hat 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?'* Where would I work ?'FOR THE CAREER FACTS YOU NEEDS!GN UP NOW FOR AN INTERVIEW!i# be?"BASIC TOAMERICA'SPROGRESS•1 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 6, N. Y,DIVISIONS! BARRETT • GENERAL CHEMICAL . NATIONAL ANILINE . NITROGEN .PLASTICS AND COAL CHEMICALS • SEMET-SOLVAY . SOLVAY PROCESS • INTERNATIONALA! LIED CHEMICAL CAMPUS INTERVIEWSA future for those with Advanced Degrees in Chemistry NOV.BS wammmmI■^ew College course offered I College is a picnic'A /VA AA1 1 V<AA T 1 < M rPL T T? J a ... I 1. ®A new college course, Introduc¬tion to Russian Civilization, is be¬ing offered this year by the de¬partment of social sciences. It isbeing taught by Thomas Riha andMeyer Isenberg.The first quarter of the threequarter sequence covers Russianhistory and culture from the year1000 to the time of Peter theCreat, the period when Russiawas a completely closed country.The second quarter covers theperiod from Peter the Great tothe revolution of 1917. The study The History of Western Civiliza- promised since 1957 was modeledtion is a desirable prerequisite on the other non-western civiliza-for this course, according to the t*on c°urses, which were startedinstructors. Many topics cannot Si?J.farS ag°*be fully understood without a fViWhen or.f?an5zing this course,firm background in western his- h<? s°c SC1 department ar-torv. nis ranged for weekly lectures to be. . given by specialists in differentcourse which has been fields.tory.TheSG plans co-op flightThe Travel Department of Stu- turn flights will depart aboutdent government is currently September 5 and September 12.of Russian literature will be in- making plans for its annua] co- The government is currently• hided in this quarter. In the third operative Flights to Europe next applications for flightquarter, *u~ """ L* 1“J— ““ ” ' ' ’the Soviet period will bestudied.According to Isenberg andKiha, the students have been veryenthusiastic about the course.However, they feel that they havesensed a slight “bafflement” summer. Next year the govern- !fader*- Th? fligl* leaders WiU.... g have their share of the costs paidment will sponsor two or three for them and will be responsiblechartered flights to Europe. for handling the administrativeThese flights are open to all details of the flight,students, faculty, and staff mem¬bers. According to calculations • \Sally, Carol, Mike, and Buck stop for lunch. They seemto be saying: "Picnicing is hard work."among the students due to the ^ased on past costs of the flightsfact that students are studying the share for each participantan earlier period of history than will be about $275. Departureis emphasized in western history dates from New York will becourses. about June 17 and July 23, re- Schlesinger is eulogizedFellowships availableApplications for National Science foundation graduate fellow¬ships for 1961-62 are now open. These are awarded in themathematical, physical, biological, and engineering sciences.Included are several related fields in the social sciences. Candi¬dates must be citizens of the United States by March 1, 1961,and have demonstrated ability for advanced training in theirchosen field. The awards cover tuition, fees, special equipmentfor research, and a stipend of $1,800 for first-year fellows, plusa possible family allowance.In addition, cooperative graduate fellowships and summerfellowships are available. These are apart from the regularprogram, and allow for greater university participation withrespect to the selection of the fellows. The first has the sameeligibility qualifications as the regular program. The summerprogram is for those who have had at least one academic year’steaching assistant experience.Information on all three programs is available from the Com¬mittee on fellowships and scholarships, Administration Build¬ing, room 201. Deadline for applications for the regular pro¬gram is January 1961. Candidates for the other two programsshould send their applications directly to the institution theywish to enter. The closing date for the co-operative program isNovember 4, 1960; the date for the summer program is De¬cember 9. An application may not be made to both the co-oper¬ative and regular programs. Announcement of awards andhonorable mentions will be made on March 15, 1961. A tribute to the late Her¬mann Schlesinger, professoremeritus of chemistry at theUniversity who died October3 at the age of 78, was paid by theChicago City council in a specialordinance passed last week.The resolution follows:“Hermnn I. Schlesinger, profes¬sor emeritus of chemistry at theUniversity of Chicago, who diedon October 3, 1960, at the age of78, was a great educator and agreat scientist. He graduatedfrom the University of Chicago,and joined its faculty in 1907.“His influence on generationsof students was enormous. Hewas a great and gifted teacherwho gave fully of his talents andenergies and inculcated in his stu-CENTER REAL BOOKSTORE831 E. 61 stComplete Line of College OutlineSeries — New and Used Books —Greeting Cards — Specializing inAfro-American History BooksPHOTOCRAPHERS:Many pictures have been taken this quarter. On theChicago Waterways Boat trip, at College Camp, and oncampus. Cameras have been seen in startling profusion.Some of these pictures are undoubtedly good. If you areinterested in participating in a joint exhibit, or in findingout what has been done this quarter please write toAlan Berger, Photography club, Dean Netherton's office,Adm. Bldg. 201, Faculty Exchange. We will work out thedetails of the showing and make all the necessary arrange¬ments. No Charge for Our Servicesftlarco poloTRAVEL SERVICESince 12761658 E. 55th St. BE 8-5944Graduate and Professional School Students(And Undergraduate Women)YOU'RE INVITED TO A PARTY UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 i. 57thFine haircuttingFour barbers workingLadies' haircuttingShoe shiningFloyd C. Arnold' ' ProprietorFridoy evening, November 4,8:30 p.m. in the beautiful M & MClub on the second floor of theMerchandise Mart.The Young Professional Groupof Chicago is o social group. Tbewomen ore mostly models, airlinestewardesses, nurses, or universitystudent. The men ore young doc¬tors, lawyers, architects, etc., orstudents in graduate or profes¬sional schools.Our party wiH be a mixer. Youmay bring o dote if you wtqh, butmost of us will not. There will beabout the some number of menond women. Dress will be informal,admission $1.50. Reservations oreNOT necessary but if you hoveany questions, please phone oursocial chairman qt WA 2-8117. forworn ssr bssBRtl cbsicMl 3-3113Ildars Ikcastrol lubricantstucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspkeffi & michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespecialists Ik speed tuningcustom engine Installationsclutch •gear boxN. electricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachwork.bob letter MG psychiatrist2306 e. 71st st.Chicago, illinois dents a deep love of scientific in¬quiry. As a chemist, he pioneeredin new fields of chemistry, andparticularly in recent years inmethods of producing boron hy¬drides, high energy compoundsused as missile propellants.