wndilation*.ty trying^dividual?r cam-’• Thom-is a dif-oney onvo book-:> that atniversitv-rsity ofif in full-nt oapi-added toonductede of theCollege,to NSA'stion andAn at-nehise atrebuffedidded. >>minghursday,ointmentand em-he cam-ver, are'will not• Thosepurchaseic Book¬ies twice,■vers arethe Uni-rror and'IES—pants,the low-EARfiePAIRinity foretIN-8302 Vol. 72 — No. 21 University of Chicago, Friday, Nov. 22, 1963 31Psi U responds to bias chargeA representative of the UC spective Executive Councils, orchapter of Psi Upsilon frater- care to, because of prejudice, prae-nitv has responded to two tice racial discrimination.”editorials on fraternities pub- phi Mtfme1araSty”ndude!lished earlier this quarter m the *a clause stating that all membersMaroon. initiated by an individual chapterThe reply took Issue with the must be “socially acceptable” toeditorial which dealth with discrim- the other chapters, Negroes andination against minority groups in Jews are considered socially unac-fraternities both at UC and on ceptable by the national office,other campuses. and other chapters have had diffi-The first editorial, which ap- oulties because they pledged Jews,peared on October 18, decried sev- However, said William Knitter,eral cases of discrimination in fra- president of the UC chapter ofternities on the West Coast, stated phi Deit, the UC fraternity in- No party for UC Press-authors fight on fictionUC Press’s “Chicago in revolves around Mr. Algren’s in-Fiction” series, which was to troduction published in Ben Hecht’shave been launched by a cock- E^!i. Dor”‘ , , . .tail party tomorrow night, is IishS' JST'sjSTS^, tr'.instead rapidly turning into a Hech,., work/. the statf„ie„( c„„.literary battle. (inued. “The University of ChicagoThe controversy centers around preg$ is faced with the alternativesan introduction written by Nelson ^ recalling the volumes or of pro-Algren for the reproduction of Ben seeding with its original'publica-Hecht’s Erik Dorn. The reprinting pian for jj,e enjire ‘Chicagoof Hecht’s work is one of a series jj, Fiction’ series,of reprints and original publications “Our Press,” the statement con-.... the UC Press is publishing, c]uded, “like the University it rep-wish without regard for his race all of which are written by Chicago resents, always has been proud ofninn frcfTd; stated Assistant authors. its tradition of editorial freedom..T. 0jini- aiI!es, T™"’ the introduction, which Hecht f0r authors and their critics. So,chapter in implementing this poli- did not Se.e before .UC. Press went we have concluded that Erik Dorn,cv ” he continued ahead with publication, Algren published November 19, shall con-“We are satisfied that the fra- ca“s Er* Dorn ‘'seriT tinue to be available to the readingternities are by and large free to aad a llte™ry hoax' Th* *>“*> public of America. This decisiontake whom they want and that the fgren wroute- 1S uausual in tbat "° has been taken with the consentPhi Delts are working to change American has written a novel this Df the author, Ben Hecht, who dis-the policy of their national office.” good yet thls bad’ agrees with what Mr. Algren hasBecause there has been an un- Algren called Hecht’s work "a said about his book in the intro-derstanding between the adminis- deterioration of a naturalistic novel duction. Like the University of Chi-tration and the fraternities, there into a Grade B scenario,” and said cago Press, Mr. Hecht leaves thehas been no need for a formal that Hecht as a writer “had a decision about the merit of Mr.statement, he added. ‘‘We have failure of nerves.” Algren’s comments to the readingthat a similar incident had occurred eludes a number of Jews, whom confidence that our fraternities are Meanwhile, Hecht accused Algren public.at UC the preceding spring, andasked fraternities to re-evaluatethemselves before other such inci¬dents took place.The second editorial, which ap¬peared as a reply to a letter from they list on records as being Uni¬tarians. The problem of initiatinga Negro has not come up. sinceso few Negro men enter UC eachyear.In the summer of 1962, a motion ‘Chicago fraternities’ and that Qf possessing a “hillbilly kind oftheir members are as opposed to intellectuality.”prejudice as the rest of the cam¬pus.”Knitter, discussing the currentpolicy of his fraternity’s nationala fraternity member who objected to completely eliminate the social office, said that the UC chapter a(j^ej tjjat Al^ren’s movie “Walkto the first editorial, charged that acceptability clause was defeated would probably lose its charter if ^ yyjjd §j<je» was “putrid.”the letter evaded the basic issue, at the national convention. A waiv- it accepted any Negroes. “But the . _ . , , ,that the first editorial was solely er plan was approved, however, situation has never come up, which f^tnTJ”eD1^u“^ay|11jgff^|k jJJ”concerned with discrimination in which would exempt an individual is fortunate. The controversy, among otherthings, has made more or less ofa shambles of UC Press’s cocktailparty, scheduled for this evening.Hecht, as a result of the conflictwith Algren, has refused to come.Hecht’s announced absence at theparty has brought a new series ofinsults from Algren. “He won’ttake responsibility for his ownforth, UC Press is still faced with talent» Algren stated. “When he“I have never read his works,”Hecht stated. “I don’t have thefaintest idea what he writes like.In this case he stinks.” Hecht‘A strong chapter can some- the problem of what to do about ^ kad> nobody is that bad. Youtimes buck the national," he con- the 3,500 copies of the book and have to good to be that bad,”tinued, but Phi Delt at UC is not its introduction which have already Algren said.in a position to do so. Therefore, been distributed. In a statement jn addition to Hecht’s refusal toUnitarians on the listings they sub- Shugg, director of UC Press, de- loamed that Saul Bellow will alsomit to the national office. clared that the copies already dis- pot be there. Bellow will not comeDiscussing the requirements of tributed would not be taken off because he feels the entire matterthe UC student code that no stu- the market, but would “continue one Qf “principle.”dent organization has in its con- to be available to the public.” Other than Bellow and Hecht, allstitution a discriminatory clause, “The University of Chicago Press those invited to the party are ex-is publishing the ‘Chicago in Fic- pected to attend,tion’ series,” the statement read, In addition to Erik Dorn, the“in an effort to memorialize a “Chicago in Fiction” series in¬great era in the city’s literary his- eludes The Bomb, by Frank Harristory. Now, we find ourselves in- with an introduction by John Desvolved in a subjective conflict be- Passes, and Artie, and Pink Marshtween two of the Chicago authors by George Ade, with an introduc-A Tbonk«(rivincr Dav serv- Edward Mondello, university or- —Nelson Algren and Ben Hecht. It tion by James T. Farrell.A inamvbgivuig o gan[st> and Daniel Robins, univer-‘social acceptability clause’inherently discriminatory.Set Thanksgiving servicefraternities and the justification chapter from being subject to thefor discrimination, and that, while clause if it was under pressure onit was glad that the particular its campus to be non-discrimina-plcdge was admitted, the Maroon tory, continued Knitter. . _ — —could not condone the “arguing and In order for the motion to go for example, Jews are listed as Wednesday, however,^ Roger W. come to the party, the Maroongerrymandering” that took place into effect it must be passed atprior to the pledge’s admission. two successive conventions. TheIn its reply, Psi U asserted that next convention will be next sum-“there is no evidence to substanti- mer. The UC chapter has supportedate tiie supposition that UC frater- for many years such motions, henities with one exception either added. , , t_ , * . , ou; rv~nmust . or care to . . . practice The University’s position is that Knitter stated that the Phi Delracial discrimination.” It was the local chapter should be freestated that five Negroes had been to pledge and initiate anyone theyadmitted to UC fraternities beforelast year’s pledge attempted tojoin, and that Psi U had pledgeda Negro before last year, althoughnot at UC.The reason so much time elapsed # , , » u j gamsi, auubetween the initial expression of ice, open to residents OI xiyae sy.y carjU0nneur( will also provideinterest on the part of the pledge park and Kenwood, will be music.and his eventual initiation was, ac- , , , , pnf,We1W Chanel on A total of 22 community churchescording to the rebuttal, that the ,ie,a ac KOCKeieuer ^ synagogue$ are participatingpledge was not certain that he Thanksgiving Day, November OS. -n ^ servdce The service is the , , ,. . . . *4- twwould return to UC this fall. He The service, sponsored by the 36th annual Thanksgiving day ob- ^discilmination. At UC dispatched them to Ithaca by air.had asked Psi U if they might Qouncji 0f the Hyde Park and Ken- servance to be held at Rockefeller, tliey protest football. But at The student group had raisednot delay action on his prospec- wood churches and Synagogues ■■ Cornell University in Ithaca, $115 ^ pay for the sandwiches,tive membership in case he dud d uc ^ at n am. , . T..ocrl«w New York) they food- «.uAtransfer so that he would not be The Reverend Samuel L. Gandy *"aS* MarOOII TUCSday ft seems that a group of 45 stu- PPy nts feastedcommitted to Psi U in case he Kenwood United Church of The last issue of the Au- dents, disgruntled over what they yesterday, a voice of dissensionwanted to pledge other fraternities Christ will deliver the sermon, *umn Quarter will be Dub- felt was “unbelievable” food, de- was meekly heard on the Cornellat his new college. When he did js entitled “Covenant and # ** , oided that the best way to protest, campus. Said dining services man-Renewal.” lished on Tuesday. All copy ^ way ^ insure suc. ager Russel Ryon, “We try toIn addition, a children’s chorus and calendar items must be cess, was to phone a New York include all the elements of goodcomposed of three hundred chil- received by noon Monday, delicatessen for roast beef, salami, {<^d within the student budget. Wele autumn quarter. , { bh hoirs of ^ par_ " 1 corned beef, turkey, and tongue stress variety, nutrition, and pal-The Psi U statement also made d^at^m^tTnd syna^ The Mar°°n reSume sandwiches. lability.”will perform under the direction publication Tuesday, Janu- The recipient of the unusual or- Maybe so, but there are 45of Christopher Moore of the First ary mj% \ 944, der, the Stage Delicatessen in mid- Cornell students who ain’t talkin’Unitarian Church. 7 town Manhattan, filled the order while the flavor lasts.Of corned beef & CornellIn Birmingham they pro- of 75 sandwiches and promptlydecide to return this fall, however,Psi U honored his request, and hewas initiated on the second day ofthe autumn quarter.reference to the recent measurepassed by the Inter-fraternityCouncil (IFC). The measure,which was passed unanimously bythe IFC on October 30, opposedand denied the existence of fra¬ternity discrimination on the basisof race, creed, or religion.The Psi U rebuttal made thefinal assertion that neither argu¬ing nor gerrymandering had takenplace in the case of the Negro UCs Friedman in Goldwater's brain trustEditor's note: “We ought to set the price of the we accumulated large volumes of eign exchangeTho following article it reprinted with dollar free. We ought to let it be foreign exchange just as we have trade zones.permission of the CHRISTIAN SCIENCE determined on the free market. accumulated large volumes ofpledge, as the Maroon had con- monitor.I “The basic problem in balance wheat,tended. “There was no attempt on Among the group of SO- of payments is no different from Changed situation to the regional“So our fundamental difficultyis that we have a pegged or fixedthe part of the Psi Upsilon trus- ca]le^ “^)nservative academi- the problem in wheat. When you “Not only did we accumulate price for tbe dollar in the foreigntees,” the statement said, “to . „ . . consufte(j W Sen try to fix fche price of wheat- if lar§e volumes of foreign exhange, exchange market.”block the pledge’s bidding or inipa- Ciant) oe g y • you fix it too high all the producers but we then moved in the other Possibilities onention, and since the chapter trus- Barry UrOlawater yti) - want to produce wheat and the con- direction of reducing our restric-tees are in constant communica- zona is University o icago sumers are reiuctant to buy. What tions on trade in order to encour- What can the United States do