Beadle: Rockwell ban"has not come up"The question of the Univer- Northwestern University, tosity administration’s barring speak at the University of Chi-Nazi leader George Lincoln cas°-Rockwell from speaking on A spokesman for the Nazi partycampus “has not come up,” said indicated that Rockwell would beUC President George Beadle in an willing to speak on campus theinterview yesterday. next time he was in Chicago. NoStudents here have the privi- dcf^lie date has been m™tioiled-lege of inviting speakers to cam- -A* * meeting on Thursdaypus, he said and they are expectedto use this privilege in responsi¬ble manner.If a group of students is seri¬ously interested in hearing what night, the residents of VincentHouse decided by a vote of 18-13to uphold the invitation to Rock¬well.According to Tom McCormick, Vol. 71 — No. 67 University of Chicago, Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1963 31UC 'flying carpet' launchedSeveral members of the UC faculty will conduct what they term a “flying carpet’'Rockwell has to say, Beadle said a resident of the house, both the course in the Civilizations of South Asia for 'three colleges in the Philadelphia area. Start-he “would defend their right” to advantages and disadvantages of ing tomorrow, one member of the faculty will fly to Philadelphia each week to conduct onedo s<>. inviting Rockwell to speak were n) „ of pvnpvimpntnl nvno-mmOn the other hand, if sudents discussed. He said that the house P , 1 !„ P10eia™-have invited Rockwell merely to members felt that students “will The course, which will be conducted for Swarthmore, Bryn Mawr, and Haverford Col-test the limits of the University’s derive intellectual stimulation leges, is part of an effort by larger universities with specialists in certain areas to co-oper-liberality in allowing speakers to from hearing Rockwell speak, and ate with smaller schools with —the university will serve as a lesser resources.The program will include a sem¬inar for about 15 faculty membersat the three schools, and a coursefor about 100 students.come to campus, they have invitedRockwell for the “wrong reason,”ho added.At the end of January, severalresidents of Vincent House in¬vited Rockwell, who earlier hadbeen banned from speaking at and deliver a lecture for the stu- develop interdisciplinary coursesforum for discussion.”McCormick pointed out that theinvitation was being made in thename of the residents of Vincenthouse, and does not involve theUniversity. dents on Thursday night. On Fri¬day, he will conduct a seminarfor faculty nieml>ers. He will alsoconduct some discussion sectionsfor the students, which will beA supplemented hy- discussions ledwill fly to Philadelphia each week, by th<J lmlivl(lllalSocial causes of crime discussed by facultyschools.The program is being financed in the South Asian civilizations,similar to the interdisciplinaryIndian Civilization course at UC.Partcipating in the project,frdm UC, are George Bobrinsky,Professor and Chairman of theDepartment of Linguistics; Ed¬ward Dimock, Associate Profes¬sor of Bengali and Bengali liter-In the Sydney A. and Julia statistics on the number and scri-Teller lecture last night, Dr. ousness of crimes perpetrated byLawrence Z. Freedman, pro¬fessor of psychiatry, discussedthe social factors and motivationswhich lead to crime. The lecture,entitled “Psychopathology and So¬cial Offense,” detailed the varietyof forces which help to createcrime or stall its abolition.Freedman placed at the top of upper and middle class citizens.Discussing the effect of slumson the upsurge of juvenile delin¬quency, Freedman stated, “Manyof these adolescent youngsters areat war; they are soldiers in theranks of their culture, their class,and their caste against the dom¬inant culture of the elite ... itis peculiar to a sincere strugglefor democracy and our myth that jor form of social problem aris¬ing out of delinquency. It is,therefore, in my view . . . sig¬nificant that we found not asingle ease in which a judge feltmoved to express any moralhomilies ... or even felt that aman who spent most of his lifein prison because of repeatedshort sentences for repeated theftsmight be a fit subject for psyclii- by the three schools, with aid ature; Stephan Hay, Assistantfrom the Ford foundation. Professor of history; Bert Hose-“The course for students will litz, Professor of social sciences;be an abbreviated version of our McKim Marriott, Associate Pro-Indian Civilization course,” said fessor of anthropology and theProfessor of Social Sciences Mil- social sciences in the College; Mil-ton Singer, who is co-ordinating ton Singer, Paul Klapper Profes-tween regarding crime as a mat¬ter of individual responsibility orregarding it as a matter of mentalillness. He added that it was diffi¬cult for the criminal to escapebeing “the incompatible foci ofour sympathy and our sense of the program.The various specialists from UCwill discuss major themes andvalues of the civilizations ofSouth East Asia. Students in theone semester course will be ex¬pected to do certain readings, andwill be required to hand in apaper at the end of the course.The faculty seminars will dis-everybody has an equal chance He concluded that help can be cuss the research that is goingwe at once provoke with the afforded to criminals by creating on in these areas, and will relatehis list of causes the conflict be- under a free enterprise economy atric scrutiny, if not concern.”very real temptation that success,wealth, fame are not only attain¬able but the highest good, and atthe very same time make it im¬possible for large segments of our clinics and hospitals to help them these discussions to various dis-bridge, “the terrible alienation ciplines. The problems involvedthat separates themthem for life.”outrage, of our impulse to treat population to acheive themthe ill and our urge to punish.”Social oppression, lie eo^t'nu^l,in the form of deprivation, helps toproduce crime, but added thatcrime-producing pressures are notindigenous solely to lower eco¬nomic groups. He pointed outNurenberg