► Exec fills SC vacancies CCE holds Isihov* CAininsu1q’lio Executive Committee Seated in college seats were Mich- ™ ® ™ I £9^# I Hill I%JI IThe Executive Committeeof Student Government (SG)met yesterday afternoon tofill vacancies in the student.government assembly. It was an¬nounced at the meeting that thedale of the next Assembly has beenchanged from tonight to this Thurs¬day at 7; 30 in Business East 103.Members of the Assembly havebeen notified of the change.Filling of Assembly vacanciesfollowed, except in one instance,the recommendations ol the recentPOUT caucus. Two graduate seatswere given to David Nelson andMurray Schacher, both of POLIT. Seated in college seats were Mich¬ael Kaufman, Barbara Caress,Carol Vogel, Harris Jaffe, JoanMahoney, Ronald Dorfman andRichard Schmitt, of POLIT; Rich¬ard Bisk, Stephen Rosen, andAlan Suss man, all independents;and Beverly Splane and JudithMagidson of University Party. Wil¬liam Klecka, who had been recom¬mended by the POLIT caucus, wasnot seated.Present at the meeting were Ar¬thur MacEwan, Pam Procuniar,Jay Flocks, and Steven Boy an, whoare the four remaining membersof the Executive Committee. Some 300 labor and busi¬ness leaders attended a semi¬nar Saturday on policy chang¬es in the National Labor Re¬lations Board at the Center forContinuing Education,Although most of the partici¬pants agreed that the governmentplays a vital role by bringing la¬bor and management to the bar¬gaining table, they disagreed aboutthe extent to which the govern¬ment should decide which subjectsare suitable for the collective bar¬gaining process.Participating in the conferencewas Frank McCulloch, chairman ofthe National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). Policy changes by theboard since he became chairmanin March, 1961, have drawn someheavy criticism.McCulloch pointed out that oneof the most sensitive areas inlabor - management relations in¬volves plant closings. He said thatthe board has made new policiesin this area. It has required com¬panies to bargain with unions onthe impact of automation or shut¬downs.R. W. Fleming, professor of lawat the University of Illinois, ex¬plained that most problems arosebecause of the NLRB's rulings onthe duty to bargain in good faith,and in its widening determinationof what has to be bargained. Thishas now been extended to includeeffects of automation, job trans¬fers, and transfers of seniority, hesaid. “In the early years the NationalLabor Relations Board was occu¬pied much more with the questionof what constituted good faith inbargaining than with the questionof what the parties had to bargainabout.”But as the process of collectivebargaining became established andrecognized, “the needs and re¬quirements of employes change,and the unions bargained for newand different benefits.”Fleming pointed out that theNLRB took the position that theparties were required to bargainabout wages, hours, and other con¬ditions and terms of employment.This was codified in the terms ofthe Taft-Hartley act.Fleming said, however, that theproblem still remained about whatspecific elements fell within the(Continued on page 4)Vol. 71 — No. 62 University of Chicago, Tuesday, February 5, 1963UC receives Robie houseAt a ceremony attended byChicago Mayor Richard J.Daley, William Zeckendorf,chairman of the board ofWebb and Knapp, presented thedeed to Frank Lloyd Wright'sRobie House to UC PresidentGeorge Beadle yesterday morning.Also at the ceremony, which washeld in the New Dorm lounge, aninternational campaign to raise$250,000 for the restoration of thehouse was kicked off with the an¬nouncement of the receipt of $14,-932 in initial gifts.$10,000 of these funds came fromthe Edgar J. Kaufmann CharitableFoundation, Pittsburgh. Pennsyl¬vania. Edgar J. Kaufmann, Jr., aInundation trustee, is a member ofthe Robie House Committee. He isan architect and the owner ofWright’s famous “Falling water”house, built in 1935.Tiie University has "conditionallyaccepted the responsibility of RobieHouse because of the expectationthat tiie substantial sum requiredto restore and repair it will beprovided by those interested whowant it preserved,” said Beadle.“This furnishes the architecturalprofession with an invaluable op¬portunity to put its money whereits mouth is,” commented JulianLevi, executive director of theSouth East Chicago Commission.Beadle said that the architectsinterested in the restoration of thehouse feel that since it was builtas a residence, it should be usedas a residence. He added that onecondition of its restoration is at least a portion of the Robie Housemust to be opened to tiie publicperiodically.He and Mrs. Beadle would bewilling to live there, he said. Otheruses suggested for the Robie Houseare a guest house, an alumnihouse, or a museum for architec¬tural exhibits. a nominal return through the useof Robie House as its constructionheadquarters during the company’sredevelopment contracts,” contin¬ued Beadle.Daley com-,mented on his]work in preserv¬ing the land-1marks of the city,]and noted that)the Robie House jwill sport a]plaque indicating]its preservation.The family of!Frederick C. Ro-t>ie, a Chicagobicycle manufacturer, lived in theRobie House for less than twoyears after it was built in 1909.Tiie family