Educators must help to plan aid for schoolsIf educators fail to COoper-t federal administration’s “commit- learning1 to that of high-grade on to higher education, who for Wilson also suggested that theate in the development Of a cducallon and *he f.act technological institutes, it is in- economic reasons are not doing federal education agencies should_ _ ■ _ that 1963 is a nolltlPal «U7inor mm^iiurlv elnur tlmf 4-Iiava nmcf ov-* >> h A o A I rl ®moanin(rfiil nm(n>am fwi v““v is a Polltical swing creasingly clear that there must so,” he said. . . , ..... .meanmgtul piogram lot red- year make the opportunity for lie more nourishment of fields of A federal scholarshin nm?ram ** reorgamzed- Responsibilitieseral aid to education, they federal action to strengthen high- scholarship other than science.” nfVS;? of the Office of Education andcould lose a rare opportunity to er education more golden than itthrough federal legislative andexecutive action, warned John T.Wilson yesterday.Wilson, , special assistant to ... science.' should be aimed at this group.strengthen higher education win ~ .. . ’ Alison dld not think that fed- He suggested “that it should prob- the National Science Foundationthrough federal legislative and mme ” g °l SOme time to f.raL aK pt’°^'a™s *hou,d ^ ably entail a ‘means test’ with should be reassigned to give theth.ou^h federal legislative and corn^ hm.ted to students already en- an income and asset criterion, tary and secondary education and. J , s*‘at1 should rolled in colleges and universities, above which assistance would not the latter higher education.insist on a broader federal aid He urged educators to support a be granted ” Wilson nninted nut ... , . . .program including the humanities federal scholarship program for that such a means test would ™°re • dlst?”t. futu'e»President Beadle, spoke at a con* and arts as well as science. “If high school graduates. protect existing scholarship nro JI?agtl?ei..‘,oinin.f. t.Jevention at the Univeis^y oi we are not to change the charae- “There are many college-age grams that otherwise would be Lerests in the arts well SColorado. He pointed out that the ter of our institutions of higher youngsters who should be going supplanted if no such test were the sciences to a m^dRied NSF\applied. thus eventually combining in oneTurning to the question of state agency, science and non-scienceversus federally administered aid areas of higher education and theto education program, Wilson arts. By such an evolutionarysaid, “Administrative and politi- process a higher educational andcal considerations may favor the cultural agency within the fed-use of state commissions to ad- eral government could emerge,”minister such a program over said Wilson,administration by colleges; a con- Wilson called on educators tosideration here is that the NDEA recognize the need for federal as¬sistance to higher education, andactively participate in formulat¬ing programs. He predicted that“the future will see an evenloans are already administeredthrough the colleges and universi¬ties.Wilson pointed out that “the mostVot. 71 — No. 65 University of Chicago, Friday, Feb. 8, 1963Library hours extendedStarting next week, libraryhours will be experimentallyextended one hour at night,announced Stanley E. Gwynn,assistant director of readers serv¬ices. yesterday.Until at least the end of thequarter, the social sciences readingroom, on the third floor of Harperlibrary, will remain open untilmidnight Monday through Thurs¬day evenings. On Friday evenings, tion Committee, said Gwynn. serious aspect of the government- greater improvement of the fed-university relationships, as they eral government in higher educa*are reflected in current support tion.”programs, lies in the limited “Despite the complexities,” hescope of these programs.” said, “educational leaders must“The time is at hand for the arrive at some acceptable resolu-recognition on the part of the gov- tion of the issues and effectively, ,, . . ,. ernment that science and non- present their view's and needs."number of problems, including science aspects of universities are John Williams was formerlyLast spring, the committee asked security,” he said. Currently, all inseparable components of an in- the assistant director for the Bio-Gwynn to try a midnight closing libraries on campus close at 5 p.m. stitution of higher learning,” he logical and Medical Sciences ofhour, which he did. However, “theuse was not heavy enough at thattime to justify it,” he said.The new extensions are to givethe experiment another chance,over a longer period of time—fiveweeks this quarter. Should enoughstudents remain in the library untilthe new closing times, the longerhours may be made permanent. on Saturdays. said. the National Science Foundation.30 at Liberal Party meetingthe modern language reading room former responsibility for elemen-will remain open until 11 p.m. The campus action committeeCurrently, the soc. sci. reading also requested an earlier openingroom is open until 11 p.m. Monday hour on Sundays and a later clos-through Thursday, and several de- ing hour on Saturday evenings,partmental libraries are open until Gwynn said he hoped to have the10 p.m. on Fridays. The soc. sci.reading room closes at 6 p.m.Fridays.The library’s hours have been ex¬tended in response to a request byStudent Government’s Camxjus Ac- soc. sci. reading room opened at10 a.m. on Sundays later thisquarter. It currently is open from2 to 10 p.m. on Sundays.“I am not sure we can work outSaturday night yet, because of aSG fills exec vacancies;hits hours, housing listsVacancies in the StudentGovernment Executive Com¬mittee were filled and resolu¬tions passed on women’s hoursand the housing list at a meetingof SG Assembly last night.Jay Flocks (POLIT) defeatedAl Levy (IRP) 19-14 for vice presi¬dent. David Nelson (POLIT) waselected treasurer over Don Cong-don (UP) 17-16. Joan Mahoney(POLIT) won over Bev Splane(UP) 20-14 to be elected secretary.Don Congdon (representing UP)was elected chairman of the elec¬tion and rales committee by a voteof 18-15 over Richard Bisk (IND).Richard Bisk was elected chairmanof the campus action committeewith 17 votes against Paul Hoffer(IND) with 9 votes, and SteveRosen (IND) with 2 votes.Richard Schmidt (POLIT) wentunopposed for chairmanship of thecommunity relations committee.Mike Kaufman (POLIT) was elec¬ted chairman of the National Stu¬dent Association committee with19 votes to 14 votes for LarryKinney (Law School Party) and1 vote for Dan Rieber (UP).Prior to the election, Kinneystated that according to the SGconstitution the executive commit¬tee did not and could not have aquorum when they filled the as¬sembly vacancies. As a result, hesaid that the newly appointed peo¬ple are not legal members. There¬fore, he contended, the entire as¬sembly meeting is illegal.A resolution was passed which The motion passed with only onevote against it. The vote was castby Leonard Miller (UP). After the About thirty students at¬tended the Liberal Party’s or¬ganizational meeting lastnight. They discussed their onand off campus political issues andmade plans to draft a tentativeplatform.The party was formed by RobertAxelrod and Michael Furstenberg,Independent College Representa¬tives in Student Government whofelt that UC has no party withwhich a liberal can affiliate.“The student body is dominantlyliberal,” said Axelrod. “Most ofthe students have sympathy for lib¬eral ideals and they need a partyfor their ideals.”University Party is conservativeand does not reflect campus opin¬ion, he said and POLIT, many stu¬dents feel is working toward itsown goals without due regard towhat the campus is thinking.“The formation of the new party resenting students and that the newparty should support representa¬tion by residence. “This party willassociate more with the students offthe campus,” he said.Axelrod and Furstenberg agreedthat SG can and should promoteevents important to students as present to join the various SG com¬mittees. “We must become famil¬iar with the workings of govern¬ment, and by participating in vari¬ous committees we can demon¬strate that we have serious poten¬tial as a majority party. «Several students present notedcitizens. “It is not out of place for that Liberal Party platform dif-meeting he stated that he voted wiU benefit the campus and theagainst the motion because, “It isan aspersion of the good will andintentions of the Administration inthat it charges them with contra¬dicting their public stand on dis¬crimination.”Another resolution was passedthat mandates the SFRC to enterinto negotiations concerning theadoption of the following rules: “1.That hours be eliminated, withparents’ permission, for all womenwho have been in residence forthree academic quarters. 2. Thatthe present four hours past mid¬night be modified for all first yearwomen, setting up a uniform cur¬few for week-days and a 3 a.m.curfew for both Friday and Satur¬day nights.During the debate Hoffer movedan amendment to notify studenthealth if the proposal were enacted.It was moved and passed not toconsider the amendment.Hoffer then stated that it shouldbe recognized that the removal orliberalization of women’s hours tothis extent would probably causean increase in venereal disease atthe University. He also stated thatthe women would be subjected toincreased danger from being on thestreets this late.Carol Vogel (POLIT) and HarrisJaffe (POLIT) were seated on thecommittee on recognized studentorganizations. Barbara Caress(POLIT) defeated Beverly Splane people who work in it,” Axelrodadded.Furstenberg stressed that SGshould be an organized body rep- SG to consider the community, theUS government and the United Na¬tions in addition to campus af¬fairs,” Axelrod stated. “Issuingresolutions is the first small stepand SG can do more.”Since students of the Universityare residents of Hyde Park theyshould take an interest in commu¬nity problems, according to Fur¬stenberg. “The Liberal Party willstrongly support CORE and SNCCand should work with TWO,” hecontinued.2821.On a national level, Furstenbergand Axelrod thought that the partyshould oppose with ‘witch hunts’and stand against the McCarronand Smith Acts an the AttorneyGeneral’s list.Axelrod encouraged the students\ \ Happening" to happenBy Art SondlerA novel artistic event willtake place in Lexing'con stu¬dios this evening. The event,termed a “happening” will bestaged by a controversial youngartist, Claes Oldenburg.According to Oldenburg, a “hap¬pening” is a composition of un¬limited material involving peopleand assorted other objects movingin a large space in a directed andyet somewhat unpredictable man¬ner.The audience sits in the middleof the room. The constant necessityto twist and turn to watch the ac¬tion forces the audience to play anactive role. The action is directedby Oldenburg, and is keyed to con¬vey to the audience the mood of aparticular place.Objects involved, in addition topeople, may range from giganticmodels of hamburgers to gymshoes and scrap metal.The “happenings” Oldenburg willpresent in Lexington will representChicago. The seats will be laid out On Monday, Oldenburg will bethe guest of the My Life and Yoursseries, in Ida Noyes hall at 8:30may sign up by calling extensionpm. A very limited number of in¬terested students in the CollegeThe “happenings” is the logicaloutgrowth of the college and theassemblage, he explained. It iscomposition of unlimited materialin a large space surrounding theaudience and performed in time.The method was first described inthe Mutz stage by Kurt Switers inthe 1920’s. “I base the ‘happening’on a place. I drive around in aplace and try to absorb it. It’s likeshrinking the place down to a 3-dimensional moving map.The place the “happening” is pre¬sented should resemble the physicalplace the artist wishes