Peraxlics* k *tLcro*Uifair housing law drive beaun Advance registration starts Tuesdayruns >U " VJ ■ ■ V Advance registration for Undergraduates who mustA letter signed by six members of the faculty urging the Board of Trustees and the spring quarter for under- change sections in one or moreAdministration to support the fair housing practices bill now before the Illinois State graduates will begin Tuesday &eneral education sequences forLegislature will be sent to all members of the University Senate today. an(j ]ast until March 15 The next t*uarter may complete Step"The letter, which expresses the six faculty members’ agreement with the objectives dates and nmrprfurpc nf remctra 3 betweon March 4 and 15 only..< the biU and their "strong desire — —— — ( ?«„ However, students in this groupsee it passed in marks the h^^^^passage otTurt 1"' ''“1 *7" ° ^ foJ gradu^fstttfcnts, a^rs "W reserve places in the sam.start of a many-faceted campus a Here ^ an exceUent * COmmlt',ee °n the analysts of ln the spring Time Schedule, which sections of any general educationUI^'L ^nr^trt for" thp hill ^ ” opportunity for the Administration “I,u “** Ul I,,ctu^us’ IS available today. sequence in which they do planI 3 student^ Government and UC and the Board of Trustees of the Gerbard E- °- Meyer, associate Next week, only those under- to continue by requesting the Reg.■ CORE are expected to pass resolu- University to use their influence professor of economics in the Col- graduates planning to continue in istrar t0 hold them.I t ons asking the University to sup- ln “elPinS solve the racial prob- lege; Mrs. Helen H. Perlman, the same sections of all generalI H*r( (he bill and UC CORE may te™8- professor in the School of Social education sequences may completeI circulate a student petition endows- “It is directly applicable to our Service Administration; professor Step 3 of registration -collection1 inc the bill said Bruce Rappaport, immediate community also as such of soc,a[ sciences and in the Grad- of class admission tickets and re-chairman of UC CORE. a statewide law would relieve uate Scho°l of business; and Jos- ceipt of quarterly tuition bills.The Fair Housing Practices Bill some of the pressures on Hyde CP^ Sutler, professor in the divin- Students in this group who do notcurrently under consideration in Park-Kenwood. We are urging the ily school. complete step 3 by next Fridaythe Illinois State Legislature would University to publicly support the All live in either Hyde Park or may find that the sections in whichKenwood. they wish to continue are closed.*|« oppOTtomity for the Admirdstration ** « * avaU^te^.'prohibit discrimination in sales, bill and use whatever means itrealty dealings and advertising, deems proper to secure its pas-and apartments and hotels. sage.”it would provide enforcement ‘‘The report of the Faculty Corn-through the courts of fair housing mittee on Rental Policies made inrules, and set up a fair housing February, 1962, by Professorscommission similar to the Illinois Allison Dunham. Philip M. Hauser,State Fair Employment Practices and George P. Shultz, to the Pres-Commission, said Rappaport. ident of the University, stated un-Abner Mikva, UC alumnus and der the subheading ‘Ask Open Oc-state representative from the Uni- cupancy’ that the Universityversity’s district, is sponsoring the should recognize that its commu-bill. nily objectives can more effective-“The most promising way at this iy be achieved in the long-run iftime of getting an open occupancy the city as a whole and, in fact,policy for the metropolitan area is, the metropolitan area as a wholeit is generally agreed, through a js open to Negro occupancy,” saidstate law,” said the faculty letter, the faculty letter.This is because the City Council ‘‘This would not merely be ahas said it cannot at this time, for move towards the long-run goalslegal reasons, enact an open occu- of non-discrimination and equalitypancy law, explained Rappaport. of opportunity for all as well asA number of states have fair integration, but also would morehousing laws, and they have all immediately remove pressure up-been held constitutional. In addi- on this particular communitylion, a number of cities, including (Hyde Park-Kenwood) which mightNew York, Philadelphia, and severely hamper the speedyBerkeley, have open occupancy achievement of the University’slaws.‘‘Over a The (kite of Nazi Partyleader George LincolnRockwell's speech has beenchanged from Tuesdaynight to Monday night, inMandel Hall.Vol. 71—No. 72 University of Chicago, Thursday, February 21, 1963Report shows run-down conditionof University-owned faculty housing“Without exception” Uni- responsibility for providing rental panding needs of the campus o*versity owned faculty housing housing to meet the entire needs for neighborhood reasons” (that, “is old, obsolescent and fre- of the faculty. However, (the Uni- is to prevent the building fromacknowledged goal of a ‘stable, quently contains considerable veisityi is cwiseious of the special {je|erjoratjng to slum conditions)year ago, in CORE'S integrated community of high deferred maintenance,” according problems confronting the lower- oresentlv 35 build-first discussion with President standards.’” to a recently issued University paid faculty especially these with There are presently 3.