ICORE slate s segregation rally* t- „ j •_ 4i._ fn\ t. f . . *A rally in front of the administration building thisafternoon will begin studentaction protesting the Uni¬versity’s policy on housing discrim¬ination.The 12:30 rally will also markIhe start of sit-ins outside Presi¬dent George Beadle’s office, whichwill continue until the Universitychanges its policy.The measures were decided upona! a meeting of the University ofChicago branch of the Congress onracial equality (CORE) last night.They were CORE'S response loyesterday's statement by Beadle.According to Beadle, the Uni¬versity is in complete agreementwith the objectives of the students.It differs with them, he said, onlyin the rate at which a stable in¬tegrated community is to heachieved.Bruce Rappaport, chairman ofUC’s CORE, countered that themain difference between COREand the administration is one ofmethodology, not just rate: “TheUniversity sees segregation as partof its program to integration,” lesaid.“CORE can never accept segre¬gation as a means to integration,on logical or moral grounds,” hocontinued.CORE will issue a point bypoint refutation of Beadle’s state¬ment: however, it will, counter itwith the following statement thatwas adopted last night to prefaceits demands to the Universitycode:“CORE does not believe that apolicy of segregation maintainedbv the University or any other in¬ stitution is the means by whichart integrated community can beachieved.“We are aware of the manycomplexities involved in the at¬tempt to create an integrated, de¬cent! community.“However, we are convincedthat the starting point for thisprocess of integration is the im.mediate elimination of all formsof d iscrimination, while at thesame time actively maintaininghousing standards on their prop¬erty.“We therefore urge all inter¬ested and informed members ofthe community, including the Uni¬versity, to pool their resources inan attempt to create a truly in¬tegrated neighborhood: the kindof community we all desire.”CORE also added the followingto its four demands on the Uni¬versity:“Concerning Ihe problems In¬volved in attaining a stable in¬tegrated community, it has beendemonstrated in other communi¬ties that when organized effortshave been made by qualifiedgroups and individuals in the areasof education and community plan¬ning, these problems need not oc¬cur.‘‘We therefore propose that oncethe University renounces its poli¬cy of segregation, a commission beestablished to initiate and directsimilar programs to which COREwill give its full support.”The original demands were thatthe University:(1) Statp publicly that it will notdiacriminate on the basis of religion,or creed in the renting, leasing, ad¬ministering. or selling of any propertythat it owns or controls. (2) Refrain from supporting anyother realtor who discriminates onthese bases.(31 Issue a directive to all personnelwho administer University owned prop¬erty to the effect of the above.(4) Provide for the implementationof this directive by establishing an of¬ficial board with equal representationfrom the administraton. faculty, andstudent body, and delegate to thatboard the full power to hear any com¬plaints relating to this policy and tomake binding decisions on all casesbrought before it.The sit-ins at the administrationbuilding are planned to last, con¬tinuing through the night, untilthe University changes it policy. If the University requests sus¬pension of sit-ins as the basis forinitiating negotiations, CORE wallagree to that “suspension at theprecise time that negotiation' act¬ually begin.” If at cessation of ne¬gotiations CORE’S demands arenot met, the sit-ins will immedi¬ately resume.Gerhard Meyer, associate profes¬sor of economics, who was UCCORE’S sponsor when it w^as af¬filiated with the National Asso¬ciation for the Advancement of Colored People, issued a word ofcaution to students at the meet¬ing.He told them they must not losesight of the complexity of the is¬sue involved in CORE’S disputewith UC housing policy by over¬simplifying.He advised CORE'S members to“do what you have to. but do itin a spirit which does not deny . .the good will of people and givethem room to make concessionsand change their minds.”Vol. 70 — No. 44 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Jan. 23, 1962Answers_bitis charge JW UAw*, 4 (v*oBeadle sta¥fe^"tJC positionBillings head appointedCharles R. Goulet, associatedirector of the Johns Hopkinshospital, has been appointedsuperintendent of the Univer¬sity of Chicago hospitals.Goulet will also become an as¬sociate professor of hospital ad¬ministration in Ihe University'sgraduate school of business.The appointment, which will be¬come effective March 1, was an¬nounced yesterday by Dr. II. Stan¬ley Bennett, dean of the divisionof biological sciences."We are fortunate in havingMr. Goulet take over the direc¬tion of our hospitals to continuethe splendid leadership underwhich they have flourished. He has displayed his ability to meetbroad new challenges in hospitaladministration,” stated Bennett.Goulet. 