Mississippi freedom vote: partial successThe Mississippi Freedom Vote attracted fewer peoplethan had been hoped for, but the three UC students whoreturned last week after assisting- the drive for almost twoweeks agreed that a start has been made toward greaterpolit ical sophistication of the Negroes.Tlie three UC’ers are Phil Russell, though workers for the Council ofa graduate student in linguistics from Federated Organizations (COFO),East Texas; Dtick Atlee, a second- which organized tile Vote, had hopedyear student from Pennsylvania, for twice that many,and Steve Goldsmith a third-year However, Goldsmith reported thatstudent from Louisville, y. in Shaw more than 850 personsThey told their experiences to voted, more than twice the expectedguests at a party in thedr honor number of about four hundred.spun oi ed by UC Friends of SNCCSunday night in a student’s apartment. Robert D. Gilman, a UC studentwho is on leave this year to workin West Point, Mississippi, reported_ „ , ... . .. . , . by phone Sunday night that COFORussell and Atlee both norkad in had expected about 1500 to vote inB"°». a, tOW". G““ his county, but only about 800 did so.Coast, which they said was ‘quiet ’ Jas far as violence against civil rights ACROSS THE STATE about GOworkers was concerned. City officials thousand voted, in contrast to and<> not want to drive away the tourist expected 150 thousand,trade, they commented. Abernathy, and Mrs. Victoria Grayof Hattiesburg against Rep. Colmer.The three workers related that inmany oases they had to show theNegroes where to place an “X.”Practically none of them had evervoted in a regular election, and didnot know what a vote meant, orwhat they were supposed to do witha ballot.MANY PEOPLE HESITATEDwhen asked to sign their names ina notebook to keep track of the num¬ber of persons who had voted. Mostsuch persons were willing to at leastmake a mark in the book, however.Atlee admitted that the “mock elec¬tion’’ was really a “fraud,” as heput it, because of the unorthodoxmethod of collecting votes. The others were willing to agree with himon this. Some of the listeners, how¬ever, pointed out that such irregular¬ities are strikingly similar to thosecommon in many Chicago wards.When Atlee related that the ballotcounters in Mississippi could neverget their tallies straightened out withthe number of voters listed in thenotebooks, a student who had helpedcount the orange ballots for state.representatives in the Illinois electiontold him they had the same prob¬lem.THE FREEDOM DEMOCRATICParty will now try to block seatingof the regular U.S. representativesand Senators from Mississippi,though the students did not seem tothink the effort will succeed.The attempt will be made in three ways. TTiere will be a court testof the legality of the election inwhich the regular politicians wereelected, basing the case on the Four¬teenth Amendment, which providesfor reducing the number erf repre¬sentatives to which a state is entitledif it deprives any segment of itspopulation of the right to vote.Another gambit will be to try topersuade other Congressmen andSenators that they should exercisetheir prerogatives to refuse to allowa person to be seated if the bodyfinds him objectionable.In what is considered a morepromising avenue, the FDP is alsoattempting to get Democratic partyleaders to deprive Southern Demo¬crats who supported Gold water oftheir seniority in the two chambers.A MIDNIGHT CALLER did threat - COFO workers felt “discouragedto find no one was really interesteden to bomb the house in which the m v°ttog, according to Atlee. HeFreedom Vote workers were staying,but when a bomb did explode soonafterward it “only blew out the bath¬room,” they related.Goldsmith worked in Shaw, a smalltown in the Delta country in thenorthwest part of the state. Little and the others related that they hadto go to the doors of Negro residentsto get them to mark their ballots,finding that not enough came to theballot boxes which were placedaround the towns.Atiee, Goldsmith, and RusseH,Quote of the dayharrassmeot was reported in his town, agreed that part of the cause of theak0 low turnout was the small numberoi civil rights workers who cameUol ke the workers who were sent down for the campaign. A littleto Mississippi for the entire summer over 150 persons were able to comefor the two-week period, joining anapproximately equal number of per¬manent COFO workers, most ofwhom wild stay in the state at leastuntil the end of 1964.Many persons were, of course, alsointimidated by threats against any¬one who took part in the vote. Suchthreats were made in many areas ofthe state, but situations were diversein the various pails, they said.Russell said that the need forsjjending a great deal of time, aver¬aging 15 minutes, with each voter,cut down the number of Negro resi¬dents who could be reached. Vol. 70, No. 11 The University of Chicago Tuesday, November 10. 