> build-Beadle, he agreed that it would The six faculty members who report. families, and for providing hous- ings in the program containing 244be an excellent idea to have a signed the letter are: Maynard C. Ray Brown, vice-president of mg for new arrivals to the cam- ,mits located between 47 StreetState Open Occupancy Law,” said Krueger, associate professor of the University for administration, Pus- . and 61 Street and between CottageRappaport. economics in the College: Richard in a comprehensive review of the In addition to age and obsoles- (^rove Avenue and the Illinois“The much-heralded Faculty Re- P. McKeon, Charles F. Grev Dis- University’s faculty housing pro- ence, Brown listed other “short- ... .port repeated this need for Fair tinguished Service professor of gram, explains that “the policy comings” of the faculty housing ' . .Housing Legislation,” he continued, philosophy and classical languages of the University is not to assume program. Many of the apartments of these properties is in excess ofare on the third floor of buildings $1,600,000.without elevators and are ehar- “Housing owned by the Uni-acterised by long and darkhallway connecting a series of ~Over the past four decades, mine workers received double the study some 20 other studies of rooms, one behind the other.” has historically been pi iced sub*the relative difference between wa«f ot, their non-unionized industrial and o.«un.aiional wages Other unsatisfactory features ofunion wages and non-union “wT-— -"" SoS the apartments are inadequate The Umvers.ty does not seek towages has been the greatest butnc jjiuioaupti,)' auti viudojcui language vuv v***^*^**^Lewis discusses union wage studyeeived about 50 per cent as much; worked only with those studies cIoset space> dark bedrooms, no recover capital funds invested inbut by the end of World War II, from which he could estimate nu- individual tenant heating control, faculty housing It does, however,there was little difference be- merical wage changes or the direc- . , , , a oMrWn ldtunj tit)tiMtiK.I wage changestion of change.during periods of rapid deflation, . _, , ,, A . . . , tween unionized and non-union-and the smallest during periods -zed miners, wages In 1956.7ot high inflation, said Professor however, unionized miners were soon be published in a book en- inadequate play space for children, expec( (ho rent structure to cover.. . T . , . , ... inadequate off-street parking, and r , .. . , .The results of Lewis study will laok proximity to the Universi- the expenses of operation, mclud-of Economics H. Gregg Lewis yes¬terday.Lewis, who has just completeda study comparing union withnon-union wages, discussed some receiving nearly 50 per cent more, titled Unionism and Relativesaid Lewis. Wages in the United States: AnOther examples Lewis cited Empirical Inquiry. ty laboratory school. mg the cost of debt service.”Brown states however that “ob- The University expec ts to losesoleseent conditions that are not $31,500 on the program this year.were unionized building workers, Lewis has been a member of due to w|e fundamental structure However, the program is expectedwho from 1930-34 received 25 per the department of economics of the buildingcent more than their non-union since 1939. His teaching and re- „ . .. , , . to break even in 1964-5 due partlyVarious items such as bathroom to “modest” annual rent increases.cH his findings in a lecture at the counterparts; airline pilots who search activities at the University fixtures, kitchen equipment, andC.iaduate School of Business. received 21-34 per cent more in have been interspersed with sev- electrical outlets are being cor- Many of the buildup,, m195(5; and the men’s clothing eral appointments to federal fected wherever the hfe-expeetan- program contain six or fewerworkers who in 1928-32 received labor boards. cy °* Uie building warrants. units. Brown has stated that since30-39 per cent more. The clothing He was the co-author, with The buildings used in the fac- operadng cost Gf these struc-The difference between wagesreceived by union members andthose received by non-union mem-bers may iiave exceeded 25 per workers union, too, was above Senator and former UC faculty ulty housing program were ong- .. . . ,cent at or near the nadir of the average in effectiveness, and this member Paul Douglas, of Studies inally acquired by the University lult‘ mgnei ma ia.Kgreat depression in the late 1920s, diminished after World War II. Consumer Expenditures, which either because “it is expected that tures, “whenever the smallerbut has declined from then on,said I,ewis.In the 1930s, it was under 20per cent; immediately followingWorld War II, it was less thanfive per cent. In the decade after1947-49, union wages recoveredsomewhat, and are currently 10to 15 per cent greater than non¬union wages, according to Lewis.An exceptionally low period,when unions were practically in¬effective in getting increasedwages for their members, camenear the end of World War II.Lewis estimated union effective¬ness at this time as between zeroand two per cent.The exceptions to this period,according to studies examined byLewis, were the transport work¬ers, who received 7-18 per centmore because they were union¬ized, and the hotel workers,whose wages were 6-10 per centhigher.Lewis placed the effect ofunions in normal periods, thosethat do not have relatively highrates of inflation or deflation.Within one industry, the ef¬fects of unions very substantiallyfrom one year to another, saidLewis.He cited the relative differencein wages earned by members ofthe United Mine Workers and non¬union miners as “extreme.”From 1920-2, the unionized Lewis used as the basis for his was published in 1947. the land will be required for ex-Voting begins today for theselection of Miss UC. Ballotboxes will be in Hall, the SocialSciences Building, and MandelHall from 9-4:30 today and to¬morrow, and in Pierce Tower,Burton-Judson Courts, and NewDorm from 5-7. The winner willbe crowned by UC PresidentGeorge Beadle at 11:30 Saturdaynight at the 68th annual Wash¬ington Prom. Every' studentregistered on the Quadrangles this quarter, graduate and un¬dergraduate, may vote.The candidates, picturedabove, are (from left to right):Hene Tamarkin (American As¬sociation for the Advancementof Alexander Scriabin), CocoBarchelon (Hitchcock Hall),Jane Whitehill (Cricket Club),Jean Sitterly (UC Orchestra),Kit Edwards (Phi Delta Theta),Norah Kan (Third Floor East),and Pam Smith (Russian Choir). Wash. Prom will begin at7:30 with the Second City doing“Peace Rallies.” A cateredbuffet dinner will be served at8, 9. and 10 pm. A jazz combowill play in the Ida NoyesLibrary from 8:30 on. and A1Ford’s Band will play dancemusic in the Cloister Club from9 pm on. At midnight, excerptsfrom Good News will be per¬formed, and the Gleeful Clubwill sing. properties are not required forfuture campus e x p a n s i o n orneighborhood stability, it is pro¬posed to offer these propertiesfor sale giving the occupants firstchoice to purchase.”Currently seventy per cent ofthe faculty lives within the HydePark-Woodlawn community, andhalf of those that live in this com¬munity own their own homes.“The success of the urban re¬newal activities in the Universitycommunity presents a dilemma inthe administration of the Uni¬versity’s concern for housing itsfaculty. As the neighlmrhood l»e-comes more attractive, the de¬mand for existing housing supplyincreases from both the generalpublic and the faculty. The moredemand that is generated forhousing in the neighborhood, lie-cause of renewal efforts, t h egreater the problem it createsfor the University’s faculty.”Thirty five of the two hundredplus townhouses in Hyde Parkare owned by faculty members.The City of Chicago will soonsell lots for 300 single family resi¬dences in 14 sites restricted to lowdensity housing under the urbanrenewal program. According tothe report, “the university is ac¬tively working with facultygroups to enable them to provi ethe housing they want throughthe vehicle of urban renewal.”TIKI TOPICSHave you heard! ORALS,HOUSE OF TIM is servingluneh! Shipped in with friendsfor luneh the other day, andwliat a pleasant surprise. Oneof the Daily Luneh Specialswas Fried Chicken SandwichPlate for 90c. The Special ofthe Day “Beef Stew” Masdelicious for only SI.00. Cock¬tails are available. Kitchen isopen from 1 I :00 A.M. to3:00 A.M. One of Hyde Park's FinestARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRSPECIALIZING IN:Heels ChangedHeels RepairedToes Cut OutVamps LoweredOrthopedic WorkZipper RepairsProfessional Dyeingand Refinishing ofShoes and HandbagsColors MatehedFAirfax 4-96221749 E. 55th St.ORALS, HOUSE OF TIKI1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-758551 si and Lake Park TAPE SPECIAL1800' Mylar 3.49Acetate 600* 98cAcetate 1200‘ 1.79MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTS Director protests reviewTO THE EDITOR:Carol Horning has been gracingthis fair campus with what shecalls theatre reviews for the pastquarter and a half. Miss Horninghas been active in the theatre forover ten years; one would thinkthat perhaps she knew somethingabout theatre. Apparently shedoesn’t. I have read each reviewshe has written this year, all ofwhich have bestowed praise onthe reviewed production. Hence,I felt somewhat relieved that MissHorning was assigned to reviewGOOD NEWS. view. I quote: “. . . it’s a success¬ful evening of theatre, much toeverybody’s surprise.”Apparently Miss Horning didn’tsense the excitement in the audi¬ence about the production. As adirector, I hate to see her shrugoff some really fine performancesby members of the cast. If shewould have spent more time talk¬ing about actual things in the pro¬duction and less time talking likea circus barker, everyone wouldhave been better off.Upon picking up Wednesday’sMaroon I discovered that MissHorning decided t hat GOODNEWS was more like a circusthan a show. I also discovered thatshe managed to incorporate agreat deal of personal snobbish¬ness and dislike for UniversityTheatre in general into her re-get Lois More frommore bodyin the blendmore flavor THEM IRACIE TIPin the smokeC3KIO more tastethrough the filter &ErS Unfortunately, Carol is one ofthe Actor’s Company die-hards.She split away from UniversityTheatre last year and has refusedto speak kindly of UT since thetwo groups reunited this Autumn.We are tired of politics going onin the theatre. We want theatrereviews, not impressions of showsfrom someone who has an avoweddislike for University Theatre. were striven after. Granted thatthe downtown papers have statfreviewers, but there too it is re.freshing and stimulating to see anew by-line.I cannot believe that Miss Horn¬ing has come running to the Ma¬roon office pleading for a review?er’s contract, for the task is notan especially pleasant one. Butwhether she has or not, amiwhether the editors and the read¬ing public find her a good anddisinterested reviewer or not, theMaroon must seek out faculty, adj.ministration, and off-campus pom.pie of merit who will be willing'to review Hyde Park and the Uni¬versity of Chicago’s theatre fareDOROTHY SHARPLES.SAudience member attackstreatment of Good NewsFILTERSU06CTT I MYERS TOBACCO CO.It s (he rich-flavor leaf (hat docs itl Among L&M’s choice tobaccos there’s morelonger-aged, extra-cured leaf than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. And L&M’sfi h er is the modern filter—all white, inside and outside—so only pure whitetouches your lips. L&M’s the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke. As the director of GOODNEWS, a member of UniversityTheatre, and a human being I amincensed to see six weeks of hardwork with, I think, gratifying re¬sults being thrown on the dungheap by a hardened snob. We atUniversity Theatre have decidedthat we prefer no Maroon reviewto one by Carol Horning. How¬ever, Miss Horning need not wor¬ry about not having anything toreview. Ringling Brothers, Bar-num and Bailey are coming toChicago next month.JERRY MASTDirector, GOOD NEWSFormer culture editorBemoans theatre policyTO THE EDITOR:As former culture editor of theMaroon, 1 am sadly disappointedat the disintegration of some ofthe cultural features which thepaper tried hard to maintain whileI was on the staff. The death ofthe Culture Vulture and the sub¬stitution of a dry calendar in tinyprint was of course a blow, butone to the sentiment and it hasbeen overcome.More serious is the degenera¬tion of the policy underlying thereviewing of local theatre: CarolHorning’s review of Good Newsin yesterday’s Maroon was theeighth review she has written forthe paper since last August andin that period only ten local re¬views have appeared. The two re¬views that Miss Horning did notwrite have both appeared withinthe last two or three weeks (In¬ternational House Theatre's Don.luan in Hell and the Last Stage’sproduction of Live Like Pigs),which is perhaps a sign that theMaroon is once more consideringpresenting a variety of reviewer’sopinion’s to their reading public.As culture editor, I tried (and wasencouraged to do so by the Edi¬tor) to have a variety of peopleto call on as reviewers, peoplewho were as disinterested as pos¬sible in the machinations of thevarious theatre groups. MissHorning is not, of course, a va¬riety of people, nor has she beena disinterested by-stander in thefeuds that have only this yearcome to an end between theatregroup and theatre group. TheMaroon even authorized her lastfall to review The Merry Wives ofWindsor which was produced bya group she and several othershad founded in the spring of 1961. TO THE EDITOR:As a nearly disinterested audi¬ence member of the opening nighlof GOOD NEWS I should like tovoice a strong dissenting opinionregarding Miss Carol Horning’sreview of that production.Might I first say that the review,itself is probably one of the worstexamples of hasty journalism thatI have seen in some time. It some¬how exemplifies a broader lack ofcare and respect for journalismthat is now rampant in the pagesof the Maroon. It is hardly whatone could call a well-thought outpiece of criticism and its failingsare manifold in s t y 1 e, thought,context.But this aside, the whole pieceseems to reflect some bias (a per¬sonal one, apparently) on the partof Miss Horning. Why, I don’tknow and really have no interest—in knowing but the fact that herreview of GOOD NEWS was pred-judicial and will not give readersa fair appraisal of the show I doknow and to this I object.The most vitrolic critics and re¬viewers usually have something ontheir side, something to base such.1appraisals upon, but even withMiss Horning’s vast experience inthe theatre, the basis of her reviewof GOOD NEWS (in such a detri¬mental way) is unknown.It is sad to acknowledge thatMiss Horning’s writing will influ¬ence the audience response < par¬ticularly on the campus) and as aresult a good many people will,1not attend and enjoy GOODNEWS.Her quarrel seems to have some¬thing to do with style of playing.(I say this with hesitation, forupon re-reading her article, 1 wastotally confounded by her rathermuddled approach and writing.).If this is the basis of criticism,then the condemnation of GOODNEWS is entirely unjustified, forMr. Mast does succeed with it.rather than fail. Perhaps a line ofdiscrimination should be drawn,as Miss Horning realizes the original basis of the musical isspoof but refuses to allow Mr.'Mast his director’s perogative of“spoofing the spoof.” At any rate,it is hardly a strong point of cri¬tical attack.Several times I failed to findperfect reviewers and on one oc¬casion I failed even to make theeffort and a show went un-re-viewed, but for the most part therules of variety and disinterest The thought of even one personbeing denied the pleasure of at¬tending one of the best musicals _seen on this campus in manyyears, through acceptance of MissHorning’s criticism brings forththis letter.Anyone who enjoys laughterand laughing will like GOODNEWS, of this they can be restassured.No, Miss Horning, it isn’t art’but then again, very little is inthe theatre — except in retrospect.ROBERT STRANG* SHARE-A-RIDE CENTRALOffers A Unique New Service To Our Mobile SocietyNow You Can Find Share Expense Rides orRiders to Any City Nationwide.Subscribe NOW! For Your Trip Home For Spring Interim.For Complete InformationTELEPHONE FI 6-72632 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 21, 1963UC Foreign Policy Centerevaluates American actions Campus fund drive for WUS this weekThe purpose of UC’s Centerfor the Study of AmericanForeign Policy is to under¬stand the principles, objec¬tives, and probable results ofAmerican foreign policy and toinvestigate possible alternatives tocurrent policies in the light ofthese objectives.The philosophy underlying thework of the Center, which is di¬rected by Hans Morgenthau, pro¬fessor of political science, assumesthat over long periods of time, theforeign policy of any nation, inso far as it is rational, follows afairly predictable pattern, com¬posed of the “objective realities ofhistory, geography, and politics.”By confronting these factorswith the declarations made bystatesmen throughout Americanhistory, the Center hopes that aclear pattern of the national inter¬est will emerge. Thus a standardwill be established by whichthought and action in Americanforeign policy can be evaluated.The Center also sponsors lee-lines throughout the world as wellas research projects which haveled to the publication of ten books.Morgenthau now delivers most ofthe lectures planned by the Center.Last year he gave 65 speeches touniversities and other organizatonsincluding SANE. The Center alsosponsored Willard Beaulac’s lec¬ture at UC during the Autumnquarter.Another aim of the Center isthe classification of “official docu¬ments. newspapers, dippings, andother material relevent to US for¬eign policy” written since 1945.They have completed this classifi¬cation up until I960.At present the Center employsthree UC professors and three re¬search associates. The staff hasincluded professors from such uni¬versities as Harvard and Vienna,and the Vice-President from North¬western University and Columbia.Housing lecture todayThe Social Sciences 122 lec¬ture, “A Housing Policy forChicago,” by Edward Marci-niak, chairman of the ChicagoHuman Relations committee, whichwas previously scheduled for Feb¬ruary 28, w'ill take place today at11:30 in Mandel Hall.Discussant will be Morris .Tano-witz, professor in the departmentof sociology.ClassifiedROOMS, APTS., ETC.2 GRAD students have sunny six roomapt. to share with third girl—$40 perperson, good location. BU 8-6684. Mrs.Dawson after six—available March l. In recent years, the Center’s staffhas decreased to almost Half itsformer size due to the completionof the files for 1945-1960.The most recent book publishedfor the Center was Robert Os¬good's NATO: The Entangling Al¬liance, which dealth with problemsranging from the world wide dif¬fusion of nuclear weapons, to thehigh number of officials who mustbe consulted before NATO can act.Founded in 1950, the Center hasreceived grants from the Lilly,Rockefeller, and Carnegie founda¬tion. The World University Serv¬ice (WUS), an organization‘‘dedicated to mutual assist¬ance in meeting the mostcrucial needs of the universitycommunity throughout the world”is holding its annual campus funddrive this week.UC WUS representatives willsolicit funds in the dormitories. Acollection booth will also be set upin Mandel hall.WUS has done work in Asia,Africa, the Middle East, SouthAmerica and Europe. In Asia,scholarship programs for Chineseand Korean refugees, and projects for student health clinics, cafe¬terias and libraries Jiave been setup. This year WUS hopes to es¬tablish a health clinic at the Uni¬versity of Khartoum and build adormitory In Nigeria.The biggest South Americanproject is construction of a dormand dining room at the universityof Huamanga in the Andes. ThePeruvian students there use thedonated money to defray costswhile doing much of the workthemselves. The university of Hua¬manga is dedicated to the educa¬tion of the indigenous Indians. WUS was founded after WorldWar I for the relief of universitiesin central and southern Europeand has since grown into a world¬wide organization.In 1963-4 WUS will conduct proj¬ects in 22 countries throughout theworld.WUS is sponsored by the Hillelfoundation of American Universi¬ties, the National Newman founda¬tion, the US National Student As¬sociation, the United Student Chris¬tian Council in the United States,and the National Student Councilof the YMCA and YWCA.Result: All 3-speed manualtransmissions inFord-built cars with V-8'snow are fully synchronizedin each forward gearTo get more “go" in low, Ford engineerswere asked to upgrade the conventional3-speed transmission to give driversmore control in all three forward gears—to make "low” a driving gear—and theytackled the problem imaginatively.Their achievement, another Ford First,is the only U.S. 3-speed manual trans¬mission with all three forward gearsfully synchronized! No need now to cometo a complete stop when you shift intolow—and no clashing gears! It lets youkeep more torque on tap for negotiatingsharp turns and steep grades. It makesdriving more flexible, more pleasurable.Another assignment completed andanother example of how engineeringleadership at Ford provides fresh ideasfor the American Road.WANT ADSHELP W ANTEDWho makes the best Kosher Spaghettion the 3rd floor of Ida Noyes?Who makes the best coffee on the 5thfloor of the Ad Building?Who is clean inside?HENE TAMARK1N FOR UC QUEEN.Alexander.WANTED: ride to Aspen, Colorado orvicinity for Spring vacation. Will sharecosts. Call John Culp, 11013 Shorey.MALE counselors and recruitors forprivate summer boys’ camp. NorthernMinnesota. Phone eves. PI 8-0417.PERSONALSMartha, let’s go to WASH PROM. G.Janie, George!This is your membership card to theChicago Cricket Club. MOTOR COMPANTThe American Road, Dearborn, MichiganWHERE ENGINEERING LEADERSHIPBRINGS YOU BETTER-BUILT CARSVote for Miss U. of C.9 AM - 4:30 PM Cobb,Social Science & Mandel5 - 7 PM New Dorm,) . j.qqBJ & Pierce ' WASHPROMSATURDAYNIGHT • 2nd City at 7:30• Buffet - 8,9, & 10(NO LINES!!!)• 2 Bands-8:15• Coronation — 11:30• Good NewsGleeful Singers 12:00M. 21, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Dejq vu'Freud' fails in its purpose“The only thing worse thanbeing talked about is not beingtalked about.” RW (In an¬ticipation of a wild surge ofrequest, we have had, at greatexpense, 1.000 membership cardsprinted up. This card, plus theregular admission price, will ad¬mit the bearer to any movie the¬atre in the world.)There are at least 3 ways oflooking at John Houston’s filmbiography, FREUD. First, one cancompare it with the actual factsof the period it claims to coverin Freud's life (roughly 1885 to1900*. Or one might compare itto other film biographies dealingwith similar men (for example,ZOLA, PASTEUR or BELL).Finally, the film can be viewedin its own frame reference: whatdoes it attempt to say, how doesit say it and does it succeed. Thefirst two points, while interesting,are more or less pedantic. If oneseeks an accurate biography onelooks to books, primary sourcesand other material capable of de¬tailing a man’s life. The film, withIts technical limitations and itseconomic needs to appeal to alarge audience must necessarilyomit a great deal of noncom¬mercial facts.• To compare one type of filmwith a predecessor or prototypeis to tacitly acknowlerge the stag¬nation of an art form. By sayinga previous film was better is tosay the current one has not de¬veloped the art of cinema. To saythe current one is just as goodis to say cinema has reached atechnical equilibrium. Even tohold that the current product isbettor than the old one Ls to con¬demn the past as inadequate andto deny its contributions to themedium. The only just form ofcriticism seems to be in terms ofthe creation as it presents itself.In these terms, FREUD is afailure.FREUD deals with the crucialyears of the development of thetheory and technique of psycho¬analysis. Following Freud’sstudies under Charcot and his as¬sociation with Breuer, it endswith the revelation of the Oedipuscomplex theory. But now unimag¬inatively the film does this: Withprologue and epilogue we are toldSpring ski trip setThe Outing club will spon¬sor its annual ski trip toAspen, Colorado during springinterim, March 15-24.Included in the $87 fee will betransportation by Greyhound char¬tered bus, lodging at the St. MoritzLodge, continental breakfasts andthree dinners at Aspen restaurants,and accident insurance.Rental sen,'ice for skis, poles,and boots can be obtained for $15,all-day ski lessons for $5. and towfees, interchangeable at all slopes,for $33.Reservations should be accom¬panied by a $50 deposit. The bal¬ance of $37 is due by Friday,March 1.Further information can be ob¬tained from Lincoln Ramirez, ex¬tension 3273.Charter Flight seatsSeats on Student Govern¬ment’s charter flight to NewYork during spring interimare now available, accordingto Barbara Caress and Sue Gold¬berg, flight leaders.The plane will leave O’Hare Air¬port at 8 pm. Friday, March 15,and will return from IdlewildeAirport at 7:30 pm. on Sunday,March 24. The round-trip cost,including bus transportation be¬tween the University and O’Hare,is $60.A deposit of $30 should bemade immediately to reserve aplace on the flight. The remaindermust be paid by March 5.Reservations are being takenbetween 3 and 5 pm. on Mondays,Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fri¬days.One-way flights can be ar¬ranged through the flight leaders. Freud’s contributions rank withthose of Copernicus and Darwin.In a rapid panorama of scenes weare taught 1) hysteria is a nerv¬ous disorder and 2) its symptomscan be removed with hypnosis.We are also shown how Freud de¬veloped hypothesis as to the sex¬ual origin of this disorder throughthe intense analysis of one casebringing light into dark, unlock¬ing the mind, and nausea. And,in fact, this is done in a layfashion. But where is the excite¬ment of discovery when Freudand Bluer deliver an interchangethat sounds as if it came out ofan analytic primer? What dramais to be found in a less than clini¬cal, too good to be true psycho¬analysis? There are some goodanalytic sous-ent(indues but theyare frequently too sous to beentendue. E.g. Houston is verycareful to point out Freud was aJew, but to what end? There isno blatant anti-semitiam showntoward him in the film, nor doeshis heritage seem to effect hisformulation of his theories. Whatdramatic purpose did this infor¬mation serve?)The fault, dear Brutus, lies inour stars — and our director. Ad¬mittedly Monty Cliff is at hisbest in a neurotic role but he sur¬passes himself in FREUD. SusaneYork is a shapely hysteric andLarry Parks a good doctor. Toobad none of them can act. Hous¬ton, usually a superb director, re¬lies too much on the didactic ele¬ments of the plot and is contentto present dream sequences inhigh contrast black and white andmemories in a difussed edged fo¬cus. Rhythm and pace as well ascamera angle or movement areabsent.Houston has stated he wantedreach the unconscious of his audi¬ence. He succeeded with us. Wehad an unconscious feeling thatthere would be a question periodafterward.(This Friday DOC FILMS of¬fers what will undoubtedly beyour last chance to laugh beforequarterlies—a potpourri of comicshorts ranging from the slapstickof the Keystone Kops to thesophisticated dirty humor of W. C.Fields.)RWToo many books(IP) There may be toortany books produced, toomuch criticism, and too muchspecialization today in thefield of literature, according toHelen C. White, professor at theUniversity of Michigan.In her presidential address tothe Modern Humanities ResearchAssociation, Miss White warnedthat there is need for self-restraintand for discrimination in writingand publishing.“The modern emphasis on criti¬cism has certainly furnished theyoung literary student with valu¬able tools of analysis and explora¬tion,’’ she continued. “But thereare certain risks that we run, notinevitable if we are aware of them,but certainly to be reckoned with.It is quite true that wide readingcan often be aimless without criti¬cal direction and reflection, but itis no less true that critical reflec¬tion without wide reading can bea very sterile thing and evenperverse.“Contemplating the enthusiasmof certain students, I have won¬dered if the close study of a textof poetry were not the new refugefor the literary student gifted withliveliness of fancy and glibness oftongue but small reading and lesshistory,” Miss White said.Specialization is both the way ofour modern technical and scientificcivilization and the inevitable con¬sequence of our very achievements,according to Miss White. She citedE. M. Tillyard’s suggestion of a“general practitioner of academiccriticism” as an ideal not to beforgotten in the present era ofoften premature specialization.”Blackwood at 2nd CityAssistant professor of mu¬sic Easley Blackwood will be UC scientists honored Today's EventsEdwar Anders, professor inthe department of chemistry,William A. Baker, professorin the department of zoology,and Zvi Griliches, associate pro¬fessor of economics, will study atEuropean universities next sum¬mer under National ScienceFoundation fellowships.The three men were selected byNSF under its Senior Postdoc¬toral Fellowship program for1963-64, designed to sii|>port ad¬vanced research training and toimprove the teaching of science,mathematics, and engineering inuniversities.Anders will study and partici¬pate in research in high pressurechemistry at the University ofBerne, Switzerland. A specialiston meteorites, Anders’ interest iscosm o-chem is t ry.Baker will travel to the Insti¬tute di Genetica Citta Universi-taria, Rome, Italy, to pursue workin genetics. Baker is studying theeffects of radiation upon livingcells and tissues.Griliches will go to the Neth¬erlands School of EconomicsUnknowns win 3rdby Steve Kupetz andRobin KaufmanThe Unknowns beat PsiUpsilon 42-24 last night, win¬ning its third straight intra¬mural basketball champion¬ship. Henderson North beat Coul¬ Econometric Institute, Rotterdam,to study in the field of agricul¬tural economics.f'oming to the University tostudy under the same NSF pro¬gram is William White, biochem¬ist from Ohio State University.