“The dedication of men such ashe and their uncompromising fi¬ delity to the search for truth addgreatness to the name of Chi¬cago.“Now, therefore, be it resolvedby the City council of the City ofChicago that: the city acknowl¬edges its great debt to HermannI. Schlesinger and extends deepsympathy to his children.”HARPER LIQUOR STORE1114-16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported and domestic wines, liquorsand beer at lowest prices.FREEDELIVERY PHONE — 1233— 1318— 7699di [_]□ THE GREEN DOOR1450 East 57th BOOKSHOPHY 3-5829Chicago's most complete stackof quality paper backsSuper Sub!It’s been said that the atomic submarine^‘Nautilus” stays submerged so long that Ifonly surfaces to let the crew re-enlist.Perhaps for this reason, the Navy has takenvaluable space aboard the “Nautilus” for theonly soft-drink vending machine in the entireSubmarine fleet.Naturally (or you wouldn't hear about itfrom us) it's a Coca-Cola machine. And notunexpectedly, re-enlistments are quiterespectable.Bugged lot, those submariners. Great „drink, Coke! SIGN OF GOOD TASTEBottled under outhorlty of The Coca-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.Oct. 28, I960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15 ■Coming events on quadranglesFriday, 28 OctoberTelevision series: Seminar Sixty. WBBM-TV. 6:30 am, "Popular Taste and Gra¬phic Arts.” Alan M. Fern, assistantprofessor of the humanities in theCollege.Contributions to Laboratory SchoolClothing Sale, 8 am-5 pm. Sunny gym,»5823 Kenwood avenue. Bring clothes,books, records, etc., for contribution.13th Annual Federal Tax Conference(University of Chicago law school andUniversity College), 9 am. Auditoriumof the Prudential building, Michiganavenue and Randolph drive.Newborn Conference, 1 pm, Lying-Inhospital. Dora DeLee hall.Lecture series:, Personality Theory (de¬partment of psychology). 4 pm. SocialScience 122. "Self-actualization pro¬cesses ih personality development.”John M. Butler, associate professor,department of psychology and Com¬mittee on Human Development.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 Captain's Para¬dise.”Motion Picture. 8 pm. Ida Noyes eastlounge, ’Ordet” ("A Legend for To¬day”) Danish prize-winning filmsponsored by the Scandinavian club.Admission: 75 cents.Fireside Conversation, 8:30 pm. Hlllelfoundation, 5715 Woodlawn avenue.An Evening with Oscar Kenig readingfrom Yiddish literature in Englishtranslation. Folk singing and folkdancing. Sabbath service at 7:45 pm.Social dancing, 9 pm, Ida Noyes theatre,sponsored by the International houseassociation. Girls admitted free thisweek. Male students. 50 cents; others,$1Grand expansion ceremonies for theGargoyle, 9 pm, Judson lounge. In¬cluding redecoration, a stereo unit,and more bagels than ever before. Forfurther information call Alan Levy,223 Mead. Saturday, 29 OctoberOuting Club Canoe trip, 7 am, IdaNoves. Trip to the Ttppicanoe river.Cost about $3 50. bring lunch. To signup contact Harold at the Administra¬tion Building Information desk.Recorder' Society, 1 pm. Ida Noyes, in¬struction from 1 to 1:30 pm, and thengroup recorder playing.Dames club. 1:30 pm. Ida Noyes sun par¬lor. All married women students andstudent wives are invited Speaker andfilm on South America. Contact Bar¬bara Blake, MI 3-9083.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, ’ el Baroque music by Daniel Robins,Rockefeller carillonneur, sponsored bythe Lutheran Council.Bridge club. 7:15 pm, Ida Noyes lounge.Duplicate bridge will be played. Be¬ginning of experienced individuals orpartnerships are invited. ACBL masterpoints will'be awarded.15th Annual Reformation Vespers Or¬ganization, 7:30 pm. Rockefeller chap¬el. The Reverend Wayne Saffen willpreach/Music by Concordia Teacherscollege senior choir, Paul Bouman,organist, sponsored by the LutheranCouncil.India Association of Chicago presents“Diwali,” festival of lights, 7:30 pm,International house, 1414 East 59thstreet. A two-hour program of clas¬sical dances and music of India. Ad¬mission : 50 cents.UUVUU&.Sundav 30 October Monday, 31 Octoberjunaay, J\J vtI D Television series: Seminar Sixty, \Radio series: Faith of Our Fathers,WGN. 8:30 am. The Reverend B. DavieNapier. Holmes Professor of Old Testa¬ment Criticism and Interpretation,Yale Divinity School.Roman Catholic Masses, 8:30, 10, and11 am. DeSales house.Episcopal Services, 9:30 am. Bond chap¬el. Holy Communion.Lutheran Communion Service, 10 am,Thorndike Hilton chapel.University Memorial Service, 11 am.Rockefeller Memorial chapel, the Rev¬erend Joseph Slttler. professor of the¬ology, University of Chicago.Documentary Film group, 4 pm, Good-speed hall, meeting for members.Carillon Recital. 5 pm. RockefellerMemorial chapel, Daniel Robins.United Christian Fellowship worshipservice, 5:30 pm, Thorndike Hiltonchapel.Slipper - Discussion meeting, 5:30 pm.Brent house. Episcopal Student cen¬ter, 5540 South Wpodlawn avenue. Dis¬cussion, 6:30 pm. “Expediency andPrinciple in Politics.” led by the Rev-e r e n d John Dreibelbis, vicar, theChurch of the Good Samaritan, OakPark.United Christian Fellowship. 6 pm.Chapel house, buffet supper. Cost 50cents.Carillon concert, 7 pm. Rockefeller chap¬Security FirstNational BankservingSouthern Californiawill have a representative on CampusNovember 1to discuss:• Accelerated Management Training• Immediate Responsibility• Outstanding Promotional Possibilities• Ideal Living Conditions in aStimulating Environment.He would like to interview Graduate Students inAccounting, Business Administration, Economics orFinance.Please make necessary arrangements at your Place¬ment Office. Television series: Seminar Sixty, WBBM-TV. 6:30 am. Alan M. Fern, assistantprofessor of the humanities in theCollege.Laboratory School Clothing Sale. 8 am-5 pm. Sunny gym, 5823 Kenwood ave-Elementary Yiddish, 3:30 pm, Hlllelfoundation.Lecture series: Personality Theory (de¬partment of psychology). 4 pm, SocialScience 122. “Culture and Personal¬ity,” Marc J. Swartz, assistant profes¬sor of the social sciences in the Col¬lege.Television program: Meeting of Minds.WTTW-Channel 11, 4 pm. "The Mythof the Farm.” D Gale Johnson, pro¬fessor. department of economics, anddean, division of social sciences;Charles M. Hardin, professor, depart¬ment of political science; and LaurenD. Soth, editor, Des Moines Registerand Tribune.Lecture, 7:30, Social Sciences 201 JohnMcFerrin, chairman of the FayetteCounty Civic and Welfare league ofSommerville. Tennessee, will speak onthe registration and voting campaignfor Negro citizens, sponsored by NS AMotion picture, 8 pm. Internationalhouse. “The Pickwick Papers” (GreatBritain).Tuesday, 1 NovemberTelevision series: Seminar Sixty, WBBM-TV. 6:30 am, Fern.Lutheran Communion Service. 