aVoL 72 — No. 51 University of Chicago, Friday, May 8. 1964 : 31Library stacks now open to allAll library stacks are now open to any student holding a validated UC ID card, ac¬cording to Stanley Gwynn, assistant direc tor for Readers’ Services.The new policy reflects the library administration’s desire to be more liberal, theirdesire to save the trouble and expense of issuing special passes, and their pleasure withthe success of the recent extension —— —-of privileges to third and fourth yearcollege students, Gwynn said."Hie change affects first and secondyear students essentially, who pre¬viously needed special permission ora borrowed pass to get into thestacks.In other recent library administra recently for improving library serv¬ices.First, installation of rental type¬writers in the typing room of theModern Language Reading Room.Tile library had intended to institutethis service two years ago, Gwynn As a result of this, the service wasdiscontinued, bui Gwynn is “lookinginto” the possibility of reinstituting it.Third, it was suggested that thedoor between the Modem LanguageReading Room and the Social Sci¬ence Reading Room be closed sothat these rooms would not be usedas corridors. Users of Modem Lan-said, but it has been unable to findtive rulings, the library has stated somebody interested in supplying the guage could use the elevator recentlyopened m Classics, Gwynn said. Thisthat students from local universitiescan use the library facilities only with„a letter from their own librariesstating that the particular volumesthey may need are not available tothem.The rule was necessitated, Gwynntold the Maroon, by the great strainon UC’s facilities, especially eveningsand Saturdays, when the UC librarieswere invaded by great numbers ofstudents from other universities.Last quarter, because of this in¬flux of outside students, the libraryasked the campus police to includeHarper, where the influx was great¬est. on their regular rounds. Thepolice were asked to remove forciblyany outside student who was dis¬tracting others. Noise in Harper hadbeen the cause of several studentcomplaints.Beside the change in stacks policy,three other suggestions were made Second, installation of a non-circu¬lating record collection in the Gen¬ suggestkm will be “discussed. Walter Johnson: LBJ isweakest in foreign policyby Steve Ege“Get off your asses and do something for your society,*that’s how Walter Johnson, professor of history opened hisremarks to students in his talk “LBJ; Beyond the New Fron¬tier.”Johnson, author of 1600 Pennsyl¬vania Avenue: Presidents and thePeople and How We Drafted AdlaiStevenson among other books, spoketo a gathering of Young Democratsat their second meeting of theSpring quarter Wednesday in theHenderson House Lounge of PierceTower.Johnson emphasized the heritageto which Lyndon Johnson is heirand what he must do with that heri¬tage to secure the Presidency in1964.The Democratic party, he said,was a minority party until 1933when, with the crash of the economyand the Republican party, FranklinRoosevelt took office. Under Roose¬velt the predominantly lower classand low educational level Demo¬cratic party of the pre-New Dealera was united with a large part oithe American middle class. “In 1936,” he said. “Roosevelt’s NewDeal allowed him to capture everycity over 100,000 population.”The biggest bugaboos of the Demo¬cratic party have been emotionalforeign policy issues, Johnson said.From the time of the Korean warElections for next year’sMAROON editor will beheld in the MAROON of¬fice, 3rd floor, Ida NoyesHall, next Friday at 4 pmAll staff members are re¬quired to attend.eral Reading Collection in the eastend of Harper. Gwynn stated that,until a few years ago, there was arental record collection but that therecords were abused so quickly thatfew people wanted to borrow them.* Wobblie rumble still rollingRoosevelt Torek SpecialThe controversy concern¬ing the recent suspension ofthe Wobblies at RooseveltUniversity has grown to newdimensions. tA flurry of statements and policydeclarations has emerged from stu¬dents, faculty, and administration,over the justice of suspending thegroup because of their alleged asso¬ciation with the Industrial Workersof the World (IWW), violation of fireregulations, and state and federalstatutes.Student protest came from twogroups: The Committee to Preservelire Integrity of Roosevelt Univer¬sity, which supports the administra¬tion’s action, and the Ad Hoc Com¬mittee to Preserve Student Rights.RU’s President, Robert J. Pitchell,said in a statement to the pressThursday: “Obviously RooseveltUniversity cannot condone violationof laws within the University or with¬in its facilities . . . therefore thisadministration intends to adhere tothe laws of the land. The “Wobblies”student group has been suspended.However, they are eligible for rein¬statement as a recognized studentGNOSIS Caucus Sun.A GNOSIS caucus to discuss plansfor the new Student Government willl* held Sunday evening in the IdaNoyes Library at 7:30 pm.In the recent elections GNOSISwon a majority of the SG assemblyseats and elected members to eightout of the eleven seats on th execu¬tive board.The caucus will concern itself withplanning future policy as well aswith specific resolutions and areasof activity. The caucus will also dis¬cuss future party activities anaplans. All students are invited to at¬tend and present their ideas andopinions. Survey costs editor joborganization at Roosevelt if they areprepared to adhere as a group to thelaws of the land and the rules andregulations of the University.”In an earlier statement, Dean ofStudents Arthur E. Hoover justifiedthe suspension on the grounds thatthe IWW is on the Attorney General'slist of subversive organizations (pub¬lished as a guide to federal employ¬ment), and that student affiliates ofknown subversive groups cannotexist on campus. Hoover suspendedthe group originally with the consentof President Pitchell.The Ad Hoc Committee condemnsthe administration, declaring that, intaking this action, Dean Hoover hasviolated the very purposes of theexistence of Roosevelt. “RooseveltUniversity withstood criticism andslander for years in order to main¬tain an atmosphere in which all poli¬tical views, regardless of their masspopularity, could be freely ex¬pressed,” their statement reads.The Roosevelt Student Senate hada special meeting to deal with thesituation, and passed a resolutionwhich said in part:“The basic position that the ad¬ministration has taken is completelyuntenable in basis of law; it is con¬trary to the basic beliefs under whichthis University was founded, and isclearly detrimental to the continued•existence of freedom at Roosevelt.“This is a violent break with basicUniversity policy. The Universityhas always held, up to this point,that students have an absolute rightto organize in order that they mightexpress themselves, and has alwaystaken a neutral view on student or¬ganizations, neither approving or dis¬approving, merely noting their ex¬istence.”The Student Senate further reiter¬ated its basic support of freedom ofspeech and assembly, urged that theadministration reconsider its action,and pressed for further liberalizationof rules and regulations in consider¬ation of the rights of student groups. Chancellor Durward B.Varner, of Oakland Univer¬sity, Rochester, Michigan,fired Wolf Metzger, editor ofthe Oakland Observer, Tuesday forconducting a survey on the sexlives of men and women attendingthe university.Varner also ordered all copies ofthe last issue of the paper destroyedbecause the issue contained an edi¬torial denouncing Varner’s order,which forbade the publication of theresults of the survey.Varner told the MAROON, in anexclusive interview, that he took ac¬tion against the survey because hefelt that Metzger was incompetentas far as conducting such a surveywas concerned, that the questionnairehad been treated lightly by many ofthe students so the results weremeaningless; that the purpose of thesurvey was to provide a “sensation¬al” story and as such would be dam¬aging to the university; and that thepropriety of such a survey was “con¬siderably questionable.”Before' taking punitive actionagainst Metzger, Varner met with"How Can the Hauser ReportBe Implemented?," a panel dis¬cussion, will be broadcast liveby WFMT from the law schoolauditorium Monday night at 8:30.The panelists are Philip Kurland,Professor of Law, moderator;Phillip Hauser, Deportment ofSociology, Chairman, ChicagoBoard of Education CommitteeTo Investigate Segregation in thePublic Schools; Rev. Callun Bra¬zier, The Woodlawn Organization;Bernard Friedman, member, Chi¬cago Board of Education; andNorton Long, Department of Po¬litical Science and Education,Northwestern University. At leastone hundred student tickets areavailable at Ida Noyes. considered only when and if neces¬sary.When Metzger responded by writ¬ing the editorial blasting Varner forsuppressing the story, Varnerordered all copies of the issue con¬taining the editorial destroyed. Hefelt that although his order prohibit¬ing publication of the results of thesurvey had been followed technical¬ly, it had not been followed “inspirit.”Varner told the MAROON that thesame procedure would be followedif a similar incident ever arose, butQuote of the Day"Can It be that poetry Is only the re¬verse side ot masturbation?"■—from Jean-Paul Sortre's introduction toGenet's OUR LADY OF THE FLOWERS,paqe 23.NUHlUillllllllllilllllliililllllliliHilllllliHllllilllUililllllUllllinilllliilllllllllHUllllilHIllllililllfhe also maintained that his actiondid not amount to censorship. TheOakland Observer has always en¬joyed freedom from censorship, butin this case “editorial freedom wasabused for the sake of sensationalismwithout regard for the students ofthe university,” he said.Varner also stated that he wouldnot reveal the results of the surveybecause they would be entirelymeaningless and invalid because ofthe way the survey, conducted bymeans of a “crudely constructed andoffensive questionnaire,” had beentreated. the Democratic party was the par¬ty “Soft on Communism” and the“War Party.”As a Democrat. LBJ is heir tothis tradition. Professor Johnson be¬lieves that if Lyndon Johnson failsto secure the Presidency it will beon account of “divisive foreign policyissue.” Johnson views foreign policyat LBJ’s greatest weakness. “Hedoesn’t have the depth or breadthof understanding that President Ken¬nedy had,” he said. “When a Presi¬dent is weak in the area of foreignpolicy,” he continued, “you pray fora shrewd Secretary of State. I don’tthink this description characterizesSecretary Rusk.”Professor Johnson thinks there isa good possibility that “Rusk willgo” when LBJ is elected. SenatorFulbright is a good candidate forthe vacancy, he remarked.As a South-westerner PresidentJohnson is heir to a stereotype char¬acterization. “He is viewed as aSouth-Westerner or a mountainman,” Johnson said. He had no ap¬peal to the big northern cities inthe 1960 convention.“LBJ’s biggest problem then, isto emerge as a national figure.”When he is viewed as less of a re¬gional man, President Johiison willbe well on his way to capturing sup¬port from northern industrial cities,Prof. Johnson concluded.Oswald s lawyer Mark LaneTo speak at UC SundayMark Lane, counsel for accused Presidential assassinLee Harvey Oswald, will speak at UC Sunday night.Lane, a 37 year-old New York attorney, is representingOswald before the Warren Commission, a group appointedby Pres idem Johnson to investigatethe assassination. He has made nu¬merous trips to Dallas in search ofnew information regarding the case.him and asked him not to print theresults of the survey, Metzger statedthat the Director of Residence Hallshad endorsed the survey, but theDirector not only denied this butalso asserted that he had directedMetzger to seek approval from theDean of Students before distributingthe questionnaire. Metzger repliedthat the dean had no right to denythe circulation of a legitimate ques¬tionnaire.When Varner saw that Metzgerwas not ready to obey his order, hesaid, he threatened him with suspen¬sion. Metzger asked if he wouldsuspend the newspaper as well. Var¬ner replied that this action would be Lane will speak in Ida Noyestheater at 8 pm. His address will besponsored by POLIT.In December, Lane prepared andpublished a defense brief for Oswaldanswering the 15 points which Dallasprosecutor Henry Wade claimedproved “beyond a doubt” that Os¬wald was the lone assassin of thePresident.As a result of this brief, Lane wasretained by Marguerite C. Oswald,the accused assassin’s mother, toact as counsel for her son before theWarren Commission. On March 4,Lane first appeared before the Com¬mission and presented his findingsup to that date.Beside his work on the Oswald case. Lane is also chairman of therecently formed Citizens’ Committeeof Inquiry, which is conducting anindependent investigation of the as¬sassination.Lane first became widely knownin the 1950's for his activities in re¬form politics in New York and forhis handling of many civil libertiescases. In 1961, after being elected tothe New York State Assembly, hebecame the first elected official inthe country to participate directly inthe integration struggle when hejoined a Freedom Ride to Jackson,Mississippi.After Lane had disclosed conflictof interest in a $100 million falloutshelter bill up before the New Yorklegislature in 1962, thousands of NewYork State citizens visited Albanyto