XI Students to observe DC action' Student government passeda bill last night mandatingthe executive council to ap¬point two students to serve asobservers to the disciplinary com¬mittee (DC).The bill specified that no ob¬servers would be present withoutthe approval of the person beforethe committee. In addition itguaranteed complete secrecy inall cases.This bill has gotten much atten¬tion since a first-year student wassuspended by the disciplinary com¬mittee last month. Leonard Friedman, SG presi¬dent, spoke in favor of the bill.“The disciplinary committee isfavorable to active student par¬ticipation,” he said.He said that, the student ob¬servers would take part in thediscussions of the disciplinarycommittee, but they would haveno vote. They might be allowedto vote in the future, he said.Those opposed to the bill saidthat students are in no positionto pass judgment over other stu¬dents. -Those in favor answered that the disciplinary committee has al¬ways been “shrouded in mystery,”and students on the committeecould help publicize the workingsof the committee.The observers, who would seemany cases, could ascertain justwhat the rights of students are.They could learn the precedentsof the committee .and they coulddiscover whether faculty membersare actually allowed any powerin the committee.One opponent of the bill saidthat no conclusions could ever bereached by observers. The more the students would criticize thecommittee, the more the commit¬tee would stand firm, he said.Friedman said that the studentobservers would be informed ofpast cases, and that the positionof the SG would be enhanced. Hesaid that SG’s participation in theDC might also result in increaseddelegation of responsibility tostudents.An amendment to the bill call¬ing for a majority of the SGassembly to approve the appoint¬ment of the observers was de¬feated. Observers will serve until thesecond week of spring quarter.The bill for the mandate of theappointment fo the observers waspassed 16 to 4.Also at the meeting ClarkKissinger, chairman of the cam¬pus action committee, said CAChas formed four sub-committees.They will investigate the tuitionincrease, campus wages, the ser¬vice of residence halls and com¬mons in comparison to othercolleges, and the reading .roomsin the library.Vol. 70 — No. 18 University of Chicago, November 8, 1961 31Chicago Sun-Times and Daily News photographers, sentto the Midway after athletic director Walter Haas statedthat he would like to see UC resume football, cover yes¬terday's game between Beta Theta Pi and Delta UpsilonFraternities. NY students plan boycottThe student government of tended a similar rally at Queens Davis had been prohibited fromthe Citv college of New York c°l,ege. Students at Hunter col- speaking at Queens recently. As/rrwvi i . i, , , V lege boycotted classes on Friday, a result of this prohibition, the(CLIN I) lias called a two- About goo students attended a municipal presidents met last weekhour boycott of tomorrow S similar rally at Queens college, and formulated the speaker policy,classes to protest the recent ban Students at Hunter college ai'e n was announced at the rallyof Communist speakers of the planning to boycott, classes next that the American Civil Libertiescampuses of New York s city col- Friday. union, the National Lawyers’ guild,leges. The students are protesting the and the American Jewish congressThe boycott wall last from 10 recent ruling of the council of are preparing legal briefs challeng-am until noon. It will be followed Municipal presidents banning jng the legal basis for the ban.by a rally protesting the adminis- “known” Communist speakers on The college presidents had indi¬cation's action. the campuses of City university. Cated in their statement that theyAt a CCNY protest rally last The university is made up of New would welcome any further legalThursday, more than 1100 students York's city-operated colleges, in- evidence on the case. The threedecided on tomorrow’s two-hour eluding Hunter, Brooklyn, Queens, national groups hope to provideboycott as their course of action. ar>d CCNY. such evidence in an effort toThe rally was one in a series of At CCNY's rally, a recorded change the decision of the corn-demonstrations at the colleges of speech of Benjamin Davis, secre- mittee.city university. Several days pre- tary of the Communist party of a rally was also held at nearbyviously about 600 students at- the United States, was played. Columbia university, Thursday.White House conference held in cityby Michael Shakman andGene VinogradoffAttorney General RobertKennedy and other leadingKennedy administration fig¬ures asked yesterday for helpfrom state and local officialsin solving major national do¬mestic problems.Kennedy made his request inthe keynote address of the firstWhite House regional conference, Kennedy said.purpose to make thousands ofpromises,” Kennedy said to under¬line, the purpose of the confer¬ence.He then gave a brief report onthe activities of the departmentof justice since he became attor¬ney general.