Advisor change delayed, but Periodic& Document RoomSG opposes dorm rulesIA resolution stating Student government (SG) opposition to the new University residencerequirements was passed by SG at its Tuesday night meeting.The residence requirements, which state that undergraduate women must remain in UCdormitories for their entire undergraduate careers, and undergraduate men for two years,was attacked as having [‘no beneficial effect,” and as doing “harm ... to the Universitycommunity if it be retained.” The bill was passed by a vote of 15-6.The bill states in part, “We — —— — —st*"d of a student referendum or peti- Under the Student code, the° U'e ,!h tlon camPai£n related to the res- dean of students must either ac-M holars at the University of Chi- idence requirement. cept or reject any code amend-, a-o. A free andIfuli *****"ge£* “The Campus Action commit- ment within two weeks after itMiras and tee to organize a letter writing is passed by the Assembly. If hestudents, faculty, and adminis- campaign in opposition to the new takes no action within that time' ators of the University is to be rCffuiation Qtudpnts and alumni action witnm that time,i.Hd „p as a goal toward which ofgthe University should be urged th° biU automatically goes intowe should strive."11 remains our contention,however, that the University willnot be brought nearer this goalthrough the restrictions imposedon its students by the new hous¬ing regulation."As difficult as it is to define, to express their opposition in let¬ters to the Dean of the -Collegeand to the Alumni association,respectively.”In other action during the As¬sembly meeting, the Student codeamendment that would abolishfaculty advisors as a requirement effect. Jim Thomason, president of the Assembly of Studentgovernment, presides over Tuesday's meeting.a community of scholars is not |-or recognition of student or-only a group of scholarly peo- g-anizations was referred back topie living in close proximity to Committee on Recognizedo n* another. A true community gtIMjent Organizations (CORSO).ol scholars is held together, not Speaking for the motion to re-by the tics of physical unity, but feri j0im Kim, CORSO chairman,In the bonds of intellectual search, stated that John P Netherton,challenge, and exchange. The dean 0[ students, had not yet de-members of such a community cjdod whether to accept or to Vol. 69 — No. 51owe their loyalty not to a com- veto the proposal.mon environment, but to a com¬mon dedication to discovery ofthe truth.” ' ,The bill, in addition, containsfive mandates, to different de¬partments of the government. University of Chicago, December 2, 1960Says corps' won't harm draftThe mandates are:"The Executive Council to ne¬gotiate with the Dean of Studentsand the Dean of the College forthe modification of the regula-t ion.“The Student-Faculty Relationscommittee to ask the FacultySenate to consider expressing anopinion on the regulation andmethods of obtaining a commun¬ity of scholars.“The President of the Assem¬bly to request that dormitorygovernments express oppositionto the regulation.“The Election and Rules com¬mittee to consider the possibility The Point Four YouthCorps will not harm the pres¬ent selective service system orthe ROTC programs, a spokes¬man for the Director of theSelective Service system de¬clared last week.The spokesman, acting underthe authority of Lieutenant Gen¬eral Lewis B. Hershey, told aHarvard Crimson reporter thatthe Youth Corps would “put nostrain” on the number of menavailable for the draft.Even a Youth Corps of tenthousand—and the present pro¬posal calls only for several hun¬ dred during the first year—wouldhardly dent the number of mendrafted every year, the “spokes¬man said.He added that many men re¬ceive draft deferments under anyone of a large number of presentprograms. The Youth Corpswould be a relatively small pro¬gram even if it included tenthousand men.Whether to exempt Youth Corpsparticipants from the draft orinstead offer them temporary de¬ferment has become a majorpoint of interest in the YouthCorps issue. Observers feel thatthe only opposition to the YouthPlay of Daniel opens soon“The Play of Daniel,” atwelfth century medieval mu¬sical drama, will have itsmid-western premiere at theRockefeller Memorial chapel,59th street and Woodlawnavenue, December 12 through 17.The UC Visiting committee tothe division of the humanities issponsoring the performance.Under the direction of NoahGreenberg, the New York ProMusica will present its 20th cen¬tury revival of this Europeanmasterpiece.Written in 1230 by the studentsnf the Cathedral of Beauvais,!• ranee, “Daniel” developed fromthe “Procession of Prophets,” an amplification of a sixth centuryritual used on Christmas night.Like other liturgical dramas ofthis period, it was performedafter the clergy of the cathedralhad finished their service.The story of “Daniel” is told\vit#i deep religious conviction.The audience is carried througha series of emotions from terrorto joy; from Daniel’s trial in thelion’s den to his deliverance andprophecy of the coming of theMessiah.Pro Musica employs an Englishverse narration, written by VV. H.Auden, which alternates with themonophonic vocal line in Latin.Founded by Greenberg in 1952,t Jonn Dietitian (left), in the title role In Omar Shapli'sThe Drafting of Sixtus Borden/ as he appeared in last] n|gbt's opening performance. The play is part of the 'To-| night at 8:30' series. See story on back page. this unique chamber ensemblespecializes in music of the Ba¬roque period from the courts ofFrance, Spain, and Germany, andsongs and madrigals of the Eliza¬bethan period.Composed of eleven members,the group includes two sopranos,a counter-tenor (male alto), atenor, and a bass, and five instru¬mentalists who have mastered theone-keyed flute, the viola da gam-ba, the family of five recorders,the rebec (medieval fiddle), andthe harpsichord.Intensive research into scholar¬ly sources, printed editions, manu¬scripts, and libraries, both hereand abroad, goes into the prepa¬ration of each program.Pro Musica gave the first com¬plete 20th century presentation of“Daniel” at the Cloisters in Janu¬ary, 1958.Last summer the play was pre¬sented in some of Europe's cathe¬drals including Westminster Ab¬bey in London, and St. Germaindes Pres in Paris.The drama was hailed by criticsin England, France, Italy, and theUnited States.There will be seven perform¬ances: Monday, December 12through Saturday, December 17,at 8:45 pm with a matinee onDecember 17, at 8:45 pm with amatinee on December 17 at 2:30especially for students.Tickets for the opening nightbenefit are $10. Other eveningperformances are $4.40, $3.30, and$2.20. Saturday matinee is $1.50.Tickets may be obtained atMarshall Field & Company; atthe Main Street Book store, 642North Michigan avenue; at theAdministration building, 5801South Ellis avenue; or by mail,by sending a stamped, self-ad¬dressed envelope together withyour check, to “UC, the Play ofDaniel committee,” room 1012,221 West Wacker drive, Chicago 1.Proceeds will benefit the Fel¬lowship fund of the division of thehumanities of UC. Corps will come from those whofeel it is a haven for draft dodg¬ers.In a move to destroy this ob¬jection before it is seriouslyraised Congressman Reuss (I).,Wisconsin), author of the orig¬inal Youth Corps bill, said lastweek that he envisioned draftdeferment rather than completeexemption for Youth Corps mem¬bers.A spokesman for Reuss added,however, that deferment wouldmean that members of the YouthCorps would in effect be exempt¬ed since they would enter theprogram when approximatelytwenty-two or twenty-three yearsof age and serve for three years.The selective service system isnot drafting persons over the ageof twenty-six at the present time,the spokesman said.He said that participants wouldprobably be given special con¬sideration by draft boards; thiswould presumably result in theirbeing drafted only in a state ofemergency, in which case tempo¬rary discontinuance of the YouthCorps would seem a likely possi¬bility.Humphrey speaksSenator Humphrey, who spon¬sored the Youth Corps in theSenate last year, proposed com¬plete exemption for Youth Corpsparticipants.He felt that members of theYouth Corps would serve theircountry in a way at least asvaluable, if not more so, thanthe average military draftee.But he proposed specific safe¬guards to keep the Corps free ofdraft dodgers.He said a vigorous screening tomake certain that all Corps mem¬bers meet the rigid languageand technical skills requirementsinherent in the program wouldeliminate automatically most ofthe draft dodgers.In addition, he advocated theimmediate drafting of any mem¬ber whose performance did notmeet the standards required bythe Youth Corps.'Army is easier'He also thought that the typeof work participants will engagein would make many goldbrick*ers feel that the army was theeasier way out. ,But draft exemption, he said,was necessary to insure enoughapplicants to the Youth Corps tokeep its standards high and per¬formance satisfactory.Other persons studying theCorps have agreed that exemp¬tion is preferable to deferment.Craig Comstock, a Harvard stu¬dent heading a group to studythe kinds of work Corp memberswould do in underdeveloped countries, thought exemption wasthe only just rew'ard for personsundergoing the hardships neces¬sary to the successful working ofthe Youth Corps.Comstock also proposed thatthe United Nations be consideredas a possible administrator ofthe Youth Corps. The UN has ad¬vantages over both the federalgovernment and private US or¬ganizations, said Comstock.The most important advantage^he explained, was the savingfrom embarrassment of govern¬ments of under developed coun¬tries who might be accused ofbowing to US imperialism if they,accepted Corps members byrect agreement with the govern¬ment.'UN is better'The UN is better than a privategroup as an administrator of theprogram simply because it is al¬most universally respected amongnewly independent nations, Corn-stock stated.It would also be easier to getCongress to give draft exemptionstatus to participants in a UNprogram than to members of aprivate organization. Draft ex¬emption, he said, is essential tothe smooth working of the YouthCorps.Comstock’s data on Job descrip¬tions in underdeveloped countrieswill be published in early Janiz¬ary. It may be used as an impor¬tant basis for the study of thoprogram, authorized by Congresslast year, which is now being car¬ried out by a Colorado State uni-versity group.The study group is operatingon only $10,000, according to it*director, Dr. Maurice Albertson.Comstock’s report will be avail¬able to Dr. Albertson withoutcost.Receives helpDr. Albertson is receiving helpfrom other student organization*as well. The Chjcago Maroon iaindexing all articles on the YouthCorps in student newspapers andmagazines. It is hoped that thiscataloguing will supply the Colo-rado group with a ready defini¬tion of student attitudes on theYouth Corps.Gene Vinogradoff, national new*editor of the Maroon, is directingthe cataloguing. He said that aUarticles on the Youth Corps todate have strongly endorsed it.Vinogradoff attributed the over-whelming student support to theopportunity the program offersfor students to learn at first handabout the goals and needs ofprimitive peoples with whom they;would never otherwise come intocontact.He agrees with Comstock andSenator Humphrey that draftexamption status is desirable forYouth Corps participants. “A stu¬dent in the Youth Corps will un¬dergo greater hardships and will.(Continued on page five).f-CC considers revisionsCancelling of In ter-clubball, and withdrawal of DeltaSigma from the Inter-clubCouncil were discussed at arecent meeting. There will be noBall due to lack of funds, time,and Interest. ( An agenda lias been established representatives, the president, andfor the committee to considerConstitution( revisions. Items in¬cluded are the questions of: whatis the purpose of clubs, are clubsworthwhile, are the purposes ofclubs fulfilled, and should clubsbe carbon copies of each other.According to that agenda, "the two other members, with one votecast by the club as a unit.“4. In the case of a tie vote, ora 3T vote whore one club feelsthat it has been unfairly treated,there shall be an arbitrationboard composed of one alumnafrom each club and one facultyDelta Sigma will temporarily problems facing clubs right now member to decide results"5. Rush shall be a period, nota calendar of definite events. Atthe end of this period there shouldbe a Preferential dance and pledg¬ing, and possibly open rush forthe rest of the year. Definite rushrules should be kept at a min¬imum."6. There would be no dues toleave Inter-club council, a spokes- are obvious. The Council last yearman announced this week, in or- defined these problems and sug-*r .o devote its full time to rush- **•*?* solu,‘°^,Jh' 2.u*d„, ... ranglers have suggested a sevenJng activities. Delta Sigma will point program for the future or-not be represented on the Council ga nation of the Council. Thefor an indefinite period, probably program consists of:&10 weeks, "during which they A coUncil of on]y ciub pres¬will devote their energies toward identa is unsatisfactory for twogetting more pledges," comment- reaSons; the presidents are more Inter-club, if the Council wanteded Maxine Blau, president of the lively to be biased than anyone to sponsor events it would haveretiring club. "I do not feel that eise> an<j ^ overburdens them to have them on a self supportingDelta Sigma can vote responsibly wjth WOrk.at present, due to the fact that "2. The chairman should be im-we have only $4.46 in funds, and partial, preferably a person out-few members to contribute to any side the club system, and shouldplans the Council might have." have no vote.3. Each club should have threeRepresentatives of Delta Sigmadenied that they were leaving theCouncil in protest because one oftheir "pledges” decided to join theQuadranglers. Although the girlhad not yet officially pledged Del¬ta Sigma, and thus was not tech¬nically a member, club membersfelt that there was ‘‘undue coer¬cion” on the part of Quadranglers.Withdrawing from the Coun¬cil will free Delta Sigma from therequirements of the Council rushrules.Inter-club council decided topermit any club to take in newmembers by submitting thenames of the candidates to theCouncil, without going throughthe formalities of rush.The current state of the Coun¬cil was also discussed by the threepresent members: Esoteric, Quad¬ranglers, and Mortarboard, Mrs.Ravitts, official sponsor of theclubs, Mrs. Newman, and two rep¬resentatives of Delta Sigma. Itwas felt that it was undesirablethat people outside the club sys¬tem should know the status of theclubs. So officially, Delta Sigmaremains a member, and Councilproceeds remain normal, theCouncil is meeting irregularlyand investigating possible revi¬sions in its constitution. basis, either by charging admis¬sion, or having money-makingprojects to build up a treasury."7. Parliamentary procedureshould be followed at Councilmeetings.”Registration schedule announcedADVANCE REGISTRATIONDATES AND PROCEDURESFOR WINTER QUARTERANNOUNCEDAdvanced registration will beheld for students on theQuadrangles according to the fol¬lowing schedule:Undergraduates... Nov. 28-Dec. 16Humanities/SocialSciences Dec. 5-9Physical/BiologicalSciences Dec. 12-16Medical School Nov. 28-Dec. 16Graduate Business Dec. 13-16Graduate Library Dec. 5 9Theological Schools Dec. 12 16Graduate Education Dec. 5-9Law Dec. 5-7Social ServiceAdministration Dec. 5-16For all students, registrationconsists of four steps: Step 1 —obtaining registration cards fromthe Registrar (However, studentsJimmy'sand the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodiawn Are.Maman.1Pourquoi ne pas dire Ikpapa qu’il a bfesoin de plusd'assurance-vie, maintenantque je suis U? 11 y a unrepresen taut Sun Life danscetie ville ct, tu »ais,Sun Life est une des grandescompagniei d’assurance-viedu monde. Demandedone b papa deeommuniquer avec lui,aujourd hui mtincl INOM ET ADRESSE DE L’&GENTRepresentativeRALPH J. WOOD JR., '481 N. LoSoFle Chicago, III.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-6800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA in the professional schools ofLaw, Business, Medicine, Divinity,Social Service, and Library Sci¬ence will pick up their packets inthe offices of their respectiveDeans of Students). Step 2 — ob¬taining approval of registrationfrom advisers and deans. Step 3— submitting completed and ap¬proved packets to the Registrarfor fee assessment and the issu¬ance of class admission tickets.Step 4 — paying, or arranging topay, fees to the Bursar. A studentwho does not complete Step 4 isnot registered.Undergraduates in residencewho pre-registered will reportfirst to the Registrar to obtaintheir packets and'— after fillingout all cards — then will go to theoffice of the Dean of Undergrad¬uate Students, Blake Hall 120, byalphabetic groups announced inthe Winter Time Schedules. Un¬dergraduates unable to report asscheduled may register from De¬cember 12 to 16. In addition, Un¬dergraduates wishing to changetheir sections for the next Quar¬ter must register from December12 to 16. All Undergraduates mustconstruct their next Quarter’sschedule in agreement with theirapproved registration forms, ob¬tainable in Blake 120. Changeswhich need to bo made for thenext quarter subsequent to thetime the student turns in hiscards to the Registrar at Step 3will not be accepted until Janu¬ary 5. *.After securing the Dean’s ap¬proval, undergraduates must turn Lifts ban on red speakersAcademic freedom and the dom of inquiry have recentlyrights of universities to free- caused controversy at WayneState university 'Michigan),*Wayne is a state supported in¬stitution. Recently, its president,Clarence Hilberry, lifted a banforbidding communist speakers tolecture on the campus. A student-faculty committee supported theresolution, the 20 students votingfor it, the 10 members from thefaculty voting against it.The controversy began whenMiss Ann Byerlein tried to havethe ban reinvoked through thepressure of 62.000 signatures ona petition she has been circulat¬ing, the written support of J. Ed¬gar Hoover and Herbert Phil-brick, and of state Senator ElmerR. Porter, chairman of the Sen¬ate’s appropriations committee.Senator I’orter originally threat¬ened to withhold state funds,which for a state university meansclosing up the school. In support¬ing Miss Byerlein, Porter wrotelie agreed with her "one hundredper cent that this (lifting of theban) is indeed o|>en cooperationwith the Communist party."You may rest assured that thefirst chance I have the Board ofGovernors and President Hilberrywill find out that I absolutelywill not tolerate the stand theyhave taken.”Later, Porter reconsidered hisoriginal comment, and stated that,"I’m in no position to take thestand that I won't give them anymoney. That would be foolish . . .I meant that if they are going topermit Communist speakers thereit might be very had for themto get increased appropriations.”Meanwhile, the board has putoff any further decision on theban in response to Porter’s or ig¬inal threat. But, according to theMichigan Daily, Miss Byerlein hasbeen subject to much criticism,especially for her methods andphilosophy. Apparently, the Dailypointed out, her statements be¬fore the board convinced them ofnothing. •She also showed parts of theHUAC films* from the San Fran¬cisco demonstrations, the samefilms which have been attackedas being gross misrepresentationscf the actual scene due to delib¬erate splicing. The National Stu¬dent association and Californiagroups have circulated mimeo¬graphed material to accompanythe film in an attempt to explainits inaccuracies and falsehoods.in all their cards to the Registrarbefore December 16.Undergraduates who did notpreregister will first pick up apacket from the registrar andthen go to the Office of the Deanbetween December 12 and 16 oron January 3 or 4, the dates ofregular registration.Graduate students in the Divi¬sions and the Graduate School ofEducation will report first to theRegistrar for packets and thento the office of their adviser forprogram consultation. Afterwardsthey will seek program approvalfrom their Dean of Students.Such students will return to theRegistrar’s and Bursar’s for com¬pletion of Steps 3 and 4 beforeDecember 16.Professional School studentswill report first to tlie office ofthe Doan of Students for Stops1 and 2. These students must alsoreturn to the Registrar’s and Bur¬sar's for completion of Steps 3and 4 before December 16.Students entering the Univer¬sity for the first time and stu¬dents who were not in residencethis Autumn must first obtaintheir packets from the Registrarand then proceed to the office ofthe appropriate Dean of Students.A new student will be asked toturn in a copy of his Certificateof Admissions at Stop 3 of regis¬tration.While it is possible to registeron Tuesday or Wednesday, Janu¬ary 3 or 4, all students currentlyin residence are strongly urgedto do so beforehand.THESES, TERM PAPERS, and MSS.typed professionally on IBM or ManualAccurate and Speedy ServiceBirdie Reeve—HYDE PARK BANK BLDG.Midw ay 3-90I I — Room 503, 1525 E. 53rdforeign cor bosprtd & cfenicMl 3-3113dealers becastrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli &michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespecialists be speed tuningcustom engine installationsclutch .gear boxx electricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachworkbob iiitir MG psychiatrist2306 e. 71st st.Chicago, illinois CHECK THECATALOG PRICES...THEN CHECK OURS!• CAMERAS • PROJECTORS• TAPE RECORDERS• Brownie 8 MovieComero Kir w. Light. . .$29.95• Bolex C 8 S8 M.M. Movie Co mere. .$39.50• Cannon P, F 1.8 $159-50• Wollensak 1515Stereo Recorder $175.00MODEL1342 E. 55th HY 3-92592 • CHICACO MAROON • Dec. 2, I960Ascoli topic is liberalism 1“4n editor,” said Max As-poli editor of the Reportermagazine, “is a spokesman forthe people on the same wavelength as he is.” Ascoli spokef(ir"the series, “The ModernlitnM al mind at work,” sponsoredl,v ('hanning-Murray, on Monday,November 28, at Breasted hall.Ascoli came to America in 1931as a refuge and political exilefrom Italy. After arriving inAmerica he came to UC to ob¬serve the nominating conventionsthat were being held in Chicago.‘ Here at UC I was exposed for(he first time to the shock ofparticipating in American poli¬tics." said Ascoli. “I was thirstyfor politics which had been out¬lawed in my native country. Im¬mediately I was attracted to theDemocrats, those wonderful peo¬ple who are always in a mess.Ascoli explained that in 1932people were saying that Roose¬velt was a young ambitious manwho wanted to be President butbad no real qualifications for thejob. They accused Roosevelt ofhu\ ing no ideas or programs buta charming personality. Peoplewere also suying that a vote forKoosevelt \vas merely a voteagainst Hoover. “You may drawyour own conclusions l>etweenthis and Kennedy,’' suggestedAscoli.