Vol. 70 No. 22 University of Chicago, November 15, 1961Conference blasts AECThe Atomic Energy com¬mission (AEC) has come un¬der attack for its licensingpractices at a law school con-erence on atomic radiation. noted that in August, 1961, anational conference on uniformstate legislation refused to adopta proposed liability law.But Murphy added that “evenif . . . rules of strict liability areLicensing of atomic reactors imposed upon operators of privatefor peaceful purposes has involved installations, a number of install-“overjudicialization and an ex- ations will be operated by federal,cessive attention to formal cor- state and local governments, andreel ness.” according to former by . . . institutions, who have notAEC general counsel William generally been subject to rules ofMitchell. As an example. Mitchell strict liability."noted that there are “as many assix or more hearings between thetime when the application ... isfiled and the time when a licensefor operation at full power ispermitted.”In addition, he said, the hear- Student government presi-ings themselves have become“more formal and lengthy, withemphasis on oral testimony andon completing the record even onminor matters.” Dissatisfied with the appearance of UC girls, pro¬ducers of a television show filmed in Mandel hall hiredmodels to pose as students. Here models frolic beforeshow begins.Murphy also pointed out thatthe federal government and pri¬vate insurance firms have takensteps to provide insurance againstlosses due to nuclear catastrophiesnot caused by war. “Two pools ofinsurance companies . . . and oneof mutual companies . . . offer atotal of $60 million of insuranceto each nuclear installation.” Sunday’s scheduled meeting the coop similarly failed becauseThe law school conference on of the International Student of lack of attendance. The meet-atomic radiation began Monday Cooperative union -(ISCU) ing was t0 have elected a ucAttempt coop meetingand ended last night.Michael Ormond were ap¬pointed to observe the disci¬plinary committee by student gov-Mitchell attributed the licens- ernmenfs executive committee lasting difficulties to the newness of night. Their observation will rep-the problem and to the sensitivity delegate to the group and to dis¬cuss local problems.ISCU’s executive secretarycalled the lack of a quorum “Mostunfortunate.” He said, “We havenow what we feel is the germ ofa highly beneficial organization.Friedman is a fourth year stu- areT students* to provide discount The l0"g Ume h°Pe f°r Some me~dent Leonard Friedman and dent and has served in M for 2 books for students. The organiza- obtain1 discount"booksSmaynat lastFriedman, Ormond tosee disciplinary committee failed to materialize becauseof the lack of a quorum. Themeeting was to have discussed sev¬eral aspects of the group’s opera¬tion.ISCU was formed earlier thusof the commission to criticism bycongress.He noted that the proceduralchanges contemplated by recentproposed legislation “would go along way to relieve the presentundue complexities of the AEClicensing process.”Mitchell also noted that Con¬gress has come to have greatpower over the AEC. He said the resent the most active student'participation in the disciplinaryaction taken against students.Student Government (SG) pass¬ed a resolution last Tuesday whichcalled for two students to ob¬serve the disciplinary committee(DC>.This resolution was in responseto the committee’s recent actionin suspending for a quarter a firstyear girl for staying all night ina young man's apartment.SG’s resolution received years. He represents POLIT. tion which currently has a mem- become a rea]it But we do needbership of some 3d0 students from • . .Michael Ormond is a member of nine area universities, sells trade berg „ P our mem'the SG assembly, is also chairman books at a 25% discount and textof the campus action committee, books at a 10% reduction: Any student can become a mem-. . , TT , .. . , . ,. ber of the coop by purchasing aand is a member of POLIT. Under its law's of incorporation membership for $1 They areISCU must have 10% of its first ... -i.l,. . .. «.Peter Brownstone and Arthur lOO members and 5% of each addi- a*1ULTUif- vl.Lffnr£Silverman are both graduate stu- tional 100 members present for a th. sPrvire rnntnr in th<»dent, Neither is a member of the ,ega, meeting to be held. Onlyassembly. twelve individuals showed up at Members can select bookg froraBrownstone is a judge on the Sunday’s meeting, which was held the coop’s inventory in the ServiceStudent faculty administration in ^ s ida Woyes a • center, and can order books fromcourt. , A meeting of UC members of any publisher through the ISCU.SNCC drive program setPlans for a University of Will be the most comprehensive is concentrated in the Southernjoint congressional committee on agreement by George L. PUye, Chicago fund raising drive for of its type ever held on the LC states where Negroes have beenatomic energy had “come to dean of undergraduate "students. Southern Negro voter regis- campus* _ orci i > pte\en ec 10m iegis.ee...... . . ,. 