talk tonight through socially and legally ac¬ceptable channels.”About causes of crime outsideslums, Freedman said that parentsmay often unwittingly encouragetheir children to commit crime be¬cause of the shock and shamethat they register upon hearingof the delinquency.Freedman differentiated be- Freedman has been a memberof the UC faculty since 1961. Pre¬viously, he acted as chairman ofthe Yale Study Unit on Psychi¬atry at Yale University.and marks in introducing the materials intocourses will also be discussed.According to Singer, there issome chance the individual faeul- sor of social sciences in the Col¬lege and the Department of An¬thropology; J.A.B. van Buitenan,Associate Professor of Sanskritand Indie studies.According to Singer, the small¬er colleges have been expressinginterest in increasing their pro¬grams in non-western civilizationsin the past few years. Last year,UC Associate Professor of His¬tory Earl Prichard spent theyear as a visiting professor there.Prichard’s specialty is ChineseArt.This year, the schools haveasked for help in building up li¬brary collections in the field ofty members introduce some of South Asia. Maureen Patterson,tiie materials into their own UC’s bibliographic specialist infields. It is also possible that fac- the field, has been working withuity members at the other schools them.Forces in Iraqui coup analyzedIraq is a socially politically, who tried to avoid merging Iraq tional Union of Iraqi Studentsfragmented country, accord-Bernard Meltzer, professor ... .... , . , _ , ,the Law School, will discuss the tween stealing and other types of mg to Leonard Binder, associ-Nuremberg trials tonight at 8 pm crime, stating that, “This sort of a(_e professor 0f political Sci-at the Thompson house coffee hour crime (stealing) is far an< away ence. The recent coup d’etat whichin Pierce. the n,ost common type o soeia ousjecj the pro-Communist, anti-Meltzer was present at the trials, offense. Quantitatively it our rna- Passer Kassem government was■ a x partially caused by this diversity inHaviahurst Speaks on teen yeors the Iraqui polity, stated Binder in» | an interview yesterday.DefOI*e niqh school prinCIpQlS The situation before the revolt. , was so delicately balanced that“The adolescent lives in a groups together with loya y o even Kassem revealed himselflon^ drawn out present dur- principles of various kinds, spe- to kg both incompetent and mental-k P ifically principles of fair play, ly unstable there was still suffi-democracy, scientific method, and cient support from the anti-Nasser, . , ... i elements to keep him in office,technological and ar is ic m . “This basic condition of politicalMaking a further subdivision, instability and indecision persistsing which he prepares foradulthood and we of the adultgeneration assist him as well as with the United Arab Republic, andpreferred to let his country act asa counterweight to this unity.“Kassem encouraged the com¬munist elements in Iraq to balancethe pro-Nassar forces. He wel¬comed Soviet assistance, causedtrouble for the Western oil com¬panies, and refused to acceptAmerican aid,” said Binder.“We may now be prepared to re¬sume aid, particularly if as seemslikely Soviet assistance to Iraq willbe reduced.”we can, hoping we are doing the ... , . ........ , , , f Havighurst sorted adolescents in- even though the communist eleright thingS but not very SUIG of . . mold mov Kx* ollmlnalAd ac a Annit.” Robert J. Havighurst, pro to three groups: the ego-involvedleaders of the society, the main-tainers of society, and the alien¬ated. About the former, he pointed ment may be eliminated as a con¬sequence of the coup” whichbrought in the new pro-Nasser pres¬ident Abd-ul-Salem Aris.Asked if he thought the strongNasser oriented policy could pos¬sibly provide the necessary nation¬al unity, Binder replied that itwasn’t likely. “It will just as likelyalienate the Kurds as did the Kas-fessor of education and professorin the committee on human de¬velopment, stated the above in alecture yesterday delivered before out that it includes about 35 per-the National Association of High ce|lt o£ youth, and contains manySchool Principals in Pittsburgh, future pro£esssional men, teach-Pennsylvania. ers> busincss eMCU,ives, farmHavighurst outlined the basic OWners, and a significant minor- sem policy of centralization.” Themeans by which adolescents can jty of clerical and skilled workers. Kurds are a tribe living in North- ^ , . . , , , .learn to lie successful adults. He Fifty per cent of youth comprise ern Iraq who have revolted peri- r£aniza ions an , joine y eac istated that they must be achieve- t|ie second group, Havighurst odically since 1946. cment oriented, intellectually, au- continued, and they are charact- Binder pointed out that there aretonoinous, creative and spontane- erjZP(i |»y their relative lack of in- two major political lines whichoils, rational and foresightful, ferest and achievement drive. The could be followed by the new Iraquiable to tolerate ambiguity, and third group, the remaining fifteen government. It could either enterpossesors of strong moral control, cent) contains potential beat- into full-fledged cooperation with aHis speech concerned primarily niks, an upper middle class vari- President Nassar, or concentratethe junior high school age group antt and lower class delinquents. 