intion with the national headquar- economist Milton Friedman, w ose happens>> you either have to store age people to take this foreign ex- jjljf balanoe-of-payments crisis.ters, it can be said that the Execu- theories call for:tive Council offered no indirect orpassive resistance.”It is the local chapter, the state¬ment declared, that has the finalsay in membership matters, andthis policy was not violated in thecase of the Negro pledge. it up in large scale, or you have to change off our hands. We engaged There are several possibilities,Liberation of the dollar from engage jn controls of one kind or in foreign-aid programs which is says tbe. Pro^ssor^ dip into re¬being a “pegged,” or fixed-value another to try to get the wheat comparable to the disposal of sur- serves Sold and foreign cur-currency; farmer to grow less wheat. plus wheat by diverting it, say, into renoy; control foreign exchange;• Freeing gold from its present Counterpart seen the school-lunch program. £?to“shackles”; “Now the counterpart of that in “Now what has happened ” Pro- of fJei c^ncy and peggingase 01 uu* * Reform of, ^ .taX System balance of payments is what hap- fessor Friedman contends, ‘ is that it M some new levei of value#£ contxadicUo/ to the IFC a™y^ * i** ^ ft ^ chlng'ed *de5“atTSherSl But Profess^ Friedman believesmeasure, however, the Psi U state- and corporation taxes early postwar years. At that time, “there is only one sensible thingment referred to Phi Delta Theta • An end to trying to solve the the price we were pegging for the to toreLnS! to do~let the ^ <* tb« d^a*-as the only UC fraternity about balance-of-payments problem by doUar was one which made it made the dollar Cheap to foreigners ^ ^ determinedwhich there might be the slightest “batches of ad hoc interferences” cheap for foreign countries to the and we were offering a high price markeTday by day” hebit of doubt concering discrimina- with the course of trade. point that many foreign countries *>r foreign exchange, we are now in lree marKet day by day* hetion in membership procedures. Reasoning explained wanted to buy more dollars than offering too low a price for foreign ; ’ .“There is no indication,” the state- To make clear his standpoints, they were able to. There was a exchange. Ihlsuils a Permanent solution toment read, “or evidence to sub- Professor Friedman devoted a great dollar shortage, “The situation now is that Ameri- the Problem, he believes, in thatstantiate the supposition that UC lengthy interview recently to step “What we did at that time, if cans would like to acquire foreign you cann°t have a balance-of-pay-fraternities, with the exception of by step explanations of his reason- you think of foreign exchange like exchange but we have to go into m<;ay* pr°bl^n} because it alwaysone. Phi Delta Theta, eitlier must, ing. wheat, was to set too high a price a form of rationing, as through Wld ^ solved by a cban2e of pricebecause of pressure from their re- He begins with frank simplicity: on foreign exchange. As a result, import quotas and by denying for- {Continued on page 7)Rehage named director of Launch UC space experimentPakistani ischooli projectj a maximum distance Irom me iigftt Irom ttus scintillator ,is|p}l|. earth of 172,000 miles and a mini- served by a photo-multipliei,, nuim;ol 12.'),: -dts.' One orbit takes T'n-e t xjicnmcnts are mubU days, .a. : .*r, diould to , ,.i «■ where cosm, XPW' sent bark-, for .a-*.it one year, come fi.- ii and how they , *■ 'Hie (': ■« -go c.\pt runout will such Ire endously high en 9study cosmic i. s which come during the,-- li\es in space, \ f*t>om ou!'.i!« t.m soiar s\ stem by a>s how they are controlled > *£ measuring the energy and charge sun's- activity. It is of parti^So‘ the a . nuclei ranging value now that the activity WaplIffromvhydrogenjo'ioxygen,,particu-;;,sun is at a minimum, and thullllj'darlyithe' low/energy ions of hydro- ni< „ , j ehb in space . P'*heliumt* and ^lithium;*1 study screen the cosmic rays in the^^SVihcpMi ii ■ • high enei- ,• •, -,i as much as duringtgy* proto? ■ ( )>artieles,^pjrt. ,c,f the cvcle. ->ut;h & ! 1 Information stored XM„\imd.t.all li:i■ , ttn--. . «, ulors Br ' ? •m-nrure pro- „ hkc electron,, 7?m - ** m,cn-v'y 01 u-m * w u,e u-i, . icm-rp by no ff-:.-?-. , , -6ccleraUon .nthe Van. Allen radia, re, d |0 ,he NAf ^ 'jP'-'m bel.l! 1 vatic m»:i« station netwo, k 7*pf'The^apparatus r consists of i four the Goddard Space Flight Cen erSm-noveily^arranged'1'solid-state ,de- Belts\die, Maryland. ?r$t£ Sfgiitectdll .uni -t iia o adc ' in ™ , = . .. T'.. * ■ , . - , ■ , . .«s*v. The three coexperimenters.ondhgithe form > telescvie looking, , , . ,. -m-, .... . project are John A. Simp-oi-'C-lout the i.K M ' Iiite and . * y*IP-" m i b >■ < , Chas#Yua i* mounted j*. i t>encuculai to its axis • c , , , ,, mS.- 1 . .. . .. bemo, d J)\Mcist ol tile lum. . *1ledIdwatlO&aO! 11 totau ..mount ot , , . . , , 1'C • . b. ", , - 1..- • Aj >piied S 1?Spower requm < * - < \ i n 1 j , , ... .• V and,,Cieo: gt" C.loeckier, aggra,l-tliSSlib % experiment ks less* tiian one- ... f>T„, - . stutu. nt, . ail of whom art • 3pi ,, , , awOsStw the Lnrico rernuans^IsatelliteJcomes.sfrom-Asolar,p,.,ine- . -;v . , c, , . m£,fen. . ., ^ , * * .-a,/. #tutei|doi . Auclear' Studies?.S.lh nTJ'•extended irom- the .cap ule. . , - j ; tmoKMMMOif p Jaccfuetg was? engmeer "in?‘clRageParticle detectors. • •. tron.es' mstrui fuflr-‘ ' •'mk:‘ ■ ' oc sc aims; m ."‘Ulu i Vf i . . n highly ,!s. 1 , • ■ . n, : , , . . ^^,m,i .built Ab3tth(:i4dx,. atones, h*. JfApplied^Seicnee.-;kuse-theF pulse n<5^er>u.^%'f;V T ff -•''| piodueedj^by a h gh eneigy par-. " $> K ” eaic^ mS - *Stiele itq^give/infoi nmt.on• aboutv-tiie^; ^ : V i ^"**?*'",0**it*P*®**'w^^PPlThe i uni e. . tal o. J v,‘lg^mihddkk ^Which" lights ■ up « J on tile de ■tw.un ‘ i , ough* it. 1 ' ° i'-c exix*.landWSmm mifig i - tern Uioi s‘“. " s 'H-on greup." sa.d \\ ar,-ten*/, 1. b , - r.o Imii ul tie r Johnson, Viee Preside - a-;-n indicator to ;Ww|Uni v t>:: -'^OlirA IMP exjxi irpentgfe^her^!^;un;ridV>a^pe^^m^on^|*^niv^il^has":-^ '|foujrTpa^-ka'gL s ?* one > of ' which^s, -,'Frt ft >mu- ■ of IMmaimn . • " > . ■ 1 growth;;; ‘ . ‘Kenneth *r]ioliage h.t^ been. 1 * uoo- oral within two v',,(hs, cant-', named-directorgof UO’s'Pakis-,. teachers, ^headioasters^fiandv ,ad-p ing aboard it a UC cosmic ray. ta ■ i Education Project ors hav< participated in^experiment. The 138-pound NASA. . .. Rehage sa.d,' w.o tra.mng programs, which, .havefdnterplanetarv Monitoring Plat-SjHUlbeg n ' die 1 - newiv-formed na- hi-tod tor two to eight, weeks F! ? . for m ( IMP) *■ is • dt signed *.to^ .iier-yj’^&tidri’s^request^that the'UC studyi ther, 29 "Pakistanis^have^come to*forrn^ten ‘experiments^ in^all^yC s,*j^S^Pakistnn’s'^ieducational problems.^ UC- fog ;advanced 'trainangl^Most^being '‘'concernedpwhh^measunng;- ,> . x rtHe project’ have beeny'of the'se 29 now hold teaching «charged pu ■ ' 1iWgrdnted^byl-the, >Ford /Foundation'fiadmimstrativeJ^positions^with !Pa'-Wcrpldnetary^space.)and-,neni^carth.^.w, p cd n c.i ng the j k tan - mo, . - *it aroundy he^ a ?■ -,nStarp;Argoipehnuclear,.,tests^^established in Eisfand.W«sfPata%^"®sLtan^This|pastfsumVner|; Rehagestf%\§serie^of^expenmentserial ^mto^useabl^.^elements^hite*^mdirected;-a|programifwhich<.tramed4r(Jemonstratingi«;economicaPop^|Spio<lucing great-_amountsyo'^heat^-aKsixteeritP^ace^Corps volunteers fq#pra.Hmgrof: pnudear4reIctor^SuchlTue0fnatefiajMlx^l,much|aching*in|these^schoolsan(J >ratomic«^fueli|iPipduction^iTior®|ecdhomically -prodneedy thangJ.n3fInewJrcuiTiculalw»hich4lconta..n^^ |VeekfScient.staein;.ithe|^ ; jgj- g electneiiv-rO't-,^tvocationaljjexxirses ^Science> pt labo;dtorJt operated by,UCjfo$jhe^f^e/,?>inT) elec\\lL »>;/g? 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Western Ave. Mikva: Negro vote not assuredThe Democratic, party inChicago can no longer takethe Negro vote for granted,and must not be equivocal ordivided on civil rights issues, saidAbner Mikva, State Representativefrom the 23d district, in a talk tothe first meeting of the YoungDemocrats Club Tuesday.Mikva, a graduate of the UCLaw School, said that even if theDemocratic party loses morevotes than it gains in the longrun by its stand on civil rights, it should keep working for openoccupancy and equal opportunity.Even when the populace refusesto move on these issues, the partyshould bake the initiative, andshould not support any candidatewho fails to take an affirmativecivil rights stand, Mikva said.By taking an unequivocal standon civil rights nationally, Mikvaasserted, the Democrats will forcewhat he termed Republican “fencestraddlers” to take stands. He in¬cluded Charles Percy, a candidate for Republican nomination for Illi¬nois governor, and Arizona SenatorBarry Gold water among the “fencestraddlers.” Gold wetter, Mikvasaid, has never put forth a civilrights program of his own, buthas only criticized the programsof others.Mikva said that civil disobedi¬ence should not be used except asa last resort, for the educating andmoral effects of laws would beweakened if law-breaking werecondoned.lit EVENTSFridayMovie: “Night and Fog,’* directed byAlain Resnais, DOC Films, Soc Sci 122,admission 60c, 7. 8:30, 10 pm.Discussion: "Civil Rights and Poli¬tics.” Leon Despres, William Sprag-gians, Arthur Mohl. sponsored byACREN, 3rd floor, Ida Noyes Hail, 7:30pm.Symposium: "Christianity vs Human¬ism,” sponsored by Inter-Varsity Chris¬tian Fellowship, Rosenwald 2, 7:30 pm.Sabbath Services: Hillel, 7:45 pm.Fireside: “An Evening of ShalomAleichem,” Meyer Isenberg. associateprofessor of Humanities, Hillel, 8:30pm. Connecticut, discusses various worksby James B. Conant with host JamesMiller, Professor of English. The Uni¬versity of Chicago.Radio Series: “From The Midway,”WFMF, 100.3 me., 11 am. “Strikes:The Private Stake and the Public In¬terest,” George P. Shultz, Professorand Dean. Graduate School of Busi¬ness, The University of Chicago.Speech: Zev Aelony Americus de¬fendant and CORE field secretary,sponsored by CORE, 50c admission,Soc Sci 122. 3:30 pm.Radio Series: “The World of thePaperback,” WAIT, 820 kc., 5 pm.Discussion: “TWO: Its Program for Woodlawn,” Rev. Arthur Brazier, pres¬ident of TWO, Brent Hpuse, 6 pm.Cancellation: The scheduled lectureby Lee Strauss on “Why Maimonides?”has been postponed and will not beheld this evening.MondayFireside Committee and Hillel Gen¬eral Assembly: Hillel, 6:45 pm.Coffee Plus: Perrin Lowrey, assoc,prof, of Humanities, chairman of Col¬lege humanities staff, reading and dis¬cussing his short story, “Fear NoMore the Heat of the Sun”; ShoreyHouse, ninth floor Pierce, 9 pm.SaturdayRugby: UC rugby club vs. U. of Wis¬consin ; meet at Pierce Tower field,11 am.Lecture: *‘A Sacramental Approachto Christian Mission.” AlexanderSchmemann, St. Vladimir’s OrthodoxTheological Seminary, Brent House, 6pm.Folk Dance Party: UC Folklore So¬ciety, with Sonnv Newman, Ida NoyesHali. admission 50c. 8 pm.Concert: Madrigal singers of the Col¬legium Musicum, Bond Chapel, 8:30pm.Radio Series: “The Sacred Note,”WBBM, 780 kc., 10-10:15 pm. A pro¬gram of sacred choral music by theRockefeller Chapel Choir. RichardVikstrom. Director of Chapel Music,conducting. Job interviews today, next weekSundayPATRONIZE Ol ItADVERTISERS Radio Series: “Faith of Our Fa¬thers,” WGN. 720 kc., 8:30 am. Rev¬erend B. Davie Napier, Holmes Pro¬fessor of Old Testament Criticism andInterpretation at Yale Divinity School.Radio Series: “The World of thePaperback.” WFMF, 100.3 me., 10:15am. Abraham Ribicoff, Senator from Stephen K. Bailey, dean of tiheMaxwell School of citizenship andpublic affairs at Syracuse Univer¬sity will be in Reynolds Club,Room 202, today from 10 am-12noon to discuss opportunities forgraduate studies in PoliticalScience or Public Affairs at Max¬well School.The following organizations arescheduled to recruit in the Officeof Career Counseling and Place¬ment during the week of Novem¬ber 25. Information describingthese organizations and. the posi¬tions for which they are recruiting is available for review in thePlacement Office.Interview appointments may bearranged through Mr. Calvin, room200, Reynolds Club, extension 3284.November 25—Union Carbide NuclearCompany, Oak Ridge, Tenn.—will in¬terview mathematicians, physicists,statisticians, and chemists (anaylitiaHinorganic, physical) at all degree levels.November 25—Unilever, Inc., London,England — will interview British andContinental physical scientists at theSM, Phd. and postdoctoral levels.November 26—US Weather Bureau.Washington, DC and throughout theUS — interviewing meteorologists andphysicists at all degree levels. Willalso speak with mathematicians andphysicists, who will have completed atleast two years of academic work byJune 1964, for summer employment.