5 ° The campus committee plans an ins-occupy a relation to the commis- The tvv0 observers will be able tration were formulated Mon- extensive educational program Members of SNCC will canvassion (AEC) which is without to observe the committee’s pro- day evening at a meeting of the jnc]U(jing a pamphlet on SNCC, Negro areas where they hope toparallel in our history.’Another speaker at the confer¬ence, which ended last night,criticized the lack of strictliability laws for private opera¬tors of nuclear installations. New cedures in cases brought before it. All-campus Committee for Civil j^s activities, and the progress of facilitate registration by providingIn addition the executive com- Ri£hts. the civil rights movement in the transportation to registration cen-mittee appointed Pder Z- According to Lula White, chair- South. Jers and setting up night schoolsstone and Arthur Silverman flight man of the committee, the fund- Formed by Southern students as 0 ®na e 1 e^Ioes ° pass 1 eiacyleaders of the long and short raising project hopes to collect a result of the sit-ins in 1960, s- ., ...flights respectively. Judy Gold- $10,000 for the Student Non- SNCC has also been active in Several local freedom riders winstein is administrative assistant violent Coordinating committee supporting the freedom rides. Its 1SCUSSCIU °g snli lhlSlss‘ppi‘aYork lawyer Arthur W. Murphy to the flight leaders. (SNCC). She said that the drive current project, voter registration,Despres attacks Willis’ policiesThe policies of Chicago’sSchool Superintendent Benja¬min Willis and Board of Edu¬cation have been attacked bya local political figure and civicorganization.Leon Despres, fifth wrard aider-man, charged that the board’spolicy of making students go tothe schools nearest their homes isconducive to school segregationbecause segregated housing pat¬terns are common throughoutChicago.Despres stated that the board“must make an affirmative effortto get away from the communityschool,” if segregation is to end.“School integration,” he stated,“is more important than adheringto the policy of the communityschool.”The "rigidity” of Willis’ policiesregarding the philosophy of thecommunity school, he W'arned,may well force him to resign be¬cause of violent protest voiced bycommunity civil rights and Negrogroups.The Temporary Woodlaw-n or¬ganization (TWO), a local civicgroup, has entered the controversyover the ful use of school facili¬ties.TWO has asserted that thereare 56,000 empty seats in the Chi¬cago public school system. Speaking for TWO, Dick Har¬man said this was a “conservativeestimate,” based upon informationfrom the 1951 Annual Record,published by the board of educa¬tion, and upon records of boardhearings since 1951.These were the “best figuresavailable,” he stated, but addedthat they were “very approxi¬mate.”Harman continued that the an¬nual records until 1951, publishedby the board of education, con¬tained information such as thenumber of classrooms per schooland number of pupils per school.The records after 1951, he claimed,do not contain the number ofclassrooms per school.TWO’s figures are in sharp con¬trast to the report submitted tothe Chicago board of educationlast week by Willis, which founda total of 143 empty classrooms,some of which Willis said wereunusable.Morris Haimowitz, of theboard’s human relations depart¬ment, stated that the figures wereinaccurate, and conjectured thatTWO considered many more seatsper classroom than does theboard, which has recently loweredthe “desirable” classroom load to30 pupils.TWO called also for an “in¬dependent outside study” of the Chicago public school, and recom¬mended that Dr. Daniel Dodsonand Dr. Patricia Sexton, both pro¬fessors in New York university’sdepartment of education, conductthe study.Harman stated that . Willis’ re¬cent report was inadequate, andthat he felt a more complete studyshould be made.Mrs. Wendel Greene and Ray¬ mond Pasnick, both members ofthe board of education, were alsodispleased with Willis’ report.Harman referred to last week’sstatement by board presidentWilliam G. Caples that such anindependent study would taketwo years and cost over a milliondollars, as “intimidating,” andinsisted that