Students 'battle Marinesguns for the Arabs.” ‘‘End thehuman race, let missile live.”A group of non-SPU pacifists,perhaps because they weren’tquite sure that this was alltongue-in-cheek, or more probablybecause they felt they had to dosomething, began to sing “I’mgonna lay down my sword andshield, down by the river side, Iain’t gonna study war no more.”The marchers provided a coun¬terpoint of “We want war.” .The “pro-war” marchers wentout, regrouped, and marched inagain; this time the trumpetplayed ‘The battle hymn of theRepublic.” They passed out theirliterature, and then led the spec¬tators, (over a hundred of themby this time) in cheers for war.“What gets rid of the social un¬desirables? WAR! What keepsyou slim and beautiful? WAR!What gives you more miles tothe gallon? WAR! What gets ridof the excess population? WAR!”Captain Hart, meanwhile, hadlit a cigarette, leaned back, andsmiled, perhaps looking forwardto being commander of the youngupstarts after they got drafted.The marchers left Mandel, pa¬raded once around the main quad,and went to lunch.James Newman, assistant dean,of students, came over from theadministration building to seewhat was going on. The only onesleft by this time however, werethe maverick pacifists, whogreeted him with a short versionof the “Marine hymn.”A campus officer at the scene,asked for his reaction, replied,“It was just a demonstration.What did they accomplish?”‘Everyone seemed to think itaccomplished a great deal.Captain Hart said, “This is thelargest crowd we’ve had inmonths.”The Student peace union calleda hasty caucus and issued the fol¬lowing statement: “Our literaturetable set up Thursday and Fridaymay have triggered interest inwar and the alternatives to war.“Bombs before butter." “We The demonstration was spon-want war.” “Algerie Francaise; taneous and showed concern isby Harry AdlerFor Marine Captain Her¬bert Hart, it started off likean ordinary Friday afternoon.He parked his car near theReynolds club — it was illegallyblocking the sidewalk, but whatthe hell, police don’t bother gov¬ernment cars — and went intoMandel corridor to give recruitinginformation to UC students.Captain Hart and his assistants0( up a table of pamphlets andprepared for the flood of stu¬dents socking informatien on howto join the marines.Across from the marines’ table,the Student Peace union (SPU)had set up a table of their own.While the marines were explain¬ing how “the marine corps buildsleaders,’’ the SPU was passing outpamphlets declaring, “It’s yourchoice: you can be drafted forWAR or you can volunteer forPEACE.”About ten SPU members werethere for what one of them called“a spontaneous demonstration, noone got around to planning it/’but this never came off.Also in the corridor were anNBC photographer; Perry Con-stas, director of student activi¬ties; Ruth McCarn. assistantdean of students; and about 400students, all of whom had heardthat “something really wild isgoing to happen, maybe a riot.”Though there was no riot, thespectators weren’t disappointed.At 11:36, led by a trumpet blar¬ing “When the saints come march¬ing in,” about 35 students, yelling“Hate! Hate!” and carrying plac-cards, walked into the corridor.Signs identified the effort as “thefirst annual student pro - warmarch of the lounge.”Other signs proclaimed: “Stron¬tium 90 is good for you, buildsstrong bodies eight ways.”“HATE” ‘There is no compro¬mise, complete annihilation ordeath.” “The lounge demands afinal solution to the pacifist prob¬lem.” present on campus. We had a lotof fun watching. All interested ina more serious discussion shouldattend our next meeting.”The SPU completely disclaimedany responsibility for either thesinging or the marching, even go¬ing so far as to remove their lit¬erature table during the demon¬stration.The motives of the marcherswere mixed. A number of themwere trying to demonstrateagainst war in a manner they feltwould be more effective than theSPU's passing out pamphlets. Afew were recruited on the wayover to Mandel, and joined be¬cause they thought it would befun.Another group had heard arumor that the rebel pacifistswere going to try to start a riotby provoking the marines intosome act of violence, and thuscreat a cause for students torally behind.These students joined to out¬shine this attempt and preventits happening.All those involved spent theevening trying to see themselveson the evening newscasts; filmsof the demonstration were shownon NBC at 6 and 10. "Pro-war" students demonstrate outside Mandel Hall.Pacifists were demonstrating inside against a Marine re¬cruiter.Vol. 69 —No. 52 University of Chicago, DecemberGilbert White said in Youth Corps studyAnti-pacifists "outdemonstrate" pacifists when a Marinerecruiter comes to Mandel Hall.Kerwin will addressgraduating studentsJerome G. Kerwin willspeak on “Centers of politicalmischief" at UC’s 290th con¬vocation next Friday after¬noon. 261 degrees will be awardedby the University.Kerwin is a professor in thedepartment of political scienceand dean of students in the divi¬sion of social sciences. He willretire at the end of this quarter.R. Wendell Harrison, actingchancellor of the University, willpreside at the ceremonies, whichwill take place in Rockefellermemorial chapel.Harrison will confer 45 bach-•dor, 105 master of arts or sci¬ence, 53 doctor of philosophy, and>8 professional degrees.The largest amount of bach¬elor degrees comes from the so-i :ai sciences department. Six are in political science. Four will beawarded in sociology, English,chemistry, mathematics, and theprofessional option in business.The social science departmentalso has the largest amount ofmaster of arts and fine arts de¬grees. Twenty will be awardedin education; 14, in political sci¬ence, and 10 in history and eco¬nomics.Eleven master of science de¬grees are in mathematics; nine,in chemistry. There are threeeach in physics and geology.Education leads the doctor ofphilosophy degrees with eleven.There are six in human develop¬ment and five in physics and so¬ciology.Forty-three master of businessadministration and six doctor oflaw degrees will also be confer¬red. Gilbert F. White, UC pro¬fessor of geography, has beenappointed to the committeestudying the Point FourYouth corps.His appointments was con¬firmed yesterday by the directorof the Youth corps study group,Dr. Maurice Albertson of Colo¬rado State university. Albertson’sgroup was formed earlier thisyear when Congress passed abill calling for a “study to deter¬mine the feasibility” of sendingAmerican young people to under¬developed countries on technicalaid missions in lieu of their mili¬tary obligations.White is widely known as anexjH*rt on natural resources. Hehas long been concerned overhow underdeveloped countriesthroughout the world are usingthe many resources they pos¬sess.He is known to feel that tech¬nical and administrative expertsfrom the United States could beof great assistance to economic¬ally backward countries in help¬ing them develop their resourcesin the most advantageous ways.He has thorough knowledge ofthe efforts U. S. private groupsare making to assist underdevel¬oped areas. As a prominentQuaker he has helped guide theAmerican Friends’ extensive pro¬gram of sending young peopleoverseas on technical aid mis¬sions.He said he “has given a lot ofthought” to the question of ex¬empting Youth Corps participantsfrom the draft, but decided towithhold his decision on this con¬troversial aspect of the YouthCorps until further specific in¬formation is available.But he believes, on the basisof the activities of AmericanFriends and other private groups,that there are enough well quali-This is the last Ma¬roon issue of the fallquarter. fied young people in this countryto make the Youth Corps an ef¬fective and useful undertaking.He is known to feel that thesuccessful establishment of theYouth corps would have profoundimplications for the Americaneducational system and possiblyfor our whole outlook towardsforeign countries.White said he plans to travelto Washington later this monthfor two conferences on the Youthcorps. Among those scheduled toattend the conference .are Con¬gressman Henry Reuss (D.) Wis¬consin), the Youth Corps’ originalsponsor, and Senator HubertHumphrey (D., Minnesota), whoguided the bill through the Senatelast year.Albertson said earlier this weekthat the conferences have beencalled to give government offi¬cials and other experts on tech¬nical assistance a chance to sharetheir knowledge and thoughtsabout the form the Youth corpsshould take.The study group plans to reportits findings to Congress by nextMay 1. It must decide what jobscan effectively be undertaken byYouth Corps participants, whether to give them draft ex¬emption or temporary deferments,what form of administrationprivate, federal. U. N., or a com¬bination of the three would bestsuit the Youth corps, and amyriad other problems inherentin establishing any technical aidprogram.Congressman Reuss plans to in¬troduce a bill to establish a YouthCorps on the basis of the studygroup’s findings. Observers be¬lieve Senator Humphrey and new¬ly elected Senator Maurine Neu-berger (D., Oregon) will sponsorthe Youth corps proposal in theSenate this year. The late SenatorRichard Neuberger (D., Oregon)had led the bill through the neces¬sary Senatorial committees beforehe died last year.Reuss and other Youth corpsbackers are cheered by the strongendorsement Senator Kennedygave to their proposal during thecampaign.Kennedy’s press secretaryPierre Salinger reported recentlythat the Youth Corps provokedmore mail than any other cam¬paign statement. He added thatall of it endorsed the Youth Corpsproposal.Students buy books at discount through SG co-operativeordering service. See story on page 3.82 building code violations UC can run FM stationFire strikes local tenement with or without studentsAn estimated twenty thou¬sand dollars damage was doneWednesday in a three alarmfire at 6041-43 South Wood-lawn avenue.The building, which was re¬duced nearly to a shell by theflames, is located only one blocksouth of University buildings, andIs in the area proposed for demo¬lition under the South campusexpansion project.Nobody was hurt in the blaze,which stayed out of control forover an hour. There was somedanger that the flames wouldspread to two closely adjacentbuildings, but firemen were ableto keep them contained. According to chief fire marshallRaymond Daley, the fire startedin the building’s basement, prob¬ably in a storeroom.The building had been cited for82 violations of city ordinances,according to Julian Levi, chair¬man of the South East Chicagocommission. “But,” said Levi, “wehave had a great deal of diffi¬culty getting anything done, sincethe owner lives in New York city,and we have not been able to gether to Chicago, where we wouldhave jurisdiction.”The apartment’s owner, Mrs.Irene Blankner, a New Yorkschoolteacher, had, according toLevi, "consistently refused tomake the necesary improvementsin the building and even had tobe refrained, recently, from add¬ing new apartments, in the base¬ment.”Among those violations forwhich the building had been citedare: 29 of the Building bureau, six of the housing bureau, 25 elec¬trical, seven health, and 15 firedepartment.Injury was kept down, accord¬ing to one fireman, because mostof the building’s tenants were atwork when the fire broke out,and most of the children wereplaying. Only one womarr had tobe assisted irom the building byfiremen.But property damage was veryhigh, nothing being left whenthe blaze was over. Sadie Wil¬liams, a maid in the New Wom¬en’s residence hall and a tenantof the building, said “Everythingis gone, and we have no insur¬ance. I don’t know about theothers, but I’m all messed up.”The large crowd which gatheredat the fire seemed resigned tothe event, and not very excited.“Well, that’s one less buildingthat the University will have totear down,” was a comment heardoften during the hour.A neighbor watches build¬ing burn.ANNOUNCINGFiremen fight three-alarm fire at 6041-43 Woodlawn. If UC gets the FM station proposed by John Netherton,dean of students, it can be operated with or without studenthelp. “The question of students’ running the new station isno longer under negotiation, for the University of its ownaccord can operate a station,” saidNetherton. complete student staff of engi-Announcing receipt this week nccrs and announcers.of an acknowledgment of his ap- a<lded that if the station. . . , . . were completely run and staffedplication for extension of his con- , . ^ .. ...^ by non-students, it would have nostruetion permit for an FM sys- more effect on WUCB than 1hotern, Netherton commented on the revocation of permission forrole of students in his radio sta- WUCB to go'FM already has had.”tion. Netherton said he recognizesHe wants to leave, in prmcple, denls. his pM stati”n ,romthe direct responsibility of stationcontrol in University, not studentmanagement.” Netherton does notdoubt students’ judgment or re¬sponsibility, but wants to safe¬guard against possible discontinu¬ation of broadcasting because oflarge student turn over rates inactivities, not enough student in¬terest or-time in working for thestation, especially in the summerquarter.Bruce Vermazen, WUCB sta¬tion manager, sees no reason whythe FM station could not closedown, if necessary, in the sum¬mer quarter. lie considers it moreadvantageous to use student per¬sonnel than non-students, as theywould not have to be paid orhired.Roger Downey, program direc¬tor, sees potential FM staff appli- WUCB. He said he wouldn’t con-cations as high as 100 students, sider students for jobs withoutHe said that it is possible, how- first consulting and reaching anever, for as few as three people agreement with WUCB.to successfully operate an FM Netherton said his efforts arestation. all directed to make the proposedClarifying his statement that FM station "worthy of the Uni-an FM station would mean the versity as a public eommunica-end of WUCB as a student aeti- tions pffort” by guaranteeing avity, Vermazen sa»J that would be year after year technical excel-true only if Netherton expects a lence of management.”• 0 ■ m ' ,. . ... -AW/V.Vl/W \ v--’1AIR. FORCEOFFICER,TRAININGSCHOOLFOR COLlfcGIGRADUAICSThree-month course leads to •commission as a Second Lieuten¬ant. If you are graduating this June,you may be eligible for admission tothe new Air Force Officer TrainingSchool. Successful completion of thethree-month course wins you a com¬mission, and a head-start on a bright,rewarding future in the AerospaceAge. -* The School is open to men andwomen college graduates with cer¬tain technological and administrativeskills. If you are selected for theSchool, you will receive Staff Ser¬geant pay while a trainee. Gradu¬ated officers may later apply for ad¬vanced training and graduate studyat government expense. Male offi¬cers may also apply for flight train¬ing as pilots or navigators.For the career-minded young offi¬cer, the Air Force way of life can beStimulating, exciting and full ofmeaning. He will be serving himself,his family and his nation. This is theAerospace Age. It is a time when acareer in Air Force blue has so muchto offer the young man or womanwho qualifies.The Air Force is seeking only aSelect group of college graduates foradmission into Officer TrainingSchool. However, we’d be happy tosend detailed information to anysenior who is interested. Just write:Officer Training School Informa¬tion, Dept SCL012, Box 7608,Washington 4, D.C.There's a place for tomorrow'sleaders on the -w- yAerospace Team. IAir Force2 • CHICACO MA O-board seeks new memberscampuscharacter:BLACKSTONETORTride of the law school,laekstone has never lost aoot trial. But there’s noth-g moot about his prefer-Cieee in drese. He finds thathen he’s comfortable, hefcan trap a witness and sway• jury like Clarence Darrow.So he always wears Jockeybrand briefs while preparinghis briefs. Exclusive Jockeytailoring gives him a bonusof comfort he gets in no otherunderwear. Fine Jockeycombed cotton is more ab-eorbent, smoother fitting, too. The Orientation board is accept¬ing applications for membershipsfrom now through the 29th ofJanuary’. Applications may be ob¬tained from any member of theOrientation board, or from theReynolds club desk, Administra¬tion building information desk, orIda Noyes coatroom desk.At your ncorest sports shopor deportment storeFRANCONIA SKI WEAR, INC.30 Essex St. Boston, Massochusetls Completed applications shouldbe returned to an O-Board mem¬ber or to the collection box locat¬ed in Gates-Blake.Applicants for membershipshould be undergraduates in goodacademic standing who do notplan to graduate before winterquarter 1962. They should be will¬ing to return to the Universityapproximately two weeks beforethe beginning of classes next fallto assist in the orientation of en¬tering students. Although olderstudpnts are preferred, all qual¬ ified applicants will be individual¬ly considered.Each applicant will be request¬ed to attend five Sunday’ after¬noon training meetings at the be¬ginning of the coming winterquarter. At these meetings he willhave the opportunity to meetwith present members of the Ori¬entation board, as well as mem¬bers of the faculty and adminis¬tration, and the opportunity toparticipate in discussions of topicsof peculiar interest to the Orienta¬tion board.ReminderApplications are being accepted now for tuition loansto be used in the Winter Quarter 1961. Students in needof such loans are urged to pick up applications in theOffice of Financial Aid, Room 201, Administration Build¬ing, any weekday from 8:30 to 5.Enjoy A Cum LaudeHarper Liquors invites youwines to brighten your Holi<Beaujolois, 1959Alexis Lichine SelectionEstate Bottled. Light medi¬um dry French Red Wine.Perfect with all red meats.$2.29 5»h Dinner—Serve Wineto select one of these fineay Table.Chateau Bel Air, 1957Contigu Yquem. Lucioussweet French Sauternes.Serve cold with desserts orfruit.*2.49 sthDomaines De LaCourcnconnc, 1957Alexis Lichine Selection.Estate Bottled, Dry WhiteRhone Wine. Full bodied.*1.79 sth— See Our Large SelectioneliveryAND UQUORSPhone: FA 4-1233Chateau Lichine, 1955Dry, Red Bordeaux perfectwith steaks. Chateau Bot¬tled.*2.29 sth«*Give Wine tor Christmas -Free DHARPER WINE1114 East 55th St.To look your best, feel yourbeat, take a tip from Tort,fklways insist on Jockeybrand briefs, $1.25. Youri store has them now!I WCOtPORMtD < HIMOSNA. WIS.V-CxJockeu© mmAHo mbriefsIOON Dec. 9, 1960aaiiiOMliglida"'^iiMfirniiirn^iw«ff«iwi»<fii^^rtiiifeiT^iBiiiwiMBMMWM^^ Faculty petitions against HU AC Sol Tax proposes meetingForty - six faculty membershave signed a petition whichcalls for the abolition of theHouse Committee on Un-American Activities. The pe¬tition was distributed by theStudents for the Abolision of.HUAC. Following is a reproduc¬tion of the petition with a list ofthose faculty members whosigned:We, the undersigned facultymembers of the University ofChicago, acting as individuals andin no way officially representingthe University of Chicago, dohereby call for the abolition of the House Committee on Un-American Activities. We feel thatthis Committee in its action andin its existence is inimical to thebasic precepts of democracy uponwhich our Constitution is based.Edward Anders, Mark Ashin,Peter M. Blau, Benjamin S.Bloom, John M. Butler, John G.Cawelti, Frank M. Child, R. A.Clement, Eric W. Cochrane, JohnCorominas, S. Thomas Cummings,Kermit Eby, Donald J. Ferguson,Alan Gerwith, Morton Grodzins,Hans G. Guterback, Robert J.Havinghurst, Robert D. Hess,Marshall G. S. Hodgson, WalterJohnson, Charlotte Towle, Harry Trossman, M.D., Bernard Weis-berger, Joseph M. Wepman, HansZeisel, Jennie R. Zetland, RichardJ. Jones, Harry Kalven, Jr., JoeKamiya, Frederick T. Lighthall,Martin B. Mathews, Elizabeth Mc¬Kinley, Hugh McLean, Bernice L.Neugarten, Victor Obenhaus,Alex Orden, Helen H. Perlman,George W. Platzman, Allen Recht-schaffen, Albert Rees, H. StephenSchultz, Malcolm Shapp, JosephSittler, Richard G. Stern, NathanSugarman, Russell Thomas. of American Indians hereA national convention ofAmerican Indians is beingplanned by the University fornext June. The purpose of theconvention is to encourage theIndians to develop proposals onIndian policy to present to' thenation. In the past they have hadto accept proposals of others. SolTax, professor of anthropology,is heading the planning group.SG represented in surveySG train, book discounts succeedTwo new Student govern¬ment services, a cooperativetrain to New York and a dis¬count book ordering service,have been described as a “greatsuccess” by cooperative depart¬ment director Leonard Friedman.More than 40 students havesigned up for the train, whichoffers a saving of $11.28 on roundtrip fares to New York. “Thismeans that we have saved stu¬dents a total of $771.20, and, in¬cidentally, made about $80 forGovernment.” Friedman expectsmore students to £ign up beforetoday’s deadline.The cooperative train will leavefrom Chicago’s Union station at6:30 pm Friday, December 16,and from the Englewood station,m 63rd street and Sta*e street at6:45 pm. On the return tr:p toChicago, students may take anyPennsylvania railroad train with the exception of the Broadwaylimited, and the return trip ticketis valid through Ja..uary 5.Friedman also announced that,through Wednesday, 55 hardcov¬er, 45 paperback book orders hadbeen received. Friedman expectsthis number to increase beforethe ordering service closes forthe quarter today. “We will savestudents a total of $150-200 onthis service,” Friedman noted.Volume, he noted, will be over$1000.Director Friedman is not sur¬prised by the success of the twoventures. “We offer a discount,and students want them,” he said.Both services will expand nextquarter, according to Friedman.The travel department will spon¬sor reduced fare plane trips tothe West coast, and the book serv¬ice will be including requiredbooks from almost all undergrad¬uate courses.Don't study in Billings'Officials of Billings cafe- Billings doesn’t mind if studentsteria this week objected to the vvish to sPend a few hours study*large number of students in« °™r a cup of coffee. How-studying at tables that other¬wise would be occupied by pay¬ing customers.When customers were not ableto find seats, cafeteria officialscomplained to the office of stu¬dent housing. “The problemcomes up every once in a whileduring times when studying isespecially heavy, particularly atthe end of quarters,” said JamesE. Newman, assistant dean ofstudents.Said Newman: “Normally, ever, they do object when thereis no room for paying customersto sit down.” Membership of the SurveyCommittee on Student Facili¬ties (SCSF) has again beenchanged to include the mem¬bers of the Student governmentcommittee on recognized studentorganizations (CORSO), as wellas the representatives of the fourhonorary societies already in¬cluded in the committee.Student union will no longerhave a representative on the com¬mittee.John Kim, chairman of CORSO,the four members of his commit¬tee, Jay Greenberg, Bob Hauser,Clark Kissinger, and Dick Mer-baum, and CORSO’s two facultyadvisors, John Hun toon andPerry Constas will join the group.Present members of SCSF areConstas, John Callahan of the de¬velopment office, Marshall Ashof Alpha Phi Omega, Fran Mc¬Neil of Nu Pi Sigma. Buzz Stennof Iron Mask, and Neal Johnstonof Owl and Serpent. “We arenow going into a period of re¬search,” Constas explained, “Weare sending probing letters to allstudent organizations on campus,asking for a direct statement oftheir needs for facilities. Theseletters will go out at the begin¬ning of the Winter quarter.