► MR. PIZZA’SFamous Thanksgiving SpecialCall At Least TwoDays In Advance $1495 CompletePre-Cooked 8 Lb. Stuffed Turkey — Cranberry SauceSweet Potatoes — Rolls — Apple or Pumpkin Pie1465 HYDE PARK RLVD. HY 3-8282Nov. 22. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON 3 .1ware of their in-' fans) want to come here? There techniques «but that their are places for them where they’ll injustices sbe happier (Big Ten schools). They group of atwill destroy our property values ately violat(i.e., lower the intellectual stand- the inferentmarks of ards of the university). We don't rcgntionistsinte- want trouble i publicity). but if they .students h<insist on coming where they're not si>eml in suex- wanted, we intend to defend- our- it for some1way of hie (grovel on the football 1 Uon.iry att.itlike* unto standing w the Ls just as d«school house, door). They' have ties or etxrights,’ but wTe don't want trade lonalthem in our neighborhood. There serva1i>»rn awouldn’t be. ,Tany \ trouble if it ©ago?*.-weren’t for outside agitators (CBSnews), and, we don’t intend to haveanybody .telling us who we haveto live with’ (the a<lministration).When we": reach . the”h argument.“They're dirty," the Ya n a 1 o g 'ybreaks down, howe\ er.Alpiusjiectone, of', the most repugnant char-del iber ately but be tediouslytellectual precocityattitudes; opinions, and actions areconsonant with a high level of in;telhgence. can -by no.means be-as-sumed. ,One,*of the carmaturity, is -a consistentlyited-’system of thought which isreflected -in all of the overtlypressive aspects of one’s life. Therecent land prolonged' display of field[assininity over the playing of somefootball games, presents a grievous theirbreach’of some of the most eh’er-ished ,tenets of. this,; self-styled in¬tellectual elite.;-, - . ,)''* I, am particularly' concerned with■^2 5.the,attitudes ‘and actions Liken in,regard to "football because ^of the,63,'. ob\ions'’ parallels .which, protestsSG a ndjfdernon s tr at ion s o yer s u c h61,-filar- tmia'f,bear to -the cml rightsmovement. ; J1 a v i n g " lived . andw'oi'ked.-.fqr, some timejn the worstor; of. Chicago’i^slum areas .on 'the<*Near West Side" and -in as similar§area\of Inlianapolis, and marched»-a 1 ii tle7f toO;; I, have ^respect for-^those who are engaged in the strug-1 purpose , gjejfor equality.-Therefore’ I com-- Ajr^mend those students who have par-studentS ticipated m- civil rights activ ities,Pevfjfat^this^'university fouffour *yearsS'although #1* sometimes, w onder7 howMXing which I have obser\ ed'^withYrnaiiy ofyt.hcm.-k now ',what they are, ‘ '/v ’ ' ; : ■■ > 1y^^^isgust the‘vposturing lof. a certain abouL.it -inyap-book. But .what is^gy^pegment^of' tHe student^ population’ their’ AyauntedN perceptiveness -andho consider themse lves represent- sensitivity, v.hen they^react to thel^Y^j^jthelfjqiversit\-of Chicago--.Thev are*',f‘>rms1ionJ tlie campus^m’ preciselyKreadily .identifiable^ through the'vis^J^thet'same mdnnen»*thatAhe scorned- > ■ v ’! k | ei m to'pc rjS ' I ■ M yeS,"jNi I :*• O - r>to the i-ommybfiitddcnt.s^vpei-hapsjspoaiise a(good-f ga110nuaiguments.y from '.both -Ae\-esAa^panyUoffidfem neve,rjget*’around;.,tol-;.trernes fand - the confused middle;cruvit^g1ltT’in^^egree''^Bu,t|that iliew areSfwhatreadSin the,Maroon andtgu'aflhan's|ofUHckpureVflame ‘of^heap' on^camixisys-the 'same irra:tty.,s.intellectual freBeclom**which(thev re-* tionu]£-indignation - and unreasoning■. ' - - ' ’ '* 1 • ■ » \N’ ' ‘■ ' . ..." . ,. • » - ’ ’ ’’)resiPif?pfi'ahea}i\rtdeny,l3^c^or^ifl£cani hclpf|stjnco',j-i football ; players& and orrriticize - v,sure of.the;alumni; is. ci.mi.uiv a to subvert the educational processillCy .-■/ by^choosinf jxxir .students whenlUdf, h/d *•’ ’ . '^l^sgood* ones can be had.* ■ '$ 1 lie following ^ . >Btadlt I.KON H KASSm amy' apfel kass're/itlyjljie'fin jlif, DAVID H LEVEY^ 'f '1^-h KARL:j;;BEMESDERFERp‘grDENT'BEADLE "‘ARTHUR MacEWAN-'. - .bfoughtfofthe* at ten-‘BERTRAM COHLER 1 -der-signeci,.fgradu'ates ANNE [MEYERS COHLERhatpinteVc;oi 1 egfatMONA L BLEIBERGit ning'^(fethe"‘Uhiver^-;l NEAL W. ’JOHNSTONgo%,iV e'^jgo t e -1% a nd;. ; ieo n n’ Kass: M.D.* ’58:* Harvard*„U>T''and'^ie^ai'e’f.an-^Bioihenu*rly Dept.; Amy Apfel KassRl.ibh\’£/pr/text • • hiundei- History of Ideas^Smis^eff;f*ue''1ecl 'to*' f omml; Das id H. Leiey ’62:'Hanard‘ I i otiotnn s . Dept.. > former S(I' rice-president: rs.Karl J.^nemesderferu'ff'' 1 \'rHariard Lan Sihool,*former O-Board*. _ - • t <M$j^e*$jk;l££piinJ(\Q'f!-h$!t/Iar> ard Economics Dept., formerjjhail9||ch a nac t'e r^-ari f^0!Pres id ait;- Bertram■ CohlerJ ,'ftjft’h3n#fTantfe;riti I Ji.“ Relations ':'Dept.: Annene^Mi^w^aV‘’^fei’fiu^ ?>eri1 Cohler, ’62, Hariard Goiern-Dfp!,: .Mo;,ac-Ir J>'i-fi'5 fihsRoord Chairman; :Neal H ’..JohnstonHarvard Lanf^Ss liool,^ formertISphi11 Maroon Fditor.) » ^ U--* » ? - RICHARD D GOW7SNew Cobb unnecessaryjTO J'HE EDITOR;.. ^; After reading the news *it<mbet Erwlay’s Maroon coiuyjMn-in «val < -ii of < \il 4> M , hJSwoniden'd this isn’t Just ■ f' ,- • w ,\ •• ^1 a» I- ill ■ ■ .S<►!; ni.He "should tell th< ^i- <!<-a*l art. on ■ : hi -kyi ’ - . i • -. r smftlie idea of an auton*. arts, college .is,,“aRANDY' MAWChicago MaroonMcSyKHE'RIGHT PLACE !S WRIGHT[for bothandLAUNDRY DRY CLEANINGmmmexrertlyIdonel^^PPickup and delivery!^[Come in or Call Ml 3-2073wmf" SINAI - FORUM’ PRESENTS \.iDr. Abram L. Sachar' President, Brondeis UniversityI “A CREDO FOR OUR TIMES’^i v - 5 ‘'- ■<^P)46NDAY. NOVEMBER 25, 8:15" p.m.^I* ';V '* ' 1 *. yot SINAI TEMPLEs> - South Shore Drivoft, 4Single Admission SI.5080^8.Hid for - ._.li.T^-'TTa^^pFurther^Informofion 1':'*v-v.315vE« *v5/Tn _ ;SERVING' HYDE'PARK SINCE*900■ thAmerica’s most popular sports car line; # 1,WMREmfoRGl ICl-CRIAM$*$*■/ MEANS WHAT IT SAYS.. 7 Flavors, plus Sundaes and ShakesCHEESEBURGER'2Sf«SHAKE‘-¥l' t ‘ ; -Pplly2Equopped1$2775. Delivered^It - '1 • * - ■ ^ > 1 ■^wIhrn!WfiM^s>elciting’snew?sports car#the;TR:4. P:5ilts famous com-panionfthe^tRB;;festill available. FOR FREE TEST DRIVES, DROPelN^OR PHONEj|*ii§SWMOTORS^ialiaJSBfe^f^S^OUTHS^EJSJLARGEST-^, J f; |PI^^^^OyicbTTAGrE GROVE IDA NOYES'■ i? § SUN. 3:30-8:30MON.-THURS. 8:30-11:30M*A R O O Ny Describes foreign aid Rights worker to speak“Foreign aid is with us and willbe with us whether we like it ornot,” stated Basil Yamey Tuesdayin a talk to the UC Young Repub¬licans.Yamey, a Ford Foundation visit¬ing professor from the LondonSchool of Economics, is at UC forone quarter.In outlining the history of for¬eign aid programs, Yamey ex¬plained that the Marshall plan was“based on the idea of giving aiddirectly to the foreign govern¬ments with no strings attached.”However, when this idea wasapplied to the new, emerging na¬tions, it was not successful. As aresult, the program began tochange until today foreign aid isgiven with all sorts of conditionsand with considerable supervisionfrom the US. “This can be seenin the Alliance for Progress,” hesaid.Each change, according toYamey, is an admission of failureof the previous method.He noted the occurrence of greatpolitical and social tensions “whena great deal of money is expendedfor economic growth but when lit¬tle growth results.” This, he said, often leads to non-democratic gov¬ernments. On the other hand, ifthe growth is too rapid — muchmore than the country is accus¬tomed to — political tension andnon-democratic solutions alsoarise.Yamey added that today manypeople want ‘‘immediate results”from the foreign aid program butthat this is not forthcoming. One of the six student civilrights workers arrested inAugust in Americus, Georgia,will speak on campus Sunday.Zev Aelony, a field secretary forthe Congress on Racial Equality(CORE), will speak in SocSci 122at 3:30 pm in a program spon¬sored by CORE.Open-end show on WUCB Aelony was arrested August 17,a week after five field secretariesfor the Student Non-violent Co¬ordinating Committee (SNCC) werearrested on charges of “attempt¬ing to incite insurrection,” whichis a capital offense under Georgialaw.According to a UC CORE worker,Aelony had just arrived in Amer-icus, and was merely walkingdown the street when policemenrecognized him as a civil rightsworker. SNCC had been conducting voterregistration drives and educationalprograms among Negroes in Amer¬icus when the workers were taken.They escaped a possible deathsentence when a three-judge Fed¬eral panel freed all except three onNovember 1.The court outlawed Georgia’s in¬surrection ,and unlawful assemblystatutes, prohibited further prose¬cution of the workers on thecharges, and ordered them setfree on bail.“Viewpoint,” a weekly open-end discussion program, willdebut on campus radio stationWUCB 640 KC this Sundayevening with a program on orien¬tation.Guests will include Julia Ashen-hurst, advisor to OrientationBoard, and Dave Strauss, Chair¬man of O-Board. In addition, first-year students and upperclassmenwill be on hand to discuss theirexperiences.Discussion will center aroundthe nature of and reasons behinddisparities in original and current conceptions of University life.A limited amount of audienceparticipation will be incorporatedinto the discussion. Students inter¬ested in participating should callLaura Godofsky at MU 4-1715 be¬fore the program.The show will begin at 8 pmand can be heard on am radiosin New Dorm, Burton-Judson,Pierce Tower, and InternationalHouse.WUCB will end the quarter’sbroadcasting next Friday nightwith University Theatre’s live pres¬entation of “Time of Your Life.” Compare Christianity, humanismThe rival claims of Christianityand humanism and their differingapproaches to man’s basic prob¬lems will be discussed tonight ina symposium with Francis Schaef¬fer of Switzerland and AaronLearner of the University of Illi¬nois.Fred Siegler, assistant professorin the department of philosophyand humanities in the College, willmoderate the discussion, sponsored by the Inter-Varsity Christian Fel¬lowship.Schaeffer is known for his Chris¬tian ministry in his Swiss moun¬tain resort chalet, where intellec¬tuals meet to discuss religion.Learner, University of Illinois pro¬fessor of pathology, will representhumanism.The program will be in Rosen-wald II at 7:30 um.Art fair at Neighborhood ClubADSFOR RENT, ROOMS. APTS., ETC. “COMING. Dec. 3: ‘FREAKS’ "WANTED 3rd male roommate to sharelarge apt. near campus. Winter andSpring quarters. $36 mo. Call 324-3861.TWO male grad, students have big apt.to share near campus, big. Winterquarter or Interim. Low rent, otheradvantages, call 363-8803 around suppertime.SUBLEASE furn. 2 bedrm. apt. Info,call 2118-5378. Reas, priceWANTED TO RENTVISITING Scientist, wife, baby requirefurn. apt. for month of Jan. 1964. CaUMl :t 0800, ext. 4244. CHARTERED BUS LEAVING WED11:27 pm RETURNING SUN., Dec. 1stpm. For reservations Phone: MO 4-4762days, RE 1-5477 eves, & Sun.REWARD—Book left in Wieboldt orCobb: “Das Nibel ungen lied,” pt.1578. A1 Elinor Wade, 2304x Rickert. The MAROON seeks to rent a winter¬ized car, with or without driver, onMondays and Thursdays from 8 pm, to2 am. Please call EX. 3266, Sue Gold¬berg.HOUSE for sale; corner of 59th andUniversity. Vacant since 1951; couldbe renovated.“I MISS Hutchins, Hell, I even missKimptonl The third winter indoor art fairof the Hyde Park NeighborhoodClub will be held tomorrow andSunday at the club center, 5480South Kenwood. Paintings, draw¬ings, sculpture and graphic artswill be on exhibit and sale from noon to 9 pm. In addition, thefewill be auctions both afternoons at3:30.Admission to the fair is 50c foradults and 10c for children. Pro¬ceeds will be used to benefit theNeighborhood Club.ERNEST DREYFUSS showing oils, GEORGE W. BEADLE wUl lecturepen & inks. Nov. 15 thru Dec. 15. Center this evening on “Disaffiliation as afor Continuing Education. 1307 E. technique of non-violent protest” at60th St. 8:00 in Rosenwald 2.FOR SALE$50 CAR. 1948 Chevy. Runs well, de¬pendable. Earl Choldin. 363-8863.FURN for sale. Living room and bed¬room. Reas. RE 4-1076.PERSONALSSHARE-A-RIDE CENTRALOFFERS you, economy travel to allcities.FIND share expense rides or riders.RENT a car no mileage charge.MAKE your holiday reservations now.DELIVER drive away autos to othercities.PHONE: MO 4-4761 days; RE 1-5477eves. & Sun. DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNTDID YOU KNOW RALPH WOOD rep¬resents the best, not the cheapest, lifeinsurance company. SUN LIFE AS¬SURANCE CO. OF CANADA, FA 4-6800CARMENS used furn. Buy and Sell.Also Moving and light hauling. 