Reorganize UC administrationWide changes in UC’s ad¬ministrative organizationwere approved late yesterdayby the Board of trustees.*The title of UC’s chief exe¬cutive officer was changedfrom chancellor to president bythe board.Three new positions were cre¬ated. They are: vice president ofthe University, the “number one”vice presidency, vice-president foradministration, and special assist¬ant to the president.Dr. Lowell Coggeshall, formervice president for medical affairs,was named to UC’s second rank¬ing position—vice president ofthe University. His administrativeresponsibilities are thus broad¬ened to include all phases of Uni¬versity administration.The change is viewed bv in¬formed observers a s merely formal; Dr. Coggeshall has beenserving as de facto “number one”vice president for some time.Named to the vice presidencyfor administration was Ray E.Brown formerly superintendentof the UC hospitals. Brown re¬tains his academic appointmentas professor in the graduateschool of business.Confusion expressedSome confusion was expressedby Board members as to the re¬lationship of Brown’s new postto the current vice president forbusiness affairs, a position heldby William B. Harrell. Harrellreaches retirement age in a year,and there is doubt as to whether asuccessor holding his exact titlewill be appointed.John T. Wilson, former headof the biology division of the Na¬tional science foundation was named special assistant to thepresident. Wilson has no rigorous¬ly defined responsibility, but willwork on special assignments asthey come up.UC’s chief officer was calledthe ‘president’ until 1945, whenRobert Maynard Hutchins sug¬gested a change to the title chan¬cellor. Hutchins felt that the sameman could not perform both ad¬ministrative and academic func¬tions, and suggested that thepresident handle the academic andand the chancellor the administra¬tive aspects of running the Uni¬versity.Exmest C. Colwell served aspresident under Hutchins andLawrence Kimpton until 1952when he resigned. In that yearKimpton suggested that the presi¬dent’s position be dropped, since itcost a good deal of money andVol. 70 — No. 7 University of Chicago, October 13, 1961 31 involved much duplication of ef¬fort.Discussing the change, Presi¬dent George Wells Beadle stated,“There was considerable confu¬sion outside the University as towhat the title ‘chancellor’ meant.At some schools it is merely anhonorary title, while at othersthe chancellor is subordinate to apresident.UC has vice-presidents“In addition, although the Uni¬versity has several vice presi¬dents, it has not had a presidentfor more than ten years. Underthese circumstances it appearedsimpler and more logical tochange the title of the executivehead of the institution from thatof ‘chancellor’ to ‘president.’ ”Glen Lloyd, chairman of theBoard of trustees commented,“The change was enthusiasticallyreceived.” Asked if the goal ofthe board was the creation of achief officer with no stated duties,Lloyd replied, “Well, you mightsay that this is the tendency, butit is not clearly the goal.”Coggeshall praisedThe promotion of Dr. Cogge¬shall was viewed as a “excellentmove” by Board members. Thereis a good deal of speculation thathis new position will give Dr.Coggeshall wide influence inmatters of curriculum. Askedabout the function of the new of¬fice, Lloyd commented, “Dr. Cog¬ Recognized as an internal au»thority on malaria and othertropical diseases, Coggeshall hasoften spoken of the relation be¬tween government and universi¬ties. The policies of the federalgovernment, he once remarked,“have enabled the universityscientist to contribute in a majorway to the needs of the nationand at one and the same time per¬mit the freedom or perhaps evenmore freedom than he enjoyedunder other forms of outside sup¬port.”Government is dependentHe sees the government as de¬pending more and more on scien¬tists, saying, “Our government’sneeds, particularly in this reignof the cold war, must to a con¬siderable degree be satisfied byuniversity scientists.”The sixty year old doctor waseducated at the University of In¬diana, from which he receivedAB, AM, and MD degrees. He hasbeen a staff member of the Rocke¬feller institute for medical re¬search, chair-man of the depart¬ment of tropical diseases at theUniversity of Michigan, and waschairman of LTC’s department ofmedicine for a year- before his ap¬pointment as biological sciencesdean.Dr. Coggeshall has served asUC vice president in charge ofmedical affairs since 1960. He hadCrewe gets Argonne postAlbert V. Crewe has been appointed director of the Argonne National laboratory.Crewe, 34, succeeds Norman Hilberry, who has served as director of the University ofChicago-affiliated atomic research laboratory.Announcing the new appointment, President George Wells Beadle said, “When I be¬came Chancellor of the University of Chicago last spring, one of the major problems beforeme was the search for a successor to Norman Hilberry, who had written that he soon wouldreach retirement age and that —— -steps should be taken immediately 3,000 other employees geshall has broad interests in previously been dean of the di¬education. I think he will act on vision of biological sciences,these in developing a program.” (continued on page twenty)to select a new directorAn ad hoc committee screeneda list of names proposed byArgonne’s policy advisory board,composed of eleven scientistsfrom mid-western universities andindustry. immediately prior to his appoint-The budget of Argonne labora- ment, Crewe is credited with ma-tory represents over one-half of jor responsibility for the designthe total University budget. Ar- and construction of the zero gradi-gonne receives $62 million of the ent synchrotron, a $42 million$117 million annually spent by particle accelerator now underconstruction.UC. .Crewe, called by many “an ex¬tremely distinguished scientist,”Crewe was selected from this was educated at England’s Unilist. According to Beadle, criteria versity of Liverpool, receiving hisused in the selection were that ^ and p|lD degrees there,the new director “Is* generally A native of England, Crewerecognized as an able scientist, joined the Argonne staff in 1955 t()ns”fronithat he have broad scientific in- as research associate. He a 1 s oterests, and that he have a con “Among physicists, Crewe wonrecognition as an innovator be¬fore the age of 30,” according toa UC official. “He was the firstscientist in the world to extracta continuous beam of ‘bullet’ pro-a liigh-energy atomsmasher. This was done at the, n ... . , . „ holds an associate professorship unjversUy of Liverpool in Aug-stmotive attitude toward all as- ^ UC’s department of physics ust 1954poets Of the research and devel- and the Enrico Fermi institute. ’ ' *opment programs of the labora- He previously served as assistant Before Crewe s achievement,lecturer and then lecturer at the bombardment experimentsThe new director. Beadle be- University ot Liverpool. haIi t0 t>e earned out ms.de thelieves, "exemplifies these quali- Serving as director of Argon- vacuum chamber of an atomtics. Mr. Crewe is energetic and ne’s particle accelerator division (continued on page thirteen)curious. He has demonstrated hisability to be both a scientist andan administrator, as has. ofcourse, Mr. Hilberry.”Argonne laboratory, called bymany "the world’s first ‘atomsfor peace’ research center,” isoperated by UC for the AtomicEnergy commission. Located ona 3500 acre site in Lemont, Illi¬nois, 25 miles west of the UCcampus, Argonne is staffed bymore than 1,000 scientists and Dr. Lowell Coggeshall was promoted to vice president ofthe University in yesterday's reorganization.Two UC administrators resignAlbert Crewe, 34, hasbeen named director ofArgonne laboratory. Two of UC’s leading admin¬istrators have announced theirresignations.They are John Kirkpatrick,vice-chancellor, and Henry T. Sul-cer, vice-president in charge ofdevelopment.Neither Kirkpatrick nor Sulcerhas announced future plans. Nei¬ther was available for commenton their resignations.Kirkpatrick has served as vice-chancellor for four years. In hisposition he has been responsiblefor the budgetary and physicaloperation of the University. Withthe exception of the President, hehas been UC’s chief financial offi¬cer.Beadle commentsCommenting on Kirkpatrick’sleaving. President George WellsBeadle said, “He had indicated hisintention to leave before I came,so I don’t have any particularcomment. He has been here forten years and has done a verygood job, both as comptroller andas assistant to the Chancellor. Hehas played a very important rolein the University in his time here.”Sulcer, a UC alumnus, has been here in an administrative positionfor only slightly over a year. Thedevelopment office, which super¬vises such groups as the publicrelations office, is responsible forrelating the work of the Univer¬sity to outside sources. The deve¬lopment office is responsible forsoliciting man> of the large grantsreceived by the University.Returns to industryConcernin . the Sulcer resigna¬tion, Beadle remarked. “He madea decision that he would leave togo back to industi'y. His leavingmakes us face the whole philoso¬phy of University development. Itshows up a need to examine thebasic principles of how the officeshould operate. This does notmean that Sulcer did not do hisjob well. It’s just that there areother ways of looking at the totalsituation.”Kirkpatrick was UC’s comptrol¬ler before his appointment in 1957,as vice-chancellor. The post wascreated at that time, Kirkpatrickbeing the first man to serve asvice-chancellor.In announcing the creation ofthe new title, former chancellorLawrence Kimpton raid, “it offersa means of meeting the unmanage¬ able load of administration thatthe head of any large university-faces.”Before coming to UC, Kirkpat¬rick was employed in private in¬dustry and as assistant to thepresident and secretary-treasurerof the board of trustees at Lehighuniversity. He received his aduca-tion at Lehigh, and New York uni¬versities,Kirkpatrick has served on manycommunity and welfare commit¬tees, including the Mary McDow¬ell settlement and the teachers in¬surance and annunity association.He has been chairman of the com¬mittee on functional budgeting ofthe Chicago community fund, andchairman of the finance commit¬tee of the College entrance exami¬nation board.Interested in athletics‘ Kirkpatrick displayed great in¬terest in .he University’s inter-col¬legiate athletic program duringhis stay at UC. Outlining his viewof football in context of a positiveprogram, he once noted:“Two years ago ChancellorKimpton outlined clearly the presand cons of football at Chicagounder present day circumstances.It makes me exceedingly angry that the game itself, in its swollenproportions, keeps us from findinga suitable, feasible, and dignifiedanswer.“Meanwhile, let’s build up thequality and quantity of our othersports here at the University.Let’s have a strong intramuralprogram which will bring a stronginter-collegiate program.“I would like to see by 1961 themidwestern tennis championshipteam at the Ui.’versify of Chicago,by 1962 the star miler and starlow-hurdler, by 1963 the championfree style swimmer—al’ of, whomcame to Chicago without prosely¬tizing because the student bodyand the climate for extra-curri¬cular were as outstandingly attrac¬tive as the curricular.”Sulcer has been with UC fopslightly over a year. A graduateof the laboratory school, the Col¬lege, and the Law School, he oncewas chairman of the UC alumniclub in New York city.Although he was on the facultyof Chicago’s John Marshall lawschool, most of Sulcer’s work hasbeen outside academic circles. Hecame to UC from an executiveposition at the Graver water coi>*ditioning company.Drive begins Monday' - —-— (V¥l Korrinnincr Mfll 1 'High cost of learning...The"unlve"Sit7of Chicago wT attempt to raise some $50,000 beginning Monday for the 'althou" hThe^^htFdrivtf^ill continue uptiMhe over-all goal^ c>f $15,750,0CK) ^ ^appfaisaTTprira^/all boJks.^R«ta, «.torMemorial hospital and the Home for Destitute Cnppled Childie . couises run ig^ go higher because publishers areBrooks McCormick, general two phases: corporate, in which humanities 111 and *16.tv r demanding from 50 cents to $1 ^chairman of the 1961 campaign, to Sheldon. He added that if eacn the Crusade wm ask 25 thousand physical science 105. , . . . „ comm<>nlwloutlined increased need for giving student gave 50e this total cou business firms for corporate Tbe most expensive coui*se this ’by 1*4 million employees and be raised some $3000. gifts; and individual, in which IV* ■ } science 230 in- a bookstore emPloyee- The em-25 000 business firms. "The money provided by the million employees will be solicited <iuait* ployee refused to be identified‘‘Local health and welfare needs Crusade of Mercy makes it pos- at their place of employment, troduction to Indian civilization because „i{ j had known it wascontinue to mount in 1961,” ex- sible for the 150 local Community ,This group includes government ($37.45), while the cheapest is the Maroo- j W0Uld haveplained McCormick. ‘‘The plain fund agencies to help more than employees and those employed m Scandanavian 201 <$1.45), other,fact is that today more families gQQ thousand individuals,” said educational and welfare organi- than courses which require no phrased my statement dinerent-need more help, because of the McCormick, “. . . healing the sick, zations.) books. ly‘loss of a job, because slum hous- comforting the aged, caring foring takes its toll, because almost homeless and helpless chil-half of our population today is dren and aiding the troubled andunder 18 or over 65.”. bewildered.In the past, only University (<The crusade makes it possible,faculty and employees have been tQo for the Red Cross to meetrequested to contribute. Students erncrgency disaster needs, toare being asked to contribute for maintain its counseling workthe first time this year.** cot nn "*'** 'll. 1 . i.* Um ^valuable training programs ,n tne The year-long fight for dis- the Reynolds club, 5706 Universi. gates, each delegate selected bya?: fields of nursing, 'first aid. and count books f o r University ’y; hours are from 11:30_1:30 and anU voting for the members onous campus organizations will water safety.” students will come to a climax 3^5 Monday thlough Friday. bis campUs. Annual meetings offrom 11-30 amamTg30’pm e?ery The division between the Com- Monday when the University s Jp mSS wa^hefd ^Toter delegates will probably be heldbom 11.30 am to 1.30 pm every munity fund and the Red Cross of Chicago branch of the Interna- ~t umver^y.^Se on the site of the USNSA Nation-James L. Sheldon. Jr., assistant ^°™r for lhe fund and its S^oXTin ‘the Reyn- meetines wiU * held by dele* al Student Congress,to the president, announced that cies and 20 per cent for the °ff,nVastudent contributions are being ' °,Uf> tluu‘. , „ „„nnoht vpflr because of simi- R d Cross: , . . , , A UC discount ordering servicesought this year because of sum McCormick is in charge of , by studentlar problems-they will face as 50 thousand volunteers who *““ment but pressure fromcitizens of their communities m so,icit lor the Crusade of ff1' Tlniversitv b^>kstorb keptafter their college years. ,, ic o the Univeisity dooksioi fA special booth will be set upin the Mandel hall corridor forstudents. Student leaders of vari Student co-op bookstorebegins operation MondayMercy. In addition, there is athe average con- sma11 paid head9uarters staff ofThe University last year con- raid hMdiuarters staff of f,'°m ^al,n^with the service.tributed $37.94S rne average con- , -. , ,tribution being $21.18, according about Slxty P60^ _ •® Although there is no general^ The ISCU is incorporated under— door-to-door solicitation, approxi- Wisconsin law, as a non-profit orniately 50 thousand selected worn- ganization, it is beyond Universi, , .. | en prospects are asked for con- ty pressure,foreign car hospital tributtons and about 5,000 neigh- Life memsec poge 4 . , „ Life memberships in the co-ophorliood businesses are solicited. are being sold for $1 and areThis is done by a special women’s available to students, faculty, anddivision. the general public; only membersOther solicitation is divided into can order books.Discounts are 10 per centMhmmmmmmmOUR "346" SPORT JACKETS .in exclusive new Fall coloringsThe good-looking light and medium-weight tweeds of our "346” sport jacketsare woven exclusively for us in our owndesigns and colorings...and the jacketsthemselves cut and made on our 3-buttonmodel with welted edges. In Glenur-quhart plaids, herringbones and fancystripes... featuring new soft colorings inbrowns, greys or olives, $65 and $75Also our "346” jlatinel Odd Trousers, $26.50ISTASUSHIOIS1Sliens furnishings, jjf ats echoes74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.'NEW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • £AN FRANCISCO • LOS ANGELES Former dean speaksat O-board programThe second speaker in Ori- ciate professor of humanities inentation board’s aims of edu- the College,cation program will be Aaron Other faculty members of theBrumbaugh, dean of the Col- f.0™.!™1106 a r e Joseph Schwab,lege from 1931-40. W/lh*m Raney Harper professorTr ... ,. ... of natural sciences; Gerhard Mey-Ile Will discuss The phil- er> associate professor of econom*osophy of the first new College” ics in the College; Sol Tax, pro-on October 23. This era in Univer- fPcc0r of jmtHrrmrvirvc™Discounts are 10 per cent on lessor oi aninropoiogy, and i\or-text and technical books, 25 per sity histoi-y is characterized by man Nachtrieb, professor ofcent on trade books, including the first experimentation with chemistry and head of the Collegemost paperbacks. Books pnay be comprehensive examinations and sciences section,ordered from all publishers. survey courses. Students on the committee areWhile most books will have to . Rodent - facultv committee members of O-Board. They willbe ordered from publishers, the u , . . , be appointed on a quarterly basis,co-op is stocking a limited num- has been established to at minister KarJ gemesderfer, chairman ofber of books. the series. Chairman of the com- O-Board, is student chairman ofOffices are in the basement of mittee is Charles Wegener, asso- the committee, and A1 Berger isits treasurer.www www ft wwwww wwww ww www w'w wwwnrw |i The Ford foundation’s fund forthe advancement of education ishelping finance the series, whichwill center around “Liberal edu¬cation, the Chicago experience,”this quarter.ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA!ORDER 3 PIZZAS AND GET ONE FREE!spaghetti • beef • sausage and meatball sandwichesFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 Eost 67th st. In addition to Schwab, who de-< livered the first lecture during<<*ii«SPECIAL COMPLIMENTARY OFFERFOR COLLEGE MENLearn the Pleasuresof Fine Tobacco...Enjoy the Original Extra-MildCavendish in theHandy “Poly” Pocket PouchBltndtd in Holland by Douwe Egberts Royal fettoritt Orientation week, speakers willinclude members of the presentfaculty and former UC educators.Robert Maynard Hutchins, for¬mer Chancellor of the University,is tentatively set to speak hereduring aims of education week inthe spring quarter.AMPHORA, is cool, even-burning, long-lasting. Its pleasur¬able smoking qualities have won loyal friends—it outsells allother tobaccos in its class! Ifyou haven’t tried AMPHORA,be our guest. Simply fill in thecoupon below and mail it. Youwill receive a complimentaryfull 2-ounce pouch. Eye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetot University Ave.' HYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscountROMICK’S INTERNATIONAL TOBACCO CO.11918 Vose Street, North Hollywood, California'Gentlemen: Please send me a complimentary full 2-ounce pouch ofAMPHORA, I enclose 10# coin to cover cost of handling and mailing,(PLEASE TYPE OR PRINT)II| NAME.I STREETCITY, ZONE, STATE.UNIVERSITY_ IThis Offer Expires December 31,1961 TAKE ADVANTAGEof National Review'sSPECIAL STUDENT RATEFOR THE ACADEMIC YEARDon't miss another issue INOW ONLY Write to t NoilonjyJReview, 6»vdeSubscription130 Cost 33thNew .York 16« N..V32 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 13, 1961Ribicoff gives 'em hell Reflects manpower problemBy Ken Pierce andMichael Shakman“Educators had better worklike hell because they have animportant interest at stake,”said Abraham Ribicoff, sec-retary of health, education andwelfare, in an interview Wednes¬day at Chicago’s Merchandisemart.Continuing his criticism of col¬lege educators for not fightinghard enough fo* education legisla¬tion. Ribicoff said, “College presi¬dents should work for all phasesof education; yot can’t just fig¬ure that since you work with acollege or university, colleges anduniversities are all you care about.You can’t just sit back and 'etothers do the job . . .“You had better start in highschool or grade school if you wantto get the quality you want ineducation. ... Of course the stu¬dents have a big job to do too.’’Ribicoff added that he felt stu¬dents also hadn’t done all theycould to gain support for educa¬tion legislation. When asked if hethought student action could beeffective, the former governor ofConnecticut said, “Of course,...their opinions count in Washing¬ton. They are the future voters.”Ribicoff declared, "I think weought to face up to the needs ofeducation per se.” Referring tothe National defense educationact fNDEAl he added that dis¬guising education under the guiseof “defense” may be necessary.