the study would cost“no such amount.” the first event sponsored by theUC committee. Well-known folk-singers and possibly James Far¬mer, leader of the Congress ofRacial Equality (CORE), will befeatured at the major fund-raisingevents to be held at Mandel HallJanuary 20 and February 16.The group will also sponsor acollection among faculty membersand in the Hyde Park-Kenwoodneighborhood, a dormitory can¬vass, and a showing of the Free¬dom Rider movie put out byCORE. They will ask other cam¬pus organizations to support thedrive by donating the proceedsfrom one 04 more of their events.GOP congressman attacksKennedy economic policy*T find a total lack of abilityon the part of the Adminis¬tration to discern betweenwhat is necessary and what iscomfortable,” said CongressmanJohn B. Anderson at a meeting ofthe campus Young Republicanslast night.Anderson, representative fromRockford and northwestern Illi¬nois, stated that after the election90,000 additional workers wereadded to the federal staff, and a$6.5 billion debt was forecast.“Kennedy stated a need foreconomy in government recently,” Anderson said, “but he could havecome to this conclusion earlier.Why did he wait until October torevert to his campaign promiseof economy?”We are just spending to try tosolve our problems, as we did in1939, when we* still had nine mil¬lion unemployed, Anderson con¬tinued.“I am afraid that instead of thisbeing the New Frontier, we arejust reverting to the Old Frontier.”Anderson then spoke of patron¬age in the Kennedy administra¬tion. “Every single defeateddemocratic candidate in the lastelection has been given a position in the New Frontier. And I thinkthis is significant.”“Another example of thehyprocrisy of this administration”is the administration’s position oncivil rights. Kennedy said thatcivil rights legislation would beone of the first things on hisschedule.“Yet,” Anderson said, “Con¬gress met in January, in Febru¬ary, in March, in April, andfinally in May, legislation wasproduced by two democrats incongress who were so embar¬rassed that they proposed thislegislation without the administra¬tion’s sanction ”M.B.A '55| Today's Events jStudy-discussion group, Haste Judaism,"Israel ami the nations,’’ 4:30 pin,TIillel linuso.English class, International house, 6:30.S:30 pm.Lecture-discussion series, "The biblicalpoet’s t ii w of Man - Job and Jere¬miah: Of suffering: and divine jiuH’-ment," Stanley Oevirtz, departmentof Oriental languages and civiliza¬tions. 7 pm, TIillel house.Israel folk dancing group, 8 pm, TIillelhouse.LettersError in name cited Obj ects to Maroon standTo the editor:The November 10 issue of theMaroon contained the followingstatement: “Speaking before ameeting of the History club, Wcin-traub discussed the relationshipbetween Voltaire and the Comte d’Orsay.”In all fairness to1 Prof. KarlWeintraub, I feel bound to informyou that the excellent gentleman,the ‘scientist philisopher” “Comted’ Orsay,” is a purely fictitiouspersonage. The man Mr. Wein¬traub was discussing was CON-DORCET - that is, Marie JeanAntoine Nicolas Caritat, marquisde Condorcct (1743 - 17941.There once existed, to be sure,a certain Alfred Guillaume Ga¬briel, Comte d’ Orsay <1801-18521,Ihe friend of Byron. But he wasonly interested in the important things in life - such as horses,clothes, and women - and was toow ise a bird to get himself caughtin the murky miasma of historicalphilosophy. Consequently, thereare, I feel, but slender groundsfor confusing him with Condorcet.I appreciate the fact that theHistory Club meeting ended at9:45 in the evening and that yournewspaper' was distributed earlythe next morning - so there waslittle time for rechecking. Other¬wise, I wish to thank you for yourfine coverage of the activities ofthe History Club, and to expressmy reluctant admiration for yourreporter’s splendid ingenuity inbridging over gaps in information.T. Bentley Duncanpresidentthe history clubThe Christian Science MonitorAN INTERNATIONAL DAILY NEWSPAPERComes from Boston by air deliveryand is available atUNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE5802 SOUTH ELLIS AVENUEandWOODWORTH’S BOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57th STREETTHE BELL TELEPHONECOMPANIES SALUTECARL HORNHow many more people will need telephoneservice in Illinois by 1970? How many more tele¬phone buildings should be built, bow much moreequipment ordered? Helping to find the rightanswers (because the wrong ones could lie very ex¬pensive) is the job of Carl Horn, a telephone com¬pany economist who graduated from college just lastyear. His studies and estimates help management To the editor:I have