f vxi ' .., . fit tJtitt ? <ST **$» twftw .-/r**. $'***& JSx&Z&J Z&kj i!RSK jaftJaS»»»aLf-I^SfSSS.- Nwr«JSfcfo.'gBgfr-vifeigByiSrsc *»*» A.Students march for cayil rightsChicago area students dents were arrested in similar Typical signs read: "Freedom ismarched on the Democratic demonstrations at Jackson, Ten- Our Goal,” “End School Segrega-and Republican party head- ""***• Tfl« students were carry- E^hfre." ThHoli of“?!SQuarters on Tuesday. The stu- ing signs reading, We want to hour traffic nearly drowned outJ- - see Negroes free to vote in Hay- ‘ ‘wood and Fayette Counties.**Ed Cohn told the students aboutdents urged both presidential can¬didates, on election eve, to sup¬port new civil right’s legislation.Similar marches were organized lhc sih,atl°" in Faya,*« •«“**in other major northern cities. the singing, however the studentscontinued in good spirits.The marchers were well organ¬ized and disturbed traffic little.The march proceeded north to 333North Michigan, the DemocraticTennessee, where a group of UniThe students from UC and versity of Chicago students are headquarters, and then on to theTTniversitv were ad- helping feed and clothe Negro citi- 900 block on Michigan, the Re-Roost \ elt umversity, w e r e aa2ens blaoklisted for regjsteinf? to publican headquarters. At bothdressM by Mrs Hl"' Dean ,Wat' vot, According to cdSfttfcSL- P'«-es Jenkins read a brief appealson of Roosevelt, Alderman Leon vote* AC(ora,nff to >7^ tne^mia-Despres, Ed Cohn, and Tim Jen- t,#n in Faye,te W* andwhere in the South has reiinadequate newsqjraper cot^r;Can't afford prejudice the North. /A, ^Despres claimed that prejudice jjm Foreman, an esnjlier sis the most serious problem fac- er, had notfdjfoat a total of 6!ing America today, “we can’t af- 70.000 pou 'ford to have it, since success of had b e e $ “deliveredcounty so receltHundreds of sign-carrying students marched in Chicago'selection day civil rights demonstration. The nationwidedemonstration was an attempt to remind both parties of theneed for effective civil rights guarantees.to campaign workers. The marehconcluded at 6 pm.Public reaction to the marchersvaried from mild amusement toindifference. Some people felt thestudents were not achieving any¬thing. Comments like “What’s thepoint of this,” Who are they try¬ing to impress,” and “That’s the. .. , _ , ... . j - /, beat mentality,” were overheard.the nation depends on full use of Jim JenMjfS, vice prpslaent of Unfortunately some of the stu-human resources . . . Despres National S\g cUett&^dssociation dent chats were unclear. At onecontinued, “up to now it has been (NSA) and lekder-Uf the march, point “must go” sounded likemore profttab1- to ignore civil spoke to the students on the pur- “Moscow.’rights than to enforce them” in Pose and historical perspective of... . .. .. the sit-in movement. He felt manythis state, but the next governor . . . . .. ■*'., students were unaware of theand the next president will not broa(j fight against prejudice ofand should not ignore them, there- which the sit-ins are a part. Idaho,fore the student marchers do weU Indiana, and New York wereto remind the candidates of their na™ed as places where voting re¬strictions are still placeckon someminority groups.Jenkins then reminded the stu¬dents of their goals: 1) restora¬tion of section 3 to civil rights leg-isation, 2) change in rule 22 of theSenate (that is the no closure ruleon filibusters), and 3) to protest Vo|. 69 —No. 48 University of Chicago, November 11, 1960‘‘generally inadequate” civil rightsduties.Some 150 Negro college stu-31legislation. Jenkins concluded bysaying that the ;it-ins contributeto an “infinite end” which wouldnot be reached till the burden ofdiscrimination had been liftedfrom the back of the last man,regardless of race or creed.Actions are necessaryThe last speaker was Ed Rid¬dick of the University of Chicago.Riddick told the marchers theywere modem Macabees, and thattheir action, though called radicalby some was fundamentally cor¬rect and necessary.Over one hundred marchersgathered outside Roosevelt uni¬versity about 5 p.m. They beganmarching north on Michigan ave¬nue singing and carrying signs. Fewer students mitigatedSome 5 per cent fewer students had to be mitigated from College general educationcourses this year than last year, announced David Williams, college examiner. He alsoannounced that this year’s class placed out of more units than last year’s.“This was in line with the record of the class, known before they came. The enteringclass of autumn on 1960 is a higher ranking class than last year’s,” continued Williams.Some 20 students received credit from the College Board Advanced Placement program.Credit from one to three unitswas given in many subjects, in- this autumn. A committee, includ- The College will now grant upeluding mathematics, French, ing the College examiner and the to four full year courses oc ftLatin, English, physical sciences, dean of the College, examined vpar-H work for flnnrfinri.t. aj.and biology. each paper separately, determin- years1 ™rk for appropriate A*New Advanced Placement legis- ing how much, if any, credit vanced Placement tests on whfcflilation was used for the first time would be granted. tbe student has scored a grade of4 of 5.No one wants Lexington Williams said, “There is no lawbinding UC and the C o 11 e g aUrge 3 Vi million fine arts centerErection of a fine arts cen¬ter, to house a “dream the¬atre” and to consolidate andincrease the humanitiesfacilities of the University, wasurged in a 30-page report issuedJuly 26, and now under considera¬tion by the Administration.The report estimated the cost ofthe project at $3,500,000, advisinghowever, that “it’s bound to costmore.” A member of the musicdepartment slated that the costcould run as high as $7,000,000,While the U n i v e r s i ty theatre,which submitted a report of itsown, figures that $10,000,000would be needed.The report was drafted by aseven-man committee, consistingof Herman Fussier, director ofthe University library; LeonardMeyer, head of the music depart¬ment; James Newman, assistantdean of students in the College;Edward Rosenheim, associate pro¬fessor of the humanities; ElderOlson, professor of English;Joshua Taylor, associate profes¬sor of art; and Gwin Kolb, associ¬ate professor of English.While there was no chairmanselected for the committee, AlanSimpson, dean of the College, nowappears to have taken leadershipof the project However, Simpsonhas not yet commented on theproject, the report remains '‘un¬official”University theatre, which hasasked for a building a block-Mda-half long to prov&4« a large theatre, has suggested thatthe center be located in the mid¬dle of the Midway. A member ofthe music department has sug¬gested that the building be erect¬ed on University avenue, from theOriental institute to 59th street.This would require the razing ofLexington hall and the demolitionor moving of the Chancellor’shouse.Campus is "lousy”UT and the music departmentconcurred in condemning thepresent facilities. Discussing theconditions under which studentsmust practice, Grosvenor Cooper,chairman of the music depart¬ment, stated, “This campus islousy for these purposes at pres¬ent.” Under the committee’s pro¬posal, first year humanitiesclasses would be moved into thenew building, making Lexingtonhall unneeded. But, said Cooper,“There isn’t a soul on campuswho wants to keep Lexington.”With the new theatre, UTwould no longer use Mandel hallfor their shows. Said Frank Mar-reno, technical director of UT,“Mandel hall was never designedfor staging plays; the sight linesare all wrong. If the ‘dream the¬atre* is built, it will provide theaudience at a full house with abetter view than Mandel hall doeswhen it Is only half full” Theplanned theatre would also pro¬vide more room backstage forstoring scenery; at present, scen¬ery must be constructed In theReynolds club and carried to Man-delThe committee report proposesthat the center contain class¬ rooms for first-year humanitiesand music department classes,sound-proof study studios, prac¬tice rooms, listening rooms fortapes and records, and art stu¬dios. An electronics center formaking recordings by humanitiesclasses and theatre groups, andpossibly broadcasting equipmentwould be included.In addition to this, the musiclibrary would be moved fromClassics, and enlarged to includerecords, tapes, and the scores ofall musical groups.At the time of the report, theart department felt that theyshould not join in the project.They have not reversed their posi¬tion; however, at this early stage,changes in this aspect and manyothers are still possible.Propose dream theatreUniversity theatre wrote a re¬port of its own on the question ofthe theatre. They propose a sin¬gle theatre, with 1500 seats, in¬stead of the two smaller auditor¬iums recommended by the com¬mittee. “If our proposal goesthrough,” asserted Frank Mar¬rero, “we will have a ‘dream the¬atre.’ It will be the best univer¬sity theatre in the country, andwill enable us to put on almostany type of play.”The theatre would be equippedwith a revolving stage, trap doors,and an orchestra pit that could beraised to extend the stage to¬ward the audience.Aisles between seats would bewide enough to permit passagethrough them without disturbingthose seated. The seats them¬selves would be m*»de of materialsuch that they would absorb about the same amount of soundwhether empty or full.Acoustics, balanced for the bestlevel for both speech and music,is to be rigidly tested throughoutconstruction.Projection, spotlighting, andsound control would all be lo¬cated in the back of the balcony,where those controlling themcould see the action.The theatre is to be ventilatedwith a silent fan, and air-condi¬tioned.A Swedish entourage of royal¬ty will visit UC campus Saturday,November 12. The group, con¬sisting of Her Royal HighnessPrincess Birgitta, Her RoyalHighness Princess Desiree, andCount Gosta Lewenhaupt will ar¬rive at O’hare field at 9:50 in themorning. After a half-hour ofphotographs and interviews bythe Chicago press, they will pro¬ceed directly to UCOn their arrivl at approximate¬ly 11 am the group will be metin front of the new UniversityHigh School building by ActingChancellor R. Wendell Harrisonand Mrs. Harrison. After a tourof the high school, which will in¬clude visits to the library, twoscience classes, and the televisionequipment room (now in processof being completed), Harrisonwill conduct the royal party on Board; however, it is unlikelythat a student receiving a five ona CEEB Advanced Placement testwould fail to place out of a coursewith the UC exam system.“UC placements don’t try toequal comprehensives. They try.to find out if you are ready to goon to the next course. You can’tmeasure too much in placementscompared to six-hour comprehen¬sives.”Approximately a B, accordingto Williams, will place a studentout of a course. He called an A,as a reasonable standard for be¬ing excused from a course, “rath¬er high.”brief tours of the Oriental Insti¬tute and the Nathan GoldblattMemorial hospital.Enroute from the Goldblatt hos¬pital to a luncheon at Interna¬tional house, the motorcade willpause briefly in front of Burton-Judson to give students gatheredin front of the halls an oppor¬tunity to greet the Princesses.Among the luncheon guestswill be His Excellency GunnarLonaeus, first secretary of cul¬tural affairs from the Swedishembassy. Among the UC studenthosts at the luncheon will bsNatalie Ostrott, Karen Tencote,Indire Brendston, and Par Kjelsted.After a little more than twohours at UC the royal party willdepart to the Northwestern cam¬pus to witness the Saturday foot¬ball game.Swedish royalty tovisit UC tomorrowTHE MAN OFACTIONis never too busy to checkhis life insurance programwith a Sun Life represen¬tative. He wants to beabsolutely sure that hischanging needs are takencare of, promptly andadequately.RepresentotiveRalph J. Wood Jr., '481 N. LaSalle Chicago, III.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-68001 represent the Sun Life As¬surance Company of Canada.Our modern plans can he„ tailored to fit your own in-dividual needs. May l dis¬cuss some of these plans withyou? There is no obligation,of course.SUN LIFE OF CANADAFaculty applauds Kennedy victorycampuscharacter: (Photo by Osgood)President-elect John F.Kennedy photographed atlast Friday's Democraticrally in the Chicago stadium.Applauding Kennedy isMayor Richard J. Daley, inlower left corner. The rallydrew record-breakingcrowds, including hundredsof UC students.nedy was hcl|>e<l hy the extraCatholic vote in the cities, but thereligions issue hurt him in therural areas.”Grant us strengthPresident-elect Kennedy w a slauded by many professors forthe strength which he is going tobring to the While House. Pritch¬ett hoped for “A stepping up ofthe tempo of activity in the Pres¬ident’s office. The presidency hasgone to sleep, especially in thelast four years. We will, I hope,see a return 1o the vigor ofFranklin Delano Roosevelt.”Robert Osgood, associate pro fessor of political science, echoedPritchett’s thoughts. Said he,“This seems to me to be the be¬ginning of a period of consider¬able intellectual foment and ac¬tivity, activity that has drifted inthe last four or five years, espe¬cially. I could judge that Kennedywill take a great deal of advan¬tage of the honeymoon that willexist with his Democratic Con¬gress to get his programs enact¬ed. However, how long this at¬mosphere of extreme cooperationwill last I do not know.”Professor of political scienceMorton Grodrins concurred in hisopinion. Grodzins said, "I thinkthat this sort of governmentwhich we have, in which thingsare politically weighted on stateand local government, needs astrong man as President. We havenot had such a man in the WhiteHouse for the past eight years.”Wallis dissentsA dissent to the above opinionwas registered by Nixon sup¬porter W. Allen Wallis, dean ofthe business school. Wallis com¬mented. “Kennedy won’t take anymoves in the direction of thedemocratic platform, fortunately.His small electoral support andthe coalition of southern Demo¬crats and Republicans will severe¬ly impede'his program.”A different approach to thequestion was* taken by JosephSchwab, professor of naturalsciences in the College and inthe department of education.Schwab commented, “What do Iexpect to see in the four years ofthe Kennedy administration —,Kennedy. Seriously, though, Ihave my fingers crossed and hopet<T see good things.”Kennedy’s ability to control hisCongress was a topic of concernto many faculty members. Ker-win noted that “For a year and ahalf the members of the partywill follow his leadership. Rightnow he speaks for the nation. Hewill be a stronger President thanEisenhower was, but after a yearand a half, one cannot predietwhat will happen, especially withthe weak support indicated by thesmall majority he received.”Osgood had a similar view; ashe stated "Although right now liewill be able to gain the coopera¬tion of southern Democrats andliberal Republicans, within a yearho will run into considerable op¬position. He wants to get a lotdone in a hurry, and hopes tohave the momentum from theseactions carry him through in thefuture.”Speculation on t h e measuresthat would be enacted during theearly months of Kennedy’s administration was varied amongthe professors interviewed. “OneO<JOOO<HKHJ<KHC100<DeliciousFoodserved- in aCharmingAtmosphere the cookeryHYDE PARKBLVD.just offBLACKSTONE SumptuousPortionsat themostModerateof Prices of the first things that will bedone,” Jerome Kerwin noted “wii;be to introduce some kind of oldage pension program. An ovor-haul of our foreign policies is alsoprobable, since we are going mhave more distinct policies inwhich he takes the initiative.France may be a bit worried because of his stand on Algeria. Ibelieve that together with his ad¬visors, Stevenson, Bowles, a n dFulbright, Senator Kennedy willevolve a whole new outlook onforeign policy.”David Easton, too, called for »new outlook in foreign policy, asdid Robert Osgood. Easton saidthat he “would like to see Kenne¬dy follow a more Intelligent andcircumspect jmliey on developingnations, including Cuba. Themeasure of our success will notire the aggressiveness we showand the satire rattling we do. Iwould like to see a less hostilepolicy, a less punitive policy. Weshould show a more helpful andsympathetic policy to Cuba, and asimilar type of policy to other de¬veloping nations, such as those ofAfrica.”"Cease bombOsgood hopes for a differentapproach to the problem of dis¬armament. Said he, “I would liketo see an agreement with theRussians on the cessation of bombtests. I think such an agreementis possible now where it was notpreviously so. and would not behad Mr. Nixon been elected Pres¬ident.”Maynard Krueger, associate’ professor of social sciences in theCollege and himself a candidatefor Vice-president on the Socialistparty ticket in 1948, also calledfor “the imagination and leader¬ship on such problems as the un-< ^developed countries that Ei¬senhower never showed.”A good deal of differciu-e ofopinion was shown on the ques¬tion of the South’s influence onKennedy. Although most facultymembers felt that It was too earlyto tell for certain the extent ofthe influenee, both Kerwin andPritehett felt that it would In1 sig¬nificant.