“CORSO members will tabulatethe results of these letters ingreat detail. After we have fin¬ished analyzing the results, mem¬bers of the Survey Committee onStudent Facilities will personallyinterview representatives of eachorganization to determine theirneeds.” The committee is not absolutelydetermined to recommend theconstruction of a new student ac¬tivities building, according to amember of SCSF. Investigationsas to possible alterations of IdaNoyes-and the Reynolds club, andreallocations of space amongthe various student activities, willalso be made. The University is working tomobilize scholars in all relevantfields to help the Indians givea full statement of conditions andto give recommendations for thefuture.In December all Indian groupswill receive notice asking themto discuss what recommendationsthey favor, and to suggest docu¬ments that might be useful to theconvention.Responses will be analyzed, andthe results will be mailed to In¬dian groups in May.The convention will meet June13 to June 20. They will work toformulate a “charter,” listingtheir proposals. It is hoped thatthe President will accept the"charter” on behalf of the Ameri¬can people.The delegates, an estimated 300-500, will live in the Universityarea during the convention.$379STUDENT SPECIALSPIZZA (ANY COMBINATION) $1.25 to $4.25LARGE BUCKETof Toasted, Golden BrownCHICKENAll Party Buckets Now IneludoCrisp Frondt Frios & Croomy Colo SlowSMALLER BUCKET *229TUt Wttl Nad m Fatally ef RvoVary Economically• Backet O'SHHmp ..$2.49• Baekat O’Rlbs ....$4.79 • Stria* A Rite ....$$.49• Rite A Cklekaa ...$S.I9_ • Fait Howtof Delivery1636 East55th StreetCallBU 8-8440 h. • Carry-OutService1851 East87th StreetCaNRE 1-9393fills Year's Most ExcitingChristmas Present:the All HewPOLAROIDELECTRIC EYECAMERAPioturea in io aeconds out-doora, indoors without flash¬bulbs—automatically.$I595Only DowilGsnrsut trads-is allowanceN S A DiscountMODEL^■■ -"W1342 6. 55th HY 3-9259 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 CANDIES• d Free Gift WrappingFree Wrapping for MailngPost Office Located in the BuildingThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEDec. 9, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROONNotional newsColdwafrer is wizard of new 'fraternity(Reprinted from the Harvard ward their starting point, singing MoV keCD fundsCrimson) "God bless America." They tried 7 w v c. .Police intervention and failure to retrieve their posters, but all from Wayne >fOtCto obtain a city parade permit had mysteriously disappeared ex- DETROIT, Michigan (UPS)nearly crippled the Iota Beta Phi cept for one reading Radical g^a^e Senator Elmer Porter refraternity demonstration yester- punks for Goldwater.day, but the group’s crimson-col- e r ■ored paddle is now safely on Its fcSSOyS TOT SOie (WSU) outside speaker policyway to Honorary Grand Wizard COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPS)—The last week (Monday. November 21)Sen. Barry Goldwater. Ohio State university Lantern has and renewed his threat to curtail &The student organization, uncovered a national ghost writ- the university’s state appropria-formed to combat the leftist ten- Ing firm operating In part on the tions.dencies which Goldwater main- campus, writing student reports understand that I have beentained exist at non-fraternity col- and term papers at $1.10 to $1.40 misinterpreted in the newspa-leges, originally planned to pa- a page. pers,” he said. "If a board of gov-rade to the post-office, waving In revealing the business, the ernors wants to revoke the bansigns proclaiming, "Boy, do we Lantern said they had a staff that has exjsted for ten years, Ihave faith,’’ and "Rights for the member apply for a 2,000-word eertainly am opposed to their pol-rights.” * paper on the Quemoy-Matsu issue icy j be)ieve that if they do notWhen the group of 15 congre- between President-elect (then reinstate the ban they will havegated at Bow and Plympton Senator) John F. Kennedy and trouble, not only from me butStreets, at 2:45 pm, however, it Vice President Richard M. Nixon. jrom others as well, ir appropri-was met by a contingent of Cam- _ They rec*lve<3 atipg money." sion paper, does not state this The three semester system willanywhere. consist of 75 teaching days of ap-The other motion, passed 13-8. proximately 15 weeks per semes-said that all newspapers must ter and three semesters per year,have a statement within the mast- Students will be able to earnversed disposition for the second head that editorial policy of the bachelor’s degrees in less thantime on Wayne State university’s paper does not necessarily repro- three years, of eight trimesters.sent the views of the majority of The trimester system will keepthe student body, only the paper's the University open 11 months ofthe year, and is hoped to makeNeither paper has complied possible more efficient use ofwith either motion. Campus hhs physical and academic facilities,declared emphatsically that it in- Under the plan, August 5 totends to disregard both complete- Labor Day will be sot aside forly. Both papers state that editorial vacation for faculty and students,policy is determined by a major- The trimester system is l>eingity of the editorial board.Ask compulsoryROTC be continuedNORMAN, Okla. (UPS) —TheUniversity of Oklahoma board of investigated at the Universities ofIllinois and Pennsylvania andSwarlhmore College.Form student groupfor civil libertiesA National Student Com-wd» ma ujr o v t> firm that the naner could be done * . , , regent’s subcommittee on ROTC niitteo for Civil T iK0..i ;«^bndgeand Umversity polic^Aft- a ££l WSU administrators expressed re?ommended that the universitv ?SSfw7..C7Y1LLlbei l,p*er being warned (It 11 be too bad XL?puzzlement over Porter’s latest continup rfor youse guys if you don’t break cost of $12.50. The firm required switch impossible for us to nroeram at the;^ *_ . « , know on what he disagrees with [IIS The firecommended that the universitycontinue its compulsory ROTC.November regent’s (NSCCL) is in the process ofbeing; formed.placards in an alley and sneaked, r^upon recei^ of Wie paper^ ^-•"'Wsu public relations chief ^^ms^vdnV^delav^unti/De IIoUf;e Committee on Un-Amori•- 3 can Activities has made evidentthe need for such an organization. The immediate project ofson, student senate president, pro- NSCC L will be the abolition,n hm.r ,n(1 n of the un-American committee.Porter’s initial threat to cut off cember.Armed with letters, statisticspaddle in hand, toward the post Fr^ank Tuohey said.ni^NichSL'^Soutter'^Hti >“<«>• WbHogi^hy!<two*maps'0of further funds to WSU came last and official statements. Jed Johnmty, iNicnoias ». ^ouuer oo, ex vjiet area and several week when his letter to Ann Ever- ...pressed disappointment at the «• errors. ' leln was read at the November 16fate of his demonstration, but he. WSU Board of Governors meet-supported the official intervention A member of the PjMtical sd- lng Misg Byerlein heads a grnupand maintained that the Cam- ^ of petitioners demanding (hat thebridge police are the bastion of Jo take about an hour^s r^earth University reinstatp thr ban for.American strength. ° ... ** he «u»id “One bidding Communist speakers onOn reaching the post office, the to be re-written, he said. One ^ cammisstudents were met by two local would expect such quality from a *policemen. A small contingent of junior in high school. There arethe fraternity hurriedly collected several misspellings; it is care-39 cents for postage and rushed lessly written, the rhetoric isinside, while the remainder of the poor; quote marks are misused.”group scattered in front of the The firm’s circular claims that cjty College of New York Untownbuilding on Mt. Auburn Street. the ghost writers are profession- student Council has passed twoAfter mailing their gift, the fra- als and that the researchers are motions aimed at curbing the ex¬tend ty members drifted back to- "Ph D trained." sented an hour and a half re- r.,. , . . ... .search report stating (he case for .0St*bllf c^uhm-voluntary ROTC. on of student effort all acrossfrom regents at 31 colleges and pur^s7ifthe NSCCL: ‘X N°auniversities reporting on their c? ♦ „ ,PHTP nfA^rrame A# |UA * tiOIlclJ S t U (J G D t COITHTlittOO fOTROTC programs. Of the 17 uni- Civil Libortios <NSCCL) is a na-versities with a voluntary pro- . liTgram. all reported favorably on it. wl,hOf the 14 universities with eom- “,r°S ,.hcCZ^CwaTiS,aC,i°n ,Whh^program was expressed by hore and abroad NSCCLing to change to voluntary ROTC ° or('n\<SS 2! bcZ-es (haf UlLs ifTun"Seek to curbstudent newsoapersNEW YORK. New York (UPS)pression of student newspapers.stated that no student newspaper and California were evaluating rlaht ,vitl ‘can claim to be “the voice of the their compulsory programs. ca„ f’u]fin its functio]student body” anywhere in thepublication. Some people felt thatthe motion was designed specific¬ally for Observation Post (OP),one of the two campus newspa¬pers. OP states in its front pagelogotype that the paper is the put into practice by Michigan“voice of the student body.” ~ 'The Campus, the other day ses "Trimesters" to be11 months long, OAKLAND, Michigan (UPS)—The “trimester” system w’ill be no societyion as the in¬strument by which man achieveshis fullest potential for a just andcreative life.NSCCL notes the increasingconcern of students of the coun¬try for the protection of civilliberties in this area. “This is theState University at Oakland Sep- need we will attempt to fill. Thistember 1, 19G1.PAUL'S HARDWARE & PAINT SUPPLYHyde Park's tAnryest Hardware StoreSTUDENT DISCOUNT906 E. 55Hi Ml 3-9754 will be done primarily by supply¬ing materials and information onrelevant problems, and when is¬sues calling for it arise, by sug¬gesting a plan for nationally co¬ordinated student action on anissue.”during the Christmas Holidaysselect your clothing and furnishings\AT OUR UNIVERSITY SHOPIn our New York, Boston, Chicago, Pitts¬burgh and West Coast stores, an interest¬ing selection of good-looking suits, sport-’wear,evening clothes and outerwear awaitsyour visit... made to our exacting specifi¬cations in siz.es 35 to 42...and all modernately priced for such fine clothing.Suits, $75 and $80 • Tweed Sport Jackets, $50Topcoats, jrom $80 • Outerwear, from $45ESTABLISHED 1S1« THE NEWCAFE CAPRI186.‘l E. 71st StreetPmHwWms Espresso Coffee cod Continental SpecialtiesFolk Singing and Art ExhibitsHoars: Saturday — 11 A.M. to 3 A.M.Sunday — 2 P.M. to MidnightClosed MondayTuesday thru Thursday — 6 P.M. to MidnightFriday — 6 P.M. to 2 A.M. The C*UeneLAUNDERETTE1449 Em* 57tfi St.MU 4.9236m/tJ'LOTHI SO^OEven's furnishings, ffals echoes foftign car btapital $ cliticMl 3-3113testers in:castrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli &michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors line74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.MRW YORK * BOSTON • PITTSBURGH ♦ SAN IRAN CISCO • COS ANGELES4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 9, 1960 specialists ic speed tuningcustom engine installationsclutch •gear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachworkht* tester MG psychiatrist2306 e. 71st st.Chicago, Illinois If you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou-iblesome problem.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.BU 8-6711ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfeMMtonal Dyeingand Refinishing ofShags and Handbags# Colon matched • Toot cut out• Vamps lowered # Platform*removedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES’NARROW HEELSHeal* changed — Any *tylo —*_ Any colorBockstrops Removed and Springa-lotors inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St.UC to use apartment-dormsApartment houses will al¬most definitely be used asdormitories next year, accord¬ing to a high-ranking UC of¬ficial.The administrator, who askedthat his name not be used, re¬ported that the committee whichhad been making an investigationof the feasibility of the apart¬ment dorm plan had reportedfavorably on the proposal, and that the Board -of Trustees Isready to give its approval.The use of apartments as dor¬mitories is made necessary be¬cause of the University regulationrequiring women to live in dormi¬tories for their entire undergrad¬uate careers and men to remainin the residence halls for twoyears.Some 300-350 extra beds willbe needed next year, accordingSnell gets equipmentfor WUCB broadcastsA WUCB transmitter will be installed in Snell dormitories,the New Dorm WUCB antennae will be repaired, and WUCBwill get new tape and record cabinets. In addition, the C-Groupdormitories will soon get a transmitter to replace theirs,which has been moved to PierceTower this year, revealed RogerDowney, WUCB program direc¬tor.Downey and William Reutiser,station technician, explained thecauses of poor WUCB receptionin the New Dorms. Until repairsare carried out, they suggestkeeping radios as close to phonebuzzers as possible to improvereception.WUCB’s wires are inside metalpipes, conduits, with the tele¬phone buzzer wires. These con¬duits absorb the wires’ energy.The conduits, which are grounded,drain the signal "down an elec¬tric sewer.”Also, the buzzer wires and theradio wires interchange signals.The buzzer line can be h^ard onradios in the New Dorm.The root of the -antennatroubles lies In what Ken Kurzeja,station aesthete, terms "modern architects’ prejudice” of fillingconduits with wires.Chicago building regulations re¬quire all wires over a certain volt¬age to be in conduits. to dean of students John P. Noth-erton. Despite the opening of theNew men’s residence hall thisfall, there was a shortage of spacein the residence halls during theautumn quarter.Members of the committee areJohn Huntoon, director of stu¬dent housing, Winston Kennedy,manager of the community andreal estate department, JamesNewman, assistant dean of stu¬dents, and Netherton.Study is nextAccording to Newman, the nextstage in the committee’s workwill be to consider specific apart¬ments and their suitability for useas University residences. Whenthis study is completed, whichshould be some time in the begin¬ning of the winter quarter, stu¬dent groups will be consulted.After these conferences, definiterules governing the dorms will bemade. Such a statement shouldbe available by the opening ofthe spring quarter, according toNewman.elimination of all forms of racialsegregation in Southern and bor¬der states.Mome Paths decorateBeta with coat of armsA silhouette of a MomeRath, member of the firstwomen’s club to form on cam¬pus in over twenty years, hasbeen added to the group ofsketches of campus fraternitiesand clubs painted on the base¬ment wall of Beta Theta Pi.“The basement of Beta,” com¬mented Myrna Helmer, one of the triumvirate that founded the club,"is the only place where theMome Raths have been successfulin achieving recognition on cam¬pus. We are very grateful fortheir, cooperation in our endeav¬ors, and in return, we will co¬operate with them as much as wecan in the future.”The picture was the inspirationof Carey Linn, another of thefounders. Miss Linn painted thepicture on the wall as well. ‘Thispicture, in the spirit of our club,”Miss Helmer proclaimed, "is dedi¬cated to. the ideal of stark truth.It shows one aspect of the clubgirl heretofore unrecognized andunacknowledged."I believe that it effectively cap¬tures the spirit of robust youngwomanhood.”The Mome Raths were givenpermission by Beta presidentLance Haddix to decorate thebasement wall with the symbol oftheir club. GUITARSBANJOSMANDOLINSTHEFRET SHOP5535 DorchesterMl 3-3459Bicycles, Ports, Accessoriesipeciol student offerME CYCLE SHOP1621 55th rt.Gifts for Ail OccasionsKOGA GIFT SHOP'"•ported and Domestic Dry GoodsChina ware - Jewelry - KimonosSandals - Greeting CardsLay-Away**•»• kegi 1203 E. S3 St.MU 4-6356 Ckieale 15. 111. Pickwick, Ltd.7104 South Jeffery Avenue20%OFFON ALL ITEMSDuring ourGrand Opening Saleon Dec. 16, 17 and 18We feature a complete line of naturalshoulder clothes and accessories fordiscriminating gentlemen. Sol Tax comments on the relative merits of the latke, apotato pancake which is traditional Hannukah food, and thehammantash, a triangular, poppy seed or jam filled cookieeaten at Purim, at last years Latke Hammantash debate.This year's debate is titled "The first international Hannukahconference on the peaceful uses of the latke and hamman-tash" and Tax, as well as Harry Kalven, Alan Fern, LouisGottschaHc, and other teachers., will participate.Braden fo speakA meeting to rally support for the Southern protest move¬ments on behalf of Negro rights will be held in Chicago Sun¬day, December 11.Carl Braden, Field Secretary of the Southern ConferenceEducational fund (SCEF) will :sprak on "The Southern protest, South ( (h<? tarcs a ycara challenge to the North, at In- , for refusing to answerternational house, 1414 E. 59th queJstions the House ofstreet at ypm-. . Representatives’ Un-Ameriean Ac-The SCEF is dedicated to the tivities committee. The case wasargued before the US Supremecourt on November 17._ , , . . . , . , A labor leader, a state repre-Braden, who tas just completed wntalive and an Urban leag,uea 4,000 miles trip through the official wil, parlcipate in a dis-cussion on what people in theNorth can do to support the grow¬ing non-violent action in theSouth.Participating on the panel willhe Willoughby Abner, RegionalEducation Director of the UnitedAuto Workers; Edwin C. Berry,Director, Chicago Urban league;and Abner Mikva, State Repre¬sentatives from the 23rd district.Bernard Weiberger, UC professorof history will act as moderator.Among the sponsors of themeeting are Dr. William Davidon,Professor Kermit Eby, AldermanLeon Despres, the Reverend Les¬lie Pennington. Jewel StratfordRogers, Professor Malcolm Sharp,Rabbi Jacob Weinstein, Professorand Mrs. Gilbert White, and Ed¬ward J. Sparling. 