“I was a liberal when I camefrom Italy, and I feel guilty thatI have no past sins to confess,not even old radicalism,” said As-coli. Ascoli described his lastyears in Italy as the “hardesttest a liberal can endure.” Hehad to say no to the regime thatwas ruining his country eventhough they were bringing inmany social reforms. “The pro¬ gram was largely one of a wel¬fare state and was in many waysakin to the program the liberalswanted. Italy wanted the partici¬pation of the liberals but manyof them would not consent to thetotalitarian nature of the govern¬ment. Ascoli defined totalitarian¬ism as a “regime that permeatesevery aspect of life and controlseverything including dreams.”Ascoli feels that when he cameto America he was a liberal con¬ditioned by background but notyet identified with or limited bythe subjects and conditions ofAmerican politics. He believesthere is no greater document oftrue liberalism than the Ameri¬can Constitution which containsperfect balance of democracy in¬cluding the much debated topicof the electoral college. “The lib¬eral should be as a crattsman, anartisan, participating in the com¬munity and serving it,” said As¬coli.To help embody and define inconcrete application his ideas As¬coli founded the Reporter maga¬zine in 1949. According to Ascolithe ideals of the magazine wereto consider national and interna¬tional affairs in the same per¬spective and to analyze the re¬lationship between the individualand the community.The Reporter carried an articlein one of its first issues exposingthe famous “China lobby.” Theyproved that a US senator wasaccepting money from the bankof China and demanded a govern¬ment investigation of the situa¬tion. The senator implicated inthis was Richard M. Nixon. Un¬fortunately, Ascoli feels that thiswas one in a series of failuresas he did not prevent Nixon frommaintaining power in his state and party and securing the nom¬ination for president.Ascoli has become acclimatedto the US and has been active inAmerican political thought andaction. He fought McCarthyismand “those were the only dayssince I had ceased being a DPand became a militant liberalthat I was afraid. McCarthyismwas so popular because it wasa movement to find scapegoats,”said Ascoli. His troubles as aliberal editor include such prob¬lems as responsibility, timeliness,and initiation. Max Ascoli, editor of the Reporter magazine, speak¬ing on "the Modern liberal mind at work."Latke meets hammantash“The first international Hannukah conference on the peaceful uses of the latke and thehammantash” will be held on Tuesday, December 13, at the Hillel house.Latest in a series of fourteen debates on the relative merits of the two victuals, par¬ticipants in the panel hope to “settle this conflict once and for all.”The latke, a round, flat potato pancake, is the traditional food of the Jewish Han-nukah celebration. The hammantash is a triangular cookie, filled with either prunes orpoppy seeds, and is the tradi- ' “ 'poppy seeds. *nd_ f . 1. ’ lege. Said Fern, “I’m pledged to at them last year when he said,tional food of *he* 1M .J secrecy. I can’t let a serious sub- “As the years go by it becomesAccording to Rabb ject jike this be prematurely more difficult to determine thePekarsky, head of the Hillel jeaked t<> the g„ relative merits of the two foods,foundation, topics to be discus other members of the panel We are looking, at the very least,at this years colloquium inc will ke: Louis Gottschalk, Gus- for the argument that will end“The hammantash—-aconven i - tavug F and Ann M Swift distin- all argument. This cannot go onal explosive, and Ihe latK s ighed service professor in the for too much longer, it’s tooa space weapon ” Pekarsky terms ^epartment of £istory( Herman much fun."the traditional discussion A Finer, professor in the depart- This year’s debate will beginof inquiry that is unique, m n ment political science, John at 7 pm sharp. It will be heldit is pursued with equal vigor Hayward assistant professor in at the Hillel house, 5715 Wood-the Federated Theological facul- lawn avenue. It is being giventy, and Elihu Katz, assistant pro- during the week of quarterly ex-fessor of sociology. aminations, in the words of Rabbi— Although this year’s ‘peace Pekarsky, as an “attempt to pro¬bate’s participants are unwilling t . kad never been formally vide examination therapy for stu*Ji.n.l^A v» rxlone Ck 11\7P IV , _. __ . »•announced, panelist Tax hinted dents.by representatives of all departments of the University.”Although the debate is still almost two weeks off, and the de-More books availableLists of required textbooks for many winter quarter under¬graduate courses will be made available soon by the Studentgovernment cooperative bookstore, according to LeonardFriedman, director of the co-operative department.Reading lists for the humani-ties 112, 125, 201, social science032, history 132, physics 216, and All books ordered through themath 151 arc already available, service will te sold at a discountb^t-Hinr, *n of at least 15%, and at a higheraccording to Friedman.A special booth to handle or¬ders for next quarter will be open discount in some cases. Bookspublished by 17 publishing housesbetween December 5 and 9 in the arc, **"« ha"dled bY the service,Mandel hall corridor. The booth and these should include mostwill be open during the hours of books required lor courses.11 am to 2 pm. A fuller list of re- Ail books ordered during thisquired books should be ready by period may be picked up on theMonday, according to Friedman, first day of the winter quarter,“Students in courses with only January 4, in the Student gov-one section can get the reading ernment office, Ida Noyes hall,lists either by checking with the Over 20 orders have been placedinstructor or by looking at the with the service to date. Direc-list for last year’s course,” Fried- tor Friedman expects that thisman said. “We are having diffi- number should substantially in*< ulty getting the lists ready im- crease during the next week,mediately because many depart- Said he, “With the great savingsments are just now deciding that we are offering to students,exactly which books they want we fully expect that many peopleto use.” will take advantage of it.” to divulge their plans, a livelycontroversy is already shapingup. After a brief canvass of pan¬el members, two of the principleantagonists seem to be Sol Tax,professor of anthropology, andHarry Kalven, professor in thelaw school.The militant Tax told theMaroon in a pre-debate state¬ment, “I’m all for continuing thefight. I think it’s a great issue.”Tax paused for a while whenasked WHY it was a great issue.“This thing about talking peace,”he concluded, “is wrong. Thereshould be some things that wecan fight about without destroy¬ing the world.”Kalven, on the other hand, feltthat “Stockpiling of these itemsis a major problem. It is impor¬tant that we reduce these currentstockpiles.” Kalven will serve asmoderator of the-panel.A more typical comment onthe impending discussion wasfrom Alan Fern, assistant pro¬fessor of humanities in the Col-STUDENT SPECIALSPIZZA (ANY COMBINATION) $1.15 to $4.15LARGE BUCKET $<979of Toasted, Golden Brown 4^This Will Feed a Family of FivevtllvIVCn Vary Economically'All Party Buckets Now IncludeCrisp French Fries & Creamy Cole SlawSMALLER BUCKET *229* Bucket O’Shrimp ..$2.45• Bucket O'Rlbs ....$4,7? • Shrimp & Rib* ....$5.69• Ribs & Chicken ...$5.8940*1636 East55th StreetCallBU 8-8440 • Fact Homef Deliverylb • Carry-OutService1851 East87th StreetCallRE 1-9393 M,tatott#608 N. MICHIGANtZTge gorfetfureOutercoatf of importedfabrics, in Saxonies andShetlands, loomed bysuperior craftsmen.Regular $85 $CQ95Value VP MEMO FROMJ. EDWARD FEINWhy it pays to own -lifelong 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. gYou’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 RepresentativeIVew YorkInsurance Company134 S. LaSalleDec. 2, 1960 • CHICAGO CE 6-5438MAROON • 34Supreme court hears two HUAC casesby Art Mac EwanThe Supreme Court recent¬ly heard two eases whichchallenge the validity of theHouse Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC).On November 17, the cases ofCarl Branden and Frank Wilkin¬son were heard by the Court.Both men have been sentencedto one year in prison for con¬tempt of Congress; they refusedto answer questions put to themby the HUAC and based this re¬fusal on the First Amendment.Wilkinson, who spoke about hisease at UC on November 21, andBraden, who will speak on De¬cember 11, were both called be¬fore the Committee in Atlanta,Georgia in July 1958 when theCommittee was investigating“Communist infiltration and ac¬tivities in the South." •Braden testifies before HUACIn his testimony Braden an¬swered questions pertaining to hispresent occupation, extent of edu¬cation and such matters. How¬ever, when asked a question per¬taining to where he had been justbefore a recent trip, Braden re¬fused to answer. He maintainedthat such a question was “notpertinent to any possible investi¬gation that this Committee mightbe conducting, and I also believethat it is an invasion of my rightto associate under this Amend¬ment, and I therefore decline toanswer."At this point in the hearing,Mr. Arens, chief counsel for theCommittee attempted to explainto Braden the pertinency of sucha question:“Sir, it is our understandingthat you are a Communist, amember of the Communist party;that you have been identified un¬ der oath as a Communist, part ofthe Communist party which is atentacle of the international Com¬munist conspiracy. It is our infor¬mation further, sir, that you as aCommunist have been propagat¬ing the Communist activity andthe Communist line principally inthe South; that you have beenmasquerading behind a facade ofhumanitarianism; that you havebeen hiding behind a facade ofemotional appeal to certain seg¬ments of our society; that yourpurpose, objective, your activities,are designed to further the causeof the international Communistconspiracy in the United States.”Arens went on to speak aboutpending legislation being consid¬ered by the HUAC, Including pro¬visions which “undertake totighten the security laws respect¬ing the registration of Commu¬nists; some of these provisionsundertake to tighten the securitylaws respecting dissemination ofCommunist propaganda. Some ofthese security laws preclude cer¬tain types of activities, the verynature of which we understandyou have been engaged in.”When then directed to answerthe question, Braden said that“Mr. Arens has been grossly mis-‘I» ••.Ml «•*■T FINE FOOD132 1 fast 57th Street Carl Braden, testifyingbefore the House Commit¬tee on un-American Activi¬ties.SCHOLARLY BOOKSonHISTORY and LITERATUREBOUGHT AND SOLDHours: 2 PM to 9 PM Ivory Day including SundayJoseph O’Gara, Bookseller1360 East 53rd St. DO 3-4035Sample Fares (Plus Tax)Los Angeles $69.00Denver $48.62Son Antonio $47.00 CUSTOM SERVICE...Reclining Seal*... Departure Tailored fo YourSchedule... Courteous AttendantsServe Meals & Snacks ... BeverageService To Your Order.San Francisco $69.00Dallas $35.00Seattle $76.86For Information and reservations contactFred Paulsell — Telephone Midway 3-6000Service offered « performed by Scheduled Supplemental AirlinesCertificated by the Civil Aeronautics Board; consistent winners of theNational Safety Council's Aviation Safety Award. informed; and it still remains afact that my beliefs and associa¬tions are none of the business ofthis committee.“On the grounds of the FirstAmendment to the United StatesConstitution, which protects theright of all citizens to practice be¬liefs and associations, freedom ofthe press, freedom of religion,and freedom of assembly. On thatground I stand, sir.”Braden refused to answer fur¬ther questions which also per¬tained to his beliefs and associa¬tions. At one point Braden, whoworks with the Southern Confer¬ence Education Fund stated, “In¬tegration is what you are inves¬tigating. All the people subpoenadhere are integrationists.”Takes first- AmendmentWhen Wilkinson was called tothe stand he refused to answerany of the Committee’s questions,except as to what his name was.He, too, based his refusal toanswer questions on the firstAmendment. He claimed that themandate and the practices of theHUAC were in direct violation ofthe first Amendment. (See Ma¬roon of Nov. 18 and Nov. 26 fordetails of Wilkinson's case.)Both Wilkinson and Bradenwere cited by the committee forcontempt of Congress and weregiven one year sentences. Judgingfrom recent decisions of the Su¬preme Court it appears verydoubtful that the high Court willreverse this sentence.In the past the Court has de¬cided very simliar cases bothways. However, the Court hasnot ruled directly in the past onthe question of the constitution¬ality of the Committee’s mandate;they have usually ruled on somefine point of law.However, in the case of Wilkin¬son, it seems that they will beforced to rule whether or not theCommittee is Constitutional. Theonly loophole in the ease is thatWilkinson was subpoenad becauseof his effort to abolish the Com¬mittee. In this light it seems pos¬sible that the Court could rulethat such a subpoena was notvalid. However, this is unlikelyand the Court will most likelyrule on the Constitutionality ofthe mandate.This controversial mandate iscontained in House Rule XI andreads as follows:“The Committee on Un-Amer¬ican Activities ... is authorizedto make . . . investigations of (i)the extent, character and objectsof un-American propaganda activ¬ities in the United States, (ii) thediffusion within the United Statesof subversive and un-American propaganda that is instigatedfrom foreign countries or is of adomestic origin and attacks theprinciple of the form of govern¬ment as guaranteed by our Con¬stitution, and (iii) all other ques¬tions in relation thereto thatwould aid Congress in any reme¬dial legislation. . . .”It is felt by such persons asWilkinson and Braden that theCommittee, under this mandate,has acted in a way which is detri¬mental to the rights of the indi¬vidual in this country. The Cqm- ries out the action which was im¬plied by his speech of April 24,1960, he will rise on January 3,when Congress reconvenes andmove that the Committee be abol¬ished. The support he will getis very questionable.At present only a handful ofCongressmen have committedthemselves to vote with Roose¬velt if he makes such a move.The hope is, however, that a lib¬eral bloc will establish itself andthe action will progress in thefuture.Frank Wilkenson, with a group who heard him state hiscase here last week.mittee usually defends Itself withstatements such as that state¬ment of Arens’ quoted earlier inthe article. The Committee claimsthat since it is fighting the “Com¬munist conspiracy” its actions arevalid.When House Rule XI was ad¬opted by the House of Represen¬tatives in 1945, and the Commit¬tee thereby made a permanentbody, the Congressman who wasthen its chairman stated that oneof the most useful devices bywhich democracy could be pre¬served was “exposure for expo¬sure’s sake.” The HUAC, he felt,could be used for this purpose.The Supreme Court has ruled,although not absolutely and di¬rectly, that exposure for expo¬sure’s sake is not the valid func¬tion of a Committee of Congress.Supreme Court to ruleAs it looks now the SupremeCourt will probably rule that theHUAC is a valid Committee ofCongress and it will continue toexist. However, there is a movewithin Congress itself to abolishthe Committee by simply votingit out of existence.If James Roosevelt (D-Cal) ear-ROSS ALLENWESTOThe New Image of the Good LifeThursday, Her. 8th — 8 p.m.BREASTED HALL In his speech calling for theabolition of the Committee Roose¬velt made, among others, the fol¬lowing point:“Finally, then, we come to whatI think is the most serious crit¬icism of the Committee — thefact that it has’ become an agen¬cy for the destruction of humandignity and constitutional rights.”“We have become accustomedto think of those whom it(HUAC) subpoenas or labels asvictims rather than witnesses. . . .Secret sources, arrogance, rude¬ness, defamation, and the threatof persecution cither for perjuryor contempt if they do not seekthe refuge of silence are the con¬stant ingredients of this degrad¬ing spectacle.”To point out what he thoughtto be the malicious actions ofthis Committee Roosevelt citedthe case where California schoolteachers had been subpoenad in1959:In June 1959 the Committee is¬sued subpoenas to 110 Californiaschool teachers. Most of theseteachers were on temporaryteaching status. The subpoenaswere issued during school hoursin the offices of the principals,and the newspapers carried a listof those subpoenad.Thus each teacher’s principaland the members of his commu¬nity knew he had been called toappear before the Committee.However, the Committee post¬poned the hearings for threemonths. This resulted in a wideprotest from newspapers, privatecitizens, religious groups, and la¬bor organizations that the Committee had in effect accused these(Continued on page 13)1411 E. 53rd FR 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & QalleryV.Presents Its SpecialCHUCK WAGON LUNCHAll You Desire - One Dollar Twenty FiveMon. - Wed. - Thurs. - Fri.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 2, 1960 Also Tuesday NightAll The Chicken You DesireOne Dollar Ninety Five GUITARSBANJOSMANDOLINSTHEFRET SHOP5535 DorchesterMl 3-3459If you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou¬blesome problem.PETERSON MOYINCAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.BU 8-6711V ■Asks for open occupancy Students' role questionedA bill calling for the elimi¬nation of segregated housingin Chicago has been intro¬duced in the Chicago Citycouncil by fifth ward alder¬man Leon Despres.“Based on long experience inChicago,” says Despres, “I amconvinced that housing segrega¬tion is a terrible cancer in Chi¬cago as in any other city. It is asevere threat to the health of ourcity, and the mortal enemy ofurban renewal.”Despres first proposed the billlast May but it was not then putbefore the Council. It has nowbeen referred to a special com¬mittee consisting of the Commit¬tee on planning and housing andthe Judiciary committee.While there has been talk ofo|H*n occupancy legislation for along time, Chicago as yet has nosuch law on its books. The statesof Connecticut and Colorado .alongwith the cities of New York andPittsburg already legally prohibitdiscrimination in housing. Despres sees the need for thisbill as an extremely necessaryone; the absence of such a law,he believes, opens the city to un¬healthy and unsanitary living con¬ditions.According to Despres, the sup¬port for the bill has been quiteheavy: “It is backed by everyonewho believes that there should beno housing segregation. However,there has been no commitmentas yet from the Mayor.”The bill states that no personselling, leasing or renting a hous¬ing accommodation shall “with¬hold from any person or group ofpersons such housing accommoda¬tions because of the race, color,religion, national origin or ances¬try in the terms, conditions orprivileges of the sale, rental orlease of any such housing accom¬modations or in the furnishing offacilities or services in connectiontherewith.Despres stressed that “the citymust take this step (as) the openoccupancy approach is the onlyone which can give health to ourcity.” Student leaders of the cam¬pus radio station, WUCB,were united in their opinionthat any campus stationshould be run as a student ac¬tivity. Bruce Vermazen statedthat, “The University might buildan FM station, but that wouldnot be WUCB. I am worried thatthis might mean the end ofWUCB as a student activity.”The main part of the disputearises over the role of a profes¬sional manager in the affairs ofthe station.Roger Downey, program direc¬tor of WUCB, explained that hewould like to see the radio sta¬tion student run. Under his plan.“Students would elect the stationmanager and a professional mem¬ber of the staff would act onlyas technical adviser.”“If he tried to say that ‘thiswas the kind of show you cannotput on,’ or, ‘you must put thisshow on,' I don’t think I wouldapprove.”“A radio station other than onein which students actively parti¬cipate is unsatisfactory,” he con¬ tinued. “And announcing and en¬gineering shows that are thoughtup by a professional adviser arenot what we would call participa¬tion; this would not be a studentradio station.”Nature of managerThe nature of a university sta¬tion first arose when, last fall,WUCB planned to convert itsclosed circuit broadcasting sys¬tem to limited power FM strans-mission. However, John P. Neth-erton, dean of students, and thestudents who ran the radio sta¬tion were unable to agree on therole that a professional full time manager would play in the sta¬tion’s operations.This fall, the University appliedfor an extension of its applicationfor construction of an FM sys¬tem, and members of the admin¬istration see no reason why theyshould not be accorded the FMfacilities and privileges.Netherton stated that every ef¬fort would be made to “see thatstudents have responsible duties”in the running of any future FMstation. However, he added thatan agreement would have to bereached before he would planfor an FM station.Uses valuable civiliansPlans demonstration seriesThe Chicago youth committee on Civil Rights (CYCCR) has planned a series of demon-stiations to protest what they consider the Board of education’s lack of concern over segre¬gation in Chicago. The two themes, one to be decided upon later, that were discussed were‘enforce the Supreme Court decision in Chicago,” and “end double shifts in public schools ”Emphasizing the need for such action, one of the members of the group also a repre¬sentative from the Committee on Racial Equality (CORE), said: “In elementary schoolsmost children go to de facto seg- — —— -legated schools, and in highschools the situation becomesmore serious since they are somuch more crowded.”The representative from COREcontinued, citing the differencein tlie number of students at¬tending Negro and white schools.“The average public school forNegroes contains 2,000 studentswhile the average school forwhites, only 700; and with theformer on double shifts (i.e., onegroup attending in the morningand another attending in the af¬ternoon) the Negro is at a greatdisadvantage.“Since the schools are unnec¬essarily overcrowded, and thereis in total enough space for allChicago students, then the segre¬gation and inequality could beended by organizing a pupil trans-fei program, whereby overcrowd¬ed schools would move some oftheir students into more spaciousschools outside their communi-t ios.”It was added that this programwould be highly superior to andJess costly than building newschools. Buses would be char¬tered for students living too farfrom school to walk.Another spokesman for the group stated that the main pur- and the board continues to remainpose of the demonstrations shouldbe to focus attention on theBoard of education’s lack of con¬cern over this issue. "The boardhas repeatedly refused to concernitself with integration of Chicagoschools. Our £oal, therefore,should be to force the board toassume a responsibility for end¬ing Chicago school segregation.”In addition to demonstrating,the committee plans to influencethe board by testifying at theboard budget hearing. However,it was pointed out, many groups inactive. Said one of the mem¬bers, “There is probably no wayshort of legislation or courts toforce the board to act.” Anotherhoped that they could influencethe board by “stirring up publicopinion against the boards ac¬tion.”The series of demonstrations isaimed at parents, in the hopethat they, in turn, will exert somepressure on the board. Most ef¬fective, the CYCCR decided, wouldbe continuing demonstrationswhich involved more and moretestify on this problem each year people and civic organizations. (Continued from page 1)probably contribute much moreto the US—both during and afterhis participation in the YouthCorps — than a draftee,” Vino-,gradoff said.“For these reasons draft ex¬emption is not only fair and just,but is probably essential to mak¬ing the program attractive to peo¬ple who meet the high educa¬tional and technical require¬ments,”' said Vinogradoff. He ex¬plained that these persons aregenerally not drafted under thepresent circumstances becausethey are considered more valua¬ble as civilians than as GI’s.