“In the area of civil rights, morehas been done this year to aidminority groups through adminis¬trative action than ever before inthe history of our country,” Wirtz defended Labor secretaryGoldberg’s intensive strike-set¬tling atcivities.“Although mediation of labordisputes is outside the jurisdic¬tion of the department of labor,” then reassembled in six panels onnational economy and youthaffairs.One of the panel members.Ivan Nestingen, under secretaryof the department of health edu-Wirtz said, “Goldberg has never— cation and welfare (HEW), saidwith the exception of the opera the “administration plans to pressheld yesterday and today at theSheraton - Chicago hotel. Morethan two thousand invited guestsarc participating in the confer¬ence.Governor Otto Kerner, in hiswelcoming address, explained that case—entered the picture until allother means of mediation havebeen tried. With a strike impend¬ing and no other means of settlingit, Goldberg feels that he shoulddo what he can.”Wirtz also said that economicgrowth must occur in both pri¬vate and public sectors of theeconomy.“Federal aid to education isThe voter registration cases arenow being pressed, he explained,because “the right to vote isprior to every other right.”After his speech Kennedy ans¬wered questions from the audienceon various aspects of the Demo-the purpose of the conference was cratic administration,to give Washington adminis tra-- The next major speech was de-tors and state and local officials a livered by W. Willard Wirtz;chance to exchange ideas. under secretary of labor.Kerner characterized the con- Wirtz emphasized the need provided better trainedference as “similar to town hall ‘for economic growth to eliminate power and reduced the hard next year for a broad pro¬gram of federal aid to education.”He said the defeat of most ofthe administration’s aid recom¬mendations this year “has notdiscouraged us.”“It is too early to tell,” Nestin- Columbia, although in New York,is not affected by the ban becauseit is not operated by the city.Even though Columbia was notinvolved in the ban, Action, acampus political party, found theissue imjxirtant enough to sponsorthe rally at which Davis spoke.Action invited all City universitystudents to attend.Another speaker at the Colum¬bia rally was Mark Lane, Demo¬cratic New York assemblyman.Lane had also spoken at theCCNY rally. At CCNY he sup¬ported resolutions condemningthe ban.The policy statement which isbeing attacked cited four pointseconomic growtli in- the publicsector,” Wirtz said. “I considerit a very good thing.”He explained that use of someof .the labor force as studentsman-laborthe gen went on, “whether next relevant to permitting speakers:year’s recommendations will in- “the university’s commitment toelude provisions to aid teachers’ the independent search for truth;salaries and/or build elementary the preservation of an atmosphereand secondary schools, but these of free inquiry; the preservationare of prime concern to SecretaryRibicoff (of HEW; and to thePresident.”Nestingen said in connectionwith the controversial disclaimer of the university’s intellectual in¬tegrity; the necessity of all partsof the university to obey the lawsof the state and nation.The council decided that, al-aflidavit in the National Defense though the appearance ot a Com-Eduaction Act that "it would not munist would not necessarily \io-at all surprise me to see the late the first three precepts citedmeetings of years ago.” unemployment, make greater ex- force, which is larger thanChicago’s Mayor Richard J. penditures for foreign aid, defense present number of jobs.Daley, who spoke after Kerner, and other national security pro- After the sneech bv Wirtz the President recommend once acain above, it would be a violation ofsaid America races ••grave urban grams, and make the US economy conference adorned briefly" and thTSnaUon of the XdaX’ (he fourth,problems,” and expressed the hope “a model for underdevelopedthat the conference would help nations.”provide solutions to these prob- Wirtz said the labor force islems. growing “so fast that 25,000 newDaley introduced Kennedy, who jobs will be needed per week dur-explained that regional White ing the next decade.” Stock control theories refutedHouse conferences are being heldthis week in all of the nation’smajor