read the editorial in theNovember 10 issue of the Maroonand found quite stimulating. Iagree almost completely with thestatements made on what a stu¬dent should study. I can not be soinclusive in my acceptance of thestatements you make on how astudent should study.We have one very importantpoint of disagreement: you seemto feel that the student has noresponsibility other than to him¬self. T feel that a student has anobligation to the rest of the aca¬demic community. A studentshould not have the right to sit inhis lounge for eight months play¬ing bridge (or chess, or poker)and then, if so motivated, cram fortwo weeks so he can pass a comp.His classmates and faculty have aright to demand his participationas a student in class, laboratoryand lecture.I also believe that a certainamount of self discipline is a nec¬essary part of the educational pro¬cess. Therefore, I do not see whya student who gets a minimumamount of sleep “will sleepthrough the entire period.”You state that “it is completelyirrevelant what a student knowsafter one quarter of a three quar¬ter course.” When I was in the College, there were a number ofcourses in which the subject mat¬ter in one quai-ter was quite dif¬ferent from what was involved inother quarters. Quarterly exams,tho not compulsory at that time,were a good thing. But, irrespec¬tive of this, retention, the psycho¬logists tell us, is a function ofrepetition. The University cer¬tainly has a responsibility for thequality of the evocation a studentreceives. Although there may besome “goof-offs” who are beingdeprived of their ‘academic free¬dom’ because of the single F rule(since they could otherwise donothing for eight months and thencram their way into a D on thecomp), the vast majority of stu¬dents are going to benefit by beingforced into even the most minimaldegree of studying during thequarters and should thereforeknow more by the time they taketheir comp.Your argument that “it is unfairto require that a student master athird of a given amount of workat any given time” could be car¬ried one step further and say thatit is unfair that a student berequired to take comps at the endof the year. Why not hold out forone super-comp at the end of fouryears? Given the interrelation¬ships of the fields of knowledge,isn’t any point at which we Stopmake important forecasting decisions. Decisions thatwill bring advanced communications to the nation.Carl Horn of Illinois Bell Telephone Company,and other young men like him in Bell TelephoneCompanies, help make your telephone and com¬munications service the lines! in the world.BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESIy for examination arbitrary? VYhall the fuss over required quar¬terly examinations? An examina¬tion generally Is one of the mostintensive learning experience?; astudent can have.Regarding your arguments onresidence hall requirements wPshould recognize the problemsfaced by those who manage theUniversity’s finances. In recentyears the University has had theproblem of insufficient acceptablehousing In and around campus.The administration can not now <permit the vacancy of millions ofdollars of dormitory facilities. Theproblems of insufficient housing,rising costs, fluctuating studentbody size, demands of parents ofprospective students, deterioratingneighborhoods, etc., have createdand will continue to create prob¬lems for the administration. Al¬lhough former Chancellor Hut¬chins didn’t seem to realize it.even a good university can sufferif certain budgetary requirementsare ignored. So it is more thanjust, a question of whether or not18 year old girls and boys can stayout until such and such an hour.There is one final point that weshould consider. The administra¬tion is composed of a group ofintelligent, well - educated humanbeings, many who completed theireducation at' the Univcrsily ofChicago within the last few years.It might be well to give thoughtto the fact that these men andwomen fared Ihe same problemsthat you and I faced as students.They are not, then, far removedfrom the problem. I personallyhave seen many changes in policyduring the past eleven years.There will'undoubtedly he manyadditional changes in the future nspolicy is modified to meet changingconditions and needs of the Uni¬versity and its student body. Butlet us recognize that the facultyand administration of the Univer¬sity qre facing the problems youdiscuss in your editorial with atleast as much knowledge and in¬tellectual competence, with con¬siderably more factual Information(some of which is unavailable tostudents), and with many years ofpractical experience In dealingwith the wide range of