“Kennedy owes his election inpart to Southern support,” Prit< li¬cit said, “and he will have to relyon Johnson to mediate betweenIhe White House and the Soulh.'Ibis should have some restrain¬ing influence on his program.”Joseph Schwab, who hastaught the OMP course in theCollege many times, added thephilosopher's analysis of the elec¬tion. Said Schwab, “I couldn’thave been better pleased. Onlythree things could have beenworse. One would have been alandslide that would give thischaracter a mandate to do as hepleased. Nobody should do as theyplease, especially young Demo¬crats. Another worse thing isthat my home state of Mississip¬pi, with its eight unpledged dele¬gates, should hold the balance ofpower. This third would he aNixon victory, which comes some¬where between a landslide andgiving Mississippi the power.”-<hj<hKho<kkh3-0<hkh3<hKhK>-P-0<hKhj<hk><Khkh3<hKKhkh>-chKh: GUITARSBANJOSMANDOLINSby Jay CreenbergSatisfaction over SenatorJohn F. Kennedy’s victory inTuesday’s presidential electionwas expressed by many UCfaculty members in interviewswith the Maroon. Most professors•aid they had expected a Kennedyvictory, although they had pre¬dicted a larger majority than theDemocrat actually received.Jerome G. Kerwin, professor ofpolitical science, had a reactiontypical of those heard. Said Ker¬win, “I was very pleased by theresults. However, I wish it hadbeen more decisive; it leaves thePresident without the mandatethat he should have. I thoughtthat there would be a greatermargin, although I expected nolandslide.”Only one man, medical schoolprofessor Emmet Bay, a Nixonsupporter, thought that the vice-President would be elected. Dr.Bay stated, “I thought it wouldbe close, and I thought Nixonwould win. Kennedy had laborand other groups behind him, andthey helped to garner voles forhim.” men and their differences werenot clearly enough mar ked. Thevote was kept close by the lack ofa sharp division between the can¬didates.”The influence of Kennedy’sCatholicism on the outcome of theelections was a matter of sharpdifferences of opinion among thefaculty. Comments ranged fromEaston’s “On a quick analysisKennedy’s Catholicism helpedhim to get votes but didn’t turnanyone against him,” to Hamil¬ton’s “I don’t believe it mademuch difference.” Morton Grod¬zins, professor of political science,took a middle road, saying “Ken-Give reasons for winMany different reasons forKennedy’s slim margin of victorywere advanced. Earl Hamilton,professor of economics, thoughtthat “the influence of Eisenhowerand the President’s aura in thelast week of the campaign” hadkept the Democrat’s total down.C. Herman Pritchett, chairman ofthe political science departmentfelt that “unquestionably the re¬ligious issue held his vote downin the Middle West, although itprobably helped his total in theeast.”Still another possible explana¬tion was offered by David Easton,professor of political science, who•aid, “The close race was to beexpected. The election was be¬tween two newer generation typeBLACKSTONETORTPride of the law school,blackstone has never lost amoot trial. But there’s noth¬in)? moot about his prefer¬ences in dress. He finds thatwhen he’s comfortable, hecan trap a witness and swaya jury like Clarence Darrow.So he always wears Jockeybrand briefs while preparinghis briefs. Exclusive Jockeytailoring gives him a bonusof comfort he gets in no otherunderwear. Fine Jockeycombed cotton is more ab-Borbent, smoother fitting, too.To look your best, feel yourbest, take a tip from Tort.Always Insist on Jockeybrand briefs, $1.25. Yourcampus store has them now!SOOSCM tftCOSFOftSTED KENOSNA.WIt.fockeu© metAsiobriefs birdH#USE COLTKAKC(fuif V(ftAppearing thru Nov. 20thweek-nights $1.50fri. & sat. $2.00First Set 8 p.m.Dearborn St. ot Division THEFRET SHOP5535 DorchesterMl 3-3459Gifts for All OccasionsKOGA GIFT SHOPImported and Domestic Dry GoodsCkinawore - Jewelry - KimonosSandals - Greeting CordsLoy-AwoyMt»« Kog« 1203 E. 55 Si.N(J 4-GB5G Chicago 15. HI->Games held by IBM New student league formsrate business skillsForty-five students from nine leading universities will testtheir aptitude for executive responsibilities at the scond an¬nual business decision games sponsored by International Busi¬ness Machines corporation (IBM). Using only pencils andslide rules, the students will manage hypothetical companiesin a three-day session, November * —,0 12 at IBM’s Chicago Data cen- Xyplcal of the docisions thoyter-. ■ must make would be whether toTiie universities that will Ik* ]OWer prices in a bid for morerepresented by teams of five sales, whether to spend moregraduate students are: University money on research to make theirof Chicago. University of Illinois, product more appealing, orMichigan State, University of whether to increase their plantMichigan, Northwestern, Ohio capacity or advertising outlay.Stale, Penn State, University of . „ .. , , , . .. A mathematical model of theWisconsin, and Wichita umver- ^ . . . . " .economy in which the teams aresity. operating will be stored in anDuring the two-day contest, the ..... crft8 , .. .. . . . IBM 650 computer. This computernine five-semester teams will lie . ,. *..... „ . , , will also take information aboutgrouped into three divisions, eaeli ... . . ... . decisions that are made, deter-oiMMafmg an imaginary company „ ... ■ ,1.. ,, ., . . . . nune their effect on the economy,making a “gold-plated gizmo. All . . Jteams will begin with equal as- an“ Pr<>' *<Ie eaeh team with asets, prediction facilities, and quarterly statement showing itsshare of the marketing area. standing.Students complain Past SG head to resignher seat in government“We are petitioning to getsomething done about the foodin B-J “said one student of Vin¬cent h o u s e. The petition wasstarted by one of the graduatestudents of Burton court. Therehave been almost 200 signatureson the petition and the presidentscouncil of BJ decided to endorsethe petition.The main complaint of the stu¬dents is that the food is non nu¬tritional and does not constitutea proper diet. Last year residentsof the New womens dorms weretold by doctors in Billings thatthey were not receiving balanceddiets and one girl was given a supplementary diet beyond thedorm food.The other complaint is that thefood is tasteless. “Although thefood is really bad our mealsand the portions are much tosmall. Whenever there is any¬thing good the portions are espe¬cially meager and seconds arenot available,” said one resident.The petition asks for better tast¬ing and more nutritious food. Oneresident of BJ, who asked notto be mentioned as he workedfor RH. and C', commented on thegeneral quality of food as “aw¬ful.’' The Progressive Student league, a new organization started at Oberlin college, foundsupport at the University of Wisconsin where three students active in the national stu¬dent movement issued a paper in which they declared the aims of such an organization.The Progressive Student league is a federation of local student political parties with lib¬eral views. John Schuerman, public relations chairman for the University of Chicago Stu¬dent Government, sees this organization as the outgrowth of the general reawakening ofstudents to national issues. Thesit-in movement and the student According to Schuerman, the ever, the Progressive Studentgroups to abolish the House Com- National Student association is league would not attempt to rep-mittee on un-American activities supposed to represent all stu- resent all students and could,are, according to Schuerman, dents, and the liberal members therefore, work more effectivelymanifestations of this awareness often find action blocked by con- toward achieving its goals,and of a desire for action. servative representatives. How- According to the University ofWisconsin paper, it would dealwith such issues as; the problemsconfronting the foreign studentin an American university, thecondition of off-eampus housing,discrimination in housing, thelow level of intellectual interestMaureen Byers, former president of Student government, in the fraternities, and alumniwill announce her intention to resign her seat as college repre- control of sororities,sentative in Student government at the regularly scheduled At the University of Chicagogovernment meeting this Tuesday night, according to in- no party has become officiallyformed SG sources. associated with the movement,Miss Byers was elected chair- -— : ——:—— : r although, Schuerman reports,man of the ISL controled general *st spr,"|' lar‘"s^1 NSA’T 21 there ls a Possibility that eitherassembly in 1959, serving in that the second largest ot s Zi qtndent leacm*ramritv through the 1960 SDrine reglons- co’ more than «><* Independent Student leagueelection ISL fgain having won, 100>m member students. The in- or the Student Representativeits caucus voted to seat Jim formed sourer cited above expect party or both will affiliate.Thomason as SG president as Byers will contimie her offi- Schuerman also said that atByers’ successor. Miss Byers, cal connection with NSA; the University of California,was re-elected to government dur- As she was unavailable for com- h- . withdrew from the Nationine this session receiving the ment, it is impossible to absolute- ,n 1 . Irom tne XNat,onvoTes caft for * this report or ,o de- »«■«■* assoc,at,on. there hasany candidate. She also topped termine the causes behind the been talk of organizing a con-the slate of candidates for the expected resignation. servative organization.National Student association dele¬gation.Originally, Miss Byers refusedto aeeept any °xeeutive appoint¬ment in the government, but hasrecently rejoined the exeeutivecommittee as chairman of the Stu¬dent-Faculty relat! 'ns committee.Miss Byers is also educationalaffairs vice-president of the Illi-nois-Wisconsin region of USNSA,a post to which she was elected For PRINTING Call JAY!OFFSET A LETTERPRESS * MIMEOGRAPHINGDAILY U. OF C. PICKUPSCallHY 3-0802 JAY Letter A Printing Service1950 East 75th StreetForeign and DomesticPeriodicalsat theaiejDiciNow ServingFRENCH BREAKFASTSundays — All Day53 rd at DorchesterI Wear Contact LensesDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist1132 E. 55th St.at University Ave. HY 3-8372 STUDENT SPECIALSPIZZA (ANY COMBINATION) $1.25 to $4.25LARGE BUCKET $079of Toasted, Golden BrownLJIf'l/Ckl This Will Feed a Family of FiveWmIVIYCn Very EconomicallyAll Party Buckets Now IncludeCrisp French Fries & Creamy Cole SlawSMALLER BUCKET *229• Bucket OShrimp ..$2 45• Bucket ORibs ...,.$4.7? • Shrimp ft Ribs ....$5.69• Ribs & Chick** ...$5.89-Av f carry-out service1636 East55th StreetCallBU 88440 • Fast Homef Deliveryk • Carry-OutService1851 East87th StreetCallRE 1-9393Seatonsfe'^iulpCHICAGO'S DISTINCTIVESHOP FOR MENReflecting the selectivity andcraftsmanship characteristic of oneof New England’s finest shirt-makers—two shirts with the undis-putable authority of good taste,executed in a fine Oxford fabric ofSTRIKING EFFECTS IN CLASSIC STRIPESrBeaton’s by #hop In Blue., Greys and BrownePlain Colors,6QB North Michigan Ave. 00WHitchall 3 2410 MEMO FROMJ. EDWARD FEINWhy 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.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 Yi»rk LifeInsurance Company134 S. LaSalle CE 6-5438Nov. 11, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3"Daily Cal" editors quit "Wac'e-in" to protestgovernment takes over “Every Saturday, since lastspring, Chicago young peoplehave been picketing VVool-Students at the University of California will have an opportunity to decide who should worth,” according to Scottcontrol their student newspaper: the editorial staff or the Student government. The Berke- Arden, direct action chairmanly government has taken temporary control of the paper. The Daily Californian, following of the Chicago Youth Com-a mass resignation of editorial staff. mittee for Civil Rights (CYCCR).The controversy arose after the Californian endorsed a student candidate for position of Ho continued, “We hope we willrepresentative at large to the Executive committee of the California Student Senate. The able to continue, the^ lines incommittee (ExCom) questioned ;the paper’s right to engage in a|j cai„p„s referendum. that the referendum will probablypartisan campus politics. ExCom. meanwhile, has hired carry. It will require a 2/3 ma-Sinee ExCom is the legal pub- a professional journalist to edit jority to change the present sit-lisher of the ‘Californian,’ it took the Daily until a new staff is se- uation.steps to see that such actions onthe part of the paper do not re-oo-ur. The by-laws of the news¬paper were changed making Ex-Com responsible for all editorialappointments and for the editori¬al content of the newspaper.At this point, daily editor DanSilver announced his resignation,almost his entire staff followedhim.Silver and his staff then an¬nounced plans to publish their lected. The paper has issued a Even if the paper is removedcall for applications for staff po- from ExCom’s control, however,sitions. Silver will not return as editor,The new paper. The Independ- for it was ruled that ExCom'sen.t seems well staffed currently, cannot be forced to rescind itsEditors of daily papers at the acceptance o f Silver’s originalUniversity of San Francisco and resignation.at the University of Nevada have Controversy on this questionboth taken leaves of absence to does not seem to have abated atcome assist in setting up the California. The letters columns of Chicago until the Southern stu-denls are satisfied with Wool-worth’s national policy concern¬ing integration.”The Chicago picket lines arepart of the attempt by Northernstudents to show their support ofthe “sit-ins” in the South. TheseNorthern picketers hope thatthey will be able to institute aneconomic boycott throughout theNorth, and this help the Southernstudents in forcing Woolworth tointegrate their lunch counters.These picket line protests arecontinuing dispite a statement byDaily. the Daily have filled with studentMoral and fiscal support has comment concerning ExCom's ac- four chain stores, including Wool-come from other sources. Most tion. They seem to be evenly di- worth, that they have already in*own'^nv^ncwsnatdr^thr student newspapers seem solidly vided between those who approve tegrated 112 southern lunchpendent Californian. The first ^hind Silver in their opposition and those who disapprove. counters and are attempting toissue of this newspaper appeared ExCom s a c t i o n. Editorialstwo weeks ago highly critical of the CaliforniaA petition was immediately cir- situation have appeared in sucheulated demanding an all campus PaPers as the Harvard Crimson,referendum on the question of Michigan Daily and the Dail>newspaper autonomy. The intent Northwestern.The United States National Stu¬dent association has condemned Confer on dignityof the petition removes the paperfrom the control of the ExecutiveCommittee. A second part of thepetition would rescind ExCom’sacceptance of Silver's resignationand return him as editor of theDaily Californian.The ]>etition received over 750signatures; this is 5 per cent of•be total undergraduate enroll¬ment. and is enough to requireMODEL CAMERAWhole soleCatalogue Prices onCameras, Projectors, Recorders1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259PAUL’S HARDWARE & PAINT SUPPLYHyde Park's Largest Hardware StareSTUDENT DISCOUNT906 E. 55th Ml 3-9754 PASADENA, Calif. (UPS)—Over 100 delegates represent-ExComTaetlon'as”/ violation"of ■»* 23 colleges and universities at a human relations confer-the principle of a free press and ence ™is weekend returned to their campuses with a per¬sonal commitment to active participation for the cause ofhuman dignity.”Delegates to the Camp Hess Kramer Human Relations conferencein Pasadena voted to establish an intercollegiate newspaper to linkcampus human relations organizations and serve as their voice.Commitment will be edited by Dick Fiedler of Harvey Mudd college,co-editor of the Associate (paper ol the*Associated Colleges of Clare¬mont), with the help of correspondents appointed from every collegerepresented at the Conference.The delegates also discussed the reed for an inter-campus actiongroup, pointing out the need for unified action on such unjust localsituations as discrimination in Los Angeles restaurants, housingdifficulties and gerrymandering the minority vote to prevent fairrepresentation.Several delegates announced their intention to picket the HouseCommittee on Un-American Activities when it meets in l<os Angeles.The Conference was made possible by an annual grant from Mrs.J. Y. Baruh and the County of Los Angeles Commission on HumanRelations.newspaper autonomy.The NSA committee of ChicagoStudent government lias protestedthe California action, and backedup that protest by sending atoken $10 contribution to the In¬dependent. The Student Senate atNorthwestern bought a $20 ad¬vertisement in the Independentin order to state its opposition toExCom. The Maroon has sent a$20 contribution to California,nominally as a subscription.Curt Cans, former NSA vice-president and currently a gradu¬ate student at Berkely, reportsFREE STEREOS FOR U. of C. STUDENTSThree Magnificent Decca StereosThree Channel-Console ModelsTo Be Awarded an This fninptisGroups or Individuals Hay CompeteTO COMPETE AS A GROUP:L One group Vvill win one of these stereos. Prize will be aworded tothe group accumulating the greatest number of points derived fromsubmitting empty pocks of cigarettes manufactured by Philip Morris,Inc.2. Contest starts immediately ond closes on Fridoy, December 9th,1960.3. Only the following brands will be accepted for point values —PHILIP MORRIS