6811Stony Island. MU 4-8843.THE CHICAGO REVIEW has no ath¬letes It has REINHOLD NIEBUHR on“THE NUCLEAR DILEMMA,” avail¬able now.HOME typing, exp. Reasonable. CaHHY 3-2438.UC RUGBY CLUB: Game at Indianacancelled. Instead home game againstWisconsin U. All players report atnorth field 11 am Saturday 23rd No¬vember.WANTED ride NYC Thanksgiving I.v.Wed.. Thurs. Back Mon. noon. CallJoe Kessler, SU 7-2680.TWA is now engaged in a nationwideprogram to publicize its servicesamong the university community. AsTWA campus rep. for UC, I would bepleased to help you with your travelarrangements. If job interviews or va¬cation plans will be taking you to suchcities as NYC, Boston, Phil., LA.. SanFrancisco, please feel free to contactme for info, or reservations. MikeLavinsky, 745 Linn House, Ml 3-6000.WANTED someone to help with Xmasdinner for family group. 11 to 5 onXmas day. Good pay. Call Mrs.Nicholson, KE 6-1707. IF YOU HAVE TRIED THE REST . . .Now Try "THE BEST”8^.. 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*3891 POM-POMSCash-n-Carry SpecialV2 Price Normally $2.50. cS.al* . Now $1.25for Studentsand Faculty Big BunchSMALL BLOOMING MUMS-$1.50Ml 3-4226Bova Florist“Where Your Dollar Has Blooming SenseOff the Corner but on the Square *J? 'I tJear (Contact eJLtni*4<>y Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1200 East 53rd St. HY 3-8372- 53-Kimbarfc N< Serving the University ofChicago Campus Since 1921SAM MALATTBARBER SHOPBUtterfield 8-09501011 East 61st StreetChicago 37. Illinois OLD ENGLISH BLOCKSTERN’S CAMPUSFOUNTAIN & LUNCHEONETTE1000 EAST 61st FA 4-4800OUR SPECIAL BUDGET LUNCHEONCHANGE DAILYONLY 6GC WISE —Glamorize Your ClothesWithJhsL Tyicvc (BhooL Qo.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERServing the Campus Since 1917iPhones: mi 3-7447 1013-17 East 61st StreetHY 3-6868 Near Ellis Ave.Nov. 22, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON •* G A D F ■■■*!*&*IY ★Laws are coercive, but necessary for the freedom of allThis reply is not intended pri¬marily for the author of the recentGadfly on civil rights, since hisextraordinary effort to quash, inthe name of freedom, the Negrofight for freedom, indicated he isnot likely to be persuaded by anyargument. Rather, the target ofmy response is the interested stu¬dent who may feel that althoughsympathy and brotherhood are onthe side of the Negro revolt, rea¬son. law, and individual rights areless clearly so. I consider Mr.Powell’s argument pernicious be¬cause his use of freedom andpower is sufficiently sophisticatedto make his argument a shadow ofthe truth, easily mistaken for thereal thing.As a beginning, I would like topoint out that the notion of free¬dom used, or rather misused, toundercut every effective measurefor securing civil-rights for Ne¬groes is a wrorthy one, with anillustrious intellectual tradition be¬hind it. Consciously or not, Mr.Powell is placing himself in thistradition, which includes such phi¬losophers as Thrasymachus, Niet-szche, and J. S. Mill. In thisconception of freedom it is op¬posed to or exclusive of law. Thisis made explicit by our author inreferring to law as “coercion.”But were he as able as his intel¬lectual predecessors he would nothave defined liberty, a synonymfor freedom, in terms of freedom,as “maximum freedom from co¬ercion . . Dramatically thismost fundamental error of defini¬tion is balanced both by his totallyerroneous conception of the rela¬tion of freedom to power, whichappears near the end of the article,and the ultimate demise of Negroaspirations for freedom accom¬plished in the name of freedom.As I hope to show later, poweris the term he should have usedto replace freedom in the defini¬tion of freedom. But even if hisdefinition had been correct, in thissense, his application of it wouldhave been as faulty without theelucidation of the ambiguous termsin it. He does not seem even torealize that freedom, power, andcoercion (to name only three) areambiguous terms, and I amobliged to remedy, as far as I can,the absence of any interrogation ofthem.Freedom excludes lawThere is, nevertheless, a certain‘‘logic” in the properties of hisconception of freedom, whichplaces it in a tradition and allowsus to trace, somewhat, its mean¬ing. Freedom excludes considera¬tions of morality, and is opposedto law. If morality and law, col¬lectively, dictate all right action,then freedom excludes all dicta¬tion or direction. That is, itsessence is choice, or spontaneity,or arbitrary action. All other con¬siderations are restraints — eventhe truth does not make an actfreer.Traditionally philosophers of thisDk have described the state as akind of compromise. Law is re¬straint, or coercion, but not thesort one wishes to do away with,since prudence indicates thatgreater freedom is possible, para¬doxically, where men are general¬ly constrained to act in certainWays. This accomplished, there isDo turning back. Laws are to beevaluated by freedom as a stand¬ard, but the freedom consideredIs not mine or yours, but every¬body's.Even defenders of free-enterpriseWways feel constrained to appeal♦o, among other things, the publicgood; i.e., they claim the economyWorks better that way. But nobodysays, e.g., Mr. Blough’s (Presi¬dent of U.S. Steel) freedom is theend of the legislation and institu¬tions created and maintained foreverybody involved in our eco-Domic system, i.e., every citizen.In a sense, then, morality isback. This morality is not the•*true way of life” that leadersDnd eductaors (and philosophers)dictate and teach, but it is thefreedom which allows every man to seek his own goals, and is itselfthe goal or standard by whichlegislation is measured.Mr. Powell’s conception of howmorality functions politically is aserroneous and dangerous as hisuse of freedom. Philosophers whohave argued that, e.g., wisdom,courage, temperance, and justice,or the categorical impreative isthe mark of true morality or vir¬tue have no difficulty citing prac¬tices in democracies and demo¬cratic institutions as instances orapplications of these.Where freedom and morality areunited rather than opposed (as inMr. Powell’s conception), andfreedom in its truest sense is rightaction rather than arbitrary action,the result is not a whit more likelyto be a totalitarian state. Misappli¬cations of either meaning of free¬dom can, of course, produce thisresult.Bath sides block real freedomIf it is true that the materialdialecticians on the left have im¬posed a morality on the state, itis no less true that “individualists”on the right would impose their“freedom,” given the chance, andsuccessfully block the attempts oflong - suffering Negroes fromachieving anything like freedom.But both conceptions, properlyunderstood, imply the need for in¬stitutions (especially for education)which encourage the growth anddevelopment of the individual insuch a way that these institutions,which preserve freedom, maythemselves be preserved, i.e., thefreedom of the citizen fostered byappropriate institution, be it con¬ceived as creative, where hemakes his own goals, or procrea¬tive, where he makes the good his,is the source of the vitality of thoseinstitutions.What Mr. Powell abysmally failsto see about morality is that thetruth in no way implies anyone’scomplete possession of it, but onlyencourages the search for a meth¬od, embodied in the above institu¬tions, by which it may be ap¬proached. Such endeavor involvesthe development and freedom ofthe individual as well as the im¬provements of the institutions.There is nothing totalitarian inthis) and nothing which implies de¬generation of education into propa¬ganda. If this were implied, theargument would be claiming thattruth is its own worst enemy—getrid of it and you have a betterchance of getting at it.Legislation for freedomThe point of the argument so faris that legislation, even grantingits natural opposition to freedom,is, in the state, the means bywhich the freedom of all is sought.In other words, Mr. Powell cannotsimply appeal to this opposition asa basis for opposing particularlaws. All laws are coercive, butlaw is necessary, paradoxically,for the achievement of freedom.All this follows from his notion offreedom.The question, then, of which lawsfail of their aims, which give uptoo much to gain too little, mustbe asked in evaluating any legis¬lation and needs a touchstone inaddition to freedom by which wecan judge.Further implications of this po¬sition arise out of the examinationof coercion. Mil] argued that thedire threat to freedom comes fromsociety, not government. The tyr¬anny of opinion is far more oppres¬sive and persuasive than anythinglike the stereotype monarch whostands in our textbooks as a sym¬bol of oppression, of all that isbad in authority, the absolute cor¬ruption of absolute power.Tyranny is against innovationIn fact, all the powers and insti¬tutions, customs, laws, and habitsof a society are tyrannical, not inthemselves, but when they aredirected against innovation. Thus,my ‘habit,’ as a Mississippian, ofkicking Negroes off the bus if Idon’t want them there is as tyran¬nical as any official legislation tothe same effect. So is the habit ofthe bus company not to enter into contracts for front seats with Ne¬groes.Contrary to Mr. Powell’s conten¬tion that freedom is merely nega¬tive, and involves no power, I amas unfree to build a house whenI can’t afford it as I am when thestate legislates against house-build¬ing. Both are coercions or im¬pediments to action. In both casesmy freedom or ability to chooseis removed. If Mr. Powell hadexplored his notion of freedom(and power and coercion), hewould have seen that impedimentsor restraints are of a great varietyof kinds, the most pernicious ofwhich are not laws.The distinction between a lawagainst house-building and the ab¬sence of funds is not that one iscoercion, the other a lack of power,for both are both. In both casespower is present only in the im¬pediment which coerces, whichprevents free action. The distinc¬tion is between a circumstance forwhich, perhaps, nobody is toblame, i.e., coerces.We should remember that theUS government is concerned thatpeople be able (freedom and pow¬er) to build houses and in generaldo whatever is necessary anddesirable. This is quite differentfrom merely building houses forthem, which, in at least some cir¬cumstances, would be the removalof freedom.Let’s bring together some ofthese points. Any impediment iscoercive. Freedom and power arenot negative and positive, respec¬tively, but are reciprocal. Freedomis the power to act without exter¬nal restraint, and power, likewise,is freedom from external restraint.What 1 am free to do, I have thepower to do, be this “doing” athought or an act in the usualsense. What I have the power todo—in that and that alone am Ifree.The freedom that excludes pow¬er, which Mr. Powell describes, isthe freedom that allows certainparties to say Negroes are free.It is, pushed to a logical extremewhich excludes all power, nothingat all. If I have not even the powerto choose, Mr. Powell would dobetter to call me dead than free.As I’ve said, our government, andany decent government, embracesthis conception of freedom throughthe relief of disaster areas, theguaranty of adequate education,and the promotion of health, wel¬fare, and opportunity.All these are directed to increas¬ing freedom in ordinary circum¬stance and in times of distress,through the increase of a varietyof powers. Where disaster hasstruck this means giving what isordinarily not given to citizens.This is not privilege, but is con¬sistent with freedom as the basisand goal of government and com¬munity action, a premiss I haveborrowed from Mr. Powell.Individual and societyThe misapplication of freedomas a legal first premiss arises, inhis Gadfly, partly from a sup¬pressed premiss which employs thedistinction between individual andsociety. By clarifying the conceptsof freedom, power, and coercion,which he uses merely as instru¬ments of propaganda, I haveshown, I believe, that the freedomof an individual is as much atstake in sitting down at a lunchcounter as in opening one’s doorsfor business.The legislation which guaranteesthe freedom of the former—if Con¬gress ever gets around to it—willnot be a suppression of individualrights in favor of the interests ofsociety. The interests of both arerepresented on both sides of thecounter.The enlightening distinction isbetween the public and the private.Both pertain to each individual,and both are contained in themakeup of society. But the dis¬tinction provides a means by whichwe may judge where law mayproperly do its business of fur¬thering freedom. What is