3 UC political scientistscomment on Viet NamVol. 72 — No. 17 University of Chicogo, Friday. Nov. 8. 1963 ^ 31To discuss civil rights, student actionNSA regional starts tonightCivil rights and studentaction are the primary topicsto be discussed at this week¬end’s fall conference of theIllinois-Winsconsin region of theNational Student Association(NSA).The sessions of the conferencewhich will be held in Ida NoyesHall, will extend from Fridayafternoon through Saturday eve¬ning.The program will be highlightedby the showing of a film entitled“We Will Never Turn Back.” Thefilm, which deals with the voterregistration project of the StudentNon-Violent Coordinating Commit¬tee, will be shown at 8 pm Fridayevening in the Cloister Club.Speeches and discussion will fol¬low.Friday’s program will consistalso of registration, beginning atS pm. and a business plenary be¬fore the film.On Saturday, three conferencesare scheduled, all of which beginat 9 am. One, a civil rights work¬shop, will be held in the CloisterClub. The second, a seminar on“The International Campus.” willtake place in the library. The finalconference, a workshop on campusaction, will be held in (lie EastLounge.The civil rights workshop willbe begun by an address by UCstudent Bruoe Rappaport. Follow¬ing the speech, a demonstrationand training session in the tech¬niques of non-violent resistancewill take place.Following lunch, Pam Procuniarof UC and students from Chicagoarea tutorial projects will describetheir activities in a program en¬titled “Student Tutorials.” Finally,representatives of the ChicagoArea Friends of SNCC will speak on “Support of the Southern CivilRights Movement.”The workshop will be moderatedby Alex Stein, a University ofWisconsin student who is the civilrights coordinator of the Ulinois-Wisconsin region.The international campus semi¬nar features two speeches and apanel discussion. The first speech,to be given by Alex Korns, Inter¬national Affairs Vice-President ofNSA, will treat “USNSA in Inter¬national Student Relations.”The second speech, schduled forthe afternoon, is called “CampusInternational Programming,” andwill be directed by Peggy O’Con¬nell of the University of Wisconsin.Tlie panel discussion, “Interna¬tional Student Programs,” will beconducted by Korns and VictorJohnson, a regional executive ofthe World University Service. Thediscussion will be moderated byStu Dowty, the regional chairman.Ann Thomas of the Universityof Illinois, the treasurer of the re¬gion, will moderate the entireseminar.The campus action workshopconsists of two panel discussionsand two addresses. The openingaddress will be presented by VanceOpperman, Student GovernmentVice-President of USNSA. It isentitled “Organizing for StudentAction.”The second address, to be heldin the early afternoon, will begiven by George Watson of Roose¬velt University. Watson will ana¬lyze “The Role of Students’Rights.”One of the two panel discussionswill deal with “Student Services.”Jim Thomason of the USNSA Coop,Opperman, Jeff Segal of CampusGovernment Services, and Educa¬tional Travel Inc. will serve asmembers of the panel.The second panel discussion, which will investigate “Action forStudents’ Rights,” will have aspanel members Opperman; PeteGalde, vice-chairman of the re¬gion; Larry Lissner, student bodypresident at Shimer College; andClark Kissinger of the Universityof Wisconsin.Andy Stein of UC, the academicfreedom coordinator of the re¬gion, will preside over the work¬shop.Registration fees for the entireconference total $2 per delegate,and should be paid at the time ofregistration on Friday evening.Further information about theconference may be obtained fromStuart Dowty, Shimer College, Mt.Carroll, Illinois; telephone 7256(McKee Hall). The recent coup d’etat inViet Nam was long overdueand it might be beneficial forthat country, according tothree members of the politicalscience department.In interviews yesterday, C. Her¬man Pritchett, professor and chair¬man of the poltical science depart¬ment, Hans J. Morgenthau, AlbertA. Michelson distinguished serviceprofessor of political science andmodern history, and Morton A.Kaplan, associate professor ofpolitical science, all expressed thehope that the coup would lead toa better government for Viet Namand more political stability.Pritchett stated that the over¬throw would prove to be beneficialsimply because Viet Nam couldnot have continued with the lackof confidence the people had in itsgovernment.He called the killing of the twoleaders of the ousted Diem regime“unfortunate,” but added that itwas not surprising in light of thenature of the Vietnamese politicalsituation at present.The US. Pritchett stated, mighthave contributed indirectly to thecoup, but certainly had no directeffect. In fact, he added, we wereprobably not expecting what final¬ly happened.Morgenthau stated that he hadno idea what would come of theoverthrow, but that it was overdueand he hoped good would come from it. “I welcome the coup,” hestated, “but it is hard to see whatwill come as a result of it.”Although the US had nothingdirectly to do with the upheaval,continued Morgenthau, “no one inWashington regretted it.” Any fur¬ther judgment on the situation, headded, would be premature. “Wemust wait to see whether politicalorder will result.”Kaplan cited the lack of reliabili¬ty of newspaper reports on theentire situation. It is hard to ac¬cept the newspapermen's accountsverbatim, he stated, since theythemselves may not know thewhole story,Kaplan, unlike Pritchett andMorgenthau, was glad that the twoDiem leaders were killed. “I wasamazed at the naivette of the USgovernment,” he stated. “Killingthese two people was the only wayto handle such a revolution.”The new government in VietNam, Kaplan stated, must be ap¬proached by the US as basicallya military one. “High politics areout of place here,” Kaplan as¬serted, “if we expect them to betreated in an ordinary way.”The new government may ormay not have politcal ability, ac¬cording to Kaplan, but we mustwait to find out. In any case, heconcluded, the new government canhardly run the government worsethan the Diem regime did, and itdeserves US support.Library starts general collectionArt curator will give talkin My Life and Yours' seriesA. Hayatt Mayor, curatorof prints at New York’s Met¬ropolitan Museum of Art, willappear in the “My Life andYours” program Mondayevening. Mayor will partici¬pate in an informal discussionat 8 pm in the East Loungeof Ida Noyes Hall.Educated at Princeton and Ox¬ford, Mayor taught history of artat Vassar College before he joinedthe Metropolitan staff in 1932. Hebecame curator of prints in 1946.Mayor is the author of severalbooks on art. The Bibiena Family,published in 1945, Barogue andRomantic Stage Designs (1950, andGiovanni Battista Piranesi (1952),are three.“My Life and Yours” is an ir¬ regular series of informal pro¬grams at which students can meetand talk with outstanding personsof the times. Fifty places will beheld for students who sign up inDean Simpson’s office, Gates-Blake 132, before 5 pm today. The University Library hasopened a general reading col¬lection on the third floor ofHarper Library, Herman H.Fussier, director of the library,announced recently.The new department, under thesupervision of Miss Jean McClel¬land, provides an open-shelf bookcollection of selected new and stan¬dard titles In most fields ofknowledge.All persons holding valid libraryprivilege cards may use it, and itis hoped that they will find it aconvenient and attractive source ofmaterials of general reading.The general reading collectionpresently has some 2,500 volumesand is expected to grow, over thenext few years, to about eight ornine thousand titles. Virtually allof the titles will be duplicates ofbooks held in the general collec¬tions of the University library.About one third of the books arefiction, drama and poetry, butmaterials in these categories willeventually form about half of thecollection as it grows and develops.The collection will not attempt toget all “best-sellers” and it willnot contain science fiction, west¬erns or mystery stories, or thecurrent or bound issues of journals.The library may sometimes ac¬quire more than one copy of un¬ usually popular works, but cannotattempt to see that every readergets every popular, current titleat the time he asks for it.In commenting on this collection.Fussier said that its establishmentIs an attempt to meet severalneeds. “The College faculty,” hesaid, “has long felt that a moreinformal exposure to a relativelysmall but well-selected collection ofcurrent and standard works wouldUC seeks rural high school talentUC will be the subject of4 television program thisweekend. WNBQ, the Chi¬cogo NBC station, will pre¬sent a half-hour documen¬tary on UC on its Dateline:Chicogo program. The pro¬gram will appear on Sun¬day night at 10:15 pm onChannel 5. UC’s Small School TalentSearch was organized fouryears ago to locate superiorstudents in the nation’ssmall and rural high schools.The students in small townsoften are not aware of the manyopportunities for college study, ac¬cording to Margaret E. Perry,associate director of admissionsand administrator of the talentsearch. Many rural students, sheexplained, don’t apply to the bet¬ter universities because they don’tthink they can compete with thegraduates of large urban highschools.“Yet our statistics show thattalented men and women fromsmall high schools can success¬fully be prepared there for a de¬manding college education.”The search is directed towardstudents attending midwesternhigh schools with enrollments be¬low 800. About 475 schools in 14 states are now being contactedthrough letters, leaflets, and per¬sonal visits, Miss Perry explained.The schools are asked to nominateone or possibly two students to theprogram. These students are theninvited to apply for admission totlie College.Miss Perry stated that the stu¬dents attending the College underthe Talent Search in any yearwould probably not exceed 10% ofthe student body. At the presenttime, these students comprise 4%of the total College enrollment.Financial assistanceFinancial aid is available whenneed is shown, Miss Perry said.“Since we have found that tliestudents from small towns nearlyalways need help, we tell the highschools that if they find us thetype of student we are looking for,we will offer him financial assist¬ance.“Some of the students selected in the search are receiving morethan $2,000 a year to cover vir¬tually all their major expenses in¬cluding tuition,” she continued.“Several members of the groupare Merit Scholarship winners anda number of the students are pay¬ing all of their own expenses.”The 106 students who have en¬tered the College under the pastfour years of the program havecome from the following states:Minnesota (32), Iowa (18), Wiscon¬sin (16), Montana (12), Michigan(9), Illinois (6), Indiana (5), Mis¬souri (5), Kansas (2), and NorthDakota (1). Students from Idaho,Washington and Oregon will par¬ticipate in the program in thefuture.For the class entering the Col¬lege, the first eight states in theorder of their representation areIllinois, New York, New Jersey,(Continued on page twelve) he extremely desirable for under¬graduate readers. As the sametime, the library felt that such afacility would be equally stimula¬ting and useful to graduate stu¬dents and to faculty membersreading for pleasure or for generalknowledge outside the area of theirspecialization.”“The general reading collection,therefore, is not designed aroundthe specific needs of undergraduatestudents, and its services have nodirect relationship to curricular re¬quirements in either the College orthe divisions. Perhaps it can bestbe described as a carefully-selectedcollection for the non-specialist. Agraduate student in economics, forexample, may find the economicsmaterials of limited use or interest,but a student in geology or Englishmight find in the economics sectionexactly the kind of sound, signifi¬cant material needed to broadenhis perspective and understandingof the field.”