problemsconcerned wilh running a large,groat university.Bernard J. DelGiornoB.A. ’54 - B.A. ’55REMEMBER:fpr service,foreign carhospitalNOW PLAYINGThe Clancy Brothers<*dTommy MakemIrish RebelsStorm The GateGene and FrancescaSongs and HumorSpecial Week night PricesSI.80 admissionNEW;thevgateOF HORN1036 N. State SU-7-2833OPENING TUES. NOV. 21For one weekTHE NEW LOSTCITY RAMBLERSCHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 15, 1961 i(iMtuimimHiniMiiiiiiHHinimiiiHitiiMiiiiiMiiimmmiiHiHHMHAiiinmiNmHNuiMMiNiiututiiifiiiMnHiiiiiiHHiuiiiiuiniHitiiiiriiHtuittMtimmimmhmiHHiHmitHuwHiwiiiuii Newsbits0Faust to give lecture on Hutchins' lessonClarence Faust, dean of theCollege from 1941 to 1947,will deliver a lecture on thetopic “What I learned fromthe Hutchins college” November30.Faust’s speech, which will takeplace at 8 p.m. in Breasted hall,will be the third in the fall pro¬gram of the “Aims of Education”series, sponsored jointly by theOrientation board and the College.A professor of English prior toserving as Dean of the College,Faust succeeded Aaron Brum¬baugh, the most recent speaker inthe series, in the position.Since 1954, Faust has been pre¬sident of 1he Ford foundation’sfund for the advancement of edu¬cation.UCer's poem published“Nativity Scene: StateStreet,” a poem by Mrs. Do¬lores Keranen, a lecturer inhumanities at the Universityof Chicago Downtown center, isfeatured in the November 33 issueof the Northwest Review.The Northwest Review is a gen¬eral cultural review published atthe University of Oregon.CORE benefits plannedFour Chicago night clubswill hold benefit performancesfor the Congress of RacialEquality (CORE) tomorrownight.The Chicago chapter of CORFis selling $2 tickets which canbe used at the Gate of Horn,currently featuring TommyMakom and the Clancy brothers; the Basin Street, noted for Dixie¬land jazz; the Birdhouse, pre¬senting Chico Hamilton; and theSutherland, where Joe Williamsis appearing.Proceeds will be donated to thefreedom riders to pay the judicialexpenses encountered by thegroup’s testing of the InterstateCommerce commission’s ruling ofdesegregation in bus terminals.Tickets of admission to the nightclubs will be sold in the Mandelhall corridor and at New dormi¬tory, Pierce tower, and BurtonJudson courts. Outing club sponsorsAspen ski tripThe University of Chicagoouting club is sponsoring aski trip to Aspen, Colorado,during the first week of win¬ter interim.The excursion will cost $100 orless, depending on the number ofstudents who make the trip. Thisprice includes transportation bychartered bus, lodging, meals, andinsurance.Instruction will be available to beginners, intermediates, and ex¬perts. The skiers will leave Fridayevening, December 15, and returnearly Sunday morning, December24.Additional information is avail¬able at the information desk in theadministration building.Actors' company planspresentation of Richard IITryouts for the Actors’company presentation ofShakespeare’s “Richard II”are scheduled for November 18 from 1 to 5 pm and November19 from 3 to 5 pm at Ida Noyescloister club.The play, to be given in theform of a reading, will be pre¬sented December 1 and 2 by theActors’ company, a group formedthis summer by UC students,wrhich presented Mayakovsky's“Bedbug” last week.Graduate student Gerry Mastwill direct the nine men and sev¬eral women to be chosen for thecast. The company advises inter¬ested students that the rehearsalschedule will be brief and urgeseveryone to attend the tryoutsthis weekend.Classified AdsNicely furnished 8'4 rm. apt., tiled Priscilla, dear, I’d love to. Nice climatobath and shower, clean. 6143 S. Ken- and no fallout.—S.C.wood. Call; SO 6-04.19, P.S.— Here's a gift for you. Use it scii.ERITOR1AL ASSISTANTFor Social research organization.Phone FA 4-8301.STRONTIUM 90 WILL HBLP TO BUILDBODIES 12. DIFFERENT WAYS THISSATURDAY NIGHT AT 9:00 P.M2304—Patted heads aren't so bad, evensophisticated ones. 2U, 2B.Candidates for fhe title of Infer-Fraternity queenpose for o group picture during yesterday's judging.They are: (standing I. to r.), Fran Maksis, Barb Ungor,Dotty Schlotthauer, Jommo Antomow, April Schwartz.Seated (I. to r.) are: Kay Poorman, Jesse Schneider, PatSorci, and Letiore Stein. Winner of the contest will beannounced at Saturday's I • F ball Second Anniversary Sale Now In ProgressSCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORM — THE UNIQUE STORAGE UNITS1542 EAST 57th STREETOpen Daily I P.M. fo 7 P.M.9nJt&c-J’JuahAmii^ (BalLSaiiir«lay. Xovrmlicr IJUliCRYSTAL BALLROOMSHORELAND HOTEL9:00 P.M. • PAUL WINTER ORCHESTRA• GEORGE ALLEN TRIO• BLACKFRIARSId rather have CHESTERFIELDS!” POPULAR