4 PIZZASFor The Price OfNICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063. MU 4-4780fSpecial Discounts To Students& Faculty OnSports - Foreign - American CarsTires - Batteries - AccessoriesSeconds Up To 50% DiscountMAMJ. .IA/MAT TRACT! OM!LOW PROFILE SNOW TIRES95from5 15 tN/tJtlSnmun*70-15nmoTmytiit tu t*4 UoMtoMt rtro Go* ttio wido-bko (now tiro.Hora’t tholow Profit# snow tiro. Whero olhor tirosslip and spin, this tira digs in. And on claorad pavo-monts whora othar tiros hum, this tiro kaops mum.Don’t got snowbound this wintor. Gat a pair ofU.S, Royai Wlntarldos today. EASY TERMSPAY AS YOU GO IN SNOWU.S. ROYALAL SAX TIRE.CO.6052 S. Cottage Groveright off the ram pm*Coll DO 3-5554 \Dec. 9, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Youth corps needed for world peaceThe Point Four Youth corps proposedby Congressman Henry Reuss (D., Wis¬consin) and other leading Democratsstrikes us as the most imaginative andfar-reaching idea of its kind since the in¬ception of the Marshall plan.The Youth corps may well furnish thesolution to the ticklish problem of win¬ning friends and allies for the UnitedStates among the countries emergingfrom the declining colonial empires.It may provide the answer to effec¬tively helping these countries meet theirtremendous needs for technically and ad¬ministratively trained personnel.But more than this, the Youth corpsmay represent the recognition in thiscountry of the need to devote more of ourtime, our energy and our talent to areasof the world other than Europe. In thisrespect the Youth corps could have pro¬found effects upon American youth andthe American educational system.The very practical problem of winningfriends and allies for the United Statesamong the underdeveloped countries ofAfrica, Asia and Latin America is onethat we have not been able to solveeasily.Congressman Reuss. Chester Bowles,Adlai Stevenson and most other foreign’’policy experts feel that our presentmethods are not sufficient. Even the lay¬man must have realized by now that theyare not always crowned with the great¬est possible success.These experts believe the basic troublelies in the fact that we are not reachingthe peoples of these countries under ourcurrent programs. It is true that we arcbuilding bridges, for example, but we arenot doing anything different in buildinga bridge than the recently evicted andgenerally despised colonial administra¬tors were doing.Our technicians are more concernedwith getting the bridge built than with showing others how to build it. They arenot working on an equal basis with thepeople.Reuss feels that young people would nottake this attitude. They would be moreinterested in the people they meet thanin the specific structure they are build¬ing; hence, they would better understandthe needs and aspirations of the peoplethey are working with and could thenmore effectively meet needs that we donot even perceive under our present sys¬tem.This would create a much closer andfirmer bond between the peoples of under¬developed countries and citizens of theUnited States. It is this “grassroots”diplomacy that holds the key, accordingto Reuss and Bowles.If indeed this does hold the key thenwe can see the Youth corps as a greatadvance toward winning friends and al¬lies among the peoples of underdevelopedcountries.In addition to winning friends, theYouth corps could be the means to fur¬nish these countries with the teachers,technicians and administrative personnelthey so sorely need.College graduates in the United Statesobviously possess many of the skills whichemerging nations must have to partici¬pate in the modem world's economy.Even our gas station mechanics haveknowledge of the kind that Africans andIndians are crying for.Add to the skills of American youngpeople their willingness to take an activerole in helping underdeveloped foreigncountries and you have a situation out ofwhich it is reasonable to expect someconcrete progress.More important than any of the otheradvantages of the Youth corps is its basicrecognition of the need to devote moreof our attention and resources to partsof the world outside Euro2?e. This cannot be classified as a "prob¬lem” in the sense that winning allies andhelping underdeveloped countries can, butit is only here that the full impact andthe far-reaching implications of the YouthCorps become apparent.It was not until a few decades ago—just after World War I — that Americaneducators woke up to the need for study¬ing European languages and culture. Un¬til that time our whole educational sys¬tem had been oriented towards the ancientGreek and Latin world.But the world changed, as we all khow,and our educational system finallychanged with it. It is now orientedtowards Europe; only recently has ourforeign policy been directed towards othercontinents than Europe.The MAROON believes that the Youthcorps represents recognition by Congress¬man Reuss that the world is still chang¬ing, and recognition of the direction inwhich the present change must lead us.The very fact that students from theUnited States will be sent to Africa, Asiaand Latin America by the Youth corps isat least as significant a change in our edu¬cational system as the Fullbright pro¬gram was when it began sending themto Europe.In this sense the Youth corps will bethe newest and, in our opinion the mostexciting and challenging educational pro¬gram yet devised for American youngpeople.The Youth Corps, like the Marshall planand the two world wars, may very wellhave profound effects on our systems offormal education. Once it is granted thatthe Youth corps is a recognition of theimportance of the “rapidly awakeningcontinents” of the world, it follows thatwe should begin to give these areas andtheir cultures more attention in our schoolsystems.The first revision in school curricula when the Importance of Europe was be¬latedly recognized was the introdiuij0 jof European languages.The teaching of the languages of tieinvindependent countries would probably n< tfollow as quickly after the recognitionof their importance, but within a fewdecades their inclusion in the curruvlaof at least some high schools would seema likely possibility.The teaching of courses in Europeanhistory and civilization has become < orrmonplace only since 1950; even now manyschools, especially those in the South,have no such courses. But the inclusionin high school curricula of courses on 1 h,history and civilizations of Africa, forexample, would be a logical result of th<.Youth corps.These are effects on our*formal edu¬cation; the effects on our attitudes towards all peoples and on our concept ofthe world as a whole could be much mor.profound — certainly will be more pr.found—than the effects of our giving upthe isolationism of the 1920’s.The Maroon recognizes that many ofthese effects will seem far-fetched at ihepresent time. We recognize, too, that theYouth corps presently being considersis a small start when compared to someof the programs that it might lead toand some of the effects it might haveBut it is undoubtedly true that theYouth corps is the first step in this tre¬mendously important direction. The failure of Congress to adopt it now may post¬pone the recognition of this needed alteration in our vxiy of thinking for manyyears to come.It is for this reason above all that theMaroon endorses the Youth corps withsuch enthusiasm. We believe it is the mostimportant piece of social legislation to I*?proposed in many years and warrantsevery effort to secure its passage.the Chicago maroonfounded — 1892issued every Friday throughout the University ol Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer quarterby students ot the University ot Chicago. Inquiries should be Bent to the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes ball, 1213 E. 59thStreet, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-0800, extensions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus.Subscriptions by mall, $3 per year Olllce hours: i to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material. 4 pm.Tuesday; deadline lor advertising and editorial material, 3 pm Wednesday before publication.All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the Individual opinions of the authors.Integrate UC studentsWe reluctantly detect a grow¬ing tendency on campus which,if carried to its absurd end,would result in a total segrega¬tion of graduate and undergrad¬uate students on this campus.Now, no one in a position ofauthority wants to go that far,but many UC administratorswould be warmly gratified wereUC college students and gradu¬ate candidates not so thoroughlyintermixed on the social and ex¬tra-curricular level. We would notshare any enthusiasm over anysuch developments.Just this quarter we have ob¬served one member of the Deanof students office working withsome ardour to change Owl &Serpent, one of the campus’ twomen’s honorary societies, backinto its pre-Hutchins condition:exclusively undergraduate incomposition.A few weeks ago we wrote thatUniversity theatre was planningto produce a series of simpleplays in the student hangout, butthat participation would be con¬fined exclusively to undergradu¬ates. Last week Maropn readerswere informed of an incipient in-ter-dormatory council, a councilsans graduate dorm dwellers.Such actions are not totally ar¬bitrary; those responsible forthese innovations have a ration¬ale.Why should O&S be collegecomposed? Because oldtime O&Salumni would prefer it that way.Because, then, O&S would be that graduate members will bekept happy.The active chapter of Owl andSerpent was not impresed; argu¬ing that its membership was itsown business and nobody else’s,the honorary was able to resistthis pressure successfully. Yet, itwould be unwise to forget thatthe attempt was made.Why should the UT hangoutshows be entirely college in com¬position? Because, according toBill Alton, new UT director, un¬dergraduates need an easy op¬portunity to learn the funda¬mentals of acting and audiencecontrol. (We suspect but cannotconfirm, that this decision wasdelivered to Alton by someonehigher up the academic ladder.)Anyway, this is the new policy.A policy which ignores the factthe UT members, to an actor,greatly desire combined gradu¬ate and undergraduate participa¬tion, and one which ignores theequally valid fact that the old-time long-term UT actors man¬aged to obtain their present com¬petence in competition with moreexperienced graduate students.Unfortunately, the student mem¬bers of UT, unlike the studentswho compose O&S, cannot de¬termine the direction of their or¬ganization and liking it or not,this is the policy they face.Why should an inter-dormcouncil exclude delegates fromgraduate residence halls?Well, undergraduates have spe¬ cial interests of their own andshould abe allowed their own col¬legiate spirit, institutions, andtraditions without botheringabout master’s and PhD candi¬dates. Granted, the most immedi¬ate problem confronting thisgroup involves improving thequality of dorm food, and grant¬ing that graduates eat too, thisargument remains.Fortunately the undergraduatecouncil members beat this onedown and insisted successfullythat graduates needed and mer¬ited representation. We commendthis position.There are differences, surely,between these two types of stu¬dents. College BA candidates, allin all, arc seeking a general edu¬cation while graduates are seek-i n g professional specialiation.Graduates are more likely to de¬velop fast friendships over thereading room tables in Harperlibrary than over beer steins inJimmy’s.But these jtoints of differenceare of considerably less signifi¬cance than are the principles ofunity. Graduates and undergradu¬ates are all students and thisfact transcends any arbitrarydistinction.As students all students sharea common fund of interests, ex¬periments and ends. To attemptto separate and segregate thesetwo groups, especially to do suchagainst the will of the studentsinvolved, is short sighted and un¬fortunate in the extreme.more social and’ less politicallyorientated. Because graduate stu¬dents should be studying andundergrads should be able to en¬joy a social life without the addi¬tional problem of so organizing Maroon Staff MeetingThere will be o short meeting this afternoon ot 4 pm in the Maroonoffice for all staff and associate stoff members. Do images cancel?Any institution, company, orassociation that deals with thepublic must perforce have an ade¬quate public relations depart¬ment. It is the job of such a de¬partment to select information tobe given to the news media, in¬formation that presents the in¬stitution, company, or associationin a favorable light.Twice this year, cameramenand reporters from the majortelevision networks have ap¬peared on campus to recordevents that have taken place.Films of both these events ap¬peared in network newscastsbroadcast to a large segment ofthe Chicago area population.The two events covered werethe Delta-Sigma-Esoteric and Del¬ta Upsilon-Phi Sigma Delta tug-of-wars at the beginning of thequarter, and the recent Anti-Peace demonstration in the Reyn¬olds club. Although it might be arguedthat the two events balance eachother out as far as creating animpression of the University, wocannot but feci that neither eventreflects favorably on the Uni¬versity.A university must creat a favor¬able public image for two reasons.It must attract students, and itmust attract donors. The ques¬tion raised is a simple one; whomdoes the University hope to at¬tract by publicizing tugs-of-waiand farcial marches?The two events demonstratewhat seems to most students diametrically opposed facets of thestudent body; the tug of war svmbolizes to most the epitome ofclean-cut, collegiate, new collegeactivity; the anti-peace marchseems to be one of the last standsof the fast fading Old College.Editors-in-chiefKen Pierce Neal JohnstonBusiness managerWilliam G. Bauer Advertising managerPhil GasteyerEditor emeritusManagement supervisorNews editorFeature editorEditorial secretary . . . .Notional news editorCulture editor emeritusCulture editorSecretory to the culture editorSports editorCopy editorResearch editorCalendar editorPhotography coordinator . . . .Circulation managerBusiness office manager . . . .Classified managerSubscription managerAdvertising representative . . Lance Haddix.Avima RuderJay Greenberg, . Faye Wells. Caryle GeierGene Vinogrodoff.. John Dietmonn. . Dotty Sharpless, . . Sandy Nelson. Chuck Bernstein. . John Juskevice. . . Carole Quinn.... Donna BergAl BergerNote Swift,, . Joan Helmkin. Maurice ZeitlinPhil HydePerry fink6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 9, 1960Editorialsi No ideas ‘un-American’Once we allow the government to place re¬strictions on the ideas which men may preach,once we allow the government to interferewith our right to express whatever politicalphilosophy we so desire, then we are allowingthe government to control our very minds.The House Committee on Un-American Activi¬ties (HUAC) has attempted to do exactly this: tocontrol our minds. By attempting to create a sit¬uation where men who hold unpopular beliefs areostracised as "un-Americans," HUAC is creatinga situation where men are afraid to express anyidea openly and freely. It is creating a situationwhere men are actually afraid to think aboutpolitical and social alternatives.The committee attempts to label certain ideasas “un-American". Is any idea “un-American”?1 The first amendment states," Congress shallmake no law respecting an establishment of re¬ligion, or prohibiting the free expression thereof;or abridging the freedom of speech, or of thepress; or the right of the people to assemble, andpetition the government for a redress of griev¬ances."If Congress can make no law abridging thefreedom of speech or of the press, then certain-jif Congress cannot investigate for the purposeof making such laws. Yet this is exactly whatHUAC is doing.Some people still cling to the idea that anyaction is valid to fight the Communists. Theyfeel that by exposing Communists and “fellow travelers” the Committee is protecting our coun¬try.However, suspending freedom of speech andpress is certainly no way to protect our country.Is silencing the opposition our only means ofdefeating it? Furthermore the job of exposure isnot that of the legislature.In addition to this, the Committee is not reallyeven fighting Communists. It is actually out todestroy those persons who seek a liberal alterna¬tive to the status quo.The Committee is an organ of reaction. It at¬tempts to block movements toward change 'this country. It takes no great insight to v-the problems in this country concerning ‘tion, peace, labor. The Committee r' )block the efforts to solve these p~tempts to associate these efforts -working in them, by truth or brectly or indirectly to the so crconspiracy.”In his message to Congress in .President Harry S. Truman stated, ‘ Once a gov¬ernment is committed to silencing the voice ofopposition, it has only one way to go, down thepath of increasingly repressive measures, untilit has become a source of terror to all its citizensand creates a country where everyone lives infear." at-peoplex>ds, di-mmunist.oer, 1950.We agree with Mr. Truman. We feel that theHUAC is an organ of these “increasingly repres¬sive measures.”The House Committee on Un-American Activi¬ties must be abolished!Medical service is extensiveThe UC student health service pus or in the immediate vicinity, ment received at the UC clinics—has at times been abused for both On the other hand, if extensive because they are not controlledinefficiencies in its operation and examination or use of compli- by student health. What shoulddeficiencies in its functions — cated diagnostic and testing equip- be considered is the system itself,often, as not, because of a lack ment is required here, we have its stated purpose, and the degreeof understanding of the purpose the use of whatever is available to which this “system" and itsof the service and the extent and at Billings. We do not have to operation are successful in ful-limits of its operation. The gen- transfer or transport cases — filling its purpose,cral service fee, from which a sometimes at quite substantial Any value judgement of theportion goes to support the health costs—to other clinics or hospi- UC student health service mustservice, has in itself inspired talsalso take into account that partgroans and gripes—serious indig- The student health service itself of the responsibility for “well-nation—among students—all of employs five full-time medical being" which is left to the stu-whom must pay. It Is time, we doctors, three registered nurses, dents themselves. In most cases,foci, to clarify some of the issues and one nurses aide. In addition, services are procured and treat-involved—to bring to light the a gynecologist from Lying-in hos- ment is rendered upon requestactual facts—which surely should pital at UC clinics and a derma- by the students. The initiative liesbe known before any rational esti- tologist can be consulted upon there —with the students. It ismation of the value of the health previous appointment. Working in their responsibility to “go to theservice can be made. liaison with psychiatry division of health service if they feel unwellTo begin with the financial as- the UC clinics, the student health —and, if at all possible, withinpects, the $60 per annum service service has a mental hygiene the times prescribed.”foe does not aU go to student staff .composed of three psychia- From this point on, then, bothhealth. This “general” fee is alio- trists, three psychiatric-social t^e student health service andcated by the University to help workers, and one psychologist, the students are “responsible”—pay the costs of student health, Student health is open every the service, to provide such aidthe libraries, athletic programs, weekday from 9 am to 5 pm and as jt announces it will withinand upkeep and maintenance of Saturdays from 9 until noon. Stu- specifically defined limits — andbuildings on campus. The health dents may come in at any of this should be of the “iirst orservice itself receives part of its these times when “ill physically or der>»; and the students, to be alertincome from private donations emotionally,” stated director Her- and avVare of their own condi-and endowments. Some services bolsheimer. tions, informed as to what serv-sueh as rent, heating, and light Hospitalization for the first five ices are available, and to be suf-arc made available free of charge, days, medicines, aenesthesia, re- ficiently responsible to them-A1 though funds may seem ade- quired surgery, and drugs used selves to take advantage and putquate, some of the private grants during surgery and recovery are to best use these services.— as many gifts to the University all provided through student The evidence is such: in the- are delegated for specific areas health. Anti biotics, as well as month Df November, 3,785 pa-and may not be directed to other some immunization and certain tients (or patient-visits) wereneeds however great. But, as stu- drugs for purposes other than seen in student health by doctors,aont health director, Henrietta surgical are not covered by the nurses, and psychiatrists. Of thisHot bolsheimer states, and we service—but are provided at costs total (out of some 6 000 registeredagree, No second-best exists in “discounted through quantity pur- undergraduate and graduate stu-mcuicme The stated purpose of chasing done by UC clinics.” Salk dents participating), 1,841 re-xne health service, is then, to vaccine and other municipally ceived medical service, 1,652 gen-piotect the well-being of the stu- provided immunization and chest eral medicines, 1,491 nursing serv¬ants—both the physical and X-rays are of course free of ice and 320 psychiatric consulta-mcntal well-being of students who charge. In addition, the service tion Approximately 670 of theseare living more or less independ- has its own blood bank—and is visits were unscheduled. 60 casesentiy but still under a contrac- now making use of a relatively involved hospitalization. This to-xuai type of agreement with an new X-ray duplication machine tal is above that for Novemberinstitution: the University, which which, in six minutes, processes 1959 partly because of the in-assumes a degree of responsibility a “picture" which can be analyzed crease in the total number of stu-ior the students in certain areas, immediately. Although student dents here on campus.So student health is, in director health does not include routine Figures vary from year to year,Ilcrbolsheimer’s words, “attempt- care for chronic or previously in- feut « can ^ predicted with someng to structure a first class serv- curred dental trouble or sight d ee of accuracy the numberice despite the limitations in fi- deficiencies, emergency abscesses 0fSfractures> flus coldS( appen-nancml resources which every or eye damages are cared for. dectomies. cases of mononucleo-pubhc service has to face.” The Emergency care of any sort. sig anemia—even, as infrequent.service provided here, she claims, should be explained at this point. as these are tuberculosis, ulcers,netter than that received at Much of the protests against stu- and other more severe organicme majority of colleges and uni- dent health has resulted from diseases which will arise-amongversifies simply on the basis of supposed lack of immediate emer- students and ^ treated at theuc cynics, a major gency care. According to director student Health service an UCHospital. Various laboratories, Herbolsheimer, student health cjinicsmedical facilities, medicine, test- “purchases the services of the * - t} student healthand-£hySiCUj; cliniCS in ,h"' CaS”; ,hUS’ 3tU- sefvtee ^the tosll ol what has, i vices are accessible and used dent emergency cases are given behaving in a respon-; the student health service,” n<> preference over non-student ’ 2 .she continued. “Many of these emergency cases. They must wait sible manner? Is there criticismadvantages are not had by other their turn.” which is sound and based uponschools. Northwestern University, In all that has been discussed facts and reason? Are there im-for instance, “houses” its student so far, we have not considered the provements which are plausiblehealth service in a large house— high cost of medical services in and would be beneficial to thethere beirvg no hospital on cam- themselves—or the kind of treat- students?m nmrmvm DECK THE HALLSThe time has come to make out our Christmas shopping lists,for Christmas will be upon us quicker than you can say JackRobinson. (Have you ever wondered, incidentally, about theorigin of this interesting phrase “Quicker than you can sayJack Robinson”? Well sir, the original phrase was French —“Plus vile que de dire Jacques Robespierre.” Jack Robinson is,as everyone knows, an anglicization of Jacques Robespierre whowas, as everyone knows, the famous figure from the FrenchRevolution who, as everyone knows, got murdered in his bathby Danton, Murat, Caligula, and Aaron Burr.