. Miss McClelland became librar¬ian of the general collection lastspring. She is responsible forordering books and she makesselections from a list of suggestionsoffered by the faculty and stu¬dents.The original collection waschosen last year by a faculty com¬mittee consisting of Sol Tax. pro¬fessor of anthropology; HannaGray, assistant professor of his¬tory; Gwin Kolb, professor ofEnglish; Perrin Lowrey, associateprofessor of humanities, and Rob¬ert Palter, associate professor ofphilosophy.The reading room is located inHarper E-31 and is entered fromthe east end of the social sciencereading room. It has seats forthirty readers at tables and forsix readers in comfortable loungechairs. The current service hoursare from 1 pm to 9 pm Mondaythrough Thursday, from 1 pm to 6pm Friday, and from 1 pm to 5 pmon Saturday.Because of the special nature ofthe collection and the purposes itis intended to serve, a few specialborrowing rules will apply. Booksmay be withdrawn for two-weekperiods, but no renewals will bepermitted. No reader may havemore than two books charged tohis name at any time. The circula¬tion regulations will apply to allusers of the collection, whetherstudent or faculty, and thus allborrowers will be liable for thelibrary’s established penalties fortlie late return or loss of books.Ginsburg talks to pre-meds Nobel Prizes to physicistsColleges and high schools two years of the College but be ^ ■ 4should share the responsibili- more spread out. "This will allow £ ^ ^ Hfll Q | y Qj g £ | £| ^ Q | '|j<*Two scientists who have With Professor J. Hans D. Jensen in chemistry in 1911,."Mrs. • Mayer received the ...'Nobel!. ty of, liberal education, accord-; the biology; majors tbi,take funda-ibeen associated with the Uni- University of .Heidelberg,T “ ,,versity^ Chicago received Mrs^Mayer did her prize-win- Prize for a theoretical model^gG^#Had£of >the, se<S^culum;, Ginsburgwarned,’ biology*'Nobel Prizes this week;ning research on nuclear shell lhe nucleus, described In agpaKeiiwee f, > of . Winning half of the $51,158 prize structure when she was a senior Published in 1949. In Germ.VirjpEueene Paul WicrrwM , physicist "at the Argonne National Jensen arrived at the same ’t!ii$S|:;.;rr\Ul - Jrecognia sion. According to this theory.^; |lions, in physics, participated in Mrs. Mayer is the second woman protons and . neutrons inside - thejBuild-ultra-low temperature lab quantum jump.moans of this theory, nu’l< ,i3spectroscopic data can be•* inten^The'iSW AP^prientotipni-, meetingS W AIA Ked^morttutors ii» -* all.high |school^ subjects. particularlyin^sciencey>and math. Interestedstudents are asked to ^contact. AnnSweaters FromiNorwaysiGenuine Home KnittedBest,Qualitylimport agent who wantssto^lear^hislwhole^stocki^As^much^m5^r,gnt*off•: SeefSSjatfMb*..' On Our4Gallery Walls£ Great Drawings Reproduced *’ **m uilor and detailed# t heoret icale.ijuKicMdo yelopmci i Vaj byjJhHjg * j; 'ft WlgMr recdhrtd the NdheiPrisSI. " ' , ,,, M Jfg for understanding the forces which]hold nuclear particles together.*?•■wwh : 1 ;>W m ,i • it ion road'’ u. i ;!' % - r 4v- A . . ; **, * * . i % v • **~ . . . < • h .'llPER DAYPER MILEATOMIC CARRENTALS, INC.70S7 Stony IslandMl 3-5155Dorms incur high budget loss UC gives fourth most PhD'sThe University's “auxiliaryenterprises,” taken as a whole,showed a net loss of $41,000for the 1962-63 fiscal year,accord inff to the recently re-b leased Comptroller’s report.Auxiliary enterprises include:jtl residence halls and commons,all other housing operated by theUniversity for students, facultyand staff, the bookstore, UC Press,the printing department, Inter¬national House, and the Center for► Continuing Education and othersmaller operations such as theReynolds Club.Total income for all auxiliaryenterprises was $7,874,000 whileexpenditures were $7,917,000.Operations providing food serv¬ice and housing for unmarried stu¬dents showed a net loss of morethan $236,000. Pierce Tower hadincome of $192,000 against expendi¬tures of $289,000. New Dorms lost$72,000 and . Burton-Judson lost$29,000.Dorm losses are deliberate“The loss incurred in the opera¬tion of dormitories is deliberate,”commented Ray Brown, vice presi¬dent for administration. “It rep¬resents the intent of the Univer¬sity.”Brown who was Interviewed yes¬terday by the Maroon, character¬ized the basic question in budget¬ing as the determination of “bowmuch each tub should stand on itsowtt bottom. We must ask our¬selves whether those students whoare housed by the Universityshould pay the full cost of housingwhen not all students are in Uni¬versity-owned housing.” Ratherthan establish a rigorous policyof making all operations self-sus¬taining, Brown said that the Uni¬versity has chosen to compromiseby subsidizing many of its opera¬tions such as dorimtorieg in sucha way as to deal most equitablywith students.Last year, the budgeted deficitfor unmarried student food andhousing was $161,000. As reported above, the actual loss was sub¬stantially higher. The discrepancyresulted from placing the NewDorm cafeteria on a cash ratherthan contract basis, said Brown.Budget dorm loss for 1963-64For the current fiscal year,which ends June 30, the Universityhas again budgeted a $161,000 lossbut. Brown explained, the actualloss will probably be higher dueto the New Dorms cafeteria. He saidthat the University will probablypick up some additional revenuefrom the cafeteria but not enoughto meet the budget requirements.Brown pointed out that the smallincrease in dorm rates this yearwas made in order to improve thequality of meals. Many studentshave commented that food is bet¬ter this year, he said.In addition to direct expenses,the “expenditures” for a dormitoryinclude amortization and intereston loans taken out on the building.Burton-Judson had an outstand¬ing obligation of some $488,000 as of June 30, he said. This dorm,which is thirty-two years old, “hasalways had a loan on it. We try toget loans for as long-term as pos¬sible,” he explained.Married student housing also lostmoney but not nearly as much asthe dormitories. With a total bud¬get in excess of $700 000, the mar¬ried student housing program lostsome $28,000 .Deficits don’t affectother parts of budgetThe deficits in the auxiliary en¬terprises did not directly affectother areas of the budget becausethe University maintains reservefunds to absorb losses in variousoperations. AH of the New Dorm“loss,” for example, was coveredby a reserve fund established forthat purpose. When an operation’sincome exceeds its expenditures, aportion of the surplus is oftenplaced into a reserve fund.The Bookstore had a net incomeof $80,000 on total volume of al¬most $1.2 million. The UC Presshad an income of $67,000 and theprinting department showed aprofit of $81,000. Both the book¬store and the Press are con¬sistently “in the black.”With most of the loss in variousoperations absorbed by reservefunds, the auxiliary enterpriseswere able to contribute more than$18,000 to the general budget oftlie University.No University operation reallyshows a “profit” since excessesare either placed into reservefunds or used in some other partof the University.Discuss Freud at HiilelDr. Richard L. Rubenstein ofthe University of Pittsburgh willspeak on “Freud and the Originsof Religion” tonight at 8:30 at theHiilel Fireside program.Rubenstein is lecturer in FrenchExistentialist literature at Pitts¬burgh, and has published frequentarticles on psychology and reli¬gion. In the period 1920-62, UCproduced the fourth highestnumber of PhDs of any insti¬tution in the country, accord¬ing to a recently completed studyby the National Academy ofSciences National Research Coun¬cil.The University’s national quan¬titative ranking has consistent/dropped during the 42-year period.For the first 5-year period. 1920-1924, UC paced all other institu¬tions. From 1925-1949, UC rankedsecond. Over the next five-yearperiod, 1950-54, UC ranked third.We were tenth in 1955-59 and 14thin 1960-61.In mathematics, and physiology, UC ranks at the top for the en¬tire period covered. The Universitytakes second place in the geo¬sciences, anatomy-cytology-embry¬ology, psychology, political sci¬ences, social sciences, foreignlanguage and literature and reli¬gion-theology.UC is also the 4th largest pro¬ducer of baccalaureates who goon to receive PhD’s.Other than UC, the six mostpopular schools for PhD boundpersons who received their bache¬lor’s degrees here are Columbia,Illinois, Harvard, California. Mostof tile students who came fromother institutions to receive PhDshere came from Illinois, North¬western, Harvard and Oberlin.Weintraub to lectureKarl J. Weintraub, assistantprofessor of history in the College,will deliver Orientation Board’sannual Aims of Education lectureMonday at 8 pm in social science122. Weintraub originally pre¬sented this lecture to the enteringclass at the beginning of thisyear’s O-Week.Richard Mandel, a member ofChamber concert setThe second concert in the UCChamber Music Series will begiven tonight at 8:30 in MandeiHall. Featured will be pianistRosen, who will perform the Sona¬ta in A-flat Major, Op. 110, by 'Casablanca* at ShoreyBeethoven and the Dacidsbundler-tanze, Op. 6, by Robert Schumann.Also on the program are ThreeOne Part Inventions by ArthurBerger, Milton Babbitt’s Parti¬tions, and Debussy’s Estampes.Tickets are $3; $1 for students.They are available at the MusicDepartment, 5802 Woodlawn Av¬enue. ext. 3885. O-Board, explained that “O’Boardfelt the lecture rang true to usas upperclass students. Weintraubdeals with many problems thatbecome fully conscious to a stu¬dent only after a year or two ofCollege. He examines the natureof solving intellectual problemsand then relates this to a student’soverall development as an indi¬vidual. For these reasons we askedWeintraub to give the lectureagain for returning students.”The lecture will be followed byan open discussion of both its con¬tent and its appropriateness for anaudience of entering students.“Casablanca,” a 1943 movie star¬ring Ingrid Bergman and Hum¬phrey Bogart, will be shown atShorey House Monday at CoffeePlus.The movie will begin at 8:30 pmon the ninth floor of Pierce Tower.Admission is 25c and free coffeewill be served.^ , wiaania ■ •■.muI Call :: HY 3-8282 filili'lk Ifn TO 177 AJ^JLJK© M MMj\JbLajljhl(Quality wills Use Real Italian Toueli! \ u. c.’s :| favorite I%M-"Miil!BilBi,n;B .a a:;"Open: I P.M.-2 A.M., Monday-ThursdayI P.M.-3 A.M., Friday & SaturdayI P.M.-2 A.M., SundayDelivery Service HY 3-8282 - 1465 E. Hyde Park Blvd. - Carry-OutsNov. 8, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Law conference tomorrow(>- ing aid to Africa, they are ineffi- program because it involves snn-js ;cient and1 often unsuccessful be-* pie people” who *eaiv.- understand...-.cause of the.great bureaucracy in, the nee-ck of the African people andI government . agencies, < Robinson *are- Svilhng to do itu . b,H(i .mdsaid. ^•''••^<tfeiiunual work that needs t«. 1" done^^ For^example,"'hes continued*/ the /'to 'provide success ful aid.? V, eo- ,Co Ps.tntl.s ‘ 1< f i« ed tl th S<> ;; i < ns'‘w jrom 1 the>African/people. If^.is^rjn.is'-^.has been unsuccessful in giving'f.^understbpd^and distrusted,, becauseyaid because it ties.*:political strings%L m lkj£< . v.t<}t < 1 ■ 'v '!,*■ ~ - ,C‘‘*|^Ja lone whileWh cpAfricankf (ieople.f^ Opera ti on sCros s r oa ds Africa,'ac-^knpw§dhat,|;* 1 hei^LsMan|;^ilterior^c<»rding to Robinson, not only/,pro-fxs|Wiy'#p rUS^aid^^p ides valuable aid to Africa, but ,^KTbeyjfricans^fwoukUflike.^tbe^ also, performs a vital service*, ini^FieuW.^biW’lo-’-cxplum^ho 'desire ■ bringing Americans ‘into „ contact,*1n-^.tJKV;*h;ne-vfor>Afncant friendship. ’ with, the cultures ail \friea.^ « :■ re.m'ist.dv”.t°;f.train V If Amercians are to give aid to^el«rnetl try-** . - ■ £*•. : ^ . \u n ;C ■ tin i <■ must hv : . los,. ,„U’■..h ’ only a seventh grade educa-’ laboration between,.Americans and ...'niion’^Robinson .explained.' Because v Africans „ Workington * projects.Is^theVl’SiethicatorsJhave^nothing in’ Otherwise. one may .feel .Africans-'Kt*• a s - m< omiM-i. et i,r etutt be helped "Lemi 111- ’l, > * ' • ' ' ■ iv * • 1 ^siniph tiei ,'iiim-.i,the> 4inin *P; i "k ' • ,< , -4; pj'usss* »\ r' ,ot' u*t\' >.'/■>* ^P' ^i^ofFdhe Jsraeli aid jvHe/added-that' rii'any Aima:u“;a“ *— i - —n - —n —■* .UAditvyoPon-P to ,be,< authoi nies on .'■ ;^uch a a. > G nt -/act •^.have^,no^knowlt‘<lgerf ofi/t h.^frican^-peoplet^j/j;^.- ■»„' • JpIs/Robin _spn|, s aid,,Al bert/ Sc hwe i t ?,e1 i s pi a y s^iiehja n ‘ a t111 iide^y/i*Ve-|^.fusing''’ to train'African;, physicians];even’LthmigHih'is hospitafeVundcr5ida,fled^»»#4^>^. .IV by the UC Law School and ^ America.- LeVy is EarliwJ*..thef-“ American ^.Society for. LegalJHU tory.'Both *nooii • ■*’'' ’ 11 «> •,, noon-'sessions will^ be held- dn the o>l the graduate school ,of Bi ande-iislWt. mouth Kirkland Courtroom' ot - University. '•“V ■ \ ' ./'i! last speaket will be Dal nt*At. the morning session, which n.'‘ Oaks.. • • - n,\s ill ' begin'J at ' 10 am, - Abram , * n , , ,, ",•, • >> . ' - , , . r ,nc law.',4^;- UC. Oaks-address, is tt'nl( . ijh , (gi L advnsw ■ - > s , \ ™,S I 1 , 1 r ' ' '* * ’ ■ 1 ^,'jThe : Right to- Enter and Leave in the State-1Courts in the Early' - *■ 1 - di C, aMsl&« a Idit on I .aw t - nc < M -I ried ' " jn.ian, ; associate • prolessor'of- law. pa|iA| «.! iAr ll.-J uthe fUrmersity ‘of ’ Wisconsin r«n“,:aw 'Sohool.'^w illy discuss Vf'ree-y « .■ , y.;:v ■" ■.. ,1' v :-,w,- ; - --Vh;.- .' ’ . ■ rh< int« lleotual- mu: !’‘it . ( '■ ‘. .. 1 r < <a s, •^sistant .professor of history at 7 45 pm in the Ida Noyes Halli*iw;iir'eon'ider "Parliament and-Law Library. y,iCafr :.* ' h \ ■ - . ‘ ' - ajyi^.-The^ 14th Ameixlment and the Hauser, Morri J;anowitz, apd Pe-^.Righlyto^:^y<)te’v?jW,ilj,.be„ the . topic, ter Rossi- will be the panelists^J-r'bfi*Jacobus TcnBroek, professor ol with Prof. Donald Ix-vme as hxkI-ff ’ ?*sciepce;;i»t'. ,-y ’ -• p ' ”4s>‘.( . 1111• >1 1.1,L ” a ‘t;, ‘ •• k /!'.< 11 Ih- om <>ii <1t ’■ I *’ , • ^ .< r M1 ► n y -■£ 'thering ,-alter the pain-1 disccisjjif.'dt^iwtH-f-^v^-.loli'n1 pn. /with .... ix-lriyhmrnts U.-ing^I?.il'te'^VleAoSSSEof^pSlii'icsCTi^h&VV^- Announcements, , will*. Ik-£Bi/hd.nsf,-lJmverMy^Rpa/hf|who!w^)^regardingyt he 1 ioi 101 s'Pro-fy"’'i'' ■/ , .Jr 1.5 . ' f: ; f. -i2^; 1 enc’^at'kU6?1 as5tveiw 11i-Vpi• ak-v•:**/. ,C ‘ ■ " "ymi:ee/Cneers For Booksiiramme 1 c Bra t i on?fofiC hi!d re rufsB«>oy^lce k» HBBk!cTtielUnivefsitv/ofiChicagolBbolt store.HaL Freeman, , member .»f’> the!( - b ago:" Cocm 01 n Humanil 1 i.i' nil ,■ * . ■_ t •■]St lie "Problem ol Community SchTvjat Calvt rl Houa 173!!,UoiJ,\Vrsi1y Ave , Sunday/4 pm ^- Thi h the econd < i < - im*imhour lecture'* 1 >n the uiImii r<K-nTll‘Jcm’-uis whic^' Cal\u t House is jnefr'sr'nt ingfi-.'"One t>f the14-topics- Free 1 nan4"wiII-?discuss'yis racial/diseriminatioiP.'mi'1. pitalsV'" * ■-* "ij *'■-V P* ' *. '■*' ** '5802J E Hi s^Aven ue^Announces Ah]AIMS^OF EDUCATIONWm:"t LECTUREEHKni|feSWmaejim>rej<tj|picLita«E EepA i? KI PGMri^ O U Rc NE w*~Gy. RAGE,.■susnaiiagrapEs -ree^pfrkw KarlWiViLeiiitraublfSocialvScience»l 22rMlgfeHBkWSTR’E eJB3-4900^mUR®IT^SsCKTAII:..l!0UN©Er—-»COFFEE SHOP —OPEN!24 HOURSr^l^g|knbwfcFoi^Prime^Steaksl/VncFprpMartinisSnasWartet!^mu#if Sis^t i mFrmvvhn <plantfor^ininnnk^a ys part y ih c«J^H ’reilloUel 1 eiititt\* 171Vnftw100 persons' Our rtfW:|Jv^rooms .in’* liide the Surrey, thie,^,lie.i'Captain’s^Gabiri.l c.. ' *'/. A,■VljlYclh.irm 11 etycaso it*o 1 "111 i stfna^i nf^ffin^WahShW#. charcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chickenPHONE 48i-1668$U discontinues twist partiesThe Wednesday night twistparties, which have beenmore or less of an institutionon campus, have been discon¬tinued effective immediately, ac¬cording to William Klecka, presi¬dent of Student Union (SU).The parties will be discontinued,Klecka stated, for two reasons:g Thefts and the threat ofViolence have been increasing at sponsible for the stolen money.At one party early in the quarter,policemen interrogated twelve“students” who had gained admis¬sion to the party by falsified IDcards. Not one of these twelve wereactually students. It has been in¬cidents and discoveries such asthis, Klecka stated, that led toSU’s action.Thomas O’Keefe, director ofStudent Activities, corroboratedKlecka’s statements, and addedthat, from the University’s pointof view, the parties could not con¬tinue if there was considerabledanger to the students. The parties,O’Keefe stated, were originally in¬tended for UC students. Recently,however, the administration andSU had considered a suggestionwhich would have limited admis¬sion to the parties strictly to hold¬ers of a college or university IDcard from any school. This ideawas rejected, however, becausethe elaborate ID checking pro¬cedure that would have been neces¬sary would have imposed toogreat a burden on the checkers.O’Keefe added that both theeventual solution and the recentdecision to discontinue the partieswere made solely by SU. NeitherO'Keefe nor Klecka could offer an estimate of when the parties wouldbe resumed, however.James E. Newman, assistantdean of students, pointed out that,although one of the prime reasonsior the discontinuation of the twistparties has been the robberies andthreats of violence, the majority ofpeople that attend the parties are“fine, upstanding citizens.” It isonly a minority who have beencausing disturbances, but thesedisturbances, according to New¬man, have necessitated SU’saction.“The parties simply need to becontrolled,” Newman stated. “Thisis a delicate issue, since the twistparties have been a good outlet forcollege students in the area, andwe must await Student Union’sdecision.”Klecka, however, could not offera definite idea of what the eventualSU decision would be. “We’re notsure what changes are going to bemade,” he stated. “We need sug¬gestions for something non-cum-bersome which would control theparties, and minimize the dangerto students without robbing thosewho attend of the opportunity tohave a good time.” Student curriculumcommittee tells plansIR club to hold meetingft steady rate at the parties so far(his year, and 2) SU is unwillingto institute an elaborate system ofChecking ID cards because of thefttrain it would put on the checkers,ftnd needs time to devise a check¬ing system that would be satisfac¬tory to both the checkers and theUniversity.Tlu> campus police, Klecka said,are very concerned about the in¬creased number of thefts. Theyhave found out that people hadbeen entering the twist parties withCither revolvers or switchbladeknives in their pockets, and havehad reports of at least eight inci¬dents in which money was stolen,tn addition, empty whiskey bottleshave been found in the men’s roomand the library following theparties.Since admission to the partieshas been 10c for students with IDcards and 50c for outsiders, Kleckacontinued, many in the latterCategory have been renting or fal¬sifying ID’s in order to escape thehigher price. In many cases, ithas been these people who were re- The International Relations Clubwill hold an organizational meet¬ing Sunday at 7:30 pm in the sunparlor on the third floor of IdaNoyes Hall.According to its organizer RogerPeters, a third year student in theCollege, the club will bring to¬gether a small number of inter¬ested students to discuss foreignaffairs and United States foreignpolicy with faculty members andexperts from off campus.Tlie club will consider a widerange of viewpoints and questionsand hopes to attract all people whodesire to carry on a serious study of international relations.Hans Morgenthau, professor ofpolitical science and chairman ofthe Center for the Study of UnitedStates Foreign and Militry Policy,will be the club’s advisor. Every¬one is invited to attend Sunday’smeeting.MODEL CAMERALEICA, BOLEX, NIKONROBERTS RECORDERS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTS Subcommittees of the Stu¬dent Curriculum Committeehave undertaken studies ofgeneral education courses,curricula of fields of concentra¬tion, and tutorial programs.The curriculum committee wasset up last spring by the student-faculty relations commibte of Stu¬dent Government and Dean of theCollege Alan Simpson to discussthe College curriculum and relatedtopics, meet with faculty membersand administrators, and makerecommendations.The subcommittee on courseevaluations has met with coursechairmen of the Physical Sciences105-6-7 sequence and the Human¬ities 111-2-3 sequence to ascertainthe objectives of these two courses.Future plans include a question¬naire to course instructors to gettheir opinions about the organiza¬tion of the course and complaintsand criticisms they feel studentshave.When these comments have beentallied, the subcommittee willmeet students who are familiarwith the course to formulate aquestionnaire to be sent to allstudents presently registered inthe course.After the second questionnairehas been evaluated, the subcom-mtitee will publicize its results andattempt to estabilsh the best mech¬anism for improving the courses.The subcommittee on major pro¬grams of all third and fourth-yearcollege students.This survey is an attempt todiscover student opinion on thecurricula in present major fields.The survey will question the rea¬sons for changes among major programs, will elicit suggestionsfor addition, deletion, and struc¬tural changes in course require¬ments. Research exams, paperrequirements and elective choiceswill also be considered.A third subcommittee Is study¬ing the tutorial system. At anopen meeting of interested stu¬dents and faculty members it wasagreed that tutorial programs (orsenior research projects and es¬says) should be expanded to morefields than currently involved.The curriculum committee iscomposed of representatives fromStudent Government, Orientationboard, the Maroon, Universityscholars, Owl and Serpent, Nu PiSigma, Iron Mask, each of theCollege sections, and all personselected to Phi Beta Kappa in theirthird year.The subcommittees of the com¬mittee are interested in findingother UC students who are inter¬ested in the projects.Any student interested in work¬ing on subcommittees should con¬tact Jerry McBeath in the StudentGovernment Office, Sylvia Wood-by (major fields), Martha Pyle(tutorial programs), or PennyGordon (course evaluation).During the winter quarter, thecurriculum committee plans anevaluation erf the grading systemin the College and the admissionspolicies of graduate schools forChicago undergraduates. Also, be¬ginning next quarter, a series ofdiscussions on multiple collegeswill be scheduled. The discussionswill include faculty members whohave proposed separate colleges,and administrators who are fa¬miliar with the present College.ATTORNEY PAUL ZUBERSTUDENT GOVERNMENTNEW YORKCHARTER FLIGHT$ 60 00 LEAVE: DEC. 13RETURN: JAN. 5ROUND-TRIP CALL:Ml 3-0800; EXT. 3272SG OFFICE. IDA NOYES3:30-5:30, MON.-FRI. Will Speak on“D-Day of the AmericanRevolution”NegroMr. Zuber is the New York attorneywho is representing civil rights of 1groups in the Chicago school in¬tegration suits.Breasted HallFriday, November 8, 8 pmSponsored By The Porter FoundationPOM-POMSCash-n-Carry SpecialV2 Price Normally $2.50for Students *125and Faculty Big BunchSMALL BLOOMING MUMS - $1.50Ml 3-4226Bova FloristWhere Your Dollar Has Blooming SenseOff the Corner but on the Square” Over 200 Folkways Record Titles In Stock12'* Folkways($5.98 list) - $3.25 10" Flokways ^ |JQ($4.25 list)VOX RECORDS ALSO ON SALESingle Records $2.49 3 Record Box .. $4.492 Record Box $3.50 (No surcharge for stereo)U.S.N.S.A. COOP BOOKSTOREREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENTOPEN 8:30-5:00Nov. 8. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROO IkPrepare freedom day filmThe UC Film Workshop isnow preparing a film of theOctober 22 Freedom Daydemonstrations with 3300 feetof film shot by crowds whomarched with the demonstrators inthe protest of school segregation.v The cameraman also took shotsof the Freedom Schools, whereNegro children who boycottedschool that day were instructed byvolunteers, and of the mass rallyin the Loop which was held afterthe marches around City Hall.Members of the workshop are nowdeveloping and editing the film.Gordon Quinn of the workshop said it would take at least three weeksto complete the job. He said hewas not sure where the film wouldbe shown.The workshop, newly formed thisyear, has also produced documen¬taries on the first football gameat UC, which was shown last nighton WTTW television, and on thepicket set up by the Student PeaceUnion when Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhuvisited Chicago recently. Thesewere shown at Friday night pro¬grams of Doc Films.The workshop has invited all stu¬dents interested in helping to stopin Lexington Hall, room 7, at 3:30pm Monday, Wednesday or Friday. Neighborhood residents respondPoll for Harper Court shopsZuber to speak on Negro revolutionPaul Zuber, the New York at¬torney representing civil rightsgroups in the Chicago publicschool integration suits, will speaktonight at 8 in Breasted Hall, 58thand University Ave., under theauspices of the Porter Foundation.Zuber will speak on “AmericanNegro Revolution.”In Chicago, Zuber is represent¬ing eighteen Negro parents in theirsuit against the School Board de-^ lUear (Contact eJLenieAby Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1200 East 53rd St. HY 3-8372___ 53-Kimbark Plaza _____ manding a change in the person¬nel of the Board and the firing ofSuperintendent Benjamin Willis.The suit charges the children havebeen deprived of an adequate edu¬cation due to inadequate, segre¬gated facilities.Zuber is known for his work insimilar suits in New Rochelle,N.Y., New York City, and Engle¬wood, N.J. He is especially inter¬ested in strengthening the influenceof the Negro in American politics.He will appear at an informalreception after the speech in theMcGiffert House lounge, 5751Woodlawn Ave. A “Get Out The Vote”rally, to sound out publicopinion on the type of tenantsmost wanted for the proposedHarper Court Center, will takeplace Saturday, November 9 atthe Hyde Park Shopping Center,55*h and Lake Park.From 10 am to 4 pm a specialbooth and table will be set up inthe Center’s mall, close to theKiosk. Everyone will get a chanceto mark his own ballot, selectingthe enterprises which he wouldmost like to see “settled” in theHarper Court project.This “grassroots” poll will givethe Tenant Selection committee asense of the popular tide of feel¬ing in regard to the undertakingconsidered “most wanted” and“most needed” for the Hyde Park-Kenwood neighborhood.There will also be large picturesof the Harper Court project ondisplay and pledge cards will beavailable for those interested in subscribing to bonds for the $120,-000 bond issue.The ballot will consist of a totalof 30 categories of artisan-typebusinesses; each voter will beasked to mark the ten key enter¬prises which most appeal to himas suitable and needed.Categories on the ballot include:antique shop; antique repair-re¬storer; 3 separate types of artgalleries—general, original prints,local artists; 4 different types ofbook stores—general, rare-secondhand books; children’s books;pocket books exclusively. Also:musical instruments store; sheetmusic shop; cabinet maker; ce-ramicists; picture frame shop;furniture shop; game shop; fabric¬sewing shop; garden supply shop;import gift shop; hobby-craft shop;leather craft shop.For schools, choices will be:dance school; music school; flowerarranging school. For re pair serv¬ices, categories include: book-/ i their ballot for their choke of: &“Pub-type” restaurant; a gourmetrestaurant; a Chinese teahouse; acombination patisserie coffee shop,and a specialized delicatessen.