of Marshall D. Wilburlived there for fifteen years.The Wilbur family sold RobieHouse to the Chicago TheologicalSeminary in 1926. It was used as aclassroom building, refectory, tem¬porary domitory, and as a con¬ference center. “But this use did not effectivelydisguise his disinterested purposein gaining time to rally the effortsto save this architectural land¬mark,” said Beadle. I Zeckendorf hands deed to UC President Beadle jPurpose of TWO discussedRichard Harmon and Pete Love, organizers of The Woodlawn Organization (TWO)described the goals of that organization at a University Party caucus Sunday night.The main purposes of TWO are to achieve equality in housing, jobs and education;to preserve the 95 per cent of Woodlawn housing that is sound, and to get the city servicesWoodlawn should be but isn't getDaleyWhen the Chicago TheologicalSeminary in 1957 “threatened thedestruction of Itobie House,” saidBeadle, Webb and Knapp “boughtthe property for a substantial priceand assisted in other efforts whichenabled the University to look for¬ward to getting it eventually andenabled the Seminary to acquirean alternate site for its expansion.“Mr. Zeckendorf’s company got ting, they said.The discussion was preceded bya short business meeting attendedby 15 students.Harmon will speak at a DivinitySchool luncheon Wednesday at12:30 in Swift Hall.In describing Woodlawn. Harmonstated that the average level ol ed¬ucation of Woodlawn’s over 100.000people is only 9.5 years. The un¬employment rate is about 20 percent and about one third of thepeople are on welfare.TWO, said Harmon, seeks toachieve its goals through organiz¬ing Woodlawn residents and thusgiving them power. “White peopletalking to white people about inte¬gration won’t do a damn thing,” hestated. “Negroes must organizethemselves to work for equality.”Commenting further on the dis¬crimination problem, Harmon said, and you“Scratch a Chicagoanfind a Mississipian.”TWO actions have included rentstrikes, pickets and voter registra¬tion drives. In explaining why theyuse devices like rent strikes insteadof going through legal channels,Harmon stated that it takes an av¬erage of 2!4 years between the timea building violation inspection ismade and action is taken by thecity.One of the most important goalsof the organization, said Love, iseducation: both of children andadults. Especially needed in adulteducation is job training to easeunemployment.Harmon contended that their arc300 empty classrooms in whileneighborhoods blit over-crowdingin Negro areas. This, he said, isbecause of the segregationist ele¬ment in Chicago, including theBoard of Education. In regard to South Campus, Har¬mon stated that he didn’t reallyknow what it was lor, since theUniversity has refused to discussthe matter with them at all. “Itwould probably be a good idea forthe University to expand,” he said,“but we want proof that they needthis area.”The University, he staled,shouldn’t have a moat around it.The crime rate about which theUniversity is worried would prob¬ably go down if UC had a friendlierattitude towards Woodlawn and itsresidents.Malawi independence fought for, not given TWO basically believes in re¬novating Woodlawn buildings in¬stead of tearing them down. Ac¬cording to Harmon, most of thebuildings in Woodlawn are madeout of stone. “In Europe.” he said“they don’t tear down their stonebuildings, they let them last for 200years. Americans are fairly stupidVm “Independence did not falllike manna front heaven, nordid the British give it to us—■we fought for it,” asserted ak>|) government official of theworld’s youngest nation Fridaynight.Yatufca Chisiza, secretary of theMalawi Congress Party, spoke atAlpha Delta Phi fraternity on thefirst day of this country’s independ¬ence.Malawi, known as Nyasalantluntil this weekend, is a nationabout the size of Illinois in thehighlands of central southern Af¬rica. Its first prime minister isHastings Banda, a former Univer¬sity of Chicago student.After relating the story of 50years of political uprisings whichfinally forced the British to giveMalawi independence, Chisiza dis¬cussed the problems that face hisgovernment.‘ We have throe main problems:illiteracy, disease, and poverty.Alter 72 years of British rule, the/mteracy rate ^ extremely high.”* bore are less than a thousandstudents in Malawi high schools;a lew years ago there were only 300.) “The British left us withonly twelve doctors for a populationof.three million. Our poverty origi¬nates not so much from the factthat we are poor, but that we havebeen neglected.”Chisiza’s government (the Con¬gress party won 98% of the vote inthe last election) has started acrash program in education.Teacher training institutes are be¬ing built; the United States hasgiven funds for a polytechnic in¬stitute: and a university is beingplanned.Chisiza said that economic andtechnical aid from any nation willbe appreciated if it is given“without strings.” “We will not^exchange aid for our dignity andour right to decide our own courseof action. We will not become adumping ground for any foreigncultures or ideologies. Before welacked dignity, but now we arefree. We would reither be poor withdignity than rich and slaves.”Africans like Americans betterthan Britons, according to