REG. - PHILIP MORRIS COMMANDER - MARL¬BORO (soft or box) - PARLIAMENT (soft or box) - ALPINE.4. Any recognized organization, housing units, fraternity or girls'club on the campus of the U. of C. is eligible.5. Points are assigned to each empty pack. Point value schedule isas follows: Packs turned in on Fridoy, Nov. 18th, receive a point valueof 10 points per pack; packs turned in on Fridoy, Nov. 25th, receivea point value of 8 points per pack; packs turned in on Friday, Dec. 2nd,receive a point value of 7 points per pack; packs turned in on Friday,Dec. 9th, receive a point value of 6 points per pack.6. All packs must be turned in only on Fridoys ot The Disc, 1 367E. 57th St., no loter than 6:00 p.m.7. All packs must be submitted in sealed containers with nomc oforganization written on each pack and on outside of container.8. No packages will be accepted after 6:00 p m., Dec. 9th, 1960.9. Phil Morris, Inc., shall be sole judge and winners shall be de¬clared on total points accumulated for the full four weeks.10. Winners will be notified by Dec. 16th.Special Bonus: Double point value will be given to every pack ofthe new Philip Morris Commander.TO COMPETE AS AN INDIVIDUAL:Two of these beautiful stereos will be oworded to individual stu¬dents on a drawing bosis.H«*E'S ALL YOU DO TO ENTER:Between now ond Dec. 8th simply save oil empty pocks of onlythose bronds mentioned above. As you accumulate these, write yourname, address and telephone number on each pock ond deposit themin the huge container ot The Disc, 1367 E. 57th St. At 4 p m., Dec.8th, a drawing will be held ond two empty pocks will be drown. Ifyour pock is drown, you sholl be declared a winner.Nothing to write or pngles to compose — just the empty pock itselfis a potentiol winner.Remember, the more pocks you drop in the box the greater yourchonces of winning, You need not be present to win. AH winners willbe notified. SCHOLARLY BOOKSonHISTORY and LITERATUREBOUGHT AND SOLDHours: 2 PM to 9 PM Every Day including SundayJoseph Otiarsi, Booksollor1360 Eas! 53rd St. DO 3 4035 integrate the rest as fast asreasonably possible. Arden com¬mented, "There seems no reasonto quit when we are so obvi-ously winning.”The Civil Rights action by stu¬dents in Chicago has taken otherforms. Instead of simply sup¬porting the fight in the South,Chicago students are working tobring integration to Chicago.According to press release putout. the CYCCR, “wade-ins,”"roll-ins,” “ride ins” have be**nstaged, and there is also a possi¬bility of "sit-ins” being held herein Chicago.Arden said that this summer"wade-ins” were held at the Rain¬bow Beach at South 76th street,a "non integrated beach” in SouthShore. The “w’ade-ins” were heldthe last three Saturdays of thebeach season. "An integratedgroup of about 40 young pt-oplewalked on to the beach and wentswimming, said Arden. "A largemob of white people iiegan t«gather and the police did verylittle to disperse them. The in¬tegrated group began to leave thebench, pimple in the mob began tothrow stones at them.”La.«t Sunday, November 6. fheCYCCR altempted a “roll in” atthe Swank Roller Rink at 2345West 11th street. According to apress release, a group of whileyouths entered the skating rinkwithout any difficulty. However,shortly after a group of Negroand white youths were refusedadmittance on the grounds thatthe rink was a private club.The CYCCR has taken similaraction at riding stables in the Chi¬cago area. They seem quite con¬vinced, hv vising methods similarto those used at the roller link,that certain stables follow dis¬criminatory practices. They haverequested that state and city au¬thorities investigate and make thestables in question obey the law.In the future the CYCCR hopesto hold “sit-ins” at segregatedrestaurants in the Chicago area.For information about future ac¬tion concerning the CYCCR. in¬terested persons are advised tocontact Joseph Kline Jr., Chair¬man, TR 33451, or write to theCYCCR at Box 452 Main Post Office.HARPER LIQUOR STORE1114-16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported and domestic wines, liquorsand beer at lowest prices.FREE ■" A A ~ ,2f*lx/roV PHONE I- £X £L — ,:,l*DELIVERY I — 7«»» CHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpocioliiHtg inCAlViO’VBSEAMERICA* DISHESOpen Hail?11 A M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKF. OUT018 Eott 63rd Sr. BU 8-9018AIRLINE SEATS ARE GOING FASTFOR THANKSGIVING AND CHRISTMASFREE TRAVEL POSTER FOR BOOKING BEFORE NOV. 15atfilarco J3olo Traocl 3troiccTravel Advisers Since 1276Ala Charge lor Our ServieesTickets On All Airlines Student ToursSki Trips Budget Rent-A-CarSteamship and Freighter Tickets Hotel ReservationsOpt* Doily 10 «.m. - 6 p.m.; Abo Mon. Evm.1658 E. 55th St, BU 8-59444 • CHICA60 MAROON • N*v. 11, 1960Class notes for sa!e Apler ferJures on AfricaProfessional note takers are supplying lecture notes to stu-dents at the University of Michigan. Two student groups, by R* Greenbergoperating under the approval of the dean of the college of “Pan-Africanism is utterlyliteral arts, assign the note takers to a lecture, and sell mime- devoted to the ideal of a unitedstuteilts^in°thtr course! n°teS l° Those favoring the plan feel they Africa in federal or confederalallow the student to devote full form,” said David Apter, As-attention to the lecture by elimi- sociate Professor of politk.al sci.HAtinO tnP nACPCCltv fnr t'jl/innrstudentsEight courses are currently be¬ing serviced by University Studyservice, which charges $10 percourse for a semester subscrip¬tion. A spokesman for the groupsaid that he expects this semes¬ter's profits to run into fourdigit figures. The second group.Student lecture aides, startedoperations late last month, soonafter the original group began,while a third, Scholastic services,plans to begin in February. Thethird group plans to charge $5per subscription, and will in addi¬tion offer individual lecture notes.The services, which usuallyemploy honor students as notetakers, have encountered a gooddeal of opposition at the univer¬sity, according to an officer ofUniversity Study service. “When1 sold subscriptions at stands Inoticed that people stood backand formed a circle around thestand as if they were ashamed tostep up,” he said. “I had to talkto them and get them to comenear and then ask them casuallyif they wanted to have theirnames put down.”A debate as to the validity ofthe service has been caused atMichigan by its establishment. nating the necessity for takingnotes.Opponents feel such plans sub¬tract from a student’s education.The chance to learn to sort facts,draw inferences and reach con¬clusions is an important part of auniversity education that “pre¬digested” noles eliminate, they ence at the University of Chicagowho lectured on the history ofPan-Africanism and the signifi¬cance of two recent Pan-Africanconferences Friday evening in In¬ternational House. He was pre¬sented by the African StudentsUnion. After his brief lecture twosay. Besides, they add, seldom do movies were shown, “Nigeria —two people consider all the same New Nation,” and “Freedom forthoughts important. Africa.”Offer Cuba tripsA low-cost vacation in Cuba The Committee was establishedfor American students is be- last April by a group of distin-ing offered by the NationalStudent Council of the FairPlay for Cuba committee.Student contingents will leaveNami. Florida on December 23 K? .K'lle.n?-1L.^ ®'"ne' Le0guished writers, artists, journalists and professionals. Prominentmembers include C. Wright Mills,Miami, . uctcmuct u „ t^and will return on January 2. The Hubcrman V8" "h, Ty " a "•nrieo of the trie which Li.t. Norman Mailer and Jean PaulSartre.Students who wish to make theCuban trip should make reserva-The projected tour is part of tions immediately with the stu-the Fair Play for Cuba commit- ent Council, Fair Play for Cubatee’s program to acquaint stu- committee, Room 536. 799 Broaddents with the truth about Cuba, way, New York 3, N.Y. Pan-Africanism, or the libera¬tion of African nations fromtheir colonial status and theirunification, began in 1919 underthe auspices of W. E. B. DuBois,according to Apter. A significantadvance was made in London in1945 when the West African Sec¬retariat was established withGeorge Padmore and K w a m eNkrumah as secretaries.In describing Pan-Africanism,Apter defined nationalism as away of freeing states from local,parochial influences to speed theend of colonialism. He said that aform of nationalism with an ideol¬ogy in the tradition of early 19thcentury evangelical socialism isthe chief weapon of Pan-Afri¬canism.Turning to more recent Africanconferences, Apter said that theAfrican People’s Conferencewhich took place in Accra, Ghana,in December of 1958, has donemuch to increase the unity of col¬ored people throughout the worldand in particular has helped tospeed African nations, such as the Congo, to independence by estab¬lishing a Pan-African SecretariatApter asserted that the Secre^tariat has had tremendous sue-cess and is to blame for few ofthe present troubles in the Congo.The Secretariat is, he said, a sym¬bol of dramatic change.Some of the difficulties whichcurrently confront the Secretar¬iat, he continued, arc tribalismand animosity between the lead¬ers of the newly independent na¬tions.The Conference of IndependentStales, which took, place in Accraearlier in 1958. Apter said, under¬went the pomp and ceremonycharacteristic of all internationalgatherings, but was imbued witha sense of awakening and expect¬ancy.It is from these eonfereneesthat a new Africa is being born,he concluded.Apter is chairman of the Uni¬versity of Chicago’s Committeefor Comparative Study of newnations.price of the trip, which includestransportation from Miami andall expenses in Cuba, is $100.SALE SALE SALEStarts Friday, November 11, for one weekPublishers' remainders, art books, gift books, history,philosophy, religion98 * to »10°°Buy now for Christmas. Stock of oil titles limited.Come early for the best selection.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue D. S. Passmore, Manager fwviflt ur iwspttd & etasMl 3-3113fctartfccastrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli & michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors line: speed tuningcustom engine mttottotionsclukchgear boteelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coacbworkbofe teeter MG psychiatrist2306 e. 71st st.Chicago, Illinois, Bicycles, Ports, Accessories J! special student offer *: ACE CYCLE SHOP ;\ 1621 e. 55th st. \A AAA. A. A.r—If you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou¬blesome problem.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.BU 8-6711ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Refinishing ofShoes and Handbngse Colors matched # Toes cot set# Vamps lowered # Hot# or meremovedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHeels changed — Any style —Any colorBockstrops Removed and Springa-lotors inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber Product’sFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St. Now Leasing for Those Who QualifyChatham Park Village is a privately ownedgroup of apartment homes on a beautifultwenty-three acre site in the midst of Chicago’*s Room exclusive Chatham Park.Duplex BEAUTIFULLY LANDSCAPED — 63 vine cov-ered buildings. Unlimited parking on the ViV»‘77SV If^l lage’s private streets. Garages available.c* all electric kitchens—. iLH a JANITOR SERVICE,rrr, Fl choice of rentals• 5 room Duplex $130.00 $135.004 room Town House (2 bedrooms $122.004 room Town House (1 bodrm., w'DRt $119.003% room Garden Apartment $110.00CHATHAM PARK VILLAGE APARTMENTS 3 room Town House $ 98.00MODEL APARTMENT737 East 33r«l Place TRiangie 4-7400 by Marian Quinlan, A.I.D. Open DailyNov. 11, 1960 • CHICAGO MAR OON • 5University denies student rightsThe fifteenth section of the Student Billof Rights is concerned with the problemof University administered student disci¬pline. The provision of the Bill stipulatesthat the University of Chicago shall main¬tain “the right to fair and impartial trialwith all due process of the law in all dis¬ciplinary matters, with right of appealto the Student-faculty-administration courtin all such matters judged in part or en¬tirely by students.”Not surprisingly, Chicago jurisprud¬ence, like American law, is built in largemeasure upon the basis of precedent.The above quoted clause was passed byStudent government in 1958 and was rati¬fied by the Dean of Students shortlythereafter. It’s validity and its implica¬tions have not been seriously tested or de¬termined. We will not know exactly whatthis provision means until we have seenit in operation. Yet, certain key pointscould properly and profitably be clarifiedat this time.The key phrase, and the most difficultphrase, is “due process.” This is not anexact legal term and is as much a ynoralstricture as a legal stricture. Exactlywhat due process is also depends in partupon the circumstances in which it isbeing defined. Yet, we would at this timelike to request a working definition of"due process” from the University facul¬ty and administration.We have some clear ideas as to what“due process” is, and, in its applicationof domestic justice, Chicago has indicatedthat it does not fully share our convictionsor our definition. Last spring a few students were expelled from the University for the useof narcotics and/or marijuana. They didnot appear before the undergraduate dis¬ciplinary committee headed by Dean ofundergraduate students George Playe,but rather directly before Playe. Theywere not confronted by any witnesses,in fact Playe would not inform them ofthe source of his information. They werenot allowed any sort of trial, but wererather informed of an already determineddecal decision of removal.This case is over and done with; thereis no reason to doubt that these enforcedleaves of absence were at least justifiedby the guilt of those charged with nar¬cotic use, yet the problem of due processlingers in our minds. The problem of defi¬nition should not be conceived in termsof this case: we cite this specific instanceonly to demonstrate the need for somesound and strongly enunciated standards.One intrinsic aspect of due process, inour minds, is a right to trial. It is quitepossible that some students when in¬formed of a charge against them wouldwilling admit guilt and would just as soonavoid the personal pain and humiliationof a trial. Yet there was at least one stu¬dent in last spring’s affair who requestedan appearaance before the disciplinarycommittee and whose request was turneddown.A trial, moreover, is meaningless unlessit is a fair trial. This means that those whoare making the final judgement do notinitially presume guilt. This means thatstudents should not be summoned to a dean’s office and informed that, In hisopinion, they are guilty as charged.It would also seem to us that any de¬votion to due process should guaranteethe charged student with a right to con¬front his accusers. The annonymous in¬formant is odious and repugnant every¬where in the enlightened Western worldapparently except upon the campuses ofour institutions of higher learning. Unlessa student can confront these who placecharges against him, it is difficult for himto prove his innocence or protest againsthis conviction.