Dean Netherton quitsOne of Netherton’s most con- is a personal disappointment $e-troversial decisions in his five cause I regard him as a fine deanyears as dean was the establish- of students. I feel that the stu-ment of a University residence dents are losing a good friendrequirement. Under the require- and a good spokesman.”ment, introduced in the summerDean of students John P.Netherton yesterday an¬nounced his resignation fromthe post he has held since1957.Netherton’s announcementnme as a complete surprise.Close associates expressed shockon hearing of the resignation.Until a replacement is foundNetherton will remain in thedean's office. This could rangefrom one to several months, ac¬cording to informed sources.Netherton will probably retainhis position until the end of thisacademic year.The dean said he is resigningto return to his academic field —Hispanic studies. He holds thefiosition of associate professor ofSpanish in the College.Accepting Netherton’s resigna¬tion. UC president George WellsIleadle said, “Mr. Netherton hasspent the last ten years workingin close association with studentsat the University, an activity forwhich lie had the essentially nec¬essary enthusiasm and under¬standing.“Despite the heavy administra¬tive duties he carried as dean ofstudents, his primary concern was to better student life. As aresult, student housing has beengreatly increased and improvedand a program of student activi¬ties that meets the needs and in¬terests of today’s students liasbeen encouraged and assisted. Ifully appreciate Doan Netherton’swish to return to teaching andresearch, and his well-earnedright to do so.”One of Netherton’s plans is toreturn to Spain, where he and hiswife have lived three years. Hehopes to do work on the sociologyof small Spanish towns duringhis stay.Before becoming dean, Nether¬ton served as assistant dean ofthe College, dean of students inthe College, and associate dean ofstudents. Today he says that theten years he spent in student per¬sonnel work is “a good roundterm of deaning, after which therefreshment of change is usuallyin order for all concerned.”Viewing his term of office, the44-year-old dean said, “If the stu¬dents and staff have learned asmuch from this operation as Ihave learned from them, its beenthe greatest of experience for allof us.” of 1960, all women undergradu¬ates are required to live in Uni¬versity residence halls for fouryears. Undergraduate men mustlive in during their first year,and have the option of living indorms or fraternity houses theirsecond. The rule touched off astorm of student protest whichlasted all of last year.Netherton’s immediate staffwas taken completely by surpriseby the announcement. Said AnitaSandke, the dean’s administrativeassistant and director of the of¬fice of vocational guidance andplacement, “I’m so shocked. He’sbeen my boss for the last threeyears and he’s a wonderful per¬son. He is a very understandingand kind person to work for. It’sthe hardest thing in the world toverbalize my feelings for him.He’s just been an ideal boss tome.”Other UC administrators wTereunanimous in their praise ofNctherton’s term of office. “This William Van Cleve, Universityregistrar echoed these views. Saidhe, “This utterly floors me andleaves me very sad. Nothing Iknow of can explain to me thereason for this unexpected andunforeseen resignation.”Bursar Albert Cotton summedup the attitude of the dean's staff.Cotton stated, “Mr. Nethertonand I have worked very closelytogether. I have always had avery high regard for him.”UC’s dean of students’ officehas one of the largest jobs ofany such office in the country.Responsible to the dean are thefollowing offices: the deans ofstudents in the divisions andschools and the dean of under¬graduate students; admissions;advisor to foreign visitors; finan-ical aid; physical education; offi¬cial publications; dissertation sec¬retary; the registrar; studenthealth; student housing; studentactivities; vocational guidanceand placement.The dean is also ex officiochairman of the committee on fel¬lowships and scholarships, and isa member of all committees onthe curriculum in the College,divisions, and schools. A review of the functions ofthe dean’s office is probable, ac¬cording to President Beadle. “Theoffice has more duties than anyother dean of students that Iknow, and we will look to see ifall these responsibilities shouldbelong to any one person.”Netherton sees advantages insuch an investigation. “This is anunusual office in the scope ofthings under it. I think it is anexcellent idea that a review beinstituted. To some extent sucha review has been continuousduring my term and my predeces¬sor’s [the late Robert Strozier]but it is a good kind of thing thatthere can’t be too much of.”No other resignations are ex¬pected in the dean’s office, al¬though when the new dean isselected he will have a good dealto say about who serves on hisstaff.Netherton’s resignation leavesUC with four major administra¬tive offices unfilled. In additionto the dean’s post, no replace¬ments have been found forNapier Wilt, dean of the humani¬ties; William Zachariasen, deanof the physical sciences; andHenry Sulcer, former vice presi¬dent for development. Zacharia¬sen and Wilt are remaining untilnew deans can be found, but thedevelopment offi^'> still un¬filled.Vol. 70 — No. 32 University of Chicago, Wednesday, Dec. 6, 1961 31USSR students judge UC“I am pleased to see that130 students here are activelystudying the Russian lan¬guage. There is also a largegroup studying English in theSoviet Union. This is bound toimprove relations.”These were the words of Niko¬lai Novokreshchenov. chairman ofthe Soviet bureau of internationalyouth tourism, when he and fiveother Soviet citizens met with agroup of UC students last night atthe Alpha Delta Phi fraternityhouse.Novokreshchenov is leading agrout> of Russians currently tour¬ing the United States. Included inthe group are a chairman of acollective farm, a historian, achemical engineer, a maritime en¬gineer, and a journalist. which are free of outside super¬vision, such as American frater¬nities. Karl Khelemyaye, a corres¬pondent for Komsomolskaya Prav-da, answered that such arrange¬ments are unnecessary since stu¬dents live either at home or ingovernment supported dormitories.He emphasized, however, thatinternal affairs of the dormitoryare under the complete control ofdemocratically elected dormitorycouncils. He also pointed out thatthe government pays the tuition,room, board, and miscellaneousexpenses of all students.The group is interested in study¬ing university and urban life"while in Chicago. They are visit¬ing university classes, the city’smuseums, cultural facilities, andhousing projects, and living infraternity house. Monday night, they attended aUC basketball game.Chicago is the second of fourcities the group will visit. Lastweek, they lived at private homesin the Washington, Iowa (popula¬tion 1200) area in order to observeAmerican rural life.Next week the group will travelto San Francisco to study indus¬trial life by visiting factories andspeaking with workers. They willfinish their tour of the UnitedStates with a two-day stop inWashington, DC. There they planto meet with leaders in all areasof government.This tour has been arranged byExperiment in International lav¬ing under a cultural exchangeagreement between the US andthe Soviet Union. John P. Netherton, who announced his resignation asDean of Students yesterday.Levan Svanadze, a history pro¬fessor at a Georgian university,was asked whether a New YorkTimes report was .accurate instating that Leon Trotsky’s workshave not been published in Russia.He replied that the works wereavailable in the large universitylibraries, but that “they are awaste of time; few want to readthem.”It was mentioned to the Russiangroup that at the University ofChicago the required general edu¬cation includes readings by Leninand Marx. In answer to a ques¬tion as to whether Russian stu¬dents read western philosophers-such as Mill and Locke, he ans¬wered that Russian philosophystudents read all philosophers, andthat every student is required tostudy “historical and dialecticmaterialism” which surveys “allWestern philosophy.”The group was asked whetherRussian students are allowed tomaintain housing establishmentsQuarter's last MaroonThis is the last Marron ofthe quarter. Our next issue willappear on Wednesday, Jan. 3rd. Summarizes legislative resultsMikva condonesby Abner J. Mikva(Editors note: Mr. Mikva, aUniversity of Chicago graduate, isthe Democratic slate represent¬ative from the 23rd district, com¬prising Hyde Park, South Shoreand Kenwood communities. He hasconsented to write this report forthe MAROON in order that UC'sstudent body may became betteracquainted with state political af¬fairs.)The recently concluded spe¬cial session of the Illinoisstate legislature received itsshare of adverse publicity. Itwas richly deserved, but lestthe good get interred withthe bones of the unlamentedspecial session, trie constructiveactions of the session ought tobe recounted as well as the fail¬ures.The most important subject thatthe special session had to copewith was that of congressional reapportionment. Under federallaw, reapportionment in all thestates must take place immed¬iately following the decennialcensus. Since the number in con¬gress is fixed at 435, changes inpopulation between the states re¬sult in states gaining or losingcongressmen as a result of eachcensus. If a state fails to re¬apportion itself after such gain orloss, then all of the congress¬men in that state must run atlarge in a state-wide contest. Thelast, census cuts Illinois’ congres¬sional districts from 25 to 24. Ifthe legislature had failed in re-^pportionment, this would havemeant an additional 48 nameson the ballot (two candidates foreach of 24 seats). The poor voterwould have walked into a votingbooth with a bed sheet for a bal¬lot and would have had even moreopportunity to be confused thannormal. As of 1 pm on the datethat the special session finallyadjourned, the two parties wereat an impass on reapportionment. specialCuriously enough, the fight wasnot over which party had to giveup a seat. The Democrats hadagreed to give up the seat and togive it up in the city of Chicago.Rather, the fight was over how theburgeoning population of the sub¬urbs was to be represented. Demo¬cratic proposals were to combinesome of the suburbs with variousparts of the city but to leave suchseats safe for Democracy. Re¬publican proposals were to makethe suburbs self-contained con¬gressional districts.The final result, at least inCook county, was a credit to theart of gerrymandering. In~Cookcounty, the Democrats have seven“safe” seats, the Republicansthree, and two were given to thevoters to decide. The geographi¬cal lines would make the Ror¬schach pictures look symetrical.Nevertheless, the agreementreached was a major victory forthe voters since congressional el¬ections at large would have beena disastrous alternative. In the sessionHyde Park district, CongressmanO’Hara’s boundaries were extend¬ed to the city line on the southand, accordingly, increased inpopulation. Most political obser¬vers believe that he should beable to carry the new districthandily.Turning to the ever presentsubject of taxes, the legislaturefought itself to Mexican stand¬off. It passed one measure whichequalized the rate between theservice occupation tax and the re¬tailers occupational tax. This willproduce a small amount of revenuefor the state and eliminate a greatamount of confusion and maneu¬vering on the part of the occupa¬tions involved. It will not addmaterially to the burden of theconsumer. The legislature passeda watered-down version of a billto establish a revenue commis¬sion. The hill was so much waterand so little substance that thegovernor was almost tempted to(Continued on page eight).2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 6, 1961Have the time of your lifein Britain for $45 a weekYOU can explore Britain, staying at any of the over400 youth hostels and meeting British studentsfor $45 a week. Or you can splurge, and for twice thatrent a car and stay in country inns. Either way, you'llsee the British way of life and the wonderful country¬side. (And you speak the language already!)Here are some of the remarkable prices that you'llfind in Britain:Youth hostels, per night $ .75Country inns, per night $ 3.75Bicycle hire, per week $ 2.00Car hire, per week $50.00(insurance and gas included)Train fare, per mile $ .029Bus fare, per mile $ .021Pub lunch $ 1.00Country inn dinner $ 1.60Theatre seat $ 1.50(or 154 in the gods*)Clip the coupon below for your FREE brochures,‘‘Students Visiting Britain” and “Travelling Economi¬cally.” They tell you how to get there inexpensively,how to get around and where to stay.