to represent,explained Oldenburg. For example,in Chicago he is using a large, fered little from POLIT’s. A personwho has long been active in SGthought that POLIT would continueto attract the “left third” of thecampus and that the new partywould take a middle-of-the roadpolicy.Food survey heldNearly half of the Piercetower residents answering aquestionnaire this wreek statedthat they would prefer tohave cafeteria service discontinuedrather than go on a compulsorymeal contract system. About 200of the 300 Pierce residents voted inthe poll, conducted by the Towercouncil.Sixty per cent of the studentsvoting said they would “most pre¬fer to have cafeteria service con¬tinued under the present system,with the requirement of increasedpatronage and/or prices.”The questionnaire then asked thestudents to list the following alter¬natives in order of preference: foodservice discontinued; 13 meal con¬tract (lunch and supper 6 days aweek and supper on-'Sunday) at$163 per quarter; 20 meal contract(three meals a day. large break¬fast and early dinner on Sunday)at $175 per quarter; 13 meal con¬tract with seconds on all items at$197 per quarter; 20 meal contractwith seconds on all items at $219per quarter; 10 meal contract art areasonable price to be establishedby RH&C if there is enough de¬mand.Eighty-nine students said theywould most prefer to have mealservice discontinued, and 15 stu¬dents listed this as their secondchoice.Twenty-nine persons ranked the10 meal contract first, and 45open room, whereas in New York ranked it second: 38 persons rank-he uses a very cramped, dark, ed the 20 meal contract at $175 perrented store. quarter first, and 28 personsOldenburg sees Chicago as space ranked it second; 9 persons ranked—the flat land, the lake, and the the 13 meal contract at $163 peropen sky. Its only logical that Chi- quarter first, and 41 ranked it sec-cago should be the home of arehi- ond.advocated that the housing list (UP) 20-13 for a seat on the E&R like the streets of Chicago, at right tecture he continued, because According to a letter issuedJ i i J* n • aa nnrl tiritVi niUPOrKlIS. tUiurtM rfVif onoc* oocilu tV.n fimn PtArnfl rACiAnfc:should only list non-discriminatoryhousing. It states that “the main¬tenance of a discriminatory hous¬ing list is detrimental to the Uni¬versity in that (1) it is notconductive to a truly integratedintellectual community, (2) it con¬tradicts the stated policy of theUniversity, and (3) violates sugges¬tions of the faculty report of Feb¬ruary, 1962.” Committee. angles and with several diagonalsDuring the meeting, Leonard The sinks on the east wall mayFriedman, last year’s student pres- represent the lake. things form right angles easily the time, Pierce residents were toagainst the flatness. be consulted before a decision was‘I someday would like to see made. Members of the Tower coun-ident and one of this year’s re¬called representatives requestedconsent to speak. He was ruled outof order. Ron Dorfman (POLIT)then moved that unanimous con¬sent be given to allow Friedmanto speak. There was, however, ob¬jection. The “happenings” will be pre- the difference between experience oil have spoken with administra-sented tonight, tomorrow, and Sun- and art disappear,” he concluded, tors several times in the past week,day at 8:30 pm. Admission is by I hope the “happening” is a posbi- The survey was conducted so thatreservation since there are only alimited seats. Reservations can bemade through the Humanities sec¬tion office in Lexington hall. Thecost is $1.50. ble step towards this, because it ac¬tively involves the audience. the Council representatives couldbebter know the opinions of the resi-Oldenburg has received a grant dents when discussing the matterto present “happenings” for theDallas Contemporary Museum. with administrators, according toa member of the Council.Letters to edit o5IHi.. tp‘:■■■-'£ V:• 5*-t.J§■rV Tolerate only good viewsand supress the harmful*TO THE EDITOR:The science of political scienceshows that there is no science, i.e.there is no truth concerning politi¬cal things, there are only opinions.There are two kinds of opinion inpolitical things: good opinions,those which provide for the healthof the community; and there arebad opinions, those which destroythe health of the community. Ifthese statements are true, thenone should be able to allow free¬dom of speech on these grounds:If the opinion expressed by thespeaker is a good opinion tendingto the health of the community,then we should allow him to ex¬press his views; but if the opinionis destructive to the health of thecommunity, we would be fools toallow it to be expressed. No com¬munity, liberal or totalitarian needtolerate cankerous worms in itsbody politic. The question thencomes to this: Who is to decidewhat is good and what is bad opin¬ion? In a democracy such as ours,the answer must be the people,you and I. How does one decide?Admittedly there are borderlinecases, but that of George LincolnRockwell is clear; his speech can“serve no good purpose.” Rock¬well’s opinion about political thingsis bad. If it is not bad. why didwe fight a World War to put anend to it? Rockwell should noteven be given the honor of a soap¬box platform; why do we proposeto give him one of the finest uni¬versities in the world from whichto speak? There is no compellingreason to allow him to speak here.CHARLES UMBANHOWARGraduate StudentDachau survivor protestsinvitation to Nazi RockwellTO THE EDITOR:I am one of the survivors ofNazi concentration camps Ausch¬witz and Dachau. With disbeliefand dismay I have read that agroup of undergraduate studentshave invited George Lincoln Rock¬well to speak on the campus.Since the space is limited to ashort letter, I am enclosing a fewpictures. These are not pretty pic¬tures. Most probably they willshock and offend a majority ofthe group in whose name the in¬vitation has been extended. Butthese are pictures of WHAT DIDHAPPEN not so long ago. Theyare part of the picture from whichI walked away 1712 years ago.Since the war ended we havewitnessed trials of hundreds ofNazi criminals. Very few of themwere ready to face humanity andadmit that they knew what wasdone in their name in the gaschambers of Auschwitz, Buchen-wald, and Dachau. They insistedthat nobody but a handful of peo¬ple had the knowledge of the finalsolution, or a mass extermination,if you please. However, today,what happened is history and amatter of a record.George Lincoln Rockwell free¬ly admits knowledge of it andidentifies himself with the mostmacabre side of Nazism. Not onlydoes he not deny knowledge of itbut is willing to write a secondchapter on this subject. For a fewpennies everybody interested and willing to participate can buyAnne Frank soap wrappers. Asfar as he is concerned, they mightcome in handy.I really wonder what this invi¬tation means and what it standsfor. Freedom of speech? I canappreciate this word to a full ex¬tent. I have lost my freedom fora long seven years and with itevery single member of my fami¬ly.Let me ask another question.Would the same group defendthe right of an individual with in¬fectious tuberculosis to move free¬ly on this campus? Certainly not—because some of us might be¬come infected. And yet a man whoadvocated rebirth of a movementand a second performance of adebacle which resulted in annihi¬lation of six million people is IN¬VITED and OFFERED a platformto speak. If this man will be givenan opportunity to corrupt themind even of one single individu¬al, the advocates of “freedom ofspeech’’ have failed miserably.EUGENE MILLERConsistency in ‘free speech’idea allows Rockwellto speakTO THE EDITOR:The well-meaning indignationaroused in these columns by theinvitation extended to Nazi partyleader Rockwell is an amusingcommentary on the limited outlookof our paladins of Free Speech.The reasons adduced against adiscussion with Rockwell are,among others, that he lacks ideal¬ism, is viciously paranoid, un-seholarly, and represents a trendof thought and action which hascaused untold sufferings to man¬kind.Of course these reasons may bevalid, but why does it happen thatthe same reasons are not voicedwhen representatives of the Com¬munist party are due to speak?In conscience, nobody could denythat the same objections apply intheir case. Yet, whenever Com¬munists are denied the right tospeak somewhere, the most earn¬est letters flood the Maroon con¬demning such a threat to freedom.It would be so nice if those whowant to concern themselves withFreedom were a little more con¬sistent. Those who honestly be¬lieve in the usefulness of discus¬sions with Communist spokesmenshould welcome the opportunity tomeet Rockwell and to take himseriously. Both are specimens ofthe same fauna, both are entitledto the same grisly historical niche.And while it might be true thatJews, Russians and Poles wouldbe insulated -by Rockwell’s pres¬ence on campus, nobody everthought of the Poles, Hungariansor Germans who might have feltthe same way when a Communisthas been allowed to present hisideas.MICHAEL ST. MICHAELMaroon catches Societywith pictures downFor the second time the Maroonhas given a very fine notice to thecoming exhibit of the RenaissanceSociety without mentioning thedate. “Darnells in India” opensFebruary 9th and will remain opento the public until March 3rd; Mon-day-Friday, 10-5, and Saturdays,1-5.HAROLD HAYDONPresidentCigarette attackcommunisticTO THE EDITOR:Hoch der lieber Uebermensch,Uebermensch, Uebermensch! I re¬fer, of course to the author of thefine letter in last Wednesday’sMaroon defending the Americaneconomy and way of life againstthe vicious communistic attack ofone “Median-Mode” upon the ciga¬rette industry. Let me add a fewwords to Uebermensch’s excellentOne of Hie photos sent by 1 statement—not, of course, in anyMr. Miller. | hope tiiat they may persuade "Me-rMode,” who is clearly bought and paid few by Moscow gold, buton the chance that they call backto Reason and Responsibility someof the misguided idealists and sen¬timentalists who are taken in bythe anti-cigarette propaganda.First of all, Uebermensch isquite right to ask: Why should theMaroon throw away its $800 sub¬sidy from the tobacco companies?