0n consolidating the Iraqui peoplebetween the ages of 11 and 16. A professor of education at UC as a step in the direction of ArabHavighurst broke down the since 1941, Havighurst is also a unity,basic functions of a junior high frequent and accomplished au-school into three categories: In- thor. His latest book, entitleddustry, identity, and fidelity. In- “Growing Up in River City,” isof (NUIS), the student strikecalled, “the major crisis facingthe regime.”The students of Iraq have lx*<*na constant source of opposition tothe Kassem government, sincethe military dictatorship was firstestablished in 1958. The studentscontinually argued and demon¬strated for representative govern¬ment, free elections, political par¬ties, a permanent constitution,a d a national legislature w’t1»real power — the essential ele¬ments of democracy.The s tr i k e s were originallycalled to protest attacks on mem¬bers of NUIS by the military po¬lice. Innumerable students werecountry played a decisive role arrested, but the strikes contin-in the recently successful rebell- ued. The government attemptedStudents' role explainedBy the Collegiate Press ServiceBAGDAD, IRAQ — Uni¬versity and secondary stu¬dents in this near-Easternion against the regime of ex-Premier Kassem, who wasreported executed by the revolu¬tionary forces this week.The initial impetus for therevolt began with a nation-wideprotest strike called by studenters’ and women’s organizations,The strike continued for morethan three weeks, despite massiveefforts by Kassem’s military po¬lice to quell the disturbance. In to close the schools and block fu¬ture registration of student load¬ers. A subsequent sit-down in theadministration building of theUniversity of Baghdad was bro¬ken up by military units, andmany students were injured butmore strikes were called, thistime in secondary schools.It is expected that NUIS mem¬bers will have an important rolein the new’ government, whichhas declared itself neutralist anddustry, he stated, requires the boy concerned with the effectsor girl to become able to organ- class differences on childrenize his energies and to use histime effectively to accomplishserious purposes. The task ofidentity, he continued, is to be¬come a person in one’s own right,as seen by others and felt by one¬self. Fidelity, he asserted, is acombination of loyalty to social Graduating students whohave arranged for yearbookphotographs must notify thestudio of their yearbook pic¬ture choice in letter by to¬morrow. statement issued by the Na- anti-communist.Douglas: coalition may block aid billExclusive to the Maroon gationists, several religious groups,A coali'cion against Presi- and the National Education Associ-The first alternative was once dent Kenned v’s aid to pduea- ation, which is against federal aidpreferred by President Aris. “If the tion bm coul‘d make its pas- L. bin entitledpro-Nassar line is pursued by Iraq, . ~ President Kennedy s bill, entitledit can take the form of political sage by Congress in 1 Jbo very the National Education Improve-cooperation with Egypt, in which difficult, stated Senator Paul Doug- ment Act, would set up new loancase we would probably not object. las when in Chicago last week. programs for undergraduates, andIf, however, it is pursued by means Douglas stated that “we will expand the provisions of the cur-of subverting the neighboring gov- work hard” for the passage of the rent ones,ernments, it would be seriously dis- bill, but it will be extremely diffi- It would also expand the numberturbing to the United States,” he cult if a coalition is formed against of graduate fellowships sponsoredsaid. it. Su:h a coalition could include, by the government, and give aidThe second policy involving con- in addition to the diehard opponents so that Colleges could provide moresolidation was followed by Kassem, of federal aid to education, segre- part time jobs for students.MENMENFOR MENTHREE TIMES THE-, Resolution asking unbaisedhousing list is significantTO THE EDITOR:The disagreement concerning theinvitation of George Lincoln Rock¬well has dominated this column forthe past few days. Yet meanwhile,Student Government, a body notunknown for its disagreement,passed a resolution with but onevote against it. I suggest that suchagreement is, indeed, more sig¬nificant than Mr. Rockwell.The resolution is, however, sig¬nificant in more respects than theagreement upon it, for it concernsitself with the discriminatory hous¬ing list of the University HousingOffice. In fact, in this column inlate January, Warner A. Wickmentioned, in a now famous letter,that the University was “about tomake an important announcement”on the subject. However, the issueis of great importance aside fromDean Wick's interest in it. Housingis, after all, one of the majoraspects of any community whetherit is a normal community or anintellectual one, and it should havebeen clear from the CORE sit-insof last year that the Universitypolicy on this important subjectleaves something to be desired.Of course, the housing list, show¬ing vacancies available to students,is one of the major influences inthe housing market of this com¬munity. Yet the University hasmade no policy and taken no actionexcluding discriminatory housingfrom its list. This lack of action isin direct contradiction to the statedpolicy of the University, the sug¬gestions of the faculty report oflast year, and the example of mostmajor American universities.According to Ray E. Brown,Vice-President of the University,the policy of the University is tooperate its own properties on anon-discriminatory policy for stu¬dents and faculty. However, theUniversity has not removed dis¬criminatory listings from the hous¬ing list. According to the FacultyCommittee on Rental Policies re¬port of February, 1962, the univer¬sity should “reorganize the file ofnon-University housing in the stu¬dent housing office so that allvacancies listed have been care¬fully screened to see . . . that allvacancies listed are open to stu dents without regard to race, color,creed, or national origin.” But theUniversity has ignored this sugges¬tion of its own faculty. Finally,major Universities including Yale,Harvard, Radcliff, Cornell andStanford have excluded discrimina¬tory housing from their housinglists. Yet the University of Chicagohas refused to follow this excellentexample.Indeed, a resolution urging theUniversity to amend this injusticeand hypocrisy is significant. TheStudent Government has come out.in direct opposition to this policywhich it feels furthers a goal whichis both, “morally unacceptable andrealistically undesirable,” and hasasked for, “affirmative steps insupport of the general ideal ofnon-discriminatory housing in theuniversity community.” I hopethat Dean