♦Gods: British English for top balconyBritish Travel Association, Box C2-B680 Fifth Avenue, New York 19, N. Y.Please send me my free copy of “Students VisitingBritain” and “Travelling Economically.”Name.PLEASE PRINT CLEARLYSchooLAddress.City Zone. -State- Former UC coach Amos Alonzo Stagg, who wasidentified by as many students as knew George Playe,dean of undergraduate students.Cool, clean Old Spice After Shove lotion alwaysgets you off to a fast, smooth start. Feels just asgood between shaves as it does after shaving.Rates A-OK with dates. 1.00 and 1.75 plus tax.5 H ULTON Qftt(Spice AFTER SHAVELOTIONforeign car hospitalsec page 4 7Students cannot identify campus figures {by Laura Godofsky andAvima RuderDo you know who GeorgeWells Beadle is? Someone oncampus does not. dents at the University, and whilewe do not claim that the resultsof the survey are indisputablycorrect, we can make many inter¬esting: observations as a result ofthe responses we received.weorge wens neaaie, presiaenr ot ug, wnom onestudent could not identify.Beadle, president of theUniversity was correctlyidentified by 66 out of 67•indents who were recently askedtl identify thirty campus figures,post and present. The other stu-dflbt only said that the President“Was a professor or held an ad¬ministrative post, I’m not surevrftich one.”Forty-one of the students quer¬ied were new to the UniversitytMb year (first year or transferstudents). The rest were ret urn-inf undergraduates, or, in a fewcases, graduate students.While we do not claim to havequestioned a scientifically-arrived-at random sampling of ail stu- We find some significance in thefact that not one first year stu¬dent and only three other stu¬dents know the identity of thepresent manager of the UC book¬store, Eugene Miller; whereas 20out of 26 returning students andonly 2 new students could iden¬tify Dempster Passmore, recentlyretired manager of the Book¬store. Could this have somethingto do writh last year’s heated con¬troversy over high prices? Orcould this mean everyone is satis¬fied with this year’s low prices?We were also interested in theoverwhelming majority of stu¬dents who identified UC physicistJohn Simpson as dean of the Col¬lege. These same students, twelve names later, correctly identifiedAlan Simpson as “Oh, he’s thedean, not the other guy; I don’tknow who the first one is.”Further, despite charges anddenials of apathy on the part ofstudents, only one student in thisyear’s entering class could ident¬ify the vice president of StudentGovernment, David Levey. Twelvereturning students, however, dididentify him. He was frequentlyconfused with the omnipresentLevi brothers, Edward (dean ofthe law school) and Julian (chair¬man of the Southeast Chicagocommission).While 14 new students couldidentify the head of StudentGovernment (Len Friedman), and20, the editor of the Maroon (JayGreenbeig), only two could iden¬tify the station manager of WUCB(Sherwin Kaplan) and only five,the chairman of Orientationboard (Karl Bemesderfer).More than 85% of the old stu¬dents knew of Greenberg amiFriedman; however, < .ly 50%could identify Kaplan and Bemes¬derfer. We’re not sure whetherthis supports or disproves thenotion that there are no BMOC’s(Big men on campus) at UC.New students seem to havebeen in unusually good healththis year (Are brawn and beautyreally becoming significant fac¬tor* in admission?), for only fiveof them knew of Henrietta Her-bolsheimer, director of StudentHealth service, who has warnedstudents not to overuse theemergency room at Billings hos--pital or to feed the possibly rabidsquirrels near the administrationbuilding.The cloistered scholarly lifeseems to lead to maladies, foralmost 2/3 of the returning stu¬dents were able to identify Dr.Herbolsheimer.The questionnaire administeredto our 67-student sample con¬sisted of 15 administrators, 7faculty members, and 7 students,and one myth.This may seem a bit weightedin favor of the administration;however, whenever we lookaround, we seem to sense that the University has twice a* manyadministrators as students orfaculty members.Six men were correctly identi¬fied by more than 50 respon¬dents. All six are known for theirwork as administrators.Three of these men, RobertMaynard Hutchins, William Rain¬ey Harper, and Beadle, haveserved as chief officers of theUniversity, three as President andtwo as Chancellor.Two other top men, George Playe(dean of undergraduate students)and Simpson, hold the two high¬est administrative posts in theCollege. One of the six, who tiedwith Playe for fourth place, isa 99-ycar-old man who has notbeen affiliated with the Universityfor some 30 years.This man, Amos Alonzo Stagg,while known for his prowess asthe football coach of manychampionship Maroon squads, is also known as the namesake ofthe concrete and steel remnanlsof the stadium on Universityavenue, and even as “the manw’ho gave the money for Staggfield.”Students Reem to feel that allmen uhu have buildings on cam¬pus named after them earn thishonor only by donating the moneyto construct said buildings.William Rainey Harper, for in¬stance, was identified by a num¬ber of students as the first presi¬dent of the University, the manwho donated the money forHarper library, or both.While it is not impossible fora university president to havespare millions of dollars, a cur¬sory glance at the library plaquesis quite informative. The struc¬ture that houses most of UC’sbook collection is the Harper(Continued on page 8)WilttMBSfiBl\ Russian civ BA given Due Process for studentsThe policy committee of thesocial sciences division hasauthorized the development ofa concentration, within thesocial sciences division, in Rus¬sian civilization.The committee which will drawup the program consists of theRussian civilization group in thedivision. It includes D. GaleJohnson, chairman, George Bob-rinskoy, Chauncy Harris, LeopoldHaimosh, Hugh Mcl^ean, ArcadiusKahan, and the three faculty mem¬bers teaching the Russian civiliza¬tion course this year, ThomasRiha, chairman of the coursestaff. Josef Anderle, and MeyerIsenberg. Although plans are incomplete,the concentration will probablyinclude, besides the course inRussian civilization, courses inthe Russian language, literature,geography, history, and politics.Interested students may consultMr. Riha. A complete statementof the requirements for the con¬centration will be issued nextquarter. Court rules on expulsionSeason's sports slateHere is the sports slate forthe remainder of the quarter.Basketball - Varsity at LakeForest, Dec. 9; Varsity vs. UIC. The Supreme Court on Mon¬day upheld the right of stu¬dents in tax-supported col¬leges to be given hearings be¬fore expulsion for misconduct.The high court’s action makesfinal an August 4 decision of theCourt of Appeals for the fifthcircuit.The appellate decision involvedthe expulsion of six students fromAlabama State college, a Negroinstitution in Montgomery onMarch 4. 3960. The students claimthey were expelled for their sit-inLatke-hamentash battled and civil rights activities.A letter to the students fromthe college president explainedthat they were expelled for “con¬duct projudicial to the school’’and “unbecoming a student or fu¬ture teacher in schools of Ala¬bama’’. The letter also cited ascauses “insubordination and insur¬rection and inciting other pupilsto like conduct.”The expulsion had been upheldin federal court in Montgomery,but was reversed by the Courtof Appeals.The decision of the appeals a tax-supported college must begiven, before expulsion, the namesof all witnesses against him, a re¬port of the testimony of each wit¬ness, and a chance to prepare adefense.The Alabama board of educa¬tion claimed in its appeal that theappellate court’s decision was “un¬realistic and apparently withoutknowledge of everyday campusaffairs in these times.”The appellate court noted thatthe six students were all in goodstanding and had a right to corn-court states that each student of plete their education.Tonight the case of thelathe versus the hamentashwill be given a “trial byJewry” at Hillel house.The judge will be HermanFiner, professor of politicalscience. Defendants will be David Bakan, professor of psychology;Leon Carnovsky, graduate profes¬sor of anthropology; Harry KalvenJr., professor In the law school;Sol Tax, professor of anthropol¬ogy; and Bernard Wieberger, as¬sociate professor of history.Tonight’s trial is Hillel’s 36thannual Hannukah program. It willPolice station to move begin at 7:15 with the lighting ofthe fifth Hannukah candle.The case brings climaxes to long¬standing tensions between the Lat-kerian and hamantashen camps.Both sides have claimed superiori¬ty for their symbols on many poli¬tical, economic, moral, social,mathematic and religiousgrounds.(The latke is a flat, roundpotato pancake and is the tradi¬tional food of the Jewish Hannuk-Tlie Hyde Park police sta- the area.” he countered. Despres kan celebration. The hamentash istion presently located at 5233 Predicted that increased efficiency a triangular pastry filled withT , .p. , J ... t will probably lead to improved either prunes or poppy seeds andLake lark avenue, will move. poijce servjce regardless of the is the traditional food of the1 lie Chicago police depart- location of police stations. Purim festival,),ment has decided to replace itwith a new police station on thenortheast corner of 64th street andHarper.The announcement of the newstation was made by police super¬intendent Orlando Wilson in anaddress to the City .council com¬mittee on finance iast week. The John T. McNeill, former professor of European Christian-committee had been meeting to the University of Chicago, has been named the divinity™"sid.ur_ lts-1-9^?. bud^et: ^ school’s “man of the year.”The award is given annually to a distinguished alumnus ofthe divinity school. McNeill, 76,Professor McNeilnamed man of yearlold the committee that “fundshave already been provided apervious bond issue” for construc¬tion of the station. received his PhD from the divin- iod through the Reformation,ity school in 1920. He is regarded English puritanism, evangelicalism,The new station is planned to by many as the foremost his- and modern movements in theserve both the Woodlawn and torian of Calvinism in the Eng- church. His works have beenHyde Park areas. The present lish-speaking world. translated into German, French,Hyde Park station is scheduled McNeill was honored Wcdnes- Spanish, and Chinese,for demolition under the Hyde day night at the annual dinner McNeill has been teaching sincePark-Kenwood urban renewal plan, given for the divinity school 1914. He was on UC’s facultyThe change in plans involving faculty by the trustees of thethe Hyde Park station is part of Baptist theological union of theWilson’s general program of con- school.solidating police districts through- His citation roads; “To John T.out the city. He thus hopes to re- from 1927-1944.Born in Canada, he receivedhis BA and MA degrees from Mc¬Gill university, and a bachelorlease more uniformed personnel McNeill, inleinationally lenowned divinity from Westminsterfor patrol work. scholar, mentor of several gener- Hall Vancouvei.( Canada.. He wasAlderman Leon Despres, Ind., ations of scholars and clergymen, ordained i n " t h e Presbyterianfifth ward, a member of the com- himself a devoted churchman and church in Canada in 1913.mittee on finance, claimed that clergyman who always upheld the His son William H. McNeillthe consolidation program would highest academic standards in be- was recently appointed chairmanhave no adverse effect on police half of university and church.” Gf tjie uc history department. Hepr°!^tion V1 thjs McNeill has published over 100 is an authority on modern Euro-ulien the old Woodlawn sta- artieles, monographs, and books pean history who has been on thetion was condemned and moved to covcrjng r10 early medieval per- faculty hei’e since 1947.Grand Crossing, business men andresidents of Woodlawn were con¬cerned over the loss,” said Despres.