stage a one-day protest againstthe bill, 4Letters to the editor May revise general ed mathNew Dorm cafeteria runincompetently, says alumDEAR DR. WICK:I am an alumnus of this Universi¬ty (B.A. 1955, Ph.d, Bio Sci, 1962),ami have been following the currentcafeteria contract dispute in theMaroon. Your position in this issue TO THE EDITOR:appears to me to be short sighted,fatuous and destructive. sooner than college instruction couldprovide them; especially a collegewhose students are daily insulted byits administration’s m o n u m e n-tal small-mindedness and taste fordrear.DR. JAN BERKHOUTGives credit for programCost accounting aside, it is clearthat the cafeteria is providing ter¬rible food at high prices. This is dueentirely to the incompetance ofthose running it. Tne peculiar cir¬cumstances of a university eatery(predictable numbers of patrons,favorable credit) are such that itshould be at no disadvantage withsuch operations as the YMCA, whichis much better at similar prices, orValois, which is better yet at lowerprices, and makes a profit to boot.I fear the compelling reasonablenessof one's own figures and proceduresis blinding you to the complete in¬eptness of your service. Though the program on Israel,reported in^ Tuesday’s Maroon, washeld at Hillel, it was prepared withthe active participation of the Inter¬church Committee and was cospon¬sored by the Interchureh Committee,the Israeli Students Organization, andHillel. Students taking the Math101-102-103 sequence nextfall will probably be takinga very different course fromthe course as it is presently consti¬tuted, said Isaac Wirszup, associateprofessor of mathematics, at a dis¬cussion of the course sponsored bythe Student Government CurriculumCommittee Wednesday night.Wirszup, in addition to professorAlfred Putnam, who was also pres¬ent, is one of the three members ofthe College mathematics committeewhich ig responsible for the Math101-2-3 sequence. problems as they naturally occurredin tills field.While no definite conclusions werereached as to what the revisedcourse would include, it was gener¬ally felt that the present calculusstudy is not the best choice of mate¬rial that could be made.Putnam, in response to a question,explained that the present use ofteaching assistants in undergraduatemathematics courses is tne result ofa national shortage of persons inthis field. This shortage began in the mid-1950's as a result of the demandsby the government and of privateindustry for qualified mathemati¬cians.As the College mathematics staffdwindled, Putnam continued, it be¬came necessary for it to merge withtile graduate school. Fifteen yearsago there were fourteen professorschiefly concerned with College stu¬dies in mathematics. Today there areonly three; W. L. Meyer, chairmanof the College .mathematics staff,and Putnam and Wirszup.Lib arts at turning pointCHARTEREDBUS TOUR TONEW YORK CITYWORLD'S FAIRNew Air-Conditioned BusReclining Seats$ 27 ROUNDTRIPLeave International House after¬noon of June 14. Arrive New Yorkearly Monday morning. Leave NewYork evening June 18, arrive inter¬national House June 19.Arranging hotel reservations NewYork, about $4 per night (3 nights).Open to Students andMembers of I.H.A.CALL FA 4-8200SNELLIN3 &SNELLUG17 north State Street Chicago346-8322Career Jobswith nation's blue chip firmsSALESTECHNICALADMINISTRATIVEFIELDScall or come inSNELLING &SNELLING17 north State Street Chicago346-8322120 offices coast to coastnation's largest personnel system We appreciate your full coverageof the evening, and because of thedifficulty in planning panel programsI hope that you will be able to giveproper credit to those who did theplanning.RABBI RICHARD W. WINOGRADGiven these depressing circum¬stances, you have chosen the small¬est. meanest and least generous wayof making your books balance: forc¬ing students to eat bad food at yourcafeteria. This will certainly negatewhatever civilizing influence yourcollege is supposed to have on it’smembers. See Isaiah 7.15, “ Butterand Honey shall he eat. that he mayknow to refuse the evil and choosethe good.” Asks student commenton proposed math changes The Curriculum Committee of Stu¬dent Government will sponsor adiscussion of Humanities I & IIWednesday May 13 at 7:30 pm inIda Noyes Hall. The meeting willinvolve a full exchange of ideas—criticisms and suggestions concern¬ing the aims, curriculum, teachingmethod, innovations and examina¬tions In the course—between thestudent and the staffs. The survival of liberal artscolleges in the future dependsupon their own adaptabilityand the generosity of the“giants,” stated David Boroff in alecture Monday night in BreastedHall as part of the O-Board serieson liberal education in America.TO THE EDITOR:As a partial compromise youshould consider letting students optout of the compulsory contract fora fee equal to a share of the proj¬ected loss. This would be between$10 and $25 a year, and a smallprice indeed to pay for the freedomand privilege of eating where onepleases. A student paying such a feewould shortly form a high opinion ofhis judgement, and develop desire-able intellectual qualities much The aims of a basic mathematicscourse and its importance in a lib¬eral education were effectively pre¬sented at Wednesday evening’smeeting sponsored by the StudentGovernment.Our discussion centered on propo¬sals to modify the structure and thecontent of the course. The staff hasbeen considering a revision of thematerial away from its present em¬phasis on the calculus and some ofits applications.Regretfully, too little student com¬ment was heard because of the poorattendance. Requests for meaning¬ful discussion of the College courseshave been frequent and I hope thatfuture programs of this kind will at¬tract more students.UMBERTO NERICollege Math Staff Both a new text and a new ap¬proach to the course are being con¬sidered, Wirszup. said. An approachis being considered along tile linesof the general education math courseas it was taught at UC before thepresent calculus course was insti¬tuted.This course, the “A, B, C se¬quence’’ as it was called, stresseda broader scope in the study of ele¬mentary mathematics. It was similarin conception to the present PhyScisequence in that it presented manyaspects of mathematical study.Another suggestion that was madeinvolved a historical approach tothe study of mathematics. Such acourse would involve a study of thedevelopment of mathematics fromthe beginning of the Rennaissanee tomodem times. The emphasis wouldbe on trying to understand and solve Boroff, associate professor of Eng¬lish at New York University and afrequent contributor to periodicals(including the Saturday Review andtlie New York Times) spoke on “Con¬trasting Approaches to the LiberalArts in Colleges Around the (J.S.”According to Boroff, Americanhigher education today is character¬ized by giantism, urbanism, academ¬ic imperialism, strong competition forfaculties, and stress on research. Inaddition to these giant institutions,there are some 700 small, rural, liber¬al ails colleges, the majority of whichare “intellectual slums.”It is Boroff’s belief that “the ideaof undergraduate education in mostmajor universities is slighted” be¬cause of the stress on graduate ed¬ucation and research. In keeping withwhat he termed "folklore,” the smallliberal arts colleges are havens forundergraduate liberal arts study, and these institutions are characterizedby selfless teachers who are “in¬terested in ideas.”Boroff believes, however, that thisdescription is a myth. In reality, theteaching load is so heavy that teach¬ing inevitably suffers, he feels. Al¬though it is true that teachers areavailable to students, in many casesit is “relative ignorance communingwith total ignorance,” he said.Boroff concluded his lecture witha number of recommendations. Hestated that a “redistribution of aca¬demic wealth” is necessary since to¬day’s trend is toward “academicmonopoly” which leads to further im¬poverishment of half of the collegesin America.Boroff also made recommendationsconcerning the content of the liberalarts curriculum. He feels that a dras¬tic reevaluation of science has to liemade and that more science coursesshould be required. Also, non-Westernculture, history, and civilization ,should be taught, he feels. Since to¬day Is tlie “age of the computer,”courses should be offered to teachmore about the nature and uses ofcomputers. Finally, Boroff declared,more use should be made of instruc¬tion^ technology, including tapes,movies, and educational television. ,Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago IS. Ml.MU 4-6856 Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 FESTIVAL OF SHAKESPEARE AND THE RENAISSANCEAN EVENING OF ELIZABETHAN MUSICTHE CONSORT PLAYERSUnder the direction of Sydney BeckSATURDAY. MAY 9. 8:30 P.M. — MANDEL HALLTickets: JJ; Student $1. TicketI may be purchased at Music Dept, or FOTAshore drive matchFACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chicago Rates. 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SERVICE CALLS $000TV, HI-FI, RADIO O -9 VOLT TRANSISTOR BATTERIES, 19cEst. 19291300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111In the 53rd-Kimbark Plaza2 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 8, 1964A Outlines history of lib ed Educators discuss sex, examsIntending to discuss “Lib-There is some hope for be used for the diversion of struc-liberal education in the fu- tural linguistics. Rhetoric could , • An1() ■ „ „tme, but this hope depends s'rv' 10 fil1 P between knew!- ‘ education in Amencau|H>n the usage of plans set "lfie anl1 actwn- Cl.arles Wegener, associateforth under the head of “Notions of The third aspect of the Liberal professor of humanities; Paulthe Liberal Arts,” according to Paul Arts which Goodman developed was Goodman (Communitas, Growing UpGoodman. that connected with the creation of Absurd) Harry Kalven. professor ofcitizensGoodman spoke at Breasted HaM * law; and James Redfield Commit-Tuesday everting, and closed the Generalized education is necessary tee for Social Thought, met Mondayseries of discussions on the Liberal for automated society. One or two . .Arts sponsored by the Orientation per cent of the population, he con- a ernoo° in lasted Hall.Board. tended, could do what fully special- Before turning to other mattersThe three notions are* *zed sectors of it now do. There is, in response to questions, particularly• For liberal education as passed- therefore, no need for specialization,and as principles ofV on tradition,civilization,• Liberal Arts in the Medievalsense-logic, grammar, and rhetoric,• In the Roman and Renaissancecontext—the creation of the produc¬tive and free citizen.The first of these concepts of theliberal Arts, the carrying on of theWestern tradition, is exemplified bythe Greeks, the Bible, and by Chris¬tianity. Goodman believes, however,tlrat such a conception is probablydead for most young people.It embodies the Greek idea ofcivic excellence, which spirit does notexist today. The twelfth century no¬tion of corporate rights and respon¬sibilities of institutions, such as theuniversity, is likewise lacking at thepresent, Goodman said. on regulations of students’ sexualbehavior, the panel did bring up thequestions of examinations, the“moral purpose of education,” andthe blocks to achieving this purpose.In beginning the discussion, Good¬man charged that “the whole edu¬cation system is failing.”“You have to remember that theUniversity is part of its society. Ifthe entire society is undirected,meaningless, it’s not very likelythat you'll find the University mean¬ingful. It’s not just the liberal artscolleges that are failing: the wiiolesystem of education is failing . . .because of the superstition of school¬ing—the insistence on a lockstephe feels. General education is neededto breed free men, and to create hu¬man culture.All that which requires no thoughtought to be automated, Goodmanr The Renaissance sense of the questfor fame cannot be found in oursociety, nor can the belief in “Na- heId- whlle aU ebf (fh°°ls- univer‘ture” of the “heroic age of science.” Slt?; government) should be con-Goodman went on. Currently, science ^17X311is not conceived as a dialogue with Scientific education ought to con-nature, or as a search for truth, cem the humanistic values of sci-The nationalism of the Enlighten- Goodman declared. It wouldfS ment cannot be conveyed, because serve’ f /^wey s sense, toit is no longer adhered to. The be- ™ake at ^ “ iXn m'lief in the common sensibility ot dustnal society from which they arealienated. Also, the sociological andthe political aspects of science oughtto be considered. SAMUEL A. BELL"Buy Shell From Bell'SINCE 19244701 So. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150 schedule from cradle to grave withlessons and credits and being gradedon a competitive system whichmight be relevant to making bettercheese but is completely irrelevantto learning.