Dewar will leave UC Students split SC poMichael Dewar, professorin the department of chemis¬try. will be leaving to takeover the Welch FoundationChair in chemistry at the Univer-&itv of Texas next fall.Dewar came toUC in October,1959. He is hon¬orary secretaryof the ChemicalSociety of Lon¬don and a fellowof the Royal So¬ciety, the oldestscientific societyin England.Commenting onhis decision to go to the University of Texas, Dewarsaid “The Welch FoundationChair is a major chair with greatresearch facilities at what Ithink will become a major uni¬versity.”Dewar graduated from Oxfordwith first class honors in 1940 andgot his PhD there in 1942. Forthe next several years he workedwith a chemical company and in1949 published his book The Elec¬tronic Theory of Organic Chemis¬try.In 1951 he was Riley Lecturerat Notre Dame. After that heheld the Chair of Chemistry andwas head of the chemistry de¬partment at Queen Mary Collegeof the Universiity of London. One hundred and fiftyeight persons tried to dividequestion 2 on this week’sstudent government poll onCuba into two or more parts,reports Russell / Kay, formerchairman of the election and rules(E & R) committee of StudentGovernment.Question 2 asked, “Do you de¬plore the action of the US inestablishing a naval blockade ofmilitary weapons shipped to Cuba,and to prevent the aggressive useof these missiles against anycountry, do you believe that itis in the best interests of the USto secure the removal of thesebases through negotiation with Cuba and the Soviet Union?”1589 persons voted in the poll.Fifty-eight persons tried to splitquestion 3, according to Kay. Thequestion asked, “Do you stronglyurge the US government, in itsown interests and in the inter¬ests of world peace, to accept thetimely offer of Mr. Thant to actas mediator in negotiations be¬tween the US and the SovietUnion to settle the current crisis,and do you urge that the US ex¬press its willingness to negotiateby complying with Mr. Thant'srequest that the blockade be sus¬pended?Twenty-one persons tried tosplit question 1, which asked, “Doyou deplore actions by any nu¬clear power which result in thespreading of nuclear weapons tonations where they are not pre¬viously established? Specifically,do you deplore the Soviet Union’s missile bases inCuba?Kay, who resigned two week#ago as E A R chairman, effec¬tive after the poll, because of theaeademic pressures, was not ableto give details as to how the ques¬tions were split. The split ques¬tions were not counted at all iethe yes, no, no opinion, and nevotes categories, but other ques¬tions on the same ballots werecounted.Kay also reported that although80% of students voting supportedthe quarantine imposed by Presi¬dent Kennedy (the percentages inthe Maroon yesterday were in er¬ror, although the figures in thebox were correct), opposition tothe quarantine was greater in theschools of business, law, and med¬icine than in the college. In thecollege, estimated Kay, about oneperson in four supported Ken¬nedy’s action.Debaters hold tourneyVol. 71 — No. 30 University of Chicago, Friday, Nov. 9, 1962Watson to speak here today Twenty-three colleges anduniversities will participatein the second annual Uni¬versity of Chicago nationaldebate tournament to be held herethis week-end.The tournament is being spon¬sored by the Forensic Associa¬tion.James Dewey Watson,recent Nobel Prize winner inmedicine, arrived on campuslast night. During his visit,which will last until Sunday morn¬ing. Watson will visit old friends,tour neighborhood high schools,and deliver two lectures. He willalso appear on Kup’s show, a tele¬vision discussion program led bySun-Times columnist Irv Kupciriet.The first of his two lectures willtake place this afternoon, whenWatson will address biochemistryclass 306 on ‘The Role of Ribo¬ somes in Protein Synthesis.” Hewill also lecture Saturday morn¬ing. Both talks will take placein the law school auditorium.Watson’s visit to Chicago ismore or less a homecoming forthe 34 year old biologist. Althoughpresently a professor of biologyat Harvard University, he spenthis undergraduate days here, earn¬ing BA and BS degrees. Hismajor was zoology. He receivedhis PhD from the University ofIndiana.As well as his other degrees,Watson also was awarded an hon¬ orary doctor of science degree atPresident George Beadle’s inaug¬uration as chancellor in May, 1961.Watson first achieved world¬Board discusses renewalThe Women’s Board of TheUniversity of Chicago willhold its fall meeting on cam¬pus Monday. The day-longprogram will be devoted to thestuds' of urban renewal includinga bus tour of the University area.The Board consists of 150 com¬munity leaders. Mrs. J. HarrisWard is chairman.Mrmebers will aw^niblo in theWeymouth Kirkland Courtroomof the Law School at 10 am,where Julian Levi, executivedirector of the South East Chi¬cago Commission, will discuss theurban renewal program, andAt ton Linford, dean of the gradu¬ate school of social service admin¬istration, will discuss some of thehuman problems of neighborhoodreconstruction. sher of the Hyde Park Herald andWoodlawn Booster.. . Mackelmann will discuss “HydePark: Old and New,” and will ex¬hibit some of the sculpture andornaments salvaged from struc¬tures razed in the urban renewalprogram. Sagan will presentpublicly for the first time plansfor an Arts-Artisan Center in theHydePark-Kenwood area. wide recognition in 1953 at theage of 25, when he completed amodel of the deoxyribonucleic acid(DNA) molecule. This moleculedetermines the hereditary char¬acteristics of living cells. H.Stanley Bennett, dean of the di¬vision of biological sciences, de¬scribed Watson’s model at thetime as “essential to the under¬standing of the function of themolecule, its coding-principles, itsstability, and its method of redup¬lication.” He called Watson “oneof the world’s mc»t renowned bi¬ologists.”Watson received the recent prizefor discoveries involving the mole¬cular structure of nucleic acids inthe nucleus of the cell. All participating schools willdebate this year’s nationa' debatetopic — Resolved: That the non-Communist nations of the worldshould establish an economic com¬munity.An arbitrary schedule will befollowed for the first two roundsof debate, pitting negative againstaffirmative teams. The thirdround will be power matched;i.e. teams will debate those of thesame calibre—determined by theirwin-loss record for the previoustwo rounds. The three rounds onSaturday will also be powermatched oq the basis of Friday’sresults. Power matching insuresfair cofnpetition for the teams inthe tournament.Debates will be held in CobbHall and Business East. The tour¬nament timekeeper chairman willsit in the first floor of Cobb Hadwith tournament schedules forrounds. Students who wish toTax rises may bring chaos'The meeting will conclude witha bus tour of the area.After thetalks, there willbe seminargroups. DonaldJ. Bogue, pro¬fessor of sociol¬ogy and directorof the Commu¬nity and FamilyStudy Center,and MorrisJanowitz, professor in the de¬partment of sociology and thegraduate school of business, andthe speakers will participate.At 1 pm, the board will adjournto the Midway Studios wtfere a•h»v lunch, vin rose, and coffee willhe served.. One . of the majorundertakings of the Women’sBoard is to assist in the restora¬tion of Midway Studios.Speakers at lunch will be D. E.Mackelmann, deputy directorurban renewal for the city Signs will comeIdentifying signs will beplaced at UC' shelter areaswithin the next few days, ac¬cording to Tony Eidson, ofthe department of buildings andgrounds (B & G). Emil Garson, of US Steel,stated last night that if theUS doesn’t halt its trendtoward higher and higher mation, Garson stated that peoplehave been afraid of automationsince the 1800’s, but that it hasalways created new jobs to re¬place the ones destroyed.taxes it is headed for economicchaos.Garson spoke at the weeklymeeting of UC Conservative Clubon the subject “Taxation withRepresentation.” The next meeting of the Con¬servative Club will be Teusday,November 13, at 7:30, in IdaNoyes. The program will .be ashowing of a film “Revolt inHungary.” It will be open to thepublic. observe a round of debate, shouldcheek first with him to get thoproper room number.The six preliminary rounds,which will determine the partici¬pants for the championship roundof debate, will take placeTn theWeymouth Kirkland Courtroomof the Law School. The first af-firmataive will debate the firstnegative team on the issue — 2:30pm tomorrow.A highlight of the touramentwill be the Chicago-style debate inBreasted Hall Friday evening.University of Chicago will debateNorthwestern University. MichaelWolfson and Thomas Mack willrepresent the University, debat¬ing the topic: Resolved: That allprivate colleges should bar stu¬dents from participating in inter¬collegiate football.Chicago-style debate is the un¬orthodox form of English style-audience comments and hecklingduring progress of debate. Anyone may attend. The debate be¬gins promptly at 7:30 pm.Schools attending the tourna¬ment are: Albion, Alma College^Bradley University, Carthage Col¬lege, Oberlin College, EvansvilleCollege, Ferris Institute, GrinnellCollege, Kent State University,Loyola University, Mt. Union Col¬lege, Northern Illinois University.Also, St. Mary’s College, St.Mary of the Lake (Chicago), Tu-lane University, Buffalo Univer¬sity, University of Illinois at Chi¬cago, University of Utah, Roches¬ter University, Wabash CollegeWestern Michigan, and the Uni¬versity of Chicago.Debating for the University ofChicago in the tournament are:Affirmative: Ulrich Melcher andHoward Hertz; Negative: ThomasPuchalski, Robert Bornholz, DanHoffman, Paul Stivers, and HaroldSee.Last week B & G called thecivil defense authorities and askedabout required specifications forsigns designating shelter areas.B & G was told not to use its ownmarkings, but to wait for a corpsof army engineers which wouldsoon visit the campus and installstandard, aluminum signs on theareas. According to Garson, 125 billiondollars was collected last yearand 150 billion spent by the fed¬eral government. Taxes hererepresent 33% of our totalnational income making us themost highly taxed* nation on theearth. This is approaching thelimit a government can tax with¬out destroying itself. Fund drive off to good startofofChicago, and Bruce Sagan, publi- Several months ago, govern¬ment inspectors designated corri¬dors below the third floor in dor¬mitories, Bartlett Gym, BellfieldHall, Ida Noyes Hall, ReynoldsClub, Sunny Gym, UniversityHigh, the Field House, OrientalInstitute, and the University Hos¬pitals as areas which could beused as fallout shelters.The University has been in theprocess of contracting with thegovernment for special food sup¬plies for these areas for sometime now. Garson stated that if the federalgovernment would lower corpora¬tion taxes this would allow thecorporations to make a profit,with which they could modernizetheir equipment, thus lowering theprice of their products while in¬creasing the quantity, with theend result that the entire economywould be stimulated and thetotal tax intake increased.Meyer to analyze students' roleIn the second of two fireside programs dealing with “The Stu¬dent and the Community,” Gerhard Meyer, associate professor ofeconomics, will speak tonight at 8:30 on “Student Idealism: Promiseand Dangers.”Meyer has been active with the UC branch of CORE and isinterested in the integration issue. The talk will be given at theHillel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn.Professor of Psychology David Bakan gave the first lecture inthe series last Friday.The series is designed to deal with the University student, hisidealism, and his involvement in community and national causes. “The Revolutionary War wasfought over taxation without rep¬resentation,” stated Garson. “andtoday we have taxation with rep¬resentation. But some people,stockholders, are taxed twice andonly represented once.” The University’s CombinedFund Drive has already re¬ceived $34,794 from 1476 con¬tributors. This year’s an¬nounced UC goal is $50,000.Cash gifts have averaged about$20 each, while pledges, to be ful¬filled by payroll deduction, haveaveraged about $31.The University’s crusade com¬mittee is very pleased with thesize of the contributions madethus far by faculty, staff andstudents, according to a memberof the committee.