Chisiza,because they lack the native Brit¬ish conservatism and are morelikely to feel that "anything canbe done.” However, Americans have twofaults which greatly irritate Afri¬cans: their irrational fear of Com¬munism and their devotion to the“American way.” “To an Ameri¬can, a military base in Ethiopiais not infiltration, but a Sovietlecturer in Ghana is.” Chisiza feltthat the Peace Corps is generallyhelpful, but that some members“seem more interested in spread¬ing propaganda than in helpingAfricans.” culture. “When the white mancame, he began to impose his cul¬ture on the African, not realizingthe Africans had any culture oftheir own. The net result was toleave the African with no cultureat all.”Chisiza, who has been touringthe United States studying com¬munity development, said that hewas disconcerted that governmentaction in the United States seemedto be controlled largely by busi¬ness interests. He sees this as thebasis for America's fear of Com¬munism and defense spending. Hewas also dismayed to find thatthe influence of intellectuals isalmost nil in comparison with thatof the moneyed interests. However,he also found that, for the mostpart, educated people were not in¬dependent of the influence thatthese interests seemed to have. Chisiza's advice to missionariesis to “stop talking about heavenand hell and start helping thepeople.” Chisiza said that he hasnot been disappointed in Christian¬ity. but only in the practice of someof the missionaries. about housing.”Love ended the discussion by say¬ing that Woodlawn and the Uni¬versity needed greater contact. Hesuggested that during orientationstudents be given a list of Wood¬lawn residents whom they couldvisit and get acquainted with. This,he said, would be more beneficialthan just warning them not tacross 61st street alter dark.Clyde Kennard inBillings for treatment“Americans do not understandAfrica, and in most cases theAmerican press is to blame.” Chi¬siza explained that newsmen areassigned to write about Africanevents which they do not under¬stand. Regardless of whether theyunderstand the events they mustproduce a convincing story. Thesestories are usually “complete fab¬rications.” Clyde Kennard, first Negroto attempt enrollment in aMississippi university, enteredBillings Hospital Saturday forcancer treatment.A' former UC student, Kennardwas refused admission to the Uni¬versity of Southern Mississippi in1959. A year later he was sentencedto seven years in prison for analleged theft of $25 worth ofchicken feed.Chisiza stated that the greatharm that missionaries have donein Africa is to destroy African When asked whether the NewYork Times, the Christian ScienceMonitor, and the Manchester Guard¬ian are exceptions, Chisiza repliedthat these papers “take some careto write about African affairs,” butoften report them incorrectly. I Last year, doctors removed amalignant growth from Kennard’sintestine and gave him a 20%chance to live five years. RossBarnett, governor of Mississippi,recently pardoned Kennard be¬cause of his condition.RANDELL - HARPER SQUAREBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Mrs. Billie Tregonxa, Prop.WashPromTicketsOnSaleNow! MEN'S DORMS★ ★ ★ ★ ★FRATS^ ^ ^ 4rBOOKSTORE GIFTCOUNTER★ ★ ★ ★ ★IDA NOYESDESKThe Celebrated Swedish - AmericanTroubador-GuitaristWILLIAM CLAUSON“VIKING OF SONG”: Carl SandburgSATURDAY, FEB. 16. 8:30 P.M.STUDEBAKER THEATRETickets: $2.50. $3.00, $3.50Student Rates (I.D.) before Feb. 16Roosevelt University Public ConcertsRm. 928 - 43 So. Michigan Ave. - WA 2-3585, Ext. 359DUAL/VWffrf </&K.'jmtUctonfilter Tqreytonton Jt Ktexc is cur mMl< name q a r Ct*"Tareyton’s Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!”says Marcus (Ace) Severus, noted Roman natator. “After a plunge in the aqua, a Tareyton is the sine quanon for enjoyment,” says Ace. “Here’s the flavor amo-rfe gustibus you never thought you'd get from any filtercigarette.” Keep a pack handy —tecum wherever you go.Dual Filter makes the differenceCannot understand anyundergrads ask Rockwellto speak on UC campusTO THE EDITOR:In the Friday Maroon it wasreported that “residents of VincentHouse invited (George Lincoln)Rockwell to speak at the Univer¬sity of Chicago.” I would like toaddress just one question to these“residents of Vincent House”:Why? What on earth could possesssane, intelligent, literate, thought¬ful, conscientious, public spiritedyoung people (as UC undergradu¬ates generally represent them¬selves) that they should ask thisperson in to speak to them?Do they wish to learn from hislofty idealism? Do they wish toquestion him about the line pointsof his closely reasoned doctrines,as one scholar to another? Or per¬haps they feel that the narrownessand bigotry of other institutionshave denied Mr. Rockwell his rightof Free Speech, and they must takeit upon themselves to set the mat¬ter straight?Free speech? Free speech meansthat any demented megalomaniac,any vicious paranoid can stand upon a street corner and speak hiswretched piece. It does not meanthat he must be sponsored at re¬spected institutions by misguidedpeople in the name of “freedom.”I sincerely hope that the officers ofthe University will have the good9ense to forbid his appearancehere, and let Mr. Rockwell exercisehis free speech