* It is true that many students would bemost reluctant to speak against fellowstudents if the veil of anonymoty shouldbe ripped off, yet this neicspaper tendsto doubt the credibility of those who willnot make their private charges public.To insist upon confronting the accusedand the accuser would seriously compli¬cate the disciplinary work of the admin¬istration, but the interests of due processand even of justice would seem to de¬mand it.Moreover, there seems to be a generaltendency to demand that the defendingstudent prove his lack of guilt (if, indeed,he be allowed to prove anything.) This isthe exact opposite of the proper situation,where innocence is assumed and guiltmust be proved.Now it could be argued that the UCdisciplinary committee is not a court oflaw and is not subject to the limits andeven the limitations of the court room.We cannot accept this. It could be arguedthat the very practicle problems of run¬ ning a university make such a stringentconception of due process totally jm-practicle, but we cannot hold that a uni¬versity, supposedly a citadle of wisdom,should sacrifice justice for expediency.It could be argued that the expulsion,the greatest punishment the universitycan provide, is no punishment at all butmerely separation. This is nonsense. Expulsion is a punishment, is painful, is in¬jurious, and can carry serious implica¬tions and result in injurious ramifications.Unless the disciplinary committee fully re¬gards itself as a site of justice, it is com-miting the greatest sort of injustice tothe entire student body.Again, we find it difficult to believethat the University of Chicago, home ofone of the world's great law schools,once headed by a man who reformed alaw curriculum by introducing the con¬cept of justice into the class room, al¬most obsessed with the idea, of civilright — tee cannot believe that the Uni¬versity would reject this definition.In any case we have presented a roughoutline of what we mean by due process,we have indicated that which we woulddo were we in a position to effect dueprocess. We recognize that this would bea difficult and even a painful process, butjustice is never simple or easy yet re¬mains well worth whatever it demands.We now request the administration of thisschool to provide us and the student bodywith a working definition of what it meansby due process.the Chicago maroonf onnded — 1892SG officers avoid dutiesAlthough we do not feel that it is necessary tocomment on the IRP criticisms of Student Gov¬ernment which have been circulating recently,there is one aspect of the present organizationabout which we have misgivings. Student govern¬ment seems to be over-ambitious in sponsoringmore activities than its offices can adequatelysr.pport.We instance the participation by officers andleading members of the Government in the recentreception for Russian visitors to the campus andin the Election Day march for civil rights. Both ofthese events were sponsored by Government or itscommittees, and on both occasions the president,vice-president and treasurer of Student govern¬ment, the majority and minority leaders and thechairmen of the three student political partieswere absent.It is clearly unnecessary and impossible for allmembers of Government to attend each and everyactivity sponsored by SG, but there would seemto us to be a certain responsibility incumbent uponthe leaders of SG to attend activities of such im¬portance.At the reception the Russians expressed greatinterest in discovering the role and activities ofstudent self - governmnet in the United States. These officers of Student Government should havebeen present to provide the answers.In addition it seems to us important that re¬sponsible student leaders should take the fullestadvantages of such opportunities to learn at firsthand of the ideas and motivations of youngSoviet Citizens.Here such a chance has been missed.As far as the election day march is concerned,we realize that these people have many other com¬mitments but believe that their oft-proclaimed al¬legiance to the principles of civil rights should oc¬casionally express itself in something more thanthe passage of resolutions.The Maroon is very glad that Student Govern¬ment is sponsoring activities of this kind. We be¬lieve that they provide valuable opportunities forstudents to extend their interests beyond the nar¬row college community and to develop an activeinvolvement in their broader community. We hopehowever that the leaders of SG will realize thattheir leadership does not end with mere sponsor¬ship, but must go on into positive participation.Power implies responsibility. We trust that thisresponsibility will be taken more seriously infuture. Strict library rulesfine students unjustlyAfter years of conscienciousthought on the subject we havegrown accustomed to the fact ofdeath and taxes. We are recon¬ciled and resolved, if not de¬lighted. However, since arrivingon this campus we have added athird member to this inescapablepair: library fines seem to bewith us forever.There is not much point in ob¬jecting to death, and actuallytaxes are probably worth whatthey cost. In a like manner, wecannot and do not object to theprinciple of library fines. Buthere we don’t think that they areworth what they cost.We would hazard a guess thatthe basic purpose of such finesarc not punitive but productive.The application of a money levyto an overdue book is expected toresult in the more rapid return ofthat book, thus facilitating theoperation of the library and sat¬isfying the due suptible and ex¬pectations of its clientel.There is no doubt that suchfines do result in a more rapid return of books, but would theinflow of tomes be lessened orslowed by a decrease in the rateof monetary acrument. Suscinct-ly, we think that Harper librarycharges too much for overduebooks; it is our opinion that aless hcafty fine schedule wouldbring in the books just as quick¬ly at considerably less to the stu¬dent.Wc also think that the currentfines are an excessive punish¬ment for the offending student.Misplacing a single book for acouple of weeks amounts in anaccumulated assessment of about$2.50. A few of these fines, un¬thinkingly accumulated by a stu¬dent during the year may helpthe library system’s hook buyingprogram significantly, but nogood to any rational student bud¬get.We would ask the library to in¬stitute a more reasonable sched¬ule, one which will still forcepeople to return books promptly,but one which more suitably fitsthe crime of late return.Students demand civil rightsAt our safe point of Chicago,Illinois between 150 and 170 stu¬dents participated in an electionday civil rights demonstration.These students were able to meetin Roosevelt university and thenmarch peacefully, if somewhatnoisily, through Chicago’s loop toDemocratic headquarters andthen up Michigan avenue to theRepublican headquarters. A fewhundred miles away students atLane college, Jackson, Tennessee,were also attempting to exercisetheir right of demonstration andprotestUnfortunately these studentsmet with more difficulties thandid the northern students. Some150-170 of the students werearrested as they paraded to theMadison county courthouse.These students were acting underthe same principles and with thesame wishes as were the UC stu¬dents who marched on electionday. Both groups of students,and hundreds of other groupsmarched under the suggestion ofthe Student Non-violent coordi¬nating conference (SNCC) to ex¬press the demand that the vic¬ torious candidate make good onhis election promises for a strongoperative civil rights program.The demonstrations were alsoprotesting the inability of Ne¬groes to vote in the south. Themost flagrant example of thishad been the economic boycottsin Fayette and Haywood countiesin Tennessee. These studentsfrom Tennessee had been carry¬ing signs reading ‘‘We want tosee Negroes free to vote in Hay¬wood and Fayette counties.” Ne¬groes in these counties had notbeen permitted to register andthose who managed to registerwere subjected to severe econom¬ic pressures.Although the Lane college stu¬dents had publicized the demon¬stration in advance, they werenot told they would be doing any¬thing illegal until they were ar¬rested for violating the city ordi¬nance requiring a permit to stagea parade. The other charges madeincluded disorderly conduct andthreatening breach of peace.As these students were demon¬strating under the principles ofSNCC and the non-violent sit-insit is more than highly improb-6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 11, 1960 able that they were either dis¬orderly or threatening the peace.These charges, coupled with thefact that they were not informedthat they would need a paradepermit for something that washardly a parade, indicate that thestudents were arrested for someother reason than was charged.It is possible that this reason wassimply that Negro students weredemonstrating for the right ofNegroes and for all Americancitizens.We believe that these studentshave the right to protest andwere within their rights on theday they marched. It is almostironic that these students weredenied one of their rights whiledemonstrating for the right tovote. We too, demonstrated ourrights, perhaps without the risks,by marching in Chicago.The students who marched allover America showed that theywill not be stopped and they willbe heard in their demands forcivil rights. These studentsshowed again that they will facebodily harm and arrest to wincivil rights. Editor-in-chiefNeal JohnstonBusiness manager Advertising managerWilliam G. Bauer Phil GasteyerManaging editorKen PierceEditor emeritus Lance HaddixAssistant managing editor Avima RuderEditorial secretary Caryle GeierNews editor Jay GreenbergNotional news editor ..Gene VinogrodoffCulture editor .John DietmannSecretory to the culture editor Dotty SharplessSports editor Chuck BernsteinCopy editor ..John JuskeviceResearch editor Carole QuinnCalendar editor Donna BergPhotography coordinator Al BergerCirculation manager Nate SwiftBusiness office manager Joan HelmkinClassifieds manager Maurice ZeitlinSubscription manager Phil HydeEditorial staff: Bert Cohler, Debby Dinitz, Roger Downey, Dave Kahn, ArtMacEwan, Paye Wells.Photography staff: Danny Lyon, John Osgood, Nate Swift.Sports staff: Mike Canes, Mike Eisenberg, Judy Shapiro.Editorialthe press is violatedFreedom ofFor several weks we havebeen watching certain eventsoccuring on our Western sea¬board with mixed feelings ofpride and dismay. In its wisdomthe Executive committee of theAssociate Student of the Univer¬sity ot California has seen fit toassume editorial control of thatschool’s student newspaper: TheDaily California, self-styled Mon¬arch of the college dailies. Up tonow', ExCom has been successfulin this attempt. In their evengreater wisdom, the former edi¬tors of the Daily have seen fit tofound a new student daily, theIndependent Californian. Theserather gallant editors seem tohave done even better with theirefforts than has ExCom, for thenew Independent Californian hasalready won the united and undi¬vided support of student news-papers throughout the country.The sin which the Daily com¬mitted was endorsing a candidatefor a student government office.This w'as the first such endorse¬ment in the paper’s history, andto complicate the felony, thepaper endorsed the losing candidate for the liberal minority par¬ty. Well now, it just so happensthat legally the paper is publishedby the ExCom, and this augustbody proceeded to pass by-lawswhich made ExCom responsiblefor the editorial content of thepaper. The editor of the Dailyat this point promptly and properlv resigned.We regard this as one of the most significant violations of theprinciple of freedom of the pressto have oecured in the collegiatefield in many years. The DailyCalifornian, among its peers, hasacquired a reputation for journal¬istic excellence. It is ironic thatshortly after ExCom assumedcontrol of the publication theDaily published a story revealingthat it had just been awarded anall-American rating in the annualAssociated Collegiate Press com¬petition. The paper has eschewednarrow parochialism, and has en¬deavored to bring an intelligentinquisitiveness to bear upon thesignificant concerns of its reader-ship.First, we wish to uphold anynewspaper’s right to endorse can¬didates. A newspaper is not arepresentative institution but,hopefully, an informed organ ofcommunication. A newspapershould have ideas on all sortsof questions, including such prob¬lems as who should control stu¬dent government; the absence ofideas is little more than sterilitywhich is the worst journalisticsin.One of the historic reasons ex¬plaining the truly remarkablefreedom enjoyed by the press isthat the press has played such agreat role in the development ofopen public debate on public questions. The press must be free tocriticize and comment upon thegovernment, or else the govern¬ment cannot properly grow and develop and the public needs willnot be met.This asertion must also coverthe collegiate world. A studentpress must be free to criticize andcommend its student government,it must be able to point out waysto correct seemingly bad situa¬tions, and when this involves theelection of certain candidates, thepress must be able to endorsethose candidates.Take this away and the studentpress might as well be mindless.This is the great danger of apaper being controlled by a gov-renment. Those who argue thatExCom’s action was proper be¬cause ExCom legally owned thepaper are ignoring the greaterissue: ExCom had no legal rightto such ownership. Moreover, ifExCom was indeed de jure own¬er, the Daily was de facto an in¬dependent newspaper.We sincerely hope it will beindependent again in the nearfuture.Since ExCom took control. TheDaily Californian has been editedby a professional journalist hiredand paid by ExCom. Frankly, thepaper has been quite good underits new leadership. This surprisesus, for we would imagine thatany good editor, by definition,would have too much respect forthe principles of press freedomand autonomy to ever be partylo such an abject and inexcusableviolation of those principles.LettersCalls Maroon ‘Communist’Sir:Hooray for Hartley Hoskinsand B. Riley! My sentiments,precisely! It is heartening todiscover some clear-thinking indi¬viduals (among the many fuzzy-minded liberals) who actually un¬derstand what is going on. It’s ab¬solutely exhilarating to hearsomeone else call your red rag“trash’’ and to realize that I amnot alone in taking decided pleasure in relegating it to the nearestwastbasket after I’ve finishedDear Sir:The story, in the last issueof the Maroon, about the fet¬ing of some Korean studentswho assisted in restoring fairelections to that country was inharsh contrast to the absence ofany article on restoring fair elec¬tions in Chicago. With that neu¬rotic pre-occupation with thedistant which characterizes theleft-liberal mind, you have di¬rected attention to events at acomparatively far remove fromthe interests of students in Chi¬cago this while neglecting yourcharge to indicate corruptionhere.Why should fair elections inKorea he more worthy of note (loyour readers) than fair elections reading the (ugh!) contents eachFriday morn.Your views and “news” are sodistorted as to appear laughableto anyone who has even primerknowledge of Communist tacticsand brainwashing techniques.You are favorably as strong anally as the conspiracy will findin this nation. Abolish the HouseUn-American Activities Commit¬tee, you say! I’ll take HU AC anyday over NKVD! I am writing toBarrett O’Hara, but not to re¬quest HUAC’s demise, for withIn Chicago? The former could begained by insurrection only, thelatter can be gained by expendinga few hours of work; the formeris little amenable to action by stu¬dents here, the latter well withinthe scope of our efforts.Your readers are more interest¬ed in information on the situationin which they are embroiled andits rectification, than in readingabout the Roman Church’s standon birth control, the squabbles ofan editorial board in California,etc. In brief, your sense of rele¬vancy needs mending.This would assume, however,that you are interested in signifi¬cantly improving the state of af¬fairs.Tyler Haynes the abolishing of this Committee,one of the last strongholdsagainst complete subversion,comes the demise of my freedom(and the freedom of everyoneelse). Who does this Kermit Ebythink he is? Does he plan to beone of the caretakers-elite whenthe purge occurs? Does he erro¬neously think that he’ll avoid be¬ing flushed away with the rest ofus?It will be interesting to see thereaction of some of the ardentsupporters of socialism and col¬lectivism when the system they'vebeen advocating for so manyyears, and have helped to bringto fruition, shows itself for themonster that it is. It will be evenmore interesting to see how thesesame advocates enjoy the newjobs that the government mayfind for them (for example, for¬mer social sciences professorsworking as file-clerks). With dou¬ble-think this is feasible.We patriots (abominableword!), of whom there are anumber still around, should bandtogether and see that our rightsare protected before the “free¬dom” groups (ACLU, Committeefor Abolishing HU AC, UN-spon¬sored alphabetical sequence organizatiOns, “peace” movements,etc., etc.) legislate us right out ofthe running.Congratulations for helping tomake this a Soviet America!Marilyn TiedemannBlasts Maroon coverage On Campos WithMax Stallman{Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf \ “The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.)A MODEST PROPOSALA movement is afoot—a shocking, startling movement—tosolve the problem of overcrowded colleges by the simple expe¬dient of refusing admission to women at coeducational schools!It is argued by proponents of this plan that in today’s worlda college education is absolutely essential for a man, while fora woman it is merely a pleasant interlude between adolescenceand housewifery. There is simply not room enough for both menand women in our overburdened colleges; tlierefore, in all fair¬ness, women who have far less need of a degree than men, mustyield their places.Well sir, when I heard this drastic profiosal, I was so shockedthat I sat right down ami lit a Marllx>ro. I always sit right downand light a Marlboro when I am shocked. I also always sit rightdown and light a Marlboro when I am not shocked. There isno time, no condition, no mood, no estate when it isn’t a sourceof soul-deep gratification to settle back and have a full-flavoredsmoke—Marllxjro, the filtered cigarette with the unfiltered taste— Marlboro, the jewel of cigarettes—Marlboro, the pinnacle ofthe tobacconist’s art—Marlboro, my comfort, haven, and snugharbor.Well sir, I sat smoking my Marlboro and thinking over theshocking proposal to keep women out of coed schools, and hopingfervently that another solution can lie found. If the calamitousday ever comes when women are banned from coed colleges, Iwill gnash my teeth and rend my garments and take to my bedwithout supper. lake any other Marlboro man, I love women.I love the sight and sound of them, the cut of their jibs, theirbeauty and grace, their dinning little spitcurls, their sleekdimples, their middy blouses, their aura and effluvium. More¬over, I freely admit that when it comes to brainpower, they cangive the average man cards and spades and big casino too. Itwould be a shame, a disgrace and a catastrophe to keep thesebeautiful, intelligent creatures out of college.However, it is always wi.se in time of fair weather to preparefor foul. What if the advocates of keeping women out of collegebegin to gather