“However, we are hoping thatmany more of the University fa¬mily will participate before theend of the drive. We do not be¬lieve in applying the kind of pres¬sure some employers use to secureparticipation, but we believe manymore would participate if theyknew the full story behind theCrusade.” contribution was approximatelydouble that of the preceedingyear, due to the introduction ofpayroll-deduction pledges.NOT. 6-$34,794. _ $50,000.40,000.30,000.20,000.In response to a question, Gar¬son said that the main reason USsteel companies are losing theworld market is that US taxesand labor costs are so high. Theaverage steelworker in the USmakes four dollars an hour plusbenefits, far more than any othernation. Several organizations in HydePark, including the Hyde ParkNeighborhood Club and the Homefor Destitute and Crippled Chil¬dren. receive annual allocationsfrom the funds collected in thedrive. v 10,000.vConcerning the threat of auto- Last year University personnelcontributed $38,626; in I960,$37,948; in 1959, $33,848. 1959’s UC contributionsto crusade of mercyEditorialGive SG rest from Cubato work on other mattersWe apologize for devoting on excess of Space to theCuban poll, which apparently interested only 25% of thecampus. From the clamour that was raised in the pasttwo weeks, we had assumed that at least a majority ofthe student body ’ as concerned with SG’s stand. Yester¬day’s poll, however, demonstrated that all of 500 fewerstudents than had voted in last spring’s SG elections weresufficiently aroused by SG’s controversial Cuban resolu¬tion to actively express their opinion of it. This poor turn¬out confirms the apathy of the overwhelming majority ofstudents to SG activities, whether on or off campus.Despite the difficulties posed by ambiguous or seem¬ingly illogical questions, it was quite obvious that a largepercentage of those voting were opposed to the SG reso¬lution. We do not deny the significance of the opinions ofthese students, but we are dubious that the students willever arouse sufficient support to do anything more con¬structive than protest.Although we do not discourage efforts to elect SGrepresentatives who might better represent all students’ideas, we do wish that the present SG could be given arespite from threats of recall and demands for polls longenough to turn to the rest of its program, of which theCuba resolution is but a small part.This quarter, SG has continued running the Bookco-op it established last year, set up chartered buses toNew York for Christmas interim and two summer charterflights to Europe, contributed to preliminary work esta¬blishing a most exciting Soc. II lecture series, raisedmoney for the Student Non-violent Co-ordinating Committeewhich has been working for civil rights, and helped theTenants on Kimbark organization in their fight for tenants’rights. SG representatives have also expressed a desire toinitiate other lecture-discussion programs on campus andnational issues, foreign student and exchange programs,campaigns to abolish the pernicious and unnecessary regu¬lations on women’s hours, among other projects. In ad¬dition, its members are concerned about securing facultyand administration consideratiion for student opinion.These are significant, and needed campus programs,the kind of programs many of SG’s critics would have itconfine itself to. Yet we wonder how many of the studentswho have spent so many hours in recent weeks criticizingSG for its off-campus activity will take the time to worstwith its on-campus projects, which will directly affectthem.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 9, 1962 Letters to the editorDefends new library seatingTO THE EDITOR:I should like to reply for theUniversity l.ibrary to the letter inthe November 2nd Maroon, signedby “10 Former Deskholders” andprotesting the library’s removalof assignment desks in the ModernLanguages Reading Room.The extensive alterations madein Harper during the summerquarter had as their primary pur¬pose the relief of intolerablycrowded conditions in some areas,the improvement of the physicalrelationship of the major servicedepartments, and the replacementof some of the library’s batteredand otherwise inadequate equip¬ment—including dangerous floorcovering and poor lighting. In allof this, the improvement of theLibrary’s appearance was certain¬ly a secondary, if highly-desira-ble, concomitant. former deskholders will come toshare this opinion.Stanley E. GwynnAssistant Directorfor Readers’ Services often far too hot by the secondshowing, and that often the tech¬nical problems with projectors andsound are'a severe trial ev en tothe loyal Doc filmgoer.The decision to remove the bookracks and discontinue the assign¬ment of seats in the Modern Lan¬guages Reading Room was takenfor two reasons:’1) Observations made over along period of time indicatedclearly that use of that room wasexceedingly low in relation to thenumber of seats available. Evenat peak periods, there were rarelyas many as 40 students seated atthe tables (in a room with seatsfor 240), and during most of theday and evening hours the occu¬pancy was considerably under thatfigure. Further observation -sug¬gested that the assignment of al¬most all the seats to individualstudents had the effect of inhibit¬ing the use of the room by other,non-seat-holding students in thehumanities who would normallylook upon this room as their nat¬ural home.2) It seemed clear from thenature of the pleas made by stu¬dents in support of their applica¬tions for assigned seats, that inmost (not all) cases such assignedseats were valued primarily as aplace to keep books and personalpossessions during the students’hours on campfis. (This is alsoone of the two major points men¬tioned in the letter to theMaroon.) The library felt thatdesks should not be used as lock¬ers when the co^t of this conven¬ience to a few desk holders wasthe non-utilization of the room bylarge numbers of students in theHumanities.Accordingly, the Library decidedthat it could increase both theutility and the utilization of theroom by making all seats availa¬ble to all comers. At the sametime, it decided that the “storage’’or “locker” aspects could be pro¬vided for by furnishing qualifiedstudents not with desk racks, butwith shelves located at one endof the room. Granted that thisarrangement represents some lossof convenience, the loss wouldseem to be more than offset by thegains to all potential users of theroom. Frats never at ,,|^erSplhery,,TO THE EDITOR:The Inter-Fraternity -Council ispleased that the Maroon consid¬ers our “attempt to contribute ina positive manner to campus life”to be “heartening.” According toWednesday's edilorial, the frater¬nities are at last emerging fromthe periphery of the academiccommunity. The fact is, the Uni¬versity of Chicago fraternitieshave never been outside the aca¬demic community. We are notimplants from Big Ten universi¬ties. We met the same entrancequalifications, took the sameplacement tests, and registered inthe same college as every otherundergraduate.In addition. University of Chi¬cago fraternity men are active innearly all student activities. Eventhe Maroon is staffed by fraterni¬ty men—business manager KenHeyl, editorial assistant GaryFeldman, and former editorsLance Haddix, Ken Pierce, andNeal Johnston. And unless theMaroon is considered on the peri¬phery of the academic community,fraternity participation in thatcommunity is not new.Further, individual fraternitieshave always invited faculty mem¬bers to the respective houses fordinner and discussion. Mosthouses grant scholarships to out¬standing members—Phi GammaDelta awards three $100 scholar¬ships each year. And a scholar¬ship trophy is given to the aca¬demically superior house each year—an honor presently held by PhiKappa Psi. These affairs are andhave always been part of the fra¬ternity system at the University.It is true, however, that this isthe first time in recent years theIFC has sponsored a public lec¬ture. But it must be remem¬bered that the IFC is primarily aregulatory agency. This year,however, the Council feels thatits role should be expanded. Wehope this lecture will be but onein a series of events we can bringto the campus.The fact is, we are above allstudents of the University of Chi¬cago. We are actively a part of“the community of scholars.” Wehave never lingered on its peri¬phery nor do we ever intend to.Sincerely,Joe Taylor FordPresidentInter-Fraternity Council The Temple of Midcult, what¬ever else Mr. Routt has to sayabout it, does not go under thedangerous assumption that a brandnew group of moviegoers descendson Hyde Park every year. I forone have seen “The Bicycle Thief”twice on this campus, “Ivan theTerrible” has been shown twicedowntown in the last two years,and “M” and “Citizen Kane” areback again for at least the secondtime as Doc Film selections in thelast two years. Mr. Routt seemsto think that a good thing is agood thing is a good thing. Per¬haps if he expanded his horizonsa little it might come to his at¬tention that “Shoe Shine” mightbe an alternative choice for thepopular and well worked “BicycleThief.” Cambridge’s Brattle The¬atre rarely commits the error ofhaving sensationally advertisedfilms, but they, like Doc films,show the same films year in yearout.As for “Lolita” the question ofwhether “Nabokov himself dis¬claimed any real association be¬tween scenario and his novel ofthe same title” is a glaring aes¬thetic irrelevancy. Hopefully, theintelligent viewers will be ableto view the movie as an entityapart from the book. It was LionelTrilling who perceptively noticedthat l^olita was about love andnot sex, and the movie, with thehelp of the "much touted” firstscenes, does much to catch someof the tone of the book. All thesensationally that I can find