Discusses proxy's roleGWB defines university greatness Abram Harris, 64, diesEditor’s note: gree), Columbia University (PhD),intr fft Roariio Tho™ i„ A tribute to Mr. Harris, written by aftd the University of Pittsburghing to Beadle. There is currently Frauk H Kni},ht, appears on page“sympathetic interest” in history 4. Mr. Knight is Morton D. Hulland Chemistry, he said. Distinguished Serrioe Professor Em-erttus of Social Sciences and of Phtl~Changes in the University which osophy.were initiated by Hutchins pro- Abram L. Harris, professorduced a great deal of dissension of economics in the College Political Theory, and the Southernin the department of Economic Journal. In addition,philosophy, died at Billings Herris served on the consumersHe said, for example, that the Hospital Saturday. He was 64 advisory board of the National Re-(MA).Harris contributed to the En¬cyclopaedia Britannica and publica¬tions such as the American Econ¬omic Review, the Journal ofA great university can said. One method of changing aexist in spite of its organiza- university is through administra-tional structure if it has a Re action (Hutchins’ method).. l+v ttr Another is through' the faculty,good faculty, accoi ding to l ( BeadIe said it is ..very difficuIt toPresident George Wells Beadle. impose changes from above andBeadle discussed the criteria of that it has also been true that uccuniversity greatness and the func- faculties are generally reluctant among "the faculty" some of which andtion of University presidents in a to initiate change themselves.” still remains, Beadle saidrecent interview with the Maroon. The best way he concluded, is for H_ fnp p a ,divisions were upsetbe^aw the ye Js old. 7u^rafWvTces"will rove^y Administration in 1934.responsibility for general educa- held this morning at 10 in Bond Harris had written a number oftion was taken away from them, chapel. books during his career, amongFor a long time, the graduate fac- Harris had entered Billings Mon- them “The Black Worker” (1931),ulty was completely indifferent to day. “The Negro as a Capitalist” (1936),undergraduate education. In many An economist specializing in and “Ethics” (1963). He receivedways “we are now rekindling an Negro labor and Negro enterprise, the 1961 Quantrell Award for ex-interest in the College,” he said. Harris had both taught and done cellence in undergraduate teaching.Beadle praised Hutchins’ institu- research at UC since 1946. He was The award carried a $1,000 bonus,tion of an autonomous college. He himself a Negro. At the time of the Quantrelltermed it a “major departure from Harris came to UC from Howard Award, Beadle had stated that Har-tradition” and said that, to this University in Washington. DC, ris “has played an influenitial roleday, no other university main- where he had headed the econom- in shaping and teaching the socialtained such an independent under- ics department. He attended Vir- sciences curriculum at the Uni¬graduate unit. " ginia Union College (bachelor’s de- versity.”dent body arc the prime indices of faculty to work for improvement,a University’s greatness. Beadlestated. “The way the College isorganized is secondary to how goodthe faculty is.” The prime concernof his administration has beenstrengthening the faculty, he con¬tinued.Beadle also discussed an articlewritten by University of CaliforniaPresident Clark Kerr which ap¬peared in the current issue ofHarper's magazine.In the article, called "The Multi¬versity.” Kerr asserted that Uni¬versity presidents are no longerdynamic leaders of their respec¬tive institutions. “Hutchins was thelast ol the giants in the sense thatlie was the last of the universitypresidents who really tried tochange his institution in any fun¬damental way,” said Kerr.Commenting on this statement,Beadle said “I don’t think it’s truequalitatively but it is quantitative¬ly.” It is increasingly difficult forpresidents to change an instiutionin any fundamental way. he said.One reason for this is the increas¬ing independence of many facultymembers, particularly in the sci- and the College English staff. “Ienoes, who are heavily supported feel quite strongly that the Collegeby outside agencies such as the should be more closely related tofederal government, he continued, the divisions.” he said.“I think the President should The administration is eneourag-look constantly at the system and ing actions similar to those mademake constant improvements,” he in English in other areas, accord-Faculty-student meetingto discuss FOTA futureUniversities, according to Bea¬dle, tend to resist changes. Changeis nonetheless, “stimulating”even though it may not be in¬herently for the better, he said.Much administrative initiativefor change now comes from the ad¬ministration through informal com¬munication with the faculty. Beadlepraised the recent merger of thefaculties of the English department Vol. 72 — No. 20 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1963NSA plans to pull out of Co-opFOTA (Festival of theArts) will hold an open meet¬ing: today in an attempt todecide whether it can moreeasily involve students and facultyin its programs and whether thetraditional two-week festival in thespring might not be changed. Wick will introduce what is calledthe basic problem, namely that The National Student As- SG; Gene Groves, President ofsociation (NSA) plans to GNOSIS: Jerry Hyman. Vice Pres-discontinue its operation of a ident Jacobson, Chair-eooperative student discountbook service, which includes theUC Co-op bookstore in ReynoldsClub basement.The International Student Co¬operative Union (ISCU), . which man of POLIT; Mark Joseph,Pierce Tower Council; BruceRappaport. Chairman of UC CORE:Bev Splane. Secretary of SG: JohnT. Williams, Editor of the Maroon.About $8,500 will have to beraised after Friday, according to per cent if in credit for more pur¬chases.Under the old system operatedby ISCU, books were sold at apredetermined discount. This wasfifteen per cent for texts and tenper cent for other books.The NSA co-op added phonographrecords and typewriters to its line,and the necessity to keep recordsin stock has demanded more mon-FOTA has not been involving the formerly operated the UC co-op and James Thomason, general manager ey in capital than they have beencampus sufficiently, attracting ade- served about ten other midwestquate audiences to pay for itself, campuses until taken over bv NSAor easily attracting student leader- last June is now attempting toship to run it.Other questions that will be con¬sidered include whether or notFOTA has lost sight of its originalThe meeting will be held in the aims and needs to be re-examined,[•da Noyes Halls library at 4 pm. whether it needs new direction inThe meeting will consist mainly ar^» and whether it has lost itsof discussions, both on a panel and student-faculty aspects of coopera-informally with audience partici- *'on and lacks coordination withpation. Among those who will act departmental cultural activity,as members of the panel are War- The meeting is open to all mem-ner A. Wick, dean of students, bers of the University community,Gerhard Meyer, associate profes- and further information about itsor of economics in the College, may be obtained from Thomas statement yesterday expressingand James Newman, assistant dean O'Keefe, director of Student Activi- support of the coop, and urgingof students and assistant professor ties, in Ida Noyes Hall, second attendance at the meeting. Theyof history. floor. are:To discuss hearings on socialist groupSteven Perlmutter, a spokes- quired registration in theman of the Advance Youth place.Organization, will speak on Advance was formed in 1960 ascammis tomorrow a leftist group featuring socialisl*camj u; tom . Marxist oriented study. The or-Perlmutter will discuss the Sub- ganization conducts lectures, de-versive Activities Control Board bates, and small study sessions,(SACB) hearings pertaining to the Perlmutter said. “We also demon¬status of Advance, a New York strate actively for peace, civilpolitical youtli organization. Attor- rights, civil liberties, and economicney General Robert Kennedy has security.”petitioned the SACB to cite Ad-' Advance has 150 members, ofvance as a Communist-front or- whom 50 can be called “active.”ganization under the McCarran Most of the members attend col¬let* lege in New York, though some areA student of New York city’s high school students. MembershipHunter College, Perlmutter will is open to any young person whospeak in the Ida Noyes library at lives in New York and who wishes be collected by Friday will be inthe form of short-term loans, whichwill be paid back next week.At a meeting yesterday, the SGexecutive committee passed a reso¬lution urging every student andfaculty member interested in theco-op to attend the meeting.NSA has been forced to get outraise ten thousand dollars by Fri¬day inorder to maintain the stu¬dent service.Tlie money will be used to dem¬onstrate to NSA that ISCU cancover all the outstanding debtsowed to publishers for books.A meeting will be held tonight of the co-op bookstore business,at 7:30 in Ida Noyes Hall for all Thomason said, because it was un¬people interested in helping save able to raise enough capital overthe UC co-op. the summer to cover its inventoryEight student leaders . signed a and current expenses.The Co-op has had grave finan¬cial difficulties for several monthsbut despite the current fiscal situ-Don Congdon, President of ation students will receive rebateson book purchases which werepromised when the co-op was trans¬ferred to NSA. Thomason estimatedthe rebate would be about eightfirst of the issue; (6) asks that the US per cent if the student chooses torestore diplomatic relations with take it in the form of cash, or tenCuba.These positions, all of which“parallel” stands of the Commu¬nist party, are taken by everyprogressive liberal organization inthe United States, Perlmutter said. of the NSA co-op