strength? We who abhor this fiendish plan mustbe reatly with a substitute ... and it just so happens I haveone—and a mighty ingenious little plan it is, if I say so myself.Granted that classroom seats are in short supply, and grantedthat men need degrees more than women, it is still not necessaryto bar women from college. I^et them go to college but—here iathe beauty part of my plan— don't let them go to class!This solution, it seems to me, answers every requirement. Itreleases hundreds of thousands of classroom seats to needy males.At the same time, it does not deprive women of the rich andvaried benefits of campus life. They can join sororities, shoot poolat the Union, build bonfires for Homecoming games, pour at theDean's tea, plait daisies in their hair, organize drag races, sculptin i<?e, hook rugs, walk their cheetahs, play Monopoly, find love— in short, they can do anything except go to class.Tell the truth, girls: Is that bad? $ tM0* * *Classroom space is short, but smoking pleasure is in abun¬dant supply. Try Marlboros—or Marlboro’s unfiltered sistercigarette—mild, flavorful Philip Morris, now available inregular size or the sensational new king-size Commander.Have a Commander—welcome aboardlAccuses paper of blunderingDear Editor:It is extremely rare to find aperson who attempts to approachissues of seeming importance inan intellectual lanner and failsto profundly. However, we seemto have found one in the editorof the Maroon. Your partison pollo# the students for Kennedy (ap¬pearing in last weeks “sheet”) isa superb example of your blunder¬ing techniques. Your sample in¬cluded about 90% of people whoare too young to vote; if you hadtaken a more random sample,which included more students whoare eligible, meaning businessstudents, law f’ dents and grad¬uate students in general, I think that you may have come up witha different and, a more accuratepicture of the favor of eithercandidate.So much for politics. My actualreason for writing is to correctyou in your editorial about theplaying of the Laura SpellmanRockefeller carillon two Sundaysago. They were not played fouradditional hours on Sunday eve¬ning, (which, by the way, was Re¬formation Sunday). Our bellswhich rank among the finest col¬lections of carillons in the world,were given to this University byits founder who hoped, in thegiving, to continue a long standmg tradition of religion on this campus, a tradition which thehonored editor evidently does notconsider worthwhile (evidencedby his awakening to the soundsof the bells on Sunday mornings).I for one, would prefer to followsuch traditions as outstanding re¬ligious spirit and academic pres¬tige rather than support of “con¬temporary “beat” attitudes of ni¬hilism and warped views on “civilrights.”Mr. Robbins and I are pleasedto know that you hear the caril¬lon. Perhaps if he plays enough,he’ll not only get you out of bed,but drive your mental conditionon certain issues into alignment.James Smith THE SWEDEHBORG PHILOSOPHICAL CEHTRE5710 Ooodliiwfl Avenueinvites you to hear the Rev. John C. Kingmember of the faculty of the New-Church Theologicof SchoolCambridge, MassachusettsStiHifay, November 13, nt 2:30 p.m.“WHO BELOHGS TO THE LORD’S CHURCH?”Whet St the Church? What is its form and function? Will there beone great Church in the future? Can the Church be theologicallydefined? This lecture considers these questions in light of Swedenborg'secumenical concept of The Church.A fret* lerlurr iipre ie (hr public-There will be opportunity to meet the speaker end oskquestions, following the lectureMAROON • 7ipLettersPhi Gams protest errorsEditor's note: The reference toPhi Gamma Delta were quota¬tion summaries of statement’smade at the last Inter-Fraternitymeeting. We are glad to correctany misunderstandings thesequotations arroused, but must in¬sist that the quotations them¬selves were correct and accura¬te.Dear Editor:Last week's Maroon containedsome statements regarding PhiGamma Delta which I would liketo correct. This was in connectionwith the fining of Phi SigmaDelta.Four years ago, Phi GammaDelta was fined $200.00 for a vio¬ lation of the spirit of rush. Aftera number of weeks of discussionof the matter, the issue was re¬solved in the following manner.We paid $40.00 to the IFC. $150.00was put into escrow by PhiGamma Delta, the University be¬ing the third party. If, during thecoming year, there were accusa¬tions supported by evidence con¬cerning any violations of theRushing code, this $150.00 wasto be turned over to the IFC. Ifthere were no such incidents dur¬ing the coming year, the moneywas to be returned to Phi GammaDelta. There being no violations,the $150.00 was returned.Also, the statement attributedto a representative of Phi Gamma Delta was incorrect. I made somecomments relating to the distinc¬tions between violations of factand violations of spirit. The state¬ments which were attributed tome concerning means for assur¬ing payment of this fine and,also, the manner in which PhiGamma Delta was fined a fewyears ago, were not made by me.Lowell MeyerPresidentPhi Gamma Delta Job opportunitiesThe US Post Office anticipates a need for some 20,000 additionalemployees to supplement its permanent staff in the handling ©fChristmas mail.Applications are now being accepted for both men and womenfor employment at the main Post Office or in branch postal stations.Wage rates for all temporary carrier and clerical positions are$1.96 per hour with a 10 percent bonus for work performed between6 pm and 6 am. The minimum age for carrier positions (men only)is 17; for all other positions, 18.Students who are interested in making application may securethe necessary application form at the Office of Vocational Guidanceand Placement, Room 200, Reynolds club.Jaywalking is easier WUCB program guideWUCB broadcasts at 640 kilocycles AM. When its own productions are not being broad¬cast, WUCB retransmits Chicago's fine arts station, WFMT, 98.7 megacycles FM.To the editor,A thought thrust itself uponme today. It is easier to crossmid-block than at the corner. Thepractical responsibility for safecrossing rests principally with theerosser, not with the driver.Observation of street crossingtechnique has led me to believethe fewer factors Involved in mid¬block crossing simplify the go— no go decision problem. At thecorner, four lanes of traffic, othercrossers, driver who don’t signalturns, and bicycles all interacted-ly confuse matters. At mid-blockby contrast are few and easilygauged factors. Mid-block cross¬ing is more sensible and frequent¬ly convenient.Beit BarkowJimmy’sand the New University RoomRKSMVID IXCLUSIVILY FOR UNIVKRS1TY CLIENTILEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.SIR WALTER RALEIGHProtective Pouch Keeps TobaccoFRESHER!No tpills*h«n you -fill—Jeof dip ini8 • Coonor or LitorYour Fivorifo"fob#eeo!Till* protective aluminum foil pouch keepsfamous, mild Sir Walter Raleigh 44% fresherthan old-fashioned tin cans. The sturdypouch is triple laminated. Carries flat. SirWalter Raleigh is choice Kentucky burl£y -extra aged! TYy it.*SMELLS GRAND — PACKS RIGHTISMOKES SWEET —CAN’T BITE Ift wuMuwoti TftftMeoo otmroMKm m ***** or HgftW wmiw%CHIC A GO MAROON • Nov. 11, 1960 Friday, November 117:30 am The Morning Show.Every weekday morningfrom 7:30 to 9:00 am.7:00 pm Rimsky - Korsakoff —Capriccio Espagnole.Respighi — Suite No. 2 ofAncient Airs and Dancesfor the Lute.Bartok — Quartet No. 5for Strings.*:00 Scheidt — Kyrie and Glo¬ria for Choir and Organfrom “Tabulatura Nova”(1624).Brahms — Concerto in Dfor Violin, op. 77.*:00 Dvorak — Requiem Mass,op. 89.10:90 Rieger—Symphony No. 3,op. 42.11:00 Tchaikovsky — SymphonyNo. 6 in B op. 74, “Pathe-tique.”Sunday, November 137:00 Mozart—Symphony No. 28in C, K. 200.Beethoven — Quartet No.14 in C Sharp for Strings.8:00 This Week at the U.N. —recorded at U.N. Head-uarters.8:10 Commentary — RichardMizrack.8:30 Hindemith — SymphonicMetamorphoseson Themes of Weber.9:00 Oscar Wilde — The Impor¬ tance of Being Earnestwith John Gielgud, Pam¬ela Brown, Roland Culver,and Edith Evans.11:00 Saint-Saens—Concerto No.3 B for Violin, op. 61.Bizet — Suites Nos. 1 and2 from the incidental mu¬sic for Daudet’s play, ”L’-Arlesienne.”Monday, November 147:00 Bach — Concerto No. 5 inF for Clavier and Strings.Brahms — Trio in E flatfor Violin, Horn and Pi¬ano, op. 40.Strauss—Three Songs forSoprano.Strauss — Serenade In Eflat, op. 7.8:00 Marty’s Night Out — The¬atre and cinema, reviewedby Marty Rabinowitz.8:15 Commentary — WilliamKelley.8:30 Wagner—Preludes to actsI and III of “Lohengrin.”Sibelius — Karelia Suite.Schubert — Symphony No.8 in B, “Unfinished.”Beethoven — Sonata No.11 in B flat for Piano,op. 22.Mozart — Symphony No.35 in D, K. 385, “Haffner."Stravinsky — The Rite ofSpring.11:00 Somethin’ Else — modernjazz, with Mike Edelstein.THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree 11,C, DeliveryTerry ’s1518 E. 63rd Tuesday, November 157:00 Prokofieff — SymphonyNo. 5 in B flat, op. 100.Ravel — Sonata for Violinand Piano.8:00 Jazz for the Layman, withJohn Brink.0:00 Mozart — Serenade No. 7in D, K. 250, “Haffner.”Haydn — Adagio for Celloand Piano (arranged byCasals).10:10 Wolf — Italian Serenade,for String Quartet.Sibelius — Symphony No1 in E, op. 39.Vivaldi — Concerto f c rViola d’Amore.11:00 Fat City — folk music, liveand recorded, with NormLinke.Wednesday, November 167:00 The Musical Coine«ly thisweek Pajama Game.8:00 SG Report.8:15 Commentary — WalterMiale.8:30 Schonberg — Moses undAron. A recording of thecompleted portion of theopera.11:00 We Come for to Sing —folk music, with MikeWolfson and John Kim.Thursday, November 177M>0 Arriaga — Symphony forLarge Orchestra in D.de Falla — Suite Popu¬late Espagnole, for Celloand Piano.Sarasate — Fantasy fromBizet’s “Carmen.”8:00 Music of the World, withGeorge F. Hawk.8:30 Mendelssohn — ConcertoNo. 1 in g for Piano, op.25.Haydn — Concerto No. 1in C for Violin.Bach — Brandenburg Concerto No. 6 in B flat.0:30 A Concert.lt.00 Jazz till Midnight — withMike Goran and TonyQuagliano.• ••••••••••» • •the traditional lookin broadcloth sport shirtsThe fabric, the fashion, the feeling,.. all lend the look of classic au¬thenticity to these favored sportshirts. Distinctively printed onbroadcloth in handsome, mutedcolorings . , , styled with button-down collar and back pleat.Tailored in exact sleeve length.$5.00Cvm Joude collectionby-ARROW*• 11* # JL-t J « f + ♦ + « • • • •in pouring roinStudents lead Kennedy marchby Laura GodofskyA last-minute error in or-dering a bus and rainyweather did not deter severalhundred UC students fromparticipating in last Fridaynight’s torchlight parade andrally for John Kennedy."We feel students willing tomarch downtown for Kennedy arewilling to march to the IC,” saidJoan Fromm, co-chairman of UC’sStudents for Kennedy.UC students led 500,000 enthusi¬astic marchers past 1,000,000 spec¬tators 2*4 miles from Jackson andMichigan, down Madison street,1o Chicago Stadium. They joined27.000 hysterical, poster - wavingspectators inside the stadium,where Kennedy lashed outagainst his Republican opposition.At 5:20 pm, potential marcherslearned that buses scheduled toleave the New Dorms at 5:30would not be leaving at all. Anerror had been made in orderingthem with the Cook County Demo¬cratic commission.Consequently, UC Students forKennedy reached the parade byIC. As one student left the train,he told the conductor, "You mustbe a Republican; otherwise youwouldn’t have charged us for thetrip." The conductor admitted tobeing a Republican.UC marchers converged at theArt Institute to pick up postersand buttons for Kennedy andother Democratic candidates.Most signs said, "America needsKennedy,” "Chicago welcomesKennedy,” or "Leadership in the60’s.” One sign read, "I’ve got allmy buttons — I’m for Kennedy.”UC students followed a bandat the head of the parade. Theytried to follow a banner held bytwo boys saying, "University ofChicago Students for Kennedy.”Occasionally UC studentslagged into the ranks of Univer¬sity of Illinois or Rosary collegestudents, who were behind them.UC students did not hesitate tojoin other students in adaptingfootball cheers to the election,such as "Go Kennedy — beatNixon!”Some students sang "Kennedyis our leader; he shall not bemoved.” Chants alternated be¬ tween "We want Jack,” and "Wewant Kennedy.” Crowds alongMadison street, from one to tenpersons deep, representing Chi¬cago’s wards, took up the chants.Often members of the crowdjoined students in the parade. Si¬multaneously, members of theparade who were trying to skirtslow marchers by running alongthe sidewalks joined the crowdsof spectators.fled torches and flares lit theway for marchers. Huge search¬lights were placed at intervals ofthe parade’s path and aroundChicago Stadium.Some spectators rang cowbells.Others directed comments to¬ward UC students. "4000 beat-nicks,” yelled one man. "Not aone of you Is old enough to vote.”shouted a second. "We wantJack” cries were answered with"You’ll get him.”One boy rushed franticallyalong with the paraders, writingin a small notebook. Asked whathe was doing, he explained thathe was taking notes for sociolog¬ical study. When asked what hewas trying to show, he replied,"I don’t know yet, but after I getenough notes, I’ll find out.” The UC standard bearersmarched a quarter block beyondChicago Stadium, but quickly re¬covered to lead the group into thestadium. Every seat in the sta¬dium was filled by 8 pm.During candidate for State’s At¬torney Daniel Ward’s speech, UCstudents led yells followingWard’s statement that in 1942, "anew era was bom at the Univer¬sity of Chicago.” Ward was re¬ferring to the Manhattan project.On the platform were seatedmany union and government offi¬cials and candidates, all of whomwere briefly introduced, andmany of whom spoke, promisingvictory for themselves, Kennedy,and the Democrats. Huge photo¬graphs of Chicago’s Mayor Rich¬ard J. Daley and Senator LyndonJohnson flanked a photograph ofKennedy above the platform.Among the speakers were Illi¬nois Congressman Phillip Daw¬son, candidate for LieutenantGovernor Samuel Shapiro, andcandidate for Governor Otto Ker-ner, who promised to end his cam¬paign bringing to Illinois "therecord of the governor that hedoesn’t want to talk about.” Sena-tor Paul Douglas, a former UC professor, praised Kennedy’s warrecord, waving his arms congeni¬ally. Later, Kennedy praisedDouglas’ reeord.The audience gave everyonesmall ovations. It yelled "Wewant Jack” between speeches. At8:28 it joined in "For He’s aJolly Good Fellow,” and at 8:30gave forth a tremendous ovationfor Kennedy, ignoring a requestmade by a Democratic spokesmanto restrain its outbursts so Ken¬nedy could finish h i s entirespeech within the television com¬mitment time.Observers felt Kenridy’s speechwas a fine example of "crowds-manship.” Kennedy evoked fre¬quent boos from Republicans andcheers for Democrats and him¬self.He scored Nixon for not want¬ing a 5th debate. He told thecrowd that it wasn’t electing acommittee, but only Nixon(boos). Thomas Dewey, HenryCabot Lodge, Nelson Rockefeller,and Dwight D. Eisenhower allwere booed. Kennedy told how much he hadlearned from seeing his wonder¬ful country, and how proud he isto be an American. He mentionedlandmarks he had visited: ValleyForge, the Alamo, and Spring-field, Illinois.To supplement the draft, Ken¬nedy urged the creation of aYoung Americans peace force,which could aid freedom by build¬ing up undeveloped lands. Olderpeople, such as retiring teachersand engineers, could fill out thisforce.Kennedy asked for a realisticattitude in America. He said therecan be no satisfaction "whilethere are people hungry or thereis food wasted.”In addition to repeating hisusual stands on aid to the aged,spending, housing, civil rights,and criticism of the Eisenhowerregime, Kennedy cited a new wayfor the US to regain lost prestige:being first to discover the key toconverting salt water to drinkingwater,DR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometristtit HwNew Hyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644Ey« Examinations Contact LensesNowest styling in framesStudent Discount HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwo specialize InRownd-O-Beef and Waffle*Open tram Down te Dawn 1342east 53 st.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236PLAY CHESSat themecoiciSaturday & Sunday AfternoonsWet-knight Evenings53rd at llorchesterJoseph H. Aaron, ’27Tluk ConnecticutMutual Life InsuranceCompany of HartfordSince 1846, over 100 years, bossafeguarded your family.135 S. LaSalle St.Suite 825 KA 6-1080Steamship $375 upRound Trip frequent soilingsThrift Round Trip hy AIRSHANNON LONDON PARIS$298.00 $313.00 $331.60(Rates to other destinations on requestCRIMSON SERIES ofSTUDENT TOURSfor folders and detailsSee your local travel agent or write usUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mas*. Old SpiceSmooth Slmve;stavs/ • '-vM.'moistandYour razor rides easy all the way. Softensthe mo§t stubborn beard instantly for a faster,closer shave, soothes and lubricates your skin.Extra-rich, extra-thick, push-button quick.Regular or Mentholated, only 1.00' SMOOTHSHAVEH U U T O N Take meto yourEsterbrookdealer!Attention earthlings! The word is getting around!Esterbrook Fountain Pens are out of this world!With 32 custom-fitted pen points there’s an Ester¬brook to fit any writing personality—star-struck orearth-bound.The Esterbrook Classic is only $2.95 and greatfor class notes. It starts to write as soon as you do... with that amazing new miracle discovery—ink!Feels just right in the hand, too—not fat, not thin,looks good, too! Colors? There’s a veritable rain¬bow to choose from. Pick your favorite of six col¬ors. Why not today? No space ship needed. Justaero in on your Esterbrook dealer..Stite/ittook Shu•T.lf. The Esterbrook Pen Co. THE CLASSICFOUNTAIN PEN>2.95Other EsterbrooXpen. from |1.W5:HE‘S A POINT CHOICE. OF 32 —ONE IS) cut, IUW-M i i E.U, runNov. 