(The reason people started saying “Quicker than you can sayJacques Robespierre (or Jack Robinson as he is called in English-speaking countries)’’ is quite an interesting little story. It seemsthat Robespierre’s wife, Georges Sand, got word of the plot tomurder her husband in his bath. All she had to do to save hislife was call his name and wrarn him. But, alas, quicker thanshe could say Jacques Robespierre, she received a telegram fromher old friend Frederic Chopin who was down in Majorca settinglyrics to his immortal “Warsaw Concerto.” Chopin said heneeded Georges Sand’s help desperately because he could notfind a rhyme for “Warsaw.” Naturally, Georges Sand could notrefuse such an urgent request.(Well sir, Georges Sand went traipsing off to Majorca, butbefore she left she told her little daughter Walter that some badmen were coming to murder daddy in his bath, and she in¬structed Walter to shout Robespierre’s name when the bad menarrived. But Walter, alas, had been sea-bathing that morningon the Riviera, and she had come home loaded with sea shellsand salt water taffy, and when the bad men came to murderRobespierre, Walter, alas, was chewing a big wad of salt watertaffy and could not get her mouth open in time to shout awarning. Robespierre, alas, was murdered quicker than youcould shout Jacques Robespierre (or Jack Robinson as he iscalled in the English-speaking countries).(There is, I am pleased to report, one small note of cheer inthis grisly tale. When Georges Sand got to Majorca wtiersChopin was setting lyrics to his immortal “Warsaw Concerto,”she was happily able to help him find a rhyme for “Warsaw,*?,as everyone knows who has heard those haunting lyrics;In the fair town of Warsaw,Which Napoleon's horse saw,Singing cockles and mussels, alive alive of)And for further Yuletide joy, give Marlboro's nonfilteredcompanion cigarette, mild, flavorful Philip Morris—in regu¬lar size or the sensational new king-size Commander. You’llbe welcome aboardtw w ft ww www ww^w wv yr w ww w'wwwwwvww'wyrwww wwwwwww^THE PLEASANT SHOPInvites You to Stop In TodayLadies Ready - to - WearAU Nationally Advertised Merchandise• LINGERIE • SLEEPWEAR • HOSE: • CASUAL DRESSES • CO-ORDINATES |Complete Size Range Moderately Priced1536 E. 55th St.In the New Hyde Park Shopping CenterIDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFTS..............A**.A***A**AAAAAA»eiiiAAAl>4*1***Dec. 9, 1960 • CHICAGO MARO O NBut I digress.We were speaking of Christmas gifts. What we all strive to doat Christmas is, of course, to find unusual, offlieat, differentgifts for our friends. May I suggest then a carton of MarlboroCigarettes?What? You are astonished? You had not thought of Marlboro*as unusual, offbeat, different? You had regarded them as familiar,reliable smokes whose excellence varied not one jot or tittlefrom year to year?True. All true. But at the same time, Marlboros are unusual,offbeat, different, because every time you try one, it’s like thefirst time. The flavor never palls, never gets hackneyed. EachMarlboro is a fresh delight, a pristine pleasure, and if you wantalt your friends to clap their hands and exclaim, “Yes, Virginia,there is a Santa Claus!” you will put them at the very top ofyour Christmas list. © im vu<,1 FILTERGAD F LYPolicy changes urged for survivalI have read with interestmd concern the debate be-ween Mr. Philip Altbach andMr. Ian Morrison in these two>ast Gadflys, interest becausethe topic they have discussed—peace—is of interest to me, con¬cern because of the manner inwhich the topic was discussed.There is only one moral concernarising from the development ofnuclear and thermonuclearweapons, and that is a concernEye ExaminotionFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetct University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372 for the survival of civilized man.Beside it, all other considerations,such as whether the Chinese Com¬munists have been nasty or niceto us in the past, pall into insig¬nificance. All thinking about theproblems of international associ¬ation in the present and futuremust be predicated upon this con¬sideration as a base, and all policyformulations ought to have astheir root purpose an increase inthe long-run probability that nu¬clear cataclysm will not occur.Such sentiments do not implythat the United States undertakea policy of unilateral disarma¬ment, for it is by no means clearthat this would lead to interna¬tional peace — in fact, the dis¬ruption in international politicswhich such a move would cause would probably lead to an in¬crease in the long run probabilityof nuclear war.But such sentiments do implythat the United States, and theSoviet Union, and our allies andtheirs, must bend their effortsto the creation of policies otherthan the ones in which each ispresently engaged.The strategy of nuclear deter¬rence is built upon the fact thatit is far easier and cheaper todestroy civilian population cen¬ters than it is to destroy militarybases. Thus a deterrent force neednot be of such a size that it coulddestroy the armaments of anenemy if he should happen tostrike first.At the present time, both theUnited States and the Soviet Un-SCHOLARLY BOOKS. onHISTORY and LITERATUREBOUGHT AND SOLDHonrs: 2 PM to.9 PM Ivory Doy including SundayJoseph O'Cara, Bookseller1360 East 53rd St. DO 3-4035 Ion are engaged in building mas¬sive first-attack and second-attackforces. What are the conse¬quences of such policies?First, every Increase in thenumber and diversity of weaponscarries with it an Ipso facto in¬crease in the probability of anaccident.An “accident” in this case isthe unintentioned delivery of anuclear weapon to enemy territo¬ry, most probably to one of hispopulation centers.Consider the case of a hydrogenbomb dropped on New York. Onedoes not have to be a great hu¬manitarian to appreciate the mag¬nitude of mankind’s loss in hu¬man beings and cultural artifactswhich such an “accident” wouldbring about, nor does one have tobe a political genius to foreseethat the United States’ reaction tosuch an accident would be the at¬tempted annihilation of the lead-in Russian population center, inwhich attempt millions of otherpeople and other priceless hall¬marks of civilization would bedestroyed. In addition, if the Sov¬iets chose to resist our attack,general nuclear war might be en¬gendered.Filters forflavor-finest flavor by far!TareytonTHE TAREYTON RING MARKS THE REAL THING !Tareyton has the taste—Dual Filterdoes it! HERE’S HOW THE DUAL FILTER DOES IT:1.It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL...definitely proved to make the taste of a cigarette mild and smooth...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.NEW DUAL FILTERfntduct of i/fo tr<m Jvfazzc — tjofxuoeo u our middle i Tareytonname £ 4. t. c+ Second, the psychology of de¬terrence makes it imperative forevery country which can possiblyafford it to possess a nuclearweapons system.This in turn multiplies the pos¬sibility of war, thousandfold,through the opportunities fortherats, blackmail, temporary al¬liances against larger — or small¬er — powers, and the like, whichit brings aboutWhen a half-dozen small coun¬tries can threaten to pull a nu¬clear trigger as their first line ofdefense against what they consid¬er to be aggression, the world in¬deed stands in danger. Underthose circumstances, what wouldwe do in the case of the rise topower in such a small country ofa new Hitler, a man who woulddisregard his own destruction inhis desire to bully the rest of theworld into doing his bidding?Finally, the development of non¬nuclear and super-nuclear meth¬ods of mass annihilation compli¬cates the problem even further.While a weapons system of thePolaris type is probably too cost¬ly for all but a few countries inthe world, it seems that anyonewith a first-rate chemist might beable to make a nerve gas like theU. S. Army’s famous G-gas, aquart or so of which would suf¬fice to destroy New York’s popu¬lation just as effectively as a bigblast. And if a country can reallydevelop a weapon like that de¬scribed in the latest ScientificAmerican, a bomb capable ofsearing a square 1000 miles ona side, the advantages of offensemay so outweigh those of defensethat that country might initiateaggressive policies simply for thepurpose of employing the weaponand thereby ridding itself of both¬ersome enemies. . . .Here we have entered the areaof real insanity. With the develop¬ment of a world like this, no coun¬try could any longer claim that itwas taking justifiable risks to in¬sure its national identity, or itsIntegrity, or its way of life. If awar should then come, all wouldbe guilty together of having sacri¬ficed mankind on an altar ofstrife.What is to be done?First, the spread of nuclearweapons to other countries mustbe stop|MHl.The best way to do this is towork with the Soviet Union fora ban on all nuclear testing. If anation cannot test the weaponswhich it hopes to develop, a greatincentive for development is re¬moved. Through pressures ap¬plied by the United States to itsallies, and by the Soviet Unionto China, it may yet be possibleto hold down memberships in thenuclear society to three or four., Second, the Soviet Union andthe United States must work to¬gether on a conscious policy ofdisentanglement, a policy aimedat the resolution of those con¬flicts holding the greatest poten¬tial danger.Each must be prepared to ac¬cept loss and compromise in theInterests of long-run stability. Ifthe admission of mainland Chinato the United Nations is such apolicy, then we must endorse it.If the holding of free elections inEast Germany is such a policy,then the Soviet Union must agreeto it.The question of armaments pol¬icy, divorced from other questionsof political commitment, must hemade the topic of intelligent de¬bate in every possible form. Onthis issue left and right, commu¬nist and capitalist must cooperatein order to gain anything at all—for the only alternative to coop¬eration is eventual annihilation.—- JeremiahStudy grant given Spotlight aids researchA $63,000 grant from theCarnegie corporation will beused to support undergradu¬ate education in non-Westerncivilizations at the University.Alan Simpson, dean of the Col¬lege, said the new grant will beus4'd to support three specialkinds of activities in the non¬western civilizations program:Teaching interneships, publica¬tion of course materials, and ex¬hibition of the “sights andsounds” of a civilization.Four introductory courses of ayear in length on the civilizationsof India, China, Islam and Rus¬sia are offered to students in theCollege.The introductory course of Rus¬sian civilization was added thisyear. The other courses, whenestablished several years ago, hadtwo primary objectives:—To communicate a solid un¬derstanding of a long:cstablishedand well-developed non Westerncivilization and of a critically im¬ portant area in the contemporaryworld.—To provide students with adifferent kind of educational ex¬perience which, by portraying acontrasted great civilization, willdeepen and sharpen their under¬standing of their own culture.The course on India is underthe direction of Milton B. Singer,Paul Klapper professor of SocialSciences in the College and inthe department of anthropology,and Myron Weiner, assistant pro¬fessor in the department of poli¬tical science and chairman of thecourse.The Chinese course is directedby Herrlee G. Creel, chairman ofthe department of oriental lan¬guages and civilizations.The course on Islam is underthe direction of Marshall G. S.Hodgson, assistant professor inthe Committee .on Social Thoughtin the College.The course on Russia is underthe direction of Thomas Riha,Instructor in Russian Civilizationin the College. A giant “atomic spotlight” which penetrates living tissue with beams of colored light Ishelping Argonne National laboratory scientists investigate secrets of life.The instrument — called a biological spectrograph — is the world’s largest of its type. Itis being used to determine the reactions of living organisms to different wave lengths(colors) of light.Dr. Charles F. Ehret, a member of Argonne’s division of biological and medical research,built the device.He explained: “The spectro¬graph serves as a molecular spot¬light, enabling us to learn moreabout the molecules (hat make upplant and animal cells, and par-'ticularly which ones react to lightupon absorbing it. Results fromthese experiments will provide agreater understanding of cellularstructure, and fundamental proc¬esses of life.” Scientists know thatlight has powerful effects on cells.Ehret said one project now' be¬ing carried out on the spectro¬graph involves resetting the na¬tural physiological “time clocks”that exist in all cells, with dif¬ferent colors of light.Recent evidence points to thepresence of chemical compoundswithin cells that somehow regu¬late physical needs such as thedesire for sleep.“In order to learn more aboutthe nature of this ‘clock’ mechan¬ism, we are exposing paramecia to different wave lengths of lightat various times.“We’ve found that the ‘clocks’can easily be reset by exposingthe animals to ultraviolet light.Two of the typical effects are al¬teration of mating response, andalteration of the basic chemicalactivities of the cells. This in turncan be reversed by exposing theparamecia to longer wave lengths,such as blue violet in the visiblespectrum.”“Once we understand the chem¬ istry of nature’s time clocks, wewill have a way to probe themechanism that controls wakeful¬ness and sleepiness in humans."He said it may eventually bepossible to eliminate the feelingof sleepiness by controlling thesechemical “time clocks”. “In animmediately practical sense, it isnatural for scientists at Argonneto be concerned about how andwhy radiation sensitivity variesas a function of time of day,"Ehret pointed out.SG chooses boardsWriters support AlgeriaMore than thirty Americanartists, writers and intellectu¬als have sent a letter of sup¬port to the signers in Franceof the "Declaration on the Rightto Insubordination in the AlgerianWar." In it they affirm that theright of dissent in certain circum¬stances is basic to the democratictradition.The signers of the originalFrench document, including alarge portion of the most im¬portant French writers, artistsand teac hers, issued the documentlast July in order to assert theirright to protest against the warin Algeria which they considerto l>e unjust and destructive.Following publication of theWHERE THE Uo-CMEETS TO EATGe*kLctti4FINE FOOD1371 East 57th 5lt iet manifesto, the Flinch govern¬ment took action against thesigners, indicting several, sus¬pending all civil servants and ban¬ning from the State-controlled ra¬dio and television, as well as fromall government-subsidized thea¬ters any actors, authors or direc¬tors who had sighed it. , In their letter the Americansigners express their belief in theFrench signers’ “right to dissent.”They “deplore censorship and per¬secution wherever it exists” andsupport the French position ofdissent because “all men of con¬science everywhere are equallythreatened." The executive council ofStudent government has ap¬pointed the members of thevarious consultant boardsplanned earlier this year. Applica¬tions had been open to all stu¬dents who are interested.The boards are “designed to in¬crease communication betweencertain University administrativeoffices and the students.”The groups established were:Bursar-Registrar, Bookstore, Reg¬istrar, Admissions, Athletics, Fi¬ nancial Aid, Library, Personnel,Residence Halls and Commons,Student Health service, and Stu¬dent Housing. They will meevwith the appropriate administra¬tors at the start of next quarter.The boards are small, withabout three members on each,and it is hoped that much will beaccomplished in accurately trans¬mitting student opinion on poli¬cies and services. However no for¬mal arrangements have beenmade yet.Joseph H. Aaron, ’27The ConnecticutMutual Life InsuranceCompany of HartfordSince 1846, over 100 yean, hassafeguarded your family.135 S. 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It is your only assurance ofthe genuine "Evening Star" engagement ring. Andonly with Artcarved® do you receive a written guar¬antee for diamond quality—plus the protectionof the nationwide Permanent Value Plan.•a t. PATEHT MO. !M,t04Discover more about this exciting ring and othervaluable tips on diamond ring buying. Write to:J. ft. Wood & Sons, Inc., Dept. CP-90, 216 E. 45th St., N. Y. 17, N. Y.NAMEADMESSnTV 7 ONE STATEA rtca r v e dDIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGSBeloved by brides for more than 100 i/ears (1350-1900)rw 9 1360 • CHICAGO MAROONPauling will speak Benson urges labor ref ormNobel Prize winner Dr. Linus.Pauling will speak at the B 1 Herman Benson, labor jour-of Rights dinner of the Illinois Division of the Americani Civil mpmber of theLiberties union (ACLU). He will speak on Decemebr 14 at 6 ™lst. rtv’s^atk)nal corn!pm in the Grand Ball room of the M-dland hotel before an Intellectuals•xpected audience of 300.The topic of his talk will be Sf.cur I t y subcommittee^ and the"The fight for freedom,analysis of congressional “UnAmerican” investigations andtheir threat to democracy, educa¬tion, scientific advances and cre¬ative achievement. This speechwill launch the 169th anniversarycelebration of the ratification ofthe Bill of Rights by Congress tothe United States Constitution.Pauling was awarded the NobelPrize for Chemistry in 1954. Hiscontributions to chemistry havebeen recognized also by severalother awards. In 1948 he wasgiven the Presidential Medal forMerit "for exceptionally meri-tous conduct in the performanceof outstanding service to the Unit¬ed States from October 1940 toJune, 1946.” asked for a list of those persons ei' _who had helped distribute this pe- YPSL meeting.He presentedtition. Pauling defied the commit- He presented "the current prob-tee and refused to give names. lem of trying to restore the linkThe ACLU dinner is open to between the intellectual and thethe public. Tickets costing $4.00 labor movement,” which reachedper person may be secured its peak in the 1930’s.through the ACLU office, 19 S.LaSalle street or by calling the of¬fice, ANdover 3 6883. He emphasized as basic that“for the same reason people fightfor democracy in society, they are inspired to fight for democracyin a union.” He said we haven’trecognized the importance ofdemocratizing labor unions.Benson classified all labor un¬ions as either "democratic” or"undemocratic.” Democratic un¬ions give their members “tangiblerights,” like the rights to publish,to criticize, or to remove peace¬fully an administration. Most un¬ions, however, he cited as undemo¬cratic.He gave the United Auto Work¬ers (UAW) as an outstanding ex¬ample of a progressive union, in-Students must hear, not readNo one is quite sure what taken out for the regular twothe score is on musical scores, weeks* T?ier.e ai<: thl,ee types of, _ ... reserve books: two-hour books,but whatever it is, the stu- two-week books, and one-weekdents seem to be losing. books. Also, there are restrictionsAt present, scores of musical on renCT,ta* r*serve booksJPauling has long been involved works studied in humanities are TT*?eim?n Pl,^s*er’ director of the. ,, _ „ , University library, stated hein Harpcr library’ bUt SinCP ,hC wouM •» "prepared and willing”hurhanities department has not to place musical scores on reserveresponsible for a recent interna¬tional petition signed by scien¬tists from all parts of the world Pu* them on reserve the scoreswhich called for a relaxing of are available only the first fewthe arms race. Recently he was students who ask for them,called before the Senate Internal (Books on reserve cannot beACASA Book StoreCarefully selected imports of gifts — children's toys andbooks. We believe we have one of the best selectionsof imported Christmas cards in the city, also foreignlanguage cards. Come in and see for yourself.1322 E. 55th HI 3-9651 if the humanities departmentasked him to.The reason the humanities de¬partment has not done this arisesfrom their purposes in teachingmusic. "Our course is designedto make consulting scores unnec¬essary,” stated John Cawelti, chairman of first-year humani¬ties.i __ /"The purpose of our course isto train students as listeners; wewant students to learn by ear,not by score.”Cawelti admitted, however, that"it would be silly to deny thatstudents who know how to readscores could not profit by usingthem.”When asked if he thought thepresent system unfair becauseonly a few students could use thescores, Cawelti said that he hadn’tthought of the problem in thatway before. He said that somechange of policy was a possibility.HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTspeciolize inRourtd-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Down to Down 1342east 53 st.Its whats up front that countsUp front is [FILTER-BLEND land only Winston has it!Rich, golden tobaccos specially selected and speciallyprocessed for full flavor in filter smoking.WINSTON TASTES G SI. J. Bryndds Tob&cfo Company. Wlnaton-SaJem. N. C terested In rights. He cited Lodge113 of the International Assoeia-tion of Machinists in