Wick’s important an¬nouncement is as significant.RICHARD H. SCHMITTChairman,Community Relations CommitteeHit rule, not DC decisionTO THE EDITOR:Following yesterday’s editorial,it is perhaps unnecessary to furtherclarify my “Letter” of Feb. 2; how¬ever, to eliminate the possibilityof further mis-readings, I will pointout that the “Letter” did not pro¬test the decision of the DisciplinaryCommittee, in which a rule wasfairly enforced.It did, I hope, justify strongdoubts as to the wisdom of main¬taining within a university com¬munity, such rules and their com¬mon principle (“The University . . ,requires behavior that is consistentwith . . . the generally acceptedmorals and manners ot our socie¬ty” ; purportedly the “obligationsof membership in a free communi¬ty"—Student Handbook).In the absence of an attempt toremove them, these doubts remain.GAIL ALTMANUiihappening won’t happenTO THE EDITOR:By now it must be evident toall intelligent readers that the dem¬onstration put forth by Mr. Olden¬burg was a travesty in the name ofart; that it did not in any waydemonstrate what is truly current that it must be dealt with in termsof its real meaning lor humanbeings.First it is necessary to examinethe real meaning of freedom. Thetraditionally liberal conception offreedom is closely related to thephilosophy, “There is no realTruth.” This philosophy seems tomake it necessary to allow absolutefreedom for all ideas, since it holdsthat no man or group of men cancorrectly determine the Truth. Asa result, this abstraction of theterms freedom and Truth becomesirreconcilable with the practicalgoals of a free society in so far asthese goals rule out the practice ofracist ideologies, while at the sametime seem to include the right toadvance them.Two hundred years ago a groupof great men were faced withbasically this same contradictionbetween a liberal attitude towardstruth and the practical goals of afree society. In order to resolvethis contradiction they realized thatfreedom and truth were real thingsfor men, and not just ideas. Thusthey wrote in the Declaration ofIndependence, that “We hold thesetruths to be self evident, that allmen are created equal, that theyare endowed by their creator withcertain inalienable riehts, andamong these are life, liberty, andthe pursuit of happiness.”Is the Declaration of Independ¬ence, because its authors have“decided” what the truth is, a be¬trayal to their liberal heritage?Not at all! It means that aftermany hundreds of years men havelearned that there is a truth: thatall men are created equal! Thesigners of the Declaration did notarbitrarily decide this, it was evi¬dent from man’s long and bitterhistory of struggling and sufferingin order to make this truth a realthing. It was decided for thesigners by all the men who haddied fighting for the realization ofthis truth. It has been further con¬firmed by all those who have diedsince fighting for the reality offreedom.Why then must we subject our¬selves to a man who denies thistruth? We do not have to, and weneed not be afraid of being callednarrow-minded. We can deny with¬out question the sli"h(e>t possibilitythat Rockwell could be right. Todo anything less than deny thetruth of his fascist ideology wouldmore than slander ourselves, butwould slander all the men whohave died making freedom a realthing for us. For Mr. Rosen toeven suggest that Rockwell couldbe correct is such a slander. IfRockwell does have to come here,the least Mr. Rosen can do is joinall the people on this campus,many of whom have had friendsor relatives killed by men likeRockwell, in a huge demonstrationagainst the racist and reactionarypoison of his philosophy.One other argument has beenexpressed in the Maroon whichshould be refuted in order to clear¬ly understand what free speechentails. This argument states thatfascists and communists are all ofthe same mold, and should there¬fore be treated equally. This againresults from an abstraction of theissue into a system where allideologies are treated as “good”or “evil.” It is crucial to realizethat there has never been anysocialist, communist, Trotskyite, orother type of liberal who has everadvocated any kind of racism,genocide, or all out nuclear war asa solution to any problem. Quite tothe contrary, all of these peopleare striving in different ways toonce and for all end such evils.The history of Man is a history ofstruggle against such ideas and inthat struggle liberals in generalhave always been the first to die.Communists make up a very smallportion of those fighting this battle,but they are just as much a partof it as anyone else who sincerelybelieves in freedom. One doesn thave to accept the teachings ofMarx in order to fight against menlike Rockwell, but one should re¬alize that those who do are just asconcerned with the struggle asanyone else.THEODORE PEARSONThis injustice has compelled theSociety for the Preservation ofModern (SPM) to present a similardemonstration in an attempt tobring really current art to the UCcampus.This event is known as an Un¬happening, and consists ot the non¬happening of a large series of un¬expected incidents. I dare say thatthose who have witnessed suchevents in the past will testify thatmore doesn’t happen at an Un¬happening than Mr. Oldenburg everdreamed of having happen at aHappening.Furthermore, this Unhappeningwill have a new twist which, we be¬lieve, has never been tried before:it will not take place.The date will be February 23, inHutchinson Commons. Tickets are$1.50 for students; Oldenburg isinvited free.UC CHAPTER SPMFanatic fascism & freedomTO THE EDITOR:The controversy over invitingLincoln Rockwell to speak on thiscampus has touched upon one ofthe most difficult questions con¬fronting modern societies. Unfor¬tunately, because this problem hasfor the most part been treatedabstractly, it remains unsolved.On the one hand, we see manypeople expressing the ideal of freespeech, saying that it should never,under any circumstances be com¬promised. On the other hand, peo¬ple who have experienced thebrutality of fascism feel that underno