“We have found however, that themove to Grand Crossing did notdetract from the police service of DOING IT THE HARD WAY by W(GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!)in* foreign car salessee page 4MODEL CAMERAWe have one of the finestselection of photographic equip¬ment on the south side.1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Distinctive Paperbacksand Juvenile Booksfor special giftsGREEH D00RB00K SHOPwltkf th»otaoici1450 E. 57th 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 right down the drain! Your hair looks hand¬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’SSHAMPOO A sparkling new computer, IBM 1621 has just been movedinto the data processing center of the National OpinionResearch center, 5720 S. Woodlawn. The computer willnot be put into operation for several days.A SUN LIFE POLICY FOR EVERY NEEDFOR YOUAND YOUR FAMILY. ..The Income Endowment plan guarantees life in¬surance protection if you die within a specifiednumber of years. If you live, the endowmentbenefit falls due oil the maturity date; you cantake the funds in cash or as income for life.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LaSalle Chicago, IIIFR 2-2390 • FA 4-5300SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA"SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT"PHILLIPS JEWELRY CO.DIAMONDS • WATCFfES • JEWELRY • RINGS • SILVERWAREPEARLS • RELIGIOUS GOODS • APPLIANCESSERVING COLLEGE STUDENTS AT WHOLESALEPRICES FOR THE PAST 20 YEARS"50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDS"~~ENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS''CHRISTMAS SALE"WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING67 E. MADISON ROOM 1101CHICAGO DE 2-6508ON CAMPUS — INFORMATIONRAY MITCHELL CAMPUS EXT. 3245Dec. 6, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROONNews bitsUrban renewal student project beginsA community service pro¬ject which gives students anopportunity to learn aboutproblems in urban renewalwill be held this wekend.The project, sponsored by theAmerican Friends service commit¬tee, will concentrate on the prob¬lems of relocating families livingin the Hyde Park-Kenwood urbanrenewal areas.Participants will be engaged ina community survey collecting in¬ formation by interviewing resi¬dents of the renewal area. Thisinformation will then be inter¬preted by the Hyde Park-Kenwoodtenants and home owners.The Hyde Park-Kenwood ten¬ants and home owners is a localorganization which "has beenactively involved in maintainingcontact with resident affected byurban renewal and relocation . . .It tries to check on the manner inwhich the Community Conserva¬tion board of Chicago adheres to its responsibility for maintaining“renewal buildings and relocatingpeople in adequate -living facili¬ties/'The project will begin on Fri¬day evening, December 8, and willclose on Sunday, December 10,about 2 pm. During this period,the participants will be housed atthe project house at 3543 WestJackson. European literaturetopic of Chicago ReviewModern European literatureis the topic of the fall issue ofthe Chicago Review, now onsale in Hyde Park bookstoresat $1 a copy. The issue is the firstof three on the same subject. Thecurrent issue features five essayson modern French and Germanliterature. Perse’s Anabase by UC professorBernard Weinberg.i.lllllllll!llllllllllllllllllli!lilllllllllllill!lllll!llllllllll!llllllllllllllllllllllllllli Students interested in participa¬ting in this project have beenasked to call HA 7-2533.'Jason found the Golden Fleeceand his Amazon at... ”TAVERN&LIQUORS= 55th and Ellis EEEE Ml 3-0524 || Ellison to lectureRalph Ellison, visiting pro¬fessor in the College, will givea lecture on “The minoritywriter in America” tomorrownight at 8:30 in Breasted hall ofthe Oriental institute. Ellison iscurrently teaching a course in"The influence of the Civil War onAmerican literature.” He is"Celebrity in Residence” of theCollege this quarter. University of Chicago instructorRalph J. Mills writes on contem¬porary French poets Rene Charand Henri Michaux; former visit¬ing UC instructor Geoffrey H.Hartman writes on Maurice Blan-chot. Other essays concernThomas Mann, modern continentalpoetry, and an essay on PaulClaudel -by Henri Peyre. In addi¬tion Leon Edel provides “notes”on the two disciplines of criticismand psychoanalysis, and Paul Herrcontributes a short story.The winter issue, to come outin January, will feature an analy¬sis of French poet St. John The Review has announced aspecial subscription rate for thesethree issues, plus a copy of theExistentialism and Literatureissue of 1959. These four issues(any other available back issuemay be substituted for'’the Exis¬tentialism issue) may be obtainedby UC students, faculty and stafffor $2, half their regular price.This subscription may be obtainedby posting $2 in cash or checkto Chicago Review, care of facultyexchange, with name, address andpreference for a back issue.The sign of Ihe omateur© °The importance of head controlWe are told that bird watchers, who always take noteswhile they watch, are able to keep one eye on the birdand one eye on the notebook. Eye dexterity of this typeis also a great asset to the girl watcher. It enables him towatch two girls at the same time, even when the girls aresitting on opposite sides of a classroom. The beginner, who must watch the girls one at a time in a situation ofthis type, must learn to restrict his movements to the eye¬balls. The girl watcher never moves his head. Unduehead-turning, particularly if it is accompanied by shoutsor whistles, is the sign of the amateur. (If you want some¬thing to shout about, try a Pall Mall!)mWHY BE AN AMATEUR?JOIN THE AMERICAN SOCIETYOF GIRL WATCHERS NOW!free membership card.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 EldonDedini. Reprinted by permission of Harper & Brothers.C* PrtJttl «/ jJmjsMi&n Ji.*&out£u-&ny*ary — Jv&uoev M #»f miiilt um Pall Mall’snatural mildnessis so goodto your taste!So smooth, so satisfying,so downright smokeable!CAGO MAROON • Dec. 6, 1961 University College hasfine arts open houseThe University College ofthe University of Chicago, at64 East Lake street, lias an¬nounced an open house in thefine arts on Friday, December8 at 6 pm. The open house ispart of the college’s Fine Artsprogram, and will be held in room201.WUCB GuideWednesday, December 67 pm Grieg: Concerto in a for pianoand orchestra.7:30 Debussy: String Quartet in G, Op.10.Mozart: Mass in e, K. 427Vivaldi: Concerto in g, for flute,oboe, violin, bassoon, and figuredbass.9— Seen through the Windows of Sec¬ond City, direct from 1842 N. Wells.9:30—Bartok: For Children (Volume 1).9:45- Weill: Aufsteig end Fall derStadt Mahagonny (complete opera).Thursday, December 77 pm —Beethoven: Symphony #1 in C,Op. 21Schubert: Trio #1 in Bb, Op. 99.S Jabberwocky, with Stephen J."Shorty" Spiro.9 Word Pictures, with Barbara Steim-etz.9:30— Prokofieff: Sonata #6, in a forpiano. Op. 82.10 "This Hand is Your Land.” a specialfolk music show with John Kim toconclude this quarter’s broadcasting.JOSEPH H. AARONAll Forms of InsuranceSUITE 825135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060dealers in:• mg• morris• austin• rilcy• lambrefta5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob lestermg psychiatristRobin Pearce, director of theFine Arts program has said theevening will include a discussionof the acting profession, a Japan¬ese film, an American film, anillustrated discourse on the Christ¬mas season, and an exhibition ofpaintings.Frances Hyland, who Is cur¬rently portraying Joan of Arc inthe Goodman theatre’s productionof "The Lark,” by Anouilh, andscribed as a charming example ofthe Actors’ workshop in SanFrancisco and playing at presentin ihe Goodman production, willhold a discussion on the profes¬sion of acting.Two films will be featured inthe December 8 program. "TheScribbling Kittne” is a Japanesefilm, directed by Taiji Yabushita.It is done entirely without the useof dialogue and has been de¬scribed as a charming example ofthe Japanese cartoon. The filmwon first prize at the EducationFilm festival in Japan.' foreign car hospital £ dink ImGood education may not lessen prejudiceOpen house FridayHot wassail punch will flowfrom 7 to 9 pm Friday at IdaNoyes hall’s annual Christmasopen house. The traditionalwassail party will take place inthe lounge and library.Guests will include Santa Claus;carols will be sung.All students may help decorateIda Noyes hall’s Christmas treelate Friday afternoon. Mrs. JohnP. Nethcrton, wife of the dean ofstudents, will light the tree at theevening party.Free refreshments will beserved by girls from the inter¬club council.Racial and religious preju¬dice are not substantially re¬duced by education, accordingto a newly-published book bya Rutgers university professor.Although the more educatedshow less prejudice in formal andlegal matters, they are likely tohold highly charged and deroga¬tory' stereotypes, favor informaldiscrimination, and reject intimatecontact with minority group mem¬bers. claimed the author, CharlesStember.Stember’s book, entitled F.iluea-tion and Attitude Change, reportsthe results of a recent surveywhich indicated that althoughprejudice is not greatly reducedby education, the better schooledtend to be less hospitable toprimitive misconceptions such asthe existence of certain anthropo¬logical differences between races.The survey noted that socialscience students are most likely,and business students least likely,to shed their prejudices.Stember found the effects ofeducation strongest among personsof low economic status. The low¬est degree of prejudice was foundamong the highly educated whocame from lower-class beginnings. lings, baked tomatoes, green saladwith raw mushrooms (a tradi¬tional German salad), and aspecial German Christmas wine.The dessert, which should be pie,has been changed to cherriesjubilee, because, “It is lighter andmore festive.”Morgenthau to discussAmerican foreign policyHans J. Morgenthau, pro¬fessor of political science, willdiscuss “The crisis of Ameri¬can foreign policy” in thesecond lecture of a series spon¬sored by the fifth ward forum.The fifth ward forum is beingpresented by the fifth ward regu¬lar democratic organization as apublic service, according to WalterJohnson, former chairman of thedepartment of history at the Uni¬versity of Chicago and chairmanof the forum.The lecture will be held onTuesday, December 12 at 8 pm inthe Ray school auditorium, 5631South Kimbark. There will be four additionallectures in the series. On January17, Emmett Dedmon, managingeditor of the Chicago Sun Timesand former editor of the Maroon,will speak on “The newspaper andthe government.”“The Illinois legislative process;a strange animal,” Will be dis¬cussed by state senator MarshallKorshak and state representativeAbner J. Mikva on February 14.On March 14, St. Clair Drake,professor of sociology at Roose¬velt university and an expert inAfrican affairs, will talk on “Thenew Africa.” “Discrimination innorthern cities” will be discussedon May 9 by Edwin C. Berry,executive director, Chricago Urbanleague, and Dr. Arthur Falls.Johnson stated that the firstlecture, held in November, waswell attended and he expressedhope that the forum will besuccessful.Prizes to be awardedfor original writingsSix prizes worth $1,500 will be awarded this spring by theOlga and Paul Menn founda¬tion for an original story ornovel, a play of one or more acts,and an original musical composi¬tion.In each category there will be afirst prize of $1,000 and a secondprize of $500.Competition is open to Univer¬sity of Chicago students who willbe between 20 and 25 years old on June 30, 1962, who are candi¬dates for bachelor degrees orthree year master's degrees, andwho have been registered at UCfor at least six quarters.Manuscripts and scores must besubmitted to Miss Fern T. Fister,department of English, Wieboldthall, room 205, by April 1, 1962.All entries must be submitted un¬der a pen name and accompaniedby a sealed envelope containingthe contestant’s real name.DEUTCH’S RESTAURANTSpecializing in Jewish Style CookingCorn Beef Kreplach, Mafzo BadCheese Blintzes Gefillfe Fish807 EAST 47th STREETCLOSED SUNDAYS WA 4-9800UC Women's boardmeets in 15th centuryA Christmas afternoon ina 15th century setting willprovide the theme of the Uni¬versity of Chicago Women’sboard meeting, December 10,Members and their husbandswill enjoy a German feast and15th century carols by the Madri¬gal singers at luncheon in theQuadrangle club, 57 street andUniversity avenue. Then they willhear Bach’s “Christmas Oratorio”presented in Rockefeller chapel bythe Chapel choir and members ofthe Chicago Symphony orchestra.