1964 31Another bunch of obviously a* em¬ployed and indoctrinated agitators orebeinq sent from Now York shortly farenew their efforts to spread confu¬sion and misinformation at widely aspossible prior fa the November 3qenerol electioe. Their announced par-pose, naturally given much attentionin New York, is to conduct "mock"elections, register Negroes to vote inthe phony poll, and generally cause asmuch trouble as they can far Negroesand race relotions which have startedto heal from lost summer's crew ofmisfits. The thought occurs as to justhow many of these long-haired, saeah-er shod outcasts are being rushedinto Harlem and Brooklyn, the slnmsof Philadelphia ond Washington, toassist their unfortunate "toothers"and sympathisers in participating la a"mock" election for which thesegroups have never had any Interestond wouldn't vote tf they were of¬fered a double slice of welfare fundsfor the rest of their natural lives.■—from the front page column ofJimmy Word, editor of the Jack-son Miss., Dally Newt, Novem¬ber 3. 1944. Comptroller's report releasedUniversity's value increasesby Matt JosephUC funds increased by $23,640,721 during the fiscal year just completed, raisingthe total value of the University to $357,019,270, the recently released comptroller’s reportstates.The total income of the University was $167,729,964, which included an $84,596,840government appropriation for thetliis year, the students who helpedwith the Freedom Vote for twoweeks received only three hours oforientation from COFO headquartersmi Jackson, the state capital. Theyalso received training in non-violenttechniques when they had reachedtike towns to which they had beenassigned.While none of those from UC metany harm, workers for the FreedomVote were arrested in some parts oftike state as soon as they arrived.IN BIIX)XI, Russell and Atlee re¬ported that one thousand Negroesvoted in the Freedom Election, EXPLAINING THE BALLOT tomany of the residents was diflicult,they recounted. The special COFOballot showed three columns for theMississippi Freedom Democratic Par¬ty candidates, the regular segregatedDemocratic Party, and the Republi¬can Party. The GOP ran candidatesonly for U.S. President and Vioe-Piresident, and for U.S. Representa¬tive in one district, who beat theDemocratic incumbent.Tike MFDP, however, listed “can¬didates’' for all offices in three oftike five Congressional districts. John¬son and Humphrey appeared in thetop place, fallowed by Aaron Henry,head of the state NAACP, and thename of the candidate for Congress.Fanny Lou Hamer, who presentedthe case of the MFDP before theDemocratic National Convention inAtlantic City this summer’. Mrs.Annie Devine of Canton also appearedon tike ballot against incumbent Rep.Coal not isolation: LeviThe division of the Collegeinto five area colleges is notintended to isolate studentsaccording to their majors, saidProvost Edward Levi, author of theCollege reorganization proposal, Sun¬day.Shaking at a GNOSIS caucus,Levi said that the undergraduatedormitories might be used specifi¬cally to cut across the area collegedivisions, and in no case would theyparallel these divisions.One fear expressed by opponentsof the reorganization proposal isthat, in giving the Divisions greaterinfluence in the College, the facultymembers teaching undergraduatecourses would be subjected to therule of [julish or perish. According♦o Levi, the University doesn’t reallyhave this policy even in the Divi¬sions. The pressure to publish is acharacteristic of American highereducation. Regardless of what UCdoes, this pressure will exist in itsfaculty, Levi said.DisadvantagesONE OF THE MAIN disadvan-I tages of dividing the College into two years of general education and twoyears of specialized education, saidLevi, is that it prevents the special¬ized courses from being part of thestudents’ liberal education. It mustbe remembered, he said, that gen¬eral education is only part of liberaleducation. If specialized courses aretaught only as prerequisites forgraduate courses, the student willmiss out on an important part of hisliberal education, Levi concluded. Argonne National Laboratory. Of thetotal income, $11,679,729 was sup¬plied by student tuition and fees.Tlie total value figure, however,included a surplus of almost 5l/2 mil¬lion dollars, of which only $387,845was availbale for use in the generalfund. This general fund must providemoney for such expenses as the con¬struction of new dormitories, and itis here that the University has beenhurting in the past.Free few fundsTHE REASON FOR the compara¬tive lack of funds in the general fund,according to Arthur Lincioome, act¬ing comptroller, and James Ritters-kamp, vice-president for administra¬tion, is that most of the funds heldby the University are donated forspecific purposes and cannot be usedin general budgeting.Lincioome stated that availablegeneral funds which are not allocatedto the general budget are at presentinadequate. He said that the Univer¬sity does not hoard its funds butuses them where possible. The prob¬lem as he sees it is that the donorserf big funds are unwilling to givethem for unrestricted purposes.Ritterskamp, on the other hand,insisted that general funds will haveto come from gifts to the University,and that these gifts must double inthe near future if the University isto continue as a leader in educationand research. He said that the ad¬ministration was aware that it couldnot “hang it on the student” in thefuture. He feels that all privateUniversities are facing the sameproblem today except for Harvard,which has an income from its endow¬ment of four or five times that ofcomparable private institutions.Ritterskamp also stated that UCspends a great deal of money onsuch things as the Hyde Park neigh¬borhood, security, salaries, and stu¬dent aid, all of which must come outof tike general budget. He feels thatthese expenditures are higher herethan at most schools and partiallyaccount for the lack of funds avail¬able for general budgeting. As an ex¬ample of this, he cited the fact that70 to 75% of the UC faculty live inthe Hyde Park neighborhood and that INCOME(TOTAL $88,1 S3,144)EXPENMTt'RBS(TOTAL *84,«30,08»>the University must foot the bill forkeeping the neighborhood attractiveand safe for them.Aid half of incomeSTUDENT AID IS an example ofone of the great expenses that UCmust provide for. When the figuresfor scholarships, uncollected loans,and student employment are addedup, they amount to more than halfof the University’s income from feesand are probably almost equal to it.On a matter of local interest, bothRitterskamp and Itincicome statedthat the University is planning toreduce the deficit in the operationof New Dorms by about $90,000through the present board contract.Last year, the University spent over$100,000 subsidising the operation ofNew Dorms. This represented thebiggest subsidy that the Universitygave to any single enterprise. Thenew board contract, it is hoped, willreduce this subsidy to about $10,000.When asked why the high feesat Pieroe Tower and New Dorms didnot cover expenses, Lincicome andRitterskamp pointed out that theexpenditures on these operations in¬cluded the servicing of the mortgageswith which these buildings werebuilt. The administrators justified the practice of charging students formortgage servicing by stating thatstudents are not asked to pay depre¬ciation oosts on these buildings.Borrowed dorm fundsRitterskamp also asserted that inthe absence of available funds forfurther dormitory construction, newdormitories would have to be builtwith borrowed funds and that pay¬ments from students would continueto absorb the servicing of themortgages on these buildings.UNFORTUNATELY, THE Comp¬troller’s Report gives little informa¬tion regarding the actual disburse¬ment of funds for academic purposes.While the general figures for howmuch each of the departments re¬ceives are available, these funds arenot separated into research and in¬struction categories. It is thus im¬possible to tell exactly how muchthe University spends on teachingas opposed to research.Lincicqme said that while suchfigures would be important, it wouldrequire an investigation of howmembers of the faculty divide theirtime