the con¬cern of all, what is public, may belegislated, for things which fall under this rubric are such thatthey may coerce, be restrictive,and stultify freedom.Thus they may need to be regu¬lated. What is the concern only ofonesself is private, for this canaffect nobody but onesself. Thisdistinction is not rigid, for the areaof individual action or personalitywhich is “of concern to all,” orpublic, is changeable.Race with RussiansGiven our race with the SovietUnion it is perhaps of concern tous all, and necessary for our free¬dom as a nation that we havecompetent, intelligent, well - edu¬cated citizens, and among themsufficient numbers of scientists.Perhaps this is the proper concernof us all even without consideringthe Soviet Union. With the emerg¬ence of African nations and ourrecognition that two-thirds of theworld’s population is non-white,perhaps the freedom of our Negrocitizens is “the concern of us all.”Perhaps this is our concern even without that reminder. (I give Mr.Powell too much; with freedom asa principle, as he uses it, it cer¬tainly is our concern that all citi¬zens have it, else we are in con¬tradiction.)I hope that I am not stretchingthe point too much in saying thatit may even be our concern thatour white citizens be educated ingood citizenship so that they mayknow what a man is and not mis¬take racial origin for humanity,and learn to discriminate only thegood from the bad, without identi¬fying either with a single man orrace.These are aims of the freedommovement. Possibly if we knewmore about SNCC here in theNorth, we would see how thismovement can pursue freedom andjustice together, and put itself onthe side of rule by law even whendefying laws which so defile free¬dom and justice that no mansensitive to either could toleratethem. Howard RuttenbergFrench Onion Soup with Croutons Nuts at theChicken Broth TableAPPETIZERSShrimp Cocktail - Blue Point Oysters on Hall ShellMarinated Herring - Chopped Chicken LiversSALADSTossed Salad Waldorf SaladCaesar SaladENTREESYoung Tom Turkey with Wine Dressing★Roast Duck with Wild Rice★Braziol★Ham and Sweet Potatoes★Prime RibCHOICE OF TWOWhipped Potato Wild RiceBaked Potato SpaghettiSweet PotatoFresh Pumpkin PieSpumoni or Ice CreamFor the Elegant Touch4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 22, 1963Friedman: government should reduce its spending' I Continued from page one)*rf the dollar in terms of foreigncurrency.”Gold discussedThis, of course, leads ProfessorFriedman into the realm of the goldstandard and other indictment:"We have not had a genuine goldstandard in this country in 40years."What we have now is not a goldstandard in any relevant sense ofthe term. What we have now in theUnited States is a price-fixing pro¬gram for gold comparable to ouragriculture price-support program.And I favor getting out of such a program.**Professor Friedman thinks it isquite wrong, furthermore, to havelaws making it illegal for Ameri¬cans to hold gold.He calls for absolute freeing ofgold—"sell off our gold reserves,auction them off in the open mar¬ket at any price we can get forthem, repeal all laws making itillegal for an individual to deal ingold or hold gold, and then letgold be free to achieve its valueon the open market.Tax outlook“If the price of gold rises, fine,”he says. "If it falls, fine, too. If\<*•••>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 CallsTV—HI-FIRADIO $300AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORYesf. 19291300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111In the 53rd-Kimbark Plaza people used gold as money, fine.Then you would have an opportu¬nity to develop a real gold stan¬dard and not the kind of fake goldstandard we now have.”As for tax reduction and tax re¬form, Professor Friedman viewsthem through the lens of a single-basic national need: "To havesmaller use of resources by govern¬ment and less government spend¬ing.”He acknowledges that politicsfrustrates purely economic solu¬tions to the tax problem."If you were being completelyrational and behaving as an indivi¬dual,” he says, "you would say,‘Well, before I cut my receipts I’dbetter get my spending under con¬trol, and then once I’ve got myspending under control, I can cutmy taxes.* But, as you observe thepolitical process in the UnitedStates, this is not very likely tohappen.A little more"What seems to be the case,” inProfessor Friedman’s view of poli¬tico-economic circumstances, "isthat Congress is always ready tospend whatever amount the taxsystem will yield, plus a littlemore. Not very much more, but alittle more. And therefore, I per¬sonally am now in favor of cuttingtaxes in the belief that this is theonly way you will, in fact, get acut in government spending."Thus the problem is not reallytax reduction. The fundamentalproblem is reducing the use of re¬sources by the government so asto keep the government within nar¬rower scope and to enable peopleto spend a larger fraction of theirown money instead of having itspent for them by governmentalauthority.”On tax reform, he says: "Themain problem is to try to have atax system which collects themoney you need with the least in¬terference with the operations and workings of the economic system.**Prime TargetProfessor Friedman pinpoints theincome tax as prime target of taxreform. He calls for a flat-rate in¬come tax on income above exemp¬tions to replace graduated incometaxation."Suppose instead of having thosegraduated rates from about 20 to90 per cent you had a single rateon income as it is now measured,with all the present deductions,exemptions, etc., as now reported.A flat rate of 23.5 per cent wouldyield more money than you arenow getting.He argues that the graduated sys¬tem is equitable only on paper andthat "people in the top incomebrackets really on the average paya lower rate than those in the mid¬dle (who, he reports, are mostheavily taxed) because the top-bracket people are in the best posi¬tion to use a host of loopholes anddevices in the taxing system.”Honesty urgedOver-all, Professor Friedman is most anxious to have the income-tax system be honest, less com¬plex, more encouraging to peopleto use their resources in the mosteffective way, and "more neutralin its effect on people.”In the area of corporation taxa¬tion, the professor again keys re¬form to the human factor: "Theproblem is that a tax system oughtto tax people and the thing aboutthe corporate tax is that nobodyknows who pays it—the stock¬holders, the wage earners, orsomebody else?”Let the corporation attribute itsincome to stockholders, he says,whether it is paid out to them ornot, by reporting to stockholdersthat, for example, so much hasbeen paid out to them in dividends,and so much has been reinvestedon their account.This information would be in¬cluded in the individual tax returnand remove the present basic rea¬son, says Professor Friedman, fortaxing the corporation separately.His reforms would move towardultimate abolition of the corpora¬tion tax.There’s a Beautiful, New Old-FashionedDelicatessen In Hyde ParkAnd it's the only place serving reallyfine food anywhere near you —of prices that remind you of thegood old daysUNIQUE1501 E. 53rd Street(corner Harper)Phone: FA 4-0633 ... We deliverThe New Campus Center for Value and Quality!PAR SUPIR SAVE COUPONNIGHTDAYGENERAL ELECTRICLighted Dial AlarmNo reason to be late to class with CVthis smart alarm that offers a Olighted dial, famed G.E. accuracyand attractive styling. Antiquewhite. 115 V. AC. Subject to 10% WITHFed. tax. Wonderful buy! COUPON3 88 WALK-TALK-N-DRYHAIR DRYERby TROY$088SALEPORTABLE TAPE RECORDERCompact, battery operated record-«r that is ideal for verbal notes,language practice or just havingfun! 4 transistors, 2!&" speaker,nelf contained case only' 8x6x3".Complete with microphone, reel oftape, take-up reel, batteries andearphone for private listening.Easily a $21.95 value. SALEPRICE$1495 • Leaves Hands Free• Luggage Type Case• Oversize BonnetWear it over your shoulder as it quickly dries hair —leaves hands free. Reinforced nylon stretch hose, quietpowerful blow'er with 3-position heat control. Smart,luggage type case. 115 V. AC. Compare with $15.95.OH. PROFESSOR — Please MayWe Have A Word With You?We would respectfully like to point out that you, as wellas the students, can indeed profit by visiting PAR. Selectfrom a tremendous stock of drugs, cosmetics, dental ondshaving needs—all at lowest prices, and in addition enjoyour outstanding values in appliances, gifts, toys et cetera.HOT POT ELECTRIC CUPBACK INSTOCKAGAIN PAR SUPER-SAVE COUPONDOMINION10 CUPAUTOMATICPERCOLATORONLY $895With Coupon ^toDelicious coffee brewed automatically just as youlike it, then kept warm. Flavor regulator, jewelsignal light to tell when coffee is done, convenientmarkings for 4 to 10 cups. Beautifully styled. 115V. AC. Regularly sold at $15.95.ONLY $144We apologize for underestimating the number we’d sellof this fine item from our previous ad, but now we havethem again! Makes instant coffee, tea or soups in min¬utes. Ideal for entertaining, snacks, quick breakfasts. 4cup capacity. 115 V. AC. Cord included. 8 Pc.HAIRCUTTINGSETSPECIAL!$A95Fighting the new high haircut costs? Well, you’vegot to keep it out of your eyes somehow', andhere’s the economical way! Contains a high-speedelectric clipper, taper attachments, barber comb,shears, blade guard, instructions. Tremendousvalue!F=>7A/V/fRCT= 53-Kimbark PlazaWeVe only a walk away, but thereis plenty of Free Parking, too. OPEN EVERY DAY9 A.M. to 10 P.M.Nov. 22, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7HARPER SQUAREGROCERLAND1445 E. 57th Phene DO 3-4251FREE DELIVERYThree Time* DeityServing th# University Community withthe finest produce, meats, and groceriesfor over 32 years.HYDE PARK'SMost Complete Photo ShopModel Camera1342 E, 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTSBOB NELSON MOTORSSouthside's LargestIMPORTSALES CENTRESERVICETRIUMPH & PEUGEOTFull Line On DisplayComplete RepairsAnd ServiceFor All Popular Import*Midway 3-45016040 So. Cottage GroveCharterA BusFor EveryOccasion ...e School Events • Tourse Week End Tripse Office, Factory aadChurch OutingsCentral West Motor Stages3451 W. Ogden 277-2900VAN'SBOOKSTORE(from the old Art Colony)1544 E. 53rdHY 3-5787Large Collection ofFine Used BooksIn All FieldsQuality Paperbacks1/3 off — ExchangeOPEN 11:00—10:00DO YOURECOGNIZETHIS MAN?Ralph J. Wood. Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank BuildingChicago IS. III.FAirfax 4-6800Office Hours 9 to 5Mondays A FridaysHe is an active member ofyour community and be 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 youat your convenience?SUN LIFEASSURANCE COMPANYOF CANADA Undergraduate examination schedulePlea** note that, for course* marked with *, the place of examination f*the usual place of das* meeting.Course Day TimeAnthropology 214 Wed Dec It 1.30-3.34Art 210 Wed Dec 11 8-10Art 220 Fri Dec IS 10.30-12.30Art 259 Wed Dec 11 10.30-12.30Astronomy 20T Wed Dec 11 8-10Biology 111secs AA. CA. EA. GAsecs BA. DA. FA, GBsecs AB. BB. CB, DB. EB. FBBiology 113 Til Dec 10 1.30-3.30Biology 117 Thu Dec 12 8-10Biology 201 Wed Dec 11 8-10 CourseMon Dec 9 12.30-2.30‘Biopsychology 211Botany 212Botany 250 Thu Dec 12 8-1 0Tue Dec 10 1.30-3.30Wed Dec 11 1.30-3.30 Mathematics 153 sec 3tPlace Mathematics 203 secsec 3211Ro 27 sec 31Cl 10 *sec 41Cl 10 sec 42Cl 10 *sec 51ICR 11* ‘Mathematics 204 sec 41Mathematics 205 sec 51Mathematics 241 sec 31Ab 101 ‘Mathematics 251 sec 11B 106 *sec 41K 107 Mathematics 252 sec 11C 116 *sec 51C 104 ‘Mathematics 253 sec 31B 106 -f Lab. Exam * Mathematics 261 sec 1112/1# Mathematics 280 sec 41B 106 Microbiolgy 221Chemistry 105 Fri Dec 13Chemistry 131 Fri Dec 13Chemistry 220 Thu Dec 12Chemistry 240 Wed Dec 11Chemistry 241 Wed Dec 11Chemistry 261 Wed Dec 11Chinese 201 Wed Dec 11Economics 201 3ee 01 Wed Dec 11Economics 240 Wed Dec 11‘Economics 270 Wed Dec 11Education 200 sec 01 Fri Dec 13sec 02 Wed Dec 11‘English 101 Mon Dec 9‘English 107 Mon Dec 9‘English 208 Mon Dec 9‘English 216 Wed Dec 11English 230 Tue Dec 10English 237 sec 01 Thu Dec 12‘English 239 Tue Dec 10English 24 4 Wed Dec 11‘English 273 Thu Dec 12English 287 Fri Dec 13English 289 sec 91 Tue Dec 10English 295 Wed Dec 11‘French 101 Wed Dec 11‘French 104 Wed Dec 11‘French 201 JVedDecllFrench 202 Fri Dec 13French 206 Fri Dec 1 3French 207 Wed Dec 11‘French 210 Fri Dec. 13French 212 Thu Dec 12French 231 Mon Dec 9French 239 Wed Dec 11‘Geography 207 Wed Dec 11Geophysical Science* 131 Wed Dec 11‘Geophysical Sciences 207 Fri Dec 13‘Geophysical Sciences 201 Wed Dec 11‘German 101 Wed Dec 11German 20T Wed Dec 11‘German 230 Wed Dec 11German 23S Wed Dec 11Greek 101 sec 01 Fri Dec 13Greek 204 Fri Dec 13History 131 Thu Dec 12History 211 Wed Dec.11History 221 Wed Dec 11‘History 228 Mon Dec 9History 231 Fri Dec 13History 235 Thu Dec 12History 241 Mon Dec 9History 245 Wed Dec 11History 251 Fri Dec 13History 261 Wed Dec 11History 265 Wed Dec 11History 271 see Ot Wed Dec 11Humanities 111 Tue Dec 10Humanities 121 Tue Dec 10Humanities 201 (126) Tue Dec 10Humanities 283 Thu Dec 12Ideas and Methods 201 Tue Dec 10‘Ideas and Methods 211 Mon Dec 9Ideas and Methods 251sec 91 Tue Dec 10 8-108-108-1010.30-12.3010.30-12.308-101.30-3.303-101.30-3.3010.30-12.308-108-108.30-11.308.30-11.309.30-11.301.30-3.301.30-3.308-1010.30-12.3010.30-12.304-610.30-12.304-68-104-64-64-61.30-3.301.30-3.3010.30-12.308-108-109.30-11.301.30-3.3010.30-12.308-1010.30-12.301.30-3.304-610.30-12.308-108-1010.30-12.3010.30-12.301.SO-IO.SO¬S'9.30.10.308-9.301.3010.30-810.301.308.10.30-8-8. 