“We feel it is important that theneighborhood take its own poll ontheir preferences for tenants forHarper Court,” said Charles W.Reich, chairman of the tenant se¬lection committee. “Since HarperCourt will consist of three build¬ings with a total of 36,000 squarefeet of rental space, we want toget as accurate an indication aspossible of what would most ap¬peal to the community and thentry to satisfy it.”Mrs. William E. Erickson, whois in charge of the balloting proj¬ect Saturday said, “We of thetenant selection committee are inthe process of exploring a vastrange of potential occupants, fol¬lowing up applicants and checkingall qualifications against our stand¬ards of occupancy. However, we14Tartuffe at Last StageThe Late Stage, a communitytheatre group, located at 1506 E.51 Street will present Moliere’splay, “Tartuffe,” starting - tonightand continuing over the next fourweek-ends.The proceeds from the openingnight will go to the Congress ofRacial Equality.Tickets cost $2 for Friday andSaturday 8:30 pm shows and $1.50for the Sunday 7:30 pm shows. Forreservations call OA 4-4200.shore drive motel-FACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chicago Rates. Beautiful Rooms,Free TV, Parking, Courtesy Coffee.Closest Motel to Univ. of Chicago and Museum of Science & Industry.FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300 .SHORE DRIVE MOTEL55th St. & So. Shore Dr. • Chicago 37, Illinois Architect's plan for Harper CourtBRITISH SCIENTISTSRepresentatives from Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd.,England, will be visiting the campus on Wednesday, Novem¬ber 13, 1963, to meet and exchange information with post¬graduate or post-doctorate scientists from Britain or the Brit¬ish Commonwealth who would like to consider careers withI.C.I. in the United Kingdom. Arrange an interview with yourPlacement Officer. SURPRISING VALUESAuction bought clothing—pants,hats, furnishings, shoes at the low¬est prices.Guaranteed FitI. C. MEN'S WEARTAILORS1547 E. 63rd"Over 25 Years in theNeighborhood"JUST PUBLISHEDThe American Language byH. L. Mencken. The FourthEdition and the Two Supple¬ments of the Classic Study ofAmerican English, abridgedwith Annotations & New Ma¬terials, by Raven I. McDavid,Jr $12.95The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue binder; clock repair; glass andchina repair; musical instrumentrepair; upholstery repair; plateglass-mirror.In the “food and drink” categorythe public will be asked to markJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 also feel that it is vital that thecommunity-at-large express itselfindividually and democratically intihis day of balloting. The ballotscan be a real guide-line lor thetenant selection committee ami itis a unique opportunity to get anexpression from the community todetermine the wishes ol the ma¬jority in regard to Harper Court.Let’s hope we have a big turn outand a big vote.”THE RIGHT PLACE IS WRIGHTyour LAUNDRY for both- DRY CLEANING• 1 DAY SERVICE!• EXPERTLY DONE!• PICKUP and DELIVERY!Come in or Call Ml 3-2073WRIGHTLAUNDRY & CLEANERS1315 E. 57th St.SERVING HYDE PARK SINCE 1900 HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFuH line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONE— 1233FA A— i3i8B ^ ^—7699 GUITAR TEACHERdesires to teach high school andjunior high school boys and girlsone night a week.HAN RADIO CLUBdesires teacher to teach high schoolstudents one night a week.If you are interested in either jobcontact:Steve Solender at RE 1 -<>969Southside JewishCommunity Center9101 South Jeffery4 ft- CONTINENTAL' MERCURY1 B COMETSALES — SERVICE — PARTSLAKE PARK MOTORS. Inc.6035 S. COTTAGE GROVE CHICAGO. ILL.HYde Park 3-3445i • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 8. 1963-\ Study of identity diffusion inactors begun by 3 on facultyBy Rick Pollock Calendar of EventsKlAUAmUan Q WFMF, 100.3 me., 11 am. “The Failuremany, novemoer O of Socialism in America," John H. M.Football game: UC vs. North Central Laslett, Assistant Professor of SocialJV, Stagg Field. 3 pm. Sciences (College).Lecture: Dr. Herbert von Buttlar on International Day: Speaker, Thomas. FirS*’ '^acting.means assum- ancy between the supply of actors ?„!,oetni*? fl«t a cnvmn mg 33 ldentlty* becoming” an- and the smaller number of jobs Cross-Country meet, Washington Industry; Candlelighting Ceremony bvht^c as Clea’rly definTan person, identity in a matter available, m, actor suffers IThaVC.aS f' y ot *> the actor, through the chronic nnemplcy- ?jT!^^5S^f*K15J“^S CoS'^nThe second reason is part of the ment because it is only when act- “SB^'cSE *S£T» ‘pX C^STh.,™.^TuXrSv'1 a™ 1nature of the art ot acting, i.e., ing that he is able to establish an stabler Advanced equitation lesson, 4 pm. ’ yquestion, three members of the an°tber identity should illustrate, cou]^ ^ proven Cinema, *.50, 8 and 10 pm. . Regulations: The Triumph^o/ ignor'_ ... ,r in microcosm, the psychological 8 COUJa De P1Qven, Speech: Paul Zuber, attorney m civil anee Over Prejudice.” George J StieCommittee on Human develop- procegses of identity formation it would have great consequences can Ne^ro^RevoluUon”^ sponsored Ty DeoaSmeifo^F Wa,green V^essJ?rment have begun a new study of such as occur jn life. for psychological thought, the p°rter Foundation; Breasted Hall, ‘8 ate School of Business1108 and Gradu'identity in relation to actors. The third reason why actors group feels. PPlays: "Antigone” by Anouilh; “The pt*S S,eJorldn°' tbePa;The three workers are: Robert were chosen for the study was the Many of the questions used were International Affair,” by Joanne Scha- Streeter! Professor of’ English andHess, associate professor and contrast between the actor’s syn- derived from Erik Erikson’s con- P1pVay!nt”Taft1ufnf|1”HbySMofiere-PLast S’ Gi^sior) °t Humani,ies-’ withchairman, committee on human thetic stage identity and his real cept of identity; the entire study Stage. 1506 E 5lst St.: 8:30. $2’. Discussion^’ “interaction for Socialdevelopment; William Henry, pro- self. Frequently, a comparison of was conceived of within a frame university ofF' Pittsburgh^ ^^Freud A~tl0n- The- Religious Situation atof reference to Eriksonian theory, and the Origens of Religion,” Hillelj.r u„ u ,1-1 Foundation, 8:30 pm.lne study has shown that women Concert: Carles Rosen, pianist, Man-have slightly more identity difl'u- del Ran. *3-51. 8:30 pm.Saturday, November 9identity as other comparablegroups?In an attempt to answer this how an actor goes about creating identity.Radio series: the sacred note,WBBM, 780 kc„ 10-10:15 pm. A pro¬gram of sacred choral music by the documentary on UC;10:15 pm.The researchers concluded thatthe two hypotheses were best re¬lated to each other by the study’soriginal theoretical premise* ‘ The Rockefeller Chapel Choir, Richardrole of professional actor provides SSng01™'01 °f Chapel MUSi°’a culturally accepted and per- Conference: Rights of Citizenship inmanent Dsvcholocial moratorium Historical Perspective; morning ses-' psycnoiociai moratorium sion j0 am; afternoon session 2 pm;lor the diffuse ego, within which Weymouth Kirkland Courtroom, Law UC,” Brent House. 7 pm.Meeting: International Relations Club.Ida Noyes, third floor, 7:30 pm.Play: “Tartuffe,” by Molieie. LastStage, 1506 E. 51st St., 7:30 pm, $1.50.Films: ”The Walk,” “Ask Me. Don'tTell Me,” and “The Alphabet Alone IsNot Enough,” Quaker Studenl Fellow¬ship, 5615 S. Woodlawn Ave., 7:30 pm.TV program: “Date’ine - Chicago”WNBQ, channelMonday, November ITSeminar: ‘‘Aspects of Classical Jew¬ish Thought—The Covenant in the writ¬ings of Joseph Albo,” Dr. Monfordit can seek and temporarily find scli0<i!‘ ~ . „ a Harris. Hillel Foundation, 7 pm.an artioial irWHv ” 0R?U>- PU °" “arp1f, CouTtU ,Hyde Meeting: Students for Civil Liberties,an arxiciai Identity. Park Shopping Center, 10 am to 4 pm. Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.When the study’s hypotheses had Biomedical Career Conference: for Radio: Dean Simpson answeringT it “ high-school students, University Hospi- questions submitted by studen.tsbeen proven, the three men cor- tais, 10 am. wucb, 7:30 pm.related the actors’ personal expe- Cross-country meet: Washington Films: Indian Cv course presentsrienees including fnmilv >nA fiark’ vs’ Alblon and Wabash Colleges, films on Hinduism; 7:30, Rosenwald 2nences, including family life and ll am. Speech: Erich von Kuehneldt-Led-sexual histories. Of the seven wari- Soccer game: vs. Illinois, Stagg dihn. on “Democracy or Liberty, 7:30.ables pertaining to early family Carillon recital: Daniel Robbins, U‘Disc us sion: “The Intellectual andlife four were found to be signifi- Rockefeller Chapel, 4pm. Professional Frontiers of Sociology”;Folk Dancing: Cloister Club, Ida panelists Philip Hauser, Morris Jano*Noyes, 7:30 pm. „ witz, and Peter Rossi of the sociologyThese four were: a history of p,ay:. ,‘"udy„-!n., Color, , witn department, Donald Levine, m Oder afamily deviation, e.g., alcoholism, wfT pmviolence, or incest; lack of com- Plays: “Antigone” and “The Inter-munication with parents; negative ^puy*1 ‘^Tartuffe!”1 by°UMoliere,‘ Lastemotional experiences with par- Stage, 1506 E. 5tst St.; *2, 8:30.ents; and locus of parental author¬ity other than in the mother.The Correlations of the armors’ Radio series: Faith of Our Fathers, _ _- , ., . , 1 ,r. 3 101 WGN, 720 kc., 8:30-9 a.m. The Rev- man, Humphrey Bogart, Shorey Housesexual modes to the Identity meas- erend Colin Williams, Executive Secre- Coffee Plus, ninth floor pierce tower,Play: “A StudyChaplain Malcolm Boyd, Mandel Hall, tor. jda Noves Library, 7:45.Lecture: Karl J. Wientraub. Assist¬ance “Professor of History, on the “Aimsof Education,” Social Science 122, Spm.Discussion: A. Havatt Mayor, cura¬tor of prints. N Y. Metropolitan Mu¬seum of Art: My Life and Yoursseries; Ida Noyes. 8 pm.Movie: “Casablanca,” Ingrid Berg-Sunday, November 10UC actors diffuse identities in past campus production uring index was also significant, tary of the Department of Evangelismshowing that preschool homo- ^beris^atI0nal Counci1 o£ Churchessexual experiences and later auto- Radio Series: The World of theerotic experiences were closely Democraticrelated to identity difiusion. Senator from Connecticut, commentsThe <jtudv’<! maior remaining on the Paperbound works of Jamesine study s majoi remaining B Conant and reflects on their mean-task is to study and attempt to ing to problems of the American edu-fessor, committee on human devel- the two shows the strength of the explain these relationships in order English, hosteS Miller’ Pr0‘opment and John Sims, research stage identity and the tenuousness 10 contribute to identity theory. Radio Series: From the Midway,associate in the committee. of the actor’s personal identity.Although the study is only par- The final reason for using actorstially completed, the researchers jn phe study lies in the nature ofhave been able to conclude that the profession; although an occu-the study group’s hypotheses were pation Ls crucial in forming andtrue: that actors do shows a great sustaining an identity, the actingprofession is in no way organized admission 25c, 8:30 pm.MODEL CAMERALEiCA, BOLEX, NIKONROBERTS RECORDERSU42 I. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTSdeal of identity diffusion (lack ofdefinite identity) and that theytend to show an increase in iden¬tity as they move through rehear¬sal to performance.The study was conducted with progress inthe cooperation of professional recy>gmzfC^and in-training actors. The selec¬tion of actors as especially mean¬ingful sources of information wasmade for a number of reasons: to serve these purposes. Americantheatre exists in virtual anarchyin which there is no continuitybetween training and actual act¬ing, and there is no organizedthe profession. Thisofthe professional actor hard toachieve and harder to maintain.Career discontinuity is nearlyinevitable because of the discrep-10% discount to students with ID cardsSales and Serviceon all hi-fi equip¬ment, foreign and[domestic.Tape recordersPhono Needles and CartridgesTubes - Batteries24 hr. Service Calls$300TV—HI-FIRADIOAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY•st. 19291300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111In the 53rd*Kimbark Plaxa NICKY’SRESTAURANT AND PIZZA1208 East 53rd Street53-Kimbark PlazaNICKY S TAKE-OUTPIZZAS & DELIVERY MENUAssortments small mediumCHEESE ... . 1.20 1.90SAUSAGE 1.40 2.15ANCHOVIE 1.40 2.15ONION 1.25 1.95PEPPER ... .... 1.40 2.15MUSHROOM 1.60 2.40BACON ........ . 1.40 2.15HAM ............. 1.60 2.40 large2.903.253.253.003.253.503.253.50SPAGHETTI WITH MEAT SAUCE 90SPAGHETTI with Meat Balls or Sausage 1.20MOSTACCIOLI ...» 95MOSTACCIOLI with Meat Balls or Sausage 1.25CHICKEN CACCIATORE ■ Salad 1.80SHRIMP DINNER.Salad. Potatoes & Buttered Bread 1.50SHRIMP V2 LB 1.25 1 LB 2.25BAKED LASAGNE with Meat Balls or Sausage 1.55RIB TIPS SMALL 1.35 LARGE 2.25SERVINGNEHIRoyal CrownBeverages FREE — $2.00 PIZZA — FREESave 15 Cards and Eat a $2.00Pizza "On the House" CardsGiven with Each Order.PHONE: FAirfax 4-5340Open Seven Days a Week Hours 8:00 A.M. to2:00 A.M. Sundays 12:00 Noon to 2:00 A.M. CHIiCKIE IN THE BOX10 Lorge Pieces 2.5016 Lorge Pieces 3.7520 Large Pieces 4.75SANDWICHESPlain or BAR BQ Beet .60Meet Belli .55SAUSAGE .55Above Served with PeppersHAMBURGER 50CHEESEBURGER 60CORNED BEEF 70BAKED HAM 65Plus Many OthersRIBS1 Slob 2.002 Slobs ..... 3.753 Slabs A 5 50Nov. 8. 1963 CHICAGO MAROC* G A » F LY *Traditional civil rights position is not acceptableThis position on “civil rights” itarian action. Because the word by one faction to coerce another Past injustices do not increases as coercion is dimin-has received considerable endorse- “rational” has different meanings to its will. justify privileges now lsb«d-meat: (1) Negroes have experi- to different people, each faction . „ It might be argued that Negroes Persons who advocate coerciveeneed an enormous amount of adhering to one meaning would Concept of human rights are at the present time socially, measures advocate not freedom,coercion and prejudice, (2) “socie- struggle, as is the case now. for is quite inconsistent economically, and intellectually in- but power for the Negro. Thety” has • a moral obligation to legal sanction of its ideas and for Further examination of the con- ferior to whites because whites Negro does not obtain freedom byipression of opposing, ‘‘irration- . . , „ . , , have treated them unjustly for so disregarding the freedom of mer-” ones. <*** o£ human rights should long; such a state of inferiority is chants through sit-ins; he obtainsBut to defend the free non-co- disclose serious inconsistencies in unjust, and therefore any means power by intimidation. Negroesereive exercise of freedom, how- the meanings of it. A right, to be that will elevate Negroes are just do not obtain freedom by riotingever foolish a person niav exer- a right, must be consistently guar- and should be effected. If one the streets, by forcefully pre-ment Practices (FEPC) laws, open cise it, is to advocate free and anteed, then it is a privilege. Let accepts the notion of equal and venting consumers from patroniz-occupancy integrated “public ac- peaceable relations between peo- us examine some of the alleged just treatment of aU persons, then mg certain stores, or by marchingoommodations” laws, and rulings pie. Let a person conspire to over- “human rights” and ascertain one must reject this argument. on Washing on to lobby for lawsby school boards to achieve “ra- throw the government, publish whether they are in fact rights or That a segment of the populace that trample on the rights ofeial balance” by arbitrarily trans- pornography, gamble, or practice privileges. bas been unequally treated ° ers-ferring students from one school segregation non-coercively, but the Consider the “human right” to (through persecution) in the past * Freedom nowto another. moment he commits a coercive a job regardless of one s race, does "ot argue for “Jequaljy treat.'I maintain that this “civil act, he is liable for persecution. creed> or color. Fair Employment vmwlnes Timh^nprse-rights” position is coercive, anti- One concludes that a segregation- Practices iaws grant the preroga- .. . infringing on theliberal, and as unacceptable as a ist who advocates laws against tive o[ any pers0n to apply for V.. * p f injusticesegregationist position. “irrational integration, and an empioymem wherever he wishes n es , for establishing aA liberal (used in the original integratiomst who advocates laws and ^ ^ hired by the criterion ot g.... ; . . . . g . town”). Negroes obtain power, notsense) has a bias toward human against “irrational” segregation technIcal competency only. Con- h:h freedom, by denying whites theliberty, liberty detined as maxi- are both enemies of freedom. versely, such laws deny the pre- ’ right not to associate or not toamend these two wrongs; and oppression of opposing, “irration-since government is the legal al” ones,agent ot “society,” then (3) lawsmust be passed to end the wrongs.Such laws include Fair Employmeans "power now"James Baldwin advocates pow¬er, not freedom, when he seemsto sanction criminal, coercive ac¬tions (see his “Fifth Avenue Ui>-exist before.... , enter into contractual relationsWe may conclude that the only wUh Negroes. Giving preferentialtreatment to Negroes because theyare Negroes — as the New Yorkmum freedom from coercion. Co- Similarly, a defender of freedom rogative of an employer to hireercion is here construed to mean must permit immoral, non-coer- persons by whatever criteria he „ th-u cm*, QhoulH bepositive injury to one’s person or cjVe uses of freedom as well as chooses. Under FEPC a non-em- Pblg gQ exercise which are 1property, or the threat of such moral, non-coercive uses of it. ployer’s right to engage volun- . , termed civil riehts arcinjury. Fraud, a violation of con- The argument that segregation is tarily in contractual relations is nreroeaiivec to act in a non- Commission on Human Rightstractuai understanding, is also a immoral is not a legitimate argu- sustained, but an employer’s right _ . without beine co- urges — rather than judging per¬form of coercion. Thus, liberty for ment for the use of force to quash to engage in contractual relations , q d . b a sons on their individual worth, ad-one person does not include the it. if the argument for a moral if he so chooses is destroyed, right” or Sa “civil rieht” to vances not Negro freedom, butfreedom to act in such a way that position were a legitimate argu- Fair Employment Practices laws - «• . £ mor-ilitv on another- to Negr° P°wer- Th* slogan ‘‘Freeanother’s liberty is thereby di- ment for compelling some persons clearly do not consistently guar- com j another into contractual dom Now’ as usually understoodminished. to do the will of others, then each antee particular prerogatives to re]ati0ns with him; or coercively means Power N°w.The existence of coercion andA property right is the right of faction sharing an identical notion au persons, and such laws there- to extraot special privileges froma person to acquire, own, and 0f morality would struggle for fore establish privileges, another That part of the “civil PreJudice against Negroes arguesdispose of his property as he sees coercive power over other fac- Consider the “human right” to rights”' position' which opposes only for the repeal of <***? laffit, provided that he does not tions; freedom would be dimin- housi regardless o{ one’s race, coercion is thus legitimate, while enforcing segregation, and for thecoerce another person A primary lshed considerably, and anarchy creed Qr color .Tair housing“ that part which advocates coercive enforcement of existing laws pro-function of government then is U> might well ensue as was the case laws grant the prerogative of any measures is as anti-liberal and hlblUng violence. Further, there~ n- during prohibition. person to apply for housing and unacceptable as the position of are non-coercive ways of impress-From the contention that a to be sold or rented that housing Governor Wallace,moral position does justify the use OQ a non-discriminatory basis,of force follows logically the In- These laws thereby forbid a real-quisition, the Reign of Terror, and tor to dispose of his housing spaceAn objection to this definition of the Gestapo. A liberal does not as chooses. A person has thecoercion exclusively in terms of seek to coerce those persons with Drerotative to rent, but at thepositive action Is that negative whom he disagrees, or whom he ex-pense o{ the realtor’s preroga- negative* cS^ept- freedom fromaction can also inflict injury. For regards as repugnant, for he does tive not rerg “Fair housing” neg 1 Ve C0nCept' Iree<,orn Irominstance, if an employer hires a not hold that it is legitimate for jaws tbus sanction tlie desires ofminimize coercion by private individuals and organizations.Gives objection todefinition of coercion Freedom is negative termpower is positive termWe ought at this point to estab¬lish the distinction between free¬dom and power. Freedomcoercion, or freedom not to becoerced. Power is a positive con¬cept that is a function of one’scapacity to perform acts. For in¬stance, one has the freedom tocontract the construction of ahouse through voluntary arrange¬ments. However, that one personOr consider the “human right” can afford to construct a man-some persons, but at the expenseof the desires of others—and es¬tablish privileges."Public accommodations" lawsestablish privileges ing upon a populace the exigenciesof the Negro—such as economicboycotts that do not coerce con¬sumers.Coercion and prejudice again tNegroes does not justify repealingthe possibilities for a free societyby enacting authoritarian meas¬ures. Freedom is nut enhanced bythose anti-liberals who advocatethe use of force to inflict theirideas on others.James Powellwhite instead of a Negro, though government to club those whot)he Negro may be more compe- anger him.tent technically, the employer is . ,“injuring” the Negro by not hiring Coercion cannot be used tohim. A Negro has a right to a enforce any brand ot moralityjob which is an inviolabie “human It is sometimes contended that esrooiisn privileges ment~s However Tha7one“'rxir7on AddIv for NDEA arafltsright, it is argued. After all, does law„ ,,..<4. or>£kn neouoanev and -j .v. • u" menis. nowever, tnat one person Mppiy TPr HUCM gruniaa proper definition of freedom JtegratS Scacco^da 0r «>nsider ,human ,ngbt Can a»"d to ^struct a man- Application forms for Nationalinclude the freedom to starve’ 1 of any pers°n 10 1)6 serVed at slon> while anoLher can only a1* Defense Education Act (NDEA)Similarly, if a Negro living in a Son by merchanU, and rea "ors 1°^^, "P acc“mmod?,t,on' a bungalow merely indicatea Title VI fellowships may lie oh-slum amities for a vacant auait- ^ A publiC accommodations law fcliat the former has a greater tained up in Foster 212. Januarymenl in a middle class neighbor- "£o would nol do w iti thf to totr«ei.v<! lo construct a house than 15 will be ibe University deadlinehood and the realtor does not rent of (nonitrdve) sSsial pressml tr<;m u pubhc ..“‘bbhshment but Ihe latter. The person w.th a man- for submission ot applications. Ato him because he is a Negro, then ?' ° y, b,y com'KU'nS the establish- sion ,s no more free than the per- December 1 deadline will be in et-the realtor is ••injuring" ihe Negro wouldintegral^ for TnstanM ro?nt A, busi"esJs e,"ter' son„ w,th a, bungalow. feet for submission of applicationsby negative action: he cannot rcinsumers Ktened to W pnSe wh,,Ch pnVal! 'nd‘vl'lu!*ls or „ ‘“"versely, peasants in VVest under NDEA for Fulbright-Haysobtain the anartmenl of his choice “ consumers tnroatenea to ooy organizations created and mam- Berlin are more free than wealthy grants.A Negro also has the “human ^i ,th^ pre"u/’ef‘ These lawx tain is thus transformed into a commissars in East Berlin. An Application forms fur Americanright” to housing regardless of wou d ^ crutches upon which put^c utUity, the control of which increase in a person's power thus Institute of Indian Studies Fellow-race creed or color There is aad realtors c o ul d accrues to government. Tlie right does not entail a corresponding ships can be gotten by writingLele a rtJ lean-,1",the South an mlcgralmg managtog such... a ripar rnniiirU tuain.