“Would they not be of even great¬er value as workers in underdevel¬oped countries than as US civil¬ians?” Vinogradoff asked.Final judgment on the questionof draft exemption will not bemade until next May. At that timethe Colorado State universitystudy group will complete itsrecommendations, one of whichwill concern military status.Even if Dr. Albertson’s study group recommends draft exemp¬tion there is a possibility thatCongress will drop the recom¬mendation in considering the pro¬gram. The opposite possibilityexists, too, but observers feel itis less likely that draft exemptionstatus will be extended to par¬ticipants if the study group doesnot recommend it.But observers admit that It istoo early to make any really ac¬curate predictions of Congress¬ional action concerning this point.They feel that a lot will dependon the stand taken by President¬elect Kennedy.Up to now he has mentioneddraft exemption as a very likelypossibility, but he has never com¬mitted himself to one side or theother.Spokesmen for Kennedy haveindicated that he is waiting formore detailed information fromthe study group. Observers be¬lieve that he has not sounded outthe opinions of key Congressmenyet either, and that he will wantto know their views before mak¬ing a commitment %Gifts for All OccaiiwiiK0GA GIFT SHOPimported and Domestic Dry GoadsChina ware - Jewelry - KimoneeSandals - Greeting CardsLay-Awayko*a 1203 E. 35 St.Hi: 4-0856 Chicago 15, III.I Wear Contact LensesM. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristB32 E. 55th St.University Ave. HY 3-8372 Christmas SuggestionsBOOKS FOR ADULTS-BOOKS FOR CHILDREN-ART BOOKS - BOOKS WITHFINE BINDINGS-ART PRINTS - MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONSPORTABLE TYPEWRITERSRECONDITIONED USED STANDARD TYPEWRITERSCAMERAS AND PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENTFOUNTAIN PENS-MECHANICAL PENCILS - SOCIAL STATIONERYLEATHER BRIEF CASES - STUDENT LAMPS-DESK PADSTENNIS RACQUETS-TENNIS BALLS-GOLF BALLSNAME BRAND SHIRTS - NECKTIES AND HOSE FOR MENNAME BRAND LINGERIE AND HOSE FOR WOMENCOSTUME JEWELRY AND U. OF C.-RINGS FOR MEN AND WOMENBLOUSES-SKIRTS-HANDBAGS-TOILETRIES FOR WOMENINFANTS' WEAR-TOYS-STEIFF STUFFED ANIMALS FOR CHILDRENCOCKTAIL GLASSES - GENSE STAINLESS STEEL FLATWARE & HOLLOWAREIMPORTED SWEDISH, HOLLAND AND ITALIAN GIFTWARETHE ORIGINAL MRS. SNYDER'S CANDIESFree Gift WrappingFree Wrapping for MailngPost Office Located in the BuildingThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEDec. 2, 1960 « CH1CACO MAROON • 5 1Is NDEA repeal a forgotten cause?r What has become of last year’sfcampaign to repeal the oath andaffidavit in the National DefenseEducation act? The "cause that ab¬sorbed hundreds of man hours ofUCers and other students still exists;the oath and affidavit have not yet beenrepealed; UC, Harvard, Princeton andmany other universities remain withdrawnfrom the NDEA, and their students con¬tinue to suffer from the resulting lack offederal loans and fellowships.Yet hardly a word has been utteredhere or elsewhere about working againfor the repeal of this sole blight on aid toeducation.What are the chances of repeal thisyear? On the whole, efforts to abolishthe oath and affidavit promise to be muchmore successful this year than last formany reasons.The first reason is Senator Kennedy’selection. Senator Kennedy sponsored ef¬forts to repeal the oath and affidavit in2959 and again in 1960. Last year he metwith partial success when the Senate■adopted a compromise proposal eliminat¬ing the affidavit but making it a criminalOffense punishable by five years in prison,a ten thousand dollar fine, or both, to ap¬ply for an NDEA loan or scholarship whilea “member of the Communist party” orany similar organization advocating over¬throw of the U. S. government by force,violence or other illegal means. The House, however, did not have timeto act on the Senate compromise beforeadjourning for the conventions. With Sen¬ate and House liberals dissatisfied withthe compromise measure, the House wasnot urged to take up the matter duringthe special session of Congress followingthe Republican convention, so the com¬promise never became law.This year Kennedy will again work forthe repeal of the oath and affidavit. Henow has the prestige of a presidentialvictory behind him, the firm support ofpowerful Lyndon Johnson, and a muchmore unified Democratic party to workwith. Chances for success look very good,indeed.A second major factor in making thisyear’s outlook better than last year’s isthe scheduled rewriting of the NDEA.The original act expires this year and itwill come up for renewal; its popularitywith educators, scientists and the militaryalmost assures its repassage without ma¬jor changes—except possibly for a largeramount of money for loans and scholar¬ships.The "power” behind the original NDEAIs Representative Carl Elliot (D., Ala¬bama). He is the chairman of the HouseSubcommittee on education, and he willbe responsible for proposing any changesin the present NDEA and for holdinghearings on various aspects of the bill.Last year his attitude on repeal of theoath and affidavit teas “let’s wait ’til nextyear and do it all at once” But even thenhe teas not opposed to the repeal of atleast the affidavit; he even held hearingsi« the face of conservative oppositionfrom the Education and Labor Committeechairman, Representative Graham Bar¬ den ID., North Carolina). This year ob¬servers predict that he will favor repealand, with Kennedy’s expected urging,probably introduce the repeal bill himself.Another major obstacle to repeal wasremoved with the resignation last year ofRepresentative Graham Barden, an old-line southern reactionary who dislikededucation bills as much as Rules Com¬mittee Chairman Howard Smith (D., Vir¬ginia) does. Barden will be replaced ashead of the Education and Labor commit¬tee by Adam Clayton Powell (D., NewYork), a strong Kennedy campaigner.Representative Powell told a group ofUC students and professors at a luncheonin October that he would “work with Sen¬ator Kennedy for the repeal” of both theoath and the affidavit.With Kennedy, Elliott and Powell co¬operating in repeal attempts, and withthe NDEA up for revision anyway, thechances for repeal have never been better.Why in the light of this favorable poli¬tical climate has student and faculty ef¬fort seemingly come to a standstillT Thereasons for repealing at least the affida¬vit must certainly be as cotnpelling aslast year.Students are still forced to choose be¬tween their academic freedom and theirpocketbooks — which sometimes meanstheir educational future—when the affi¬davit is placed before them.Farmers, servicemen, and corporationexecutives are still exempted from sign¬ing similar oaths and affidavits whenthey receive financial aid from the gov¬ernment, and their receipts total morethan the nation’s entire educationalbudget. Students remain the only privategroup in the nation that is suspected ofsubversion and red affiliation; how many student Communists have been “captured ’by the FBI in the past year?The affidavit is still as unsuccessful anattempt to “legislate beliefs” as it turwas.Universities must still contribute tenper cent of the loan fund, the governmentstill has the right to limit the universities’dispensation of its own funds.Now, however, an additional reasoncompels the repeal of the affidavit: over25 major US universities and colleges findthat they cannot with clear conscienceparticipate in any program that makessuch requirements of their students; as aresult, all of these institutions have with¬drawn from NDEA loan and scholarshipprograms.Last year most of them could findmoney to lend to students who had de¬pended on NDEA loans and scholarships;this year they may not fand, in our ow ncase, cannot) find enough money as easily. Slowly most of these universities willbe forced to swallow their consciences andreturn to the NDEA even with the affi¬davit.This will establish once and for all theprecedent of federal control over unin r-sities with federal aid—something thatboth Republicans and Democrats hawpreached against since the inception ofthe first federal aid to-education program.Why cannot Congress realize that whatis happening is just what it has alwayswanted to avoid TThe answer is simple: the point mustbe brought home by student and facultyactivity, possibly similar to that under¬taken last year, possibly different. But,with the chances for success so very good,we find it lamentable indeed that studentsand faculty have both been so mute.the Chicago maroonfounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and Intermittently during the summer quarter,by students of the University of Chicago. Inquiries should be sent to the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E. 59thStreet, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus.Subscriptions by mall, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material^ 4 pm,Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pm Wednesday before publicationAll unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signed•ditorlal material represents the Individual opinions of the authors.Dislike of recent changesstems from respect of idealsr Objections raised against recent changes- Jn the college structure have often and fre¬quently been dismissed as predictable and ex¬pected conservative complaints. The normalUC student, accustomed to thinking of him¬self as a left-wing liberal, is generally takenSback by these charges that he is in fact a con¬servative. But surprise is not refutation; are theyoung radicals really reactionaries?It is true that most contemporary studentsmaintain a deep devotion to the ideals and thegoals of the Hutchins era — Jealous of theseIdeals, of this somewhat forgotten system, manyftudents have resented current developments asIrteps baekword. Here is an area where the UC•radical’ and the conservative might seem tocross paths, but do they?“Conservative” used in this sense of disappro¬bation refers to one who has a devotion to thepast qua past. But it would seem to us that theChicago student body has been devoted to thepast for that which it represents, or rather main¬tains a respect and admiration for a system ofpast ideals and not the past at all.Moreover the conservative is not necessarilyopposed to change; most political conservativeswould welcome rescinding some of this nation’srecent liberal federal legislation; he would objectto changes which would move us farther to theleft. The student objections to recent academic•hifts seems to emanate from the conviction thatrecent changes have moved us closer to the normal»nd the right and away from the experimental,the leftIt thus seems to us specious to dismiss com¬plaints as mere conservative grumblings of dis¬contented die-hards, without an extensive exam¬ination of the proffered arguments themselves.Yet this does not solve the problem. It wouldbe difficult to assert that objection to new educa¬tional philosophies per se is the simple source of•tudent discontent. Objection to many changes hasbeen totally disproportionate to the real signifi¬cance of those changes; some non-substantivealterations have also prompted an inexplicable•mount of discontent. More than the merely aca-6 • CHICAGO MAROON • demic is involved in this. It is perhaps this lastobservation which caused the cry of conservatismto be raised. We take a somewhat different view,crying "radical”.As is the case with any ideology, liberalism ispredicated on more than the merely rational. Theemotions and the psychology of the liberal nat¬urally affects his entire orientation. Part of thispsychology is a desire to be different, a tendencytowards experimentation, a reluctance, when con¬fronted with equally good possibilities, to choosethat which is most common.Some of Jhe recent administrative changes havebeen defending in part with the following argu¬ment: By following patterns of operation commonto many schools, our efforts can readily mesh;by going on our own merry way we merelycomplicate the process of co-operation and effi¬cient transfer of information. Why be different?Why? Because we like being different. This isnot a stirring defense, but it is an accurate ex¬planation of much mute and inarticulate unhap¬piness. To ignore this fact and this source isfoolish and unwise.If students have been improperly unhappy itis partially because they have lost the sense ofsatisfying experimentation, of wild youthful defi¬ance of the status quo, of rejection of the normsand the normal. The want could be salved, atleast in part, by the re-introduction of a dramaticsense of purpose and direction.We are convinced that much of this curiousair of discontent will vanish as soon as the Uni¬versity of Chicago once again has a real Chan¬cellor, one who will lead us not into any promisedland, but into the area of new investigation. Hutch¬ins possessed that remarkable ability which en¬abled him to perform all actions with a flair,which invested all actions with direction, whichcontributed drama to everything he did. We hopethat our New Chancellor can duplicate this talent.Infused with and enthused by a new set ofgoals, thrust again into a sphere of experimenta¬tion, we believe that the UC student body willwillingly and readily respond. Confronted with thepossibility of being radical, we think that studentswill act in such a way as to eliminate any futurecharge that UC students are conservative to thepoint of rejecting automatically all change anddevelopment.Dec. 2, 1960 Bill of rights ignoredThis summer, increasedcollege housing requirementswere announced by JamesNewman, assistant dean ofstudents, as a step toward a resi¬dential college.In the past we have stated thatwe think the decision is a wrongone. It now appears that is alsoan improper one.Section two of the Student Billof Rights deals with the questionof housing. The Student Bill ofRights, for those undergraduateswho have never heard of it, is adocument passed in 1950 by astudent referrandum and ap¬proved by the Administration.Students wishing to see justwhat rights are guaranteed themare out of luck: neither the cata¬logue nor the student handbookmention the bill.Section two guarantees "Theright of students to a concisestatement, before entering theUniversity ... of their contrac¬tual rights, obligations, and re¬sponsibilities pertaining to educa¬ tional and extra-curricular activi¬ties, and University housing.’’A "clear and concise statement”was not given to entering stu¬dents this summer, at least notearly enough. Notification of theincrease was not sent out untilafter class deposit fees were collected and after most college'--acceptance dates, so students whowished to change schools couldnot do so.The actions of the Administra¬tion have clearly been a violationof the spirit, if not the letter ofthe Student Bill of Rights.The preamble of the Bill ofRights states that the rights guar¬anteed in the bill are “indispon-sible to the full achievement ofthe objectives of higher educationin a free, democratic society . . .(and) essential to the completedevelopment of the student as anindividual and to the fulfillmentof his responsibilities as a citizenof that society.”We can only wonder what theobjectives of disregard of theserights are.chicaaoEditors-in-chiefNeal Johnston Ken PierceBusiness managerWilliam G. Bauer Advertising managerPhil GasteyerEditor emeritus Lance HaddixManagement supervisor Avima RuderNews editor Jay GreenbergFeature editor Faye WellsEditorial secretary Caryle GeierNotional newt editor Gene VinogrodoffCulture editor emeritui John DietmonnCulture editor Dotty ShorplessSecretary to the culture editor Sandy NelsonSports editor Chuck BernsteinCopy editor John JuskeviceResearch editor Carole QuinnCalendar editor Donna BergPhotography coordinator Al BergerCirculation manager Nate SwiftBusiness office manager Joan HelmkinClassified manoger Maurice ZeitlinSubscription manager Phil HydeAdvertising representative Perry F*r*k"1EditorialUrges Christmas boycottsThe sit-ins have continuedfor a long time with a dubiousamount of success in differ¬ent areas of the country.Fortunately for the morale ofboth northern and southernstudents and for the fight theywere waging, they have suc¬ceeded in several cities. With theapproach of Christmas, the south¬ern students have decided toagain show their strength andtheir solidarity by calling for aboycott on all stores that discrim¬inate against Negroes.This boycott will come at thestores’ busiest season, the Christ¬mas shopping rush, and will ef¬fectively diminish the stores’ profits. It is hoped that the boycottwill be nation-wide and will re¬ceive publicity and sympathy inthe North as well as the South.The idea for a Christmas boy¬cott against stores which discrim¬inate was originally conceived atthe last meeting of the StudentNon-violent Co-ordinating com¬mittee (SNCC) held earlier thisquarter in Atlanta Georgia. Theysaw this as a natural and effec¬tive outgrowth of the work theyhad been doing in the ‘sit-ins.’Not long ago the question ofwhether or not to continue sym-Letter pathy boycotts and picketing inthe North arose. At this time itwas believed by many that Wool-worth’s was making a consider¬able effort to integrate theirlunch counters. Even if one ac¬cepts this as true, assumes thatWoolworth’s is really trying tospeed up this integration, we can¬not listen to their statements andthen ignore their practices. Thesepractices, which we and studentgroups all over the United Stateshave deplored as unconstitutionaland degrading to the individualsdiscriminated against, continue inmost chain stores in the South.The Christmas boycott, capableof injuring the stores where theyare most vulnerable, their finan¬cial reports, will do what moralright alone has been unable todo. The sympathy boycott in theNorth will not be as extensivebut it will be able to providemoral support and publicity forthe southern boycott.The plans for the boycott havereceived favorable commentsfrom many student groups in¬cluding United States NationalStudent association. Support hasalso been given by the SouthernChristian Leadership conference. This is Indicative of the supportthat has come and will come fromsouthern adult groups and Ne-groe organizations. In some ofthe Southern'cities the churchesand community leaders have sug¬gested not buying Christmas pre¬sents at all since almost allsouthern stores discriminate ineither their service or their em¬ployment practices, and to givetheir money to either theirchurches or other organizationswhich are fighting for Negrorights.To suggest this in the Northwould perhaps be carying thingsto an illogical conclusion but toask for support for the southernstudents and all southern Negroesis a natural and understandablerequest. To ask that northern stu¬dents continue the boycott againstWoolworth’s and other chainstores that discriminate in theSouth is only asking them tocontinue their fight for equalrights for all Americans.As these southern students arefighting for their rights, some¬times for their freedom, it is nottoo much for northern studentsto observe the boycott for theChristmas shopping season.Individuals can act wellTo the editor:Recently a book was published,called “Neither Fear Nor Favour.”The author is John McGovern ofEngland and the book is his auto¬biography; a story of his 26stormy years as a labor M.P. inthe British Parliament When hewas still a boy going to schooland working hard before schoolfrom four to eight am and earn¬ing two shillings a week, theregrew in him the tremendous pas¬sion to fight for justice for theworkers. There on is a story ofselfless fight for the benefit oflabor, including hunger marchesand strikes and fight against thecommunist exploitation of theworkers for their own ends.In the post war years, after thevictory of the Labor Party, Mc¬Govern became increasinglyaware of the infiltration of com¬munism into the ranks of the Par¬liamentary Labor Tarty itself. In1954 he was prompted to go toCaux, Switzerland, to meet withsome people! His going there wasnot in vain. He found the new andbasic approach which led to thesolution of many problems inwhich he was very interested.Armed with this new approach hefound the powerful means toachieve justice and righteousnessin dealing with human problems.This permitted breaking downthe barriers between peoples andwhich had heretofore prohibitedhonest communication.One day, for example, at theheight of the Cyprus crisis Mc¬Govern met Archbishop Makariosin New York. He told the Arch¬bishop what had happened to himand about his convictions aboutBritain’s responsibility for thetragedy on the Island. The actiontaken as a result of his frankdiscussion (described fully in hisbook) led directly to the solutionof the Cyprus problem.Who were the people he met inCaux, Switzerland? In his ownwords he says, "I learned at Caux,-Switzerland, a statesmanship oftbe humble heart. I learned an an*sv/er to man-pleasing, to corrup¬tion and to communism.” In thatplace McGovern had arrived un¬announced in the midst of an as¬sembly of 850 people from 50 na¬tions, at the Moral Re-Armament(MR A) center. He discovered thatthose people talked sense and re¬alized that the most reactionaryman in the world was the man who wanted to change the world,but refused to begin by changinghimself. This is what changed hislife.Very often one hears that weare on the right path, because weare God-fearing people and be¬cause we are God-fearing peopleso God is with us and thereforethe Communism and the kindcan’t touch us. We have been onsuch a defensive ideology for along time. As Dr. Frank Buch-man, the initiator of Moral Re-Armament, said recently, “Thehour is late . . . for God’s sakewake up.” The time long sincehas been ripe to take up on theoffensive and that is what a God¬fearing person ought to be: onLetter the offensive against all the ide¬ologies that leave in us fear andhatred against our own brothers.It is a fact, that most of us feel,as individuls we can contributevery little in the solution of worldproblems. This is true if we arenot convinced of the right basisin which to proceed. None of usknow when we may suddenly findourselves in a key position in theworld problems. Further most ofus may not recognize the keyposition when we are in it. How¬ever, morally re armed, the indi¬vidual recognizes his position andacts in line with his conscience.On this basis individuals will notsay, “WHAT CAN I DO?”Name WithheldPinko bears rompIn response to the criticism ofMarilyn Tiedemann regardingyour liberal views and the obvi¬ous pinko character of a largenumber of both students and fac¬ulty, I would like to offer the fol¬lowing short essay for your con¬sideration:BEARS BAREDThose who have for yearsstudied the Russian bear of Com¬munism learn, though he is fer-rociously hungry and deceitful, he is just the cub. Mama bear(who shall remain nameless) ismore “respectable and above anycriticism” — but in actuality ismore treacherous and contempt¬ible. Papa bear, a cunning thoughsecret patriarch born maybearound 1760 but never in betterhealth, masquerades as an awakeintellectual in the den of hisfourth estate in which the read¬ers, not he, slumber in hiberna¬tion.E. B. ScottAsks for more dorm foodThis letter is written in re¬sponse to a statement, reported inthe Maroon by Henderson house’svice-president to the effect thatthe house as a whole felt that thefood being served at Pierce isatrocious.As a member of Henderson, Ifeel that this was rashly and er¬roneously uttered, without author¬ization, provocation, or justifica¬tion, in a vain attempt to bolsteran individual opinion.I see no palpable discontent in Henderson concerning the qualityof food, and indeed have come tothe conclusion that there is a fair¬ly widespread realization of thefact that this is indeed very goodinstitutional food.The root of my discontent liesin the ridiculously paltry portionsbeing served to us. Out of the$2.10 we pay for food per day,it would seem that quite a bitmore than $.90 might actually goto the food.Fredric BrailfmanBlasts girls’ club editorialGentlemen:Clubs should have houses tobest serve Administration.Haven’t you things wrong endto? Some of my best friends areAdministrators. They are muchnicer when opposition is strong. OnCtnqns Mth(Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf*,"The ManyLoots of Debit Gillie”, etc.)MTHE INTELLIGENCE QUOTIENT OFNED FUTTY”Chloe McFeeters was a beautiful coed who majored In psychol¬ogy and worked in the I.Q. testing department of the University.She worked there because she loved and admired intelligenceabove all things. “I love and admire intelligence above all things’?is the way she put it.Ned Futty, on the other hand, was a man who could takeintelligence or leave it alone. What he loved and admired aboveall things was girls. “What I love and admire above all thingsis girls” is the way he put it.One day Ned saw Chloe on campus and was instantly smitten.