10 am,Graham Taylor chapel. 57th and Uni¬versity (above Thorndike Hilton chap¬el). sponsored by the Lutheran Coun¬cil.All Saints Day Lutheran CommunionService, 11:30 am, Bond chapel. Jaro-slav Pelikan, associate professor, fed¬erated theological faculty, will preach.Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 12noon, Ida Noyes hall, Flble Study. Allare welcome.Faculty and University Board Meetings:Committee of Council, 12 noon. Quad¬rangle clubColloquium (Institute for the Study ofMetals). Research Institutes 211, 4:15pm. “Statistical thermodynamics ofsteady transport,” Federico Garcia-Moliner, staff member. Institute ofphysics, Spanish Research Council,Madrid.Hug Ivri (Hebrew Conversation), 4:30pm, Hlllel foundationGlee club, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes eastlounge, rehearsal.Sholom Aleichem Reading circle, 8 pm,Hlllel foundation. A reading and dis¬cussion of Gimpel, the Fool, by I. B.Singer and modern Yiddish poetry.Headings by Professor Edward Stan-kewicz, department of linguistics. Wednesday, 2 NovemberTelevision series: Seminar Sixty. WBBM-TV, 6 30 am. Fern.Lecture series (graduate school of busi¬ness). 1:30 pm. Breasted hall. “Bruns¬wick: The First 115 Years.” B E Ben-singer, president, Brunswick corpora¬tion.Faculty and University Board Meetings:Physical Sciences, 3:30 pm, Eckhart133.Hebrew classes, 3:30 Hlllel foundation,first section: 3:30 pm; second section:4:30 pm.Geography Colloquium (department ofgeography), 4 pm. Rosenwald 41. “Therelations of topoclimatology and phy¬sical geography,” C. W Thornwaite,director, laboratory of climatology,Elmer, New Jersey. /Carillon Recital. 5 pm. Rockefeller Me¬morial chapel. Daniel Robins, Uni¬versity carillonneur.Episcopal Services, 5:05 pm Bond chap¬el, Evensong.Israeli Folk dancing. 7:30 pm. Htllelfoundation.Symphony Orchestra. 7:30 pm, Mandelhall, rehearsal.Discussion series, 8 pm. William WallaceFenn house. 5638 South Woodlawnavenue. The Reverend Ellsworth M.Smith, regional director of the Amer¬ican Unitarian association and theReverend Leslie T. Pennington, min¬ister of the First Unitarian Church.57th street and Woodlawn avenue, willdiscuss “Unitarian action-service tothe community and the world ”Lecture (Woodlawn Residence), 5544South Woodlawn avenue. 8 piB. “Thereligious and political future of theWest,” Eric Vogelin, professor of po¬ litical science. University of MunichLecture, 8 pm. Social Sciences 201. "1900Elections” by Jim Burnett. NationalSecretary Young People’s Socialistleague.Country dancing. 8 pm, Ida Noyes, spon¬sored by the Country Dancers. Begin¬ners welcome. 'Thursday, 3 NovemberTelevision series: Seminar Sixty, WBRM-TV, 6:30 am, Fern.Episcopal Services. 11:30 am, Bondchapel. Holy CommunionLecture (Zoology club), 4:30 pm. Zoo¬logy 14. “Ecology of trout populationsand applications to management ”James T McFadden. National ScienceFoundation Postdoctoral Fellow, de¬partment of zoology.Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. 7 30pm. Ida Noyes hall, “The transforma¬tion of the individual,” a discussionled by Bob Brlnkerhoff.Student-Faculty Seminar (departmentof economics). 7:45 pm. Business East106. “Economic and non - economicfactors In the agricultural develop¬ment of Southeast Asia.” CliftonWharton, Council on Economic Af¬fairs.Friday, 4 NovemberTelevision series: Seminar Sixty WBBM-TV, 6:30 am. Fern.Lecture series: Personality Theory (de¬partment of psychology). 4 pm, SocialScience 122, “Lewlnian Theory of Per¬sonality,” Jacob S. Kounln, AssociateProfessor of Education, Wayne Stateuniversity.Motion Picture, 8 and 16 pm. Burton-Judson Courts, “Madame Bovary ”ClassifiedFor rent — magazine can be? Send 50 cents toHelp! Dept. P-3, Box 6573, Philadelphia38. Penn6046 Ingleside Ave. 1 and 2 Room fur¬nished units. Clean and comfortable-available at very moderate rentals Seeresident mgr. after 5:30 pm or call BU8-2757.2 Rooms, semlfurnlshed, private bath.Owner will decorate 3rd floor, 57th andDorchester. HY 3-2525. weekdays. ServicesRoom: Prof’s family. Hyde Park Blvd..near 55th St., $25 monthly. PL 2-5808.after 6For sale Experienced Male Piano Teacher: Masterof Music Degree Hyde Park referencesChildren a specialty. Phone: PL 2-2787Public Stenographer: Doctors and Pro¬fessional work, ipanuscripts. term pa¬pers. etc, a specialty. IBM Executivetypewrtter used HY 3-3149. eveningsSewing, Alterations, Hems. BUtterfteld8-6001.Typing. Reas. MI 3-5218.Mary nook 8564 University avenue.Owner architect, 6-room, brick ranch,garage, paneled study, custom book¬cases, patio, brick barbecue, central airconditioning, gas heat, garbage dis¬posal Many architectural features Mustsee to appreciate. 4',*%. 30-year mort¬gage. By owner, ES 5-7543.’58 Triumph 4 dr sedan. Black. $550 orbest offer. 2,000 miles since engine over¬haul. 4 speed trans., foldtng rear seat.Contact Herb Schwartz. PL 2-8213.Need “Help”? The originator of Madmagazine has done it again—only thistime for college students! He’s createda hilarious new magazine called Help!Want to see how funny an adult satire Clothing Alterations and Remodeling,slip covers and draperies made to orderRates reasonable for faculty and stu¬dents. WA 4-0699 by appointment.Help wantedPeople to Solicit Cap and Gown adver¬tising C and G. Ext. 3598, 4-5 pmStudent Wife Wanted to baby stt for8*—month-old girl. 8:15 to 5:15. Moo-day-Friday. Call PL 2-5693PersonalsTHE NEWCAFE CAPRI186.1 E. 716 StreetFeaturing Espresso Coffee ant Continental SpecialtiesFolk Singing and Art ExhibitsHonrs: Saturday—11 A.M. t" 3 A.M.Sunday — 2 P.M. to MidnightClosed Monday ,Tuesday thru Thursday — 6 P.M. to MidnightFriday — 6 P.M. to 2 A.M. Big Boy: J.ust put a dollar deposit onmy copy of the C and G How aboutyou?*** Fats.Creative Writing Workshop. PL 2-83T7.You Can’t Gargle a Bagel, but you canbagel at the Gargoyle. Friday, JudsonLounge, 9 to 12:30.Wanted: 15 gallons of cider 1406 B.57th St —Theodosia. ’rtvvTvvvvffvvvtrvvvv)Bicycles. Ports, Accessoriesspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 •. 55th a.