in“Lolita” appears on the advertise¬ments outside the theatre. Mr.Routt will be happy to hear thathis judgment of “Lolita” agreeswell with that of Time Maga¬zine.Second, the “mental” annoyanceof no longer having a settled placeto work” is undoubtedly a realone, but we cannot believe that itis a significant obstacle to pro¬ductive work. We have not beenable to assign desks to the greatmajority of graduate students inthe social sciences, the sciences,and the professional schools, butthis circumstance seems not tohave inhibited their work. As for“having to roam, nomadic andburdened, through the variousreading rooms, looking for a va¬cant spot,” this condition, if itindeed existed, would simply un¬derline the need to make morereading space by doing away withthe table racks and assignedseats. The fact is, however, thatwhile occupancy of the ModernLanguages Reading Room seemsto be increasing, there is still am¬ple seating in that room, so thatno humanities student needs tolook for space in other rooms.The student still has a shelf forhis books; he need only go tothat shelf, select the materials hewishes to use, and then settledown to the nearest vacant seatoffering the lighting—and theview—he prefers.We remain convinced that thedecision contributes to the gen¬eral good, end we hope that the Gracf-e mysteriously withheldTO THE EDITOR:Today is Nov. 9. Nearly 11weeks ago, during the week ofexams (summer quarter) I tookthe Soc Sci II comp. When thegrades were finally released twoweeks ago (about one month late),I found that my exam was notgraded (my grade was LATE).I have been to the registrar’soffice every day since then, onlyto receive no answer. They hadno crade for me nor any expla¬nation.My complaint then is twofold:(1) My exam should have beengraded in the 11 weeks since Itook it; and (2) I should havesome reasonable explanation ofthis delay.I feel that it is disgraceful forthe administration to allow sucha situation.A disgusted Undergraduate SUSAN FROMBERGRoutt's reviews criticizedTO THE EDITOR:I have long been irritated withWilliam Routt’s ill tempered re¬views of most films in the Chica¬go area. His latest attack on theHyde Park admirably illustrateshis lack of judgment in writingsuch reviews and the disgracefulbad taste with which they are.written. That he has become ac¬customed to back biting is evi¬dent in his “Perhaps Jean Schoen-stadt believes that Hyde Parkerswill pay fantastic prices to sit inher dingy theatre and watch atechnically mismanaged showingof a sensationally advertised sec¬ond rate film about a sexual per¬vert.” Leaving the question ofRoutt’s aesthetic reliability openmomentarily, I should like to pointout that Social Sciences 122 ishardly the crystal palace, that it is Chicago MaroonEditor-in-chiet Laura GodofskySuiiiKti Manager .... Kenneth C. HeytAdvertising Mgr. . . Lawrence D. KaplanSews Editors Andrew SteinRobin KaufmanCity News Editor . . John T. William*Asst. City Neves Editor . . Gary FeldmanCulture-Feature Ed. . . Rona RosenblattRewrite editor Sharon GoldmanEducation Editor Vicky ShiefmanPhoto coordinator Bob KassSports Editor . . .• Rich EpsteinNight Editors ........ Mike SilvermanJohn SmithMaryann TaranowskiErratum Editor Sherwin KaplanOffice Manager ........ Jean MacleanBookkeeper Anita ManuelAdvtg. Secy Ann StudleyCirculaton Mgr. R. A. WilsonEditor Emeritus Jay GreenbergStuff: Avima^ Ruder, Joe Kelly, FranAidman, Ron Pell, Al Housfather, PeteRabinowitz, Barry Bayer, M. Steven*,Sue Goldberg, Murray Schacher,George Rowell, Ron Dorfman, Les Gour-witz, Mary Deal, Marianne Geisel, JaneRosenberg, BtH Boggs, Tom Heagy, CarolEnglander, Lucy Reals, Ross Ardrey.Bob Levey, Steve Ford, Lynn Tilfoid,Steve Heffner, Irv Levinstein, MikeConroy, Martha Grosblatt, NancyOlin, Mike Rind, Sharon Murphy,Eleanor Perlmutter, Nancy Shea, Geol*Hjron, Glenn Loafman, John Page, JudyRacz, Rich Hasher, Bert Rubinstein,Stan Karter, Bill Fay, Michelle Surveyer,Leslie Kondor, Sandy Roos, EleanorKneiber, Marty Rabinowitz, Jo^nLevenson, Myrna Bell, Gail Rubin, AKelson, Harris Jaffe, Joanne Urban, JoflBeck, Pete Getman, Mary Gottscbalk. pulbotfir:,offiportheduWcbotmo,thedec4 heWhile it is perfectly true thatthe Hyde Park theatre has shownsome mediocre modern films, theymore than balance the failureswith their wide selection of thebetter films. In most places, likeHarvard, it is necessary to godowntown and pay high prices tosee movies like “Jules and Jim”and "Tomorrow is my Turn.” Whe¬ther these films are as excellentas their reviewers suggest, it isan excellent thing that they areavailable at low prices and ingreat numbers to the Hyde Parkarea.Finally, Mr. Routt seems to hein a fit about the ninety centsadmittance charge for “Lolita” aprice only Iwenty five cents abovethe normal student price. I no¬tice that Doc Films has raisedtheir admittance price to sixtycents, and can see no differencein either their quarters or in thecaliber of -the selections of films.I assume they, like the HydePark, have their reasons for rais¬ing prices, and you pays yourmoney, you takes your choice.Very often there is more of achoice at The Hyde Park.mFormer UC SG president Mini editor answers Goldwaterengineers miracle in Mass.Roger Woodworth, former achieved something through po-president of the University’s litical organization in Massachus-In this week's column Ebertsets.”Woodworth was a member ofnow defunct Independent Stu- asserted ’that what'Goldwater'isdents League, which was a cam- aiminK for «is a vendetta affainstWoodworth was campaign man- pus of political party. This party, college writers with liberal phllos-c TT1 \ \T D*«/vr\lr/\ mm rtno/\t<r1 innr t« T aUSma 1 1student government, helpedengineer a political miracle t(JMassachusetts. In his weekly column Wednesday, Daily Ulini News Editor Roger Ebert answereda letter sent to him by Senator Barry Goldwater on November 1.Goldwater’s letter attacked Ebert’s October 17 column which was critical of the Ari¬zona Republican. Ebert blasted Goldwater for his part in the firing of Colorado Daily-editor Gary Althen. them, seem to have the ability to dent Kennedy’s which said, **. . .do what they want without cen- in a manner certain to antagoniizesure.” the Cuban people, we used theIn this Wednesday’s column influence of our Government toagcr for Edward W..Brooke, sue- according to LeVine, was opposed ©phies and particularly"against Ebert answered Goldwater’s state- advance the interests of and in-I cessfui candidate for the office of to “student government by cable.” those who point out holes in the ment bY saying. “If he insists crease the profits of the privateI Attorney General. Brooke, a Re- ISL favored things “it could Goldwater Ideology where the uP°n courting the shrill purvey- American companies, which domi-publican, prevented a sweep of do effectively." despotism shows through.” ors of thought-control, conform- nated the island s economy. . . .statewide offices by the Demo- Woodworth was also chairman Ebert opened his column by ist> fear based ‘patriotism/ he Ebert also answered Goldwa-‘cratic party which was led by of the An Campus Civil Liberties quoting from Goldwater’s letter to must expect Americans who be- ter’s question of how “this columnEdward M. Kennedy who piled up Committee (ACCLC), which was University of Colorado President lieve in the ideas of Jefferson now rates the President. “... sincea 280,000 vote plurality over his composed of representatives of all Quigg Newton which said: Paine and Marshall to differ with he has come out for action I haveRepublican opponent, George Ca- student organizations on campus. “. . . I am far more concerned b*m- long advocated,bot Lodge. In this capacity he went to about the ability of people with “This differing is not ‘un-Amer- He asked if Goldw'ater had thoMoreover, Brooke became the Springfield to testify against a bill an un-American philosophy dis- ican’’ but profoundly American, evidence which Kennedy had whenfirst Negro ever to win statewide which proposed to establish a played in the college press and, and not aU the letter-writing *n he sat up the blockade. .If Gold-toffice in Massachusetts. His op- state commission to investigate in some cases, defended by the the world oan silence it.” water did have such factual in-ponent. Francis E. Kelly, was, at “seditious activities.” He argued press. . . I have spoken with Ebert then went on to refute formation so much earlier thanthe time of the election Lieuten- that only through the free com- groups at some 250 colleges and 80016 of tbe statements made by the President, why, Ebert asked,1- - ’ - - - — -<• .-a— — s --!—1~ Goldwater in his letter. ...utu-u s* *He showed where Goldwater,after chastising Ebert for not be-ant Governor of the state and had Petition of ideas can enlightened schools in this country, and this Goldwater inpreviously served two terms asAttorney General.Woodworth was SG presidentduring the 1950-51 school year.According to Robert A. LeVine,assistant professor in the Commit¬tee on Human Development,Woodworth “was considered byboth enemies and friends as the citizens make a democratic choice is the only one where socialists,in issues of government.” or whatever you care to callSchwab and Wegener writefor third Curriculum Bulletin ing “fully aware of his facts,”proceeded to incorrectly cite asection of the US Constitution.Ebert discussed Goldwater’scharge that he could not docu¬ment his assertion that Cuba suf-In the current issue of the Cur- ministration building,riculum Bulletin, Professor of The bulletin was started last fered from America’s monopolist-Education and Biology Joseph year by the college faculty in ic exploitation for 60 years,most brilliant parliamentarian at Schwab presents a plan with sev- order to increase discussion and Ebert pointed out that “At thethe University in the post-war eral choices of college programs present proposals on the college time of the Castro revolution, ao-decado.” LeVine, a student in designed to fit the differing needs curriculum. cording to a 1961 study, theJlic College when Woodworth was of individual students within a Also in this issue, Charles United States took 60 to 70 per'SG president, described Wood- “liberal education” framework. Wegener, associate professor of cent of Cuban exports and sup-worth as “an idealist who believes The third issue of the Curricu- humanities, “sets up some guide- plied 70 to 80 per cent of its im-in effective political organization him Bulletin is now' available at lines for constructing a now col- ports.”rather than agitation. He has the information desk in the ad- lege curriculum or curriculums.” He also cited a speech of Presi- did he withhold it from the na¬tion?”In his letter, Goldwater hadcharged that Ebert’s assertionthat the Senator had threatenedCU President Newton “. . . Be¬cause the president has refusedto silence the open expression ofideas on his campus” was “. . . justa plain outright lie. . . .”Ebert replied, “Either thiswriter is unable to read, or theSenator is unable to read. WhatGoldwater DID say is quotedabove. . . President Newton ap¬parently thought Goldwater wastrying to silence segneone, becausehe replied by calling the Senator*. . . a symbol of the repressiveforces at work in America to¬day . . .’ and ended his letter with‘Senator, I shall not silencethem!’ ”E. E/s, M.E/s, A. E/s,PHYSICISTS &MATHEMATICIANS:If spaceis your future,your careeris with HughesIN ASTR0SPACEIN AEROSPACEIN TERRASPACEIN HYDROSPACEAs f^r back as 1890, Jules Vernevisualized excursion trains tothe moon. Today — 72 years later «•Hughes offers you the opportunityto play an important part in maa’eactual conquest of space. ' foreign hospital & clinicdealers in:• mg• morris• austin• triumph5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob lestermg psychiatristHelp us soft land the SURVEYORon the moon — or work with us oaexciting advanced projects such MlANTI MISSILE DEFENSESYNCOM (Communications satellite)PLASMA PHYSICS A ION PROPULSIONADVANCED FIXED-ARRAY RADAR SYSTEM*LASER A MASER RESEARCH A DEVELOPMENTNUCLEONICS A MOBOT* SYSTEMSSOLID STATE MATERIALS A DEVICESDATA PROCESSING A COMMANO CONTROtM.S. and Ph.D. CandidatesMembers of our staff will conductCAMPUSINTERVIEWSNovember 29, 1962Find out more about the wide range ofactivities, educational programs andrelocation allowances offered by HughefcFor interview appointment or Informationalliterature consult your College PlacementDirector. Or write; College Placement Offic9,Hughes, P.O. Sot 90515, Los Angeles 9, Calf;• i i ■ ■ 11 ———■—wCreating a new world with ELECTRONICSI 1j HUGHES jL JHUGHES AIRCRAFT COMPANYAn equal opportunity employer.•Trademark Hughes Aircraft CooVMf/Bettmu ArUiiv# CoBEAUTY SALON—^ ExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Allred1350 E. 53rd Sr. HY 3-8302EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetof Vniversity Ave.HYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscountHARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONE_ 1233FA £L— 1318■ ^ ^—7699Nov. 9, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROOBio students hear BeadleSG and SoC. plan lecturesSpeeches by President George Wells Beadle and Biologi¬cal Sciences Dean H. Stanley Bennett will highlight thefourth annual Biomedical Career Conference for high schoolstudents this Saturday. More than 150 specially chosenstudents and 50 biology ; : — : " — “TT.rology in the lecture hall at Btl-Neurology in the Department ofMedicine, will present the patient,and will discuss with other facultyspecialists the diagnosis and treat¬ment of the patient’s illness.The program will close with asumming - up by Bennett Dean ofthe division of Biology Sciencesscienceteachers will represent 50 Chica¬go area schools.At laboratory demonstrationsand lecturers during the day-longconference, faculty men will givethe teen-agers a first - hand viewof concept and techniques used inpresent - day research and medicalcare.The program will open at 10 amSaturday in the first floor lecturehall, P-117, at Billings Hospital,with a welcome to students fromJohn L. Sommer, Assistant Profes¬sor in the Department of Surgery,and director of the conference.President Beadle will give theopening lecture, on chemical ge- The Social Sciences II staffand representatives of stu¬dent government are current¬ly discussing plans to bringto campus noted speakers to dis¬cuss topics connected with theSoc II course.According to the plans, thespeakers would present eveningpublic lectures and participate ina panel discussion with tTC facultyand students during the Soc IIlecture period the following morn¬ing. In a memo to Soc II studentsasking for volunteers to work onplanning committees for the proj¬ect, lectures and topics suggestedwere Erich Fromm, on “the na¬ture and development of indus¬trial society,” Abraham Kibieoflf,on “social class and the quest forequality,” Arthur Schlesinger Jr.,on “leadership, mass politics, andthe quest for freedom, Adlai Ste¬venson, on “conflict and coopera¬tion in international relations,”UC's Area Committees described(Editor's note: this is the firstin a scries of articles on the areacommittees at the University ofChicago).In response to a need forrelics aid .he code °f college jevel study of non.heredity. Beadle shared the Nobel .Prize in medicine and physiology Western Civilization, five in-in 1958 with Edward l. Tatum terdisciplinary area commit-and Joshua Lederberg for their lees have been formed at thework on the chemistry of genes. University in the past six years.For the remainder of the morn- Today an undergraduate maying, students will separate into major in Indian, Islamic, Chinese,smaller groups to attend demon- Japanese, or Russian civilization,strations by other faculty special- These majors are under the juris-ists in laboratories and confer- diction of area committees onence rooms on the campus. Dem-bnstrations scheduled include:“Techniques in Leukemia Re¬search ’ Clifford Gurney, AssociateProfessor in the Department ofMedicine.“How Do Plants Grow” Law¬rence Bogorad, Professor, andWayne J. Mcllrath, Associate Pro¬fessor in the Department of Bot¬any;“Reward Centers of the Brain” South Asia; Africa and the MiddleEast; Far East; Slavic; and theComparative Study of New Na¬tions.The area committees have triedto break across departmentalbarriers so that UC studentscould study countries other thanthose in Europe or North Amer¬ica.Though the program was insti¬tuted for the benefit of under-John A. Harvey, Assistant Profes- graduates, the introductions of thesor in the Departments of Psycho- program in the College has stimu-logy and Pharmacology; lated graduate work.“Recent Advances in Psychiatry” A EC undergraduate may eon-George G. Meyer, Instructor in the eentrate in the work of the areaDepartment of Psychiatry; committees, none of which grant“Urinary Stones, an Ancient but MA’s or PhD’s. The lack of ad-Unsolved Disease” Cornelius W.Vermeulen, Professor and Head©f the urology section, Depart¬ment of Surgery. vanoed degrees is to prevent di¬luting disciplinary training whileallowing a study of one wholearea, according to Milton Singer,The afternoon session will open chiarman of the South Asian eom-with a clinical conference on neu- mittee.lings. Sidney Sehulman, Ellen C.Manning Associate Professor ofBESOINS DE BASE->.• InstructionVous von* 6ies pent Fire rendntemple que l'expiession "unhomme parti de rien” n'est plu»courante aujourd’hui. Un telattribut disparaiira entiereinentsous pen. Grdce aux octrois ac-cord^s aux v6t4rans, grSce auxStoles du soir, grfice k une plusg^n^reuse repartition des bour¬ses deludes et grflee k la sagessedes peres de famille qui prepa¬rent 1’avenir de leurs enfants,un pourcentage assez eieve denoire jeune peuple peut se per-mettre un plus haul niveau d’ins-truciion. L’assurance-instruciionest un des plus Important* ser¬vices qu’oflrent les compagnlesd’assurance-vie. Elle garantitqu'aucune restriction ne feraobstacle aux ambitions d’unjeune homme, sauf ses proprescapacites naturelles. Penser queses enfants auront toutes leschances possibles k l’avenir, parsuite de sa pr6voyance k leurprocurer une police qui pareraa toutes les 6\entualit6s, consti-tue une source de fiert6 pour leptre de famille d'aujourd’hui.Permettez-moi de causer avecvous de vos besoins d'assurancede base. Jc suis associt* it la SunLife Assurance Company ofCanada, la compagnie qui pol¬itic la police r^pondant k vosexigences! T^kphonet- inoiatijourd'huimhne! J1 n’yaura auctineobligationde votre part.PALPH J WOOD, Jr., *481 N. LA SALIE. CHICAGO. ILLFR 2-2390 FA 4-4800SUN LIFE DU CANADA “This is a transformation ingraduate training,” he explained,“without disruption of the or¬ganization ol graduate curri¬culum.” Singer cited three graduatehistory students who added totheir training by studying theirarea language before going abroadunder the sponsorship of theSouth Asian committee.“If the students did not knowBengali or Tamil, they wouldhave to rely on the records ofthe English rulers of India, whichwould put them at a great dis¬advantage,” Singer said.“Before forming the non-west¬ern civilization courses, we de¬bated about having a non-west¬ern survey course as part of thegeneral education curriculum,”Singer continued.“We decided that a surveycourse would be so broad andsuperficial that it wouldn’t beworthwhile educationally andwould tend to increase the stereo¬type of the non-western civiliza¬tions, thus making them indistin¬guishable from each other.”“By studying one non-westerncivilization in some depth, one isin a better position to compareother civilizations,” Singer added.This quarter an honors seminarin the comparison of civilizationshas been formed. Class members,chosen by invitation, representeach of the non-western civiliza¬tion courses as well as a fewdrawn from the western civili¬zation program. Each week pro¬fessors from various departmentsdeal with problems which cutacross several civilizations.In the future, Singer feels thata similar course could be extend-One of Hyde Park'* FinestARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRSPECIALIZING IN:Heels Chonged, ^ \ Heels RepoiredToes Cut OutVamps LoweredOrthopedic WorkZipper RepairsProfessional Dyeingand Hefinlshing ofShoes and HandbagsColors MatehedFAirfox 4-96221749 E. 55th St. *3 'I thar (Contact oL €enAeAbyDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372ot University Ave.' Hank’s Restaurantand Bar-B-Cue"the best bar-b-eue on earth” iFeatures: Complete Dinners from $1.25Buisnessmen’s Lunches from 95c j5Specialty: Hickory Smoked Bar-b-cuedRibs and ChickenWe have a private dining room for businessmeetings, clubs, and private affairsOpen 7 a.m. to 1 a.m. v7101 STONY ISLAND AVENUE s643-1131 ; ed on a larger scale.The South Asian and Africanand Middle Eastern committeeswere the first to organize. Fol¬lowing them came the Far East¬ern and Slavic committees. Anewcomer is the Committee forthe Comparative Study of NewNations.In 1956, although there werea few specialists to form thenucleus of the committees, fundsfrom the Carnegie and FordFoundations and the NationalGovernment greatly aided the de¬velopment of staff, library, andequipment.The committee also plays hostfor a number of campus events.They sponsor lectures, conferen¬ces, films and special institutes. and Senator William Ftillbri^hton problems of the new nation.”..These names were merelygestions; no one has yet been in¬vited.A meeting of those interestedin working on plans for the pro¬gram will be held in Ida NoyesHall, at 7 pm next Wednesday.The topics of the course for thewinter quarter, during whichtime the 6 lectures would begiven, are “The conditions of free¬dom in urban industrial society”and “Culture, freedom, and con¬flict in the modern world.”The plans are still in the dis¬cussion stage, although the groupshope to send out invitations soon.The major problem, at present. >sarranging for a hall for the lec¬tures. Mandel, the only hall, thegroup feels is large enough to ac¬commodate the number of personsnecessary to support the event fi¬nancially, is reserved for rehear¬sals by the UC eymphony or¬chestra every Wednesday night.The Soc II staff members hadwanted to hold the programs onWednesday nights because theSoc Lecture period is on Thurs¬day.Timekeepers neededTimekeepers for the Universityof Chicago Intercollegiate DebateTournament are still urgentlyneeded. Interested persons shouldcome to the Cobb Hall lobby at3:45 this afternoon.Calendar of EventsFriday, November 9Holy Communion: Bond Chapel, 11:15am.Lecture: Law School Auditorium. 