Chicago «san example of an undemocraticunion, in which “printing a hand,bill seems to be a crime againsthumanity.”For five years, the duration ofmany college careers, men 0fLodge 113 have been fightingracketeering. Two machinistshave been expelled from the un.ion, but the reform group is stillthere. Now, some “eminent” poo.pie have begun supporting them.Benson said that to follow i),oprogress of labor reformers, oneneed only follow the machinists'court ease. Benson showed hisaudience an appeal NormanThomas helped put out for fundsto pay for the case.Benson explained that althoughunion members want them lo winout, reformers aren’t successfulbecause they can get no moralencouragement, as Negroes canfrom the NAACP. Semi-sympa¬thizers tend to shy away fromthose who seek to make corruptunions honest.Once a reporter has written areform story, he ran do no more.Ilis reputation will close all pre¬viously established contacts.Benson said that even in "de¬cent unions interested in prog¬ress,” like Reuther’s UAW, noth¬ing is done, not because leadersare unconcerned, but because theyfeel nothing can be done. Theywon't violate a tacit “officials’mutual benefit protection assoeiation,” by which they are supposedto support one another.Decent labor officialdom doesn'taid the reformer. The reformer isignored, not written about in labor magazines and newspapers.Benson paralleled Americanyouths of "all political viewpoints— communist, socialist, extremesocialist, liberal — ” who leftschools to work for labor withyoung Russian intellectuals whoparticipated in a "movement tothe people” during the RussianRevolution. They both wanted "toheln bring democracy to society.”Benson said the young Ameri¬can intellectuals who came to dielabor movement out of idealismin these days are now prominentleaders. One is a well known joinnalist, unnamed by Benson. An¬other is a university professor.Some are in the UAW, and other“progressive” unions.They are motivated, accordingto Benson, by Marxism’s empha¬sis on the role of the workingclass as a force that could yieldfreedom and democracy to theworld. They had a “desire to re¬make the world, as a better placeto live.”Benson regards the labor andunion movements as synonymous.Intellectuals’ leaving school towork with labor culminated, liesaid, in the formation of the CIOand the organization of mass pro¬duction in industry.Unions, continued Benson, weteformed to help the working class,as were innumerable charities,soup kitchens, free schools, andwelfare worker groups. The un¬ions differ, however, because theyrepresent an attempt of the worker To improve himself.Benson sees unions as a meansof limiting, but not eliminating,owners’ industrial monarchy. Un¬ions have attracted Intellectualsbecause they can bring industrymore democracy.Today, the liberal intellectual,said Benson, is not often attractedto the labor movement. Instead,he is disenchanted, but his disen¬chantment is surprisingly not a<eompanied by a lack of Interestin unions.Cited as examples of rising in¬terest in labor are many seminarson labor—as well as the Fund ba¬the Republic’s study and analysisof labor unions by 75 experts, atBenson's estimated cost of$2,000,000.In addition, he said that anyuniversity of importance todaywould have, in addition to a football stadium, an industrial andlabor relations school. In theseschools, claimed Benson, the interest is predominantly in labor andonly tokenly i;i management.Theocrat still fights Left debates rightVatiMiulw TJivnn ' Will th#» ramnaion . . _ SJrPicture Kennedy and Nixonin a dead tie in California,Illinois, Texas Will the campaign succeed?From the University of Califor-the entire n*a s Brother Homer for President The merits Of socialism and youth movement of the Socialist rov, that God created man, notcapitalism were debated last ' Social Democratic federa- society or the state, and that manSunday by a young official of tion. is endowed with the right of freean official of choice.„ and Frank The debate was the first ac-“Yesterday praise God I wa«s 73yearold head of a grouP Pro- Chodorov, president of ISI, dis- tivity of the newly-formed Chi-in the backroom, lignting to the witness tQ a’ miracje Th’ree fln .moting conservative thought on cussed "Socialism vs. capitalism: cago chapter of ISI. The chapter...v.s„u — promotes individual- 1 L " **" ’nation. Picture the campaign- *.b comes the following report fh Socialist Zty and the thDe^°rahr ^eier’t ahardened bosses chomping cigars of dIv,ne assistance: , ,St P.y and the Lhe Socialist party,death over who wins what. Pic- gejs appeare{j jn my room arMj college campuses,ture bitterness growing, voices proclaimed your election would The debate was sponsored byrising, complete confusion reign- yet be fulfilled. The angels in- the Intercollegiate Society of In-jng (which is not too far fetched f°rmed us that if we worked and dividualists (ISI) and the Youngpicture) prayed diligently. the electors Americans far iv-Af\prayed diligently, the electors Americans for Freedom (YAF),would cast thir votes . . . Brother two conservative groups, with theThen picture t h e backroom s Homer would be elected.” Young People’s Socialist league,door opening on an elderly gen¬tleman of the robe, draped inkingly attire, with a gold crownon his head and a small globewith the words "King of theWorld” painted on it perched onhis shoulder. Chancellor for Christmas? which oneism?”Miss Meier began the debate bystating that freedom and individ¬ualism should not be confusedwith insecurity. She cited the ac¬tions of labor unions as an exam¬ple of people joining together toincrease both their economic se¬curity and their freedom."Material prosperity should be¬come as free as the air webreathe,” Miss Meier declared.Chordorov outlined the basic has about 30 members accordingto President Robert Schuettinger.ISI was founded in 1953 inPhiladelphia. To further its aim,"the advancement of conservativethought on the "campus,” ISImaintains a mailing list of over12,000. They send out a monthlynewsletter, the Individualist.Articles include "There’s stillhope for Antioch,” "Left-wing stu¬dents ask: recognize Red China,”and "What do you do with a Fifthamendment Prof? One anti-eom-ists believe, according to Chordo- answer: fire him.’'Hiere are rumors, according to ministration instituted a four yearofficials of the administration, bachelor’s program. His resigna-, •.9rrhnmnin<r h n c c p e chancellor w ill be fion was rejected by Kimpton, but premises of capitalism. Capital- munist administration knows theThe cigai-chomping bosses announced before Christmas. The he left and went to India to workthrow away thier cigars, throw two most likely prospects at this for the Ford foundation,up their hands and shout with date seem to be F. Champion Clark F>rr ic tho"“TtII—CPr Trd’ an<1 C,ark Ka,T 'r0m ™ “i.yT, “caUfornia! fnAlBishop Homer A Tomlinson Pres- forma. author of the contr0versial "Kerrident of the United btates. F. Champion Ward was a Dean Directive” designed to limit theWhen you have successfully pic- of the college under Robert M. scope of student governments onturcd all of that you will have Hutchins, and resigned his dean- University of California campus-seen the entire campaign of ship in 1953 when the new ad- es.Bishop Tomlinson: even thoughhe conceded defeat in the popularelection, he has not yet given uphope.Throughout December he willcampaign for the support of theelectors themselves, expecting “towin by a miracle.”On his campaign route aremany universities (includingNorthwestern last Tuesday). Hearrives at the main gate of theuniversities on foot at precisely4:00 pm each day, dressed in regalrobes and with his “King of theWorld” globe on his shoulder. Hocampaigns not only as “King ofthe World” but also as "King ofAll the Nations of Men” as well.And on the morning of Decem¬ber 15 he will crown himself‘‘King of Mississippi” on thecourthouse steps of Jackson (Mis¬sissippi’s capital).His campaign platform includesthe replacing of all taxes by tenpercent tithes, the “abandon ofRoman law, English common law,and the establishment of newcodes, civil and criminal,” and heis for "union- of church and stateunder Jesus, Prince of Peace.”Students strikeHaitian students have gone onstrike to win the release of Jo¬seph Roney, secretary of the Na¬tional Union of Haitian Students.The government of PresidentFrancois Duvalier, calling the stu¬dents Communists and accusingthem of plotting to overthrow thegovernment, declared the nationunder martial law Tuesday.A telegram from Dr. CamilleLherisson, former Haitian Secre¬tary of State for Education, re¬ceived by Student GovernmentWednesday stated:"Express deep concern andstrong protest against tortures in¬flicted innocent college and uni¬versity students by Duvalier’s dic¬tatorship in Haiti. Two studentskilled, more than thirty jailed andbeaten.“Martial law proclaimed yester¬day. Student associations dis¬solved. Police ordered to shoot onschool children at universityschools of medicinq, agriculture,engineering. Normale Supericreclosed by army. Would greatlyappreciate your denunciation ofsuch tyranny and efforts to makethese conditions known to all stu¬dents.”The student strike was made"meaningless” by an order of thegovernment advancing Christmasvacation twenty-three days.The government has expelledArchbishop Francois Poirer;highest Catholic official on theisland, allegedly for assisting thestudents by giving them money.Poirier has denied the charge.HARPER SQUARECROCERLANDFree Delivery1455 E. 57th St. DO 3-2444 For PRINTING Call JAY!OFFSET * LETTERPRESS * MIMEOGRAPHINGDAILY U. OF C. PICKUPSCall JAY Letter & Printing ServiceHY 3-0802 1950 East 75th Street (Yes, we know it's the weekeruLbefore EXAMS,but who wants to study when . . .)TheFOLKLORE SOCIETY PRESENTS:A HOOTENANNY — H1NG OINGirith special guestsFri., Dec. 9 — 8:30 pm — Campus HangoutMembers Free Others 25cLorsn Gergens briefs two of hit salesmen on new telephone services for business customers.“I DIDN’T WANT TO BE STOCKPILED”When Loren ^Gergens was working for hisB.S. degree in Business Administration at theUniversity of Denver, he had definite ideas aboutthe kind of job he wanted to land. He was de¬termined to profit from the experience of severalof his friends who had accepted promising jobsonly to find themselves in “manpower pools” —waiting to be pulled into a responsible position.“I didn’t want to be stockpiled,” Loren says."That’s no way to start.”As a senior, Loren talked to twelve companiesand joined The Mountain States Telephone &Telegraph Company, an associated company ofthe Bell Telephone System.From his first day challenges were thrown athim thick and fast. First, he supervised a groupof service representatives who handle the com¬munications needs of telephone customers. Then he served as manager of several telephone busi¬ness offices. In these jobs Loren had to provehimself on the firing line, make right decisionsand carry them through. He kpew his next jumpdepended on only one man—Loren Gergens.In July, 1960, he was made Sales Managerin Boulder, Colorado.“I’m on the ground floor of a newly createdtelephone marketing organization. And I can tellyou things are going to move fast!” Loren says.^“It’s rough at times, but hard work is fun whenyou know you’re going somewhere—in a busi¬ness where there’s somewhere to go.”If you're interested in a job in which you canbe your own- prime mover—a job in which you'regiven a chance to show what you can do, right fromthe start—you'll want to visit your Placement Officefor literature and additional information.**Our number one aim is to have in allmanagement jobs the most vital, intelli¬gent, positive and imaginative men teccan possibly find."Frederick R. K appel, rresidentAmerican Telephone & Telegraph Co. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESDec. 9, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON FTTV censorship stifles creativityDomination of television byadvertising agencies and spon¬sors has deprived many crea¬tive writers of the freedom towrite "in terms of their owntruth” and has driven themout of the medium, a group ofleading TV playwrights have de¬clared in a report published bythe Fund for the Republic’s Cen¬ter for the Study of Democraticinstitutions last Monday.The writers’ views are con¬tained in 31 pages of excerptsfrom a discussion entitled TheRelation of the Writer to Tele¬vision. Participants in the discus¬sion were Robert A. Arthur. RodSerling and Irve Tunick. top-ranking television dramatists;TV critic Marya Marines; EvelynEurkey, executive director of theWriters’ Guild of America; andProfessor Eric Goldman ofPrinceton, Frank Kelly and Rob¬ert Horton, all associated withthe Center’s continuing Study oftire Mass Media.Views summarizedMiss Mannes summarized theparticipants’ views in an intro¬duction. She declared that thechief factor which “throttles thecreative writer" is “the power ofthe sponsor over the word and the domination of the TV mediumand of the networks by commer¬cial interests.“Given freedom, the dramatistcould bring the urgent realities oftoday to Americans with moreimpact and eloquence than anyabstract discussion or competentdocumentary, proving, beyond adoubt, that entertainment andenlightenment were wholly com¬patible and that ideas were theliving stuff of drama.TV offers little“Commercial television willhold little inducement for thewriter until he is given the powerwhich is his right: the power todetermine what he shall writeabout, how he shall write it. andwhere it may be interrupted.“If a commercial, moreover, isinjurious to the mood or con¬tinuity of his script, he shouldhave the right to question its toneand placement and request achange. If a sponsor wants ahack, he can hire a hack. But ifa sponsor hires talent, he as¬sumes an obligation to respectthat talent.”Miss Mannes concluded by stat¬ing that “the only way in whicha writer can use the marvelousmedium of television to its full extent is in a system where, as inEngland, sponsor and programare completely divorced, or insome form of Pay-TV.”In the discussion, Robert A.Aurthur said that, despite theprotests of the writers, advertis¬ing agencies and sponsors aretampering with scripts to thepoint where many TV writershave asked “to have their namestaken off the screen.”The discussion includes a num¬ber of examples of how agenciesand sponsors often abetted by thenetworks, interfered in the writ¬ing of scripts and in casting. Acase cited by Rod Serling was hisattempt to write a drama sug¬gested by the slaying of EmmettTill, a Negro youth in Mississippi.Agency and sponsor pressure,concerned about the reaction ofSouthern viewers, required Ser¬ling to disguise the plot by mov¬ing the locale to New England.Serling said that in this case,the advertising agency asked forthe change to avoid a boycott ofthe sponsor’s products (U. S.Steel), and that the producer, ofthe show , the Theater guild, “sup¬ported the agency right on downthe line.”Show is ruined“When the show finally hit the air, it had been so diluted and sochanged and vitiated that the central theme ... had no relationshipto any existing social problemthat we were familiar with . . .I was destroyed professionally, Ithink, for about eleven or twelvemonths.”Serling said that much of thewriter’s trouble arises becausethe sponsors and networks do notwithstand pressure very well.They will “respond to pressurefrom any side. These are fright¬ened people, who are desperate,who have to have a feeling offunctioning, of doing somethingall the time.”Tunick felt that his col¬leagues may be overemphasizingthe amount of agency and spon¬sor interference with scripts. “Iwould say that 95 per cent of thetime you automatically make anychanges that are requested. Youreach the point where it takesless time to do it than to argueabout it. The great critical ques¬tions, the big points of policy,come up most infrequently andpresent problems at rare inter¬vals.”Dramatists crippledMiss Mannes said that the dra¬matist is seriously crippled bythe insertion of tod many com¬ mercials in his program, and thatthe commercials tend to destroythe atmosphere of the play: thewriter “cannot properly sustain amood over a period of time with aconstant interruption of extrane¬ous matter.”She declared that TV dramacannot become a “free art form”until placement of the commer¬cials is taken away from thesponsor and put under the cddrolof the writer.Serling said that the spons&r Isforcing more and more commer¬cials into the programs he buys,with some half hour shows hav¬ing four breaks for commercials,and hour shows having as manyas six.“If a sponsor chooses to utilizethe dramatic form as the vehicleof his communication,” Soilingsaid, “he has to take with it cer¬tain responsibilities which areinnate in the form he chooses.“Drama is not a bastardizedthing which exists in a vacuum.This is an aspect of culture thathas its roots in many many pastages. With it come certain agelessstandards, certain ancient con¬cepts of quality. They can sayall they want about movinggoods, but if they want to movegoods and do it by calling all thetunes, let them sponsor baseballgames or bowling contests orsomething like that over whichthey can have no control.“If a sponsor chooses the playas a kind of piggy back on whichhe wants to use his commercials,then he has to respect the formhe has chosen.”Sponsors inaccessibleThe participants commented mithe difficulty of wiling: sponsorson scripts which deal with contro¬versial subjects such as capitalpunishment, suicide, religion anilrace problems. Fear of pressuregroups is “the operative tiling inindustry thinking,” according toSerling.Goldman declared that ourwhole society is “becoming moreand more the prey of pressuregroups. The reason televisionfeels it so keenly is that televi¬sion is new.”Miss Burkey and Horton dis¬cussed responsibility of the net¬works, the station owners andthe sponsors to the public in thefollowing interchange:Horton: “The situation seemsto be this: The agency has nofunction except to sell, so it ob¬viously assumes no public respon¬sibility, which is quite right. TheFCC has no control over it, andso they can say, ‘We are out.' Thenetworks say — well, they don’tsay it frankly, but we know theyare not controlled by the FCC —they say in effect that they don’thave any responsibility, either.“The sponsor, who is the fur¬thest removed of all, obviouslyhas no responsibility. So we comedown to the local station licenseewho does have the responsibility.But it is not enforced by the FCC.And since the local station is un¬der network influence and con¬trol, it cannot in effect dischargethe responsibility which it hasunder its license.”Networks shirk jobBurkey: “I think one of the ba¬sic problems is that it is the net¬works, which own and operatestations, that have the responsi¬bility for operating in the publicinterest, and in fact they have ab¬dicated this responsibility. Theyhave given it to advertising agen¬cies and sponsors. There is aquestion whether you should havecontrol over programming vestedIn the same person that has con¬trol over the facilities. But whatwe are suffering from right nowis that nobody is really exercisingdirection and control in the inter¬ests of broad programming. Whatyou have is an interplay of pres¬sure groups, an interplay of va¬rious forces, which results in achaotic condition, rather than anybroad pattern of providing serv¬ice and programming to people.CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a changeProduct of tj/u. <,y/rru,tcc<in <Jvfwjceo~£vnyxan^ — is our middle name<§> a. r. c*.• CHICAGO In which Lucky Strike’sgift to the arts selects“The World's GreatestMasterpieces” andreveals all-in fact,more than all—thatis known about each. Whistlers’ Mother: This painting, by an unknown artist,depicts the housemother of a college sorority patientlywaiting for a dance to break up in the next room. Notahow the artist has captured the anguish and devotion ofthis lonely woman as she frets over her young charges(who were nicknamed “The Whistlers” because of theway in which they obtained dates).Early Rembrandt: That Rembrandt wasborn a genius is conclusively proven bythis little-known masterpiece. This, hisfirst known painting, astounded criticsand made the name Billy Rembrandt fa¬mous throughout Europe. Believe it ornot, Rembrandt created this master¬piece when he was two years old! The Venus de Milo: Sculp¬tured in the second cen¬tury B.C. on behalf of aGreek pencil manufac¬turer, this great statuehas won fame throughthe ages as the symbol ofbeauty parlors, bowlingalleys, upholstery firmsand reducing pills. Todayit is used primarily as avivid warning to smallchildren who bite theirfingernails.The Thinker: What is The Thinker think-’ing? This has been as baffling to scholarsas the riddle of the sphinx and “Who’son first?’’ But now it can be revealedthat this statue is actually a Romanwarrior who had been asked, “Remem¬ber how great cigarettes used to taste?”When he failed to answer, “Luckies stilldo,” he was turned to stone. Woman in Water: Here is the originalof a great “lost" masterpiece whichI was able to acquire for the ridicu¬lously low price of $8,500. I mentionthis only to show what great bargainsyou can find in art if you know yoursubject. I determined the authenticityof this priceless original by provingthat the small stain, upper left, wasmade by Renoir’s favorite coffee.AT LEFT: “MASTER OF ALL MASTERPIECES”! “Here, in my opinion,”says Dr. Frood, “is the greatest work of art. Note the bold, cleanstrokes in LUCKY STRIKE, conveying the wisdom and pride of themanufacturer. Note the perfect circle, representing, of course, theperfect product inside. And in the product itself we find a truly mag¬nificent expression of quality, good taste, pleasure and contentment.Surely, there is no work of art that, over the years, has brought moreaesthetic joy not only to all of us in the art world, but to millions ofpeople in all walks of life.”DfcTfiSODSNUNeAaisCompany of Four UC debaters take 6 of 10presents 'Peach'bf Otto ScfclesingerClifford Odets’ “The Flow¬ering Peach,” as presented bythe Company of the Four, isa delightful and moving playwith moments of intense gran¬deur, farce, and “heimlichkeit,”blended in a well-paced, well-actedproduction. The Odets version ofthe biblical story of Noah’s Arkpresents the trials and tribula¬tions of Noah and his family —a family not too different fromthe Bronx Jewish family of“Awake and Sing”—in their pre¬paration for and Journey on theArk. The play is undoubtablyallegorical, but for those Inter¬ested in discovering the author’strue intent, philosophy, and mean¬ing, there is a cast-audience dis-russion after the performance onFriday and Saturday nights.Although every major acto:* Inthe cast achieves a high levelof believability, and each has mo¬ments of truth, the warmth ofJeanne Kurlander’s Rachel is es¬pecially well projected, while Ed¬die Goldberg as Noah dominatesthe stage. His ability to be anheroic figure and a peevish oldman, his portrayal of shifting andchanging relationship with histhree sons, while maintaining aconsistant, three-dimensionalcharacter, is superb. As an actinginstrument, he has power, sin¬cerity, timing, and warmth, andait overall consistency which is too Infrequently seen. If anythingis missing from his performance,it is perhaps a slight and occa¬sional inability to achieve themore subtle variations. Nonethe¬less, here is an actor whose workis thoroughly enjoyable. It is funto experienc a good actor doinga job well.*The Flowering Peach” is nota play which, when read, seemsespecially well suited to the three-quarter round staging require¬ments of John Woolman Hall, yetBoardman O’Connor’s settingsand William MacDonald’s direc¬tion allow for emotional intensitywithout losing distance and pers¬pective. It is perhaps in attempt¬ing to maintain this balance instaging that the projected aware¬ness of family relationships,which must be present even whilemembers are swearing at eachother, occasionally gets lost. Itis unfortunate that with the gen¬erally high level of acting, stag¬ing, and settings, technical bumpsand lulls sometimes mar thesmooth flow of events. (Note totechnical crews: dark, rather thanlight clothes help diffuse focuswhen audience must watch sceneshifts.)The Company of the Four doeswell by Odets—you can still seehow wed this weekend. There areperformances today and Sundayat 8:00 pm, and Saturday at 6:00and 9:30 pm. Reservations are ad¬vised. Tlie University of Chicagodebating team concluded itsactivities for this quarter witha successful trip to the Uni¬versity of Pittsburgh tournament.The UC team compiled a 6-4 rec¬ord. Roger Fink and George Glen-denning on the affirmative, andBob Quail and Garry Greenbergon the negative both finished with3-2 records.This was the first tournamentof the year run on the "cross¬questioning” system. Each of thetwo speakers gave eight minuteconstructive speeches and werethen questioned for four minutesby members of the opposition.There were only two rebuttalspeeches, each team having fourminutes for rebuttal and sum¬ mary. Traditional debate stylecalls for ten minute constructivespeeches and five minute rebut¬tals for each member of the team.The UC affirmative had theirmost interesting debate againstthe University of West Virginia.The negative claimed that thewhole health insurance problemcould be settled through a pro¬gram of health education and a"good neighbor” policy.They pointed to the examplesof the Detroit and Windsor On¬tario health Insurance plans.Widespread education amongall groups of people has led tolarge numbers insured underthe plan. It also has made ef¬fective use of preventive medi¬cine. The cost of these .planshas been kept to a minimum through the doctor's own self-restraint. By demonstrating thefeasibility of expanding such asystem of an national scale, thenegative won the debate.The Chicago negative openedthe tournament against Cornelluniversity, the same affirmativeteam they had defeated in the lastround at Rochester. Once againUC triumphed.In the last round the negativefaced University College of theWest Indies. The team, on tourfrom Kingston, Jamaica, demon¬strated great skill in debatinghealth insurance In the UnitedStates—a topic not very familiarto residents of the Caribbean.UCWI based their case on“principle and expediency.” Theyargued that a problem existedand it was expedient for the so¬ciety in general to solve It Thesecond part of their case Bug-— w — mm m. mm . gested that compulsory health In-A surance was not a concept alienThe University of Chicago based on 19th century dance t» democracy, nor foreign to ourSymphony orchestra con- forms. For the last work, Beetho- present governmental programs,ducted by H. Colin Slim will vens Fantasia 1or piano, chorus The UC negative offered acrivo itc Autumn Quarter Pnn and orchestra the symphony will counter-plan. The negative’s eon-£w «? Twirnher o ** ioine6 bV Bamberger, tentions all boil down to: "Thea-nn «. winAM Hail Th» Piano; Katherine Kiblinger, so- need which exists can be metr? ^ ™ ^ prano; Martha Right, alto; Lin- without compulsion, and the com-If! 01>c" coin Ramirez, tenor; Dan Eby, pulsory aspect of any plan isJ*-1* y . 1 bass and the University of Chi- not the aspect which meets thefollowed by Mahler s Songs of a GlM c)ub. Admission to the need." The debate went to theWayfarer aung by Jennie R.es- ^ fc lree Jamaicans,man, soprano. The Mahler workIs the U of C Symphony’s contri¬bution to this year’s Mahler cen¬tennial celebration.The second half of the concertopens with Stravinsky’s Suite No.2 for Small Orchestra which isOffer Verdi. MahlerIBM puts UCers in the redNear-bankruptcy threat¬ened five University studentslast week.The five, all students in thegraduate school of business, wereUCs entry in the IBM businessgames competition between nineschools held last week here inChicago.The University of Michiganplaced first on the basis of “soundbusiness practices” in a groupthat included the University ofIllinois, Michigan State univer¬sity, Northwestern, Ohio State,Penn State, the University of Wis¬consin and Wichita university, aswell as UC.Lee Parsons, Daniel Leonard,Gene Kay (team president), Rob¬ert Kirkpatrick, and WilliamPoole, competed for the Univer¬sity.“The first day they played ex¬treme ly well,” said Andrew Celia,regional manager of public rela¬tions for IBM, “and Chicago’steam was in top contention. Thesecond and final day of competi¬tion they nearly went bankrupt.”The competition involved set¬ting up an artificial economy inwhich all teams would be produc¬ing and selling a "gold - platedgizmo.” The product is fictitious,since the game is based on generalbusiness principles, rather thana particular type of commodity.After the teams made decisionson manufacturing, sales, research, prices, and other business factors,an IBM 650 computer determinedthe effect of these moves on theeconomy and competitive action.The machine also produced re¬ports on which the teams couldbase their subsequent decisions.Over a two day period theteams completed 26 rounds of de¬cisions, each equivalent to a fiscalquarter—six and a half years inall. The winners were selected bya "board of directors” made up offaculty members from the partici¬pating schools, including SelwynBecker, assistant professor of psy¬chology in the business school,who was the UC faculty repre¬sentative.“Although success in thesegames requires acute businessknowledge, planning, pre - plan-n i n g, and organization,” com¬mented Celia, "you can’t reallysay that because of these gamesany one group of students will dobetter In business. The gamesfunction rather as a training de¬vice and exercise."The shortness of these gamesalso affects the results. In ordi¬nary business competition, suddenaccidents or strokes of luek be¬tween competitors tend to balanceout in the long run, whereas in acompetitoin of this kind these fac¬tors count for a great deal more.”IBM plans to continue holdingthese business games if the inter¬ est in them continues. This is thesecond game held here in Chicago,and a game was also conducted inNew York last year. THREE PIZZAS FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree lJ.C. DeliveryTerry ’s1518 i. 63rd Ml 3-4045No* tUm m stvdont who TMsI Porspl«Kloos.*•stotBos drowsily no asottor sfcorpl NSDez koops yo* ..how modi sloop ko pots. owofcs mmd aloft—safolylIf you find studying sometimes soporific (and who doesn’t?) the wordto remember is NoDozq. NoDoo alerts yo« with a taft and accurate•mount of caffeine—the same refreshing stimulantin coffee and tea. Yet non-hahk-fbrmingNoDox is faster, handier, mors reliable.So to keep perspicacious daring study and«*a«ns—and while driving, too—■Iways keep NoDo* in proximity.jNjJjs*•» aoato MM—NnatSUs Maqsshsss. AosUa las pssOsct 11 tost Ufcwstort— FIRST STRING. You candepend on that refreshingBudn eisen taste. Which is whythe campus crowd agrees—where there’s life...KING Of BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. • ST. LOINS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • MIAMI • TAMPADec. 9, 1960 • CHICAGO MAR OOH • 13 •, . *v .The AmazingElectronic Educator!The Electronic Educator is* an amazing new scientific devicedesigned to train and teach at both the conscious and subcon¬scious levels. You read, speak or transcribe recorded materialthru the microphone, where it is recorded on special endlesstape cartridges holding from 1 min. to 2 full hours of tape. Thistape repeats itself and your message endlessly to give you thenecessary repetition to memorize material. Comes completewith mike. Slumber Speaker, timer and cartridges. Offers thou¬sands of uses from learning languages to helping backward stu¬dents. Write for free descriptive literature. Sleep-LearningResearch Ass’n. Box 24-B Olympia. Washington. Blackfriars hold tryoutsBlackfriars will hold try¬outs for this year’s production,“Mad Money,” on January 10,11, and 12. The location will beannounced later on the sign infront of the Administration build¬ing.The play is about some smalltown dignitaries who decide torob a bank to escape from bore¬dom. It was written by Mel andPeggy Rosen and adapted forBlackfriars by Peggy Rosen, BobReiser, and Marty Rabinowitz.Music is by Mel Rosen, and BobAshenhurst will direct the 14scene production.Abbess Abby Sheldon encour¬ages “everyone who has ever fos¬tered a desire to be in this typeof show or has any undevelopedham in them to come and try outBlackfriars shows are great funand we like to have as many stu¬dents as possible taking part.”There are six primary roles,three minor parts, and a chorusof 15 to be filled. None of theparts are primarily speakingroles, but a good delivery is moreimportant than a trained voice.Those trying out should come pre¬ pared with a number that winshow them at their bestOne of the male leads, Ed, Isa worldly lawyer. He should beof at least medium build and havea fair voice. George is a corpora¬tion president who is fairly hard-headed and a Republican. Usuallyhe is prosaic, but he occasionallyindulges in whimsy. He shouldhave a good voice, baritone orlower. The third male lead, Dan¬ny, is meek and mild son of awealthy man. He must be lithe,a good dancer, and have a tenorvoice.Of the female leads, Sarah IsGeorge’s wife—a teacher who be*comes a gun moll to please herhusband. She should be dynamicand forceful with a good voiceand figure. She must be willingto strip, but also be capable ofacting straight-laced because ofthe character change she under¬goes.The other female leads areAmy, a sweet young thing whoshould have some sense of ballet,and Joan, a hard-boiled business¬woman who is in the venturestrictly for the money. There arethree character parts: the mayor,a typical smalltown politician: Eloise, a chick; and Phil, a crot¬chety old banker.Those interested in trying outshould contact Miss Sheldon bycalling her at HY 3-2230 after 6pm or by leaving a note for herat the Reynolds club desk. Any.one interested in working on thetech crew should attend the try¬outs and speak with the producer.Private John Diefmannas he appeared in Black¬friars 'Sour Mash* in 1959,Dietman is currently star¬ring in the Fort LeonardWood Revels.ONE-STOP SHOPPING FORANEW CAR at your Chevrolet dealer's !Now 3'ou can make your car-shopping rounds the easy way—all under one roof! For '61 your Chevrolet dealer offersnearly any type of car you could want—at the kind of price that'll make you want it all the more. There’s a whole newcrop of Chevy Corvairs with lower priced sedans and coupes and four wonderful new wagons unlike any ever built beforein the land. There are new Chevy Biscaynes — the lowest priced full-size Chevrolets, beautifulBel Airs, elegant Impalas, six easier loading Chevy wagons, including three 9-passenger models.Come In and pick and choose to your heart's content!New ’61 ChevroletNOMAD 9-PASSENGER STATION WAGONThere are six easier loading Chevrolet wagons for ’61—rangingfrom budget-pleasing Brookwoods to luxurious Nomads. Eachhas a cave-sized cargo opening measuring almost five feetacross and a concealed compartment for stowing valuables(with an optional extra-cost lock).New ’61 Chevrolet BEL AIR SPORT SEDANBeautiful Bel Airs, priced just above the thriftiest full-size Chevieibring you newness you can use: larger door openings, higher easy-cnaiseats, more leg room in front, more foot room in the rear, all wrappeup in parkable new outside dimensions. Hoyt ’€1NOW-BIG-CAR COMFORT AT SMALL-CAR PRICES-Chevy’s new Biscavnet,6 or V8, are built to save in e big way. They offer a full measure of Chav*roiet quality, roominess and proved performance, yet they are priced rightdown with many cars that give you a lot lose.New '61 Chevrolet IMPALA 2-DOOR SEDANHere’s a new measure of elegance from the moat elegant Chevrolets ofall. There’s a full line of five Impalas—each with sensible new dimensionsright back to an easier-to-pack trunk that loads down at bumper leveland lets you pile baggage 15% higher. New lower priced ’61 CORVAIR 700 CLUB COUPEThere’s a whole crew of new Chevy Corvairs for ’61—polished andperfected to bring you spunk, apace and savings. Lower priced sedansand coupes offer nearly 12% more room under the hood for yourluggage—and you can also choose from four new family-lovin’ wagons.See the new Chevrolet cars, Chevy Corvairs and the new Corvette at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's• CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 9, 1960T4Coming events on quadranglesFriday, 9 December Saturday, 10 DecemberMatins with Sermon, 11 JO am. BondchapeLKewhorn conference, 1 pm, Lying-Inhospital, Dora DeLee hall.Lecture series: Personality Theory (de¬partment of psychology), 4 pm. SocialScience 122. "Multivariate experi¬mental approaches to personalitytheory.” Raymond B. Cattell, researchSrofessor In psychology, University ofllinols.Louis B. Block fund lecture f zoologyclub), 4:30 pm, Zoology 14. "Develop¬mental potential of the chick blastula(unlncubated blastoderm),” NelsonSpratt, department of neology, Uni¬versity of Minnesota.Koinonia, 4 pm. Chapel house, supper,cost: 75 cents, 7:15 pm, Dr. JaroalavPellkan will speak on "The Christian,the Church, and the Community.”Sabbath services, 7:45 pm, Hillel foun¬dation, Oneg Shabbat will follow at8:30.Motion picture, 8 and 10 pm. Burton-Judson courts, "The Student Prince.”University Symphony orchestra, 8:30pm, Mandel hall. Overture, la Forzadel Destlno, Verdi; Songs of a Way¬farer, Mahler (Jennie Relsman. solo¬ist); Second Suite for Small Orches¬tra. Stravinsky; Choral Fantasy, Bee¬thoven (Jeanne Bamberger, soloist).Social dancing, 9 pm, Ida Noyes, spon¬sored by the International house asso¬ciation. Admission: students, 50 cents,others $1. Recorder society, 1 pm, Ida Noyes, themeeting will begin with one half hourof Instruction and then there will be^group playing.frail games, 8 pm, Field house.Chicago “B” team vs. Purdue Univer¬sity Calumet center; Chicago vs. LakeForest college.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 •venue, supper meeting. Jeanne Good¬man will lead the program.United Christian Fellowship, 6 pm.Chapel house, buffet supper, cost 50cents.Bridge club, 7:15 pm, Ida Noyes lounge,first floor. Beginning and experiencedIndividuals and partnerships Invited.Duplicate bridge will be played.Panel discussion, 8 pm, Internationalhouse. “The Southern protest: Achallenge to the North,” main speak¬er, Carl Braden, field secretary, South¬ern Conference Educational fund..Sunday, 11 December ^0"da’''12 DecemberRadio series: Faith of our FathersWON, 8:30 am. Reverend W. BarnettBlakemore, Jr., associate dean. Rocke¬feller Memorial chapel, and dean. Dis¬ciples Divinity house.Roman Catholic Masses, 8:30, 10. and11 am, DeSales house.Episcopal Communion service, 0:30 amBond chapel.Lutheran Campus - Parish Communionservice, 10 am, Graham Taylor chapelUniversity Religions service, 11 am,Rockefeller Memorial chapel. Convo¬cation Sunday, Reverend Ewell J.Reagln, associate director, United Re¬ligious work, Cornell university.Carillon recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller Me¬morial chapel. Daniel Robins, Univer¬sity carlllonneur.United Christian Fellowship, 5:30 pm,Thorndike Hilton chapel, worshipservice.Quaker Student fellowship, 6 pm,Quaker house, 5615 South Woodlawn Television series: Meetings of Minds,WTTW, channel 11, 8 pm. "The eco¬nomics of abundance,” Reuel Denney,professor of the social sciences In theCollege, Dexter Masters, director ofConsumers union; and Dexter M.Keezer, vice-president and economicadviser of the McGraw-Hill Publish¬ing company.Dames club, 8 pm, 1413 East 60th street,sewing. If you plan to attend, callPL 2-2014.Motion picture, 8 pm. Internationalhouse, "Silk Stockings,” (USA).The Play of Daniel, 8:45 pm, RockefellerMemorial chapel. A twelfth-centurymusical play performed by the NewYork Pro Muslca, directed by NoahGreenberg, and with verse narrationby W. H. Auden.Tuesday, 13 DecemberLutheran Communion service, 11:30 am,Bond chapel.Maroon classifiedsFor saleMaryhook, 8564 University avenue.Owner architect, 6-room brick ranch,garage, paneled study, custom book¬cases. patio, brick barbecue, central airconditioning, gas heat, garbage dispo¬sal Many architectural features. Mustsee to appreciate. 4\'a%. 30-year mort¬gage. By owner, ES 5-7543. Summer Camp Jobs—Jewish Vocational8ervlce, Camp Day, Thursday, Decem¬ber 29th from 9 am to 4 pm. 30 campdirectors will Interview applicants at1 S. Franklin, Chicago. LostTravelComplete Tool Set forafter 5 pm, DO 3-2762, He. $45.00. CallU of C Class Rings. By John Roberts.1515 E. 53rd. NO 7-2666.Help wantedPart-Time Help after Jan. 7th, to pre¬pare Income tax returns. Established63rd St. office, days or evenings. BE3-4053, after 6 pm.Men and Women: For full-time Christ¬mas holiday work and/or winter quar¬ter part-time employment. Apply now;6tart work after exams. Call In personat the Hyde Park Theatre, 5312 8. LakePark, this Frl., Sat., 8un. evenings. Wanted—student to drive car to Or¬lando, Fla. $50. HY 3-9655.Wanted — riders to Boston, leavingWednesday, December 21. DA 6-3754. PersonalsFor rentBasement Room, near campus, privatebath and entrance. DO 3-3710.ServicesTyping. Reas. MI 3-5218.Sewing, Alterations, Hems. BU 8-6001.Papers, Term Papers, and Theses: Typed.Picked up and delivered If you wish.TR 4-8539, after 6 pm. Faculty and University Board meetings:College, 4 pm, Business East 106.Colloquium (Institute for the study ofmetals), 4:15 pm. Research Institutes211. "Some measured properties of adynamic hard-sphere model,” DavidTurnbull, General Eelectrle companyResearch laboratory, Schenectady,New York.Lecture (department of radiology), 5pm. Pathology 117. "Unusual mani¬festations of trauma,’’ Dr. Ronald O.Murray, radiologist. National Ortho¬pedic hospital, London, England.First International Hanakkah confer¬ence: The Peaceful Uses of the Latkeand the Hamanta6h. 7 pm, Hillelfoundation. Harry Kalven, Jr., profes¬sor, law school; Herman Finer, pro¬fessor, department of political sci¬ence; Louis Gottschalk, Gustavus F.and Ann M. Swift Distinguished Serv¬ice professor, department of anthro¬pology; Alan M. Fern, assistant pro¬fessor of the humanities, College;John F. Hayward, assistant professor,divinity school; Ellhu Katz, assistantprofessor, department of sociology. Dames club, 8 pm, 6826 South Clydeavenue, bridge, those planning tocome should call FA 4-8375.The Play of Daniel, 8:45 pm, Rockefellermemorial chapel.Wednesday, 14 DecemberCarillon recital, 5 pm, Rockefellermemorial chapel.Episcopal Religious service: Evensong,5:05 pm, Bond chapel.Country dancing, 8 pm, Ida Noyes, spon¬sored by the Country Dancers.Illustrated lecture, 8:30 pm. Breastedhall. "Zlwiye: Legendary fortress InIran,” Helene J. Kantor. associate pro¬fessor of Archeology, Oriental Insti¬tute and department of oriental lan¬guages and civilizations.The Play of Daniel, 8:45 pm, Rocke¬feller memorial chapel.Thursday, 15 DecemberEpiscopal Communion service, 11:30 ana.Bond chapel. ‘The Play of Daniel, 8:45 pm, RockefellerMemorial chapel.THE GREEK1450 East 57thBritish and AmericanQuality Paperbacksall the Free Press booksDOOR BOOKSHOPHY 3-5829Lady’s Gold Bulova Watch, between55th and 57th and Woodlawn. Call Rm.210, International House. EXPRESSION!Hyde Park's Contemporary Art GalleryPAINTINGS — SCULPTUREHAND CRAFTED PLAQUES — CERAMICSOpen: Afts.: 2-5; Eres.: 7-9; Weekends1713 Vi E. 55thCreative Writing Workshop, PL 2-8377.Riddle: What Is 6' 4", weighs 230 pounds,has a full black beard, but Is gentle?Ronnie: Come borne on tbe yule-tide,with bookcase. Henry.Pooh Meeting: 3:30 today, same place.Happy Holiday: "The Elf in Print.”Boys: Strange long and lost week-end.Now that we've rested, here’s to nextyear and more of the 6ame. It rainedfor three days. CaryleRide Wanted: To Boston on Thursdayand return to Chicago. Contact AlalneBaerson, Kelly. DR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometristin HieNew Hyde Park Shoppmg Center1510 E. 55th St. ** DO 3-7644Eye Examinations Contact LensesNewest styling in framesStudent DiscountThis\EltO SPACECOMP ORA TIOXare creating a climate conduciveto significant scientific achievement**Essentially, this corporation Kill bepeople—people of the highest quality.The United States Air Force recog¬nizes that men of great scientific andtechnical competence can perform attheir best only when they can exercisetheir initiative to the full under lead¬ership which creates the climate forcreativity. We expect Aerospace Cor¬poration to provide that kind oftnvironment.nSecretary of the Air ForceAmong those providing their leader¬ship to this new non-profit publicservice corporation are: Dr. Ivan A.Getting, president; Allen F. Donovan,senior vice president, technical; JackH. Irving, vice president and generalmanager, systems research and plan¬ning; Edward J. Barlow, vice presidentand general manager, engineering divi¬sion; and Dr. Chalmers W. Shcxwin, vice president and general manager,laboratories division.