a director of able to raise, Thomason said. Rec-ISCU, since most of the money to ords, however, have been the big¬gest sellers since they were of¬fered.A discount book ordering servicewas started by the UC StudentGovernment in I960, but many pub¬lishers were reluctant to do busi¬ness with it.In 1961. student representativesfrom UC and several other Chieago-area colleges met and formed theISCU, incorporated in Wisconsin asa non-profit organization.Its wholesaler was able to de¬liver books from all publishers.The co-op was able to withstandpressure from other bookstoreswhich did not like the discountsystem, according to Thomason.At the time of ISCU’s formation,its organizers tried to interest theNational Executive Council ofNSA in backing the venture, butthey declined, according to Thom-(Continued on page 8)Wick proposes discussionDean of Students Warner Wick The SG executive committee yes-yesterday replied to two letters to terday voted to have such a meet_Perlmutter is presently visiting Mar°°" Wrmen by ing early next quarter.a number of colleges and univer¬sities on a speaking tour. Advanceencourages students all over thecountry to make the administra- Branfman had suggested that The text °f Wick's statementcommunication between students follows:and faculty and administration be I should like to propose some extion aware of their obiection to the impr°ved* In his Wick sug' tended discussion of the P^^ts raised„„ n A t , ^ gested an open meeting “of those in your letters to the Maroon of lastTuesday and Friday, especially the4 pm.In an interview yesterday, Perl¬mutter called the McCarran Actundemocratic and unconstitutional.“It is a clear violation of the first to participate in the group’s ac¬tivities.According to Perlmutter. Ad- McCarran Act and especially to who are Merested/.this use of the act. Student groupsat a number of schools have sentstatements of opposition to the At¬torney General, Perlmutter com¬mented.“At any point Kennedy can calloff the hearings If enough pressurevance was asked to appear before brought to bear on the issue, hethe SACB because the gioup has may be persuaded to withdraw.amendment,” he explained, “since Communists in its membership and The government,” he continued,it denies the right of free speech because the group has held certain «ig embarrassed bv the McCarranand the right to hold ideas. The actis a classic bill of attainder be¬cause it subscribes penalties underlegislation without a trial.” obnoxious.”“If the SACB orders Advance toregister as a Communist front or¬ganization. we will appeal thepositions which parallel those of Aot because the law is really sothe Communist Party.Advance (1) called for a ban onnuclear testing by the US beforeFurther, the aot violates the fifth the test-ban traety was signed:amendment, he said. Registration (2) asked that the McCarron and case,” he continued. “We hope thatas a Communist-front group under Smith Acts be repealed; (3) op- the Court of Appeals will drop thethe McCarran Act self-incriminates posed the US-Japanese Security case, jierhaps on a technicality, asthe organization under the Smith Pact; (4) opposes the draft; (5) happened when the court heardAct. This second act makes illegal called for the end to the Cuban the appeal of the Committee forthe holding of views which re- blockade and peaceful settlement Soviet-American friendship.” former, which was headed “FootballControversy Involves Larger Issues.'*The issues you mention have been onmany people’s minds for a long time.They are not imaginary, and they areimportant. Finally, they are of a sortthat can be clarified through discus¬sion.So I am at your sendee. I shouldthink Student Government might wishto arrange an open meeting, since asmany as possible of those who are in¬terested should have an opportunity tobe present and take part. There couldbe a second or even a third meetingif the first turns out well and interestremains strong.I hope you don’t mind my addressingyou through the columns of the Ma¬roon, as you addressed me. This isreally public business, as I think youwould agree. As I said when you askedyour question from the floor at theStudent Government meeting on No¬vember 12, I was sorry that there wasnot time then to do justice to thepromise of your question.Warner A, Wick,Dean of StudentsCongress checks science aid“The impression in Uie Con- undertaken \>V • h 0 Foundation, sider why the government is sogress is "clearly that science ’nns rc-sU'!‘-'•<>n wT* involved in research and develop-.JMippoiteprograrm -have grow rf froin 'T.., pI 0,*>M'd. "t>!' . imui, and why funds are coneen-• i •i - - :• ' . ence deve opm. m and scieiu-e • ■ • . -v-v^wliero troinoi,sh;p . - r". University foundation bondsare an a I y zed by Ford hea d -amongtasked.'to ' dimensions where Tli'eYt?"?, ?T vV?" Tf<:VT".‘T ■-yirated in what appear to the Con-must' level - off, ■ stated John , . . • * gross to be iavored institutions.WiUon. -deputy •d.r.Vor . of 1 ho rhr ,'"rr Heyj-topmrnl pro- Ql„,aboutN e J . i iki.u on «ra'"-, «" evpl.iined. .s m-,Ncl- . , „ .'-t tended m*.assist institutions other‘f than those of th<> \orv fiist rank,’ rom 1961 ;o J963 a spo\ thus int reasir.g the number of cen-cial *ass ■'tant to President George (0rs 0f excellence'; in science and. lio.nth . -piKt. at a mooting ol ho^rn„I|)f,(,rlll„ planned. “the pro-^NationaUAs-pc iation^ of State grajll 4 j|lTipakeF grants to thoseif^servltJev and institutions^* which are judged to• h.i\ e - the oi o.itost |x>tential to takefactor influencing currentlrbltatl^nlara jmajor^stepi forward in a fixe--%'#fiships|' between |the^NShJ; and^Uic^vea^'penod.Jiy I’he' institutions in-;;sound plans fordevelopment. "The most meaningful lx>nd only 5% of the $8 billion n<. ]Lot ween foundations a n d each year to operate the natumjlIt igfh<».»•■ (duration,: is their mu- colleges and universities,the .se<H>e. and tual concern for finding' the Heald emphasized that motbalance, of. support programs, and tacts, following thorn.to-logical con- • /oundations were of a mind toabout the duplication of ollort clii'ions. and- v; making them avail - ■ J .controlling interest in high, r editprograms will also be table for u^e and>action by the rest- cation, they^would lack the me inj■■■■:■ of MKioty." aocoiiCng to llonry T.He aid,' * president!# ofjfvthe - FordFoundation. ’* '** ‘-f * -1In" an address' presented »lastweek,'at a general; meeting of.-theNational" Association of State UniThese reports on currenttrends in higher educationare drawn from speechesdelivered in the Loop lastweek at the 77th annualmeeting of the Associationof State Universities andLand Grants Colleges. to do so.” Yet, he said, fun<is,,e;on]itributed by foundations .,11 ofk-nlvital to the institution of .Tighplflearning.By enlarging the univerVtresJarea of choice among soiiivesf$>iversitios and Land (Irani Colleges, v«ip|x>rt, foundations augnu u O $Heald explained .lii.it the financial ••continued autonomy of ninvt-r cvflconnection -bet ween- ■ universities 'Mould noted. Furthermore-’"-:....(t|,and private foundations is not a- ,lons "foster vitality and f 1 < xi ?great as .-is'■-common! v thought. I’n ■ ,n. highc'r . education boea i ».-4 h« \-4vate foundations, ho said, grant iContimted m po^« 3)* „„ , i.\i -nr i i- ' s, n ntifu- manpower '■ - ^ mm ■: ■ ' ■ ■ ■ #ssss Keppel predicts federal scholarshipsfH n 1 ’, * i.ch die NSt' has beenseientisi 1,1 < 'in< -ngy ol '^^adrnimsiermg during the last dec*!ne ' * < l n. < r;,the existing program,'“^t.scien . e - failed.Jo , r, , .5e NSF grants fellowships to grad- i' mM% Sooner -or later we will have I’C’s tuition, $1455 this year, will justification Xor further- I-Vd.to have a national scholarship become $1710 as of next Septem- educational involvement is Hu* <d|_ program of a scope so great her. Room and board costs aa es- rent trend towards a T a n. J* (. f m elves. ^Under that only the federal govern- timated addillona! $«50. , economy and cukure.”^ • mental1 nature of basic scieix ^ * ne ' new program, however, the ment can administer it, predicted Noting that intellectual ability . Citing a recent study .-.deinooj, C ongress^i^ust > a v joll ,k \ a \ i0n wOU Id make grants to US Commissioner of Ed neat ion * 1)01 related to..;t*^e# ability *?to pay, stratlng a high correlation betneenuniversity departments and: stu- Francis Kepjx?l. '«• • ■ , K. j>ix*1 stressed the,need for, equal- the salary and experience of teacljThe former Harvard Dean sug-: l, v (>t educational opportunity. If ers nnd student achievement, KeSgested a government-run scholar- we. c»>ntinue to sacrifice needy stu: pel stated that the Federal goyen^ship jvogram in an address this (^en,s to n.'dional indifference,*-to-one correspondence betweenbask : research; programs and ap- % 6ents will ^ selected by the de-cannot beexpected payments to receive the grants.Wilson.emphasized , . -' Dissatisfaction ' ' ! meohamsm will intro-growth; of i more c«hege graduates into weekoft otg« science:-^■grantsMis^reflected: before the Associatum ol, wl^ kv^e many potentialleaders, he warned.P1 °^advaiK'ed training and will also State Universities and Land Gian' loa<l<M s- ' ^ Wtirn(Hl - -on Congress? — r<_„ . ,v . .Help for urban ,ue,.-. whwe m'come. and aspiration are^low a ndn ow -<Ls.the NSF-appropria-.-privlde «retl,er refdom f Collo^sSgtion i%4 a< Wlthm our institutions of- higher Ybe p... ' U ,r-is H. • ap- learning, . Wilson «uud he state:^Spropr i a 110 nsff||u b-eommi bteej,' gaveS^S^he4f NSF^about^a^ quarter' ^billion^^ooHarslle'ssltha'mwasKTequestedifetl»^le>Fhi r ih er !^ore^f,Wilson not eel L>The i concern % with scientific,-,re-ssearch%hasyed&C^igressAto^estab^^M-h^al^niibl^n^ibfiiTbriii'rn'i.ttefelAb-g^^^^l«&*z.*4,vyc^ut^.y^.sr^..s.v.i'i.