“If that is the only way you canget it through you should do it.”He also said he expected to see anexpanded NDE/ next year.When questioned about the aidto education legislation, which was defeated In the last session ofCongress, Ribicoff noted that “re¬ligious and civi’ rights issues help¬ed kill the whole aid bill.” Con¬cerning the manner of defeat inthe House, Ribicoff said, “Wewere ambushed between Indianaand Illinois.” But he added, “Ihave confidence that we will getadequate education legislation."Ribicoff said he tended to disa¬gree with the statement of Con¬gressman Adam Clayton Powell[Dem NY], cha'rman of the Housecommittee on education and labor.After the defeat of the school aidlegislation Powell said that in¬stead of pushing umvelcome legis¬lation on the House he wouldpress for aid to higher educationin the fields of science and engin¬eering, neglecting the humanities,social science, and other fields notdirectly affecting national de¬fense.Secretary Ribicofi was in Chi¬cago to appear with Senator Ever¬ett Dirksen (Rep.I.) on the NBCtelevision show “The Nation’s Fu¬ture.” The show' will appear Sun¬day. Expect UC student draftThe present high draft quo¬tas are causing students to bedrafted out of the University,UC registrar William VanCleve announced this week.To date, he said, only a fewstudents have been drafted, butthe national military manpowersituation indicate that more willbe called.Van Cleve said he received aletter this week from the directorof selective service for Illinoisadvising'that all male students 22years or over apply for studentdeferment if they wish to com¬plete school before being called.The deputy director of the na¬tional Selective Service systemtold the Maroon last week that ashortage in the present pool of1-A men over 22 years of agewould probably force draft boardsto begin calling 21 and 22 yearolds betore next July. Students form a large percent¬age of the men in these youngerage groups, according to selectiveservice statistics, and informationreceived by Van Cleve and repre¬sentatives of other universities in¬dicates that many of these stu¬dents without student defermentsmay be called.Van Cleve said he could nottell at the present time how manyUC students have been drafted.“When a student is drafted hewithdraws, of course, from theUniversity,” Van Cleve said, “butall we see in the registrar’s officeis a course cancellation card.”He said this prevents him fromknowing whether withdrawals aredue to the draft or to any ofhundreds of other circumstances.He added, however, that thenumber drafted “could not be verygreat” because more cases wouldhave come to his attention.He said a number of cancella¬tions of registration are probably due to call up of reserve*. Th*University can do nothing gainingdeferments of the active reserves,Van Cleve said.Van Cleve said the selectiveservice deferment branch in theregistrar’s office has the poweronly to certify for local draftboards that a man is a studentin good standing at the Univer¬sity.“This letter certainly does notguarantee a deferment,” VanCleve said.He also stressed that no lettersof certification are written “auto¬matically.” He said the studenthimself had to request such aletter, just ac he must take theinitiative with his local board ingaining a deferment of any kind.Van Cleve said he is workingon several methods to try to learnmore accurately how many stu¬dents are drafted, how many havedeferments, and other data rele¬vant to the draft situation.File suif against right-wing groupsBERKELEY, Calif.—Threestudents arrested in the after-math of the May, 1960, dem¬onstrations against the Housecommittee on un-American activ¬ities (HUAC) have filed suit ina California court against mem¬bers of right-wing groups for cir¬culating police mug shots ofthem.The suit charges the pro-HUACgroups with invasion of privacyand violation of a California stat¬ute prohibiting the use of police data for “malicious harassment,degradation, or humiliation” ofany person.The students, all attending theUniversity of California in Berk¬eley, are Irving Hall, treasurer ofthe Bay Area Student committeeto abolish HUAC; George Mur¬ray, a member of the Bay Areacommittee; and Robert Meisen-bach, the University of Californiasenior who earlier this summerwas acquitted of charges of beat¬ing a policeman in connection with the anti-HUAC demonstra- publication and otherwise, policetions. shots of the students.The suit is being supported fi¬nancially by the Bay Area com¬mittee and the Southern Califor¬nia branch of the American CivilLiberties union (ACLU). Coun¬sel for the students is A. L. Wirin,a prominent west coast civil liber¬ties attorney.Total damages asked in the suitare $540,000. The suit chargesfour representatives of pro-HUACgroups with circulating, through The mug shots were takenwhen the three were arrested,with 61 others, immediately afterSan Francisco police turned firehoses on several hundred studentsin the rotunda of San Franciscocity hall, where HUAC was hold¬ing west coast hearings.Meisenbach was the only oneof the 64 arrested held on charges.The case against him was dis¬missed last May.NEW TEXT BOOKS USEDSTUDENT SUPPLIESs _ <FOUNTAIN PENS-NOTE BOOKS - STATIONERY - LAUNDRY CASESBRIEF CASES-SPORTING GOODSTYPEWRITERS sold - rented-repairedPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH’SBOOKSTOR1311 EAST 57th STREET2 BI4HKS EAST OF MANBFX HALLE WOWi DAILY 8:00 AM. to 6.*00 PM. . . . EVENINGS — Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9:00 PM.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiOct. 13, 1961 • CHICAGO MAfcOOM- • - 3Knoxville progressing in race relationsBy, Michael Shakman rally willing to help;,in fact; the chargeKNOXVILLE, Tennessee— ™»or- John.Duncan, has enteredThere is a hard, coiand deadly serious light foreivil rights on hnv. ('in Mon¬day 51. students were arrestedthe box offices of whitemo\ ie theaters and tried to buym the negotiations.Acording to one Negro spokes- 6f integration e leveled More important, however, these ‘ back country.” One-room m Lon]the school in the lower people hav e had important eitects houses have been consolidated; tue'_ _ , ISO norm their'lival cowwilaalcourt. «C-~, upon their local communities. For younger element are, brought-lo-Horton has protested vigorously niost ol diem. Highlander is the get her, and transmit ideas to t hen-man, Duncan is "generally open- against the first two ch.n ge.s. The tirst mtegraled experience ol their elders.minded and fair ". . . but a poll- school, with the kelp of the Ameri- lives., In the South this is very The repercussions of recent stu-TT^TTirrTrfriiliTll j f tician and therefore cautious.” can civil liberties union attempted important. dent actions have also been verywhile picscting in protest o segre- None of lhr hospitals are willing to persuade the Supreme court Segregation means no com- important. Said one 80-year oldKi,,H)nv to take the first step alone. The of the United States to take the munications” between whites and Negro woman in Atlanta, ItsOn Tuesday 90 more students problem now is convincing them case on rev iew. On Monday the Negi oes, said Amiee Horton. High, these students if they can doboth white and Negro, lined up that they should do it together. Court refused. lander fights this lack oi com- something, so can I.” However,There is a new spirit among the Although the present sc hool will mumcation. The school conducts Amiee Hoi ton noted that thelocal officials in Knoxville, attri- he closed, a new one, to he called residential 11 aining and ha.s a Southern Negto students arebn ted by Negro leaders to the the Highlander research and edu- grass-roots adult literacy program basically a conservative groupMontgomery, Alabama freedom rational center, will be opened in aimed at increased Negro voter I’liey ol tern at end hlx-ral on otherrides last spring. “When local offi- the Knoxville area. A new charter registration. The field program issues (besides civil rights) atnent of Justice would act if they tion squarely challenging the Ten- 'ton he cause ol this commumca- Motivating Negroes to help mlid not. they realized they would nessee segregation law. Ihe stale lions hick. Since most rural meet i-he -i ggle fen civil righls. haslave to act themselves if they has granted the charter, and a test ings arc prayer meetings, the k)K been a serious, problem. "Outvanted to keep control of their of the- law may arise when the- cal white-s don't know what is greatest problem is with !hetickets. These incidents underlinethe fact that civil rights is thebig problem in this Southern city,i ml.ke other Southern cities 'j7hereV"folind’"the Depart has been prepared for the instil..- has met little local white- opposi all.”nie-nt of Justice vvemld net if they tion squarely challenging the Te-n- Hon be-cause ol this commumca- Motivating Negroes to help indidhavewanted to keep ...M I ... . .. BMCommunities,” one spokesman said, new institution he-gins operation, going on. middle class Negroes vim .have“I don’t expect any violent oppo- Among the chief opponents of "Inmans places," Amiee Horton decent^ .leh-." -aid la mice Kobm-•« . . . rp.. u-„k i i ^jii sition to civ il rights here,” he the Highlander school lias hem added, tin- w Intis dnln t know sou. I In \ aie air * id o! losinghomg made. I Ik high school will ^ ^ rs Senator Jamos Kamland of what lunacy meant " "livery time their jobs because of integration.be desegregated on a "grade per RreakinK fhp inortia of „tab_ Mississippi Aeeordmg to Umver- we are having a gathering they This is vv he, we have it-■ ir” basis, acording to the pie- ljsh(H] ,r.llbfion h;us a major sitv of Uhieago gradual.- Amiee tlmik we an- having a prayer (>s| problen ^ not with the grass-t plan. But the plan is not fast p1(>piom in Knoxville, and else- Horton, wile ol the -elmof-. direc- nw <-t io-j, ' a N. m o toa.hoi added. "H’U poophenough for som<- No-roes ease whore even when manv whiles tor, "it has become more and The teacher, Mrs. Bernice Hu- I vptammg sumo Negroes nineif ? now in the courts mav sneed inte- favor change. “The biggest thing mote important to Highlander.here is fear of losing status and Eastland?! ., instructions for hisbusiness. It is difficult for white boys in Tennessee were ‘get High-t hat the.T'"'there has been little violence and.. few mass arrests here. ,W^Ftmjoessee isn’t Mississippi or', Alabama in terms of civil rights,’ but it is the South. It has segre¬gation law-s over 50 years old. InKnoxville, however, progress isnow in the courts may speed inte-jgT-^fcratipn. ' binson, noted a ease in wInch toiue to pushNegro voter registration had made Amiee HortonThere were a few lunch counter jri(lividuals to communicate their lander’.” Shi addeddemonstrations here this summer, true feelings on civil rights to school’s trial "was appalling, an-but no one was arrested. “Selec- other whites,” according to a Ne- other Scopes type trial . I wish,lve buying programs ta* KfcO ad. S2.7Z,Sh"lpod Negroes break the color rl(,hts here be,*,, courts in the South.”bar. And negotiations are now that progress can only come with Aimee Horton appi.u-ed lligh-under way to integrate the local contact between individuals of lander’s effectiveness. In recent a difference in local elections. InJohn’s Island, South Carolina, »judge was put in office with thehelp of Negroes trained at High¬lander. The judge, while not “pro-Negro," at least gave them faircourt practices for the first time.Many authorities believe voterregistration is the main long-termhospitals. City officials are gene- both races. The Highlander folk years it has been training Negroes program lor solving Southern civilj:m for integration,declared: "Vouhave built up parallel Negro andwhite communities, with parallelvested interests. We often thinkin the North of only vested inte¬rest in the white community."Opposition to the 1954 SupremeCourt integration decision hasarisen among Southern whites asa result of this Negro reluelanceto act. Said teacher Robinson, “Ifthe present interest had come upin 1954 with this student-like** ' foreign or hospital t dMt*:■-SIP dealers irv, *• mg• morris• austin• riley ’• lambret+a-5340 s lake parkdo 3-0707.service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-31 13bob testerA ... mg psychiatrfc^'v:i.;.%'UNIVERSAL ARMY STOREi 10% Discount With This CouponWM •' s\r- r. a z-izr Ak.rv CMUMT#school has arranged such contacts.The school, which has sponsoredintegrated adult education, is apioneer in encouraging person-to-person contact. It is located inMonteagle, Tennessee. But theschool’s days are numbered, anda new institution is planned forthe Knoxville area. ' - /The Tennessee Supreme courthte.upheld revocation of theschool’s charter, without which itcannot operate. The Court has, sustained revocation on two , 4... . „ »Hcounts: first, that Myles Horton, The United States and her North .Atlantic Treaty .organization (NATO) allies mustdirector of the school, operated it modify their stand on Berlin, agreed a three-man panel discussing the Berlin crisis Tues-for profit, and second, that he day night. \ C J V*5\-; A " " vsold liquor illegally. In review- They also agreed that our government must initiate proposals leading to a united, de¬in g the. case, the Tennessee Su- militarized, and non-aligned Germany. Such proposals depart from our government’s pres-preme Court side-stepped the ent position of remaining in West Berlin on the basis of legal right and making West Ger¬many a strong pai tnei in out siat(-s has not taken Ihe many from the Kast West powerNATO alliance. initiative in introducing proposals struggle. This would mean theThe discussion was sponsored which would take Berlin and disengagement of West (In manyto pass the voter registration re- rights problems. Once the Negroquirements in their local com- voters got real voting power they drive, then there wouldn’t havemunities. Since 1957 about 1500 will be able'to influence local offi- been this problem. The tragedy inpeople have received instruction trials to a far greater degree than ,*1‘s l4’*-' fights I thing is (hat. . ; • ■, .. , . , , . >• we didn’t move earlier, before thein the adult, -interracial' school. Of is row ivossihle. manv believe. , . ... . , , .- .* whites organized. At first theythese people 800 have registered, Awareness of problems among bought they were beaten but wemost of them in the deep South. Negroes is high; even in the didn't move last enough.”US, allies must alter stand■a■• ■ ;■aam COMPLETE LINE OF SLACKS AND SHIRTSLEVIS — KEDS — BOOTS — SHOESJACKETS — SWEATSHIRTS — FOOT LOCKERS, ETC.• 1459 E. 53rd Street FA 4-5856 by the University of Chicago Germany out of the East-Westchapter of the Student Peace power struggle.union (SPU). Some 50 people at- J&****>German problem with Paultend^.. - Douglas, then professor iif eco-Howard Sehomer, president of nomieg, fh 1939, believes that thethe Chicago Theological seminary, crisis originated in a westwardSaul Mendelsohn, a member of Soviet movement winch replacedfive-century old e a s t war dthe national committee of theSocialist party, and Roget Lock-aid, national secretary of SPU,all expressed regie t that the a rive-century oldGerman move m e n t before itreached Stalingrad in 1943.The boundary line of the SovietsUrge has run through central from the NATO alliance and ofEast Germany from the WalsawPact, he added.Sehomer feels that our imme¬diate stand on West Berlin mustlie placed on a nobler plane.Hat her t han insist on rights inBerlin on a legal basis alone, hewould like to see the NATO pow¬ers defend Berlin as a use till liai¬son iwtween East and WestBoth Mendelsohn and Sehomerfeai that unless the Tinted Siau-s■ m'■ : COPYRIGHT © mi. THE COCA-COLA COMPANY. COCA-COLA AND COKE ARE REG STERtD TRADEMARK*iissifit...»Ik&w -anr- 1 > ,LB. f:' '8 KT-'ai Europe, d'oday il is known as the B«m lin pohey changes. BeilinIron Curtain. The present conflict could become another Sarajevo oris the result of western efforts Danzig, resulting in a futile Third‘"roll back” this line, which World War. Sehomer does notRussia tenaciously holds, ex- feel that a war to preserve theplained Sehomer. freedom of some 1(£ million WestThe crisis is not a conflict over Berliners (Sehomer claims thatTS newspapers tigure of 2V mil¬lion, is exaggerated' at the ex¬pense of universal destructioncould be 111-1,1 ledLock.Oil disagreed with Men-the status of Berlin, but if isactually the result of a collisionof Soyiet and Western aims inCentral Europe, he said.In order to remove this basisof conflict, the Western powers delsohn and Sehomer on the jh)S-must accept the existence of the sibility of war. Although he ad-sjpresent vyestern boundary of So- mittCd that a war over Berlinv i°t expansion. I lie l nited States would be futile, he believes thatmust work toward a settlement, the result of the present crisisacceptable to the Soviet Union, would be a re affirmation of thewhich would disentangle Ger- status quo” in GermanyOPEN WIDE and SAY A-H-H-U!Gel that refreshing new feeling with Coke!Bottled under authority of The Coco Cola Company by The Coca-Cola Co. of Chicago, Inc.Old1 TUI/ACn iiiBAAM • Art 13 1.961..' ppmySPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTPHILLIPS JEWELRY CO.DIAMONDS a WA TChF S • JEWELRY a RINGS a SILVERWAREPEARLS • RELIGIOUS GOODS a APPLIANCESSERVING COLLEGE STUDENTS AT WHOLESALEPRICES FOR THE PAST 20 YEARS"50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDS""CHRISTMAS SALE" IWATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING67 E. MADISON ROOM 1101CHICAGO DE 2 6508ON CAMPUS - INFORMATIONRAY.Shake-up possible as SC meetsProspects of a re-alignment!n Student Government ap¬peared at the SG meetingTuesday.Leaders of both minorityparties, PRO (Practical Re¬form organization) and IRP (In¬dependent Reform party),claimedafter the meeting that they hadbeen “taken advantage of’ byPOLIT. the majority party, onthe seating of members. A1 Levy, head of IRP, statedthat he thought PRO was being“bludgeoned.” “We will do every¬thing we can to soften the blow,”he said.After last spring’s SG elections,IRP’s leaders repeatedly said thatthey would not give any sup¬port to PRO.In the election of this year’s of¬ficers, IRP voted with POLIT inevery case except one; Levy, pres¬ent head of IRP, voted for the present floorleader of PRO, JohnBrooks.The election of officers washeld just after last spring’s elec¬tions. Since then many of lastyear’s leaders of both minorityparties have left campus.The SG meeting, first of thisyear, was marked by sharp disa¬greement between PRO andPOLIT.Shortly after the call of theroll, Leonard Friedman, a mem-Debate Cuban revolutionThe merits of the Cuban revolution were debated last Friday night. An audience of500 interrupted the speakers numerous times.Sid Lens and Roberta Montero were the participants in the debate, entitled “Is the Cu¬ban involution seivmg the needs of the Cuban people?” Lens, a Chicago union official andauthor, has touied Cuba recently. Mrs. Montero, lecturer and secretary of the Cuban anti?Communist corps, Escambry Front, has lived in Cuba for two years and has personallvinterviewed Fidel Castro, prime — * Jminister of Cuba.I,ms praised Castro’s leader¬ship, both as a field general andan administrator. He cited Cas¬tro’s courage in battle as well asbis |M»IUieal actions, such as landreform, reduction of unemploy¬ment, and disenfranchisement ofthe populace. When challenged onthis latter point by Mrs. Montero,lie isnmtered, “I’d like to see elec¬tions in Mississippi.”Mrs. Montero emphasized thatCastro had betrayed the ideals ofthe Revolution, for “A dictator¬ship was replaced by tyranny.”She attacked Castro’s seizure ofindustry and blamed him for thenumerous shortages in Cuba.Each speaker was allot It'd atotal of 40 minutes to state hiscase. Lens spoke first. He con¬ceded that there were elementsof good as well as bad in the Rev¬olution but accused the US press bor of POLIT and president of theassembly, began to give the rou¬tine announcements.Max Plager, representative ofPRO in the physical sciences di¬vision, was recognized and chal¬lenged the right of the executivecouncil to seat replacements forrepresentatives who had left cam¬pus but had not resigned. Heclaimed that there was nothingrequiring representatives to beon campus.The executive council is con¬trolled by POLIT and seated onlyPOLIT members in vacancies.Plager’s challenge was defeated.After a sharp exchange withFriedman, Plager announced thathe protested the ruling of thechair and might take his chal¬lenge to the Student-Faculty-Ad¬ministration court.The assembly elected RogerLevin to the chairmanship of theelection and rules committee.When Friedman asked for nom¬inations for the chairmanship ofCORSO, the committee on recog¬nized student organizations,Brooks stated that he had been told by Friedman the day beforethat no vacancies would be filled.He stated that he had been liedto, and was being “taken advan¬tage of.” Brooks moved that allfurther nominations should bepostponed till the next meeting.John Kim of POLIT spokeagainst the motion, maintainingthat, “no matter who said whatto whom,” delaying action wouldparalyze much of the government.The motion to postpone was de¬feated.Several members of PRO thenwalked out of the room andBrooks called for a quorum. Thetwo members of IRP at the meet¬ing remained in the room.The quorum was maintainedby one member.After the meeting, Friedmantold Brooks that there had beena misunderstanding about the va¬cancies.In other actions, the Assembly;• Sent to committee a motionpresented by Levy of IRP pro¬testing the tuition increase.