and that the University did notfeel that it could require such infor¬mation.EDITORIAL Of forensics and fornication‘No’ to finance proposal Legalized prostitution at UCIn an earlier issue, we ex¬pressed concern, although notoutright fear, over the pro¬posed finance committee thatwould be run by Student Gov¬ernment and which would bothdistribute the various studentactivities budgets and hearcomplaints against student or¬ganizations in the way ofbreaches of ethics or profes¬sional integrity. Now, the pro¬posal having been discussedat length by SG and clarifiedsomewhat for the students,our concern is growing.Although we are glad thatSG is taking considerablepains to discuss the proposalfairly before proceeding withanything definite, we wonderif they are not merely ironingout final details before pre¬senting the student body and,more specifically, the studentorganizations with what couldcome to be a fait accompli.We remind SG that fair andimpartial discussion, not justfinishing touches with thefinal end already decided, arevitally necessary in connec¬tion with a board whose ac¬tivities would be as importantand as potentially dangerousas those of the finance com¬mittee.The very structure of SG,and the manner in whichmany decisions are made iswhat disturbs us. It shouldcome as no surprise that theSG Executive Council is com¬pletely in favor of the pro¬posal, but we insist that theyresist the urge to railroad themeasure through until ade¬quate discussion and criticismhave been heard — and takeninto account — from the mem¬bers of the assembly.It should come as no moreof a surprise that the Maroonand Cap and Gown see in thisproposal the possibility of anunnecessary and potentiallyharmful group. It seems to usthat editors of these publica¬tions suffer enough when theycommit breaches of ethicsor responsibility. They areaware, or will be aware invery short order, that, as deanof students Warner A. WickWHAT’SNEWIN THE NOVEMBERATLANTIC?Canada: A Special Supplement dis¬cusses segregation, the new Canadianleadership. Canada’s struggle torunity, herauthorsand painters. Timelyarticles on: What Is Canada?, CanFrench Canada Stand Alone?. TheTrouble with Quebec, Canada as aMiddle Power, Education: Past andFuture, The Dilemma of the CanadianWriter, and other subjects.••Pomp and Circumstance: C. P.Snow” by Robert Adams: An appraisalof Sir Charles' writings, his new book.Corridors of Power, and his contribu¬tion to the two-cultures dialogue.“Labor’s Mutinous Mariners” byA. H. Raskin: A report on the rivalrybetween Joseph Curran of the NationalMaritime Union and PaulHall of the Seafarers Inter¬national Union.Every month theAtlantic provides aplatform for manyof the world’s mostarticulate and crea¬tive men and women.The result is alwaysentertaining and in¬formative, often bril-liant, occasionallyprofound. More andmore, the Atlantic isfinding its way intothe hands of discern¬ing readers. Get yourcopy today. wrote last year, ‘‘pranks haveconsequences.” They do notneed a board of any kind totell them so, and they certain¬ly do not need the threat ofofficial censure hanging overtheir heads.Finally, we wonder if thefinance committee, given thatit were to be created in keep¬ing with the proposal as it nowstands, would be positive inany respect. We see severalnegative aspects to it. First,SG’s claim that student dis¬bursement of student activi¬ties funds would raise SG’sprestige is not totally correct.As we noted in the earlierissue, such a set-up would tendto elevate SG only in the eyesof campus leaders, a smallgroup. Thus, the proposal isnegative in that it would denysome of SG’s energy and timeto the student body at large,which deserves it as much ifnot more than a comparativelytiny group of student leaders.Secondly, the proposal isnegative in that the commu¬nications board portion of ithas the air of traffic cop-ismin it. We repeat that studentleaders do not need watch¬dogs and do not need thethreat of punishment. SGmight better find some wayto help these organizationsget more staff members andincreased interest among thestudent body in the particularactivity through some suchmeasure as an annual publici¬ty campaign.Thirdly, the proposal is neg¬ative in that, from the stand¬point of the entire University,it denies the possibility thatany one individual might initi¬ate constructive criticism of astudent activity. As of