in the gutters fromwhich his doctrines arose, andwhich provide their most appro¬priate setting.The crowning irony of Ibis invita¬tion is its source; that it shouldarise from our undergraduate stu¬dents—those same students, if 1 am not mistaken, who continuallypontificate about the Universal Ab¬solutes, who have the most vehe¬ment opinions about all facets ofour government's domestic andforeign policies from Federal Aidt© Education to the Cuban crisis,who love All of Humanity and willreadily die on the barricades forOpen Occupancy, who denounce allforms of tyranny, hysteria and in¬sanity in the name of Reason. Andthe end of all this magnificent hu¬manism; an invitation to GeorgeLincoln Rockwell to speak at theUniversity of Chicago. Forgivethem, Father, for they know notwhat they do.We may note one final irony. Inthe same issue of the Maroon asreports the Rockwell imitation, wefind an undergraduate girl com¬plaining that the University doesnot, for some reason, seem to havesufficient respect for her maturity.And the Maroon uses her complaintto editorialize about what a Com¬munity of Scholars ought to be.ROBERT ROSENWhy bring Rockwell?TO THE EDITOR:The residents of Vincent House,fabled for their antisocial behavior,have at last taken the Great LeapForward and have decided to par¬ticipate in the life of the campus.One might long for the old days,when all they did was to them¬selves.What motive, other than rmuse-ment, prompts them to invite tothis campus the leader of theAmerican Nazi Party (whose mag¬azine, The Stormtrooper, advertises“Anne Frank soap wrappers”)?Do they think his appearance willbe funny to those of our facultyand staff who were driven fromtheir homes in Nazi-occupied Eur¬ ope, or to the many among us—Jews, Poles, Lithuanians, Russians—whose families were mur deredin the Sturm-und-drang?Do they believe that there aovconsiderations of civil liberty in¬volved which override considera¬tion of the sensibilities of so largea portion of our community? If M\then let them go ahead with theirplans to bring Mr. Rockwell tocampus, and I shall be the first todefend them against interference.But let me suggest to them thatthey examine their own consci¬ences and see if they do not agreewith me that discretion in this instance is the mark of wisdom.RON DORFMANWhat does recall mean?TO THE EDITOR:What does the recall electionmean? The POLIT people seemwilling to accept the interpretationthat it only represents a repudiation of the SG Cuban action, andnot of POLIT policy. 1 believe thisis a misinterpretation of the situa-tion—a failure shared by most ofus at the University of Chicago.Just because a student votes notto recall a member of Studen'Government does not mean that heapproves of that person or whathe symbolizes, but that he doesnot disapprove so strongly as towant that person recalled. His de¬cision may be in part determinedby magnanimity and some respectfor the person's energy and ideal¬ism.Part of the problem is that wchave a tendency to reject compas¬sion and understanding in what wetoo quickly say and do. We havea tendency to think in terms otideas and issues and abstractions,and we imagine that we actuallymake decisions on that basis. Weoften forget that reality is notabstraction but people—irrational,fallible, pretentious, and ignorant.We often become so enchanted byour illusions of sophistication andenlightenment that we fail to seetheir farcical side, and that we arelike children playing meaninglessgames in an endless mansion.The POLIT people seemed to failto realize that student feelingtoward them is not on the intellec¬tual level of disagreement but onthe emotional level of distaste—forthem as the New Victorians whocall themselves “liberals” whilerejecting the mature, wholesomeskepticism so necessary to trueliberalism in favor of an overbear¬ing messianic attitude and formal¬ized approach to social problems.Moreover, distaste for them isone aspect of an atmosphere ofdemoralization on campus. Weknow too little of what others aredoing or thinking, and so we cometo think only around our own feel¬ings. We imagine we have beenoffended by some thing or someperson, when in fact we have apredisposition to mistrust the ad¬ministration, misinterpret theiractions (such as the Stagg Scholar¬ship), resent the reformers, andcriticize everything.We need more humanity, notmechanism — not an impersonalbureaucracy that issues directivesto students such that one can hearthe sounds of wheels turning amongthe words, not overcertain reform¬ers who suggest dogs’ mouthswatering at the ring of a bell.The recalled members of SGshould be painfully aware thatsomething is wrong with the -at¬mosphere here, as should the ad¬ministrators and the universitycommunity as a whole.For the university community isnot a whole. It is fragmented, andunless it can be unified it willdecline.JON ROLANDTT» rm TP CTLR.CAL 1 cOWOtTiovtQCois«m/ 1316 E. 53« ST.'"S' il am to to PM^ WE PtUVQSDEJA YUSDouglas in exciting role—Photo by GounvitzThe Hew Lost City Ramblers perform at the Sunday nigMconcert of the Folk Festival, at Mandel Hall. All three eve¬ning performances of the Folk Festival were sold out. Sev¬eral hundred persons from campuses as far away as NewYork came to UC to participate in