12:30pm, “The Role of Ribosomes in Pro¬tein Synthesis.” James D. Watson,Department of Biology. Harvard Uni¬versity. Department of BiochemistryGraduate Training Program.Football Game: UC football class vsNorth Central football team, at NorthCentral, 3:30 pm.Lecture: Howard Frazier. “The SodiumPump in Toad Bladder,” Billings RoomP-117, a pm.Sabbath Service: Hillel Foundation,5715 Woodlawn, 7:45 pm.Film: “Zvenigora,” Doc Films. Soc Sci122, admission 60c, 7 and 9 pm.Chicago style debate: University of Chi¬cago vs. Northwestern University,“Resolved: Private Universities ShouldBan their Students from Participatingin Intercollegiate Football,” (audiencecomments and heckling desired).Breasted Hall, 7:30 pm.Film: “Grapes of Wrath,” B-J Cinema,50c, 8 and 10 pm.Lecture: "Aspects of Anthropomorph¬ism,” J. Duschesne-Guilleman, visit¬ing professor, divinity school. 8 pm.Swift Commons (History of Relig¬ions Club).Lecture: "1962, Crisis in Race Rela¬tions,” George Rowen, McCormickPlace, $2, 8 pm.Operettas: “HMS Pinafore.” and “Trialby Jury,” by Gilbert and Sullivan,Mandel Hall, $2.25, 8:15 pm.Hillel Fireside: The Student and theCommunity: “Student Idealism. Pro¬mise and Dangers,” Gerhard Meyer,associate professor of economics inthe college, 8:30 pm, Hillel founda¬tion, 5715 Woodlawn.Concert: The Reverend Gary Davis andSleepy John Estes. Ida Noyes CloisterClub, 8:45 pm (Folklore Society).Saturday, November 10National Debate Tournament, Cobb Halland Business East, all day.TAL SAX TIRE CO.6052 S. Cottage GroveAve. — DO 3-5555Discounts to Studentsand FacultyTIKI TOPICSALOHA NUI (Hearty Greetings)from CIRALS, HOUSE OF TIKI,1510 Hyde Park Blvd., Waltines(ladies) and Kang (gentlemen)treat yourself to an afternoonluncheon in a Hawaiian atmos¬phere. Your choice of FriedChicken, Fteneh Fried Shrimp,Filet of Sole, Beef Platter or Hamwith Fruit Sauce at the Luncheonprice of $1.45 . . . There is alsoa selection of sandwiches avail-aide. Enjoy your favorite cock¬tail before or after your lunch.Okole Muhina (Bottoms Up)CIRALS, HOUSE OF TIKI1510 Hyde Park Blvd.Kitchen open from 11:00 A.M. to3:00 A.M., but closed on Wed. TAKSAM-Y&NCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYn A.M. to 10:80 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd S*. IU 8-9018English class: International H* iRoom B, 10 am.Soccer Game: UC vs. Purdue. SnggField. 2 pm.Tournament Championship debate: 2:20,Law School Auditorium.Motion Pictures: “Night and Fog. theGift,” Law School auditorium, 8 pm(Doc Films).Operettas: "HMS Pinafore” and "Tulby Jury.” by Gilbert and Sullivan,Mandel Hall, 8:15, $2.25.Sunday, November 11Sung Eucharist and Sermon: 9:30 rru.Bond Chapel, the Rev. Moelyn M.chant, head of dept, of Eng. atExeter University, England.Radio Series: “The United States andLatin American Diplomacy,” WFMF,11 am.University Religious Service: Rock< fel¬ler Memorial Chapel, the Rev. OttoMeindardus, asst. prof, relig., Airier.Univ.. Cairo. Egypt. 11 am.O-Board, 3 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Supper-discussion: Brent House. 5:30supper, 6:30 program, 8 pm eveningprayer.Methodist Graduate Discussion Seminar:Existential Anxiety and ChristianFaith. Chapel House, 7:15 pm.Porter Craduate Fellowship: “Dieti-hBonhoeffer, Disci pleship and theCross.” Chapel House. 7:15 pm (T’rs-byterian United Church of Chrrt).Bridge: Ida Noyes, first floor, 7:15 pm,informal duplicate game.POL1T caucus: business meeting, 7:30pm. Ida Noyes Hall.University Party open caucus: P: tyelections, fiim on Berlin, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes Hall.Radio series: The World of the Paper¬back, WBBM, 10 pm.Monday, November 12Block Fund Lecture: (Botany Club),Botany 106. 4:30 pm, “Pollen TubeFine S ructure and ChemotropismWalter Rosen. Associate Professor,Department of Botany, MarquetteUniversity.Class, Poetry of Bialik and Tchernich-ovsky: Hillel Foundation, 4:30 pm.English Class: International House,Room B. 6:30 pm.Slide Program: Worship of the God¬dess, "Indian Relfgion in Indian Art,”Rosenwald 2. 7 pm.Women’s Clubs: 7 pm, Ida Noyes.Film: “The London of William Ho¬garth.” and “Miserere — GeorgesRouault,” Soc Sci 122, 8 pm (dept,of art).Film: "Frenchman Goes Wild,” 8 Pm>Int. House.Lecture: “What a Psychiatrist WouhlLike to Know About You." by LouisBoshes. Sinai Temple. 8:15 pm.Shorey House Coffee Plus: Mike Mich¬els, noted folk guitarist, will headlinethis affair with coffee as an extraadded attraction. 9:30 pm. Admis-ion20c. Tierce Tower.CHICAGO MAROON Nov. 9, 1962Woods made trustee [students seek travel to CubaThe election of FrankHenry Woods to the Board„f Trustees of the Universityof Chicago has been an¬nounced by Glen Lloyd, Presidentof the Board.Woods has been a member of IheVisiting Committee to the Schoolof Social Service Administration.During the summer UC PresidentGeorge Beadle announced that$500,000 had been contributed forthe new SSSA building by theWoods Charitable Fund, Inc.Woods Is the president of theSahara Coal Company, and Chair¬man of the Lincoln, Nebraska Tel¬ephone Company.Woods has been active on manyphilanthropic committees. He wasmember of the Board of the Wel¬fare Council of Metropolitan Chi¬cago and is now president of thateragnization. He also directs theCrusade of Mercy, the CommunityFund of Chicago, and until 1945Meinardus talks atRockefeller ChapelOtto Meinardus, associate pro¬fessor of religion at the AmericanUniversity at Cairo, will be thepreacher in .services at theRockefellerMemorial Chap-|el this Sunday.Meinardus willgive a sermonentitled “InChrist thetwain shallmeet.”Besides hisprofessorship, Meinardus is min¬ister of the Maadi CommunityChurch in Maadi, Egypt. A Ger¬man by birth, he trained in Eng¬land and the US as well as Ger¬many for his four degrees. He isalso the author of four books andnumerous articles.Merchant at BondThe Rev. W. Moelyn Merchantwill preach in Bond Chapel at the9:30 a.m. Episcopal service onSunday.The Rev. Prof. Merchant is thehead of the department of Englishat Exeter in England. He is awell known scholar in the fieldof Shakespeare studies, and isprominent in the field of religiousdrama. He has traveled and lec¬tured extensively in this country. was president of the North SideBoys’ Club.He has been a member of theChicago Zoological Society, a di¬rector of the Associated Telephoneand Telegraph Company, and theYoungstown Sheet and Tube Com¬pany. He is also director of theIdeal Roller Company of Chicago.Woods was associated with theHarris Trust and Savings Bank ofChicago until 1933, and is nowdirector of the bank. He is also atrustee of the Art Institute ofChicago, and President of theNational Society for the Preven¬tion of Blindness.Woods, 57 years of age receivedand AB degree from Yale Univer¬sity in 1928, and now lives with hisfamily in Lake Forest, Illinois.Classifiedh)R SALE: 1061 Fiat 600. excellentcondition. 16.000 mil*-*, 40 mile* tothe gallon. *750. Call 752-8761 after4:30 pm.Six volt silver cobalt battery, *20.943-7894.3 room apt. 6757 Jeffrey, *102.50 in¬cludes parking in rear and gas. Goodneighborhood. 288-6557 or HY 3-5303HOUSE FOR SALE: Charming stonebrick English style home with matching2 car garage in wooded North Beverlyarea. Pleasantly planned eight roomsinclude three bedrooms. Pull attic, base¬ment. and 1 *2 bathrooms. Many con¬veniences, close to schools and trans¬portation. Excellent condition through¬out. Easily reached via State St. speed¬way. Contact L. D. Marinelli throughFaculty Exchange.3*4 rooms, newly decorated, mosaicbaths, sanded floors^, couples preferred.*95. 288-6757.PERSONALSHey guys — sorry I couldn't make it.Love, Sylvia.Who says Chicago boys aren’t horny 7Just ask Sylvia Kravnitz.You take an “L”, 5 ‘'M’s”, and "J”,and what do you get 7 SYLVIA.Who says 3rd floor Black stone girlsaren't swinging? Just ask 20 sad boys.TO THE BOOKSTORE: IS IT STILL X.:TO; VI; N2; A3; 4; 0,L,H,S.C?IX>ST: lavender ball-point pen. acciden¬tally carried off from SG poll tablein Cobb Hall Wednesday—return toSally Cook at SG office.Mike Michels is coming to Shorey Mon¬day night for Coffee Plu«. Admission20 cents.Wanted: Student with will of iron,nerves of steel, and heart of gold togive one hour every Thursday to typ¬ing for the Maroon. Sorry, no pay.Spiritual rewards instead. Call ext3265 today or Monday.BYE. BYE ELEANOR.Hene Tamarkin calls off block partySaturday night. Claims parents eausewithdrawal of invitations.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingFIVE BARBERS WORKINGLadies' haircuttingShoe shiningFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor SCANDINAVIANIMPORTSHome of the MultiformOpen Sundays1542 E. 57th St.NO 7-4040ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti • beef • sausage and meatballsandwiches • shrimp pizza*... . . rFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-1014,1015 1427 East 67th StSHARE-A-RIDE CENTRALOffers A Unique New Service To Our Mobile.SocietyNow You Can Find Share Expense Rides orRiders to Any City Nationwide.Subscribe NOW! For Your Trip Home on Thanksgivingor Christinas. — For Complete InformationTELEPHONE FI 6-7263 A group of students fromseveral New York City col¬leges and universities haveformed an Ad Hoc StudentCommittee for Travel to Cuba,and hope to make a trip to Cubaover the Christmas holidays.Career calendar |Representatives of the following or¬ganizations will conduct recruiting in¬terviews at the Office of Career Coun¬selling and Placement during the weekof November 12. Unless specifically in¬dicated, these interviews are open tostudents who will be available to acceptfull-time employment between now andSeptember 1963. Information describingthese organizations and the positionsfor which they are recruiting is avail¬able for review in the Placement Office.Interview appointments may be ar¬ranged through Mr. Calvin, room 200,Reynolds Club, extension 3284.Nov. 13—Atlantic Refining Company,Philadelphia. Pa. and Dallas, Texas—SM and PhD mathematicians and sta¬tisticians for positions in systems plan¬ning.Noy. 14 Fansteel Metallurgical Cor¬poration, North Chicago, Ill—chemistsand physicists at all degree levels forpositions in research, development, andprocess control.Nov. 15—Operations Evaluation Group(MIT), Washington, D.C.—SM and PhDmathematicians, physicists, and statisti¬cians for positions in operations re¬search. Schedule permitting, will inter¬view graduate students in above De¬partment* for summer work.Nov. 15—General Atomic (Division ofGeneral Dynamics). San Diego, Calif.