3.3012.301011.3012.30 ;1011.303.3012.301012.303.301012.301010Italian 101 sec 01Japanese 201Latin 101‘Latin 204Linguistics 221‘Mathematics 101‘Mathematics 103‘Mathematics 150sec 2 1sec 31sec 4 1sec 42‘Mathematics 151sec 11sec 21sec 22sec 3 1‘Mathematics 151 continuedsec 32sec 41sec 51see 61see 71Mathematics 152 sec 41 Wed Dec 11Wed Dec 11Fri Dec 13W ed Dec 11Thu Dec 12Tue Dec 10Tue Dec 1 0Tue Dec 1 0Tue Dec 10Tue Dec 10 1.30-3.309.30-11.SO10.30-12.308-101.30-3.301.30-3.3010.30-12.308-104-61.30-3.304-64-6Wed Dec 11 10.30-12.30 CRB 101B 205K 107K 103K 107K 110K 110K 103Cl 10SS 302SS 106SS 305J 105J 105K 107. E IS*. CL 10.Ab 133, B 106Ro 2Wb 20*Cl 20Cl 20Cl 16C 103Ro 27Cl 11Ro 27Lx 2Cl 16K 107E 133C 110C 407C 416Wb 202Wb 102Wb 402C 416C 408Wb 20*Ro 26Wb 20*Ro 2*LMHWb 10*Wb 20*Wb 102C 316Cl 31LMHSS 107SS 30 6C 102I Ro 2SS 10TC 410C 402SS 107Ro 2C 10*Ro 2LMHLMHRo 2Ro 27C 101C 101C 102C 416OR 208C 316C 101Ro 27LMHE 203E 2037. 14E 308C 110C 305C 415E 305S 201E 312C 408C. 410C 406C 402C 110CONTINENTALMERCURYCOMETSALES — SERVICE — PARTSLAKE PARK MOTORS, inc.6035 S. COTTAGE GROVE CHICAGO, ILLHYde Park 3-3445HEY PAISAN!Try our wonderful PizzasSmall Medium LTYSCheese 1.75Sausage 2.00 3.00Greee Pepper .... 1.25 2.00 3 00Anchovies 1.25 2.00 3.00Mushroom 2.25 3.25Peperoni 2.25 3.25ShrimpITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA1923 E. 71st ST. 2.25 3.25DELIVERY HOURS: Sue. - Thurs. Until 1 A.M. — Fri. and Sat. UntilTELEPHONE NO.: MU 4-3262, MU 4-1014$.25 Service Charge on All OrdersSPECIAL PRICE ON ALL PARTY ORDERS 3 A.M. Music 151Music 201Music 211Near Eastern Arch. 200Oriental History 201‘Philosophy 201Philosophy 206Philosophy 207Philosophy 231Philosophy 241 sec 91‘Philosophy 256‘Physical Sciences 105Physical Science* 201‘Physics 111Physics 121Physics 131Physics 201Physics 215Physics 221‘Physics 225Physics 235Political Science 205Political Science 261‘Psychology 202‘Psychology 211‘Psychology 220‘Scandinavian 201 sec 01‘Slavic 101Slavic 201‘Slavic 204 sec 01Social SciencesSocial Sciences‘Sociology 202Sociology 204Spanish 101Spanish 104Spanish 20 tSpanish 207Spanish 230Statistics 200Zoology 207 DayFri Dec 13Thu Dec 12Fri Dec ISFri Dec 13Wed Dec 11Wed Dec 11Fri Dec 13Mon Dec 9Fri Dec 13Fri Dec 13Fri Dec 13Wed Dec 11Fri Dec ISFri Dec 13Thu Dec 12Fri Dec ISWed Dec 11Thu Dec 12Fri Dec 13Wed Dec 11Thu Dec 12Thu Dec 12Wed Dec 11Tue Dec 10Tue Dee 1 0Wed Dec 11Wed Dec 1 1Thu Dec 12Wed Dec 11Mon Dec 9Tue Dec 10Mon Dec 9Wed Dec 11Wed Dec 11Fri Dec 13Wed Dee V 1Wed Dec 1 1Wed Dec 11Fri Dec 13Wed Dec 11Tue Dee 10Wed Dec 11Thu Dec 12Mon Dec 9Tue Dec 10Wed Dec 1 1Wed Dec 11Fri Dec 1 3 Time Place10.30-12.SO 7 148-10 E 2078-10 C 41610.30-12.30 E 30#10.30-12.30 C 41510.30-12.30 E 3051.80-3.30 E 2039.30-11.30 E 3081.30-3.30 E 20710.30-12.30 E 3058-10 E 30310.30-12.3# E 3088-10 E 2071.30-3.30 E 2028-10 E 3088-10 E 20210.30-12.80 E 2078-10 RKS N l10.30-12.30 Mus 2011.30-3.30 Mua 1018-10 Mus 2014-6 Cl 1010.30-12.30 OR 2081.30-3.30 C 1021.30-3.80 C 10910.30-12.30 Cl 168-10 C 1104-6 Cl 181.30-3.30c Wb 2033-6 E 133 + K 1071.30-3.30 C 3093-6 Ro 21.30-3.30 E 13*8-10 E 13310.30-12.30 E 2028-10 E 2021.30-3.30 Ry 25110.30-12.30 E 13310.30-12.30 Ry 2518-10 SS 1031.30-3.30 SS 1221.30-3.30 Ab 1018-10 B 1069.30-11.30 C 11010.30-12.30 C 1014-6 Ro 210.30-12.30 Wb 10210.30-12.30 C 102i 111 Thu Dec 12 4-6 LMH121 (125) Thu Dec 1 2 10.30-12.30 LMHi 220 Wed Dec 11 10.30-12.30 C 408i 230 Tue Dec 10 4-6 Cl 10> 240 Fri Dec 13 1.30-3.30 Ro 2i 245 Wed Dec 11 1.30-3.30 C 402255 Wed Dec 11 10.30-12.30 C 10*i 271 Mon Dec 9 9.30-11.30 C 410> 276 Wed Dec 11 10.30-12.30 C 107Mon Dec 9 9.30-11.30 c noThu Dec 1 2 8-10 SS 122Wed Dec 11 4-6 C 411Wed Dec 11 10.30-12.3* C 416Wed Dec 11 1.30-3.30 C 4(6Fri Dec 1 3 10.30-12.30 C 416Wed Dec 11 1.80-3.30 C 411sec 01 Wed Dec 1 1 1.30-3.30 E 202Thu Dec 12 1.30-3.30 Z ItAnnounce fellowship opportunitiesThe National Science FoundationNSF has announced that the regu¬lar fellowship competition forgraduate study in the sciences isnow open and closes January 3,19G4. The stipends for these fel¬lowships have been increased to$2400 for first year, $2G00 for in¬termediate, and $2800 for terminalyear. In addition, tuition and othercost-of-educa lion items are cov¬ered. The student also gets de¬pendency allowance and may fur¬ther augment his stipend up to anadditional $1000 if permitted byhis department.Students interested in applyingshould contact their DepartmentalOffice for preliminary application forms, or write directly to Na¬tional Science Foundation, Wash¬ington 25, DC. Applications arealso available from the FellowshipOffice, Administration 201. Mr. H.R. Voorhees, Coordinator of Gov¬ernment Fellowships will be gladto answer inquiries. He may becontacted through the fellowshipoffice, Mrs. Anne Tough, ext. 3418,or directly on ext. 4128.Application forms for graduatestudents in residence for fellow¬ship or scholarship awards arenow available in the fellowshipoffice, Administration Building,room 201.Application deadline is January15, 1904.Be an Early Christinas ShopperEverything New and FreshHandmade wall Plaques — Book-EndsFigurines — Christmas DecorationsItalian Pottery — Block printed LinensSwedish Coffee Pots — Mugs — Tea TilesWrought Iron Trivets — Book-Ends — Candle StickjAfrican Hand Carved Wood FiguresWide Selection Christmas Cards — Gift WrappingsFor a Personal Gift Visit our Men’s dCWomen’s DepartmentsAll gifts purchased here — Gift wrapped FreeTHE UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. Ellis Ave.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 A Industry.FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTELS6*k Sf. A So. Shore Dr. • Chicago 37. Illinoi*8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 22. 1963Joseph H. AaronCoMMcticiit MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060Creative PhotographyPortraits ByLouise Barker5706 HARPER AVE.DO 3-6869FRI. & TUES.The Marooon is pleasedto announce the marriageof Joan Marie Bartel toStephen Fleming Heffner onOctober 21st. The couple,both former University ofChicago students, weremarried at the Church ofthe Epiphany in Grandview.Missouri and now reside at1501 N. Scott Lot 72. Bel¬ton, Missouri. Mr. Heffneris currently working forIBM in Kansas City. Mis¬souri as a Computer Engi¬neer.British films still in a fog Folklore concert tonightThere is still no sign onthe horizon of British cine¬ma of any storm that couldblow away the mist current¬ly enveloping not only thecountry’s moors but its film¬makers as well.England has neither a Resnaisnor a Truffaut, neither an Anto¬nioni nor a Visconti, neither aStevens nor a Kazan. With DavidI jean stuck on spectaculars andCarol Reed stuck in a slump, audi¬ences are stuck with the dynamicbut noncohesive social realism thatbegan its current vogue with“Room at the Top” and continuewith little change in “The L-ShapedRoom,” now playing at the HydePark theatre.Director Bryan Forbes has toldhis story with invention and tact,keeping many narrative elementsjust out of camera range, knowing,almost always, just when to injecta fast zoom shot or a quick cut.He has also avoided a tendencythat flaws too many British pic¬tures, the brief but intense infatu¬ation with miliou that overempha¬sizes the artifacts and outcrop¬pings of modern life without sub¬serving atmosphere to a largerdramatic intention. Forbes makesuse of props and locale to tell hisstory without lingering excessivelyin the thick gaiety of streets andparks or probing the mists of anoverpoweringly gray outdoors.Unfortunately his ambitious ef¬forts have been spent on an essen¬tially maudlin and unoriginal story.Forbes’ script is, according to theads, dedicated to the propositionthat “sex is not a dirty word.” Assuch the tale of pregnancy andlove will leave many with a senseof the mellifluous where thereshould be just a taste of honey.The love episodes are more thanonce dull and sticky, and the restof the script vacillates betweentouching effects and affectedtouches. As the film progressesthis uneven tone begins to tell onthe drama. The struggling writer'sfeeble self-pity becomes a bit em¬barrassing, and the emanations ofdie heroine's honest and wise heartbegin to sour.At the climax it's Christmas, andthere's a speech about love tomake matters worse. Amid thesideplots, comic relief, and acridexpose of contemptible socialtype*, we tend to lose sight of theheroine’s central problem, whetheror net to bear or abort her illegiti¬mate baby.To achieve emotional involvementForbes has been as aggressivewith the background music as withhis camera. The London Sinfoniapresents Brahms* Piano Concerto #1 as a counterpoint to the squalidimagery of the film, expressing insound the internal emotions notalways palatable in the bleak vis¬uals. The scoring is effective attimes but not nearly as successfulhere as in “Brief Encounter”(1945) when David Lean usedRachmoninoff's Piano Concerto #2to dramatize illicit love.In Its better moments the filmgenerates a good deal of warmthand concern. Much of this effec¬tiveness must be credited to theactors who are entirely competent,if not outstanding, in all roles.Leslie Caron, better known for herwork In musicals and light ro¬mance vehicles, carries a greatdeef of dramatic weight on herLih-whdte shoulders.As a pregnant young French girlwho takes up lodging in a squalidLondon boarding house, she spendsa great deal of time at the centerof the •creen, playing the some¬times saccarine part with winningcredibility and proving herself anable purveyor of quick emotionaltransitions. She acts with smoothassurance and general effective¬ness remarkable in an actress sounusued to heavy drama andpleasant in a star so unfailinglyattractive. Producer James Woolf,who cast Simone Sdgnoret in“Room at the Top,” also chosewisely In Miss Caron who won theBritMi Academy Award for “TheL-Shaped Room.”Tom Bell lacks the dash and power that characterize otheryoung British actors now gainingprominence, but be is convincingas the poor writer who falls inlove with Caron, then balks whenhe learns that she is with child.(At last, a fresh variation of theeternal triangle!) Cicely Court-nidge has her moments as a dotinghas-been stage star who turns outto be a lesbian. Brock Peters, whoplayed the accuded farm hand in"To Kill a Mockingbird” and isnow doing “Othello” at the Good¬man Theatre, breathes a good dealof life into the film with his strongportrayal of a friendly jazz musi¬cian.