• Authorized the government(continued on page 15).Roberta Montero and Leonard Friedman listen to SidLens defending the Castro government.country in the light of Castro’s Negro woman in the audience,intention to establish a state sys- The latter insisted that there hadof distorting facts in a swell of tern of child upbringing and in- been, in fact, racial discriminationanti Communist sentiment.He stated that revolution wasthe only feasible means of chang¬ing the former regime. He de¬scribed the coup as part of a pat- doctrination. in Havana, pressing her point de-In response to Mr. Lens dec- spite an appeal to order by mod-laration that unemployment erator Leonard Friedman, presi-would be soon eliminated, Mrs. dent of Student Government.Montero contended, “The 135,000 Mrs. Montero twice apologizedtern of world revolution, blaming Cubans in exile solve the unem- for becoming over-emotional, say-the US for keeping Batista em- ployment problem.” She went on ing, “I was going to be very coldpowered and for forcing Castro to say that many were deserting and rational.” At one point Lensto.become socialist as a result of to the mountains to strengthen accused her of trying to impugneconomic sanctions against him. the counter-revolutionary effort. his integrity as tempers flared.Mrs. Montero pointed out that She likened Castro’s following A question and answer periodtlie principles of the revolution to Hitler’s, citing the militant as- followed the debate,were essentially good, but she pects of both. Lens then describedblasted Castro’s suppression of how fifteen loyal Cubans held offcivil liberties. After attacking his hundreds of invaders in the un¬nationalization of Industry, she successful attempt to topple Cas-added, “I speak as a person whose tro.family held sonfe of these things At one point there was a dis-Isuch as the sugar industry] in turbance over a racial issue. Mrs.small measure.” Montero, after attributing theShe noted the unpopularity of lack of racial discrimination inCastro’s actions by citing the at- Cuba to the common Negroid ortempt of Cuban parents to smug- mulatto character of Cubans,gie their children out of the was interrupted by a vociferous For news of UC's newfootball team see page17.THE LIBERAL FRONTIER IN RELIGIONUnitarian HistoryA Lecture by Dr. Wallace Rusterholt*Oct. 18 at 8 p.m. 5638 WoodlawnPublic Invited SEWING MACHINESERVICERepairs on Americanand ForeignRentals: $6 a monthSpecial Rates for Facultyand StudentsBilly Williams6141 S. GreenwoodBU 8-2083LOOKING FOR PAPERBACK BOOKS?Our paper books have been rearranged by subject, instead of publisher for faster serv¬ice and greater ease in browsing. No longer will you have to hunt all over the depart¬ment for a few titles on one subject. They are all grouped under their propter heading.We do not have all the labels up, yet, but you will enjoy the greater clarity of the arrange¬ment . Dozens of new titles are arriving daily, so come in soon and catch up on yourbrowsing. rTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE1 5802 Ellis Avenue SALEA Norwegian Viking ship sailed to Chicago's World Fairin 1893 — a Norwegian sailing vessel to the Fair in1932—■4WBtyand last week a Norwegian, steamer brought over 4 tonsof Multiform for Scandinavian Imports, located in theArt Colony built in 1893.Multiform — the favorite of professional people. Multi¬form— the freestanding wall units. Interchangable book¬cases, bars, desks, chests with drawers, endless combina¬tions for a complete wall. Or start with a bookcase unitfor as little as $24.00, and add to it later on.But by all means take advantage of our once-in-a-lifetimeMultiform sale — a 25% discount!SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSNO 7-40401542 East 57th StreetOpen Tuesday through Saturday, 1 p.m. to 7:30 p.u(Multiform can also be purchased at Field's downtownend Frank Ryan on the North Side)Oct. 13, 1961 CHICAGO MAROONinistrative es won’t9. Lettersresult in many real changesi„ The seemingly sweeping admin-' 1st rati ve changes approved atyesterday’s meeting of the boardof trustees seem, in Shakes-speare’s words, “Much ado aboutnothing." the fact thatlew people on the fifth floor ofthe Ad building hold the sametitle today as they did yesterday,all will fte performing essential-IKy the same function.The change of the title of Chan¬cellor to President, perhaps themost striking of all, is as mean¬ingless as any of the others. Rea-, sons given for the change arethat the title causes confusion tothose outside the University andthat the function of the chancel¬lor has never been too clear toanyone. " ^We have always had a senti¬mental attachment for the title‘Chancellor,’ and do not feel thatthe term is terribly misunder¬stood outside the quadrangles.But, since the University of Chi-cago still has a chief executive,responsible for all administrativeaction, we can see no serious ob¬jection to the change.One change, however, is im¬portant, and we greet it with en¬thusiasm. This is the promotionof Dr. Lowell Coggenshall fromvice president for medical affairsto vice president of the Universi¬ty-Dr. Coggeshall has been tiefacto second only to the Chancel¬lor for quite a white, and we wel¬come the official recognition ofhis role. Dr. Coggeshall servedwell for many years as dean of the division of biological sciences,and as vice president.In his new capacity, Dr. Cog-gcshall will he second in chargeon all administrative matters. Weare sure that he will do well hisjob in his new position.Perhaps the most important ad¬ministrative change under consid¬eration is one which has not yetbeen proposed to the board oftrustees. This involves a re-exam¬ination of the role of the vice-president for development in theUniversity, with a view to pos¬sible redefinition.The vice president for develop¬ment plays an extremely import¬ant part in the activity of the Uni¬versity. It is this office which isresponsible for ‘selling’ UC tofoundations and individuals withmoney to give, thus securinggrants for the school’s projects.The development office worksunder a very large budget andsupervises such large depart¬ments as public relations.It is unfortunate, but true, thatthe development office is oftenout of step with much of whatgoes on in the rest of the Uni¬versity. The office is run by busi¬ness men. men who often are alltoo unaware of the real meaningof an institution of higher learn*ing. fWith the tremendous demandsfor money which so many schoolsmake these days, development andpublic relations offices frequent¬ly find themselves in the positionof dictating University policy. Many of the recent changes inUC’s educational policy have beencriticized as being attempts tokow-tow to public opinion. Whilewe will not make this categoricalcharge, and while we refuse toaffix blame on any one office orindividual, it is true that any de¬velopment office tends to losecontact with the institution itserves. \p*;.Therefore, we eagerly await anevaluation of the work of the of¬fice, and would welcome anychange designed to bring it clos¬er to the rest of the University.This is a worthwhile step towardan excellent University, and wehope it js taken soon.Coming at the same time asthe announcement of reorganiza¬tion is the announcement of theresignation of two of the Uni-\.-iMtv's 11iji ■ilinlrilfiibton, Vice-t ’hanrrHor John Kiikpatiiek andVice President for developmentHenry Sulccr.The jobs of neither of thesemen involved much contact withstintents, and it is quite unlikelythat many students have everheard their names. But their jobshave been important ones, de-nnuxiing a great deal of both aca¬demic anal administrative ability.There is no need foj urn greatalarm on the part of studentsabout what superficially appearsto be a wide Change in the administration building It is stillthe same IV. and we foresee nosi .phi fieant changes in policygrowing out of the administrativereorganization.Aims of education talks worthyexample of school cooperationThe second in a series of lectures on theaims of education will be presented soon. Theprogram, which is sponsored jointly by USstudent faculty, and administration groups,is one of the most worthy projects tried herein recent years.The scries is a fine example of what can bedone if students, faculty, and administra¬tion listen to, and cooperate with, each other.With all the student protest and administra¬tive counter-protest heard, this is a refresh¬ing and all-too-rare example of unanimity ofpurpose.UC has always been a school where prob¬lems of educational philosophy were of para¬mount concern both to students and faculty.In most American institutions, unfortunately, aconcerted effort has been made to shy away fromthe problem of what a good education is and howit can best be effected. This has never been thecase here. Conceived as an experimental institution, UChas never looked the same for very many yearsin a row. As new theories were proposed, manywere tried, only to give way shortly to furthermodifications.Interest in the aims of education extended tostudents. While on many campuses football coach¬es were being hung in effigy, hundreds of studentswere staging a sit-down strike in protest overchanges in UC’s BA program. The 1953 demonstra¬tion has been the rule rather than exception here.The opportunity to hear leading theories of edu¬cation expressed is, therefore, most important atUC. In conception, and we are sure in practice,the aims of education series will provide this op¬portunity, ' T 1Thanks to a grant from the Ford foundation,there will be no admission charge for the lectures.The grant will also enable leading educators to bebrought to UC from all over the country.We hope that students will take advantage ofthe opportunities presented by the series. It shouldprovide insight into one of the most importantproblems facing society today.Marxist lecture cancelledHarold W. Stoke, president of.-ns ollege, announced Mon¬day that v* q.,,. • - m.< > wcussion club would have to cancelits sponsorship of a lecture byBenjamin J. Davis, secretary ofthe US Communist party. Daviswas to have spoken on the topic“Peaceful co-existence and Amer¬ica's future.”Stokes acknowledged that hehad received a number of pro¬tests against Davis’ appearancefrom right-wing groups. One pro¬tect, addressed to New YorkMayor Wagner, was from theKnights of Columbus. As reportedby the New York Times, the state¬ment read, “Our public institu¬tions should not be allowed to beused as a forum for the dissem¬ination of the evil menace ofcommunism which threatens todestroy us.”This argument, in less emo¬tional form, has often been in¬voked by responsible educatorsto justify restrictions on speakers at public and private — col¬leges and universities. A perfect¬ly logical < xtension of this argu¬ment bans all poll lira! activity byofficially recognized studentgroups. Such a ban applies, forinstance, at the University ofCalifornia, where political groupsare denied the privileges of othercampus organizations.It would appear that manyAmerican universities, in additionto promoting the fragmentationof intellectual disciplines to thepoint where meaningful commu¬nications among scholars in un¬related fields is all but impossible,are fostering tne isolation of stu¬dents and faculty alike from thelai ger o< et\ which the univer¬sity purportedly serves.Since when is the discussion ofpublic issues not a fit activity forcollege-age men and women? Dothe universities prefer that theirstudents flock to Fort Lauderdaleevery year? Do they prefer that o>- ' [tils ayt n es b( n •• : tophilately and pantv raids? It hasbeen our experience that the cam¬puses on which this philosophy isprevalent are those on which thecolor of pom-poms for the home¬coming parade is more impoiiantthan the quality of tlx* educationthe institutions deliver.But worse than the no-politicsattitude is the position exempli¬fied by President Stokes in deny¬ing Davis tlu right to peak on1 he Queens rumpus. \dmc thekind of politics becomes the deter¬mining criterion. An educationalinstitution w hich show s its, If i()he afraid of flea,* <■;, m fm itselfthe contempt of all who believethat edut-abon is more than theaccumulation of facts. Such insti¬tutions are no more than theircharters indicate- businesses, op.dating on the theory that theircorporate images will bring themmore revenue than a qualityproduct. To the Editor of the Maroon:In last Tuesday’s meeting ofthe Student < :< v, ■ nnx i t a etbly, A1 Levy, the. leader of theIndependent Reform party, IRP,vigorouslv opposed the sendingof telegi ants of support to stustudents m Jackson and MpPapd,Mississippi who are fighting fortheir rights as citi/ens of theUnited States. Mr. Levy urged theAssembly to forget about theseproblems in far off "jerkwatercolleges” - a v in g that theirstruggle is of no concern to theUniversity of Chicago.Mr. Levy’s arguments remindsme of the British Prime MinisterNeville ('hamhei lam's d, , • ptionof Czeehoslavakia as “a far-offland, of whose people and cus¬toms we know little" However.Mr. Levy to the contrary notwith¬standing what happens jM Missis•ppj doe . • , * -1 n- not* v« 1 dhappens to students in Mississippiconcerns us as students.Aside from our moral duty todefend freedom where it existsauT td TuM $gg It w here it doesi '.vt HQ| • i . 1 I \ MN < -u 04titfreedom is tlu eat* ix-d when,- orsomeone els, 's i-, edom is takenaway or denied.And let no one argue that send-b - • a”> (i s u ( % ■ M Itore Ihe students m Mississippiwho leeeive them aie encouragedby them and strengthened in theirresolve to continue ihrii sti tiggle This is not mere'conjecture r>rtour pa, t Tins wt d tied< i who h, m rd c< t xQ ■ ‘ •- rd !r. i 11 ' . • ,told us personally. Who shouldknow better than they?T'-e ass, n-h|\ v otod to s, "d p,etelegrams with every POLITmember voting in favor, both IRPmembers abstaining, and w; i t hsome PRO members voting infavor, some against and some ab¬stains- r.The other three Items of busi¬ness dealt with were a protest ofthe conversion of the coffee shopinto a machine shop, a pledge ofSC coop, nation with the Orienta¬tion board’s Aims of Educationprogram and a student codeam< ; dnx-’d w 1 i, lib, i aides *(„»use of the sign between the treesand makes it available to • estudent organizations. POLIT, themajority party in the assembly,believes that SG has both the! igh.t and duty In net on b.,th onand off-campus issues. ^But to return to Mr. Levy andIRP __ he began his remarks tothe ass, mhlv with tht Ha inis thatlx- was as much in favor of civilrights as anyone. In ttibi heagrees with I ’< >1 .IT. Ilowevm. wedp disagree on one thing — wewant to do something aboutthem.John L. KimFormer Chairman POLITAnalysis is informative< b rh man: ,Your “news analysis” of thetuition increase on page two ofthe October 6 Maroon was infor¬mative. However, your informa¬tion on Duke university was out¬dated and misleading.The following information isfrom the Bulletin of Duke Univer¬sity for 1959-60, dated March,1959: 1) tuition $650, 2) generalfee $150, and 3) “addendum -ef¬fective September 1, 1960, the tui¬tion charge will be increased inthe amount of $200 per academicyear beyond the printed figuresin this bulletin.”The general fee has to be paidbefore a.student can attend class¬es at Duke and is thus a part of the total “tuition” charge of the< • I 1 <•<,!.-,! !< ' • eper year is $1,000 and not-thc $650reported by you. . 'To make your listing of sehortlsfully comparable research shouldhave also been conducted on ihe“required fees” of the schools.Chicago’s -$105 medical-generalfee; to compare just tlx* tc i oncharges is misleading. The totalbill is what affects the student’sbank account.Peter C. CoggeshallDuke '61P.S. I too regret the extra $300a > eai that Clix-ap,. •« *charging and agree with theeditorial on page 6 of theMaroon. «■CHICAGO MAROON Oct. 13, 1961 Editor-in-chiefJay GreenbergBusiness manager Advertising managerWilliam G. Bauer Raymond MitchellManaging Editor -Avima RuderEditor emeritus Ken PierceExecutive news editor Gene Vint gt ffCampus news editor Laura GodofskyNational news editor . .Mike ShakmanCity news editor Faye WellsAssistant news editor . . .... . Gary fCulture editor Dorothy SharpkssCopy editor. . . . . . . . Suzy GoldbergPolitical news editor. .Ron DorfmonPhoto coordinators Don Auerbach, Al BergerSports Editor .Chuck BernHemSupplement cover by. ....... . *. Al BergerSecretary to the editor... .Carole QuinnResearch ussistont Larry B (MVIEditorial staff: Harry Adler, Steve Becker, Barry Bayer, Jay Flocks, Kevin Ma¬honey, Sheldon Nohmud, Ronnie Rosenblatt, Murray Schacher, John Smith,Business stoft: Lu ”.y Ebert, Phil Hyde, Jeon Mac Icon, Nate Swift, Me xoZeitlin.Sports staff: V P i , , < Mil , rit t< thIs ued even Friday ihiourhout tht Unit f.: ,t\ of Chx.ino school ve >n,«lIn*, limn, ntly d the , immer <t war t< , b\ w.x-m.s of the University ofChicago Inquiries should OP sent to the < ,, < M.iroon. Ida Notes hii’l - i--I- not ( <• 3 rihiini: l-o - M (X'Ott f-vn-l, lot - . '< >!> D rlbuted without charge on campu Subscriptions by mol $3 ptOffloe hou i i Honda] throu b Pi la] Deadllnt tot aland &i matt alC “* : • ‘ • i .... uo<1 < nut, 3 Jim W> o ■ • ,MmteamfittMlim ■. > -v ... SW.; -All mmm «a«cwliS waiter on fins page represents the official opinion of,ll(1 ( 1,1 1 ■> >l.<r<M,n «ditonal board. c- ned 'xihonal »«..,*< ,,d represent* theindividual oionuou, of ,i,u iuUhoJH.Neal JohnstonSit-in spirit is complicatedWhen the sit-ins started eight¬een months ago, we greeted themwith a rushing welcome; our im¬mediate and automatic responseto the freedom rides was muchthe same.But tht; sit-ins and the freedomrides are different things. Therevolution which is sweeping theSouth, and it is a revolution, is adynamic process; the Southernmovement is not static and it haschanged significantly in the pastyeai and a half.I am by no means certain thatwe have examined the dynamicsof this movement with sufficientclarity.The first sit-ins were sjkmtan-eous, youthful affairs, and despitethe fact that there are still todaymany young Negroes with scarsremaining on the back of theirnecks from where lit cigaretteswere pressed, there was some¬thing of an air of an adventurousgame about these original demonstrations. This could not last.The spontaneous impulse whichprompted students to sit down atforbidden lunch counters has de¬veloped into a calm and calculatedprofessionalism leading men andwomen to spend four months ina Mississippi jail.The closely linked sympathywhich the Northern liberal quiteproperly holds for these deter¬mined Southerners is no longerperfectly matched by a unity ofidentity or purpose; the Northerner has yet to fully realize thisfact.Within the present situation lieburied the germs of a dangerousalienation; those of us in theNorth must act with intelligentdispatch to rectify those mutualfailures which have caused thisincipient threat.The young Negi*oeg who leadthis movement are propelled by aprofound and personal sense ofinjustice and indignity, and theyhave infused the entire movementwith the same sense of urgencyand^ intensity which motivatesthem.Letters We must respect this, even aswe fail to feel it ourselves in anequivalent personal matter. Butwe must also note that the move¬ment is predicated not so muchout of intellectual devotion to anabstract idea of human equalityso much as out of direct personalconfrontation with injustice andinhumanity.Similarly, the movement is col¬ored throughout with a religiousfervor. This, too, we much appre¬ciate; this, too, we cannot dupli¬cate. The difference between areligious mission and a rational¬istic commitment is more thanone of pitch.One Northerner, writing recent¬ly of these Southern students,speaks of them as “miles aheadof us, looking back, chucklingknowingly about the sterility ofliberals, tightening grimly againstthe potency of the racists.’’This attitude is as understand¬able as it is unfortunate.This same writer speaks of anew sentiment among these stu¬dents that “this is not a move¬ment but a revolution, that ouridentity should be not with ourNegro predecessors but with thenew' nations around the world,and that beyond lunch counter de¬segregation there are more se¬rious evils which must be rippedout by any means: exploitation,socially destructive capital, evilpolitical and legal structures, andmyopic liberalism which is anti¬revolutionary.”Can this movement, launchedwith the single-minded purpose ofuprooting a social evil, the moralreprehensibility of which is soclear cut as to need no delibera¬tion, can this movement, by itself,successfully meet the infinitelymore complex problems whichseem to lie ahead of it? There’s amajor difference between Negrorights and human rights.One can hardly expect theyoung and newly awakened South¬ern Negro, placidly accepting thelikelihood of four months in jailamidst the neo-fascist police state brutality which is modern Missis¬sippi, to have much respect orsympathy for those intellectualequivocations and qualms of neo-Kan tian conscience which so bogdown the Northern liberal.The seeming laxity and slow¬ness of the liberal emanate froma sort of fear which the Southernmovement has successfully con¬quered and from a commitmentto painstaking intellectualismwhich the Southern movementhas largely avoided and which itclearly needs.We cannot afford to allow thisalienation to grow because we.both need each other too badly.But it is the Northerner whomust reach out and retouch hisfellows in the South. It is thealive South which has lost faithin us, not the other way around.If we are to regain the confi¬dence of the Southern movement,if we are to regain our lost abilityto provide a sound intellectualbasis for a movement whosestrength and long range validitycan no longer be denied, we mustdo so by demonstrating an abso¬lute and active commitment tothe goals of that movement.Not by sending telegrams, andnot by sending money, but bysolving the problem as it touchesus.Dozens of students were arrest¬ed for sitting in the wrong wait¬ing rooms of the Illinois Centralstation in Jackson, Mississippi.How many Hyde Parkers havegone out of their way to take theCTA to work?Last year the families of fourlittle New Orleans girls risked agreat deal by sending them tonewly integrated institutions.How many ail Negro or all whiteschools are there in Chicago?Tonight a couple hundred Ne¬groes will be sleeping in the jailsof Jackson. How many Negroeswill be sleeping in the hotels thatline Chicago’s lake front?We must act, not only becauseour cause is just, but also becauseif we do not, we shall lo.se con¬tact with that movement whichwill someday direct the South.Fraternity men attacks columnTo the editor;If the word Negro be substi¬tuted for fraternity alumni, Mr.Johnston’s article in last week’sMaroon would appear written bya biased, uneducated rabble rous-er. It is shocking to discover thatMr. Johnston, after years of cam¬paigning against such individuals,has found he can use their meth¬ods to his own adavntage.It is a strong blow to the wholeeducational system at Chicagowhen one of its prime movers andmost active participators in stu¬dent activities concludes that fra¬ternities are responsible for menof a certain moronic stamp. Thismoronic man is characterized bya brief visit of one alumnus to Mr. Johnston’s fraternity house,through his actions a clear con¬cise picture of all fraternityalumni and national officers takesform. A nice device, I may add,commonly used by those inter¬ested in stiring up racial preju¬dice and hate.Nevertheless, Mr. Johnston, con¬sidering his point well taken,rushes into an attack on nationalfraternity officers. These “pa¬thetic vestigial human organisms. .. . exert considerable influenceupon the local chapters.” In al¬most a year of contact with otherfraternity presidents, I havenever heard anyone complain ofexcessive national pressure.Through personal experience I Our alumnus is considered to berepresentative of all alumni, andhave found national and local of¬ficers to be extremely helpful, in¬telligent and successful men.Since Mr. Johnston’s concern iswith the products that these“very strong” men produce fromtheir respective fraternity sys¬tems, it would be interesting tonote that the nine nationals rep¬resented at Chicago are responsi¬ble for Theodore and Franklin D.Roosevelt, Robert M. Hutchins,Wendell Willkie, Justice FelixFrankfurter, Justice William O.Douglas, Charles