REPEATDINNERAT THE ffleDicx 5 to 8 P.M.Soup or JuiceHerb Bice• Bleu , Burgundy BeefSalad Baked TomatoCoffee, Tea, or EspressoCheese, Tortoni, or Italian Cookies' 1450 E. 57th STREETOUR CHILDREN'S BOOKS FOR CHRISTMAS ARE HERE!Dr. Seuss Beginner Books $1.95Looking Glass Library Classics $1.95Allabout Books and Landmark Books $1.95Actibity Boxes for Younger Children: $1.25 & upDo your shopping now for the best selectionUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEDOING IT THE HARD WAV(GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!AGED MILD. BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD -THEY SATISFY easier 3-minute way for men: FITCHMen, get rid of embarrassing dandruff easy as 1-2-3 withFITCH ! In just 3 minutes (one rubbing, one lathering, onerinsing), every trace of dandruff, grime, gummy old hairtonic goes righl down the drain! Your hair looks liand-.• somer, healthier. Your scalptingles,"‘feels so refreshed. UseFITCH Dandruff RemoverSHAMPOO every week forpositive dandruff control.Keep your hair and scalpreally clean, dandruff-free!FITCHLEADING MAN’SSHAMPOONov. 15. mi • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Fpotball playoffs today Author sees Negro inferiorityChampionship football re¬turns to Stagg field at 3:15this afternoon, when the firsttwo games of the intramuralplayoffs will be held.The “B” league champ, Psi Upsi-lon (8-0), will meet Divisionalking Laughlin house. Laughlincompeted in a defense-mindedleague whose scoring leader, Jim¬my Fink, garnered only 26 points.The teams as a whole averagedless than two touchdowns a game.In contrast, Psi Upsilon boasts ofthe all-university scoring champ,Steve Holland. Holland, DickPvler, and Woody Skiles havepiled up a total of 158 points forPsi Upsilon. Doliner, who each racked up 24markers.Psi Upsilon “A,**league victor, willlege game winnerfirst game winnerPsi Upsilon-CollegeSaturday for thetitle. the Fraternityplay the col-Friday. Thewill face thehouse winnerall-universityLeague scoring leaders:Nam*Steve HollandPsi UpsilonDennis DeKeyrelDelta UpsilonSteve JubynaDoddFred HoffmanChamberlinJohn ThompsonRes Ipsas League“B"FratBlueRedDivisional TotalS379493931 Carlton Putnam, author ofRace and Reason, urged theSoutli to base its fight againstracial integration on the bio¬logical inferiority of the Negro.Speaking Saturday at a rally ofthe Citizen’s council of the greaterNew Orleans area, he stated thatthe South has been mistaken inbasing its case on the principle ofstates’ rights.Putman stated that the 1954Supreme Court decision orderingschool desegregation was based onthe “scientific hoax’’ that Negroeshave the same natural endowmentsas whites.The two college league winnerswill clash in the second game.Salisbury’ (8-0), the Blue loopstandard-bearer, has the offensiveedge, while the Red league seven.East III (6-1), has displayed avicious defense.Salisbury's main scoring threatsare Rich Epstein and Stu Fisher.East III is pinning its scoringhopes on Tom Wolfe and Mike SC charter flightStudent Government* has arranged with Trans-World airlinesa one-way charter flight to New York’s Idlewild airport, leavingearly in the evening on Friday. December 15. Cost per student is$27.50.The TWA constellation will depart from O’Hare field; trans¬portation to O’Hare will be provided for an additional charge of $1.Students wishing to make reservations, for the flight shouldcontact the Student government office between noon and 1:30 pmMonday through Friday. Phone campus extension 3273 or 3274.Anthropologist is objectiveAn anthropologist “studiespeople positively from theirown point of view and objec¬tively like a man from Mars,"said Sol Tax, professor of anthro¬pology.Tax spoke Sunday before theKappa Alpha Psi fraternity on 47street and Ellis avenue. His lec¬ture. entitled “Man—evolving orrevolving?”, was part of thefraternity’s Great Issues forumseries.He outlined first the growth ofanthropology as a legitimate,organized study and the early be¬liefs of anthropologists. Duringthe 1840’s, ethnological societieswere formed in Parish. London,and New York.The English physician Hunt ofthe succeeding anthropologicalsociety contended that some raceshad been left behind in evolution.Thomas Huxley, the popularizerof Darwin’s theory of naturalselection in evolution, concludedthat the Negro was actually in¬ferior to the white, just as womenwere inferior to men. Therefore,women and Negroes must befavored and given every advan¬tage.Tax, commenting on this senti¬ment, said, “It’s easy to becomeconfused and believe that you’resmarter than the other fellow justbecause you have him down.”Tax said that