^iivzicyg-^t.iie%ffstudya'£th'e'Tgoylcr.rin.'icrit.isj^1r'es’ea.rc:nnn 1 ded€thef^s11 pu 1 a11 on ^effoiHs,, and pi oghams,’1-‘WilsorT^ exjtliat^ hoanewo>i;ograms ~ should ; be * plained. -The* c* committees’ wdldon-:., m "" I j j ^ j program will be. necessaryi:S*'l ,.... v. ... .....he stated, because even the‘"rela-“Jf/inaI?c’n suPlort of. qualified butbvely low cost", ot state^.nstitu-\fmaneial,y^ distressed students”tionsf will. soon be^too grcat<ifoi,.aT*wer,o^tw’oi of five .> legislative, tarlarge/niimberJLot^s'tudeht ^Xh°V’l,s Kcp|x 1 as^areas foiuavcyageisiTSO, cod .obi cxim, IIxmi d ‘ddij onal J^edyial ^ai ti\and " col lege otu it ion ;in the I’S# id*/>iT)iG.other‘'ai eJ.s5;w ere dhedeaoh,.alieady t(X) great for thousand^of^ing^piTdessionfe^iJmei sity^exb nstudent,'fS KeppeL'said and'' adultjlllitei <tLy^Kep|)c 1 sMl•• s®§W career: flMNOEMil&j^^tro’e^^i^yS,ars^pV:ft:6rhhThHWiq!^iycorhputer system performs iri split seconds, the.•astronormcal nurnber of cal.culations r.equired.,r for the rocket’s control. I A career at IBM carrfr* be-f.much involved with" thesedeal Time cbniM' 1 '." •• • ^piannmg^them^rh'ak'ing tlTenrfjlprofirarehiingt^my;l< / V‘j ■ i“ pr'to'r our’brc■ - • ■ *■ ■,xhures. I Check with him.for amappointmenU\ ■ \ '• ' T“;V'. ;■ T'7 '' 1 dTMTs'an'^^ EquarOpportundy^Empb: ■ ■: . /. JTUSLoyowoyJ|;0 amend.:"f'o'r T': ; "Special v> ? ?&£'’■'v.isctr.K' ■>» ' d-'-dv.Student Discount''PHILLIPSJEWELRY CO.;Wholesale Distributor? ,Loyowsyypiamon'dMforX-motl-DIAMONDS^* WATCHES ^ JEWELRY,jH|U, . .._ ...... ... .. .... .... ..... .. . „„ „■Serving college students at wholesale prices for the post 30 yean >:fy f : 50 c OFF ON ALL DIAMONDS. >ENGAGEMENT, AND WEDDING RINGS^ Watch1 and Jewelry Repairing/ Rm.Tl 1 Otf 47 E. Madison St., DE 2-4S0t|F orF u r t hefl n f o rm a t i o nC a 11 An d y Stein — Extf3265 V? ment must and can make teaching!more financially rewarding. s.hIwould be far better to have. ,obe|person teach for thirty years *t..jrfhigh- salary than have six; inexlperienced persons each teach forifive years, at lower salaries. belsaid. •# TeachingSfcis the only, prnfc^idn^winch puts a-ceiling on tlic imoiiveWof P those 4 who y have served £ morel!than 10 or 15 years, Keppcltnoteda'Dus ceiling has limited ..the i each-ing"profession primarily to women.!'who generally> have less l in:incial|responsibility ' to y theiir, l.imiliesL.:tha ri';| KeppelTpi'0|k>sed “uni\ »*.r>-,i; y,.%ex-;tension and adult literacy^ ■ ■ • |grams aleviabii •>' ■ nployment ■'stamtial percentage of tlio US Tin-;employeti labor force is con>j»osed|of .'-skill,* >rers who.,-have** »x*en?trained, for-jobs which ( n« >w|gobsolete' ;Yn< 1 of 1 u notion all y jj htmSpHe' adultstj he said. ’■ - dfcJMIBMwmmmm‘-4-t DR^A’.-fZ IM B LE R ,Opto met r i s t ±4IHnSee' _ ' sKarawwiHH®*,NEW HYDE PARK SHOPPINGICENTERJ ^1 lU^%r % ^ ” ', .....^ iE r e|eX a MIN ATI O N siPRE iCRI FTIONS FILLED ' .EWES||STY LI NGf IFRAMESSTU D ENT. &#AC UL'TyIdISCOU N 'pm.^ *-foreign car ■>?•*.*Tl“l hospital ,MWmmittft-'Ah C.BbS&Spl:bob; ■lesferi|&^&^^!:'psychibtmtMiis424'%mbari(^I j ‘ •’ «<-V . - •■ =.& 3-4900if £.0;■: . ' -. :.. . -d! • , t, !di.^*df J ' %4.i ■* -• tfips>“ > *> Mjf ’•KtbTAUKANI •—CUWKIAIU - LUUNVE —-tUUhhtt bHUK — UrfcN MOUR5-T;; YVT/VT- . • v ' ■ , .O', 1500h S LAKE SHORE DRIVE'’ //?',•IJmmu f J 4, '..JiCife* t ' f' * - 1 ■' * * *>a Long Known For Prime Steaks And Dry Martinis■M HrmKKmmj \ s i 51 m; m"T'w««m-w^ ••• .;,-v -Tv^TTvT CT ■ TV .;:.^/:TTiT' :''-T ' ' •' ;Y.. T ■ Tv-'-'r.-' 1 ’1, / ; }■ , ' 4’TV'-- "'V%?V>VV; .tV ‘ V’Ya Vliv T, ^: '' * 1TTKeTuiiM.M, L,s* a son 1 Y.is '"started, and it is time how to plan for: ThanL Our n< wK r* niolk led Century RoonCWiff seat 100 jpersons; Our newgiving, Christmas and holiday partying. Call John Dinou for prices and Piet >(>. RuoinVis also availahlcV Other room* include the Surrey, the.tfull infofthatton'^L/MI 3 1900. - ? f ^ f Surf,-Tml the ( .iptainT ( - - /Fo^?i'°Tf'!Lf U"1 Sps City course has 10-man staff(Continued from page 21enable universities to explore newfields of teaching and research, toexperiment with institutional ar¬rangements, and to strengthen im¬portant but exceptionally expensiveundertakings.”This facet of foundation assist¬ance is necessary, Heald feels,since ‘‘most university budgetshave never allowed enough leewayfor experiment.” He added that“beset with rising costs and enor¬mous needs for physical expansion,universities are less likely nowthan ever to provide much venturecapital.”Heald stated that foundationshave ‘‘an implicit mandate fromthe American society to identifyimportant problems and to assistor originate efforts likely to con¬tribute to their solution.” For thisreason, most grants are awardedfor specified purposes, not forgeneral support.“Folklore has it,” Heald com¬mented, “that foundations ride petideas and that any institution canclimb aboard if it tailors its pro¬grams to the foundation’s fashion.But nothing confounds this fallacyso well as the very record of thefoundation in and with higher edu¬cation.He explained that foundationideas and objectives related toBlackfriars deadlineBlackfriars, the organizationwhich produces an original student-written musical each year, has an¬nounced that the deadline for thisyear's competition is November26.Entries may be left in the Black-friars’ box at Reynolds Club desk.A prize of $50 will be awarded tothe author of the winning script. higher education reflect an inti¬mate knowledge of the needs andcapabilities of our universities.“Foundations do advocate certainapproaches over others,” he said,“but they are not drafted in Olym¬pian isolationism.”Foundations have a responsibilityto make their objectives clear touniversities and, conversely, theuniversities seeking foundation as¬sistance need to express theirviews and declare their prioritiesclearly. “As institutions dedicatedto truth and integrity, universitiesand foundations should not be timidabout discussing their relationscandidly,” Heald said.The Ford Foundation has grantedUC $5 million to be used by thebiological and physical sciencedivisions for research plants andfacilities.Ruddigore opensGilbert and Sullivan’s “Ruddi¬gore” will be presented Thursday,Friday and Saturday of next weekin a performance by the ChicagoGilbert and Sullivan Company. Theperformance will De sponsored bythe Parents’ Association of the UCLaboratory Schools.The production is part of theAssociation’s “Adventures in theArts” project. Last year, the pro¬gram presented Gilbert and Sulli¬van’s “Trial by Jury” and “H.M.S.Pinafore.”Several UC students and facultyare in the cast and orchestra.Nancy Lorie and Ruth Stack areco-directors.The performances will be atMandel Hell at 8:30 each night.Single admission tickets are $2,and may be ordered from Mrs. F.Howell Wright, 5739 Kimbark ave.,DO 3-5456. Friday's performance isalmost sold out. A one-quarter course on“The Modern City” will beoffered for the first time nextquarter. Intended to be aninter-disciplinary course for under¬graduates, the course will be giv¬en by eleven faculty members inseveral fields of social sciences.It is one of the “core” coursesin the new program of generalstudies in the social sciences, whichbegan this year. It is open toother college students not in theprogram as an elective.The course will also be relatedto the newly-created Center forUrban Studies, which was an¬nounced last month.The Center will engage only inresearch and graduate training,but some of the students in thecourse on the city may go on towork in the Center, which maytherefore be able to co-ordinateits curriculum with that of theundergraduate course.There are also plans to includework on an extensive researchpaper in the course, although it will not be part of next quarter’swork. Students will be able to usethe facilities and get help fromthe staff of the Center for theirprojects, which may include re¬search work in the field in Chi¬cago. It is contemplated that suchwork may be done in the springquarter.Several of the staff members forthe city course are also on theCenter’s executive committee. Thechairman of the course is HaroldM. Mayer, professor of geography.Each week will be devoted tothe subject of a lecture given atthe first meeting by a staff mem¬ber. This subject will be discussedat one seminar meeting with thelecturer. The readings will be dis¬cussed at the third weekly meetingwith two regular discussion lead¬ers, Mayer and Gerhard E. O.Meyer, associate professor of eco¬nomics in the college.After one week of introductorydiscussion, Philip M. Hauser, pro¬fessor and chairman of the depart¬ment of sociology, will deal withthe demography of modern citiesof the world.Calendar of EventsTuesday10% discount to students with ID cardsSales and Serviceon all hi-fi equip¬ment, foreign andIdomesfic.TAPE RECORDERSPhono Needles and CartridgesTubes - Batteries24 hr. Service CallsTV—HI-FIRADIO $300AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORYesf. !»2?1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111In the 53rd-Kimbark Plaza Lecture: (Humanities 20n “Rhetoricand Poetics,” Richard McKeon, CharlesF. Grey Distinguished Service Profes¬sor, departments of Philosophy andClassical Languages and Literatures,Rosenwald 2, 10:30 am.Lecture: ‘‘The Fine Structure of theCerebellar Cortex: A Golgi and Elec¬tron Microscopic Study. Clement A.Fox, Marquette University, Anatomy101. 4 pm.Colloquium: “Divalent Rare EarthDoped CaF 2 Laser Materials,” ZoltanJ. Kiss. RCA Laboratories, ResearchInstitutes 480 , 4:15 pm.Lecture: “Degrees of Unsolubility,”Gerald E. Sacks. Cornell University,Senior Mathematics Club, Eckhart 206,4:30 pm.Discussion: “Underdeveloped Na¬tions,” Basil Yamey, Ford FoundationVisiting professor in economics, 3rdfloor Ida Noyes. 