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:chemistsphysicistsmetallurgistsmathematicians electronic engineersmechanical engineersceramic engineerschemical engineersTory 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 operateat 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 suepassage. Call your placement office for an appointment*LAWRENCE RADIATIONLABORATORYof the University of CaliforniaBerkeley & Livermore, California(San Francisco AreaJjt6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 28, 1960Sports news20 North Wocker, Chicogo 6CEntrol 6-4554lnf«rmali»H »Im» avfilablr on mx rvnttrl NortoK ofWIWIC <W THE R4R04I ECHICAGO CONCERTS,INCSulb*orifM$oM Tirket* SIS oo«f Jit 2 I hi Molrootf«*»«# Jt.'IO on Nttin FJoorTickets may be obtainedthrough The StudentService Center, basementof The Reynolds Club,hours 1 1 :00 to I :00 and3:30 to 5:00 Mondaythrough Friday LOtS MARSHALLCross-country team loses Co,lege is ° Pienic'The cross-country team was de¬feated by the University of Wis¬consin at Milwaukee on Saturday,19 36. The winner of the race wasBill Krueger of Wiscosin. He wasfollowed by UC’s Pat Palmer. Pathas been the first Maroon acrossthe finish line in every meet thisseason. The winning time was16:10, slow for a three-mile race.Bernie Sanders finished seventh,John Bolton eighth, and Vic Neilland Dennis Rusche ninth andtenth.On Saturday the team, whichhas a 2-5 record, will travel ,toMacomb, Illinois, for a doubledual meet against Northern andWestern Illinois,Soccer outlook dimThe outlook is not bright forthe UC soccer squad, which meetsWashington of St. Louis in thesoccer-crazy city on the Mississip¬pi tomorrow. The Maroons willattempt to halt their four gamelosing skein.Saturday an older and more ex¬perienced Illinois outfit droppedthe Maroons 6-1, in Champaign.The Illini proved to be the tough¬est foe Chicago has encounteredthis season. Their sharp passingand balanced teamwork provided tense..DC goaltender Neman Tay¬lor again came up with more thantwenty saves during one of hisusual outstanding performances.Alvar Hermanson’s elevencloses the season next weekendwith games against Indiana andthe NCAA champions, the St.Louis Billikens.Intramurals continueWith half of the intramuralfootball season completed, the pre¬season favorites roll oh unim¬peded to the all-University Cham¬pionships.In the college house league,arch rivals East II and East IIIcontinue undefeated in their re¬spective divisions. East II, ex¬hibiting fine team speed and anaccurate passing attack, needworry mostly about East I, alsoundefeated in league play. EastIII seems to be home free in theirdivision on the strength of a bigtough line and an excellent run¬ning game.Defending champion Psi LTpsi-lon and Phi Kappa Psi lead thefraternity league, each being un¬beaten and untied. These twoteams will meet November 10 inthe last regular season game ofthe year, probably deciding theleague championship.The law school Mudders haveoverpowered all opposition in thedivisional league so far andshould roll on to the title. Thebusiness school is the most likelychallenger to the Mudders.The “B” Jeague championshipmay hinge on the outcome of theLinn House-East II B-game. Linnrates a stropg favorite on thebasis of decisive early season vic¬tories, but both teams are unde¬feated in league play.Basketball team practicesThe 16 man varsity basketballteam is working out at fullsteam in preparation for the sea¬son’s opener December 3. With only four lettermen slated to re¬turn from last year, coach JoeStampf welcomed the comebacksof John Davey, veteran guard,and Jerry Tomasovic, rangy left-handed forward. Both are letter-men who didn’t play in 1959.Stampf is enthusiastic abouthis “fine group of boys,” whoseem to he rearing to go, butcompetition for all positions isvery keen, and he doesn’t knowwhQ will win starting jobs. “Atthis point, any group of five boysseems to be just as good as an¬other,” he related.Several men, including JoelZemans, Gene Erickson, and DanEby, have put on weight andshould be much stronger. GerryToren and Mike Winter also ap¬pear to have sharpened up andimproved considerably over thesummer. All good things, even picnics, must come to an end. ButPhyll, Albie, Rick, and Lolly aren't sorry, because they knowthat tomorrow, means another day, and best of all, anotherpicnic.Football class droppedThe football class this quar¬ter has been cancelled, WalterHass, director of physical edu¬cation, announced. He statedthat the cause was simply a lackof active participation. The classhad been held since 1955. Duringthe five-year period some hopedthat * the classes’ success wouldlead to a return of the sport as anintercollegiate one.* In fact, theCouncil of the University Senatevoted on the issue in 1956; thediscussion was largely inspired bythe existence of the class. (How¬ever, fQotball was defeated 21-14.)Chicago has not played inter¬school games since 1939, whenthe Senate Council first votedagainst it.Many hoped or feared that theclass would soon be dropped afterthe 1956 decision. The turnouthad never been large, averagingabout 35 students. Nevertheless,the class struggled on, generally with a fair record. They playedsuch teams as Wilson junior col¬lege, North Central, and the Uni¬versity of Illinois at Chicago(Navy Pier).This year’s class was to becoached by Walter Hass, ChetMcGraw, and Kyle Anderson. An¬derson played football for theMaroon’s Big Ten teams of 1925,’26. and ’27. The original planscalled for a minimum registra¬tion of thirty-five, with at leasttwenty-eight regularly attending.Enough boys signed up, but day-to-day attendance was poor, as classes and studies interfered.Hass hesitated to continue, as theinadequately-trained team wouldeventually be facing anotherschool in a scrimmage. A tenta¬tive game had even been sched¬uled tor the past Tuesday withWilson junior college.WHERE T EMEETS TOGoalie attempts defensein Maroon soccer squadpractice.them their fifth straight win.Zoran Sibineik’s goal was oneof five shots the Maroons got offa« they displayed almost no of- ACASA Book StoreGood Used BooksImported Cards, Gifts and Children's BooksRELIABLE TYPEWRITER SERVICE1322 E. 55th HY 3-9651Mister...you’re going to wearthat shave all day!START WITH THIS NEW FORMULA BEFORE¬SHAVE LOTION, stop 4 o'clock stubble trouble!You con shove blade;dose, oil-day clean, with¬out ’’tenderizing" your (ace, when you usePro-Electric Before-Shave Lotion. It containsISOPHYl1*' to give your shaver extra glide-power—refreshes you with that brisk, brocing Old Spicescent. 