NSA region meets in cityYol. 70 — No. 17 University of Chicago, November 7, 1961 31 THe University of Chicago LibraryPeriodical & Document RoomWatkins named headof visiting committeeGeorge H. Watkins, vice-president of Marsh and Mc¬Lennan, Inc., has been namedchairman of the visiting com¬mittee of the College, announcedAlan Simpson, dean of the college.He succeeds the late John J.McDonough, senior vice-presidentof Harris Trust and Savings Bank,who died October 2. year to aid the administration oncollege programs, to help withrecruitment, and to sponsor specialevents.Simpson said, “The chairman¬ship of the visiting committee call*for the sort of enei’gy and devo¬tion which we found in John J.McDonough, our first chairman.As a neighbor in Hyde Park anda former vice-president of theTwenty member schoolsand four observer schools at¬tended the Illinois-Wisconsinregion of the United StatesNational Student association’s fallconference at Roosevelt universitythis past weekend.The purpose of the regional wasto plan nine future conferencesand to consider necessary legisla¬tion.Each of the conferences in the A resolution favoring the Peacecorps in principle, but opposed tothe disclaimer aflidavit was passedSaturday evening. The disclaimeraffidavit requires all Peace corpscandidates to swear that they arenot a member of any subversiveorganization. The region passed another reso¬lution establishing a. committee tostudy the possibility of Peacecorps training programs interfer¬ing with the academic freedom ofindividual universities and stu¬dents by dictating curricula.(continued on page 3) The visiting committee is agroup of distinguished businessand , civic leadei-s interested inthe development of undergraduateeducation and ’ife at the Univer¬sity of Chicago.The committee was formed last University with an infectious flairfor development, Mr. Watkins iaan admirable choice.”Watkins. 48, graduated from UCin 1936. From 1951 to 1957 hewas vice president in charge ofdevelopment and raised over $32million in funds for the University.Holborn explains Kennedy's staffcoming year will discuss a singletopic.Two of the workshops, whichserve to plan the organization ofthese conferences, were headed byrepresentatives from the Universi¬ty ot Chicago.Jim Thomason headed the fed¬eral aid to education workshop andLeonard Friedman chaired theworkshop on the American Indianand migrant labor. A conferenceon one ol these topics will be heldat UC.Other workshops were: thePeace corps, student editorial af¬fairs conference, fine arts pro¬gramming, freshman orientation,student-faculty administration re¬lations. northern human relations,and the commuter college and tri-college conference.'Because of the nature of theregional, there was only one legis¬lative committee, which waschaired by Liz Heath of UC. Thereasons for this were that therewas already enough legislation tobe discussed and that the purposeof the conference was to plan thefuture conferences. by Gene VinogradoffOne year ago today Senator•John F. Kennedy became thePresident-elect.Last night one of his WhiteHouse staff members explainedthe growth and changes in theKennedy style of conducting thePresidency during the past year.The .staff member, FrederickHolborn, stressed the Presidential“task force” and the choice of key-advisers with general backgroundsand experiences as two major waysof "making the administration asfluid as possible.”Holborn told one hundred stu¬dents at a “My life and yours”lecture in Ida Noyes hall thatKennedy had “limited or doneaway with many administerial in¬stitutions and permanent commit¬tees” so that he could assume amore direct control of the execu¬tive department ot government.“The intimate White House ad¬visors — and their are eight ortert of them — could chauge jobson any given morning withoutseriously damaging the country.”Holborn said.Discuss disarmament Whether this fluidity demandstoo much of the President’s timeis a key to its possible alterationduring the next year, Holborn ex¬plained.Aside from the added strain onthe President personally, the“style of fluidity — with taskforces and personal contact withthe President — may not be thebest means of providing solutionsto longer range problems,” Hol¬born said.Most foreign policy problems,which center around USSR - USrelations, would not Jt>e besthandled by a task force, Holbornbelieves. Some domestic problemsfall into this category too, headded.He said the style of fluidity wascreated by breaking down “theinstitution of the cabinet meet¬ing . . . and abolishing the hund¬reds of inter-departmental com¬mittees” wrhich had been respon¬sible for seeing that White Housepolicy w as being carried out in theseparate'departments under pre¬vious administrations.Holborn said the most success¬ful task force “was chaired byDean Aeheson — not a govern¬ment official — on the NorthAtlantic Treaty Organization.