34, received a mastersdegree in hospital administrationfrom the graduate school of bus¬iness at UC in 1953. He joinedthe staff of John Hopkins hospitalin 1958.In his new position he will suc¬ceed Ray E. Brown, who becamethe University’s vice president ofadministration last October.The UC hospitals are a 715-bedmedical center located along theMidway plaisance, occupying al¬most four square blocks. It servesover 16 thousand bed patients and180 thousand outpatients annually,and employs more than 1500people. George Beadle reaffirmedhis position yesterday thatthe University has the sameobjectives in regard to neigh¬borhood integration as representa¬tives of Student government andthe lTC branch of CORE. Both,he said, want to achieve “a stableinterracial community.”In a prepared statement, Beadlesaid that “the only issue on whichthere is arguable defference of opi¬nion is the rate at which it is pos¬sible to move toward the agreed-on objective without losing morethan is gained.”A controversy broke out lastTuesday when Beadle and vicepresident for the administrationBay Broun disclosed to studentsrepresenting SG and UU COKEthat the University practiced ra¬cial discrimination in a largeamount of its off-campus bousing.The students had previously pre¬sented six test cases to the ad¬ministration seeking to prove thatfact.Following is the text of Beadle’sstatement:The University believes in equalopportunity for all persons - ineducation, in employment, in liv¬ ing conditions, and in all otherrespects, regardless ol race reli¬gion or ethnic background.In line with this belief, the ob¬jective of the University in allits neighborhood housing activi¬ties is to achieve a stable interra¬cial community. As President Ken¬nedy recognizes (N.Y. Times, Jan.16th). the achievement of the de¬sired end result must be attaineddeliberately, so as not unduly toincrease fear and distrust. Thisview is widely shared by sociolo¬gists, social workers, local com¬munity leaders, city planners, andnational authorities on the sub¬ject - both Negro and white.It is the firm intention of theUniversity to continue to move asrapidly as feasible toward the de¬sired goal.The objectives of the Universi¬ty are therefore the same as thosestated by representatives of Stu¬dent Government and of CORE.The only issue on wliieli there isarguable difference of opinion isthe rate at which it is possible tomove toward the agreed-on ob¬jectives without losing more thanis gained.The University’s activity inhousing falls into two categories.Its policy toward student and fac-Trilling discusses teaching literaturemuch a representative man of the20th century.”Lowrey praised Trilling’s workin several fields, and pointed es¬pecially to his “candid” writingsabout the relationship betweenstudents and instructors in col¬leges.Trilling, whose critical essays Trilling's announced topic forhave appeared in all the major the informal discussion, “Thecritical and literary magazines in teaching of literature,” led him toAmerica and England, was intro- consider three specific problems:ducod by Perrin Lowrey, assistant his role as a teacher (of Englishprofessor in humanities, as “very at Columbia university for moreby Ronnie RosenblattLionel Trilling, notedAmerican critic, novelist,editor, and professor spokelast night to 100 students inthe quarter’s first “My Lifeand Yours” program.East house resident Bob Unfurth looks longingly at stack•f long-overdue books now being moved into East houselibrary. than 30 years); the writing by stu¬dents of term papers; and thequestion of choosing a college.He began by quoting HenryAdams, who at the end of histeaching career at Harvard, statedthat “no man could teach in anAmerican university for more thanfive years without being de¬stroyed.” Trilling pointed to hisown long teaching career as per¬haps a case in point.Attitudes changeThe changed attitudes towardliterature in the last century be¬came increasingly imi>ortant asTrilling moved on to his majorconsideration of the evening — theresults he has achieved in hismodern writing course at Colum¬bia.He described “in sorrow ratherthan in anger” the papers he re¬ceives each term from his stu¬dents as exhibiting seriousness,thought, and real effort, but “aw¬ful writing.”He offered as possible explana¬tion the belief many students holdthat the w riting ol-lucid, exposi¬tory prose in some way harmstheir creative ability, and is there¬fore thought by them to be alien.With examples of Mann, Joyce,Eliot, and virtually all the otherwriters Trilling employs in hiscourse, ho destroyed this ideal,pointing out that what makes thegreat works “greal” is their con¬st rucl ion and form.Trilling oiled the sense of "en-ormousness of literarv enterorise"behind such works as Eliot's Wasteland, Mann’s Magic Mount¬ain, and all of Joyce's works ashaving no small basis in the earlytraining the writers received inthe production of “clear, preciserhetoric.”Expressing his admiration forand belief in the need for this typeof training, Trilling examined theother side of the problem — thequestion of whether today’s stu¬dent, and indeed, today’s scholar,is not “wary of too much formal¬ization.”Trilling, in no way criticizingthe writers whose works arelauded for their careful construc¬tion, pointed out that there is per¬haps a “fatigue” in literatureitself and a desire lhat “anti¬literature” begin to function in itsplace.Teaching undercutThis, he said, “undercuts thewhole business of leaching litera-tuio,” because literature and artarc not sought for their own sake,but studied in some new way ofwhich account must be taken.Trilling concluded his lecturewith a consideration ot the prob¬lem of choosing a college — speci¬fically using his son as example.Stating lhat he would not wantthe boy “to listen to the kind ofguff that I hand out,” Trilling em¬phasized the need for today’s stu¬dents to leave the college and tobecome involved early in "some¬thing very, very, very real ... tobecome committed to somethingto which the college could nevercommit (them».” ulty housing’ is to provide assist¬ance in finding suitable accommo¬dations for all, though regular Uni¬versity channels, without refer¬ence to race or creed. It must herecognized, however, that therewill always be difficulties in thiseffort, for there is not now andthere is not likely to be sufficienthousing of a kind that will satis¬fy all needs and all desires.The University also owns andmanages certain commercial resi¬dential properties. Whenever ttieUniversity acquires a building be¬cause it is threatened with dete¬rioration - the primary reason forsuch acquisition - it does not makeabrupt changes of practice withregard to occupancy because main¬tenance of a socially practicablerate of integration is essential tothe prevention of further deterio¬ration.Experience has proved that in¬tegration of such property doesnot occur spontaneously; in tactthe opposite is true. A suddenchange of practice eniiances thefpar and distrust of present ten¬ants and they tend to move out.The building shortly becomeswholly segregated in character,and the achievement of multi-ra¬cial occupancy becomes vastlymore difficult than if a policy ofcontrolled integration had beenfollowed.In making decisions on the timeschedule to be observed in suchcases, the University seeks andmakes use of the best advice itcan get from responsible sources.Uncontrolled social forces atwork in an irnperfeet society oncealmost destroyed the Universitycommunity. These forces are nowwell understood, and as a resultthere has been substantial pro¬gress in creating a stable inter¬racial neighborhood in Hyde ParkKenwood. This has been made pos¬sible through the cooperation amigood will of persons of manyethnic origins, both as individualsand .through .organizations towhich they belong. In these effortsthe University has taken an ac¬tive part. It will continue to doso, recognizing that not all an¬swers to the fundamental problemarc known, and that there will al¬ways remain some risk of error.It is difficult to achieve andmaintain a truly stable interra¬cial community. Ours is now moresuccessful than most; furthermore,there is evidence that the degreeof success achieved during thepast decade is making possible anacceleration of the process. Butthe goal is not yet achieved. Ifwe are set back in the orderly pro¬cess now going on, the los: willbe shared bj’ all members of thecommunity, whatever their racialorigins.The policy described above hasbeen presented fully to the Coun¬cil of the University Faculty andto representatives of Student Gov¬ernment and CORE, and lias beendiscussed in detail with thesegroups. .Ren Pierce LettersCites 6re-awakening9 moves9 CORE calls off picketurges new University actionI am not in agreement withthe anti-segregation demandsof UC’s student governmentand its chapter of CORECongress of racial equalityBut 1 think that UC admin¬istrators should be thankful forOORE’s public condemnations.Since neither students nor ad¬ministrators have come to thesesame heretical conclusions, I shallattempt to explain them.I am firmly convinced that allforms 01 racial segregation areequal!} injurious to all races.Even without talking aboutbrotherhood and human dignity,the Chicago housing situation isproof enough that, at least econ¬omically speaking, segregation isharmful.Negroes in Chicago generallycannot find housing outside ofChicago’s "Negro ghetto,” whichstretches from the Loop acrossthe south and west like an in¬verted ‘L.’ The ghetto is over¬crowded and over-priced. Northside white Chicagoans pay for theghetto every time they pay taxeswhich are used for increasedpolice and fire protection, and forurban renewal. Yet the ghettoexists only because of their ownunfounded fear and bigotry.For Chicago, as for mostnorthern cities, a famliar patternis present in neighborhood history.New neighborhoods are first in-habitied by high income whites.Then lesser income whites. Thena Negro family moves in, or isrumored to have moved in. Thewhites panic. Slum landlords buyproperty at reduced prices. Theyturn large apartments into manysmall apartments. Rents go up.Property values go down. Victimsof the Negro housing shortageflood in. Overcrowding develops.Buildings deteriorate. And finally,the bulldozer is brought in.For the last eight or nine years,the University of Chicago hasbeen trying to reverse the familiarcycle of neighborhood decay in itsforeign cor solessee page 3 own neighborhood, Hyde Park.Previously, the cycle had been pre¬vented by violence or threats ofviolence, as in Chicago’s Back ofthe Yards neighborhood near thestockyards, which today remainsalmost totally white, or, as in thecommunity southwest of the Uni¬versity. by only token integration.But the University, whichfought Tor restrictive covenants inthe 1930’s, saw, in 1954 and 1955,that Hyde Park was “too fargone” for token integration. Sothe University was convinced asmuch by the facts of life as bymoral considerations that it couldfight neither for an all-white noran all-black community if it wasto save its neighborhood from anenormous renewal project at sometime in the future. “Stability”became the word then, and"stability” is the word now\I believe it to be an indisput¬able fact that the University’schief planners are fighting tomaintain an integrated community—neither all black, nor all white.This has been an extremelydifficult battle. And it has beenfought primarily with the whiteresident. Slum landlords are alltoo anxious to rent exclusively toNegroes. White apartment; dwell¬ers are all too ready to move out .And it is in this context that Ithink CORE and the studentgovernment have been far too ex¬treme in their demands forimmediate integration of all Uni¬versity owned properties. This iscultural and economic nonsense,benefitting only the slum landlord.Those Negroes who would movein to fill the tremendous vacuumwhich this policy would producewould find, all too soon, that theirapartments would be condemnedas shims due to improper main¬tenance and overcrowding, thetools of the slum landlord. And mthe meantime, these tenantswould be paying inflated rents.Yet, the university’s actionshave not been entirely praise¬worthy. Not all of its administra¬tors have understood the differ¬ence betw-een segregation andstability. And many people con¬cerned with ihe University’s ex¬tensive property holdings havebeen overcautious.• Officially, all faculty membersand students have been entitled to any vacant university apart¬ments, regardless of race. Yet,the author of this column wasquite recently assured by Univer¬sity City realty corporation thathe would not have been able torent his apartment were he aNegro. Student government andCORE have documented otherexamples of segregation of stu¬dents in university owned build¬ings. These practices certainlyshould be stopped.Furthermore, I find it difficultto believe that a university w’hichhas a large reservoir of sociologi¬cal talent has not devoted agreater amount of effort to de¬veloping integration plans whichwould prevent "white panic,” thebeginning of the end of the neigh¬borhood cycle. What about blockgroups? What about communitymeetings? What about a buildingby building plan for integratingproperties?This is why I think the Univer¬sity should thank CORE and thestudent government for forcingthe issue. Now is the time of re¬awakening for those administra¬tors who have allowed theirtrusteeship of a great universityto lull their consciences to sleep.The University’s embarrassmentis the ideal excuse for its rela¬tively new president: to call fornew integration action, and for areturn to some previously statedintegration policies.The wheels of corporate changegrind slowly. But iheve is stilltime. To the editor:Last Friday’s Maroon carried astory stating that Student Govern¬ment and UC CORE would picketyesterday’s “My Life and Yours”lecture given by Lionel Trilling.The decision to picket the Tril¬ling lecture had been made, infact, without consulting CORE.The demonstration was called offFriday and the reasons for thisshould be made quite clear. Thedemonstration was planned as a protest, at a University sponsoredevent, against the University’savowed policy of racial discrimi¬nation in its off-campus housing.It was decided to call this