the weekend events. most westerns, Lonely Are theBrave is set in contemporaryAmerica. Kirk Douglas plays acowboy who seems to be a throw¬back to the 1880’s. He also turnsout to be a sort of Thoreau inLevis. He returns to Texas (?) ondiscovering that his best friend(an intellectual idealist who iswriting a book) has been jailed forhelping wetbacks. Douglas ingeni¬ously joins his friend in jail for a a good broad humor. Another rolewhich was also ably carried offwas that of the sheriff, who almostwalks away with the film.Lonely Are the Brave is liberallysprinkled with a simple humorthat is most delightful. DavidMiller’s direction is sure, evenwhen he must deal with DaltonTrumbo’s stereotyped script (e.g.,a sadistic jailer, the faithful wife,ad nauseam). Philip Lathrop’sMaroons defeat BrandeisChicago and Brandeis, two edu- come more balanced lately, wonrational centers where skinny PhiBeta Kappas are held in higheresteem than muscular athletes,played basketball, or a reasonablefacsimile thereof at the StadiumSaturday night.A Cathedral-like hush hung overIhe thinly-populated arena as theChicago representatives, who canquote Plato in the original Greek,triumphed 60-52 for their 11th vic¬tory in 14 engagements. . . .No pro league scouts were in thestands to watch Chicago andBrandeis settle their differences,but the Maroons nonetheless dis¬played some dexterous players in.Joe Zemans, Bruce Lubitz and(lene Erickson, a 6 - foot - 8 - inchscholar, whose ability to take thelx>ards away from the smallerMassachusetts boys may have de¬cided the issue. . . .They teach clean living on theSouth Side as was evidenced bythe fact that while 32 transgres¬sions were noted against Brandeis-nly eight were charged to Chi¬cago. . . .—from an article by Jack Clarkein Sunday’s Sun-Times the four field events and four ofthe running events to build theirwinning margin. short visit and then escapes. The photography is adequate, but sel-bulk of the film consists of the dom imaginative. 'Die music, bypolice chasing Douglas. Jerry Goldsmith, sounds like Cop-The picture is a curious mixture land imitating Respighi, and theof the good and the tired. The plot frequent quotes from the Exodusis weak, trite and implausible, theme are at times jarring. RWSome of the lines seem older than A ,, ,The Great Train Robbery. Philo- Addenda:sophical overtones are hardly audi- The Great ( base, now dying theble. The juxtaposition of the old death of deaths at the Cinema,First-place winners for UC wereWilliams (440-yd. run), McCready - — A , ,(high hurdles), Zehner (low hur- West personified by Douglas and do^s deserve such a fate. Covdies), Marrison (pole vault). Wool- the new America represented by a ering the swashbucklers from Theey (high jump), Weyhrich (shot truckload of toilets is carefully Great Train Robbery to The Markput), McKeon (broad jump), and ^ed off’ yet a«y great meaning f Z«rro the film gives us ratherRichards, Swan, McKenzie, and the sto4T might have is lost. Lonely harried glances at William S. Hart,Are the Brave survives because ofDouglas.Kirk Douglas is ona of the fewremaining stars who is able tothrow himself thoroughly into aWilliams in the mile relay.Other scorers were Palmer, Kurz,Sieberman, Vahle, Trabich. Kliiess-ner, and Pierce.Culture CalendarCabaretsSecond City opens this week withtheir tenth revue. From the previewedmateria) already seen it promises to bean especially different and exceptional¬ly fine revue. A revue will appear laterthis week. 1846 N. Wells. DE 7-3992.Shows nightly, 9 and 11, Saturday andFriday 9. 11, and 1. 8:30 p.m. tickets, $1. For reservations,FA 4-8200.“Gayety” by Claes Oldenburg a setof six happenings, three dimentionalpanoramic assemblage at LexingtonStudio Gallery, 5835 S. University, Feb.8, 9 and 10 at 8:30 p.m. Limited seat¬ing reservations necessary, WH 4-6638,9 to 6 and BU 8-9682 after 6 p.m. riding along in Tumbleweed, NoahBeery and Jessica Gaudy in MardiGras, a slice from Griffith’s im¬mortal Way Down East, and min¬ute upon luscious minute of PearlWhite hanging by her thumbs.Larry Adler, the left-wing har¬monica player, wrote the score;and we understand that at a spe¬cial showing this evening he willbe on hand to explain it and an¬swer questions. All in all it’s worththe Cinema’s reasonable prices(on weekdays) to indulge oneselfin a fine bit of entertainment.WRDanceIsraeli nam ing tonight 8 - 10 p.m.Hillel. 5715 Woodlawn.Folk Dancing tonight 8 - 10 p.m. In¬ternational House assembly hall, 50c.Folk Dancing Sunday, Ida Noyes hall,8 p.m.Country Dancing, oldest dance groupThe University of Chicago on campus, Feb. 6. 8 p.m. Ida Noyes^ ° hall.Roberto Igelsias Ballet Espanol atthe Opera House on Feb. 10, at 2:30p.m., for its annual presentation of thevaried music and dances of Spain.Cagers top Wise. Statevarsity basketball team con¬tinued its winning ways bydefeating Wisconsin State•w-49 Friday night at the StaggFieldhouse.Tlie Maroons were never in seri¬ous trouble with Wisconsin State.Joel Zemans, with 19 points andEugene Ericksen the 6'8" center,with 23 rebounds, contributedgreatly to the team's victory.The Maroons’ style of play wasconsistent with past performances.The defense, which has allowed anaverage of 49.6 points per game,third best among small collegeteams, again was a big factor inthe victory.Ericksen again controlled theboards for. the Maroons andboosted his rebound average to16.2, which is one of the topsamong small college players. Chamber Music SeriesPAUL JACOBS, pianistSaturday. February 9, 8:30 P.M.Mandel Hall UC Student $1.50Tickets at Music Dept.5802 Woodlawn or Box OfficeSaturday evening BOOK SALEContinues through February 14.