“The least successful,” he said,“was the task force on Cuba. But that -one has been replaced byanother,” he said amidst generallaughter.“The change in style for thenext year will probably be the re¬turn of more [lower to the gov¬ernmental departments,” Holbornpredicted.He said this was probable be¬cause a ' primary purpose of thetask force wras to get the Presidentacquainted as quickly as possible with the various executive func¬tions.“The reliance on task forcesdoes not imply a lack of confi¬dence in the cabinet officers,*Holborn said. “Rather, i‘ is a re¬sult of Kennedy’s desire not towaste their time at cabinet meet¬ings on subjects with which notall of them can be personally con-*cerned.”SC shows HUAC filmBernard Weisberg, generalcounsel for the American CivilLiberties union, discussedproblems raised by legislativeinvestigating committees Saturdaynight in Mandel hall.His lecture, attended by some400 people, followed a showing of“Operation Abolition.” the Houseun-American activities’ committee(HUAC i movie of student riots atits May, 1960, hearings in SanFrancisco.The entire program was spon¬sored by Student Government.The functions of a legislativecommittee are to gather facts inaid of legislation, to investigatethe operation and functioning ofgovernment, and to stimulate pub¬ lic discussion, according to Weis-berg. «Most committees of Congress donot use subpoenas. HUAC is ex¬ceptional as a standing committeeof the House of Representativeswith sub[)oena power, he said.The two basic problems involv¬ing committees are the extent oftheir legal [>ower to compel orcoerce testimony and the way aninvestigation results, accidentallyor intentionally, in damage to in¬dividuals.The primary responsibility todeal with these problems belongsto Congress and the public, saidWeisberg. “Conventional liberalexpectations of strong judicial ac¬tion in this field ar6 unrealistic.*We must examine the mo- armament. The older one is the Rose Bowl IfGXt ?lives behind the adoption of Pacifists’- The> fi"d war an un-military technique before we ““*able ,aclic which 0UEbt *>. ; be discontinued, either for rei-can reject them as an effort „gious ol. mora, rcasonsleading to war, Robert Paul Wolff, ,,The non-pacifists eliminate theassistant professor of philosophy, religious or moral considerationstold a POLIT caucus audience and realize that modern nuclear athletic apathv was shattered the outcome even before the open-war must be avoided. They be- ,w. „ xy^0ua_ ing whistle. “They’re really do-Champions of the WestA 20-year UC tradition of Of the Bolsheviks, was confident oflast night. ,,,ua' w »vu.ucu. mvy utf- qlin(iftV -- *up ptyi,,- Bnlokp. ,nK wnisutr- 1I,c-yicT. t> , . . . , lieve that force is a legitimate as 11 e * > ; . moralized about the desecration ofi o aris submarine, fot ex- tool but that the nature of modern viks trounced the University gtalin’s tomb,” he said, as Bol-warfare makes it undesirable, to of Wisconsin s Maoist Maulers chevik cheerleaders, waving their34-0. shoes in the air, shouted “WeCheering throngs of placard- sha]l disinter you!”waving politicos (see photo) on The Maoist rooting section re-the Midway reminded some long- sponded with frenzied cries of “Sixtime Hyde Park hangers-on of hundred million can’t be wrong”the days when visiting delegations ^nd -crush the Khrushchevit.es!”from Madison and other Big Ten The B0]she\ iks carried picketcampuses were common. signs in RUssian. Thomas Riba,“Its nice, said a grey-haired chairman of the course in intro-woman in tennis shoes, “that the duetion to Russian civilization,younger generation of campus wuen asked whether the Bolshe-radieals has such a feel for tradi- viks were at least using correctample, although a nuclear weapon,is used as a means of defenserather than offensive attack. Itis an