“Excuse me, miss,” he said, tugging at his forelock. .“Will youmarry me?” vShe looked at his duck-tail haircut, his black-rimmed glasses,his two-day beard, his grimy T-shirt, his tattered jeans, his de¬composing tennis shoes. “You are not unattractive,” she ad¬mitted, “but for me beauty is not enough. Intelligence is whatI’m looking for. Come to the I.Q. testing department with me.”As for student organizations,their special function is to makelife exciting — an end neverachieved by trying to serve anyAdministration, even the best.Shame on you, Yes-Men.Everett C.Huglies mil yotc tttmytte ?“Of course, my tiger,” cried Ned and giggled and smote histhigh and bit Chloe’s nape and scampered goatlike after herto the I.Q. testing department.“First, I will test your vocabulary,” said Chloe.“Be my guest,” laughed Ned and licked her palm.! * What does j uxtaposition mean?”“Beats me,” he confessed cheerfully and nibbled her knuckles.“How about ineffable?'*“Never heard of it,” guffawed Ned, plunging his face intoher clavicle.“Furtivet’l.“With fur on?” said Ned doubtfully.“Oh, Ned Futty,” said Chloe, “you are dumb. ConsequentlyI cannot be your girl because I love and admire intelligenceabove all things.”He flung himself on the floor and clasped her ankles. “But Ilove you,” he cried in anguish. “Do not send me from you oryou will make the world a sunless place, full of dim andfearful shapes.”“Go,” she said coldly.Lorn and mute, he made his painful way to the door. Therahe stopped and lit a cigarette. Then he opened the door amistarted away to his gray and grisly future.“Stay!” called Chloe.He turned.“Was that,” she asked, “a Marlboro you just lit?”“Yes,” he said.“Then come to me and be my love,” cried Chloe joyously.“You are not dumb. You are smart! Anybody is smart to smokeMarlboro, the filter cigarette with the unfiltered taste whichcomes to you in soft pack or flip-top box at prices all can affordat tobacco counters, drugstores, groceries, restaurants andtrampoline courts all over America. Ned, lover, give me aMarlboro and marry me.”And they smoked happily ever after.Cl Mas Sfauimau* * *And if your taste runs to unaltered cigarettes, you're smartto try Philip Morris—from the makers of Marlboro. Weespecially recommend Philip Morris's new king-size Com¬mander—long, mild, and leisurely. Have a Commander-welcome aboard lTHE PLEASANT SHOPInvites You to Stop In TodayLadies Ready - to - WearAil Nationally Advertised MorchaadMa• LINGERIE • SLEEPWEAR • HOSE• CASUAL DRESSES • CO-ORDINATESComplete Sise Range Moderately Priced1536 E. 55th St.In the Now Hyde Park Chopping CenterFormal Grand Opening — Dec. 2, 3Dec. 2, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROONLetter to the GadflyAttacks ‘Gadfly’ disarmament standIn the Maroon which polluted is on these four points which Mr.our campus by its presence 26 Altbach feels are so praiseworthyNovember 1960 you carried a let- and optimistic that I question hister by one Philip Altbach. In this sincerity, his intentions, or hisletter Mr. Altbach praised such sanity.organizations as the Student The cessation of production andPeace Union for giving the lie to testing of nuclear weapons hassuch terms as the "silent genera- two main disadvantages for thistion” and for adopting a position country and only one for ourwhich he feels is opposed to the Marxist opponents. Neither thecynicism and pessimism which, Kremlin (and now, according tohe alleges, characterizes the out- reliable reports, Peking in latelook of American students. He 1961) nor the Pentagon can pre¬even praises the fact that two vent the other from sub rosa test-delegates of this misguided or- ing or production. It is true thatganization appeared in Paris last we, and presumably the RussiansJune to present a petition to the as well, have devices for detect-hoped-for summit conferences. ing nuclear explosions but be-Among the suggestions embod- tween mere detection and all outied in this youthful document prevention a large gap exists,which Mr. Altbach feels are One alternativeworthy of praise are "the cessa- The only alternative, then, intion of nuclear weapons testing view of the U.S.S.R.’s unwilling-and production, admission of ness to provide for an effectivemainland China to the United policing in this field, is unilateralNations, increased non-military cessation. Of course, unilateralforeign aid and stepped up sup- cessation or disarmament is tan-port for the United Nations.” It tamount to surrender. But, even□ □□ □nr all t-he Free Press booksTHE GREEK DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 East 57th HY 3-5829British and AmericanQuality Paperbacks assuming the improbable that the"atomic club” powers could reachan agreement which would beadequately policed, such a cessa¬tion would leave the Soviet Unionwith a preponderance of non-nuc¬lear military striking force, aforce that could easily tip thebalance in a non-nuclear waragainst freedom and in favor ofcommunist enslavement.Seat Red China?The second point which Altbachdeems worthy of praise is the ef¬fort to seat Red China in theUnited Nations, an organizationwhich Peking openly defied dur¬ing the Korean War, and an or¬ganization whose principles theI\ed Chinese threw to the windsin the recent tragedy in Tibet.Aside from her past behavior ininternational affairs, Red Chinais at present loudly proclaimingthe inevitability of war, a meansof settling disputes which issoundly denounced by the UnitedNations’ charter.It would seem, therefore, thatthe seating of Red China in theUnited Nations is quite inconsist¬ent with the plea for "stepped upsupport of the United Nations,”unless, of course, Mr. Altbach’slogic assumes that you'supportsomething by destroying its foun¬dations. "Increased non-military foreignaid” is an innocuous soundingpolicy if taken merely at facevalue. However, there is a tend¬ency for the country receivingsuch aid to regard it as only itsjust due, and to be unwilling todo its part in this "share-the-wealth” game when it is able todo so, as witness the present situ¬ation of our good ally, West Ger¬many. Discounting this, however,it is becoming increasingly dif¬ficult to distinguish between non¬military and potentially militaryaid, as witness Russia’s recentattempts in the Congo, or be¬tween non-military aid and eco¬nomic imperialism, as witness thesad plight of Guinea. But, evenignoring all these factors, does aid put a country’s economy on assound a footing as trade? Surelya country which augments itswealth in the time-approved fash¬ion of trade can hold its headhigher and be more desirous ofmaintaining its independence thana country which relies on a doleor "nonrepayable” long termloans."Stepped up support of theUnited Nations” is a fine idea,but, what kind of support? Iffinancial support is intended, letour adversaries, who boast soloud of their increased produc¬tions and standards of living ob¬tained under Marxist dictatorship,contribute their fair share.Ian W. Morrison‘Shocked’ by AscoliI am shocked at Max Ascoli’sdefinition of "liberalism.” How itcan be seriously contended thatliberalism needs no party organ¬ization or doctrine to make itselfeffective, resting instead uponthe individual, I cannot under¬stand.Modern liberalism is the mostdoctrinaire, organized of politicalbeliefs, denying, not affirming,LUCKY STRIKE PRESENTS:D&R.DR:F«O0DDR. PROOD’S THOUGHT FOR the DAY: “Life ain t all beer and skittles,” as the saying goes—but if enough students got together, maybe skittles could make a big comeback.D«ar Dr. Frood: I don’t speak from personal experience, but Iunderstand all the men in this college are wolves. What do youthink a respectable girl like me—-with a good old-fashioned up¬bringing-should do about this situation?Strait LacedDEAR STRAIT: Drop your handkerchief.Dear Dr. Frood: I just don’t understand themen in this college. Not one of them hasever asked me for a date. I am intelligentand easy to get along with. Enclosed is mysnapshot. What do you think is wrong?Left OutDEAR LEFT: After considering this problemfrom every angle, I can only conclude thatyou have enormous feet. IIM Dear Dr. Frood: When I entered college as a freshman this fall, myfather gave me a very large sum of money to cover room, board,tuition, books and all other expenses for four full years of college.Because of an unfortunate series of poker games, however, themoney is now completely gone. How would you suggest I handlethis situation?Ten HighDEAR TEN: I feel confident that your father will give you anotherchance if you go up to him like a man, tell him you are sorry, admityour mistake and promise him that your luck will change.Dear Dr. Frood: According to my figuresover ninety-five per cent of the studentshere are below average. What is wrong?Math MajorDEAR MATH: You are odiously going to abelow-average college. hiI Dear Dr. Frood: Do you think it is safe fora girl to walk home alone from a collegedance?NervousDEAR NERVOUS: Safer., . ...DON’T BREAK TRADITION, WARNS FROOD! One of the proudest traditions on the Americancampus, reports Dr. Frood, is smoking Luckies. Today college students smoke more Luckiesthan any other regular. According to Dr. Frood, "Any student who breaks this tradition not onlyrobs himself of the full pleasure of smoking—but also could, conceivably, bring ‘the Curse ofFrood' down upon the entire student body.”t •CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change!Product of c/& iS&nfAie<in To&cco&yx,y. -Xt&ceo is our middle nameDec. 2, 1960C 4. T. CfejCHICAGO MAROON freedom of the individual at theexpense of a centrally organizedand executed policy of "social re¬organization.”"Liberalism” is free from theobsession of a perfect or ultimateform of political organization?Hardly! Liberalism has as its cen¬tral moving force the idea thatgovernment exists for the perfec¬tion of mankind, and that govern¬ment alone is able to fulfill thisfunction.Mr. Ascoli’s statements aretypical of the "double-think” wayin which modern liberals try toconvince us, as did Rousseau,that regulation is freedom.Butler D. ShafferYour 0-eEUROPELEASE a NEW CarPURCHASE a NEW Car*Rent a Late Model Car IVOLKSWAGEN SIMCAMERCEDES RENAULTHILLMAN PORSCHE|*with Repurchase Plan availabl«|... or bring it homo with you.Thi pleasant, economical way totravel in Europe. We make all ar¬rangements for the Plan you prefer.Write for full detailsUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq , Cambridge, Mass6 ways tohypnotize menEver wonder why some of theplainest gals walk off with themost eligible bachelors-oftenunder the noses of a batch ofbeauties? The December Jour¬nal tells you “How to Be Pop¬ular.” Your eyes, smile, mannercan help you hypnotize men—if you know a few simple tricks.(P.S.) Information comes froman irrefutable source-men!DECEMBER LADIES' HOMEJOURNALCUK1IS M At* A/ IN I\■ Newsbits rnmmmmMiMmimMFraternities curb communism: GoldwaterAccording to Senator BerryGoldwater (R.-Ariz.) frater¬nities are protecting our na¬tion from the Communistthroat. Goldwater, speaking be¬fore more than 1.000 fraternitymembers at the 51st meeting ofthe National Interfraternity con¬ference said, “where fraternitiesare not allowed, communismflourishes.” He noted that Har¬vard university, a non-fraternityinstitution, permits Communistand Socialist philosophies tobreed what he calls a “faithlessgeneration.”At a news conference precedingh i s address, Goldwater empha¬sized the value of faith. “Youngmen who are inexperienced buthave faith are more useful thanolder, experienced men withoutfaith.“We look more and more, to fra¬ternities to provide our futureleadership,” he told reporters. Re¬ligion, brotherhood, the impor¬tance of the individual, and free¬dom were the qualities listed bythe senator by which fraternitiesdiscourage communism.Interfraternity council presi¬dent, Jon Trost ’61, agreed withGoldwater. He said, “Communistson campus make the least stridesin tho fraternity system, becauseit is contrary to the principles ofCommunism. Where fraternitiesexist, there is little appreciationfor what Communism offers.” Ac¬cording to Trost and IFC Vice-president Howard Mueller. ’61,Goldr.ater’s remarks were “fine,thought provoking, and encourag¬ing.”Here on campus, IFC presidentAnsel Edidin felt that there wasno connection between communistactivity and the presence of fra¬ternities. According to DavidEmin, IFC secretary on campus,Senator Goldwater “would disap¬The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 lot 57Hi St.MU 4-9236 prove of some of the activities offraternities here.” Emin felt “fra¬ternities have no politicak pur¬pose.”There were no representativesof the University of Chicago IFCpresent at the IFC National con¬ference held in Los Angeles lastweekend.Flight leaders appointedMarshall Schwartz andCraig Philips have been ap¬pointed flight leaders forStudent government’s (SG)flights to Europe.Two types of flights are plan¬ned. A long flight, expected cost$280, will leave N. Y. about June17 and return about September12. The short flight, expected cost$320, will depart from Chicagoaround July 23, returning Sep¬tember 5. Both flights will go toLondon and Paris.If enough students want to go.a second plane may be charteredfor the long flight.Students desiring informationmay call the SG office, MI 3-0800,ext. 3273 and 3274, from 2:30 to5:30, Monday through Friday.Sells Christmas treesChristmas trees are beingsold for the benefit of youthprograms in the Hyde Parkneighborhood.The sale is sponsored by theHyde Park Neighborhood club, agroup which owns a summercamp and provides meeting spacefor 16 suprevised teen age groups.They also support the efforts of two street club workers workingwith groups who hang around,street corners.. /The Circle Pines Center, a Mich¬igan camp maintained by localcooperatives, is co-sponsoring thesale.The trees are being sold eve¬nings December 16, 17, 18, 22, 23and 24 at the Hyde Park Neigh¬borhood club, 5480 Kenwood.Prices of the trees range from$1.50 to $8.00. Reservations maybe made by sending $1 depositto the Hyde Park Neighborhoodclub, 5480 S. Kenwood, Chicago15, with name, address, and typeof tree desired.Housing conference meefsGoals and plans for thecoming year will be outlinedat the eleventh annual meet¬ing of the Hyde Park-Ken-wood community conference nextTuesday in the United Church ofHyde Park. Nearly 700 Hyde Parkarea people are expected to attendthis conference which will assessactivities of the past year anddetermine future projects.Harry Gottlieb, chairman of theboard of directors of the confer¬ence, will give the annual reportat this time. In addition, the re¬sults of the annual election ofmembers of the board of direc¬tors will be announced by CharlesBeckett, chairman of the nominat¬ing committee of the conference.Chairman of the annual meet¬ing Bernard Cogan has an¬nounced that Frank Reynolds,HARPER LIQUOR STORE1114-16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported and domestic wines, liquorsand beer at lowest prices.FREE ■"A A ~ 1233,wcnv PHONE — *318DELIVERY —7699how to get a headIt’s easy to make headway (female-wise, campus-wise andeyery-wise) if you use ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic . . . made spe¬cially for men who use water with their hair tonic. ‘Vaseline’Hair Tonic’s 100% pure, light grooming oil replaces oil thatwater removes. ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic will not evaporate ...u>ill remain clear and clean. And just a little does a lotiITSccsaA T J3if“5 Cl£AUVASELINE HAIR news commentator of the Colum¬bia Broadcasting system, willspeak following the businessmeeting.State senator Marshall Kor-shak, Alderman of the fifth wardLeon Despres, fifth ward Superin¬tendent Harry Seeberger, andJohn Ramey, director of t h eNeighborhood club, and otherprominent citizens will act asushers for the evening.Consider flight to JapanA reduced rate flight to Japanis being considered by Studentgovernment (SG).By chartering its own plane,SG will be able to offer studentsfares of between $450 and $550(depending whether the depar¬ture is Seattle or Chicago), as op¬posed to commercial fares of $880to $1,050, tourist class.SG must have some idea of thenumber of students interested inthe flight before it can make fur¬ther plans. Interested studentsmay call the SG offices at MI 3-0800, ext. 3273 or 3274, weekdayafternoons from 2:30 to 5:30.Holds 'Ski Fest"UC’s Outing club is holdingits second annual “Ski Fest”this Saturday evening, De¬cember 3, at 7:30 pm in thefirst floor lounge at Ida Noyes.Persons interested in a Christ¬ mas interim ski trip are urged toattend as final plans will be madebased on the interest shown. Atentative schedule of winter quar¬ter trips will also be available. Asquare dance put on by the Out¬ing club will be featured concur¬rently starting at 8 pm.Wine taste at Quad clubThe board of the MaryMcDowell settlement house,formerly the University settle¬ment house, is sponsoring awine-taste at the Quadrangle clubSunday evening from 5 to 8.There will be a $5 donation,nearly all of which will go to thesettlement house. I. Padnos, awine expert from the Party Mart,has donated five German wines of1959 vintage. He will be presentat the taste to comment on thewines and point out the subtle dif¬ferences between similar wines.The co-chairmen of the benefitare Mrs. Heilman Metcalf andMrs. Louis Crawford. CarrollBowen and Richard Storr are co-chairmen of the arrangementscommittee, and Mrs. John Nether-ton is one of the co-chairmen ofthe ticket committee. Others whohave been planning the taste in¬clude Mrs. Helen Hughes, AltonLinford, Paul Berger, GeorgeOverton, and Mrs. Albert Cotton.theoneandNow an engagement ring design so distinctive——*it is protected by a U. S. design patent*! This'exclusive Artcarved "Evening Star" design drama-]tizes the diamond as other rings can’t do. Even ajmodest diamond appears impressively radiant and;rich. Isn’t this what you want for your love? Thenaccept no less. Look for the name stamped in eachring. It is yOur assurance of a genuine “EveningStar” engagement ring by Artcarved. And onlywith Artcarved do you receive a written guarantee,for diamond quality—plus the protection of the;nationwide Permanent Value Plan.'Discover more about this exciting ring and othervaluable tips on diamond ring buying. Write toi1.1. Wood & Sons, IncTDep'. CP-80, 216 E. 45th SG N. Y. 17, N. Y«NAME „A00CESS . — —OTV ZONE STAIF .. .. - —ArtcarvedDIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGSBeloved by brides for more than 100 years (1850-1960)Dec. 2, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9<* * "' ■ * •' X ' ' - /Reynolds club is center of informa tWHtKIVIR \yr\YOU SKI V* JYOU'LL su y*IK ANCON t A fkSwirly Porko II fi, SilrrtHa SWk/ 23 « Urro•ociation met and rehearsed hi &the theater and adjourning tow¬er-room, and Blackfriars met Jathe offices north of the stage.The many conveniences of the ^building — the free check ngservice, the barber shop, billiardroom, candycounter, and the read¬ing and lounging rooms -— were Nropen to all men students. The the-ater, committee rooms, dancefloors, and other space w«r eavailable to student groups andcampus organizations upon ap¬plication.The building was run by theReynolds club council, an or-gmnization limited to the m«-nof the campus, but far fromthe exclusive organizationimagined. It was this groupwhich sponsored smokers, the¬ater performances, dances, amtbilliards exhibitions to memix-rship in the Reynolds club,cording to its constitution,meant application to a councilwhich verified the eligibility ofthe applicant — i.e., whetherthe person was a student in "Jjresidence — and payment ofthe initial dues.In November of 1903, when thebuilding was completed, the firstelection of officers was held. He-fleeting the student interest in theaffairs of the club, the Maroonof Nov. 15, 1903 stated: “The elec¬tion is on, the interest of the Chi¬cago student body is centeredaround the unique ballot box inthe Reynolds club reading room.Groups of supporters of each ofthe principal candidates standnear the door and waylay uncer¬tain voters as they approach thepolls.”The administration demon¬strated their concern by securinga regular ballot-box through thecourtesy of I N. Powell, thenchairman of the Chicago board aCj^welections.By the end of that year, theclub had 356 active and 150 as¬sociate members.At the formal opening of theclub at the December, 1915 con¬vocation, Professor George E.Vincent echoed the sentiments ofthe new members and the admin¬istration over the new building."The Reynolds club will serveWANTEDClub Icodcrs and field workers forYoung Judea. 3-19 hrs. weeklyemployment. Work neor U of C.Call or write Mr. Frank IsoocsWE 9-4168, 72 E. 11th St.HARPER SQUAREGROCERLANDFree Delivery1455 E. 57th St. DO 3-2444PW«<t of NEW DUAL FILTER— rJv&xatt it our middle name (tra TareytonHere’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.The large room on the third floor of Ida Noyes hall, nowused for watching television and other informal activities.by Faye WeHsWhen the cornerstone ofDie “Student’s club house,” asthe Reynolds club was thencalled, was laid on June 22,1901, UC President Harper■aid: “The average collegeman receives as much benefitfrom his fellow student as fromthe officers of instruction in thecollege with whom he comes incontact.“The student club house to beerected on this corner is expectedto become the headquarters ofstudent life and activity. It is herethat friendship will be cemented,battles fought, victories gained,and defeats and disappointmentsmanfully accepted. It is impos¬sible to overestimate the import¬ance or the significance of thisnew addition to the Universitylife.”In this cornerstone, AssociateProfessor George E. Vincentstated: “Yonder stand labora¬tories devoted to the sciences oflife; here we raise a buildingdedicated to the art of living. “In the early days of our de-cennium there was much talk ofcollege spirit, as of a commodityto be had somewhere, the giftperhaps of an enthusiastic donor.There were both humor andpathos in the eager effort to layhands upon the intangible“Now we speak of the spirit,for the thing- itself has begunto inspire us. The social life ofthe University has organizedItself into various groups, andthese in turn are groupingtoward unity . . . But the largergroupings have been hamperedby lack of a rallying place.The organized clubs have hadno social clearing house, andmany students living scatteredthrough the great city areahave looked to the Universityfor a hearthstone, and foundonly a radiator.“This ceremony is, therefore,full of meaning for the individ¬ual student, for the life of theUniversity, and for the aims andIdeals of the higher educationgenerally. , “This building will stand alsoas a symbol of the part whichspecial contact plays in the high¬er education. So important is thisdeemed that as old conditionsyield to new, conscious effort ismade to preserve and foster theelement of comradeship. Educa¬tion must cherish sentiment aswell as trained reason . ..The Reynolds club house is amember of the Tower group, sonamed because of Mitchell tower.It runs to the east of the toweron University avenue, giving en¬ trance to the Commons, to Man-del hall, and to what is now theC shop.To the left and right of the me¬morial portrait of Joseph Reyn¬olds are the reading and loung¬ing rooms respectively — decor¬ated, like the rest of the roomsin the tower group, by FrederickClay Bartlett.South of the entrance hall wasthe office of the head of the club¬house. On the second floor werethe billiard room and YMCAheadquarters. The Dramatic as-NOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe speciolixe InRound-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open from Down to Dawn east 53 st.Tareyton has the taste—Dual Filterdoes it!Filters forflavor-finest flavor by far!YD • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 2, 1960mt% da Noyes, of organized student lifethree main purposes in the life ofUniversity men: It will exalt theetriture of comradeship: It willIt* at once the symbol and meanserf association . * . This buildingwill represent the common life ofI the University men. It will standfor catholicity, not for socialsectarianism ..."