-d>d>n , — k— , ,—,—. "■ t r pcisvj»»» jncuiaguig suah an increase in his freedom. Power Mrs. Goldie Levin, American Insti-human rights” and nrnnertv merchant could rePly ^|a pr°test- establishment to engage or not to increases chiefly through improve- tute of Indian Studies, Box 17.P P y ing segregationist that the law-, not engage in contractual relations, meats in technology that enable Bennett Hall, University of Penn-The* concent of “human riuht-” me^°bant» responsible for and iheir right to dispose of their enjoyment of a higher standard sylvania, Philadelphia 4, Pennsyl-. ’ ii„ , n , » integration. property—and labor —in a non- of living and the performance of vania. The deadline for these appli-as usually expounded is false. Intlie first place, negative actiondoes not constitute coercion. Neg¬ative action is a function of freechoice because concomitant to theright to engage in free, contractualrelations is the right not to engagein such relations. Since free, con¬tractual relations are essentialto a condition of human liberty, todisturb them is to diminish free- implicit in this argument is the coercive fashion is discarded, acts with greater ease. Liberty cations is January 1, 1964.assumption that the coercion of Prerogatives are assigned to cer-merchants and realtors who wish tain people, but not to other peo-to segregate is quite pennissable. pie; “public accommodations”If one rejects the use of coercion laws create privileges,to enforce a particular brand of It is asserted, however, that a *'RENtf\ ROOMS, APTS., ETC.morality, then ou«» cannot accept merchant who opens a businessthe inconsistent view on coercion agrees with the “public” that liecontained in this argument, - shall serve the “public,” in theIn the third place, if one advo- “public interest.” Consequently, a CLASSIFIED ADSas part time representative for LatinTTT.'p - ~ ~ T- American community action project.2 mos. caU 28S-OT ' 56 °r F_leaie send resume to AOCION, Boxdom; to diminish the negative ac- cates legislating discrimination out merchant cannot discriminatetion which a person may choose o£ existence he is not justified in against any particular part of the W0ULD LOST AND FOUND 27, Cambridge 38. Mass.PERSONALSto ransom Nikon S-2to pursue is to diminish his free- Fly TWA SUPERJETS to London.Paris, Tel-Aviv, Bombay, and othermajor international centers in bothEurope and Asia Your TWA campuslegislating against discrimination “public” in favor of another.dom. only on the basis of race, creed, Hence, the accommodations laws to Chem 220 lecture. Call Block, ^presenuuve^^ Michaer^vSy.If a merchant is to be prose- or co^or- H discrimination should ure justified. 745 Linn House, Mi 3-6000.cuted for not serving a Negro be- ^ I^Sislated against, then all dis- Such an assertion and conclu- found CAT: Black and yellow, pink sewing, alteration* & Mendingcause he is a Negro, then, to be crimination should logically be sion are clearly incompatible with nose, y-g eyes. Call 324-8471.consistent, a Negro must be prose- Prohibited — including, say, dis- any consistent notion of rights. vok kaivcuted for not patronizing a white crimination on the basis of accent A merchant who is compelled to __ runmerchant because he "is white. In or_self:rigbtioJ^sn!;ss;;_a Pfr; labor ^r ^ persons whom he does im Morris Minor conv. 1000. 31,000 Zeta Beta Tau.Call DO 3-1686.. . GHOULIES and Ghosties andlong-legged beasties and things that gobump in the night.” Friday, Nov. 15.both oases one party is exercising son wbo is discriminated against not wish to has clearly lost a sig- mi., new clutch, breaks, battery,his prerogative not" to engage in bemuse he is self-righUous (e.g. nificant part of his freedom. Just 81 ?19 paint Sformal Xc^ comptete with" sea-sonal and constellational decoratiotis.soft, smooth orchestration by Phil15-19 centuries, all fields; Walsh and inviting refreshments fora contractual relation. Both of about integration) suffers in the as a consumer should be free tothese prosecutions would reduce same way as one who is discrim- patronize whomever he chooses- mD books L-eilluries 11B1US ........freedom. No person has any right, ina^ed against because he Is a to allocate his resources as he prints; antiques; open 1-7 pm 7 days lust i1 per person? Only the internahuman or inhuman, to compel Negro. chooses, so should a merchant be a week; 2915 w. Cermak Rd.. FR tional House. On Friday, Nov. 15, fromanother person to enter into a Dut to ban any ideas or values free to ser.ve whomever he chooses 6'699® or 247-2963 9 to midnight.contractual relation with him is authoritarian precisely because and to advance his economic wel- * P11?, YOU ENOW Ralph Wood has ac-»» taction-in power-is dictating fare by aUocating his resources as SKM=^nI“Sd'°i3i.,BbLlKS «fi Si^in'ure^sm. Zte"****Defender of freedom must what it considers valid notions he chooses. As long as neither stony island, mu 4-8843. ance co., of Canada, fa 4-6800.defend its "irrational" uses that another faction—not in power merchant not consumer coerces to Place a classified ad call mT3-08<x>In the second place, a defender —must live by. Such action is a anyone, each should be able to vemberAio—NSovember5'i7 ^argauis.N°" (exF 3266) special student, faculty andof freedom must defend not only form of thought control, and is act without fear of reprisal,so-called “rational” uses of it, but ugly whether advocated by Ross Exploitation of one group by an-“irrational” (and non-coercive) Barnett or James Baldwin. One other (merchants by the “public”)uses as well. To defend only tlie concludes that appeals to “human is certainly not in the “public EXPformer necessarily entails author- rights” are thinly-veiled appeals interest.” staff rates.HELP WANTED HEAR Erich von Kuehneldt-Leddihn.Europer’s leading intellectual monarch-ist, speak on “Democracy or Liberty.secretary, shorthand for soc. 7:30 pm, Monday, November 11, 1®*study org. Hrs. 1 to 7, Mon. thru Fri. Noyes Hall.DO 3-7873. JW: trouble with 0 was WS. SG.'The Suitor7 lacks necessary 'ballet and ballyhooto these days when foreign filmsflnjoy an unprecedented commer¬cial, popular, and artistic emi¬nence, it is easy to overlook the in¬fluence of a waning Hollywood onits more sophisticated competitors.Truffaut happily admits the in¬fluence of the Marx Brothers on“Shoot the Piano Player”; theJapanese “Eastern” (Seven Snm-arai, Yojimbo) is an obvious coun¬terpart to our cowboy epics; Euro-l>ean creations, from Viscounti’smetropolitan parable “Rocco andhis Brothers” to Vadim’s insipid“No Sun in Venice,” have derivedmuch from the American actionand gangster films; the Cahierscritics canonize our B directors(Fuller, Ray, Hawks) as well asthe internationally - acknowledgedHitchcock; and the image ofHumphrey Bogart lives on in JeanGabin and Jean Paul Belmondo.The latest example of this in¬fluence is a French film calledTHE SUITOR, now playing at theSurf Theater. Its star, director,and co-writer, Pierre Etaix (pro¬nounced “Ay-tex”) looks like across between Marcel Marceauand Buster Keaton. In the filmhe manipulates his delicate dead¬pan through a series of sight gagson the order of a Chaplin short.Any such attempt to resurrectthe spirit of America’s “GoldenAge” screen comedy* is a nobleand welcome effort, but it takesmore than nostalgic emulation tobring off such a venture.Etaix earned a reputation ofpromise with his Academy Award¬winning short, “The Anniversary.”THE SUITOR is his first full-length feature. As such, to com¬pare it with the well-known workof the great silent comedians, oreven with that of Etaix’s mentorJacques Tati ("Mr. Hulot’s Holi¬day,” “Mon Oncle’’). But THESUITOR is so clearly derivative,and falls so obviously in the lineof a rather wonderful tradition,that it must be judged in relationto its filmic heritage. Thus it canlie rated at best a pleasant try,lor Etaix still lacks a definite styleand comic personality.The plot — what happens whena meek Parisian bachelor sets outto find a bride — is traditionallythin, a mere excuse for the situa¬tions. The espisodic succession ofjokes is not held together by anyChaplinesque expression of charac¬ter, nor does it progress with thewell-paced build-up of a Laureland Hardy catastrophe.Comparison with Chaplin willdiow how far Etaix must go be-fore his ambitious work can beconsidered creative or original. Ina backstage sequence (reminis-» cent of the Marx Brothers’ “Nightat the Opera”) Etaix plays withhis clothes, losing an uncoopera¬tive handkerchief in a bottomlesspocket, wiping the buttons off hiscoat, etc. On Chaplin clothes werenot mere props, but expressionsol character — the incredibly bag¬gy pants, the impudent, ineffec¬tual cane, the obscene mustache,etc. In the opening shot of “GoldRush,” when Charlie comes bounc¬ing along the edge of a lofty moun¬tain with the dare-devil nonchal¬ance of the Grand Nebbish, weget more than we do from THESUITOR in an hour and a half.Etaix’s conventional gags areoverlaid with some fancy editinggimmicks. In the throes of amo¬rous daydreaming he dances witha series of luscious girls who al¬ternately appear as the actualobject of his whimsical affection,a flower pot. Without a wanninghe leaps from second-story win¬dow or rips into a superhumandance. Chaplin also used cameratrickery, again in “Gold Rush,”not for its own sake but to expressa comic situation founded on basiccharacter motivations. A starvingminer begins to eye Charlie hun¬grily. As he does so, Chaplin ap-!>ears as a giant chicken. Afterthe homicidal hunger pangs sub¬side, Charlie is himself — but heunwittingly begins to mimic achicken, and so the chase is onagain. Etaix’s use of visual mechanicsis overdone and yet incomplete,perhaps due to the generally poorediting of the entire film. At theend, Pierre extends his arms toembrace his true sweetheart, butinstead of moving closer to her hedrifts backwards. He is standingon a moving baggage cart belowthe level of the screen. If Etaixhad allowed the camera to followhim around the station until hereturns to his girl for the finalclinch, he would have had a charm¬ing, filmic ending, but he cutsaway in the middle of the move¬ment. This unfinished bit of busi¬ness is typical of the whole film.THE SUITOR may help to developEtaix’s talent as a mime, but itcannot stand by itself as a work —the film, like its creator, lacksthe proper synthesis of ballet and ballyhoo that has in the past pro¬duced great film comedy.Also showing at the Surf is ashort, THE TRUE STORY OF THECIVIL WAR, by Louis dyde-Stou-men, creator of The Black Fox,last year’s Oscar-winner documen¬tary about the rise of Hitler. Stou-men here uses Raymond Masseyas narrator and, like Etaix, em¬ploys cutting and camerawork toenliven his film, a compendium ofstills, prints, and newspaper clip¬pings. All ingredients in this in¬formative, interesting short areovershadowed by its one genuinelyartistic element, the unassumingmagnificence of Matthew Brady’scelluloid monuments.Charming BillyUnknown to everyone, includingtlie participating theaters, last week was the occasion of the BillyWilder Film Festival in HydePark. ONE TWO THREE playedthe Hyde Park Theater, whileNINOTCHKA (written by Wilderin 1933) and SUNSET BOULE¬VARD (written and directed byhim in 1950) were on display inthe Documentary Film Group’s“Bevy of Beauty” series. The toorapidly-paced ONE TWO THREEis little more than a Pandora’sboxfull of international politicalgags and indicates the relative de¬cline in Charming Billy’s laterwork.NINOTCHKA is still a pure andsimple delight. Garbo and Mel-vyn Douglas, under Lubitch’s di¬rection, endure as one of thegreat romance teams of screenhistory. The trio of bumbling Bol¬sheviks, clearly the precursors ofOne Two Three’s inept Commu¬ nists, consistently transform partylines into punch lines. One cannothelp but wonder: if Wilder has di¬rected, as well as written, Ninotch-ka, would it have become, likeONE TWO THREE, the Layman’sCyclopedia of Cold War Witticism?A comparative viewing of thesefilms indicates that Wilder’s great¬est talent, despite the brilliance of“Some Like It Hot,” lies in therealm of realism. SUNSET BOU¬LEVARD retains its hard, coldgleam of sardonic brilliance, be¬cause, when he wants to, Wildersees, as Fellini says, “with strongeyes.” The film libraries of Ameri¬ca would be a good deal richerif Wilder would get a divorce fromIrma La Douce and return to thegreat love of his creative life —gutty, stylized realism.SKThe International Affair', Antigone' both excelThe International Affair, a cur¬tain raiser which precedes the An¬tigone, is a priceless travesty ofa society women’s club luncheonfor foreign students. The playlet,written and directed by JoanneSchapiro, could hardly be betterdone. The salty quips, which re¬semble in their deftness those ofthe Thurber Carnival, get right atthe heart of the self-styled broth¬erhood popular todday. The skitwas acted well (especially goodwere Edrene Furman and SamDe Noms) and directed consum¬mately; all in all, it was a piquantand contrasting appetizer for thelonger play which followed.Antigone, a play of Anouilh’s ma¬turity (1946), combines the roman¬tic with the philosophical. The cen¬tral scene between Antigone