improvement over the in¬stant decisions which character¬ized the airplane of the StrategicAir Command.Chit defense has also beenattacked as part of a policy whichmakes the United States readier,(» go to war. Yet Wolff believes•hat it it is defensive and cansave numberless lives, it is justi¬ciable. If we prepare ourselves start a destructive war.The only alternative is to worktowards disarmament. The ques¬tion becomes one of method.Wolff appealed for an infoimedAmerican public. He believes thatintellectuals tend to withdrawfrom the scene of political action.Yet in this country, an informedgroup can effect concrete changes.If the American public couldbe convinced of the possibility ofmgif., . - - . ..... , tion,” Russian grammar, said, “I don’tdefens.vely and combat any policy disarmament, it then could work Tl.adition verging toward senti- know about their football, hut this°. • Russians, then the Russians to achieve a stable domestic montality Was much in evidence as team js certainly doctrinally pure.”will not be readier to attack. He economy without military spend- rival cheerleading squads evoked Halftime festivities commenced•*elieves the same of bomb test- ing in the budget. the shad(es of Kautsky, Luxem- ^ a united front, both teams join-Wolff quipped, “If there were bourg, Trotsky, and Stalin to spur ing in the singing of “The people’sWolff defined two points of anything but my life at stake, I’d their teams to greater effort. flag.” However, the inevitableievv oi those who propose dis- think it would be hopeless.” Dick Merbaum, star quarterback factionalism broke through thethin veneer crt intercollegiateworking class solidarity whenMike Parker, formerly executivesecretary of the Student peaceunion, and a member of YPSL• (Young People’s Socialist league)snarled, “Let them kill each otheroff, so the working classes may atlast find peace.”Discussing his teams success.Bolshevik stalwart John Kimcommented. “With their bucolicbourgeois government up therethey were, expectedly, weaker. Student carries sign read¬ing Better Red Than Repub¬lican to cheer on MaoistMaulers in contest withUC’s flying Bolsheviks.Plying Bolshevik captain and quarterback Dick Merbaum readies a scoring pass toFriedman during Sunday's game* Standing off on a corner of thefield, a member of the StudentPeace union appeared disgusted bythe whole affair. “I think thisproves once and for all the utterfutility of combat between themembers of the working class.What do they think they’re prov¬ing?” she asked.At the game’s conclusion, thetw’o leftist factions joined in anunusual display of solidarity.Coming from a strong proletarian Showing great camaraderie theatmosphere, we tyad a natural ad- teams loudly sang the “Interna-vantage which we never lost. If tionale,” first to the tune of theour environments were reversed, Marine Hymn, then yielding to thewe would have still won, however, demands ot traditionalists andbecause we cheat.” using the conventional melody.Leaders discuss local issues chapel music now "atonalBeginning this morning, over 2,000 gov¬ernment and civic leaders from Illinois, Indi¬ana, and Wisconsin will hear Attorney Gen¬eral Robert Kennedy and other nationaladministration -officials talk on major domestic is¬sues such as employment, youth problems, urbanaffairs, and aid for senior citizens.The conference will be held in Chicago todayand tomorrow. It will then move on to 13 otherlarge cities. Behind the conference is the idea thatthe federal government and the local governmentscan gain something from an exchange of ideas. Wethink this is a long overdue approach.But now that it has become a reality we hopeit won't turn into a political issue; in Americanpolitics this may be wishing for something thatcannot be. Whether the conference becomes abattle ground for partisan politics, or a constructiveventure in government improvement, however, de¬pends upon the attitude of the participants. Representative William E. Miller (NY), theRepublican national chairman, has already declaredthat the conferences will do no more than providethe Democrats with free political mileage. It seemsthat Miller has already made up his mind, beforethe performance, as to what kind of show will bepresented.Miller may be right, but it seems unlikelysince the administration has attempted to invitea politically