“What I find interesting is thatschooling itself is failing. The kindof specialist it produces just won’tbe needed; he is being outdated bycomputer automation. Under thesecircumstances it’s not seriouslyworthwhile to talk about the prob¬lems of liberal education.Redfield: Well, of course you’renot an administrator; you aren’tfaced with the day to day problemsof running a University. If you wereyou would have to be concerned withwhat resources you’ve got . . . Theuniversity after all is a living insti¬tution and at least in some ways itis giving and education to its stu¬dents. We ought to be concernedwith finding the essential strand tothe life of the University which ex¬ists in spite of grades.Taylor: “The moral purpose of theliberal arts college has disappeared.It’s become a prep school for gradu¬ates. Tire student is educated for hissociety; The courses he takes rarelyallow for questioning society; so much of his time is taken up bymastery of a body of facts that hehas no time bo do his own thinking.”Redfield: “I don’t really disagreewith you. There are bad things;there always have been. But it’s pos¬sible that an academic tradition stillexists. We ought to look at it; findout how to apply it, develop it. Doyou think there is a genuine functionof a liberal arts college, Mr. Good¬man?”Goodman: “The aim of all educa¬tion is to produce free, initiating citi¬zens who can draw on what is known.And I just can’t help thinking thatit’s a very simple thing to do.”Redfield: “I agree with you exceptfor one thing. I don’t think it's avery simple thing to do.”Goodman; “Elementary.”Redfield; “But that’s a very dif¬ferent thing. It can be elementarybut still be problematic. Suppose yougot rid of all the extraneous stum¬bling blocks—grades and administra¬tions and everything—so that youhad as close to an ideal teaching situ¬ation as possible. You still have toask, How is the education to be con¬ducted? What ought we to teach,and how ought we to go about it?”Goodman: “Certainly, certainly.”mankind as an idea has no meaningfor us, Goodman feels.Social justice is, similarly, lost.There is no engagement in causesmerely for the sake of justice. Freedom in a highly automatedsociety depends on the decentraliza-tion of decision-making, and thus onThroughout this century. Goodman ^ destruction of bureaucracy, Good-asserted, the entire tradition hasdecayed. Instances of such decayare tiie first World War, the MoscowTrials, and the Spanish Civil War.Due to the fact that the modemman does not take the ideas of thetradition seriously, a lack ot a feel¬ing of justification for behavior hasresulted. Overall, there is a loss ota sense of identification with thetradition. The past of only the lastfive or six years is in any way con-temporary for youth.Because of these trends, teachinghas been rendered more difficultthan previously in recent decades,Goodman believes.Tlve second of Goodman’s notionsinvolved the Medieval Liberal Arts.Their primary purpose is to teachmethod.The scientific method could beemployed as representative of Logic.Grammar, concerning the nature oflanguage and communications, could man concluded. 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Experience with cook¬ing or child care is helpful.Each application will he sent toover 3000 large yacht owners inMay. Crewing affords an oppor¬tunity to acquire or sharpen boat¬ing skills, xisit new places hereand abroad while earning a goodsalary in pleasant outdoor sur¬roundings.To apply-, send ns a short re¬sume using the following formalong with $3.00 processing (ee.( 1) Name, address, ph one no.(2) Age, school (3) Availablefrom ...... to ini.e. Northeast, Great Lakes,East and South, etc. (4) Pre¬vious boating and relevant workexperience (5) two references(6) Preference i.e. Racing, sail¬boat cruising, motorboating,none, etc. (7) Other pertinentfacts. Two applicants wishingto work together, state thispreference. Every applicant willreceive a finished resume.Deadline for applications isMay 13, 19(>4. Send to WetherillCompany, 1331 Western SavingFund Bldg., Ph.hr, Pa. 19107. ^ foreign car hospital and clinic, inc.authorized sales and service foraustin, mg, morris, austin heaiey, triumph 8c jaguarand we fix all other european cars, too5424 south kimbark avenue mi 3-3113ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL, 59th ST. 3. WOODLAWN AVENUEROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRMembers ofCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRARichard Vikstrom, Good.HANDELSISRAEL IN EGYPTSunday, May 17 — 3:30 pmTickets: Reserved $4.00; General Admission $3.00Student $2.00On Sale: Chapel House, 3310 Woodlawn Avenue, amiUniversity BookstoreNoDoz keeps you mentallyalert with the same safe re¬fresher found in coffee andtea. Yet NoDoz is faster,handier, more reliable. Abso¬lutely not habit-forming. Next time monotony makesyou feel drowsy while driving,working or studying, do asmillions do . . . perk up withsafe, effective NoDoz tablets.Anottier Tine product of Grove Laboratories.THE SAFE WAY to stay alertwithout harmful stimulants| J A % § Mmuy u, notTHEATER REVIEWLast Stage presents new 'Frogs' for May openingA new, remodelled LastStaye is presenting an ancientcomedy during the month ofMay. The play too has beenremodelled, and there’s the difficulty.The new theatre, with its randomplatforms and central playing area,puts its audience into an ideal pos¬ture for enjoying Old Comedy, butthe new script is soon announcingthat the Frogs is not a matter foe-mere delight.The translation, when it translates,is fine and funny, always felicitous, actors of nearly indistinguishable styleto play the four major roles.One temper, petulance, and onelone, loud, is common to all. Psycho¬drama in a kindergarten must besomething like this, and before thefirst act is over you may, like thelate Harold Ross, find yourselfdreaming of having your ear-drumspierced. In this context it may seemthat Tom Conley as Hell’s gate-keep¬er pleases only by being quiet. It’snot true; his tired coolness is ex¬quisitely absurd. This production, because it is aconsistent and serious attempt at in¬terpretation, provides the answers tosome of the standard questions aboutUie FROGS. It has been asked whe¬ther, if Aristophanes had in factweighted his play in favor of Aeschy¬lus, he wouldn't have ended by blunt¬ing its humor. The answer is clearlyyes. When the lines that made himridiculous have been censored, Aes¬chylus, played with an air of (petu¬ lant) nobility, is a bore. It has beenasked whether the slight flavor ofhomosexuality was really necessaryto the play. Apparently the answeronce a'.-ain is yes. This production,at any rate, with its Dionysus mod¬eled after a radio comedian of re¬tarded intellect but undoubted hetero¬sexuality, loses all its necessary nas¬tiness and bite. again, grotesquely whacked by agiant paddle. Rube Goldberg ma¬chines seldom fail; even the pedestri¬an weighing device is somehow jolly,and Cheiron and Dionysus in theirboat provide an unsteady moment oftrue hilarity.sometimes truly brilliant. But thethesis of this production is that Aris¬tophanes, a social science professorwith a weakness for bathroom humor,was earnestly giving a lesson inpolitics when he wrote the Frogs.Tlie elegant obstreperousness of theoriginal has therefore been temperedwith a proper pedantry, and thewhole play has been sobered up tomeet its class.To make sure that no extendedmood of hilarity shall prevail, theadaptors have shamelessly inter¬rupted their comedy with a lectureby the (Pseudo-) Aristophanes him¬self. looking much like Spencer Tra¬cy playing Clarence Darrow, andtalking a bit, but not enough, likeWill Rogers, he mournfully apolo¬gizes for writing comedy in wartime,and spells out a political philosophywhich is neither certainly Aristo-phanic nor capable of translation intomodern terms.The nadir of the evening is reachedwhen two maps are held up, but theless said about that Uie better.Aristophanes did, in his comedies,sometimes make his chorus speakdirectly to the audience, but he didso within a form as balanced andtight as a sonnet, where irony, musicand wit dispersed any shadow ofsolemnity.The Frogs is a play about style.The authors of this production be¬lieve that literary style is here in¬vested with ethical content, to be¬come a figure for style of politics orstyle of life. Be that as it may, aclash of styles makes the praxis ofthe piece, and since this is the case,it was surely an error to chose four Calendar of eventsFriday, May 8Concert: Modern Music for ChamberOrchestra; Mandel Hall, 12:30 pm.Colloquium: “The Automation of theLibrary of Congress,’’ Don. R. Swan¬son. Dean, Graduate Library School:Graduate Library School CommonRoom, Harper East Tower Mezzanine,12:30 pm.Lecture: “The ’Program’ in Pro¬grammed Instruction,” Professor B. F.Skinner, Harvard University; Soc. Sci.122, 3 pm.Lecture: "War by Mistake.” AlbertWohlstetter, University of California,(Division of the Social Sciences);Breasted Hall. 4 pm.Lecture: “Hindu Festivals,” Dr. V.Raghavan. University of Madras,(South Asian Seminar); Rosenwald 2.4 pm.Motion Picture: Sherlock, Junior,starring Buster Keaton; (Doc. FilmGroup: Fun in the Dark); Soc. Sci.122. 7:15 and 9:15 pm.Radio Series: ”H. Colin Slim Con¬ducts the UC Orchestra,” Winter1963 Concert; WUCB, 7:30 pm.Discussion: (Oneg Shabbat) “Th^Question of God—A Creative Exchangeof Ignorance": Hillel Foundation, 5715Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.Theatre: Ibsen's Ghosts, (Intel-na¬tional Players): International HouseTheatre. 8:30 pm.Concert: Chicago Blues Artists. (Folk¬lore Society): Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm. Concert: “Music of the ElizabetheanTheatre,” The Consort Players(FOTA); Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.Theatre: Ghosts; International House8:30 pm.Discussion: “The Italian CommunistParty.” Bob Brown. Young People'sSocialist League; Shaiken’s, 5228 Wood¬lawn. 8 pm.Theatre: (Tonight at 8:30) Christo¬pher C, Death Watch; Reynolds ClubTheatre. 8:30 pm. The good things in the Frogs nicelydemonstrate some of comedy's firstlaws. A truth that Aristophanes knewbetter than anyone is that idiocy andbrutality are the immortal marroweven of an intellectual comedy. WhenXanthias and Dionysus at the LastStage confront the dangers of Hellpuffing and stumbling in a frenzy ofcowardice and lost flashlights, theyare memorably funny. So they are A fool-proof device that Aristo¬phanes would have used if lie couldis girls. Tlie chorus of the Last StageFrogs is the star of the show. It con¬tains a handful of the prettiest girlsin Chicago, and it has been trainedto sing, to romp, to be serious if itmust and to speak clearly, but aboveall to enjoy itself. While the girls aregiggling, the audience can forget towonder why it so seldom laughs.Anne Pippin BurnettAssistant Professor of ClossicsACCION offers LatinSunday, May 10Folk Dancing: Workshop; Ida NoyesHall. 3 pm:Discussion: “Chicago Politics,” TimBlack. (Unitarian Student Fellowship);First Unitarian Church, 1174 E. 57thStreet, 7:30 pm.Caucus: GNOSIS discussion of SGand party plans, Ida Noyes Library,7:30 pm.Radio Program: “The F.ight-o-ClockSpecial.” Professors McNeill, Redfield.Sinaiko, and Hodgson discuss Rise ofthe West; WUCB. 8 pm.Lecture: "Plato's Crito: The Cityand Its Laws.” George Anastapalo.Lecturer in the Liberal Arts. (CivilDisobedience: Duty or Crime?); HillelFoundation. 5715 Woodlawn. 8 pm.Theatre: Ghosts; International House, American volunteer programGary Glenn, US Director of ACCION, will be at theCareer Counseling and Placement office, second floor ofReynolds Club, from 2 to 5 today to speak to UC students onACCION’s volunteer program in Latin America.ACCION has announced openingsfor 40 North Americans willing towork for 18 months in Latin America.Paying full travel and living expense,ACCION will send 20 volunteers toVenezuela in July and 20 in Septem¬ber.8:30 pm.Saturday, May 9Folk Dancing: Workshop, John Czom-po; Ida Noyes, 2 and 7:30 pm. Monday, May 11Varsity Baseball Game: UC vs.Lewis College: Rtagg Field. 3 pm.Lecture: “Limiting the Disaster andIts Likelihood.” Albert Wohitstetter.Harper Visiting Scholar. (Division ofSocial Sciences: Stability of Peace);Breasted Hall, 4 pm.Papers in Marine Geoloqy: Shepard CommemorativeVolume, edited by Robert L Miller $20.00Twenty-four papers concerned directly with current knowledge and renearch inundersea geology and marine geophysics, by students of Francis P. Shepard.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. AH North Americans joiningACCION will be teamed with a DilinAmerican partner in order to trainlocal people to carry on the programafter the North Americans have re¬turned home.ACCION, a bi-naf:onal “privatePeace Corps,” is an American-Ven-ezuelan foundation supported by pri¬ vate enterprise in Latin America.Now headquartered at Box 27, Cam¬bridge, Massachusetts, ACCION wasbegun almost four years ago in Cali¬fornia.Since its founding, ACCION hassent four groups of workers to Lai inAmerica to help organize and stimu¬late the construction of schools, com¬munity centers, self-help housing,sanitation and sewage projects, elec¬trification, and other physical im¬provements. Working with local lead¬ership, ACCION volunteers have alsoassisted the formation of democratic¬ally elected community councils.having service problems? THEARISTOPHANESFROGSAT THE LAST STAGE1506 E. 51 st St. FOR RESERVATIONS CALL OA 4-4200STUDENT DISCOUNT FRIDAYS AND SUNDAYS SI.50MAY t, 9, 10. 15, U. 17, 22. 