—SM and PhD physicists: PhD mathema¬ticians and statisticians: and PhDchemists (analytical or physical) forpositions in research.Nov. 16- General Aniline and FilmCorporation, New York and New Jer¬sey PhD chemists (organic or physi¬cal) for positions in research.Nov. 16—North American Aviation,Los Angeles, Calif:—PhD mathemati¬cians, physicists, and statisticians forresearch positions.Nov. 16—Atomic International, Ca-noga Park. Calif.—primarily interestedin doctoral candidates in mathematics,statistics, physics, and chemistry (allspecializations) but will consider pro¬spective graduate at all degree levels.Nov. 16—Autonetics, Downey, Calif.— mathematicians, physicists, statisti¬cians, and chemists (analytical or phy¬sical) at all degree levels for positionsin research development.Nov. 16- Rocketdyne, Canoga Park,Calif.—PhD candidates in mathematics,physics, statistics, and chemistry (ana¬lytical, inorganic, or physical) for re¬search positions. One of the committee's leadershas received an invitation fromthe Federacion Estudianti Univer-sisitaria, the Cuban national unionof students, to visit Cuba.The committee’s spokesmen areawaiting the response of the statedepartment to their applicationfor validation of their passportsto make the trip.They cited the following reasonsfor wanting to go to Cuba:"As students, we would like thechance to s£e and evaluate thesituation in Cuba for ourselves.We feel the Cuban revolution is ahighly significant occurrence inthis hemisphere and merits as fulland complete an understanding aspossible. Such an understandingis unobtainable when limited topress coverage which we feel hasbeen inadequate and often con¬tradictory.“As citizens we are appalled bythe government’s policy to re¬strict the right of travel, and feelthat as responsible people we should register this form of pro¬test of a policy which could leadto further incursions on Ameri¬cans’ civil liberties.Any UC students who wouldlike more information about thetrip should call ext. 3265.Murchie speaksGuy Murchie, author of therecent best-seller, “Music ofthe Spheres,” and a formerChicago Tribune feature writ¬er and war correspondent, willspeak on “Science and Religion”Monday at 8 pm in the JudsonLounge.While serving as pilot, Murchiebegan to contemplate the natureof the stars and the universe, andto do extensive reading on thesubject. His experiences in theAir Corps became the subject fota best selling Book of the MonthClub selection, Song of the Sky.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE\ EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES* STUDENT DISCOUNTJimmy’sand the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Are.55 FREEDINNERSADAMS HARTMAN HOUSE393 Milwaukee Ave., WheelingADAMS HOUSE61 E. Adams St., ChicagoATHENS530 S. Halsted. ChicagoBOBBIE S RESTAURANT & LOUNGE3507 S. Central, ChicagoBOOM BOOM ROOM5220 N. Sheridan Rd., ChicagoBURGUNDY INN2335 N. Clark St., ChicagoCAIRO SUPPER CLUB4015 N. Sheridan Rd., ChicagoCANDLE LIGHT LODGE3300 W. 55th St., ChicagoDRIFTWOOD STEAK HOUSE4330 S. Pulaski Ave., ChicagoEMBASSY RESTAURANT A LOUNGE6144 W. Cermak Road., CiceroFOUNTAIN LODGE3818 S Harlem Ave., LyonsHOUSE OF ENG106 E. Walton Place, ChicagoIMPERIAL ROOMDel Prado Hotel, 5307 S. Hyde Park, Chi.JOHNNY LATTNER’S109 W. Madison, ChicagoLUIGI’S BANQUET RESTAURANT2550 W. North Ave., ChicagoMILAN'S9545 S. Colfax Ave., ChicagoMR. U S7942 Ogden Ave., LyonsNEVER ON SUNDAY CAFE410 S. Michigan Ave., ChicagoPATIO1250 River Road., WheelingSARATOGA7733 S. Cicero Ave., ChicagoSCHEHERAZADE163 E. Chicago Ave., ChicagoSMALLWORLD1759 N Sedgwick. ChicagoSUNSET ARM HOTEL TOP OF THEMARC.10025 W. Grand Ave., Franklin ParkTHE BLUE ANGEL624 S -Michigan Ave.. ChicagoTHE COVE at the TIDES MOTEL5235 N. Sheridan Rd.. ChicagoTHE COVERED WAGON2138 S. Michigan. ChicagoTHE DESERT INN514 W. Diversey Pkwy., ChicagoTHE DIRECT LINE - GRANADA HOTEL530 W. Arlington, ChicagoTHE GOLDEN HOST2000 N. Mannheim at Armitage, NorthlakeTHE PEACH TREESouth Shore Dr. at 79th St., ChicagoTIC TOC RESTAURANT A LOUNGE3058 W. Peterson Ave., Chicago FOR ONLY $10 GOURMET CHEK PLANOffers you the finest and most liberal restaurantplan ever to be presented in the Chicago area. Youpay for only one dinner and receive the second oneFREE!!! You simply order any two dinners from theregular dinner menu and pay for only one. YourGourmet Chek will cover the cost of the seconddinner. You need not order any specified dinner,and there is no limit as to the cost of each meal.Twenty-four of the clubs and restaurants have in¬cluded double checks in the book so that a partyof four can also dine out at the cost of two.★ CHEK BOOK VALID UNTIL JANUARY OF 1964.★ YOU NEED NOT PRESENT THE BOOK UNTILREADY TO SETTLE THE CHECK.★ MAJORITY OF CHEKS HONORED 7 DAYS OFTHE WEEK.★ BONUS ! ! SEASON TICKETS TO THE GREATTHEATRE FIRST.AND THOSE WHO ACT NOW ....TICKETS TO ENJOY THE LIMITED ENGAGE¬MENT OF "TONGUE IN CHIC!" AT THE BRANDNEW ELBO ROOM THEATRE.Moke Checks & Money Orders payable to :SHOWTIME ENTERPRISES 664-42131759 Sedgwick, Chicago 14, IllinoisEnclosed find S for Gourmet Chek Books.I understand thot I con use my book os of now and that it isuntil Januory 1964.NAMEADDRESS .....CITY 20NE STATESPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO GROUPSNov. 9, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Story behind the International HouseV ' * .(Editor's note: In honor of International House day,which is this Sunday, we are presenting this discussionon tMe history of the International House.)Placque honoring J. D. Rockefellerby Mary Clare BeckOne day in 1910, a New York YMCA workernamed Harry Edmonds stopped to say hello toa Chinese student at Columbia University. Today,the results of that chance greeting1 are morethan twenty-five International Houses, serving studentsfrom Chicago to Melbourne.Shocked to discover that he was the first Americanwho had spoken to the Chinese boy in the month sincethe boy’s arrival in the United States, Edmonds begana series of Sunday suppers and discussion groups forforeign students. These led to the formation of theIntercollegiate Cosmopolitan Club, which sponsoredactivities for foreign students.Edmonds’ work aroused the interest of John D.Rockefeller, Jr., who provided the funds to build thefirst International House in New York City in 1924.Edmonds was its first director.UC chosen for third Int HouseIn 1925 Edmonds conducted a survey to determinepossible locations for other International Houses. Rocke¬feller donated funds for the building of three morehouses: at Berkeley (1930), Chicago (1932), and Paris.(1936).The Rockefeller gift was not the first attempt tohelp Chicago’s foreign students. In 1919 UC PresidentJudson had appointed a committee to study the prob¬lems of foreign students at UC. The result was Mid¬way House at 923 E. 6ft St., which served as a dormi¬tory for men students and a clubhouse for groupactivities. It ceased operation in 1923.In that year the UC committee recommended theappointment of an Advisor to Foreign Students. Thepost was filled by Bruce Dickson, the YMCA directoron campus. Dickson’s work with foreign students hadcome toAhe attention of Judson through a party Dick¬son gave for a Chinese student who had studied inthe US for three'years without ever having been invitedinto an American home.With a'budget of $25 per month for entertainment,Dickson began a series of Sunday suppers. In 1927,a gift from Julius Rosenwald, head of Sears Roebuck,and a UC trustee, made the suppers a regular insti¬tution, Increasing attendance made it necessary to movethem from Dickson’s home to Ida Noyes Hall.Rockefeller gives fundsIn 1926 President Burton sent Dickson to discussplans with the Rockefeller Committee on the Extensionof International Houses. Discussions were continuedby a committee headed by Charles W. Gilkey, and in1929 announcement w'as made of Rockefeller’s giftof over $3 million to purchase the property at 1414E. 59th Street and build an International House.In his letter of donation, Rockefeller wrote, “My^special interest in making the gift is the educationin international friendship and understanding of thestudents of the wrorld who are studying in Chicagoor its vicinity.”He expressed the hope "not only that the buildingnow being erected on this site may provide living ac¬commodations and fatalities contributing to the socialand educational welfare of students, but that it mayalso be used to promote international understandingand friendship of the people of Chicago and of theMiddle West toward nations and cultures other thantheir own.” /Although UC w'as to hold title to the property andbe responsible for its obligations, Rockefeller, in thewords of Charles Gilkey, “desired that InternationalHouse should not be administered as a department ofthe University but as an institution with distinctivepurposes and a going life of its own, in which studentsfrom other lands, in every higher institution of learning in and around Chicago, might share on an equal basis,under the direct and undivided control of a boardrepresenting the University, other educational insti¬tutions, and citizens of Chicago.”Thus International House has always had its owrnboard of directors, and, also in accordance with Rocke¬feller’s wishes, it has been entirely self-supporting. Thegifts received from private donors or from the Friendsof International House have been used for the libraryor for scholarships, while the House itself is and hasbeen supported only by its owrn earnings from rent,its cafeteria, and its gift shop.Hutchins laid cornerstonePresident Robert Maynard Hutchins laid thecornerstone in June, 1931, and the building openedin September, 1932, with 518 rooms, an auditorium, acafeteria, a main lounge, and six smaller meeting rooms.Among the speakers at the dedication on October5, 1932 were John D. Rockefeller III, representing hisfather, and Raymond Fosdick of the Rockefeller Com¬mittee, who described the aims of the founders ofInternational House: “We are not trying to develop amelting pot, but rather a home of honest differences,a refuge for conflicting opinions, a haven for contrasts... a fabric of variegated pattern.’’Although International House was intended to houseequal numbers of American and foreign graduate stu¬dents, there were fewer than one hundred foreignresidents when it opened. It was not until after WorldWar II, when great numbers of foreign students begancoming to the US, that better ratios were achievedDuring the war, the House was turned over tothe armed forces, and from 1942 to 1944 Navy andAir Corps cadets replaced students.Int House dining hallSince then, the influx* of students from othercountries has kept the ho*ise full. There are now' 518students living at International House. Most of themattend UC, but a few are from other Chicago areaschools.'Since its founding, approximately 25,000 studentshave lived in International House, many of whom havesince risen to positions of importance in their owncountries. One of' the most famous American alumniof International House is poet Langston Hughes.Seventy-two nations are represented at Inter¬national House now. In recent years there has been adecline in the number of students from Europe andthe Chinese mainland, while the number from Africaand the rest of Asia has increased.