1 00 no federol tax. SUBSCRIBE NOW!CHICAQO CONCERTS,INC.Presents Six Outstanding Voeal RecitalsFriday Fveninys — Civic TheatreSONQ SERIESCONSUELO RUBIO, sopranoDecember 9LOIS MARSHALL, sopranowith Clark Brody, clarinetJanuary 13DONALD BELL, bass' February 3, ERNST HAFLIGER, tenorSchumann's Dichterliebe and Chicago premiere ofJanacek's Diary of One Who VanishedFebruary 24MAUREEN FORRESTER, contraltoMarch 10ELISABETH SCHWARZKOPF, sopranoHugo Wolf program/April 21SUBSCRIPTION SALEONLY, DEADLINENOVEMBER 28!3 Oct. 28, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • t7'; >'VDirector appointedBob Ashenhirrst has been se- "Mad Money,** written by Mel WUCB pregram guideWUCB broadcasts at 640 kilocycles am. When it's own productions are not being broadlected as the director of "Mad and Peggy Rosen, in fourteenMoney,” Blackfriars 1960-61 pro* scenes and including twenty-three • - - , ,. wCAki ae n claduction, announced Abbie Shel- musical numbers, is being adapted cast, WUCB retransmits. C icago , , , • 9 yFriday, October 287:30 am The Morning Show7:00 pm Rachmaninoff — Sym-phone No. 2 in e, op. 27.Borodin — Nocturne forString Orchestra.8:00 Boccherini — Quartet in eflat, op. 58, No. 2.don, abbess of the musical comedy for Blackfriars by the authors,group.' Bob Reiser and Marty Rabino-Ashenhurst has been previously witz. The musical will go intoconnected with Blackfriars. serv¬ing as director for the 1958 pro¬ production some time after thefirst of the year. An auditionduction of Sour Mash. Last year sched„,e tor cas| l8 in thehe composed the music for the 9:0010:00Darwin centennialWill Tell show, Time show will, be announced shortlyby Miss Sheldon.Moviegoers nix substituteNearly 65 students walked out of Mandel hall last Saturday at University Cinema Society’sfirst film showing and demanded their money back. Although the officers in charge, Henry 8:00Etzkowitz, president, and Lee Brown, vice-president, knew that the film ‘‘Citizen Kane” 8:15would not be shown as had been advertised on pastel's during the previous week, it wasnot announced that a substitute film would be shown until the audience was assembled inthe hall. Handel — Water Music.Gretry — Ballet Suite.Mozart — DivertimentoNo. 17 in d, K. 334.Beethoven — Quartet No.15 in a. op. 132.Bartok — Sonata for TwoPianos and Percussion.Kodaly — Sonata for SoloCello, op. 8.Debussy — Nocturnes.Sunday, October 307:00 Chopin — Concerto No. 1in e, op. 11.Sehonberg — Five Pieces Wednesday, November 211:00 Somethin* Else — modern'jazz, with Mike Edelstein.Tuesday, November 17:30 am—The Morning Show7:00 pm Telemann — Suite forFlute and Strings in a.Beethoven — SymphonyNo. 7 in a, op. 92.Jazz for the Layman —with John Brink.Verdi — AidaFat City — Folk music,live and recorded, wi t hNorm Linke.8:009:0011:008:30Etzkowitz apologized for disap- explaining such revisions in movie proached Dean Netherton. whopointing the group by not having plans is customarily done after the suggested Professor Joseph Schwab“Citizen Kane” available, and ex- audience has assembled.. This is as faculty advisor. 10:00plained that the film distributorhad rented the film to anothergroup. He estimated that abouttwo-thirds of the audience remain¬ed in their seats for the" showingof the substitute film, a Frenchmovie, "The Dirty Hands.”"The Dirty Hands” was rentedto University Cinema at a cast of$25 because of the mix-up over"Citizen Kane,” although underordinary circumstances the filmwould have been rented for be¬tween $200 and $250.Etzkowitz later commented that the reason why the students were When Schwab suggested makingnot told separately while purohas- films, thoughts turned from filming tickets at the door that showing to actual production of ex-"Citizen Kane" would not be perimental movies.shown. Films will be shown on Satur-The University Cinema Society days,' however, to raise enoughcapital for production. A founda¬tion grant will be needed by thisnewly formed body, as film-makinginvolves rather large expenses. A30 minute film costs $500 to pro-was formed several weeks ago bya group of 20 students who bandedtogether to bring movies to UCon Saturdays. After electingHenry Etzkowitz president, LeeBloom vice-president, Charles Tyl duce. The group eventually wantstreasurer, and Ron Sager socialrepresentative, the group ap-Sun., Oct. 308:30 p.m.MEDINAH TEMPLEAn Evening withMORTand the-Tickets: $4.40, $3.30, $2.20 atBox Office Friday & Saturday1 1 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sun. from 2 p.m. to show its own movies.With Frank Morrero and 'iBillAlton, both from UniversityTheatre, as technical advisors, thegroup’s first effort is being planned.This is to be a ten minute “short,”a film in lyric poem with an origi¬nal score written by a UC gradu¬ate student.Planned for the immediatefuture is a faculty panel group todiscuss the films after showing, onthe stage of Mandel hall, to be fol¬lowed by an after-theatre party. for Orchestra, op. 16.This Week at the UNConunentry — RichardMizrackErich Fromm speaking onThe Future of Man.Mozart — Symphony No.39 in e flat. K. 543.Haydn — Symphony No.97 in c.Dvorak — Serenade forStrings in e, op. 22.Stravinsky — Petroushka.Monday, October 317:30 am The Morning Showr7:00 pm Monteverdi — II Ballodell Ingrate.Marty’s Night Out — The¬atre and movies, reviewedby Marty Rabinowitz.Commentary — WilliamKelleyBayer — Music from theballet “Die Puppenfee.”Villa-Lobos — BachianasBrasilieras Np. 5.Prokofieff — Sonata No.2 in d for Violin, op. 94.Vivaldi — Concerto in Cfor Two Trumpets.Busoni — Concerto for Violin, op. 35a.Mozart — Quintet in E flatfor Strings, K. 614.Riegger — Symphony No.3, op. 42.8:008:148:3010:00ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage & meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.CLARK theatre50dark & madisonfr 2-2843NOVEMBER or all rimes forcollege student'sjust present youri.d. cardto the cashierSUNDAY6) r. harrison, k. kendall,s. dee, j. saxon “reluctantdebutante” teenager Ispushed into social whirl(vincente minelli, directorof the month)r widmark, c. boyer, 1. bacall“the cobweb” inside amental asylum (mlnnelli)a Sunday film guild program MONDAY13) marx bros. “a day at theraces” groucho, chico, &harpo at the track(sam wood)top all-time film comedians“golden age of comedy”great film laugh scenes(r. youngsonfw. c. fields & benchley shortsa Sunday film guild program20) h. fonda, j. lemmon,j. cagney “mr. roberts”screen version of hit broad-way play about life on anavy cargo ship. (John ford& mervyn leroy)f. sinatra, k. novak,r. hayworth “pal joey”biography of a •'heel”(george Sidney)a Sunday film guild program27) g. peck, 1. bacall“designing woman” rockymarriage of sportswriter andstage designer (v. mlnnelli)d. reynolds, c. Jurgens,j. saxon “this happy feeling”naive girl falls for "olderman” (blake edwards)a Sunday film guild program 7) a perkins “tallstory” basketballplayer is offeredbribe to "throw”game(joshua logan)t. tryon “scarlethour” boss’ wife &trusted employedplot to get rid ofhim (m. curtiz)14) “rise-and fall oflegs diamond”biography of a thug(b. boetticher)m britt. s. whitman“murder, inc.” truestory of paid killers(hurt balaban &Stuart rosenberg)21) r. calhoun “sagaof hemp brown”army officer trailsman who “framed”him (richardcarlson)J. edwards “blood &steel” seabees mapenemy-held island(bernard kowalski)28) “the accursed”strange vengeanceof men betrayed byarmy comrade(mlchael mccarthy)g. hamllton “crime& punishment,USA” dostoievskyclassic updated toUS (denis senders) TUESDAY WEDNESDAY1) s. hayden "nakedaiibi” detectiveclears own name(jerry hopper) 2) mitchum“thunder road”moonshiners vs.federal agents(arthur ripley)d. bogarde “cast adark shadow” youngman kills older wife(lew. gilbert) a quinn, k. douglas“last train fromgun hill” westernertracks down wife’*killer (J. sturges)8) h. neff “svengali”ruthless man domi¬nates actress’ career(noel langley)g