off indeference to Mr. Trilling, who hadnot been previously informed offhe proposed picket. It was feltthat Mr. Trilling might think thedemonstration aimed at him ratherthan at the University.Terri Royvice-president UC COREFriedman: ‘My mistake’To the Editor:I hope that I am entitled toone generously proportioned mis¬take; for I certainly have madeone. My apologies to Mr. Trillingand any others who may havebeen offended by my intemperatecall for a demonstration (notheld) at his lecture last night.CORE, it should be noted, wasonly involved in the imagination of the headline w’ritcr. Mr. Trill¬ing was given a letter Mondaymorning explaining ihe natureand reasons for our protest andthe cancelled demonstration.I hope that this isn’t (althoughI fear it will be) used as an ex¬cuse for inaction against the Uni¬versity’s inexcusable discrimina¬tory policies.Leonard FriedmanCalendar of EventsTuesday, 23 JanuaryExhibition: "lT«)iftn i>iayg of the Ren¬aissance,” Harper library, let and 6thfloor west, 9 am-5 pm.Exhibition: Water colors by JohnRichardson and a display of tech¬niques of priiumaking. Lexingtongallery, 9 am-6 pm.Exhibition: works by Shalom of Safed,the Israeli painter. (loodspeed 108,10 am-5 pm.Concert: Russian choir concert. IdaNoyes hall. 11:30 am.Lutheran services: Bond chapel, 11:3*)am.Exhibition: Oil paintings from the(iuiidhall galleries. Tufts house, 3rdfloor, 12 am-12 pm.Seminar: "The American Jewish com¬munity.” Hillel foundation. 12:30 pm.Lecture: "The Balanced Christian—What should be pray for?" Paul Froniei,Swift, 208, 12:30 pm.Gastrointestinal seminar: Billings M- 1 37,3 pm.Intermediate Hebrew: Hillel foundation,3:30 i*n.Elementary Hebrew (Bet): Hillel foun¬dation, 4:30 |tni.Zoller dental seminar: Cardiac surgery,'’l>r. Robert Harrison, Billings SO-225,4:30 pm.Cine seminar: "Fracture- elbow amiankle," l>r. Robert I). Moor. . Billing*P-117. S pie.Rifle club: Field'house, 7 pm.Folk dancing: International hou-t 7 pm.ENT Journal club: Billings S-134, 7:30pmMeeting: Washington project, all com¬mittees, Ida Noyes. 7:80 pm.Record concert: International house. ?pm.Sittler discusses councilThe Reverend Joseph Sit¬tler, a divinity school profes¬sor who attended the 1961world council of churches heldin New’ Delhi, India, spoke atBrent house Sunday night.Discussing “Faith and order atWCC’s New Delhi,” Sittler, anordained Lutheran minister, com¬mented on the New Delhi meetingand the churches’ attempt atachieving doctrinal unity.Sittler pointed out that in thepast, theologians thought the onlyway of reaching unity would in- \olve getting rid of all doctrineand leaving only obvious points ofagreement. “The problem was howthrough thisdogieal (piestions toget theologieal perpeetives thatwould have a common renter,” heexplained.There were even times, at Lund,for example, when theologians“came to part, not because theydidn’t understand each other’steachings, but because they un¬derstood them perfectly well.”He related parts of his speechto the New Delhi assembly. Thataddress, which was about “theunity of Christ’s church not onlyin the human demonsion but inall of nature,” was described byTime as “perhaps the most ori¬ginal and challenging address giv¬en at ihe assembly.”In the speech Sittler claimedthat the idea "that we are calledto unity, that the One who callsus is God, that this relentlesscalling persists over and throughall discouragements, false starts,and sometimes apparently fruit¬less efforts is what engenderedthe ecumenical movement amongthe churches, and steadily sustainsthem in it.”The New Delhi assembly, whichrepresented over 65 million people (he WCC proposed a statementof belief which the faith and or¬der commission had worked on foreight years. The final version ©Ithe statement, known as the SaintAndrew's statement, is as follows:“We believe that the unitywhich is both God’s will and Hisgift to His church is being madevisible as all in each place whoare baptized into Jesus Christ andconfess him as Lord and Savior,are brought by the H6ly Spiritinto one fully committed fellow¬ship, holding the one apostolicfaith, preaching the one Gospel,breaking the one bread, joining incommon prayer, and having a cor¬porate life reaching our in wit¬ness and service to all, who atthe same time are united with thewhole Christian fellowship in allplaces and all ages in such wisethat ministry and members are ac¬cepted by all, and that all can actand speak together as occasionrequires for the tasks to whichGod calls his people.About, the statement, Sittlersaid jokingly, “It has many fathersand mothers; so many that it isnot only illegitimate, but untracc-able.” He further declared, ”1think it is a magnificent state¬ment. and I'm proud to have hada part in battling it through.”DR. 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ILL.