7:15 pm.Discussion: “US Military Policy inthe Cold War,” Nathan Leites. profes¬sor of political science. InternationalRelations Club, 3rd floor Ida Noyes,7:30 pm.Israeli Folk Dancing: Hillel, 7:30 pm.Films: “The Golem” and “Gertiethe Dinosaur,” soc sci 122, 6:45 and9 pm. Lecture Series: “Studying the Effectsof Religious Education.” Peter Rossiand Andrew Greeley, NORC, soc sci122, 4 pm.Meeting: UC CORE, Ida Noyes Hall,7:30 pm.Lecture Series: “The Dictionary ofAmericanisms,” Mitford M. Mathews,professor emeritus, department oflinguistics, Breated Hall. 8. pm.Lecture Series: “Cloud Precipitationand Rain-makiriff,” Roscoe R. Braham,assoc, professor dept, of geophysicalsciences, Downtown Center, 64 E.Lake st., 8 pm.ThursdayLecture: "Mutational Aberrations ofProtein Structure,” Charles Yanofsky,Stanford University, Abbott 101, 12:30pm.Lecture: "The Pauline Epistles: AScientific Solution.” A. Q. Morton,Minister of the Church of Scotland,Breasted Hall. 4 pm.Lecture: “Biosynthesis of Acid Muco¬polysaccharides.” Albert Dorfman.dept, of pediatrics, Zoology, 14, 4:30pm.Operetta: “Ruddigore,” Mandel Hall,admission $2, 8:30 pm. Richard C. Wade, professor inthe department of history, will out¬line the urban experience in theUS, followed by Brian J. L. Berry,associate professor of geography,who will speak on theories of urbanlocation.In the fifth week, geographerMayer will deal with the internalorganization of cities. Peter H.Rossi, professor of sociology anddirector of the National OpinionResearch, Center, will then explorethe social and political structureof cities, and Morris Janowitz, pro¬fessor of sociology and director ofthe Center for Social OrganizationStudies, will speak on the socialpsychology of city life.Julian Levi, professor of urbanaffairs and former director of theSouth East Chicago Commission,will discuss urban renewal in theUS during the eighth week of thequarter.Norton S. Ginsburg, professor ofgeorgraphy and associate dean ofthe College, and Chauncey D. Har¬ris, professor of geography, willcompare cities in Asia and theSociet Union. In the final week,Nathan Keyfitz, professor of soci¬ology, will lecture on urbanizationand economic development.Course staff members who arealso on the executive committeeof the Center for Urban studiesare Hauser, Berry, Levi, Mayer,and Wade.The course, according to Ger¬hard Meyer, is designed to combinea general education approach withmore specialized study in certainfields.It is designed to be one of thesix required “core” courses in theprogram of general studies in thesocial sciences. ‘ This program, inits first year of operation withtwelve students enrolled, is de¬signed to continue a broad inter¬est in the social sciences and letthe student go deeply into twofields.The course on the city will begiven at 10:30 am Mondays,Wednesdays, and Fridays in Rosen¬wald 28.WednesdaySpeech: “On the Advance Case,”Steve Perlmutter, NSA Committee ofSG and Students for Civil Liberties,Ida Noyes Library, 4 pm.TUXEDO RENTALnow availableatCOHN & STERNin theHyde Park Shopping CenterSpecial Discounts to fraternitygroups, wedding parties, etc.HOBBY HOUSERESTAURANTBREAKFAST DINNERLUNCH SNACKS1342 E. 53rd St. a newworld, ofdiningpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668 The University of Chicago TheatrepresentsWILLIAM SAROYAN’SCritic's Circle andPulitzer PrizewinnerTHE TIME OFYOUR LIFEdirected by Jim O'ReillyNov. 22, 23, 24, 29, 30. Dec. I8:30 P.M.Reynolds Club TheatreArena staging—only 100 seats per performanceStudents: $1.00($1.50 on Saturday)COMING NOVEMBER 29ONE NIGHT ONLY!Dances of Koreaa lecture-recital byWON KYUNG CHOFriday, Nov. 29. 8:30MANDEL HALLStudents: $1.00Tickets at Reynolds Club DeskNov. 1$, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3A tribute to Abram HarrisNoted economist had “courage, drive and patience”by Frank H. NightMr. Knight holds a Morton D. HullDistinguished Service Professorship(emeritus) in the Social Sciences andin Philosophy.The invitation to write abrief tribute to Abram L.Harris, my lamented colleagueand friend, confers a privilegebut also causes some embarrass¬ment. It is more of the friend thanthe university colleague that Iwould speak—of his character andpersonality. His professional careerhas been summarized in the localpapers since his death and is setdown in his biography in “Who’sWho In America,” where it hasbeen carried through two decades,with occasional revisions.In fact, I do not know muchmore about it than what is a mat¬ter of record, which can speak foritself, and for him. In particular,I recall little that is definite aboutthe time before he joined thefaculty of Howard University, in1927, as I was returning to theUniversity of Chicago as professor,after eight years at the (State)University of Iowa. I do not knowjust when or how we came to mu¬tual notice, but “guess” it wasthrough papers he submitted in the30’s to the Journal of PoliticalEconomy. These seemed to me sogood that f soon looked up the manin Washington, and began an ac¬quaintance which was from thestart a warm friendship. I like tothink that I had something to do with bringing him to Chicago, firstin 1946 as “visiting” AssociateProfessor, then Associate Profes¬sor, and with his promotion to aprofessorship, in 1950.Embarrassment arises becausein some part what drew us to¬gether was “naturally” things wehad in common—views on and at¬titudes toward economics, publicaffairs, education and general hu¬man concerns—and any eulogymight sound like self-praise—or“preaching” on controversial mat¬ters. One item, I must at onceconfess and “get off my chest.”That is Abe’s generally “sound”thinking about economics andsocial policy, specifically his “con¬servatism.” (This term now standsfor the position recently calledliberal—when the latter word hadsome implication of liberty, ratherthan state paternalism.Against the general drift, weboth thought that there is a differ¬ence, at least in degree, betweentruth and falsity in this field, andsome cause-and-effect relations thatpublic policy will ignore, as itoften does, at the cost of doingmore harm than good. The causes,however, are vague and very com¬plex; no one of them acts alone,their effects are hard to separate,thejr are not measurable, and thepublic and the political agentselected to represent its interestsdoes not know enough about themto act very extensively or very fastand very intelligently.Harris and I have had in com-mmf |mmmWHY did Van Heusenpat a “back loop” on its “417”Collection of Ivy-style skirts?Some students say it keeps a shirt wrinkle-freewhen you hang it with this helpful device, whileothers remark that it’s a decorative item muchlike an English "butler”. But to those who reallyknow—it’s the prime symbol of the authenticcollege shirt.See the wide range of dress and sport shirts in theVan Heusen "417” Collection at your local retailer.They are shown in traditional striped and solid colorfabrics in both the Button-Down and Snap-Tabcollar styles. All are cut with the new Y*Taper tofit slimmer and trimmer, $5.00Dacron and Cotton $5.95VAN HEUSEN*V-Taper-~for the lean, trim look.m:' " mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrnAAvailable atTHE STORE FOR MENfe&H* Simr©mint mb (EampuaIn the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 mon the recognition that much re¬formism is quackery, honest or o-th-erwise; it seemd to us that “thepeople” cry out for “the govern¬ment” to “do something” and now,without anyone spending the timeand effort to diagnose the supposedmalady they are to treat or tounderstand the anatomy andphysiology of the organism to bedealt with. This never implied thatthe government must do nothingabout the economy; it certainlymust do much, and strict “laissez-faire” would be as bad as doingtoo much or even doing very stupidthings.But society often acts on im¬pulse to “pass a law” directed atsymptoms. (It happens in physicalmedicine; George Washington’sdeath was caused in part by thedoctor’s treatment, especially“bleeding”.) It is not even impliedthat emergency measures may not sometimes be necessary, more orless in the dark. But it is alreadya cliche that emergencies rathertypically become permanent, andtend to grow beyond foreseeablebounds.The personal traits which mustespecially strike anyone knowingAbe Harris or knowing a littleabout him, were his courage, com¬bined with “drive,” and patience,that enabled him to climb to thetop or near to the very top, of hischosen profession, well before theearly retirement age set by hisuniversity. These I could only ad¬mire, not share, never havingfaced comparable obstacles callingfor their exercise. My deep sym¬pathy was always mixed withanger at man’s inhumanity to man,and intense disgust at public stu¬pidity and prejudice. (Much thatappears as ignorance and stupidityis prejudice.) The special refer¬ence is of course to what is calledCLASSIFIED ADSFOR RENT APTS,, ROOMS, ETC.SUBLEASE turn. 2 bedrm. apt. Info,call 288-5378, Reas. Price.FORSAKESTEREO Phono-FM MPX. set $85.ES 5-9532.HELP WANTEDEXPERIENCED secretary, shorthandfor social study org. Hrs. 1 to 5 Mon.thru Fri. DO 3-7873.PERSONALSALL star student-faculty discussion ofFOTA—Ida Noyes Library 4 pm Fri¬day.CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP(PL 2-8377)DID YOU KNOW people buy life in¬surance from RALPH WOOD. SUNLIFE ASSURANCE CO. OF CANADA,FA 4-6800.The CHICAGO REVIEW doesn’t havecheer leaders. It has no scheduledcompetition. It is not a class it isON SALE NOW. LOST: Steel bracelet, Sanskrit inscrip¬tion. Soe. Sci. reading room, 11/13/63,reward. Call 509 Blackstone.NAVAL RESERVE OFFICERS!MAINTAIN your Navy affiliation andearn promotion and retirement points—Scientific programs, field trips, re¬search training duty—Naval researchreserve Unit, Co. 9-1, meets 2nd and4th Tues. of the month. Contact Cdr.Benedict S. Jaskoski. USNR. Phone:BR 4-3000 (office); RO 4-9196 (home).ALL star student-faculty discussion ofFOTA—Ida Noyes Library 4 pm Fri¬day.SHARE-A-RIDE CENTRALOFFERS you, economy travel to allcities.FIND share expense rides or riders.RENT a car no mileage charge.CHARTER bus trips, N.Y.C. & othermajor cities.MAKE your holiday reservations now.DELIVER drive away autos to othercities.PHONE: MO 4-4761 days; RE 1-5477eves. & Sun.To place a classified ad call ext. 3265(Ml 3-0800).WANTED: Filing cabinet with a num- TYPING —FAST, ACCURATE. REA-ber of drawers. Call Laura or Sue at SONABLE. EXPERIENCED, WILLOV 4-1715. EDIT. No. 7 3609 after 6.l!ow to join in the fun ofShakespeare’s Year in Britainfor less than *45 a weekApril 23, 1964, is Shakespeare’s 4(H)ihbirthday, and Britain is celebratingwith nine months of festivals andfun. Read facts below. Note Britain'slow prices. Then clip coupon for free10-piecc Student’s Travel Kit.Next year, Britain will be the liveli¬est spot in Europe. Here are just afew of the events you can enjoy:Shakespeare Season of Plays. Openingnight at Stratford-upon-Avon is April23. Season lasts 7 months, includes atrilogy of histories. Seats from 56 cents.Edinburgh International Festival. FromAugust 16 through September 5, theScots put on a feast of Shakespeare,music, ballet, avant garde movies—evena floodlit military tattoo. Prices start at14 cents.Goings-on in London. You can see SirLaurence Olivier play Othello with thenew National Theatre Company. WatchShakespeare indoors on an Elizabethanstage at the riverside Mermaid Theatre.Or out of doors in Regent’s Park (allthrough summer). Having fun in Britainon $45 a week3 nights in London,witli breakfast % 8.254 nights in student hotelsoutside London,with breakfast . 