— S. K. The UC Folklore Society willpresent a concert featuring FredMacDowell tonight at 8:30 in Man-del Hall.MacDowell is one of the fewblues musicians whose style hasnot been influenced to any signifi¬cant extent by city music. He hasspent all his life in Mississippi,and now is a cotton farmer inComo where he lives in a fourroom wooden house in the middleof a huge cotton field.MacDowell sings blues and alsospirituals, a rare combination sinceblues are often considered sinfulby spiritual singers and spiritualsare often ‘just church music’ to blues singers. He plays the guitarwith a bottleneck (which he quietlyadmits came from a half-pint bot¬tle), sliding the glass along thestrings with his left hand ratherthan playing single notes. The ef¬fect is often eerie and piercing.His guitar style is complementedby a sometimes growling some¬time sobbing vocal presentation,through which he is able to trans¬mit both the hardness of the bluesand the religious fervor of spirit¬uals.Tickets for tonights concert are$1.50 ($1.00 to students) and willbe available in Mandel corridorand at the door.UT stages Saroyan play, dance recitalUniversity Theatre will pre¬sent William Saroyan’s “TheTime of Your Life” this week¬end, November 29, 30, andDecember 1, and December 6, 7and 8. The play has won thePulitzer Prize, though Saroyan cre¬ated a sensation by refusing theaward, and the Critics CircleAward.James O’Reilly, director of theplay, will utilize the intimate one-hundred seat Reynolds Club The¬atre to create a total environmentin which the audience will be cen¬trally involved. This type of arena staging treats the audience as ifthey were actually present in the1939 San Francisco waterfront barwhich is the scene of the action.Appropriate but legal beverageswill be served over the bar duringthe intermissions.Tickets are $1.50 on Fridays andSundays, and $2.00 on Saturdayevenings. All performances are at8:30 pm. Seating is limited to one-hundred people per performance.University Theatre will also pre¬sent Won Kyung Cho in a recitalof classical Korean dances Friday evening, November 29, in MandelHall.Won Kung Cho, formerly as¬sistant professor in dance at Yonseiand Ewha Women's universities inKorea, has studied at the Juil-liard School of Music and the Mar¬tha Graham School of Contempo¬rary Dance. He has given recitalsat Carnegie Hall and the SeattleWorld's Fair.Tickets for the performance,which will start at 8:30, are $1.50or $1 for students, and can bepurchased at Reynolds Club.THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESSALUTE: DON LIEBERSRecognize the man below? You may have seen him on yourcampus. You see, Don Liebers (M.B.A., 1960) representsMichigan Bell on many college campuses—Don's a Staff^Supervisor in the College Employment Section,f Don earned this important promotion after demonstrat*[ing his ability in both line and staff jobs. On one, as an'Accountant in Comptroller’s Operations, he revised theRevenue Accounting Department Instruction for billingdirectory advertising—a major contribution. Seeing what he could do, Michigan Bell next put Donin charge of the 71 Data Processing people who, amongother duties, issue the company’s entire monthly payroll!Again Don proved himself, and again his reward wasa promotion—this time a full-level jump to Staff Supervisor.Don Liebers, like many young men, is impatient to makethings happen for his company and himself. There arefew places where such restlessness is more welcomed orrewarded than in the fast-growing telephone business.BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESTheater review'Plowboy' barren, melodramatic Culture Calendar“Who'll Save the Plowboy?” byFrank D. Gilroy, opened last week¬end at the Jane Adams Center ofHall House Association under thedirection of Robert Sickenger.“Plowboy” is sometimes ratherbarren and melodramatic, but sen¬sitive performances by its non-pro¬fessional actors pull it through.The play, which had a brief off-Broadway run last year, concernsthe reunion of a former “plowboy”hick and the Army buddy whosaved his life in t.he war and whoencouraged his dreams to have afarm and a child someday. Accord¬ing to the buddy’s mother, her son,who is now dying because of hiswartime act of courage, has re¬turned to see whether lie has sal¬vaged a valuable life.Awkardly, “Plowboy” and hiswife, who lives of hatred and shab¬by pretense, try to shuffle up afinal fiction, the aura of a HappyHome. They succeed only in clut¬tering up the stage with fifteenyears’ worth of grubby secrets andin nearly crushing the buddy.The play builds steadily to aferocious and only partly explainedemotional peak: people shout andsmirk and collapse on the floor. Yet even after all the confession,no relief comes. The buddy statesbaldly that he “may have to turnto God or something”; Plowboyand his embittered wife remain,in the ironic climax, unconsciousof each other.Despite the often contrived plot— the mystery of the long-lostchild, the pile of secrets, the play¬wright’s inconclusive characteriza¬tion of the secondary characters,and the dialogue worthy of a soapopera, able acting makes “Plow¬boy” electric drama.Bob Kidder portrays the herowith great humor, imagination andflexibility, and manages to seem atonce a coarse, common city hickand an engaging individual. Per¬haps the character of the wife isone solidified by bitterness, butLoraine Zelmanski remains tooevenly cold, harsh and unbelieva¬ble. Arthur Geffen as the old friendis properly plump and perplexed,but sometimes fails to hold thestage. The rest of the cast wasgenerally stiff but sufficient inbringing meaning to the script.Perhaps the success of the wholeeffort was partly due to director Sickenger’s vibrant staging and ap¬propriately tasteless set.It may also have been due to thenew Hattie Caliner Memorial The¬atre, well suited to audience in¬volvement with banks of seats onthree sides of the stage.“Who’ll Save the Plowboy” wiMbe presented weekends throughDecember 1. It is a praiseworthyfirst effort for a theatre whichpromises much more for the future.—-Elizabeth FentonConcerto ContestThe University of Chica¬go Symphony Orchestra hasannounced its fifth annualConcerto Contest. Auditionswill take place during themiddle of February and fhewinner will play a concertowith the orchestra at itsSpring Concert.Candidates must be UCstudents and must givetheir names to the Secre¬tary of the Music Depart¬ment before the close ofthis quarter.MORE KINDS OF CHEVROLETS THANEVER BEFORE!JET SMOOTH LUXURY CHEVROLET15 models. Four series. Onebrand-new series—the ImpalaSuper Sports. More luxury,too. Even the Biscaynes arenow fully carpeted. There’sseven different engines’ worthof power—140 hp to 425 hp(optional at extra cost). It’sa matter of knowing if you’dlike your luxury on the gentleside or on the other side.Model shown: Impala Sport Coup4TOTALLY HEW CHEVELLE! 11models. Three series. Anentirely new line of cars sizeda foot shorter than the bigcars, so you get the handlingease of smaller cars. But don’tsell it short! Chevelle givesvou generous passenger andluggage room. Engine choice t120 to extra-cost 220 hp.Model shown: Malibu Sport CouprHEW CHEVY A Six models. Twoseries—Nova and Chevy II100. Both now offer an extra¬cost 195-hp V8 or a 155-hpsix, to give you more ChevyII power than ever before.Match this added power withChevy II thrift, and you cansee why Chevy II will beharder than ever to keep upwith this year.Model shown: Nova t-Door SedanHEW C0RVAIR Seven models infour series. Two Green briers.A new standard 95-hp engine(nearly 19% livelier). Anextra-cost 110-hp engine on allCorvairs and a 150-hp Turbo¬charged engine in the MonzaSpyder. Styling? Never beencleaner. Interior? Never beenbrighter. Fun to drive? Neverbeen more so.Model shown: Monza Club Coup*NEW CORVETTE Two models-'the Sport Coupe with a nevrone-piece rear window plusimproved interior ventilation,and the dashing Sting RayConvertible. Both boastsmoother rides, improvedsound insulation. Both gowith four big V8's, includinga new extra-cost 375- hpengine with Fuel Injection.Model shown: Sport Coup* Theatre, Revues“Who’ll Save the Plowboy,” HullHouse players, 8:30 pm, week-ends,until Dec 1, Jane Addams Center. >213N. Broadway. $1.90-$2.90. 348-8330.“Antigone,” by Jean Anouilh, and“International Affair,” by J. Schapire,8 pm, November 22 and 24. Interna¬tional House, >1.50. FA 4-8200.“A Taste of Honey,” Shelagh De¬laney’s drama, 8:30 pm, November 22,23. December 6. and 7. Chicago StageGuild. 640 N. State, students >1. WH4-8050.“The Time of Your Life,” by WilliamSaroyan: James O’Reilly, director, 8:30pm. November 22-24. 29-30. DecemberI, 6-8. Reynolds Club Theatre, >1.50-$2. Tickets—Reynolds Club.“Mary Stuart,” Friederich Schiller’sdrama in new translation by StephenSpender, starting November 22 North¬western University Theatre, Cahn Au¬ditorium. 600 Emerson, Evanston, >2->2 50. UN 4-1907.“Tartuffe,” by Moliere. directed byWayne Caudill. Friday and Saturday.8:30 pm, Sunday. 7:30 pm. November15-December 1. The Last Stage, 1506E. 51st St., OA 4-4200.“The Sea Gull,” by Anton Chekhov,8-30 pm, Sunday 7:30. November 22-24.November 29-30 and December 1. Thea¬tre First, the Athenaoum, 2936 N.Southport. LA 5-9761.“The Three Sisters,” comedy byAnton Chekov. November 29. Decem¬ber 18. Nightly 7:30. weekends 8:30,Goodman Theatre. CE 6-2337.“Othello.” William Shakespeare’stragedy, November 29 through De¬cember 17. Nightly 7:30. weekends 8^30pm. Goodman Theatre: students >190,weekends >2.50. CE 6-2337.“How to Succeed in Business With¬out Really Trying.” nightly. 8:30 pm.Schubert Theatre, 22 W. Monroe. >2 20->6 95. CE 6-8240.“Get the Picture,” musical review.Nightly 9 and 11. closed Monday. LeShow. 1759 N. Sedgwick. Dinner andshow. $4 95. show only >2, weekends>2.50 . 944-8057.“Thirteen Minotaurs, or SlouchingTowards Bethlehem,” satirical review’.Newest troupe members comedy teamof Steinberg and Kadish. Nightly 9 andII, Second City, 1946 N. Wells, >2->2 50.DE 7-3992.MusicEvanston Centennial Music Festival.Various concerts November 22-24. byEvanston Symphony Orchestra, North¬western Symphony Orchestra, North¬western University Band and FestivalChorus. Information, UN 4-7900, ext 622.Madrigal Singers of the CollegiumMusicum, November 23. 8:30 pm, BondChapel, admission free.Chicago Symphony Orchestra, JeanMartinon, conductor. November 22.Byron Janis, piano soloist. November28 29. Mozart’s Requiem. Stravinsky’sSymphony of Psalms. November 30,“Pop” concerts, Walter Hendl conduct¬ing Information HA 7-0362.l.vric Opera. November 22 . 27,“Thannhauser.” 7:30 pm. November23. 26, 29, “Don Pasquale,” 8 p.m.Opera House, 20 N. Wacker, >2.50->10 W. FI 6 6111. Organ recital, by Edward MondeUo.University Organist, 8:30 pm. Novem¬ber 26. Rockefeller Memorial Chap<k.Free admission.“The Messiah,” by Handel, .7:30 pm,December 15, Rockefeller MemorialChapel. >3 00, students >2.00Gaslight Singers, nightly 9 A It. Fri-day-Sunday 8:30, 11:30, 12:30, Gate ofHorn, 1036 N. State, >1.50 admission,>1.50 minimum, weekends >2 50 admis¬sion, >2 50 minimum. SU 7-2833.Bob Gibson, folk-singer, 9 and IIpm, Crystal Palace, 4945 N. Sedgwick.“Black Nativity,” gospel jamboree. 7pm, December 2-January 18, specialstudent performances December 4 and5. Civic Theatre, Student admissioa>1.95.ExhibitsErnest Dreyfuss One-Man Show,Center for Continuing Education. 1307E. 60th St, November 15 through De¬cember 15.“Decade of the Armory Exhibition.”Art Institute, Adams and Michigan,through December 29.17th Annual Exhibition, “Contem¬porary Art for Young Collectors.”Goodspeed Hall, November 17 throughDecember 15.Special Events, LecturesChicago Arts Festival, featuring dis¬plays, discussions and demonstrationin graphic arts, photography, theatrearts, music, painting, sculpture, andarchitecture. Noon-10 pm, November19-24, McCormick Place, >1 50. 922 4393.Third Annual Winter Art Fair, saleand exhibit of paintings, drawings,sculpture and graphic arts by SouthSide artists. Noon 9 pm. November 2324, Hyde Park Neighborhood Club, 5380S. Kenwood. 50c. children 10cUNESCO Art Symposium, on contem¬porary European painting. 2'30 pm.November 26, Morton Lecture Hall. ArtInstitute. .“The Angels of Chicago.” reading byPaul Carroll. Chicago poet. 8:30 pm,November 277. Second City, 1842 N.Wells 82 00. students >100 DE 7-3992.Won Kyung Clio, Korean dance re¬cital. 8:30 pm, November 29 MandelHall. *1 50, students >1 00, tickets Reyn¬olds Club.Films“The End,” Christopher Maclaine.8 pm. November 24. Hyde Park ArtCenter, 5236 S. Blackstone. >1.50 667-2066“The Swindle.” Ttaly. 1955. directedbv Federico Fellini. 7:30 pm. Novem¬ber 25. De Paul University Film Forum.25 E. Jackson, 50c. Information WE91W. ext 270“Life and Loves of Beethoven.”(1935). Abel Gance director, with Har¬ry Baur, 7:30 pm, Novemlier 27, Rix>se-velt University Sinha Hall. 430 S.Michigan, series admission >3 50. WA2-35R0. ext 311.“The Marriage of Figaro,” with LaComedie Francaise, starting Noveml>er29 Globe Theatre. Clark and North“Drunken Angel,” directed by AkiraKurasaw’a. R pm. December 1. IllinoisInstitute of Technology, Hermann Hall.75c“The Blue Angel,” directed by Josefvon Sternberg. 