“We have tried to reproduce anintriguing 15th century atmos¬phere in menu, decorations, andentertainment,” said Mrs. CalvinSawvier, who is handling arrange¬ments for the program.A committee, consisting of Mrs.Harry Weese, Mrs. Ben Heineman,and Mrs. Gustavus Swift. Jr.,read many German cookbooks toarrive at their menu. The menu,printed in German script, beginswith salmon in aspic, followed bychicken marengo, potato dump-BOB NELSON MOTORSIMPORT SERVICESPECIALISTS HAS«‘DAVE" MURRAYSERVICE6038-40 S. CottageGroveMl 3-4500Eye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetat University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount ENJOY GAMES LIKE 3-D TIC-TAC-TOE?Then you’d like computer programming, the new careerthat makes full use of your logical talents. If you have akeen analytical and logical mind —and want to use it fullyafter college—then computer programming at IBM maybe just the career you’ve always looked forward to.A computer programmer examines a business, indus¬trial, or scientific problem and translates it into a specialmathematical-logical language for the computer. Workingat amazing speeds, the computer can produce answersIn minutes, even seconds. Some of these answers mightactually take days to produce by other methods.The problems are interesting and varied. IBM pro¬grammers have used computers to predict hurricanes, telldays ahead where satellites will be in space, locate thebest factory sites for businessmen, and aid highway engi¬neers in laying out roads. No previous knowledge of computers Is necessary; anIntensive training course will equip you for your work. Butyou should have an analytical and logical turn of mind,and at least two years of college mathematics.In computer programming you will find that the salariesare excellent, and that the future can be virtually as un¬limited as the future of the computer itself. There areample opportunities for continued education.The IBM representative will interview on your campus.He will be glad to give you details about this fascinatingnew profession. Your placement office will make an ap¬pointment. All qualified applicants will be considered foremployment without regard to race, creed, color or na¬tional origin. Or you may write, outlining briefly yourbackground, to: Manager of Technical Recruitment, IBMCorp., Dept. 902,590 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N. Y.,You naturally havea better chance to growwith a growth company. IBMDec. 67 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON * 5Netlierton’s openness made him fine deanThe office of dean of students is one of themost difficult in the University administration.When a man must represent the interests of thestudents to the administration, and the views ofSdministration to students, he must be prepared toencounter the anger of all concerned.The good dean must be a diplomat, for he isoften forced to take steps which will anger andindividual or an interest group. He must be anopen minded individual, for he is faced with theneed for reconciling what are often diametricallyopposed points of view. But most of all a deanmust be dedicated, for the endless intricacies ofwhat is essentially an 18 hour a day job will other¬wise become unbearable.The mortality rate among deans of studentsis extraordinarily high. Few stay in office for morethan two or three years, many leave after one orless.It is in this office which John P. Nathertonhas served for the past five years. We feel that hehas done a remarkable job during this time.We do not mean to imply that we have alwaysbeen in agreement with the dean’s policies; indeedwe have often been angered by his actions. Theresidence requirement, essentially his in origin, weconsider odious; his handling of WUCB’s attemptto get an FM license we do not condone. But,when viewed from the overall perspective of afive year tenure. Netherton’s execution of his jobmust be called excellent.Perhaps Netherton’s outstanding quality was demonstrated on those occasions when we disagreedwith him most. He spent countless hours last yearlistening to students comulain about Ihe residencerule, but he continued to listen, calm, attentive,and , most of all, considering. He was always wil¬ling to be convinced that he was wrong, alwaysdesirous of hearing all points of view.Toward the Maroon the dean’s attitude has beenexemplary. He guarded essential freedom of thepress with the greatest care, guaranteeing itto us, defending it to those who would take itaway. Never once in our recollection did he makeany attempt to influence in any way the Maroon'scontent or editorial policies.The Maroon is daily now largely because, ofNetherton’s efforts. It was he who presented ourproposal for increased publication to the Presi¬dents staff, responsible for the decision and it washe who worked to assure its approval.Perhaps more important, however, is 1he dean’swork in regard to individual students. Throughout his years he displayed an understanding and awillingness to help which is unparalleled even with¬in UC’s own administration. We personally knowof several UC students who might not be in schooltoday were it not for dean's understanding.Handling of the problems of foreign studentsis one of the major problems of the dean. His dedi¬cation to these students is known throughout theUniversity, and the effecls of his work are magnifi¬cent.John Netherton has resigned. It will probablybe difficult to find a replacement of his calibre.We hope that the search for a new dean will besuccessful.As for Netherton himself, we certainly respecthis desire to devote full time to his academic field,Hispanic studies. As he himself put it, he hasspent enough time “deaning.”It remains for us only to thank the dean forfive years of exeellen administration, and to wishhim the, best of luck for the future.Letters on FBI story are sillyJAItlEBeauty and Cosmetic Salon5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Mrs. Billie Treganza, Prop.ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL £59th & WOODLAWN tBACH’SCHRISTMAS ORATORIO *Richard Vikstrom, conductingTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRmembers ofTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA While we generally refrainfrom answering letters concern¬ing Maroon policy or activity, thetwo printed in yesterday’s paperare worthy of reply. The lettersconcerned our story about beingfollowed by four cars while driv¬ing left-wing youth leader DanRubin around Chicago.The first of the letters, writtenby David Charles Seidman, asksour resignation for “deliberate vi¬olation of federal law.” This re¬quest is worth little of our time,but one point should be clarified.As far as we know, no violationof any law — city, state, or fed¬eral, was committed. If SeidmanLetters would be a bit more specific wemight attempt a serious answerbut, as the letter now stands, hischarges must be dismissed asgrossly irresponsible.Carl Erickson’s letter does raisesome serious questions. If the mo¬tives which he read into our arti¬cle were indeed there, if we reallythought of the incident as funny,we are certainly deserving ofblame. But the fact is that we didnot.That eight men spend an entireday chasing a 25 year old youngman who is suspected of being"subversive.” and that these menarc paid for their labor by the government is indeed a seriousmatter. That the paranoic fearfor our national security shouldlead the government to such po-lice-state tactics is perhaps ih<>most significant sign of a in¬verted national mentality.It was in this frame of mindthat our article was written lastweek. The rather flippant tonewas meant to appear as super¬ficial only. If it did not, we canonly apologize and restate our be¬lief in the tremendous stupidity,the monumental injustice of thefacts presented.•Fay Ur cell bergEditor, Chicago MaroonSobell article errors are citedSunday, December 10, 3:30 P. M.Jackson Sheats, tenor, Edward Warner, bass£'an„elist Edward Mondello, OrgonistKay Griffel, contralto Charlotte Brent, SopranoRoger Fillet, tenor Teresa Orantes, SopranoGeneral Admission, $4.00; Student and U of CFaculty, $2.00LON SALE: U of C Bookstore, Woodworth's Bookstore, and Chapel office Dear Sir:In Tuesday’s Maroon there ap¬peared an article dealing with Mr.Malcolm Sharp’s lecture on “Thecase of Morton Sobell.” The arti¬cle includes a misstatement offact, for the Rosenbergs were never convicted of, of indictedfor, treason. Actually, they weretried and found guilty of conspi¬racy to commit atomic espionage.I am anxious to point out thiserror because there has been amajor attempt on the part of theGOT A MINUTE?That's about how long it willtake to read this message andto acquaint yourself with NATIONALCOMPACTNEWSPAPERYou see, we know your reading time islimited. In fact, that’s why WORLD came intoexistence — to accommodate busy people whowant to keep up with major NATIONAL andINTERNATIONAL events, but who haven’t thetime to wade through page after page of unim¬portant detail.WORLD’S an entirely new concept in newsreporting . . . it’s compact — really compact.WORLD reports facts — both sides of majorissues — gives equal attention to the news ofgovernment and of people. WORLD is being usedby busy executives to keep themselves abreastof the news . . . now it’s available to you — thebusy student — at a special student rate . .'.THIRTEEN WEEKS OF WORLD FOR ONLY $1.00.Take advantage of this opportunity to beamong the best informed on your campus. Sendyour order today! ITS NOT TOO LATETo buy brush stroke prints. Our sale continues throughDecember 15th. There is still a wide range of artists andsubjects. With some frames, they are marvelous under$5.00 gifts.Also see our fine selection of records and make yourgift selections from our large stock of paperback and hardhound hooks.Come in and browse aroundTHEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE government and the press to passthis off as tantamount to treason,of which there was absolutely noevidence.Anyone interested In Ihe ra>-e,and particularly those peopleplanning 1o attend Mr. Sharp’slecture, might find it profitable toread Mr. Sharp’s book, Was Jus¬tice Done? or at least the Prefaceto that book, by Doctor HaroldUrey.The Rosenbcrg-Sobell ease isone of the blights on Americanjurisprudence. Mr. Sharp clearlypoints out that there is indeeda reasonable doubt, as to theguilt on their part of any crime,except that of holding unpopularpolitical views.Bruce F. Jacobsforeign car hospitalsee poge 4COPV»IOHt @1 19*1. THC roc* COL* COMPANY COCA-COLA ANO ecu PtGlSTERtD TRAOCMAPk*Subscription Dept, of WORLD, P. 0. Box 9605, Washington 16, D. C.I would like to take advantage ol WORLD'S Special Student Subscription offer.Enclosed is my check or money order for $1.00 entitling me to receive13 issues of WORLD. 6 • 107 • 365‘/4 *60 million times a day people get that refreshing new feelingwith ice-cold Coca-Cola!Settled under authority ol The Coca-Cola Company by Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicagowmrmkiu*Neal JohnstonHalf-way Harvard decriedThere were days, dear reader,jn the not too distant past whenthe University of Chicago recog¬nized the foreign and the domes¬tic Cambridges as . probableequals, and thought of Oxford asits peer.It is just and fitting to bemoan,bewail, and mourn the past. Thejournal you are now perusing hascarried its fair burden of grief.Christ raised Lazarus from thedead, but there is little likelihoodof a repeat performance here. In¬deed, it’s a sure thing that thesecond coming of Christ is goingto precede the second coming ofRobert Maynard.And so we must accomodateourselves to the* idea and spiritof an Oxonian dean with Har-vardian asperations.We can, however, insist that ifwe are going to imitate Harvard,the imitation must, be whole¬hearted and complete. There arecertain forms of poverty whichone is willing to undergo whenengaged in the heat of noble ex-jk>i imentation; the implementationof imitation can justify no suchrestraint.The esoteric folk song knownas the Alma Mater has an inter¬esting line lodged somewhere nearits center. (‘Heart’ is just toostrong a word.) This passage in¬forms us that “life is somethingmore than lore.”Life is also something more thannuclear accelerators, and a col¬lege is something more than aplush student health center. Life,college and the not-yet-forgottenidea of education have somethingto do with the cultivation and in¬culcation of art and grace andcivilization.The newest men’s dormitory atHarvard has four man suites, with four bedrooms, a private bath, ahuge living-room for the four men,and rugs. Our newest mens’ dorm(which really wouldn’t look anybetter or more sensible upside-down) stands on the corner of55th street and University avenueas a monument to something, Ipresume.Harvard has built an immenseand superb new theatre for itsstudent productions; it cost somc-thi. j like $2,000,000, as well