(The University of Chicago currently has over 1000foreign students and foreign visitors associated, withit. This is approximately the 6th largest number offoreign students and foreign visitors on any US campus.)Int House Association formedIn 1947, the International House Association wasformed, to serve as a unifying force for widely separatedhouses. There is currently a Chicago chapter of theassociation.Jack Kerridge, new director of Int. House and forthe past ight years Advisor to Foreign Visitors, finds nounuusal difficulties in advising foregin students.“On the whole, their problems — financial, acade¬mic, personal — are generally the same as students’everywhere,” he says. “Of course, there is difficultyfor some in adjusting to a new culture, but by andlarge the adjustment is made by Viost foreign studentswithin approximately three months of their arrival.“It is largely a question of the foreign studentslearning to be ‘themselves’ and this can happen afterthey have learned all the little, detailed, daily patternsof our life which we all take for granted.”To help students make the transition, InternationalHouse holds a tw'o-day orientation program each Sep¬tember. However, no amount of orientation can prepare foreign students for the weather, and, after the ex¬citement of the first snowfall has wrorn off, manystudents fromy tropical climates find it rather difficultto adjust to a Chicago w-inter.Kerridge feels that the purpose of InternationalHouse is to enable people to meet on a personal, in¬dividual basis. *Activities, which are mostly student managed, areplanned not as an end in themselves, but rather asa means for students to meet and get acquainted.The feeling of residents of the House is that, “Whenyou’ve been here a while, there are no ‘foreign students.’Each person is aeeepted as an individual; there is nocolor bar, and national animosities are forgotten.”There are also programs that enable the foreignstudents to meet Americans outside the University.Each resident receives an invitation to Thanksgivingdinner in an American home.More than four hundred Chicago-area students,most of them from UC, this year took part in theInternational Thanksgiving Fellowship, under whicheight Illinois communities each year invite groups offoreign students for a lour-day visit.Students learn about USBegun in 1956, the Fellowship offers the studentsthe opportunity to become thoroughly acquainted withthe fife of a small American town; and offers the citizensof Paris, Danville, Lockport, Princeton, Sterling, RockFalls, and Freeport, the opportunity to be friend peoplefrom countries they ordinarily would hear of only innewspaper headlines.The visitors can spend their holiday just relaxingor they can take part in a great variety of activitiesplanned for them. However, it is often the unplannedincidents that make the greatest impressions.In 1959, a group of students from the Far Eastwere deeply impressed by the two families they visited,each of which had adopted several children from foreigncountries.Said one of the students. “No matter how manybooks on America we read, no matter how manylectures we had about democracy in America, nothingcould have convinced us more than just seeing whatthese two families had done.”It is because of experiences such as this one, Ker¬ridge believes, that, regardless of their attitude towardsthe policies of the United States government, foreignstudents return home with a warm feeling tow'ard thepeople they have met in the US.According to Kerridge, “Things happen just be¬cause International House exists.”Also serves as conference centerIt serves as a natural location for meetings andconferences of groups concerned with internationalrelations, such as the Conference on World Tensions,sponsored last spring by UC and World BrotherhoodInc., at which six Nobel Peace Prize winners spoke.It also plays host to a constant stream of visitingpoliticians, educators, labor leaders, and VIP’s rangingfrom India’s prime minister Nehru to the Swedishprincesses, Birgitta and Desiree.International House itself sponsors a number ofgatherings designed to encourage the growth of in¬ternational understanding. Two of the biggest are theannual Festival of Nations and International HouseDay.The Festival of Nations is held during the Festivalof the Arts and consists of displays by various countriesand a program of music and folk dancing.International House Day features a program ofdiscussions of current international isssues such as theimportance of the student movement or the value ofchanneling foreign aid through the UN. It is climaxedby a candle lighting ceremony in w'hich representativesof many lands come forward one by one and lighttheir candles.One ceremony wras introduced with these words:“International House was built that brotherhood mightprevail. It has prevailed in the hearts of all thosewho have lived in International House.”International House from the MidwayPIZZASFor The Price OfMICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780 You won't have to putyour moving or storageproolem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711 BOOK SALEofLibrary Duplicates and Discards10° and upFriday, Novemer 9, thru Thursday, Navember 15Select from many hundreds on displayThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueggTKTTV!. i.Ll.11'. *L IX litmTOTtW ■mill.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 9, 1962'yi '.V':bill well. ' V.jhsL I/YLojc SaddL Qo.IN A HURRY?SAME DAY CLEANING SERVICEIN BY 10:00. OUT BY 4:30CASH AND CARRYServing the Campus Since 19171013-17 E. 61st ST. (Across from Birrton-Judson Courts) YOU CAN TRUSTOld Spice Stick Deodorant.. . fastest, neatest tvay to all¬day, every day protection! It’s the active deodorant foractive men...absolutely dependable. Glides on smoothly,speedily...dries in record lime. Old Spice Stick Deodorant-mo^t convenient, most economical deodorant money canbuy. 1.00 plus tax.STICKDEODORANTNov. 9. 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON •The third annual Gilbertand Sullivan production inMandel Hall is a double billof “Trial by Jury” and“HMS Pinafore,” two operettaswhich can hardly miss. They playtonight and Saturday.“Trial by Jury” is rather wooden,but cute. The chorus is a motleycrew, but they sing very well.The two best performances aregiven by Pat Cain, as the dapperdefendent and Bill Randleman asthe bride’s attorney. They oozewith stage presence. Vince Krus-kal has a magnificent leer.The second play on the programis far better. It is even thrilling.This “Pinafore” is conventional, but achieves a kind of brilliancefrom a superb cast, directed withspirit, a good looking set andlovely bright costumes.Bette Sykes is an absurdly sternButtercup. Ernest Arnett and Hel¬en Yoos as the romantic leadssing beautifully and act prettywell too. The most polished per¬formers are Jerry Loeb, as thepompous captain, and Ray Lub-way, as the weak-eyed, feeble,lecherous admiral who craves in¬nocent Josephine and never goesto sea. It’s a very good evening o'theatre but we could ask for some¬thing more (. . . originality). Pro¬ductions of Gilbert and Sullivarseem to have become so conven¬tional. The operettas themselverhave wildly artificial plots, andstylized music. They could lendthemselves to more forceful move¬ment and more imaginative design.Of course this takes money, andwork, and inspiration. And wecan’t all be Tyrone Guthrie. B"itwhy not try?Carol Horning^ *♦* *•* *•* **• *♦* *•* *♦*' *• *!* *1* *♦* *** •** ••• * !* *5* *1* »!* *1* ♦J* * *• »J» «*••>X Chicago Musical College of Roosevelt University•>*•* presentsI A scene from “The Wall’, which will be presented thisweekend by the Last Stage.Intramural football season closingLast night’s 7-6 win overthe Outlaws clinched the Di¬visional League football titlefor the Res Ipsas. The LawBabies, who were tied with ResIpsas and the Outlaws, lost to theCapitalists 19-6. In the other Coach Sid Stein expects thefollowing eight returning wrestlersfrom last year’s team which wonthree and lost seven: Co-CaptainsCliff Cox and Jim Baillie, FredHoyt, Fred Kobrick, Dave Gaus,Dick Cook, Don Baer, and MikeEisenberg. Cox is the defendingraces CTS romped over k AQ 38-0, ncaa College Division 130 poundsand Winsochi U claimed a 2-0 win champion.over the Robber Barons.Psi Upsilon finished on top ofthe Fraternity League, crushingPhi Kappa Psi 52-7. Zeta BetaTau edged Phi Delta Theta 20-13and Phi Sigma Delta downed BetaTheta Pi 13-6.Tonight’s College House and “B’’League games are not likely todecide any championships, but to¬morrow afternoon’s game betweenEast III and Chamberlin will de¬cide the finish in the Red Divisionof college house play. Unless oneof them loses tonight Phi Psi andPsi U will be playing for the “B”League title Saturday.Saturday’s games will be playedat 2 pm except for the FlyingBolsheviks vs Phi Sig and Salis¬bury vs Dodd which were sched¬uled on fields 8 and 9. Thosetwo games will be played at 3pm on fields 4 and 5.Wrestling tryoutsBoys interested in wrestling areinvited to come out for the varsityand freshmen wrestling teams onMonday between 3:30 and 5:30 inthe Bartlett Gym. Seventeen freshmen with highschool experience are expected tocome out for the team plus allwho wish to try out.There is a no-cut policy andpractices will be arranged to fitindividual academic schedules.The team will host six dualmeet opponents plus one tourna¬ment, and travel to five dualmeets and two away tournaments.A practice meet with the MoodyBible Institute is scheduled forNovember 23, as a warm-up forthe Knox College Tournament thefollowing week. An exhibition of etchings,engravings, and woodcuts hasjust opened at the Court Gal¬lery of UC’s Midway Studio.The exhibit features severalworks by Max Khan, UC Art in¬structor. Khan is one of Amer¬ica’s outstanding artists speci¬alizing in graphics. He is alsowell known for his color tech¬niques.The purpose of the exhibitionis to stimulate more activity inany of the graphic arts. The ex¬hibit, said Harold Haydon, as¬sociate professor of art, is wellsuited for this since it has a verybroad scope.Max Khan has been teachingat UC for more than five years.Just recently he gave up hisclasses at the Art Institute, wherehe was doing part time work.Haydon said that he is one ofthe most able American artistsnot only because of his use ofcolor, but also because he suc¬cessfully exploits a wide varietyof techniques.Other Chicago artists featuredlit the exhibition include, EleanorCoen, Vera Berdich, Richard Flor-sheim, and Margo Hoff.Midway Studio is located nearthe corner of 60 and Ingleside.The exhibition was arranged byHastings College and will be thereuntil November 26.