* * *Melba Newell Phillips, pro¬fessor in the Physical SciencesDepartment has been awardeda citation by the AmericanAssociation of Physics Teachers.The 1963 Distinguished ServiceCitation praised Dr. Phillips as agifted scholar, teacher, research¬er, and author, whose excellenceprovides a notable example forwomep who seek careers inphysics. The Association alsocommended her participation inits own programs, in the Aca¬demic Year Institute programs atWashington University, and inthe Commission on College Phys¬ics, as well as her contributionsto the improvement of physicsteaching.IM championshipPsi Upsilon is the fraternitychamp, the Unknowns the divi¬sional champs, Henderson Norththe College champs, and Coulterthe B division champs.The intramural season havingended, the free throw contest willstart next week. Lecture: Social Science 128,Housing Policy for Chicago”, EdwardMarciniak, chairman, Chicago HumanRelations Committee, Mandel Hall.11:30 am.Episcopal Holy Communion, BondChapel. 11:30 am.Meeting: CORE and Community Re¬lations committee, to work on StateOpen Occupancy law, SG office, 2:30pm.Elementary Yiddish Class, HillelFoundation, 3:30 pm.Lecture: English place names: Ahistorical-Geographical summary. R.P. Backinsale. Senior lecturer in Geo¬graphy. Oxford University. Rosenwald28, 3:30 pm. Department of Geography.Seminar: “Some boundary problemsin the Theory of Dental Caries.” StuartZimmerman, Research Assistant. ZollerDental Cline and Committee on Mathe¬matical biology. 5753 Drexel. 4 pm.Committee on Mathematical Biology.Track meet: Frosh-sophs vs. Juniorcolleges. Fieldhouse, 4 pm.Lutheran Vespers: Bond Chapel. 5.05pm.Study inGuadalajara, MexicoThe Guadalajara Summer School,a fully accrdeited University o fArizona program, conducted in co¬operation with profesors from Stanford University, University of Cali¬fornia, and Guadalajart, will offerJuly 1 to August 10 art, folklore,geography, history, language andlitierature courses. Tuition, board anjroom is $240. Writee Prof. Juan B.Rael, P.O. Box 7227, Stanford, Calif.ter B 54-38. taking third place.In the championship game, theUnknowns, from the Law schools,took an early lead and held itthroughout the game. Kersletterof the Unknowns was high scorerwith 12 points. His teammateGufstafson followed close behindwith 10.Several of the Psi Upsilonstarters were missing. Neitherteam was playing championshipball.In the other game. HendersonNorth’s Ralph was high scorerwith 16. Although the game startedoff slowly, Henderson scored 6 con¬secutive baskets in a spurt at theend. Henderson led all the way.the featured artist in the fifthof a series of concerts at theSecond City Sabaret Theater, 1846North Wells Street, on Monday.The program will begin witheight preludes and fugues fromBach’s Well Tempered Clavier.This will be followed by the Varia¬tions for Piano by Anton Webern,and five works by Arnold Schoen¬berg. The concert will concludewith a performance of the Balladein F Minor, Op. 52, by Chopin.The recital will begin at 8:30pm. Admission is $2.00. Reserva¬tions can be made by callingDElaware 7-3993.'Subversive1 bill stalledA bill proposed to the Michi¬gan House Committee on Re¬vision and Amendment of theConstitution concerning theappearance of “subversive” speak¬ers on the campuses of publiceducational institutions has beenstalled in that committee, accord¬ing to the Michigan Daily.The bill, proposed recently byRepresentative Richard Guzow-ski, a democrat from Detroit,called for the refusal of the rightto speak for speakers “advocating,teaching, or urging subversion.”Representative Homer Arnett.Republican from Kalamazoo andchairman of the committee, wasquoted as saying several days agothat he “doubts very much”whether Guzowski has the votesto carry the measure through.Guzowski, on the other hand, pre¬dicted “unanimous passage” ofthe bill.Although none of the membersof the committee have disagreedwith the proposed bill in prin¬ciple, the committee has statedthat any action on the bill wouldnot take place before April 1,when Michigan voters decided onthe proposed new constitution. TYPEWRITERSUNTIL MARCH 31. 1963With the purchase of either —1 Olympia Portable Model SM-7 or1 Hermes Portable Model 3000Yau may purchase a sturdy typing table for $1.00 more.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenueUniversity Of Chicago TheatreGoodNewsA Musical Spoofof the'a\p eLAST TWOPERFORMANCESFriday and Saturday8:30 PM *Mandel Hall$1.50 & $2.00 atMandel Hall Box Office