* Thus, in the words of Dr. Good-jRpeed, the Reynolds club becameto the men students what theCommons had heen to the Uni¬versity as a whole—a center ofaoeial life and activities.Until 1924, the social activitiesof the club included Saturdaynight smokers, to which speakerswere often invited, Friday nightinformals, bowling, billiard andpool tournaments, and for a shorttime, interscholastic meets.Among the celebrities to enter¬tain the Reynolds club at someof their smokers were McCut-cheon, a cartoonist, and RichardH. Little, a war correspondent. Inaddition, the former billiard ex¬perts Demarest and Perkins gavean exhibition match for the mem-I bers.In 1924, however, the club wasj compelled to ask the Universityte a put the Reynolds club underthe control of the dean of stu¬dents, who opened it to men oncampus without fee. Herenfter,the council existed only In anadvisory capacity.Not much later, the laxity ofthe rules increased, with the in¬troduction of Saturday afternoonfootball parties and social affairswhich required the entry of wom¬en through the Reynolds cltibportals. This meant the destruc¬tion of whatever sacredness theclub held for men, despite the factthat women were admitted onlyon special occasions and neverabove the first floor.According to Howard Mort,one time director of the club, andpresent executive secretary of thealumni association, "The club be¬gan to break down when womeni^were allowed in."Increased facilities and the ex¬clusion of segments of the cam¬pus from its halls lead the clubto widen the scope of its func¬tions and activities. In 1940, theReynolds club \yas turned overto the armed forces for use asa training headquarters for menstationed on campus.When it was returned to theUniversity in 1945, it was openedto both men and women and be¬came the center of student activi¬ ties, a distinction it held untilautumn of 1955.The main role of the Reynoldsclub now Is that it serves as anInformal gathering place for stu¬dents who wish to study, read,relax, play chess, or cards. Itstill houses Biackfriars, Univer¬sity theater, WUCB, FOTA, andother organizations. But most ofthe activities which had officesin Reynold's club "migrated" toIda Noyes hall in 1955, and thelatter has since become the mainscene of organized student ac¬tivity.Just as Reynolds club was orig¬inally designed to serve the menon campus, so Ida Noyes hall wassupposed to serve women on thecampus. It too, however, even¬tually came to serve both sexes.Built in 1915, it was financedby La Verne Noyes as a memo¬rial to his deceased wife IdaNoyes.The need for such a buildingwas exemplified by the fact thatthe women did not even have apermanent site for physical edu¬cation facilities. For instance,gymnasium facilities had rangedfrom the fourth floor in Cobbhall to the Lexington gymnasium.In addition, between 1892 and1903, a temporary library build¬ing, a Sunday school room of theHyde Park Baptist church, theschool of education had been usedfor women’s athletics.Inspiration for getting thefunds needed for the building,came, according to Marion Tal¬bot, who wrote a history of thewomen at UC, from Mrs. Judson,the President’s wife. Unable tosleep one night, she came uponthe idea of asking Mr. Noyes ifhe would be interested in erect¬ing a women’s activity hall inhonor of his recently deceasedwife. He was.Ida Noyes is a combination ofmany buildings, housing a pool,a gymnasium, a pool room, a pingpong and game room, a smalltheater, and several other fea¬tures.At the laying of the corner¬stone, Dean Marion Talbot dem¬onstrated the expectations theschool had for Ida Noyes saying,"Here self-discovery and self-con¬trol will lead to social co-opera¬tion and mutual understanding.The weak will learn from thestrong and the strong will learnfrom the weak. Tolerance, sym¬pathy, kindness, the generousword and helpful act, all typicalof fhe woman we commemorate, will be the contribution of thewomen who go fofth from IdaNoyes hall to take part in theupbuilding of the new civilizationwhich is to come."During World War one, IdaNoyes was used for social affairsfor the men in nearby trainingstations, but after the war re¬sumed its original purpose as ahouse for the women’s activities.This role it maintained until 1955,when numerous organizationstransferred their offices fromReynold’s club to the more spa¬cious Ida Noyes hall. Among theactivities which moved were theMaroon, Student government, Capand Gown, Student forum, thePhoenix, and the student activi¬ties office.Thus Ida Noyes hall has cometo play a more important andextensive role as a student unionthan Reynolds club now plays.Each Monday night the hall isreserved mainly for the women’sclubs, but other nights any or¬ganization may cal! and obtainroom in whit^i to meet. In theafternoon, athletic activity fromswimming, to billiards goes on.During Orientation week it isin Ida Noyes that Activities night,the Chancellor’s reception, andnumerous .other functions occur.When the migration of clubsfrom Reynolds club to Ida Noyestook place, Mrs. Mary Alice New¬man, assistant director of studentactivities said that she hoped thebuilding would take the place of"a student union building on thiscampus.”Edith Ballwebber, director ofIda Noyes thought that the hallcould "accommodate the in¬creased traffic the move willcause.” Jeffrey Steinberg, direc¬tor of Reynolds club pointed outthat the "obvious reason for themove is the severe shortage ofspace in the Reynolds club.”On the first floor of Ida Noyeshall, the Cloister club was estab¬lished to provide "a place for stu¬dents, particularly commuters, tomeet, eat and talk.” However,students remained loyal to theC-shop, largely because of its cen¬tral location.Now the Student union hang¬out corresponds to the C-shop,though it in no way competeswith it, since the Hangout is openonly at night.Because of its central location,the card-player, the billiard fans,the "lounge lizards,” continue torender their first allegiance to* choose the protection of.AFTER SHAVELOTIONSkin protection, that is. Old Spice refreshes and stimulates, guards against the loss of vitalakin moisture. Feels great, too. Brisk, bracing, with that tangy Old Spice scent. It doe* seemto attract female admirers, but what red-bloodedman needs protection against girls? 1.00 pi-i** i H U LTO N Reynolds club, though such ac¬tivities are now enjoyed in thebasement.One may doubt whether firecould drive a dedicated card play¬er out in light of a certain inci¬ dent of the club’s history. Oncea fire started in the basement.The players refused to move orleave, commenting, "shut up anddeal,” as smoke drove out lesshardy observers.Andy Moore takes a break in the Hangout, now on thefirst floor of Ida Noyes. The Hangout of Ida Noyes corre¬sponds most nearly to the C-shop of Reynolds club.ThisGrand Tourof Europecan be yours...next summer!England ... the Continent... touring capital cities, ham¬lets . . . traveling through beautiful countryside, quaintvillages and passing landmarks . . . enjoying good fellow¬ship ... laughter, conversation and song! And it’s all yourswhen you choose one of the American Express 1961 Stu¬dent Tours of Europe! Groups are small, led by distin¬guished leaders from prominent colleges. Itineraries coverEngland, Belgium, Holland, Germany, Austria, Switzerland,Italy, The Rivieras and France. There are 12 departuresin all, timed to fit in with your summer vacation; rangingin duration from 47 to 62 days ... by ship leaving NewYork during June «md July ... starting as low as $1402.50.And with American Express handling all the details, there'sample time for full sight-seeing and leisure, too!Other European Escorted Tours from $776.60 and up.MEMBER: Institute of International Education and Councilon Student Travel.For complete information, see your Campus Representa¬tive, local Travel Agent or American Express Travel Serviceor simply mail the coupon.J American Express Travel Service, Sales Division 1■ 65 Broadway, How York 6, N. Y. B* Door Sir: Please send me literature on Student Tours of Europe □ ®European Escorted Tours—1961 □ 5| Nome §g—. Address 5B City Zone State BiHiHMHHHHaiHlIUKHaatfKHKKlDec. 2, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11rNew organizations form Phoenix opens contestPhoenix has announced a literary contest open to studentsTwo conservative organizations, the Intercollegiate Society of Individualists (ISI) and and friends of the UC. The contest is part of the magazine’sYoung Americans for Freedom (YAF), have established chapters at UC. effort to search out and publish the best of the UC literaryISI, which was founded in 1953 at Philadelphia, is established “for the advancement of doIlars wl11 be awarded the winnersconservative thought on campus.” YAF was founded this September in Sharon, Connects __ to ^ judged by El- is not limited and may rangecut, as an action group. der Olson, noted Chicago critic, from politics to literary criticism.Campus membership of the two groups is about 30; most of these hold membership in Entries must consist of no more The Winners will be announcedboth groups. Nationally, ISI than one poem, although length January 6,1961. All entries shouldclaims a mailing13,000; YAFmembers. . . is not limited.LhLt “What we hopeto demonstrate ISI sends out a national news- short F|Hjon _ to be judged be sent to Phoenix, c/o Ida Noyeshas about 20 000 * — — onort ritutm — uc j»ug™ Hall before December 15 The’ Jj lcitcr ever>’ month> the Ind.vid- by Ronald Weiner of the English manuscripts, which must be typ£. .. , TCT the In*rl^s would like to uajjs^ containing articles which department. Entries must be be- written, will be returned at theDiscussing the purposes of ISI, see Goldwciter President <ind thst , tmoon 1CWV) And r5000 words in thn * . n. *UC Chairman Robert Schuet- manv of tho boobs (so discuss such things as member- tween lbUU ana ouw woras in ciose Qf the contests, but Phoenix**"* SChUe‘ Z L an ship and ISI policy. hUm0r' P“bli'“Many intelligent collie st..- politics goes) are on the laculty Articles include “There-. Still ExrositorJf Ess»y_t0 be judged will be awarded in any Mtego“Hope for Antioch’ and ‘Left- by Robert Streeter of the English if the best entries fail to exhibitWing College Students Ask: Rec- department. 1500 to 5000 words, a certain minimum of literary'“‘t ognize Red China". Subject matter in this category quality in the judges’^pinion.dents go through a period of of Harvard university,iconoclasm for its own sake. They “Our main contention is thathave drunk a little from the such politician-scholars as GalPierian spring and think it fash- braitli and Sehlesinger areionable to have contempt for the liberals at all. but are statists orideas of ‘unenlightened’ people totalitarian democrats intentwho did not go to college . . . upon imposing their own socialsuch as their Republican parents, and cultural preferences upon“They delight in reading such other people,authors as Galbraith and Schles- “History gives us countlessin^fr who epater le bourgeois; such examples of so-called cham- Coed celebrates atomic pileThe world’s first atomic the Enrico Fermi institute, and passage of time," explainedM , • -r mi it. „ Anderson, director of the Enrico Garber.~ —,, r"— -- Jrf , ’ Fermi institute, will tell Miss Milton Janus, Miss Janus’fatherfrom their limited experience pions of the underdog, who really CC tirst year art Student, Janus “why the Manhattan Proj- and a UC alumnus with <hache-were born exactly 18 years ect, which changed the world, is lors and law degrees, was respon-ago today. To celebrate these an- important to her life and her era, sible for explaining the signifi-niversaries, Samuel FC. Allison according to Sheldon Garber, di- oance of her birthday to hisand Herbert Anderson, two of the rector of the public relations daughter. He is also responsibleparticipants in the Manhattan office. v for informing University officialsProject, will discuss their historic jn addition, Miss Janus will be °* bis daughter’s birthdate.experiment with Miss Janus this shown a model of an atomic pile. Miss Janus enjoys having herafternoon. This celebration of the “anniver- birthday on December 2, 1942.Allison, Frank P. Hickson dis- sary of an event in which the -other people have birthdays ontinguished service professor in University was intimately con- . , ... _r ,the department of physics and in nected is juwav of marking the ,s ias an ow Yeais butDecember 2 is also an importantthey imagine that all intelligent used the ‘downtrodden’ as step-people- are statist liberals and all ping stones to their own eleva-tlie boobs voted for Nixon. tion to power.”For PRINTINGOFFSET Call JAY!HY if LETTERPRESS ★ MIMEOGRAPHINGDAILY U. OF C. PICKUPSCmII JAY Letter & Printing Service3-0802 1950 East 75th Streetdate.” She noticed that people atUC appreciated her birthday’s sig¬nificance more than elsewhere.“I only wish I knew more aboutnuclear physics or had wanted tobe a scientist, for this meetingwould be a doubly wonderful op¬portunity," commented MissJanus.SUCCESSFULSTUDENTSLINCOLN LABORATORYhas openings for alimited number of en¬gineers, physicist* andmathematicians in orig¬inal research anddevelopment activities.NAME: John Hulse AGE: 27 MAJOR: Bus. Adm.PRESENT JOB: Telephone Manager, Sioux City, IowaWhen John Hulse was a senior at the U. ofSouth Dakota, he had his own set of “do’s” and“don’ts.” Don't become a mere cipher on some¬body’s payroll. Don’t sit on the shelf waiting foryour first taste of responsibility. Do get-a jobwhere you have a chance to show your stuffright from the start. Do the job.John knew his B.S. in Business Administra¬tion could lead him into almost any field. Hechose the telephone business and joined North¬western Bell.One of his first assignments: streamlining oper¬ating procedures for the telephone offices of Iowa’sfive largest cities. In this work John showedgood judgment and sound organizing ability.Today he is Telephone Manager of SiouxCity, Iowa.“Our number one aim is to have in allmanagement jobs the most vital, intel¬ligent, positive and imaginative menwe can possibly find."Frederick R. KVppel, PresidentAmerican Telephone & Telegraph Co. Besides managing day-to-day operations,helping plan tomorrow’s telephone growth isan important part of John’s job. A typical ex¬ample is the work he does with the Sioux CityIndustrial Development Association. In this role,he’s the answer man on projecting, planning andsupplying the communications needs of new in¬dustry. He’s shown above with Bob Sweeney,manager of the Sioux City Chamber of Commerce.“You must always be thinking of the futurein this business,” John says. “We have to stayahead. I think a man who has something to offerthis outfit won’t have a minute’s worry aboutwhat it can do for him.”If you’re a capable guy—looking for an action'job with rapid rewards far the man who can handleit—you’ll want to visit your Placement Office forliterature and additional information.BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES LINCOLN LABORATORYis an eleclronics researchand development centerestablished by M.l.T. in1951.OUR REPRESENTATIVEWILL BE ON CAMPUSDEC. 5thCONTACT YOURPLACEMENT OFFICE NOWReiearch and DevelopmentLINCOLN LABORATORYMassachusetts Institute of Technology•OX 21 • LEXINGTON 73MASSACHUSETTS12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 2, 1960IFree booklet tellshow to tour Britainon a budget24 pages packed with facts: Free booklet"Travelling Economically in Britain” tellshow you can tour the British Isles for just apittance. Includes map; photographs; detailson transportation, accommodations, tours,customs, and currency. Mail coupon below—and see your travel agent before you go.CL,p COUPON TODAYThe British Travel Association, Dept. C-2680 Fifth Avenue, New York 19, N. Y.Please send me “Travelling Economically in Britain.”Name !- —Addrwi M ■*"“y State •{PLEASB P1INT CLEARLY) The best tobacco makes the best smoke!R. J. Remold* Tcbteoe Co.. WlMtoa-Sklea, N. 6.Dec. 2, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • *3Debaters win third place at tournamentThe UC debating team tookthird place last weekend atthe University of Rochestertournament. Participating intheir first major tournamentof the season the debaters wonthe trophy with a 7-3 record.Holy Cross University, with an8-2 record took first place andColgate University finished sec¬ond.UCs affirmative team of AnnHillyer and Gary Greenberg com¬piled a perfect 5-0 record. Theytotaled 23 out of 25 team points,and 200 out of a possible 225speaker points.The only other team, of thetwenty-nine participating, to fin¬ish with a perfect record was theHoly Cross affirmative.Gary Woller and Bob Quail, thenegative team, finished with a 2-3record. They scored 20 teampoints and 188 speaker points.Miss Hillyer and Greenberg,the affirmative, held that “accessto the means for the attainmentand preservation of health is abasic human right.” They con¬tended that voluntary health in¬surance has not been meeting theneed, nor fulfilling its obligation,in the economic sphere of healthcare.To meet this need the affirma¬tive set up three criteria: 1) theencouragement of group practice,2) the encouragement of preven¬tive medicine, and 3) less utiliza¬tion and abuse of the hospital.Miss Hillyer and Mr. Greenbergshowed that voluntary insurancecan’t meet these criteria, andhence, cannot meet the economicneed. Therefore, they contendedthat we must change to govern¬ment compulsory health insur¬ance.In the first round the affirma¬tive met the Colgate negative.The Colgate team admitted aneed existed, but denied that asuccessful solution has to meetthe affirmative’s three criteria.Rather, they held that a privatelysponsored “reinsurance” planwould meet the need. Under such a plan insurancecompanies and prepayment plans(Blue Cross and Blue Shield, forexample) would pool resourcesand assist each other. The nega¬tive felt this would lead to lowerprices and broader coverage.Miss Hillyer and Greenberg at¬tacked this proposal by referringto the Eisenhower reinsuranceplan of 1954. It was rejected byCongress in 1955. Their mainargument was that such a plandoes not add one cent to workingcapital, nor does it broaden thebase of persons covered. There¬fore, according to the laws of ac¬tuarial scales the cost could notbe lowered, nor coverage expand¬ed. They further demonstratedthe importance of their criteriaand how they would be meetingthem through their plan. The de¬cision went to the affirmative.The final round debate againstSyracuse University attracted alarge audience. The central pointof the negative argument wasthat the affirmative plan wouldcost too much. The cure wouldbe worse than the status quo;therefore, it is no solution.The affirmative again turnedto actuarial scales. They pointedout that broadening the base ofthose covered and increasingworking capital has to lowercosts. They further claimed thattheir three criteria, when success¬fully met, would institute greatmonetary savings. Finally, theycontended that centralizing theadministration of health insur¬ance and removing advertisingcosts would save additional sums.Once again the affirmative tri¬umphed, completing their perfectrecord.Wollen and Quail, the negativeteam, faced the Buffalo affirma¬tive in the first round. Chicagowon the decision by demonstrat¬ing that a cure to the need thatexists lies within the status quo.They argued that only low in¬come groups cannot afford com¬prehensive coverage, but thesegroups can receive their medical care free of charge from govern¬ment clinics. 'They warned thatsocialized medicine would not befar off if the affirmative planwas adopted.In the second round Middleburybeat the negative as they wereable to demonstrate a sufficientneed and that the solution doesnot lie within the status quo.They claimed that the need was aproblem today, and therefore, weneed a solution today. Theyargued that the trend presentedby the negative that 90% of allour people will be covered by1975 does not meet today’s need.Middlebury also pointed out in¬adequacies in the program of freeclinics. Rochester Institute of Technol¬ogy won the fourth round fromthe negative by defeating the“trend” argument. RIT also askedfor a solution to today’s problemstoday. But further, they arguedthat the future was not as brightas the negative held it was. RITalso defeated the argument thattheir plan would lead to social¬ized medicine. They held that thegovernment only acted as an in¬surance agent and that all medi¬cal freedoms still existed.In the fifth round the negativetook a close decision from CornellUniversity. In this crucial debatethe negative seemed to capturevictory on the strength of theirargument against government Chicago also sent a "novice”negative team of George Shippand Gerald McBeath. They werepaired with an affirmative teamfrom Case Institute in teamstandings. They did not fare aswell as the other UC participants.They won one and lost four.Commenting on the teams suc¬cess Mrs. Nancy Rooker, thecoach, said: "We expected to dowell, but not this well. The fu¬ture certainly appears verybright.” Mrs. Rooker also expres¬sed hope that this success coupledwith a 29-8 record will stimulateinterest among the students, par¬ticularly entering and secondyear students, to participate indebate.Osgood, Hinshaw debatePresent job opportunitiesRepresentatives of the following organizations will conductrecruiting interviews at the Office of Vocational Guidance andPlacement during the week of December 5. Interview appoint¬ments may be arranged through Mr. L. S. Calvin, room 200,Reynolds club, extension 3284.December 5—Lincoln laboratory (M.I.T.), Lexington, Massa¬chusetts — will interview SM and PhD candidates in math¬ematics, physics, and statistics; and doctoral candidates inphysical chemistry. Will also speak with Bachelors andadvanced degree students for summer work.December 6—Vulcan Materials company, Birmingham, Ala¬bama, Chicago, Illinois, and other locations — is interview¬ing for positions in Chemistry (SB and SM), sales, andmarket analysis. Will also interview for a full-time summerposition as a market research trainee.December 8 and 9—Central Intelligence agency — will inter¬view lor Agency’s Junior Officer Training program andfor other positions requiring backgrounds in geography,English, foreign language, physics, and library A political scientist who be¬lieves in military preparednessand an advocate of non-violentresistance debated Novem¬ber 17.Robert Osgood, political sci¬ence professor and Cecil Hinshaw,peace secretary of the AmericanFriends service committee, northcentral region, debated “Militarydefense versus non-violent resist¬ance.” About 80 students attendedthe discussion, which was spon¬sored by the UC chapter, StudentPeace union.Hinshaw’s opening statementwas that the most practical policyfor the US in the nuclear agewould be unilateral disarmamentand the adoption of a program ofnon-violent resistance as its na¬tional defense posture. He empha¬sized his approval of some sortof negotiated agreement for dis¬armament, but insisted that,should such agreement be impos¬sible, the US should disarm any¬way, rather than risking the pos¬sibility of nuclear war.Hinshaw pointed to the factthat nuclear war would be inevi¬tably devastating, and that civil¬ization as we know it might wellnot survive. The risks of acci¬dental war, he stated, are sub¬stantial, and went on to quote aRand corporation study whichconcludes that there is a strongpossibility of US involvement ina nuclear war within the next tenyears.To cope with this situation, Hin¬shaw proposed a radical breakwith our present defense policy: a program of unilateral disarma¬ment, and reliance on non-violentresistance. The latter would in¬clude a well-planned and disci¬plined program, and, would, headmitted, involve many risks.These, he thought, would non-the-less, be less great than those ofcontinued reliance on the powerof deterrence and nuclearweapons.Osgood based his arguments onthe actualities of the presentworld situation and on the prac¬tical question of what can be ex¬pected from the US in a defensepolicy shift. He agreed with Hin¬shaw on several points, however,such as, for example, that unre¬strained coercion in internationalrelations would result in disaster.According to Osgood, the choicebetween complete disarmamentand nuclear war is not an inevi¬table one. He suggested that theacceptance of limited war willkeep the world from a nuclearholocaust while maintaining the defenses of the US. An essentialpart of this program is a balanceof power.Osgood described internationalpower politics as a sort of game,in which the US would give theSoviet Union certain guarantees:to refrain from a “first strike,”and to reply to an attack in kind,rather than with massive retalia¬tion. An essential part of this pro¬gram is a stalemate between thetwo powers; hence, it is necessaryfor the US to build up a conven¬tional armed force adequate lorlimited war.Osgood attributed the inadvis¬ability of arms-reduction agree¬ments to the difficulty of policingsuch agreements. He emphasizedthe importance to the US of anadequate "second strike” forceso that we could deal unaccept*ably heavy damage to the aggres¬sor even if he struck first; at thesame time, he said, the US shouldadopt a non-antagonistic policytowards the USSR.PIZZASFor The Prke OfNICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4700mmmm ra mm mm. Have a reaj cigarette-have a CAMELDr. Herbolshimer defends Billings' jobVigorously denying chargesof incompetent and unsympa¬thetic care levied at it by arecently injured first-year UCstudent, the Billings Emergencyroom has risen up in arms duringthe past week. The rest of Bill¬ings rose with itMarion Jolles, injured whenshe inadvertantly walked througha glass door in the lobby of thenew dorm, charged that she en¬countered a great delay in ambu¬lance transport to Billings andthat she received further delayand neglect on arrival there.