now,he need only work throughthe dean of students or thestudent activities offices, andas it is he lobbies his own case.With a finance committee anda communications board, suchindividual power is lost andis replaced by a group whoseapparent aim is to condemnrather than to criticize con¬structively. We hope that SGwill think long and hard aboutits proposal. The dangers anddefects far outnumber thevirtues. by Bob LeveyAlthough rotten peachesand tomatoes were absent,very little dialectic (obsceneor otherwise) was spared atthe fourth annual Chicago-style de¬bate, held Friday night in Ida NoyesHall.In keeping with the rules or lackof them peculiar to the debate, theannounced issue (whether prostitu¬tion should be legalized) was eithertreated, not treated, or mistreatedthroughout the evening by the speak¬ers and the sizeable audience.The affirmative, embodied! !) bytwo women, Avis Vidal and KarenHalvorsen, attempted to show gen¬erally that legalized prostitutionwould improve both the economicand moral fiber of the country. Thenegative, upheld typically enough bytwo second year law students, FrankWohl and George Badenoch,erected!!) * an argument aroundwhat they considered the inevitableresults of legalized prostitution —a female population which wouldbe, to a (wo)man, either “whoresor virgins,” and the danger that “thebottom would fall out of the pros¬titution market.”Four-point programMISS VIDAL, speaking first andclad in a shocking red (light?) dress,presented a firm and well-construc¬ ted four-point program. Amid reso¬nant belches and haunting cries of“depra-a-a-ved,” she argued that,since present-day society thinks ofsex only as a means of gratifyinga need for pleasure, prostitution, iflegalized, could serve mankind whileremoving the shame and guilt towhich he is now subject.Secondly, legalized prostitutionwould result in an increased grossnational product, she maintained,since women would have an oppor¬tunity to enter full-force into thelabor market.Thirdly, rebutting cries from rightand left that Avis is only numbertwo, Miss Vidal argued that cor¬ruption — in the form of payoffs topolice and pejorative bickeringamong potentially fine, upstandingprostitutes — would sink to a mini¬mum with legalization. “Legaliza¬tion would keep people off the streetsand put them in the beds,” shecontended.FINALLY, SHE protested that thegovernment would also benefit fromlegalized prostitution in that taxrevenues would soar. “Prostitutesdo well economically,” she (under)stated.VW'S on the outsMiss Halvorsen, assistant directorof forensics at Illinois State Uni¬versity, kept tongue out of cheekLetters to the editorParticle aims forscience communicationTO THE EDITOR:I would like to explain the purposeof Particle so that you on the Maroonand the students on campus mayunderstand it.It has been the experience of stu¬dents in the sciences that their pro¬gram of study often becomes ex¬tremely narrow. While in certainrespects this cannot be helped, thereis one in which it can. Interestedstudents can try to bring the variousdisciplines of science together. Par¬ticle magazine was established asan incentive and a means of suchcommunication for students on theundergraduate level who were doingcreative research. It is still our be¬lief that undergraduates, no lessthan graduates, deserve a mediumfor publication of their work. How¬ever, the problems involved in fund¬raising have led us to chart othercourses for interdisciplinary commu¬nication.This year the Particle staff is sponsoring a series of lectures withthe purpose of bringing to under¬graduates an opportunity to hearinteresting topics from various sci¬entific fields. Tea and Taurus isan attempt to present to undergrad¬uates the new but often too compli¬cated material which is described athigher-level lectures around the cam¬pus. The members of Particle aresincerely trying to end this hiatusin the activities of an undergraduatescience student. We believe inter¬disciplinary communication is anecessary complement to the cre¬ative research which Particle maga¬zine attempted to emphasize. Per¬haps the mathematician JaquesHadamard, expressed it best whenhe wrote, *\ . . it is important forhim who wants to discover not toconfine himself to one chapter ofscience, but to keep in touch withvarious others.” It hope this willmake the purpose of our organiza¬tion clearer to you.R. J. SCHNEIDER