cooper, m. schell“the hanging tree”colorful western(delmer daves) 9) J. payne “hell'sisland” search forstolen'ruby (philkarlson)m. ferrer, d. wynter“fraulein” germangirl is “marked" asprostitute(henry koster)15) g. ford “trial!”young lawyer gets“baptism of fire”(Charles schnee)cagney. e. borgnine“run for cover”rugged actionwestern (nlch. ray) 16) elsa martinelllt. howard “stow¬away girl” sailorsmuggles girlaboard ship(guy hamllton)J. hunter “count 5& die" spies fakeInvasion of holland(victor varcas)22) s. cochran “i,mobster” life of a“hood” (r. corman)r. ivers “short cutto hell” paid killer"gets” double-croosers (J. cagney) 23) r. ryan “escapeto burma” murdersuspect flees tojungle (allan dwan)r. taylor, j. london“saddle the wind”ex-gunfighter triesto curb hot-headedkid brother (robt.parrish)29) j. barrymore, Jr.j. london “Nile ofthe quarter moon”man finds wife hasnegro blood(h. haas)r. mitchum“bandido” arms-smuggling in mexi-can revolution(richard flelsclier) 30) Jayne mansfleld“female jungle”detective is accusedof murder(b. vesota)sinatra, lancaster,d. kerr “from hereto eternity” explo¬sive dram.a of pre¬war army(fred zinneman) THURSDAY3) g. ford “ransom!boy is “snatched"by kidnappers(alex segal)r. hudson, a. dahl“bengal brigade”action In India!(laslo benedek)10) g. kelly, n. wood“marjorie morning-star” girl tries tocrash broadway(irving rapper)esther williams“dangerous whenwet” american girlswims channel(paul lahdres)17) gary cooper"northwest mountedpolice” mounties“get their man”(c. b. demille)w. elllott “chain ofevidence” detectiveclears innocentsuspect (p. landres)24) r. ryan, r. bur¬ton “ice palace"edna ferber’s brawl¬ing saga of alaska(vlncent Sherman)k. more “39 steps”cross-country spychase (r. thomas) FRIDAY, Ladies Day SATURDAY4) lemmon, mitchum“fire down below"partners fall outover adventuress(robert parrtsh)k. novak “pushover"detective tries to“cut in” on holduploot (rich’d Quinei11) bob hope “thatcertain feeling”cartoonist hires“ghost” (mel frank& norman panama)sinatra ‘hole in thehead” miamisharpie tries to keepson & hotel(frank capra)18) lancaster. katehepburn “rain¬maker” rancher'sspinster daughterfinds a man(Jos. anthony)montand, signor“the crucible”witch-hunting innew england (ray-mond rouleau)25) j. wyman. cwebb “holiday forlovers” adventure inrlo (henry levin)g. ford, d. reynolds“it started with akiss” “gold digger"marries sergeant(george marshall) 5) alan ladd “gunsof the timberland”loggers vs. ranchers(robt. d. webb)s poittier “all theyoung men” colorednoncom takes overmarine platoon(hall bartlett)12) g. peck “worldin hjs arms” ameri¬can ship’s captainfalls for russlan girl(raoul walsh)J. stewart, r. hudson“bend of the river”,ex-missouri raiderleads wagon trainwest (a. mans)19) f. march,k. novak “middle ofthe night” widowercourts young divor¬cee (delbert mann)r. burton “look backin anger” trenchantstory of angryyoung man (tonyrlchardson)26) r. burr “desirein the dust” love Aviolence In thesouth (wm. claxton)k douglas, k novak“strangers when wemeet” backstreetadultery (r. quine)★ program changeddaily★ open 7:30 a.m.late show 4 a.m.★ write m for f-eeprogram guide ★ "little gal-lery forgals onlyoil gals admitted foronly 25c★ movies subject tochange withoutnotice18 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 28, 1960 7:30 am—The Morning; Show7:00 pm—South Paelfic8:00 Sfi Report8:15 Commentary — WalterMiale8:30 Haydn — Mass of St.Caocilia.10.00 May 8th, I960 — The SanFrancisco RiotsA frankly partisan docu¬mentary in sound, pro¬duced by some of the stu¬dents who were involved.11:00 We Dome for to Sing; —folk music, with John Kimand Mike Wolfson.Thursday, November 37:30 am The Morning Show7:00 pm Beethoven — Bagatelles, op. 126.Strauss — Don Quixote.8:00 Music of the World, with. George F. Hawk.8:30 The Spoken Word — Ladyof the Cats, by WolcoltGibbs and E. F. Kinkead.read by Rick Ames.9:0011:00 Bach — Concerto No. 5 inf for Clavier.Berwald — Symphony inC (1845).Sweelinck — Balletto delGranduoa.Brahms — Trio No. 2 ine flat, op. 40.Tchaikovsky — SvmphonvNo. 6 in b. op. 74, "Pat hetique.”Jazz till Midnight, withMike Goran.NATIONWIDE BOOK SEARCHSERVICESend 25c for results — by mailZOLLINGER S BOOK SHOP1150 Vi W. Belmont Ave.MODEL CAMERAWholesaleCatalogue Prices onCameras, Projectors, Recorders1342 E. 55fh HY 3-9259Gifts foe All OccasionsK0GA GIFT SHOPImported and Domestic Dry GoodsChinaware - Jewelry - KimonosSandals - Greeting CardsLay-Away!Hisa Koga 1203 E. 55 St.MU 1-6856 Chicago 15, III.TEL BES. BE 7-104th MonthChicago’s Long-Run Musical Hit!MED DMRARE"^''TJicAao's NewcsrjHAPPY MEDIUM,*01 H. RUSH St.INS’niUPikJP Bilim iU altir tbi ikn toUAHuINU tk« DOWNSTAGE ROOMI Itooi T*M. S*I, IlM * III!I'» UN * MU«—W*MI Im n.rt. no • StJSM • M. M-M 1 tI.M, Im ImL HUH MSMAIL OSDIRS NOWCulture VultureEven a cursory' analysis of most peoples' motives would unearth the simple truism that most people have an axe to grind. Ofcourse, it varies from individual to individual whether a dull or sharp instrument is preferred, upon what grinding wheel orwarm body Mid mstrunsont it kept m repair, and generally what degree of fanaticism is brought to the task. However, it can bedemonstrated Htat everyone is guided by the principle of modified self-interest which subsumes .such concepts as self-indul¬gence and id tendencies. This situation is not exactly conducive to the orderly functioning of society and thus man can congrat-ulate himself for a chance discovery made by his Neandeithan ancestors; this masterpiece of serendipity can either be describedas the primal horde or, to return to our original metaphor, two men grinding the same axe. Could we have ever bridged theawesome gap between gathering nuts in Mesopotamia and planting our own little stars in the firmament without that beautifulbit ot human engineering, unity of action, and all it entails from filial piety to political parties? The discovery of the commoncause, and unfortunately its imposition in many cases has defied man and his works. All the foregoing remarks are merelypreface to noting that ten examples of the archetypical horde begin proving the strength of collective man this week. Frater¬nity rush has begun. Ad astra per aspera.CampusOnTheaterUniversity Theater’s most re¬cent innovation can be termedgetting just the proper amountof a good thing. As the bird re¬marked last week the tonight at8:30 series affords students theopportunity to participate in thefull gamut of theater arts andespecially in directing, which istoo often closed in academic the¬ater to students. The decision onthe part of UT“s board of direc¬tors to offer an early 8:30 selec¬tion ot plays in December ex¬pands a program that marks ourtheater as*-continuing its leader¬ship of the rations^ avant garde.The plays chosen for produc¬tion are Chekhov’s The MarriageProposal, Brecht’s The Privatel ife of the Master Race, andOmar Shapli’s