Percy, and ahost of other men devoted to andsuccessful in activities which(continued on page 11)Fac ex challenges editorialTo the editor:The author of the article inyour October 6 issue under thecaption “A house by any othername” exhibits great possibilitiesas a humorist but little desire fora factual argument. In order thatyour readers should not take seri¬ously the many incorrect state¬ments in the article, permit meto have “equal time or space” forrebuttal.Contrary to the statement “Fac¬ulty exchange had a legal out—Pierce tower was not listed in thefaculty directory,” which the au¬thor of the article assumed wasa legitimate excuse for the non¬ delivery of campus mail to Piercetower for the early days of itsopening, a listing in the directoryhas nothing to do with either adepartment or dormitory receiv¬ing mail service thi’ough facultyexchange. As a matter of fact,there are several departments andstudent quarters which are listedbut still do not come under ourdelivery schedule. A few of theessential factors which governthe addition of any department ordormitory to the faculty exchangeschedule are: the availability ofUS mail delivery, the volume ofmail from the campus to thatparticular spot, the proximity to other regular scheduled stops,and application to the Bursar forfaculty exchange service.In the case of Pierce tower,which was officially opened inSeptember of 1960 when an offi¬cial application was made by MissKay to the Bursar, faculty ex¬change received authorization toservice this dormitory as of Sep¬tember 29. The autumn quarterregistration started on October1, 1960, so it is difficult to under¬stand the claim “and so for thefirst few weeks of the quarter,the exchange refused to delivermail to the hundreds’of occupants(continued on page 11) THE TRUE ANDHARROWING FACTS ABOUT RUSHINGIt is well enougn to sit in one’s Morris chair and theorize aboutsorority rushing, but if one really wishes to know the facts, onemust leave one’s Morris chair and go out into the field. (MyMorris chair, incidentally, was given to me by the Philip MorrisCompany, makers of Marlboro Cigarettes. They are great¬hearted folk, the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes, as millions ofyou know who have enjoyed their excellent cigarettes. Onlyfrom bountiful souls could come such mildness, such flavor,such filters, such pleasure, as you will find in Marl boros! Forthose who prefer crush proof boxes, Marlboro is available inerushproof boxes. For those who prefer soft packs, Marlborois available in soft packs. For those who prefer to buy theircigarettes in bulk, please contact Emmett R. Sigafoos, friendlymanager of our factory in Richmond, Virginia.)But I digress. I was saying that in order to know the truefacts about sorority rushing, one must go into the field andinvestigate. Consequently, I went last week to the IndianaCollege of Spot Welding and Belles I.etires and interviewedseveral million coeds, among them a lovely lass named GerundMcKeever. (It is, incidentally, quite an interesting little storyabout how she came to be named Gerund. It .seems that herfather, Ralph T. McKeever, loved grammar better than any¬thing in the world, and so he named all his children after partsof speech. In addition to Gerund, there were three girls namedPreposition, Adverb, and Pronoun, and one boy named DativeCase. The girls seemed not to be unduly depressed by theirnames, but Dative Case, alas, grew steadily more morose andwas finally found one night dangling from a participle. Afterthis tragic event, the father abandoned his practice of gram¬matical nomenclature, and whatever children were sul>eequentlyborn to him—eight in all—were named Everett.)But I digress. I w*ms interviewing a lovely coed namedGerund McKeever. “Gerund,” I said, “were you rushed bv asorority?”“Yes, mister,” she said, “I was rushed by a sorority.”“Did they give you a high-pressure pitch?” I asked. “Didthey use the hard sell?”“No, mister,” she replied. “It was all done with quiet dignity.They simply talked to me about the chapter and the girls forabout three minutes and then I pledged.”“My goodness!” I said. “Three minutes is not very long fora sales talk!”“It i6 when they are holding you under water, mister,”said Gerund.“Well, Gerund,” I said, “how do you like the house?”“I like the house fine, mister,” she replied. “But I don’t livethere. Unfortunately, they pledged more girls than they haveroom for, so they are sleeping some of us in the belt tower.”“Isn’t that rather noisy?” I said.“Only on the quarter-hour,” said Gerund.“Well, Gerund,” I said, “it has certainly been a pleasure talk¬ing to you,” I said.“Likewise, mister,” she said, and with many a laugh and cheerwe went our separate ways—she to the campanile, I to theMorris chair. @ nwi m«_ * * * ,The Philip Morris Company makes, in addition to Marlboro,the neu> unKltered, king-size Philip Morris Commander—choice tobacco, gently vacuum cleaned by a new process toassure you the finest in smoking pleasure.TAVERNLIQUORSCHICAGO MAROON—Levi blasted on Hyde Park development programAmong the more futilt^human; Jacobs «^llenges : m ? number* of chapter of a book, The Death and' neighborhood, thie Maroon article^ South East commission, citedendeavors is worship of the sac:: currently popular city planning Life of Great American Cities, selects 23 taverns to bolster its crime rates as justification for-4red cow. When said cow happens aNumptions, ■among' - them. the published this week by «—.'i — * —..... . - ‘to have been university-sired, her theory that clearance makes a ^house. Another excerpveneration c. j,-. - i« t>« as W'eb neighborhood safe. She cites Money Can Make or Hister defines-it,' merely humorous. Hyde. Park as one of several ex*'“Cities,” ; ’Her browsing in the- midway pas- amples. ft -vr/*-- / 4* 4*, 4 § magazine of October 12,tur°v • 1 ,n<' fiallv. of <ieban . ft :. ».r< to a jok< ; Mrs. Jacobs is concerned about Apostle church (55tli and Kim-and laboratories of searching, be card, Mr. Levi accuses-'* Mrs. urban people — all of them, in---1comes,^ at. best^^lpdicrous^at Jacobs of ignoring “the facts.”'* eluding lower>income and minori- doorsi^exeept for scheduled serv-worst, am sci< "Since Mr. Levi disdained in his ty got up<- anti the function of ives, Ihvuusc of repeated pilfer- effort to avert an S'The, bovine elevated to5diviqe:;own article-such-pertinent-facts their existing neighborhoods, a ing (Hyde Park Herald, Septem- competitive situation” for the,"in \in this university community'is' as Mrs. Jacobs’ identity, Maroon consideration many big city plan- ber 13, page 1)? ; r 44, ^ ? dependent businessman.” WhatLits urban *'• might like to know that nei-s pi < fer to foigei But mi,.-. kVcii mm. »« rtm.nt is the businessmen? Close to t>tiO ha\.Maroon recently publish. •< ai jaiw Jacobs is an associate edi- Mrs.. Jacobs is the best exponent pri«r question, who licensed such V<’cn or are being cleared, throughanswer by Julian Levi,J^director tor'of Architectural Forum. Hereof her own humane theses, let a concentration of taverns in the virtualIv complete destruction fof>*h« s. ( I,,. ,c <j coin contributions i< Forum u ... t< u- .dbm tiy to weigh th< mid first place? The city government n" ,nain commercial streets. Potmission, to an alleged attack Fortune magazines book The way cow and aw, s< tier append of t iiicago. of course, issued the 'do, anon rne.-ms d.-mlon the protect in Ha e * Fxploding Metropolis, art among anti yield, despit, tit, displeasure |i<vns,,s _ and -could have re- 'Hie Maroon piece oiideH\.e-zme ol beptemlxu rht more provocative critiques of of her keeper yoked or refused to renew them to establish "the relationship b<In <*>« Harper’s: article, "Vior city planning. The Harper’s ar-4-Out of the ,huge? Hyde Park when the crime rate warranted, tween deteriorated housing and'lenee in tin i iiy Miots.. , Jane, tn 1* , w«»s aoapted from a Mr,gi. cleaico.ee. largest in. any,.- < 'hieago ; Instead, the city, spurred by--.- the .^deteriorated social oonditmr,*.-*****'<.»_ --!« in fact the relationship is castLtl.l rr...g'Another excerpt, “How tuivs reduces crime. funds to clear hundreds of otherCc.r Make or Break Our Why, then, after most of the -neighborhood structures, mainlyappears in Tlie Reporter buildings around it have been moderate-priced housing.cleared, has St Thomas the The Maroon article paints'1 r<ductibn of the new shopping cenfbark) announced it Is locking its ter (55th and Lake Park) beIo\y|* ‘ * ’ * 'r.t its originally-planned size as anm possible1 Ai * *** l I MyT lx Id! lUMMIIfJ lb ( dS*"ual. jas implied, why is the Hyde*' g* Park "project destroying almostm V.*' a1' manV “good” structures as“bad' <(>f (i,'<u clearance build; “ v ings, 292 aie officially designated -4 / as sound or with only minor .codeIndeed, the writer contradicts.himself when he erroneously:;.chides Mr. .Facwhs for not recor*'-nizing "that tl e occurrence of fcrime is a svmnn.ni of social dis¬organization.” If this analysis isthe correct one, and we believe ItlgIs. how does the bulldozer help?,4;* It provides no jobs for the job-:'y:i_,less. no equality for the dlscHr^Vinated. no end to douhle-sliiftf * *, schools in the communities re-, ( reiving the displaced. It proffers||gpf| only a one-way ticket to someother neighborhood, nstmdv vvltnresented by Pal! Mall Famous CigarettesCgM,:.-I ”problems more severe than Hyde-'Park’s., 444 f§4 * 41} Long before ds involvement in4 .V,, , t the power politics of renewal, the'S - university community helped,•* 4^ evolve modern thought on social, v * disorganization Men like the late1 f" J -*/ Robert Red field and l^vuis Wirth,’-A y I k '.as citizens and as scholars, deep-ened understanding that factors,f ?;ghke crime and poor housing are4-ftiS 1 ^ symptoms, not causes and that'' - f social disorganization stems--in*' large degree from imposed con-^tions over which the disorgah-Ml. ^ze(1 have little or no control. 4V- - 4 V Few.families live in bad houp-ing through choice. It has beenv well-stated that the long-term so- '• • ' lution for poor housing is jo" '/ j,, starve it by competition; fromFood housuig lower-income fami-Alies can afford. *The kind of exclusively andshort-term solutions now opera¬tive in Hyde Park renewal servefei i'Cm " »s planner Victor Gruen told the'4', "‘If United States Conference ofMayors, not to remove slums tint, 4 ? to move them around. The. M»-v - HHin ai tide unwittingly bolsters', L ;L this point w'hen it cites increasing■4 : density in Woodlawn, just south4; of campus. No few of Woodlawifs• 'Problems arise from populationpies.sures caused by Chicago’si; • ■ public1 clearance ; projects, includ-4? 1 ing Hyde Park renewal. r/Vn/1 5 t)f even greater concern, liowca' 4' 4 ever, to a university communityEafggj'M §■ should be the attitude of its^ ' | leaders. -No seriously critical ain-44’V . alysls of the renewal project has,44been countenanced with grace,1 ,4 ' c off-campus or on. 4 g4*' HerodotusppfeWONT44 -y : ■■■'444m4Three views of on overode/heolthy girl-:v ^« , - S■ :: v- : MlIt is not surprising, in these days of constantly changing to identify from the side However, even the beginnerlushiot; standards, that girls arc often mistaken for men. w ill soon achieve proficiency trom front and rear as well.Certain popular items of apparel, such as slacks, Advanced students can usually tell a girl from a manbaggy sweaters and boxy suits, contribute to this un- at five hundred paces, even when both are wearingfortunate^ situation. Therefore, we suggest that new | : asbestos firefighting suits, (You might try offering thestudents of girl watching start with the fundamentals subject a Pall Mall, but you won’t prove anything It’s(see above diagram) As you can see, girls are easiest an extremely popular brand with both sexes), ^ ' - 4 ^ ’44:* 44 :• 44 ■■„ * Pali MaU'sI natural mildnessI . is so ^ood> ;WHY BE AN AMATEUR?JOIN THE AMERICAN SOCIETYOF GIRL WATCHERS NOW I 44 .>. .reEE MEMBERSHIP CARO. Visit the editorial office ofthis publication for a free membership card in the world’sonly society devoted to discreet, but relentless g:rl watch-ft ing. Constitution of the society on reverse side of card.8 | ^ m 44, € ' 4 v 4 ‘d i v >r:£ This ad battO on the book, **1V Otrt Watcher’s Guide” Text;I- '-MCopyright by Dontild. J. Sauers. Drawings: Copyright by El<Io*Dcdiai. Reprinted by permission ol Harper A Brother*. .,," T 1 - ■a*'’ * J-J. ^ s. - Z 4‘ : HARPERLIQUOR STORE1114 - 16 East 55th Street.Full line of imported and domesticwines, liquors arid beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERY :m PHONE • HIK-A m — 1233>A A— 131#. " ^—7699enrcAco maroon ® Oct. 13, ttfei.I Wood lawn problem history citedby Leon M. DespiresEditor’s note: Leon Despres,alderman of the Fifth Ward,here comments on the Commu¬nity of Woodlawn. It is the firstof a series of articles concerningWoodlawn redevelopment.For Maroon readers, one ofmost absorbing developments for1961-1962 is the beginning of im¬provement of the Woodlawn Com¬munity. This is one of the mostchallenging and exciting develop¬ments in all Chicago. It will bedue to the people of Woodlawnthemselves, the help of the cityand federal governments, the in¬terest and support of neighbor¬ing communities, and the acqui-'escence of the University of Chi¬cago administration but most ofall it is coming as a result of theawakening insistence of the peo¬ple of Woodlawn themselves. Aswe in Chicago succeed in makingWoodlawn a markedly betterplace for families to live in. wewill Ik* taking an enormous steptoward solving the overwhelmingproblems of urban living in ourcountry. Woodlawn’s improve¬ment will require vast amountsof courage, drive, cooperation,and wisdom.Why is Woodlawn a problemfor its inhabitants and the wholectiv? Because in 75 years, uncon¬trolled uijaan growth has suc¬ceeded in transforming a lovelysmall country hamlet into an ag¬ing and overcrowded portion ofChicago’s segregated housingarea "At what is now 67thstreet,” the Community FactIfcwdt tells us. “was a small lakeamong the reeds, where wildge-s^j, ducks, mudhens, wildpigeons, and rabbits, as well asfish were plentiful. The trailwhich the Pottawattomie Indianshad followed to the huntingground around the little marshlake became one of the main highways of pioneer travel, and waslater named Cottage Grove av¬enue.”4ii>»t 75 years ago, in 1886.Woodlawn had a total of threegroceries. Between the presentMidway and 63 street were fenced-in woods and meadows other Chicagoans, they seek and vironment, and good education vation” of the Woodlawn areafor pasturing cows. By 1889, theyear of annexation to Chicago,Woodlawn still had less than 2,000inhabitants, one school accommo¬dating 100 pupils, and one church.In 75 years, without city plan¬ning or adequate building or zon¬ing codes, private enterprise suc¬ceeded in converting the seven-eights’s square mile between 60to( 67 streets and Cottage Groveto Stony Island into an over built,overcrowded, urban community,with a disproportionate numberof inadequate and substandarddwelling units, with insufficientopen and play spaces, heavilybuilt up land areas, double shiftsfor all elementary schools, and atleast one concentration of sa¬loons which would astonish evenStephen Crane, and which at¬tracts modern hunters who cometo it at night over the old Pot-tawattomic Cottage Grove avenuetrail.When Chicago decided to havethe World’s Columbian expositionin Jackson Park, Woodlawn tookits first spurt of growth, andquickly went from a small coun¬try town of 2.000 people to anurban area of 20.000 in 1893. Actu¬ally, the spectacular growth andphysical decline of the Woodlawncommunity, in terms of buildingsand land use, occurred in lessthan seventy years. Today thecommunity houses 60.030 resi¬dents, whose needs, aspirations,and achievements are common tothe other middle class and work¬ing people of Chicagoland. Like need an adequate living, decent for their children,shelter, pleasant community en- For many years, the ‘conser- was based on one single policyand course of action — exclusionof Negroes. This policy was asmistaken, impractical, and dam¬aging, as it was immoral. I havein my possession a bulletin of theWoodlawn Property Owners'league, dated September 25. 1944,which told Woodlawn residentsand owners:"Do not be too hasty to sellyour property at a low price.Woodlawn is soundly protectedagainst racial invasion, is thebest organized community inthe city, and has the most ac¬tive property owners associa¬tion in Chicago . . . The Chica¬go Plan commission has selectedWoodlawn as the most prom¬ising of the city’s older neigh¬borhoods, and is now complet¬ing an exhaustive study andplan for the redevelopment ofWoodlawn. actual work onprojects of which will be begunimmediately upon the conclu¬sion of the war.”The league bulletin scored fiverumors, which it characterized as“false” and “absurd," namely,that Negroes would lie permittedu> use and oi»erate the Trianonballroom, the Tivoli theater, the'(continued on page 10)foreign car salessee page 4ffleeoicxSandwich MenuPolish Ham, imported. .$.65with Swiss Cheese. .$.85Genoa Salami $.65with Provolone . . . .$.85Provolone Cheese .... $.55Swiss Cheese $.55Braunschweiger $.65Bresling Sardine $.50Sliced Egg andAnchovie $.50SPECIAL SOUPS.35N i •ASSORTED CHEESES.40 - .50All served uhth richblack bread. and butter•Serving Saturdayand Sunday afternoonsand Every Eveningincluding Sunday•I RI^CH BREAKFASTandLOX & BAG EEServed Sundays from10:00 a.m.at theGREEN DOORBOOK SHOP1450 1 57th St. >Special PaperbacksV. y. Times Sunday - Daily urnvnoi■monthfor fhe entire school yearSheaffer,s',/^|uT1^HlM/contest2 FIRST PRIZES OF MOO A MONTH\ Winners (one man andone woman student) willreceive a check for $400on Dec. 15th and $100 amonth beginning in Jan¬uary and ending in May.25 SECOND PRIZESof a new Philco *transistor radioIT’S EASY TO ENTER—EASY TO WIN! HERE’S ALL YOU DOJust tell us in 25 words or less, what you like most about Sheaffer'sall new $2.95 Cartridge Fountain Pen. Write your entry in ink onany sheet of paper, enclose it with the top from a package of Skripcartridges, and maii it to: Sheafter "Pen Money” Contest, P.O.Bqk 4399, Chicago 77, Illinois. Entries accompanied with yourname, address, school name and class must bo received byNovember 7, 1961.Entries will be judged on the basis of their believabdity andfreshness of thought. Judges’ decisions are final and all entriesbecome the property of the W. A. Sheafter Pen Company. Nonewill be returned. In case of ties, duplicate prizes will be awarded.Every college student in the United States may enter, exceptemployees of W. A. Sheafter Pen Company, its subsidiaries, itsadvertising agencies... the independent company judging entries...and members of their immediate families. Contest subject tofederal, state and local regulations.Winners will be notified by majl approximately four weeks altercontest closes. List of winners available after close of contest ifrequest is accompanied by stamped, self-addressed envelope. Here are some of the things to keep inmind when you’re writing aboutSheaffer's all-new cartridgefountain pent• For smooth, easy writing, there’s no sub»stitute for a SheafFer fountain pen.• Loads like a rifle with leakproof cartridge*of world famous Skrip writing fluid.• Fills quick, clean, easy...just drop aSkrip cartridge into barrel,• Fits easily into a shirt poOket.. .comes ina choice of five smart colors,SPECIAL!LIMITED TIME ONLYPen and 98c worthof Cartridges FREE$3.93 Total Value for$ 095W. A. SHCAffCA COMPANY, fO*f MAO»»9*, H>WAfHCAFf£* P6N» * HAtCO M*A*<*W| AiO*Oct 13, 1961 CHICAGO MAROONReview contempt decisionThe United States Supremecourt agreed Monday to re¬view the case of a Universityof Illinois student who lost aNational Science foundation grantbecause of a contempt of Con¬gress decision.The student, Edward L. Yellin,is currently appealing his 1958conviction for contempt of Con¬gress. The one year sentence washanded down after he refused House committee on un-Americanactivities. He is currently out onbond.The fellowship grant was re¬voked when an influential Con¬gressman held that persons sus¬pected of “Communist or subver¬sive activities” should not be eligi¬ble for governmental aid in anyform.Yellin was not proven to be aCommunist. He has maintained convicted, and thus lost the grant,only because he refused to an¬swer the committee’s questions.The Supreme court will heararguments on the case later inthe current term. The contemptof Congress decision was origi¬nally handed down by federal dis¬trict court, and later upheld bythe seventh circuit court of ap¬peals. He is a sheReveal mistaken identityThe “E. Fromm” listed in the addition to the time sched¬ule is indeed an ego-psychologist and does teach in the psy¬chology building.But students who plan to register for this course nextquarter are advised that E.Fromm is not the noted ErichFromm, author of Psychoanalysisand Religion, The Art of Love,and The Forgotten language.The teacher of that ego-psy¬chology course is Erika Fromm(with an “a”) and he is a she. Time schedule errsContrary to the Time Sched¬ule, Slavic 201, section 51,meets MWF at 12:30 pm inClassics 11, and Slavic 204meets MWF at 11:30 am inClassics 11.n Tareytonj deliversthe flavorDVAL FILTER DOES IT!to answer questions before the in court proceedings that he wasACASA Book StoreGood Used BooksImported Cards, Gifts and Children's BooksRELIABLE TYPEWRITER SERVICE1322 E. 551 b HY 3-9651 Alderman examines areaGOLD CITY INN_ l ^Specializing in Cantonese FoodOrders to Take Out10% Discount to Students With This Ad5228 Harper HY 3-2559 (continued from page 9)Hayes hotel, the Southmoor hotel,and Wood lawn temple!The Woodlawn redevelopmentplan to which the bulletin re¬ferred was the subject of a WorksProgress administration planningproject initiated / December 11,1939, under the sponsorship ofthe city of Chicago. Based on theunspoken premise of racial ex¬clusion, the plan never got offthe ground. It is available in at¬tractive bound foi*m in good plan¬ning libraries. It made proposalsforeign car hospitalsee page for street design, off-street park¬ing, mass transit adjustments,community action, new school andplay space, new zoning, and agovernment sub-center. Exceptfor a cul-de-sac at 62 street andIngleside, which Alderman Rob¬ert Merriam succeeded in induc¬ing the city to build in 1950, theplan was never put into effect.The cul-de-sac provides safe cross¬ing and play area for the Friskeelementary school children andgives a hint of what new streetarrangements could do; but,standing alone, it is a forlornisland which sometimes givestraffic patterns more confusionthan simplification.The story of Woodlawn can beread in part in the census fig¬ures of the last thirty years. In1930, Woodlawn had 47,003 peo¬ple, of whom 275 yere non-white.