circumstances should fascistsbe given even the smallest chanceof winning support. The first argu¬ment treats the concept of freedomabstractly and the second one dem¬onstrates a realistic knowledge ofsuffering. Therefore both of thesepoints of view may appear equallyvalid and yet contradictory. Thesolution to this contradiction doesnot lie in choosing one argumentover the other, but in realizing thatEditor’s Note: We are reprint¬ing the following editorial fromthe Daily Iowan in order to dem¬onstrate that other universities atleast ARE taking active steps torelax their arbitrary and “archaic”curfew systems. We would suggestthat the final paragraph especial¬ly is as applicable to UC as it isto the State University of IowaWhen the boys and girls attendgrade school, their report cardsshow more than just academicperformance. Unlike their imper¬sonal college counterparts, gram¬mar school grade sheets includean important category called “de¬portment” in which the young¬sters are graded for manners,cleanliness, punctuality and otherattributes.As the pupils are graduated intohigh school the deportment cate¬gory is wisely dropped. By ages15, 16 and 17 deportment is stillvery important, but educatorsrealize that if young peoplehaven’t learned to obey rules, abad report card really won’t scarethem. Wise administrators realizethat if students don’t like therules, they will devise means ofgetting around them.And thus American studentsgradually emancipate themselvesfrom grade school restrictions—or do they? While men are grad¬uated into an independent status,girls are not so fortunate if theyenter college and thereby join inthe compulsory dorm life.Most universities, SUI includ¬ed, bind their under-age coedswith an archaic set of hours re¬strictions completely incongruouswith the academic program, whichconsiders coeds, mature enoughfor independent study. But now', fortunately, manyuniversity administrators are re¬alizing that by the time a womanenrolls in college she has madeup her mind whether she intendsto obey the rules or not.The University of Michigannewspaper, The Michigan Daily,reports, “Senior women in soror¬ity houses are already using thekey permission system with nohours restrictions, and judiciarybodies of women’s dorms are con¬sidering ways of instituting thesystem there. Under the key per¬mission system, the keys are as¬signed all senior women, and acoed need only sign out and returnbefore her residence opens at 7a.m. the following day.”At the University of Wisconsin,coeds are urging a similar plan toinclude all junior and senior wom¬en and sophomores with a 2.5or above grade point average.At UCLA, the Office of HousingServices is polling parents of resi¬dents in women’s dorms to seewhether “special restrictions forcollege women have become out¬dated.” If parents agree, the lock¬out system may be discontinued.Under the present rules, coedshave to be in by 2 a.m. Fridayand Saturday nights and mid¬nights Sunday through Thursday.If the grounasweii of opinionagainst over-restrictive women’shours continues, the issue may be¬come an important avenue forprogress at SUI. This Universityhas by no means taken the leadin loosening the fetters binding itscoeds, but it could compensate forthe hesitancy by taking a carefullook at measures being proposedand carried out at other schools.—Jerry ElseaI SHARE-A-RSDE CENTRAL \6 Offers A Unique New Service To Our Mobile Society >/ Now You Con Find Shore Expense Rides or/ Riders to Any City Notionwide. JS Subscribe NOW! For Your Trip Home For Spring Interim. r/ For Complete Information f\ TELEPHONE FI 6-7263 \The BruteMennen Spray Deodorant is rugged. Hard working. Long lasting.Delivers 3 times the anti-perspirant power of any other leadingmen’s deodorant. That’s right. 3 times the anti-perspirant power.Mennen Spray...in the handy squeeze bottle. What a brute! [M]Curfews eased elsewhere Letters to the editor2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 13. 1963'Live Like Pigs"Arden's play is triumph Diefenbaker defeat not tragedy'With the production of LiveLike Figs, “The Last Stage”belies its name, for this newplay by John Arden quite ex¬plicitly indicates a new directionin drama. Without succumbing tothe by-now well codified tricks ofthe avant garde, Arden managesto delineate a fundamental absurd¬ity in the human society, embeddedin a richly realistic texture. Hisrealism obviously owes much tothe “new epic realism'’ of Brecht,but Arden escapes the didacticismsof the German master by concen¬trating his tension within theframework of the ancient myth ofthe uninhibited Dionisiac againstthe social Appollonian structure. Itis this fusion of the theatrical re¬alism of Brecht and the poeticmyths of other contemporary ex¬periments that I found the mostexciting aspect of Mr. Arden’splay.Live I.ike Pigs is certainly aplay that makes a social comment,but Arden avoids the melodramaticand the petulant, foot-stamping at¬titude of Osborne’s heroes by in¬vestigating the area beyond (orbelow) the socially defined values.The “angry” hero objects to thefact that he is not allowed into thesocial fabric. Since he criticizesthat which he seeks, he oftensounds as though he were sufferingindigestion from sour grapes. ButArden’s characters, Sailor Shawneyand his strange menage, exist onthe |>eriphery of society. They areoften confused, sometimes afraid,but always contemptuous of thatworld outside their own. Becausethey have a world of their own,they can have their own valuesfrom which strength and pride canbe derived.What happens when the twoworlds clash? Arden provides amarvelous framework for theirmeeting: Sailor Shawney and hisfamily, consisting of his woman(Rachel) and her son (Col), hisdaughter (Rosie) and her twoyoung children, are victims of“urban renewal.” Removed fromtheir former home where they“lived like pigs,” they are placedin a new multiple-dwelling munici¬pal project, where they proceed to“live like pigs.” The stage is soona marvelous clutter of brokenpieces of the house, too fragile tocontain the powerful, if