-These scientist/administrators arenow selecting the scientists and engi¬neers who will achieve the mission ofAerospace Corporation: concentratingthe full resources of modern scienceand technology on rapidly achievingthose advances in missile/space systemsindispensable to the national security.The functions of Aerospace Cor¬poration include responsibility for:advanced systems analysis; researchand experimentation; initial systemsengineering; and general technicalsupervision of new systems throughtheir critical phases, on behalf of theUnited States Air Force.Aerospace Corporation Is alreadyengaged in a wide variety of specificsystems projects and research pro¬grams-'offering scientists and engi¬ neers the opportunity to exercise theirfull capabilities, on assignments ofunusual scope, withjn a stimulatingenvironmentImmediate opportunities exist for MSand PhD candidates completing require¬ments in engineering, physics, andmathematics, and interested in;• Theoretical Physics• Experimental Physica• Inertial Guidance• Propulsion Systems• Computer Analysis• Applied Aerodynamics• Space CommunicationsThose capable of contributing in theseand other areas are invited to directtheir resumes to:Mr. James M. Benning, Room 153P,Q. Box 95081, Los Angeles 45, Calif.A new and vital force AEROSPACE CORPORATIONengaged in accelerating the advancement of space science and technology Grand 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 yours1when you choose one of the American Express 1961 Stu-1dent 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 and 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.■■iiHiiiiaiRiHiiaiaiHHii ’American Express Travel Service, Sales Division65 Broadway, Mtw.York 6, N.Y.Dear Sir: Please send me literature on Student Tours of Europe □European Escorted Tours—1961 O■■iM■1■ Name.Address..Zone. .State.■ Cityfc««Bm«efi8aSBISB»KBS^«BB!S888®I88®»*»II«. c Sports newsBasketball team to meet Lake ForestTwo former teammates will Phil Sokody, who are pacing thepit wits from opposite sides of team t0 71 ppsr*the coaching lines tomorrow, are carrying averages otwhen Chicago battles Lake ference of Illinois choices last sea- pForest in an 8 pm Fieldhouse son when the Red and Blackbasketball game. Gene Ericksen and Joel Zemans son closed the gap to 28-25 at half- vander Sterre, who are now onnailed down their spots by lead- time, but the Maroons forced the the varsity wrestling team, woning the Maroons to the decisive Redmen t0 shoot from the outside all‘camPus titles in the intramu62-46 at Simpson’s expense. Both rai tournament. The other win-after the intermission. ners are. p j Pepppr 132. G(,ni,Besides pacing the attack with Becau*' «>uld"'t r°llow “P ?STn H?i„I’ar7 ,Kapl"’ J59:broke even in 12 league games 18 points, Ericksen played a bruis their shots, the Redmen hit on 169; and Jerry Bathko,and dropped a two point decision ing game under the boards and only four from the field in the y s *Maroon mentor Joe Stampf Maroons. Lewis averaged grabbed 12 rebounds. Zemans second half. They pulled onlyand forester coach Dick Triptow 19.4 points and 14 rebounds a added 10 points and turned in an t , offensive rebounds thanksplayed professional bali together game ias, season, and owns the “ !„ the Lrtwor" of ■for the Chicago Bears in the mid- ^hool scoring rcco 99 ™gr^ ^ J ' VPra(;od 35 5 ppg in Tomasovic, and Zemans.. . _ , _, Triptow said the Foresters have '59-60. When the big left theBoasting a 2-1 record Lake For- t infprove their shooting accur- K^me with nine minutes to go,est goes into action tonight fhey shot at a fantastic .733 Tidgren had scored only tenagainst Augustana. Although j/ tQ North Central 62-61 Points, four of them in a firsttheir five starters are experienced bu^ felJ from the fjeld half span when Zemans was rest-i.r. s, |ng on bench.Joe Stampf, who had scouted Basketballers winThe basketball season got off toWrestlers traveland have ten letters among them,the Foresters might have a slightadvantage besides by havingplayed four games. Chicago hasbeen idle since it whipped Simp¬son Saturday, 62-46.UC will have a front line heightadvantage and once again will becounting on defense and rebound¬ing. Since the Foresters havegiven up 36 points per game, Beloit Tuesday and lost, 77-68.Forester’s Starting Ijn«-up: a very successful start on Satur¬day. The team, who whippedSimpson college, 62-46, wascheered on by an unexpected!ySeven rookie wrestlers and only lar£c number of spectators. The... ...... fieldhouse stands wore filled alone veteran will make the trip to mos, rapaoity conning aboutGalesburg this afternoon for the 400 people.Knox Invitational tournament. Th(, chwrleadera, cocaptainclThe veteran is Fred Hoyt, 130No. Name Ht11 Phil Sokody, f 6'233 Jerry Ziegler, f 6'231 Tom Lewis, c 6'323 Tom Kelly, g 5'1021 John Sime, g 510 Simpson, commended guards Ray , . ,, , , J by I at Sorci and Roxane Russ, led, . T . .. pounds, who wrestled last year. sorne rooting, and the crowd resaid, “Tidgrenthe ball because Strecker and Uary Derer, 157; Dave Alftine. songs had been mimeographedy t * ' • «5t/J I Iv 4 wV HI I f*) p 1 • VI 41 1C V 4 V/ V? 11 JL CJohn Davey. He The rookies are: Jim Baillie, 123; Sponded with a good amount ofwasn't able to get Cliff Cox, 137; Mike Watson, 147; enthusiasm. Some cheers antiAfter their fine play Saturday, quite happyspirit, but regretted that their unito pass away from him.” TvvoIva sfhnnls arp ontprod ....Bewildered by UC’s clamp-like the two day mePt AI1 the schools forms, the first such outfits indefense, the Redmen failed to pet except UC belong to the Midwest UC history, had not arrived ona field goal for several minutes conference or other college con- time for the game,scorers and rebounders in 6'3 cen- Ullmann are back in the running the start of the game, and Chi- ferences of Illinois. Chicago stmpsonter Tom Lewis, and 6'2 forward for starting jobs. cago jumped to a 20-10 lead. Simp- Jim Baillie, Cliff Cox,Triptow is emphasizing defense assistant coach “Whitey” Niehol-in preparation for Saturday. On son reported that 6'4 Dan Eby,1he other hand, he has two fine 6'4 Jerry Tomasovic, and 5'9 SteveI'( i FT P KG FT PZemans 5 6-12 4 Tldgren 5 9-12 4Toien 1 0- 0 3 Yount* 4 5- 6 2j Ericksen !) 0-0 5 Cope 3 1- 3 2Strecker 1 3- 4 4 Cb'kr'ng 0 0- 0 2! Davey 1 l- 2 3 Hadley 0 1- 3 2Tomasovic 2 0- 0 4 Lansing 0 1- 3 3Paulsell 0 0- 1 2 Van Eps 1 3- 5 2! Bilo 1 0- 0 0 Zahn 0 0- 0 1; Ullmann 3 0- 1 1Llss 0 1- 2 0Lahti 0 2- 2 01 Eby 1 0- 1 1Totals 24 13-25 26 Totals 13 20-32 18Shooting pet.—Chicago, .393; Simp¬son, .283Rebounds--Chicago. 54; Simpson, 39TINY MEMORY UNITGUIDES GIANT ROCKETSINTO SPACEOn this tiny drum, only four and one-half inches in diameter,is recorded all the significant data needed to direct a rocketinto space.As the rocket blasts skyward, the electronic computer, whichIncludes this small memory unit, begins to monitor the flight.The computer continually correlates data on flight progresswith data in the memory unit and makes course correctionsinstantly. ,The very small size and weight of this memory unit is anachievement in itself. Yet other difficult problems had to beovercome—shock, prolonged vibration and extremely high Gforces. Only by using new materials and design techniqueswere these problems solved.You naturally have a better chance to growIBM will People with backgrounds in the sciences, engineering, andliberal arts all contributed to the success of this project. Ideaswhich create new products can come from anywhere at IBM.From research, development, programming, manufacturing,marketing.If you would like a job where your ideas can be put to work ininteresting and important areas, then you should considerthe many opportunities at IBM. The IBM representative willbe interviewing on your campus. He will be glad to discusscareer openings at IBM. Your placement officer can make anappointment. Or you may write, outlining background andinterests, to: Director of Technical Recruitment, Dept. 897,ISM Corporation, 590 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N. Y.with a growth company,interview Joe. 31, '61 IBM The team, in particular, wasquite elated at the turnout. Hopes; for even more fans were ex| pressed. The possibility of an or> ganized trip to an away game,probably at Knox college, hasbeen considered by the Gargoyle| dub. whose president is Neil Koi mesar. This club, whose purpose! is to boost the spirit on campus,j has plans to increase the num| ber and activity of those in the; stands even further.INovice team loses* The LTC first year basketballteam was defeated 77 67 Tuesdayby a fast breaking Kendall eollego outfit in the season’s openerfor the UC team. The game wasplayed in the Fieldhouse beforea small but vociferous crowd thatmore than made up for its lackof size by enthusiastically sup¬porting the home team and visiting cheerleaders.Dennis Havens and BruceLubitz paced the UC attack with19 points apiece, while White's29 topped the Kendall scoring,although four of the visitorsbroke through the inept Maroonzone defense to hit in double figures.Rifle Club WinsThe University of Chicago Rifleclub won its third match of theyear last Wednesday, defeatingFifth Army headquaters 1313 to1198. High scorer for UC wasMace Gazda with an aggregratei score of 274, closely followed byj three others tied with 261. Top! shooter for the Army was M/Sgt.j J. B. Golden who fired 266.The victory gave the club a 3 Ii record for the year in MidwayRifle league competition, its bestrecord in several years. The clubhas also entered intercollegiatepostal matches sponsored by theNational Rifle association, but noscores have been received as yet.The Rifle club, in cooperationwith the intramural office willsponsor the second annual allUniversity rifle tournament during the Winter quarter. Rules forthe tournament will not be available until early next quarter, butanyone interested in participatingcan come to th rifle range under¬neath the Fieldhouse bleachersany Monday or Tuesday eveningThe next match will be firedagainst the Wasp Rod and Gunclub next Wednesday at the Field-house range.• CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 9, 1960Theatre workshops 'Daniel' opens MondayAFTER SHAVELOTION goonir or LaforYour fovorifa Tobacco!This protective aluminum foil pouch keepsfamous, mild Sir Walter Raleigh 44% fresherthan old-fashioned tin cans. The sturdy\ pouch is triple laminated. Carries flat. SirWalter Raleigh is choice Kentucky hurley-extra aged I Try it. r'~ No spillsi»h«n you Till-just dip iniMen who lace wind and weatherchoose the protection of.., Opinths paek-Out comesthe Pouch Istart next quarterUniversity theatre work¬shops in dance, acting, stage¬craft, directing, and playread¬ing will have their first meet¬ings next quarter. Forty studentshave already registered, andothers interested in the seminarsurn urged to attend.All meetings will take place inthe Reynolds club theatre. Thedance group is scheduled to meeton Saturday, January 7, at 10:30am. The acting workshop willconvene at 1 pm, that for stage¬craft is at 2 pm, and the seminaron directing is at 3 pm. The play-reading participants will meet onMonday, January 9, at 8 pm.‘The early workshops will bemainly theoretical discussion oneach craft in itself,” commentedBill Alton, director of Universitytheatre, who is running the semi¬nar series, “but toward the mid¬dle of the quarter I may assignwork for the participants. How¬ ever, I don’t want this series toeven resemble anything curricu¬lar, anything in the way of regu¬lar studies.“Of the forty students alreadyregistered,” Alton continued,“about ten per cent have beenactive in UT. There is a largepercentage of students who havefrequently tried out for Theatreproductions.”Of the participants 7 expressedan interest in the dance work¬shop, 22 in the acting workshop,10 in stagecraft, 11 in directing,and 12 in playreading.“We may have to split the act¬ing workshop into two groups,”Alton stated, “for the presentsignup is too large to work effec¬tively.”The total number of studentsenrolled in the various groups ismore than 40 because many areinterested by more than one areaof drama craft.Show ideas neededAll students with ideas forshows that can be effectivelypresented in the round in theStudent union hangout nextquarter, are asked to contact BillAlton, director of University thea¬tre.“Anyone who is interested inacting in such a show, doing techwork for it, or who has an ideafor a show,” Alton commented,“should get in touch with mesoon, as I’d like to set this pro¬gram up at the beginning of nextquarter.“The nature of the surround¬ings in which the performanceswill be given dictates a selectionof lighter, short plays. The playswill all be done in the round, onour revolving stage, and we willbring UT equipment for all tech¬nical connections with the show."I’m interested in getting alarger proportion of the stu¬dents on campus interested inUniversity theatre,” he con¬tinued, “and I think that theway to do it is to offer a varietyof theatrical activities for stu¬dents to participate in.“Although there is a dangerthat the work will fall upon thepeople, already quite busy, whoare now working for UT, I dohope to draw others into the the¬atrical program.”At the present time. Alton plans to limit this venture to under¬graduate students, who, he feels,do not get equal opportunity toparticipate in dramatic activities.“Because of their lack of ex¬perience,” he noted, “these stu¬dents do not get as much of achance as the more experiencedand qualified graduate students.‘There are a lot of people justwaiting to be attracted to someactivity. I hope to interest themwith this plan.”Wine tasteFive fine German wines wereoffered to participants of theWine taste benefit for the MaryMcDowell settlement house, atthe Quadrangle club, Sunday eve¬ning. The donations were given tothe settlement house to continuetheir work.The Mary McDowell settlementhouse was formerly the UC settle¬ment house and was supported bythe UC settlement league. Thisorganization, called “the organiza¬tion for town and gown,” by onefaculty member, later became theUC service league and expandedits activities. Although there areno official connections betweenthe University and the settlement Currently under construction in the vacant garage appended to the vacant Chancellor’shouse is a huge tri-level stage which will be used in the presentation of the Play of Daniel.Meanwhile, other dedicated souls are stitching together sections of old Mandel hall carpet¬ing to be used as a ground cloth for the stage; others are constructing tin candle holders,for both the east and west walls of Rockefeller chapel will be decorated with burning can¬dles throughout the ninety-minute production.There will be seven perform¬ances of the play starting thisMonday and running throughnext Saturday, December 17. Per¬formances start at 8:45 pm andthere will be a Saturday matineeat 2:30. a performance scheduledespecially for students.Preparations for the 12th cen¬tury musical drama are beingmade by faculty, students, Build¬ings and Grounds, and membersof the community.The fall quarter convocation isscheduled for next Friday and thestage will have to be removed forthis event. Consequently, thestage, which will be situated onthe chancel of the Chapel, hasbeen constructed in portable sec¬tions. It must be removed by 12noon on Friday, and back inplace before 7:30 pm.Although the primary actionwill occur on the stage, all ofRockefeller chapel will be usedby the New York Players. Mem¬bers of the group will enact thedrama from positions all over theChapel, including -the back choirstalls, and some of the roles willeven be sung in total darkness.The fire-eater, a minor role inthe production, will be taken byKeith Anderson, a UC student.Other UCers will assist backstageand as ushers. will be directed primarily at thecenter stage. The University ishopeful that an amplifying sys¬tem will not have to be used, butequipment will be on hand ifneeded. A University-providedseamstress will be on hand tomake last minute alterations inthe costumes at the dress re¬hearsal scheduled for Sunday eve¬ning.The London Times called theproduction “a rare experience notto be missed ... a vivid recreation. . . refreshing purity of im¬ pact. . . .” 1 /?. Monde from Parissaid the play was a “. . . beautifullesson in simplicity, which provesthat the life of art is not alwaysin its technical complications andthat all things, done with talent,contain their element of universaltruth... ”Tickets for the opening nightbenefit are $10. Other eveningperformances are $4.40; $3.00 and$2.20. The Saturday matinee is$1.50. Proceeds will benefit theFellowship fund of the divisionof humanities.Spotlights are being construct¬ed throughout the Chapel, andheldhouse there are many personalties and many UC people serve onthe board.The settlement house is one ofthe organizations that receive theChapel collections. Many UC stu¬dents have worked at the settle¬ment house in conjunction withtheir traihing in social work.The five wines were contributedby I. Padnos, owner of the PartyMart. He was present and ex¬plained the differences betweenthe wines. Guests had been pro¬vided with instructions not tosmoke or eat heavily before thewine taste in order to clear theirpalates and increase the sensitiv¬ity of their taste. The New York Pro Musica rehearses for one of its manyworld-wide productions of 'The Play of Daniel' next week inRockefeller chapel.SIR WALTER RALEIGHProtective Pouch Keeps TobaccoFRESHER!Sfcta protection, that is. Old Spice refreshes and stimulates, guards against the loss of vital•kin moisture. Feels great, too. Brisk, bracing, with that tangy Old Spice scent. It does seemto attract female admirers, but what red-bloodedman needs protection against girls? 1.00/>/«*«» S H U L T O N SMELLS GRAND - PACKS RIGHT!SMOKES SWEET — CAN’T BITE!- •rw ~CROWN * WULIAMCOM TOCACOO CORPORATION l TBS MARK Of 4UAUVV IN TOBACCO I'ROC VC1%Dec. 9, 1960 9 CHICAGO MAROON • 17Reviewer praises drama seriesby Dorothy SharplessCulture editorAmid a confusion of alumi¬num lawn chairs, the Universi¬ty theatre presenter theirautumn offering of experi¬mental plays in the “Tonight at8:30 series.The evening got under waywith Omar Shapli’s ‘The Draftingof Sixtus Borden,"* directed byNeal Johnston. Briefly, the playconcerns the confusion createdwhen a member of a nominallypacifistic organization is drafted.Mr. Shapli’s dialogue was adaptedto the Hyde Park area with themention of 55th street and a fewwords such as “kook” peculiar tocertain segments of the campus.The play started off weakly withthe characters appearing ratherflat and totally unconvincing.About half way through the pro¬duction, acting improved as theactors began to relax. John Diet-man n gave a credibly and credit¬ably portrait of Sixtus. Through¬out the play, he carried off hislines well, never over - riding laughs. Carol Horning, FarrellAnn Madoni, Keith Anderson, andNeal Johnston, all gave fair butnot memorable performances ofMarge, Doris. Maxi, and Saxonrespectively. Bob Reiser, in hisportrayal of Wendell gave theoutstanding performance of theproduction. As “the duty fileclerk"* of the organization, hestarted off weakly, but by the endhad created a convincing pictureof the wrath of the meek. Most ofthe actors underplayed the char¬acters they represented, with thenet result that the play carriedthe acting, not the acting the play.“Private Lives of the Mas¬ter Race’’ by Bert hold Brecht,and translated by Roger Downey,was of a truly experimental na¬ture for a group with the experi¬ence of that which undertook theproduction. Directress MaggieStinson made a laudable attemptto tie the episodes of the per¬formance into a convincing whole.The outstanding episode was en¬titled ‘The Informer,” where thewhole family becomes suspect inNOW PLAYING"SCHOOL FOR SCOUNDRELS"Starring:Terry Thomas, Ian CarmichaelDearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763Special student rote for oil .performances seven days iJust Show Cashier Your I.D. CardCHICAGO’S “HIGH TEMPLE OP SATIRE**NEW show- ActnjScene 3:- POLITICAL PRIMER,—ffrn| * ♦1 his is acabinet-Who will JACK putin the cabinet ?Find out at—-SHOWS: 9-11 wkdys.N 9-n-l sat,wkdys.*- $1.50fri.-sat.- $Z,closed mondays18*42 N. Wells U) the opVi'onuVDE7-399ZClosed MondaysDuring Your Vacation ...ENJOY THE GREATEST HOLIDAYENTERTAINMENT IN CHICAGO!“A NEW KIND OF MOVIE!a super-spectacle with spiritualvitality and moral force!”-TIME“A mighty tale told large! Titanic!Gigantic! A spectacular movie!”-LifeSfeMEUthMRESERVED SEATS ONLY!RESERVED SEATS ONLY!EVES, at 8:15 (Sun, Eves, at7). MATS. Wed., Sat., Sun.,Hols, at 2:15. EVES. Sun. thruThurs. $2.75, 2.20, 1.80. Eves.Fri., Sat., & Hols. $3.50, 2.50.MATS. Wed., $2, 1.75, 1.49.MATS. Sat., Sun., & Hols.