andher uncle Creon is essentially aconfrontation of two viewpoints,and it may be significant thatneither really understands theoilier. The world would come toa stop, Creon says, if everyonerefused to obey the laws of thestate; therefore pride and individu¬ality must be limited by the state.Antigone, on the other hand, be¬ lieves that a man, however hap¬py, is worthless unless he is “him¬self,” unless he can say “no” tothe forces that would circumscribehis actions. And Antigone goes toher death with the terrible beautyof the doomed.Romantic elements enter into theplay in the loving relationship ofAntigone and Haemon, her cross¬cousin, and in the rather sac¬charine relations of Antigone withher nurse. Happily, even the mostsentimental of scenes comes offwithout the unintentional irony sofrequent in poor melodramas, andthe romantic element adds poign¬ancy to the tragedy.Anouilh’s play, then, is an ex¬cellent one: intriguing philosophi¬cally, and at the same time deep¬ly moving.Renee Capellini plays Antigone,and I have never seen a betterperformance on this campus. She ison the stage nearly all the time,but in her huge part the subtletyand rightness of her performancenever varies. Go and see her: shecan Act.Fuad Haddad (the Statue inlast year’s Don Juan) plays Creon, and it appears that as late as thedress rehearsal he does not knowhis lines. There are times whenhe is extremely good, but thereare more times when he does notknow what he is saying. He tendsto stammer when he has forgottena line. Haddad has an actor’s in¬stincts, or he would be mediocrethroughout, but he needs muchmore work in sheer memorizationof the part. Like the little girl inthe nursery rhyme, when he’sgood, he’s very, very good, butwhen he’s bad, he’s atrocious.The rest of the cast shows asmuch variation as the two impor¬tant roles. Peter Lang, as Jonas,the First Guard, would have stolenthe show from anyone but MissCapellini. His portrayal of theloquacious, mercenary soldier isa joy to experience. Maria Rud-isoh, as the Nurse, and Ken Mnt-tran, as Haemon are more thancompetent, but often do not getfull value from their lines.Rochelle Wilson, as I s m e n e ,seems more stupid than fighty. Joe Ehrenberg’s direction is excel¬lent: the characters were perfectlyformed, the blocking natural, theplay cast, for the most part, quitewell. The lighting and costumingcontribute greatly to the effect ofthe play.Apologists for the InternationalPlayers often speak of them asone would of an animal act: theylook upon their work as thoughthe feat of a group of foreign stu¬dents putting on a play at all ex¬ouses any imperfections in the per¬formance. To judge them this way,though, is unfair, for it allows boththe company and the audience tooverlook IP’s true potential. Thereis some great acting in Antigoneand there is some poor actingwhich might improve with prac¬tice and coaching: the play isless satisfactory than it might be.Despite the unevenness of the pro¬duction, the play is well worthseeing for Anouilh’s excellent dra¬ma, and for Miss Capellini’s bril¬liant performance.DAVID RICHTERDR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55fli St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNT HEY PAISAN!Try our wonderful PinasSmall Medium LargeCheese .. 1.75 2 75Sausage 1.25 2.00 3.00Oreen Pepper . 1.25 2.00 3.00Anchovies 2.00 3.00Mushroom 2.25 3.25Peperoni 1.75 2.25 3.25Shrimp 2.25 3.25ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA1923 E. 71st ST.DELIVERY HOURS: Sun. . Thurs. Until 1 A.M. — Fri. and Sat. Until 3 A.M.TELEPHONE NO.: MU 4-3262. MU 4-1014$.25 Service Charge on AH OrdersSPECIAL PRICE ON ALL PARTY ORDERSOLDENGLISHBLOCKServing the University ofChicago Campus Since 1921SAM MALATTBARBER SHOPBUfterfield 8-09501011 Eost 61st StreetChicago 37, IllinoisHARPER SQUAREgrocerland1445 E. 57th Phene DO 3-6251FREE DELIVERYThree Timet DailyServing the University Community with, * finest produce, meats, and groceries•or over 32 years. STERN’S CAMPUSFOUNTAIN & LUNCHEONETTE1000 EAST 61st FA 4-4800— THIS WEEK ONLY —10 OZ. STRIP STEAKOnly 5100 WISE —Glamorize Your ClothesWithJhsL Vlflmt (B/woJl Qo.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERServing the Campus Since 1917Phones: mi 3-7447 1013-17 East 61st StreetHY 3-6868 Near Ellis Ave.Nov. 8, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9Set IVI confab in Charge Frostburg intimidationC loister ClubThis Coupon WorthOne Free Order of FriesWith Hamburger & Malt,Shake, orLarge Ice CreamGood Sun.-Thurs. (Nov. 10-14Ice Cream Features Again This Week:Cherry, Pineapple Sherbet, Orange SherbetThe Willis administration’sattempt at financing segrega¬tion in the public schools willbe one of the topics discussedat the state convention of the In¬dependent Voters of Illinois (IVI),an affiliate of the Americans forDemocratic Action. The conventionwill be held all day November 16at the Palmer House.According to reports, severalhundred million dollars worth ofbonds have been raised over thelast few years for building schoolsin Chicago. However, the numberof students in the elementaryschools has remained relativelyconstant because students havebeen shifting to parochial schools.Most of the construction has beenin Negro neighborhoods whileWhite schools remain partially un¬used.IVI’s education committee willconsider this problem at an opensession beginning at 9:30 am.From this discussion the platformof the organization will be formu¬lated.Similarly, separate open-commit¬tee meetings will be held in themorning to discuss and decidepolicy for national, state and localaffairs. Many civic leaders, inclu¬ding State Representative RobertE. Mann, Tim Black and Elroy C.Sandquist, Jr., will testify beforethese committees. Questioning willbe open to all in attendance.MODEL CAMERALEICA, BOLEX, NIKONROBERTS RECORDERS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTSCharterA BusFor EveryOccasion...• School Events • Tours• Week End Trips• Office, Factory andChurch OutingsCentral West Motor Stages3451 W. Ogden 277-2900 At a luncheon Congressman Rob¬ert W. Kastenmeier (Dem. Wise.)will speak on Kennedy’s civilrights bill. In the afternoon thevarious committees will presenttheir recommendations for the IVIplatform. General discussion andfinal adoption will follow.The convention is free to IVImembers and $1 to non-members.The luncheon, however, is $5.The IVI represents an indepen¬dent liberal approach to politicsand hopes that through action andactive support of liberal candi¬dates, such as Alderman Despres,honesty and progress can be ac¬celerated. The organization, whichhas made application to join theCoordinating Council of CommunityOrganizations, will be forming achapter on the campus. Any ques¬tions concerning the November 16convention or the proposed cam¬pus chapter may be directed toEllis Levin, Pierce 1816X. Frostburg, Md. (CPS) —The Student Association ofFrostburg State College hasrequested that the UnitedStates National Student Associa¬tion (USNSA) conduct an immedi¬ate investigation of what was de¬scribed as a “dire situation.”The student body, meeting in anall-school assembly last Wednes¬day adopted a proclamation thatcharged intimidation of the stu¬dents by the president of the col¬lege. Out of a total attendance of1051, 1045 students supported theproclamation which charged thatmisuse of pressure was evident inrecent dealing with the studentbody and was partially shown inthese cases:—Intimidation upon the office ofStudent Association president bythe President of the College (thestudent was forced to resign as theresult of being charged by thePresident with attempting to “filchCareer opportunities availableThe following organizations arescheduled to recruit in the Officeof Career Counseling and Place¬ment during the week of Novem¬ber 11.Information desribing these or¬ganizations and the positions forwhich they are recruiting is avail¬able for review in the PlacementOffice. Interview appointmentsmay be arranged through Mr. Cal¬vin, room 200, Reynolds Club, ex¬tension 3284.November 11—Texaco, Inc., Beacon,N.Y., Port Arthur. Texas—interviewingchemists (all specializations), mathe¬maticians, and statisticians at the S.M.and Ph.D. levels.November 11—Radio Corporation ofAmerica, RCA Laboratories. Princetonand Camden, N.J.; Burlington, Mass.—Ph.D. candidates in chemistry (Inor¬ganic, physical), mathematics, physics,and statistics.November 13—Imperial Chemical In¬dustries Ltd., London. England—inter¬ested in meeting with doctorial andpost-doctorial students in PhysicalSciences who are British or BritishCommonwealth citizens.November 13—Texas Instruments,Inc.. Dallas. Texas—chemists and phy¬sicists at all degree levels.November 14—I.I T. Research Insti¬tute, Chicago. Illinois—S.M. and Ph.D.candidates in mathematics and physics:chemists (inorganic, physical, polymer)at all degree levels.November 15—North American Avia¬tion, El Segundo, Calif.—Ph.D. candi¬dates in mathematics, physics, statis¬tics, and chemistry (physical).November 15 — Autonetics, Anaheim,Calif.—S.M. and PhD. candidates inmathematics; Ph.D. candidates in phy¬ sics and statistics.November 15—Atomics International.Canoga Park, Calif.—Ph.D. candidatesin mathematics, physics, statistics, andchemistry (all specializations).November 15—Space and InformationSystems, Downey, Calif.—Ph.D. candi¬dates in mathematics, physics, statis¬tics. and chemistry (analytical, physi¬cal).November 15 — Rocketdyne. CanogaPark. Calif—S.M. and PhD. candi¬dates in mathematics, physics, statis¬tics. and chemistry (analytical, inor¬ganic, physical).Football game todayThe UC football class will hostthe Junior Varsity team of NorthCentral College at Stagg Field thisafternoon. The game, the class’fourth, will begin at 3 pm.Originally scheduled to be playedaway, the game will be on cam¬pus so that it can be taped byCBS-TV. The tape will appear onWalter Cronkite’s 5:30 pm nationalnews show.An ad hoc committee which in¬cludes members of Student Govern¬ment. GNOSIS POLIT, and SNUB,has been organized to protest the“unnecessary publicizing of thisafternoon’s game.”Students interested in participa¬ting in a protest demonstration thisafternoon are asked to meet out¬side the Ad Building at 2:30 or atStagg field at 2:45. a five cent ice cream cone”).—Intimidation of the studentbody as a whole to follow admini¬strative policies without questionas shown in the letter mailed tothe student body during the pastsummer, These letters caused stu¬dents to fear entering or returningto college because their attitudesand values were being dictated tothem.—Required acceptance by or¬ganization presidents to assumefull responsibility for their group’sindividual actions as well as theirown actions.—The abuse of student’s rightsto free assembly and the ex postfacto punishment of the demon¬strators.—the expulsion of students ex¬ ercising their basic rights to freeand open speech.The proclamation concluded.“We feel that the pressure exertedupon the student body and thefaculty and the resulting fear havedefinitely hampered our learningprocess. Living in an atmospherewhere a student may be placedon probation or expelled fromcollege without notice or properhearing, as has been done recent¬ly, curbs our initiative and prog¬ress. Thus, the students placed insuch an atmosphere are not ablebo develop their potential as mem¬bers of a democratic society.”Joel Sharkey, national affairsvice-president of the USNSA statedthat USNSA is planning to maketentative inquiries to see how itcan best be effective in resolvingthe conflict occuring at FrostburgState College.Announce bridge tourneyThe UC Bridge Club hasannounced a bridge tourna¬ment for teams representingcolleges and universities inthe Chicago area. The tournament,to be held at the University ofIllinois at Navy Pier, will be con¬ducted in much the same way asthe world championships are con¬ducted, with the use of Interna¬tional Match Points.The first round of the tourna¬ment will be held next Fridayevening. At that time, the tearrefrom each school will be dividedinto two groups. Each team willplay a match against every otherteam in its group. On the followingFriday evening, the highest scor¬ ing teams in each group will re¬turn for the championship match.The winning school will be pre¬sented with an inscribed trophy.Any full-time student, graduateor undergraduate, is eligible toparticipate on the UC team. Theteams will consist of from two tofive pairs, with two pairs playingat any one time. If there is sub¬stantial interest, a session will beheld to determine the startingteam and to provide practice.All students interested in play¬ing on the team should contactMax Plager at NO 7-2852. Furtherinformation about the tournamentmay be obtained by calling DavidMoorshead at WH 4-3800, exten¬sion 135.Rugby club practice tomorrowInspired by the Midwest RugbyFootball Tournament held on cam¬pus last weekend, a group of UCstudents has announced plans toform a rugby football club.Anyone interested in playing,whether experienced or not, isinstructed to come to Stagg Fieldat 10 am this Saturday, or to con¬tact Bob Pace, NO 7-6109.In the Midwest Tournamentmatches, Michigan was victoriousover Wisconsin by a score of 13-6,and Illinois defeated Indiana 3-0. Rugby, like football, has its basisin running and tackling. Unlikefootball, no forward passing orblocking is permitted. Instead, theball is moved downfield by way ofbroken field running and lateralpassing. Points are scored throughtries (touchdowns, which countthree points), conversion kicksafter tries (two points), field goals(three points), and drop kicks atthe goal during play (three points).Does a man really take unfair advantage of womenwhen he uses Mennen Skin Bracer?All depends on why He uses it.Most men simply think Menthol-Iced Skin Bracer is the bestafter-shave lotion around. Because it cools rather than burns.Because it helps heal shaving nicks and scrapes. Because ithelps prevent blemishes.So who can blame them if Bracer’s crisp, long-lasting aromajust happens to affect women so remarkably?Of course, some men'may use Mennen Skin Bracer becauseof this effect.How intelligent! (JJJj JESSELSONiSSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOOD AVAILABLEPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-8190 1340 E. 53rdIF YOU HAVE TRIED THE REST . . .Now Try "THE BEST”. JUST PICK UP THE PHONEand we will deliver to your home.WE ALSO HAVE TABLE SERVICEPizza Platter1508 Hyde Park Blvd. KE 6-6606 — KE 6-389110 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 8. 