8.00Lunch and dinnerfor 7 days 14.00200 miles travelby train or bus . 6.00Visit to RoyalShakespeare Theatre .. .56Three visits toLondon theatres fl.OOIncidentals 2.00Total $44.83CLIP COUPON FORf TRAVEL KIT^Please send my free 10-piece Student’s Travel Kit:Mail coupon toBritish TravelAssociation at oneof these addresses:NEW YORK:6S0 Fifth AvenueLOS ANGELES:612 So. Flower St.CHICAGO: _39 So. LaSalle St.canaoa:151 Bloor St. West,Toronto Name.PI«>aM* print clearlyCollege _Address.City .Zone. race prejudice, but is in fact castesentiment and dogma.There are no nameable Humanraces, and in particular to call theAmerican Negroes or “Whites”races is the height of absurdity.Abe once told me of being bodilythrown out on the street, with nomoney and nowhere to go, from ahotel in our national capital wherehe had gone to attend a meetingof the professional association inhis field; and I myself recallhaving to go to a basement roomto attend such a meeting becausethe group included a very fewNegroes.Yet Harris in the main “keptsweet” through many outrages; hewas not wrecked or crippled bybitterness. I refer of course to thetime before he was “almost” com¬pletely emancipated by his appoint¬ment at the University of Chicago,an act for which everyone con¬nected with the institution maywell feel pride. A biography ofHarris might be a useful additionto the literature, admittedly al¬ready vast, striving for decency inattitudes to other so-called races.It should be stressed that Abe“grew” intellectually and spiritu¬ally through life. In early yearshe was a “radical” both on labor-capital relations and on the “race”issue. But he became more con¬servative as well as temperate, ashe came to understand the issues.He finally decided that propagandaactivities would not mix well withobjective scholarly and scientificwork. In particular, he came torealize that Negroes as well asothers can be intolerant and stu¬pid, and ceased to work directlyfor the Negro “cause.” I recall hissaying that it is as bad for theNegro to be held always in theright as always in the wrong,Frank H. KnightRENT-A-CAR$5 PER DAYPER MILEATOMIC CARRENTALS. INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155Kona Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856See the box above for encouraging factsabout Britain’s low prices. For morefacts, clip coupon below. Your free 10-piece Travel Kit tells you about Shake¬speare’s Year celebrations, gives hintson traveling around Britain on a shoe¬string, and includes a list of comfort¬able but inexpensive accommodations. SAMUEL A. BELL"Buy Shell From Bell’SINCE 19264701 So. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150State. TONIGHTFRENCH STUDENTS:S.G. Classic FilmspresentsTHE GOLEM1937 in Frenchwith subtitlesSoc. Sci. 122, 6:45 £ 9:00Plus 1909 Cartoon:"Gertie The Dinosaur"4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 19, 1963Speaks on urban renewal at Brent HouseSol Tax: Neighborhood needs more UC cooperationdigent in the United States. Hesaid that 25% of its residents areBecause the University of World War II, he recalled, the ference had the support of theChicago is the strongest entire area was dominated by mid- University,force in the Hyde Park com- dle clasfi white families. A few Ne- Although sometimes criticizedmlinjty, it is responsible for ®roes did hve in the Hyde Park- for its effort to keep the neighbor- unemployed. In addition, UC own-inaction as well as wrong action Kenwood area. As Negroes began hood middle class, Tax continued, a good deal of property in Woodin neighborhood affairs, comment- into ** H^e Park-Ken- the cooperation represented the lawn. The University wantsed Sol Tax at Brent House Sundaynight. Tax is professor of Anthro-jiology and Dean of University ex¬tension.Tiie University is a bureaucracywith ideals, and moot of the horrorstories are untrue, he said. Tax wood area, the University Boardof Trustees took the same “mis¬taken” attitude as the white com¬munity in opposing their residency,he charged.Tax explained the difference be¬tween the feelings of the academic tofirst reversal of the usual trend of clear this real estate of tenants toiidded that although he had been community ,and 1)116 businessJ1S suspicious of the University office* ^ business office support-neighborhood policies as anybody, cd restrictive covenants (oontrac- Negro residents completely dis¬placing whites. Instead of thewhites moving out when the Negrofamilies began to move in, Taxadded, the Hyde Park-Kenwoodarea began to integrate.This was aided, Tax continued,by a change in the communitypolicy of the UC business office.the reasoning of the faculty and lual agreements prohibiting selling When it saw it had only a choice«>f the business office are com- certain properties to Negroes) between an all Negro area sur-pletely different. Few people in the while a group of UC professors rounding the University and ansurrounding community realize were influential in bringing the re- integrated one, it chose the latter,that there are students associated ^ictive covenant procedure before he said.with UC, he added. *re Supreme Court. The Court ruled To aid in keeping the neighbor-Tax began bv outlining the re- * 6Jcovenants unconstitutional. hood middle class, Tax continued,Once restrictive covenants could build an extension called SouthCampus, Tax added. The peopleof Wood!awn fear this, for it mightmean their eviction as was thefate of the poorer families ofHyde Park-Kenwood.Tax made several proposals forimproving the Woodlawn area. Heremarked that the Student Wood-lawn Area Project (SWAP) has been the first instance of coopera¬tion with the University Hu Wood-lawn residents have had. Taxadded that he thinks US studentsshould try to become familiar withthe college-age Woodlawn resi¬dents as well as those of highschool age they meet in SWAP.Tax suggested a labor coopera¬tive between financi ,lly well-offHyde Park-Kenwood and the Wood¬lawn neighborhood. Hyde Park,Tax explained, has “urban re¬newed itself out of unskilled serv¬ices.” It needs the labor of peopleliving in Woodlawn, he said. Thecent history of the neighborhoodssurrounding UC. Until the end ofBOB NELSON MOTORSSouthside't LargestIMPORTSALES CENTRESERVICETRIUMPH & PEUGEOTFell Line On DisplayComplete RepairsAnd ServiceFor All Popular ImportsMidway 3-45016040 So. Cottage Grove no longer be enforced, continuedTax, the dike against Negro oc¬cupancy was broken. Middle classNegroes began moving into theHyde Park-Kenwood area. At thistime, the Hyde Park CommunityConference was formed to main¬tain an integrated community“with high standards.” The Con- the business office backed a con¬troversial urban renewal projectwhich removed lower class Ne¬groes from the Hyde Park-Ken¬wood area. Hyde Park-Kenwoodbecame a stable, integrated dis¬trict, Tax said, and it is now theonly such community in Chicago.The Woodlawn neighborhood, Taxremarked, is one of the most in-EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1200 East 53rd StreetIn 53-Kimbark PlazaHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount KEEP ALERT!SAFENoDozTABLETSSAFE AS O OFF B €THE SAFE WAYto stay alertwithout harmful stimulantsNever take chances withdangerous “pep pills.” Instead,take proven safe NoDoz©*,Keeps you mentally alert withthe same safe refresher foundin coffee.Yet NoDoz is faster,handier, more reliable. Abso¬ lutely not habit-forming. Nexttime monotony makes you feeldrowsy while driving, workingor studying, do as millions do.. .perk up with safe, effectiveNoDoz. Another line productof Grove Laboratories.is it me...or Jack Winter!It’s you, princess, when you have theJack Winter look. But whoa... takea minute to learn about the subjectof stretch. Because once you putyourself in Jack Winter stretchpants, you are going to get the eyetest. Be darn sure you can pass.Questions. Should you wear stretchpants? What kind of figure does ittake? Most all figures are flatteredby stretch, whether angular, trian¬gular, or a figure eight. Even if youhave an hourglass figure where allthe sand has sunk to the bottom, stretch pan ts can subtract¬ing. You won’t need a grease jobtoslip in, but there’s no sag, bag orbind either. Jack Winter cuts ’emjust right...lean and ladylike..^.pro¬portioned in your proper leg-length.So it’s you and Jack Winter gettingall those straight-on, slant-eyed,turn-about-face looks. You and JackWinter causing that campus stir.Jack Winter1410 Broadway, New York City On Campus withMaxQhulman(Author of “Rally Round the Flag, BoysI”and “Barefoot Boy With Cheek9’.)DECK THE HALLSThe time has come to think of Christmas shopping, for theYuletide will be upon us quicker than you can say Jack Robin¬son. (Have you ever wondered, incidentally, about the originof this interesting phrase “Quicker than you can say JackRobinson”? Well sir, the original saying was French—“Plustrite que dc dire Jacques Robespierre.” Jack Robinson is, as every¬one knows, an Anglicization of Jacques Roljespierre who was,as everyone knows, the famous figure from the French Revolu¬tion who, as everyone knows, got murdered in his bath byDan ton, Murat, Caligula, and A1 Capone.