agingSailor, a disorganized heap ofmulticolored rugs and bedding andthe few household objects that arethe family’s sole possessions and,finally, people. The group is soonincreased with the arrival of thefather of Rosie’s children, a womanhe has been living with and herancient, demented mother. The“other” world is right next doorin the form of a well-scrubbed,lower middle-class family who de¬light in their having risen to thestatus of the housing project.The clash is immediate andfundamental, for the animal ex¬istence of the new arrivals is notsimply a superficial affront to sani¬tary codes. The frank, uninhibitedsexuality of the group is at onceattractive and frightening to theneighboring Jackson family. Theplay is immensely funny, but theribald humor is the dark kind thatgoes to the source of comedy wherejoy and terror are mixed. The factthat this group is beyond socialstrictures is a challenge to theexistence of the walls that definethe civilized world. Society mustfight back for its own existence,and ironically becomes animal indoing so.Arden’s triumph is that he hasbeen able to present this group with¬out comment which would idealizetheir essential freedom as a roman¬tic picture of natural man. This ob¬jectivity is provided by the theatri¬cal framework of the play. Eachscene is prefaced by a ballad whichnot only interrupts the narrativeflow of the drama but forces theaudience to withdraw its attentionfrom the stage. The ballads alsoserve as motifs to which eachscene is an exempla. The audienceknows what it is about to watchbefore the action begins.The great achievement of theplay’s director, Martin Roth, isthat he has carefully preserved thisstructure. Mr. Roth shapes a scenebeautifully, allowing it its own pace and its own climax. And thechallenge of a large cast in a smallspace becomes a virtue, since hewas able to weld them into visualunits. A stunning example of Mr.Roth’s skill here is the wray inwhich the old woman merges withthe bundle of rags, literally crawl¬ing out of the woodwork when shereappeared. I have one objection:given the conditions of “The LastStage,” it is disastrous to have theactors sit when the action is placeddownstage. Anyone beyond the sec¬ond row may as well have listenedto a radio.The whole cast played with acommendable gusto and with pro¬ficiency in varying degrees. Con¬stance Mathieu’s creation of theold crone was perhaps the moststunning accomplishment of theevening; I was half convinced thather mumbo-jumbo charms wouldwork at the end of the play. Dur-ward McDonald was a powerful oldSailor. He managed to project theremnants of great strength and theconviction of his former “glory.”The other men of Sailor’s house¬hold, Col and Blackmouth, wereplayed with sufficient, robust en¬ergy. However, Col’s scene withDaffodil is crucial, and it is ashame that Keith Neilson lackedthe control to anchor it. HerbNector, as the Gypsy Blackmouth,lost most of his dialogue to an in-determinant dialect. His perform¬ance was rescued by fine qualityof his gestures and his enactmentof his attack on a prison guard wasone of the great moments of theplay.Betty K. Hayes was triumphantin her projection of the wildstrength of “Big Rachel.” How¬ever, as Sailor says, her rebukesto “them” get louder and louder,but Miss Hayes failed to build thiscrescendo the way her counter¬part, Caroline Plesofsy (as Mrs.Jackson) did so beautifully. Herprevailing sullenness prevented mefrom fully believing that she de¬rived joy from her essential being.In sum, the production at “TheLast Stage” is a triumph and onthe strength of it I would chooseMartin Roth as the director I wouldlike to see stage Brecht’s master¬piece, Mother Courage. And Iawait, anxiously, further develop¬ments in the career of John Arden.ALICE BENSTONInstructor in HumanitiesMiss UC finalists namedSeven finalists for the MissUC contest of Wash Promwere selected Sunday. Thestudent body will vote nextweek on the selection of Miss UC.Wash Prom will be held on Satur¬day, February 23.Selected as finalists were HoneTamarkin, Association for the Ad¬vancement of Alexander Scriabin;Mary Barchilon, representingHitchcock Hall; Kathryn Edwards,Phi Delta Theta; Norah Kan, 3rdfloor East; Jean Sitterley, UCOrchestra; Pam Smith, RussianChoir; and Jane Whitehall, CricketClub. We reprint the following editorialfrom the McGill University Daily, toshow how some Canadian universitystudents reacted to the collapse of theDiefenbaker government.Five years seven months andtwenty-six days after it was votedinto office by the Canadian people,the government of John Diefen¬baker, torn by internal dissension,condemned before the whole worldfor its fatuous blundering over thedefense issue and despised, accord¬ing to every available indication,by the overwhelming majority ofthe nation, has lost the confidenceof the House of Commons. Defeatcame almost as an anticlimax aftera week of crisis that saw the resig¬nation of one cabinet minister, theapparent defection of several more,and the hourly expectation of anend to the most dismally ineffec¬tual parliament since Confedera¬tion. It was obvious towards theend that the Prime Minister, facedwith certain disaster in the inevita¬ble election, was holding grimlyto the remnants of his office asthe reality of power collapsedaround his ears. He hoped, as healways has hoped, that “tomorrow”would bring some unforeseen im¬provement in the situation, but theinevitable caught up with him. ThePrime Minister who procrastinatedwith regard to every major deci¬sion required of him in nearly sixyears of office, denied himself eventhe possibility of securing a dis¬solution of the House before defeatovertook him.The story of John Diefenbakerwas not tragedy in the classicsense, for the dimensions of theprotagonist were lacking. It variedrather from melodrama to farce.The end was a sordid one for aPrime Minister who had aspiredto emulate Macdonald. He hadseemed, for a time, to capture theimagination of the Canadian peopleas only one statesman does in ageneration. He lailed to grapplewith the problems which