cities.Kennedy stressed that the meet He said this growth of the labor ories of the control of Ameri-force explains in part why em- can corporations are not sup-ployment can be at an all-time .high and unemployment as high ported by a review of theings were not being held for politi- as it was at the beginning of the available data, according to thecal purposes He said adminis- year. lead article in the Autumn issuetration officials were here to “Four million unemployed work- of New University Thought,“consider honestly and objectively ers represents a loss of eighty “Stock Owner Ship and the con-Ihe gains we have achieved, the billion man hours of work over ^r0] corporation,” by Don Villare-obstacles we face and the sacri- one year,” Wirtz said. “We simply j0> ph.D. candidate in physics atfices we must make” if we are to cannot afford this loss.” UC, questions the theory of mana-solve the problems facing us. He said only the “decision to gement control advanced originallyHe listed “unemployment, slums,' reach full employment and use of gerje an(] Means and suggestsracial discrimination, crowded capital goods” is needed to attain ^at ^ theory of “people’s capi-cl ass rooms” and many others as that goal. “If a war were to is a creature of press-agen-pressing national domestic* prob- start tomorrow, we would have .terns. so many jobs that there wouldn’t“I am not here to say . . . that be men to fill them. We should “I am attempting simply to re¬al of the domestic difficulties we be able to create these jobs in open this problem to scholarly in¬faced last year or five years ago peace time,” he concluded. quiry,” say Villarejo, who headedhave been overcome .,, nor is my In an interview after his speech, a team researching the subject forThe two most popular the- the past tw’o years in Newr Jfork, and other intermediaries and insti-Washington, and Chicago. tutions.Villarejo, while advancing no al- Parts I and II of the study areternative theory on his own, sug-‘ presented in the Autumn issue ofgests that a pow’er exists on the New University Thought. Part IIIbasis of personal holdings, direct will appear in the Winter issue,and indirect through trust funds which will be out in January.Democrats winDemocratic candidates were victorious in yesterday’s tw'O•major elections.In New’ York city’s mayoral campaign, incumbent DemocratRobert Wagner, with 3,175,815 votes defeated Republican LouisLefkowitz (776,815) and independent Lawrence Gerosa (321,907).New Jersey Democrat Richard Hughes, a political unknownwith the support of President Kennedy, upset Eisenhow'er-backedformer secretary of labor James Mitchell by a vote of 991,472 to961,277. Hughes led by this margin with 352 of 4,395 precincts notreported.LetterHOUR RFTER-SHRUE LOTIOHSIR”“Jason, you dolt! You know I use onlyMermen Skin Bracer after-shave lotion.”“Of course, sir. And this...” 'I’ve told you that Skin Bracercools rather than burns.Because it's made with Menthol-Ice.”‘Quite, sir. And this..."'Besides, that crisp, long lasting Bracer•aroma has a fantastic effect on girls.”Consultant boards fight apathyAn article in today’s Maroon announcesthe desire on the part of Student Govern¬ment’s bookstore consultant board to meetwith students to hear comments on bookstoreoperation. While at first this request would appearroutine, it does point up a great problem of apa¬thy on the University of Chicago campus.■When first initiated, the consultant boards re¬presented a great forward step in the workings ofStudent Government. For the first time studentshad an opportunity to become familiar with anyphase of University operation which interestedthem. If they were concerned with the workingsof the Registrat’s office, they could meet weeklywith William Van Clove; if admissions proceduresinterested them they could see Charles O’Connell.Administrators were very considerate in givingtheir time to the consultant board members. Theyseemed to be genuinely concerned with discussingmany of the problems which students found in theoperation of their departments.Unfortunately a similar interest has not beendemonstrated by the student body. SG is havingan extremely difficult time filling available placeson the boards. Several boards have not begun ope¬ration due to lack of interest, others are operatingwith below capacity membership.Letter Students on this campus are continually com¬plaining about many aspects of UC’s operation.They complain about the food, about long regis¬tration lines, about the high prices charged bythe bookstore. This is healthy and desirable. How¬ever, we fear that the students are making a gravemistake in not backing up their complaints withaction when