(The reason j)eople started saying “Quicker than you cansay Jacques Robespierre”—or Jack Robinson, as he is called inEnglish-speaking countries like England, the U.S., and Cleve¬land—is quite an interesting little story. It seems that Robes-pierre’s wife, Georges Sand, got word of the plot to murderher husband in his bath. All she had to do to save his life wase^ll his name and warn him. But, alas, quicker than she couldsay Jacques Robespierre, she received a telegram from her oldfriend Frederic Chopin who was down in Majorca setting lyricsalUtehJ to do mi call B mueto his immortal “Warsaw Concerto.” Chopin said he neededGeorges Sand’s help desperately because he could not find arhyme for “Warsaw.” Naturally, Georges could not refusesuch an urgent request.(Well sir, off to Majorca went Georges, but before s’ue left,she told her little daughter Walter that some bad men werecoming to murder Daddy in his bath. She instructed Walterto shout Robespierre’s name the moment the bad men arrived.But Walter, alas, had been sea-bathing that morning on theRiviera, and she had come home with a big bag of salt watertaffy, and when the bad men arrived to murder Robespierre,Walter, alas, was chewing a wad of taffy and could not get hermouth unstuck in time to shout a warning. Robespierre, alas,was murdered quicker than you could say Jacques Robespierreor Jack Robinson, as he is called in English-speaking countries.(There is, I am pleased to report, one small note of cheerin this grisly tale. When Georges Sand got to Majorca, she didsucceed in helping Chopin find a rhyme for “Warsaw” as every¬one knows who has heard those haunting lyrics:In the fair town of Warsaw,Which Napoleon’s horse saw,Singing cockles and mussels, olive olive o!)But I digress.We were speaking of Christmas gifts. What we all try tofind at Christmas is, of course, unusual and distinctive gifts forour friends. May I suggest then a carton of Marlboro Cigarettes?What? You are astonished? You had not thought of Marl borosas unusual? You had regarded them as familiar, reliable smokeswhose excellence varied not one jot nor tittle from year to year?True. All true. But all the same, Marlboros are unusual )>e-causc every time you try one, it’s like the first time. The flavornever palls, the filter never gets hackneyed, the soft; pack i*ever a new delight, and so is the Flip Top box, Each Marlborois a fresh and pristine pleasure, and if you want all your friendsto clap their hands and cry, “Yes, Virginia, there is a SantaClaus!” you will see that their stockings arc filled with Marl¬boros on Christmas morn. © 1963 M„ ShulmaBThe holiday season or any other season is the season to bejolly—if Marlboro is your brand. You’ll find Marlboros wher¬ever cigarettes are sold in all fifty states of the Union. Yougel a lot to like in Marlboro Country.Nov. 19, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5★ GADFLY ★Of Wittgenstein, Wick and UC footballIt seems to me that so many ofmy friends and reporters and bigshots in the administration and onthe board of trustees has beenphoning me up at all hours andasking for my views on what Ishall pen the “football crisis” thatword of what I think would of got¬ten around by now. In fact it seemslike anytime there is a big headlineor scandal or a new building Ican’t hardly go no place in HydePark without being attacked on allsides by local celebrites (like RayBrown or Hans Morganthau) want¬ing to know' my many opinions,since as everybody knows, I havehad strong and voluble opinionson every event of importance thathas took place on this campus inthe last 4 years except only onthe decision to plant colias on thequadrangles last summer, whichI did not feel to strongly aboutone way or the other and whichwas not hardly “of importance”anyhow. So I am hereby takingthis opj>orbunity to render myviews to the public — so please donot call anymore.Shuns and complicashunsIn the 1st place like I alwayssay everything is complicated —God knows but as ever there isalways something which is simpleand the problem is how to tell thereally simple things apart fromwhat is complicated and then toknow how simple they really are and vice versa for the complicatedthings, if I make myself clear.And it seems to me that in clear¬ing away the “debris” we shouldremember to “shun” the extrem¬ists on both sides as I sec StudentGovernment and its organ the Ma¬roon are doing wisely too.Now in the first place, it seemsto me that one of the more com¬plicated things is the questionwhether or not the team is reallya team o>r whether or not it isa class or the other way around.This whole problem is like theoutcome of an invention of someWashington, D.C. press officer's.Now it seems to me that this mat¬ter is easily settled. For as I re¬marked to my roommate yesterday“Why, if it is a class, well thenwhere is the teacher?” Seriouslytho. classes are generally likegames and as L. Wittgenstein re¬marked to me, “you can neverbe sure exactly what a game is.”So maybe this team is still reallya class but with something funnyabout it. And in conclusion on thispoint it seems to me that “seman¬tics” is not so important as straightthingink and being right.*Now in the next place, it hasbeen expounded that as near asI can make out the “sit-iners”*Someone asked me well if it isa class what are they doing withthese other classes from thoseother schools? and as I remarkedamusingly, these are but classwars!Here’s deodorant protectionYOU CAN TRUSTOld SpiCS Stick D60d0r3nt.../«sfe<!r, neatest way to all¬day, every day protection! It’s the man’s deodorant pre¬ferred by men...absolutely dependable. Glides onsmoothly, speedily ...dries in record time. Old Spice StickDeodorant most convenient, most economical deodorantmoney can buy. 1.00 plus tax.ice STICKDEODORANT5HUI.TON figured that the University starteda grand decline with the deporta¬tion of Robert M. Hutchins andcontinued steadily down hill untilby the time that (the omp comp)was abolished wc had went to thedogs sure enough and to stop tilingsfrom going lower than the dogs the“sit-iners” “sat in” so that theCBS on-lookers would see the true“image” of the University. Andthe image from this viewpoint isjust as bad and important as theUniversity itself. (I just want tosay that for myself I think that theUniversity should be as innaleck-shul as possible — and its imageto.) Now putting “value judg¬ments” to one side (all though Imust say that such things as thediscontinuation of serving chippedbeef and lumpy squash in thedorm, cafeteria says somethinggood about the University’s sta¬ture in my eyesight.) The questionis whether they had a “right” tointerfere with “our kind of sports”as Mr. Dean Wick put it so homely.(By the way, Mr. Wick, wasn'tthis football game more excitingthan explosive acts?) I refer ofcourse to the “demonstrators.” Inother words, who is right, theprigs or the jocks?Images and BirminghamNow it seems to me in the 1stplace that the right to worsen animage is as much the (iriviledge ofone man as the nex man and nobody should be to hard on nobodyelse as far as this is concerned.I do think tho that the “demon¬strators” were a bit narrow sinceafter all demonstrating is a popu¬lar pastime — I almost said sport— and nobody ever stops studentsfrom demonstrating and going tojail (all though now that I thinkabout it in this case I guess Mr.Wick did stop both). Also if they’regoing to “sit in’’ why don’t they“sit in” some place like Birming¬ham, Ala. where they wiU notcause any trouble for the Univer¬sity. Also nobody interferes with stu¬dent government which almost ex¬actly one year and Vz ago to theday was voted by almost V4 of the20 per cent of students voting tobe abolished and we should theysay take into account student opin¬ion.Jail and existentialismTalking about jail reminds meof the subject of using the policeto “cause forcible eviction of saidpersons from said premises” asthe law books say. Now it was pro¬posed that by using said policeMr. Wick was admitting that hecould not appeal to reason, but asone of said policeman wras said toof said, any one can appeal to rea¬son but it takes 2 to both appealto reason and to be appealed toby reason and to be so moved byit, if I understand him right.In the 2nd place, there are thecurious remarks of President Bea¬gle about “demonstrators” who“transcend reason” or something,which sounded like he was accusingthe “sit-iners’’ .of being religiousfanatics or “existentialists.” NowI do not kndw about others, butspeaking for myself only 1 willnever transcend reason when con¬trary to University policy. How¬ever, as K. Jaspers remarked tome, “the unfulfillment of (reasonand the difficulty of bearing itsshipwreck become a revelation ofa depth which none other thantranscendence can fill.”* Thus Ithink wr should all join in deplor¬ing President Beetle's injection ofthe religious issue into sports —if such indeed was what he in¬tended to do.I was glad to see that the ad¬ministration would take no non¬sense and was 100 per cent unani¬*And as Rheinie Niebuhr put it:“(man) has a capacity to tran¬scend (reason).”HEY PAISAN!Try our wonderful PinasSmall Medium Large1.10 1.75 2 75Sausage 1.25 2.00 3.00Green Pepper . ... 