23, 24V.THEATER REVIEW'Inside the Outsiders' unevenby Citizen KahanCurrent campus film farefeatures two great romantic* teams. On Tuesday the last ofthe BOGEY FLICKS, CASA¬BLANCA. will feature Bogey andIngrid Bergman. The heroically stoicHumphrey and the elegantly exoticIngrid set off some sparks in this1944 thriller that put Liz and Dickv in the amateur category and evenrival smoldering scintillation of Bogeyand Bacall.Hie hero and heroine play out theirlove affair surrounded by a bevy ofinternational criminal types. PeterLorre and Sydney Greenstrcet willvie for cheers from the usually vocif-' erous BOGEY FLICKS audience.Claude Reins is delightful as thelocal police prefect who is as amiableas he is corrupt, and Conrad Veidtplays the arch-Nazi to sinister per¬fection.Tlie air is thick with intrigue, and, tlie cheek is thick with tongue. There’s•* a conspiracy going on in every cornerand a witty line in every covertconversation. Never has Bogey beenmore deeply in love or more stirringin his hard-bitten individualism.Rarely has he triumphed over evilwith such cool or remained so he¬roically above the confines of so-eiety. #Our second “romance team” pro¬vides a striking contrast. BusterKeaton and Kathryn McGuire had ashipboard romance to end all ship¬board romances in TILE NAVIGA¬TOR earlier this quarter. Now they'reback to travel the rough but hilarious* road to tine love in SHERLOCKJR.This comedy was originally re¬leased in 1924. Since then it has lostlittle of its humorous effectiveness buthas been largely unavailable for view¬ing. Portions of the chase scene werelater used by W. C. Fields in ‘'Thek Bank Dick.” The irrepressible Mr. Fields will also make a return ap¬pearance in a short. Both attractionsscreen tonight at SocSci 122.Cuts & Fades:Last week this column complainedof the delay in getting HIGH ANDLOW booked into Chicago. TodayI see that the Kurosawa crime thril¬ler Ls playing at the Cinema Theatre— it’s encouraging to know that theMaroon has a strong influence on thecultural activities of our great city.... No, Orson Welles was not inDoc Films’ basement last Sunday —the voice you heard was the soundtrack of LADY FROM SHANGHAI.The Welles film will be presentedby DFG next fall in a series onInternational Crime. . . . The Britishhave been trying for years to createsome first-rate social drama, but theyseem to do better with, of all things,horror films. Two new scaries fromHammer Films open around towntoday. A world premiere, no less.. . . Scan Connery, now playingJames Bond, has been signed byJohn Ford to portray Sean O'Casey.. . . Glancing at the downtown movieattractions currently available, onerecalls the advice of scriptwriter Her¬man Mankiewitz: ‘‘Let’s get the[>eople back into the theatres by show¬ing tlie films in the street.” . . .A new schism in cinematic theory forsome bright motion picture scholarseeking a dissertation topic: Hitch¬cock says actors are cattle; vonSternberg says they’re pupj)ets. . . .Two goats, after eating a can offilm: “How’d you like it?” “I likedtlie book better.” . . . Will there be aMidwest Film Festival next year?. . . Noble Deed of the Year Awardgos to playwright John Osborne, whoreferred to his screenplay of TOMJONES as the cleaning up of a rath¬er messy novel. . . . Yes. they aremaking a movie of CATCH 22 —directed by Richard (Elmer Gantry)Brooks. . . . MUH! . . .JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODFL 2-2870, PL 2-8190. DO 3-8100 1340 E. 53rdMONEY GOING UP IN SMOKE?SAVE ON HEATING BILLSJOINYU EL CO-OPOil. - COALi»i:im:m»aui.i: seiiviceCALL KE 6-2864Scandinavian ImportsMOTHER'S DAYSPECIALHEART-SHAPED TEAK TABLESNOW ^1 0^® EachFormerly$78*95Special -20% off on all pewterand rosewood jewelryEAST 53rd ST., Corner Lake ParkNO 7-4040OPEN WEEKDAYS, FROM 11 A.M. 'TIL 9 P.M.SUNDAYS, 12 NOON 'TIL 6 P.M.Free Parking In Rear INSIDE THE OUTSIDERS, ORRAINWATER FOR EVERYBODYC ast:Ann ElderSally HartRichard UbertlnlOmar ShapllDavid SteinbergWilliam Mathleu, eomposer-planUtSheldon Fatlnkln. directorThe new review at SecondCity, Inside the Outsiders orRainwater for Everybody, isan extremely uneven produc¬tion ranging, like the little girl in thenursery rhyme, from the very, verygood to the horrid. The show is, asa whole, quite a bit interior to thereviews I have seen there in the past.The players are every bit as goodas before the departures of oldtimerslike Severn Darden, Mina Kolb andAvery Schreiber. The problem is notw'ith inferior performers: it is ratherthat drab, worn-out material is beingserved up. Take for example theskit entitled “The Foreigner.” Animmigrant Italian shepherd turns upat tlie Chicago Employment Bureauin search of a job. The case workercan find no openings as a shepherd,and so he suggests other possibilities:a stock-yards worker, a CTA con¬ductor. The shepherd declines andreturns to Italy.The skit was a long one, but ex¬cept for the old chestnut about the CTA, there was nothing to justifyits length. The possibilities for evok¬ing irony in the situation—in that thecaseworker is, effectively, a shepherdof men—was completely overlooked.Most of the skits were, admittedly,a bit better than this one. But whatwas presented was not the SecondCity review that I remember. Thesatire is often stale (Governor Kemeras a wind-up doll; Daley as thepuppet-master); the humor is oftenproduced in a cheap way (Lady-bardJohnson replying to Ex-PresidentTruman’s flattery: “Aw, shee-it!”Blackout.); sometimes there is nohumor evident at all. When the skitsare good, they are extremely effec¬tive: witness Omar Shapli’s parodyof the Newsweek polls on Negro-white relations, for example, or AnneElder's portrayal of a public rela¬tions woman from Time Magazine.But two hours is a long time to waitaround for the three or four goodskits in the show.In all fairness to the show, it mustbe said that the cast was indeedexcellent. Even some of the leastcreatively written skits came alivebecause of the players’ great actingability. Especially effective, I felt,was David Steinberg, an alumnus ofUC who acted last year, in “GoodNews.”At best, the new Second City re¬view is a mediocre offering; by com¬ parison with previous shows, it is adefinite failure. The cause of play¬ers’ lack of success in producinghumorous original satire is probablyprofessionalism in its worst form:the tendency to rest upon one'slaurels. Perhaps if the new reviewis as great a failure financially andcritically as it is artistically, thegroup may be encouraged to dobetter next time.DAVID RICHTERStephen Spender tospeak on languageand behavior vStephen Spender, English poet andcritic and visiting professor at UClast year, will speak at Breasted HallSunday at 8 pm. Spender’s topic willbe “Language and Behavior,” a dis¬cussion of the role of poetry in the ex¬pression of language, thought, andaction in the modern world.Spender has been one of England'smost noted poets and critics for over30 years. He is the author of coasider-able criticism and fiction, and is for¬mer co-editor of Horizon. At present,he is co-editor of Encounter.General admission to Spender'stalk is $1.50; UC students $1.Let’s say for a minute, this is you.t-TOnce you wear the gold bars of a secondlieutenant in. the United States Air. Force,what’s in store for you?Well, you may fly an aircraft entrusted with avital defense mission. Or you may lead aresearch team tackling problems on the fron¬tier of knowledge. You’ll be helping to run anorganization that’s essential to the safety ofthe free world.Sounds like you’ll be called on to shoulder agood deal of responsibility, doesn't it?But when you come right down ■■ a m—to it, that’s what your college U«V« RIP years have been preparing you for. YouV*got ability and a good education. Now’s th«time to put them to work!You’ll have every opportunity to prove yourtalents in the Air Force. By doing so, you canput yourself and your country ahead.If you’re not already enrolled in ROTC,you can earn your commission at AirForce Officer Training School—a three-month course that’s open to both menand women college graduates. To apply,gftnfUI you must be within 210 daysiUI vt# of graduation.May 8, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • STHE SCREEN SCENEThis article hat been adapted tram a paper that was presented ta aconference at the Students for a Democratic Society In Ann Arbor. Michigan,lott month. Andrea Cousins, a white woman who graduated from Sarah Lawrencehit June, has been working with the Harlem Educational Project for nearly a year.by Andrea CousinsEarly last fall an integrated group of students begana community organization project in the heart of CentralHarlem. Our group, the Harlem Educational Project (HEP),was at that time attached to the Northern Student Move¬ment, which had similar programs in seven other Northerncities.Our staff consisted of three college graduates and fourcollege drop-outs; two of the Negro males had grown up inNorthern ghettos, while the remaining five people (twowhite females, one white male, two Negro males) were ofmiddle-class backgrounds. None of us, whatever our roots,had ever had direct experience in community organization.Here, first of all, is a brief statement of the general prob¬lem which provokes the need for such work. The life of manyAmericans, regardless of race, or income, is harnessed byhighly-bureaucratized institutions in which economic anddecision-making power lies with a centralized minority. Thecontradiction between democracy and twentieth-century cap¬italism should be seen not only in terms of material poverty,but in the broader terms of personal alienation and socialimpotence.The effects of American industrialization, rather thanfreeing a person to live creatively with himself, and withothers, have cut short the connections between him and theproduct of his efforts, between him and other persons w hosecircumstance has much in common with his own. Segrega¬tion in this sense is pervasive — among whites and blacks,whites and whites, blacks and blacks, and within the individ¬ual himself. Class and cultural differences make the splitvisible, but the problems take subtle form within more “ho¬mogenized” societies, such as the university. There are fewinstitutions in the United States that enable an individualto develop the kind of self-awareness, and awareness of otherpeople that can be realized in a socially-creative fashion.The solution does not seem to lie in simply upsetting thegoing system, but in working out alternative means wherebypeople can learn to live, work, and think in radically differ¬ent ways, ones which can serve as a powerful base for thereconstruction of the country. The rebuilding, if it is to bea democratic one, must be understood and implemented bythe large numbers of people who are to be affected by ft.And, paradoxically, the opportunity to make something newseems greater in the ghetto, on 147 street in Harlem, thanin a more formal, highly institutionalized environment.The area where wre set up our office is primarily resi¬dential, with the exception of some small business establish¬ments on one avenue. On the east side of the avenue — atthe border of our community — there are a number of largebusinesses (a chain restaurant, a supermarket, a drug store),usually owned and operated by white people. An elementaryschool one block away was built in the late 1800’s; it has astudent population of more than 2,000 and a predominatelywhite administrative staff.In the neighborhood there are no social or political or¬ganizations, such as the Elks or the Democratic Party. Theonly municipal establishment is a recreation center, once usedas an armory, located on the site of a city park. There is noplace in the neighborhood which belongs to the people wholive there, no place — with the possible exception of a large,empty lot—where people can idependently direct their ener¬gies, and create something of their own.When we began to work on 147 street, our staff sharedtwo objectives, though we did not often discuss them formal¬ly. We wanted to bring the people of the local communityDR. AARON ZIMBLER. OptometristNEW IN THEHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERDO 3-7444 1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-6844EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESMXMATTEROF... when you become a Sun Lifepolicyholder, you are joining hundredsof thousands of farsighted men andwomen who are protecting their futureand the future of their families throughlife insurance.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr.. CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago IS, III.