“When I arrived at Billings ...I waited and waited. Althoughmy leg was bleeding profusely, Ithought that my nose was brokenand I was in pain, I lay in theEmergency room for approxi¬mately two hours till I saw a doctor.“When a doctor finally did ar¬rive, he could not see me, as atthe same moment a number ofpeople arrived who wished toknow my name, address, age, clo¬sest friend or relative and otherinformation.”“Fantastic,” replied the UCclinics staff.According to Henrietta Herbol¬shimer, head of student health,Miss Jolles’ claims “are in directcontradiction to the log of theEmergency room, the clinicalchart and the testimony of nurses,doctors and lay associates of thepatient. The ambulance deliveredthe patient to the Emergencyroom approximately 30 minutesafter the call had been placed byBillings and the placing of thatcall had routinely alerted theEmergency room staff so that afull complement was waiting.”According to the Emergencyroom records, Miss Jolles wasplaced in the operating roomupon arrival, that several pa¬tients who had arrived ahead ofher were kept waiting while shereceived immediate attention. Thedoctors in charge assert that sheImmediately received a shot ofmorphine and that they waiteduntil the drug had set in beforedressing the wound.“The discrepancy between MissJolles’ claims and the facts is so great that we must assume thatthe patient was so distraughtthat reality escaped her,"* DoctorHerbolshimer continued.The director of student healthIssued this statement after spend¬ing several days compiling a dos¬sier on the case. Doctor Herbol-shimer’s chronology of the caseis based on interviews with thedoctors and nurses of the Emer¬gency staff and with studentswho observed the accident andacompanied the patient to thehospital.A story concerning Miss Jolles’claims of maltreatment appearedin the Maroon of November 18.No statement from the medicalpersonnel involved with the acci¬ dent appeared in the original arti¬cle.The staff of the Emergencyroom was quite distressed by thisarticle, as were several studentswho wrote in complaining aboutits “onc-sidedness.”“The staff of the Student healthservice is deeply concerned withthe past year’s numerous MA¬ROON articles criticising our serv¬ice. We are, by predilection andtraining, conditioned to specialregard for students as patientsand, of course, are unhappy wheneven a few of our patients failto recognize the fact that we aredoing our very best for them. Webelieve the criticism comes froma small fraction of the total stu¬ dent body and it is largely ground¬less,” nerbolshcimer continued.“However, we fear harm mayhave been done by needlesslyalarming students who are notregular users of the service orparents located far from the city,and who lack information otherthan that gleaned from the pagesof the Maroon.The doctor explained that sheunderstood that the Maroon wasattempting to present a student’sstatements as assertions, not asfact, but expressed fear that thispoint might be missed by manyreaders.“As an epidemologist who ex¬pects various phenomena to oc¬cur sporadically, but is sensitive to aggregates of such phenonmer.a, i: have been philosophicalabout isolated unfair criticismsI am, however, concerned by thenumber which appeared thisyear,” the doctor went on. “Per¬haps I should have spoken ear¬lier, but certainly the time hasnow come when something shouldbe done to provide the facts tothe readers of the Maroon.”Miss Jolles, however, main¬tained that her original statementwas correct “There was a clockopposite me, which I watchedwhile I was in the emergencyroom,” she said. "I was quite wellaware of the time at which treat¬ment was begun.”Examination schedule announcedThe following it the lift ofquarterly examinations in under¬graduate courses. Information onthe time and place of any examsnot included may be obtainedfrom the instructor.Anthrop 21* Mon , Dec. 12-12:30-2:9*.Welker Sem RmArt 2**—Frl., Dec. l«—1*:30-12:3*, CL 10.Art 221—Wed., Dec. 14-10:30-12:30, OoH101.Art 2*0- Wed., Dec. 14—0:00-10:00, CL 10.Biorhem 201—Thurs. St Frl., Dec. 15 it16 — 8 :30-9:30, AB 101.Biol 111—Wed., Dec. 14-1:30-3:30. K-107,E-133, E-202 (plus lab exam Dec. 12).Biol 113—Tuee, Dec. 13-10:30-12:30,C-110.Biol 201—Wed., Dee. 14-3 :00-10:00, B-10*(plus lab exam)Botany 212—Tues., Doe. 13—10:30-13:30-CRB-101.Botany 25*- Mon., Doe. 13—12:3*-2:3*.B-20S.Chem 1*5—Frl., Doe. II — 8*0-10:00.K-107. K-333.Chem 220 — Tues.. Doe. II — 4:00-0:10.K-103.Chem 223 —Frl, Doe. 1* — 1:00-18.00,K-103.Chem 240 (241)—Wed., Doc. 14—10:30-12:30, K-107.Chem 261 —Wed., Doe. 14 — 1:00-10:00,K-103.Chinese 201-Mon., Doe. 12-1:30-2:30,CL-10.Earth Sciences 131—Thurs., Doc. IS—1:30-3:30, Ro 36.Boon 2*1 —Wed., Dee. 14 — 1:00-10:0#,SS-302.Econ 205—Frl., Dec 16-3:00-10:00. BE-10Econ 271 —Frl., Deo. 16 - 8:00-10:00,SS-302Educ 201—Wed, Doc. 14-4 00-8:00, J-126Lag 101-*- Mon., Dec. 12 — 8:30-11:30,K-107. Ro-2, C-110, E-202. E-207.Eng 105 —Mon., Dec. 12 - 8:30-11:30,P.1M f.MCEng 208 —Wed. Doe. 14 - 8:00-10:00,CL-1LHAVE MORE HOLIDAYTIME AT HOME...HAVE MORE FUNGETTING THERE...FLY UNITED AIR LINESBe home sooner ... be home longer. Fly homefor the holidays on a United DC-8 or 720 JetMainliner®.Even if home is all the way across thecountry, it’s only a few hours away on a UnitedJet. You'll like the convenience of United’sschedules—United flies the most jets and servesthe most cities by jet. And you're treated withextra care all the way whether you travel deluxe Red Carpet or economical Custom Coach.If this is your year for a “Sunshine Holi¬day/' consider Hawaii. There’s time enough toenjoy the fun of the Islands when you go thereon a United Jet. For reservations home or in¬formation on “Sunshine Holidays," see a travelagent or call any United Air Lines office.V. The extra care une Eng 216 —Wed, Dec. 14 -10:30-11:30,CL-18.Eng 219 —Thun, Dec 15-1:30-3:30,WB-103.Bag 230 — Thure, Dec. 15 — 8:00-10:00,Cl-18.Eng 232—Mon, Dec. 12-12:30-2:30, Wb102Eng 237 —Tue, Dec. 13-10:30-12:30,Cl-18.Eng 271—Tue, Dec. 13-4:00-6:00. Wb-202.Eng 275 —Wed, Dec. 14-1:30-3:30,Wb 102.Eng 287 —Frl, Dec. 18- 10:30-12:30,Wb 102.FT 102—Tue, Dec. 13- 8:00-10:00, BI¬RD, E-133.Fr 102—Frl, Dec. 16 -8:00-10:00, C-407.rr 201—Tue, Dec. 13-8:00-10:00. C-110.Fr 204—Tue, Dec. 13—8:00-10:00. Wb 102.Fr 207—Tue, Dec. 13—4:00-6:00. Wb 103.Fr 210—Wed. Dec. 14-8:00-10:00. Wb 102.Fr 212—Mon. Dec. 12-12:30-2:30, Wb 103.Fr 236-Wed, Dec. 14-10:30-12:30, Wb102.Ft 258—Thu. Dec. 15—8.80-10:00. Wb 103.Fr 270—Wed, Dec. 14-1.30-3:30. Wb 103.Geog 207—Wed, Dec. 14-10:30-12:30,Ro 2.Geol 246 —Frl, Dec 16—10:30-12:3*,Ro 26Geol 251 — Thu, Dec. 15 - 8:00-10:06.Ro 26.Geol 260 — Mon, Dec 13-12:30-2:30,W 204.Geol 263—Frl, Dec. 16-8:00-10:00, W 204.German 101—Tue, Dec. 13—8:00-10:00,LMHGerman 207—Frl, Dec. 16—10:30-12:30,Cl 11.German 234—Wed, Dec. 14-10:30-12:30,Cl 34.Greek 101 —Wed, Dec 14 - 8:00-10:00,C-416.Greek 204 —Wed , Dec. 14-8:00-10:00,Cl 25-BGreek 207 —Mon, Dec. 12-12:30-2:30,Cl 18.Hist 131—Thu, Dec. 15-4 :00-6:00. LMH.Hist 211 —Wed, Dec. 14-10:30-12:30,S3 107.Hist 221—Thu, Dec. 15- 10:30-12:30,S3 305.Hist 231—Frl, Dec. 16-10:30-12:30, Ro 2.Hist 261—Wed, Dec. 14-8:00-10:00, Ro 2.Hist 271—Frl, Dec. 16 -8:00-10:00, Ro 2.Hist of C-200—Tue, Dec. 13-4:00-6:00,Cl 11.Hum 111—Thu, Dec. 15-1:30-3:30. LMH,Ro 2.Hum 121 —Tue, Dec. 13-10:30-12:30,LMH.Hum 201 (126)-*Thu„ Dec. 15-1:30-3:00.E-133.Hum 211—Thu, Dec. 15-1:30-3:00, E-133.Hum 284 —Mon, Dec. 12 — 12:30-2:30,BE-107.Ideas & Methods 251—Mon, Dec. 12—3:00-5:00, C-109.Ital 101—Wed. Dec 14—8:00-10:00, C-407. Ital 2*1—Wed. Dee. 14-10:30-12:30.Cl 20.Ital 204 ( 2*7)^-Wed, Dec 16 -10:30-12 :3#,Wb 206.Ital 210—Frl, Dec. 16 8:00-10:00. a 15.Jap 211 —Mon.. Dec. 12-1280-2:30,Or 209Latin 1*1 —Frl, Dec 18 — 10:30-12:30,C-410.Latin 2*1—Wed, Dec. 14-1:30-3:30,Cl 20.Latin 2*8 —Wed, Dec 14-10:30-12:30,Wb 102.Math 101—Wed. Dec. 14-4:00-6:00, LMH.Math 1*2 —Frl, Dec. 16-10.30-12:30,C-110.Math 103 — Mon, Dec. 12 — 12:30-2:30,E-305.Math 156-Wed, Dec. 14-4:00-6:00, aec11. C-104; aec 21, K-207; see 22, C-410;sec 31, C-415; sec 41, E-206; sec *1,C-308.Math 151—Wed, Dec 14—4:00-6:00. eec11, E-305; sec 21, E-203; sec 22, C-406;sec 31, Z-14; sec 32, C-30S; aec 41.~~C-402; sec 42. C-103; aec 51. E-312;sec 61, C-408.Math 152—Mon, Dec. 12 — 13:30-2:30,E-207.Math 153 aec 11—Frl. Dec 16 -8 :00-10:00,E-203 -Math 153 sec 31—Tue, Dec. 13-10:30-12:30, E-203.Math 203 sec 11—Frl, Dec. 10-8:00-10:00, E-207.Math 203 sec 31—Frl, Dec 11-10:30-1280. C-305.Math 203 sec 33—Frl, Dec. 16 10:30-12:30. C-103.Math 203 see 41—Wed, Dee. 14-10:30-12:30. F-207.Math 204 —Tue, Dec. 13 — 10:30-12:30,E-207.Math 205 —Wed, Dec. 14 — 10:30-12:30.E-312. _ „Math 241 see 11—Frl, Dec. 16 — 8 00-10:00, C-305.Math 241 sec 71—Wed, Dec. 14-1:30-3:30, E-206.Math 251 sec 21—Wed, Dee. 14—8:00-10:00, C-305.Math 251 sec 31—Frl, Dec. 16-10:30-12:30, E-312Math 252 sec 61—Mon, Dec 12-12:30-2:30, C-402.Math 252 sec 71—Wed, Dec. 14-1:30-3:30, E-207.Math 253 —Mon, Dec. 11 — 12:30-2:30,E-308Math 261—Frl, Dee. 16 - 8:00-10:00,C-402.Meteor 101-Wed, Dec. 14—10:30-12:30,Ro 2.Meteor 212—Tue, Dee. 15—10.30-12:30.E-308.Meteor 212 Frl, Dee 10—10 30-12:30,Ro 28.Microbiol 221—Tue, Dee. 13—10:30-12:30,Rks N.Music 151—Wed, Dee 14- 8:00-10:00.Chapel House.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.1332 E. 55th IIY 3-9651ftdlltfMiltmtfllUiHIIMIIIIHIIllllllIflllMMfmttilillllllllllillliiltHIllltllMtllHIHIDIHItlintMlllllllMItltllfllltltimtl!it #fi*f FiftY-Seventh at Kenwood ]TW29/IAL £UT unusual foodDELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICESItMiPHnitlimtUIIKIIIHIHliHimHimilWnmmmnnmimiHIIIKHmilllllHIlHWIlHmNIVXX • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 2, I960 DONALDMEIKLE JOHNAcademic Liberalism in the SixtiesM**d*y, Dee. 5th — S p.na.BREASTED HAM. “Mon- Dec. 12 — 12 30-2 30Mus 101. •"m£ S?._Fr‘~5?—Mus 201.MMlS£“Wed- ^ 14 - 8:00-10.00.{£{} 2£r“°^- Dec !12-8:30-11.30, J-126P1UL 2,^1~ Tue- Dec‘ 13 — 10:30-12:30WD 102.22* —Wad, Dec. 14-10:30-12:30BE-10.Phil 231—Fri, Dec. 16-8:00-10:00 Wb102PK-mC!c1-no MOa ’ (12 3:00-6:00,rhC-',09i *#1~Tu“* 13—1:30-3:30.P1Ro*2* 111 MoB< D*e- 12-3:00-5:00.Physics 111 (Phy Sd comp)—Mon.. Dec12—5:00-6:00, Ro 2.Ph/SH3 ' D#c 22—12:30-2:30.Physics 111—Wed, Dee. 14-8:00-10:00.physici 201- Frl, Dm. 16-8:00-10:00.E-202.P*E 202 m W#d * ^ 1A—10:30-11:30.Physics 215—Frl, Dec. 16-10:30-12:30E-133.P*Usi£? 221—Mon, Dee. 13-12:30-2:30,E-202.Physics 225 -Wed, Dee. 14-10:30-12:30E-133.Physics 235 Mon, Dec. 12-3:00-6 00E-133.Pol Scl 255—Tue, Dec. 13-10:30-12:30.Ro 2.Psych 208—Mon, Dec. 12-12:30-2:30Be 106.Psych 211 — Frl, Dee 16 — 10:30-13:30,Ab 133.Scand 201—Thu, Dm. 15-8.00-10:00Wb 202.Scand 254 —Tue, Dm. 13 — 1:30-3:30,Wb 103.Slavic 101 — Tue, Dee. 13 — 8 00-10 00Ro 2.Slavic 201 —Tue, Dec. 13-8:00-10:00.Cl 10.Slavic 204—Wed, Dm. 14-10:30-12:30,Cl 11.Slavic 230 — Mon, Dec. 12 — 12:30-2:30C-109.Slavic 240 — Wed, Dec. 14-1:30-3.30,Cl 17.Soc Set 031—Thu., Dec. 15-10:30-13:30,Ho 2.Soc Scl 111—Tue, Dec. 13-1.30-3:30.LMH.Soc Sei 115—Tues, Dee. 13-1:30-3:30.LMH.Soc Sci 121—Thu, Dec. 15-10:30-12:30,LMH.Soc Sci 125—Thu, Doc. 15-10:30-12:30.LMH.Soc Sci 236—Wed, Dec. 14-1:30-3:30.Ro 2.Soc Sci 24*—Tues, Dec. 13-480-5:00,Ro 2.Soc Sci 256—Wed, Dec. 14-8:00-10:00.C-107.Sociol 210 —Thu, Dec. 15-8.00-10:00.SS-108.Sociol 220—Frl, Dee. 16—8:00-10:00, Ro26. Ro 27.Span 101 —Tue, Dec. 13 - 8.00-10:00,S-208.Span 2*1—Mon, Dec. 12-10.30-12.30.C-416.Span 207 —Frl, Dec. 16 -10:30-12:30,Cl 20.Span 210—Wed, Dec. 14-10:30-12:30,BE 17.Span 212—Frl, Dec. 16-8:00-10.00,Wb 103.Span 254 —Frl, Dec. 16- 10:30-12:30,Cl 18.Stat 200 sec 01—Wed, Dee. 14—8:00-10:00, Ro 26.Stat 200 eec 02—Thu, Dec. 15-3:30-5:00,E-207.Zoology 207—Tue, Dec. 13-1:30-3:30,Z-14.Zoology 24*—Frl, Dec. 16-10:30-12:30,W-200ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeing*W41 ReflnlsMng ofShoes «M86l Handbags• Colon matched • Tom cst out• Vamps lowered • Platform#removedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'HARROW HCCLSHeele changed — Any style —Any calmBockstraps Removed aad Springe-laton Inserted — Shea* stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic week.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsPAJrfax 4-96221749 Cat# 55th 9C.First year representatives of the Hew men's residencehall, shown above, met with those of other dormitories in aFirst year council. First year council meetsThe first year council, composed of twenty entering students, representing the variouscampus dormitories, had their second meeting of the quarter on November 29, in the Bur-ton-Judson apartment of Mrs. Mary Alice Newman, assistant dean of undergraduate stu¬dents.Edward Rosenheim, chairman of the humanities department of the College, had beeninvited to speak before the group, when at iraised questions as to the validity of the firstyear humanities course.The meeting began with questions by RichardMandel, from East house, who expressed on behalfof the students he represents, a confusion withthe arrangement of the Humanities 111 course.Miss Miriam Weisdorf, from Green hall, said thatshe and several of her friends had no idea justwhere they stood in the course, and could notreally tell from the few graded themes they hadreceived whether they were understanding thenew work or not.Rosenheim, head of the course which seeks tocombine art, music and literature in such a wayas to lead to greater appreciation and eventualanalysis of the three in given situations, explainedthat the Chicago approach to humanities is dif¬ferent from that of the other colleges who includethis in their curricula.He spoke of the historically oriented course, inwhich art or music or composition could be tracedfrom the Egyptians, to the Italian renaissance,and down through the twentieth century. Hespoke of the courses which dealt primarily withfacts received in a certain period of art, suchthat a student taking the class would be familiarwith the music of 1552 and nothing more. Ineither case, memorization would be more impor¬tant than creative understanding."We at Chicago try to help you to look, tolisten, and to read more richly and help you tohave in your life a real enjoyment of humanistic previous meeting several first year studentsworks. You first learn by an introduction to hu¬manistic works in their immediacy,” Rosenheimstated.The usage of musical scores as an aid In themesconcerned with music was brought up in severalquestions by the students. It was learned that theHumanities department is not against the em¬ployment of these scores, but that they feel stu¬dents only confuse themselves by watching theactual score when listening to a musical perform¬ance. In addition, no scores are allowed to beused during the humanities exam and thus itwould be to the student’s advantage to get intothe practice at this point of not using the scores.Those students who arc still interested in see¬ing the scores for their own enjoyment will findthat the Classics library has placed the necessarymusic on reserve so that all students wishing thescores will be guaranteed an opportunity to seethem during the music sections of the quarter.Members of the first year council include, fromEast: Carl Oeljin, Richard Mandel, Barry Rumaek,Bill Scott; from West: Nina Helstein, Susan Wirth;from North: June Takafugi, Joan Means, DoreenBlank; from Mead: Chris Peebles; from Thomp¬son: Fred Hecht, Arnold Brier; from Shorey: TonyLissey, Earl Choldin; from Green: Miriam Wesi-dorf; from Vincent: Brien Tugana; from Hender¬son: Don Spangler, Colonel Rodgers; and fromTufts: Jerry Glazer and Bob Pristave.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.Friday, December 27:30 am The Morning Show.Each weekday morning foran hour and a half.7:00 pm Jazz Archives — withBill Peterman.7:30 Brahms — Double Concertoin a, op. 102.Dvorak — Scherzo Capric-cioso, op. 66.Holst — The Planets.9:00 Mozart — The Marriage ofFigaro.Saturday, December 37:45 pm Varsity basketballgame, UC vs. Simpson Col¬lege. With John Kim andIra Fistell.Sunday, December 47:00 Beethoven — Sonata No. 9in A for Violin, op. 47.Schumann—Symphony No.3 in E flat, “Rhenish.”8:00 This Week at the UN.8:15 Transatlantic humor — aBritish Information serv¬ices presentation.8:30 Dvorak — Symphony No. 5in e, op. 95.Pergolesi — La Serva Pad-rona.9:45 Tschaikovsky — Swan Lake(complete ballet).Monday, December 57:00 Mozart — Mass in c, K. 427.8:00 Marty’s Night Out.8:30 Commentary — WilliamKelley.8:45 Berlioz — Harold in Italy,op. 16.9:30 Dukas—The Sorcerer’s Ap¬prentice.Debussy — Preludes, BookII.Haydn—Symphony No. 104in D, “London.”11:00 Somethin’ Else — modernjazz, with Mike Edelstein.Tuesday, December 67:00 Roussel —Suite No. 2 fromthe ballet “Bacchus andEye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist.1132 E. 55th Streetot University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372 Ariadne.”Boieldieu — Concerto in Cfor Harp.Ritter — Cantata, “O aman-tissime sponse Jesu.”8:00 Jazz for the Layman—withJohn Brink.9:00 Beethoven — Symphony No.4 in B flat, op. 60.Brahms — Trio in a forClarinet, Cello and Piano.10:00 Dvorak — Four SlavonicDances, Nos. 1, 10, 3 and 16.Schubert — Qintet in C, op.163.11:00 Fat City — with NormLinke.Wednesday, December 77:00 Weill — The ThreepennyOpera.9:00 Liebermann — Furioso forOrchestra.Bartok — Sonata No. 2 forViolin.Schonberg — Pierrot Lu-naire.10:00 Bach — Concerto in E forViolin.Mozart — Serenade in D, K.239. Schubert — Symphony No.3 in D.11:00 W'e Come for to Sing—folkmusic, with Mike Wolfsonand John Kim.Thursday, December 87:00 Weber — Overture to theopera “Oberon.”Rossi — Vocal and instru¬mental music.7:30 Mozart — Quintet in D forStrings, K. 593.8:00 Music of the World — withGeorge F. Hawk.8:30 Monteverdi — Lagrimed’Amante.9:00 Ponce — Concierto del Surfor Guitar.Martinue — Piano QuartetNo. 1 (1942).10:00 Tschaikovsky — Serenadefor Strings, op. 48.Stravinsky — Persephone(melodrama).11:00 Jazz till Midnight — withMike Goran and TonyQuagliano.WUCB concludes its broadcast¬ing today until the winter quarter.It will continue to rebroadcastWTMT.jp y »>TTTTrTT,nrrT»»V»*VVtTVfT**fITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage Gr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.Buiko Service57th Jk Cottage GraveBU 8-9209announcesComplete Road ServiceTires — BatterieswithSpecial Rale lor Stndenls Nemerov to speakHoward Nemerov, poet,novelist, and critic, will pre¬sent a reading of his poemson Sunday, December 4, atIda Noyes hall, at 3:00 pm. Spon¬sors of Nemerov’s reading are thePoetry Seminar of Chicago andthe University of Chicago Press,which on October 11 publishedhis latest hook of collected verse,New and Selected Poems. Admis¬sion is $1.50.Nemerov is a native New York¬er, and a graduate of Harvarduniversity. He is currently a member of the Department ofLiterature at Bennington college,Bennington, Vermont.Considered one of the finest ofthe younger generation of poets,Mr. Nemerov has gained in¬creased stature with each suc¬ceeding collection of verse, noveland critical work brought to pub¬lic attention.Nemerov is the author of fivevolumes of poetry. They are: TheImage and the Law, Guide to theRuins, The Salt Garden, Mirrorsand Windows, and now New andSelected Poets.'«»««“ IS A ICtUffHO VAdt-MAWW. CO^vAfMT 0 UK Tw« COCA-COLAOut of this world!Space travelers—be on the alert! Makesure there’s a cargo of Coke tuckedaway in the rocket! You may not beable to buy your favorite sparklingdrink on the moon TT? but that’s justabout the only place you can’t. Sowhen you’re ready for the big lift, beeure the cheerful lift of Coca-Colagoes along! BE REALLY REFRESHEDBottled under authority of The Ccca-Colo Compony byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicogo, Inc.Dec. 2, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15Coming events on quadranglesFriday, emberTelevision se .uinar Sixty. WBBM-TV. channel 2. 6:30 am ’’Dream re¬search,” Dr. William Offenkrantz. as¬sociate professor, department of psy¬chology.Matins with Sermon. 11:30 am. Bondchapel. Reverend Thomas A. Droege.Lecture series: Personality Theory (de¬partment of psychology 1, 4 pm, SocialScience 122, “Measurement in person¬ality theory,” Donald W. Flske. asso¬ciate professor, department of psy¬chologyMaroon staff meeting. 4 pm. Maroonoffice, Ida Noyes 303. All staff mem¬bers and Maroon seminar participantsare urged to attend. All those inter¬ested in Joining the staff are welcome.Koinonia, 6 pm. Supper, cost 75 cents.Chapel house, 7:15 pm, discussion withOtto Bremer, assistant executive sec¬retary of the NLC Commission on Col¬lege and University Work, topic, “Bus¬iness ethics and the Christian.”P.ridge club, 7:15 pm. Ida Noyes lounge,first floor. Monthly Master point du¬plicate bridge game. One full ACBLmaster point will be awarded to win¬ners. Fifty cent entry fee for thisevent. Beginning and experienced in¬dividuals and partnerships invited.Movie, 7:30 and 9:30 pm. Social Sci¬ence 122, “Death of a Salesman,”sponsored by the Young Peoples’ So¬cialist leagueInter-religious fellowship, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes, East lounge, all those invitedwho are interested in discussing re¬ligious ideas.Sabbath Services. 7:45 pm. Hillel foun¬dation, 5715 South Woodlawn avenue.Motion picture, 8 and 10 pm, Burton-J u d s o n courts, “Green Pastures,”written and directed by Marc Connel-ley. starring Eddie Anderson Admis¬sion is 40 cents and there will be freecoffee.lecture series: Works of the mind. 8pm. University college. “Plato's Apol¬ogy and Crito: A philosophical analy¬sis," Alan Gewlrth, professor, depart¬ment of philosophy.Oneg Shabbtt, 8:30 pm, Hillel founda¬tion.University theatre, 8:30 pm. Reynoldsclub theatre. “Tonight at 8:30.”C hamber Music series, 8:30 pm, Mandelhall. Fernando Valenti, harpsichord,Purcell, Suite No. 1 in G; Rameau,Deux Rlgaudon; Balbastre, Noel withVaratlons; “Josef est bien marie”;Bach, Chromatic Fantasy and FugueIn D Minor; Mel Powell, Recitativeand Toccata: Scarlatti, Sonatas.Social dancing, 9 pm. Ida Noyes theatre, sponsored by the International houseassociation. Admission: 50 cents forstudents and $1 for others.Safurday, 3 DecemberModern Master Dance lesson (women’sdivision of physical education and theChicago Dance councill, 10 am. IdaNoyes. Charles Weldman, dancer andchoreographer.Recorder society. 1 pm. Ida Noyes, in¬struction from 1 to 1:30 pm ana thengroup recorder playing.Cross-Country meet, 1:30 pm. Washing¬ton park. National Junior AAU 10,000meter championships.Association for the Advancement ofMoral Re-Armament, 2 pm, Ida Noyes,meetingYoung Peoples’ Socialist league class,3 pm, Ida Noyes library, topic is Rus¬sia.UC Outing club. 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes,lounge. “Ski Fest.” ski fashions, skiequipment explained, ski movies. In¬formation on Christmas Interim andwinter quarter ski trips.Varsity Basketball game, 8 pm, Fieldhouse, Chicago vs. Simpson college.Outing club square dance, 8 pm, IdaNoyes gymnasium. Caller: Steve Sachs,no admission charge.University theatre, 8:30 pm, Reynoldsclub theatre. “Tonight at 8:30.”Concert (Student government), 4:30 pm,Mandel hall. Folk songs performed byMartha Schlamme.Radio series: The Sacred Note, WBBM,11 pm. A program of choral music bythe University choir, Richard Vlk-strom. director of chapel music, con¬ducting,Sunday, 4 DecemberRadio series: Faith of our Fathers. WGN,8:30 am. Reverend Kyle Haselden,managing editor, The Christian Cen¬tury. and professorial lecturer. Divin¬ity school.Roman Catholic Masses, 8:30, 10, and11 am. DeSales house.Episcopal Communion service, 9:30 am,Bond chapel.Lutheran Campus - Parish Communionservice, 10 am, Graham Taylor chapel.Sikh Study circle, 10 am, 855 SouthRoscoe, religious celebration, refresh¬ments, everyone welcome. Those need¬ing transportation call PL 2-1663.University Religious service, 11 am.Rockefeller Memorial chapel. ReverendW. Barnett Blakemore, Jr., associatedean. Rockefeller Memorial chapel,and dean, Disciples Divinity house.Carillon rectial. 2:30 pm. RockefellerMemorial chapel, Daniel Robins, Uni¬versity carlllonneur.THE NEWCAFE CAPRI18(i:i E. list StreetFeaturing Espresso Coffee and Continental SpecialtiesFolk Singing and Art ExhibitsHours: Saturday — 11 A.M. to ^ A.M.Sunday — 2 F.M. to MidnightClosed MondayTuesday thru Thursday — 6 P.M. to MidnightFriday — 6 P.M. to 2 A.M. Concert series: Messiah, by Handel, 3Glee club,pm, Rockefeller Memorial chapel. The lounge.Rockefeller chapel choir and membersof the Chicago Symphony orchestra.Reception for Lutheran students. Chap¬el house, following the Messiah.Poetry reading, 3 pm, Ida Noyes, How¬ard Nemerov reading his poems froma new book, New and Selected Poems.Sponsored by the Poetry seminar ofChicago and UC press.Wine Taste, 5 pm. Quadrangle club.Mary McDowell Settlement Housebenefit, featuring five different kindsof wine. Admission: $5 per person.United Christian Fellowship Worshipservice, 5:30 pm, Thorndike Hiltonchapel.United Christian fellowship. 6 pm, Chap¬el house buffet supper. Cost 50 cents.United Christian fellowship, 7 pm.Chapel house, discussion. "Progress Ina Christian life.” bed by Reverend E.Spencer Parsons, minister, Hyde ParkBaptist church.University theatre, 8:30 pm, ReynoldsClub theatre, "Tonight at 8:30.” 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes, EastMonday, 5 DecemberLecture series: Personality Theory, (de¬partment of psychology!, 4 pm, SocialScience 122. "Adlerian theory of per¬sonality,” Dr. Rudolph Drelkurs,psychiatrist.Geography colloquium (department ofgeography), 4 pm, Rosenwald 41. "Re¬port on fieldwork In Iran,” Robert J.Braldwood. professor. Oriental Insti¬tute and department of anthropology,and Charles Reed, professor of zoology,college of pharmacy, University ofIllinois.Louis B. Block Fund lecture (zoologyclub). 4:30 pm, Zoology 14. “Aspectsof chemical mutagenesis,” Dr. Char¬lotte Auerbach. Institute of AnimalGenetics, University of Edinburgh.Elementary Yiddish class, 4:30 pm, Hil¬lel foundation.Motion pictures (Indian civilizationcourse), 7 pm. Rosenwald 2. “Thera-yattam,” “Kathakall,” “Bharata Nat-yam," “Land of the Dancing Shiva,”and other films on Indian dances.Lecture (Society for Social Research).7:30 pm, Rosenwald 26. "Impact ofAmerican films on African audiences:research in Ghana,” Elizabeth Drake,sociologist.Motion picture, 8 pm, Internationalhouse, "The Awakening” (Italy).Collegium Musirnm — The MadrigalSingers, 8:30 pm, Bond chapel, con¬cert of English and Italian madrigals.Tuesday, 6 DecemberLutheran Communion service, 11:30 am,Bond chapel.Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 12noon Ida Noyes, Bible study.Lecture (department of microbiology),3:30 pm, Ricketts North 1. "Recentwork with new penicillins,” E. B.Chain, professor. Institute Superlorede Sanltas, RomeFaculty and University Board meeting:Council, 3:30 pm, Business East 106.Colloquium (Institute for the study ofmetals), 4:15 pm, Research Institutes211. “Generation of point defects Inplastic deformation,” Howard K. Blrn-baum, assistant professor, Institute ofMetals.Hug Ivri, 4:30 pm, Hillel foundation,Hebrew speaking group.Lecture (Emily Talbot fund), 7 pm, Ida Basketball game, 7:30 pm, Field house,Chicago "B” team vs. Kendall college.Wednesday, 7 DecemberLecture series (graduate school of busi¬ness), 1:30 pm, Breasted hall. "Prob¬lems and prospects of union tank intoday's economy.” Edwin A. Locke,Jr., president, Union Tank Car com¬pany.Swimming meet, 3:30 pm, Bartlett pool.Chicago “B” team vs. Wright Juniorcollege.Intermediate Hebrew class, 3:30 pm, Hil¬lel foundation.Elementary Hebrew class, 4:30 pm, Hil¬lel foundation.Carillon recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller Me¬morial chapel, Daniel Robins.Episcopal Religious service: Evensong,5:05 pm. Bond chapel.Israeli Folk dancing. 7:30 pm, Hillelfoundation.Lecture series: Academic Program inReligion for Adults (University col¬lege), 7:30 pm, 64 East Lake street.“Modern Jewish Religious Thought.II,” Maurice B. Pekarsky, director,Hillel foundation.Symphony orchestra, 7:30 pm, Mandelhall, rehearsal. Country dancing, 8 pm. Ida Wove,sponsored by Country Dancers 'Lecture (UC history club), 8 pm id*Noyes. “The Sahib in India in' th*Eighteenth Century,” p. c. Guntavisiting professor, department of his'troy and committee on South Aslanstudies.Thursday, 8 DecemberEpiscopal Communion service, 11:30 amBond chapel.Lecture (department of history, 4 30pm. Social Science 122. "Czar andEmporer,” Michael Chernlavsky, asso¬ciate professor of Ruslsan historyWesleyan university.Lecture (zoology club), 4:30 pm, Zo-ology 14. "Population ecology of peri¬odical cicadas," Henry Dybas, asso¬ciate curator of Insects, Chicago Nat¬ural History museum.Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30pm. Ida Noyes, discussion, “Christianrelationships to one another,” led byClinton Conner. Informal coffee hourto follow.Friday, 9 DecemberMatins with Sermon, 11:30 am. Bondchapel.For rent nings. Call RE 1-0444 and ask for PaulAbies.Basement Room, near campus, privatebath and entrance. DO 3-3710.For sale Men and women. Apply now for Christ¬mas and winter quarter employment.In person at the Hyde Park Theatre,5312 S. Lake Park Ave.Marynook, 6564 University avenue.Owner architect, 6-room brick ranch,garage, paneled study, custom book¬cases, patio, brick barbecue, central airconditioning, gas heat, garbage dis¬posal Many architectural features. Mustsee to appreciate. 41-%, 30-year mort¬gage. By owner. ES 5-7543. Personals“Buitengewoonlijk” U of C class rings.By John Roberts. 1515 E. 53rd. NO 7-2666.Reasonably Priced, 3 Bedroom Home, ll/atile baths, gas heat. Hardwood kitchencabinets, floors, and paneling. Built-In units, and many extras. 8100 Wood-lawn RA 3-5486. Open Sundays, 1 to 5.Unusual steel body and neck Guitar,and steel body Plectrum Banjo. Bothwith Dobro resonator frets. Other WildOnes. The Fret Shop, Ml 3-3459. Creative Writing Workshop, PL 2-8377.Only 23 More Shopping Days till Christ¬mas. Plan now to tell those special peo¬ple how much you've been thinking ofthem, but how little time there Is tobuy their gifts. Christmas Day can beProfitable! Just Plan Ahead . . .TransportationDrive my ’56 Olds to Calif., middle toend Dec. New tires, exc. condition. Retexchanged. Faculty or Grad. Stu. AM2-5188.ServicesHelp wantedGroup Leader for Youth Center. Maleor Female. Sun. aft. and Weekday eve- Typing. Reas. MI 3-5218.Sewing, Alterations, Hems. BU 8-600i.Papers, Term Papers, and ThesesTyped. Picked up and delivered If youwish. TR 4-8539 After 6 pm.Need permit to driveEvery student will find a permit for automobile use In hisNoyes, “china Today/’ Myra E^RoperT registration packet which may be obtained from the registrarformer principal, Womens college, *university of Melbourne. after November 28.Ruth O. McCarn, assistant dean of students and chairmanNOW! Come Up...All The Way Upto the MENTHOL MAGICof KOOL!When your taste tells youit’s time for a change,remember: Only Kool—no regular filter cigarette,no other menthol cigarette-gives you real Menthol Magic!©I960, BROWN & WltUAMSON TOBACCO CORPORATION I THE MARK OF QUAllTf IN TOBACCO PRODUCTS16 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 2, 1960 of the parking committee, statesthat every registered student whodrives between 55th and 63rd,Cottage Grove and Stony Islandmust fill out a permit for auto¬mobile use.Students who will not operate| automobiles on campus duringwinter may discard this card. Apermit for automobile use should| not be confused with an applica-i tion for space in a reserved park¬ing lot. Such applications, whichj arc obtainable from the depart-i ment of buildings and grounds, require the payment of a $10quarterly fee.Mrs. McCarn comments thatthe parking committee is satis¬fied with the simplified student-operated automobile registrationsystem instituted this fall. Notingthat compliance with the censuscard instructions in the timeschedules was almost one hun¬dred per cent, she adds that “themembers of the committee ap¬preciate the cooperation studentshave given in this important as¬pect of campus safety.”THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree U.C, DeliveryTe r ry9s1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045HcAa\A,VACAT,ON FUN andE^Ay.£5EDITS ,N SUNNYYOU co MFfXlC0,THIS SUMMER!ina^xMrfenS nt™ t su"*drenc|]ed weeks or more) the rich, reward-safe frienHIu a ° *ei?dmg college in a foreign country which isFnrf'ckl ♦ dy ondJeos,|y accessible. BUT YOU MUST ACT NOW!those^nron prepared ,n ^ol°rful Mexico Ci»y Hst colleges, indicatingoffjr nSP°inSOre^ by U S> ins»itut*°"s of higher learning. AMshit, ro d' r"-p,anned Qnd we,,;tQlJ9ht courses (in English). Fact-ver ivmg costs and conditions, ways to save money, how toarrange accommodations, amusements, places to see, history, customs,border formalities, how to get a student visa or tourist card — andmany other important points. DON'T MISS THIS SPECIAL OFFER!Thousands of students have taken valuable courses and also havelearned to speak Spanish among warm-hearted Mexicans. These fact-s eets can save you many times the low introductory price of $1.You II want your own copy to dream over during the Christmas va¬cation. To insure getting your copy postpaid. DON'T DELAY. Thisoffer may not be repeated in this newspaper. Print your name and thename of your college (or other address), and send with $1 (cosh,check or money order) to:WIDE WORLD PRODUCTS CO., SUITE 15,SCRIMGEOUR BUILDINC, SILVER SPRING, MD.\SportsBasketball season opens tomorrow nightby Chuck BernsteinI'C opens the basketballseason tomorrow night, tan¬king with the Simpson Red-men in the Fieldhouse at 8.It should be a hard foughtbattle. Itching for competi¬tion. the Maroons are coming offtheir best campaign in fifty yearswith an 18-4 mark, while the Red-men are hungry for victory. Theywon but three and dropped 19 in1959-60.To bone up on their "underfire’’ lessons, Chicago scrim¬maged with Second Federal Sav¬ings Wednesday night. At homein Indianola, Iowa, Simpson kicksoff die campaign tonight againstAugustana.Defense must once again be thedeciding factor in the Maroons’corner. Led by the high-scoringBob Tidgren, Simpson averaged71 ppg last season. Thirteen timesthey topped 70, and in five gamesracked up over 80 points. OnlyIhree times did the Redmen failto register 60 points. ject” encounter last year. WhenKnox came to town, it was pacingthe Midwest Conference and aver¬aging over 80 ppg, but Chicagoapplied a tight defense andtriumphed, 63-55. The Midwaymenare hopeful that the same thingwill happen tomorrow night.1950-60 Form ChartChicago (22 games)FGA-FG FG% FTA-FT FT%StreckerTorenUllmannZemansTucker (a)Cope (a)Tidgren (b)Yount (c)Chkrng (d)(a) 20 game..(d) 22 games104-35 .336 30-21 .700177-84 .474 88-63 .71655-18 .328 65-21 .324122-40 .328 94-61 .649Simpson33-12 .364 41-22 .536146-59 .404 95-55 .579399-192 .481 207-152 .73438-16 .421 30-21 .7001 11- 4 .364 3- 3 1.000Probable Starting Line- upsCHICAGO SIMPSONNo . lit Name Name Ht. No.3? 6 4 Toren f Cope 6'5 4322 6'2 Strecker f Tucker 65 5350 6 64 Ericsen f Tidgren 6 4 5552 6 3 Zemans g Yount 6 4 4524 5 11 Davey g Chick’ring 6 0 31Word out of the Redmen campsays that Capt. Tidgren, whoposted 25.5 ppg, "probably missedbeing chosen little all-Americanbecause of a knee injury andshould make it this year.” Shoot¬ing at a sizzling .481 clip, hebroke a fistful of Simpson rec¬ords, including: per game aver¬age, 25.5; season total, 536; threeyear career total, 1104; singlegame high, 47; consecutive freethrows, 27, and free throws inone game, 21. He hauled down 355rebounds.Coach Joe Stampf, who willTomorrow's bosket boll's 90m*with Simpson college will b«broodcost over campus radio Sta¬tion WUCB ot 7:45 p m.scout Simpson tonight, said thatGene Erickson, G'G'k" sophomorecenter, probably will be assignedto guard Tidgren.Although Simpson is a highscoring outfit, its defense gaveup a whopping 82 ppg, comparedwith UC’s average of 48. The Ma¬roons held all opposition under 70points, but the Redmen allowedover 70 points in 19 games, over80 in 13, and over 90 in 6. So Chi¬cago may have ample opportunityto show off its new offense, whichis designed to increase last sea¬son’s output of 57 ppg.Dubuque, the only common foein 1959-60, whipped Simpsontwice, 87-83 and 114-81. UC defeat¬ed Dubuque.The ballgame tomorrow nightcan be likened to another "irre-sistable force vs. immovable ob-Support Causes,Charities, CommunityOrganizations, and the53rd at DorchesterTAhSAM-YMJCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen DallyZ1 AM to 19 :M PMOEDVES TO TAKE OUTU1I Im» 63rd St. BU 8-9019 Three of the University of Chi¬cago’s ablest gymnasts have beeninvited to participate in an openmeet to be held next Saturdaynight at 7:30 pm at Navy Pier.The meet is being sponsored bythe University of Illinois at Chi¬cago as a preview to the regulargymnastic season, and will pre¬sent former A.A.U. championsamong the performers. KenDriessel, Joe Kuypers, and PeteWilson will represent Chicago atthe meet.Driessel will perform on theside horse, parallel bars, andrings, while Kuypers is scheduleda Sports This WeekBasketballDecember 3—Chicago vs. SimpsonFieldhouse, 8:00December 6—Chicago Freshmen vs.Kendall, Fieldhouse,7:30December JO—Doubleheader at Field-house, Chicago vs.Lake Forest, 8:00Chicago Freshmen vs.Purdue (Calumet),6:00GymnasticsDecember 2.-3—M 1 d w e s t Open atNavy PierSwimmingDecember 7—Chicago "B’s” vsWright Jr.WrestlingDecember 2-3—Knox Invitational atGalesburgTwo members of UC'sbasketball team practice forthe season's opener againstSimpson college. Admissionto the game, at Bartlett gym¬nasium, is free. The gamewill also be broadcast oncampus radio station WUCB. Bicycles, Port*, AccoMoriotspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 «. S5th if.EXPRESSION!Hyde Park's Contemporary Art GalleryPAINTINGS — SCULPTUREHAND CRAFTED PLAQUES — CERAMICSOpen: Afts.: 2-5; Eves.: 7-9; Weekends1713 Vi E. 55thNote AppearingEDDIE "LOCKJAW'1 DAVISandTHE JOHNNY GRIFFIN QUINTETTheater Jazz Gallery OpenAdmission $1.00 Wed., College Night, 75cThe Home of Progressive JazzatSutherland47tfc.fi OREXEI10 M » * A.MjWJWWVHl /AAWN<.Saturday from 8:00-9:00Broadcast SpecialDrinks 1 Price to StudentsADMISSION CH6LCOVER CH6E.ENRMAlliMfNI UX to execute maneuvers on thetrampoline. Wilson, a first yearstudent, will complete on the sidehorse and rings. According toChicago coach Bob Kreidler, thesethree men are the mainstays ofthe Maroon team.The Chicago gymnasts willopen regular season competitionhere on Friday, December 16,against Indiana. The 1959 squadfinished the year with two winsand five losses, but according tocoach Kreidler, this year’s teamis both larger and stronger, andhas a fine chance to improve onlast year’s record.New council formsMary Alice Newman, assistant dean of undergraduate stu¬dents, in a meeting Wednesday, November 23, with DaveFrodin, president of Chamberlin house in Burton-Judsoncourts, and Val Dalwin, president of North house, /in theNew Dorms decided tentativelyupon the functions and limita-tions of the proposed Inter-dor- According to Dave Frodin,mitory council. Mrs. Newman favored the idea ofcently pro^ttTll the^ormt an ^-dormitory council. Piercetories the formation of a council tower, the only dormitory yet toto investigate and act upon mat- send representatives to the coun¬ters concerning them, such as cil, although without officially*°°d> and °Pen house regulations, recognizing it, was strongly inThe recent meeting held by favor of it. All members of theMrs. Newman decided, first, thatthe Interdormitory council will be Pierce council questioned by therestricted to the college. If grad- Maroon seemed to feel that theuate students wish such an or- Inter-dormitory council would beganizafioni they will have to form able , p^jorm the job o£ liaisollstudents will be represented by between the dormitories and Res-the houses with which they are idence halls & Commons muc hassociated. Apartment dwellers, more effectively than the presenthowever, will not be represented student government. Church Ver-■nle meeting further decided no£f- Prosident of Shorey house,that the houses are to be repre- one the four houses in Piercesen ted only by their presidents, tower, said, "The administrationAccording to the initial Burton- has a healthy respect for organ-Judson council proposal represen- ized student opinion. The Inter-tation was to have been propor- dorm council should be able totional with one representative bring this opinion to bear cffec-for every 75 students. tively.”DR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometristin theNew Hyde Park Shopping Centerot1510 E. 55th St..Eyo Examinations DO 3-7644Contact LensesNewest styling >« fro mo*Student DiscountPLAY OF DANIELRockefeller Chapel, December 12-19Presented by the New York Pro MusicaSponsored by the Visiting Committee on the HumanitiesSATURDAY MATINEE TICKETS at S1.50Office at the Bursar, Window 1211:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m, dailyROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELFifty-Ninth Street and Woodlawn AvenueHandersMESSIAHSUNDAY • DECEMBER 4, I960 • 3:00 P.M.RICHARD VIKSTROM, conductingTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRMEMBERS OFTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRASOLOISTSMillicent Fritschle, soprano Edward Warner, bassMartha Larrimore, contralto Edward Mondello, organistRoger Pillet, tenor Daniel Robins, carillonneurTICKETS: University Bookstore, Woodworth's Bookstore,and Chapel OfficeADMISSION:General, $3.00; Student (All Schools with ID cords), $1.50Dec. 2, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 17sm&Authentic folk musicfolk festival scheduledThe Folklore Society has announced that it is holding a Folk festival February 3, 4,unci 5. It is to be the first of its kind in Chicago, and to their knowledge, the first in anyurban setting.The festival will feature traditional folk singers who have grown up with this musicIn their native hill country. Tentatively, the program includes the Stanley brothers, withtheir five-piece “blue grass” country band made up of a guitar, banjo, mandolin, bass fiddle,and harmonica, the only native —Anglo-American orchestral form. w^0 makes an(j sens folk toys eral admission. There will be aAnother featured group is the made of such materials as corn 20 per cent discount on all ticketsNew Lost City Ramblers, New stalks and twigs will also be here, to members of the Folklore so-Yorkers who have made a schol- Mike Fleischer, president of the ciety.arly study of American country Folklore society, recommends Fleischer said that the festivalmusic from the period of the “Everyone on campus should has an educational as well as an1880 s to the 1930’s. They play have a whin-diddle or a flipper- entertainment value. Folk musicsouthern mountain tunes, fiddle dinger.” as part of our tradition is of amusic, guitar and banjo tunes, The only WOman on the pro- historical and cultural anthropo-country blues, white spirituals, am is Elizabeth Cottin from logical interest. It is for this rea-and the songs of protest that Washington, D. C., who sings old son that the Folklore society hasprevalent in the depression, hln^s snirituals. booked only authentic folk A scene from "Golden Demon," the Japanese Romeo andJuliet, premiering in Chicago at the Hyde Park, Friday,December 9.were prevalent in the depression. Negro country blues, spirituals, booked onlyThe Folklore Society also hopes and the songs of iament and pro- singersto have Allan Mills, a Canadian ^at have been sung for thepast 200 years. She plays herguitar backwards, i.e., strummingwith her left hand.There will also be local talentfolk singer who sings Montrealsongs of French, English. Scot¬tish. Irish. Welsh, and Indian deri¬vation and his accompanist, JeanCarigan, a French-Canadian coun¬try fiddler. Choir sings MessiahUT readings slatedAdditional readings for the University theatre productionof John Gay’s “The Beggar’s Opera” are scheduled for nextMonday, December 5, at 8:30 pmin Mandel hall. Bill Alton will direct the production, which will bipresented on alternate nights with“The Sea Gull” for ten days inthe middle of February.Handel’s “Messiah” will be tenor; Edward Warner, bass.CeorUginand Gerrv by the Rockefeller Daniel Robins newly-appointed AUon hls dcsir0 forOther American folk singers in- ^strong Flemming Brown, chapel, choir Sunday, Decern- eanlloneur of the Un.vers.ty, will untrain<Kinan lum-aiugcia v>- Armstrong, rtenuxiuig u.un, ... , q .. ., "r~“ voices in this produc-clude Rosco Holcomb, a banjo Sandy Payton, and Inman and ber 4tn> at d Pm* play a 2:30 recital proceeding the tion. “I d rather have fine actors,”player from Daisy Kentucky; jra " * Richard Vikstrom, director of concert. he stated, "and this play is actual-Horton Barker, a blind ballad Besides the three public con- Chapel Music, will conduct the yikstrom’s goal, in this as in ^ better if the voices aren’t toosinger; Frank Proffitt, a singer cerds jn Mandel hall, there will be choir, members of the Chicago prevjous years, is to have the polished.of folk songs who also makes, groUp discussions, Wing-dings, . Hrc“fs,tia ana work performed as Handel in- Music for “The Beggar’s Ope-plays and sells wooden fretless and Hootenannies in Ida Noyes 1S* Edward Mondello. tended it to be done. As the first ra” is based on old English,banjos and dulcemes. during the Folk festival. Tickets It will be the 13th annual per- conductor in America to present Scotch, and Irish airs, music byA teller-of-tales, Richard Chase to the concerts will sell for $2.50 formance of the “Messiah” at the “Messiah” in this manner, Handel and Purcell, and Frenchof Beech Creek. North Carolina for reserved seats and $2 for gen- Rockefeller Memorial chapel, 59th Vikstrom, who hand-copied Han- and Spanish melodies. Additionalstreet and Wood la wn avenue, del’s original notes for the choir, music to that written-by Gay wasGeneral admission tickets are works with a small chorus so contributed by Frederick Austin.