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 ELUS AVE.ExhibitsThe Art Institute closes the 66th An¬nual Exhibition of American Paintingand Sculpture on the 10th. To be re¬placed with aretr-ospective exhibition ofthe works of Mark Tobi opening the 22nd.McCormick Place: the Art Galleryfrom Feb. 8. a display of Chicago pho¬tography featuring Arthur Siegal, My¬ron Davis, and Robert Amft amongothers, 10 to 5 daily.Goodspped Hall “Daniels in India”a display of fifty 18th Century water-colors done in India by James andWilliam Daniels, circulated by theSmythsonian, 1010 E. 59th, 10-5 daily. TAPE SPECIAL1800' Mylar 3.49Acetate 600' 98cAcetate 1200' 1.79MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTS MITZIE'SFLOWER SHOPS1225 E. 63rd St.HY 3-53531340 E. 55th St.Ml 3-4020Fencers lose first twoThe UC fencing team opened itsseason Saturday afternoon withlosses to Michigan State, 19-8, andIllinois, 21-6.The outstanding Maroon perform¬er was Ron Kaye, who won fourout of six matches. Films“Lawrence of Arabia” based veryclosely on T. E. Lawrence's Seven Pil¬lars of Wisdom. This almost four hourepic film of the desert campaignsaround the first World War makessome of the most exciting viewing tobe seen on the screen this year. StarsPeter O'Toole. Alec Guinness, AnthonyQuinn, and Omar Shariff. Reservedseats only at Todd's Cinestage, 170 N.Dearborn.“Forbidden Games” Feb. 7 at 8 u.nt.at the Art Institute. A story of WorldWar II children, the winner of the 1952Venice film Festival Grand prize.“Too Young to Love” Soc. Sci. 122.7:15 and 9:15 p.m.. Feb. 8.“The Ox-bow Incident” 8 and 10, aBurton Judson courts.. Feb. 8.“Wild Strawberries” and “TheMagician” by Ingmas Bergman. Man-del Hall. Continuous performances onFeb. 9. SHARE-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 For Spring Interim.For Complete InformationTELEPHONE FI 6-7263Lectures“Program of Indian Music” at ShoreyHouse. 9th floor. Pierce at 9 p.m., Feb.Thinclods crush DePaulThe varsity track teamscored a 67 l/> to 35*4 victory ll Mrs“ ‘Rajeshwari. lecturerover DePaul University at the y|,eatreField House last Thursday. International Players productionThe Maroon team, which has be- of“Don Juan in Hell” by G. B. Shaw,Feb. 8, 9 and 10, at International HouseDR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometrist'IN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERH510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNT STUDENTTRAVEL...STUDENTSCAN AFFORD !STUDY-TRAVELPROGRAMSsome scholarshipassistance availableAlso Work Camp& Hosteling42-46 land days... from $300 33 ITINERARIESfeaturing:Western & Central EuropeEastern Europe & USSR'Scandinavia • SpainTurkey • South AmericaIsrael • Greece36-60 land days... from $510alsoINDIVIDUAL AND GROUPDRIVE-YOURSELF TOURSandBERMUDA SPRING WEEKS$239 all-inclusive by airSERVICES FOR INDEPENDENT STUDENT TRAVELLERSInternational Student ID card $1.00Handbook on Student Travel (Lodgings and Restaurants) $1.00Work, Study, Travel Abroad....... $1.00European charter flights and other transportationU. S. NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATIONEducational Travel, Inc., Dept. CN20 West 38th Street, New York 18, N. YOXford 5-5070“USNSAit anon-profit organization serving the American tttidtnt community’ ecu** ewe * mi mc-stcpcd tHAot-HAiOQI*H*CM CENlirv ONLY 1H£ f**0DUCT Of THE COCA-COLA CCMPFNykJ n“The Lord is my shepherd, role. He handles himself well inI shall not want.” any type of part and never lets hisit- , own powerful personality dominatete on& relieved that J,js acting (something that Brandothe best iilms produced in the is incapable of doing). In LonelyU.S. are comedies and westerns. Are the Brave he is believable asLonely Are the Brave supports this an isolate who loves wide openbelief in many ways—but in many spaces and hates fences. Even hisways it is disappointing. Unlike affected cowboy gait is done with YEAtake a break...things go betterwith CokeBottled under the authority ofThe Coca-Cola Company by:CQCA COLA BOTTLING COMPANYof CHICAGOMONTAGE STARTS THIS SUNDAYMERCE CUNNINGHAM DANCE COMPANY WITH JOHN CAGE!$liO( 2.00. 2.50. Student discount of 50c at Reynolds Club Desk.Feb. S. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROONTHE UNIVERSITYof CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE.Buy the one that fits thopen you own and the penyou may get or borrow.Washable Blue, Wash*able Black, Peacock Blue,Jet Black, Cardinal Red,Blue Black ar.d Green.Get All-Pen Cartridges.6 for 39* or 8 for 49*Feb. 5. 