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays ft FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY into greater control of their own lives, and consequently ofthe institutions which exerted power upon them. At thesame time, we hoped to enlarge the community to includepersons of varying interests, skills, and economic and racialbackgrounds. But even at the start there w as some confusionover whether these two aims were complementary or mu¬tually exclusive, and whether they could l>e achieved simul¬taneously.In the early days of the project, however, these the¬oretical problems seemed somewhat irrelevant to the workthat was already in progress. A member of the staff had al¬ready involved men and boys in the neighborhood in the plan¬ning and construction of a community park. This effort tobuild a Commons had brought al>out the creation of aNeighliorhood Council, which was to determine, in demo¬cratic fashion, the nature of block redevelopment beginningwdth the Commons itself.A second staff member had involved a score of olderboys in a science workshop, where they attempted to relateproblems of logic to the actual working of particular me¬chanical tools.There was also a tutorial program which was designedto bring tutorial relationships into close contact with com¬munity concerns. In conjunction with the tutorial, one ofour staff hoped to work with the curriculum research divi¬sion of the Harlem Parents Committee. He wanted to use thetutors’ experiences to formulate teaching methods that wouldbe relevant to Harlem schools.Although these jWjects were well underway, our groupfailed to face up to the problem of reconciling two apparentneeds — to define long-range programs and to respond to theimmediate problems and desires of the local community.The question of timing was at the heart of the issue.To be specific, while the tutorial program provided our or¬ganization with a definite framework for sustained work,we failed to present the parents with an explicit descriptionof our plans before beginning to recruit out tutees. Unlikeother such projects, which had enlisted their studentsthrough guidance counsellors or teachers in the schools, thenew tutorial was expected to grow through immediate neigh¬borhood contacts. We felt this would be a more democraticprocess.But what we failed lo.take into account was our own lackof knowledge about the community. For example, we failedto realize that there would be substantial conflicts of inter¬est within the area. While the interest groups were not de¬fined in precise economic terms (as they might have been ina more developed area containing local business interestsand outside investments) it quickly became apparent thatsex, age, and particular places of residence made for theirown particular and conflicting concerns.Mothers of younger children, for instance, expressed aneed for a child-care center; among the older boys and menthe problem was to get jobs; the younger students felttrapped by the local school system; some tenants wantedto do something about their dilapidated homes; some personswanted more space for recreational pur]>ose; some tuteeswanted their own hangout; some parents wanted more waysto get together with each other; others only wanted peaceand privacy.A general conflict was evident between the older andyounger generations of the block. The young people wantedmore freedom of movement, and the power to strike back atthe policemen, the truant officers, the probation officers, theteachers, the building inspectors — at the whole code whichsays: no drinking, no-gambling, no singing in the hallways,no loitering on the stoops, no playing in the streets, no sexin the alleys, no pigeon coops on the roof. The parents gener¬ally wanted to enforce “respectability.”PHOTO DEPARTMENTREMEMBER YOUR YEARS ON CAMPUS WITH PICTURES.TOO EXPENSIVE? COME IN AND WE LL HELP YOU FINDA CHEAPER WAY.The University of Chicago Bookstore5B02 Ellis Ave.VISIT THENEW AND BEAUTIFULCLASSIC ROOMin the Windermere HotelEnjoy Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner orLate Snacks—OPEN TILL 12:00 P.M.FREE PARKING IN OUR NEW GARAGETRANSIENT SINGLE ROOMS $7.50TWINS $12.00ALSO INCLUDES FREE PARKINGWINDERMERE HOTEL1642 EAST 56th STREETCHICAGO 37, ILLINOIS With our lack of knowledour relative youth, and our corrnent, we found ourselves in tlamong the varying interest-gnan effective mediator between 1result of our failure to invo^J^"of a program like the tutorial, buour own investment in the neighlot, use of the basements and t\ticipation of people in the tutorijgroup like any other.In mid-autumn we reloca^ian apartment building, and tl'IH1 between the teen-agers who hurw ho lived in the house. DespiteNext Tuesday an articleIndiana, by Paul Cowan will ci|Any contributions to the ibe welcomed. Articles shouldoffice, Ida Noyes Hall.there with the express purpojsocial activity which had takenstorefront w here we previously vi’ty of the teen-agers oil the btyjtact with all people, militatefta]ness office.”It was the white women 01(juired organized office activity,least equipped to enforce order.:place outside the office, were rein supervisory roles away frojn]any clear restriction on the srypmately take place in the office,increased as the younger peopUable to back up our own immediiThe presence of a sixteen vvolunteered to serve as a secret!She found herself unable to dias a teen-ager and her role a iWwas increased by her ambivalent'an integrationist organization, v]H>sed to communicate to a grouflin time, this group managed ttuse the office at night, as a planand drink. The tenants in the biwhy the disorder persisted.Other people who voluntejlems into your relationship witjexample, one man turned out to |was no secret to anyone whothat we had never reached any !and the fact that we ended ali 4we discovered his avocation, ne\j<initial impression that he had b<ler. To both the tenants injtfcetand to other parents in the nekwe were instigating immoral ageneration.But it was not only in 11that w e aroused the suspicion |>nity. We also incurred a kind)the staff workers, a white sty<sl»would uphold the right of thetion in all decisions that affect**one of the dominant citizens ymeeting to find out what the b<lice commissioners and a boardadvise them on ways they coldIndividually, the boys^y^of the room and asked to statefront of this imposing board. Ndesire to speak. Soon, the mameeting began to reprimand tlrecess to permit them to thin!reform it.When the meeting resu^i#stood up to assert that the pro*and that the boys weren’t beinjThe fact that other HEP worksence next to the teen-agrs add*sense of antagonism.The meeting organizer l>and he used most of the reSWHEP. He argued that the boyscuts about their problems, andThe hostility incurred at thi|&causes of a campaign in whirpersuaded to withdraw their *program. |Our problem, then, washthe young people, whose oefcmained disorderly, and the atjtstigating disrespectfulness am*not only that our hopes were ltoo broad: they were express^tion that tends to alienate poolmind. ▼A kind of religiosityour staff, and this is certainlycurrent civil rights organizatiobecome deeply and personallyset of ideas. It is a source of pganizational confusion. In plac*| • CHICAGO MAROON • May I. 1944: A Tutorial Project inlodge about the neighborhood,concern for democratic govern-1 the position of choosing sides-groups, rather than acting ash* th<*m. This was not only theWHW# parents in the planning. bat also of the fact that we hadug'nborhood (development of the[1 the office-apartment, the par-oi ial) which made us an interestur office in the middle ofted a conflict of interesthung around us and the tenantshtefthe fact that we had moved:le pit primary night in Gary,II appear on this page,ht graduate student page willVhi delivered to the MAROONriK>se of cutting down on theken place in the Eighth Avenue-\y worked, the persistant eurios-bLak.and the need to have con-*agh1&st the need for a “busi-n on the staff whose work re-ity, but they were the workersher.. The men, whose work tooke reluctant to spend long hoursojn/the street. There was neveractivity that could legiti-ice, and naturally the confusionrealized that we were un-unliate demands,en year-old Negro girl who had•rotary aggravated the problem,o distinguish between her roleworker. This difficultya lent feeling about working forn. \?hose demands she was sup-•ouii of Negro boys her own age.<1 tt) persuade her to let themplace to play bongo drums, sing,e building could not understandj - L-sinterred injected similar prob-uitji neighborhood adults. Forto be a junkie, which of courselooted out his window. The factiiy formal agreement with him,ill dealings with him as soon asne\j<T changed the community’sil ba n a regular, full-time work-iUh*trading where we worked,neighborhood, it a|>peared thatal i tivity among the youngern cur individual relationshipson if the adults in the commu-indl of political anger. One ofstated publicly that hethe teen-agers fair representa-e(t0d them. In response to this,ns pf the community called ale boys wanted to do. Two po¬ll arc! of adults were present tocould solve their problems.^HVsummoned to the front4ate their personal concerns ind. None of them showed muchman who had organized theid them, and then he called athing over their behavior, andj^j^d.J.he white HEP organizerprocedure was entirely wrong,being treated with any respect,orb rs were sitting in the audi-addki to the adult community’su- became increasingly hostile,(of^the session to denounce)<Tvs»nould talk with their par¬allel hot to a group of outsiders.th» meeting was one of thewhirh about ten parents w’ereicir children from the tutorialv Lwp-fold : it involved botheravior in our presence re-? adults, who accused us of in-aniong their children. It was?re too high and our objectives•oss^tl with the kind of convic-peoble who are not of a similarcVeTwped among members ofa inly a danger that faces mostzations where individuals haveally identified with a particularof personal frustration and or-plac« of dogma, no matter how deeply it is felt, there should be a clear and functionaldescription of particular programs. This not only sharpensa staff’s awareness of what can actually be accomplished,it also reduces the inevitable disappointment whichmounts as ideology departs further and further from thefacts at hand.In our case there wTas an additional difficulty rootedin the fact that most citizens of the neighborhood, despiteour ideological pronouncements, wondered why we hadcome there in the first place. This distrust increased asour promises, which emerged more out of our ideologythan out of what was materially possible, persistentlyoutran our accomplishments. Of course, many people inthe neighborhood broke a promise or two during thecourse of several months, but for us such failures weredifferent.When working with a formal organization, one isviewred not only as an individual but also as a part of somestrange impersonal entity. This entity might be the verything that increases hostility. As an organization we wereexpected to have money, to know exactly what we weredoing and howr wre were going to do it, and to possess apower that was considerably greater than the sum of ouractual parts: a handful of staff members, a secretary, atelenhone, and an apartment with our name (for awhile)on the door.It would be a much simpler matter if individualswithout substantial organizational means, such as moneyor administrative machinery, could go and live in an area,come to know the people personally, get a close sense oftheir concerns, their way of talking, their w ay of thinking—and then begin to think up organizational possibilities.IIEP failed, then, to become an organic part of thecommunity in wrhich we worked, and a large part of thisfailure can be attributed to our actual style of life. In Sep¬tember, when we began our program, several of the staffmembers hoped to find apartments on the block, and thusfasten their private as well as their organizational livesto the community. But there w?as a shortage of availablespace, and high rents for whatever was open, so all butone of us found apartments outside the immediate area.For this reason, the people on the block could neverfeel that our interest was an abiding one. The effect ofseeing us leave each night for unknown places was tosever the sense of solidarity betw een the staff and thepeople of the neighborhood. With this arrangement, it wasdifficult to say “why don’t we do such and such” whenthe personal circumstances of our lives made for “us” and“them.” The price of understanding a community, of be¬coming accented there, is steep. But unless one investsone’s life in the life of a neighborhood, there is a seriousquestion as to whether one’s involvement can be more thansuperficial. And it may be destructive.In our case, the fact that wre set up an office in thecommunity long before we had established a programgeared to the people’s needs proved more of a liabilitythan an asset.Although our meetings with the boys seemed toprogress in good spirits, the raids on the office continued.It soon became a contest to see who could claim the mostterritory, with HEP succeeding dining the day and theboys triumphing at night. The attacks grew more hostile;chairs and. books were stolen, pictures slashed, drawersand shelves overturned. The remaining paint wras splashedless discriminately over the floors and over the desks.IIEP couldn’t afford to spend more money on locks.By this time, tenants would visit the office duringthe day, shaking their heads and advising us to turn theboys over to the police. There was no solution that ap¬peared to be feasible, or to promise effectiveness in thelong run.The strangest part of the struggle was that no indi¬vidual*. either from the staff or the group of boys, couldpersonally confront each other with the problem—the con¬test did not seem to exist between any single persons.Although boys would come in singly to ask in amusedpuzzlement what we were going to do, even going so faras to say “I did that painting on the wall near the desk,”each would add remarks like “But I wouldn’t have messedup that typewriter” or “I wouldn’t have put that shit onthe walls.”In a peculiar way, the hostility was not directed atany of the three staff members who remained; in similarfashion, it was hard for the staff to feel that any of theboys was really accountable. Apparrently the boys con¬sidered the attacks to be on a collective entity called HEPand upon an impersonal office, rather than upon X, Y, oiZ; the staff felt that “the boys” had done it. and foundthe raids impossible to connect with individual peoolemost of whom laughed and joked with the staff