itmight, for the main auditoriumcan be converted for use as aprocenium, three-quarter, ortheatre-in-the-round p r c s e n t a-tions.Chicago’s actors work in a min¬ute garret with no wings, no flies,no back stage to speak of, nosound system to speak through,no understage to crawl through —it lacks almost everything buttalent and an audience.Instead of supplying Universitytheatre with a fit stage, the UCadministration last year unilater¬ally supplied the theatre with anew director almost universallydespised by the students he issupposed to serve.The Harvard library is suppliedwith a number of comfortableand well-lit smoking lounges. Theonly smoke in Harper is comingfrom a few fiery eyes.In the light of our new Har-vardian self-image ,it’s a bit diffi¬cult to justify the fact that ourorchestra can barely afford to buya handful of new scores each year,much less purchase needed newinstruments.I also find it a bit difficult toexplain to my uncomprehendingCambridge friends the incredibleconfusion and sardine-tinnishcharacter of Ida Noyes, ou • clos¬ est misapproximation of a stu¬dent union building. Student or¬ganization at the Harvard on IheCal-Sag canal really should dobetter than this.It is true, the Student Activi¬ties office makes an impressiveeffort to find space for every¬body, but, like type, Ida’s snowybosom is not made of rubber,and it really can’t be stretched.The Shapiro collection of paint¬ings is fine, but hardly a fit sub¬stitute for the art museum whichshould be found somewhere ,oncampus. (The miniscule Renais¬sance society galleries scarcelysatisfy the fit fastidiousness ournew cultivation will demand).The already age-old complaintof the music department over theutter absence of practice facil¬ities will fade into nothing oncestudents start demanding themusic rooms and listening roomswhich now seem their indisputabledue. After all, this isn't St.Mary’s of the Swramps anymore;this is the Harvard ol the Jack-son Park lagoon.Now, all of this, of course, willcost money. All of this, of course,the trustees will say we cannotafford. But, quite simply, we canno longer afford not to afford it.Harvard, it is true, has thelargest endowment in the country.But Chicago has the fourth larg¬est. The difference between thebiggest and the next to biggestbut two seems somehow incom¬mensurate with a five room duplexdormatory suite and a cubby-holedouble with a scarce six foot ceil¬ing loosely attached to the exter¬ior surface of Pierce tower.After all, this is the Harvardon the 63 Street “El” — we'regoing to have to have a reputa¬tion to live up to.Ken PierceNetherton learned in job<Editor's note: With this columneditor emeritus Kcne Pierce beginsu regular weekly column for theMaroon)The dean of students has re¬signed.To the best of my knowledge,John Netherton made the decisionto submit his resignation all byhimself, free from any directpressure from above or below.It is important that those whohave admired Netherton’s funda¬mental beliefs realize that he wasnot fired because of those beliefs.In the last few years, the deanhas given evidence that he per¬sonally respects the principle ofstudent freedom, and its corol-LetterTo the editor:We have finally found a con¬structive approach to a constant:problem. The December 1, NewYork Times reported that a Cali¬fornia housewife has given $1000,the cost of building a fall-outshelter for her family to the Unit¬ed Nations. She described her aftas “a pledge of faith that theworld organization offers the bestprotection of hope for man’s sur¬vival.”We were very encouraged tolearn that someone has takenpositive action in working forworld peace. Instead of investingher time and money in a nearfutile attempt to insure her sur¬vival of World War III, Mrs.Wayne Elwood, Sr. has placedher trust in the UN that it mayprevent another war.We concur with her that theUN is the only real shelter in anuclear war. Tacit approval ofber actions is insufficient. Wemust show our agreement withber beliefs. Many students are<*ager to join us. We know there»re more, who, when introducedto our plans, would give their lary, student responsibility. Hehas understood that studentsthink they should help determinenon-academic university policywhich directly affects students.And he has understood that apaternalistic dean of students isas likely to make unwise deci¬sions as he is to make unchal¬lenged decisions.Netherton learned this lesson,whereas most UC administratorshave not. Most administratorsdeal with students only occasion¬ally, on a condescending and for¬mal basis. But in years of discuss¬ing and debating policy withstudents who were intelligentand who defended their positionswith passionate conviction, Nelh-support. With the recognition ofStudent Activities, we plan thefirst two weeks of January tocollect donations and to compilethe names of sympathizers.Because we are students whoare each financially incapable ofbuilding a fall-out shelter, ourmonetary gift will be only atoken. The most important ob¬jective is our common pledge offaith in the United Nations.Building fall-out shelters andhoarding armaments give in tothe inevitability of a third worldwar. These material forces areonly deterrents and not the pre¬ventions of war. Only throughthe cooperation of nations can webe assured of achieving disarma¬ment and peace. The United Na¬tions is the only existing groundswhere many nations meet to dis¬cuss common problems.Because the United Nations isour strongest hope of securingpeace, we must place our primaryefforts in assuring its success. Adefinite method has been initi¬ated. Now we must follow andenlarge its example.Deborah EdelDonna Wilson erton had a rare opportunity tolearn a most simple and difficultlesson, namely that students aremature and responsible people.When Netherton advocated thatstudent committees meet regu¬larly with University administra¬tors, his conception of the studentwas quite clear. But when Nether¬ton advocated the compulsoryresidence rule, which forces mostmale students to live in dormi¬tories for two years and mostfemale students to live in dormi¬tories for four years, Netherton'idea of the student seemed tohave been grotesquely trans¬formed. Yet most students didn’tknow what Netherton could neversay — the residence rule was nothis rule.Netherton had approved therule when it was formulated byhis housing staff. But Nethertonhad asked for reconsideration ofthe rule at the first signs of stu¬dent disagreement.Once the rule was announced,Netherton did not think he couldrescind the rule, since to do sowould have been to oppose thedean of the College, who had an¬nounced his vigorous support ofthe rule. And so, as the Univer¬sity’s student relations officer,Netherton was for eight monthslast year forced to defend, beforestudents and faculty, a decisionwhich he personally felt shouldbe reversed.I don’t know what triggeredthe deans’ decision to resign. Per¬haps he foresaw future conflictwith other UC administratorsover the way he administered themillion dollar budget of the deanof students.However, I do not believe thatNetherton, who consistently dem¬onstrated an awareness of stu¬dent maturity and student needsat the Wednesday morning meet¬ings of the President’s staff, wasasked to resign for that reason.And I ask that Netherton’s suc¬cessor be a man who similarlyrealizes that a dean of studentsshould differ greatly from eventhe most benevolent of babysit¬ters.UN gets shelter funds On Canons withMaxSfrolman{A uthor of “Barefoot Boy With Chrek'\“The ManyLoves of Dobic Giliis”, etc.)FROM SEA TO SHINING SEAAmerica is a groat country. America’s cities are full of houses.America’s forests are full of trees. America’s rivers are full ofwater. But it is not houses and trees and water that makeAmerica great; it is curiosity—the constant quest to findanswers—the endless, restless “Why?” “Why?” “Why?”.Therefore, when I was told that Marlboro was a top sellerat colleges from USC to Yale, I was not content merely toaccept this gratifying fact, I had to find out why.I hied myself to campuses in every sector of this mighty land.First, I went to the Ivy longue—dressed, of course, in anappropriate costume: a skull-and-bonos in one hand, a trianglein the other, a mask-and-wig on my head, a hasty pudding inmy chops. “Sir,” I cried, seizing an Ivy Leaguer by the lapels,which is no mean task considering the narrowness of Ivy Leaguelapels, but, I, fortunately, happen to have little tiny hands; infact, I spent the last war working in a small arms plant where, Iam proud to say, I was awarded a Navy “E” for excellence andwon many friends—“Sir,” I cried, seizing an Tvy Leaguer by thelapels, “how come Marlboro is your favorite filter cigarette?”“I'm glad you asked that question, Shorty,” he replied.“Marlboro is my favorite filter cigarette because it is the filtercigarette with the unfiltered taste.”“Oh, thank you, sir!” I cried and ran posthaste to-severalcampuses in the Big Ten, wearing, of course, the appropriatecostume: a plaid Mackinaw, birling boots, a Kodiak bear andfrost-bitten ears.Spying an apple-cheeked young coed, T tugged my forelockand said, “Excuse line, miss, but how come Marlboro is yourfavorite filter cigarette?”“I’m glad you asked that question, Shorty,” she replied.“Marlboro is my favorite filter cigarette because the flavor isflavorful, the flip-top box flips and the soft-pack is soft.”“Oh, thank you, apple-cheeked young coed,” I cried andbobbed a curtsey and sped as fast as my little fat legs wouldcarry me to several campuses in the Southwest, wearing, ofcourse, the appropriate costume: chaps, canteen, and several oilleases. Spying a group of undergraduates singing “StrawberryRoan,” I removed my hat and said, “Excuse me, friends, butwhy is Marlboro your favorite filter cigarette?”“We are glad you asked that question, Shorty,” they replied.“Marlboro is our favorite filter cigarette because we, native sonsand daughters of the wide open spaces, want a cigarette that isfrank and forthright and honest. We want, in short, Marlboro.”“Oh, thank you, all,” I cried and, donning a muu muu, I setsail for Hawaii, because in Hawaii, as in every state where OldCJlory flies, Marlboro is the leading seller in flip-top box. Oncampus, off campus, in all fifty states, wherever people smoke forpleasure in this great land of ours, you will find Marlboro.£ 1961 Max Sliulinao* * *And you icill also Find another winner from the makers ofMarlboro—the king-size, unfiltered Philip MorrisCommander, made by a new process to bring you newmildness. Have a Commander. Welcome aboard.411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300 JCafe Enrico & QalleryFeaturing Our Hors d’oeuvres TableFree Delivery to U. C. StudentsON ALL PIZZAComplete Italian-American RestaurantPIZZA PIESSmall SmallCheese $1.45 Bacon and Onion .. .. $2.15Sausage 1.80 Combination . 2.40Anchovy . 1.80 Mushroom . 2.15Pepper and Onion . . 1.65 Shrimp . 