they ex-Despres files suitAlderman Leon M. Despresfiled a suit in Circuit Courtrecently charging that theChicago Real Estate Board,“controls and enforces” racialsegregation in city housing.The suit asked that the board beenjoined from carrying on its,“policy of encouraging housingsegregation and from excludingnonwhites from membership on theboard.”Despres charged that the net ef¬fect of the board’s action was tomake “Chicago residentially themost segregated city in the UnitedStates.” Through its members, theboard substantially controls and en¬forces the exclusion of Negro per¬sons from occupancy of real estatein Chicago, except within certainareas of segregated Negro housing.Despres characterized this segre¬gation as “for purposes of extor¬tion, or high rentals and high pur¬chase prices from Negro residentsof Chicago.”Vernon M. Welsh, general coun¬sel for the Real Estate Board, saidhe hadn’t received a copy of thecomplaint yet, but he denied Des¬pres’ charges.-Student Government Charter-FLIGHTS TOEUROPE$265 Round TripJune 17— Sept. 13 orJuly 18 — Aug. 23for information call Ml 3-0800ext. 3272, 3:30 - 5:00 weekdays pected him to solve. He survivedthe 1962 election, which his partyran second in the popular vote,owing to the umforseen rise of So¬cial Credit in Quebec which deniedthe Liberals their expected sup¬port from that province. He canhardly survive the next one.History will judge John Diefen¬baker, and it will not judge himkindly. He campaigned on hisclaim to have restored the healthof the economy a week before hewas forced to reveal the mostserious monetary crisis of ourgeneration. He muttered impres¬sively about the need for nationalunity, and dismissed an inquiryinto English-French relations as awaste of time. He made procrasti¬ nation a way of life. He thundereddenunciation of Communism, whichhe combatted by sowing discord inthe Western alliance and evolving adefense pollicy so esoteric that hisown Minister of National Defenseproved unable to understand it.Though the skies darkened his ex¬cuse was the same, yesterday, andtoday, and forever. It was not he,the Prime Minister, who was re¬sponsible for the country’s prob¬lems. It was the “old gang,” thebureaucrats, the “socialists in dis¬guise,” and of course the Amer¬icans, who frustrated his plans tobring light to the universe. Historywill dismiss these as the excusesof a charlatan. We are content tolet the Canadian people judge themin the approaching election.On Campus withMaxShuJman(Author of “/ TFa* a Teen-age Dwarf", “The ManyLoves of Dobie Gill is”, etc.)THE CURSE OF THE CAMPUS: NO. 2As was pointed out last week, one would think that witli allthe progress we have made in the education game, somethingmight have been done by now about roommates. But no. Theroommate picture has not brightened one bit since EthanGoodpimple founded the first American college.(Contrary to popular belief, Harvard was not the first. Mr.Goodpimple started his institution some 75 years earlier. Andquite an institution it was, let me tell you! Mr. Goodpimplebuilt schools of liberal arts, fine arts, dentistry, and tanning.He built a lacrosse stadium that seated 102,000. Everywhereon campus was emblazoned the stirring Latin motto CAVEM USSI—‘‘Wateh out for moose.” The student union containeda bowling alley, a clock, and a 16-chair barber shop.(It was this last feature—the barber shop —that, alas,brought Mr. Goodpimple’s college to an early end. The studentbody, being drawn from the nearby countryside, was composedchiefly of Pequots and Iroquois who, alas, had no need of abarber shop. They braid their hair instead of cutting it, and asfor shaving, they don’t. The barber, Tremblatt Follicle by name,grew so depressed staring all the time at 16 empty chairs thatone day his mind finally gave way. Seizing his vibrator, he ranoutside and shook the entire campus till it crumbled to dust.This later became known as Pickett’s Charge.)But I digress. We were discussing ways for you and yourroommate to stop hating each other. This is admittedly diffi¬cult but not impossible if you will both bend a bit, give a little.I remember, for example, my own college days (Berlitz, ’08).My roommate was, I think you will allow, even less agreeablethan most. He was a Tibetan named Ringading whose nativecustoms, while indisputably colorful, were not entirely endear¬ing. Mark you, I didn’t mind so much the gong he struck onthe hour or the string of firecrackers he set off on the half-hour.I didn’t even mind his singeing chicken feathers every dusk anddaybreak. What I did mind was that he singed them in my hat.To be fair, he was not totally taken with some of my habitseither—especially my hobby of collecting water. I had no jarsat the time and just had to stack the water any-old-where.Well sir, things grew steadily cooler between Ringading andme, and they might have gotten actually ugly had we not eachhappened to receive a package from home one day. Ringadingopened his package, paused, smiled shyly at me, and offeredme a gift.“Thank you,” I said. “What is it?”“Yak butter,” he said. “You put it in your hair. In Tibetanwe call it gree sec kidstuff."“Well now, that’s mighty friendly,” I said and offered him agift from my package. “Now you must have one of mine.”“Thank you,” he said. “What is this called?”“Marlboro Cigarettes,” I said and held a match for him.I le puffed. “Wow!” he said. “This sure beats chicken feathers!”“Or anything else you could name,” 1 said, lighting my ownMarlboro.And as we sat together and enjoyed that fine flavorfulMarlboro tobacco, that- pure white Marlboro filter, a glow ofgood fellowship came over us—a serene conviction that noquarrels exist between men that will not yield to the warmth ofhonest good will. I am proud to say that Ringading and I re¬main friends to this day, and we exchange cards each Christmasand each Fourth of July, firecrackers. © ma nu* shuimanWherever you or your roommate may be—on any campusin any city, town, or hamlet in any state of the Union—youwill find Marlboros at your favorite tobacco counter—softpack or flip top box.Feb. 13, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3CultureCalendarCabaretsSecond City has opened their tenthshow. Something a little unusual evenfor their fertile minds, it contains apeace meeting that duplicates the realthing. 