1963Now all pensuse sameink cartridgeFits Sheaffer • ParkerEsterbrook • WeareverVenus • EversharpCartridge Fountain FensGrad. stu. wants room and board withGerman family to improve Germanconversation. C. Dickinsen, FA 4-8991.HELP AVAILABLESusan Levitin, teacher of flute. MrsLevitin teaches at the studies of GavinWiiliamsen, 5518 Hyde Park Blvd. Ap¬pointment by phone, 326-4121, or FA4-3525 (home).Buying a car abroad this summer? Anymake. Delivery in any city. Shipmentto U.S. included. Tourist • InternationalSales. BU 8-3045.HELP WANTEDStudents to work part time preparingsimple tax returns—established offices.South side. ST 3-6681, evenings, BE3-4053, Sundays.Student with one hour to spare onThursdays (anytime before 6 p.m.) todo about 3 pages of typing. Call ext.3265 , 3266 (MI 3-0800).CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP.(PL 2-8377)In the garden path of a great tradition,white sweatshirts emblazoned with the“Scarlet Letter’’ A, in Gothic script.Our price, $3.50 cheap, or the equiva¬lent in Pine Tree Shillings. Rags toWitches, 1318 E. 51st St. Chicago 15,285-7180.Hey kid, I need you because I love you.Bored with tapes? Will trade record¬ings in order to record. For exchangetype sessions. HY 3-3952. If you have trouble saying it...Say it with a ParkerIf you're a little shy and have difficulty say¬ing "I love you" or even "I like you verymuch"—say it with a Parker.The new Parker Arrow makes a beauti¬fully expressive gift and looks as if you paida small fortune for it. It only costs $3.95,however, which should leave you withenough date money for an impressive pres¬entation ceremony in romantic surround¬ings such as the second booth from theback in your local drugstore.The new Parker Arrow comes in black, dark blue, light blue, light gray, and brightred, with a choice of four instantly replace¬able solid 14K gold points. Gift-boxed withfive free cartridges.P. S.To girls: a Parker Arrow—besides beinga very romantic gift—comes in one size (theright ope), should last at least ten timeslonger than a scarf or a tie, and shouldbring in a harvest of correspondence you'llcherish the rest of your life.<£> PARKER Maker oi the >vorld's most wanted /tens$095New PARKER ARROW only $3CCE holds labor seminar(Continued from page 1)range of this definition.“One of the most difficult ques¬tions in connection with the dutyto bargain concept is what theparties must bargain about. It isequality apparent that the NationalLabor Relations Board and thecourts have tended over the yearsto expand the list of bargainablesubjects.Fleming said that unions arenow asking for assurance thatplants will not be closed. Alongwith mobility pay to help the em¬ployee with the expenses of mov¬ing when plants are closed.Labor's demand for a role in de¬ciding if a plant is to be closedand whether there should be trans¬fer pay have become very con¬troversial, because these problemsapproach the sensitive core ofmanagement decision-making, hesaid.“It is safe to say that an em¬ployer must now bargain about theimpact of closing his business onemployees, but the basic decisions,if taken for economic reasons, re¬mains in the employer’s hands.Ultimately, it is likely that theboard will rule the other way,since they have already done sowith respect to subcontracting,which amounts to closing a partof the plant.”Frederick Livingston, a memberof the New York Bar, said thatrecent NLRB decisions suggestthat the board seems to be work¬ ing its way toward a rule whichwould require management to bar¬gain on the actual decisions, alongwith the consequent effect whichthese will have on the employees.“The likely result of this will beto restirct mobility, retard plantmodernization, and retard techno¬logical change, all of which areessential to the economic growth,and the ultimate attainment ot fullemployment.”According to Livingston, unionshave a vested interest in main¬taining the status quo which maybe as strong as management.“Union pressure to maintain thestatus quo will either precipitatecostly strikes or force capitula¬tion by management with conse¬quent delay in technological de¬velopment and loss of comnetitiveposition ” The effect of the Board’snew policy is to throw the weightof government on the side of theopponents of technological change,”he believes.“In my view one of the basicproblems with Board practicesover the years has been the ten¬dency of the board to look overthe shoulders of the parties at thebargaining table and to tell themwhat to discuss and what not todiscuss.”“Whenever the presence of theboard is felt at the bargaining ta¬ble. it hurts the bargaining. Mare-over. an atmosphere of govern¬ment coercion is not conduciveto serious, creative, bargaining.”Professional crime cannotbe explained in terms of thedominant culture. Rather, itmust be understood as a sep¬arate way of life, flourishing inits own highly organized sub-cul¬ture.This subculture, which has itsown mores and language patterns,“eats away at the dominant cul¬ture,” and enters it only to work,according to David Maurer, alinguist at the University- of Louis¬ville.Maurer, who is studying thiscriminal subculture by analyzingits language, lectured qn campusFriday afternoon to over 100 stu¬dents.His research involves interview¬ing professional criminals, “thosewho have never done anything elselor a living” in order to gatherdata on their language. He is cur¬rently in Chicago to continue hiswork with their “living” language—language which has not yet pro¬gressed beyond a primarily verbalstage into a written form.Criminals are willing to