1963Direct from 424 New Yofk performances!S. HUROK presentsDy arrangement with ttl6 Gr63t3T N.Y. ChSptGT Of ANT ALOTTE LENYA_in the CHERYL CRAWFORD production ofArranged and Translated by GEORGE TABORIMEMORABLE!” “SUPERB!”-NY TIMES -NY HER TRIBA COMPLETE SUCCESS"™.■ NEW YORKERUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATREMANDEL HALLNovember 13 thru 17Tickets at Reynolds Club Desk50c Student DiscountsPrices range from $2.00 to $4.50.RESERVEYOURSEATSNOW!forSUNDAYEVENING —NOVEMBER 108:30 P.M.CHICAGO SINAI CONGREGATIONAnd Its AFFILIATESwill presentALLAN SHERMAN"My Son, The Folk Singer""My Son, The Celebrity"plus ORCHESTRA and ENSEMBLEATSINAI TEMPLE5350 South Shore DriveAll seats reserved.TICKET ORDER BLANKChicago Sinai Congregation5350 South Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60615Please send the following tickets for "An Evening WithAllan Sherman" on Sunday Evening, Nopember 10,Tickets at $17.50 (Main Floor) $Tickets at $7.50 (Front Bale. $1Tickets at $(5.00 (Middle Bale.) $(■ Tickets at $(3.50 (Rear Bale. $1NameAddressCity 7Ap CodeTelephone(Make Checks Payable toChicago Sinai Congregation) MAROON (§) WEEKEND GUIDEPierre Etaix "W DEARBORNAT DIVISIONSunbftTrue Story of the Civil War Chicago's most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films.STUDENTSTal* advantage of tit®special discount avail*able to you. 90£ any dayexcept Saturday. Show1,0. cord to the cashier. The Most Popular BookOn Your Campus Is NowAn Exciting MovieA Shocker"Lord Of The Flies"Winner of the 1963 Cannes Festive? ms "Best Film of the Year2oth ct*Tuav ron **•«*/? ^•i«st«Burt Lancasterin•‘nticX-copard’'also starringAlain DelonandClaudia CardinalcSpecial student rate of $1.00 ineffect during this engagementonly (except Saturday night). The ESQUIREOAK N E A AN MICHIGAN MlLAKE^PARK AT ^RD : N07-9071the (t-yde park theatreStarts Friday, Nov. 8From France's "New Wave""SEVEN CAPITAL SINS"Plus Cartoon Special"WHEN MAGOO FLEW"Free Weekend Patron Parking at 5230 S. Lake ParkSpecial Student Rates^WITH Student I.D. CardsESCRU and BRENT HOUSE, the Episcopal Church at theUniversity of Chicago, offer a brilliant 2-hour even¬ing with"expresso priest’)freedom rider, playwright,STARRINGIN HIS OWNPRIZI-WINNINGONI ACT PLAYWITHWOODII KING,JR.&TUDYINCOLO READINGSFROMJAMES BALDWINEDWARD ALBEERALPH ELLISONSATURDAYNOVEMBER 9AT EIGHTDONATION 43STUDENTS uimczi PLACIPSI UPSILONRUSH PARTYAll First-Year Men InvitedBand, Bar, Models9-1 Tonight5639 University Ave. CINEMAChicago at MichiganStudents SI.00 with I.D. CardsEvery Day But SaturdayB-J CINEMAPresentsHell is for Heroeswith Steve McQueenFRIDAY, NOV. 8th8 and 10 P.M.BURTON-JUDSONCOURTS1005 EAST 60thThe Last Stage1506 E. 51st St.presentsMolie Re'sTARTUFFENOV. T SV sur.15 16 1722 23 2429 30 Dec. 1Fri. & Sot.—8:30 P.M.—$2Sun.—7:30 P.M.—$1.50(new membership fee - 50c)For Reservations call—OA 4-4200DO YOURECOGNIZETHIS MAN?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank BuildingChicago 15, III.fAirfax 4-6800Office Hours 9 to 5Mondays A FridaysHe is an active member ofyour community and he rep¬resents the Sun Life Assur¬ance Company of Canada.With the backing of thisinternational organization —one of the world’s great lifeinsurance companies — he iswell qualified to advise youon all life insurance matters.He is a valuable man toknow. May he call upon you•t your convenience?SUN LIFEASSURANCE COMPANYOF CANADArNov. 8. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Talent search brings rural stud(Continued from page one)Minnesota. Ohio, Indiana, Pennsyl¬vania. and Massachusetts.Tiie eight most heavily repre¬sented states in the entire Collegelast year were: Illinois, NewYork. Pennsylvania, California.Ohio. Minnesota, Indiana, andFlorida.The states which sent the fewestStudents last year were Alaska,Delaware, Idaho, Utah, Wyoming,South Carolina, South Dakota,North Carolina, and Maine. NoStudents came from Mississippi.Arkansas, and Nevada.Forty-five of the 106 entered thisSeptember and represent 8.5% ofthe first-year class. In 1960, thefirst year of the program, nineStudents enrolled. Twenty-five ran¬domly-chosen rural high schools insix mid western states were toldof the talent search and 15 of theschools proposed candidates.The following year, the plan wasexpanded to 50 high schools in 11states, and 19 nominees enrolledin the College. Last September 33more students joined the program.Discusses drop-outs01 the 61 talent search studentswho came to UC before this year,21 have withdrawn.Miss Perry explained that mostof the drop-outs accurred duringthe early years of the program.Though the drop-out rate is over50% for the first two groups ofentrants, only five of last year’s33 entrants did not return. A ma¬ to A than B; their scholastic apti¬tude test (SAT) scores were al¬most entirely above 500 and morethan half the scores were above600.Four students in good academicstanding transferred to less de¬manding colleges, and two left be¬cause their professional goalschanged. One student dropped outfor each of the following reasons:family problems, marriage, emo¬ year 1961-2 show lhat upperclass¬men get slightly higher marksthan lowerclassmen. While allfirst-year students (1961 entrants)had a GPA of 2.31. and all secondyear students (1960) entrants hada GPA of 2.32; the GPA for allthird year students was 2.39 andfor fourth year students was2.42. (Averages for the academicyear 1962-3 are now being com¬puted by the Registrar).Yearly grade point averages (GPA)(basis of 4)1960-1 1961-2 1962-2I960 talent search entrants 2.14 2.14 . 2.62All 1960 entrants * 2.32 **1961 talent search entrants 2.28 2.57All 1961 entrants * 2.28 **1962 talent search entrants .... 2.20* Figures not available** Figures being tabulatedMean Scholastic Aptitude Test scores(the score in parenthesis is the mean of the entire entering class)verbal mathematics1960 entrants (9) 605 (635) 582 (637)men (7) 611 600women (2) 586 518 -1961 entrants (19) 593 (646) 639 (645)men (15) 590 631women (4) 605 5931962 entrants (33) 612 ( 646) 625 (650)men (20) 602 644women (13) 628 5961963 entrants (45) 626 (660) 659 (655)men (27) 625 672women (18) 629 641jority of the drop-outs left aftertheir first year.Seven of the students did notreturn because of academic rea¬sons. since they were unable tomaintain an average better than1.75 on a 4 point scale. ‘'As faras we were able to determine,however, these failures werecaused not by a lack of intellectualability but by a lack of motiva¬tion," Miss Perry said. Each ofthese students entered the Collegewith a high school record closer tional disturbance, military serv¬ice, and homesickness.Averages improveMiss Perry stated that the aca¬demic averages of the talentsearch students improve eachyear. The average performancefor all students in the College is2.34 for men and 2.36 for women.On a basis of 4, the average gradeis C-plus.GPA figures from the academic Miss Perry commented that“the quality of academic prepara¬tion as demonstrated through highschool records is, in the opinionof the Committee on Admis-trations, the most valuable cri¬terion in judging proparation forthe College." However, she added,“the Scholastic Aptitude Test(SAT) are particularly signifi¬cant in this talent search becauseof our unfamiliarity with the pro¬ ents to the Collegegrams of most of the small schoolsat the time they nominate can¬didates.“At the start of the program,we believed that the ‘culturalquotient’ inherent in any nationaltesting program would be a factorof considerable concern. The re¬sults of these tests indicate, how¬ever, that if such tests do indeedreflect cultural orientation, stu¬dents from small schools are notso ‘culturally deprived’ as weonce thought.”Miss Perry added that on hermost recent visit to schools inWashington, Oregon and Montana,she met many very well-preparedstudents at some very high schools.“Secondary school proparation iscontinually improving,” she com¬mented.Of eighteen students in the pro¬gram contacted by the Maroon,fourteen said they would not havecome to UC if they were not inthe talent search program.Most said they never could haveafforded to come here without thesubstantial financial aid the Col¬lege has provided. Many are get¬ting full tuition scholarships, somemore than tuition. Several pointedout they are paying less at UCwith scholarship aid than theywould be paying even at theirstate university.Several said they had never con¬sidered UC until they were toldabout the talent search. Only afew said others from their schoolshad gone to UC. Most would havegone to a state school in theirhome state.Some, however, reported thatthey had been considering UC be¬fore they were approached aboutthe talent search program. Onesaid that before he was told aboutthe program, he had just notknown what procedures were nec¬essary for applying for a scholar¬ship.One upperclass woman in the program said she thought nv«tstudents in her school thought acollege like UC was “out of theirrange.” and were not really h*.formed about any schools otherthan their state institutions.Almost all said most of theirclassmates who went on to collegewent to state schools, and that ■very few went to out-of-state uni- Iversities, although several said Ithey attended small liberal arts Icolleges. IReports on tlie percentage of stu- Idents in the high school graduat- Iing classes who were going to Mcollege ranged about thirty to 1about sixty per cent.Report poor preparationMany said they felt their highschools did not prepare them wellin one or more areas. Several saidthe science and math courses in --their schools were more nearlyadequate than those in other areas,especially English and foreign lan¬guages. Others felt they wereabout as well prepared in mostareas as most other students.Several of the upperclass stu¬dents in the program said they •found UC difficult at first, buthave now managed to “catch up.”Responses about preparation va¬ried rather widely, however. It waspointed out that, of course, thereare individual differences amongstudents just as among schools. Afew thought that their schools werefairly good in most areas, and re¬ported little difficulty in their col¬lege work.The Maximum size for highschools participating in the TalentSearch program is 600. Most parti¬cipants interviewed reported theirgraduating class numbered be- a\tween 100 and 150. The smallest ||school discovered was reported Iby Ronald Burthold of Pekin. North IDakota. His school consisted of Itwenty-six students in grades 9-12, Iwith six in his graduating class, Iout of a total student body in all Itwelve grades of 75. The highschool faculty, he said, totalledfour people.PAR-ALL NEW Super-Value Center Just Off CampusPORTABLE TAPE RECORDERCompact, battery operated record¬er that is ideal for verbal notes,language practice or just havingfun! 4 transistors, 2V2" speaker,self contained case only 8x6x3".Complete with microphone, reel oftape, take-up reel, batteries andearphone for private listening.Easily a $21.95 value. SALEPRICE$1495PAR SUPERS AVI COUPONPROCTORSILEXSteam-N-DryIRONA sensational buy . . . and don’t wait becausequantities are limited. A streamlined, steam anddry iron packed with features that make it easyfor even the fellows to use. 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