diversified group of participants to theconference. If the administration is willing to takehonest criticism, not the Miller variety, the con¬ference will be successful. But if the administrationgets defensive about such unfulfilled promises as Dear Sirs:For the last seventeen years Ihave been listening to Rockefellerchapel's bells. During this timethey have been deafening at closerange, and a mentor for thoselate to class. Sometimes they havebeen muffled by snow storms, andat others they have chimed outclearly on still nights. On severaloccasions they have even rung atthe wrong time. (Once the hourbell tolled 437 times in succession.)All these things have becomesecond nature to me. However,during the last days rtiy ears have been assailed by a different sound.At first I thought it was mechani¬cal failure and later perhaps abad Halloween joke. However, thedismal banging continued and Iam now beginning to suspect, thatthis is the atonal product of amusically misguided human. If soIf indeed this is no mistake - thenI am shocked and grieved.I would like to express the hopethat we may soon return to musi¬cal sanity - that once again ourchapel may be proud to ring thehours.Tom Lise©aid to education and medical aid for the aged, the A • • ■ ■ ■ •conference will in fact become just another political fYl iniSlTcIl O X if O I I T OSfootball.This is an idea which sounds good; whether itfulfills its potential remains to be seen.foreign cor solessee page 3 FOR l-F BALLRemember MITZIE’S FLOWERS1225 E. 63rdHY 3-5353 1340 E. 55thMl 3-40201Check your opinions against L M’s Campus Opinion Poll 10m *K Expect more...get more fromThe rich-flavor leaf amongL&M’s choice tobaccos givesyou more body in the blend... more flavor in the smoke. .. more taste through thefilter. Get lots more—L&M! 'dyoujs of ay// A//bbj oi/mQ/dodd jojf dffdjed/o JOf/fjBiff a,/yj>7—*oq JO i/obj%LZ on ^%U S8A **%\fr on a%Z9 sax "%\V sdjoo Mead%6S S ‘0 u« qof "Try best-tasting L&M today ... in pack or box2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 7, 1961 Marjory Etnyre, Universi- m°rc bearded students on campusty selective service advisor nowand former director of stu¬dent housing, will retire atthe end of this month.She has “never worked anf^where else but at the Univei-sity.”Her first position here was assecretary to Edgar J. Goodspeed,wfio was secretary to Henry PrattJudson, third President of theUniversity.Recalling the years after WorldWar II when she was directorof student housing, Miss Etnyreremembers the difficulty a “com¬mittee for the most desperatecases of graduate students had insetting up pre-fabricated housingfor the returning soldier students.’’When asked about difference be-tw^een the University now andwhen she came to the University,she pointed out that, “There are Morjory EtnyreSelective service advisorRadiologist helps Formosaspecialty, a specialist from theUniversity of Chicago would gothere every year to assist in itsdevelopment.In order to develop a radiationtherapy program on Formosa,Hodges worked oui a program in from Taipe. One large cobalt thewhich Chinese physicians came tostudy radiology at UC and at leastone radiologist from UC goes loFormosa each year to teach Chi¬nese physicians how to install andoperate new therapy equipment.Hodge's interest in China datesDrop' deadline soonThis Friday is the last day for dropping or adding an undergraduate course.SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORM1542 EAST 57th STREETOpen Tuesday through Saturday, 1 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT 1FNSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTACASA BOOKSTORE - for ChristmasCarefully selected inmports of Christmas Cards, Giftsand Children's Books.Our customers say we have one of the best collectionsin the city.1322 E. 55th ST. HY 3-9651Watch theNew “HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER”November 16thIn order to keep a promise, a (18-year-old professor isscheduled to make a 5,000 mile trip to Formosa today. Twoyears ago professor' emeritus of radiology, Paul G. Hodges,promised the Formosa government that if it instituted amodern program in his medical to 1915 when he taught physiolo¬gy at; Shanghai. After working inPeking, he came to UC in 1927.This w ill be his fifth trip to China.Hodges w’ill work with radia¬tion therapy equipment