membersPart of this can be explained by the tact that theboys were usually high when the raids took place, andperhaps it is also true that the statf was conned by asemblance of friendship. But the mattei was fai moiecomplicated. A definite group psychology was at work,obscuring all individual relationships. In fact, the. toadeiof the boys group would take much time to explain to ushowr the raids happened, and would warn us about theindividual boys who took part in them. Not onlv was itdifficult to reconcile the need for a business office withthe idea of a place for people to gather and talk (andexcluding people did not seem to resolve the problem; it Harlemcreated another)—but the fact of having to protect ourown property put staff members on the defensive.The most dramatic instance of this problem was therecent wrecking of the office. The group of older teen-aged boys had been coming into the office nearly everyday looking for a way to spend their time; this was ob¬viously frustrating to everyone concerned. At the timethere were only two men left on the staff, neither of whomhad the energy or force to direct the energies of these boysinto a sustained and imaginative program.Even if this had not been the case, the steady pres¬ence of a wdiite woman in the offfee caused some sexualfrustration which probably needed more than a programto alleviate. In addition to the daily visits to the office,the boys asked to use the office at night as a place to singand drink. When they were denied this by one of the malestaff members, the boys took it as a challenge and provedthat no lock—even a $60 steel bar—could hold them back.The first raid was highly strategic, rather thandestructive. That is, rather than breaking window-panesor furniture, the boys carefully put the typewriter andphones out of commission by pouring white paint overboth. (The office had just been repainted, and cans ofwhite and black paint w’ere stored in the back room.)Large drawings of naked men and women were paintedin black in the central room; on file cards and on severalwalls the boys had painted “Fuck H.E.P.” (sic) and aglobe of the world was completely covered with black.A photograph of a small boy building something in theback lot was carefully retouched; black paint filled in theboy’s face and arms. The slogan w as repeated underneaththe picture. The window-panes wrere filled in with black,but th^red curtains had been removed and replaced afterthe operation.One of the tutors felt that instead of taking it person¬ally, we should be able to “read” it as a message. Thepaint job said to him that the boys had felt blocked outof the organization, and wranted to make their power rec¬ognized by the staff. In talking w ith them afterwards, amale staff-member explained that he didn’t have the en¬ergy to paint the whole thing over, and at this point someof the boys said they’d help to fix it up.Some of them did help, sporadically, in getting thepaint off the walls, but the job was pretty much takenover by a bunch of the younger children wrho clamouredto do it after school. At this time most of the older boyswrere setting up plans to build a basketball court on theCommons. This appeared to be one of 'che main sore pointswith them, since the Commons was supposed to have beencompleted, with their help, the previous summer.Under different circumstances it might still havebeen possible for us to move the actual administrativeapparatus out of the neighborhood, and keep the apart¬ment open as a field office, attempting, among otherthings, to redirect the energies of the gang w’ho hadraided us into creative channels. But by this time the malestaff member who lived in the neighborhood was demor¬alized and weary, and the other Negro student in ourgroup was not suited to supervise such an obviously toughoperation. We would have had to find another “strongblack male” to make a field office effective, and this wasimpossible since wre didn’t have even enough money to payour present staff regular salaries.We finally decided to close down the office alto¬gether and move to an empty room in the Domestic PeaceCorps building ten blocks south of the neighborhood. Itseemed to us just as absurd to run a neighborhood officedesigned as the center for a grass-roots organization on astrictly business-like basis as it did to keep open a roomthat w^ould become more and more a hang-out for teen¬agers.To an extent this plan has proved effective. Withoutso much need to socialize with the community, w^e cancarry out our daily business with considerably greaterefficiency, and after hours we can fraternize with neigh¬borhood people in apartments or on the street. Since weno longer need to defend a piece of property, these rela¬tionship proceed with greater ease. But there is still aproblem. The boys in the neighborhood, especially thosew’ho earned out nightly raids on our office, feel that wehave run awray, that we have ducked a challenge. When¬ever we meet with them now we are reminded that, insome way or another, we have failed.A neighborhood like 147 street now appears to usto be one of the most difficult, as well as one of the mostimportant, places to begin, if one wrants to understandand bring about change in this country. To work in suchplaces one must have a far more concrete sense of methodthan we started with last fall. If some of us had beenliving more ordinary lives in the neighborhood since lastSentember, instead of initially approaching it as the objectof our organizational efforts, wre would most likely havegained by now* a far clearer sense of its problems and pos¬sibilities.On this basis, urograms could have been develonedfrom the start with the cooperation of local citizens. Thenmbimus that a stranger, particularly a white one, wouldface in moving into such a block might be impossible toovercome. But it is just as imnossible to think of movingout at night. on weekends, or dnrinor the summer.In the equation for social change there is at loast one fac¬tor that stavR constant: the noed for neonle to dearlyunderstand themselves, each other, and the ways in w hichtheir freedoms arc related.May 8, 1844 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7plan now forI SUMMERESTER IN THENATION'S CAPITALat The George WashingtonUniversityTWO TERMSJune 15-July2IJuly 23-August 28classroomslibraryHousing available in studentresidence hallscampus just four ^ .from the White HousOwrite for catalogueDean of theSummer SessionsThe GeorgeWashingtonUniversityWashington, D.C,80006Tlie GeorgeW ash.ingtonXJniversity , Here’s deodorant protectionYOU CAN TRUSTOld Spice Stick Deodorant.. .fastest, neatest ieav to all-day, every day protection! It’s the man's deodorant pre-rred by men...absolutely dependable. Glides onsmoothly, speedily...dries in record lime. Old Spice StickDeodorant — most convenient, most economical deodorantmoney can buy. 1.00 plus tax.STICKDEODORANTS M V l_ T O IMCHICAGO MAROON * May 8, 1964 Breathtaking, beautiful and yoursAll the surging beauty, the exciting mystery of thesea itself seems captured in this newest engage¬ment ring from Artcarved. See the distinctly new.yet timeless, design of Surf Star at your ArtcarvedJeweler. Priced from $180. For more information,plus helpful suggestions on wedding etiquette,send 25C for Wedding Guide to J. R. Wood &Sons, Inc., 216 E. 45th Street, New York 17, NYork, Department C./r-~ See Surf Star only at these Authorized Artcarved JewelersChicago vCOLE & YOUNG9144 Commercial Avenue ChicagoROMAN KOSINSKI5754 W. Belmont AvenueChicagoFARMER JEWELERS3153 W. 63rd Street ChicagoR. L. SEIDELMANN2615 S. Pulaski RoadChicagoLOUIS FRIED6007 Irving Park Blvd. Oak ParkHAYWARD J111 N. Marion StreetZionASHLAND JEWELERS2716 Sheridan RoadGADFLYWhat could be of more value than fun? — IItU. of C. footballer commenting uponthe value of football for the Universityduring a television Interview last Autumn.Lest it be objected that this is taken outof context, the full statement in answerto the question, "and what Is the impor¬tance of football tor the University?" was:"Well, first of all It create* alumni In¬terest and brlnqs In a lot more money,tut most of oil It's fun. It's fun for thecheerleaders. It's fun for the fellows whoploy it, ai-d It's fun for the people whowatch It. And what could be of morevalue than fun?")Two weeks ago I attempted to de¬scribe the philosophy of the firesentadministration, and suggested thatit is basically at odds with tlie tradi¬tion developed through the years bytlve University. A number of peopleIvave asked me since then if 1 reallyfek that the administration is sostupid, or that it is hatching a plotto subvert the college. I have at¬tempted to explain in answer tlvatthis in no way what I am suggest¬ing.I state again that to a man ouradministrators are intelligent, like¬able and capable. President Beadleis as nice and as sincere a man asone could want. Dean Wick excelsas a Dean of Students in regard t«specific individual problems. Myvery purpose in emphasizing an all-; pervasive attitude was to bring outThe ell-newBBeautifulnew gracenew sweepBrawniernew 1800 c.c.power plantBetter comfort... wind-upwindows that the various charges are NOTthe result of a well thoughtout, con¬scious "plot.’'There can be no doubt that by andlarge recent administrative decisionsare instinctive reaction to specificsituations arising naturally out of thephilosophy already described. Noclearer demonstration of this isneeded than the so-often bumbling,fumbling nature of these decisions.(A more fatuous policy than thatfollowed by the University in regardto student Ixxising cannot be imag¬ined. Innumerable student apart¬ments have been removed withdormitory space completely inade¬quate for the need. Tlte result willbe the chaos that will ensue nextyear when hundreds of students des¬perately try to find non-existentapartments.)BUT THIS QUESTION OF AD¬MINISTRATION MOTIVES ISCOMPLETELY IRRELEVANT.They without doubt are “good-willed.'’ They may well be trying tocreate a distinctive university. Theymay well be only catering to variousstudent-initiated desires with no ul¬terior motives. But it simply does notmatter. It is not important what theadministration wants. BUT WHATIT. AND ALL OF US. WILL GETAS A RESULT OF ITS DECISIONS.Let us avoid sterile quibbling overtin? intentions of the administrationand simply consider the results ofrecent policies upon a future Univer¬sity of Chicago.As the admissions officer pointsout. the sort of selection determiningthe basic character of a student bodyi* the "sell-selecting'’ done by thestudents themselves in deciding towhich schools to apply. This is clear¬ly done on a basis of expectationsbased uixin jiersonal experience. reading, and so forth. Tlie expecta¬tions of personal freedom, serious¬ness, and a special educational ex¬perience were ultimately responsiblefor building up the sort of studentbody here under Hutchins describedin part I. Thousands upon thousandserf students made it a point oi apply¬ing here.If there is no more student free¬dom at a future University of Chi¬cago than at other “good" schools,if the education and extra-curricularactivities are virtually identical aswell, what will there be to speciallyattract anyone but. the good high-school achiever? It must be clearthat as tlie social and educationalconditions of a University are con¬ventionalized. its student body willbe as well. Those who have in thepast made it a point of applying herewill simply be scattered in variousuniversities throughout the land. ’At this point a basic question isessential. W'hat exactly is WRONGwith the “great" universities? W'hyshould not diversity, optimum large¬ness. high-quality faculty be desired?What is wrong with wanting goodhigh-school achievers?To answer fully this question in¬volves far more than space permits.Suffice it to say for the present thatwhatever the undeniable virtues ofthe “great” universities, THEREARE ALREADY DOZENS OFTHEM. Tlie applicant seeking inti¬mate contact with other fine stu¬dents in dormitories, who wants bothsuch things as football and frater¬nities together with a fine educationunder well-known professors, and soforth, can choose from among dozensof schools.THE QUESTION IS NOT WHETH¬ER DIVERSITY. LARGENESS ANDTHE REST ARE DESIRABLE IN’ AND OF THEMSELVES, BUTWHETHER THEY ARE DESIR¬ABLE AT TIIE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO.Surely there ought to be, must be,at least one university*** whichhas the courage and vision to offeranother sort of experience. Theremust be at least one university whichoffers as much freedom as possibleto tens of thousands of students hon¬estly unable to achieve maximumpotential or happiness without it.There must be at least one Univer¬sity which offers critically intelligent,socially concerned people the oppor¬tunity of meeting as many otherslike themselves as possible andforming a distinctive meaningfulcommunity unparalleled at any otherinstitution (the great myth of diver¬sity ignores the fact that people withlittle in common but ability to getgrades do not meaningfully interact,and early in the game separate offinto isolated cliques.) There must beat least one administration which bydiscouraging the inessential and tak¬ing a stand upon societal problemsencourages social concern both in itsown student community and societyat large.Mv purpose in writing this articlehas not been to# engage in polemicsagainst the administration. Tlie gene¬sis for it lays in tlie conviction thatthere is a crying need in this countryfor a University which dares to cri¬ticize, show concern in social andpolitical problems, allow freedom forits students, and create an educationdesigned to stimulate thought. I havetried to bring out that in attemjjtingto creafe such a University one isopposing a whole conventional men¬tality and. philosophy. This is the basic reason why innumerable lettersto the Maroon and discussions withthe administration over tlie yearshave resulted in only increased arbi¬trarily-imposed mediocrity and nowand then a palliative or two (as theincreasing of women's hours).THE NATURE OF THE PROB¬LEM IS SUCH THAT ONLY BY RESPONSIBLE BUT POWERFULSTUDENT ACTION CAN A SOLU¬TION BE HOPED FOR.