—Simply to lengthen the lives of afew people (who may quite wellturn out to be criminals or liberalsanyway) in an already overcrowd¬ed world? Only the rash theoristwould venture to interfere in thisway in the vast circle of nature.Let us bear in mind what has hap¬pened in certain Western stateswhere predatory animals have beenoverkilled. The result has been in¬calculable harm to the entireecology of the area: degeneracyof deer and other species as thehealthful challenge to life wasrelaxed, a dangerous drop in theRocky Mt. tick population, enor¬mous herds of antelopes over¬running the lawns and flowerbedsof Denver and Cheyenne, etc., etc.Our modem society is fully ascomplex in its interdependenciesas nature, and we need to think ofthe whole and not simply of ourown personal safety. As John Don¬ne once said: No man is an island,entire to himself. Each man is acustomer, actual or potential, apart of a vast interrelated eco¬nomic whole.Think for a moment of some ofthe possible consequences to oureconomy if any appreciable per¬centage of the potential smokersjust coming into the market—andit is to these that the ads in collegepapers are directed—should be per¬suaded not to smoke. What wouldhappen to the arts in America, sogenerously kept alive by. cigaretteadvertising on television and radioand in the press? What about theTB sanitoria that would be forcedto close their doors? How manyskilled lung surgeons would bethrown out of work? What aboutthe electrocardiograph factoriesthat would shut down across theland? What would happen to themany medical researchers and bio¬chemists hired each year by thetobacco companies to prove thatcigarettes are really good for us?Could our economy stand the sharpdrop in the cough drop market?Think of the millions of acres nowsafely out of food production thatwould again be sown in wheatneeded only by foreigners who areunable to pay for it.It must by now be plain to everyhonest mind that for the Maroonto give up its cigarette advertisingwould be not merely quixotic butdownright unAmerican and sub¬versive. Rather, if should widenits scope and its usefulness to thesocial organism by soliciting adsfrom the syndicate, from heroin-pushers, from distributors of shivs,knucks, and rods, and from someof the livelier entertainment spotsin Calumet City. Properly handled,the Maroon could support the Uni¬versity instead of the other wayaround and so be completely un¬fettered in its editorial policy.L. CARSON NOMAProposes RW fan clubTO THE EDITOR:There is so much change, mis¬taken tendentiousness and seamymotive in the world today (don’tyou think?) that to come upon your women’s hours, most parents ofgirls here would not have allowedthem to enroll in the first place,and if the hours were dropped now*many girls’ parents would removethem to someplace like Podunk U.before they could pack their blacktights and leotards.That this is really the case hasnever been investigated as far as Iknow. Why not, therefore, a poll ofall parents of undergraduate girlsto find out their opinions?Not that it would matter to theadministration, of course, anymore than anyone’s opinion otherthan the administration’s everdoes. But it might satisfy somepeople's curiosity (namely, mine).JOHN ZEGLINClass of "64 (gawdwillin )Quote of the dayThe UC-North Central wrestlingmeet, scheduled for tomorrowafternoon, has been cancelled be¬cause of an outbreak of impetigoamong the members of the UCsquad.—Coach Sid steintetters policyTli* MAROON will consider forpublication letters of interest to theUniversity community.All letters must be signed, butnames will be withheld upon request.We reserve the right to edit allletters, and suggest a maximumlength of 300 words. We do notquarontee the publication of all let¬ters received.Deadline for letters Is 4 pm.movie reviewer’s gently glowingand fulsome positiveness is assweet as skipping school. R. W.has finesse and is knowledgeable.Notice (in Deja Vu Jan. 31) whathe does: He begins with a thought-provoking quotation for city-plan¬ners (also an inside joke far Arabi¬an musicians). Right off we havethe cinemeat of the week: Marien-bad and L’Avventura. Direct? Noless honest than Italians!With heart and sock, he takesintellectual strides through theselabyrinthian films seeding enlight¬enment in the dark, dismissingobscurities with the fastidiousnessof Mr. Clean, so one is back inthe lobby in three paragraphs allwonderment. And—‘the mark ofgenius—you know he is right. Youknow without appreciating how. Acoup de filme! Towering cogency!Hotcha! (Speaking as a psychiatricfern though, I could have told himnot to bother asking psychiatristsanything as they are much too busyrunning data in order to really pindown the real world) (to pin reallydown? really to pin down? to pindown really?)A frank discussion of nude swim¬ming challenges our age. We aregiven semantic evidence on NakedNights. Bergman is displayed onhis continuum. Appropriately, aHollywood flick gets last-mention.I propose an R. W. fan club. Whypot give over a whole page to hisreview? Say. the page of yourLetters to the Editor (after this ispublished)??J. B„ PSYCHIATRIC FERNExamines imaginary courtstudents judge professorsTO THE EDITOR:Last night between meditationand calisthenics I had a dream:I sat unseen at the closed trial ofProfessor Phobe, a visiting so¬ciologist, who was called beforethe Supreme Student Tribunal toanswer the charge of holding onlypolitically expedient views. Hiscase had come to the attention ofthe Student Advisory Committee,a panel of eight students responsi¬ble for reviewing alleged violationsof moral and social custom byUniversity employees. Ascertain¬ing that the evidence was of suf¬ficient weight, the SAC duly re¬ferred the case to the SupremeStudent Tribunal for jwosecution.The only sounds in the court¬room were the rustle of papersand the low voice of ProfessorPhobe conferring with his lawyerand faculty sponsor. Hus graveface attested to the seriousnessof the charge: unless exoneratedhe faced the possibility of an aca¬demic career restricted to thelesser State universities- The sixstudent judges entered and slowlytook their seats; at a signal fromone of them the chairman of theStudent Advisory Committee roseand began reading the indictment,“The Supreme Student Tribunalhas been asked to convene in or¬der to consider the case of Pro¬fessor Argo L. Phobe. .JACK HARDYSuggest a poll of parentson women’s hoursregualationTO THE EDITOR:With all the fervor over women’shours, one suggestion remains tobe made.In the course of conversation,Dean Wick once suggested to methat if the University did not have\ 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 Information„ TELEPHONE FI 6-7263i iChicago MaroonEditor-in-chief Laura GndofskyBusiness Manager .... Kenneth C. HeylAdvertising Mgr. . . Lawrence D. KaplanNews Editors . Andrew SteinRobin KaufmanCity News Editor John T. William*Asst. City News Editor.. .Gary FeldmanFeature Editor .......... .Ross ArdreyCulture Editor........ .Vicky ShiefmanRewrite Editor Sharon GoldmanAsst. Rewrite Editor........ . Bob LeveyPhoto Coordinators ...... Les GourwitzStan KarterNight Editors John SmithMike SilvermanSports Editof Rich EpsteinErratum Editor Sherwin KaplanOffice Manager ........ Anita ManuelBilling Secretary .... Mary GottschalkEditor Emeritus Jay GreenbergStaff: Pete Rabinowitz, Barry BayerM. Stevens. Sue Goldberg, Ron Dorfman,Jane Rosenberg, Lucy Reals, Tom Heagy,Russ Kay, Stephen Sharnoff, Harris Jaffe,Sammy Fuqua, Howard Rosen, MichaelKaufman, Jim Byer, Gail Ruben, JayFlocks, Arthur Kaufman, Sue Guggen¬heim, Kathy Fritz. Nancy Erickson, JoeCalkowski, Jon Roland, Tom Assens, GuyOakes, Martha Grossblatt, Glen Miller,Rich Gottieb, Dan Gross, Murray Batt,Myrna Bell, Paul Greenberg, Mary Car¬penter, Connie Carnes, Paula Houser,David Aiken, Hene Barmash, Sherry Bas-baskus, Cynthia Spindell, Deidre Holloway.Carol Horning, Art Sondler, Don Baer,Jim Means, Irv Levenstein, Paula Foz*zy, Barbara Caress, Steven Becker.Stan Karter, John Yaeger, SteveSaeket, Murray Schacher.Issued free of charge on the Quad¬rangles every Tuesday through Fridayduring the academic year by studentsof the University of Chicago. Addresscorrespondence to: Chicago Maroon,1212 E. 59 Street, Chicago 37. Illinois.Telephones: MI 3-0S00. exts. 3265, 3266.Printed at West Side Press, Chicago,Subscription by mail is $4 per year.The C1MW is a news alliance, con¬sisting of the Maroon, the MichiganDaily, the Wayne State Collegian, andthe Daily IUini.The Maroon is a charter member ofthe United States Student Press Asso¬ciation, and subscribes to its newsservice, the Collegiate Press Service(CPS).Computer course setA course in elementary program-ming for the 7090 computer usingt h e FORTRAN programmingmethod was begun Wednesday byRichard Schwemm.The course will be held Monday,Wednesday, and Friday, 1-2:30,February 6-20, aft the ResearchInstitutes, 5640 S. Ellis, RoomC-B12. There is no fee or pre¬requisite for the program. Stu¬dents who wish to register shouldcall extension 4086.Juvenile delinquency discussed Language iab aids studentsThe social organization of Street gangs,” he continued. “Wecommunities is in many ways assume that street gangs arethe cause and quite possiblv and that, as groups, theyJ r. nave no particular goals. He com-the cute Of JUtenile deliliquen- pared them to pieces of machinerycy, agreed four Chicago area social which are not intrinsically good orworkers at a panel discussion pre- bad. They may, however, do goodsented for the Social Sciences 122 or bad things.course yesterday. ...Illegal activities occupy only aThe members of Hie panel were minor portion of total group lite.Hans W. Maittick, director of the “Destroying the group,” he con-Chicago Youth Development Proj- eluded, “would destroy the anchoreot of the Chicago Boys Club; it provides for the individual mem-Dietrieh Reitzes, of the Commissionon Youth Welfare; and Russell Ho-grefe of the Chicago Youth Center.Mattick said that there wouldhave to be a major change in oureconomic outlook and total socialstructure in order to achieve a bers. There foi e wewith the group.” aim to work quent may very well be the person A new language laboratorywho is abnormal.” designed to teach seven dif-The community must be involved ferent languages simultane-in the legal process when it applies ously has been instituted into the delinquent, according to the Social Sciences building. TheR„ilt70c T4 , ,,, • , . laboratory, which was donated toRwlzes It should intervene m ,hc University though a $100,.cases where the policemen are un- 000 grant from the Ford Founda-fair. “One way to deal with de- tion, is equipped with seventy sep-Linquency is to change the police- arate booths, and makes use ofman’s concept of delinquency,” he a ]?irifura\ S0Vnd sy®tem.... Instruction is available in twen-coneiuaea. ty-six languages at the laboratory.One of the most important prob- They are Greek, German, Ice-lems with which community or-Hogrefe said that delinquency is ganizers must deal is alienationdefined by the action and the waythat the community reacts to theaction. He differed with Mattickwho argued that delinquency was apermanent solution to the educa- problem related primarily to eco-tional and occupational problems nomic and psychological depriva-facing our young people. tion. “In many communities,” IIo-“We cannot generalize about grefe continued, “the non-delin- and anonymity of many of the oc¬cupants of public housing units,according to Hogrefe. They must landic, Swedish, Norwegian, Ur¬du, Hindi, Bengali, Tamil, Na-hautl, Old English, Old Irish,Arabic, Persian, Turkish, Chinese,Japanese, Italian, Albanian, Span¬ish, French, Russian, Polish,be pulled and in some way made Czech, Serbe Croatian, and Bul-to interact with the total commu- garian.nity, he concluded. Eric P. Hamp, professor ofwe cannot generalize about grefe continued, “the non-delin- mm III ■■New education professor Eskr,<lge hoWs mass ra,bIVl /l) 'A f MQh 1 I D£lAll1ti UrOmiOrl O K/M1 f Mortm »-»i nit I r» 1 miDan C. Lortie, an authority versity of Kansas City. He wason the sociological and psycho- born October 2, 192b. More than 1000 people at- worried about Negro rights untiltended a mass rally and recep- Woodlawn became part of the Fifthtion for Chauncey Eskridge EZX "*logical aspects Of teaching, Lortie received his BA from Me- last night with free picnic din- club 1 he * or gets^f tfbou r the111^'V faculty of the Gill University, Montreal, and his ners and unlimited beer. Four gro).'” ^ ^(iiuduate School of Education as arKj from the University brand new $100 bills a sixteen inch , , . ,an Associate Professor. iVlA ana i nU IIom the Umversi:fcy Philco TV hams bacons and nv- He 1S no Democrat no fnendI ortip is nrpcpntiv nn t °f Chicago, where his major field , ’ . ’ . ’ of labor, and a phony friend of theLome is presently on the fac- . ’ J Ions, were given out m a door prize *»ully of Harvard University. His was sociology. lottery. iNegro.appointment is effective at the During 1952-54, he was Field The rally sponsored by Labor’sbeginning of the Summer quar- Director of the National Opinion Committee for the election ofter, 1903. Research Center at the Universi- Chauncey Eskridge, was held atLortie, 36, will teach courses ty of Chicago and from 1955-57 the Grand Ballroom, 6351 Cottagein education and educational ad- he served as Associate Director Grove. Distributed was “Theministration, emphasizing the so- 0f the University’s Kansas City Voice,” the official democraticciological-psychological aspects of study of Adult Life. organ of the first Congressionalteaching and administration., ... districttCr^' MAMS “ Despres „ at! talk." saidwvst AdminluaUan Cemor ol biology he has examined Eskddge. 