11, 1960 • CHICAGO M A R O O N • 9Meals plan delayed Medical tout held hereHouse councils in the University Dormitory system havetaken little action concerning plans for served meals in thedorms. They have delayed action on this matter long pastthe start of*the quarter; when normal difficulties in improv¬ing efficiency of the serving lines would have made discussionof served meals seem premature. ~rA decision to inaugurate such man had made no mention of thea plan must come from a positive council’s option in the pamphlet.The custom of served mealswas discontinued at the Universi-- ty during World War II. TothEast house has already strongly Heinrich Schultz, Resident Headvetoed this in an «f - ~ -- — ^ *—council last week;dormitory council decision, whichis based on the consensus ofopinion in the individual houses.man.* 1 * I lv. 1111 1\ . 11 OC UUllx-j lvColUv.llv l iv.action ot the 0f Coulter House, and Philosophy— J Pierce and professor Charner Perry remem-Burton-Judson councils will make ^ the cust0m here, said New-decisions pending a talk withJames Newman, assistant dean ofstudents, at their meeting sometime next week.This plan was first presentedm a pamphlet sent to enteringstudents. “The University HouseSystem,” in which Newman said:“This year we will revive thepleasant custom of served dinners. For the present, dinner willbe served on Sundays and on oneweek night., and we look forwardto this addition to our life incommon."Dinner is always somewhatmore formal, incidentally, thanbreakfast or lunch; women areexpected to wear skirts, and men•re expected to wear coats andties at that meal. This dress isrequired when dinner is a servedmeal.” It * was noted that New Fifty UC doctors and scien¬tists will show 250 Chicagoarea high school students,from over 75 different highschools both clinical and researchaspects of modern medicine at thesecond annual Medical Careerconference which will be held atUC on November 12th.The Medical Career conferenceis designed to show these highschool students actual glimpsesof the medical profession, said Dr.Lowell T. Coggeshall, vice presi¬dent for medical affairs of UC. education in the physical sciencesin this missile age, we believe it isessential that youth be given anequal opportunity to evaluate ca¬reers in biological sciences,” saidCoggeshall.According to Coggeshall theconference will open at 9:30 amwith a welcome by Joseph J. Cut-haml, dean of students in the di¬vision of biological sciences.“Then,” Coggeshall stated, "thevisitors will view science andmedical demonstration, followedby an informal luncheon in Hutch-‘With all of the emphasis on inson Commons.” Coggeshall stated that at 1:3oin Mandel hall he will address thestudents on the topic of medicineon the national scene.“At that time,” Coggeshall said“Alan Simpson, dean of the College, will discuss undergraduateeducation.”“Also,” Coggeshall said, “DrWilliam R. Bradley of UC willdiscuss undergraduate education."Coggeshall said that In the finalsession at 2:30 pm in Room P 117at Billings hospital, the studentswill witness clinical pathologicalconferences establishing a diagnosis of a lung case.Dorm council censures residentsby Rickard MandelA series of events surround¬ing the East House council’scensuring of two students hasthrown many of the residentsof the dormitory into ani¬mated, and sometimes bitter,re evaluations of the extent of thepower of their council and ofsome of the problems concerningdorm life.On Wednesday, November 2 theEast House council at its weeklymeeting passed a motion sevento two to censure first-year stu¬dent Stephen Magidson and trans¬fer-student Harold Jacobs for “de¬ struction of house property,(and) lack of consideration formembers of the house.”The motion, introduced byf o u r t h-y ear student RichardStern, was an effort to curb ex¬cessive noise in the game roomand misuse of the pool table andballs attributed by several Coun¬cil members to Magidson andJacobs.Stern at the meeting statedthat he had warned the two stu¬dents several times to refrainfrom playing an original gameinvolving the pool equipment, ashe considered the game very dis¬turbing to students trying to study in the adjacent studyrooms and harmful to the tableand balls.Magidson and Jacobs objectedviolently to the censure, on thegrounds that they were not pre¬sent at the meeting to defendthemselves. Stern, regarded thecensure of a resident as some¬thing “never meant seriously —never meant maliciously.” Othercomments by dorm residents oncensoring by the Council werethat it "has always been thoughtof as a joke” and “this went onall last year — people were cen¬sured all the time — it doesn’tmean anything.”YOU MAY RECEIVE A LIFE-SIZED,AUTOGRAPHED PORTRAIT OFVfcKooD-UNLESS YOU ACT NOW!Hurry! Rush out now and buy a pack of Luckies! Smokethem quickly! Send the empty pack to Dr. Frood. If youdo it now-Frood guarantees not to send you this photo.THIS IS NO IDLE THREAT! Dr. Frood portraits will be mailed at random beginning November 15.Only students who send us empty Lucky packs will be safe! TAKE NO CHANCES! Mail thoseempty packs today. Send them, with your name and address, to Dr. Frood, Box 2990, Grand CentralStation, New York 17, New York.CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change!© * t. c«3• CHICAGO MAROON Product of dnwtiectn tJvtHieeo-dorytHvny — is our middle nameNov. 11, 1960 Nevertheless, Sherwin Kaplan,president of the Council, musthave had the action of the Coun¬cil on his mind last Sunday evening: when Bill Glowe enteredKaplan’s room and said, “Getyour cobra, we’re enacting thecensure,” Kaplan and Glowejoined six other East house residents.The eight students walkeddownstairs, each armed with“cobras” pieces of surgical tubing filled with water and capableof ejecting their contents at apressure comparable to that of asmall fire hose-; they found Ja¬cobs cleaning up after havingfinished his home-cooked Sundaydinner, and they emptied the con¬tents of their “cobras” all overthe fully-clothed Jacobs and thegame-room floor.Kaplan later stated that the“cobra-ing” had “no connectionwhatsoever with the Council” andthat it was “done by individualswithout having any connectionwith the Council’s action.” Healso named Bill Glowe as his“commanding officer” in the as¬sault on Jacobs. Glowe. however,emphatically denies being a lead¬er or an instigator of the event,stating that in "cobraing” “thereis no leader — it is a spontanousthing.” Glowe went on to explainhow he became involved in theraid: “Someone came up andsaid, ‘He’s at it again; no onecan study in the study-room; he’ssinging so loud.” Then someonewent up one way, and one wentup the other way, and it justmushroomed, like it does all thetime; and then we went downthere, and then he was got.”At last Monday’s Council meet¬ing, Howard Benensohn, vice-president of the Connell, re¬opened the question of the Coun¬cil's right to censure residents ofthe dorm, especially if they werenot informed of the proceedings:“We did a pretty ridiculous thing.We should withdraw the censure;whether they deserved it or notis rattier immaterial—the point isthat they were not here to defendthemselves—this is grossly un¬fair.”Magidson, present at the meeting, questioned the legality of anessentially legislative body’s pass¬ing on judicial matters.Kaplan explained that “TheHouse council, acting on behalfof the house, has the right to ex¬press the disapproval of thehouse concerning any situationthat they (the representatives)think warrant such action—also,this censure power is not some¬thing to be used lightly.” Jacobsand Magidson were given an op¬portunity to state their case; theyargued that their game, which issimilar to regular pool exceptthat no cue sticks are employed,did in no way injure the equip¬ment and that, as they were notinformed of the proceedings, thecensuring was unfair.A motion was made to reaf¬firm the censoring motion passedthe previous week; the vote onthe motion was tied six to six;Kaplan, as President, cast the tie-breaking vote in favor of the mo¬tion to reaffirm. The Councilthen passed another motion tooffer its apologies to Magidsonand Jacobs for the way In whichthe censuring proceedings hadbeen conducted.Coming events on quadranglesFriday, 11 NovemberMicrobiology club, 4 pm. Ricketts North.Room l. “Genetic studies on lmmuno-loeically competent cells,” Dr. G. J .V.Nossftl, Stanford university.I erture series: Personality Theory (de-oartment of psychology). 4 pm, SocialScience 122. "Constructive alterna-tlvism ” Lee Sechre6t. assistant pro¬fessor of psychology, Northwesternuniversity.lecture series (department of medicinemid physiology), 5 pm, Abbott hall133 ••Electrophysiology of the Heart.Part II,” Dr. Brooks.Ki'inonia, 7:15 pm. discussion. ‘‘TheChurch and In social welfare” led byReverend Reuben Spannaus. LutheranChild Welfare association, Addison, Il¬linois and Chicago.Moiion Picture series: American Con¬tributions to the Cinema (Document¬ary Film group), 7:15 and 9:15 pm,social Science 122. “Stagecoach”i 1938).I dure i Far Eastern association). 7:30pm Ida Noyes hall. “Chinese paintingin the Fourteenth Century: A turningpoint.” Reverend Harrle Vanderstap-pen. S V D assistant professor, de¬partment of art.lecture, 7:30 pm, Classics 10. “India’s , jj.miijuig movement: the dem¬ographers contribution,” ProfessorDonald J Bogue, associate director ofthe Population Research and Train¬ing center.Motion Picture, 8 and 10 pm, Burton-Judson courts, “The Informer.”University theatre: "Heartbreak House ”by George Bernard Shaw, 8:30 pmMandel hall. pSocial dancing, 9 pm. pm. Ida Noyestheatre, sponsored by the Internation-al House association. Admission: 50cents for students and $1 for others.Saturday, 12 NovemberRecorder society, 1 pm. Ida Noyes, in¬struction for 1 to 1:30 pm, and thengroup recorder playing.Kumsitz, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes library,real_ campfire, discussion, singing!Collegium Musicum. 8:30 pm. Bondchapel. A concert of German Renais¬sance and Baroque music.University theatre: "Heartbreak House ”by George Bernard Shaw, 8:30 pmMandel hall. H ’Folklore society, 8 30 pm, Ida Novestheatre. Richard Chase, noted folkstoryteller and George and GerryArmstrong. Admission: 75 cents formembers. $1 for others.Class series: Imperialism and the Colon-Classified AdvertisementsFor soleNeed “Help?” The originator of Madmagazine has done it again—only thisi ;me for college students! He’s createda hilarious new magazine called Help!Want to see how funny an adult tatlremagazine can be? Send 50 cents toivip! Dept. F-3, Box 6573, Philadelphia38 Penn.Share SM212, Stereo arm and cart.,brand new. unused. Cost $93, sell $75.Professional Turn Table with stereoif m and cart. Coot $330. Sell $125. DO3-2684.Servicessewing. Alterations, Hems. BU 8-6001.Voice Training: Oberlln graduate, yearof training at the Mozarteum of Salz¬burg. Austria. Presently with Jolietconservatory of Music. Write: CarolynSloan Smith, Apt. 114. 5751 Woodlawn.Chicago 37.Typing. Reas. MI 3-5218.Russian Tutoring. First or second year.Reasonable rates. BU 8-5229; MI 3-096-3Help wantedPeople to Warm Chairs at a concert,contact Folklore Society at Ida Theatre,Sat nite., 8 30. Wanted Immediately: Campus travelrepresentative for the only US Govern¬ment Civil Aeronautics Board approvedAir Charter Exchange. Drawing accountand commission available to the rightperson. Call, CE 6-1828. Or write 7 WMadison.Personals52 Four Door, Automatic, Ford. Excep¬tionally good condition. $195. Call- MI3-0238.Creative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.Pooh Meeting: 3:30 today. Same place.Two Headed Male Student Desires meet¬ing with two-headed female student.Object: sharing a Four-Way cold tablet.1306X Pierce.For rent2 Rooms. Semi-furnished; private bath.Owner will decorate and install newlinoleum. 3rd fl.: 57th and Dorchester.HY 3-2525, weekdays.Five-Room Apartment near Universityand Ray School. First floor, share porch,yard, basement with one family. Avail¬able now. MI 3-0568 or MI 3-3459.6040 S. Ingleside Ave.: Clean, comfort¬able, one-two room, furnished unitsavailable in a well maintained building,catering to University students. Con¬tact resident manager: Mrs. Tapia. BU2-2757 after 5:30.Basement Room, near campus, privatebath and entrance. DO 3-3710.A CASA Book StoreCarefully selected imports of gifts — children's toys andbooks. We believe we have one of the best selectionsof imported Christmas cards in the city, also foreignlanguage cards. Come in and see for yourself.1322 E. 55th HY 3-9651NEXT SUMMER EUROPE IS YOURSAT A LOW PRICE —IF YOU BOOK NOWMarco poloIraoel £>croiccSince 1276NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICES1658 E. 55th St. BU 8-5944THEARCHWAYSUPPER CLUB356 EAST 61st STREETThe Archway announces an entertainment policydesigned to present the "comers" in jazz. Showswill be Wednesday through Sunday from 10 p.m.TheDON CARLOTRIOAppearing RegularlyJOHNNYHARTMANDecember 14t-h MOSEALLISONNovember 9thfor reservations— eall —PLozo 2-4498 lal revolution, 3 pm, Ida Noye6 11-orary. Third in a series of classes onsocialism presented by the Young Peo¬ples Socialist league.Sunday, 1,3 NovemberRoman Catholic Masses, 8:30, 10 and 11am, DeSales house. *Episcopal Communion service, 9:30 amBond chapel.American Musicological associationmeeting, 9:30 am, Ida Noyes.Sikh Study circle, 10 am, Chapel house.Celebration of birthday of Guru Na-nak, founder of Sikhism. Program willelude holy singing, speeches, dis¬cussion and Indian style dinner.Lutheran Campus - Parish CommunionService, 10 am. Graham Taylor chapel.University religious service, 11 am,Rockefeller Memorial chapel. Rever¬end Herbert Gezork, president, And-over-Newton Theological schools.Cross-Country meet, 1 pm, Washing¬ton Park, University of Chicago Trackclub Five-Mile Open Championship.Carillon Recital, 5 pm. RockefellerMemorial chapel, Daniel Robins.United Christian Fellowship worshipservice, 9:30 pm, Thorndike Hiltonchapel.Supper - Discussion meeting, 5:30 pm.Brent house. Episcopal Student cen¬ter. 5540 South Woodlawn avenue.Discussion, 6:30 pm. “Symposium:moral, legal, and medical aspects ofdeath,” Dr. Joseph Evans, professor,department of surgery, Wilbur Katz,professor, law school, and ReverendJoseph T Mangan, S.J., St. Mary-of-seminary. Mundelein. Ill.•t Christian fellowship, 6 pm,house, buffet supper. Cost 50Bin ge club, 7:15 pm, Ida Noyes lounge,first floor. Beginning and experiencedindividuals and partnerships Invited.Duplicate bridge will be played andUniversity theatre: "Heartbreak House,”by George Bernard Shaw, 8:30 pm,Mandel hall.Monday, 14 NovemberElementary Yiddish classes, 3:30 pm,Hillel foundation.Lecture series: Personality theory (de¬partment of psychology). 4 pm. SocialScience 122. “An application of learn¬ing theory to personality theory,’’ Janet A. Taylor, associate professor,department of psychology, Northwest¬ern university.Geography Colloquium (geography de¬partment), 4 pm, Rosenwald 41. “Hy¬drological requirements of meander¬ing valleys,” George H. Drury, lec-t u r e r In geomorphology, Birkbeckcollege, University of London.Lecture (Botany club), 4:30 pm. Botany106, “Some effects of the ys.-Locus onthe Iron and phosphorous nutritionof maize,” William D. Bell, researchassociate, department of botany.Motion picture (Indian Civilizationcourse), 7 pm, Rosenwald 2. “Gau¬tama the Buddha.” Followed by lec¬ture (Committee of Southern ...si&nstudies), “Life in a Buddhist monas¬tery,” Sao Htun Hmat Win fellow.Center for the Study of World Re¬ligions, Harvard university.Motion picture, 8 pm, internationalhouse. “Gate of Hell” (Japan).Tuesday, 15 NovemberLutheran Communion service, 11:30 am.Bond chapel.Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 12noon, Ida Noyes hall. Bible study,bring your lunch.Lecture: 4 pm, Ida Noyes library. Her¬man Benson, labor journalist speak¬ing on "The intellectual and the lone¬ly union reformer. Presented by theYoung Peoples Socialist league.Faculty and University Board meetings:Council, 3:40 pm. Business East 106.Readings for Chekov’s Seagull, 7:30 pm,Reynold’s Club theatre.Glee club, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes eastlounge, rehearsal.Hillel Seminar on Biblical Thought, 8pm, 5715 South Woodlawn avenue."Biblical view of creation and man.”Monford Harris, College of JewishStudies, Chicago.Illustrated lecture (Archaeological In¬stitute of America), 8:30 pm. Breastedhall. “An archeological pilgrimage toSantiago de Compostela.” Millard B.Rogers, associate director, Seattle artmuseum.Lecture (Committee on Social Thought),8:30 pm. Social Science 122. “Lord Ac¬ton and His Grandfather” by HaroldActon historian and poet.Wednesday, 16 NovemberLecture series (graduate school of busi¬ ness), 1:30 pm, Breasted hall. ‘‘Whatwould you say If your son wanted togo into advertising?” Leo Burnett,president, Leo Burnett Co., Inc.Lecture (Microbiology club), 4 pm, Rick¬etts North 1. “Mixed infection studieswith Newcastle disease virus,” Dr.Allan Granoff, Public Health ResearchInstitute of the City of New York.Seminar (department of statistics), 5pm. Eckhart 207. ‘Statistical inferenceon stochastic processes,” HermanRubin, professor of statistics, Michi¬gan State university.