cooper¬ate with him in his work, saidMaurer, beoause of professionalpride, because they are intelligent,or because they “have a curiosityabout language.” He keeps all hissources confidential, and avoidsfinding out anything that could getthe source in trouble, he said.Maurer differentiated betweenthe professional criminal, who be¬longs to a subculture, and the ama¬teur. who is merely a “memberof the dominant culture gonewrong.”Professionals account for over90 per cent of our crime, and yetcomprise only 5-10 per cent ofthose criminals in jail, where theydo time as a “calculated occupa¬tional risk.” Jail has no effect onthe professional, save possibly“motivating” him to “make upfor lost time” when he is freed.Jail is no stigma to the profes¬sional criminal; he does not apol¬ogize when he gets out. He feelsno guilt upon committing his crime,or even upon getting caught, saidMaurer.Mermen win one,split double meetThe University of Chicagoswimming team split a doubledual meet Friday beatingGeorge Williams 70-35, andlosing to the University of Wis¬consin 71-33. On Saturday nightthe team travelled to Peoria andsmashed Bradley 52-39.Terry Platt. George Calef. JohnMcConnell and Joel Krissoff werethe top point men in the threemeets. The foursome took numer¬ous firsts against George Williamsanrl Bradley but only Calef wasable to capture a first againstWisconsin with a victory in the'lfiO yard individual medley. Otherscorers for the Maroons were Er¬rol Elshtain, Chris Flory. and MikeAnderson. The worst thing that can befalla professional is not jail, but rathera “job in the dominant culture,”said Maurer. The professional doesnot reform, for reform would meangiving up all he stands for or be¬lieves in.A professional criminal is al¬ways recognized by other profes¬sionals. He has at his disposalmany means of identification, orwhich language is one. Specializedsecret or semi-secret argots areone characteristic of the criminalsubculture. These argots are sel¬dom spoken outside the profes¬sional criminal’s group or hishangout. Most criminals don't knowmore than one argot; as they getmore specialized in their work,they concentrate on the areots in¬volved in the kind of work they do.Professionals work under pro¬tection. which they buy like lifeinsurance, said Maurer. Indeed,“crime in our culture is a majorindustry.” Its total overall cost isabout the same as our defensebudget, $45 billion a year.Criminal society is stratifiedhorizontally and vertically. Thehorizontal strata are grifts, heavyrackets, quasi-criminals, and lonewolves. Within these groups, ver¬tical status is determined by theindividual member’s qualities.Amateurs, on the other hand,who account lor 90-95 per cent ofthe 1,000.000 people behind barsnow, are not accepted by the pro¬fessional criminal's subculture. Un¬like professionals, they “work onlywhen the opportunity presents it¬self.”The amateur reacts to the punish¬ments imposed upon them by thedominant culture with guilt or re-Today#s Events |Humanities 202 lecture, “HuckleberryFinn,” James Miller professor, depart¬ment of English, Rosenwald 2, 10:30p.m.Track meet, UC Frosh-Sophs vs. Jun¬ior colleges, Fieldhouse, 4 p.m.Wrestling, UC vs. Valparaiso Univer¬sity. Bartlett gymnasium, 4 p.m.Lecture, “Deformation of Algebraicand Analytic Singularities,” J. W. Gra-uert. professor. Mathematisches Institutder Universitat, Gottingen, Eckhart 206,4:30 p.m.United Christian Fellowship seminar,“God and Man in the Old Testament,”Chapel House. 4:30 p.m.Sermon Vespers, Bond Chapel, 5:05p.m.Folk dancing. International House,50c. 7 p.m.Christian Scientist testimony meeting,Thorndike Hilton Chapel. 7:15 p.m.Lecture on communications. ForensicAssociation. Carl Broom.National Restaurant Association, IdaNoyes. 7:30 p.m.Student Peace Union meeting. 6029University, 8 p.m.Lecture. Ethics of Extermination, Dr.Robert Palter, associate professor ofphilosophy. Student Peace Union, 6029University, 9 p.m. form. Since only the amateur hasa chance to reform and since hemay do so, “if we make any ef¬forts at rehabilitation, they shouldbe directed towards the amateur,said Maurer.Amateurs, whom Maurer re¬ferred to as “occupational crip¬ples,” have no contacts or organi¬zations which will come to theirrescue should they get caught.They do not even know how to buyprotection.Finally, the amateur lias noargot of his own. Even prisonargot which he may pick up dif¬fers from criminal sub-cultureargot.Maurer is working with RavenMcDavid. associate professor ofEnglish and an authority onAmerican dialects, on a book onAmerican English called THEAMERICAN IDIOM.He has not made direct appli¬cations of his work to criminology.A scholar is “obligated to find thetruth,” he said. His business is toget information and put it into anunderstandable form. Those whowish to apply it can build from it.'Great Chase' discussedMichael Goldstein, producerof “The Great Chase.” andLarry Adler, harmonicist whowrote the movie’s score, willtalk informally with DocumentaryFilm Group members and otherinterested students at 4 pm thisafternoon in Goodspeed basement.Classifieds IROOMS, APTS, ETC.For rent, furnished townhouse, 6039 S.University, 4 bedrooms, Steinway piano,garage. April 1-Sept. 15, FA 4-6796.Crime has its own sub-culture