***Reed and Antioch are the onlyollier.s which oometomind. But givenReed's isolation and tlie special char¬acter of Antioch's work-study pro¬gram, plus tlie smallness of theirstudent bodies, clearly neither canfill the need.Tlie ultimate aim of such studentaction—in the form of pickets, sit-insand so forth, would be hopefully athqrougligoing revolution in tlie pres¬ent administration's attitudes or,what is unfortunately perhaps morelikely, their resignation.The immediate aim of such action ,would be—through fear of bad pul>-licity and general inconvenience—toforce a slowing-down of the process.For, each year during the last 5we have had one or two major addi¬tions to the conventionalization ofthe University, and there is littlereason to believe that it will haltnow if not met by powerful studentopposition.Clearly the student body is dis¬satisfied. Sit-ins last autumn, the boy¬cott, and perhaps most significantly—tlie overwhelming choice of POLITin the college in elections two weeksago—clearly indicate that if givenresponsible student leadership, thestudent body will respond.Fred BronfmanMEN !MGB today at—NELSONMOTORSCENTREM.G. vSprit*Triumph• new & usedCottage GroveMidway 3-4501Free Lecture onCHRISTIAN SCIENCE:The Way To Hope And FreedombyPaul A. Erickson, C.S.B.of Chicago, IllinoisMember of Board of Lectureship,The First Church of Christ, Scientist, BostonSunday, May 10, at 3:30 P.M.Fifth Church of Christ, Scientist4840 Dorchester AvenueNursery care provided tor small childrenf COMET CUSTOM LIMITEDBRAND NEW '44$ 1882 00SALES — SERVICE — PARTSLAKE PARK MOTORS, Inc.6035 S. COTTAGE GROVE CHICAGO. ILLHYde Park 3-3445CONTINENTAL—MERCURY—COMETEVE EXAMINATIONFASPNON EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist53-Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount NEW CAR LOANS$4 per hundredUNIVERSITYNATIONAL BANK1354 East 55th St.MU 4-1200Member: F.D./.C.EveryoneEATSatGORDON’SJL321 E. 57th RENT-A-CARPER DAYPER MlPER MILEWEEKEND SPECIAL RATEFRIDAY 4 P.M.TO MONDAY 10 A.M.* 'Ghosts' to play this weekendInternational House Play¬ers, directed by Joe Eh ren¬tiers, will present HenrikIsben’s tragedy “Ghosts” to¬night, tomorrow and Sunday »t theInternational House Theatre.According to Ehrenberg, there arenumerous problems involved in pre¬paring Ibsen for production. “Thefirst and major problem for boththe director and the actors is oneof language. Even though the trans¬lation of Eva LaGallienne is reason¬able, it fjiils in some respects tocatch the beauty and nuance ofIbsen. Mote than we think. Ibsenwas a poet as well as dramatist.”“More problematic still is to con¬vey to the audience lire profoundmeaning of Ibsen’s lines. Perhaps noother playwright in any time madeeach speech, each line tell so muchas did Ibsen. A remark in the firstact may give preparation for awhole revelation in the second orthird. In ‘Ghosts,’ for example, thefirst and second acts fill themselveswith several reflective vignettes—reminiscences of the past which inthemselves may at first appear tobe unconnected. But each vignetteis a ghost which becomes reality.”“With only five characters, playingIbsen’s ‘Ghosts’ is like the subtleperformance of a Brahms quintet.The interplay is remarkable andconcentration insistent, for both ac¬tor and audience. But it all takes acareful study of the lines, not onlyone’s own but also all others sothat the proper tension and interplay may allow the enormous drama ofthe play to emerge.”Besides the problem of generalstyle, a further difficulty is posedby what Ehrenberg calls the “aca¬demic halo which attends the worksof Ibsen.” According to Ehrenberg,“Though ‘Ghosts’ is a tragedy, thereis much good comedy in it. We areattempting in this production to playthe comedy for what it is. The roleof Pastor Manders is one of sting¬ing satire upon Christian self-righ¬teousness and should still please thebest of cynical palates. Engstrandhas much of Harlequin in him, andof the Parasite. To effect the bal¬ance between the comic and the ter¬rifying is never easy, and withIbsen's aura it is even less so.”Renee Cappeliini and Edwai-d Foystar as Mrs. Alving and Osvald.Joyce Tetrev appears Regine,Michael Slater as Engstrand, andJoe Ehrenberg as Pastor Manders. Admission to the Friday and Sun¬day performances is $1.50, to theSaturday performance $2. All per¬formances will start at 8:30.Need moot court jurorsA trial moot court will be held at1 pm this Monday at tlie Law School.The case concerns personal injuryand will be judged by the HonorableArthur Zimmerman.Jurors are needed, and studentsinterested in serving as jurors maycontact Rick Taft, 752-7217: A1 Levy,Pierce Tower; Betsy Ellenbogen,New Dorm; or John Gale, Burton-Judson.Serving the University otChicago Campus Since 1921SAM MALATTBARBER SHOPBUtterfietd 8-09501011 East 61st StreetChicogo 37, IllinoisOne Man Art ExhibitEric Anderson, Jr.PAINTINGS & DRAWINGSatNicky’s Restaurantand Pizza1208 E. 53rd ST.M \Y 9, MAY 23, 1%4 dPrworld ofdiningpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668BRASS RINGERBo see Kclonel Keds flywith the Bell rochet beltaI the N. Y. World's Fairk Wonderwor/d Showt^ATOMIC CARRENTALS, INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155 “The Congolese Army hat been en¬gaged tor months in trying to putdown a Communist-tad revolt by oneof the lata Patriot Lumumba's aides,Pierre M ulah, in Kwilu province. An¬other MtM revolt, this one headedby Oaatrm Soundslot, hat erupted inthe eastern province ot Kivu. Wbet’sthe Ulf doing f Dropping thousands otleaOeta In the Ketangeae fuogJe eder-ing mournsty to any former Tetwsabegendarme whowlU uurtendeshie urmm to thyblue helmet sA myI tor e free copy el thecurrent Inn af NA»TIONAl REVIEW, writ*to Dept, Cf-7, 190 «,35 V, NuV. 14 N. Y<iA-Pn6 M * Batiste gets an Oxford education-ARROW-Comfortable batiste fabric in thecollege man’s favorite oxfordweave is sure to be one of themost popular shirts this sea¬son on or off the campus.Traditional ivy styl¬ing in the handsomeSussex button-downcollar... traditionalARROW tailoringfor perfect fit and“Sanforized” labeled toensure lasting fit washingafter washing. Crisp, coolwhite in short sleeves.$5.00 Hop to It, meet the new “Brass Ringer," it really gets around. It*sclean and lean. With man sire brass eyelets and wraparound toeguard. Long on looks, strong on comfort, great on wear. Made ofwashable cotton duck in a new smoky white chino, also In white.Medium width, sizes 5 to 12, 13, 14.Stampede on down to your nearest store Looh ,or the b,u* labeland let ’em rustle y’ up a pair. Ask for“Brass Ringer” Keds® today! It’s a .United States RubberRockefeller Center, New York 20, New YorkMay 8, 1744 • CHICAGO MAROON • fFOR RENT, ROOMS, APTS., ETC.SUMMER Sublet 4 rms.. comp. turn.$105 mo. Option to renew lease. 5334Greenwood. NO 7-3271 after 6 pm.AVAIL, now 2 bedrm. apt., fireplace,bookcases. 2nd fir., 56th & Blackstone.Call CE 6-5144 or DO 3-0896.SUMMER sublet — 4 rms.. 2 baths,comp, turn., in Hyde Park. PL 2-2190.SUBLET mid June to late Sept. Cool,comp, furn.. attractive 21* rm. apt.Suitable for one. 5^0 Cornell. 643-7876,eves., weekends.SUBLET for summer 5 rms. (2 bed-rms.. 2 baths) furn. 53rd 3c Dorchester.Call 684-3781.AVAIL. June 15—6 rm. apt , 53rd ScBlackstone. exc. cond.; Martinez, ext.3446 or DO 3-1187.ROOMMATE wanted thru summerquarter. $12.50 per week. Near Campus.See Ken-Bus. Econ. Library.SUMMER sublet: 3 rm. furn. apt. 2blocks from Univ. $85/mo. Call 752-0855after 5 pm.SUMMER sublet: 2 male roommatesto share 8 room apt. at 53rd andKimbark Plaza. $48 per person. Calleves. 752-7066.WANTED: female roommate (pref.student) to share for summer withpossible fall option. 4 rms., own bed¬rm.. near campus. 57th PI. Call 493-3508. 5:30-7 pm.TWO female roommates wanted forthe summer. Own bedrm., 2 baths,attractive 8 rm. apt. Call 752-9581.GIRL to share U apt June-Aug.: ownfurn. air-cond. rm. $72.50. NO 7-3600.SUMMER sublet: 4 rm. apt., 56th andBlackstone. Furn. Call MI 3-7379.SUBLET June thru Aug. 5. quiet, larget!x»ms—cool front and back porch.5338 Harper. Call 363-0930.SUMMER sublet 5'i rms.. comp. furn.363-8448. Mid June to Sept. 1.WANTED: 1 male to share 6 rm., 2bath apt. Rent $48.33/mo. Avail. June15. Call Harris at 684-0427.RM & Kitchen priv. in exchange forbaby sitting. BU 8-6672. near campus. ADS Wohlstetter talks on warAlbert Wohlstetter, Harper ence adviser to the U.S. delegationat the Geneva Conference on Sur-WANTED: 2 or more bedrm. apt. afterJuly 1—for 2 years. Must be in immed.UC area. Dick Quinn. 328 Chamberlin,MI 3-6000.SUMMER sublet—3'^ rm. apt. avail.June 15, 53rd & Kimbark. 667-4753.HELP WANTEDAVAILABLE now for student or facultywife: Secretary-girl Friday for interra¬cial community center 20 minutes fromcampus. All day nursery care avail¬able at Center for children 2'* orokier. Liberal salary and benefits. CallSO 8-5452. 3 BOOKCASES, 1 big dresser. 2 lamps.1 bed. Good cond. Can separate Avail.June 14. MU 4-1715.PERSONALSGNOXIOUS is its own best friend.WEST HOUSE: VOTE.IS YOUR FIR HIGH ENOUGH???STUD, disct. now avail, on repT 8calignment of high-qual. turntables,amps. 8c recording gear. ES 5-5524. Visiting Scholar here andFord Research Professor atBerkeley, will lecture on “Warby Mistake” at 4 pm today inBreasted Hall, 11(55 E. 58th St. TheDivision of Social Sciences is spon¬soring both lectures, and admission isfree. prise Attack in 1958.In the past 12 years, Wohlstetterhas led a series of research projects,mostly at RAND, concerned mainlywith the deterrence of nuclear warand lessening the likelihood of “acci¬dental'' war. The first of these wasOn Monday Wohlstetter wll speakon “Lemitting the Disaster and ItsLikelihood,” also at 4 pm in BreastedHall.Wohlstetter is a consultant to the the first systematic study of thevulnerability of strategic forces tonuclear attack, the difference be¬tween a first- and second-strikecapability, and its political-militaryimplications for problems of deter¬WANTED: 50 students for assistanceduring a research project. Rate $1.75per hr Hours: 15 to 30 hours (max.)during the period of May 16 throughMay 24. Requirements: 1. Live ATHOME with spouse and/or parents. 2.Have a T.V. set. 3. Apply 10 am to3 pm, Haskell Hall. Room S26.WANTED CHEMISTRY MAJORSHave you had organic chemistry?Are you interested in a per. position inIndustrial chemistry?Do you like the idea of tuition reim¬bursement?If your answer is yes to all thesequestions call Howard Rubin at ParkerPersonnel (HA 7-4571. Our business atParker is placing people).This is not for summer employmentonly.FOR SALE WHO was that bearded guy wanderingaround campus with a Lollypop and acopy of ‘'Bride In Me Kitchen"?NEEDED: One Scottish elephant. TheBlackfriars.MACBETH: I -have reservations foeInverness for the weekend. Flora.HAPPY Birthday to the $1.25 BridalLollypop. (see Wright)TRAVEL LIKE “CHARLIE” — RENTa new. 14-ft. travel trailer. Sleeps 5.Has gas range, ice chest, water tank,storage, heater. Reserve now. GR6-5500.NAN FOR PRESIDENT!TYPIST, exp all field. Papers, MS,Thesis. HY 3-2020. Secretary of Defense and to the de¬partment at State. From 1961 to1963, he was a member of the Re¬search Council of The RAND Cor¬poration and chairman of its pro¬gram of studies on conflict in allied,neutral, and satellite countries;He was a Defense Departmentrepresentative on the Acheson Com¬mittee to review U.S. Political, Eco¬nomic, and Military Policy in Europeduring the string of 1960, and sci-UniversalArmy Store rence.The principal recommendations o?the study, a transformation in themethod of operating SAC overseas,were adopted by the government atthe end erf 1953. Other recommenda¬tions, including the use of groundalert with warning to match, wereadopted later.Later studies suggested the “fail¬safe” procedure for reducing theprobability of accidental war, aprogram of “hardening” strategicvehicles as a principal protectionagainst ballistic missile attack, thebomb alarm system, and other de¬vices and methods of operation nowin use.NEW-USED BOOKS 10-30% DISCOUNTTYPEWRITERS — new-used-electric-manual TO 45% OFF CURRENT MAR¬KET PRICE. Used typewriters fullyfactory rebuilt (not just reconditioned)and fully guaranteed Discounts aver¬age 25-30%. J. ALLYSON STERN-BOOKSELLER. PL 2 6284. Anytime(even late at night).DUNCAN Phyfe 10 pc. mah diningrm. set. excel, cond. $150; Freezer,Mont. Ward. 7>i cu. ft., $100. DO3-8510.1961 FORD 4-door sedan. 6-cyl.. manualtrans., remarkable low mileage—only15,500—and outstanding appearance. 