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife InsuranceProtection135 S. LaSalle $LMl 3-5986 RA 6-1060 TAPE SPECIAL1800’ Mylar 3.49Acetate 600’ 98cAcetate 1200’ 1.79MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTSLAKE A PARK AT SjRD : N07 9071the pyde park theatreNOW HAYINGNABOKOVS "LOLITA1and 2 Academy Award ShortsSTARTS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16Terry Thomas ^ Peter Sellers'YOUR PAST IS SHOWING1AND James T. Farrell’s"STUDS LONIGAN"STARTS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22Peter Sellers ^ Dany Robin"WALTZ OF THE TOREADORS"ANDJulie Harris A' Laurence Harvey if Shelley Winters"I AM A CAMERA"Free Weekend Patron Forking at 5230 S. Lake Fork Ave.Special Student Rotes WITH I.D. Cards dark theatredark & madisonfr 2-284550*» ” timesfor college students■ft open 7:30 a m.late show 3 a.m.ft different double feature dallyft Sunday Film Guildft write in for free program guideft little gal-lery for gals onlyft every frlday is ladies dayall gals admitted for only 25cft Clark parking . 1 door south4 hours 95c after 5 p.m.WEEKEND PROGRAMfri. - 9th - “love and thefrench woman”and “paris blues”sat. - 10th - “breakfast attiffany’s” and“world of susiewong”sun. - 11th • “grand illusion”and “paths ofglory” X “America's Best Known Traditional Singer” •>•>| STUDEBAKER THEATRE - SATURDAY, HOY. 17 at 8:30 P.M. ?* XX Tickets: $2.50, $3, $3.50| tRoosevelt University Public Concerts x❖ 430 S. MICHIGAN AVENUE WA 2-3585, Ext. 359 |•*. *:• 7..-..-. .*.*•» .• **..-..-. «•««-..-. .*. .*. .*..*. .*..-..-..-. .-* .*. .*..-. *yDEARBORN AT DIVISION“Expertly written, acted and directed.”Tribune‘A RAREMENT.”n.y post j rtrrrn tNot r•commanded tor persons under IS Chicago’s most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films.STUDENTSTake advantage of thespecial discount avail¬able to you. 90< any dayexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. card to the cashier.MEN !JHere’s deodorant protectionDebater presents negative Common Market case(Editor’s note: Gerald McBeath,president of the Forensic Associa¬tion and tournament chairmanfor^ UC’s national IntercollegiateDebate to be held this weekendat UC, has prepared the follgiv-ing brief for the negative casefor this year's national debatetopic — Resolved: That the non-Comrnunist nations of the worldshould establish un economic com¬munity. A brief of the affirmativecase appeared in the Maroon onWednesday).A negative speaker maytake four different stands torefute affirmative conten¬tions. He may: 1) attack allneed arguments, the practicalityand advantages of the affirmativeplan, while substantiating thestatus quo; 2> refute need con¬tentions, advocating that shoulda need arise, it can be controlledwith slight improvement and ex¬pansion of the status quo; 3> con¬cede minimal need issues, butmaintain that the affirmative planis unnecessary, inappropriate, anddetrimental to non-communist na¬tions, and that a status quo re¬pairs plan would alleviate thesmall need, or he may 4» con¬cede all needs, suggest more im¬portant issues the affirmative hasoverlooked, and propose a nega¬tive counter-plan to meet these.In this last case, the negative as¬sumes the burden of proof. Eachof these approaches differs ac¬cording to the need indictmentmade by the affirmative speakerand the plan to meet this need.It Is crucial in discussions of thefree world economic policy thata clear distinction be made be¬tween free trade and economiccommunities. The former impliesa reciprocal reduction of restric¬tions; the latter, a structure tointegrate the economies of all na¬tions into one unit — with freemovement of labor, centralized in¬vestment and developmental au¬thority. The negative team con¬tends that there is a definite trend Political necessity forces our in¬terest in strengthening their econ¬omies. Our foreign aid programsare huge and beneficient, the larg¬est in the world. But to pursuethe last objective effectively, fundsmust be earmarked and labeled.Foreign aid is a potent propa¬ganda weapon, nullified if admin¬istered multi-laterally.The European nations of EFTAand EEC have yearly assumedmore of the foreign aid burden tothe under-developed nations. TheEEC last year granted millions toAfrican nations. The United Na¬tions programs are extendingmembership and funds each year.ILO. FAD. WHO, UNRRA, andIRO were specially designed topursue economic development ofunder-developed nations.The most effective operation ofaid and trade for these under¬developed nations lies in our as¬sistance in the formation of re¬gional trading areas. These exist,not as an end in themselves, butas an important step in the evo¬lution of a free trade community.This step cannot be eliminated.A current example of a regionaltrading center is GATT, the Gen¬eral Agreement on Tariffs andTrade, which is a regional trad¬ing association of Atlantic states.Tariffs on a wide range of manu¬factures were recently cut 20 percent by' members. The LatinAmerican Free Trade Zone pro¬ poses greater economic integra¬tion. In addition, two AfricanEconomic Unions, and a SoutheastAsian Common Market are in thediscussion stage.Regional economic integration isa necessary pre-requisite to rapidindustrialization. The commonbackgrounds and problems ofthese nations enable them to com¬bine to effectuate common policies— to develop their strength as abargaining center for greatershare of the trade of the freeworld. Flow of technical know¬how increases in intensity andscope as integration results in in¬creased contracts and relationsbetween citizens of participatingstates with obvious common in¬terests.In the three areas of restrictivetariffs, developing nations, andregional trading centers, thestatus quo is not rigid; it ischanging, adapting, and expand¬ing toward a free trade area ofthe non-communist world. Thisambiguous terms “status quo” in¬cludes: foreign aid expenditures(developmental loans. grants,technical assistance), trade agree¬ments — admitting with infre¬quent duties the primary productsof under-developed regions; therecent Trade*Expansion Act, whichgives greater trade benefits toless-developed nations; participa¬tion in UN programs (develop¬ment banks, technical programs,economic planning associations), and the trends of the status quotoward strong regional centerswithin a free world network.An economic community wouldbe undesirable. Free movement oflabor, great administration diffi¬culty, and political-economic am¬biguity would be detrimental toa community of non-communistnations.Nations must have stable econ¬omies to trade consistently to¬gether; but it is fallacious to as¬sume that free movement of laborwill give the world a general highstandard of living; the converseis more likely to happen. Mem¬bers of under-developed nationswill flood industrialized nations.Another problem, aptly illustratedby Professor Hoselitz, would bethe difficulty of inducing workers,once moved, to return to theirnative lands. TTiere would be aninflux of workers into the devel¬oped nations, leaving the less-developed nations barren of pro¬ductive populace.The organizational difficulty liesin creating a governing body foran association that will have ex¬treme powers over internal econ¬omies. Filially, it is difficult toenvision an economic unit thatwill not have political components.The EEC was formed prospectivelyfor a more permanent politicalunion on the continent; the mem¬bers compromised many of theirliberties to form a more encom¬ passing community. Would neu¬tral nations be willing to form acommunity on such a basis?Feasible alternatives exist tothe challenge of advancing freeworld trade through non-commun¬ist economic communities. GATTcould expand its membership tothe non-communist world. Thiswould form a loose free trade as¬sociation without the objection¬able movement of labor or ad¬ministrative centralization. Th.-diversion of more funds to an In¬ternational Development Author¬ity in the United Nations wouldunite many small nations morequickly into regional trading cen¬ters.A word on communist “economicthreats.” No purely economicmaneuver has been successful inchanging free institutions intocommunistic ones. The Siuo-Sovietbloc controls only four per cent ofpresent world trade. Analystscomment that Khrushchev is moreintent upon building internal self-sufficiency than committing com¬munist economies to competitionwith nations of the free w'orkl.Because of the untenable needindictments of the affirmataive,the impracticable and undesirablenature of its plan, the negativefully endorses the present trendtoward free trade and its gradualimplementation through the statusquo.THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESSALUTE: JIM McCLUSKEYOn his very first assignment with Indiana Bell, JiraMcCluskey (B.S., M.B.A., 1958) was put in charge of fiveCentral Offices employing 65 people in the BloomingtonDistrict... no mere training assignment.But Jim handled it well and was promoted to AssistantTraffic Engineer. On this job he planned Central Officeequipment additions costing thousands of dollars, and designed Indiana University’s campus telephone system.Jim's success on his many projects brought still anotherpromotion, this time to Assistant District Traffic Manager!Jim McCluskey and other young men like him in BellTelephone Companies throughout the country help bringthe finest communications service in the world to the homesand businesses of a growing America.in the non-eommunist world to¬ward a free trade area, but thatan economic community would beinimical to this trend and theprimary foreign policy objectivesof the United States.The first foreign policy require¬ment vvas “to promote thestrength of the United States,”for it is upon this that thestrength and cohesion of the non¬communist world depends. It isessential to our national interest,that United States commerce re¬main strong, that under-developednations receive more aid andtrade, and that these nations pro-- gress in a homogeneous regionalenvironment.Restrictive trade meksuros areundesirable. Many countries areunable to trade freely with us;while we are often unable to ex¬port products to them at compe¬titive rates. But current measures,especially the Trade ExpansionAct of 1962, lower trade restric¬tions on groups of products, al¬lowing the President great dis¬cretionary powers.However, even if unhamperedcompetition and industrial effi¬ciency argue against the restric¬tion of an import, competitionfrom imports is still harmful tosome American industries, and theinjured industry should be entitledto more than just our sympathy.To date, most plans for the grosselimination of tariffs have offeredlittle else. Short-term, stop gaprestrictions are valid, until wedetermine a long-range plan equit¬able to the nascent industries ofthis country. Also, United Statesfacilities deemed essential to na¬tional security and found to beseriously impaired by foreign com¬petition should continue to be as¬sisted by government action.Developed nations have not beeninactive in assisting less-develop¬ed nations. US policy to these na¬tions is: 1) to obtain a share ofexpanding markets for the pro¬ducts of our own economy; 2) toassure reliable sources of raw ma¬terials essential- to our securityand industrial expansion, and S)to develop these nations confront¬ed with political subversion. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES»