UC gets many lettersand calls on RockwellThe University has received received countless telephone callsat least 100 letters and tele- objecting to the appearance, espe-grams commenting on Ameri- las* Thursday, Friday, Sat-Can Nazi Party leader GeorgeLincoln Rockwell’s recent speechhere,Warner Wick, dean of students,estimated that perhaps two jiercent of these letters were favor¬able.The letters <?ame to many dif- urday, and Monday. “The phonewas ringing all the time,” saidWick, He even received calls athome protesting.On the other hand, Wick said thathe has “had lots of favorable com¬ment in the faculty.”“Nobody in the faculty has come Vol. 71 — No. 77 University of Chicago, Friday, March 1, 1963ferent parts of the University, said to me personally to complain,” heWick, including the President’s of- said. “All the comments I’ve hadficc, his office, and the public rela- in ft. faculty from people who passed by various "women’sitems office. have gone to the trouble to sayIn addition, the University has anything to me were favorable.” Administration considers hoursWUCB won't present amarathon show this year In response to resolutions directly whatever rules there are,” Newman had nohe added. comments on theJames E. Newman, assistant feasibility ofdean of students, said yesterday abolishing hours.. , .... , that the women affected have far women whoques ion o modi y ing women s done all that is necessary to make have their par-house councils, the adminis¬tration will soon consider thehours,Warner their opinions known. ents’ approval.Arms Wick, dean of He said that when the house He said he wouldCampus radio stationWUCB will not present its an¬nual fund-raising marathonthis year, announced technicaldirector A1 Kirk yesterday.The twenty-seven hour oonglom- been the playing of a recording offormer Chancellor Robert Hutch¬ins’ farewell address and the pre¬sentation of the annual farewell be “surprised” ifthere were anyaction befores u en s, sai yesterday that the council resolutions are finally sentmajor question has been one of him, they will be given consid-ge ing e womens house coun- eration by himself, Wick, George ~~ Newmancils themselves to tolk over the Playe> dean of undergraduate stu- ne£l quarter‘ vissue of eurfev*; and make con- dents, and Alan Simpson, dean of Newman said he considers theCrete recommendations. Now that the College,'^is ka5 happened, he said, “ob- Wick said that no doubt the . ..concert of the Pro Nausea Musica. viously we 11 get together and talk house heads and assistant resident Wlck commented that he hasrm n at i i • i.n jj, OV6T " « • - - .... fnnnsl “nn iwic/vn 4^ iL -house council resolutions as “aserious expression of opinion.”The Pro Nausea has won littlefame for its little known versions heads would be consulted, too. found no reason to doubt ’ the“I am always inclined to give Wick declined to make any pre- Stlideat opinion shown* so far.a lot of weight to the opinion of dictions on the outcome of the ,th Wick and Newman lastthe people who have to administer consideration of hours changes. week 831(1 .’fihey would Sive fargreater weight to house councilresolutions than to the SG resolu¬tions already passed asking hourschanges.Last week, North and WestHouse Council passed resolutionsin favor of the abolition of curfewsfor second, third, and fourth yearwomen, subject to parental ap¬proval. The present curfew sys¬tem would continue to apply tofirst year women.The North House Council reso¬lution was passed unanimously; theWest House Council resolution bya vote of 7-2.Because the West House resolu¬tion was not passed unanimously,the four floor presidents in WestHouse will poll the residents oftheir floors on hours changes, re¬ported House President Liz Hurtig.She said that women in WestHouse will be asked to vote oneach of three ways to changehours: that hours be abolishedwith parental permission for a)second, third, and fourth yearwomen; b) third and fourth yearwomen; c) fourth year womenonly.A Maroon poll of New Dormwomen taken Tuesday indicatedthat over 90% favor some changein the present curfew system. Oferation of music, panels, poetry, ., . , , T •*., . , , , , of lesser known works. In its reper-drama, sports, and spoof has been to ire have appeared such pieces asRespighi’s “Pines, Fountains, Fes-presented for the past ten years.Among recipients of proceedsfrom the marathon have been the tivals, and Sewers of Rome,” “MyWorld University Service, the Stu¬dent Non-violent Coordinating Com- Hoopsters shun NCAA bidmittee, the University of Frank¬fort, and the WUCB record fund. Bonnie Lass, She Smileth,” a“cracking good madrigal,” and theSurprise Symphony, in which theMake repairs instead The basketball team hasasked the National CollegiateAthletic Association selection Regional College Division Basket¬ball Tournament March 8 and 9.The Maroons have won 14 gamesand lost 4 this season, with ones“Tise was.the assassination committee to withdraw theThe marathon has been can- conductor Mitya Pandowski with sohool's name from consideration Walter L Hass Director ofAthletics and Professor and Chair-celled because “the time involvedcould better be spent in work forthe station,” said Kirk.Also, the technical facilities need¬ed would be too hard to transferfrom second floor of MitchellTower, where the station regularlybroadcasts, to the first floor Reyn¬olds Club Lounge, where the Mar¬athon is traditionally staged.Right now, members of WUCB a poison tipped dart. f<?r a berth in the Great LakesCongressman from UC districtO'Hara for service corpsCongressman Barret O’Harayesterday termed PresidentKennedy’s idea for a domesticare rebuilding the station’s trans- Peace Corps “fundamentallymitters, which are all over 15 years sound.”old. said Kirk. By the middle ofnext quarter, WUCB hopes to re¬place the transmitters currently inNew Dorm, Pierce, Burton-Judson,and International House.New transmitters setIn addition, it hopes to put moretransmitters on campus next year,perhaps in Hitchcock and variousmarried student dorms.The new transmitters will be“better, more stable, and have abetter quality of sound,” said Kirk. O'Hara told the Maroon that theoverseas peace corps has beeneffective, and there is a need forsimilar services at home.O’Hara added that although hesupports the general idea whole- investigatory committee. Only 6heartedly, he is not aware of thespecific details yet, and thereforecan just make a general statementon its merits.O’Hara also said he generallysupports Kennedy’s proposal for . , , . .solving some of the problems of for volunteers to work with localunemployed youth. “We cannot agencies to solve problems ~ man of the Department of PhysicalEducation at the University, saidthe request was made becauseplans call for the tournament to beheld at a site that will be at least300 miles from the campus duringHouse Committee on Un-American ?e w«*kend ^forc final examina-Activities. “I always vote with myconscience.”O’Hara said, however, that therewas “too much emotionalism onboth sides. When everyone calmsdown, some changes may bemade.”Twenty congressmen voted thisyear against appropriations to thepersons had voted against it in thelast Congress.The service corps, proposed toCongress by President Kennedyon February 12, would provide tions for students in the WinterQuarter.“With the travel time involved,”he said, “it would be too much toask that members of the basketballteam give up four or more daysat such a critical tame in theiracademic programs.”Two years ago the University ofChicago won the NCAA GreatLakes Regional College DivisionTournament which was held inBartlett Gym on the Midwaycampus. The Maroons were de¬feated in the first round of thenational NCAA tournament inEvansville, Indiana.Joseph M. Stampf, basketball these, 56% favor complete aboli-ooach of the Maroons and associate tion, 23% favor abolition for stu-WUCB received over $1000 from unemployed youth, and there- area3 that want and need such professor of education, said the dents who could obtain their par-the Dean of Students’ office earlier fore must give attention to their Areas might include migrant team members expressed a prefer- ents’ permission, and 11% thinkthis year to enable k to make problems,” stated O’Hara. workers, mental health hospitals, ©nee to study for the final exami- that the requirement should beneeded technical repairs. O’Hara also discussed his vote urban areas, and Indian reserva- nations rather than participate in dropped for third and fourth yearAmong marathon traditions have against appropriations for the tions. the post-season tournament. women.Green House Council in C-Grouphas also passed a resolution re¬questing the abolition of hours forail but first year women, withparental approval.A Maroon survey of 50% of theresidents of Beecher and Kellyhouses, also in C-Group, showedthat 92% of them favor some modi¬fication of the women’s hours sys¬tem currently in effect.Blood Wedding' opens tonightTh« University of Chicago Theatre's production of Blood Wedding, by the Spanish playwright Federico GarciaLorca, opens tonight in the Law School Auditorium. Starting at 8:30, the play will be presented tomorrow and Sundaynights also.The drama is a story of love that cannot become marriage. Set among the primitive hill people of Castille, theplay depicts the workings of tremendous passions and tribal ritual toward an inescapably tragic end. Live flamencomusic will be included as part of the production.Pictured above are from left to right: in the first picture, Marty Reisberg (Leonardo, the lover), Ellen Mason(the bride), and Jeanne Schapiro (Leonardo's wife). Second picture: Ellen Mason and Anita Leavy (the mother of thegroom). Third picture: Hene Tamarkin (death as a beggar woman) and Nancy Barty (a young girl).Individual admissions for the play are $1.50 and $2.00 and can be reserved by calling Midway 3-0800. Anastaplo to speakGeorge Anastaplo, Lecturerin the Liberal Arts at theDowntown Center, will speakon “America’s Political Reli¬gion: The Gettysburg Address” inthe last program of Hillel’s “Re¬ligion sind the Commonweal” seriesthis Sunday at 8:00 pm.Tonight’s talk is part of a seriesexamining the various possible re¬lationships between religion andthe political society, attempting topoint towards a resolution of thecurrent church- abate conflict.In 1951, Anastaplo was denied ad¬mission to the Illinois bar becausehe refused to answer the question:“are you a member of the Com¬munist party.” He pursued his caseto the US Supreme Court, where itwas turned down.Anastaplo received his Doctor ofJurisprudence degree from theUniversity of Chicago School ofLaw in 1951. In 1969 he was actingdirector of the Basic Program ofLiberal Education for Adults at theUniversity of Chicago. Since 1956he has been a lecturer at the Down¬town Center.rEDITORIAL Letters totlY@& fJldOfV ClTlCllyZ@Ci Wliat havA WP lparn^ri? who remained in the freezing winds government should not provide" ** * and slashing snows of the subzero funds for any purpose to thoseThe fifth ward aldermanic results indicate that our ward TOJHE BD1TOK: . , . , night to discuss and explore the whose own purposes include over-... ... ,. . . , , , . , , . . .. "*r. Anastaplo is certainly en- najure 0f American Nazism. throw of the government,has lost none of its rational judgment and independent spirit, titled to feel that “there may be „ ,, m 4mi - . . r p. , , . , , , somethine- of value to be learned My first lump m th ee years 5. Alan T. Waterman testifiedThe incumbent Leon Despres was overwhelmingly re-elected Rockwell either from came to my throat to see that band at these hearings that under theover his far inferior opponent, Chauncey Eskridge. the wav be presents his doctrines of seekers~the largest d,scassloa statutes of NSF as they existed; 7y Presents u ‘ group ever assembled on Universi- then Yellin’s grant could not teWe must, Of course, attribute much Of Despres’ great to contemporary audiences or from ty Avenue _ arrange themselves revoked unless it could be estab-margin of victory to the support of the Regular Democratic himself11 ootids occasion.”00 Ut S !nta a <*>hes.lve whole around their lished that he had perjured him-_ . ,. , . . . , || -rr * ....... n,"lse ° s , t . leader hanging from the boughs of self in obtaining it.Organization, headed by Marshall Korshak, which finally It is strange, however, that he a tree. En masse they sought todecided that it was completely nonsensical to expect the fifth ^oos®3 to communicate such define the tenets of the American ^ec^bv'NSF^on^ounds^th d usr ; ....... . thoughts post facto. Wouldnt it Nazi partv, thrashing pros and vokeoDy war on gj;ounas mat. asward to elect a man too closely bound by the decisions of any have been more enlightening to cons Of this and that from right to h? had been convicted bf contemptpolitical pavty. Korshak’s move was highly unconventional review what we have learned from left, huddling together for inspira- ^11. ... . ,, , . • i. „ Mr. Rockwell’s appearance? In- tion, shivering with stimulation, pending) he rmght not be able toand, as such, it deeply offended seveial pionnnent membeis deed> what have we learned? - blowing on their hands, and seeking *x> m school during its tenure,of the Democratic party. We have always regarded Korshak We have learned that “Contempo- objective truth through frost-bite. h* ,T‘ sLrame Court' C°n*;IS one of the most capable members of the local Democratic rary audiences” will sit on their 1 could leel the warmth generat-, _ , , . . , hands when told that only 20% ed by the discussion method in full 7. Legislation amended the Na-party and we hope that Despres smashing victory Will serve tbe jew;sb population of this swing, could hear my chattering lional Science Foundation Ac t toto increase Korshak’s prestige and power within the party country is loyal; that the remain- teeth felling me that those stamp- require applicants to fill out a form... . , r , • .... . inflf SO % are Communists or Com- inS dialecticians were demonstrat- listing previous criminal and civilorganization. Korshak IS to be commended for hlS political munjs^ dupes- that Jews sit up hig another truth about America: convictions and any legal actionwisdom and for his intestinal fortitude. -‘night and day” figuring out in- that we can stand on any street which might be pending against... inteoa-ationist nlots- that corner we like and investigate them. Filling out this form is aPerhaps the most surprising aspect of the election was was incorrect only twice every issue under the moon to our requirement for receiving a fcllow-Despres’ 3-1 margin of victory in the predominantly Negro once because he was chauvinistic heart s content without worrying ship; a “clean bill of health” is,. „ .. , ,, „ Jt . , „„„„ v,. „ about the Beadles or anyone else. not said to be.portion of the ward south of the Midway. (Despres received “dta™ce.Jf wa^pwrentty“or A ma" in “arch of answers *. At the time Yellin apniicl f..rmore than 86% of the total ward vote). It was generally felt rect in all other matters, with the shouldn't let an Oriental Institute a fellowship, and now, NSF appli-that Eskridge, a Negro, would have garnered a much larger possible exception of not winning °°\ s °'v .J™ . tLvwiT'in L’an*s reqaired s.,gn a loyaltyb ’ bthA war I night no,h,ng slowed anybody. In oatb. The oath made (and makes)percentage of the vote in these precincts, especially since his We have learned that “professors addition- Vm happy to report that no reference to the applicant’s pastworkers apparently concentrated most of their efforts in this who would attempt to qualify our !he entire class maintained a high feelings or affiliations. Yellin says. xi a. i . i. j u u • a j >» .u' level of gaiety throughout the eve- he signed this oath in good faith:area. Apparently, the voters were largely not swayed by the basic freedoms (by preventing ning despKe lhe solemnily of lhe * ,h£ ,^e hc slgned had „„trace “factor,” and carefully examined the platforms of the Rockwells speech here) me ir- the 50icmnity 0f the police- „ a party TOCmbcr tor sometwo candidates. STf Mated .nd ridiculed fan- mcn- and ,he imP»sslbla 1<!™1 of Mme.The weaknesses of Eskridge's proposals may be demon- atics (one almost cries, thinking the fampernluie. A waim glow was A faouky.adminislration hear-j.* . . . , . .,L t. i /m- t»i i bark to Adolf Hitler and the six e y ’ . . at the University of Illinoisstrated by comparing Ins showing With that of Tim Black, Pack toAdolt H,tier ana ines In view of the enormous success ruled that when Yellin signed theanother candidate who sought to overthrow a firmly en- w . p tv sitting alone in of Monday ni8ht’s meeting, I Broyies oath (a simUar loyaltytrenched alderman in the fourth ward which is immediately 1020) are apparently not -should like to go out on a limb to oalh the University of Illinois re-north of the fifth. Black, with no significant organizational ' WHAT HAVE wti LEARNED,support, captured 3,205 votes—more than twenty-three per Where is the outrage, the disgust, pm lo 9 00 pm l would gladiy lead n^ed from that university forcent of the total vote in a three-sided contest. Eskridge, on . e shar”e. v'. K“h. , we ^.P the first discussion—and discus- ,perjuring himself on signing thethe other hand, polled only 2,436 votes (13 per cent) despite yl "if wnTstunidTo inS sions thereafter until the weather Broyles oath, and was reinstatedthe fact that he had the sunnort of the Democratic ovo-nniza ** Po V il V Tiul warms—and if selected will be in in good standing following thattne I act max ne naa tne suppoit 01 the Uemociat c oigamza Vite Rockwell; yes it Mould have the University Tree Friday night rulin This took p!ace be^-e histion fiom another waid and, from what we could tell, of a been a denial of free speec to g.QQ pm wearjng oniy a copy of application to NSF, and the fullvery expensive public relations firm. Black’s relatively strong rescind the invitation once offered; 0n Liberty. In the first hour I wiu report of his reinstatement wasshowing should be attributed to his campaign which was but now’ .In r**ro,3pect’ m“®t T'* attack vigorously everything that communicated to NSF after hisbased on rational, concrete suggestions and policies. let te, Vr{ 1 i" Rock6 that ^ stands fT’ by, which ^d<>wship had been revoked..... ., r, , „ A • , • , . ra m L h K’f O ay means 1 hope to reinforce the uni- 10. There seem to be two possi-whlle Despres has done an excellent job in the City well s theses a*’e P versal conviction that Mill s vision bilities: nsF’s board of directorscouncil and fully deserved re-election, we suspect that among LEARN 1,. - .n(,„ ' is still applicable toflay. (which has never given Yellin athose fifteen thousand persons who voted for him, there were " only ask that class members )iearing) judged that the chargesome who did not really think that he was the best possible Alumnus objects to being enthusiasm by wearing °dacron [^/'^'te^uphei^ae15,11 theyperson to represent their interests, but, at the same time, karre(J from Rockwell talk shirts and silk cinches. The tern- judged Yellin guilty), and Yellincould not, in good conscience, bring themselves to cast a ballot perature will drop to 27 below zero would be unable to serve his fel-for anyone as totally unqualified and seemingly incompetent Mr Hardimr- Friday night’ which !^eans T can, l°wshiP’s tenure, or CongressionalHA Eskridge. Perhaps, in future elections, an intelligent can- D Wrilg as an (18 anddidate who could represent this hopefully small minority ’48), thank you for your earnest jusl raise your gioveiess hand until made the NSF board decide toshould run; the result would be a campaign, unlike this one, efforts to obtain entry for me m- J recognize it ior what it is. I am treat its loyalty oath as if it werecharacterized by intense and rational discussion bv both can- the Rockwe 1 speech last eve' confident alter Monday night that retroactive over the applicant smunitv »H* l^ny •""’“‘"I- f?d 0Ur COm‘ ""Aa Assistant Dean Tthe mfddfe of‘the e ^ a,ey. Sue l a dialogue is essential in a viable democracy, of Students, James E. Newman re- njght Won’t attract any curiosity- . ing oarticularly since ever-1 ♦ XI * fused to grant any Alumni such seekers> rU know by their uplifted jncreasini numbers of students in. Chicago Maroon adm1l88i°”- YoU,JTa 1 f IZ blue faces that the class members the physicait biological, mathe-t lilSSUinl ® marked to you that Alumni of the present are there to learn. See you matica] and SOoial sciences a«eMMnmmammmm^^H__ Editor-in-chief Laura Codofsky University are not any more vio- pr,day night. coming to be supported on NSFBusiness Manager Kenneth C. Heyl lent in nature than Students and ROBERT M. STROZIER JR. Rnth arp irrelevant to tlieROOMS’ <PTS ’ ETC Kiri, faculty. You replied that “as a See or WustTce of YelUn's pos-4 ROOM unfurnished apartment to sub- * „A“dr*w fe,n matter of fact, the person propos- More fads On Yellin Case sible conviction of contempt be-let- .ut0«i and refrigerator. $100 per , R"b'" .man ing to picket the speech as leader rmTOR- cmise of his use of the first amend-We^en<to- Newt Editor. . .Gary Feldman „« I’l While I am sympathetic to the ment. This is not to say that theLOST AND FOUND Feature Editor Ross Ardrey pin this has to do difficulty in which Edward Yellin justice of such a comic ion isCulture Editor Vicky shiefman not quite sure what this has to ao placed by having his established.kmffwea'eTl SoiT'zwiilVhacK *"*1 Editor Sharon Goldman with me and how^1 or any other ^ and ^ K is to raise separate thoughveiie, l German-French spiral notebook. As^. Rewrite Editor Bob Levey Alumnus mi^nt d . turbed at some of the implications related questions. It is not justcontact VCourtL0rf KTEast' House® Coordinator. Les Gourwita I can only conclude the Univer- of ^ revocation j feeJ that that if ‘-today you are for some-3i°7x. ' ’ N. s\™ K*rter sity Administration has ser ous Maroon.s has been thing controversial you’re likely toLosV wristwatch Fiiider ' catl Ml MikeOverman * • .Vh complete. Some facts have been te investigated,” as Yellin said.3-6000’, room4 322 Reward Sport. Editor . . Rich EpsTein of any schooling our Alumni mjht overlooked in th Maroon’s re- Rather, today you may be forF FA * CL tp 7 have acquired at their Alma Mater. mherc are wrons something wholly “safe,” and to-LOST: Post Versalog Slide rule in ma- Erratum Editor Sherw.n Kaplan vecterdav’s experience P°ris, others are wrong. someming who y ,roon case at Ryerson lab. Reward. Executive Secretary... .Mary Gottschalk After. J .St y P j While Yellin was Out of school moTTOW it becomes controversialJerry Frank, 3i05x East House. office Manager Anita Manuel along with the first time I ve ever working in a steel plant in illegal; a retroactive restraint isfor sale Advertising Secretary Nell Kmebier been excluded from a campus-wide Qaryt indjana, he was a member placed de facto on the associationLIVING room furniture: sectional sofa. Editor.Emeritut •••••• Jay Greenberg meeting, I feel as though said f th Communist Party for sev- and support one may give groupsSrsVac“"meb,wrh?n.am1scd,T:? Alma Mater has deserted at least eral years. (He does not deny this.) and issues by one’s prudent (orvalues BU 8-4314, Heagy, Michael Kaufman jay Flocks; Jim 0ne of its children. 2. When he decided to return to scared) visions of the future, metrailer, water, wind-proof metal Greenberg, David Aiken, iiene Barmash, This letter is a protest on behalf (after he became disillu- restraint is as large as the posenclosed, doors front and rear, 6+ feet Cynthia Spindei, Deidrie Holloway, Art 0f a]i Alumni who might be ex- eir>ned with the nartv he notes) he sible swings in national opinion,GrlataforOtentecamepSinglg$hi80. bu'8C-8723.' Howard Rosen, St^e’ Be^ke^Pete^Rabi’noI eluded from any “open” campus wag approached by the FBI, who very great indeed.riders wanted" toTT™ TOnii meeting and I requert yoR preseRt asked him to_ remain in it as an Secondly, as the possibility ofand Florida over spring IN- Jon Roland, Rich .Gottlieb, Barbara Cares*, it both to the University Admmi- agent. He refused, quit the party, getting a job in research, at aterim. $30 round trip to New York Dan Gross D.ve Richter, Bill F.ye, Don stration and the Alumni and The and was ]ater subpoenaed by university, in the government, orCity, and $40 round trip to Miami. Baer, Jim Means, Steve Sackett, Mary Car- • A .. „ ”‘7. _ umvcionj, 1 e>Call 664-4761 immediately. penter, Paula Hiza, Connie Carnea, John AluiTUH Association. HUAC. elsewhere COmeS to depend UpOH^er p^!fhen sharnoff‘ Joan By the way, my protest reached 3 Re refused to testify, plead- “having a clean loyalty record,’SeEt°x ?etrurns-southPs!dePPhone ‘LLd' freTof eha,Ee on the Quad- such fever pitch th^ 1 sacr]fice<1 ing the first amendment, which the power of groups not given thatbe 3-4053 evenings. ranges every Tuesday8 through Friday my sacred honor and sneaked into guarantees freedom of speech and power to judge and convict be-personals during the academic year by students the meeting. I didn’t enjoy it association, rather than the fifth, comes proportionately greater.JKf'eS 254 3442 ge"eral and Stat,S* -rXcnd^'^to?' Chicago' M^on. very much. since the latter, he feels, has come The ..sentence” a congressional1212 E. 59 Street, Chicago 37. Illinois. LOUIS E. SHAF.FFER to be tantamount to admitting or the board of direc-BRIGITTE Telephones: MI 3-0800. exts. 3265, 3266. rrnilf onH /vnilH ironnrfiiIhG ^Promise you'll be at “Aside from all Printed at West Side Press, Chicago; f , , guilt. and ^ jeopardize me torg of a foundafcion, can pass isthat” tryouts next week? Rod. Subscription by mail is $4 per year. Tfllth SeekerS defy Cold career he Wishes to follow in SCI* n<>t sentence. It may comevmrmr icaen it uo Joni •The CIMW is a ncw* alliance, eon- to the editor; ence. to be life at manual labor, or asYOU RE domg K p ^p. grtm, £ ^e^Maroon, ^ Michigan 1 have nothing but as much re- 4. Representative Scherrer s con- ^ ig automated out of existence,-• - — ■. — the Daily HiinL ’ spect as I can muster for the oem was not with Yellin s convic- on the dole or nfe on the run-(Ml 3-0800). ^nexpensfve and Iffective. 4, Th« }• a charter member of citizens of this community who tion for contempt of Congress, but The possibility of receiving such— —— United states student Press Asso- attended George Lincoln Rockwell s with his former membership in the , . L^ nd *0 conditionllannv Related' MTC elation, and subscribes to ita news “ , . . . . „ e,, ,a„A a sentence IS DOUna HJ ivnuiiuiuii^ ' service, the Collegiate Pres# Service lecture Monday night in Breasted Communist Party, Scherrer (and prudent (or scared) citizens. • •Roses are red; violets are blue (CPS). Hall, but am prouder still, by others) maintained at the hearings timtt A F07ZYShlu weSdo?e °n thlS page; What «iDgU«VpTe..'\7pr,Ks^Gc,U,e In,#r' Gawd, of those hardy few hundred to ammend the NSF act that the ►2 • CHICAGO MAROON » March 1, 1963Church issue plagues education billJanowlh ',reiudiee *8ni’M(CPS) — The friends ofPresident Kennedy’s new aid-to-education program are onceagain killing its chances of be¬coming law.It may seem ironical—but it’snothing new. Internecine strife be¬tween groups backing increasedfederal aid to education have kill¬ed similar programs before.Kennedy’s sweeping new omni¬bus education proposal would as¬sist American education from thefirst grade to the post-graduatelevel, through construction loans,matching funds, and student loanplans.Opponents of federal aid toeducation are this year relaxingwhile the measure’s proponentskill its chances. Once again, theapparent cause of death will be thechurch-state dispute: the Admini¬stration program would give $1.5billion to assist public elementaryand secondary schools, with no aidto private schools at the samelevel.The main antagonists in the dis-| Calendar of eventsFriday, March 1Lutheran Matins: Bond Chapel 11:10Swimming Meet: IntercollegiateChampionships, Bartlett Pool, 4:00 and7:00.Lecture: "Two Levels of Morality inWestern and Indiap Ethics,” Dr. Raghavan Iyer, Fellow and Lecturer inPolitics. St. Anthony’s College, OxfordBreasted Hall. 4:00.Lutheran Vespers: Chapet House.5 45, followed by Koinonia. LutheranStudent Fellowship.Track Meet: Chicago and MidwestConference Championshio, Field House,6 50 Jewish Sabbath Services, HillelHouse. 7:45.Movie: "Forbidden Planet": Burton-Judson Court. 8:00 and 10:00.Experimental Movies: "Lemonhearts"and "To L.A. With Love." with appear¬ance of Vernon Zimmerman, producer,SS 121. 7:15 and 9:15.Wingding: Folklore Society, IdaNoyes Hall, 8:30.Ilillel Fireside: "The Dynamics ofPrejudice,” Morris Janowitz, US pro¬fessor of Sociology, Hillel House, 8:30.Saturday, March 2Swimming Meet: Chicago Intercolle¬giate Championship, Bartlett Pool,10:00 and 2:30.Track Meet: UC Track Club Relavs,Field House. 2:00 and 7:00.Movie: "Compulsion”, Leopold-Loebcase fictionalized, Henderson HouseLounge. 8:00 and 10:00. Sunday. 2 pm.■ lTC Symphony: Bach, Wagner, Beetho¬ven, Mandel Hall, 8:30. Admission free.Radio Series: "The Sacred Note.”choral music from Rockefeller Chapel,WBBM. 10:45.Folk Hauce workshop.Sunday, March 3University Religious Service: Rocke¬feller Chapel, 11:00.Radio Series: “From the Midway,"Raghavan Iyer lecture, "The Ghan-dian Theory of Non-Resistance: AReappraisal” WFMF 11:00.Folk Dancing Workshop: Ida NoyesHall. 2:00.Gleeful Club Concert: Ida Noyes Li¬brary. 3:30.Carillon Recital: from RockefellerChapel. 4:00.Radio Series: "From the Midway."Roliert M. Hutchins on "Limits of aLiberal Education,” WAIT 5:15.Folk Dancing: Ida Noyes Hall. 7:30.Lecture: "America’s Political Reli¬gion: The Gettysburg Address,” GeorgeAnastapole, Hillel House, 8:00.Seminar: "Church-State Issues.” Bap¬tist Graduate Student Center, 8:30.Monday, March 4Movie: "The Ladykillers.” with AlecGuiness and Peter Sellers, InternationalHouse, 7:00 and 9:00.Shorey House Coffee Plus: ElvvoodJensen will speak on cancer research,Pierce Tower, 9th floor, 9:00 pm.All WeekendBlood Wedding: Lorca play. LawSchool Auditorium, 8:30, Friday, Sat¬urday and Sunday.Rlackriars Tryouts: for "Aside fromall That,” Reynolds Club Theater, 7:00,Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.Exhibits:The l'oet and the City: Harper Li¬brary. first floor.Daniel’s In India: 18th cen. water-colors, Goodspeed Hall.One of Hyde Park** FinestARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRSPECIALIZING IN:Heels Changed\ Heels RepairedToes Cut OutVamps LoweredOrthopedic WorkZipper RepairsProfessional DyeingAnd Refinishing ofShoes and HandbagsColors matched pute are the National EducationAssociation (NEA), which consid¬ers the Administration plan near¬perfect, and the National CatholicWelfare Conference, which assertsthe program is unfair to parentswho pay public school taxes aswell as extra tuition to send theirchildren to parochial and privateschools.Backers of the Administrationplan assert that federal aid to pri¬vate and church-supported schoolsviolates the Constitution and thetraditional doctrine of separationof church and state while the op¬ponents hold that the Administra¬tion’s way of doing things woulddiscriminate against Catholic andother taxpayers who also pay tosupport private schools. These op¬posing views are held by a suffi¬cient number of Congressmen toblock passage of the legislation en¬tirely, as indeed happened in thelast Congress.There are some indications thatthe two factions may compromise Professor of Sociology Morris Janowitz will discuss ‘‘The Dynamicsof Prejudice” tonight at the Hillel Fireside.The program will start at 8:30 at the Hillel foundation, 5715University.Janowitz is Director of the Center for Social Organization Studies.He and Bruno Bettelheim of the Orthogenic School together wrote abook entitled THE DYNAMICS OF PREJUDICE, based on a studyconducted by UC. The book focuses on the problem of anti-Semitism,but its conclusions are applicable to the problem of group hatred ingeneral.Hamentash, famous as the companion of the Latke in Hillel’s an¬nual faculty Latke and Hamentash symposium, will be served at to¬night’s “pre-Purim program.” Hamentash is the festive food of thePurim holiday, which celebrates the failure of an early effort toannihilate the Jewish Community by the Persian empire.Since the two opposing factions _ .have yet to settle on a compromise, PdperbaCKS COStlier tHdl! hdrdbOUVIClSWashington educational circles and ■lobbyists are giving increasing sup¬port to a “salvage job” on theprogram, to get through what canbe gotten through this session. Inother words, colleges and universi¬ties are hopeful that legislationbenefiting ,both sides will be div¬orced from the omnibus bills andpassed.to get some of the legislationthrough Congress, but the groupshave yet to settlq on a suitableagreement. Kennedy’s programwould give indirect benefits to pri¬vate schools—but these are calledinadequate by Catholic spokesmen.One feature of the plan wouldmake construction loans for spe¬cialized classrooms and labora¬tories available to private schools,and another portion of the pro¬gram would extend the “forgive¬ness” of National Defense Educa¬tion Act loans to teachers in pri¬vate schools.Use of paperback books in schoolis likely to be more expensive thanhardbound books, the Texas Educa¬tion Agency has concluded in apreliminary study requested bythe state legislature. The agencyreported the average paperback used in the schools costs $1.93,against $2.15 for hardbound books.But paperback books have a lifeexpectancy of less than a year, theagency reported, and hardboundbooks last more than five years.Education USALibrary costs increaseThe rising costs of librarymaterials were cited recentlyin testimony before the HouseEducation and Labor Com¬mittee in support of a provision inthe pending aid to education billauthorizing matching federalgrants for college libraries.An annual publication summar¬izing new developments in chem¬ical research which cost $60 in1956 now costs $500. Abstracts of biology research which cost $50in 1956 have gone to $180; in bio¬physics the increase is to $144 from$36; and in foreign languages to$325 from $60.These figures were presented byEdmond Low, librarian, Universityof Oklahoma, and vice presidentof the American Library Associa¬tion.Low said a recent survey haddisclosed that fewer than 100 of2000 colleges and universities havereally adequate libraries.Hawaiian minister to preach hereAbraham K. Akaka, a grad¬uate of the Chicago Theologi¬cal Seminary, will be thePreacher at Vespers Monday.He will speak at Graham TaylorHall at 9 pm.Akaka, member of the CTSclass of 1943, is presently Pastorof Honolulu’s Old Stone Church.Known as Hawii’s WestminsterAbbey, it is the state’s motherchurch. Akaka was made a Doc¬tor of Divinity in 1958 by theSeminar}'.“His ministry in Hawaii duringthe past 20 years has come tohave a unique influence throughoutthe Islands.” the OPEN DOORcontinued. “He has identified him¬self vividly with the dynamic,multi-racial society to which thechurch there must minister.”“As a Regent of the University,as chaplain when new business orcultural buildings are dedicated, asquiet promoter of equal educa¬tional opportunity for the oldHawaiian ethnic group, as inter¬preter of the Islands to the Main¬ land and the Mainland to theIslands, as intercessor at the mo¬ment of Hawaii’s accession tostatehood, Akaka is unique,” theCTS news-paper commented-Akaka will be at the CTS CoffeeHour after Vespers for those whowish to speak with him informally.Prof. Jensen discussesnew cancer researchElvvood V. Jensen, professorin tlie Ben May Laboratoryfor Cancer Research, willspeak on new developments incancer research at Shorey HouseCoffee Plus, Monday evening at9 pm.The Laboratory is devoted to theexploration of science at the levelof ideas rather than technical in¬vention or development. It is spe¬cifically interested in understand¬ing the processes of growth ofnormal cells and their deviationin cancer. Jensen will show slidesrelating to some of his work.i MR. PIZZA iWE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTS |HY 3-8282PIZZA5 Sizes — Any CombinationSAUSAGEMUSHROOMGREEN PEPPERANCHOVIEONION OR GARLICTUNA FISH OR OLIVECHEESEVi AND VjEXTRA INGREDIENTSPEPPERONI PIZZASHRIMPBACONCONEY ISLAND PIZZASausage, Mushrooms, Peppers Box of Chicken20 Pieces, Golden Brown10 Pieces, Golden BrownBAR B-Q RIBSSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGE,MEAT BALL- FAirfox 4-96221749 E. 55th St. \ GRAND OPENING MARCH 4| 1465 HYDE PARK BLVD./ Open 7 Days a Week—4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m.—Fri. to 3:00 a.m.K Sat. to 3:00 a.m. — Open 2 p.m. Sundays Cohn & Sternpresents adistinguished additionto our roster offamous names . . .FLORSHEIMSHOESfor menBecause they look the part, feel the part, fitthe part—Florsheim Shoes are an importantpart of the wardrobe of well-dressed men—and a worthy addition to our fine namesin quality men’s wear. Our selection isoutstanding—why not choose yours soon.THE STORE FOR MEN(Mr* Star©mutt attii (tfampaa ^IjupIn the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100March 1. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON 3★ GAD F LY *A modest proposal for saving US economyNot often has God smiledupon a wild, irrational andtwisting segment of a nation’spopulation and said to them,'‘Yes, you have the answer; youare the answer.”Such, fellow students of Amer¬ica, must shortly be our blessedfate. For we and we alone canget America moving again, turnthe free world from defense tooffense, and thereby please allthroughout the world.The economic advisers to thePresident must shortly see, withGod and ourselves, that we aloneare the answer; they must shortlyput the wherewithal to carry outour historical role in our hands.That is, they must shortly re¬solve to donate annually to eachone of us $10,000 cash.Gentlemen, when we read news¬paper accounts of your proposedtax cuts, we are struck by thesoundness of your economic rea¬soning: you want to put moremoney in consumers’ wallets;they will then spend more, creat¬ ing a larger market; producersthen must produce more to satis¬fy the market, and hence employmore, who will again spend more,and so on.But we are shocked at yourpoor choice of means to forgethe first link of this grand chain:you want to cut everbody’s taxes,never stopping to think that nu¬merous portions of our citizenrystill commit the heinous crime of... of ... I can hardly say it. . . saving!Let us enter the home of onewho is surely the most averageperson known readily to all ofus, Mr. Dean A. Simson, on theeve of his receipt of $500, his firsttax-cut benefit.*‘I say, my dear wife, let’s takeourselves to dinner, what thatwe’re not so ’ard up anymore . . .well, per’aps not that, as it woulduse more than 1 per cent of thebenefit. But certainly I’ll rundown to the corner for a box o’tea and some English muffins.”And at the corner: “Anythingelse you want?”ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti • beef • sausage and meatballsandwiches • shrimp pizzaFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-1014,1015 1427 East 67th St"A Rhythmic Carnival"BHARATIYAKALA KENDRAThe exciting Kathak Dancers andMusicians of North India in CourtDances, Indian Gypsy Dances,Hindu Dance DramasatMANDEL HALLFriday, March 15,8:30 P.M.Main Floor and Box Seats, $2.50 per ticketBalcony, $1.50 per ticketTickets: On Campus: Foster Hall, 5856University Avenue, and (after March 4)Mandel Hall Box Office. Off Campus:Hyde Park Co-Op Credit Union ‘Well, my good man, might aswell throw in a pack of life sav¬ers, what with all the moneyfloating around these days.”And on Sunday a large, shinyfifty-cent piece hits the collectiontray instead of the usual quarter.Finally, the good citizen orders$50.00 worth of books, from Eng¬land, in an extravaganza thatleaves him bi’eathless for weeks.If we shift our view to thegroup one generation older thanthat just witnessed, we would seea pale, thin hand, trembling, tear¬ing and opening the envelopefrom Interna) Revenue, readingthe amount on the check, gasp¬ing with a withered relief, andbuying another U. S. SavingsBond.Yes, only when we look at thegeneration just now’ entering ma¬jority do we see a group readyto carry out its patriotic duty ofspending freely, in liberty andunder God. The students of Amer¬ica, alone among all its people,spend all they get for anythingand everything — indeed, buys,everything even before they getthe money.Our spending greatness extendsfrom the smallest sandwich (which we buy in a coffee shopfor double the price we couldmake it at home) to the biggestautomobile (if we have one al¬ready, we hope for another). Weall want apartments, records, high-fi’s (w’e’ll get over our anti-tele¬vision prejudice immediately, wepromise), boats, clothes, art works—all in much greater quantity,much more highly diversified de¬sign, and much better quality,than the older generations.But not only are we great con¬sumers. We are also great in¬vestors, or would be as soon aswe had the capital.This is proved simply by theconversation we were having im¬mediately before solving this na¬tional economic crisis, in whichwe were drawing up a plan to de¬molish all buildings along 55tlistreet to plant a grove of orangetrees. Not only does this obviouslysave on transportation, but thinkof the jobs it would create! Fiftymen per tree per night — thinkof it — blowing their warmbreaths over the branches, protect¬ing them from midwest cold bybathing them in tropical zephyrs.And before that, in the samebreath, we called forth a newAustria study program announcedWagner College of NewYork has announced a pro¬gram of study in Austria forstudents wishing to combine aliberal arts education with life inEurope.They are offering a curriculumat the upper undergraduate level,including elementary and ad¬vanced courses in German andFrench, English literature, history,art history, philosophy, social sci¬ences, music and fine arts, andphilosophy of education.Instruction, given in English, isby American and European pro¬fessors. Winter sports and Euro¬pean excursions are mentioned asadded attractions.The fee is described as slightly more than the yearly cost of aliberal arts college, and includestransportation. A limited numberof tuition scholarships up to $500each are available.Interested students may write toThe Wagner College Study Pro¬gram in Bregenz, Staten Island 1,N. Y.Detroit game broadcastlive on WUCB tomorrowWUCB will broadcast tomorrow’svarsity basketball game againstthe University of Detroit live fromDetroit at 8 pm. Ira Fistell willannounce the game, which can beheard in New Dorm, Pierce, Inter¬national House, and Burton-JudsonCourts. student magazine, with all en¬gravings done from paintings, notphotographs, and all text writtenin each copy by hand, the maga¬zine delivered to the subscriberby hand, then read aloud 10 himby a special reader who, when hearrived at the Dial Soap ad, woulddemoristrate it in a non-imaginaryenvironment, i.e., by washing thesubscriber’s back as he lay in atub.But forgive us for latheringover, so to speak; the discussionmust be kept on the plain of uni¬versal economic law, for thou¬sands of comparable specific ideaswill automatically be called forthby the adoption of our proposal.Yes, giving $10,000 to each stu¬dent every year is the only wayto stop saving, to get the econ¬omy ami the country movingagain.Of Course, saving could be out¬lawed or made impossible, as ourprimary economic competitors,the Soviets, have done, but thatwould be slavish imitation whichthis country’s pride would neverswallow.Or you could, instead of givingready cash to everyone, givevouchers that are valueless un¬less spent, thereby making eventhe older generations stop saving.You could, for example, giveevery Chicagoan a $500 gift cer¬tificate to Marshall Field’s insteadof cash.But the political problem thereis obvious, for it would call forthan immediate revolution by Car-sons Piries and Scotts, who wouldlie joined by Mandela and otherwreckers. And no country, leastof all this one, would like itsfinal chapter in history to detailits overthrow and subjugation bysillers of lingerie and yo-yos.Students alone are the answer.If you rise to the occasion and doyour part, gentlemen, we canguarantee patriotic completion ofours. We shall live forever underthe maxim: “Live always withinyour means, even if you must bor¬row to do it.” ,Carl Marks■ ■ > . gyui ■ ■ ■ ■ tumble ■ ■«■flip...flop...lug...tugpush...jump...leap......chin...lift...pull......run...puff puff-pauseSHARE-A-RIDE CENTRAL \Offers 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 6-7263 take a break.. .things go better with CokeBottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by: The Coca-Cola Bottling Company of ChicagoGOLD CITY INNSpecializing in Cantonese FoodOrders to Take Out10% Discount to Students With This Ad5228 Harper HY 3-2559 You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfleld 8-67114 • CHICAGO MAROON * March 1. 1963Peace Corps helps Colombian villagesbyAlbert L. Wahrhaftig(Kditor’s no*e: Albert Wahrhaftig wasa student in the Division of Social Sci¬ences at UC from Autumn 1957 untilSpring 1961. He is now working as avolunteer with the Peace Corps inSilvia, Columbia.)Sometimes I wonder whatan individual Peace Corpsproject should be called.Peace Corps” and its agoniz¬ingly literal translation into Span¬ish, cuerpo de paz, became fixedbefore anyone could do muchabout it. We are officially “Colom¬bia 1”, the first Peace Corps groupto function in Colombia, the firstin Latin America, and one of thefirst three in the world. I thinkof our group as a “combo”, forthe analogy to jazz, however awk¬ward, is pertinent. We are im¬provisors about a theme.Concepts, not jobsMany Peace Corps groups havejobs to do: teaching English insecondary schools, nursing in smallclinics, surveying rural roads. ButColombia volunteers are promotersof community development, andcommunity development is not somuch a job as a concept to beelaborated.We live in the small communi¬ties of rural Colombia, with peopleleft disoriented and apathetic bygenerations of poverty and a de¬cade of political tumult and vio¬lence.Our goal Ls to bring these peo¬ple to an understanding of thepossibilities of progress for theircommunity through undertakingwith them a study of the situationof the community and its re¬sources, through discovering anddeveloping local leadership,through helping to instill demo¬cratic techniques of community ac¬tion, and through directing con¬crete projects of benefit to thecommunity.Self>acting communityThe theme of a progressive self¬acting community is one which tastically varied background, inwe are playing out against a fan-steamy fishing villages on thebanks of the River Magdalena,among iron miners in the interiordepartment of Boyaca, with farm¬ers of tiny plots in the highlandsof Narino, and on Indian reserva¬tions in the Andes where my part¬ner and I work. The problems tosolve and the manner of solvingthem are as different as are themany people and landscapes whichform this Republic.Three hours by horse from ourbase in Silvia, Cauca is a tinyreservation of Paez Indians calledQuichaya. Although many of thepeople in Quichaya are illiterate,they recognized, as do nearly allColombians, the value of educa¬tion. They emptied the best housein their town to serve as a tem¬porary school and petitioned thegovernment for a “real” schoolhouse.School-less and embifferedThe government responded andstarted to build a school. Sturdybrick walls were completed andthen, suddenly, construction ceasedsome two years ago. Whateverthe reason, the people of Quichayaconsidered the abandonment of theschool a betrayal and passed thelast few years school-less and em¬bittered.When my Colombian co-workerand I first came to know this com¬munity, we realized that comple¬tion of the school was, as com¬munity developers call it, a "feltneed”, a problem which weighedon the conscience of all the in¬habitants.We discussed the problem withthe cabildo, a body of officers whotraditionally govern the com¬munity. We explained that thegovernment could no longer affordto "give” them a school, but thatif they would divide among all themembers of the community theburden of construction, the govern¬ment would provide what dearly could not be supplied by the com¬munity.As we came to know the com¬munity and its resources, werealized that the soil there wasideal for making bricks. Why not,we suggested, make a communalbrick and tile factory to producematerials first for the school, laterfor a community meeting house,and still later for the improvementof individual homes.School almost finishedThe idea of having one effortproduce two material assets forthe community apparently was ap¬pealing. Within a week, Indiansbegan bringing posts and loads ofstraw to the town center. At theend of two months a rude thatch-roofed shed had been built toshelter the brickworks, and theowner of an abandoned brick ovenin the hills offered to let the In¬dians tear down his oven and usethe materials to build a new one.Within another month or so,Quichaya should have producedsufficient bricks and tiles to finishthe school. Meanwhile my Colom¬bian co-worker and I visited thedepartmental capital and talkedwith the architect in charge ofrural school construction.Impressed with the ambition ofthese people, he agreed to visitthe community with us, and on thebasis of what he saw he assessedthe value of the community’s la¬bors at 6,400 pesos and approvedan application for 15,600 pesosmore from government funds(which will come in large partfrom the Alliance for Progress).Three-part patternThis three part pattern of ac¬tive cooperation from the com¬munity, stimulation and technicaldirection from Peace Corps volun¬teers, and material aid from theColombian government is what weconstantly strive for. Ideally, thispartnership will be not for justone project but perpetual.Progress and change begin to be self-sustaining. As a result oftheir interest, leaders from Qui¬chaya were invited to a course incommunity development in whichthe two Peace Corps volunteers inSilvia helped the local branch ofthe Department of Indian Affairsto instruct leaders from the manyreservations around Silvia.There the delegation from Qui¬chaya developed new ideas for thefuture they purchased, with a loanto the community from the Colom¬bian Agricultural Bank, a machineto convert hemp leaf into market¬able fibre, and began a programto supply school cthlidren with dailyhot lunches using food donated byCARE under the supervision ofPeace Corps volunteers.Community is inspiredAs the people of this communityfeel their muscles and renew theirself confidence, they even beginto revive an old dream: the con¬ struction of a motor road acrossthe hills to the markets of Silvia.Even in this small area, mypartner and I continue to be sur¬prised by the directions which no¬tions of community unity and ac¬tion take, once rooted. A commu¬nity decides that adults needn'tremain illiterate and offers to or¬ganize classes if we will find ateacher. Another needs funds tocontinue the construction of arural health post and we helpthem to organize a charity bazaarand soccar game. Another offersto bring its men together eachSaturday if we will find anagronomist to teach them to im¬prove their harvests of potato. Andthere is a reservation that thinksit can make money for communalprojects by building an oven toconvert local limestone into lime.That's a twist we never eventhought of!Start work of U of I campusCity officials have an¬nounced plans to break groundin May for the Chicago branchof the University of Illinois.The new campus, which will becalled Congress Circle, will be lo¬cated on the west side of the city.Earlier this week the IllinoisSupreme Court handed down a de¬cision against the Harrison-HalstedCommunity Group Inc. This grouphad sought to have the campuslocated in another part of the city.They have petitioned the UnitedStates Supreme Court to review therulings of the lower courts.The Harrison-Halsted group isseeking Supreme Court review be¬cause it feels that the lower counts:1) decided several imiporbainitquestions of federal statutory andconstitutional law which have notbeen settled by the Supreme Courtbut‘should be; 2) decided these questions in away inconsistent with the rationaleof prior decisions of the SupremeCourt; and3) decided at least one of thequestions in a way that is in directconflict with the decision of anotherlower court.The University expects to openthe campus to its first students inFebruary, 1965. Originally, thecampus was scheduled to be openedin the fall of 1964. The delay wascaused by various court cases in¬stituted by the Harrison-Halstedgroup.The first stage of constructioncalls for twelve academic build¬ings, including a 28-story buildingdevoted to administration, staff andfaculty. There will also be a $10million Student Union Building.Eventually, the campus will spreadover 100 acres.i;t=>r»r>=6->:>=>=»=>=i>:>r>=>=>=o;»ri=>=>=>=t=>=«:>=>=>=>=<=»\ATTENTION!II|iIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHliIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIU•z*z«r*z«zz*-•=•=»:*->z>z»z>z»:»z>z>z>z>z»:ii»z>z>z»z<z«z»z»ztztz»z»z>z<ztz>zWe are so proud ofthe 1963 ed. of theUniversity of Chicago Yearbook,that we are even preparedto use HUMOR* toentice you to buy it atSPRING REGISTRATION ! !!but we can't think of anything funny! Signed,The Editors of the Cap & GownMarch 1, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON 5Business school slatesconfab on managementLeaders of the academicand business communities willmeet to discuss current prob¬lems facing the business ex¬ecutive at the 11th annual Manage¬ment Conference of the Universityof Chicago.The one-day conference, which issponsored by the Graduate Softoolof Business and the Executive Pro¬gram Club of the University, isscheduled to be held March 27 atMcCormick Place.In discussing the conference.George P. Shultz. Dean of theGraduate School of Business, saidthat it “enables the business execu¬tive to obtain in a few hours aconsiderable amount of sophisti¬cated knowledge which he might3 Wear Contact aCtease*Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-3372at University Ave.BESOINS DE BASE —^ InstructionVom vous ties petit-£tre tenducompte que l’expressiow “unhotmne parti de lien" «’e»t plu*coiirante aujourd'hui. On telattiilmt disparaitra entitlementsous pen. Grice aux octrois ac-cordis aux vitirans, giAie auxetoles du soir. gr&ce A mie plusgonoreuse repartition ties bour¬ses d etudes et grAce h la sagessedes pcres de famille qui prepa¬rent l’avenir de ictus eufants,un pourcentage assez cl eve de*noire jeune peuple peut »e petmet ire un plus haul niveau d’ini-t mi l ion. L'assurance-insmtctionest un des plus important* ser¬vices qu’offrent les compagniesd'assurance-vie. Ella garantitqu’aucune restriction ne fetaohstacie aux ambitions d unjeune homme, said scs prop rescapacity naturelles. Penser queses eufants auront toutes lesdiaiues possibles k l’avenir, parsuiie de sa prevoyance a leurprocurer tine police qui paieiaa loutes les eventuality, const i-ttie une source de lierle pour lejure de famille d’aujtmrdhui.I’erinettez-moi tie causer avecvous de vos besoin* d assiitancetie base. Je suis associe a la Sunlife Assurance Company of( auada, la compagnie cjui jmmsede la police repondant a tote x i g e n c e s I T i 1 i p h o u e z in o iaujouid’liuimhnet 11 n'yaura aucutieobligationde volte part.RALPH J. WOOD, JrM CLU1 N. LA SALLE, CHICAGO. ILL.FR 2-2390 FA 4-6800SUN LIFE DU CANADA otherwise not receive.**An expected 1200 businessmenwill hear 10 panel discussions fo¬cusing on what Shultz terms “newforces’’ in the economy of the na¬tion ">ch as the effect of automa-tioi he labor market, currentand t-.^x>sed changes in the fed¬eral tax policy, and shifts in thenation's foreign policy and its effecton long range business plans.The panels, which will be chairedby educators, are composed ofbusiness executives.Some panels and their Universityof Chicago faculty chairmen are:Profit Squeeze, Yale Brozen, Direc¬tor of Research Management Pro¬gram and Professor of BusinessEconomics in the Graduate Schoolof Business; Tax Reform I: CapitalGains and Executive Compensa¬tion, Sidney Davidson, ArthurYoung Professor of Accounting;Economic Growth; Problems andProspects, Walter D. Fackler, As¬sociate Dean and Associate Profes¬sor of Business Economics, Gradu¬ate School of Business; DecisionTheory, Harry V. Roberts, Profes¬sor of Statistics; Three Noble Ex¬periments in Organization. ThomasL. Whisler, Associate Professor ofIndustrial Relations.Other panel sessions are: Devel¬opments in Computers—Hardwareand Languages, Robert L. Graves,Associate Professor of AppliedMathematics; Current Problemsand Developments in FinancialManagement. James H. Lorie, Pro¬fessor of Business Administrationand Director of the Center for Re¬search Security Prices; Changes inMethods of Distribution, IrvingSchweiger. Professor of Marketing;and Looking Ahead in Labor Rela¬tions. Arnold R. Weber, AssociateProfessor of Industrial .Relations. Catholic U shuns Ecumenical fightA controversy is brewing- at Catholic U niversity over the university administration’srefusal to permit four leading Catholic theologians to speak on a student-sponsored lectureseries at the Washington, D.C., school.The four, whom the University administration “preferred not to have,” include theJohn Courtney Murray, thenewshop address' foreign car hospital & dir5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113Bob Lestermg psychiatristAn Everlastinq Remembrane*ENGRAVING CALLIGRAPHYIn Enqlisk — HEBREW — YidishOn Geld * Silver - Trophies. Etc.Metal - Parchment Plaques Hand MadeDiplomas, Certificates, Repairsbv M. KUPFERSTOK5 S. Wabash • Chicaaa • CE 6-0039 RevRev. Gustave Weigel, the Rev.Hans Kung and the Rev. GodfreyDiedman. They have been gener¬ally identified with the church’s“liberals” in their views.A spokesman for the administra¬tion said the decision was madebecause the University did notwant to be put in the position ofseeming to take sides in the ecclesi¬astical debate over issues raised atthe Ecumenical Council in Rome.Father Weigel, a Jesuit, was atheologian for the recessed Councilwhile Father Diedman, a Benedic¬tine, acted as a consultant.Msgr. Joseph McAllister, ViceRector of the University, empha¬sized recently the decision im¬plied no criticism of the theologiansindividually or of their views."Definite Print of View"“But,” he added, “they representa very definite point of view, avery definite attitude, in regard tocertain ecclesiastical matters nowbeing debated. The University didnot want to put itself in the posi¬tion of championing this position.A number of matters quite con¬troversial ecclesiastically came upat the Ecumenical Council, andthere are strong views on bothsides.”The four theologians, Msgr. Mc¬Allister said, were in no way“banned” from talking on tihe Cath¬olic University campus. FatherWeigel, he noted, is scheduled tospeak before an undergraduateclass this week and “can expressany views that he wishes.”But once a speaker appears on apublic platform at the University,Msgr. McAllister explained, theuniversity cannot senarate itselffrom the sj«aker and his views.Post lions ExplainedThe Vice Rector pointed out thatCatholic University is in the unioueposition of being governed by theCatholic hierarchy of the UnitedStates, with the bishops of thechurch in effect serving as theboard of trustees. He said. Uni¬versity officials made the decisionto withhold permission for thespeakers. The Hierarchy, hestressed, was not involved.Among the faculty and students,the issue has flared into chargesof censorship on the campus.The Undergraduate StudentCouncil has voted unanimously torecommend to the Administration-Faculty-Student Advisory Boardthat qualifications for guest speak- Earlier Msgr. William J. Me- be cleared in case the speakersDonald. Rector of the university, could be scheduled. No invitationsmet with representatives of the he said, has been issued. All out-administration, faculty and stu- side speakers, he said, must bedents. The Tower described it as approved by the university admin“a friendly and informal discus- istration as routine procedure,sion of student-administration prob- University officials told the Grad-*ems‘ uate Council that they “preferredDanger Cited not to have” Fathers Murray, Wei-This included, the news account f»ek Kung and Diedman speak onindicated, the danger of misunder- ^he Public platform at this time,standing of university policies in Msgr. McAllister said,news media and the need to handle The Graduate Council entered nointernal problems through “proper formal protest. But the Undergrad-channels.” uate Council picked up the issueThe background of the contro- and passed the unanimous recom-versy, as pieced together from mendation that the Administration-Msgr. McAllister and the campusnewspaper, is this:Early last month the GraduateStudent Council submitted a two-page list of more than a dozennames of suggested speakers forthe Council’s lecture series.These, the Vice Rector said, rep¬resented a “list of possibilities” to Faculty-Student Advisory Board re¬view procedures for approvingguest speakers.The Board is scheduled to meetthis week. The issue also maycome up at the next faculty meet¬ing since it is being widely dis¬cussed on campus.—Washington Postpaign. After a month-long furoron the Boulder campus, univer¬sity president Quigg Newton firedthe then editor of the Daily, GaryAlthen.The letter fired off to Atkins byMarshall, which the board saidPunish student for letter(CPS)—A special board of appeal composed of threedeans has upheld an administrative action placing; ex-manag¬ing editor of the Colorado Daily Terry Marshall on probationfor writing an outspoken letter to university Regent DaleAtkins.The only change recommendedby the board w>as to change theterminology of the disciplinaryaction to read “Dean’s warning”instead of “administrative proba¬tion.”Dean of students Arthur Kiendl ... .,placed Marshall probation alter «• •«•.*»««* «■*■«»•*the managing editor wrote an out- «•« ?**“* Makrsl,“"spoken teller t» Kegent Atkins, who ‘wW *• “contmue to s-bvert your. j . . , . i »(Limo had dirty Americanism. The specialhad been just elected. Atkins hadbeen instrumental in pressuring board held uiaithe Colorado administration totake action against the ColoradoDaily because the paper had ear¬lier allowed a student-written arti¬cle to be printed whic h 1 e^‘conduct unbecoming a student.”Senator Barry Goldwater (R-Anz.) , _tJ tlin derogatory terms.Atkins campaigned (and won)for the Board of Reg.nts on a“clean the subversives out of theU” platform, and made the Dailya major issue for conservativesin the November election cam- student at the uni¬versity do not have the privilege,as a matter of right, to write scur-riiious and insulting letters to otherstudents, teachers, or to membersof the Board of Regents. It isStudents start lobbiesStudent groups at opposite endsof the country were setting upas legislative lobbyists last week.Ten high school students in theDistrict of Columbia formally reg- The special board also said thatas far as it could determine, Mar¬shall’s letter was private, not in¬tended for publication, but thatMarshall “could reasonably haveexpected it to be made public-considering the time and circum¬stances of its writing.” The board,did however .direct that the disci¬plinary measure not be made partof Marshall’s academic record.Are frats on way out?The traditional way of fra-istered at the Capitol as lobbyist, ternity life at American col-They are mem-bens of the High ]eges faces extinction, claimsers be re-evaluated. The issue School Students for Bettei Educa j0|^n Poppy in the currentcame out in the open for the first ti°n which spoke up last >eui or Look magazine,time in a news account of the more and better textbooks. ^Thismain objective is toa newsCouncil meeting in The Tower, theweekly undergraduate newspaper.TAhSAM-WJCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANTIAMERICAN III SUESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. ta 1B:S# P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 PIZZAS FOR PRICE OF 2Free UC DeliveryTERRY'S PIZZAMl 3-40451518 E. 63rd Street year their main objective iseliminate overcrowding in juniorhigh schools.In Oregon, four members ofthe U. of Oregon student senatedesignated as lobbyists are to ap¬pear before the state legislaturein favor of more money for highereducation and lower tuitioncharges. Education USA] Hank’s RestaurantI and Bar-B-Cue Instigated as pleasant escapefrom “the dreary, rigid curricu¬lum” of 19th century colleges, fra¬ternities, with their social empha¬sis and built-in “herd instinct,”have become incompatible with the20th century intellectual competi¬tion. where more is being asked ofevery student.For the first time, says Poppy,“fraternities must prove they be¬long on the campus—or get off.'Poppy predicts that fraternitieswill survive—minus the rituals—but that they may eventually be¬come “a chain of boarding houses."II, .11DR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometrist’IN THE1c1fl r NEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th Sr. DO 3.7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESN5WEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNT 'the best bar-b-cue on earth'Features: Complete Dinners from $1.25Businessmen’s Lunches from 95cSpecialty: Hickory Smoked Bar-b-cuedRibs and ChickenWe have a private dining room for businessmeetings, clubs, and private affairsOpen 7 a.m. to 1 a.m.7101 STONY ISLAND AVENUE643-1131 CoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 L 53rd St. HY 3-8302COLOR DEVELOPINGPREPAID MAILERS8 mm Roll, 3 mm 20 exp 51.2935 mm, 36 exp $1.98MODEL CAMERA1342 I. 55th HY 3-9259' NSA DISCOUNTS >•6 • CHICAGO MAROON * March 1, 1963Tryouis start Monday for Blackfriars showTryouts for the 44th annualBlackfriars musical comedywill be held Monday, Tuesdayand Wednesday in the Reyn¬olds Club theater at 7 pm.Written by Rod Phillips, a third-year student in the College, theshow is a satire on contemporaryEnglish society, entitled “AsideFrom All That.”Music is by Bob Applebaum, alsoin the College, and composer ofthe music for last year’s Black¬friars show “Sing Out SweetRock.”Twenty-seven parts are to be cast, ranging from Sadistic Work¬ing Class Leader, Lady PoliceChieftess, and Duchess’ daughter,to Young Hero (who must be love¬able in adversity).Not all leads must be able tosing, or dance, according to AbbessDotty Sharpless; a sense of show¬manship is the chief asset desired.The show, to be presented April25, 26 and 27, will be directed byJames O’Reilly.Students may get a complete listof available roles from the Black¬friars office on the second floor ofReynolds Club. UC symphony concert SaturdayOn Saturday evening in pecially for use in the Ring), andMandel Hall, 85 members of woodwinds in threes and fours.the UC Symphony Orchestra(the largest number yet used)will perform Siegfried’s RhineJourney from Richard Wagner’sopera Gotterdammerung. Includedwill be eight French horns, fourtrombones, three trumpets, basstrumpet (invented by Wagner es- The concert will open with Bach’sSuite No. 2 for Flute, Strings, andHarpsichord, with Thomas Rosen- wein as solo flute.The program w'ill conclude withthe Symphony No. 2 in D major byBeethoven.The concert will begin at 8:30;admission is free.Some seats on Student Governmentinterim flight to NY still availableA limited number of seatsare available on Student Gov¬ernment’s spring flight toNew York.Students interested in tak¬ing the flight are urged tomake reservations at the SGoffice, Ida Noyes Hall, today,Monday, and Tuesday between3 and 5 pm. A $30 deposit isnecessary for a reservation.The flight will leave O’Hareat 8 pm Friday, March 15; itwill return from Idlewild at7:30 pm Sunday, March 24.Round - trip price, includingbus transportation to andfrom O'Hare, is $60. Students who have alreadyreserved seats on the flightare reminded that full pay¬ment must be made by Tues¬day, March 5. H. Colin Slim conductingUC symphonyPAY FOR YOUR DEGREE-WORK PART-TIME AS A BUNNYEarn top money by working evenings orweek-ends at the glamorous Playboy Club.Choose your own schedule—work 3 to 5 daysa week. If you're pretty and personable,married or single, between 18 and H, youprobably qualify. No experience necessary.Apply m person Monday through Saturday, 3 to IPM. at the Playhey Club, 112 L Walton, or cell loran appointment. Applications also hemg taken f«rvacation work. ¥ Y V ¥ ¥ V ¥ VTIKI TOPICSHave you heard! ORALS,HOUSE OF TIKI is servingluneli! Stopped in with friendsfor lunch the other day, andwhat a pleasant surprise. Oneof the Daily Lunch Specialswas Fried Chicken SandwichPlate for 90c. The Special ofthe Day “Beef Stew” wasdelicious for only $1.00. Cock¬tails are available. Kitchen isopen from 11:00 A.M. to3:00 A.M.CIRALS, HOUSE OF TIKI1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-758551st and Lake Park Freud has been acclaimedBY THE NEW YORK CRITICS AS"ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!"FREUD IS A 'TAUT, INTELLECTUALTHRILLER .. .VASTLY EXCITING l”TIME MAGAZINEF&eud IS "A BOLD, DRAMATIC,MOMENTOUS, TASTEFUL, DARING ANDFASCINATING FILM THAT EVERYONEWILL ENJOYl” CROWTHER.N. Y. TIMESFReud BORN INTO A RESPECTABLEWORLD-TORE AWAY ITS MASK OFSEXUAL INNOCENCE. NEVER AGAINWOULD THE WORLD PRETENDTHAT SEX DID NOT EXIST.”N. Y. HERALD TRIBUNEJOHNHUSTONSrmooucTtoN ofFreudMONTGOMERY CLIFTSUSANNAH YORK 'LARRY PARKSSUSAN KOHNER • eileen herlieSPECIAL REDUCED ADMISSIONSFOR STUDENTS & FACULTY!GOOD ONLY WHEN PRESENTEDAT BOXOFFICE WITH COUPONT riiICOUPONFOR 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 55 couponFOR REDUCED ti STUDENT & FACULTY {ADMISSION *"FREUD" !IIIIL, 90< 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 THEATREMIDWEST PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT!STARTS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15STATENEARRANDOLPH LOOP THEATRE ,°SCHICAGO CONTINUOUS' Directed by JAMES O'REILLYLIVE FLAMENCO MUSICby Stanley Slater and Peter Grant Performed in theLAW SCHOOL THEATREDesigned by Eero SaarinenSTUDENT PRICES: $1.00, Fri. & Sun.—$1.50, Sat.Tickets at Mandel Hall Box Officeand Reynolds Club DeskDEARBORN >/ AT DIVISIONone of the year's 10 best-timeKirk Douglasinlonely Are The Brave’Starft Friday Chicago's most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films,STUDENTSTake advantage of th#special discount avail¬able to you. 90£ any dayexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. card to the cashier. V -lV I TRY OUTS!SINGERS - DANCERSMUSICIANS - ACTORSMON., TUES., WED..MARCH 4. 5. 6 at 7 p.m.REYNOLDS CLUB THEATERBlackfriars 44th AnnualMuical Comedy"Aside From All Thatdirected by James O’ReillyJimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.March 1. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROOpUC grad presents films Profs discuss New York paper strikeby Ron Dorfman“I suppose you .might sav I’m arepresentative of the ‘Hard KnocksSchool’ of film-making,” said VemZimmerman, whose two majorfilms will be shown on campustonight. “Not out of choice, neces¬sarily. but film is a very expensivemedium to work in. The hardknocks school is born of poverty.You have to work with what’savailable. I guess this producesrealism of a sort.”Zimmerman began making filmstwo and a half years ago. Aftergraduating from the University ofChicago in 1958, he returned toNew York where he was “hung upwith pneumonia. I couldn’t shakeit. so I just picked myself up andleft for the West Coast.”In San Francisco. Zimmermanran into “a disaffected ad manfrom Madison Avenue and an emi¬gre from D.C. None of us knewanything about making films, butwe decided that that was what wewanted to do.”Zimmerman’s first film was“Lemon Hearts,” one of the filmsto be shown tonight. “It startedout as pure fantasy, but I wasworking at he time as a reporterfor the Examiner. Working on anewspaper was so derressing thatthe film turned into a socialsatire.”The locale of “Lemon Hearts” isan urban renewal area in SanFrancisco. The actor (TaylorMead) wanders in and out of whatwere once the homes of the city’sfirst families. The houses are beau¬tiful, in their own way. but areobviously uninhabited and about tocrumble. Although frequently veryfunny, the film manifests through¬out an eerie, almost surrealisticquality.“That’s an example of ‘hardknocks’ art,” said Zimmerman.“That quality is produced by thebacklighting used throughout theproduction of the film. Not thatwe exactly intended to use thatkind of lighting, but we would getout there after breakfast, and bythe time we had finished walkingaround the place it would be after¬noon.”“To LA—with Lust” is the storyof the rise of a Hollywood starlet.“The girl was a waitress. She’dcome over from Sweden and wastrying to make it in Hollywood.Like all other Swedish actresses,she had narrowly missed workingwith Ingmar Bergman.“I met her when I was sleepingon the beach in Venice (Califor¬nia). She had this house and wemet over the fence. I asked her ifshe wanted to be in pictures—thatold line still works. So we madethe film, using local scenes. Weused local scenes because Icouldn’t afford to order the" sets Iwanted.”Zimmerman returned to NewYork when “Lemon Hearts” wonthe $1,000 Rosenthal award “forthe most creative film by an Amer¬ican citizen under 25 years of age.”Stopping in Chicago on his wayback, he entered “Lemon Hearts”in the Midwest Film Festival spon- Taylor Mead in"Lemon Hearts"sored by Documentary FilmGroup. In Chicago he met JerryTemaner, who induced him to stayto work on the film about Univer¬sity life which Temaner is direct¬ing.Last week Zimmerman and UCstudent Danny Lyon travelled toHazard, Kentucky, where thou¬sands of miners are on strike with¬out the support of the United MineWorkers. Lyon took still photo¬graphs, and Zimmerman filmedand tape recorded the life of theminers. Zimmerman will make adocumentary film with this ma¬terial as soon as the Universityfilm is finished. The latter will bepremiered at the Second MidwestFilm Festival in April.One of the major problems ofthe independent film-maker, ac¬cording to Zimmerman, is distribu¬tion. The commercial distributinghouses take 50 per cent of therental fee. “You might as wellsend them out yourself,” he said.*To get around this problem, sev¬eral independents in New York gettogether to organize the NewAmerican Cinema Group, “some¬thing like an artist’s cooperative.”The Group distributes its mem¬bers’ films for a nominal 10 percent.Although the biggest market forindependent films is still the col¬lege campus, San Francisco film¬makers have been showing theirfilms in bars to working men.“You can do this in Frisco. Thelocal columnists will give you aplug announcing where you’re go¬ing to show the film. The bar¬tenders agree because it bringsthem extra business. Then we passthe hat because you can’t chargeadmission without a cabaret li¬cense. We usually got very ap¬preciative audiences.”In addition to “Lemon Hearts”and “To LA—with Lust” Zimmer¬man will show films of the recent“happenings” and of the twistparties. Showings are at 7:15 and9:15 in Social Sciences 122. Ad¬mission is 75c.Argentine prof speaksR. Olivar-Bertrand, professor ofhistory from Argentina, will speaktoday on the current political situa¬tion in that country.He is from the National Univer¬sity of the South, Bahia Blanca,Argentina. His talk will be at 3:30pm in room 16, Classics building. Editor’s note:Late yesterday. The New York Tostannounced that it will resume pub¬lication on Monday. Mrs. DorothySchiff publisher of the paper, re¬signed from the Publishers Associa¬tion of New York City in order togain freedom to reopen her paper.The Publishers Association subse¬quently issued a statement pledgingit “firm determination ... to conti-nue to press for a satisfactory agree¬ment to end the strike.”The problem of which unionwill be the pace setter for theNew York typographers is oneof the main issues in the NewYork newspaper strike, accordingto Joel Seidman, professor of in¬dustrial relations.“The main difficulty seems tobe that the most powerful union,Local 6 of the International Typo¬graphical Union, has been put inthe position of following the leadof the weaker Newspaper Guild.It just so happens that the Guild’scontract expires first,” he said inan interview yesterdayLocal 6. agreed Arnold Weber,associate professor of business,feels that it can’t minimize itsposition because the News paperGuild's contract expires first, andtherefore frequently becomes apace setter in the New York area.The Guild’s contract was negoti¬ated several years ago. They bar¬gained for and won an increase inwages, but Local 6. the “Big 6”didn’t think it was high enough.When the current president ofthe Typographers Union, Powers,ran for top position in the “Big 6,”his program was that he was goingto change the pattern and makethe typographers union the patternsetter instead of the follower, saidSeidman.Asked how long he thought thestrike was going to last, Webersaid that he thought it was goingto have to run its course. “Ireally don’t see any solution.They’ve tried arbitration, andmediation, and it’s now obviouslybecome a situation in which thestrongest will win out.”He added that in some ways thestrike has been over mediated.“Mediation is also subject to thelaw of diminishing returns. If theSecretary of Labor can’t settle theproblem, then the Mayor can’t.”Weber indicated that anothercause for the prolonged strike wasdue to the technological advancesR & D recruiter hereRecruiters for one of the Navy’sleading research and developmentcenters — the U. S. Naval Ord¬nance Laboratory (NOL), WhiteOak, Maryland — will visit theUniversity of Chicago on Tuesday.The NOL team, usually a per¬sonnel representative accompaniedby a professional scientist or engi¬neer, is particularly interested intalking to students majoring inmechanical, electrical, aeronauti¬cal and phemical engineering aswell as physics, chemistry andmathematics.Further information may be ob¬tained from the placement office.The following courses have been added to those to be given next quarter. Cancelledcourses, time and room changes, will be posted on campus bulletin boards and in the officeof the registrar, room 103 in the administration building.Courses Added Title Instructor - Location Time Prereq.BUS DP 311 Sec. 82 Managerial Acctg-2 Birnberg, J. 6:30 • 8:30 TuFENG 344 Sec. 01 Achievements of Dryden Williamson, * G. Wb 202 2:30 MWFHIST 505 Sec. 01 Brxontine 9 Slav Sources Ferluga, J. C 102 9:30 MWFHUM DEV 460 Sec. 01 Psych Var Stdy Sac Proe Bradburn, H. ftLevine, R. BE 17 2-3:30 TT Ident. BUS 49SHUM DEV 479 Sec. 01 Multivariate Analysis Kaiser, H. E 308 2-5:00 Tu •aJAPAN 250 Sec. 01 Japan Lit Translation McClellan, E, ARR 10:30 MWF Ident OC 220MATH 241 Sec. 71 Anolytic ft Project Geom. Ginsburg, M. E 203 2:30 MWF - PO MATH 252NEARCH 306 Sec. 01 Read Syro-Palest Art Kantor, H. ARR ARR PQ Cons Instr.STAT 309 Sec. 91 Tech Experiment Design Brownlee, K. E 203 3:30-5 MW PQ Stat 306 or equiv.ZOOL 440 Sec. 01 Cytochemistry Swift. H. ARR ARR PQ Cons Instr.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife InsuranceProtection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 PIZZASFor The Price OfNICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780 which have come into the news¬paper field. “In the future theunion’s bargaining power isn’t go¬ing to be any stronger, so it maybe possible that they have decidedto show their muscle now.”Seidman (minted out that on thepublishers side, several papers arein a precarious position. “They saythat a substantial increase in theprice of their papers will cut downthe readership, which in turn willlower the advertising and hencethe revenue.”“Of the well known papers, Ithink the Post is in the most pre¬carious position, but it's not theonly one,” he said.But Seidman added that whatcould happen is that some of thepapers will be forced to increasetheir prices, and they may findout that it will not drastically cutdown their circulation.At present, however, Seidmanthinks they sound very far apart.“Powers has been quoted as say¬ing that the publishers know whathe's willing to settle for, but whatthis is has not been disclosed tothe public.“On the union side the pressuresfor an early settlement are weak¬ened because the union pays verygenerous strike benefits, saidSeidman.When asked h»w long he thoughttheir strike fund would hold out,he said that in a recent referendumthe International Typographical Union voted to tax themselves inorder to rebuild the funds whichhave been depleted by the NewYork strike, and by one in Cleve¬land.Seidman pointed out that an in¬teresting aspect of the strike isthat it may actually eliminate anumber of jobs for the unions itseveral of the New York papersare forced to close.“There seems to be no immedi¬ate solution, short of compulsion.The city, the state, and the federalgovernments have all expressedgrave concern. Major Wagner haspersonally conducted a number ofbargaining sessions. Rockefellerhas offered to hold some, andfederal mediators have long beeninvolved.”“We don’t have any laws forcompulsory arbitration in thiscase,” said Weber. “And even ifsome were made, the consequencesof this practice would seem to befar less that the immediate valueof getting the New York papersback.”Weber pointed out that for manyyears the printing industry hasbeen designating as model of labormanagement relations. “Now itscatching it. Not only in New York,but also in Cleveland and in othercities across the country.” Andmuch of this, he said, is due totechnological change which willrender obsolete many of the jobswhich the typographers now do.Tear out this couponUNIVERSITY OF HAWAII SUMMER SESSION 1963HAWAII795-SIX $'WEEKSFROM CHICAGO-ROUND TRIP JETImagine ... six weeks (43 days) inHawaii, the Paradise of the Pacific.During this wonderful summer touryou can attend (optional) theUniversity of Hawaii. Included isround trip Jet travel from Chicago,Waikiki hotel accommodations,sightseeing, beach parties, surfing,dinner dances, hula lessons,and more ... only $795.00. Plannow for your summer in Hawaii IAsk for details.LEAVE JUNE 23 RETURN AUGUST 4, 1963LEILANI TOURS, INC.DEPT. G, 19 LAKE STREET, OAK PARK, ILLINOIS • PHONE 948-7144Tear out and mallthis coupon with your name- .Address.SALEMarch 1 through March 7, 1963Library Duplicates & DiscardsJQc&upFresh Stock Added DailyThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 EllisHARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of Imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONE. a m — 1*3*FA £L—1318^— 7898 ^ rrn Tn nm re.jnLSU.a-CAU l aiq, cauomoNto°0ISWM/ »W 6.53** ST^ II AM TO 10 PM_ MIS-34 07opv^w& Dtuvat