2.401Iffj V , / New students are unfamiliar with faculty(Continued from page 2)Memorial library; it was builtafter Harper’s death to commem¬orate his contributions.Similarly, many of our firstyear respondents are convincedthat the second president of theUniversity, Harry Pratt Judson,did nothing but contribute halfthe funds for the monastic Burton-Judson courts, supplementing thecontribution of Ernest DeWittBurton (third UC president). Al¬most all of the older students,however, seem to have learned thevalue of hard work, and identifiedJudson correctly.Although no buildings are namedafter him, one of the men on ourlist can only be brought to mindby two campus structures. Archi¬tect Eero Saarinen, designer ofthe law school building and theNew Residence hall, was identi¬fied correctly by most of theolder students and by almost halfof the new students. At an in¬ stitution noted existing primarilyfcv the sage of academic advance¬ment, it is strange and disappoint¬ing that no faculty member whois not an administrator was recog¬nized by more than 2/3 of ourrespondents. Surely, wre felt, menw'ith national reputations as ex¬perts in their fields would be bet¬ter known on their own campus.In all cases, the older studentsgenerally knew of the professorson our list, while few first yearstudents had even heard of manyof them.Hans Morganthau, professor ofpolitical science and leading ex¬ponent of theories of “powerpolitics,” was correctly identifiedby 40 students. One student, how¬ever, credited him with WilliamWhite’s w'ork, Streetcorner So¬ciety. Another associated himwith the graduate school of bus¬iness.Joseph Schwab wras correctlyidentified by the largest number of first year students. This wasprimarily, we feel, because he de¬livered the first “Aims of Edu¬cation” lecture several w'eeks be¬fore our survey w'as administered,rather than because of his workas a teacher of education andbiology or because of the legendthat he has taught every coursein the College.Two of the people on our listare not with the University at thismoment but w'ere very w'ell know nhere last year.Our attempts to discover how w'ell their reputations were passedonto first year students revealedthat less than 25% of those weinterviewed could correctly iden¬tify Neil Johnston, former editorand present columnist for theMaroon, or Ned Rosenheim, of thehumanities faculty, who wroteWhat Happens in Literature, atext for humanities I. All of theolder students correctly identifiedthese two men.Finally we investigated thecurrent status of a Maroon fost¬ered myth, Aristotle Schwartz, “the last queer kid to leavecampus.” According to history,Schwartz was expelled in the early1950’s by a committee formed bythen Chancellor Kimpton to “cleanup the University.” Although notmany people identified Schwartzcorrectly, w'e are confident thatthe myth wilt be fostered, as evi¬denced by the many titles attri¬buted to him: editor of theMaroon, professor of social sci¬ence, and mouthpiece for theCapone gang during the 20's.Senate defeated tax billiwxmwwvetvmxmuwvPIZZASFoe The Price OfNICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780 (Continued from page one)veto it. However, it now' rep¬resents the only official group try¬ing to find answers to our des¬perate fiscal problems.The governor had included inthe call for the special sessiona proposal to increase the corpor¬ate franchise tax. Illinois cor¬porations pay the grand total of$5,000,000 a year in state taxes.In relation to the total budget,even such “progressive” states asMississippi and Alabama do bet¬ter. The bill passed the house andwas defeated in the senate, aformula that has become quitefamiliar in Illinois in recent years.A slight dent was made in thefield of justice. The legislature ap¬proved the election of 17 newjudges for Cook county. With thepresent backlog of cases, a person seeking justice in Cook countymust wait approximately six yearsto have his case heard. With thenew' judges, it is hoped that thisbacklog can be cut materially.The new judicial position will befilled at the November, 1962, elec¬tion.In the field of mass transporta¬tion, the session was o completedud. Proposals had been made togive the Chicago transit authority(CTA) some much-needed assis¬tance. Specifically, it was proposedthat the CTA be reimbursed bythe amount that it costs to sub¬sidize school transportation (inChicago, students other than col¬lege students are pi'emitted to rideat approximately half fare). Theproposed bill would have author-zied the state to reimburse theof? w® mm ®if |jg\8?Must tomorrow's travelers resort to howdahs andcamel litters in order to get about? Not so, sayour Ford Motor Company scientists.First—aside from the unlikely depletion of ournatural sources of gasoline—the prospects forhigher-efficiency internal combustion Enginesare excellent.Second, while gasoline still appears the best con¬ceivable automotive fuel, our scientists are study¬ing the outlook for new energy sources for cars.Among intriguing possibilities: new energy con¬version systems using degraded fuels, or fuelssynthesized from low-cost power produced bynuclear fusion. Magneto-hydrodynamic gener¬ators and solid-state thermoelectric and electro¬chemical converters offer other possibilities.This is all part of a broad quest for fundamentalknowledge, earning Ford its place of leadershipthrough scientipc research an<f engineering.MOTOR COMPANYThe American Road, Dearborn, MichiganPRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD . THE FARMINDUSTRY • AND THE AGE OF SPACE3 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 6, 1961 CTA for this cost, just as it re¬imburses dowmstate school dis¬tricts for their transportationcosts. The amount of money in¬volved would have permitted theCTA to operate without the neces¬sity of new fare increases. Theproposal was defeated. As it nowstands, the likelihood is very greatthat 1962 will see a 30c basic fareon the CTA. It is an area such asthis that the urban-rural diver¬gence of interest becomes clear.The downstate land for that mat¬ter, suburban) legislators do notsee why mass transportation inChicago should be of concern tothe state. The fact that downstatedistricts get this kind of assis¬tance for school transportation isignored and the general attitudeis “let Chicago worry about Chi¬cago’s problems.”The fact is, of course, that ifChicago's mass transportationsystem becomes wrecked or outof roach of the people who needsuch transportation, the wholestate has to suffer. Chicago’sbusiness economy throws off morethan half the state’s revenues.The prosperity of the state isdirectly dependent on the pros-peritay of Chicago. If the inner |city dies because people can’t get |to it. the outer city, the suburbsand the state will be hurt. IiOne suburban legislator said, “Ipay my own automobile expensesand don’t ask any help from the jgstate.” (He din’t mention that it Iwas a Cadillac, and I admit thatis expensive to operate). “I.et Ithe people who w’ant to ride the gCTA pay their expenses.” In other 3W'ords, as wa« once said in France, Ithe rich and the poor will be ■treated equally—both will be pro- Ihibited from sleeping under the 8bridges., And so went the special session.It could have been a lot better,and it could have been a lotworse: it adjourned and thepeople hopefully ar6 safe untilJanuary of 1963.foreign car salessee page 4GoBEAUTY SALONy ExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd Sr. HY 3-8302HARPERLIQUOR STORE1114-16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEmm a jm 1233FA a—I**#^ 7699* 7Short says gang workers eliminate rumbles" Those beachtoughs betternot kick sandin my facenext summer!"EXAM FATIQUE?relax at themmci1450 E. 57thOne of Hyde Park's FinestARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRSPECIALIZING IN:Heel* ChangedHeels RepairedToes Cut OutVamps LoweredOrthopedic WorkZipper RepairsProfessiotsml Dyeing«*d Heflnlshlng of(Seven Months Pass)Yes, Santa. There is a Virginia.Meeting of the U.C. Chapter of theJohn Birch society in the secret meet¬ing hall at 9 pm Friday, Dec. 8.George rides too late for all comers.— GeorgeWHEN DOES A LUCKY TASTE BETTER THAN A LUCKY? There’s a dangerousquestion because, as you well know, college students are crazy about Luckiesand smoke more of them than any other regular. Still, there is one kind ofLucky that tastes a little bit better than any other kind. These extra-specialLuckies are the ones you get for Christmas. The only thing better than a Luckyis a free Lucky. Ask for a carton this Christmas.Chatham Park Villa** ApartmentsU and 2 bedrooms—3 to a rooms)$103 to 3142 per monthApplications being processed for wellqualified prospective tenants. Conven¬ient ta U. of Chicago and Skyway.Ideal for graduate students. Modernall-elMtvle kitchen. 24 hr heat. 63FIRE PROOFED BUILDINGS, PRIV¬ATELY POLICED. Ample street park¬ing ood garages. Close to shoppingand r3aasi>ortation, park-like with sub¬urban atmosphere. Model apartment,737 M. 33rd PI. TRiangle 4-7400.’58 Buick, 4-door, fullpower. air con¬ditioning, r&h, w.w., 3400. RE 1-0358.WantedW sated: Room mate, female, to shareapartment at 55th & Blackstone. Con¬tact: Mary Jo Williams, ext. 4070 orFA 4-7268.Roommate to share apartment. CallWayne Mitchell at PL 2-7700, or leavemessage.2nd fir. apt., male student. Must bequiet. BU 8-5229. Call evenings andweekends. 335 complete.Are those pumpkins still for sale?—PriscillaVoice production, new method byEuropean for singing, acting and tortheological and law students a con¬vincing voice. Free consultation. WEb-ster 9-2113.PersonalsTyping — inexpensive, accurate, rapid(special RUSH service) calling RonnieRosenblatt or Karen Borchers, NO7-3809. LUCKY STRIKEpresents:memYouth gangs consider it amark of distinction to havesocial workers assigned towork with them, according tofindings of James F. Short,jr„ visiting associate profes¬sor of sociology.In a preliminary report entitled“Street corner groups and pat¬terns of delinquency," Short, onleave from Washington State uni¬versity since 1959, discusses theeffects of "gang workers” amonglower income groups in Chicago,A "gang worker” is a trainedresponsible adult who attempts togain confidence of youthful gangsand exert effective guidance.The report seeks to explain“why gang fighting is virtuallyeliminated among gangs withwhich the gang workers havebeen effective:“The worker introduces a con¬siderable safety factor into the gang Conflict situation becauseboys know he will go to greatlengths to prevent inter-gang con¬flict"He can always be informedsurreptitiously so that the taskforce (a special police unit) canbe called in to prevent a rumble(gang fight), if all negotiationsfail; and negotiation, itself, givesthe gang considerable prestige.”The report continues: “Theworker can perform many serv¬es for the boys which are func¬tional to adolescent needs. Hemakes available athletic equip¬ment and can intervene with thepolice and other authorities, andcan help the gang boys, especiallyas they grow older, to find em¬ployment. The lower class ethicof reciprocity obligates the boysto respect the worker’s wishesas a result of such services.”The primary task of Short’sstudy is to provide basis in data and interpretation for policychanges by agencies which areconcerned with problems of de¬linquent behavior.The study was made with theassistant of a grant from the. Na¬tional Institute of Mental HealthResearch. Members of the depart¬ment of sociology, in conjunctionwith the program of detached(“gang”) workers of the YMCAof Metropolitan Chicago, didmuch of their research by first¬hand observation of Chicagogangs and gang workers.The YMCA’s detached workersprogram, finding that gang lead¬ers are the more stable membersof their groups, is seeking toevolve them in assistantship andconsultant roles in the program."Status problems of the lowerclass gang boys are not so muchassociated with failure to achievemembership in the idle class asAdsFor Rent & For Sale EXCHANGEExchange, wint., spr. qts, room & hath.Apartment to share (woman). 5 rooms<2 bedrooms), completely furnished, 379monthly. Graduate Student or Em¬ployes. (6th and Kimbark. MU 4-3370.Beautifol 31 •> room furnished apart¬ment. til* bathroom and shower, reas-onabl* rent. 5143 S. Kenwood. Call:SO 8-0439.Furnished ApartmentsShor* line Apts., 5135 S. Kenwood. Of¬fers 1 to 3 *4 efficiency units attrac¬tively appointed, month to month oc¬cupancy. 380 and up. Elevator, fire¬proof hid*. Mgr. on premises.Used sleigh, reindeer, and toy shopfor •*>*.— S.C. board after Feb., for babysitting infantwhile mother in class. FA 4-1617 eves.Birth AnnouncementVirginia, 8 pounds, 6 ounces. UC claseof 33.You are not a teddy bear, you arenot a pixie, you are not an angel, youareTTTTT?—the gnome.Creative writing workshop. PL 2-877 0 they are with failure to achievestatus within the context of adult,middle-class dominated institu¬tions such as the school andchurch and economic and politicalinstitutions,” according to the re¬port.“Lower class children are .ill-equipped in terms of such middle-class virtues as ambition andmanners, thrift and stick-to-it-ive¬ness, neatness and punctuality,and willingness to defer immedi¬ate gratification for long-run andnot altogether tangible and cer¬tain rewards.“The gang boys do not appearto be reacting against the middle-class system of values so muchas they are acting in pursuit of asystem of values which in somerespects runs counter to middle-class values. Not only is mali¬cious and negativistic behaviorrelatively rare . . . hut theft,while frequent, is rarely econom¬ically non-ultilitarian.”The report cites certain envir¬onmental factors which play an important role in delinquent be¬havior. They are:• High incidence of guns foundamong lower class adults.• Milling character of life onthe street. A great deal of lowerclass life takes place in the streetand other semi-public settings.• Physical violence as a meansof settling disputes.• High consumption of alcoholin public.• Tendency to distrust outsid¬ers.“The values of the lower classNegro gang boys are expressedas one thing, but their actions areanother. For example, the boys‘positively evaluated’ those whowork for good grades, at school,‘someone who reads good books’and ‘someone who saves hismoney.’