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jon. 23, 1962Sports newsDubuque challenge cagers Piano concert FridayAir Force fencers winThopson North to a 20-12 victoryby Chuck BernsteinChicago’s varsity cagers The crack fencers of the US over East n in a co]]ege househo})e to extend their winning Air Force academy coasted to jeague game.h,,0i. thvpe in 1 mw wl1An their twentieth consecutive victorystieak to thiee in a 10 \ hen ag they convindng]y subdued Fenn In olhei. intramural activity,they host Dubuque tonight in coilcge and the Maroons at Bart- the han<tbali tournament gets Easley Blackwood, pianist, wood. These works present acom noser and assistant nrn- clear historical Panorama of a, composer, ana as. istant pio movement }n composition which,Chet Dabrowski’s 14 points led fessor of music at the Univer- until a few years ago, was con-sity of Chicago, will give apiano recital of the complete solopiano music of Schoenberg, Berg,and Webern at 8:30 pm Friday,an 8 pm fieldhouse game. Dubuque lett gym Saturday,features high-scoring guard DickYapp, who last season was one oftwo men to score as many as 23l>oints against the Maroons.Larry Liss rendered an eyepop¬ping shooting exhibition Saturdayto lead the Maroons to a 58-49 nin« e]even contests. Gradman of Henderson favored to( oach Alvar Hermanson's squad successfully defend his all-univer-could salvage only three victories s|ty championship,in 27 bouts against the Air Forceacademy, but fared a little betterin competition with Fenn, win- under way this week, with Wayne January 26, in Leon Mandel hall.A concert of the complete worksof these composers has never beengiven before, according to Black-win over Denison at the field-house. The slender hoosier guardliied in 27 points, a personal highand tops for a UCer this year.The Maroons had difficultypenetrating the efficient Denisonzone defense with any regularityand fell behind 23-14 after 15minutes. Then Liss took over. In2'2 minutes he netted five straight won both of his epee matches withjump shots from the side to knot Fenn. Two saber victories went toihe score at 24-24. Dan Rosenblum and the third toThe lead see-sawed in the Nick Liepins.second half as Liss and GeneEricksen, who tallied 15, kept the l-M basketball SCOreSMaroons in contention. After get- Iphigenia' production readyThe Actors company’s next production, Euripides’ Iphi¬genia in Aulis, will have “mammoth” settings for its presen- WhiIe they do not require greatJim Byer and Helmut Laumer,the former at foil, the latter atepee, led the Maroons with three . .victories each. They accounted for tuition in the Cloister club riiursd&y, January 25 throughthe entire Chicago point total Sunday, January 28, said Phil Hyde, technical director foiagainst the Air Force. the company. He described thePatrick O’Donovan won two technical production as the “big-points and Marshall Wais one in gest thing we’ve done yet.”foil competition, and Ron Kaye sidered highly controversial, hesaid.Blackwood will play the entire60-minute recital from memory.The program is made up of manyshort pieces with the longest last¬ing six minutes and the shortest,20 seconds.“The fifty minutes of musicwhich make up Schoenberg’s out¬put for piano are probably moreconsistently excellent than thepiano music of any other com¬poser,” Blackwood said. “Pianisti-cally speaking, the pieces are hard.The central setting, designed bysecond year student James Brad¬ley, will stretch the length of theCloister club. Slides for the fourprojected backdrops will be bySecond City designer Stanley Kaz-dailis. The costumes have beenc.icr o aa a 1 C.07 * . Thursday’s intramural basket- desjgn<xj by Rosemary Lawrenceting 44"41 lead With 6l37 to 1>aI1 action in thp • .» , , c ,,. n . , .. , „ 0811 acnon’ in rne lziwstonai in style ot seventh centuryl>la>, Chicago went into its ball league, School of social service ad- Greece,control offense. Three Big Red ministration beat Laughlin house,Starters received an early exit via 21 11; Calv ert club crushed Geog-the loul mute because ol over- graphy, 40-8, and Chicago theo-anxious ball-hawking, and thesubsequent free throws icedMaroons’ seventh win. logical seminary won over thethe Flying Bolsheviks, 30-15. In thefraternity league, Beta Theta Pi According to director WilliamBezdek, Iphigenia in Aulis needsthis elaborate decor to establishthe war fever in the preparation for the Trojan war. Counteringthe war atmosphere is the singingchorus of eleven women with or¬iginal music by Gordon Stewart,who also wrote the instrumentalscore.