the opportunity for such action pre¬sents,' itself.The consultant board is the only place thatthe average students, those not members of Stu¬dent Government, the Maroon staff, or other groupswhich have contact with the administration, can ex¬change ideas with administrative personnel. It ishighly unfortunate that students have not takenadequate advantage of the opportunity.For those students who have insufficient timeto join and adequately participate in the operationof consultant boards, there is ample opportunityto take advantage of the system. Members of theboards are available to discuss complaints with stu¬dents, and in this way their ideas can be transmit¬ted to the administiation.We feel that many students are losing one ofthe greatest chances they have to influence, or atleast become more informed about, administrativepolicies. We hope that the situation will be rapidlycorrected. Blasts NWJ columnBook store asks suggestionsDear Students, not feel that it is our job to voice bookstore is that you find pricesIn order to fulfill our duty to our own feelings on the issue and there to be 'oo high, that youthe student body, the bookstore to act on them, but rather to rep- were sold a dress that did nothingcommittee would like to know resent the ideas of the student at all for your figure, that youyour grievances and suggestions body. dislike the bookstore’s coffee, oron the bookstore problem. We do If your complaint against the that it annoys you to bo glared atby the store detectives while leaf¬ing through the cartoons in NewYorker, let us know about it. Orif you have some warm words ofpraise for the bookstore, its mer¬chandise or personnel, please sendthem to us so that we might gaina clear picture of student feelingson the issue. Please send yourletters and cards via faculty ex¬change or deliver them to: MichaelJacobson, 1701x Pierce; or Jac¬quelyn Friedman, 7 Green.The Bookstore committee To the Editor:I am saddened by NealJohnston’s analysis of in locoparentis in Friday’s Maroon.When a leader of both theUniversity of Chicago studentbody and of students acrossthe country has so weak agrasp on democratic ideals itis evident why student actionis often ineffective.Johnston entirely overlooksthe necessity for all vital seg¬ments of a community to havea voice in the decisions whichgovern them in order that thedecisions will treat them fair¬ly. He overlooks the need forconflict of ideas in a univer¬sity community; obviously,free expression is as basic toa university as to a society.Paternalistic government isbased on a different belief:that decisions are to be madeby “competent” people. Sucha rationale ultimately encour¬ages a feeling that the peoplewho are making policy mustbe doing right because theyknow better than anyone else.No need to question, then.And it is difficult to make anyquestions—or crying needs—felt, because there are nochannels reserved for the cur¬rently “incompetent” voice.Because Johnston omitsconsideration of the demo¬cratic ingredients of policy¬making and emphasizes theroles of competence and en¬forcement in their place, his orientation encourages pater¬nalistic administration. Al¬though I do not want to implythat the University of Chica¬go is paternalistic, I do sus¬pect that a similar orientationamong students here leaves avoid which the administrationcould, if it wished, fill by ar¬bitrary actions. I suspectthat the ineffectiveness of thestudent protest against theresidence requirement inaugu¬rated last year was due to thefact that at no time before orafter the decision did studentsact on the assumption thattheir voice in the matter wasas “competent” as the admin¬istration’s.Of course, exercise and en¬forcement of rules have a rolein a democratic community.But experts should advise onand implement policy, and dis¬ciplinarians should enforce it;they should help the segmentsof the community governthemselves.The argument that stu¬dents are not a vital segmentof a university community isindefensible. The argumentthat they are consumers whohave the prerogative of refus¬ing to buy the goods offered(“if you don’t like it you canleave”) is not worthy of anVman committed to a univer¬sity.1 prefer to assume that stu¬dents can make a vital con¬tribution to the university or¬ganization, and benefit per¬sonally in the process. Suchan orientation does not leadto anarchy, but to a morecomorehensive order.Sincerely,Nan MarkelCity Editor, The MichiganDaily, 1960-61Pat Weaver, National College QueenWhat does this lovely College Queenwant in her diamond ring?Miss Pat Weaver, America’s National College Queen, re¬vealed her feminine taste as well as her practical sense whenasked about diamond rings. She selected as her favorite thelovely Artcarved Evening Star —one of Artcarved’s award¬winning designs. Why did she choose it? Because of itsbreathtaking beauty and guaranteed quality. You see, everyArtcarved ring is guaranteed, in ivriting for all the years tocome by America’s most respected ring maker. You buyit with confidence—wear it with pride.Visit your local Artcarved Jeweler and see why Artcarveddiamond rings have been the choice of millions for morethan a century. Perhaps you can start hinting for yours now!NATIONALLY ADVERTISED INAMERICA’S LEADING,MAGAZINESrtc arve dDIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGSName.Address,EVENING STARFirst choice ofAmerica's College Queens StateJ. R. Wood &. Sons, Inc:, Dept. CP-31216 E. 45th St., New York 17, N. Y.Please send roe more facts about diamond rings aiid"Wedding Guide for Bride and Groom.” Also nameof nearest (or hometown) Artcarved Jeweler. I amenclosing 10i to cover handling and postage..County or Zone..^ACTUALLY, YOU DON’T NEED A VALET TO APPRECIATE MENNEN SKIN BRACER. ALL YOU NEED IS A TACEIDirector analyzes Candide f Classified AdsEditor's note: Robert Bencdettl poistion, chief among them Mar¬is assistant director of University tin, the Manichean, who concluded For Rent & For SaleOne of the great charms of_ _ _ “Candide” is the coincidentalTheatre and director of its first "that man was born to live in editorials by Voltaire which formpresentation of the year, Voltaire s either the convulsions of misery an obligatto to the main line of* Candide.” The highly expert- qj. jn the lethargy of boredom,” the work; travesties upon ro- Large basement room for rent, cookingmental aspect of the prodtiction and, "being firmly convinced that mances and adventures, comments fec,«free KaB and elec* 79th and Jeffery«good Wanted: any number of girls 21 yearsof age and under for work with theBBES. Call DO 3-0883 (the GreenRoom).requires, he feels, the follounng people are equally uncomfortable on political ideals, and the de- ** minute drive from carai>u«, also *essay of explanation and clarifica- everywhere, accepted things lightful spoofing of contemporary tranB* *46- per “1°* CaH:tion. patiently.” — customs and of many of Voltaire’s BA Personalsby Robert Benedetti patiently.” — customs and of many of Voltaire’sIt is in the matter of this fellow-writers.patient acceptance that Voltaire All sources of usual theatrical Health Mobile Rig. $220. Will separate; How’* the BWOC? Haven’t seen muchWhen Francois - Marie refuses Martin’s point of view, illusion, such as lighting and setArouet de Voltaire wrote Voltaire foreshadows Dostoevsky ting, are eliminated. Only the live. .. i actor, rejuvenating his text for alive audience, remains as a source Gas range, $20; Elee. refrig., $30. EV of4-1915."Candide” in 1759, the op- and the existentialist writers inr i - ^ his view of a world hostile to man;pressive power of his oppo- but patient acceptance of this you ever, been working out ?•—the Gnome.Wantednents was no laughing matter;hut great satire creates the illu¬sion that its targets are morecomic than sinister.The major argument of ‘‘Can¬dide” involves the doctrine of must not onlyphilosophic optimism. Both Pope’s gardens.” but also"Essay on Man” and Leibniz’s noxious weeds.”state is, to Voltaire, a great evil.Voltaire not only refutes optim¬ism, but urges us to a pessimismthat results in an aggressive at¬tack upon our environment. We‘cultivate our“root out the of make-believe. The audience itself is fully recognized (the house-lights remain on) and is invited Want^ studen)t "ith car for d<>livery o{slipcovers on Saturdays only. Gall: DOby direct address to participatein the creation of the dynamicimage of “Candide.” 3-2211, American2139 E. 75th St. Slipcover Co., Inc., S.C.—I cannot accept your offer. Itwould look too compromising to one ofmy religious beliefs.—Priscilla.Appendicitis isn't much fun, Huh Bob?monadic theory come in for the The format of our presentationlion’s share of travesty. Through- is an unusual theatrical mediumout his travels, Candide is in- called “chamber theatre.” “Can-volved in situations which test theteaching of his tutor, Pangloss(“all-tongue”), that “those who literature,have stated that all is well speaknonsense; they should have said from a text for the stage (that is, Growth of cities analyzed“From the earliest days cities played a far greater role in national development thandide” is not turned into a play; their numbers warranted,” stated Richard Wade, professor of history, Washington univer-it could only be called “staged sity, at his lecture Thursday. The lecture, delivered in Social Science 122, was on the topicliterature, as the elements which 0f urban development. In his lecture, Wade analyzed various perspectives in the history ofdistinguish a text for the study cj^jeg Jthat all is for the best.”In spite of the suffering of all description, summary, narration,and the all-important stylistic Wade pointed out that this relationship could be traced back as far as the pre-revolu¬tionary period when the towns : ———— —— —"being a philosopher it would beunbecoming of me to recant.”Candide is at last strong enoughto assert “Tis well said; but wemust cultivate our gardens.”the characters in the novel, matrix of the author’s voice and would supply the needs of the American cities, because of their tools in this great struggle werePangloss stands by his view, for point of view) are maintained. settlers. They, in fact, “held the cultural supremacry, became the roads, canals, and railroads intoSince “Candide” is a didactic West for the approaching popula- centers for the scattered settle- the disputed areas,work, written from an omniscient tion.” An example given of this ments around them. They had In the 40 years before the Civilpoint of view, Voltaire is fully was St. Louis, which was being available printing presses, news- war the urban population jumpedcharacterized on the stage and surveyed at exactly the same time papers, bookstores and circulating from 693,000 to 6,200,000 and thethere is certainly no point in the that “the British threw the Pro- libraries. number of cities with more thanSeveral Characters that Candide novel at which Voltaire’s presence clamation line along the Appala- Even more pursuasive than this people rose from one tomeets state portions of Voltaire’s is not strongly felt. chians to stop the flow of settlers.” abundance of culture was the oeo- nine‘. , i .. nomic power of the cities. “Nearly “This era of unprecedented ex-Newsbits all thp la Th .. . ,ne iaiger Peaces owed their pansion remade the face of Ameri-initial success to commerce.” The „„„ ^ _ , , .... . . , can cities. An example ot thiscities took aggressive lunges intothe surrounding areas. This even- was the congestion. “New forms of. tually “led to collisions between building, especially the tenement,UC students Karl Bemes- South of 1900 has been described 1174 East 57 street. Performances great metropolises as each sought were devised to house the in-Jerfer, Donald Fox, and Mi- by members of the production will be nightly at 8 pm, except to annex the growing market. The creased population.staff as a “brilliant example of Saturdays when there will be two ^American realistic drama.” shows, at 6 and 9:30 pm. Admis- |sion is $2.30; students $1.75.Students pass first Rhodes testchael Shakman have beensuccessful in the first round ofcompetition for Rhodes scholar¬ships to Oxford university, an¬nounced George Playe, dean ofundergraduate students.The three students, selected fromseven applicants from the Univer¬sity of Chicago will appear nextbefore a regional committee and,if successful there, before anational committee.These committees will focusiheir attention on the students’"statement of purpose,” written aspart of their application.The students successful in thefirst round “have to be more thanjust students,” said Playe. “Theymust have reasonable plans forstudy according to Oxford curri¬cula; they must have a variety ofinterests and that doesn’t meanfootball.”'Little Foxes' to be givenAs its second production ofthe 1961-62 season, the Com¬pany of the Four of Hyde Parkis offering: “The Little Foxes,”a drama by Lillian Heilman. Thisstory of the Hubbard family’sbitter struggle for power in the Company of the Four will con¬tinue to operate as an off-Broad-way professional company, a policybegun with its production ofGogol’s “The Marriage” last Sep¬tember. Ministers confer ,; „Some 65 Baptist ministers WfdnesdoV' 8 N«vem8er1, Study-Discussion group in Basic Judaism.are now attending" the tenth 4.-30 pm, Huied foundation, 5715Woodlatyn. > _00 pm, RockefellerRobins, Universitypm, BondToday’s events,T, T .... annual Roger Williams fellow- cannon ‘ recital, 5:i ne untie rox- . . „ , ,, . rhu^i. i^nuiMajor roles in me uuut: rox- w .. .... chattel Danieles” will be played by Roberta ship conference at the dlVim- cariiionneur.Samuels, Philip McDonnell, James 1y school, which began yesterday Ep:*ca“pal ev€ns<mfr> 5:95Lecture series: “The Biblical poets’ viewDeuter, Durward McDonald, Tom and will end tomorrow.Arthur, Helen Deaderick, and The participants will hear sev-Rachel Lindrud. eral papers and hold discussions onThe play will run for ten per- the topic of the conference, “Bap-formances < November 8-11 and 15- lists and the contemporary Strug- Porter *raduate torw*: c«l'tam Protes-18) In the John Woolman Hall, gle for freedom.” taint responses to mass society, 7:30pm. Chapel house, 5810 Woodlawnavenue. Showing of “The Iona com¬munity,’’ a documentary film.All campus meeting to help the Studentnon-violent coordinating committee’svoter registration drive for Negroesin the South, 7:30 pm, social* sciences122. Charles McDaw, chairman of.SNCC, and Tom Hayden, ex-editor ofthe Michigan Daily will speak.of man, Balaam: of Jews and Gen- Company of the Four, 8 pm, presentingtiles,’’ 7:00 pm, Hillel foundation,Stanley Gevirtz, instructor, depart¬ment of Oriental languages andcivilizations. Lillian Heilman’s “The Little Foxes,”John Woolman Hall, 1174 East 57street.Israel folk dance group, 8:15 pm, Hillelfoundation, 5717 Woodlawn avenue.Watch theSCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORM1542 EAST 57th STREET,Open Tuesday through Saturday, 1 p.m. ta 7:30 p.m. Ne. “HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER”November 16thSome New Appraisals Of Urban ProblemsCHILDREN OF THE GILDED GHETTO $C.OOby Kramer and Leventman **THE FUTURE OF OUR CITIES $A.95by Robert A Futterman • ^THE DEATH & LIFE OF GREAT AMERICAN CITIES $C.95by Jane Jacobs ^The University of Chicago Bookstore* 5802 ELLISREMEMBER:for sales,foreign carsalesCOMPANY OF THE FOURPRESENTSTHE LITTLE FOXESA DRAMA BY LILLIAN HELLMANNOV. 8 - 11 and 15 - 18John Woolman Hall1174 E. 57th ST.NIGHTLY AT 8:00 p.m.,EXCEPT SATURDAYS AT6:00 AND 9:30 p.m.$2.30, students $1.75Reservations: Ml 3-4170, FA 4-4100Tickets Available:MARCO POLO TRAVEL SERVICE1255 E. 55th Street SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12thaHhE ©eCDTCX 5 * P MSoup or Juice J Burgundy BeefHerb Rice Salad Baked TomatoCoffee, Tea, or EspressoBleu Cheese, Tortoni, or Italian Cookies$1.75with the(KEEN DOOR BOOK SHOP1450 EAST 57th STREET Jfe all make mistakes, ,dERASE WITHOUT A TRACEON EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTyping errors never show on Corrasable. The special but*face of this paper makes it possible to erase without atrace—with just an ordinary pencil eraser. Results: clean*looking, perfectly typed papers. Next time you sit downat the keyboard, make no mistake—type on Corrasable IYour choice of Corrasable inlight, medium, heavy weights andOnion Skin. In handy 100-sheet packets and 500-sheetboxes. Only Eaton makesCorrasable.A Berkshire Typewriter PaperEATON PAPER CORPORATION :‘E’; PITTSFIELD, MASS*■IiII£■■■fc;lIi1 US studies urban affairs TWO deCNGS SCSregatiOnby Ken Pierce newal projects beneficial only to ■ WW **'++'%** "WW ■A department of urban af¬fairs will definitely be created,according to Robert C, Weav¬er, chief of the federal hous¬ing administration. Such a de¬partment is “essential,” he added.Weaver’s name has been men¬tioned as a possible cabinet leveldirector of the department, as hasChicago’s mayor Richard J. Daley.But at a press conference yes¬terday Weaver left unsettled theDaley rumor, saying that manymayors were “being mentioned’’for the, post. Weaver is in Chicagoto address the two-day WhiteHouse regional conference beingheld at the Sheraton-Chicagohotel.When questioned on universityurban renewal practices. Weaverstated that there is nothing “in¬herently abusive” in Section 11?Of the federal Housing act of 1961.Under section 112, the federalgovernment may agree to give thecity three times the amount ofmoney spent by an educationalinstitution for land acquisition ordemolition, providing that theland which the. institution im¬proves is in or near an urbanrenewal project.Critics of this section havecharged that, under section 112,universities are able to wield apowerful financial lever to forcecity government to undertake re-AN UNPAIDTESTIMONIALRichard the Lion-Hearted says:1 mould urnkm surrenderedInland...If I'd hadJockey<g> 06HNO msupportC’mon, Rich! You’re rationaliz¬ing. Jockey support1 might neverhave secured you against theEmperor2. But it certainly wouldhave provided snug protectionagainst the physical stresses andstrains of your active life. Yourarmorer never tailored a coat ofmail more knowingly than Jockeytailors a brief —from 13 separate,body-conforming pieces.1. Other "imitation” brief* (copiee of theoriginal Jockey brand) have no moreJockey support than a limp loin cloth2. Richard the Lion-Hearted, 1157-99.surrendered England and a huge ransomgo secure his release from Henry VI-' Get ../e real thing. Look forthe name JOCketf on the waist band^Jockey briefs new'al projects beneficial only tothe university.