1846 N. Wells nightly 9-11, Fridayand Saturday 9, 11 and 1. Sunday 3p.m. matinee, for reservations DE7-3992; $2 and $2.50.ExhibitsAn exhibition of Photographs by Chi¬cago area professional photographers,at the McCormick Place Art Galleryfeaturing the work of Mickey Pallas,Myron Davis. Carl Burk, Arthur Siegeland Robert Amft. 10 to 5 daily.DanceFolk Dancing, Sunday, Ida Noyeshall. 1212 E. 59th. 8 p.m.Country Dancing, oldest dance groupon campus, Wednesday, 8 p.m., IdaNoyes hall.FilmsFreud, opens Friday at the LoopTheatre. A biography of psychoanalysis,focuses on the years of Freud's life be¬ginning at the age of 29. A well-doneand mildly disturbing film, it will provea delight for undergrads in psych, anda comedy of the obvious for grads inthe department.Art Institute weekly series at 8 p.m.on Thursday presents a 1927 silent film“Berlin: Symphony of a City" a mile¬stone in documentary films: a day inthe life of the city taken through can¬did camera shots. 50c.Documentary film group—“MexicanBusride” Soc. Sci., 122, Friday 7:15and 9:15 p.m., 50c.The Black Orchid,’’ at B-J courts,8 and 10 p.m.MusicMusic by Monteverdi, Saturday. BondChaoel, 8:30 p.m.William Clauson, folk singer at Roose¬velt University on Saturday at 8:30p.m. Studebaker Theatre, WA 2-3585,extension 395. $2.50 and $3.50.Chicago Symphony Orchestra on Sat¬urday at 8:30, “Scheherazade.” Concer¬tino for Trumpet and String Orchestra,by Riisqger, “Divertissement” by Ibert.“Rhapsody Italia, Opus 11,” by Ca-sella. $1.25 to $2.25.Bach Aria Group: Eileen Farrell, JanPierce, and others at the StudebakerTheatre on Friday at 8:15 p.m.,922-0764. $2.50 to $6.Chicago Chamber Orchestra, at Car-son Pirie Scott auditorium, 1 S. StateStreet, at 6 and 7:45 on Monday pre¬sents Bach's “Concerto No. 1,” theChicago premiere of Epstein’s “Meta¬morphoses for Woodwind Trio andString Orchestra.” Cowell’s “Hymnand Fugue Tune No. 2.” and Mozart's“Symphony No. 26.” 744-2295. $2Second City recital series: TeresaOrantes. “Songs of Vivald and Mahler.”on Mondays. DE 7-3992, students $1.50general, $2.Theatre“Good News,” Mandell Hall, 8:30p.m., Saturday and Sunday.j Classifieds jROOMS, APTS., ETC.Graduate student wants room & boardwith German family to improve Ger¬man conversation. C. Dickson. FA 4-3991FOR SALELike New, ICE SKA THIS, Size 12, $9 80.Call BU 8-4802TIRES AND BATTERIES10-40 PER CENT DISCOUNTAll American brands and Miehelin x,Bierelli and Dunlop. Call NO 7-6732,anytime.WANTEDWAITRESS for the Medici about to bereopened. NO 7-9693, or HY 3-3398.Typist needed to type one term paper,corrected copy available, and help withanother in Economic Botany. MI 3-7113after 6 p.m. If no response call againlater. Mr. Allin Jackson.PERSONALSLOST: Gold wrist watch. Finder caltMI 3-6000, room 322. REWARD.Who has the right to censorship? Any¬one we know?Disneyland East Government in exileGeorge, they are having SECONDCITY, two bands and scrumptious food,all for $5. I want to go!M.| Today's EventsDivinity School luncheon, “The IllinoisPublic Aid Controversy,” ReverendThomas B. McDonough, Calvert House,Swift Commons, 12:20 p.m.Platform discussion meeting. LiberalParty, Central Unit meeting room, 7p.m.Lecture, Young Peoples SocialistLeague, “Crisis in the British LaborParty.” Saul Mendelson, Social Sciences201. 7:30 p.m. Tempest Winners...Lap 1!ASHTON B. BURKEU. OF KENTUCKY ROGER P. BLACKERN.Y.U. JOHN N. BIERERTHE CITADEL WILLIAM P. MARTZ.KENT STATE U. LUCY LEE BASSETTEMORY U.Did you win in Lap 2?IMPORTANT! If you hold any of the 10 winningnumbers, claim your Pontiac Tempest LeMans Con¬vertible in accordance with the rules on the reverseof your license plate.AM claims for Tempests and Consolation Prizesmust be sent via registered mail, postmarked byFebruary 23, 1963 and received by the judges nolater than February 25, 1963.If you hold a Consolation Prize number, you win a4-speed Portable Hi-Fi Stereo Set, “The Waltz” byRCA Victor. Or, you may still win a Tempest! (Seeofficial claiming rules on reverse of your licenseplate, and observe claiming dates given above.) 1. B9818592. C0029123. B6383544. C4266385. B291597 6 A3044757. C5186608. B3506929. B15136010. B203340CONSOLATION PRIZE NUMBERS!1. A6704362. C6083613. A0707734. A7825495. A534015 6. C1116687. C1623858. B4157699. C62414810. B018030 11. B86986512. C20379713. A03994914. C59939415. B234707BM GRAND PRIX 50Sweepstakes for colleges onlyMore than 50 times the chance to win than if open to the general public.'35 Tempests to go!Get set for the next lap ... 15 more Tempests and 20more Consolation Prizes! It’s never been easier to win. no essays, no jingles, no slogans. Just pick up anentry blank where you buy your cigarettes. Enter now...enter often. Any entry received by March 1st, can winone of 35 Tempests still to go! Of course, entries you’vealready submitted are still in the running! 4SrTlpEXCLUSIVE FOR THE GIRLS!If you win a Tempest you maychoose instead a thrilling expense-paid 2-week Holiday in Europe—fortwol Plus $500 in cash!Get with the winners...far ahead in smoking satisfaction i6EC THE PONTIAC TEMPEST AT YOUR NEARBY PONTIAC DEALER IA VALENTINE S DAY REMINDERLOVE TS A SPECIAL WAY OF FEELTNG .. $1.75A FRIEND IS SOMEONE WHO LIKES YOU .. . $1.75HAPPINESS IS A WARM PUPPY $1.50The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE. 3 PIZZAS FOR PRICE OF 2Free UC DeliveryTERRY S PIZZAMl 3-40451518 E. 63rd Street Attention SENIOR and GRADUATE MEN StudentsWHO NEED SOME FINANCIAL HELP IN ORDER TO COM¬PLETE THEIR EDUCATION DURING THIS ACADEMIC YEARAND WILL THEN COMMENCE WORK.Apply to STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION, INC.A Non-Profit Educational Corp. 610 Endicott Bldg., St. Paul I, Minn.?ri. Sat. Sun15 16 1722 25 ★Mandel Hall A Musical SpoofGood News $1.50 & $2.00AtMandel Hall Box Office CLIPANDFILE