1.25 2.00 3.00Anchovies 1.25 2 00 3 00Mushroom 2 25 3.25Peperoni 1.75 2 25 3 25Shrimp 2.2S 3.25ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA1923 E. 71 tt 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 All OrdersSPECIAL PRICE ON ALL PARTY ORDERS mous except maybe Mr. Newmanin adopting a “tough” line. DeansSimpson and Playe were at theirthoughtful best in appraising thesituation carefully and in disspeil-ing ill feeling.Passing over this, however, asI remarked to my roomate, all Ican say is that Name Withheld hada point about somebody going toa state institution! All kidding toone side, however. I do think thatas has tended to be the case withthe football team and it’s coach,Name Withheld took things a triflepersonly about everything beingdirected against “the 30 players onthe football team.” At least NameWithheld is not bogged down m“semantics” as much as his coach,Dr. Stein, although he seems al¬most as innacent as him, and Ishould like to take this opixirtunityto say that if there is anything tobe innacent about then Dr. Steinis certainly the most innacent per¬son involved in the whole “crisis.”In the last place like I alwayssay there is usually always somesilver lining some place and 1think that outside of the generalenjoyableness of the “crisis” weshould be glad that once again allof us have somebody to feel supe¬rior toWalter Miale(With apologies to R. L.)WUCB gets strongersignal in dormitoriesStudent radio station WUCB nowcomes through with a strong sig¬nal in the three main dormitoriesand International House. Becauseof new transmitters in PierceTower, Burton-Judson Courts andWoodward Court, more studentsthan ever before will be able tohear the station clearly, accordingto station manager Charles Packer.Due to the nature of the trans¬mission system, how’ever, therewill be some 60 cycle hum asso¬ciated with the signal, which canbe reduced somewhat by revers¬ing the power plug of the radioreceiver in the wall socket. Thenew transmitters were purchasedlast year, but difficulties with tliecircuit prevented them from beingused until they could be modified.WUCB will broadcast this quar¬ter until the end of November, andwill return again in the secondweek of Winter Quarter with aspecial opening program, completewith Pro Nausea Chamber Ensem¬ble. WUCB broadcasts from 7 pmto midnight Sunday through Fri¬day at 640 kilocycles.This -ARROW'is the shirtyou should...and can...snap up!It’s the new Decton oxfordTabber Snap by ARROW...the shirt with the trim goodlooks of a traditional tabcollar without the fuss andfumble of a collar button.ARROW Decton oxford isa blend of 65% Dacron*polyester and 35% cotton,it’s a new oxford that hasgraduated Cum Laude inthe class of wash-and-wear.In short sleevesas illustrated$5.95*DuPont T.M. for its polyetttr fib*r• CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 19. 1963At The Last StageTartuffe: the triumph of art over politicsown with Tartuffe. Such unre¬in formation, strained self-indulgence blinds himThe Last Stage, Hyde exist.”Park’s oldest permanent float- Even with such oing resident theatre, has however, we are too far away to what is obvious"to all. There isgiven US a lively and enjoy- from the original scene to have no Tartuffe without his Orgon; aable performance of Moliere’s an^ ^he highly charged fteelings variation on the old saw that youTartuffe, though presentation of abouT khe issues that made Tar- can’t con an honest man.this 300 year-old classic creates tuff® so explosive Nor is the play William Besdek as Tartuffe isformidable problems for its com- ea*’1y translatable onto current perhaps too sustained in manner,pany and for its audience. political terms. Perhaps if we had He give$ us a reeidng fraud> aFor its part, the audience must inl!! ^ ° teiY . Ure sinister and compelling one atsomehow assimilate the fact that ^d. . ltS ?lterary ^aditaons we But t missed some variationin 1664 Louis XIV banned the a ^nslation in his demeanor at his momentscomedy after its first performance , .c\ 1 y‘ , a,f ® .° y’ of passion, triumph, and especiallyand that it took extensive revi- I ^ afraid wiOi a confrontation of in his defeat. A difficult challenged, universalized but individual char- . lt „ „„sions and several years of per- , . Th tr;1Irnnh to ** sure> but Tartuffe is a com-slstent pleading by Moliere and . , p plex character; Besdek’s portrayalhis friends to have it reinstated ar ^ P°1 1CS* of reptilian intensity, while ab-at the court. Seeing it today, one The East Stage has faced this sorbing, left the hypocrite’s earthyis hard pressed to imagine what *act anc* giyen us a straight for- and more comic elements too farall the fuss was about. The come- warc^ reading of the play. No ex- behind.uppance of an obvious religious traneous; ideological issues were j*m to]d (1hat in French actinghypocrite who has hoodwinked an imported nor were any of the im- traditions Tartuffe is either a cad-all too willing victim is a univer- Pjj01* Political corpses disinterred. averous and ascetic personificationsally appealing story and it is a on‘Y exception was the audi- 0£ evd or he is a fat, jovial andstrange society that makes its tell- s enthusiastic hooting of lecherously wicked rogue. Prob¬ing almost treasonable. Cleante s advice the We live in ayy ^ese two conceptions are im-All societies agree to put limits SUCa 311 af>e> whli such a king that poSSjb]e to put together in oneon the fleecing of fools, but 17th valence cannot advance our performa.nce>century France apparently had cause- Such lines, in Hyde Park The reS£ &£ aots jnlittle patience with those who ** least» touch supersensitive one way or anot3ier as counterfoilseemed unable to tell the differ- serves. We will have to go to ^ Orgon’s belief in Tartuffe’scnce between the shepherd and sucb prophets as Lenny Bruce to goodness. All have seen throughthe shearer. Why Moliere was deal with our modern hypocrites; tjje hypocrisy and each in his own“confused” and why he met with politically, at least for the United way S€CijS to help Orgon do thesuch a reaction requires some States, Moliere is a museum piece. same> Cleante’s voice of reasonknowledge about the political sig- The two principals, Tartuffe and and moderation is ignored. (Tomnifiranee of religious orthodoxy in his victim Orgon. successfully car- Kelly looks imperious and sagethose days, about the influence of ried the play with convincing and though lvis advice seemed toothe “directors of conscience—lay- sustained performances. Marshall hesitatingly stated) and the saucymen who exercised considerable Richey’s Orgon is an authoritativeinfluence over the daily religious rendition of the infatuated andand secular activities of bourgeois fatuous paterfamilias who finds inand noble families, especially the Tartuffe’s presence the excuse towomen, and about Moliere’s dra- indulge an irascible tyranny overmatic techniques and conventions, his family. It is too bad, inciden-This knowledge is essential to a tally, that the violent temperfull understanding of the play, for shared by mother, son, and grand-a play, like a fact, says Piran- son was not more clearly indi-dello: ‘is like a sack which won't eated by some theatrical device,stand up when it is empty. In or- One immediately guesses that Or¬der that it may stand up one has to gon was a tyrannanized son andput into it the reason and sentiment probably hen-pecked by his firstwhich have caused it to exist.” wife. But he has come into his maid Dorine (played brightly byConstance Mathieu) only infuriatesOrgon with her sharp observa¬tions; his children can only weepor expostulate. It is finally hiswife who does the trick by lettingTartuffe reveal himself as would-be seducer.The denouncement of the play,bringing Tartuffe's downfall afterhe nearly ruins Orgon, is a de¬lightful turnabout on Moliere.Since we no longer can accept theall-seeing, all-knowing benevolenceof the Sun King, director WayneCaudill has provided an engagingand well-staged spoof of royalpower. The flamboyant costumingthe exaggeratedly formal style ofspeech and manners by Felix Shu¬man as M. Loyal and DanielBraun as the King's Gendarme,plus the veritable presence ofLouis himself gives the proper ir¬reverent horselaugh to end thepiny.The denouement of the play,ance, apart from its somewhatslow pacing, stem from the dis¬tance in time and space the playhas had to travel. The mixtureof English speech styles, alternat¬ing relatively formal passageswith those in the venacular, gratedon my ears. Perhaps it was be¬cause I had just finished a 1906translation and the changes weretoo startling. Yet the care takento fit costumes and sets to the 17th century (both were very weOdone) made the intermittent bRsof modern or racy speech especial¬ly upsetting. Second, and relatedto this, was a comparable dive^sily of acting styles. There weretoo many different theatrical man¬nerisms and oddments from everyperiod; the courtly elegance <rfMoliere’s theatre doesn’t meeheasily with college caper* nrMethod studies — the latter exenv*plified by Harry Bokstein’s mov¬ing performance.As has been the case before, flieLast Stage warms to its workslowly and the succeeding threeweek-end performances promiseto be well worth a visit.Phillip H. EnnisMr. tnn'n Is an assistant professor tathe Graduate Library School.'Time' starts soonThe major University Tlieatreproduction this fall, “The Time ofYour Life,” opens this Friday tortwo weekends. The play is con¬sidered one of great humor nodwhimsey. It is very nostalgic andsentimental, but quite serious inits message: In the Time of YourLife, Jive, so that in that good tamethere shall be no ugliness or deoth. . . for your life or for any hfoyour life touches. Seek goodnesseverywhere, and when it is found,bring k out of its hiding place andlet it be free, and unashamed.THOSE CLEAN WHITE ADLERSNow you’re getting the swing of it. All you have to do is be ‘’clean white sock” in’your Adlers. Suddenly you find yourself doing just as you please, and the whole worldbeaming unquestioning approval. You’ll like it. Girls love it. And all because ofthe Adler SC shrink controlled jwool sock. In white and a covey of colors. $1.