8 pm. December 8.Illinois Institute of Techology, Her¬mann Hall, 75c.Art exhibit at GoodspeedThe 17th annual exhibition“Contemporary Art for YoungCollectors” opened last weekin Goodspeed Hall. Initiatedoriginally to bring fine art withinreach of UC students, the “YoungCollectors” show has attracted na¬tionwide attention and interest.This year’s show contains 1,000original works of art, priced from$1 to $100. A broad variety of artmedia is included: oil paintings,wateroolors, collages, sculpture inwood, metal and ceramic, draw¬ings, lithographs, etchings. Lead¬ing Chicago artists are representedin the collection: Eleanor Coen,Lillian Desow-Fishbein, Mary Gehr,Sidney Rafilson, Fred Rappaport,Rosemary Zwick. Max Kahn, Mar-tyl, Richard Florsheim, Rainey Bennett, George Fred Keck, TimMeier, among others.Enamels from the Wolleys ofCalifornia can be seen, as well asrepresentative work from studiosin New York City, Madison, Wis¬consin, Baltimore, Maryland andCleveland, Ohio. In addition, thereare European prints of Dufy, Cha¬gall, Daumier, Kollwitz, Leger,Matisse, Miro, Manet, Picasso,Utrillo. Of particular interest isthe work of Mr. Erik Plen, leadingScandinavian potter and ceramist,who will be guest lecturer and pro¬fessor this year; examples of hiswork are included in the show.The exhibit is ojien Mondaythrough Friday, 10 to 5, Saturdayand Sunday, 1 to 5. The show willrun through December 15.JESSELSONSSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOOD AVAILABLEPL 2-2870, PL 2-11*0, DO 3-8190 1340 E. 53rdPane’s PiAsk about a SMILE-MILE Ride and the ChevroletSong Book at your Chevrolet dealer's izzeria“Home of Hyde Park's Tastiest Pina**Welcomes everyone back to file UniversityFREE DELIVERY WITH STUDENT I.D.PHONE NOrmal 7-9520 1603 E. 53rd ST.OPEN DAILY 11:00 A.M.-2.00 A.M.10 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 22, 1963Winner of the 1963 Cannes Festival as "Bast Film of the Veer.”30th CfOtfUB Y-FOX pre<*dlySuriX^nncaster MAROON <g) WEEKEND GUIDE•«also starringAlain ScionandClaudia Cardinala ifSpecial student rate of $1.00 ineffect during this engagementonly (except Saturday night). The ESQUIREOAK Nt A ItA MICHIGAN ILAKE /jthe (*• PARK A T R D : NO 7-9071yde park theatre HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of Imported ond domesticwines, liquors ond beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONE■> A A ~ 1233FA d—1318■— 7699 B-J CINEMAPresentsOur Man In HavanaWith Alec GuinnessFRIDAY, NOV. 228 and 10 P.M.BURTON-JUDSONCOURTS1005 EAST 60thStarts Friday, Nov. 22Dostoyevsky's Masterpiece"THE IDIOT"Gerard Philippe ^ Edwige Feviliereand"Magnificent Sinner"Romy Schneider ^ Curt JurgensFree Weekend Patron Parking at 5230 S. Lake ParkSpecial Student Rates WITH Student I.D. Cards DEARBORN 'H AT DIVISIONNew Program StartsFriday, Nov. 22ndHard-Hitting Drama of aSMALL-TIME HUSTLER!Anthony Newley in"THE SMALL VIOLENTWORLD OF SAMMY LEE"Trkwgle Theatrical Productions. FRANKLIN PRIED. E»«c. Dir., PrasenhFRI. AND SAT., NOV. 22-23, 8:30 F.M., McCormick PlaceEXTRA PERF. SUN., NOV. 24 — 3 P.M.1ST TIME IN CHICAGO! Chicago's most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign enddomestic films.STUDENTSToke advantage of thespecial discount avail¬able to you. 90< any dayexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. cord to the cashier. TIKI TOPICSAlolta Nui (Hearty Greeting?)from Cirals, House of Tiki . . .Treat yourself and your NaniWaliine to an evening of legiti¬mate theatre, dinner and cock¬tails. Onr menu offers yourchoice of appetizers, dinners orsandwiches . . . then right up¬stairs for a delightful eveningwith a “Last Stage” performance,and “After the Show Is Over”back to Cirals, House of Tiki forone of the many tall, cool Ha¬waiian drinks available.CIRALS,HOUSE OF TIKI51st ST. and LAKE PARK AVE.LI 8-7585Rife hen Open:11:00 4.M. to 3:00 A.M.JANDY WILLIAMS SHOWstarringAndy WilliamsOSMOND BROTHERS BOYS' QUARTETSpecial Guest StarHenry ManciniPLUS 40-PIECE ORCHESTRA$2.50, $3.50$4.50, $5.50Tickets en Sale■0«f at McCar-■ick Bax Officear by Mail, Me-BaraUck BaxBffiea.$1.50. 3.50 ticket* for Fri. Part. end $2.50.3.50, 5:50 ticket* for Set. Pert. All Sold.FRI.. NOV. 29. B:30 P.M.. McCormick PlaceEXTRA PERF. SAT., NOV. 30 — 8:30 P.M.THE S E\S.\TfO\A/. BARER ASTREISANDTHANKS¬GIVINGWEEKENDORCHESTRA CONDUCTED IT PETER DANIELSTickets: $2.50. $3.50. $4.50. $5.50. $4.50($4.50 Tickets for Friday. Nav. 29 All Sold)Tickets dr sale NOW at MeCormick Bax Office or by MaH,McCormick Bex Office, East 23rd at Laka Front—Phone 225-4366for CONCERTS ABOVE available ^oT Dfcco.m’t Records.'H°«uNiioi u,, ?L,°iea ??d,#r 'J.l,1 kvoxsfon; HarmonyNoll, 4103 H. Lincoln, Lincoln Village. BACH CANTATA GROUPSoloists of the Rockefeller Chapel ChoirTHE GOLUB STRING QUARTETRAY STILL, WALFRED KUJALA,LEONARD SHARROWRICHARD VIKSTR0M, conductingPRESENTS CANTATAS39 42 78inBOND CHAPEL(1010 East 59th Street)DECEMBER 1. 1963 7:30 P.M.Tickets: $3.00ONLY 300 TICKETS WILL BE SOLDInformation: Call Ml 3-0800, ext. 3387Mail Orders: 5810 Woodlawn Avenue W orld ofdining.charcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668The Most Popular BookOn Your Campus Is NowAn Exciting MovieA Shocker"Lord Of The Flies itCINEMAChicago at MichiganStudents $1.00 with I.D. CardsEvery Day But SaturdayJOHN DINOU'S MS 3-4900SURF i SURREYRESTAURANT —COCKTAIL LOUNGE — COFFEE SHOP — OPEN 24 HOURS5000 S. LAKE SHORE DRIVELong Known For Prime Steaks And Dry MartinisThe banquet season has started, and it is time now to plan for Thanks¬giving, Christmas and holiday partying. Call John Dinou fer prices andfull information ., . MI 3-4900. Our newly remodeled Century Room will seat 100 persons. Our newPier 50 Room is also available. Other rooms include the Surrey, theSurf, and the Captain's Cabin.Nov. 22, 1963 • C H I C A G O M A R O O N • 11FUOl.pOYAdduces in Comparative Physiology andBiochemistrvEdited bv O. E. LOW ENSTEIN1962. $i2.0<JAdvances in Ecological ResearchEdited Uv J. B. CRAGG1962, $7.50Blood Vessels and LymphaticsEdited by D, I. ABRAMSON1962. $26.00The Cell (Biochemistry, Physiology,,Morphology)Edited bv J. BRACHET. and A, E,MIRSKYVolume 1: Methods; Problems ofCell Biology, 1959. $22.00Volume 2; Cells and Their ComponentParts, 1961, $25.00Volume 3: Meiosis and Mitosis,1961,$12.00Volume 4: Specialized Cells, Part 1,1960, $18.00Volume 5: Specialized Cells, Part 2,1961, $20.00Electron Microscopy (Proceedings of th*Filth International Congress)Edited by S. S. BREESETwo volume set, 1962, $32 00Structure and Ultrastructure of Micro*organismsBv E. M. BRIECER1963, $10.00Biochemical Applications of Cas Chroma*tographyBy H. P. BURCHFIELD, and E. E.'STORRS1962, $22.00Enzyme Histochemistry and Its Applied*tion in the Study of NeoplasmsBy M. S. BURSTONE1962, S22.50Energy-Linked Functions of MitochondriaBy B. CHANCE1963, S4. 50The EyeEdited by H. DAVSONVolume 2: The Visual Process,1962, S22.00Volume 4: Visual Optics and the OpticalSpace Sense, 1962, $14 00Environmental Control of Plant GrowthBy L. T. EVANS1963, S17.00Biological Structure and FunctionEdited by T. W. GOODWIN, andO. LINDBERGVolume 1: 1961, S10. 50Volume 2: 1961, S18.00Biological Organization at the Cellularand Supercellular LevelEdited bv R. J. C. HARRIS1963.S9.50Metabolic Inhibitors: A ComprehensiveTreatiseEdited by R. M. HOCHSTER. andJ. H. QUASTELVolume X: 1963. $26.00Analytical MicrobiologyEdited by F. KAVANAGH1963.S22.00The Action of Insulin on Cell*By M. E. KRAHL1961. S7.50 cSvmposium on the Cell In Mitosis’Edited by L. LEVINE1963, S10.00Selected PapersBy K. LINDERSTRQM-LANO1962, $17.00Biological Transmission of Disease Agent*Edited by K, MARAMOROSCH1962, $7,00The Structure and Function of Skin(Second edition)By W. MONTAGNA1962, $16. 50Ecology of FishesBy G. V. NIKOLSKY1962, S12.00Optical TechniquesEdited by G. OSTER, and A. V .POLLISTER1955, $15.00Protein StructureBv H. A. SCHERAGA1961, S9.00Insect Pathology: An Advanced TreatiseEdited by E, A. STEINHAUSVolume 1: 1963, S22.00Volume 2; 1963, S23.00Enzyme and Metabolic Inhibitor*By J. L. WEBBVolume 1: General Principles ofInhibition, 1963, S26.00Cytology and EvolutionBy E. N. WILLMER1960, $12.00The OvaryEdited by S. ZUC KERMANVolume!: 1962, S22.00Volume 2: 1962, S22.00academic paperback:Division of Labor in CellsBy G. H. BOURNE1962, $2.9$Design and Function at the Threshold ofLife: The VirusesBy H. FRAENKEL-CONRAT1962, S1.9STime, Cells, and AgingBy B. L. STREHLER1962, $2. 9$ CHEMISTRYScience of Ceramic*Edited by G. H. STEW ARTVolume 1: Proceedings of the OxfordConference, 1962, $11.50Methods of Enzymatic AnalystsEdited by H. U. BERGMEYER1963» $30.00Catalysis by MetalsBy G. C. BOND1962, $15.50Ultrastructure of Protein Fiber*Edited by R. BORASKY1963, $9.00Electodeposition of AUoys; Principlesand PracticeBv A. BRENNERVolume 1: 1963, $24.00Volume 2: 1963, $22.00CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGYFuel Cells' Edited bv W. MITCHELL, Jr.1963, $i5.00Study Projects in Physical ChemistryBy F. E. CONDON1963, S4.75Methods in Hormone ResearchEdited by R. DORFMANVolume 1: Chemical Determination*,1962, $16.00Volume 2; Bioassay, 1962, $24.00Newer Methods in Preparative OrganicChemistryEdited by W. FOERST1963, $i4. 50Recent Progress in the Chemistry ofNatural and Synthetic ColouringMatters and Related FieldsEdited bv T. S. GORE. B. S. JOSHt,S. V. SUNTHANKAR, and B. aTILAK1962, $24.00OxvgenasesEdited bv O. HAYAISHt1962, $17.50Introduction to Modern BiochemistryBv P. KARLSON1963, $10.00.Physical Methods in HeterocyclicChemistry; A ComprehensiveTreatise (in two volumes)Edited by A. R. KATRITZKYVolume 1: Non-Spectroscopic Methods,1963, $12.00Volume 2: Spectroscopic Methods,1963, S14.00Retardation of Evaporation by Monolayer*'Edited by V. K. LaMER1962, S10.00Phvsiology and Biochemistrv of Alga*Edited by R. A. LEWIN1962, $32.00Inorganic Adduct Molecules Of Oxo-CompoundsBv I. LLNDQVIST1963, S6.50Gas Chromatography: Principles,Techniques and ApplicationsBv A. B. LITTLEW’OOD1962, $15.00Mass Spectrometry of Organic ton*Edited bv F. W. McLAFERTY1963, $24.00The Chemistry of Nucleosides andNucleotidesBy A. M. MICHELSON1963, $18.50The Chemistry of Heterocyclic CompoundsBy G. M. BADGER1961, S13.00Colloidal Surfactants: Some Physio*Chemical PropertiesBy K. SHINODA, T. NAKAGAWA,’B. TAMAMUSHI, and T. ISEMURA1963, $11.50Cenetic Effects of RadiationBy C. E. PURDOM1963, S7.00Inorganic Polymers• Edited by F. G. A. STONE, andW. A. G. GRAHAM1962, $19.50Methods in Carbohydrate ChemistryEdited by R. L. WHISTLER, andM L. WOLFROMVolume I: 1962, $20.00Volume 2: 1963, SI9. 50Volume 3: 1963, $15.50Anodic Oxide FilmsBy L. YOUNG1961, $11.00The Chemistry and Function of Protein*(Second edition)By F. HAUROWITZ1963, S10.00PHYSICSPhysics Of Thin FilmsEdited by G. HASSVolume 1: 1963, $13.00Nuclear Quadrupole Resonance Spectro*scopyBy T. P. DAS, and E. L. HAHN1958, $8.50XU International Astronautlcal CongressBy R. M. L. BAKER, Jr., andM. W. MAKEMSONTwo volume set, 1963, $44.00Proceedings of the Rutherford Jubtle*International ConferenceEdited by J. B. BIRKS4*82, $35.00 Diffusion In SemiconductorsBy B. I. BOLTAKS1963, $14.00Methods of Celestial MechanicsBy D. BROUWER, and G. M.CLEMENCE1961, $15.50Communications SatellitesEdited by L. J. CARTER1962, $7.00EnergyBy B. CHALMERS1963, $5.75Programming and Utilization of ResearchReactorsBy S. EKLUND (Director General)Volume 3: 1962, $15.00An Introduction to Atmospheric PhysicsBy R. G. FLEAGLE, and J. A.BUSINGER1963, $12.00Italian Physical Society: Proceedings ofthe International School o( Phvsic*’’ENRICO FERMI"Edited by G. POLVAN1Nuclear SpectroscopyDirector G. RACAH1963, $9.00Physicomathematical Aspects of BiologyDirector N. RASHEVSKY1962, $16.00Topics of Radiofrequency SpectroscopyDirector A. GOZZINI1962, $10.00Nuclear PhysicsDirector V. F. WEISSKOPF1962, $7.50The Moon: Our Nearest CelestialNeighbourEdited by Z. KOPAL1960, $4.50Paramagnetic ResonanctEdited by W’. LOWTwo volume set, 1963, S30.00Molecular PhysicsEdited by D. WILLIAMS1961, S19.00Nuclear PhysicsEdited by L. C. L. YUAN, andCHIEN-SHIUNG W UPart A, 1961, $18.00Part B, 1963, $22. 50Principles of Quantum ElectrodynamicsBy W. E. THIRRING1958, $8.00Group Theory and Its Application to theQuantum Mechanics of AtomicSpectraBv E. P. WIGNER1959, S8.80Mathematics in Phvsics and EngineeringBy J. IRVING, and N. MILLINE UK1959, $11.50Wave Propagation and Croup VelocityBy L. BRILLOLIN1960, $6.00Nuclear SpectroscopyBy F. AJZENBERG-SELOVEPart A, I960, $16.00Part B, I960, $16 00Quantum TheoryEdited by D. R. BATESPart 2, Aggregates ol Particles,1962,S11.00Quantum Mechanics of Manv-Body System*Bv D. J. THOULESS1961, $5.50Aft Introduction to Elementary Particle*Bv W. S. C. WILLIAMS1961, S11.00Atomic and Molecular ProcessesEdited by D. R. BATES1962, $19.50Nuclear Shell TheoryBv A. de-SHALIT, and I. TALMI1963, S14.50Nuclear Research Emulsion*By W. H. BARKASPart 1: Techniques and Theory1963,$18.00Physics of the Upper AtmosphereEdited by J. A. RATCLIFFE1960, $14.50Dynamics of SatellitesEdited by M. ROY1963, $15.00Reports on AstronomyEdited by D. H. SADLERXI A, 1962, $11.50XI B, 1963, $11.50Absorption and Collective ParamagnetismBy P. W. SELWOOD1962, $7.50MechanicsBy A. SOMMERFELD1952, $7.50Thermodynamics and StatisticalMechanicsBy A. SOMMERFELD1956, $7.50Theromagnetic Effects in Semiconductor*By I. M. 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