“Yet these boys, for the mostpart, are early school dropouts,they read almost nothing andthey spend such money as theyacquire almost immediately uponits acquisition,” the report says.Sewing, Alterations, Hems. BU 8-6001.Multilith Printing (1250 offset) (ForStudent Resumes). EXECUTIVE IBMTYPING: Mimeograph stencils. Offsetplates, Ditto masters — for termpapers: News letters, general manu¬scripts. HY 3-4541.Priscilla.—I know we met under in¬auspicious circumstances, but may Itake you out.—Rudolph.We know who Avima Ruder is; she'sLaura Godofsky’s bridge partner. ACASA BOOKSTORE — for' ChristmasCarefully selected imports of Christmas Cards, Giftsand Children's Books.Our customers soy we have one of the best collectionsin the city.1322 E. 55th ST. HY 3-9651Shoes and HandbagsColors Matched CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change!FAirfox 4-96221749 E. 55th St. BAt.es roduct of c/Ac J*/rntl<e<in Ju&xcc Centrums — <Jo&xeo is our middle namt\ Dec. 6. 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 911.... A" Oxford women are getting little equality ¥by Simon Jenkins(Editor's note: Mr. Jenkins is astudent at St. John's college atOxford university. He occasion¬ally contributes articles to theMaroon.)It has been a tough ‘term’for the girls at Oxford. Thestandard of entry for womenis so high that those whofinally do get in are supposedtraditionally to have no interestsother than study.Times are changing, however, sion from membership of theUnion society, the all-male clubwhich provides the only facilitiesfor debating in the university.A two-thirds majority vote ofthe members is required to allowmembership to be opened to them,but whenever it is put to the vote,ancient and reactionary life mem¬ bers return to “keep those whoseplace is elsewhere out of theUnion, and thus maintain thestandard of debating’’ which isappallingly low and could do withsome invigorating.This the women naturally re¬sent, with the result that amongBells are ringingand girls are beginning to take amore active part in university lifeat all levels. The only difficultyis that Oxford finds it painful tochange with the times, and thismovement conflicts, at timesviolently, with the masculinecharacter of her life and institu¬tions.The most ridiculous and long¬standing thorn in the flesh of the“undergraduettes” is their exclu¬ Nerly one hundred peoplecalled a wrong number yes¬terday. And the bargain theythought they’d found didn’teven exist.In yesterday’s Maroon classi¬fieds, an advertisement for anapartment appeared. It offeredfive rooms, completely furnished,at 56 street and Kimbark, foronly $70 a month. Multitudes of attentive readerscalled MU 4-7370, the numberlisted in the ad, for further infor¬mation. other protests, two girls recentlyentered the debating chamber dis¬guised as men, and were con¬sequently gated. This provoked amajor student outcry and intensi¬fied the “campaign for women inthe Union,” led by the studentreswpaper, Cherwell. But tradi¬tional Oxford still withstands theassault.An even greater protest fol¬lowed the sending down (perma¬nent expulsion) of a girl caughtin bed with a boy one afternoon.“Tlie authorities have no right topass judgment in this way on what is a purely moral issue."complained a student magazine.But what really angered thegirls was that the boy concernedwas only expelled for two weeks.The national press seized on thecase with natural delight, andeven Time rrtagazine covered itDR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTWhenever you leave town,carry money only you canspend: Bank of America.Travelers Cheques. Loss-proof, theft-proof, cashedonly by your signature,Sold at banks everywhere, It was a wrong number, andfrom 9 am on calls from confusedapartment hunters flooded theMaroon office. The correct num¬ber, MU 4-3370, was given outand the distraut housewife at thelisted exchange was called, givenprofuse apologies, and asked torefer calls directly to the correctnumber.The final note to the story wassounded when the classifieds man¬ager informed a telephone wearystaff that the body of the adwas wrong, too. True, the apart¬ment cost $70, but this was tobe the share of the graduate stu¬dent or employee of the Univer¬sity who decided to share it withits present female incumbent. Moroons win openerThe University of Chicagofirst year team won its open¬ing game over Kendall Juniorcollege 47 - 40 at Stagg fieldhouse last night. The game wasgenerally sloppily played withboth teams cold on offense.The Maroons looked like theywere going to run away with thegame in the first half, when theytook a 19 to 12 lead. However,Kendall battled back to a 25-25tie at half time. Jeff Kaplan ledChicago with ten points in the firsthalf.In the second half the Maroonshad a seven point lead until Ken¬dall started a rally with four min¬utes left in the game and closedthe gap to 42 - 39. At this pointEd Cufter sank a shot and con¬verted a free throw to clinch thegame for Chicago. But these are just some exam¬ples of the inequalities and re¬strictions from which women atOxford (and at that “other place."Cambridge) suffer. It is the resultof the Victorian attitudes whichstill exist here towards studentsin general and “young ladies’* inparticular. IMadrigal singers'autumn concert setThe University of ChicagoMadrigal singers will present .their autumn quarter concertin Bond chapel, Saturday at8:30 pm. The concert will be with¬out admission charge and open to *the public.The singers, part of theCollegium Musicum, wi.t presenta program of 16th century motetsand madrigals. The concert willinclude Gabrieli’s motet “HodieBe perspicacious! completi sunt” for double chorus;one group of the twenty singerswill be in the chancel, the otherin choir left. Adrian Willaert, oneof the organists of St. Markscathedral in Venice, will be pre¬sented as well. The Italian madri¬gals on the program include somelater chromatic ones by Ciprianoda Rore, considered one of theleading madrigal composers of histime.Not this: a stwdont who This: partpicaciaut...draws** ov«r books no mattar sharp! NoDot koops youhow much sloop ho pots. awako ana alart—sofolylIf you sometimes find studying soporific (and who doesn’t?), the wordto remember is NoDoz.® NoDoz perks you up in minutes, with thesame safe awakener found in coffee or tea. Yet NoDozis faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutelynon-habit-forming, NoDoz is soldeverywhere without prescription. So,to keep perspicacious during study andeiamsr— and while driving, too—always keep NoDoz in proximity.Tha Ufa stay awafci taMat—avaMaM* tvaiywfcor*. Anathsr Am product at Gray# laharataria*. The Madrigal singers are asmall group of undergraduate andgraduate students who meet regu¬larly to sing Renaissance andBaroque choral music under thedirection of Howard Brown, whois also director of the UniversityChoral society. They will heassisted in Saturday’s concert byKatherine Bowers and Peter As-coli, recorders, and Peter McKeon,harpsichord.see paqe 4foreign car hospitall“What’ll it be, Miss Porter,the Dekes or us?’’21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD -THEY SATISFY■BCulture VultureSince ifs olmost JHme for (he beleaguered bird to galumph off into the Eastern (!!!) sunrise, she can but pity all you Poor Folk who have to spendreal Vacation in Chicago, where there * all that snow for goodness' sake ! rBut be «*f good cheer: there are lots of concerts, and you con buy all your next quarter's books before anyone else.On campus stove only different. They’ll let Sunday afternoon at 3:30 it’sU • r you see their weird beasties and Bach time in Rockefeller chapel.WUSiC hear their pretty music Friday The program is the ChristmasThe New York Chamber Solo- a* 8:30 pm in Mandeb "Oratorio.”More Southern decadence at theIsis play music on all sorts ofthings, including a glass harmoni¬ca, which is just like a Franklin stove only different. They’ll letyou see their weird beasties andhear their pretty music Fridayat 8:30 pm in Mandel.You can hear Madrigals andMotets in Bond chapel, Saturday Blackstone! That lady who wrotenight at 8:30. the last Company of Four play, Lillian Heilman, wrote anotherand called it "Toys in the Attic.”It is not about children. Get yedowntown and find out what it isabout any time from December 25till January 27.Loop theaters offer student discountsSix downtown tlieflties <lie 12 noon and fiom 1 to 5 pm Mon- see ^Villiam’s new drama, "Night Bye Birdie” can bo seen at the'•offering student discounts for day through Friday. of the Iguana.” The play starring Erlanger theatre, 127 Northweek-day or special perform- Sponsored by the Educators’ Margaret Leighton, Bette Davis, Clark, Monday through Thursday'inoes of their current nresen- Theatre committee, the Black- and A. Webb, is holding its pre- at 8:30 pm and Wednesday at 2 pm*. , . . stone theatre, 60 East Balbo, is Broadway run at the Blackstone with a student discount coupon.Intions. Ex ange coupons for the offering $2.75 seats to students for and will be there through Decern- $3 second balcony seats will be.theatres are available at the Stu- $1.75 for the week-day (except ber 16. available for $2, and $2.50 seatsdent Activties office fiom 9 am to Friday) performances of Tennes- The musical comedy hit "Bye for $1.50. The discount will begood for three weeks, DecemberCalendar of EventsWednesday, 6 December"Dermatology clinical conference: Gold-blatrt. hospital. <1-126. 2 pm.Study group: “Basic Judaism: Hope ofredemption," Hillel foundation, 4:30pm.Clinical conference: Billings hospital,P-117, 5 pm.Carillon recital, Rockefeller chape), 5pm.Episcopal evensong: Bond chapel, 5:03pm.English class: International house, 6:30pm.Radiology seminar: Billings hospital P-117. 7 pm.Annual Hanukltah faculty symposium:“The latke and the hamentash,” Hillelfoundation, 7:15 pm.Lecture: Carl Shier on “Big auto andthe UAW." Social sciences 201. 8 pm.Motion picture: "'Techniques of Arch¬aeology," Breasted hall, 8:30 pm.Thursday, 7 DecemberEpiscopal holy communion: Bond chapel,11 :30 am.Elementary Hebrew: Review class, 3:30pm. Hillel foundation.Lecture: UC Students for Civil Liber¬ties present Malcolm Sharp. "The case\ of Morton Sobell,” 3:30 pm, IdaNoyes hall. ..Rifle club: Field house. 4 pm.Lecture: "Complex pathogenicity oftumors.” Dr. Joseph Sinkovics, 4 pm,Ricketts north 1.Lecture: "Some aspects of adaptation,”/oology 14. 4:30 pm.- Obstetrics and gynecology clinical con¬ference: CL1H lie Lee hall, 4:30 pm.Tumor conference, Billings hospital M-137, 5 pm.'Lutheran vespers: Bond chapel, 5:05pm.* Lecture: “The Crisis,” Erie Fife, 7 pm,Ida Noyes 213.Record concert: International house 8s Pm,Lecture: Breasted hall, 8:30 pm, "The rhetoric of Hemingway and Faulkner,”Ralph Ellison.Radio: "Commentary on the news,”WFMT, 10:15 pm.Friday, 8 DecemberCardiovascular seminar: "Aerial eon-traction studies,” 11 am, GilmanSmith W-265.Lutheran matins: Bond chapel, 11:30am.Newborn conference: CIJH De Lee hall,1 pm.Gastrointestinal research seminar:"Runting. secondary disease and gas¬trointestinal keouelae in rodents.” Bil¬lings hospital M-137. 4 pm.Opthalmology research seminar: "Somemedico-legal aspects of opthalmology,”Goldblatt conference room. 4 pm.Seminar: "The structure of chromoso¬mes,” Research institute, 4 pm.Seminar: "Authorship of the disputedFederalist papers: statistical theory,"Eckhart 207.Cardiovascular lecture: Billings P-117,5 pm.Wassail party: Ida Noyes hall. 7 pm.Sabbath service and Oneg Shahbat: Anevening with the book of the Mac¬cabees. Hillel foundation. 7:45 pm.Motion picture: "Little Fugitive.” Bur-ton-Judson courts, 8 and 10 pm.Crossroads student center: "Workers,state, socialism , . Crossroadsstudent center, 8 pm.Chamber music series: The New Yorkchamber soloists, Mandel hall, 8:30pm.Saturday, 9 DecemberSurgery conference: Billings hospital P-117, 7:30 am.Diseases of the nervous system: BillingsM-137, 9 am.Pediatric clinical conference: BillingsM-137, 10:30 am.English class: International house, 10 Motion picture: "The World of SholomAleiehem,” Roosevelt university, 2:30and 8:30.American association of teachers ofFrench: party, Ida Noyes library, 4pm.Saturday night tea: International house,8 pm.Annual Hanukka party: Phi Kappa Psi,couple 32.50, single $1.50, 8:30 pm.Collegium musicum: the Madrigal sing¬ers, Bond chapel, 8:30 pm.Radio series: "The world of the paper¬back,” WBBM, 10:45 pm.Sunday, 10 DecemberRadio series: "Faith of our fathers,”WON, 8:30 am.Roman Catholic Masses: Calvert house,8:30, 10, and 11 am, and 12 noon.Episcopal Communion service: Bondchapel, 9:30 am.Lutheran Communion service: GrahamTaylor chapel, 10 am.University religious service: Rockefellerchapel, 11 am.Duplicate bridge: International house,students admitted free to all frac¬tional point sessions, 2 to 6 pm.Record concert: 2 pm, Alpha Delta Phichapter house.Chapel series: Rockefeller chapel, 3:30pm, Bach "Christmas Oratorio.”Carillon recital: Rockefeller chapel, 4pm.Radio series: "Profile WIND.” 6:35 pm.Lecture: "Myth and meaning in theChristian faith,” Chapel house, 7pm.Radio series: “The sacred note,” 10:30pm, WBBM.Monday, 11 DecemberTelevision series: College of the air,WBBM-TV, Channel 2, 6-6:30 am.Christmas program: Service leaguemusic group, Ida Noyes library, 1pm.Different Russian movie every we* k.Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m.; Sun. 3 p.m.December 8-10:COSSACKS OF THE KUBANa gay musical comedy. Next week:The Anna Crass, by ChekhevRUSSIAN ARTS CLUB2952 W. North Ave. r1 CINEMATheaterChicago Ave.at MichiganSTUDENT RATES $1.00Every Day But SaturdayUpon presentation #/ I. D. Card GOLD CITY INNSpecializing in Cantonese FoodOrders to Take Out 4 to 21.A third student rate sponsoredby the Educators’ Theatre com¬mittee will be good until February15, 1962, at the Happy Mediumtheatre club, 901 Rush street. Stu¬dent prices for the musical revue,which is in its second year of per¬formances, are $2.65 on Tuesday,Wednesday, or Thursday at 8:30pm; $1.50 for the 11:30 pm show'on the same evenings; $2.65 forSunday’s two performances andFriday’s 11:30 pm presentation.Another Chicago pre-Broachvayopening, “The Egg.” starring DickShawn, is at the Civic theatre, 20North Wacker drive. A specialstudent rate of $2 will be in effectwhen seats are available, exceptFriday and Saturday evenings.Edw'ard Albee’s “The Zoo Story”and Jean Genet’s “The Maids” arecurrently playing at the Play¬wrights at Second City theatre,1842 North Wells. The theatrehas announced December 5 to 10as a special preview week for stu¬dents only. The discount will givestudents the regular $2 week-dayticket for $1, and the regular $2.50Friday and Saturday ticket for$1.50. Reseravtions should be madeby calling AN 3-5150.Finally, the Studebaker theatrehas announced discounts for arepertory of three British plays,Sheridan’s “The School for Scan¬dal” (December 16-27); Shake¬speare’s “Coriolanus” (January 2-5); and Andre Davis’ “Four Men”(December 28-31). The plays arebeing presented by the TheatreOutlook of England, a companycurrently on tour in the UnitedStates. The student rate for thisdrama series is $1. MusicThere’s all sorts of lovely thingsat Orchestra hall, which, for theuninitiated, lives at 216 SouthMichigan which is near one ofthose IC stops, and has tw’o phonenumbers: HA 7-0366 and HA 7-0499. On December 16 there willbe a special Christmas concert ofworks which include Bach’s Mag¬nificat in D. This weekend, Thurs¬day, Friday, and Saturday, GeorgeSzell conducts music all by Beet¬hoven. On December 21, 22, and23, Mr. Szell and his soloist ArturRubinstein, will play music by allkinds of assorted folk.FunsThe current Second City showis called “Alarums and Excur¬sions.” They’ll tell you all aboutwhy alarums is spelled so strange¬ly if you call DE 7-3992.Josh White, who got mobbedhere last month when he came tobe a folksinger for us and thosetelevision people, will be at theGate of Horn December 19 to 31.Call SU 7-2833 for ticket informa¬tion.'Christmas Oratorio'to be presented SundayThe Rockefeller chapelchoir and members of theChicago Symphony under thedirection of Richard Vikstrom,will present Bach’s “ChrL/masOratorio” Sunday afternoon at 3in Rockefeller chapel.The Oratorio, composed for theChristmas of 1734, will be pre¬sented this year instead ofHandel’s Messiah. The Bach workconsists of lyrical meditations,held together by recitations thattell the Christmas story as it isWTitten in Matthew and Luke.Jackson Sheats, tenor, will oefeatured as th> Evangelist.Tickets for the concert are $4($2 for students) and may be ur-chased at the Chapel office, 59street and Woodlawn aver-"".foreign car hospitalsee page 410% Discount to Students With This Ad5228 Harper HY 3-2559LAKEtire PARK AT SjRDyde park 9 O 7 1theatrealldark theatredark Gr modisonfr 2-2845 ^50“lof college studentsA open 7:30 a.m.late show 3 a m.t different double feature dally★ Sunday Film Guildi wflf* in ior *re* program guide* nttle gal-iery tor gals onlyA *yery friday is ladles day“l gals admitted lor only 25cA Clark parking - 1 door south4 hours 95c after 5 p.m.FILM GUILD CLASSICSfri. - 8th * '"from here toeternity”"on the water¬front”sat. . 9th • “the magician***"wild strawber¬ries”■«*». - 10th - «"shane”"room at thetop" NOW PLAYING"THE PURE HELL OFST. TRINIANS"Dramatization of cartoon classict \and’THE CHEATERS"Award winning French FilmNext"IVAN THE TERRIBLEPorts I and IIDirected by Sergi EisensteinSTARTS THIS FRIDAY !■ The •Disc1367 E. 57th StreetRECORDS FOR CHRISTMASHANDELMessiah- Joan SutherlandAdrian BoultVIVALDIGloriaHermann ScherchenTHE PLAYof DANIELNew York ProMusica AntiquaBERLIOZL* Infance du ChristCharles Munch HANDELActs and GalateaJoan SutherlandPeter PearsBERGLyric SuiteJulliard QuartetPURCELDido and AeneasKirsten FlagstadBACHChristmas OratorioFerdinand GrossmanDec. 6. 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Netherton's view of university role explainedJohn P. Netherton, retiring rung the Quant roll prize for ex¬dean of students, has said cellence >n undergraduate teach-that his job is to “produce the il}s ini1®55- He has scrved as as*i • x, , . sistant dean of the College, asstudent in the classroom m dcan 0[ studcnU ln the rcollof,cthe optimum condition for (the position is now called deanlearning.” But he adds that of undergraduate students), and.the process of bringing the stu- as associate dean of students. good frame of mind for effectiveclassroom work by some kind ofoccupationally therapeutic toniceffect derived from this particularform of fun and games, but thestudent is in a position to learnthings from the activity whichwill themselves become properdent to the classroom should initself have education value Neth¬erton has tried to add this valueas dean of students.Netherton, who also holds anappointment as associate profes¬sor of Spanish in the College, isvery concerned with the conceptof “Paternalism.” a charge leviedagainst institutions by studentswho feel their rights have beenabridged. Says the dean:“American institutions of highereducation provide their studentswith elaborate, formalized guid¬ance of vocationl, academic, per¬sonal and psychological varieties.It provides, by one form or an¬other of subsidy facilities for agreat variety of Student activit¬ies.’ Does all this constitute pater¬nalism? Unquestionably it does—in a descriptive sense, in the sensethat it all arises out of an atti¬tude in which the college takesitself as standing in loco parentisto its students in a form and de¬gree that call for the provision ofthese facilities and services.“But the term is also used inan evaluative sense, implying anexcessive or inappropriate solici¬tude for student welfare. To usethe term in this sense begs an im¬portant question. It is in the firstplace a matter of historical per¬spective and national custom. Itis too easy to adopt some tin-stated view of the continentalEuropean university as a startingpoint for a line of more or lessunreal questions about the ration¬ale of the American system.“Under the very sign of what Isaid earlier coneerning the educa¬tional content of the student per¬sonnel program. I would indeedsay that there is no effective dif¬ference in principle between theinstitution’s right—and indeed re¬sponsibility—to concern itself withtile shape of its students’ degreeprograms, and with the social andother conditions in which they livewhile members of the studentcommunity.”Netherton, avvnrded a Phi BetaKappa key while a UC under¬graduate, took his BA, MA, andPhD degrees here. He has beena faculty member since 1941, win- The dean subscribes to thegeneral philosophy of education ofUC chancellor George W. Beadle.He says, “Within certain broadlimits the single most importantthing about a university is thefaculty and student body. How¬ever comprehensive it looks, andmay be, on paper, any educationalsystem has its effectiveness aris¬ing out of understanding, partici¬pation, and support of the studentand faculty.“Meanwhile, speaking from theparticular point of view of the stu¬dent personnel dean, I can addthat my account of the ‘good’ uni¬versity would probably carry somespecial emphasis on the idea ofthe sense of common purpose inall elements of the university com¬ munity, and the importance of tion whether three is the correctgood, full, collaborative communi- number: what of trustees, alumni,cation among them.” parents?Great concern over the concept The dean sees great value inof “three” parts of the University (he fraternity system of a univer-students, faculty, and administra- sity. He noted in a pamphlet re-tion. is expressed by Netherton as ccntly published by the Inter-well as by the chancellor. He fraternity council, “The value of ......views as an important part of his fraternity is necessarily potential, Par * ° is w to e co ege educa-job the establishment of communi- not guaranteed, for any student, 10”j.cation. He commented: any chapter, or any college.“The student personnel staff has Where it is fully achieved, groupa responsibility to see beyond and idealism enters into effective bal-work to reduce any feelings of anee with values individuallydivision of interest, of adversary held, chapter activities afford theposition, among the three lements member both pleasure and con-of the community—faculty, stu- structive social experience and,dents, and administration. I would in addition, partly through satis-also point out that the idea of fying these needs, sharpen his at-‘three’ in this context should not tention to the intellectual task;be over-emphasized at the expense and one part of the total result isof a conception of the single, com- growth in moral character.”Student activities can havegreat education value for theirparticipants. He says, “It seemsclear to me that activities involvenot only putting students into amon institutional purpose.“The tripartite division is. in away, merely technical, useful forthe purpose of analysis. But deansare teachers, professors are stu¬dents, students and staff are allelements of the institutional bodypolitic. There is even some ques- Netherton is a believer in thecore program of required coursesestablished at UC by RobertHutchins. “The faculty knowsmore than anyone else what theirstudents should be taught,” hesaid. “That is not to say, ofcourse, that a reasonable amountof elective freedom should not beallowed.”One of the great traditions ofUC is that, although studentsshould not be allowed to decidewhat they should study (hence thecore requirements), they mustbe allowed how to study (non-compulsory class attendance).DEMOLITION SALE NOW IN PROGRESSSCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORM — THE UNIQUE STORAGE UNITS1542 EAST 57th STREETOpen Daily 12 noon to 8 p.m. Appointment only Ml 3-8032FLORENCE RESNIKOFFCUSTOM JEWELRY DESIGNPrecious Stones Matched Wedding SetsThe only Chicago designer to be included in “Design Quar¬terly's" survey of contemporary jewelry craftsmen.THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESSALUTE: LOREN GERGENSThree years ago lie was an economics major in college.Today he is a salesman ini reducing Bell System productsand services to business executives. Loren Gergens andbis sales staff have improved the communications efficiencyof many firms by analyzing their operations and rec¬ ommending advanced Bell System products and services.Loren Gergens of Mountain Slates Telephone & Tele¬graph Company, and the other young men like him inBell Telephone Companies throughout the country, helpmake your communications service the finest in the world.fjjk| BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESforeign car salessee page 4STUDY INSOUTHERNFRANCEFRENCH LANGUAGEAND LITERATURE. EUROPEAN STUDIESAn academic year in Aix-en-Province for undergraduates.Institute students enrolled atthe University of Aix-Marseille;founded in 1409.Classes in English or Frenchsatisfying American curriculumrequirements.Students may live in Frenchhomes.Tuition, trans-Atlantic fares,room and board, about $1,850.For further information, writeairmail to:INSTITUTE FORAMERICANUNIVERSITIESoff. UNIVERSITY of AIX-MARSEILLE21 rue Gasfon-de-SaportaAIX EN-PROV1NCE France12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 6. 1*61