“Euripidean tragedy is not thetragedy of periphery and fall, ofpity and fear,” stated Bezdek,"The characters in Iphigenia makefree choices, bring their fate onthemselves, with full knowledgeof what, they are doing — eventaking joy in giving themselves tothe Greek cause. Clytemnestra isthe one character in the play whofeels that these sacrifices madefor the war are outrageous.” strength and endurance, the maintechnical problems are those as¬sociated with large skips at veryrapid tempos and with indepen¬dence and control,” he continued.In the preliminary game, Pur-due-Calumet Extension tipped thePC first-year five 67-64, despite a25 point outburst by Maroon guardNorm Sannes. Chicago led 64-63villi eight seconds to go, but BillWilson of Purdue scored two freethrows to send the Maroons’ fifthv'ln down the drain. The fresh¬men are now 4-2. The box score: heat Delta Uusilon, 32-17. as BobWilson scored 12 points for thewinners.Tn other games. Phi Delta Thetaedged Phi Sigma Delta, 24-21; andPsi Upsilon took Phi Gamma Delta20-18. In Friday’s only game,n-Z'-mans 3-11lomasovic 2- 5Krieksen .... 5-10l.isn 10-16UHmann .... 0- 3t.ahti 0- 6t. um —Chicago 58P-R0- 31- 35- 77- 73- 72- 2 Hb10JO-51 18-29Denison 49B-aBaker 2-10Foster 3- 6Blown 1- 1Nelson 7-18Shuford 2- 7Brookbank 2- 4Dt'echsel .... 0- 0team — F-h.6-122- 23- 42- 21- 11- 1l- 2 UP Ri>17-46 1 5-23 22 35Half time Denison 28, ChieaKO 26.UC track club winsChicago's varsity track guardgot a good workout and a numberof third-place finishes in the UCtrack club invitational practice re¬lays Saturday in the fieldhouse.The UC track club took sevenfirst places and the unofficial titlewith Loyola a close second. Otherinvited teams were Northwestern,Wheaton, Northern Illinois, Wes¬tern Illinois, De Paul, Bradley,Drake, Wisconsin, and Milwaukeeirack club.Chicago’s John Musgrave andPaul Blumberg took second andthird respectively in the shot put,and Mike McKeon place third inthe broad jump. Three varsity re¬lay teams also finished third intheir events. These were the dis¬tance medley relay of Pat PalmerCharles Swan, John Bolton andHal Lieborman; the sprint medleyrelay of Don Williams, FrankSmith, Ed Wooley and Tom Clarkeand the 880-yard relay of Wooley,Swan, Jim McKenzie and Wil¬liams. 99c SPECIALSWITH THIS APBrake AdjustmentONLY 99®Flat Tire RepairsTube Type QQqOnly 99' foreign car hospital & clinicdealers in:• mg• morris• a us tin• riley• lambretta5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob lestermg psychiatrist Rotation of 5 WheelsONLY 99®Wheel BalancingPlus QQcWeights 99Tiers| ******& *>12*29■ gSSS&r** lre**b!t tire?summmf TAKE ADVANTAGE...only ONE WEEK left of our1st CLEARANCE SALE... in our new storeItI1II90 REDUCTIONS ON ALLTROUSERS, JACKETS,SUITS, SPORTSCOATS,TRADITIONAL SUITS(Many with Vests IFormerly up to $75NOW $47-5°to*57-5°Also20% DISCOUNTOn AllNeckware, Gloves, ScarfsSweaters and Sportshirts I1|l1|III All salemerchandisehas beenselectedfrom ourbrand new,current stockof clothingandfurnishingsStore Hours9 to 6Thursday & Friday9 to 9THE STORE FOR MENAL SAX TIRE CO.6052 Cottage GroveDOrchestor 3-5554 INC.attfc (tfampit* ftijopin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100Jan. 23, 1962 • C H1C AGO MAROON • 3Wr/r/Afi/^MiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii Newsbits iiuiiiiiiimiiiiimmiiiiiHiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimnii!iiiiMtiniiiiiininnPolish author named visiting professorMaria Kunceviez, a distin- “Polish literature, because of “Two outposts on the New Southern Minutemen Discuss urban renewalguished Polish author* has -the political eclipse of Poland in Frontier.” Organize ,A UC professor wiU discus'been named visiting professor 1ho 19rh century - lack of embas- Weinstein is a member of the “Minutemen” organizations woodlawn” with a member oi in'ol 1 olish hteiatuie. >ies, lack of international prestige— President Kennedy's committee on a}.e formed throughout Industrial areas foundation (IAFi.Mrs. Kunceviez will bo on cam- has been grossly neglected in the equal employment opportunity,pus until the end of the spring world. Even at that time we hadquarter. She is now teaching Sla¬vic 251, a survey course in Polishliterature, and Slavic 349. Polishliterature from 1918 to 1939.In the United States. Mrs. Kun-cevicz is best known for her novel,The Stranger, written in 1945. Herother well-known novels includeThe Keys (1946* and The Conspi¬racy of the Absent (1950>.In 1954 she wrote a play inEnglish, Thank You for the Itose,and a novel in Polish. Lesnik,which was translated into Englishas The Forester.While on campus. Mrs. Kun-cevvicz will finish another novel,Spanish Notes and write a bookon Warsaw.According to Mrs. Kuncevvicz, great poets and excellent novel¬ists. two of whom won the Nobelprize. The 20 year inter-war per¬iod of Polish independence was tooshort a time to repair the damageand it was not until the 1940’*that Polish culture began tospread more widely in the Westwith political emigration.'’Mrs. Kuncevvicz is the first ap¬pointment in the Slavic depart¬ment's program to strengthen stu¬dies in Polish