$2.50, 2.00, 1.49.EXTRA! DAILY MATINEE DEC. 24 thru JAN. 2 at 2:15 p.m.McVICKERSMADISON NR. STATERA. 6-4351 each of the member’s eyes. BothOtto Schlesinger and Anne Folketurn in outstanding perform¬ances as husband and wife. Theyplay well to each other, have anexcellent exchange, and keep thetension continually at the break¬ing point. Close behind thisscene in memorability was thefinal one of the series, “The Jew¬ish Wife.” Carol Horning camethrough with an excellent, con¬vincing, and dramatically wellbalanced performance of a Jew¬ish wife who is about to leaveher husband, a gentile. The epi¬sode concerns the policies of Hit¬ler that might effect her hus¬band’s position and what thesepolicies have already done totheir life together as man andwife. The over-all production en¬abled John Walker Hartigan,Keith Anderson, and Rick Amesto demonstrate, as they did, theirability to give a convincing per¬formance in a number of differ¬ent roles. Farrell Ann Madoni,aside from showing her versatili¬ty, in the episode entitled TheBetrayed*, turned in a most realand convincing performance forits length. Sam Robinson did aCLARK •—dark & madisonit 2-2843 good but not as convincing jobwith the judge in the sectionlabeled “In Search of Justice.”Unlike “The Drafting of SixtusBorden,” the actors carried thenecessarily choppy production ofa difficult play.Nothing but praise all aroundfor “The Marriage Proposal” byAnton Chekhov, directed by Wil-1 liam Bezdek. Bezdek. first-yearstudent Indira Berndtsen, andHarry Henderson were genuine,loveable Russian bourgeoise, acting with warmth and spontaneity.The set here was especially fullof folksy charm and lent itselfto the ridiculously simple action.Again, nothing but praise for thisfinal touch of the evening.Second City's revueis beacon of hope“DateMe”Per Coupleit college students ad¬mitted for 50c \ inerial★ ladies day every fridayVSHe'',a,all gals admitted for 25cit different double featuredallyit open T:M a m.; late show4 a.m. A week from today a large seg¬ment of our population will beginits annual Christmas trek towardsNew York. Once there, Chicago-dulled students will be comfort¬ed by the sight of Times Square,with dozens of theatres, scores ofnightclubs and hundreds of bars(not to mention an 18-year-oldage limit on alcohol). On the otherhand many of us will be spendingChristmas in Chicago, where legi¬timate theatre consists of a SanFranciscan’s view of China at theShubert and an Israeli’s view ofJapan at the Erlanger with nottoo much in between.Shining forth like a beacon ofhope in all this drear drab is theSecond City, situated at 1842North Wells. Nightly there (ex¬cepting Mondays) one can observeeight young men and women tak¬ing a trenchant imaginative andpenetrating view of the worldaround them, a view which ifsomewhat jaded, remains remark¬ably youthful and refreshing.Their new revue, opened buta month ago, is ritied: The Sea-coast of Bohemia, a title whichremains mystifying to the dramacritics, but is clear enough to anyShakespearian. Not quite as bit¬ing as the t h r -* e productionswhich preceded it, The Seacoastof Bohemia remains funny, star¬tling, and different.,\VVVVV\\\V\\VVVWVV\\\VN\VV\\\\\\V\\\\VVVJDecember 14th thru January 1stRAMSEY LEWISDlow AppearingEDDIE “LOCKJAW” DAVISandTHE JOHNNY GRIFFIN QUINTETTheater Jazz Gallery OpenAdmission $1.00 Wed., College Night, 75cThe Home of Progressive Jazzat To any UC student of longstanding, this trip up Northshould be something of class re¬union, for a goodly part of theeight performers there have oncegraced University theatre’s nar¬row boards. Bill Mathieu, com¬poser and pianist for the groupis still a full-time student on cam¬pus, while Andy Duncan and Eu¬gene Troubnick have names wellknown to UC theatre goers.Another member of the cast,and quite probably the most tal¬ented, is the nefr legendary Se¬vern Darden, the young man whoonce, after being chased through¬out Rockefeller chapel pursuedby the campus police after play¬ing jazz on the Rockefeller caril¬lon, threw himself upon thechapel alter shouting: Sanctuary.Among the better scenes are aFreudian western, an examina¬tion of the psyche of a would-beactor, an episode in which a fabu¬lously wealthy Titan offers tosell his soul to the devil, only todiscover that Satan has nothingto sell which he does not alreadyown, and a spectacular “Roman"drama entitled Insipidus.The Second City, founded toprove that Chicago can createand maintain a lively intellectualtheatre on its own, is leaving forNew Yqrk soon, under the guid¬ing wing of David Merrick. Thoseinterested in seeing this produc¬tion should make reservationssoon.Cover charge is $2 on week¬ends, no minimum, with drinkscosting $1. They seem in the habitof checking identification cards,so bring along a few, and do makereservations in advance.Neal Johnston47(6.6 0KEXEI |t0».« » 4 AM \AIRMAN! AJUONO .Sutherland ADMISSION tULCOVER CH6E.HTEIlTUiUUinUSaturday from 8:00-9:00Broadcast Special Drinks 1 Price to Students TEL RES. DE 7-10006th MonthChicago’s Long-Run Musical Hit!MED UM"vwwsrw'v'vw 'w rrrw w w'vwwsr’ww'irv-vyr'v'w vtvwwwtvw www'THEARCHWAYSUPPER CLUB356 EAST 61st STREETThe Archway announces an entertainment policy ■designed to present the "comers" in jazz. Showswill be Wednesday through Sunday from 10 p.m.TheDON CARLOTRIOAppearing Regularly• ^ ,JOHNNYHARTMANDecember 14th MOSEALLISONNow Appearingfor reservations— call —PLaza 2-4498 'TJicAOO * NCWCsr. kT".HAPPY MEDIUM.N. RUSH ST.niliPlUR »•'»•«• a*4 after tkt »ktw laURnUml! tkA DOWNSTAGE ROOMI !k«»t kit*,1 T•«. »«(. |,m t IliMIm. IiM I IliM—AriMn •■■..TAjma. M.M t UMfri 4 (At »*J» k SIJ*. »a< IaaL slash IM,MAIL OAOSKS MOWftjiopekfyI Steamship $375 up 1jJ®^^2j^requenHailing^Thrift Round Trip by AIRSHANNON LONDON PARIS$291.00 $313.00 $331.60[ Rates to other destinations on requestCRIMSON SERIES ofSTUDENT TOURSfor folders and detailsSee your local travel agent or write trtUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.>6/.,Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mass.18 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 9, 1969Culture VultureThese are the times that try men $ souls and drive them to distraction. Winding upwards, mingled with the smoke from athousand smoldering butts, is our ignorance. It pervades our minds and chokes off all creative productivity. Aristotle is only awriter to be ploughed through before our empty heads hit the down-filled pillows. And then the excruciating pain of morn¬ing; another day to be faced, more endless lines of black on white, more heaps of stubs of Pall Malls, Parliaments, Camels,and Salems in conglomerate confusion. From the tapping of our temples floods the inexplicably horrible feeling of uselessness,of frustration. Frustration, as everyone in this sophisticated age is well aware, breeds aggression—that characteristic of humannature which most desperately needs close control. To vent th is inner discontent, we violently hurl Aristotle at the mirrorwhere reflect palely the black circles of our eyes and the madness of our satisfaction. Blessed are the peacemakers.On campusTheatre The Vulture humbles herself be- that might be conducive to con- Musicfor a drastic mistake in last structive entertainment — but toweek’s column concerning aspir- an alluring Russian girl name of for Aristotle says that spectacle,, . . .. . . ., , . when exploited, is the detrimentOrchestra hall is to the glories of a]] that purports to be art). . . .ing musicians and the heartbreak Ninotchka. Sounds like the old of symphonic music what Rocke- -phe twelve million dollar epic,feller is to choral delights. The Spartaous, has certain generalFriday afternoon concert this value for students of the Historyweek (that’s today . . . HURRY!) of Western man. It is the story ofincludes Beethoven’s Prometheus a powerful slave rebellion whichThe University theatre doesn t roa(j 0f self-expression. The Vul- quasi-liberal story,give us a chance to catch our {ure js concerned with suchbreath — short as it is. Director matters, and so is the University Off ram nutBill Alton has announced a con- orchestra, but the self-expression **tinuation of tr>’-outs for The Beg- is not to takp tbo form of an orig. Though the world on this cam- Overture, Vaughn Williams’ Sym- came close to putting a pcrma-gar’s Opera, to be presented next inally composed concerto, as was pus ought, out of due considera- phony number 4, and Dvorak’s nent fissure in the walls of im-quarter. This “Sj^rousical thought here last week; rather, tion, cease and desist next week, ’cello concerto, featuring Antonio perial Rome. The cast of stars isnot even strictly Hollywoodian, soperhaps we can ignore the stupen¬dous spectacle angle of the mat¬ter and spend a profitable eveningand hisbv is a natural for clever lyrical each aspiring musician on this the outside world worries not Janigro soloist“ S5Sat abOU' the S,Udent'S The Art ins,itutc „ a Janus ««,IC"Si0n 3297' University orohestra next spring Theatre media of pint's" anTb^sheT this •theatreMusic All those wishing to do so should Flash! John Dietman !s star. Sundayf Awards that most per- at the McVicker s theatre.v. f hniMitv An leaV! t^eil nam^s at thc d°Part- ring in the Fort Leonard Wood feet form of art, music. The Chi- Perhaps SpartaeusThe highlight of the holiday en- ment of Music before they leave revels! Due congratulations and cago Chamber orchestra begins slaves practically toppled the Rotortainment season on this cam- for the Christmas breather. Ex- wishes to Dietman. its fifth season at 1-30 nm with man Empire, but The Golden De-pus will undoubtedly be the per- ruse the mistake. A city-wide theatre group has music lifted'to our holiday mood mon, premiere-ins at the Hydeformance of the twelfth century That same illustrious orchestra come to the vulture’s attention as (don’t we wish): conducted by Park theatre this week, hasmusical drama, me i lay or will present its autumn quarter they have settled at last in a the- Dieter Kober, the orchestra will shaken the world, the movie-goingDaniel. I his high powered dra- COncert this Friday night in Man- atre of its own in the Oriental perform the Christmas Concerto faction of it at any rate,matic work of music will dc given del hall in conjunction with the theatre building which just hap- by Menfredini; in addition, the The Golden Demon is based oneach night during exam week, as Glee club. Their fare is Beetho pens to bp jn the path Q{ thig Doubie violin Concerto by Bach, a very popular Japanese classicwell as . aturday e t , in Ven, Verdi, Mahier, and Stravin- bird’s morning constitutional This with featured artists Sidney and (written 50 years ago) and artist-Roekefeller chapel. I be New York sky< Admission is free. group, formerly “the North Side Terese Haith as soloists, and Mo- ically depicts a modern OrientalPro Musica, the worlds leading y^e bave descended gradually Little Theatre” has the sparkling zai-t’s Piano Concerto in B flat, “Romeo and Juliet” theme: a girlRenaissance and Dlizabetman mu- from tbe rea]m 0f bib]ical angels new title of “The Original Cast,” K. 595, with Jack Winsor Hansen is persuaded by her parents tosic ensemble, has done exhaustive and arrjved fjnauy in the Hang- and are presenting an Agatha at the piano. This series has a throw over the struggling studenthistorical, artistic, and musicolog- out wbere the beards and guitars Christie play, The Hollow, on De- flavor of high culture and worth, for a rich young man with muchieal research in preparation for Chicago wdj present the final cember 9, 10, 16, and 17. Miss it seems. sparkle. Tisagrossoversimplifi-their world wide tour of this piece, p0jkj0re Society Wing Ding and Christie’s plays have those sur- cation; in reality “spite, bitter-\\ Inch probably has not been per- Hootenanny of the quarter. De- prising surprise endings which Cinema ness, and discord become the dom-fui med since the Middle Ages. cember 9 is the date. Admission characterize her best-seller list The twelve million dollar epic inating motives until, in a con-, . Pro Musica s cast or forty 25 cents. Take vour aggressions books. For reservations, call UP (right there the Vulture’s blood flagration of violence, true valueseludes not only eminent s.ngers .... . 8-5551. runs colder than it normally does, come to the surface.”includes not only eminent singers ^ -n son„and players of museum type in-struments, but actors as well. Thepageant retelling of the Book ofDaniel will be sung in the original CinemaInternational house has obvi-monkish Latin, but to render the ously been influenced by theiraction comprehensible to non-clas- overabundance of American stu-sic students, W. H. Auden has ere- dents, for Silk Stockings is theirated an Elnglish narrative text, cinematic offering next MondayRockefeller chapel has been get- evening. It is a Fred Astaire-Cydting an over abundance of fnvoca- C h a r i s s e type musical (youtions to glory irr the past few know!) about an American pro-weeks; perhaps our - time shall ducer in Paris who sells democi'a-come. ey a'Vid himself not to the devil —birclHOUSE1 Tonight1 thru Dec. 18HORACESILVERFirst Set 8:30 p.m.SUNDAY MATINEE 3-5 p.m.Dec. 21 thru Jan. 1QUINCY JONESSPECIAL COLLEGE RATE!Mon., Tues., Nights, Sunday Matinee$1 with ID CardMON. & TUES. — BUNKY GREENEGreat netr alto sax artist!FREE!The Jazz Supper ClubFinest in Food and DrinkAt Moderate PricesNOW PRESENTINGLURLEAN HUNTERTHE FLOYD MORRIS TRIOEvery Monday night — Folk MusicThis Week —WILLIE WRIGHTProbably the outstanding male folksingerto develop during the past few years.Hyie Park BlvdLat Blaekstoae FreeParking LAKE //PARK AT ^5rdthe (cyde park N O 7 - 9 O 7 1park theatrefrom the daiei stuIpAVORITF VIGTORIANAtRAVORITE VICTORIAN NOVEL IORIENTAL MODE. THE JAPANESE Rc5AND JULIET' (KAN'ICHI TO OMIFILMED WITH AN UNSURPASSED USEDELICATE COLOR ‘SUPERBSTYLE AND BEAUTY’ - LIFE MAGAZINEFUJIKO YAMAMOTO AS MIYA: JUN NEGAMIVENICE FILM FESTIVALARTIST'S WORK SHORTBY THE MAKERSOF 'MOONBIRD tlyeSTARTS TODAYStorts Fri., Dec. 16Land of the Sovietsfilmed, in color, in the SovietUnion ... A two-hour look atthe Soviet people . . . theirlands, their cities, their cul¬ture, their theatre includingstill another look at the Bol¬shoi and Moiseyev Ballets. Starts Fri., Dec. 23Terry-ThomasMon in A Cocked HatOne of the latest spoofs fromBritain . . . the target thistime—diplomacy and the For¬eign Office.andJulie Horn’s* and theAbbey Theatre Playersinthe poacher's daughter"Comedy with a fine Irishverve."—Time Starts Fri., Dec. 30Lourence HarveyExpresso Bongo"Best movie of 1960.Both story and star areso superior that themovie emerges aswhopping entertain¬ment and a savagesatire.'' — Justin Gil¬bert, Daily Mirror.student rale G5e ail periormuneesDec. 9, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 19Deans discuss grade distributionsA great variation in themeaning and distribution ofgrades was exhibited in a re¬cently distributed analysis ofgrade distribution in the vari¬ous UC academic units. The re¬port, prepared by William VanCleve. UC registrar is based upongrades received by students inthe spring quarter of 1960.Thus, while 17.46 per cent ofthe grades received by col egestudents were A's, 31.64 per centof the grades given Social Serv-ive Administration studentswere A's, as compared to a12 63 percent figure in the Lawschool.These are not exclusivelygrades given out by the units in question, but rather grades dis¬tributed to students registered inthose units. Thus a college stu¬dent receiving a B for work com¬pleted for a 300 level social sci¬ence course would have thatgrade recorded in the Collegecolumn.“There is a lot of variation,”commented acting Chancellor R.Wendell (Pat) Harrison, “but thevariation is not in the abilities ofstudents in the various units somuch as in the methods of grading applied throughout the Uni¬versity.”The minimum grade averagefor graduation in the college is2.0, the graduate library schoolrequires 2.5 and most of the de¬partments in the division of hu¬ manities require a B average.Most UC officials questionedseemed neither surprised nor dis¬turbed by this variation. "I don’tthink it could matter less,” com¬mented James Radcliff, assistantdean of the Law school. “Our stu¬dents understand what our gradesmean. However, in the law schoolthe really important thing is notgrade average but class stand¬ing.”In SSA almost half of thegrades are B, with slightly lessthan a third registered as A’s.Wilma Walker, dean of students,commented “we consider a B anaverage satisfactory grade. D isnot failure, but any student whoreceives many D’s doesn’t receivemuch encouragement.” AccordingGRADE DISTRIBUTION BY STUDENT’S HOME DIVISIONSPRING 1960A B C D F I P R BlankCollege 17.46 30.57 29.58 9.46 5.63 5.74 1.33 * .23Biological Sci. 25.18 20.99 12.84 3.21 1.24 3.21 24.94 7.90 .49School of Med. 18.28 35.87 12.55 .99 .39 .49 16.80 13.44 1.19Humanities 25.57 27.42 6.31 .76 1.31 16.87 11.64 9.14 .98Physical Sci. 22.54 18.08 14.32 3.87 2.70 1.76 26.30 9.51 .92Social Sci. 20.52 23.91 8.75 .79 1.59 15.3& 16.07 12.04r .95Business 16.08 36.76 27.81 6.89 2.06 3.14 4.84 2.42Theology 14.14 26.16 8.39 .10 .06 5.01 2.13 22.66 19.90Law — 12.63 38.25 32.95 10.41 1.01 .93 .06 1.17 2.59GLS 25.96 49.04 8.66 .96 1.92 2.89 6.73 3.84SSA 31.64 47.84 9.99 .99 .44 2.22 5.33 1.11 .44Univ. College 13.85 26.11 19.52 5.19 4.64 8.54 2.68 6.95 12.51Exec. Program 11.77 .32.84 19.61 35.78Downtown Program 12.00 31.79 38.17 10.89 3.85 2.75 .44 .11* This table distributes the grades received in the Spring, 1960, Quarter according tothe academic unit to which a student has been admitted. 'In making a distribution of grades for students enrolled in the College, the grade Rhas been dropped for the purpose of calculating percentages inasmuch as this gradeis given in the Spring Quarter, to all students registered for courses in which a compre¬hensive examination is given and would therefore cause an abnormal shift in the dis¬tribution of other grades. to Ratcliff the law school regardsC as an average award.Bobrinskoy noted that the hu¬manities departments were muchmore liberal in allowing Incom-plctes than were most UC units.“We are not teaching profession¬als, and our faculty, as a result,takes a more laissez-faire atti¬tude.” 16.87 percent of the hu¬manities grades were I’s; theSchool of Medicine awarded only.49 percent I’s.There are I’s in Social Sciencesalso: 15.38 percent. “Many ofthese go to PhD people. At thedoctoral level courses don't countthat much — it’s the preliminaryexaminations that really matter.We are simply freerer about giv¬ing I’s to doctoral candidates.”James Parsons, dean of stu¬dents in the physical sciences of¬fered a partial explanation for thelow I frequency in that division.“People in the social sciences havea lot of papers to write—studentstend to put papers off. Here weconcentrate on laboratory work,and lab work can’t wait.” There isno policy against I’s in the divi¬sion, Parsons continued. The Graduate Library schoolgives a higher percentage of A'sand B’s than do most units.“Many of our students are praoticing librarians," explained Les¬ter Asheim, Dean of the school“We don’t have the problem ofeliminating poor students. Ail inall the students we have are better qualified in their field thanstudents starting out in anotherfield-” GLS students also tend tobe older, according to Asheim.The mark P also turns up fre¬quently in the four academic divi¬sions and not so often in the professional schools. According toKerwin, P is mostly used as agrade given to 400-level seminarparticipants, a type of coursegenerally confined to the fourdivisions.Grades also vary within divi¬sions and departments. Within agiven field, say, some professorsdistribute grades over an entirespectrum while others award almost nothing but B’s. “It is im¬possible to construct a meaning¬ful absolute definition of A work,"according to Bobrinskoy, al¬though Dean Walker notes thatsome campus confusion might resuit from this mixed system, butdoubts that it is serious.Special sandwichesand hot cider at the \ 1411 t. 53rd FR 4-5525 — HY 3-5300 Jj 5(DGtPIO if Enrico & Qallery t33rd at DorchesterFrench BreakfastServed All Day Sunday Presents its SpecialTAl-SAM-Y&NCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialism? InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Dally11 A.M. to 10:10 P M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUTU18 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 CHUCK WAGON LUNCH> All You Desire - One Dollar Twenty Five\ Mon. - Wed. - Thurs. - Fri.Also Tuesday NightAll The Chicken You DesireL% One Dollar Ninety Five >jIA SUN LIFE POLICY FOR EVERY NEED• • •I Wear Contact LensesDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. i>y jat University Are. MT An ordinary life insurance policy with FamilyIncome defers payment of the face amount in theevent of your death until the children are grownup, meanwhile providing an immediate monthlyincome to replace your salary.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LaSalle Chicogo, III.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-6800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA mmmmmrACCUMATIC IX, $89.50Self-winding, Weatherproof *THIS CHRISTMAS...HOPE FOR A HAMILTONThe Christmas you get your Hamilton willbe remembered as the day you receive yourdiploma, win your varsity letter or starin the class play. A Hamilton is no ordi¬nary watch. It carries with it the highregard of the giver, and expresses hispride in you as no lesser watch can. Hopefor a Hamilton and you hope for the best.Hamilton Watch Company, Lancaster, Penna.M/L-7~0/Vfor all the hours of a lifetime -M-♦Waterproof, duttproof provided original teal It restored If opened for tervldn^20 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 9, 1960