skin pigmentationexists partly to protect the personfrom the rays of the sun, “But ifyou don’t have it, you can alwayswear a hat.”Different peoples, he stressed,have developed different aspectsof their civilizations to varyingextents. For instance, the Austra¬lian aborigines have organized acomplicated system of familyrelations, whereas other civiliza¬tions like that of the UnitedStates have concentrated on thetechnological aspects of humanprogress.The organization of beings intocommunities is unique to man. Hehas established within each of hiscivilizations three primary charac¬teristics of community living.First, a language system ofcommunication evolved. Eachgroup of peoples produced alanguage technique which servedits own needs, and no singlelanguage is best for all men.Secondly, social systems ap¬peared, which were equally arbi¬trary and which are applicableonly to that particular community.Thirdly, a values system placedthe likes and dislikes in a prefer¬ential order of importance. Forexample, the bounds and degreesof freedom and order have been given varying emphasis by differ¬ent civilizations.Tax concluded that men arebiologically the same. The majorphysical differences are largely inmatters of blood types, for ex¬ample, _ and not in externalfeatures, like hair texture. Dis¬tinctions among men are theirdissimilar arbitrary culturalforms.Yet mankind lias made little up¬ ward progress in matters ofmorality, for instance. Suchviolent practices as human sacri¬fices have stopped, hut absoluteaims like “making the world safefor democracy” have proven im¬practical and optimistic. Evolu¬tion is rather the “coming to¬gether and branching off” of manand his cultures. Evolution is notan uphill advance but a series ofcontinual ups and downs.REMEMBER:for sales,foreign carsales .cic**E “Three years of study of thesubject have convinced me thatthis is a scientific hoax perpetratedby left wing, politically mindedscientists in both America andwestern Europe,” he said and ad¬ded that if northerners learn thetruth about the equality theory,they will welcome a reversal ofthe Court’s decision.Putman referred his audience to a study on the “External Morpho¬logy of the Primate Brain” byFather C. J. Connolly. He saidfrontal brain lobes (considered theseat of higher faculties) of Ame-rican Negroes were significantlysmaller than those of whites, *ndcontained fewer wrinkles. Wrinklesare regarded by some authoritiesas indicative of development.Two socialists to speakThe University of Chicagochapter of the Young Socialistalliance (YSA) will presenttw’o socialist speakers repre¬senting distinct schools of thoughtin the socialist movement, Satur¬day night at 8 p.m. in Internationalhouse.The speakers Herbert Apthekerand William F. Warde. will discussthe questions; Does US historyhave any consistant pattern? Whatare the prospects of the labormovement? Can our colored citi¬zens win equality with capitalism?Will this country escape the worldrevolution of our time?Aptheker is a contributing editorof Mainstream, editor of PoliticalAffairs, author of American NegroSlave Revolts. A Documentary has been active in many civil lib¬erties struggles including the fi^htato free Tom Mooney and saveSacco and Vanzetti, and the morerecent fight against McCarthysm.A writer for the InternationalSocialist Review and the Militant,Warde is also the author of TheI^ong View of History, The logicof Marxism and The IrregularMovement of History.Gershon Horowitz, president ofthe UC chapter of YSA, said thatthe YSA is sponsoring this meet¬ing in the hope that it will leadto a clarification of views, whichis so essential for the building ofa new socialist movement in Ame¬rica.Admission for students is 25cents and $1.00 for non-students.History of the Negro People, His¬tory off Reality, Dare We Be Freeand The Colonial Era. In 1939 hewas awarded the “Prize of His¬tory” of the Association for thestudy of Negro life. He was a Gug¬genheim fellow in 1946-47.Warde was educated at Harvard.He was an associate of Leon Trot¬sky while the latter was in Mexi¬co and he participated in Trotsky’sdefense in-the Moscow trials. He ErratumThe announcement in yes¬terday's Maroon statingthat winter quarter timeschedules would be avail-ble November 14 was inerror. The schedules willnot be available until Nov¬ember 24.Its whats up front that countsUp front is [FILTER"BLEND! and only Winston has it!Rich, golden tobaccos specially selected and speciallyprocessed for full flavor in filter smoking.K. I. Reynold*Tobacco Co.. Winston-Salem. N. C.WINSTON .TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should!ROON • Nov. 15. 19{>1