'Tve beep fighting forthe Graduate School ot Education. •"“«« °'her ‘"“Tf,' *tie.role ° "eeroef.f<f.45 yeaf j .f* }The Center, a research lacilitv (or the,,<>acher and ,,he lra,nmg and years oldr,1 know *hat “ **the teaching ot administration is carly carecrs of lawyers- Leo" DesPr<* ^come linguistics, in accepting the lab¬oratory, said, “This laboratorywill give the teacher the mostmodern facilities and also assistinvestigators in such disciplinesas anthropology and linguisticsto prepare for work in theirfield.”Besides the tapes used in thelaboratory, research materialsare also available for languagesnot offered in the university cur¬riculum. These materials areavailable for the following lan¬guages: Korean, Tzeltal, Danish,Welsh, Indonesian, Dutch, Thai,Finnish, Kpelle, Ojibwa, Burmese,Rumanian, Y o r u b a, Portugese^and Hungarian.Students may request any tapeupon entering the laboratory, andthere are tape recorders in twelveof the booths for checking pro¬nunciation against the instruction¬al tape. There is also a seminarroom in the laboratory, and aprojector and screen.Meeting today for groupswishing to show filmsAny organization interested iashowing films on campus this yearis invited to a meeting today at10:30 am in the Student Activitiesoffice.VALENTINE'S DAY IS FEBRUARY 14BOOK SALE CONTINUESOur fin« group of sole books offers wonderful qift choices for valentines.Sale ends February 14, so buy now for best selection.THE UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE.the teaching of administration, isdirected by ROALD F. CAMP¬BELL, the William Claude ReavisProfessor of Education at the Uni¬versity.Since 1957, Lortie has been amember of the Graduate Schoolof Education at Harvard Univer¬sity. Currently he is a lecturer ineducation and a research associ¬ate ai Harvard’s Center for FieldStudies.Previously he taught at Roose¬velt University, in Chicago, TheUniversity of Chicago and the Uni-Classifieds |ROOMS, APTS., ETC.For rent; furnished townhouse, 6(139 S.University, 4 bedrooms. Steinway piano,garage. April 1-Sept. 15. FA 4-6796.Grad, student wants room and boardw'German family to improve Germanconversation. C. Dickinson, FA 4-8919Sleeping room, lake view. PL 2-7457.HELP AVAILABLE Open Only To Students OfUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOVICEROYBasketball Contest * 3(Closes Feb. 13th)Light housekeeping, personal laundry,6 day work week. Salary open. 681-3790.PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER* IBM EXECUTIVE TYPEWRITER* PHOTOSTATS* STENORETTE DICTAPHONE* LETTERS DICTATED VIA PHONE* MANUSCRIPTS. ETC.Hyde Park 3-3149Susan Levitin, teacher of flute. Mrs.Levitin teaches at the studies of GavinWilliamson, 5518 Hyde Park Btvd. Ap¬pointment by phone, 326-4121, orFA 4-3525 (home)HELP WANTEDStudent, two hours, five afternoons perweek. $1.25 per hour. Babysitting andlight house work. FA 4-4019.FOR SALE1959 Opel station wgn. PL 2-2190, $650.TIRES AND BATTERIES. 10-30 percent discount. All American brand andMichelin X, PirelH, and Dunlop. CallNO 7-6732 anytime.Ice hockey equipment for sale. Reason¬ably priced. Gloves, shin guards, elbowpads, head guards. Call 684-6081 after8 p.m.Book case, phonograph stand and coun¬ter stool. Reasonable prices. Call NO7-3609, after 6 p.m. -.For sale; two London-Paris to NewYork flight tickets. Sept. 13, 1963 2 for$250 or 1 for $150. Call 324-8275PERSONALSGeorge,Please take me to the WASHING¬TON PROM. M.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 equivalentin Pine Tree Shillings. Rags to Witches.Write Maroon, Box A, 1212 E, 59th St.Have vou got your tickets for GOODNEWS, Fink? Well, get themII! First Prize...$100^„Second Prize.. ,$25?2Ten 3rd Prizes...=S10<?4C„12 WINNERS ON THIS CAMPUS IN EACH CONTEST.Four contests in all. .. New contest every twoweeks . . . exclusively for the students on thiscampus! You’ll find complete rules printed onOfficial Basketball Contest Entry Blanks.Ballot Boxes and Entry Blanks are located at;Ida Noyes DeskUniversity BookstoreReynold’s Club Barber ShopInternational House Gift Shoppe"v ENTER NOWAND WIN INot too Strong...Not too Light...Viceroy^ /ifcg*got the Taste / * DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTthat’s right!©1963. BROWN 4 WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CORP. Alsoavailablein new“Slide-Top"Case University Theatre presentsONE NIGHT ONLY! SUNDAY, FEB. 10thMERCE CUNNINGHAMAND DANCE COMPANYAs imaginative and exciting as anything modern dancehas ever produced, Mr. Cunningham is a superb dancerblessed with a magnificent company. Musical directorJohn Cage is famous in his own right for his preparedpiano compositions, as is pianist David Tudor.$1.50, $2.00, $2.50 — STUDENT DISCOUNT 50cFEBRUARY 15. 16. 17. 22. 23a rollicking campus musical ofthe roaring 20V.GOOD NEWS!Like many popular off-broadway musicals, this will be a good-naturedspoof of the 20’s musical, with songs like “Varsity Drag,” “JustImagine,” and “Lucky in Love.”$2.00. 2.50. Student Discount of 50cMARCH 1, 2. 3a modern verse dramaBLOOD WEDDINGby Federico Garcia LorcaConcerned with love that cannot become marriage, this play tracesthe movement of tribal ritual among the hill people of Castille towardan inescapable tragic end. Performed in the Law School Theatredesigned by Eero Saarinen, the play will feature live Flamenco music.$1.50, 2.00. Student Discount of 50cALL TICKETS AT REYNOLDS CLUB DESKFeb. 8. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROONn.» • * vi •'McRae discusses socialism Czech Mothers prefer nurseries'•v*.I » Leroy McRae, National Or¬ganizational Secretary of theYoung Socialist Alliance, willspeak tonight on “The BlackRevolt in America.”McRae, a Negro, will discussthe relation of socialism to civilrights.He was an observer at the re¬cent SNCC conference in Nash¬ville. In 1961 he was a freedomrider on project “Freedom High¬ways.” During the nationwidedemonstrations in support of thefirst Southern sit-ins he was sec¬retary of the Philadelphia YouthCommittee -Against Segregationwhich organized the picket linesthere. In 1958 he was a NationalExecutive member of the YouthMarch to Washington. He playedan active role in the Committeeto Aid the Monroe (NC) Defend¬ants, and was temporary secre-Mondeilo will playEdward Mondeilo. the Universityof Chicago organist, will give anorgan recital at Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel, next Tuesday at8:30 pm.The program includes: Toccataand Fugue (Dorian), J. S. Bach;Three Schubler Chorale Preludes,J. S. Bach: Chorale in A-niinor,Cesar Franck: Benedictus, MaxReger; and Toccata and Fugue,Op. 59, Max Reger.Admission to these recitals iswithout ticket and without charge. tary of the youth committee. Pres¬ently he is an active member ofthe Harlem Anti-Colonial Com¬mittee.McRae attended the Universityof Pennsylvania as a pre law stu¬dent. While there, he was presi¬dent of the University’s YoungSocialist Club.His talk will begin tonight at7:30 p.m. in Ida Noyes Hall.Leaves for ParisBruce Morrissette, actingchairman of the departmentof romance languages and lit¬eratures, will go to Paris nextweek in connection with the publi¬cation of his latest book, Romansde Robbe-Grillet.While in Paris, Morrissette willtake part in a public debate onthe New Novel on February 19.The debate coincides with thepublication of his new book andcenters around the new image ofRobbe-Grillet which the book pre¬sents.Morrissetfe’s book analyzes allof the novels of Robbe-Grillet, theacknowledged leader of the Nou¬veau Roman group of Frenchnovelist and the author of the film,Last Year at Marienbad. He re¬lates Robbe-Grillet’s work to con¬temporary existentialism and phe¬nomenology and to his ownliterary theories. by Arthur Kaufman(The author, a student in the rolleee,traveled through Czechoslot akia lastsummer.)“Most working mothersprefer their children live hereat the nursery all week be¬cause it frees the mother towork and provides excellent carefor her children.” This was theclaim of an attendant at one ofthe country's newest nurseriesfound on the outskirts of Prague,Czechoslovakia. The creche (theCzech word for nursery) is a formof state child-rearing spreadingrapidly throughout the nation.The creche varies from Americannurseries in many respects, themost striking being that the chil¬dren live at the nursery all week,returning home only on weekends.There are, however, some day nur¬sery children. The primary pur¬pose of the creche is to permityoung mothers to join the Czechworking force, rather than remainbound to the home, caring for theirtoddlers.After the birth of each child thestate gives all working mothers 6months off with full pay. Thecreches therefore begin to acceptbabies from the age of 6 monthsrather than at 3 or 4 years, as istypical in the United States. Thecreche can take care of children upto 6 years of age, at which timethey begin their regular lowerschooling.THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESSALUTE: JERRY CUNNINGHAM This particular creche in Pragueis almost exclusively an all-weekaffair for the children. The mothersbring the children in on Mondaymorning, before they go to work,spend Thursday afternoon with thechildren, then take them home Sat¬urday for the weekend.As is the case with numerousother institutional forms in Czech¬oslovakia. this convenience is con¬nected with a particular economicunit; in this case a television fac¬tory. The entire creche, a modern,two-story structure, was built bythe donated labor of all the tele¬vision factory workers, for the chil¬dren of the women in their factory.It can house 80 children and staffs15 adults and one doctor. We weretold that such projects were com¬mon in Czechoslovakia and a na¬tional aim is to have each factorysupplied with its own creche.The most striking thing about thecreche to one who is unfamiliarwith it is the repetition of every¬thing. Children are divided intotwo groups: those under threeyears of age. and those above, thelatter located on a second floor.The only real difference betweenthe facilities for the groups is thatthe older children have largerbeds, fatter toys, and longer cloth¬ing than the other.Since one of the purposes of thecreche is to orient the youngsterinto socialist society, everyone’sclothes, toys, and privileges areNorthwestern Bell has been impressed with Jerry Cunning¬ham (B.A., 1960) right from his first assignment. In fact,it was during this assignment that Jerry was selected toattend the special Bell System Program at NorthwesternUniversity.After completing this program, Jerry was named Assist¬ant Manager in Sioux City. His work there earned him a promotion to Manager in Northwestern Bell’s Marshall¬town, Iowa, Commercial Office. He's now responsible forthe telephone needs of 9200 customers.Jerry Cunningham and other young men like him inBell Telephone Companies throughout the country helpbring the finest communications service in the world to thehomes and businesses of a growing America.BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES the same. A typical clothes closetmight have a high stack of bluepajamas, long rows of tiny, grayjackets, neat little Tows of yellow,furry slippers. No child’s clothingis distinct from any other’s, savefor a variety of shirts which theyshift around from day to day.The one distinguishing mark eachchild does have, however, is hisown symbol: a flower, a toad, orperhaps an egg. The symbol is inplace of the child’s name since hecannot yet read. The symbol isreproduced on every article as¬sociated with the child. It is sewnonto all his clothes, his pillow case,his blankets; stamped onto hiscups, his toothbrush, his crayons;and labeled on his cubbyhole. Ap¬parently the women from the TVfactory make many of the clothesand sew all of the symbols onarticles.The day schedule for the chil¬dren is no different from that inthe United States, with its restperiods and play times. When wevisited the creche, children wereobliviously snoozing in the sum¬mer’s outdoor warmth under parti¬colored quilts. We found one lineof them under a row of sun-um¬brellas. Another row was on topof a small hill. An attendant keptguard over them making suretheir heads got some air. Everytime a miniature head disappearedunder the quilt she would run overand pull it out again patting itscheek affectionately.According to a worker at thecreche, "there is almost no prob¬lem of children wanting to go homebecause they are too young. Chil¬dren have a better time grow ing upwhen they are with many otherchildren, so a family with only oneor two children benefits by bring¬ing them to the creche. A motherwho has many children usuallydoesn't work because her job athome is so huge; therefore thatproblem takes care of itself."Mothers are much happier be¬cause they can now thoroughly en¬joy their children instead of hav¬ing to think of the ‘dirty laundry.