5regular tires, 2 snow tires with ownwheels. $1,150 firm. BU 8-2694HI-FI speaker. $25; stereo cart. $12.493-4967 after 6 pm. DO YOU know that last month traus-Atlantic economy fares were substan¬tially reduced—in some cases as muchas $100? Round trip 21 day excursionNYC—London is now a low $300. It iseven less to Shannon! FLY TWA TOEUROPE — Campus rep.: MichaelLavinsky, 745 Linn House. MI 3-6000.The MAROON will accept Quotes ofthe Day for publication. THE MORESALACIOUS (heh, heh!) THE BET¬TER.CAT seeks home—call Minda Bikman.Quaker House.FOUND: one pair of glasses at partyat 6020 Woodlawn 3 weeks ago. Call643-0575 at a reasonable hour.Paul Stuart has a batting average(thru May 6) of 1000 and a sluggingaverage of 1000. CONGRATS. 1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856HOODEDARMYRAINCOATS*10% Off with this Coupon*Escept Fair Trade ItemsCottlid) This Spring Wohlstetter plans topublish a book, Scientists, Seers andStrategy, and a second book, donefor the Council on Foreign Relationson foreign policy and military power,is scheduled for completion thisyear.His public writings include “TheAffairs, January, 1959; “NuclearShoring: NATO and the N-fl Coun¬try,” Foreign affairs, April 1961;“Scientists, Seers, and Strategy,”Foreign affairs, April, 1963; and“Strategy and the Natural Scien¬tists,” a monograph for the ColumbiaUniversity Council of Atomic AgeStudies.A University accredited by the Mid¬dle States Association of Callage#and Secondary Schools.Located in New York City'sGreenwich Village66 West 12th Street,New York 11Fhone; ORegon $-2790 SUMMER SESSION 1964^ SEVEN WEEKS, June IS July 31Undergraduate credit courses offerod in:Social Sciencea-History, Economics, World Affairs, Psychology,Sociology .Humanities-Literature, Philosophy, Religion, Art HistoryArt A Writing Workshops, Music, Thoator(Art classes begia Juno 1 and and August 6)Most classes meet between 8 and 10 p m,, twice weeklyCredit Courses transferable to other accredited institutions.Qualified students may take graduate courses in Economics,Philosophy, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology with The HewSchool's noted Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science.Registration In person or by mail is now open Mon. through Thurs. —10 A.M.-3 P.M.NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH66 West 12th Street, New York 11□ Send me catalog listing all Summer courses□ Send me the Graduate Faculty Summer CatalogNameStreetCity StateWHAT’SNEWIN THE MAYATLANTIC?“The Squeeze on the Liberal Uni¬versity” by J. Douglas Brown: Canthe liberal university survive in aclimate of bigness, diversity, andspecialization? And what valueswould be lost if we succumbed to theconcepts of the multiversities?“Liebling, Libel, and the Press”:Louis M. Lycos discusses the respon¬sibility of the p»ess ‘.he tfireat to thefreedom of the pr>»ss front libel suits,and inadoq'. ale tramirg of reporters.“The Corr.p-ifors of Tomorrow”!Martin GieenLcryer malyres the ex¬tent to which ermpuiers will reachinto our daily lives.PLUS: “The Mad Strangler ofBoston” by Trie Stanley Gardner.“Tokyo and the Olympics", "Peopleon Fire: The Conge" ani“A Rcugh V.*p of Greece”. /fztzfa.What ha-r-»rs whenan o'il*bn4-n9of editors sc- cutto pfCN\« a n •*»-Zt'-e *4 It •cosJorn**- ar*J ct»I-t«i»i inf*»»si? You IIk-w-vt wS«-, yjvi* readTi e AtlentSc. Inea'-ti liS-e you’llf I rd fr«sh newId-aj, o,e**«wg lii-e»vy techniques,keen !"•'■'*•! cfi-j-r*”*t anda r-'der c-f cr-ti-c;s-n. C*4 ycur copytoday. i STUDENTGROUPSWide Variety of Toursplanned for students onlySORBONNE STUDY TOUR70 days, $1388including England, Holland, Belgium,France, Spain, PortugalDISCOVERY ADVENTURETOUR OF EUROPE76 days, $1295Many other Student Tours featuringEurope, Israel, Greece and USSR.or form your Own GroupAsk for Plans and ProfitableOrganizer ArrangementsSPECIALISTS INSTUDENT TRAVELSINCE 1926for folders and detailsSEE YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENTor writeUNIVERSITY TRAVEL COMPANTCambridge 38, Mass. IjuTRApj■iTi / ExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd S*. HY 3-8302GET THE NEWB1C“FINE POINT”-ONLY 25«!This is really fine writing.Until today, only a spidercould spin such a fine line.Now BIC invents a new “FinePoint” pen that writessharper, clearer, thinner lines.BIC "Fine Point" with "Dya-mite” Ball Point is guaran¬teed* to write first time everytime because it’s tooled of thehardest metal made by man.BIC is the world’s finest writ¬ing instrument: BIC neverskips, BIC never clogs, BICnever smears. What a pair ofpen pals: thin-writing BIC"Fine Point” with orange bar¬rel, only 25(; standard lineBIC Medium Point "Crystal,"Just 19C. Both available withblue, black, green or red ink.Made in the U.S.A. *For re¬placement send pen to:WATERMAN BIC PEN CORF.MILF0R3, CONN. Are youworriedabouttheHCLon Acampus?Money, money, money!There’s never enough, isthere? But clever colle¬gians now cope with theHigh Cost of Living in avery pleasant^way.They’re becoming part-time (or summer-time)Tupperware dealers.Which means, they dem¬onstrate these famousplastic food containers athome parties —and earnup to $50 a week, ormore. Sounds like fun?It is. Ask your FinancialAid Director about it andcall your local Tupper¬ware distributor, listed inthe Yellow Pages underPlastics or Housewares.Or send in this coupon...• Good HouMkttping • 1 parents JV 664 KAMI If | '"JupptRWAlu Department C-4,Orlando, FloridaI would like to talk to someone•bout becoming a part-time Tup¬perware dealer.Name..Address10 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 8. 1964-1 ”V\♦i'') UNIVERSITY THEATRE - F.O.T.A.TONIGHTAT 8:30GENET - DEATHWATCHGHELDERODE - CHRISTOPHER C.MAY 8, 9. 10$1.50; Students $1.00REYNOLDS CLUB THEATERDEARBORN AT DIVISIONBack In April of 195420,000,000 of us were daz¬zled by some of the mostexplosive images of ourtime! Now, the Army-McCarthy hearings havebeen edited down to anhour-and-a-half of superbtheatre.Its called: ,POINT Chicago's most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films.STUDENTSTole odvcntoge of thetpeciol discount ovail-oble to you. 90c any dayexcept Saturdoy. ShowI.D. card to the cashier.LAKEthe PARK AT S^ROyde park : N O 7 • 9 O 7 1theatreStarts Friday, May 8Venice Festival Winner"KNIFE IN THE WATER"Leon Jolanta ZygmuntNiemcxyk it Umecka it Malanowicx"A devilish dissection of man that has humor, suspense and aof evil.” — Crowther, N.Y. Times.AndShort — "Love Me, Love Me, Love Me"Free Weekend Patron Parking at 5230 S. Lake ParkSpecial Student Rates WITH Student I.D. Cards dashCAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THE THY 3-5300 FA 4-5525PIZZAMed. LargeCHEESE 1.45 2.00SAUSAGE 1.80 2.35PEPPER & ONION 1.65 2.20BACON & ONION 2.15 2.70COMBINATION 2.40 2.95MUSHROOM 2.15 2.70SHRIMP 2.40 2.95! THIS COUPON WORTH 50ci ON ANY PIZZA DELIVERYI IN APRIL CHICAGO MAROONWEEKENDB. J. CINEMAANATOMYOF A MURDERJAMES STEWART.LEE REMICK1005 E. 60th ST.Fri., Moy 8. 7:30. 10:3050cTAhSAM-AfcNCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpeciolixing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY1318 11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUTEast 63rd St. MU 4-1062TIKI TOPICSVisit Lirals House of Tiki for aquiet, relaxed evening conducivefor a twosome. Our candlelightsetting is ideal for an intimateconversation, spiced with achoice of Jumbo Fried Shrimp,Barbecued Back Hilts, FriedChicken, Ixtbster Tail, BeefPlatter, etc. Try Cirals House ofTiki where the Hawaiianatmosphere sets the scene for anenjoyable evening with ihe ladyin your life.For an added treat after dinnertake in the new* show at ""TheLast Stage."’ The production is“ f lie Frogs’" byAristophanes. Don’t miss it.“After the Show” hack toCirals House of Tiki for adelightful Hawaiian drink.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51st and Lake Park Ave.1510 HYDE PARK BLVD.LI 8*7585Food served from 11 a.m. to 3:00 o.m.Kitchen Closed Wed.dark theatrefor college studentswith i.d. card• different doublefeatures daily• open dawn to dawn• little gal leryfor gals onlyfri., 8 - "period of ad¬justment,” "20 plus2”sat., 9 - "el cid, ” "mail¬order bride*’sun., 10 - "crack in themirror,” "adventuresor _ young man”mon., 11 - "the trunk,”"the ruffians”tues., 12 - "marco polo,”"sergeants three”wed., 11 - "5 miles tomidnight,” "the cheat-thurf., 14 - "ring offire,” "the last voyage”fr 2-2843dark ft madisoa GUIDEJimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.URBANITE RESTAURANT & LOUNGEModern Jazz FeaturingJack De Johnepte at pianoScotty Holt on bassNightly except Mon. & Tues.no admission charge75th and Michigan (block east of Dan RyanlThere’s a Beautiful, New Old-FashionedDelicatessen In Hyde ParkThat tempts your palate v/ith hot pastrami(natch!), Lox and bagel (what else?) Rye bread,pumpernickel, chole-Hot corned beef (the best),Good old-fashioned soups, big gooey sundaes,choc, phosphate (could you want more?)—Andreal good coffee (it goes without saying)UNIQUE1501 E. 53rd Street(corner Harper)Phone: FA 4*0633 . . . Customer ParkingJEFFERYTHEATRE1 «r»2 E. 71 st ST. IIY 3-3333Now PlayingElia Kazan'sAMERICA.AMERICAFeature Times:2:10,5:20,8:304 N4 BLACKFRIARS••the ROAD TO DUNSINANE” comes to MANDEL HALL ON MAY 15, 16, 17Tickets $2.50, $2.00 — Stud. Disc. $.50. May 8, 1964‘ v»' • ,V v V. • CHICAGO MAROON * U v ‘ K !H» ^—r-r■i AN OPEN LETTER•, / ^TO THE YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN OFSOUTHAMPTON'S DEBUTANTE PARTYWE READ A STATEMENT in the Press made byone of the young defendants after the courtcase involving alleged damages at a debutanteparty in Southampton, Long Island: “Every¬one knows there is too much drinking in thiscountry, but what can you do about it? Every¬body knows the morals of this country aregoing down the drain.”WE THE UNDERSIGNED believe we have theanswer to the young man’s question. ' ,We believe it is time our generation stoppedself-righteously deploring this state of thenation or irresponsibly contributing to it. Thetime has come to change it.WE REPRESENT hundreds of young Americansacross the nation who have committed theirlives to create a new society in America andthe world with the global program of MoralRe-Armament.WE ARE IN REVOLT against a society which cre¬ates the climate of immaturity and lawless¬ness that leads to such a debacle and to such acynical statement. We have got to stop it.WE ARE IN REVOLT against the gutlessness of“good” Americans who lack the courage toexplode the corruption existing in all levels ofour society, who sit silently while one womanforces God out of our schools, who permit mencommitted to atheism and anti-God to proceedunchecked, who proclaim one set of standardsand live another.WE ARE IN REVOLT against the line of the “newmorality” which is forced down our throatsby books, magazines, television, films, profes¬sors and some churchmen. Sex, violence, lustand godlessness are taking over the nation.When venereal disease among young Ameri¬cans rises 130% between the years 1956 and1961, when 13,000,000 children come frombroken homes—who is responsible ? We are. jWHERE ARE THE YOUNG AMERICANS whowill pay the price in their own lives to standup for what is right in the country? Whereare the fighting Americans who will cure thehatred, bitterness, impurity and selfishness which divide families, destroy races, deaden* youth, split nations ?THE FREE WORLD looks to us for leadership.The captive world looks to us to make freedoma reality again. We know that if America failsthe world fails.WE ARE OUT TO BUILD A NATION where fami¬lies teach mankind how to live together, whereindustry—management and labor—teach thewhole world how to work together, where allraces, colors and classes learn together withall nations how to lead the whole world for¬ward. We are out to create a force of youngAmericans more dedicated to building a worldthat works than any Communist or material¬ist. We will create an America to whom thewhole world will turn and say, “That is theway men are meant to live.”WE BELIEVE IN MODERN AMERICA. We be¬lieve she will rise to the challenge of the times.We believe she will demonstrate the great re¬ality that free men will accept of their ownaccord the discipline to be governed by God,so that millions on the earth will never beruled by tyrants.THE CHALLENGE facing the American youth is’not to go backward to the decadence that de¬stroyed the Roman Empire, but to go forwardto the revolution of Moral Re-Armament.WE CAN REBUILD THE MODERN WORLD. Letus go forward to absolute moral standards forall men everywhere: absolute honesty, purity,unselfishness and love, not as an end in them¬selves, but as a means for giving us the en¬ergy, the maturity, the responsibility, theclarity that will take humanity forward to thenext stage in human evolution.THREE THOUSAND OF US are meeting this sum¬mer in a Conference for Tomorrow’s Americaat the Moral Re-Armament Center, MackinacIsland, Michigan, to shoulder that task to¬gether. We invite every young American whohas the courage and spirit to care for his na¬tion and the future of mankind to join us.WILLIAM WISHARD, Williams College ’64MARY GALLWEY, Manhattanville College ’66S. DOUGLAS CORNELL, St. Albans School ’64STEPHEN RICKERT, Princeton University ’65SUSAN CORNELL, Radcliffe College ’63For further information on the Conference forTomorrow’s Americafill out coupon and mail to:Miss Susan Cornell, at Cedar Point,Mackinac Island, MichiganTelephone: VI 7-3311 Please send me the brochure of the summer conference sessions:June 25-July 20 and July 23-August 17.NAMEADDRESSTELEPHONE SCHOOL,The cost of this advertisement has been donated by a patriotic AmericanwmmPaid Public Notice12 • CHICAGO JMAR09N • May 8, 1964