The Drafting otSixtus Borden. The latter playis an original and its productionwill be a world premiere; Shapliis an alumnus of the University,ITT, and Hyde Park, and is cur¬rently engaged as resident play-write at Bennington college inVermont.If this information haswhetted your appetite, made youhave hallucinations revolvingaround Kazan, D. W. Griffith,and Stanislavsky, then consideryourself in the exalted positionof director. After indulging inthis fantasy select a play andsubmit it — and incidentally,yourself too—to UT at the the¬ater office before November 6.Thus one becomes eligible for di¬recting laurels during the second8:30 interlude of brilliant experi¬mentation in February.This week UT announced thatbesides the already-publicizedworkshops in acting, directing,stagecraft, and playreadingscheduled for the quarter, thetheater has imported a profes¬sional dancer, Miss Jane Abelson,who will lead a weekly sessionin the dance. Interested studentsare asked to leave a note in theUT box at the Reynolds clubdesk. Also, those interested inparticipating in a radio produc¬tion of Nemerov’s Cain contactdirector Bill Alton at the UT of¬fice. ^MusicThe music department’s sec-See You At TheffletDici137# East 53rd St.French BreakfastSundays 10-1Open Sat. & Sun. Afternoons ond offering in its chambermusic series will be the NewYork Pro Musica. The group spe¬cializes in vocal and instrumen¬tal music of the middle ages,rennaissance, and early baroque.Mandel hall, November 4 at 8:30.A particularly knowledgeablefriend of the vulture — wheremusic is concerned—reports thatthis ensemble brings a vivacity,fervor, and wit to a type ofmusic that one usually associateswith formality and reserve.Somewhere locked in a miser¬able dungeon atop a mountaincalled old smokey languishes amember of the Seeger familywho not only loathes folkmusicbut who is also *tone deaf. Thelatest and fairest offshoot of theclan planning an appearance oncampus is Miss Peggy Seegerwho will grace Mandel hall withthe family’s authentic music onNovember fifth. A well-knownBritish folklorist and singer,Ewan MacColl, is scheduled toshare the bill with Miss Seeger.The concert is under the auspicesof the International House asso¬ciation and for the benefit of for¬eign scholarship students.SRP and the Folklore societyare jointly responsible for theSonny Terry-Brownie McGheeconcert at Mandel tomorrownight. The vulture regrets thatcertain works and phrases—namely, authentic, for instance—have been used and re used tothe mystical point of dullness.The bird is partly at fault forthis lamentable state of affairs.While groping for a more articu¬late expression, he must be con¬tent to say that McGhee andTerry are for real. you make of ft. Eight and teno’clock in the Judson diningroom.Documentary film group isshowing Underworld, an exam¬ple of silent violence. Directed byJosef von Sternberg from a storyby Ben Hecht, Underworld siredan entire decade of gangster-culture-hero triumphs. At 7:15and 9:15 in Social Sciences 122.Student Government, tonight,takes a clinical interest inmother love and birth trauma bypresenting Ingmar Bergman’sdiagnostic tragedy, Brink of Life.A delightful McBoing-Boingshort will also be shown. At 8and 10 in the International houseauditorium.Monday International househarkens us back to DickensianEngland in the company of thecharming Pickwick and hiscronies. The Pickwick Paperswill be shown at 8 pm in the as¬sembly hall.Off Campus canny. Starting Monday, October31 and every Monday thereafterSevern Darden will present aspecial one man concert of theludicrous and the sublime on theunaccompanied buffoon. Dardenis one of the stars of the SecondCity revue.The Lyric opera is still beingheard. The current selections areAida and Figaro. But the vulturehas better news. Chicago con¬certs has announced its songseries and baroque music serieswhich begin December 9 and runthru April 21. Orders for sub¬scription seats may be placed at the Reynolds club desk or at Chi¬cago Concerts, 20 North Waeker.Twelve artists including 5 whowill have their Chicago debutswill perform.CinemaThe Hyde I^rk theater, herein the land of we happy few,presents Tati and Fernandel thisweek in two excruciatingly fun¬ny films, My Uncle and The BigChief. In My Uncle Mr. Hu lotlooks at suburbia; The Big Chiefis a gallic version of O. Henry'sThe Ransom of Red Chief. O OHenri.CinemaTonight discriminating cine-matophiles have a choice be¬tween the beautiful and thedamned, some voce and one sortof soto voce. BJ provides thenoise as Alec Guinness rides thesea lanes living the Jekyll andHyde life of the philandering saltin The Captain’s Paradise. Thisfilm demonstrates emphaticallythat Britannia rules the wavesand bourgeois morality is what PoetryPoetry magazine has tradition¬ally been on the point of immi¬nent bankruptcy ever since Har¬riet Monroe decided to makeChicago the poetic headquartersof the world. However, for thelast six years an aroused citi¬zenry has manned the barricadesadmirably against creditor andphilistine. The Modern Poetryassociation which publishesPoetry now sponsors annually apoetry day. This year’s benefitwill feature the usual mundaneraising of funds plus W. H.Auden, reading from his poems.November 18 at the Civic the¬ater.MusicThe Chicago symphony, hope¬fully with a convalescent Maes¬tro Reiner, will perform Bee¬thoven’s Missa Solemnis, in Dmajor Opus 120 next Thursdayand Friday at Orchestra hall.Various soloists will be featured.The Gate of Horn on NorthDearborn is currently presentinga blues singer, Barbara Dane,who is so fantastically remines-cent of Bessie Smith that it’s un- New publication describes,chronicles campus eventsForecast, the newspaper of Student Union, was resumedthis year after an interruption in publication lasting since1956.The purpose of Forecast, according to editor Dave Emin, -is to provide a concise chronicleof student activities in an easy- printed by press.to-read manner. The paper is not The publication has no immedi-concerned with any event that ate plans to increase the size ofdoes not involve students. its present four-page issues. How-Student Union is well satisfied ever, the staff expects to increasewith the accomplishments of its the variety and interest of the arti-joumal in its first few issues, cles as enthusiasm for the paperand with its prospects. One se- increases. More and more studentrious problem which has faced organizations are asking for anthe publication is the matter of opportunity to submit articlesprinting. Thus far Forecast has about themselves,been printed by the photo offset One aspect in which Forecastprocess, which requires the staff differs from a true newspaper isof 20 people to do all the layout that It does not run editorials,and dummying, a job that im- Furthermore, there is little likeli-poses a strain on their schedules, hood that it will print editorialsHowever, the