*They are also able to be more cre¬ative and productive by workingoutside the home.”Wild StrawberriesTo be shown tonightIngmar Bergman’s "WildStrawberries” and "The Magi¬cian” will be shown this eveningin Mandel Hall. The showing issponsored by Student Govern¬ment."Wild Strawberries” will beshown at 6 and 9:40, while "TheMagician” is scheduled for 7 :45and 11:30. Admission is 75c forstudents and $1 for all others."Wild Strawberries” won theGrand Prize at the Berlin FilmFestival in 1959.JOBS IN EUROPEGrand Duchy of LuxembourgFeb. 1, 1963 - Would you like towork at a Swiss resort, a Norwe¬gian farm, a German factory, aconstruction site in Spain, or usummer camp in France? Thou¬sands of paying summer jobs(some offering $190 monthly) areavailable in Europe to U. S. Stu¬dents.The American Student Infor¬mation Service, celebrating its 6thAnniversary, will award TRAVELGRANTS to first 1500 applicants.For 20 - page Prospectus, com¬plete selection of European jobsand Job Application (enclose $1for Prospectus, handling and air¬mail reply) write, naming yourschool, to: Dept. F, ASIS, 22 Ave.de la Liberte, Luxembourg City,Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. Thefirst 8060 inquiries receive a $1coupon towards the purchase ofthe new student travel book, Earn,Learn & Travel in Europe.Feb, 8, m3<v '. ■statistics announced ".-V ■ . ' ■ ■ ■'Discusses medical ethics, About 6000 students are en¬rolled on the quadrangles thisquarter, according to a reportissued by the office of theregistrar this week. This is about300 fewer than were enrolled in theautumn quarter, but 120 more thanwere enrolled at this time lastyear.The increase in students sincelast year can be explained by thefact that extension courses former¬ly held at the downtown center arenow being held on the quadrangles,Two thousand and fifty-nine stu¬dents are registered in the College, a drop of about 15 since this timelast year. There are about 100 few¬er students in the College now thanthere were in the autumn quarter.Thirty-six College students grad¬uated in the autumn convocation,but new students are not admittedto the College in the winter quarter.Enrollment in the four GraduateDivisions is 2373, and that in theProfessional schools is 1414.The division of Social Scienceshas the largest graduate enroll¬ment, 995, an increase of nearly100 since last year. Enrollment inthe Division of the Humanities in¬creased by 30, since last winter. while enrollment in each of theother divisions remained about thesame. ,' vThe Law school, with 405 stu¬dents, had the largest enrollment ofthe Professional schools. This rep¬resents a gain of about 20 sincelast year. The Business school has370 students, a drop of 24 sincelast year.Enrollment in the School of Ed¬ucation is now 86, an increase of20. Enrollment in the Libraryschool is 94, an increase of 26 sincelast year. Enrollment in the Divini¬ty school now stands at 227, an in¬crease of about 30 since last winter. Today medicine has ma¬tured in returning to both theliteral and philosophic contentof 'the Hippocratic oath, stat¬ed Ilza Veith, associate professorin the field of medical history, ata meeting of the UC history Clublast night.There are three mile stones in thefield of medical ethics, Mrs.Veith stated. The famous oath ofHippocrates did not really con¬form to medical practic in theancient world. Indeed the phy i-eian was not considered to have aSummary of Enrollment by Academic Unit and Status (a)Total Total Total TotalAcademic Unit 1-30 3-17 Aut. Aut.2 3 4-9 19*3 1962 1962 1961College 2059 2076 2155 2163Bio. Sei. 36 190 226 _ 223 235 230Medicine 254 254 260 257 262Total Bio, Sei. 290 190 480 483 (492) (492)Humanities 257 167 424 394 464 428Phy. Sciences 159 315 474 471 495 491Social Sciences 481 514 995 889 1001 930Divisions 1187 1186 2373 2237 2452 2341Business 312 58 370 394 391 428Education 86 86 66 95* 71Law School 405 405 383 428 392Library 81 13 94 68 96 73Social Serv. 211 21 232 232 239 235Divinity- 125 102 227 196 —Schools 1220 194 1414 1339 1481 1401Total: Grads 2407 1380 3787 3576 3933 3742Others 190 190 256 268 289Total: Quadrangles 2407 1380 190 6036 5908 6356 6384(6)(a) Academic Status codes: 2— -Master’s and First ProfessionalLaboratory School, Postdoctoral and Non-degree students,(b) In Autumn, 1961 (Final Week Report), 190 degree students wereregistered in “University College” credit courses in the Loop.In the present quarter, 182 degree-candidate students are reg¬istered for Extension-sponsored credit courses on the Quad¬rangles.In order, therefore, to compare properly Autumn 1961 vs.Autumn 1962 Quadrangles enrollments, the 190 students reg¬istered downtown last Autumn have been added to the Quad¬rangles total for that Quarter. Thus, the Autumn 1962, (FinalWeek) Quadrangles enrollment has decreased by -28. not in¬creased by 4- 162 which addition of the gain or loss figures in therighthand column seemingly indicates. Watercolor display opensAn exhibition of 50eighteenth - century Englishwatercolors executed in Indiaby Thomas Daniel and hisnephew, William, will be in Good-speed Hall from Saturday Febru¬ary 9th until March 3rd.IM scoreboardOne upset and one near up¬set highlighted last night’sintramural basketball play.Once - defeated Mead gaveDodd their first loss 25-20 throwingthe College House Blue Leagueinto a three-way tie betweenHenderson North, Dodd and Mead.Phi Delta Theta led unbeatenPsi Upsilon 19-16 at half time buthad to play the last few minuteswith only four men after one fouledout, and lost 31-29, If the losslessPsi U can beat the winless ThetaBeta Tau Monday night the Fra¬ternity Championship is theirs.Unbeaten Thompson South needsonly a win over oft-beaten ShoreySouth Monday to take first placein the College House Bed League.The Unknowns finished twogames ahead In the Divisional RedLeague with a 7-0 record. TheProphets from CTS beat the Out¬laws to finish first in the DivisionalBlue League. The exhibition, which is beingcirculated throughout the countryby the Smithsonian Institution, isbeing presented here by the Ren¬aissance Society of the Universityof Chicago in collaboration withthe Committee on Southern AsianStudies. A preview of the exhibi¬tion for the members of the Soci¬ety, members of the Committee onSouthern Asian Studies, and theirguests will be held tomorrow at8 pm.The Daniels were among the firstEuropean illustrators of the Indianscene. All the watercolors in thepresent exhibitions were done bythe Daniels between 1786 and 1793during their journey through theremote parts of both northern andsouthern India. Their work, as awhole, is said to have been one ofthe most important single influ¬ences on an entire generation’sconception of India.It was from architectural draw¬ings such as that of the HindiTemple in the Fort of Rohtasgarchthat the West began to form itsidea of Hindi architecture. Sketchesof the tomb of Sher Shah, of theancient gate of a capital of Bengal,and of the ruins of the Palace ofRohtasgarch had major influencein creating the vogue for the ex¬otic which continued throughout thenineteenth century in England. sacred or holy function, but wasin actuality an itinerant artisanwhose ambitions was to achievefame.Two other works of Hippocrateshave a more direct bearing onethics than the Oath, which dealsmore with etiquette. These workshave an immediate applicability tothe daily life of a physician eventoday, said Mrs, Veith.The second important work onmedical ethics was written by Ar¬nold of Villanova. He contributedthe only document of the middleages concerned entirely with medi¬cal behavior, she said. In contrastwith Hippocrates, problems of aphysician are delt in a practicalway without any attempt at ideal¬ism. The Hippocratic Oath returnedliterally in the Renaissance, but thespirit of the Oath was not revived.The Doctors during the Renais¬sance, Veith explained, were con¬cerned with the advancement ofthe art, of medicine. Ethics, accord¬ing to Veith, were ignored, and per¬sonal codes of morality were thephysicians guide.In 1803, Thomas of Pereivak, anEnglish physician, published whatis essentially the modern code ofMedicine. This work, in minutedetail, covered all the eventualitiesof moral and social behavior, shesaid. Also, for the first time, inter¬nal discipline was advocated formedical society, and in 1847 a per¬sonal code w as adopted by thenewly founded AMA. In this codehumanitarian doctrines were fin¬ally wedded with the literally pre¬cepts of Hippocrates.Miss UC tea SundayThe tea for judging candidatesfor Miss University of Chicago willbe held Sunday afternoon, at 3 pm,in the west lounge of Ida NoyesHall.Seven candidates will be selectedby a panel of three faculty judges.Forty-seven student organizationsand dormitories have submittednominee® for the honor.CAP & GOWN CAP & GOWNEXCERPT FROM OCR TOWN“I often wonder why people like to be buried in Woodlawn and Brooklyn when theymight pass the same time up here in New Hampshire . , . Over there are some CivilWar veterans. Iron flags on their graves . . . had the notion that the Union oughtto he kept together, though they never seen more than fifty miles of it themselves.All they knew was the name, friends —- the United States of America . . , Whereveryou come near the human race, there’s layers and layers of nonsense . . .“Now there are some things we all know, but we don’t take’m out and look at’m toooften. We all know that SOMETHING is eternal. And it ain’t the houses and itain’t the names, and it ain’t the earth and it ain’t even the stars. , , , All the greatestpeople have been telling us that for the past five thousand years and yet you’d besurprised how people are always losing hold of it. ♦ . . Gradually, they lose hold ofthe earth , . . and the ambitions they had , , , and the pleasures they had . . . andthe things they suffered . . . and the things they loved.. , (T)hey slowly get indifferent to what’s going on . . , all those terribly impor¬tant things grow pale. ,. . And what’s left when memory’s gone, and your identity . ,— Thornton W, ildvr —Order the UNIVERSITY YEARBOOK at RegistrationmmiiiiiniMH::;f !.-.,fe Fail-Safe distorts many facts Raise High' falls flatFail-Safe, Eugene Burdick andHarvey Wheeler, McGraw - Hill,1962. 