language and lite¬rature. secret aryethics viand on commerceHodges’ committee onbusiness.He has been active in the inter¬national Zionist movement, urbanrenewal, and many other activi¬ties.His lecture opens a seriesplanned by the fifth ward Indepen¬dent Voters of Illinois. Weinsteinwill speak tonight at 8:30 at thehome of Mr. and Mrs. JosephSilvern, 1507 East 56 Street. the Soutli to combat integra- Robert Havighurst, professor intion attempts. the department, ot education and» u * u a chairman of UC s committee onAccording o oi . - human development, and Nicholastorso,,, ol the association ol cm- Hoffman, assistant director otzens councils in Mississippi, ther au IAI will discuss urban renewa npin-pose of those community level . .. ” 1groups "is to peacefully assemble Woodlawn tomorrow night at 8 pmon short notice at any given point " *■» housc »< ** Southwithin their community to demon-Rabbi Weinstein to talkon New FrontierRabbi Jacob Weinstein of Evening in Asia heldat International house‘Evening in Asia’, a varietyprogram of folk dances andsongs by students of Asian strate a citizens' protest againstany invasion institutions.”The minutemen will act as “anon-violent counter-action to theorganized non—violent lawbreak¬ers,” said Patterson. They will lendsupport to local law enforcementofficers who might be outnum¬bered by "the invadei-s.”The units, which are “made upof a cross section of the finestwhite citizenry in each commu- Woodlawn avenue.The discussion will he sponsoredby the South Side chapter of ilv«American Humanist associationKAM temple will speak on nations, was presented Satur- nity. have a communication chainClassified Ads at InternationalNicely f urnixhed 4 rni. apt., clean. Happy birthday. Rich.— Aloof & Harry.5623 S. Dorchester. Call: Ben Zisook. .SO 8-0439.utilities.Croat Books of the(new). Call 761-0503, Westernbefore 6 Worldpm. WANTED: Students to work on Maroonproduction staff. Call managing editoror come to office.Typing: reasonable, rapid. accurate.Special RUSH service. Call Rona Ko^en-blatt or Karen Botchers, NO 7-8609. Happy birthday. Carol Quinn.— Jay-see-pooh day eveninghouse.Sponsored by the Pakistan as¬sociation. the program featureddances and songs by a group fromthe Philippines, and students ofIndia, Pakistan. China, and Egypt.In celebration of Indian republicday, the Indian student associationwill present a program this Sat¬urday at 8 pm, at Internat onalhouse. with seven basic leaders telephon¬ing five captains who in turn callfive lieutenants until the entiregroup is alerted. Doc films tonightTonight, “Nanook of the North’*and “City of Gold’’ will begin ;tfilm series presented by Un¬social sciences 2 course with thetechnical assistance of the Docu¬mentary film group. 'Hie filmswill be shown on Tuesdays at7:30 pm in Judd 126The other films to lx- shown are“Man of Aran.” January 30;“Louisiana Story.” February 6;and “The Quiet One" February 13.ARTISTS, CRAFTSMEN,NEEDLEWORKERST.ct mo sell your handmade Kilt article*in my store on Ch icagos North Side.Call I*0 3-5716 or (JR 7-0906.Why was Clytemnenstra unfaithful toAgamemnon? See Iphigiliia in Aulis. SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORM — THE UNIQUE STORAGE UNITS1542 EAST 57th STREETOpen Daily 12 noon to 9 p.m. The Chr ISTIANScience Monitoris publish**r/ avvninf's in Ilnshm ami rnnu-s /<»Ciiicafio by air It is on sah• daily atAN INTERNATIONAL DAILY NEWSPAPERl MYERSITY BOOK STORK. 5802 SOI'TII KI.US WE.WOODWORTHS BOOKSTORE, 1315 EAST 57tl. STREETTENTH CHIRCH READING ROOM. 1448 EAST 57tl« >T.Part-time job. Men’s clothinK andfurnishing salesman. Must be able towork Thursday and Friday eveningsand all titty Saturday. Apply in person.Phone 752-8100,Cohn & SternHyde Park Shopping CenterHave a . . .FOR SALE? WANTED?PERSONAL ?USE AMAROON CLASSIFIEDforeign car hospitalsee page 3WANTED—NEW OR USEDPickett and Ketchum:Investment Principles and Policy’Harper, 1954 EditionWill pay up to $5.60UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave., Chicago 37, 111.STRAUS. BLOSSER& Me DOWELLMembersNew York Stock ExchangeMidwest Stock ExchangeDetroit Stock ExchangeAmerican Stock ExchangeHyde ParkShopping Center55th and LAKE PARKCHICAGO 37Phone NOrmal 7-0777HERZOG’SDEPARTMENTSTORE948 East 55th StreetAfter 32 years we must vacate;our building is coming down. Wenow have bargains throughout thestore on all well-known brands ofmerchandise —Up to 40. 50 and60% OffHURRY, HURRY, HURRYBefore We're All Sold Out es your tasteevery puff//air-d . c/s • With every Salem cigarette, a soft,refreshing taste is yours. Salem's special cigarette paper breathes in fresh air...to smoke fresh and flavorful every time. Smoke refreshed... smoke Salem!• menthol fresh • rich tobacco taste • modern filter tooCreated by R J Reynolds Tobacco Company4 • CHICAGO MAROON * Jan. 23. 1962