paper is now being in the near future.LAKEthe PARK AT$5RDyde park N O 7 9 O 7 1theatreNOW PLAYING"A BATTLE OF THE SEXES"Starring:Peter Setters, Robert M or ley, Constance CummingsDearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1753Special student rote for oil performances seven days a weekJust Show Cashier Your I.D. CardLES McGANNandTHE SLIDE HAMPTON OCTETuntil November 6atThe Home of Progressive Jazz47th. & OREXEl10 P. M. & 4 AM.ATTENDANT PARKING ^ SutherlandLou Donaldson coming November ADMISSION CH6E.COVER CH6E.ENTERTAINMfNI TAX9 student rmte H5e —— all performances fiveTWO ENCHANTING CLOWNSFERNANDELO. HENRY'S HAPLESS KIDNAPPERA Free-Wheeling Gallic Adaptationof O. Henry's Classic, "The Ransom of Red Chief"AndJACQUES TATIAtMR. HULOT AT WAR WITHTHE MECHANIZATIONS OFMODERN TIMESTTNftTlT PU MVIuEffACADEMY AWARD WINNERBEST FOREIGN FILM(of the year!) 77Oct. 28, I960■ I:- 1 • CHICAGO MAROON • 19; aNone injuredDorm hit by bomb explosionI I ■MUM ****m*vm”> '1“ tm-MiJ.v'H*by Mike TrumpCampus and city policewere called in to investigateafter a home-made bomb ex¬ploded on the top floor of thenew men’s residence hallshortly after midnight Mon¬day.The explosion — the seventhand most violent to occur sincethe residence opened just over amonth ago — shook the entirebuilding but caused little damageand resulted in no injuries.The bomb had been placed inthe eleventh floor stairwell whichleads onto the roof and into theelevator motor room. Clouds ofthick smoke and fragments ofparched paper resting from theexplosion drifted Tlown to thetenth floor and into nearbyrooms.Ron Weiner, head of ShoreyHouse, the ninth and tenth floors,called the campus police officer,Henry Natzke, who was on nightduty in the residence, to open theroof door in an effort to clear thesmoke and fumes.Police notifiedIn the course of his duty Natzkereported the incident to campuspolice, who in turn notified theHyde Park police station.Several squad ears arrived onthe scene within a short time, aswell as investigators from theChicago Police “bomb and arsonsquad.”They concluded that the bombwas of amateur construction —possibly a bundle of cherry-bombs, firecrackers, or gunpow¬der. The device was housed in ashirt box, and tightly packed withpaper, which scattered over awide area due to the force of theblast. A magnesium fuse seemsto have been used with some typeof time delay.However, the campus policeman who Das ■sod tho scone ten minutes out that suoh publicity could only As a result of this wide pub- that a person or persons fromSom Se exptoston nottced noth- be detrimental to the good name lieity numerous parents phoned outside the building was respon-tag strange or suspicious. of the University. “We don’t want the University to inquire about Slble. Those on duty at the receping stiange or si pi nfaved ud as a country- the well-being of their sons. tion desk were keeping a sharpso^has^n rrned out Sd Whce dubtr^oXrsThe Slid Mr. Ht.ltard did not consider watch for strangers and haveand University officials regard Most of the Chicago radio ste- *h“‘"“ ‘""''hT from entering. "°""ofiSsomedC." icak!itcre iiTthe *>"* mentioned »*e explosion in «^enM „ny worM o» Wednesday , ietter fromnL men s residence hall who their Tuesday morning newscasts. t|Mn ,h,ls, in Burton .ludson and John Huntoon. Director of Studoes not realize the seriousness of One claimed that the house had the New Dorms In the past. dent Housing was circulated tohis action been evacuated, and another that He gaw no connection between *“ members of tlie new men’srm. ... . , . . „ the tower had “rocked.” In a ... inricjont an(j the tampering residence hall concerning bothThe attitude of the adm list™- dlsc.j(X,k interview, the follow- ‘ lth ctevatom and Then of the bomb questton and tin, mis-tion was stated by John Huntoon, J heard- ..where did you with eIOvam, s^ ana ose of ,|,.v,mrs. Huntoon fellDirector of Student Housing, to J? . . . ..We wpnt watches and wallets wnun nas ........ ma(.Kget to last night?” “We went occurred>be one of “reasonableness.” Atthe same time he pointed out thedanger of such acts, and said that S/‘The"chicaio'Sun-Timesalong to the University of Chi¬cago and man we had a real that both these matters called fora full statement.He dealt first with the eleva-Burglaries ceaseIn the interest of all the resident* menVresI The burglaries of the first few °n^o! siuXto from dence hal1 housed at lea5t eighty weeks appeared to have ceased aboPv<, th, X>nd whe^f studeni-likely^to be taken. Kxpul.sion friim chemist& a„d the authorities are satisfied opera(ad VaHous me,hods hav(.the University is very likely,should the culprit be discoveredplanning another similar detona¬tion.Student reaction to the explo¬sion and possible consequencesfor the person responsible wasmixed, although most people dis¬approved strongly of the wholeincident. Richard Gtlasser, firstyear Henderson House resident,felt that “regardless of his mentalstate this person poses a menaceto the community as a whole, andtherefore should be expelled."In contrast, Fred Branfmann,also of the new men’s residencehall, maintained that, “under cer¬tain circumstances many of usmight well have acted as the‘mad bomber' has done. He’sprobably only young, so let’s bereasonable and give him achance.”Asked to comment on the in¬cident, Mr. David Hilliard, seniorresident head at Pieree, deploredthe exaggerated and sensationalway in which the Chicago pressand radio had reported the event.Comparing this in some waysto the TV coverage of the tugs-of - war Botany Pond, he pointed The New Men's residence hall, scene of Monday's bomb*ing, is shown during its construction last year. been devised by the residents tostop them at even-numberedfloors as well, causing the ele¬vators to jam.Repair bill high“While we applaud this evi¬dence of ingenuity we cannot allow it to continue,” Huntoon said.The elevator servicemen charge$8 an hour, and already Resi¬dence Halls and Commons hashad to pay out over $100 for thisservice. In an attempt to bring toand end this practice. StudeniHousing will in the future regardmisuse of elevators as a majoroffense to be automatically re¬ferred to the Disciplinary Coinmittee. At the same time RH&Chas threatened to close the eleva¬tor system altogether if any moremoney has to be spent on un¬necessary labor.He concluded by emphasizingthe danger of these acts and theconsequences facing future of¬fenders. He expressed his confidence that “there will be norecurrence of these incidents andthat we can all turn our attentionto more profitable matters.”STUDENT GOVERNMENT PRESENTSBRINK OFLIFEdirected by INGMAR BERGMANTONIGHT ... 8 and 10 pmINTERNATIONAL HOUSE AUDITORIUM65cThe stroke of a master — NewsweekNever lets up its tension, which being distinctly Bergman is a blend of mya-— N.Y. Herald Tribuneticism, philosophy and stinging drama.Also — A "McBoing - Being" Short