286 pp, $4.95.Take a highly controversialsubject — say, the possibilityof accidental nuclear war;capitalize on a natural publicconcern about it; distort the factspertaining to it; write it in theform of a suspense novel; find apublisher who will bedeck k witha bright red cover with little con¬centric circles representing, (wesuppose) radar, and big black let¬ters for the title: state in allleading communication media thattt is “based on truth" and youhave a best selling novel. Youdon’t have much else, but then,you don’t need anything else.Asked (in a Saturday Reviewinterview, issue of October 20,1962) why they wrote Fail Safe,Messrs. Burdick and Wheelerstated it was written because theybelieve the possibility of nuclearwarfare to be “inevitable underthe present circumstances;” thatthey “don’t know of a scientistwho has a direct knowledge of‘fail-safe’ (the safety mechanismdesigned to prevent the possibilityof Burdick’s and Wheeler’s in¬evitable) who isn’t worried:” andthat “this is something j>eopleought to know.” We don’t presume to determinewhat people ought to know, butwe find the phrase a rather hack¬neyed and overworked hook uponwhich to hang just about anythingin order to call it truth. Fail-Safeas a novel, a form in which no oneeven tries to justify its existence,is an insult to anyone with theability to read. As an “essay on theend of man” (a phrase coined toadd status to a fictional workwhich couldn’t make it), it wouldbe dangerous if it weren’t so over¬done as to be ludicrous. from about page 5. No one walks—everyone sprints; telephones don'tring—they shatter the death-likesilences; people don’t think—theyhave quick, irrational flashes (ofinsight?). How long the readerfinds the edge of his chair com¬ “Raise High the Roofbeam, Carpenters,” and “Seymour: An Introduc¬tion,” Jerome David Salinger. Little, Brown and Co. 19C3. $4.®*.The cult which has magically sprung up around JeromeDavid Salinger, especially in Prep School and College sets, willwelcome, no doubt, the belated publishing in hard cover of“Raise High the Roofbeam, Carpenters,” and “Seymour: AnIntroduction.’’ The former has beenChamber Music SeriesPAUL JACOBS, pianistSaturday, February 9, 8:30 P.M.Mandel Hall UC Student $1.50Tickets at Music Dept.5802 Woodlawn or Bex OfficeSaturday evening"l Iakvard University’s Internation¬al Relations Council will send adelegation to a model VS forum inWashington this month. The liar-t urd lads will play-act as a delega¬tion from the Soviet Union or oneof the Soviet satellites. Play-actfiercely, Harvard! Thump shoe ondesk, 0 Crimson! Don’t Puses-footwith Adlai! And for Kennedy's sakedon't get Adlai riled up. He has aturrihle. temper,and a killer in¬stinct. (Carbonto Alsop.y* J For ike current issu*of NATIONAL REVIEWwrit* for free copy,150 0. 35 St., NewYork 16, N.Y. For those of us who haven’t yettaken the icy plunge into the depthsof atomic era realisties and comeup with the authors’ pearls ofknowledge-inspired panic, Fail-Safeis the story of what would happenif the fail-safe mechanism shouldactually fail and thus bring about awar. Despite what passes for char¬acterization and description in thenovel (and, as long as we’re speak¬ing about mechanisms which fail. . .), the reader’s attention isfocused upon the President and hisattempt to find some acceptablesolution to the problem broughtabout by a group of six US bombersstreaking towards Moscow on abombing mission.The cause of this? Failure in thefail-safe machanism. What, spe¬cifically? Nothing, specifically; ablown fuse, the failure to detect apuff of smoke, a mix-up in UScommunications, the jamming ofUS detection devices by the USSR,and a host of other things. Thereally significant Point that Fail-Safe makes, ironically enough, isnot that a failure in the mechanismis highly likely, but rather thatonly a series of miscalculations, er¬rors, and unfortunate quirks of fatecould bring about the “inevitable.”Our sympathies, of course, arewith the unnamed President. Forhe is young, attractive, outspoken,with an accent born of his NewEngland heritage, a rapid reader,and has a young and pretty wife(anyone you know?). His immedi¬ate problem is to convince PremierKhruschchev (who is named), viaKremlin-to-White House telephone,(the “hot wire”) that there hasbeen a mistake. Now there’s a plotfor a suspense novel!And suspenseful it is. Fail-Safehas you on the edge of your chair fortable will vary, but we suspectlimit of endurance in almost allinstances to be considerably short¬er tlian the 286 page novel. Notthat you'll put it down—but you’llprobably settle back and contem¬plate the novel rationally insteadof emotionally, observing the at¬tempts to induce mounting hysteriainstead of falling prone to them.And it will undoubtedly “spoil” theeffect for you, as it did for us.Think of being unable to shudderat the President's decision to offerup New York City in exchange forMoscow. Think of not being movedto frenzied screeching at the point¬less suicide of the President’s life¬long friend who is ordered to carryout this “special mission.” Thinkof not experiencing absolute horrorat the discovery that the Presi¬dent’s pretty young wife is on ashopping spree in the big city withthe kiddies when the bomb falls.But, if this is war-mongering andinsensibility, then it’s a whole lotmore comfortable than chair-edge-teetering, and much less pointless.Plans are in the offing, accord¬ing to Burdick, bo get the booktranslated into Russian. Wheelerthinks, “It is equally important, ifnot more so, to get a movie madefast!” Fast, by 'all means, butpromise to keep the movie true ‘othe book. Americans who are trulyand seriously concerned over thepossibility of accidental war oughtto have the opportunity of seeinganother kind of mushrooming, ofwatching mountains built frommolehills. available to the public in boundcopies of the New Yorker for eightyears now. But these stories areby no means, to this reader’s mind,up to Salinger's former offerings,such as Franny and Zooey, whichwas not given altogether favorablenotice by the critics.Briefly, Raise High the Roof¬beam, Carpenters is about Sey¬mour Glass’s courtship and mar¬riage to Muriel Fedder as toldby Buddy, his younger brother anda guest at the wedding. Seymour:An Introduction is a collection ofessay-material by the same BuddyGlass—who is admittedly Salinger’salter ego.“Raise High” is, in style and de¬velopment. much like “Franny,”and could pass as a good shortstory, even though not in Salinger’sbest form. “Seymour” is over-long. wordy, and in the sameparenthetical, loquacious and ap¬pallingly cute style as the letterBuddy Glass writes brother Zooeyin “Zooey.”Both fall flat as entertainmentand are unsuccessful in theirpurpose as well—the characteriza¬tion of Seymour Glass. In “RaiseHigh” we get a glimpse—no more—of a tall, nervous young mandining at his financee's home, hold¬ing a bottle of ketchup and apply¬ing the viscous sauce to everythingon hds plate.In “Seymour” the obfuscation of tion in “Seymour.” In “Seymour,”the style is not grossly inefficient;it is insolently so.It is apparent that J. D. Salingeris so much in love with the Glassfamily, and especially with Sey¬mour, that he cannot bear to partwith their mystery. The enigma ofSeymour—why he held up his ownwedding, and eloped with thebride-to-be; why he drove hismother-in-law’s car into an elm;why he shot himself on vacationwith his wife in Florida—maynever be resolved, as it wouldforce the author to tear the char¬acter from his heart and leavehim, as critic Hoke Norris hassaid, dead on the printed page.Mr. Salinger has picked up an¬other bad stylistic habit: name-dropping. How careful he is inquoting Sappho in “Raise High:”in “Seymour” how assiduously heworks the names of Issa and Shel¬ley, Vivekananda and Kierkegaard,as well as other great poets andphilosophers of both Eastern andWestern traditions. That the arch¬foe of the phony take up mention¬ing “in” authors, largely, H wouldappear, for its own sake, is aparadox—and a shame.The view could be advanced thatit is Buddy’s love for his deadbrother that provokes the running-off-at-tiie-mouth which waters thefew insights of “Seymour;” thatthis verbosity is a conscious stylis¬tic effort. Apart from my revulsionSeymour's character seems almost at the; sa<Ksm of this stunt, it doesAnd, for the introduction to themovie, may we propose the au¬thors’ memorable words: “Some¬how collaboration has the abilityto produce a more perfect (if notmore personal) result in the sameway that the proper dialogueshould produce a truly dialecticresult. . . . Both of us have beendeeply influenced by Bob Hutchinsand his wondrous way with thedialectic process.” Hemlock, any¬one?Rona RosenblattSTUDENT GOVERNMENT PRESENTSINCMAR BERGMANSWILDSTRAWBERRIESAND THEMAGICIANMANDEL HALLFRIDAY. FEBRUARY 8th“Strawberries’'—6 pm, 9:40 pm. Students — 75c“Magician1 —7:45 pm, 11:30 pm. Gen’l Adm — $1.00 intentional. The lengthy discussionof our hero as a great Americanpoet never gets off the ground, forno specimen of Seymour’s maturework is presented: only a quatraincomposed when the poet was eight:John KeatsJohn KeatsJohnPlease put your scarf on.One would not think it possibleto talk around a poet’s work for aslong as Salinger does—some 7000to 8000 words without an example.In the same story, we get a10,000 word dissertation on Sey¬mour’s personal appearance whichgives us less of an idea of what helooked like than does the veileddescription in “Raise High,” andeven less than the short sketch inA Perfect Day for Bananafish. Inthe latter, the entire short storywas less than a fourth the size ofthe personal-appearance descrip- not seem a likely explanation, forif this were true, the entire effectwould be spoiled by Buddy’s senti¬mentality, which renders his loveludicrous, as well as by his - self-righteousness, which renders itsinful.These tales are not without theirgood points. “Raise High" has longstretches of excellent, biting dia¬logue and effective narrative writ¬ing—especially in the selectionfrom Seymour’s diary of his court¬ship years. In “Seymour” we aretreated to a fine discussion of thedifferences between Chinese andJapanese poetry.But all in all, these stories arethe worst Salinger has publishedsince before The Catcher in theRye, and I look forward to the newstories that he promises on thedust jacket of his newest book withlittle hope.Dave RichterBreathing SpaceThe Blower(This poem about the ever present air conditioning noise, thoughwritten from the point of view of a law student, should have meaningto the ever increasing ranks of those who si>end a big chunk of theirlives similarly oppressed.)IA steady whoosing, a gabby whisper blowing hot air from the flatwhile dome entombing Socrates On Law—Common Law no less—With a slate-gray front and discretely ascending gray tile floor;Whoosh from silver rings-inrings in vague soot rings, flush, orderlyair diffusers spaced among the tube-light cages.The sea-shell’s haunting sound of the seashore,Whoosh, the relentless noise level drones on unnoticed over the one¬sided battle below, the teacher’s teeth-pulling battle againstweasel words for a spark of insight, a nice argument, a newrationale, a new rationalization for old, unyielding, leathery law.A student’s stumbling among his underlinings,—“going way out on a limb" with a feeble “perhaps”—In midsentence a silence, a shocking thunderclap of awhoosh no more.II silence,The veil instantly lifted, the sound fog suddenly gone,not just bare words, newsprint plain words struggling tliru the fog,but subtleties, a sigh, an imperceptible change of tonewith meaning only to the starved unconscious world of feelings,a new dimension to the bare words, the big lecture hallsuddenly a oozy living room, humans touching in conversation.Oh why hadn’t I noticed the whoosh. Marginal,Damn that I had grown callous to the bad sound,that I’ve come thoughtlessly to accept the whoosh,the straining, the bare words, the deadend emptiness filled withuseless noise. AConcentrate, I must know the instant the whoosh returns—but never—as slowly an the minute band advances,the whoosh imperceptibly resumesnot to be noticed till it suddenly stops again.Arthur Rubia'*Chandra discusses Eastern art Demonstrate Indian music‘When the West first be¬came interested in Indian artthey thought it was awful.The head of Buddha was com¬pared to a pudding,” said PramodChandra in a recent interview.Chandra was the curator of thearts section of the Prince of WalesMuseum in Bombay and is now avisiting professor of art.He explained that Indian art justdidn’t appeal to tiie 19tih centurymind. “Indian art is not a realisticrepresentation of nature. It is muchmore concerned with abstractingan idea and presenting it in thecontex of the human form. Fortu¬nately this didn’t appeal to theVictorians, for they would havetaken all the specimens away,” hesudd.