*'Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!''says veteran coach Romulus (Uncle) Remus. “We have asaying over at the Coliseum—Tareyton separates the gladia¬tors from the gladioli*. It’s a Teal magnus smoke. Take itfrom me, Tareyton delivers de gustibus - and the Dual Filterdoes it!*’DUAL FILTERthAnl V i.'/rruuean Jv&iwo&nyMitty— « our middlt 941fcf* C4 CM In 1960, with almost no inter¬vening residential construction ofany kind, Woodlawn’s populationgrew to 60,030, of whom 51,719are non-white. Of the total popu¬lation, the number of personsunder 20 years of age was 8,933in 1930, and 19.959 in 1960. Thereis the story: no-new residentialbuilding, a 28% increase in totalpopulation, and a 123% increasein persons under 20, with theensuing overcrow'ding, dilapida¬tion, over-use of structures, antidouble shifts in schools.The great problem in Wood¬lawn now is to improve the Wood¬lawn community for its residents.The aim should be to make it aviable, pleasant, balanced part ofthe city for family units to live in.Because of the complicated so¬cial and moral factors, a numberof Woodlawn fallacies have longfloated through our communities.In my second article, I would liketo take them up, try to -showwhere they came from, andanswer them.You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORACE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711One of Hyde Park's FinestARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRSPECIALIZING IN:Heels ChangedHeels RepairedToes Cut OutVamps LoweredOrthopedic WorkZipper RepairsProfessional Dyeingand Refinishing ofShtues and HandbagsColors MatchedFAirfax 4-96221749 L 55th St.ADDRESSCITY HERE! THE ORIGINAL I' WHEAT |JEANS ISanforized denim inWheat or Black; 29-32'waist, 30-32-34 length.$4.50*Meote RUSHBloch WhenWais length. STATE-tO • ■ CHICA6P M^ROpK j • ‘ Oct. J3, l?€l 0 I•Price indudta delivery and Safes Tax. IJn-sfore price, $3.98 pfvs Tax. |J Kingston Shop jj 1612 Chicago Ate. Evanston, III. I* ZBT president criticizes column(continued from page 7)of the building.” Relative to thehave initiated every kind of re¬form. a number of fledgling sopho- traits are the natural productsmores pushed into positions of of a well-run fraternity house,responsibility. Their experiences j mus^ admit, however, that forare the keystone of fraternity liv- some members the period from.... justification of a fra- SOphomore to senior must beA fraternity is not "a group of termty system. A fraternity is an ]onger than three years Your at-people who all in all enjoy living, ideal place to learn the disciplines titude and DerceDtion indicates aeating, drinking, and talking with necessary for industrious exist- sophomore status _ but don’tone another,” but a group who ence. Under these conditions, Mr. „ivp lin for thprp it. hnnphave been chosen to assume the Johnston, we are in no position g up is aiwa>s nope,responsibilities of their own liv- to operate without justice, equity, Howard Rosenfield, PresidentZeta Beta Tau Fraternitying, eating, drinking, and man¬agement. In three years of mem¬bership I have often tried to jus¬tify the necessity of a fraternitysystem. The answer is not foundin surface observation, but ap¬pears in the close observance ofthose who grow through a fra¬ternity system. In equal import¬ance with the book work we do friendship duty,-and trust. TheseSociologist to speakFaculty exchange answers Maroon Daniel Bell, professor of sociology at Columbia universitywill lecture and speak with UC students and faculty nextweek.. ....... He will give a lecture entitled “The eclipse of distance, aeach evening is the daily assump- theory about modernity and mass — ; ;tion of responsibilities which en- cuiture” at 8 pm Thursday in the social science staff. The seminarable us to leave a protected Uni- jda Noyes lounge will be concerned with curricu-versity community and become ,. . . * .. , . lum revision and will not be openleaders and initiators in our re- „ ^mediately after the lecture, to the publicspective communities. This is the Tnee.t with some 75 stu- ge]j as a College social sciencefunction of residency, and in this T informal coffee and jnstructor jn the mid - forties,respect a fraternity is an ideal ^scussion hour. Students wis ing beiped t0 create the old generalresidence hall. The twenty-four Jo talk with him must sign up at eduHcation social science sequenceresidents (sic) of my house have ^ates-Blake 127. Soc j n and m In 1948 Bellfound themselves in the position On Wednesday he will partici- left UC to become labor editorof running a five figure estab- pate in a seminar with the College for Fortune magazine,lishment. It is not an easy job,and it certainly requires the abili- Q^*x^*v^%x^*v,,>^^*****^v*v****v*********v<'ty to assume responsibility. As 2my class progressed, I watched(continued from page 7)supposed statement from an“offi¬nal” at the exchange regardingRed China, it has been repeatedlystated that the reluctance to ad- 5"'ar ‘he M»row* .had amit Red China to the United Na- over herc ,or qulte a long ,Hnegathering data on the operationsemployees, and students as fast members and students is an ob-as possible. All three categories jective that deserves the full co-could assist to this end by com- °Peratioa of a11 wha «>uld in anyplying with simple rules. Last Wa^ as‘Iist‘Roy B. NordheimerManager central facultyexchangelions was based on moral grounds,Surely your reporter did not in¬tend to convey the impressionthat insofar as faculty exchangewas concerned the occupants ofPierce tower and the Chinesewere in the same category. Black-stone hall, University hotel, andHarper Surf hotel all house stu¬dents but have not so far been PIZZASFor The Price OfNICKY’S1235 E. 55th HO 7-9063, MU 4-4780and limitations of faculty ex¬change and we stressed the factthat students, especially newones, would be greatly assistedby such an article. Nothing ap¬peared in your paper and whenwe inquired as to why, we weretold they couldn’t rememberwhom the assignment was givento. Faculty exchange does notapproved as stops on the campus seek publicity, but when the stu-schedule.In conclusion, I would like tomake this point. Every effort,within the budget limitations, ismade by faculty exchange toroute mail to faculty members, dent body is deprived of valuableinformation which can be trans¬mitted to them through theMaroon only, we think it is aworthy objective. The quick de¬livery of mail to new faculty HAVE A BALL. Every semesterhas its bright spots—and you canenjoy them even more witha refreshing glass of Bud®.Where there’s life... there’sBudweisenCORRECTION!THERE REALLY IS A COIN-OPERATEDDry CleanersIN HYDE PARK NOW!!!IT'S AT1611 EAST 53rd STREETIn less than one hour, for only $1.50you can professionally clean10 ladies' dresses, or4 men's suits, or20 children's dressesDraperies Uniforms — etc.DO IT YOURSELF AND SAVE AT LEAST75% ON YOUR .CLEANING BILLS!!!!!... ... > ■ '.*••• .!Akron, Inc. IMS OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS AN6ELES • TAMPA0ct.*13, 196l>’ • CHICAGO MAROON- • 11 IirRMH notes place of education in societyjr By Jay Greenberg‘ and Ken PierceRobert Maynard Hutchinsis a heretic.In over twenty years aschief officer of the Universityof Chicago ho shocked a com¬placent society with continuedattacks on many of its educational' folkways and mores.Hutchins believed that univer¬sities did not need nearly as muchmoney as they thought they need¬ed. Dining the depression of the1930‘s he succeeded in cuttingUC’s budget by 25 per cent with¬out touching faculty salaries. 'He felt that the standard Ameri¬can program of eight years ofelementary school, four of highschool and four of college, wasunnecessary. The student shouldbe ready for higher general edu¬cation by the time he was 16 yearsold, Hutchins said. He was aleading exponent of UC’s now¬dying early entrant program, andfound it a success.Hutchins despised, and contin¬ues to despise, a society which isintolerant of its critics. He saw itas the university's function toeffectively comment on society,to point out all of society’s faults.For these views, society attack¬ed Robert Hutchins. Investigatedby the House committee on un-American activities, he was brand¬ed a Communist by those who dis¬agreed with him.When two University of Chicagostudents visited Hutchins at theCenter for the Study of Demo¬cratic Institutions in Santa Bar¬bara. California, he was still aheretic. He remains unwilling tocompromise his beliefs merely be¬cause they conflict with the pre¬vailing ideas of the day.Indeed, Hutchins feels that inmany ways he did not go farenough in his fight to reform edu¬cation. With more time and, per¬haps with less opposition fromforces within UC, more stepswould certainly have been takentoward making the University atrue community of scholars.The following is the third ina series reporting an interviewwith Robert Hutchins.Q. It would seem that a largepart of the failing of the univer¬sity in your o/rinion is due to thefailing in the elementary schooland the high school.A. That’s right. .Q. What do you think the troubleis theref What are they doingthat’s wrong* ' 'A. It’s partly the same [as in theuniversities]. It’s partly the notionthat the educational system is••*e means of learning how to earna living, partly the notion thatit’s just a place where youngpeople, children, are accommo¬dated and out of their parents’ .hair.In special situations resultingfrom public pressure such as thepressure toward automatic pro¬motion, in a state like Illinois,where the high schools guaranteethat they’re accredited, that theirgraduates will go to fhe Universityof Illinois, • the high schools inIllinois put off op the Universitythe work that they ought to havedone. I would say that up tovery recently at least about halfthe work that’s done at theUniversity of Illinois in the fresh¬man and sophomore years is workthat should have been done inhigh school. They have a generalaimlessness, a general laxity pro¬duced by real absence of, anysense of purpose about the out¬come. What are they trying todo? I guess nobody wants to findout.Q. Then the chairman of theboard of education of the Illinoisschools has to take the kids untiltheir 16th birthdays or whateverthe local law is. Not ail of themwant to be here in fact, many ofthem don’t want to be here —andthey certainly don’t want to learnanything, but they have to \behere. How am I going to sulntti-tute for wluit I’ve got in %nore rigorous discipline, when theywon’t even jmy attention or dowhat I want them1 to do rightnon’?A. It’s very hard to do. and it maybe that the Danish procedure inwhich the school-leaving age wasreduced to 14, with required con¬tinuation of courses in the after¬noon and adult education avail¬able at the age of 18 is thealternative. I have never believedthat the elevation of the school¬leaving age was the automaticsolution to all educational prob¬lems. Everybody has always as¬sumed that the country was bet¬ter off if the compulsory school¬leaving age was raised. I don’tsee why.Q. And there ar • many who wouldhave stayed on anyivay.A. Many would stay on anyway;in present conditions, probablymost would stay on anyway. Thosewho didn’t want to be there leftand went to continuation schoolin the afternoon, while working.They might eventually find thatthere was some education thatthey wanted.Robert and Maude Hutch¬ins in their early days at UC.Q. Perhaps the problem would notgo away even then—because, ofthe many who remained, thereare those capable of doing thework that they should now bedoing in high school, but quitea few aren't, and are not reallycapable of doing the later workin college, either. These’ are stillpublh* schools. Is this pointing atsome sort of separation of publicschool facilitiesfA. Well, the principal differencebetween students is the differencebetween the fast and the slow.You do what we used to do atChicago and, say, present your¬self at the examinations at anytime when you’re ready to doso, and go on. Then this particu¬lar difficulty would be very large¬ly solved.<?. The early entrant programat Chicago has now become amere nothing. Was it in youropinion an unqualified success?A. It’s been an unqualified successwherever it’s been tried, as faras I know. The Ford foundationtried it in 21 colleges, or some¬thing of the sort. It’s been triedover the years.The difliculty to contend withis the general notion that collegeis a social activity and not anintellectual activity, and thereforesocial maturity is very important.The further difficulty to con¬tend with is that in the localcommunities people think it is un¬wise to send their children awayto school at tender age, andthere’s a good deal to be said aboutChicago and the city of Chicagoin that connection.Q. On the question of the pressureof the public what can be donefA. Well, you have to stand upto it and keep working at it, oryou have no confidence that youwill get away with it. . . . Afterall, there was emotion on theboard of trustees of the UC wellalong in the Walgreen case tocensure the members of the faculty who were involved, and theUC had—has a very enlightenedboard.You get on the train everymorning at 8 am at Lake Forestand you ride in. Your neighborsand brokers say, “What kind ofuniversity are you a trustee of?You haven’t any football team,your students are all Jews, they’reall joining Red organizations andmaking it terrible. . . What doyou think this is?" This is hardto take day after day.Q. All these problems stem fromthe system or at least from thepopulace at large. And herewould you say that there i$ amore fai'orable light throvm onprii'ate universities rather thanpublic*A. Well, I don’t know . . . WhenHarvard goes out for 3*82 millionit doesn’t seem to be any differ¬ent from when any universitypresident is approaching thelegislature. The tremendous sumsthat these institutions now feelit necessary to have, they mustbe prepared to make enormoussacrifices to get them. The roleof government and business inconnection with the universititiesseems to me to be one that isextremely dangerous.You cannot come to rely onthese sources without running therisk of selling out. Now you maybe able to avoid it. I don’t saythat it’s* inevitable. But the riskseems to be very great. Thesuperiority of the private uni¬versity from this point of viewhas been in the multiplicity ofits donors. That is, there was no¬body like these legislatures whocould say “We’re going to cutyou off.”When the University of Chicagowas in that position with Mr.Rockefeller, he was very busywith the oil business and he didn’treally care very much anyway.He believed in the autonomy ofthe universities, as far as I cansee. And as time went on, theUniversity got more and moredonors, more and more multifa¬rious support, and there was no¬body who could tell the Universitywhat it had to do.But when you get these govern¬ment contracts, and when you getsupport in a very large' amountfrom very large business corpor¬ation. these advantages are mini¬mized and you become more andmore like your state universities.After all, in both cases the insti¬tution has to convey its message,and there is no greater difficultyabout conveying a message to alegislature than there is in con¬veying one to the president ofUS Steel.Q. What about a university with¬out money fA. Well, I went through the de¬pression at Chicago, and the wayin which absolutely indispensableexpenditures can disappear isamazing. I accidentally just hitit right completely unintentionalon niv part. It was not shrewdnessat all. I said that we would main¬tain faculty salaries to the last, but that this would mean thatwe’d have to cut everything else.The way that everything wascut would just surprise you. Mem¬bers of the faculty would find thatthey didn’t need lights, telephones,typewriters. They didn’t need any¬thing and we cut our expendi¬tures 25 per cent and maintainedfaculty salaries through the de¬pression. I am convinced that it’ssimply inevitable that there is alot of water in the financial oper¬ation of the university.You must, in the nature of thecase, put people on permanenttenure; in the nature of the casesome of them will not work out.You institute courses because menwho are members of your depart¬ment are specialists in this field.Any examination, any free ex¬amination of the budget of anybig university will, in my opinion,reveal very large sums thatought not to be spent.The trouble is unless you havethe pressure of something likea depression to force it on every¬body and everybody admits thatthe situation is serious — whichthey did during the depression —you haven’t got the bureaucraticmeans at your disposal. You’vegot to keep on getting moremoney and building around yourmistakes.Q. Were there any other thingsin retrospect that you would havedone differently at Chicagof Notsmall things but things indictiveof a more general change ofopinion or attitude in your part inlooking back at what ukis doneat Chicago?A. I think I was too timid on thewhole. I think I was too muchimpressed by such casual advanti-tious circumstances as theChicago Tribune. I think, though,that the position is impossible.I’ve always thought that, but thereason it’s impossible is that it’sim{>ossible to keep your mind onyour work. There are too manyinterruptions and diversions toomany different kinds of thingsthat you’re supj>osed to be doingat all times, I think, in general,what policies have revolved in myday were pretty good. I don’t be¬lieve they went far enough.Q. How would you have gone fur¬ther?A. I think that federalizationwould have been a good thing todo. I think that we should haveeliminated schools, courses, anddepartments that we did not eli¬minate. The process was a processof discussion. The president ofUC has no real power; he has ,theprivilege of attempting the boardand the faculty, and I think thetime that that takes increases withthe individual's stay on thegrounds.You can’t keep trying to per¬suade the same people to be infavor of something they don’t like.They become bored. The question,of course, is what the Universityof Chicago was for. There aretwo views of that.One is that the University wasa fine upstanding private univer¬sity, located ini the city of ChicagoRobert Hutchins and Lawrence Kimpton at Kimpton'sinauguration in 1951. for the purpose of furthering sci¬entific research and educating theyoung people of the Middle West.The other view is that the solepurpose of the existence of UC isto exercise educational leadershipon a world scale.Those are quite different views.They affect your view of the localcommunity, whereas your atti¬tude toward Chicago is that you'rethere to serve the city. You takean attitude toward the people init and the government of it, and thenewspapers in it that is quite dif¬ferent from the view that youwould take if you say that ourobject is to provide natinal educa¬tional leadership on a world scale.The view that we tried to takewas the latter. This is hard tomaintain.Q. Well, was there any differentsort of problem you think wasassociated rrith the AB aioardedat Chicago after it was decided toaward it after two years of col¬lege work?A. I think the AB made a greatdeal of sense at that period andhad the incidental advantage ofmaking sense out of the MS. Ispoke about the trustee who comesin on the train every morning.Professors are the same. They goaround to professional meetingsand somebody says, “What is thisterrible AB that you have?"Or we used to hav» a systemwhereby we turned over our out¬side income to the Univeristy.Well, a professor at another uni¬versity who is making $500,000 ayear at MIT will say to a profes¬sor at UC who's getting all hismoney in salary, “What is thisterrible system that you have?”Well, people don’t like to beasked that kind of question. Thereis an answer and they can makeit, but it takes a long time anda lot of effort, and it makes themfeel odd.'This is a culture in whichthe first rule is that you mustn'tfeel odd. So the BA at UC at theend of four years beginning at theend of the sophomore year of highschool was the only one of itskind. This is very hard to main¬tain, esjiecially when studentswant to go from one institutionto another.Q. Do you think it importantthat the people whom you haveteaching courses be great schol¬arstA. I don’t think that it’s import¬ant that they be great scholars,but I think that it’s importantthat they be great teachers, asfar as that can be done.Q. What is a “great teacher’’*A. Well, a great teachei\is a manwho understands his subject andcan communicate his understand¬ing and inspiration to the young.Q. How do you measure him*A. Well, it’s not too difficult; it’snot more difficult than it is tomeasure anything in academic life.In non-academic life you measureyour success in terms of quantity,figures, but in academic life, out¬side the sciences where the Nobelprize or the National academyprovide some kind of standard,you have to say this is good, thisis better, this is the best, thisis poor; and you must do it onthe of whether you think, aman Understands what he is try¬ing to teach and whether he ap¬peal’s to be able to communicateit to the students.Q. In judging d university or col¬lege, many people these days seemto rate it by the size of thelibrary, student-faculty ratio, thesoftness of the chairs in the dormi¬tory room. How dd you look at acollege—what criteria do you usefA. I would try to — hope that —you could look at its course ofstudy and say this rhakes sense.You could lpok at the faculty andsay these people know whatthey’re trying to do. If you cando that it doesn’t make any dif¬ference what kind of building ithas, what kind of library it has,or anything else. :jA.'t12 • CHICAGO MAROON Oct. 13, 1961SPU plans demonstration Maroon to hear BeadleStudent peace union (SPU)will stage a demonstration inthe loop tomorrow as a pro¬test against United States andSoviet resumption of nuclear test¬ing.Dave Kelly, chairman of theChicago council of SPU, explainedthat “Since this act (resumptionof testing).directly threatensworld peace by intensifying thearms race and increasing the al¬ready high state of tension inworld affairs, the SPU believes itappropriate at this time to ex¬press its dissatisfaction with theSoviet ynion for initiating test re¬sumptions and with the UnitedStates for following suit and nottrying to achieve a constructivesolution.”The protest walk will form atMadison and Michigan at 2:30 pm.According to SPU national of¬ficers, the group will be veryactive both locally and nationallyduring the coming academic year.November 11 (Armistice D ay)has been declared “Students speakfor peace day.” Students in col¬leges across the country willmarch, fast, picket, distribute leaf¬lets, and otherwise demonstratefor world peace.Mike Parker, a UC student whowas national secretary of SPUlast year, will present a programon campus October 19. Parkerwill show four films produced bythe US government which, accord¬ing to an SPU spokesman, arepieces of propaganda designed tojustify government action suchas the removal of Japanese-Amer¬ican citizens to “relocation camps”dialing World war II.Later in the quarter, SPU andthe Quaker student fellowshipwill sponsor a lecture by CaptainAlbert Bigelow (USN, ret’d), whohas been a freedom rider and wasMedusa was once heard to rave:"A new hair-do is just what I crave,With my Swingline I’ll tackAll these snakes front to back,And invent the first permanent wave!"no bigger thana pack of gum!Unconditionally Guaranteed• Made in America!