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. Hillelfoundation.Lecture (Academic Program in Religionfor Adults), 7:30 pm. Downtown Cen¬ter. “Old Testament Theology,” J.Coert Rylaarsdam, professor of OldTestament, Divinity school.Lecture (History club), 8 pm. Ida Noyes.“Poet and Peasant: reflections on therole of the historian,” John Clive,assistant professor, department ofhistory.Country dancing, 8 pm. Ida Noyes, spon¬sored by the Country Dancers. Begin¬ners welcome.Thursday, 17 NovemberCommunion Service, 11:30 am, Bondchapel.Cross Country Meet, 4 pm. WashingtonPark, Chicago vs. University of Illi-nois-Chlcago.Louis B. Block F’und lecture, 4 pm.Zoology 14. “The evolution of complexpolymorphisms,” Richard C. Lewon-tin, associate professor of biology.University of Rochester.Lecture series (department of medicineand physiology), 5 pm, Abbott hall133. "Electrophysiology of the heart.Part III,” Dr. E. E. Suckling, depart¬ment of physiology. State universityof New York, Downtown Medical cen¬terIn ter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 7 :30pm. Ida Noyes hall. A discussion,"Pattern for Prayer” led by MargaretNuttal.ADLERS, IN WHITE AND COLORS, FOR MEN AND WOMEN, AVAILABLE ATMarshall Field's The FairLytton's Wieboldt'sBaskin's All Neumode StoresNov. 11, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11ll4®, ,v' i!1* ;- "S3 ■r;EfIftfr& i * Present job interviewsRepresentatives of the following organizations will conductrecruiting interviews at the Office of Vocational Guidance andPlacement during the week of November 14, I960. Interviewappointments may be arranged through Mr. L. S. Calvin, Room200. Reynolds club. Extension 3284.November 14 American Red Cross will interview prospectivegraduates for positions, both domestic and overseas, associal workers, recreation workers, and counselors. It willalso interview AM candidates in social service administra¬tion for positions as disaster representatives.November 15 -Arthur D. Little, Cambridge, Massachusetts, willinterview SM and PhD candidates in mathematics, physics,and staistics, and chemists (inorganic, organic, physical) atall degree levels.November 18—Texas Instruments. Central Research laborato¬ries. Dallas, Texas, will speak with prospective SM andPhD graduates in mathematics, physics, statistics andchemistry (analytical, inorganic, and physical). Will alsointerview for summer work if schedule is not filled withstudents seeking permanent positions.November 18 American National Bank and Trust company,Chicago. Illinois will interview prospective graduates forits training program leading to such positions as commer¬cial loans, investments, trust administration, banking oper¬ations, etc.Charles A. Anderson, associate dean of the graduate schoolaf business, will interview interested students on Friday,November 18, Room 200 of the Office of Vocational Guidanceand Placement. Appointments can be made between 9 am and3 pm. Call extension 3291.The Stanford graduate school of business is interested in stu¬dents who have a general Liberal Arts education. Scholarships,awards and loan funds are available for those who need finan¬cial assistance.ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage & meatballFree OeUrertf Orer $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th ft. rapWiLrn talks cn the novelEnglish novelist Angus Wil¬son spoke on “Conformity andthe novel” Wednesday eveningat the new Law school audi¬torium, in the first WilliamVaughn Moody lecture of theyear.Alan Simpson, dean of the Col¬lege, who studied with Wilson atOxford in 1934, introduced himas one of a long line of distin¬guished British novelists andpoets who have spoken in thelectureship, including E. M. Fors¬ter, Joyce Carv, T. S. Eliot. W. H.Auden, C. Day Lewis and Ste¬phen Spender.Wilson described his lecturetopic as the development of afeeling of concern over a trendtowards conformity in modernBritish literary criticism, whichhe summarized as a “school ofneo-traditionalism.” This school, led by such writers as F. R. Leavis, C. P. Snow. C. S. Lewis andT. S. Eliot, “wishes to set up cer¬tain standards or traditions ofmaturity, vitality and responsibil¬ity which are becoming obliga¬tory in literature criticism” andwhich would develop a “climateof opinion” in which literaryworks would be judged by theiradherence to these standards.Wilson remarked, “I write inthe traditional form, and I amnaturally extremely moralistic,”but although his own work there¬fore falls into the category ap¬proved by neo-traditionalism, heis concerned by its implications,and its possible effect on the fu¬ture of the novel.“The source of the novelist’spower,” he said, “lies in a unionof his childhood vision with hisvision of a mature world of reall the Free Press booksTHE GREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 East 57th HY 3-5829British and AmericanQuality PaperbacksTHE NEWCAFE CAPRItm:i E. 71 st StreetFeaturing Espresso Coffee and Continental SpecialtiesFolk Singing and Art ExhibitsHours: Saturday— 11 A M. to 3 A.M.Sunday — 2 P.M. to MidnightClosed MondayTnasday thru Thursday — 6 P.M. to MidnightFriday —6 P.M. to 2 A M. sponsibility.” He traces the riseof neo-traditionalism to a reactionagainst the earlier school of“Bloomsbury writers,” which in¬cluded Virginia Woolf, LyttonStrachey and E. M. Forster. Inthe perennial conflict betweenthe two visions of the novelist.Wilson thinks the Bloomsburywriters to have overemphasizedthe childhood, or subjective, element, with a consequent lack ofstrength in their work. Hence theconcern of today’s neo-traditionalist critics with the objective, withproblems of responsibility, gov¬ernment and power.“The culmination of neo traditionalism, is seen in its criticismof modern novels according totheir social relevance, in an at¬tempt to make the novelist asaviour of society, a doctor for aculture which the neo-traditional¬ist sees as sick.' This could havean increasingly potent and dangerous effect on the novelist ashe becomes forced into a s«»rt ofcompetition with C o m munistwriters as literary representa¬tives of their culture.Wilson rejects this concept ofthe novelist’s function, sayingthat he “must look neither tothe* future or the past in the construction of the novel. The im¬position of a standard of health,vitality, maturity and responsi¬bility endangers the individualrichness of the novelist’s vision —the only thing he does have tooffer society.”NATIONWIDE BOOK SEARCHSERVICESood 25c foe results — by uniZOLLINGER'S BOOK SHOP1150*4 w. Belmoot Ava.IBM WILLINTERVIEWNOVEMBER22 Candidates for Bachelors or Masters Degreesart invited to disease opportunities in;Marketing and SalesThis Is a unique opportunity to find out aboutthe many career opportunities at IBM. The IBMrepresentative can discuss with you typical jobs,various training programs, chances for ad¬vanced education, financial rewards, and com¬pany benefits—-all important factors that affectyour future.SOME FACTS ABOUT IBMAn Unusual Growth Story: IBM has had one ofthe exceptional growth rates in industry. It hasbeen a planned growth, based on ideas andproducts having an almost infinite applicationm our modern economy.Diverse and Important Products: IBM develops,manufactures and markets a wide range ofproducts in the data processing field. IBM com¬puters and allied products play a vital role in the operations of business, industry, science,and governmentAcross-the Country Operations: Laboratory andmanufacturing facilities are located in Endicott,Kingston, Owego, Poughkeepsie and Yorktown,New York; Burlington, Vermont: Lexington, Ken¬tucky; San Jose, California; and Rochester,Minnesota. Headquarters is located in NewYork City with sales and service offices in 198maior cities throughout the United States.The Accent Is on the Individual: No matter whattype of work a person does at IBM, he is givenall the responsibility he is able to handle, andall the support he needs to do his job. Advance¬ment is by meritThe areas in which IBM is engaged have an un¬limited future. This is your opportunity to findout what that future has to offer you.Call or stop in at your placement office to ar¬range an appointment with the IBM representa¬tive for the date above. If you cannot attend aninterview, write or call the manager of the near¬est IBM office:Mr. J. J. Keil, Branch ManagerIBM Corporation, Dept. 8829415 S. Western AvenueChicago 20, III.PRescott 9 8000IBMINTERNATONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION• Nov. 11, 1960 You naturally have a better chance to grow wltlka growth company.Maroons lose 10-0 Sundayby Mike EisenbergLast Sunday NCAA cham¬pion St. Louis routed UC’ssoccer team 10 to 0. Becauseof the fine defensive play of A] Shearn, Roger Levin, andgoalie Nemon Taylor, the gamewas much closer than expected.Ken Davidson started severaloffensive threats, but the Ma¬roons could not mesh together aJazzmen to competeGeorgetown university will holdits second annual Intercollegi¬ate jazz festival, a national com¬petition among promising youngjazz groups from colleges anduniversities throughout the na tion. Following a perliminaryjudging, the top five groups willcompete in the finals at George¬town before a hoard of judgesincluding Dave Brubeck, PaulDesmond, John Hammond, andGeorge Hoefer.Either East II or East III scoring play. Joe Ford was hit inthe head with the bail in the firsthalf, and was the first Chicagocasualty of the season.Dropping a 3 to 0 decision toIndiana Saturday, the Maroonslost the battle to stay out of lastplace in the Midwest soccer con¬ference. Leary, Shapiro, and Fort-gang posted creditable perform¬ances. The Maroons made theirbest showing of the year, andmight have come out on top ifseveral offensive plays at the endof the game had not gone away.Within a minute and a half,Umberto Neri had two scoringchances but failed to capitalize onthem. The first was when he gota pass from Eisenberg in frontto lose "unbeaten" statusA dramatic battle for the football championship of thecollege house league will take place Tuesday, November 8,when East III and East II square off in the opening game ofthe all-university playoffs. Both teams are undefeated anduntied in seven contests, while East II carries a two vearstring of thirteen games in whichthey are unscored upon.A personal contest betweenquarterbacks Joe Young and DonJohnson of East II and East IIIrespectively should highlight the(“ontest. Both have fine receivers,but both will be throwing againsttough defenses. East III has aconsiderable size advantage in theline which East II will attemptto minimize with their excellentteam speed. One touchdown mayhe enough to clinch the gameand with it, the intramural housechampionship.The winter of this game willplay the fraternity champion onWednesday of next week. PsiEpsilon, perennial winner of thefrat league, needs only to tri¬umph over Phi Kappa Psi toclinch their eighth straight cham¬pionship. Though Psi U has ex¬perienced rough going in theirlast two games, they are heavyfavorites to defeat Phi Psi andmove on to the playoffs.The divisional league winnerwas decided by the outcome ofthe Business School-Law Schoolclash last week in which the Busi¬ness School triumphed 20-7. Onthe following day, the BusinessSchool knocked off the Cadavers2(V6 to end the regular seasonwith an undefeated record. The race for the "B” leaguechampionship is highly entangleddue to a forfeit by the league¬leading Linn house outfit. Thisdefeat, coupled with wins by theEast II and East III “B” teams,sent the league race into a threeway deadlock. The eventual win¬ner of this league will play theBusiness School in the other halfof the playoffs. of the net and kicked wide, andthe second time he lost a passfrom Hoyt near the goal.With an 0 and 7 record, the Ma¬roons failed to equal last season’smark of 1-6. They were inexperi¬enced, hut could serve as a gbodnucleus for next year. Laumerand Reynolds deserve praise forgood showing in their first years,while Nemon Taylor, in his lastyear as goalie, kept the Maroonsfrom being swamped every timeout.Coeh Alvar Hermanson, whohas been coaching soccer at UCsince its inception at the schoolmore than 20 years ago, will re¬tire at the end of the year. Hemade no criticism of his team.THE EXCLUSIVE CLEANERS & LAUNDERERSdesigned for student needssomc-doy service 3-hour dry cleaningmoderately priced2 campus locations >11 3-06071112 E. .77Ih— 1300 E. 57lh >11 3-0002For real taste, nothing like a Camel«tU> SURVEY ENUtNEER.GLEN CANYON PAM. ARIZONAHave a real cigarette-have a CAMEL00*mThe best tobacco makes the best smoke!«ijj| ft. A tetaoec CWpout. ft. ft Now AppeoringLOU DONALDSONi QuintetSaturday from 8:00 - 9:00Broadcast SpecialDrinks 2 Price to StudentsatThe Home of Progressive Jazz47th 6 OREXEI10 * M O 4AMaitempaw mrntim. ADMISSION CH6LCOVER CH6E.tNTEftTMNMdl W 47Elementaiy...my dear Watson! From the happy lookon your physiog, from the cheerful liftyou seem to be enjoying, I deduceyou are imbibing Coca-Cola. No mysteryabout why Coke is the world’s favorite.. . such taste, such sparkle! Yes, myfavorite case is always a case of Coke!BE REALLY REFRESHESBottled under authority of The Coco-Colo Compony by r~Nov. 11, I960 • CHICAGO MAIOON • 13University theatre actors in a final rehearsal for Heartbreak House, which opened lastnight, practice in Mandel hall.Book commemorates centennial'Heartbreak House' opens,its UTs first production“Heartbreak House” by George Bernard Shaw, first University theatre production of the quarter, opened last nightat Mandel hall. Almost one-quarter of the available 1200tickets had been purchased before the Thursday perform¬ance, according to a theatre member.Three performances of “Heart- —break House are scheduled foi trying to do will be evident in thetonight, Saturday, and Sunday in sjlow itself.”Mandel hall. Rick Ames, Judy Deutch EThe show is the first to b« pre- Martin deMoscato,' Ellen Fieldssen ted since Bill Alton became di- and Eve Twose star in the prorector of the theatre group, and it duction which utilizes sets dois the first show directed by Al- sjgnod by Dolores Alton for theton. “I’m not saying anything new revolving disc. This piece olabout flic production,” Alton com- stage equipment, a permanent admented, “I hope that what I m djtjon to the group’s supplies forthe presentation of theatrical- works, permits the presentationof multi-scene shows on the Mandel hall stage.Evolution After Darwin, athree volume summary of cur¬rent evolutionary thought edi¬ted by Sol Tax, has been re¬leased by the University Press.The work is a compilation of the“Darwin papers” prepared in ad¬vance by the participants and thepanel discussions that formed themain feature of the Darwin Cen¬tennial held last year at the Uni¬versity. The first volume, “The Evolu¬tion of Life: Its Origin, History,and Future, includes twenty arti¬cles by “leading scientists andscholars,” such as Sir Julian Hux¬ley, Harlow Shapley, and A. J.Nicholson, r- "J:-g to John Bur¬ton of the Press.The Evolution of Man: Mind,Culture, and Society containstwenty-two articles, including“Can Man Control His Numbers?” by Sir Charles Galton Darwin.“The Evolutional., Process inEarly Civil'-'fions" bv R ’"MtAdams, assistant professor of an¬thropology at UC. " “FourSf^orps in the Evolution of Mind¬ing” by I die White.The third outlie volumes. Issuesin Evolution, includes the texts ofthe five panel discussions: TheOrigin of Lif~ " olution ofLife, Man as an Organism, The of “At Random” and “All Thingsof this book that “it is a reward-Considered.”“Evolution After Darwin is anintegrated total1 . It is not just acollection of papers by prominentscientists, each essay was createdin isolation,” emphasized Burton.“This means that Evolution AfterDarwin is a unique work of un¬equalled authoritativeness.“Fifty leading scientists from The play itself was describedby Shaw as a description of “cultured, leisured Europe before thewar.” The .inhabitants of Heartbreak House have substituted theactivities of “going to the theatre,reading, and attending art showsfor eating, sleeping, and makinglove.”“Heartbreak House" was, inci¬dentally, one of the few of Shaw’splays to he published Indore it■ w w -e-w ttt w v w-w w ww WWW T'rvr* w www www w w ww wwww ■wwyrwww^The Folklore SoeieiypresentsliltHAltll C IIA Evolution of Mind, and Social andCultural Evolution. It also in¬cludes a third group of papers onEvolution and Religion, the con¬viction address “The EvolutionaryVision" by Huxley, the transcripts ten different countries have assembled in one place to combinetheir remarkable skills in consid¬ering our human origins, ourthousands of years of history, andour collective human destiny.”noted folk storytellerMr. Cho»€ will give a demonstration of folk toys made by his neighborsin Beech Creek, N.C,withGeorge & Gerry ArmstrongSinging and playing the gwitae andAppalachian DulcimerSal., \«v. 12til ItM p.m.Ida Xorem TheatreOther* $1.00Members 75c4 NOW PLAYING"A BATTLE OF THE SEXES"Starring:Peter .Sellers, Robert fforle*. f’oustwnee Camming*DearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1753Spoeiol student rote for alt performances seven days a woefcJust Shots) fashier Your f.M. CardUNIVERSITY THEATREPresentsGeorge Bernard Shaw’sHEARTBREAKHOUSEMandel Hall—November 11, 12,13 at 8:30 p. mTickets: $1.50; Student-Faculty $1.00Tickets Available: Reynolds Club Desk « appeared on the stage. Shaw himself decided not to present theplay at the time it was written,for fear that the events de¬scribed might at any momenthave come true with a Germanhomher striking ail attack on thetheatre.