“But recently in the UnitedStates there has been an increasingconcern and Indian art is now un¬dergoing a re-evaluation apprecia¬tion for Indian art.” This he thinksis partly due to growth of modernart, but maybe also the conse¬quence of widening cultural con¬cern. Chandra cautioned, however,against the use of generalizationswhen one speaks of Indian art.“Indian art history dates back tothe 3rd millenium BC. To makegeneralizations about such longperiod is very risky,” he said.When asked why Indian artseems closer to western than eitherChinese or Japanese, he said thatthis is partly because the Indiansand the Europeans came from thesame ethnic stock, and also be¬cause there has been more com¬munication between the Indiansand the Europeans than there hasbetween Europe and China.”“In a sense almost all Indianart is associated with religion. It isonly with the coming of the Islamicinvaders that you get much secularwork,” Chandra said.He added, however, that thisdoes not mean that all Indian artip religious. Although much of it isdone in temples and was intendedto help in the understanding of cer¬tain religious ideas, the artists fre¬quently presented other conceptsin their work.Chandra pointed out that the clos¬ est parallel between western andIndian art is during the medievalperiod, for at this time the westernartists, like the Indian, used thehuman form for the presentationof their ideas instead of nature.Chandra said that the study ofIndian art helps in the understand¬ing of Indian history, for therearen’t as many written records asyou find in China. There are hard¬ly any books about early India.So little has survived. Most of whatwe had comes from myths andlegends. But Indian art gives youa visual look into the past. Itbrings concreteness to what writ¬ten records we have.Chandra will be at TJC untilAugust. Miss Rajeshwari Datta, an Indian musician and visitinglecturer in music, will present a lecture-demonstration of herart Monday night at Shorey Coffee Plus.Miss Datta teaches a course in the music of India andhas given recitals in various parts disciple, and soon began to sing onof the country. This spring, she the radio in Calcutta and to makewill give recitals at colleges in recordings.Washington DC and Virginia. In 1957.53, she came to UC withMiss Datta has studied Indian t*er late husband, a poet, wjio wasmusic for many years. Daughter here as a visiting scholar. Sheof an Indian civil servant, she was later spent several years in Eu-schooled in a convent run by Bel- rope, giving recitals in France,gian nuns. She began her musical England, and Italy. She was work¬training at a university near Cal- lag 1° Pans with a concert co-cutta founded by Tagore, an Indianpoet and musician who had an im¬portant influence on Indian musicand received a Nobel Prize inliterature in 1913. She became hisPresent Don Juan in Hell'| CalendarFriday, February 8Episcopal Communion: Bond Ch.ipel,7:BO a.m.Lutheran Matins: Bond Chapel, 11:30a.m.Hebrew Class: Hillel Foundation, 1pm.Lecture: “Xenophon and the Art ofWar.” W. M. Kenrick; Political ScienceAssn., Social Sciences 302. 3:30 p.m.Lecture: "Labeled Antitumor andAntitissue Antibodies.” Dr. David Press¬man; Billings P117, 5 p.m.Lutheran Vespers: Chapel House,5:45 p.m.Ski Trip: Outing Club, leaving 0 p.m.Motion Picture: "Too Young to Love."Doc Films; Social Sciences 122, 7:15and 9:15 p.m.; 50 cents.Koinonia (Lutheran Fellowship): “Sci¬entific Knowledge and Social Values:What is the Scientist’s Moral Besponsi-bility? Dr. John Platt, dept, of phy¬sics; Chapel House, 7:15 p.m.Varsity Gymnastics Meet: US vs.Illinois Normal Univ. and West VirginiaUniv.; Bartlett Gym, 7:30 p.m.Discussion: “A Bi-partisan view ofChicago’s Political Scene.” John Kear¬ney, Independent Voters of Illinois, andPhillip Bixler, Republican candidate forCongress last November: CrossroadsStudent Center, 5621 Blackstone Ave..7:30 p.m. , .Speech: "The Black Revolt in Amer¬ica.” Leroy McRae, Young SocialistAlliance; Ida Noyes, 7:30 p.m.Speech: "Cancer Research. Dr.Charles Huggins, director. Ben MayLabs; Pre-Med Club, Ida Noyes The¬ater, 7:45 p.m.Happening, Lexington; 8:30 p.m.Sabbath Service; Hillel Foundation,7:45 p.m. . , , ,,Motion Pictures: “Wild Strawberriesand “The Magician,” by Bergman.Mandel Hall. 7:45 and 11:30 p.m.;students 75 cents.Motion Picture: • The Ox-Bow Inci¬dent." Burton-Judson Courts, 8 and 10p.m.; 50 cents. .Don Juan in Hell, International Play¬ers; International House, 8:30 p.m.; fl.Fireside Lecture: "Who Is a Jew..Reflections on Israel’s Brother Dame1Case.” Marc Galanter, asst, professorof social sciences; Hillel Foundation,5715 Woodlawn Ave., 8:30 p.m.The Last Stage, 1506 East Hyde ParkBlvd. presents “Live Like Pigs byJohn Arden, Feb. 8-10. 15Jl7 *2-»4at8 30 p m. General admission $2.50, students and members $2. f “^reserva-tions and tickets call OA 4-4200.Saturday. February 9Exhibit: Daniells in India, 50 Eigh¬teenth Century English w^tercolors.Renaissance Society Gallery. 1010 E.59th st. (through Wieboldt Arch), Mon-day-Friday, 10 to 5, through March 3.Track Meet: UC vs. Wheaton College,Field House. 2 p.m.Basketball Games: UC vs. Illinois of EventsInst, of Technology; “B” teams, 6p.m., Varsity, 8 p.m.Chamber Music Series: Paul Jacobs,Piano; Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.Don Juan in Hell: InternationalHouse, 8:30 p.m. $1.Happening, Lexington; 8:30 p.m.Radio Series: The Sacred Note,WBBM, 780 kc., 10:45 p.m. RockefellerChapel Choir. Don Juan in Hell, by Ber¬nard Shaw, will be presentedby the International Playersin the International HouseTheatre tonight, tomorrow night,and Sunday.The performances begin at 8:30pm. Admission is $1.00 per per¬son. Advance tickets may be ob¬tained at International House.Sunday, February 10 H°ld P0etry readSnS Organized this fall by a groupof residents at International House,International Players draws onthe resources of students from avariety of nations in every facetof production. The cast of DonJuan in Hell includes a Lebanese,an Indian, and two Americans. In¬ternational Players was formed todemonstrate that a cohesive thea¬trical unit can be developed inspite of the diverse individual andcultural differences of the partici¬pants. ordinator and teaching Indianmusic in the Oriental Music Centrewhen she was invited to come toUC in 1%2.Miss Datta accompanies hersinging with the tamboura, a four¬stringed instrument which “pro¬vides a drone background.” Thereis no harmony in Indian music,she explained.The type of music she performsis from Northern India, which isdifferent in style from that of theSouth, although it is in the sametradition. There are several typesof classical songs, such as devo¬tional songs, love songs, epic tale,seasonal songs, and patriotic songs,each with its own distinctive style,she continued.Miss Datta’s performance w:1l beat Shorey House, ninth floor PierceTower, at 9 pm Monday.Roman Catholic Mass: Calvert House,8.30, 10. 11 and 12 noon.Radio Series: Faith of our Fathers,WGN, 8:30 a.m.Lutheran Communion Service:Graham Taylor Chapel, 9 a.m.Episcopal Eucharist: Bond Chapel,9:30 a.m.University Religious Service: Rocke¬feller Memorial Chapel, 11 a.m.Radio Series: From the Midway,WFMF, 11 a.m.Television Program: The Great Chal¬lenge. WBBM-TV, Channel 2. 3 p.m.CarUlon Recital, Daniel Robins,Rockefeller Chapel, 4 p.m.Seminar: Church-State Issues. BaptistGraduate Student Center, 5:30 p.m.United Vesper Service: Graham Tay¬lor Chapel, 6:30 p.m.Seminar: Porter Graduate Fellow¬ship Seminar, “Human Evil,” ChapelHouse. 7:15 p.m.Duplicate Bridge: Ida Noyes Hall,7:15 p.m.Seminar: Historical Determinism andChristian Hope; Methodist Foundation,Chapel House, 7:15 p.m.Folk Dance: Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 p.m.Poll! Caucus, “Dormoritory Prob¬lems,” James Vice, Ida Noyes Hall,East Lounge, 7:30 p.m.Lecture Series: Religion and the Com¬monwealth, “Christian Faith and theProblem of Politics,” The ReverendJames C. Buckley, C.S.C.; Hillel Foun¬dation, 8 p.m.Dance Recital: Merce CunninghamDance Company; Mandel Hall 8:30 p.m.Don Juan In Hell: InternationalHouse, 8:30 p.m.Happening, Lexington; 8:30 p.m.Monday, February 11Lecture: “A Cytocliemical Study Con¬cerning the Occurrence of RNA in Plas¬tics of Zea mays.” Ann B. Jacobson,Research associate, dept, of botany;Botany 205, 4:30 p.m.Motion Picture: “The Cossacks.” In¬ternational House East Lounge, 7 and9 p.m.; 50 cents.My Life and Yours: Discussion withClaes Oldenburg, artist. Ida Noyes EastLounge, 8 p.m.Films on Art: “Gaugin,” “The Charmof Life," and “Van Gogh.” Departmentof Art: Social Sciences 122, 8 p.m.Coffee Plus: Miss Datta, of Musicdept., in lecture-demonstration of Musicof India. Shorey House, 9th floor, PierceTower, 9 p.m. A poetry reading featuring sev¬eral former and present RooseveltUniversity students will be givenMonday night, at a new OldTown coffee shop-bar. The reading,which will be held ait the SaoredCow, 1363 North Sedgwick Ave., at8:30 pm, will feature poets WalterSublet*, Martin Berman, DavidNoble, Jules Freemond, F. D. Gil¬man, and others. The owners ofthe new coffee shop-bar hope toschedule poetry readings weekly,on Monday nights. The readingsare to be open to new poets, aswell as those known to the man¬agement.You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORACE CO.101) East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711 Freud has been acclaimedBYTHE NEW YORK CRITICS AS"ONE OF THE YEAR’S 10 BEST!"Freud IS A “TAUT, INTELLECTUALTHRILLER .. .VASTLY EXCITING l'*TIME MAGAZINEFreud IS “A BOLD, DRAMATIC,MOMENTOUS, TASTEFUL, DARING ANDFASCINATING FILM THAT EVERYONEWILL ENJOY!" CROWTHER.N. Y. TIMESFftEUD "-BORN INTO A RESPECTABLEWORLD-TORE AWAY ITS MASK OFSEXUAL INNOCENCE. NEVER AGAINWOULD THE WORLD PRETENDTHAT SEX DID NOT EXIST."N. Y. HERALD TRIBUNEJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife InsuranceProtection135 S. LaSalle StMl 3-5986 RA 6-1060 JOHN HUSTON 'SrmookjcTto" orFReuddark theatredark & madisonfr 2-2845for college studentsif open 7:30 a.m.late show 3 a.m.if different double feature dailyif Sunday Film Guildif write in for free program guideif little gal-lery for gals onlyif every friday is ladies dayall gala admitted for only 25cif Clark parking - 1 door south4 hours 95c after 5 p.m.WEEKEND PROGRAM8th9thsun. • 10th “the last bridge”and“the 8th day ofthe week”“the captainfrom koepenick”and“confessions offelix kryil”. “aren’t we won¬derful” and“last ten days” ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti • beef • sausage and meatballsandwiches • shrimp pizzaFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-1014,1015 1427 East 67th SL MONTGOMERY CLIFTSUSANNAH YORKLARRY PARKSSUSAN KOHNER • eileen HERUESPECIAL REDUCED ADMISSIONSFOR STUDENTS & FACULTY!GOOD ONLY WHEN PRESENTEDAT BOXOFFICE WITH COUPONi r-DCARBOM AT DIVISIONone of the year's 10 besMimeKirk Douglasinlonely Are The Brave’Starts Friday Chicago’s most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films,STUDENTSTale advantage of thispecial discount avail¬able to you. 901 any dayexcept Saturday. ShowIf.D. card to the cashier. SS COUPONFOR