at; the Ve¬terans general hospital, 7% milesrapy machine has already beencompleted.Hodges intends, to do researchto determine why cancer of thenose and pharynx is more preva-lent among Chinese than Ameri¬cans.1Regional supports coop Students tour Woodlawn{ continued from page 1) Del Pozzo (University of Wiscon- ** ■ *’* WW ■ *The representatives passed a sin) to the post of civil rights co- Leon Despres, independent alderman from the fifth ward, conducted an “educationalresolution to give the civil righfo or(jjnator) Wh0se term was set at ^our Woodlawn for several members of the Maroon staff.raisin ^campaign for the Student on€ year- Woodlawn is the area south of the University of Chicago midway bordered by 69thNonviolent Coordinating commit- ln the opening session, Mareia street on the south, by Stoney Island on the east, and by Cottage Grove on the west,tee (SNCC) might be run. Any re- Kirkpatrick of the University of r,1e tour consisted of visits to several'Negro and Puerto Rican homes, as well as tomaining money will go to SNCC. Wisconsin announced her accession Commercial and civic establishments. \A resolution to support the In- to the regional chairmanship upon The students first saw the home and she plans to “She’s fourteen, but there aresemester. elementary school children whoNext the students visited “sin- have to walk the same way toone share of stock was defeated. vice-president. ment house, with defective wir- strip,” four blocks on 63rd street school,” she added.Another resolution condemning A change occurred, in the voting in£< leaky roof. and bad plumbing, between the Illinois Central tracks She and her husband own thethe taking over of the Southern of some of the schools. Illinoislernational .Student .Cooperative u.„ - ... . , .. „ of a large Negro family in a nine ets daughter,Tnion was passed, although an *T re*'*nfion of room apartment on the fourth return next samendment for the region to buy who was elected national program floor of a badly deteriorated apart-vice-president. ment house, with defectiveThe parents operate a grocery and Kenwood which contain as building in which they and theirIllinois university's student news- and Wisconsin who in the nast "TS‘reet; a"d S“P' TLI V, “fS”.h Eevntian bv the de- Wisconsin, wno in me past port ten children. v plained that in some of these es-rtment of" journalism leaving always voted with UC, were The father supplements his in- tablishments activities such asof the undergraduate staff opposed on a number of issues, come from the store by working prostitution, gambling, and dope-members without nositions was Northweste™ and Mundelein as a dining car waiter on a part peddling were known to go on.( ’ changed policy and voted with UC. time basis. The mother works Complaining of this “degradingLiz Heath said of the meeting, nights in the grocery store. neighborhood,” the second house- children live. He has renovatedthe building and provides 8 and4 room apartments. Four roomapartments rent for $90 a month.The tour ended with a visit toseveral Puerto Rican homes, anda talk with Juan Sosa, director ofAlso passed was a resolution “The success of the regional can The family belongs to the Cath- wife visited stated, “My daughter the Knights of St. John establish-expressing support for the self- only be determined by the attend- olic church, and all the school-age can’t walk the four blocks todetermination of educational pur- ance at. the conferences and their children attend the parochial school without being proposi-productivity.” school of St. Cyril, except the old- tioned.”suit of the Algerian nationalists.Four procedural resolutionswere proposed by UC StudentGovernment president LeonardFriedman.One, that a travel pool bo set•ip so that all member schoolscould afford to send representa¬tives to the planned conferences,was passed. Friedman acceptedthe chairmanship of the commit¬tee to plan the pool.His resolution that all non-mem¬ber schools should be invited toall regional conferences was alsopassed.Two resolutions, that the feesfor all conferences be the same,allowing no conference to be moreimportant than another and that Kimpton joins groupCitizens board installs chairmanRemiek McDowell, chairman of the board of the People’s Gas Light and Coke com¬pany, was installed as chairman of the University of Chicago Citizens board at its firstmeeting of the year Tuesday.The Citizens board is a group of 425 distinguished business, civic and industrialleaders interested in the progress of the University of Chicago.In addition, 19 new members of the board were introduced at the meeting. Amongthem was Lawrence A. Kimpton,former chancellor of the Univer¬sity, now general manager of plan¬ning, Standard Oil company.McDowell has been a member ofthe board since 1954. His associa¬tion with the University goes backa icipated in the executive program,from which he received, in 1954, art market” at the meeting.In his talk, he suggested that ment in the Woodlawn area. TheKnights of St. John is an organi¬zation established to find housingand jobs for Puerto Rican emi¬grants.The Knights, supported finan¬cially by the Catholic church, havebought an old southside girls club,renovated it and now rent, it tothe Puerto Rican families as theycome to the city.The apartments are 10 rooms,designed to accommodate the pre¬ponderance of large families. < Oneman stated that he had 22 broth¬ers and sisters; another, nine.)All the Puerto Ricans spoken tohad jobs. One,, young man hadfinished high school in Puertothe degree of mastep of business art today can be as good an invest- ^jco. v ;th a fuu knowledge ofthe planned conferences be al¬lowed to pass programming legis- to 1926, when he enrolled aslation, were defeated. undergraduate.1 he Saturday plenary opened Although he was forced to dis-uith the election of Dick Childers continue his studies here after<Southern Illinois University) to one year, because of his father’si he vice-presidency and Theresa death, he later returned and part- Lecture, “H.art ofRosenwald 2arts. ment as stocks and bonds. HeEdward A. Maser, associate pro- warned, however, of the dangersfessor of art history and chairman that might befall the novice artof thesented English, he had enrolled in a Chi¬cago junior college and workednights. Because he was “layeddepartment of art, pre- collector if he fails to seek and » ho was f0ix.e(j to seek day-‘An academic look at the heed the advice of art experts.Today’s Events201 Darkness,” 10:30Stanton Hoffman,lecture open to theInformation pool begunSeveral Hyde park women community.”have formed the Information The ten founders of the Infor-pool, a “service organization mati°n pool include wives of Uni-designed to acquaint file new versi,y of Chicago faculty mem-residents of Hyde Park with civic liting in Hyde Park, andand cultural activities of the city wives of local businessmen and Varsity cross-country meet, Chicago vs.and particularly the Hyde Park political personalities am.humanitiespublic.Lutheran Communion service, 11:30 am,Bond chapel.Lecture, “The economics and politics ofincome distribution in Latin America,”3:30 pm. Professor Edmundo Flore*of the National University of Mexico.Rabindranath Tagore memorial lectureseries: ‘‘Sanskrit poetics in the light ofWestern aesthetics, creation and re¬creation,” S. K. De. Professor Emeri¬tus, University of Calcutta, 4:0Q pm.Breasted hall. Rifle club, 7 pm, fieldhouse,Christian Science testimony meeting,7:06 pm, Thorndike Hilton chapel.Lecture series: “Traditional and modemEthiopia, the world, of the peasant,”7:30 pm, social science* 302. DonaldLevine, visiting assistant professor,department of sociology and _ thecommittee on research in Africa’ andthe Near East. time employment, and to leaveschool.Most of those interviewed feltthat their lives were better inChicago than in Puerto Rico.The students visited the apart¬ments of two families; they wereneatly kept and freshly paintedwith bright colors.Despres, in explaining his reasonfor the tour, stated: “Students atthe Univeristy live on an island;Folk dancing, 8 pm, International house.Record concert, 8 pm, international they know very little about Wood-Meeting, UC Democratic organization, laWTl and its problems, since theClassified AdsFor Safe1958 Chevrolet Impala Convertible,white, full power. Call: MI 3-0800, ext.