(Under section 112 the city ofChicago will receive over $30 mil¬lion in federal renewal funds ifthe city agrees to undertake theUniversity of Chicago’s plans fora new campus between 60 and 61streets. Cottage Grove to StonyIsland).“Like all of our laws.” said theFHA head, “this law has to beadministered artfully. The nation’suniversities need this law to helpthem expand their facilities.”Weaver, who is a Negro, re¬iterated his belief that “openoeupancy legislation is the pri<*eof urban renewal.” Weaver addedthat no restrictions of raee orcolor should he applied to occu¬pants of any sort of housing, re¬ceiving federal aid.Weaver said that the greatestneed for urban renewal researchwas in the “human problems” ofurban renewal. “I don’t thinkinundating communities withsocial workers is going to solveproblems of people in renewalareas.“We can rebuild structures, butunless we get people to feel apart of their community and toparticipate in renewal efforts, weare simply not protecting orrinvestments.” _ „ . . _ . , , achieve segregation, and testified that I would never send my chil-Arthur B. Brazier, official spokes- to ineq„u|]ties in several specific dron to a public school. That isman for TWO and pastor of the schools. why I enrolled them in a CatholicOne parent stated that five school.”- Apostolic church of God, 6344Kimbark avenue, gave the reasons classes met in the auditorium of Several statements were readfor the demonstration., that in each class there were be“There has to be some way to tween 40 and 50 studen(J5.the school her child attended; and for teachers who were afraid toappear in person. Others werelet the public know of the condi- Mrs> A]len Biddle. of goao Southtions in the segregated school p>orchoster, charged that whensystem of Chicago, he said. We read by teachers wearing hoods.Most of the statements i»teachers complained of lack oftools, textbooks, and generalher child and others were trans , ,want the board of education and ferred from Carnegie to Ray facilities such as classroom space,superintendent Benjamin e]emerdary school, they were One teacher described the prob-“ordered to enter through a lems of a neighborhood changingseparate door and have a separate from Negro to White.Negroes in these areas arcMi's. Johnelle Boyd of 6029 “often exposed to perplexed, hos-Participants reiterated „ charges South Woodlawn. stated, “I went tile white teachers who neitheralready levied against the board through the public school system understand their problems and reof .gerrymandering .districts .to and I made up my mind then, sultant action nor attempt to.Willis to know exactly how’ thegreater Woodlawn area feelsabout the state our schools are lunch-hour”*in.”REMEMBER:for service,foreign carhospital Watch theNew “HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER”November 16thGirlWtitclier’s GuidePresented by Pall Mall Famous CigarettesThe nudge is permitted when a beautiful girl is sighted in an unusual place or at an unusual time. *1The Temporary Woodlawn organization (TWO) has sponsored a demonstration protest¬ing the Chicago board of education’sflholicies regarding double shifts and alleged segrega¬tion in Chicago’s South Side public schools. TWO is a community organization in theGreater Woodlawn area.Teachers, parents, ministers, and students read statements at the demonstration.Over 700 people, nearly all of them Negroes, attended the meeting Monday evening atthe Southmoor hotel. ReverendtL@©®®C3 © ° Concerning self-controlAlthough we believe that girl watching has it all overbird watching, we feel that these two hobbies do shareOne important characteristic.They are both genteel.Theyboth respect the rights of the watched. A girl watcherwho asks a beautiful stranger for her name and phonenumber is like a bird watcher who steals eggs. (If the stranger happens to have a pack of Pall Mall FamousCigarettes, and you’re dying for a good, natural smoke,you may break this rule.) Normally, the girl watcher’spleasure is warm, quiet and internal. However, thereare cases when a discovery is so dazzling it must beshared. Such a case is illustrated above.WHY BE AN AMATEUR?JOIN THE AMERICAN SOCIETYOF GIRL WATCHERS NOW!FREE MEMBERSHIP CARO.Visit the editorial office ofthis publication for a free membership card in the world’sonly society devoted to discreet, but relentless, girl watch¬ing. Constitution of the society on reverse side of card.This ad based on the book, “The Girl Watcher’s Guide." Text:Copyright by Donald J. Sauers. Drawings: Copyright by EldonDedim. Reprinted by permission of Harper & Brothers.COOPER'S, INC. • KENOSHA, WIS. ♦ S t Ct Prvisft of J& J^msuean — ^/u&natir it eur middle i Pall Mall’snatural mildnessis so good. to your taste!So smooth, so satisfying,so downright smokeable!