REDUCEDSTUDENT & FACULTYADMISSION"FREUD"90c INSTEAD OF 1.25TO 12 NOON1.25 INSTEAD OF 1.5012 TO 5:00 P.M.1.50 INSIEAD OF 2.005:00 TO 10:00 P.M.LOOP THEATRE Si; couponFOR REDUCEDSTUDENT & FACULTYADMISSION"FREUD"90c INSTEAD OF 1.25TO 12 NOON1.25 INSTEAD OF 1.5012 TO 5:00 P.M.1.50 INSTEAD OF 2.005:00 TO 10:00 P.M.LOOP THEATRE 1iII«■iaI•isJJ - MIDWEST PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT!STARTS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15i,YS - innp THEATRE ,°72RANDOLPH liVVI CHICAGO CONTINUOUS'OPEN9AMCONTINUOUS'Feb. 8,1963 • CHICAGO MAROONIUniversity Theatre presents |V| O N TAG E a month with the thealTe arts'Good News'by Jerry MastI71 1927 Lindbergh Hew theAtlantic, the stock marketflew to new heights and Saccoand Vanzetti flew the coop.Also in 1927, DeSylva. Brown, andHenderson, famous for their hitsong “Five Foot Two.” wrote GoodNews. Good News was supposed tobe a satire of college life in the1920’s. And audiences applaudedfor over 550 consecutive perform¬ances, a phenomenal Broadwayrun for 1927. Many of the show'stunes became popular hits, and inaddition to the music, the audiencehad a great time laughing at theshow’s comic parts, many of themderived from vaudeville and bur¬lesque.Twenty years later, in 1947,M-G-M turned its stable of starsloose on Good News and came upwith an entertaining film. Featur¬ing everybody’s favorite girl-next-door, June Allyson, and JackieKennedy’s favorite boy-next-door,Peter Lawford, M-G-M succeededin turning a 1920's spoof into a1940's extravaganza. The vigor andbounce of the original show wasconverted into a cast-of-singing-and-danoing-thousands spectacular.The plot, orchestrations, and chore¬ography were all up-dated to 1947.The original Good News was onlythe framework for the movie. - a historyToday, the roaring ’20’s havebeen reborn. We tend to look backon the period as a wacky era, atime when anything could and didhappen. Television shows like TheUntouchables and The RoaringTwenties, musicals like The BoyFriend, Oh Kay and Little MarySunshine, and even the increasingpopularity of writers like ScottFitzgerald have brought the ’20’scloser to our generation than eitherthe depression-filled ’30’s or war-boom ’40’s.And that’s wliv we decided to doGood News. And we decided todown-date it, to make it close tothe spirit of the original produc¬tion. The vaudeville comedy isplayed like vaudeville comedy. Thesong-cues are obviously song-cues;the songs do not stem realisticallyout of the action of the play.Theatre-goers of the ’20's neverbothered themselves about makingmusicals realistic, as we do today.On the other hand, certain ele¬ments of the romantic plot of GoodNews strike us as being ridiculous.So we decided to spoof it. In thisway, University Theatre’s produc¬tion of Good News is both a returnto the original production and. atthe same time, a comment of ourown generation on some of theaspects of 1920’s theatre that nowseem absurd. GOOD NEWSa musical spoofFebruary 15, 16, 17, 22, 23Mandel Hall8:30 P.M,CastBelleruth Krepon, Ron Inglehart,Cyndee Schwartz, Dave Stein¬berg, Herb Jones. Jerry Loeb,Janie Whitehill, Susie Workoff,Steve Ege, Andy Kaplan, Rich¬ard Mandel, Don Swanton, AnneThai, Lou Yeidel, Lisa Blair,Anna Hollinger. Judy Hollub, C.J. Smith, Jane Piore, SandyPanem, Feliety O'Meara, CathyFritz, Kathy Wexler, A1 Kienzle,Norm Jenesen, Bob Herman,Vincent Kruskal, Dennis Toma-sallo, Courtner KingDirected by: Jerry MastMusical direction: Ken PierceAsst, director: Ruth StackSets: Teichner Studios, ChicagoCostumes: American CostumeCo., New YorkTickets atMandel Hall Box-office11:00-2:30, 5:00-7:00 dailyor call ext. 3581Prices: $2.00 & $1.50(student rate) 'Good News' text explicatedby Jerry MastModern theatre has becomemore and more of an enigmafor the modern theatre-goer.Such writers as Beckett,Ionesco, Pinter, aixl Jean Kerrhave shown that the enjoyment ofa play increases as the audience’scomprehension of it decreases. Itis for this reason that I felt afew prefatory words about GoodNews were necessary. Lest theaudience should fail to understandthe delicate symbolism or complexphilosophy of this play, I am pro¬viding this analysis so that noneof its subtlety will be lost.Structurally, there are two plots—one serious, the other comic.This is similar to Marlowe’s DoctorFaustus. The serious plot involvesTom Marlowe, the star-football-player at Tait College. Tom, yousee, through an error in judgment,flunked an astronomy exam and isin grave danger of being ineligiblefor the big football game of theseason. This, of course, producespity and fear. Tom asks his fiance,Patricia, to coach him. but she istoo busy being the president of hersorority. She gets her cousin Con¬nie to tutor Tom, and our hero, likeBelleruth Krepon and Dave Steinberg cavort in "GoodNews.". Paris, falls in love with the wrongwoman.Tom is now tossed betwixt thetwo poles of duty and love, likeChimene in LeCid—his obligation- toPatricia and his love for Connie,Which will Tom choose? Will hepass the exam? Will he help Taitwin the big game? Tune in againlater to find out.The comic plot involves a groupof characters drawn from the verywell - springs of human nature.There is Beef Saunders, an intro¬spective young man whose IQrivals that of the campus shrub¬bery. There is professor CharlesKenyon, nicknamed “ComicalCharlie,” who seems to be old fundcrotchety but is really good-heartedunderneath. There is Bobby Ran-dally who seems to be lewd, crude,and obnoxious, but who is reallyobnoxious, crude, and lewd under¬neath. And there is Babe O’Day,a petite young miss who shootscraps, drinks booze, and does othertldngs. Ah yes, the tvhole world isthere.Now that we have disposed ofthe plot or fable, character, andthought (the play is obviously writ¬ten to save Rose Bimler), we canmove on to the diction, melody,and spectacle. The music deservesto be mentioned. Every time theemotional strain on the charactersbecomes too great, they burst, asit were, into song. And such song.There is “The Best Things in Lifeare Free,” the story of OrvilleHodge. And we must mention“Lucky In Love,” a folk-song aboutNathan Leopold. And finally theever-popular “Varsity Drag,”which is about automobile racingon the college campus.It is now hoped that you under¬stand this difficult dramatic text.Every aesthetic work needs to beexplained within its historical con¬text so the contemporary audi¬ence can appreciate the jewels ofa bygone era. This play, so mucha product of the 1920’s period, hasrequired this intellectual explana¬tion so that you will realize thatall the people running around onstage acting crazy are not justhaving fun. They are recreatingthe serious art of our forefathers.Cunningham and Co : danc ers of the absurdby Robert BenedettiWe were recently askedwhy University Theatre choseto present a dance concert asthe initial event in a series of“theatre arts.” The answer seemedobvious enough, but as we thoughtobout it, more and more reasonspresented themselves.Most obvious is -the fact thatdance is performed in tlie theatre,and that in this sense ‘theatre’ didnot necessarily mean ‘dramatic.’But that answer met with a howlof protest from the dance fans inthe office, as it implied that dancewas non-drama tic.The more we thought about it,especially in terms of recent de¬velopments in the avant-garde and absurdist theatre, the more it be¬came obvious that dance as a formis more essentially dramatic thanmost theatre. Martin Esslin, in hisbook The Theatre of the Absurd,says about Harold Pinter, the Eng¬lish playwright, “The startingpoint of Pinter’s theatre is thus areturn to some of the basic ele¬ments—the suspense created bythe elementary ingredients of pure,pre-literary theatre: a stage, twopeople, a door; a poetic image ofan undefined fear and expectation.”And who better than Merce Cun¬ningham and his company to ex¬emplify this ‘basic’ pre-literarytheatre? He has been described tous as a ‘legend in his own time.'It would be hard to communicateto you the enthusiasm we en¬ countered from every person con¬nected with dance in this city whenwe announced Mr. Cunningham’svisit. Private and jealously guardedmailing lists suddenly were madeavailable; usually ‘busy’ newspapercritics began calling our office forinformation.Here are some things that criticsacross the nation have said aboutMerce Cunningham and DanceCompany. “In the field of dancetoday, there is no more daring per¬former than Merce Cunningham.”—Milwaukee Sentinel“Mr. Cunningham is blessed withan impeccable company.”—Chris¬tian Science Monitor“Their two-hour program left acapacity audience astounded andenthralled, possibly even stunned.”—Vancouver Sun“Mr. Cunningham is a superbdancer, and his group is composedof highly skilled artists.”—NewYork Herald Tribune.The music supplied by Mr. Cun¬ningham’s Musical Director JohnCage, and his pianist David Tudor,both of whom will perform withthe company this Sunday, is ofequal interest to many of us. Mr.Cage is famous lor his pioneeringwork in the realm of the preparedpiano, and supplemental electroniceffects. Mr. Tudor spends a greatdeal of time performing in Europewhere he is well-known as that“far-out” pianist.The entire Company is here forone performance only, tills Sun¬day at 8:30 pm in Mandel Hall.Tickets range in price from $1.50,$2.00, to $2.50. A student discountof 50c is available, at either theMandel Hall box office or theReynolds Club desk. Lorca dramaBlood Wedding, a powerful,moving verse drama aboutpassions and tribal ritualamong the primitive hill peo¬ple of Spain, Is the third majorproduction of University Theatrethis year. Written by FedericoGarcia Lorca in the 1930’s, BloodWedding, albeit Spanish in essence,is universal in concept. The particu¬lar way of expressing a people’sconcern with an ever-present as¬pect of their lives—the concept ofhuman fatality—is Spanish. But theloss, the tragedy, the final effecton the surviving members of thefamilies combine to make the playa comment on all peoples facedwith death.The plot in brief: a young manand his widowed Mother arrangethe formalities of his wedding tothe daughter of an old widower-farmer. The Bride had a sweet¬heart some years before, whomshe refused when he proposed, andhe married someone else. On themorning of the wedding, Leonardo,the former sweetheart, appears totell the Bride of his still strongfeelings for her. She admits to asimilar feeling for him, but sherepulses him as she has made herdecision to marry the young man.However, during the wedding re¬ception she succumbs to an over¬whelming passion and runs awaywith Leonardo. They are capturedin the woods, and the Groom andLeonardo fight to the death withknives. The final scene of Lorca’splay ends on a beautiful note oflamenting, housed in the magnifi¬cence of his poetry, as the Bride,Leonardo’s Wife and the Motherexpress their individual and mutualgrief. 'powerful'The cast of Blood Wedding is:the mother, Anita Leavy; thebride, Ellen Mosen; the servant,Madalyn Shorr; the groom, PaulMargulies; the father, Eric Gang-loff; Leonardo, Martyn Reisberg;his wife, JoAnne Schapiro; hismother-in-law, Donna Wilson;neighbor, Marsha Finkel; beggarwoman, Hene Tamarkin; little girl,Mary Gottschalk; the moon, Ed¬ward Harris; three young girls,Peggy Gibbons, Nancy Barty, Lin¬da Varland; three woodcutters,Jerry Katch, John Sherman andFred Franklin.Blood Wedding will be performedin the new Law School Theatre,designed by Eero Saarinen, locatedat 60th and University Ave. Di¬rected by James O’Reilly, the playwill feature live Flamenco Guitarmusic by Stanley Slater and PeterGrant. Using only the bare stage,which is beautiful in its simplicity, ithe play will use no scenery. How¬ever, special emphasis is thusplaced on the lighting"Blood Wedding** rehearse! |j Members of the Merce Cunningham troupe rehearseI for Sunday night's concert.