-60. Room 50 after 7 p.m. Need 4 riders Lawrence avenue (4800N.) and N. Walcott for fast non-stoptrip to 58th and Ellis. Call 3309, Mr.Black,Portable CiE television seit.ttlackstone Hall. Room 510, DePaul university, 4 pm, WashingtonPark.Colloquium, “On- the anisotropy of theenergy gap in superconducting tin,”4:15 pm. Research institutes 211. ByO. J. Adkins, department of physics.Royal Society Mond laboratory, Uni¬versity of Cambridge.Seminar “The essence of Christian faith,”4:30 pm, Chapel house seminar room.J. Preston Cole, Methodist Chaplain.Dinner meeting, alumni association,school of social service administration,7 pm, Quadrangle club. Speech, “Sinscience, and social work,” by EdwardE. Schwartz, George Herbert Jonesprofessor, school of social ServiceAdministration. 7 pm, Ida Noyes library. Organiza¬tion election of officers, discussion ofcoming events. Midway divided Woodlawn fromHyde Park.”Watch theNew “HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER”November 16thFor Rentl^rge basement room for rent, cookingtac., free gas and elec. 79th and Jeffery,15 minute drive from campus, also goodpublic trans. $45 per mo. Call: BA1-1931. vLarge room near commons with twoclosets and kitchen privileges. CallHY 3-8460.ExchangesPRISCILLA — DON'T TRADE STOCK'OR PUMPKINS STOP CAN MAKEbetter offer. BEFORE YOU ORDERCHRISTMAS CARDScheck our prices and the selection of folders for colorand black and white prints.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREPHOTOGRAPHIC DEPT.5802 ELLISWanted A SUN LIFE POLICY FOR EVERY NEEDFOR YOUWanted: 77 people for bridge game,December 15. Entrance fee: $27.54).AND YOUR FAMILY.foreign or hospital & dinkdealers in:• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambretta5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob lestermg psychiatrist 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 fpr life.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LaSalle Chicago, III.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-68006UN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA TRIANGLE THEATRICAL PRODUCTIONS, INC, FRANK, FRIED, Exec. D-r.presents vA SEEGER FAMILY CONCERT!PETE SEEGERPEGGY SEEGERtlieNew Lost City Ramblers:MIKE SEEGERJOHN COHENTOM PALEYORCHESTRA HALL - Dec. 1st, 8:30 P.M.Tickets: 2.20. 2.7S, 3.50. 4.30By Mail: Orchestra HalfOn Sale: Hyde Park Co-Op Credit UnionNov. 7,19*1 • CHICAGO MARpONNewsbits1 Men with phys ed deficiency threatenedTwenty-eight male under¬graduates have been threat¬ened with expulsion on thegrounds of deficiency inphysical education requirements.Joseph M. Stampf. associate pro¬fessor of physical education in¬formed them by letter that their George Beadle early next week todiscuss financial aid to students.On Friday, the SG consultantboard on financial aid will meetwith John P. Netherton. dean ofstudents, and Richard Hopwood.director of financial aid.The CAC’s subcommittee ontuition is investigating various asregistration would be cancelled un- pects of the increase, foi instant r,etndnnf cohnmr-less they made some arrangementswithin the next ten days for com¬pletion of these requirements.Max Putzel. assistant dean ofundergratuate students, said hehoped none of the twenty-eightwould have to be suspended. Heexplained that fulfillment of phy- its effect upon student scholar¬ships. and upon the university’sexpenditures. Ormond said the committee Mrs. Beadle explained that thewill sponsor SG legislation on wile of an Oxford Don (teacher)November 21. CAC’s next meet- maintains an existence appreciablying will be Monday. November 20. different fTian that of her husband.She is exjiected to remain homeMrs. Beadle discussesOxfordMuriel Beadle, wife of Pres¬ident George Beadle, spoke tothe Dames club last Saturdayabout her life rvt Oxford. tion to her husband’s social com¬mitments.Candide' presentedAn adaptation of 18th cen- action found in the Comedia delsical education requirements was ^ury novelt (’andide, will be Arte theatre Christian SciencediscussedMental purification, orprayer, is the open door umanaging the children and house- heaven, declared Elbert 1*hold rather I'^^ ^pting invitji- Slaughter in a Christian Sci¬ence lecture yesterday.Slaughter, a member of thefee+ure Christian Science board of lecture-tCOnomiST TO leCTUre ship, emphasized that heaven is »Edmundo Flores, professor divine state of mind obtainableof economics at the National here and now rather than a physi-University of Mexico, will lec- f®1 locat,on- ‘' wf make our own. A . heaven or hell, depending whollyture on Latin American eco- upon the thoughts whicli we ar-nomics here today and Thursday, cept jn^0 Mr consciousness.” lieThe lectui’es on "Economics and said,politics of income distribution in Slaughter illustrated the prachmade a condition of reeistration 7,i Tr • -i. u . , , _ T . Latin America” will be given at cal power of prayer by relatingseveral vears aeo bv Robert Stro- l)resen^e^ University the- The cast includes lom Nolan 3.30 pm in Social Sciences 122. the experience of a friend who ha aTan of atre in Mandel hall on Novem- as Voltaire Dennis Jutata « ^ art sponsorod V th. Nor-nt who fails ber 9, 11, and 12 at 8:30 p.m. Candtde, Janie.Whitehill as Cune- man wait Harris Memorial Foun-Directed by Robert Benedetti, as- gonde, Ronald House as Cacambo, Nation in International Relations, and understanding,sistant director of UT, “Candide” and Thomas Jordan as Pangloss. Flores, who received his PhD in Slaughter stressed the vital ini-has been adapted for the stage by Andrea Pontecorvo is the Old, economics from the University of portance of expressing love, kinu-Benedetti, Robert S. Breen, and Woman, George House plays Mar- Wisconsin, has specialized in agri- ness, joy, and happiness. "SimplyJohn G. Edwards of Northwestern tin- and various Men and Women cultural economics, particularly refraining from manifesting hate,university be portrayed by David Stein- ]anfj reform. malice, jealousy.The adaptation not changethe novel into a play, said Bene- Jdetti; it is, rather, "an adventure Tickets for the three perform¬ing the physical representation of ances are currently on sale at thestyle technique.” He went on to Reynolds club desk. The discountCAC plans legislation say that none of the actors will be price for faculty and students isStudent representatives will believable characters; they will SI for Thursday and Sunday, andmeet with members of the ad- teU the story with ,he freedom ol 5150 for Saturday,ministration to discuss the re¬cent tuition increase. •Mike Ormond, chairman of thecampus action committee (CACi - „and Leonard Friedman, presidentof Student Government, will seeUniversity' of Chicago PresidentTechnically, no studentto meet these requirements canretain his registration.Stampf declined to make a ge¬neral comment on the letters, say¬ing that each case involved dif¬ferent circumstances.All the boys who received let¬ters are second-year students.The.v comprise roughly seven percent of the males in their class. lost the sight of one eye but re¬gained it again through prayerWatch theNew “HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER”November 16th"ARTHUR LARSON, the ADAsdream Republican, feels that' World lawmust be based on the legal traditions otall parts of the world, not just one part 'Since a large pari of the world genuflectsbefore cows while the other parts eatthem, presumably Mr. Larson wouldpropose a Solomon-like compromisewhich might assign the front halt ofthe cow for dinnerand reserve theback half for divineworship" From »h* currant umof NATIONAL REVIEW.Writ* for fra* copy,150 E.3J St.,N*wYork16. N.Y., for fra* copy.EAST INNOPEN ART SHOWNov. 10. 11. 12WINNERS ANNOUNCEDMIDNIGHT SUN. NOV. 12TH206 E. Superior Cats are notoriously silent in their singularly feline way. But even the.most stealthily treading tomcat could take lessons from the men atFord Motor Company whose job it is to track down and suppressunwanted noise in vehicles,At our Ford Research and Engineering Center in Dearborn, engineershave created a unique room without echoes, virtually duplicating thaperfect stillness that exists miles above the earth's surface/The “Silent Room", as we call it, is a chamber utilizing fiber-glasswedges as sonic ' blotters" to soak up noise emanating from subjectsundergoing developmental tests. In this acoustically sterile environ-'ment, electronic instruments seek out the source of vibrations,*rattles, rumbles and squeaks so that they can be eliminated inproduction.This scientific approach to sitence is but a tiny facet of the many*sided program of pure and applied research which goes on daily atFord Motor Company. It is another example of Ford's leadershipthrough scientific research and engineering.foreign cor salessee page 3FLY NEW YORKALSOCALIFORNIA $67.50*MIAMI $40.85*MINIMUM SEATS AVAILABLE FORCHRISTMAS AND THANKSGIVINGMAKE YOURRESERVATIONS NOW!CAPITOLAIRCOACH AGENCY MOTOR COMPANYThe American Road, Dearborn, Michfgar?nOOUCTI FOR TH€ AMERICAN ROAO • THE FARM • INDUSTRY • AMO THfl