• Tot 50 refills always available!• Buy It at your stationery,variety or bookstore dealer!INC.Sufinf&nelLong Island City 1, New YorkWORLD’S LAROEET MANUFACTUREROF STAPLERS FOR HOME AND OFFICE on board the ketch "Golden Rule”when it sailed into the atomicproving grounds in the Pacific.Bigelow’s talk will be entitled"The nature, scope, and practica¬bility of non-violence.”SPU has moved from its oldheadquarters near 55th street to a new office at 6029 University.Phil Altbach, fourth year studentin the College and national co-chairman of SPU, says that thegroup is very anxious to havestudents “come over and lookaround.”Crewe named(continued from page one)smasher, where space was limitedand it was impractical to placedetecting and recording equip¬ment. This severely limited therange of possible experiments.”Crewe’s invention was a schemeto deflect the ‘bullet’ protons fromtheir 150 thousand miles per sec¬ond paths Inside the atomMaroon staffmeetingThere will be a Maroonstaff meeting at 4 pm ilnIda Noyes hall today.All new and old staffmembers are invited to at¬tend. smasher into an external targetarea without disturbing the veloc¬ity or focus of the beam of theparticles.Crewe, a father of two, livesnear Palos park, Illinois. He isa member of the American Physi¬cal Society. Crewe has served asa consultant on accelerator proj¬ects at the Gustaf Werner insti¬tute in Upsala, Sweden, and withthe Commission Nacioale de laEnergia Atomica in Buenos Aires,Argentina.He is the author of many arti¬cles, most concerned with prob¬lems of particle acceleration.foreign car sales Greoge Beadle, presidentof the University, will addressthe Maroon’s second trainingseminar on Monday afternoon.He will discuss the organiza¬tion of the University and hisideas about education. In addi¬tion, students will have the oppor¬tunity to question him.The seminar, lor prospectiveand present Maroon staff mem¬bers, will be held in the eastlounge of Ida Noyes hall at 3:30.Representatives of the Chicagodaily press will speak at the fol¬lowing two sessions.On October 23, Maurice Fisher,city editor of the Chicago DailyNews, will discuss techniques ofnewswriting. The following Mon¬day, Bill Braden, feature writerfor the Chicago Sun-Times, willconclude the seminars with a dis¬cussion of feature wiiting.At the first seminar Monday afternoon, prospective staff mem¬bers did their first reporting,covering the “murder” ©f KenPierce, editor emeritus of theMaroon.Masked in a paper bag, PerryConstas, director of student activ¬ities, interrupted Pierce’s discus¬sion of the operation of theMaroon, shouting “You lousy, nogood Communist,” and "s h o t”Pierce with a cap pistol. (The in¬cident was staged by Maroonmembers to give prospective staffmembers training in observationand accurate reporting of news.)Although pleased with the turn¬out of some 50 Maroon trainees,Jay Greenberg, editor in chief,stressed that interested studentsare still welcome to join the staff.“As the Maroon will shortlybegin daily publication, we areanxious to train as large and asefficient a staff as possible.”see po^e 4 THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree I/.C. DeliveryT erry9sMl 3-4045Small .. .$1.00Medium ........ .. .$1.45Large . , , , ...Extra Large ..... .. .$2.95Grant* . .1518 E. 63rdWS® ®p®K£&SkiIn days of yore, men feared not only theirmortal enemies, but the elements too. It wasthe medteval armorer’s task to protect hischief against foemen, but weather-protectionwas a more difficult matter. Thus many aknight was spent in rusty armor, iEngineers and scientists at Ford MotorCompany, engaged in both pure and appliedresearch, are coping even today with theproblem of body protection (car bodies, thatIs). Through greater understanding of theChemistry of surfaces, they have developednew paint primers and undercoatings, newrustproofing methods, and special sealersthat guard entire car bodies against nature’scorrosive forces—all of which add armor-likeprotection to Ford-built cars,From other scientific inquiries will undoubt¬edly come new materials with protectiveproperties vastly superior to those of today.This is another example of Ford's leadershipthrough scientific research and engineering*MOTOR COMPANYThe'American Roach Dearborn, MichloaflProducts for thc American road • the farm*INDUSTRY • AND THE ACE OF SPACEComing events on quadranglesFriday, 13 OctoberLutheran services, 11:30 am. Bond chap¬el.Lecture. S.K on “Sanskrit poetics inthe light of Western aesthetics,” 4pm, Breasted hall.Lecture, Cardiovascular lecture. 5 pm.Billings P 117.Koinonia, 6 pm. Chapel house. Lutheranstudents.Discussion. William Lehman on “Crisisin our times,” 7:15 pm, Chapel house.Documentary film, “Animal Farm,” 7:15and 9:15 pm, Judd 126.Sabbath evening services, 7:45 pm Hil-lel house.Film, “Vampyr” 8 and 10 pnv Burton-Judson dining hall, 50c.Fireside, Frank H. Knight and BarnettBlakemore. “Educating for excellence:is religion necessary? ' 8:30 pm, Hil-lel house.Dance recital. Asian Arts series, Indraniand company of six, 8:30 pm. Mandelhall.Saturday, 14 OctoberRadio series. “World of the Paperback,”10:45 am. 780 kc.Varsity cross country meet, 11 am,Washington Park. Chicago vs. Wabashcollege.Recorder society, 1 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Open to all who are interested.Varsity soccer game, 2 pm, Stagg fieldChicago vs. University of Illinois.WUCB station meeting, 2:30 pm. Mitch¬ell tower, second floor. Prospectivemembers welcome.Documentary films, “Olympia Part. 2.Festival of Beauty,” 7 and 9:15 pm,Judd hall 127. 75cPolit film, “Me and the Colonel,” 7:15and '9:30 pm, Ida Noyes theater.ANNOUNCEMENTPleose Visit Our New LocationVERSAILLES BARBER SHOP(Formerly Woodlawn Barber Shop'Same Management, "Mack" KozinI 376 E. 53rd StreetChicago 15, Illinois Saturday nite tea, 8 pm. Internationalhouse home room.Film, “Certificate of Maturity.” 8 pm.2952 W. North avenue. Russian Artsclub. Also Sunday at 3.Sunday, 15 OctoberRadio series, “Faith of Our Fathers.”720 kc, 8:30 am.Roman Catholic mass, 8:30, 10, 11. and12 am. Calvert house.Episcopal Communion service, 9:30 am.Bond chapel.Lutheran Communion service, 10 am,Graham Taylor chapel.University religious service, 11 am.Rockefeller chapel.Record concert. 2 pm. Alpha Delta Phifarternity house. No admissioncharges.Interclub Rush Tea, 3 pm, Ida Noyeslibrary.Brent house supper-discussions. “Christand the cultural revolution.” 5:30 pm,Brent house.Channing-Murray discussion group,“Should .universities be concernedabout technological unemployment?”7 pm. Fenn house. Everyone welcome-Bridge club. 7:15 pm. Ida Noyes lounge.Duplicate bridge ACBL fractionalmaster points awarded. Inexperiencedplayers welcome with or without apartner.Folk dancing. 8 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Folklore society.Radio series. “Sacred Note,” 10:45 pm,780 kc.Monday, 16 OctoberElementary Yiddish class, 3:30 pm. Hll-Iel foundation.Lecture, “Poetics in the Renaissance.”3:30 pm. Rosenwald 2. Mr. BernardWeinberg, Hum 201.English class, 6:30 pm. Internationalhouse. Also Wednesday at 6:30 pm,Saturday at 10 am...Workshop, “Problems of Jewish iden¬tity in modern times,” 7 pm, Hlllelfoundation.Films on “History of South Asia,” 7pm, Rosenwald 2. Free.Lecture, “From Gandhi to Vinoba” 8:30pm, Rosenwald 2. Sponsored by In¬dian Civ course.Film, “Gigi,” 8 pm, International house,Cost 50c. ,Jimmy’sand the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave. Tuesday, 17 OctoberLutheran service, 11:30 am, Bond chap¬el.Lecture, “Gogol and romantic realism.”4 pm. Wiebolt commons. Admissionfree.Lecture. “The problem of poetic expres¬sion,” 4 pm, Breasted hall. S.K.De,University of Calcutta.Lecture, “Monarch and nobility inEthiopia,” 7:30 pm. Social science 302.Donald Levine.Lecture. “Nature and scope of non¬violence,” 7:30 pm, Quaker house.Albert Bigelow co-sponsored by SPUand Quaker student fellowship.Lecture, “Politics in the nuclear age,”8 pm, Reynolds club south lounge.Hans Morgenthau.Folk dancing, 8 pm, Internationalhouse.Record concert, 8 pm, Internationalhouse.My Life and Yours. 8 pm, Ida Noyeslibrary. Mark Bonham-Carter. Admis¬sion by ticket only.Wednesday, 18 OctoberBasic Judaism class, 4:30, Hlllel founda¬tion.Lecture-discussion. “The biblical poet’sview of man,” 7 pm, Hillel founda¬tion. Admission free.Folk dancing, 8 pm. Ida Noyes halt. Lutheran vespers. 5:06. Bond chapelYoung Americans for freedom. 7:30 pm,Ida Noyes sun roomRecord concert. 8 pm. Internationalhouse.Concert. Orchestra of 3an Pietro ofNaples. 8:30 pm. Mandel hall. Admis¬sion $2.Friday, 29 OctoberLutheran services, 11:30 Bond chapel. Documentary films, “Bed and Sofa."7:15 St 9:15, Judd 126. Admissiou 60c.Wing-ding and folk dance, 7:30, IdaNoyes theater. Folk lore society. Mem¬bers free, non-members 25c.Film, “Battle for Siberia,” $ pm. Rus¬sian Arts club, 2952 W. North avenue.Film, “Distant Journey.” $ and 10 pm.Burton-Judson courts.Foreign service examThe next written foreign service officer examination will begiven on December 9.The one-day examination will test English expression, generalability, and general background knowledge. Successful candidateson this examination will be subject to further examination.Candidates found qualified in all respects will be placed on aregister from which appointments to the foreign service will bemade in the order of examination scores.Applications are due on October 23. Application blanks and fur¬ther information may be obtained from the Board of Examinersfor the Foreign Service, Department of State, Washington 25.District of Columbia.Classified AdvertisementsFor RentExcellent APARTMENT for STUDENTor FACULTY. Available by November Ior before on lease basis. English base¬ment. Ideal location (near Del PradoHotel). Convenient for IC or bus trans¬portation. Consists of 4 rooms (Includ¬ing washroom with shower, and onehuge room with PULLMAN KITCHEN).Present tenant must sell furniture andair-conditioners for reasonable sum.Landlord will fully decorate. Rentalonly $67.50 per month. See occupant(in afternoon or evening) at 5326 HYDEPARK BLVD. — bsmt. at foot of stairs.Chatham Park Village Apartments(1 and 2 bedrooms—3 to 5 rooms)$103 to $142Applications now being processed forwell-qualified prospective tenants. Con¬venient to U. of Chgo. and Skyway.Ideal for graduate students. Mod. allElectric kitchens. 24 hr. heat, 63 FIRE¬PROOFED BLDGS., PRIVATELY PO¬LICED. Ample street parking or garages,close to shopping and transportation:park-like, with suburban atmosphere.Model apartment.737 E. 83rd PL. TRiangle 4-7400Have 6 room furnished, redecoratedapartment at low rental to share with1, 2, or 3 men.Call: Ext. 5572 or RE 1-6572Crieger Manor1 y2 to 3 room furnished apts.. nicelyappointed. Elevator building. $8O-$120per mo., utilities included. Quick ac¬cess to University via public transpor¬tation. Mgr. on premises. Call PL 2-9327. Your HOME AWAY FROM HOME6040 Ingleside A\ enueA well maintained bldg, catering toUniversity students. One and two roomfurnished units from $38.50 {nonthly.Clean and comfortable. See residentmanager Mrs. Leo Tapia, or call: BU 8-2757.Furnished ApartmentsShoreline Apartments, 5135 Kenwood.Offers 1 to 3l_. efficiency units attrac¬tively appointed, month to month occu¬pancy $80 and up. Elevator, fireproofbldg. Manager on premises.House For Rent With Option To Buy7 rooms. 2 baths, tri-level, furnishedrecreation room, garage and side drive.$190 month. Call: ES 5-1804.ExchangeRoom and board offered In exchangefor babysitting 3 days per week andwashing dinner dishes. Call: Mikva,BU 8-7522.Room with private bath and entry forgirl U of C student in exchange forthree nights babysitting. Two children,ages 10 and 12. One half block fromNew Woman’s Dorm. Call: MI 3-8859.Private room, bath and meals In ex¬change for babysitting and cleaningdinner dishes. Call: FA 4-0329. ServicesTYPING: accurate, reasonable, rapidSpecial RUSH service. Call: Ronnie orKaren. NO 7-3609.Sewing, alterations, hems. BU 8-600iFlamenco and Classical guitar instruc¬tion. William Texter, HY 3-8333For SaleCo-Op Apartment for Sale:Lovely four room co-op near 55th andWoodlawn overlooking private park andclose to campus, large rooms; price$11,500. $5,000 cash required, free park¬ing, possession 60 days. Lovely homeCall Mr. Lowenthal today.MeKey and Poague1501 East 57th St. DO 3-6200, HY 3-8100Porsche 1500 Normal, convertible, white,black top. leather upholstered, carpet¬ing. Excellent condition, recently over¬hauled. $1295. WE 5-6397.Have new $13 briefcase. 18* high by 14”long. Will trade for smaller briefcaseor sell for $8.00.Call: 684-2645 before 8 am or after 11p.ra., weekdays or anytime week-endsPersonalsValuable Articles remained at the Col¬lege Camp after the freshman (sic>class made sudden departure. Claimant*are advised to call at room 125 Gates-Blake. where Mrs. Martha Mandlowit-/.may be able to help them.foreign car hospital Wanted F is forGood Luck Bill B.Social worker wishes to share studioapartment with woman student. 10 Sorry we need him. JFKMax is coming. Watch this space forminutes from campus. Call VI 2-6651 further developmentssee paje 4 after 6 p.m.— A ride week day mornings to the Lab Creditors meeting, Mandel hail.21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD-NOI FILTERED MILD-THEY SATISFY ^ School from 106th and Parnell, Mustarrive 8:30. Call: WA 8-4726.1 or 2 rooms In faculty home, nearcampus, for senior female student. Call:AL 1-2801. Loose HallHow are things In the dining room 'Say hell-o to WOOD for me.MBBack PageWatch theNew “HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER”November 16thV T%1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & QalleryFeaturing Our Hors d'oeuvres TableFree Delivery to U.C. StudentsON ALL PIZZAComplete Italian-American RestaurantPIZZA PIESSmall SmallCheese . $1.45 Bacon and Onion. . .$2.15Sausage . . 1.80 Combination . 2.40Anchovy .. 1.80 Mushroom . 2.15Pepper and Onion. .. 1.65 Shrimp . 2.40LIMITEDINTRODUCTORY OFFEROFF ONALL PIZZAWITH THIS COUPON14 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 13, 1961Is this the only reason forusing Mennen Skin Bracer?Skin Bracer’s rugged, long-lasting aroma is an ob¬vious attribute. But is it everything?After all, Menthol-Iced Skin Bracer is the after-shavelotion that cools rather than burns. It nelps healshaving nicks and scrapes. Helps prevent blemishes.Conditions your skin.Aren’t these sound, scientific virtues more importantthan the purely emotional effect Skin Bracer has onwomen? In that case, buy a bottle. And— have fun. Ww e r* r* is tvskin bracer.|»' 3 e e £® © t ejIN THE NEW NON SLIP FLASKCurriculum report dueat Wednesday meetingLeonard Friedman, SG president-, conducts Tuesday's assembly meeting.Discuss UC-Frankfort exchange A report evaluating the entire curriculum of the Collegeand proposing improvements in it will be brought before theCollege’s policy committee on Wednesday.The committee deals with academic matters that involvefaculty legislation. It is composedof two representatives of eachsection in the College, and, exofficio, the dean of the College,the associate dean of the college,and the dean, of undergraduatestudents. It will present recom¬mendations on the report to theentire faculty for action.The University of Chicago-Frankfurt university ex¬change program was dis¬cussed by three German grad-jate students and three UC stu-lents who spent last year abroad. They spoke at a meeting heldTuesday night at the Psi Upsilonfraternity house.The program enables a few Chi¬cago students to study each yearat Frankfurt while West GermanSG holds meeting(continued from page five)to send telegrams of support forcivil rights activities at Macomb,Mississippi and Jackson college.Levy spoke against the sendingof telegrams to what he called"jerkwater colleges” until “weclean up the ugly mess on ourown campus,” a reference, among other things, to the postponementof action on the tuition resolution.• Passed a resolution protest¬ing the conversion of the coffeeshop in the Reynolds club into anautomat.• Amended the student code toallpw more groups to use thesign-between-the-trees near the Adbuilding. students attend UC. Participants,who must have completed twoyears of college German, receivemonthly stipends to cover tuitionand living costs, but receive nodegree accreditation for the yearabroad.At the meeting, Professor Hel¬mut Viebroch, director of the Ger¬man end of the program, com¬mented on slides taken by thethree UC students. Viebroch ex¬plained that at Frankfurt, spe¬cialization usually begins immedi¬ately, since West German highschool graduates have the equiva¬lent of our “general education”courses.WUCB program guideWUCB broodcasts of a frequencyof 640 kc AM, wifh transmitersin Burton-Judson courts. NewWomen's dormitory, Pierce Tower,ond Internotionol house. When notbroadcasting its own productions,WUCB rebroodcasts the signal fromFM station, WFMT.Friday7 00 PM -JAZZ ARCHIVES with BILLPETERMAN "The Revival’’PM-SAINT-SAENS Introductionand Rondo Capriccioeo lor Violinand Orch. op. 28TCHAIKOVSKY Symphony No. 2in c, op. 178 15 PM—PONCHIELLI Dance ol theHours from "La Gioconda"BRAHMS Quartet No 3 in B nat0 00 PM—VERDI opera, AIDA1) 25 PM- STRAVINSKY Le Sacre duPrintempsSunday7 00 PM—COPLAND El Salon MexicoBEETHOVEN Symphony No. 4 InB flat, op. 60VIVA1™ Concerto for Violin Ing, op. 12 HWEBr,. .i Intflieht auf leichtenKahnen for Chorus8 00 PM -SCHUBERT Symphony No. 4in cPROKOFIEFF Sonata No. 5 forPiano in C. op. 38MILHAUD Quartet No. 129 00 PM—THIS WEEK AT THE UNI¬TED NATIONSMOZART Concerto No. 20 forPiano in d, K. 49110 00 PM- WILDE play. THE IMPOR¬TANCE OF BEING EARNEST11 40 PM—STRAVINSKY Capriccio forPiano and OrchMonday7 00 PM—STRAUSS Six Songs onPoems by Clemens BrentanoBLOCH Suite Palestinlenne infour movementsBEETHOVEN Sonata No. 8 in G,op. 30. No. 3 for Violin8 00 PM—RESPIGHI The BirdsBONPORTI Concerto in D, op. 11,No. 88 30 PM—MARTY’S NIGHT OUT Aweekly survey of the entertain¬ment world, featuring reviews,music and special guests, withMARTY RABINOWITZ9 00 PM—VERDI Ballet Music from"Othello”ROGERS Three Japanese dancesDVORAK Serenade for String Or¬chestra in E, op. 22SCHONBERG Suite for Piano, op.10 00 PM—CONSTANT Orchestral SuiteCyrano de Bergerac TCHAIKOVSKY Symphony No. 5in e, op. 6411:10 PM—SOMETHING ELSE WITHMIKE EDELSTEIN H;00Tuesday7:00 PM—TELEMANN Suite for Fluteand StringsBRAHMS Quintet in f for Piano 7:00and Strings, op. 348 00 PM-CONTACT WITH MARTYRABINOWITZ AND JANIEWHITEHILL9 00 PM—STRAVINSKY The Fairy’sKiss, complete Ballet j.qqMOZART Two Concert Arias10:00 PM—Trio No. 2 in E flat, op. 100FALLA Suite Populaire EspagnoleWEBERN Two Songs, op. 811:00 PM-HAYDN Symphony No. 101 jo ooin DRACHMANINOFF Concerto No. 2 in cfor PianoWednesday 11:157:00 PM—HANDEL Suite No. 3 in d forHarpsichordRACHMANINOFF Symphony No.2 in e, op. 278:10 PM—BEETHOVEN Sonata No. 2in g for Cello and Piano, op. 5,No. 2SCHONBERG KammersimphonieNo. 2; Hafner9:00 PM—BARBER Overture to Sheri¬dan's Play, "The School for Scan¬dalPALESTRINA Three MotetsRAVEL Sonata for Violin andPianoTELEMANN Concerto in e forOboe and StringsSCHUBERT "Auf dem Wasser zuBingen”10:00 PM—BEETHOVEN Symphony No.1 in C, op. 20 STRAVINSKY CantataVIVALDI Concerto in G for Celloand StringsPM—BACH Cantata No. 39. "Brichdem Hungrigen dein Biot”Thursday The report emphasizes prob¬lems of mitigation and fields ofconcentration, according to War¬ner Wick, associate dean of theCollege.There are 29 quarters of re¬quired courses in the Collegegeneral education program; how¬ever, no student is held for morethan 24 of them. Students whoare not exempted from at leastfive courses by their scores onplacement tests must be “miti¬gated” out of a sufficient numberof courses to enable them to re¬ceive their degrees within fouryears.In the past, as many as 45%of the first-year students havehad to be mitigated, either arbi¬trarily, or from courses they“almost” placed out of. “The prob¬lem, then, is to state the require¬ments in terms of 24, not 29 quar¬ters,” said Wick.Wick also said the committeewants to be sure that major fieldsof study are designed so that the student attains certain proficien¬cies in his field.The curricular review commit¬tee, a subcommittee of t^e policycommittee appointed by AlanSimpson, dean of the College,prepared the report. William Mc¬Neill, chairman of the historydepartment, is chairman of thecommittee. Mark Ashin, associateprofessor of English, is secretary.Other members of the commit¬tee are Samuel Allison, physics;Howard Hunt, psychology;Charles Wegener, humanities andphilosophy; Ernest Sirluck, Eng¬lish; Charles Olmstead, botany;Maynard Kreuger, social sciences.Results of the evaluation of theCollege curriculum will not beannounced until winter or springquarter. 1 *CoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302PM—BEETHOVEN Sonata No. 2in g for Cello and Piano, op 5.No 2SCHONBERG KammersimphonieNo. 