“The only technical difficultywe have had with the productionhas been the shortage of techcrew.” remarked technical dirertor Frank Marrero, "and thisshortage is always a problem.”Every Monday nite at the College ofComplexes Bill Smith. Bearded Beat¬nik candidate and spokesman, willdiscuss one of the great pholosoph-ers. The only eat in the world whocan make THINKKKS swing. 9 p.mSIS N. Clark.No Charge for Our ServicesMarco poloTRAVEL SERVICESince 1 276IB5R F. 55fh St. HI 8-5911Tonite / TEL RES. DE 7-10002 ,Shows / / 6th MonthChicago’s Long-Run Musical Hit!i'MEO UMRARE"* Ncwcsr, *7®'®.HAPPY MEDIUM,*01^ «. RUSH JLniUPIIIP itisih ui'ittii Hi* tin taUAnUlnU Hu DOWNSTAGE ROOMt S».w, MM*: Tm. UI. tiN t IliN•» >'N » IIUD-Mmi SM.-TV.rt. IS .Si i SMSM. « S*L MS * U4S, Us VmL A.Sit MXMAIL OR DIM HOWW GLACIER. NO. 4.^ NOW —DOWN/ -THROUGHTHESOUP!r GO YOU 'actuaryFIGURED OUTWHERE YOU^ ARE BY 4V DOWN- ]L DRAFTS.! JOOF THE RIGHT TASTE BECAUSEViceroys got it.at both endsGOTTHEBLEND!O I960, BflOWH A WILLIAMSON TOBACCO OOIC,14 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 11, 1960Culture VultureOne of the super-national picture-book magazines this week indulges in a little dream work about "the lost cause." Themagazine proudly informs us that it tells the story of real people caught in the tenacious grip of reality; however this doesn'tmitigate against employing high-priced talent to reshape history along certain peculiar lines. Well, reality, we have painfullylearned, is merely a product of a subtle, continuous process of consensual validation and that if enough people hallucinatealong certain peculiar lines, south of the border might mean across the Ohio river. Getting back to the main point — thearticle by high-priced talent — one would have the tendency to be slightly appalled by the possible ramifications of chang¬ing victors in a great war. Great and not-so-great men left unborn — just looking at one side of the dilemma — significantinventions left uninvented for want of the particular juxtaposition of a particular mind and a particular inspiration. The latterthought sends a mild twinge of pain traveling downward (where else would it be?) to the center of our sense of creaturecomfort. Allay your fears, all the right and wrong people get born; all the pleasant and unpleasant inventions get invented.Even the Russians become troublesome (the Alaskan Soviet Socialist Republic is home for collectivized eskimos and rockets).The year 1960 brings forth a note of hope, the divided states of poor America reach a blessed detente and bracely face thecommon enemy and the future together.Post-election oratory usually stresses unity as a vivifying panacea for pre-election oratory. Concealed somewhere in the heartof the article (by high-priced talent) is a tender morsel of high-minded political morality.On campusTheoterGeorge Bernard Shaw’s firstlove was always the theater, hisunbounded esteem for himselfwas forced to play a subordinateyet complementary role. The ideaof the artist recognizing his ownworth transcends mortal conceitm one significant respect. Per¬haps the biggest obstacle that fatethrows in the path of the strug¬gling artist is the natural apathyof a public that associates innova¬tion with moral turpitude and con¬siders progress a personal af¬front. The only weapon at hand isoften sheer ego and a blind faithin the justice of the cause. All thisShaw had. The cause was a pecu¬liar admixture of utopian social¬ism and pure Shaw; the ego hadat its disposal the most contemp¬tuous self-propagandist since Cy¬rano. University Theatre assistsUBS this weekend in perpetuat¬ing the folk leged of GBS as anirrascable old iconoclast. Heart¬break House opened Thursdayand will run through Sunday,Nov. 13th.Frank Marrero, who is respon¬sible for the monster revolvingstage used in Heartbreak House,announced this week that read¬ings will be held Nov. 15,16,17 forliis production of Chekhov's TheSeagull The readings will be at7:30 in the Reynolds club theatre.It’s getting close to experiment¬ation time as December and To¬night at 8:30 approach. Studentdirectors and casts are poised bothto do battle with each other forprime rehearsal time and to offerthe community a healthy dose ofArt and the avant garde.As soon as GBS and UT usherthe loveable Shot over family outof Mandel, Gilbert and Sullivan, assisted by a hard core of unre-costructed Darwin show perform¬ers will troupe onto a stage stillwarm with Shavian tragedy. Thescene is Venice and the show isThe Gondoliers, a poignant storyof the water-taxi drivers and theirfight for love and a living wage.November 18 and 19 in MandelhallCinemaThe vulture doesn’t quite knowwhether the term adub was everapplied to westerns before the ad¬vent of the one - eyed monster.Anyway the Documentary filmgroup tonight presents one of thefilms that took the oat-burnerfrom oblivious infancy to youngadulthood in a single jump. Thefilm is Stagecoach, directed by thehigh priest of the horsey set, JohnFord. It stars John Wayne as thenoble Johnny Ringo. The story ispurportedly taken from De Maup-pasant who shouldn’t mind at all.Tonight at 7:15 and 9:15 in SocialSciences 122.O, O, Ireland sad is thy lonelysoul for they’re hanging men andwomen for the wearing of thegreen. Nothing pleases the Irishmore than to recount the nobilityof their ancestry and the historyof their time of troubles. The bestexpression of the latter is LiamO’Flaherty’s novel The Informerand the immortal film John Fordmade of it. Tongiht at 8 and 10 inthe Judson dining room. Monday International housepresents Fernandel in The Manin the Raincoat. This film provesthat Inspector Maigret’s reputa¬tion as France’s greatest sleuth ismore than secure. Eight pm inthe assembly hall.ArtThe Renaissance Society is stillposing the question, “Is it Art?”every day at Goodspeed hall. Thiscollection provides its own answerin its own unanswerability bymaking the question rhetorical inthe first place. The University’sartistic benefactor, J. R. Shapiro,is to complimented for his tasteand his wit, both are evident inthe works he has selected for thisshow.MusicThe folklore society has themost commendable sense of thepast, particularly those expres¬sions of our cultural heritage thatwe never felt needed to be writtendown on paper. The vulture,whose tin ear for such things isby now legend, can remember en¬trancing a group of Italian armynurses on a train somewhere be¬tween Venice and the Brennerpass with a forgettable renditionof John Henry. Ah, camaraderiethrough music. Once again thesociety is pushing authenticity inIda Noyes this time with musicand the spoken word. Saturdaynight Richard Chase from Beach Creek, N. Carolina, will tell stor¬ies and George and Gerry Arm¬strong will sing.Off campusTheaterIf winter comes, spring is us¬ually waiting in the wings. Moreexpressly, it seems this seasonthat if Shakespeare closes, there’smore to follow. The Goodman’sproduction of The Taming of theShrew closes on Nov. 15 but theStratford, Conn. American Shake¬speare Festival’s production of AMidsummer Night’s Dream opensNovember 14 only to close on No¬vember 30 and be followed bytheir production of A Winter’sTale. The Blackstone theater isthe scene of the bard’s rebirth.Meanwhile, two inscrutable ori¬entals, Rogers and Hammerstein.take us to the exotic east, SanFrancisco, in Flower Drum Song.Chinese civilization students takenote that the excursion leaves theSchubert every evening startingNovember 14.MusicJazz on the South Side, particu¬larly in Hyde Park, has beensomething of an orphan since theuntimely demise of the Beehivemany years ago. True, the Suther¬land on the periphary of the areahas held the torch of the truefaith high through the lean yearsbut competition is not only a Dar¬winian imperative but also a boon to the hungry masses who yearnfor the true and intoxicating. Wecan rejoice for lo out of the Pic¬cadilly hotel in a room called theCounterpoint comes noise that en¬trances, beverages that stimulate,and food that is merely excellentFifty-first and Blackstone. Thecurrent attraction is the KennyDorham group.Old loyalties cannot be Ignored;equal time for the gracious Suth¬erland lounge to announce thattheir special college is Saturdaynight when from 8 to 9 duringtheir broadcast session drinks arehalf price. The Lou Donaldsonsextet will be featured thru thefifteenth; the Onnette Colemanquintet opens November 16.PoetryProphets without honor in theirown country are not in short sup¬ply. Poetry magazine must annu¬ally beg sustenance from a cold-hearted world. This year the cupwill be passed around by W. H.Auden. Friday, November 18. atthe Civic theater.CinemaThe Hyde Park theater’s billweek consists of Lovers of Parisand Let’s Make Love. The latterfilm ^demonstrates again thatMile. Monroe is no Sarah Bern¬hardt ; however the immortalSarah was no Monroe. Invidiousdistinctions tend to lose heavily.Lovers of Paris is not a travelog,but it is a very naughty film.AfterHEARTBREAK HOUSEat theffieoici•>:trd at Dorchester SHAI K. OPHIR50% Off on Food and DrinkThe Gate of Horn753 IN. Dearborn — SU 7-2833 LAKE ^PARK AT S^RD(ayde park NO 7 9071Eye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetot University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372 KENNY DORHAMQuartetEvery Monday Night — Folk MusicThis Week — JOHN LEE HOOKER"The greatest country blues singer of our time." — DownbeatHyde Park Blvd.at BlarkMvne FreeParking the (^yde park theatreMONTANDYVESMONROEMARILYNTime Listed: "Marilyn Monroe triumphantly sings "My Heart Belongsto Daddy" os if she hod never heard of Mary Martin, and partnerYves Montand is possibly France's most chorming male export sinceChevalier. The production is slick . . . the songs are good . . . thegame is fun. Marilyn's comic counterpoint of fleshy grandeur ondearly Shirley Temple manner is better thon ever. Co-star Montand isurbane and masculine (as well os charming) . . . ond the supportingactors are expert, especially Tony Randall who ploys Montand's press-agent with an accurate blend of servility and fresh-faced eagerness.— And —JL®w©rs ®ffIP®rii§Kasetl on Entile Zulu's \ttvel "l*ot Kouille"The Stars: GERARD PHILIPE - DANIELLE DARRIEUXThe Director; JULIEN DUVIVIER"A group of France's TOP ARTISTS have turned their assorted skillsto a nimble and naughty rendering of Zoto's novel!"-— Bosley Crowther, N Y. TimesStarts Next Friday —INGMAR BERGMAN S "A Lesson in Love"ondCHARLES LAUGHTON S "Night of the Hunter"Start.** Thanksgiving Weekeml —PETER SELLERS' "I'm AH Right, Jack"And THEN —Chicago Premiere — the Japanese"THE COLDEN DEMON"Nov. 11, 1960 CHICACO MAROON •Eight Russian students visitEight vi§iting Russian stu¬dents were more surprised byAmerican elections than any¬thing else they saw duringtheir week-long stay in Chicago.These eight, mostly in their early30’s, were part of a group of Rus¬sians half way through a monthlong tour of America.*‘I saw your polling stations,and I saw your voting booths,but I didn’t really believe it,"commented one of the group. Theelection returns themselves,however, did convince the group that United States elections arenot rigged. They kept expectingthe “pre determined winner" toshoot to a towering lead. Thisdidn’t happen.The Russians were on campusfor six days. The six men werehoused in fraternities houses:Zeta Beta Tau, Psi Upsilon, andDelta Upsilon. The two womenstayed in New dorms. They ar¬rived a week ago Thursday anddeparted early last Wednesday.“We had a good idea what yourpeople and your country werelike before we arrived," com¬ mented one of the men. rtOurpapers tell us that your’s is a richand pleasant country, and that iswhat we have found. Especiallyyour students and your youth.”The touring guests were par¬ticularly interested in meetingstudents and young workers.They had requested to tour sev¬eral factories and talk to workers,but no company in Chicago waswilling to sponsor such a tour.Many Chicago work men arerefugees from Russian satalitestates, and an unpleasant incidentwas feared.Pro Musica will perform While here the Russians visitedthe National Urban league offi¬ces, the Sun-Times, the offices ofthe Hyde-Park redevelopers, TheChicago Board of Trade, the Mu¬seum of Science and Industry,and other frequent Chicago tour¬ist spots.Several of these foreign stu¬dents expressed great interest inthe civil rights question andharsh amazement that more defi¬nitive action has not been takenby Federal authorities. They alsowere doubtful of the sincerity ofthe Northern students’ announcedhumanitarianism.However, Tim Jenkins, Na¬tional Affairs Vice President ofthe National Student association(NSA) arrived on campus this week and was able to speak tothe Russians on this point. Jen.kins, a Negro, seemingly did convince them that the Northern student was actively working forintegration.They also commended thoMaroon for being a viable organof “social protest,” and expressedsurprise at its degree of autonomy.The anniversary of the Russiarrevolution was celebrated Monday evening when all eight students met for dinner at the BetaThea Pi house. After noon alipresented toasted Russia with im¬ported Russian vodka. The Russians sang some Russian songs:the Betas sang some fraternitysongs. Neither side translated."We are privileged to bring to students, faculty and the people of Chicago their firstopportunity to see and hear "The Play of Daniel," said Earle Ludgin, University trusteeand chairman of the UC Visiting Committee to the division of humanities. The Committeeis sponsoring the week long appearances of the New York Pro Musica production. Perform¬ances will be nightly, from December 12-17 at Rockefeller chapel.As produced by Lincoln Kirstein, under the direction of Noah Greenberg, this recreationof the twelfth century master-piece has most recently scored a as one of the great moments inaeries of successes in its summer the history of Western musicalEuropean tour. By special per- drama.mission, the company opened its A Biblical pageant retelling ofEnglish tour with a number of the story of the Book of Daniel, express purpose of performingthe long - neglected masterworksof music before J. S. Bach.‘The Play of Daniel” is accom¬panied by a verse commentaryperformaces in Westminster Ab- the production was made possible written for the production bybey. After the performances in through research by Noah Green- W. H. Auden. The medieval musi-Wells, Bath, Oxford and other berg, in collaboration with emi-English cities, the productionmoved to France. The tour con- nent musicologists, designers, ar¬ eal instruments used in the pro¬duction include the recorder, re-tists and historians. Careful prep- bee, v i e 11 e, hurdy-gurdy, min-cluded with performaces an the aration and constant striving for strel’s harp, triangle, small andAbbey of Royauniont in the dio¬cese of Beauvais, where the workbad its origin some 800 years ago authentic interpretation has char¬acterized the work of the ProMusica, founded in 1952 for the bells and jingles.large drums, tambourine, smallcymbals, finger cymbals, hand The Pro Musica performsthe 'Play of Daniel/These are the silver wings of •U. S. Air Force Navigator. At aflying officer on the Aerospaceteam, he has chosen a career ofleadership, a career that Hasmeaning, rewards and executiveopportunity.The Aviation Cadet Programis the gateway to this career. Toqualify for this rigorous and pro¬fessional training, a high schooldiploma is required; however, twoor more years of college are highlydesirable. Upon completion of theprogram the Air Force encouragesthe new officer to earn his degreeso he can better handle the respon¬sibilities of his position. This in¬cludes full pay and allowanceswhile talcing off-duty courses un¬der the Bootstrap education pro¬gram. The Air Force will pay asubstantial part of all tuition costs.After having attained enoughcredits so that he can completecourse work and residence require¬ments for a college degree in 6months or less, he is eligible toapply for temporary duty at theschool of his choice.If you think you have what ittakes to earn the silver wings ofan Air Force Navigator, see yourlocal Air Force Recruiter. Askhim about Aviation Cadet Navi¬gator training and the benefitswhich are available to a flyingofficer in the Air Force. Or fill inand mail this coupon.There's a place for tomorrow’sleaders on the -w- -yAerospace Team. I I w.Air ForceMAIL THIS COUPON TODAYAVIATION CADET INFORMATIONDIPT. SCI.OllBOX 7SOS, WASHIMOTON 4, 0. ft.I am bstwMA 10 and 2#W, a cNIiaoof tho U. S. and a high school graduatewith. .years of colltge. Vlsasasited information on thosond mo detailAir Force Aviation Cadet program.fclTV _ 1COUNTYNEW DUAL FILTERrWlirt of i, Mir mdJIt .amt ER Tareyton• « r an.Tareyton has the taste—Dual Filterdoes it! Here’s how the DUAL FILTER DOES IT:1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL... definitely proved to make the taste of a cigarette mild andsmooth...2. with a pure white outer filter. Together they select and balancethe flavor elements in the smoke. Tareyton’s flavor-balance givesyou the best taste of the best tobaccos.Filters forflavor-finest flavor by far!t6 • CMICAGO MAROON • Nov. 11