$3JK) each, student, $1 50. that the texture may be clear. He Beggar’s Opera” was firstSoloists with the all-profession- also has scored the trumpet parts ntcd g 1728 and was an ,<im.al. 40-voice choir are Millicent a full octave higher than the mediate success. Some think thatFntschle, soprano; Martha Lar- modifications of later years it was written as a parody of therimore, contralto; Roger Pillet, specify. high-flown Italian opera then socommon on the English stages,”Alton continued.•V'WWVWWWW’W*THEARCHWAYSUPPER CLUB356 EAST 61st STREET <The Archway announces an entertainment policydesigned to present the "comers" in jazz. Showswill be Wednesday through Sunday from 10 p.m.TheDON CARLOTRIOAppearing RegularlyJOHNNYHARTMANDecember 14th-*********** MOSEALLISONNow Appearingfor reservations— call —PLaza 2-4498 TONIGHT AT 8:30Reynolds Club Theatre — 8:30Friday, Saturday, Sunday — $1.00A NOW PLAYING"SCHOOL FOR SCOUNDRELS"Starring:Terry Thomas, Ian CarmichaelDearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763Special student rate for all performances seven days a weekJust Show Caxhior Your I.D. Card “Macheath, the highway robber,is considered to be a caricature ofthe Prime Minister at that time,Robert Walpole. Gay, JonathanSwift, and Alexander Pope wereall friends, and it is rumored thatSwift suggested the topic of theplay and even had something todo with writing it.”‘The last time the play waspresented here in Chicago,” Altonconcluded, “it ran for three andone-half years in the Nigel Play¬fair production.”CLARK Theatredark & madisonfr 2-2845H _ of oil timesf°rg^J college studentsjust present your i.d. cardto the cashier ^ open 7:30 a.m.lote show 4 a.m.-A- every friday is ladies dayall gals admitted for 25c★ program changed dailyDECEMBER ^ movies subject to changewithout notice•fa write in for free program guideSUNDAY MONDAY4) t. curtis “so this is paris”sailors on leave in frauce(richard quine)Jose ferrer “deep in myheart” story of composerslgmund romberg (Stanleydonen) guest stars: genekelly, cyd charisse, tonymartin, howard keela Sunday film guild program 5) e. purdom “trap¬ped in tangiers”police crack dopering (antonlo cervi)m. rooney “plati¬num high school”father visits schoolto probe son’s death(Charles haas)11) ben gazzara, Julie Wil¬son, geo. peppard “thestrange one” sadistic cadetofficer terrorizes mili¬tary school underclassmen(jack garfein)andy griffith, patricia neal,lee remick “face in thecrowd” biography of awould-be dictator (ellakazan)a Sunday film guild program 12) v. mature“escort west” west¬ward trek(francls d. lyon)s. brodie “spy in thesky” internationalintrigue(w. lee wilder)18) mario lanza “greatcaruso” life of the Immortaltenor (richard thorpe) withdorothy kirsten, blanchethebom, marina koshetzkathryn grayson, mervgriffin “so this is love”story of grace moore(gordon douglas)a Sunday film guild program 19) Jeff morrow“5 bold women’’marshall ‘escorts’ 5women to Jail(J. lopez-portillo)Jim davis “lust tokill” western tam¬ing of the shrew’(a. r. milton)25) 2 hilarious comedies!peter seller, terry-thomas“I’m all right, jack!” wry,"plague-on-both-your-houses” look at capital andlabor (jbhn boulting)“carry on, nurse” inside A,zany hospital‘(gerald thomas)a Sunday film guild program 26) v. heflin “underten flags” saga ofnazi ‘ghost’ ship(dulllo coletti)lancaster, slmmons“elmer gantry” Sin¬clair lewis’ scathingexpose of ‘fire &brimstone’ evange¬lism (r. brooks) TUESDAY6) f. m’murray “faceof a fugitive” gun¬man goes straight(paul wendkos)v. mature “banditof zhobie” nativesvs. british in india(john gilllng)13) r. long “tokyoafter dark” g.l.flees japanese murder trial(norman t. herman)d. andrews, J. powell“enchanted island”sailors jump ship,Join native tribe(allan dwan)20) J. hunter “wayto the gold” questfor lost mine(r. webb)r. mltchum, t. bikel“angry hills” withthe greek under¬ground (r. aldrich)27) d. niven “king’sthief” loyalists foilplot against king(r. z. leonard)r. hudson, s. poitler“something ofvalue” black vs.white in so. africa(richard brooks) WEDNESDAY7) J. cagney “neversteal anythingsmall” career ofraffish union boss)(Charles lederer)r. buttons,v. mature “the bigcircus” under the‘big top’(jos. m. newman)14) j. gavin “a timeto love & a time todie” life in wartimegermany(bouglas sirk)c. wilde, J. russell“hot blood” strangeworld of gypsies(nicholas ray)21) burt lancaster“crimson pirate”Caribbean adven¬ture (rbt. siodmak)george montgomery“watusi” return toking Solomon’smines (k. neuman)28) v. mature“shark fighters”navy seeks sharkrepellent for use ofshipwrecked(Jerry hopper)a. ray, c. robertson“naked & the dead”war in the pacific(raoul walsh) THURSDAY FRIDAY, Ladies Day1) r. todd, J. greco“naked earth”african adventure(Vincent Sherman)r. taylor, e. parker“many rivers tocross” western gal‘gets her man’(roy rowland) 2) r. egan, J. london“voice in the mir¬ror” man’s fightagainst alcoholism(harry keller)J. slmmons “thiscould be the nite”schoolmarm turnsnight-club topsy¬turvy (robt. wise)8) dana andrews“tobacco road” lifein rural georgia(John ford, directorof the month)h. fonda “grapes ofwyath” Steinbeck’sgreat story of thedepression (ford) 9) J. saxon, s. dee“restless years”problems of youth(helmut kautner)r. hudson, J. sim-mons “this earth ismine” lusty tale ofCalifornia vine¬yards (henry king)15) perkins, palance“lonely man” out¬law fights for re¬spect of estrangedson (henry levin)a. ladd “Santiago”gun-running inCuban revolt vs.spain (g. douglas) 16) g. macrae“about face”‘brother rat’ set tomusic (r. del ruth)d. day “by the lightof the silvery moon”small-town life inthe early 20’s(david butler)22) wayne, 1. turner“sea chase” germanship eludes britishnavy on eve of war(john farrow)r. taylor “hangman”hunt for a killer(michael curtiz) 23) Gable “King & 4Queens” gablealone with 4 beau¬ties (raoul walsh)r. hudson “neversay goodbye” mantries to win backwife (Jerry hopper)(29) wayne,w. holden “horsesoldiers” union raid300 miles into rebellines (John ford)v. heflin, r. roman“tanganyika” ex¬pedition to africa(andre de toth) 30) gable “but notfor me” aging pro¬ducer falls foryoung girl (w. lang)m. britt, e. Jurgens“blue angel” Ill-starred marriage of‘tart’ & teacher(edward dymtryk) SATURDAY3) gable, s. loren“it started innaples” americanlawyer ’romances’Italian girl(m. shavelson)r. mltchum “nightfighters” Irishrepublican army vs.british (t. garnett)10) p. newman “sil¬ver chalice” searchfor cup of Jesus(victor saville)J. Stewart,a. murphy “Kitepassage” r.r. agentvs. outlaws(James nielsen)17) nat ‘king’ cole“st. louis blues”life of w. c. handy(robert smith)b. crosby, m. gaynor“anything goes”romance snags huntfor leading lady(robert lewis)24) wayne “bloodalley*” escape thruformosa straits(wm. a. wellman)a. gardner“bhowani Junction”tangled life ofeuraslan girl inIndia (geo. cukor)31) new year’s eve!v. mature “hanni-bal” carthageattacks rome(edgar ulmer)J. hunter, w. strode“sgt. rutledge”negro g.l. Is accusedof rape and murder(John ford) Joseph H. Aaron, ’27The ConnecticutMutual Life InsuranceCompany of HartfordSince 1846, over 100 years, hassafeguarded your family.135 S. LaSalle St.Suite 825 RA 6-1060Company of the FourpresentsThe Flowering Peacha humorous & tender folk fableCLIFFORD ODETSJohn Woolman Hall1174 E. 57th St.8:00 p.m.—Dec. 1, 2, 4, 8, 9, 116:00 & 9:30—Dec. 3 & 10Admission $2.00 Students $1.50Reservations —Ml 3-4170 - FA 4-4100TEL RES. DE 7-10006th MonthChicago’s Long-Run Musical Hit!MED UMRARE"Ntwtsr,^",00cV„\LA’*s%.HAPPY MEDIUM,i. rush st.UArluINU »• DOWNSTAGE ROOM1 Shaw, Nitwl/i Tin..Sat SiN t IliMIn. TiN * (lilt—Prim: In-Thin. S1.U I UMW I IA UM I IS.M, tax taxi. ILtlll MM.MAIL OKDiM MOW18 • CHICACO MAROON • Dec. 2, 1960Culture VultureDeep in the depths of Kent 107 today, there flashed a picture on the wall of the "metacarpal bone from the wing of Vulture.**How wait! The Vulture has promised her odorific carcass to the Museum of Natural History, to be stuffed and perched on theshoulder of a Neanderthal man-with long black hair; never has she given a word of encouragement to the Biology department.On this metacarpal bone were great dark diamond-shaped splotches which indicated points of stress. What the Vulture needsare counter-weights (Christmas Vacation; spikes on claws to eliminate slipping on the glare ice which is encasing Hyde Park;a new tense called the fairly perfect, to counter the drastic effects of the perfect, the past perfect, and the future perfect).The theory of counter-weights has given rise to the derrick; perhaps it will be the cause of new efficiency and strength in theworld of bird and man. Efficiency, strength, and automation are what we need in this end-of-the-quarter panic. Let us Hy toHarper and settle forever in the smoke filled downstairs room.On compusTheatreThe time has come to speak ofmany things: of philosophy, ofpoetry, of Tonight at 8:30. To¬night, tomorrow night, and thenight after that (all at 8:30 inMandel hall), student directorsStinson, and Bezdek will be pull¬ing the strings of their puppetfellows in hopes of setting a bril¬liant precedent for the future,and the not too far away futureat that. The Drafting of SixtusBorden, The Private life of theMaster Kate, and The MarriageProposal are on the docket; andthey shall have ‘unsuccessfully,’because ours is a University ofexperiment and avant garde, andthat is what these plays are.To prove the point, hard on theheels of the present autumn se¬ries are tryouts for the winterquarter production, to be giventhe last week of Jan. and thefirst week of Feb. The list ofplays is twice as impressive asthis quarter’s, because it is twiceas long: The Two Executioners byArrabal, directed by Will Moody;The Time Is Ripe written and di¬rected by David Ingle; SamuelBeckett’s Embers, directed byMartin Roth; The Twelve Lookby JM Barrie, directed by MartinKabinowitz; We Were Dancingby Noel Coward, director BobReiser; W’illiam Saroyen’s HelloOut There, director Susan Pen¬nington; and finally If MenPlayed Cards As Women Do theworld would be the worse forwear, by GS Kaufman, and to bedirected by Ira Fistell. All thosewho wish to be experimental (andmore than a few notches abovethe rats) and avant garde, try¬outs are next Wed. and Thurs.,from 7-10 pm in the Reynoldsclub. And whovloesn’t?MusicThe angels haven't forgottenthe Messiah, nor have the experi¬mental rats; have you? Sunday at3 in Rockefeller chapel.Straight from the greene fieldsof merrye olde England come theMadrigal singers of the CollegiumMusicum, to give their direct con¬cert — ever? The first half of theprogram will be devoted to Eliza¬bethan music,” madrigals, solosongs, and instrumental piecesfor harpsichord and viola da gam-ba. There is nothing more con¬ducive to summer skies and sun¬ ny hearts than a group of clearvoices singing Now Is the Monthof Maying or Adieu Sweet Ama-rillls. It should be done moreoften. So wrap your scarvesaround your necks and hie acrossthe meadows next Monday eve¬ning at 8:30 to Bond chapel. Thereis no charge for this bit of sun¬shine, of course.A creative word from the UCSymphony Orchestra which ispresenting their first concert withthe UC Glee club on December 9:again this year there will be aconcerto for aspiring musicianswho wish to fight their ways upthe heart break road of self-ex¬pression. The winning composerwill play his composition with theUC Orchestra during their springquarter concert. Auditions willnot be held until the bleakness ofFebruary, but everyone interestedshould leave his name at‘the de¬partment of music by Decem¬ber 16.FilmsMonday night at Internationalhouse will be The Awakening, anaward winning film of the VeniceFilm festival. The awakeningconcerns the “touching” innerconflict of a nun; Anna Magnaniis torn between her religious vowsand the maternal instinct thattears at every woman’s breast.She is awakened and presumablysees her way towards the lightand truth. Which road she picksis not for .the Vulture to say, only being a lowly bird. 8 pm in theassembly hall. Admission 50cents.The Green Pastures will spilltheir aroma of new-mown grassinto the Judson hall dining roomtonight at 8 and 10. Gabriel willblow his golden horn and thepearly gates, narrow though theybe, will swing back to receive usinto the straight and narrow. Thestory is a Negro folk tale, witha backdrop of eternity and spir¬ituals.The classical (or rather whatshall someday be classical) trag¬edy of the twentieth century hasnever been more effectively con¬densed into words than by ArthurMiller in his play, Deat.i of aSalesman. He must be given avoice, the insignificant little guywho doesn’t have the guts tostand up for his own self-respect.He will be given a voice tonightat 7:30 and 9:30 in Social Sciences122. The Young People’s Socialistleague are giving Willy Lomanthat voice.Off campusTheatreThe Goodman theatre has beencompletely modernized in prepa¬ration for its 60-61 season, andnow that they can boast of 740ideal seats, they are ready forChristopher Fry and Venus Ob¬served. the 1953 recipient of theNew York Critics Circle award.Fry has put into his plays of verse, the drunken glory whichthe Elizabethan* found in theEnglish language. In Venus hesobers up not at all. “I could seeno reason,” wrote the playwright,“though writing a comedy, whyI should not treat the world asI see it, a world in which we areall poised on the edge of eternity,a world which has deeps andshadows of mystery, in whichGod is anything but a sleepingpartner.” The play starts tonightand will run for 17 performances.ALL Friday and Saturday per¬formances are already sold out.A good omen for the Goddess ofLove.Tonight is also the sparklingopening performance of CliffordOdet’s The Flowering Peach,given by the Company of theFour. The Flowrering Peach is notthe product of the usual negative,sad Odets. It is a warm and sim¬ple modern adaptation of the bib¬lical Noah and the flood. The fa¬ble is woven delightfully arounda modern, middle-class Jewish family. When the vision fromGod appears to Noah, he is toofeeble to follow the dictates of hisheart, but God gives him thestrength to make the famed voy¬age. During the trip, Noah mustcompromise his intense religiousidealism in dealing with the terrea terre problems of his family,and before it is done, each hascome to a bit more human under¬standing. Humor and heartbreakintermingle. Performances areDec. 1-3, 8-11 at 1174 E. 57th. Stu¬dent rates always in effect.CinemaAmericans have been laughingso hard at the Hyde Park theatrethis week that Peter Sellers andI’m AH Right Jack will be pro¬longing their stay in the area.Also on the bill for this week-endis the first offering in a culturalexchange between the USSR andthe USA. Tschaikowsky’s SwanLake is now a b r i 1 li an t, full-length motion picture, an unedit¬ed rendering of the Bolshoi Balletin action.LAKEthe PARK AtS3RDyde park NO 7-9071(ilrilH0USE Tonight thru Sunday1 First Set 8:30 p.m.SUNDAY MATINEE 3-5 p.m.Coming Wednesday, Dec. 7 —HORACE SILVERSPECIAL COLLEGE RATE!Mon., Tues., Nights, Sunday Matinee$1 with ID CardMON. & TUES. LEADING LOCAL ARTISTS student rate 65c all performancesHELD OVER! . i 3Starring —PETER SELLERSv Ion CarmichaelTerry-ThomasMargaret RutherfordAnd TM ALL RIGHTVisit themepicxBefore or AfterThe MessiahFrench breakfast ServedAll Day Sunday53rd ot DorchesterWEAVINGElse RegensteinerJulia McVickerWOODCUTSAnsei fir Toshiko UchimaPOTTERYHelen Noel ShagamOPENINGNovember 30, 7:00 - 9:00The Little Gallery1328 East 57th Street1:00-5:30 Daily7:00-9:00 WednesdaysFA 4-0660DECEMBER performed byTh* FuK Company and OchaatraOf tha FamtdBOLSHOI BALLET 1U S. - U S S R. CulturolExchange FilmA "different" ballet film incorporating a documentarylook at the mechanics of the Bolshoi Theatre — backstagebefore performance time — out front audience reactionsduring the show — the lobby at intermission time. Thedancing of the ensemble and the prima ballerina MayaPlisetskaya is superb.STARTS FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9from the daiel stFavorite VictorianA«FAVORITE VICTORIAN NOVEL l.,_ORIENTAL MODE. THE JAPANESE RtfAND JULIET’ (KAN ICHI TO OMI „FILMED WITH AN UNSURPASSED USEDELICATE COLOR "SUPERBSTYLE AND BEAUTY' - LIFE MAGAZINEFUJIKO YAMAMOTO AS M!YA: JUN NEGAMIIVENICE FILM FESTIVALlARTIST S WORK SHORTBY THE MAKERSOF MOONBIRD'Dec. 2. 1960 9 CHICAGO MAROON • 19....' V -V ■ ■ r'-’> ■ ; :kDean addresses trustees about cancerDr. Henry Stanley Bennett,who will become dean of theDivision of Biological Sciencesof the University of Chicagoon January 1, addressed theboard of trustees of the Uni¬versity of Chicago Cancer Re¬search Foundation at a luncheonmeeting Thursday in the Shera¬ton Blackstone hotel on “funda¬mental discoveries which mayprovide us with decisive break¬throughs in the cancer problem.”Dr. Bennett, currently chair¬man of the department of anat¬omy at the University of Wash¬ington in Seattle, was born De¬cember 22, 1910. He received hisBA from Oberlin in 1932 and hismedical degree from Harvard in1936.He opened his speech by not¬ing that the principles expressedby Francis Bacon 330 years agoin regard to the importance ofbasic scientific research “havefound application and fruition inthe cancer field.” The major dis¬coveries cited by Dr. Bennett inthis context were those of the19th century German biologistsSchleiden and Schwann, “whorecognized that all living crea¬tures were composed of unitscalled cells.”These discoveries were appliedto disease processes less than adecade later in 1848 by Virchow,who theorized that diseases werecaused by abnormal multiplica¬tion and growth of cells. Dr.Bennett continued. “The realiza¬tion of this simple truth openedup the most effective approachtp treatment of malignant dis¬ease which is available to us atthe present time.”Another basic discovery whichwas originally not related to can¬cer research was that of Dr.Avery in 1943 at the RockefellerInstitute. Avery “demonstratedthat nucleic.acids affect the gen¬etic characteristics of cell,” Dr.Bennett said. The study of nucle¬ic acids is a promising approachto the cure of cancer. “Just as we are- still refining applicationsof Schleiden and Schwann’s celltheory more than a century afterits discovery, so we can be surethat many decades will be con¬sumed in developing the applica¬tions of Dr. Avery’s discovery inthe cancer field,” he remarked.Dr Bennett went on to statethe need for more basic discov¬eries which may have applica¬tions in cancer research. He said,“we have need to create andstrengthen many streams whichwill develop the knowledge de¬rived from these discoveries asthey can be applied to the specialproblems of malignant disease.”Finally, he discussed what hethinks should be the role of theUniversity of Chicago CancerResearch foundation in makingthese discoveries. He said, “It isheartwarming to see how thisintelligent group has recognized both the importance of the mo¬bilization of available knowledgeand skill for the benefit of pa¬tients and the necessity of in¬creasing our store of knowledgeby research at the basic sciencelevel. In my judgment thesesound practices need only to beStrengthened and extended.”Specifically, he cited the needfor a “comprehensive and but-standing group working in thefield of molecular biology.” Alsolie urged “the most modern hos¬pitals, the most learned physi¬cians and the most up-to-datefacilities and equipment, so thatin the decades ahead all our pa¬tients will have the full benefitof modem knowledge without aday’s unnecessary delay.”Dr. Bennett taught at Harvardfrom 1937 to 1942, reaching therank of associate in anatomy andinstructor in pharmacology. He'Tonight at 8:30' opens“Tonight at 8:30," the Autumn quarter series of student-produced, student-directed one-act plays, opened last nightin the Reynolds club theatre,presented tonight, tomorrow,for SI each are still available atthe Reynold’s club desk.Omar Shapli, author of “TheDrafting of Sixtus Borden,” hascome back to Chicago from Ben-ington college in Vermont, wherehe is resident playwrite, for thepremiere of his work.“The Drafting of Sixtus Bor¬den” deals with a member of apacifist organization who receivesa draft notice, and must decidefor himself what action he willtake. His decisions are both ex¬pedited and confused by his fel¬low members of the Action forPeace committee of Chicagoansfor Global Disarmament.Seven selected scenes from“The Private Lives of the MasterRace” by Berholdt Brecht com¬prise the next play in the series.The play, directed by MaggieStinson, shows the coming to The three plays will also beand Sunday evening. Ticketspower of the Nazis in the Ger¬many of the ’30s.The last play is a Chehkovianfarce, “The Marriage Proposal,”directed by Bill Bezdek, who alsotakes one of the three parts inthe production. It is about a Rus¬sian landowner who decides at 33to marry his next door neighbor,but finds difficulty in ceasing toargue with her long enough topropose.This year marks the first au¬tumn quarter production of theTonight at 8:30, a traditional win¬ter presentation. The winter pro¬duction of the series with othershort plays, will be shown earlynext quarter. Readings for thatproduction will be held next Wed¬nesday and Thursday in the Rey¬nolds club theatre. served as a naval officer duringWorld War II and was awardedthe Navy Legion of Merit in 1945for combat service in Guam andOkinawa.He did research at MIT from1945 to 1948, whgn he went tothe University of Washington, asan assistant professor of cytol¬ogy. During 1939-60 he was prosident of the American Associationof Anatomists. He is a diplomatof the National Board of MedicalExaminers, a member of theAmerican Association for the Ad-vancement of science, The Amer¬ican Chemical society, and manyother scientific and honorary or¬ganizations.“The Flowering Peach," Clifford Odet’s retelling of theBiblical legend of Noah and the flood, opened last night inJohn YVollman hall of the First Unitarian church. The playis a presentation of the Company of the Four, and it willalso run tonight, Sunday, and the8, 9, and 11 of December.William MacDonald directs“The Flowering Peach,” which“has been widely acclaimed as adelightful and warmly humorousfolk fable,” according to SaraO’Connor, a member of the Com¬pany. “The play follows Noah andhis family,” she commented,“through a process of growth to anew maturity of vision concern¬ing the manner in which thestrength of God and man mustmeet and combine at a time ofchaos.“At the time his play was firstproduced with great success in3955, Odbts indicated that the taleof Noah’s quest was the mostmoving of all parables for ourtime, struggling to chart a coursethrough the rough waters of theatomic age.”Tickets for the peformances are$2.00; student tickets cost $1.50each. Tickets may be obtainedby mail to the Company of theFour, 5652 South Kenwood, andat the door the nights of theshows. John Wollman hall is lo¬cated at 1174 East 57th street.Readings for the FebruaryCompany of the Four production,Oliver Goldsmith’s “She Stoops toConquer,” will be held at 8 pm,December 12 and 13, at John Woolman hall. Sara O’Connorwill direct the production, whichis scheduled for February 2-5 and9-12.A scene from CliffordOder's "The FloweringPeach."Present Odet's Play“Miss Schlamme deserved the tre¬mendous ovation she received as sheonce again blended a brilliant voicewith a sensitivity for the folk-artidiom. Miss Schlamme lifts the folksong to a high art.”-—Christian Science MonitorADMISSIONSATURDAY NIGHTCHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 2, 1960