2WEBERN Trio for Strings, op. 20PM—J ABBERWOCKY withSHORTY SPIRO This Week fea¬turing THREE PENNY OPERASCHUBERT Quintet in C forStrings, op. 163PM—PROKOFIEFF Peter and theWolfPURCELL Dido and Aeneas, operaIn Three ActsBARTOK—Quartet No. 3 Diverti¬mento for String Orch. DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARk SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FPAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTDisc1367 E. 57th StreetRECORD OF THEWEEKJOAN BAEZVolume 2VRS 9094 $3.99 Subscribe Nowat Hall Price*•You con read this world-famousdoily newspaper for the next sixmonths for $5.50, just holt theregular subscription rate.Get top news coverage. Enjoyspecio! features. Clip for refer¬ence work.Send your order today. Enclosecheck or money order. Use cou¬pon below.Tbo Cbristion Science Monitor P-CNOn* Norwoy St., Boston 15, Moss.Send your newspop*r for the timeChecked.□ 6 months $5.50 0 1 yeor $11□ College Student Q Faculty MemberNomeAddressZone Stote•This spscial offer available ONLY to collegeStudents, faculty members, and college libraries.Oct. 13, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15Newsbits ">»■ -»S K'rf* ft i * IPublisher will speak to undergraduatesAs of Tuesday, only oneperson had signed up for thefirst “My Life and Yours” dis¬cussion, at which Mark Bon-ham-Carter, British publisher,former member of Parliament,and former student at the Uni¬versity of Chicago, will meet withstudents.The meeting will be held at 8pm Tuesday in the Ida Noyeslibrary. All students interested inattending are urged to sign upby 5 pm this afternoon in DeanSimpson’s office (Gates-Blake132).(“My Life and Yours” is aseries of informal discussions atw’hich students have the oppor¬tunity to meet and speak withprominent people in their variousfields.)Bonham-Carter, presently aneditor with Ctollins, Ltd. has beenactive in politics, standing forParliament in several elections,and serving as Liberal memberfor Terrington 1958-59.His grandfather, H. H. Asquith,was Prime Minister from 1908to 1916. and his mother. Lady Vio¬let Bonham-Carter, was for manyyears chairman of the Liberalparty—a position held now byBonham-Carter’s brother-in-law.In 1947-48, following a distin¬guished military career. Bonham-Carter was a Commonwealth fundstudent at UC.Women's rush opensWomen’s club rush opensSunday, when Interclub coun¬cil (IC) holds its annual RushTea at 3 p.m. in the Ida Noyeslibrary. All first-year and transferwomen students are invited to at¬tend.Many university officials andwives of officials have been in¬vited to the tea. according toBetsy Ellenbogen, president of IC.During the tea, prospectivemembers will be able to learnabout the various clubs (DeltaSigma, Esoteric, Mortarboard, and Quadranglers and their ac¬tivities. • . ,Rush activities will continuewith a series of rush parties bythe various clubs to be held laterthis quarter.Travelers to lectureA man who spent eightmonths in “one of the love¬liest, most romantic, pictur¬esque counties in England”will give the lecture “Our en¬chanted village” next Wednesdayat International house in thehome room.The traveler, Richard M. Ste¬vens. originally went to Englandwith his wife, intending to spendthe winter. While there, he reada magazine about the county,stumbled upon a village, renteda house, and stayed eight moremonths.The village itself was Studland,Dorset, England, on the coast ofthe English channel. It had only700 people and was preserved asa typical English village, not al¬lowed to change.Stevens, who previously d i dnewspaper work, advertisingwork, and lectures on trips andphotography, is now connectedwith a model camera shop. He hasbeen lecturing at Internationalhouse monthly for the past fiveyears and considers these lec¬tures his own “small contributionto international life.”In Wednesday’s lecture Stevenswill describe the village, relatesome of his experiences there,and show color slides.Flu menace notedHenrietta H e r b o lsheimer,director of student health,has announced that immuni¬zation against influenza willbe available to students at Stu¬dent health service (SHS) at therate of 75 cents for the two-shotseries, and 40 cents for a boosterFifty-Seventh at Kenwood §TSmiM UNUSUAL FOODDELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICES for those students who had theflu injection last year.Dr. Herbolsheimer stated thata release from the Surgeon Gen¬eral of the US Public Health serv¬ice predicts a likelihood of anoutbreak of influenza in the USthis coming winter. The SurgeonGeneral recommends that personswho have “disproportionate healthrisks” should avail themselves ofimmunization.Students wishing the injectionsare advised, to make an appoint¬ment through the SHS switch¬board operator.The vaccine is especially rec¬ommended for persons who havepulmonary diseases of variouskinds, including bronchitis andasthma as well as healed tuber¬culosis. Cautioned against thevaccine are persons sensitive toeggs or feathers, as it is preparedon chick embryos.Lambert joins DeSalesThe Reverend Rollins E.Lambert, an alumnus of theUniversity, has been appointedassistant director of DeSalesHouse, the Catholic student cen¬ter on campus. His new dutiesconsist of assisting Father Thom¬as McDonough, director of theHouse, in conducting the spiritualand' social activities of Calvertclub, while continuing to teachreligion at Mendel Catholic highschool. rFather Lambert, a convert tothe Catholic faith while studyinghere, received his AB in politicalscience in 1942. Subsequently hestudied for the priesthood at St.Mary of the Lake seminary, Mun¬delein, Illinois, where in 1949 hebecame the first Negro ordainedfor the Archdiocese of Chicago.Father Lambert has spent theremaining years in the city serv¬ing as assistant in St. Malachyparish and St. Dorothy parish, inaddition to publishing several ar¬ticles in Catholic periodicals.Fellowships offeredApplications for Danforthgraduate fellowships worth upto $12,000 are being receiveduntil Oct. 31, announced G. R.Hopwood, director of financialaid.The fellowships, offered by theDanforth foundation of St. Louis,Missouri, are open to male col¬lege seniors or recent graduatespreparing for a career of teach-foreign car hospital§ ^aattiHiitiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiF see page 4 ing, counseling, or administrativework at the college level. Appli¬cants may be planning to majorin any recognized field at theAmerican graduate school oftheir choice, but should not havealready undertaken graduatework.Approximately 100 fellowshipswill be awarded to candidatesfrom accredited colleges and uni¬versities in the United States.Nominees will be judged on in¬tellectual promise and personal¬ity, integrity, genuine interest inreligion, and potential for effec¬tive college teaching.Winners will be eligible for upto four years of financial assist¬ance, with an annual maximumof $1,500 for single men and$2,000 (as well as $500 per child)for married men, plus tuition andfees.Danforth graduate fellowshipsare unique in that they may beheld for life, with certain bene¬fits after completion of graduatework, such as financial assistanceto attend educational conferencesand stipends to purchase booksand periodicals during the firstthree years of teaching.Students may hold a Danforthfellowship concurrently withother appointments. Winners willbecome Danforth fellows withoutstipend until these other awardslapse.Further information concerningthe program may be obtained inroom 201 Administration buildingfrom Hopwood.Szilard honoredLeo Szilard, professor ofbiophysics in the Fermi Insti¬tute for Nuclear Studies will re¬ceive an honorary degree — Doc¬tor of Humane Letters — Sundayfrom Brandeis university.Szilard, who has been on theUniversity of Chicago facultysince 1946, received his PhD fromthe University of Berlin and be¬gan work in the field of nuclearphysics in London. After workingfor two years at Columbia uni¬versity, he became a key memberin the project which developedthe atomic bomb.Doctor fights drugsThe use of drugs in cosme¬tics was opposed recently byan American Medical associa¬tion (AMA) committee, head¬ed by a former University of Chi¬cago professor.Stephen Rothman, professoremeritus in the department ofmedicine (dermatology) said thatno cosmetic containing a drugshould be allowed unrestricteddaily use unless its effects can be proven entirely harmless.He warned of dangers ol apply¬ing certain drugs to the .' in.These drugs, when taken instant¬ly, have toxic effects. Rothmanfears harmful effects when thesedrugs are absorbed by the skin.Deodorants, for example, con¬tain antiobiotics which are poison¬ous internally. These antiobioticsmay be just as harmful if appliedto the skin, either through ab¬sorption or by upsetting thebody’s bacterial balance betweenharmless and harmful bacterianormally present on the skin.Immediate pleasant or helpfuleffects of the cosmetics shouldnot be exchanged for problemsmore serious than the original,said Rothman.Rothman’s opinions appeared inthe Journal of the AMA.Ethiopian lectures heldThe first in a series of eightlectures dealing with tradi¬tional and modern Ethiopiawas given Tuesday evening byDonald Levine, visiting assistantprofessor in the department ofsociology.The programs are sponsored bythe committee on research inAfrica and the Near East.In his first lecture Levine, whowill go to the newly establishedUniversity of Ethiopia on leavingthe UC campus, dealt mainly withthe Ethiopian’s history.This country, although visitedand written about for 2000 years,remains today little known andobscure. Levine pointed out thatthis obscurity makes the studyof Ethiopian history, culture, andcivilization “an intellectual chal¬lenge.”Succeeding lectures in the se¬ries include “Monarchy and Mo¬bility,” “Church and Society,”“The world of the peasant,” and“The problem of Amharic individ¬ualism.”The programs are held Tuesdayevenings at 7:30 during the fallquarter in social science 302.Bike registration urgedThe Chicago Police Depart¬ment has recommended thatUC students owning bicyclesregister them with the City.Registration will make re¬covery of any lost or stolenbicycles or bicycle parts mucheasier, police officials stated.The registration can be madewithout cost at the Universityregistrar’s office any weekdaybetween 9 am and 5 pm.In a classby itselfThere’s never been a casual sport shirt sorichly endowed as Arrow Batik Prints.The patterns are subtle, imaginative, andauthentic. The sleeves come in your exactsleeve length — plus the famous Arrowcontour tailoring for a slim, trimtapered waistline fit.Sanforized labeled.,l’ V « -J .Short sleeves $4.00Long sleeves $5.00HARROW- Watch the«e> ‘TOE PARK SHOPPING CENTER”November 16tht A SUN LIFE POLICY FOR EVERY NEEQFOR YOUAND YOUR FAMILY...The Income Endowment plan guarantees life in¬surance protection if you die within a specifiednumber of years. If you live, the endowmentbenefit falls due on the maturity date; you cantake the funds in cash or as income for life.From the"Cum Laude Collection** RepresentativeRalph J, Wood Jr., ’481 N. LaSalle Chicago, III.FR 2-2390 e FA 4-6800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADASS • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 13, 1961Sports NewsSoccer team begins season tomorrowby Mike EisenbergThe University of Chicagosoccer team begins the 1961season with a home gameagainst the University of Illi¬nois at Champaign at 2 pm, Sat¬urday, at Stagg field.The season’s opener will be fol¬lowed by three away gamesagainst Lake Forest college, Pur¬due university, and Wheaton col¬lege. The Maroon booters willplay the remaining four gamesat home against Washington uni¬versity, University of Illinois atChicago, Lake Forest college andSt. Louis university, champion ofNational College Athletic associ¬ation (NCAA) soccer competitionin 1959 and 1960.The 30-man squad is composedmainly of underclassmen and isbolstered by 8 men returningfrom last year’s team: HelmutI,auimcr, Ken Davidson, JoeFord, Fred Hoyt, Pete Leary,Roger Levin, John Miller andAllan Shearn.Ron Wangerin succeeds AlvarHermanson as coach of thisyoung team.Harriers open seasonA much improved Universityof Chicago cross country teamenters its second meet tomorrow in Washington Park at 11 am.Coach Ted Haydon is hopeful ofa victory over Grinnell in the tri¬angular meet, but discounts theMaroons’ chances for defeatingWabash. Last season, the Wa¬bash’s Little Giants had theirgreatest team in history, and thenucleus of it is back.Eastern Michigan University(EMU) outran the Maroons 15-43last Saturday. EMU captured thefirst five spaces, but Chicago’sMarty Baker came in sixth only18 seconds off the pace. FredKurz, a first-year student whomHaydon is very “high” on, wasseventh, followed by veterans PatPalmer, John Bolton, Steve Sack-ett, and Hal Lieberman, a highlytouted second-year student whoattended the University of Cali¬fornia last year.Haydon thinks his 17-mansquad is larger than any pack ofcollege harriers in the midwest.UC track club runs againstKansas at 11:30 tomorrow afterthe varsity meet.Intramurals beginDuffers take heed! Entries forthe intramural golf tournamentclose Monday. Accompanying en¬tries must be a green fee of $1.50.Play will be on Thursday, Friday,and Saturday, at the time of the entrant’s choosing. The tourneyis being played under UnitedStates Golf association rules andthe Calloway handicap systemwill be employed to determine thewinner.The touch football season alsoopens Monday with a modern rec¬ord of 46 teams competing in fiveleagues. Psi Upsilon and East IIand East III will defend theirfraternity and college houseleague titles, respectively.The fraternity league will ex¬periment with flag football in¬stead of the standard touch vari¬ety. In flag football, the defensiveman must not only tag the ballcarrier, but must also pull a clothfrom the ball carriers hip. This| is expected to add to the offenseof the game and increase the useof running plays. Monday’s GamesCollege House RedThompson S.W. vs. Shorey S.W.Henderson S.W. vs. East 1Tufts S.W. vs. East III• Vincent vs. ChAmberlinDivisional LeagueHitchcock vs. Res Ipsar (law)Laughlin House vs. Mudders (law)Jacks vs. Business School No. 2The Academy vs. Fine Arts QuintetBusiness School No. 1 vs.Midway MonstersThe all-University tennis tour¬nament also begins Monday.Wrestlers to meetRon Wangerin has called. ameeting for all those interestedin varsity wrestling Monday at 4pm in Bartlett gym. If enoughfirst-year students report, Wan¬gerin will field a first-year teamwhich will meet the junior col¬leges and freshman teams fromarea schools.Badminton meet setThe Indian Students association of the University of Chicago willhold a badminton tournament onOctober 26, 27, and 28 at IdaNoyes hall. All students and fac¬ulty are invited to participate.The events include men’s singles,ladies’ singles, men’s doubles, andmixed doubles. The entrance feeis one dollar per singles and twodollars per doubles. For furtherinformation please contact CarolGrossman — BU 8-6610 or ShamKarandikar HY 3-2240. Last datefor entries is October 23.Official practice for all win¬ter sports begins Monday. Thisincludes basketball, indoortrack, swimming, wrestling,gymnastics, and fencing. Allinterested candidates shouldreport to the appropriate coaehin Bartlett gym.Propose left-wing leagueI Anthropologist dies IThe Reverend Berard Haile, research associate in the de¬partment of anthropology at the University of Chicago since1929, died Oct. 1, in Santa Fe, New Mexico. He was 87years old.Haile, misisonary to the Nava- —jos, spent more than half a cen- governors of Colorado and Utahlury on a Navajo reservation and one cf (he ^en men wh0 ha(j ^onedeveloped the tribe’s alphabet and the most in pioneering the devel-the Navajo dictionary. Throughhis efforts the first books in theNavajo language were writtenand published.Born in Canton, Ohio, he re¬ceived his MA from Catholic uni¬versity of America, Washington, opment of the mountain west.His colleagues called him“scholar to the Navajo”; his In¬dian flock called him “Yazzie”(Shortie).He wrote many scientific works Stunned by the large turn¬out to their first practice ses¬sion Sunday, the Flying Bol¬sheviks (FB’s) have decidedto go intercollegiate. The left-wing football team will challengethe University of Wisconsin So¬cialist club to a game which, ac¬cording to team spokesmen, willtake place early in November.It is proposed eventually toform a series of such politicajly-oriented football teams on majorcampuses throughout the coun¬try. These will be federated intothe international league.Team officials appeared flab¬bergasted when 24 studentsshowed up for the team’s first practice on the midway oppositeRockefeller chapel. Several of theteam candidates said they hadbeen all-state football players inhigh school. Most had been ontheir high school teams.One official of the Bay AreaStudent committee to abolishHUAC commented on the pro¬posed left-wing football league,“I really hope this works out. Allour efforts at building a studentmovement have thus far failed. Perhaps football is the mortarwhich will bind together the loose-propped bricks of inter-collegiatestudent cooperation.”A member of the staff of theUS National Student association,reached by telephone, stated thathe was concerned about the mo¬tives of the group. “I am afraidthey may give up transcendentvalues like sportsmanship formore immediate advantages; suchas touchdowns.”foreign car salesDC, in 1929 and his doctor of lit- on the Indians and translations ofnature degree from St. Bonaven- Indian thture’s in 1932. 17Haile joined St. Michael’s mis¬sion, center of the Franciscan ef¬fort to convert the Indians of theSouthwest, in 1900.He gained international .recog¬nition for his linguistic achieve¬ments and was known as one ofthe foremost experts in Navajoculture and folk ways.Last year he was chosen by the see pogeMODEL CAMERAMost Complete PhotoShop on South Side1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNT DEUTSCH’S RESTAURANTSpecializing in Jewish Style CookingCorn Beef Kreplach, Matzo BallCheese Blintzes ' Gefillte Fish807 E. 47th Street WA 4-9800CLOSED SUNDAYSJoseph N. 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Old Spice Slick Deodorant—most convenient, most economical deodorant money canbuy. 1.00 plus tax.@/c/<^Jce STICKDEODORANTS M t_J l_ T O MOct. 13, 1961 CHICAGO MAROON 17Set Sanskrit talk /Brakhage films are 'arty/ not artTDAYSZzl*' and 1Extravaganza| Amazing New Deceptions! Glamorous New Costumes!ik New Spectacle! starrinf3fe-JLYNN CARTERniiraaiigyRDiabolical TerrorPIUS OnScreen I 11|0Sushil Kumar De, professor emeritus of Sanskirt, Univer¬sities of Dacca, Calcutta, and Jadavpur, will discuss “San¬skrit poetics in the light of western aesthetics.” this after¬noon.His lecture, which will be in : _ / , ——T-rr-Breasted auditorium at 4 pm, is Passion on October 17; 'Thethe first of a series of lectures nature of poetic mtaginat'pn, ojiand cultural events markina the 0e*obe(rl, 2V The the°ry °‘ ™,sacentennial of the birth of the In- ?r aesthetic enjoyment, on Octo-dia» poet. Rabindranath Tagore. l1- an£ Creation and recrea-Tagore, a respected poet, novel- “on' °n November 7.ist, essayist, and playwright, isbest known for Ghitanjali. a bookof poems for which he was ward¬ed the Nobel prize. He foundedthree universities in India andachieved recognition in his coun¬try as a musician and painter,and for his work in the reforma¬tion of the Bengali script and thetheory of education.The celebration of the Tagorecentennial in the United States, anindication of Western recognitionof Tagore as one of the foremostIndian writers of recent time, pro¬vides a cultural link between theUnited States and India.De, a distinguished historianof Sanskrit and Bengali litera¬ture. is the author of many books,including Problems in SanskritPoetics, History of the VaisnavaFaith and Movement in Bengal,and a History of Bengali Litera¬ture in the Nineteenth Century,and is considered the world’s fore¬most i n t e r'p r e t e r of Sanskritpoetics.De’s histories are important be¬cause he is able to deal withliterary concepts in the evaluationof history, according to Dr. Ed¬ward C. Dimock, assistant profes¬sor of Bengali and Bengali liter¬ature and program chairman ofthe University’s committee forthe Rabindranath Tagore memo¬rial lectureship.De will deliver four more lec¬tures: “The problem of poetic ex- On Wednesday night theDoc Film group presentedStan Brakhage and a care¬fully selected group of his ex¬perimental films. Luckily for me,I entered Judd hall well armedwith a release from the groupcautioning me that “despite ap¬pearances he (Brakhage) is noMusic series plannedThe department of music of the University of Chicago willpresent the first in a series of six chamber music concertsnext Friday evening, October 29th, at 8:30 p.m. in Mandelhall.The featured artists of the firstconcert will be the Orchestra San New York woodwind quintet;Pietro of Naples, under the di- Zara Nelsova, cellist; and therection of Renato Ruotolo. Found- Claremont quartet,ed in Naples in 1957, the orches- Tickets for the series are tentra of 21 young men is currently dollars (students six dollars), andmaking its first American tour two dollars (students one dollar)and is featuring Franco Gulli as for individual concerts. Seriesviolin soloist. tickets can be obtained by send-The concert will include works ing a check or money order to:by D. Cimarosa, G. B. Pergolesi, The University of Chicago, depart-Mozart, G. Gabrieli, and Haydn, ment of music, chamber musicThe remaining five concerts series, 5802 Woodlawn avenue,will feature William Maselos, pi- Chicago 37. Tickets for individualanist; the New York chamber concerts can be obtained at thesoloists with Adele Addison; the door.Talks open to alldark theatredark Cr madisonfr 2-2845at¬olltimesfor college studentsit open 7:30 a.m.late show 3 a.m.★ different double feature dallyif Sunday Film Guildit write in for free program guide★ little gal-lery for gals onlyir every friday is ladies dayall gals admitted for only 25c★ FILM GUILD CLASSICS *fri -13th — “deadlier thanthe male”“house of pleas¬ure’’sat - 14th — “m an In theraincoat’’“the snow wasblack”-k sun - 15th — “god needs men”-ft “strangers in the-K house'->*¥¥¥¥¥*¥¥****¥*¥*¥¥¥•* The lectures in humanities201 and Indian civilizationcourses are open to all stu¬dents interested in attending.The humanities lectures areevery Tuesday at 10:30 am inRosemvald 2. Included are lectureson: “Moral and Religious Aspectsof Shakespeare’s Tragic Vision,”by Professor Preston Roberts, Oct.24; “Plato and Poetry,” by Pro¬fessor David Greene, Oct. 31; “Phi¬losophy and Poetics,” by Profes¬sor Richard McKeon, Nov. 14; andlectures on Heart of Darkness,Crime and Punishment, andHume’s The Standard of Taste.The lecture in Indian civiliza¬tion will be given on Mondaynights at 8 pm, also in Rosen-wald 2, anC will pertain to theFriars to do seriesThe 1961-62 Blackfriarsboard has announced a newseries of short musical comedyskits to be presented thisquarter at large campus eventsand over the student radio sta-LEIhllOFF SCHOOL of MUSIC and DMl’EInstrumental MusicFaculty: predominantly members of Chicago Symphony OrchestraALL INSTRUMENTSMODERN DANCENeville Black • Concert DancerBeginning — Intermediate — Advanced(Performing unit being formed)5313 Blackstone BU 8-4347 ‘phony.’ ” Brakhage gave a shortintroductory lecture, expressing,in carefully worded statements,his views on art, life, humanity,the A-bomb, sexual symbolism incontemporary America and inci¬dentally, his thought, on the con¬temporary film in America. Hadhe selected but one of these topicsto talk upon, I believe that hewould have failed dismally. How¬ever, in the tumult of his verbi¬age on ali these topics, his failurewas nothing short of phenomenal.For a moment I must digress.It is unfortunate for reviewersthat their criticism appears to at¬tain a more permanent validitywith the passing of time. No oneenvies those reviewers whobrought their negative criticismsdown upon Beethoven, Picasso,and a host of other innovators.A reviewer must always checkhis attitude, his preconceptionsand inclinations prior to forminghis artistic judgments. And atthat he may still be wrong.Knowing all this and with thegreatest restraint, I feel that myartistic intuition must bo voiced.I think that what Brakhage callsart, his experimental films — area sloppy, attempt at being “arty.”His films, some of which are“constructed with a mathematicalrigidity” (whatever that abstrac¬tion may mean) exhibit a lack of the most fundamental knowledgeof photographic techniques. Ashaking camera may be used withsome dramatic effect, but, I amconvinced that either Brakhagehas over used the technique or heis in dire need of a sturdy tripod.To be as brutal as some of hisscenes, I am quite sure thatmany home movie enthusiastscould have presented films ofhigher technical quality and per¬haps, of more interest.Technical quality aside, thefilms were. comparable to earlyvintage Abbott and Costello filmsin subtlety. (I venture that Ab¬bott and Costello made subtleruse of symbolism than Brakhageis yet capable of.) There is noth¬ing intrinsically interesting in tenminutes of film devoted to the de¬caying carcass of a dead animal.And watching a young man gougehis eyes out seems passe to me.In all. I contend that Brakhagehas missed the filmatic boat.Perhaps with a brush up coursein amateur movies he might, withsome patience, become proficientenough to execute clear, steady,well exposed, interesting and en¬joyable home movies.The entire evening was not lost,however. My date looked beauti¬ful in the projector’s beam.Joel Snydertheme studied in classes duringthe week. Films will generally beincluded.Lectures thus far have included,films showing opposite views onpresent-day India and a languagedemonstration.One of the highlights of the In¬dian civilization lectures will begiven Monday when Donald Groomof the English Society of Friendswill speak on “From Gandhi toVinoba.”Groom, who was a Quaker mis¬sionary in India for twenty years,was an intimate friend of bothGandhi and Vinoba.The Indian civilization coursehas also scheduled an ancient In¬dian sacrifice on Oct. 23, and isplanning a lecture and demonstra¬tion on practical yoga.tion, WUCB.The series, to be called StudioPresentations, will, provide an op¬portunity for students to developa feeling for the musical comedystage before the spring quarter’smajor production, said Ken David¬son, abbot of Blackfriars.“The series will have a placefor script writers, composers, andarrangers as well,” continuedDavidson, “for we want to workwith brand new material.”Auditions for the Studio Pre¬sentations will be held Mondayfrom 7:30 to 9 pm in the IdaNoyes theatre. Writers, compos¬ers, and arrangers are encour¬aged to attend because, accordingto members of the board, a writ¬ing workshop will be set up atthat time. >. Students selecting pictures from Shapiro collection,#Art to live with” on Wednesday in Ida Noyes.Art exhibit to openTODAY hrOpen 1:30—Last stageand A MOST tlY C^ Y AND GALLERYPLEASANT \-A.K VA A COFFEE HOUSESerigraphs by DEAN MEEKERNationally Known PrintmakerOctober Showing 1450 E. 57th? ■' £/:' v.w:•:;■ ■v S''W V* ^The Renaissance Art so- year with an exhibition ofciety of the University of paintings and drawings by Ken-Chicago will begin its 46th n^th Callahan.Th*e exhibit will open Monday> <| in Goodspeed hall, 1010 East 59street, and will run through No¬vember 15. Gallery hours are 10am to 5 pm Monday through Fri¬day, and 1 to 5 pm on Saturday.This showing from the collec¬tion of Emily Winthrop Miles'Tonight, Friday, October 13, at B-JCARL DREYER’S Vampur 35 paintings and drawings is Cal¬lahan’s first Chicago one-manexhibition. One of his drawingsis in the permanent collection ofthe Art institute of Chicago."One of the few serious and reallybrilliant firmic creations of themacabre,”JUDSON DINING HALL 8 & 10 P.M.—-50c THE FRET SHOP1-3, 5-10 p.m. Weekdays10-5 Saturday & SundayInstrument, New, Used, AntiqueGuitars, Banjos, Mandolins, etc.Supplies — RepairsPhone NO 7-10601551 East 57th St.CHICAGO* MAROON Oct. 13, 1961i ■ j •* 1 "T-r-—vm •ICulture VultureEye of newt, fenny'* toilAII to no ovoil ...The fire bod ftone o«t; the cove we* dork. All thot remoined wo* the shadows, dying on the wall. I burst from my chain*. And 1 spread my wings endeoored. And os the earth fell oway, I found myself yawning over a precipice. Before me, the sea. "Yeto! Yeto!*' I cried. But the yeta stuck in my throat.Note: The vulture wishes to thank her great grandfather, Mr. R. Reiser for preporing the above message.Off CampusTheatreThe final tryouts for the Uni¬versity theatre adaptation of Vol¬taire’s Candlde will be held from1 to 3 pm tomorrow in the Reyn¬olds club theatre.MusicTickets for the October 28 JoanBaez concert at Mandel hall goon sale Monday In the Mandelhall box office.FilmsTonight Doc films shows us In"Animal Farm” what happenswhen the pigs take over. Festivi¬ties are at 7:15 and 9:15 in Judd126.And tomorrow night, at 7 andp.15 we can see “Olympia, part2” in Judd 127.On CampusTheotreSome clever people turned anold burlesque house at 641 NorthClark street into the Encore the¬atre and are producing “OnceUpon a Mattress” there. Theirphone is WH 4-8414.Student tickets for “The BestMan,” at the Blackstone, areavailable at the Ida Noyes andReynolds club desks.“Faust” comes to the GoodmanOctober 27. Call CE 6 2337.MusicThe concert season at Orchest¬ra hall opens this weekend:Leopold Stokowski conducts“locata and Firgue in D Minor”by Bach, “Symphony No. 4, in Eminor” by Brahms, “GeorgianaSuite, Opus 92” by A. Tcherepnin, and “Capriccio Espagnol” byRimsky-Korsakoff this afternoonat 2.*Next week’s concerts, Thurs¬day, at 8:15 pm and Friday, at 2pm will include works by Wag¬ner, Prokofieff, Beethoven, andStrauss. Again, Mr. Stokowski isthe conductor.On Tuesday there is a specialconcert at 3 pm. The conductor isWalter Hendl; his program is“Hungarian Dance No. 6” byBrahms, “Midsummer Vigil” byAlfven, "Music from AppalachianSpring” by Copland, "Green-sleeves” arranged by Vaughan Williams, music from “Under theSpreading Chestnut Tree” byWeinberger and “CapriccioItalien” by Tschaikowsky.You can see "Lucia di Lam-mermoor” at the Lyric Operahouse the evenings of October 14*16, and 18. sThere will be a classical andflamenco guitar concert at Or¬chestra hall at 3:30 pm this Sun¬day. Call FR 2-0566 to ask aboutstudent rates.Or, if you prefer another kindof guitar, Josh White will be atOrchestra hall tomorrow at 8:30pm. Call SU 7-7585 for tickets. FilmsThe Clark theatre is having aFrench film festival; the RussianArts Club is having a Russianone. Call the Russians at SP 2-4254 and they’ll tell you aboutjoining their club and seeing theirmovies. Write to the Clark atClark and Madison (where theyhonor student I.D.s) and they’llsend you a schedule for the com¬ing weeks.Coff and ...Everybody who doesn’t go tosee William Alton (director of University theatre) in “Six ofOne” at Second City goes nextdoor to see Mrs. William Altonin “Big Deal” at Playwrights atSecond City. Second City lives at1842 North Wells; Playwrights,at 1846.Two 57 street coffee houses fordoes that qualify as “On Cam¬pus?”) have special-super-addedattractions to go with the es¬presso: the Limelight theatre,just beyond the IC tracks givesus a satirical review; the Medici,just this side of the IC tracks, anart exhibit by Dean J. Meeker.'Second City' best opening of yearSo mkny articles have appearedin so many publications in thepast few months bemoaning thepresent state of the Americantheatre in general and the trulysorry sag of the last season, thatI will refrain from belaboring thepoint or beleaguering my readerswith more of the same.The point to stress is the factthat a new season is starting;the point to minimize is that sofar the new season in New Yorklooks fully as bad as the last onedid.The most Interesting openingthus far is a simple and unpre¬tentious review7, already quitefamiliar to Chicago theatre goers.“From The Second City” is a col¬lection of the best bits collectedfrom all the old Second City re¬views.Indian dancers hereA performance by Indrani,an interpreter of India’s clas¬sical and religious dances anddance-drama, will open theAsian Arts series tonightT ie series, consisting of threeperformances by Asian musiciansand (lancers, is being sponsoredby the Committee on SouthernAsian studies, in cooperationwith the division of humanities.The committee is an inter-univer¬sity group promoting the studyof the culture of South Asia.Ravi Shankar, an Indian musi¬cian, will appear on October 27.The National Dancers of Ceylonwill conclude the series on Feb¬ruary 17.All performances will be inMandel hall at 8:30 pm. Ticketsfor the entire series cost six dol¬lars. Students and faculty mem¬bers may attend at half price.Tickets may be ordered throughthe Asian Arts series, c/o theUniversity.Indrani will be accompanied bya company of six dancers andmusicians. She was the first toperform the Orissa style of dancein the United States. This dancewas developed in the temples ofancient Orissa, the storied easternIndian state.Shankar plays the sitar, an in¬strument made of seasoned gourdand teakwood, with six mainstrings and 19 sympathetic res¬onating strings. He will be accom¬ panied by two performers on thetable (drums) and tamboura (azitherlike instrument.)The Ceylon dancers, a companyof ten, will present a repertorythat includes the "royal” and my¬thological dances of the northernCeylon and the devil dances andfire dances of the South.Tryouts setUniversity theatre announcestryouts* for Candide:Tonight from 7 to 9 pmTomorrow from 1 to 3 prrfUT offices, third floorReynolds club. COME! Many people who saw the Sec¬ond City company in its originallocal pub on North Wells streetfelt a great sympathy for thethings the young company wasattempting to do, but felt a dis¬quieting conviction that theywere all trying too hard to befunny.No such complaint can belodged against “From the SecondCity.” Here they are funny, andthe fun, trenchant and timely asit is, comes across effortlessly.Only the most uninitiated needto be reminded that the SecondCity grew out of the old Compassplayers, an inspirational impro-visational group of young satir¬ists who went to the Universityof Chicago in the daytime (some¬times) and acted in a 55th streetbar in the evenings.The old Compass produced suchnotable alumni as Nichols andMay and Shelly Berman. The pre¬sent Second city company, whoseconnections with UC are almostas close, contains such futureluminaries as Severn Darden andBarbara Harris.Occasionally they reach toohard for a point already too ob¬vious; more often they hit upontheir target with a terrifying di¬rectness. Among their more tell¬ing targets are great books dis¬cussion groups, neo Nazi Germanyouth, Bergman movies, Louisi¬ana segregationists (“we are go¬ing through a difficult period oftransition, and then right back tosegregation”), Barry Gold water,and the University of Chicago.Anyone chancing to the biggercity who feels a sudden lonesome¬ness for that which is Hyde Parkshould not miss this show; any¬one with the more positive pur¬pose of finding a topical reviewworth both the going and theprice of admission should movedirectly to the Royale theatre. Another production of specialinterest to UC types is the re¬cently panned “Blood, Sweat, andStanley Poole,” one of whose au¬thors, James Goldman, is a UCalum.Unfortunately, the play, star¬ring Darren McGavin (remem¬bered for a splendid performancein the short-lived “The Lovers”and Peter Fonda (brother of JaneFonda, the actress). The casttries hard and a few scenes aregenuinely funny, if one is willingto accept the fairy tale qualityof stock army comedy, but theproduction falls far short of suc¬cessful comedy.Two musicals just left Phila¬delphia bound for New York. Itshard to tell which is the moredisappointing.“How to Succeed in Businesswithout Really Trying” stars Rob¬ert Morse who is very talentedand Rudy Vallee who is not. Themusical, book by Abe Burrows,music by Frank Loesser (the pairwho produced Guys and Dolls),is an obvious and non-integratedsatire on big business.In my youth I was willing toargue with Aristotle as to wheth¬er plot really was all that im¬portant. A few more musicalswhere plot is merely a device forcementing the songs together andI will join his side completely.“Let It Ride,” a musical versionof Three Men on a Horse andfeaturing George Goebel and SamLevine, is a bit more successful,but not that much. Again, I re¬call numerous formula songs but not much of note between them.The second act does contain onehilarious number in which a com¬pany of police men plead for com¬munity sympathy in assertingthat anyone can make a little mis¬take.In the course of my theatricalmeandering, I also dropped in onthree old shows which were over¬looked last season.“Uamelot is a much malignedmusical. In contrast to the othersI’ve sat through in the past fewweeks it does have an intelligentbook with something to say: theproblems confronting a man whorefused to abandon devotion toutopian ideals even while realiz¬ing the impossibility of achievingthose ideals.The production is beautiful, im¬maculate, and thoroughly profes¬sional. The music, while n3 Bern¬stein, is several cuts above stand¬ard Broadway cacaphony.“A Far Country” is a serious at¬tempt. In a season such as lastyear’s, it would be a welcomedramatic addition. According tomore absolute standards, it mustbe judged as rather suspenselessand thoroughly obvious.“Do Re Mi,” starring Phil Sil¬vers, has Nancy Walker and littleelse.Neal JohnsonDifferent Russian movie everyweek Fri. ond Sat., 8 p.m.; Sun.,3 p.m. Student Rotes. Oct. 13-15.Certificate of Maturity, story ofmodern Russian school boy.RUSSIAN ARTS CLUB2925 W. North Ave.LAKEthe /park AT C^RD : NO 7 9071(vyde park theatreHURRY — LAST WEEKS!!!!"NEVER ON SUNDAY"StarringJULES DASSINMELINA MERCOURIBest Actres* — Cannes Film FestivalDearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763Special Student Rate on Mondays and FridaysJust Show Cashier Your I.D. CardTHE FOLKLORE SOCIETY PRESENTSJOAN BAEZSaturday, October 28, 1961 8:30 P.M. Mandel HallTICKETS ON SALE AT BOX OFFICE STARTING OCTOBER I5THReserved $2.25 General $1.75Discount to Membersi v. 11itStarting Friday, Oct. 13THE BIG DEAL ONMADONNA STREETVittorio Gass man - Claudia CardinaleMarcello Mastroianni To to“A funny picture, artfully and joyously played."plus—A Return Engagement of the Delightful ShortA BOWL OF CHERRIES'• nStorting Friday, Oct. 20That Tantalizing TempestuousCannes Prix ActressMELINA* MERCOURIinJULES D ASS IN'S“NEVER ON SUNDAY”Free Weekend Patron Parking of 5230 So. Lake Park Av.Special Student Rate WITH Student I.D. CardsOct. 13, 1961 CHICAGO MAROON 19LIT'S SMARTTo Read Maroon AdvertisingBECAUSE:1. Most Maroon Advertisers Give Student Discounts.2. Maroon Advertisers Like People and People Who Like PeopleLike You. t3. Maroon Advertisers Need More Business.Repeat after me! ul saw your ad in the-Maroon and. ♦ ”20 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 13, 1961Bob Nelson MotorsComplete Import parts andservice for all import cars.6038-40 S. Cottage Grove Ave., Chicago Adler SC’s are guar*anteed not to shrinkout of fit or your mon«ey back. Lamb's wool«In men's and women’ssizes, in white and 12other colors, dust $1at fine stores., ADLER SC's AVAILABLE IN WHITE AND COLORS ATMARSHALL FIELD'S LYTTON'SBASKIN'S THE FAIRWIEBOLDT'S ALL NEUMODE STORESTHE NEW PEUGEOT 404 IS HERE!New from France is the Peugeot 404 ... a four doorsedan that combines luxury with high performance.Bigger than a Rambler American and smaller than aComet the Peugeot 404 seats 5 to 6 people, delivers 30mpg. Won’t you drop in soon for a demonstration ride?Our complete, fully-equipped price is only $2699Coggeshall, Brown get high UC posts(continued from page one)When he was appointed to thevice presidency, then chancellorLawrence A. Kimpton remarked,“Dr. Coggeshall has worked bril¬liantly for thirteen years to main¬tain the position of the Universityof Chicago medical school as oneof the best in the world.’’Long active in work with localand national government, Cog¬geshall. a member of the NationalAcademy of Science, was appoint¬ed in 1956 as a special assistantto Secretary of Welfare MarionFolsom. Coggeshall went on leavefrom the University that year,when he aided Folsom on medi¬cal affairs.Brown appointedThe new vice president has alsoserved as United States delegateto the World Health organizationmeeting in 1961. He was chair¬man of the committee on medicalresearch and development for thedefense department before takingthe WHO post.Newly appointed vice presidentRay Brown will serve as UC’schief financial officer. He will re¬main superintendent of the hospi¬tals until a successor is chosen.Brown’s appointment was com¬mended by President Beadle. “Hewill bring to the service of theentire University the long experi¬ence and the fine talents of hisown career as an administratorand scholar. We are pleased thathe has agreed to undertake thesenew responsibilities.” Beadle said.“Professor Brown has achievednational eminence both in hisspecial field of hospital adminis¬tration and his wider concernwith the problems of business or¬ganization and management,” thepresident concluded.Brown came to UC’s hospitalsin 1945. being appointed superin¬tendent a year later. He had pre¬viously served as county managerof Cleveland county in North Car¬olina and as superintendent ofShelby, North.Carolina, hospitalsin North Carolina.Brown has served as presidentof the American hospital associa¬tion and of the Illinois hospitalassociation. He also headed the American College of hospital ad¬ministrators and the Chicago hos¬pital council. He received the mod¬em hospital Award of Merit in1950.In addition to his duties v/ithUC, Brown is currently servingas chairman of a committee onplanning facilities for long-1 ermpatient care. The committee issponsored jointly by the US pub¬lic health service and the Ameri¬can hospital association.Known as writerEducated at the University ofSouth Carolina and UC. Brown isknown as a writer and speaker.In addition to two books, he hasco-authored books on educationfor hospital administration andhas written hundreds of profes¬sional articles.For the past three years Brownhas been a lecturer for the Mid¬ career officers institute for theState department at Front Royal,Virginia.News of UC's reorganizationwas broken a week ago by Chi¬cago Tribune reporter RichardPhilbrick. When it appeared, withseveral inaccuracies, UC officialswere angered. Discussing the ar¬ticle at today’s meeting, one UCtrustee remarked, “Well, at leastthey got Coggeshall’s titlewrong.”As curently constituted, thepresident’s immediate staff con¬ sists of ten members. This group,which meets weekly, makes manyimportant decisions concerningUC administrative policy. In addi¬tion to Beadle, Dr. Coggeshall,Brown, and Wilson, the staff in¬cludes:R. Wendell Harrison, vice pres¬ident and dean of the faculties;Warren Johnson, vice president incharge of special scientific pro¬grams; William Harrell, vice*president in charge of businessaffairs; William Morgenstern,Kimpton portrait shownA portrait of former UCchancellor Lawrence AlpheusKimpton was unveiled yester¬day, taking its place in Hutch¬inson commons beside pictures ofother leading figures in UC’s his¬tory.All former chief officers of theUniversity have their pictures inthe Commons, a large dining hallbuilt as a replica of Christ churchhall at Oxford. Portraits now inthe Commons include that of UC’sfounder, John D. Rockefeller,large contributor, former trusteeMartin Ryerson. and another im¬portant donor, Harold Swift.Kimpton resigned as UC chan¬cellor in 1960. After travellingand resting for several monthshe went to work for Standard Oil company of Indiana, where henow holds the position of Generalmanager of planning.The three-quarter length oilpainting showing Kimpton in hisacademic robes was painted byRobert Brackman, 63, a well-known portrait painter. Brack-man is represented in several mu¬seums by his portraits of John D.Rockefeller, Jr., John FosterDulles, and Herbert Lehman. secretary of the University; andJames M. Sheldon, Jr., assistantto the presidentCommenting on the reorganiza¬tion, Glen Lloyd stated, “Ourbroad purpose is to set the stagefor even more imaginative ap¬proaches to the varied academic,organization, and communityproblems facing the University ofChicago. The president’s staff isnow an unusually strong one andshould be of great help to Mr.Beadle in carrying out his dutiesin a wide range of academic andadministrative areas.”The announcement of reorgan¬ization coincided with the newsthat two of UC's leading adminis¬trators, vice-chancellor John Kirk¬patrick and vice president fordevelopment Henry J. Sulcer, hadresigned. It was denied by top of¬ficials, however, that either of theresignations were in any way re¬lated to the reorganization. Sincethe position of vice chancellor ismeaningless after the change, nosuccessor to Kirkpatrick will beappointed. No decision as to Sul-cer’s successor has been made.WATCH THIS SPACEThe resignation of Johnl.Kirkpatrick as vice-chancel¬lor coincided with UC's ad¬ministrative changes.photo by Auerbachforeign car hospitalsee page 4Watch theNew “HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER”November 16th WON’TSHRINKEVENIFYOU DO