(VMC Add MMPANV, •INCINNATI 14. CW«> M tA»AOA< •I.UW MO»iC*V MILL*, MON!ACL*COMPANYCordially invites the Faculty and Staff toan Exclusive Product ShowforTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOAND UNIVERSITY CLINICSNOVEMBER 20th and 21statThe Center forContinuing Education1307 EAST 60th STREET — ROOMS 1A and IBFrom 9:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. inclusiveSee new, dramatic developments end techniques from theResearch Labs of Minnesota Mining t Manufacturing Co.— PARTICIPATING DIVISIONS —Duplicating ProductsMagnetic Tape ProductsMedical ProductsMicro Film Products Photocopying ProductsRevere-Wollensak ProductsScotch Brand ProductsVisual Products"WHERE RESEARCH IS THE KEY TO TOMORROW'3TgSZ yordbird suiteTERRI COLLIER • KENT FOREMAN • BILL COUSERFolk Singer Poet Afro-Cuban DancerJACK DE JOHNETTE & TRIOTUES. - WED. • THUR. & FRI. — 9 P.M. - 4 A.M. .THUR. — ARTIST NITERoberts Penthouse6622 SOUTH PARKNov. 19. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Goldwater: abandon platforms How NSA co-op went down® m aha! aniil iIiia 4a *Conservative spokesmanBarry Goldwater said recentlythat the Republican PartyShould abandon the tradi¬tional platform in favor of ashort statement of principles basedon freedom of the individual.Speaking at a press conferenceIn the Conrad Hilton Hotel, Gold-water critized the conventionalpractice of writing platforms ashypocrisy and the finished docu¬ments as “packets of lies.”Pointing out that the traditionalplatform tries to support the in¬terest of all factions. Goldwatersand this cannot be done. “You can’t keep everybody happy.”Goldwater, the leading candidatefor the Republican Presidentialnomination, privately expressedthe desire for “less exposure.”(Political analysts have raised thequestion of whether Goldwater’scampaign was “peaking" too ear¬ly.)Speaking at the annual dinner ofthe Chicago Better BusinessBureau earlier Tuesday evening atthe Hilton. Goldwater criticizedthe Kennedy Administration andrepeated his charges of “athousand days of wasted spending,wishful thinking, unwarranted in¬terventions, wistful theories, and (Continued from pa?# ©n*i ason said, due to legal regulation!,ason saying they did not have It then ran into difficulty trym,+ CONTINENTALMERCURYCOMETSALES — SERVICE — PARTSLAKE PARK MOTORS, Inc6035 S. COTTAGE GROVE CHICAGO, ILL.HYde Pork 3-3445* AN OPPORTUNITY TO GROWIN THE HIGHEST PROFESSIONALWORKING ENVIRONMENT*\II ELECTRICAL ENGINEERSPHYSICISTSMATHEMATICIANSTechnical representativesof the MITRE Corporationwill be conducting interviewson campusNovember 22, 1963MITRE designs and develops systems that enable our mili¬tary commanders to detect attack and retaliate instantly.Typical systems include Nuclear Detonation Detection andReporting System, North American Air Defense CombatOperations Center, and Back-Up Interceptor Center.MITRE is also experimenting with techniques for future airtraffic control systems.For the young systems engineer there is no more rewardingwork. You associate with the top men in your field. Youwork in an atmosphere that allows you to extend yourcapabilities professionally and academically.At MITRE, men trained in single disciplines are encour¬aged to grow beyond their original fields of interest. Systemsdesigners learn to work from an increasingly broad base.You may work in such diverse areas as informationtheory, computer design, display techniques, propagation,or human engineering. You may analyze. You may syh-thesize. You may deal with systems or individual compo¬nents. At the highest levels, you may have to considerpolitical, economic and social factors ... as well as theavailable and predictable technology.Requirements, B.S., M.S., or Ph.D. in these disciplines —electronics, physics, and mathematics. MITRE is located inpleasant, suburban Boston and also has facilities inWashington, D. C. and Colorado Springs. If an interviewwill be inconvenient, inquiries may be directed in confidenceto Vice President — Technical Operations, The MITRECorporation, Box 208, Dept. CN15, Bedford, Mass.ARRANGE FOR AN INTERVIEW THROUGH THE PLACEMENT OFFICE.THEMITRECORPORATION/ An Equal Opportunity EmployerPioneer in the design and development of command andcontrol systems, MITRE was chartered in 1958 to serveonly the United States Government. The independent non¬profit firm is technical advisor and system engineer for theAir Force Electronic Systems Division and also serves theFederal Aviation Agency and the Department of Defense. waning confidence.”In a general attack on the poli- en0ugh resources. to raise money from individuatical measures stemming from the He surmised that NSA became contributions on member earnNew Deal and depression days, he interested in such a venture last puses during the summer. Thornpointed out that the legislation of year when many schools were ason pointed out that this is a diithis period solved nothing because withdrawing from NSA. The ficul/t season to raise monev 0iin 1939 we were still in a depres- schools complained that NSA did college campuses,sion with millions unemployed. not offer enough concrete services During the summer, two bookGoldwater called for a rejection make membership worthwhile, store operations similar to that aof the “depression-born” idea of ^ discount book service for all UC were set up at the Universit'government, saying it was a member schools would he attrac- of Illinois and the University 0proven failure alien to our way ot Hve ^ such schools, Thomason Michigan. These are now in fullife- said. operation. Finding sufficient capikn answer to the liberal criticism NSA agreed to raise money for tal for these operations added t<that he advocates “turning back ISCU. In return, the membership NSA’s problems, however,the clock,” Goldwater said: “On of ISCU agreed to amend its consti- Negotiations were also conductedthe contrary, I am looking ahead tution to put itself under the au- to take over the franchise of theto increased individual welfare, op- thority of the president of NSA. bookstore run by Shimer College,portunity, and fulfillment. The downtown Chicago office of but these fell through due to NSA’s“Turning back from failure and ISCU acted 35 headquarters for all lack of adequate organization andreturning to proven, sound princi- operations of the combined NSA- capital. Thomason said. An at-ples means going ahead,” he de- ISCU organization. tempt to take over the franchise atdared. “It does not mean turn- The book co-op became a sepa- Roosevelt University was rebuffeding the clock back. And those who cate corporation, but parallel in for the same reasons, he added,say it does simply need some new- organization to NSA. Election of • ■ « •up-to-date timepieces.” the co-op’s directors was made by ■ IliKeyS, CTC., COfTlingCommenting on the overall state the NSA delegates from each Thanksgiving is this Thursday,of the economy, Goldwater said school. ... . according to a large appointmentthe current Administration does NSA’s financial difficulties began calendar published by UC and em-not have the confidence of the when it had to return SI,000 to the bellished with scenes of the cam-business community or the nation original investors in ISCU, Thom- pugas a whole. .... , ... Informed sources, however, are“Confidence is not built on prom- qP|J CH00S6S OilIC6TS betting that the turkeys will notises,” he said. “It is built on per- trot out until next week. Thoseformanee and mutual respect. The The UC chapter of SPU elected who are impatient may purchaseonly way Washington can get the Ed Cohn as chairman for the fall the calendar for $1 at the Bookeconomy moving again is to let it quarter. Cohn, a fourth year eco- store, and give their thanks twice,move.” nomics major, will head the new In the meanwhile observers areGoldwater blamed the current steering committee composed of watching to see whether the Uni“sputtering" state of the economy Bob Hambourger, Mike Parker, versity will realize its error ancon unnecessary interferences of Mark Joseph, Bob Schehr, Bob stay open on Thursday,government. He said the bright Halfhill, Garry Breckon, Ayn Wil-picture which is now shown in only liams, and Nathan Bessen.a few isolated spots would be char- Also at the November 12 meet-acteristic of the entire economy ing, Eld Cohn, Bob Hambourgerunder less restrictive conditions. and Gerry Breckon were appointedSpeaking specifically on the for- delegates to the city council witheign aid question, Goldwater said Bob Halfhill, Bob Schehr, and Na-he supports military and technical than Bessen as alternates. Bobaid. but objects to economic as- Schehr became delegate to thesistanee. Hyde Park Peace Center.during the Thanksgiving holidaysplan to visit our comprehensiveUNIVERSITY SHOPYou’ll find a wide choice of suits, tweedsport jackets, topcoats and warm outer¬wear in sizes 35 to 42...all with our dis¬tinctive styling and taste. Also furnish¬ings, skiwear and other items.Our 3-piece Suits, $75 to $85Tweed Sport Jackets, $55Topcoats, $85 • Polo Coats, from $90Tropica/ Worsted Tuxedos, $80Outerwear, jrom $45Prices slightly higher West of the Rockies.ESTABLISHED 1818lothTHg^OMens furnishings, Hats ^$hoes74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.NEW VORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • SAN FRANCISCO • LOS ANCELE* SURPRISING VALUESAuction bought clothing—p.wits,hats, furnishings, shoes at the low¬est prices.Guaranteed FitI. C. MEN'S WEARTAILORS1547 E. 63rd"Over 25 Years in theNeighborhood"HYDE PARK SHOE REPAIR1451 E. 57th ST.HY 3-1247Serving The University Community torwell over 40 Year*OFFSET PRINTINGMU LTILITHINGDISSERTATIONSCLASS MATERIALSPOSTERSFLYERSBUSINESS STATIONERY1230 EAST 63rd STREETFA 4 6360 • 3634353You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORACE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711CoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302MITZIE'SFLOWER SHOPS1225 E. 63rd St.HY 3-53531340 E. 55th St.Ml 3-40208 CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 19. 1963