and mind on technique. As coinsflew stageward, she intoned: “Goneare the days when you have to learnhow in the back seat of a Volks¬wagen. With legalized prostitution,there will be fullsized beds for all!”Legalizing prostitution, she added,would lead to increased advertising,which, since “sex is here to stay,”would increase sexual knowledge inthe laymand), to say nothing ofthe possibility of improved per¬formance.Admitting that he was not open-minded but broad-minded, Wolil ad¬vanced a primarily economic argu¬ment. Besides the danger of work¬man’s compensation, Wohl foresawmoral danger in a financially basedsociety. “Can you imagine a whore’sunion?” he implored.MAKING A DIRECT attack onMiss Halvorsen, Wohl called forwatchfulness in regard to advertis¬ing. “The ‘does she or doesn’t she’ads could lead to untold complica¬tions,” he pointed out.Chicken, not moralBadencch argued that, in legaliz¬ing prostitution, society would notbe moral but chicken instead. In¬sisting on the inebreation of hisaudience, he asserted that societyshould work to prevent corruptionrather than fall victim to it.Nevertheless, Badenoch could notdeny the existence of prostitution.Feeble soul that he made himselfout to be, he could only point outto the audience that “the bottomwould fall out of the prostitutionmarket if rank amateurs were al¬lowed to infiltrate.”A question period that followedproduced only one worthwhile query:how would one avoid misrepresenta¬tion in packaging? Wohl, attemptingto answer, was drowned out by theroar of a neo-Billy Gnrfiam, whopointed out that if prostitution wasmentioned in the Bible and was goodenough then, it should be equallygood now.INCONCLUSIVE AS it was, thedebate nevertheless proved onething: prostitution, in all its clandes¬tine glory, is here to stay, moraldecay and Barry Goldwater notwith¬standing.Book Clearance SaleContinues thru Thurs., Nov. 12The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.ONSALENOW Rockefeller Chapel 59th St. & Woodlawn Ave.Bach’s MASS IN B MINORRichard Vikstrom, cond.; ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIR, mem.of CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Teresa Orantes, top;Charlotte Brent Elsa Charlston, mezzo-sop; Walter Carringer, tenor;Michael Cousins, Bass; Edward Mondello, organ.SUNDAY — NOVEMBER 15 — 3:30Season Tickets: $16.00; $12.00; UC Stu/Staff $8.00Single Concerts: $4.00; $3.00 UC Stu Staff $2.00ON SALE: Chapel House and Bookstore.COMING: Dec. 13 MESSIAH; Jan. 17 APPAREBIT, Hindemith,MASS, Stravinsky, MISSA PAPAE MARCELLI, Palestrina; Feb. 14NETHERLANDS CHAMBER CHOIR; Mar. 14 MISSA SOLEMNIS,Beethoven; Apr. 11 ISRAEL IN EGYPT, Handel SWAP will hold a semi¬nar for all tutors tonightat 7:15 p.m. in Ida Noyes,at which public schoolteachers will speak onproblems of teaching sev¬eral subjects. All presenttutors are asked to attend.SWAP also needs moretutors for all high schoolsubjects. Interested per¬sons may come up to theSWAP office in Ida Noyesany day. Little heed givencycle moratoriumScgns prohibiting motorcycles onthe UC campus have been postedfor the last few months, accordingto A. J. Eidson, supervisor of Cam¬pus Security.Eidson stated that the administra¬tion had received a number of com¬plaints. “Too many students wouldgun their motors and otherwise dis¬turb classrooms and offices,” hesaid.Oil drippers“THEY ALSO NEGLECTED topark on the street, and dripped oJall over the sidewalk,” Eidcon con¬tinued. “We tried to find some wayof parking the motorcycles, but wecouldn’t get the right kind of rack.”Despite the notices, motorcycleshave been sighted all over the cam¬pus. Eidson explained, “I supposethe patrolmen are too busy to doanything about them right now.” Buthe promised that aH parked motor¬cycles would be ticketed, and added,“I saw one ticketed this morning.”IIT UNION BOARD PRESENTS ESTERHAZYThe Union Board of the Illinois Institute of Technology ispresenting the world renowned Esterhazy Orchestra on Friday,November 13, at 8:30 p.m. at Grover M. Hermann Hall Audi¬torium, 33rd at Dearborn. The orchestra, which is conductedby David Blum, performs the works of Haydn and other 18thand early 19th century composers, including J. Ph. Rameau.Tickets are available by mail or at the door. Free protectiveparking is provided.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 10. 1964Mrs. Maxine Sullivanappointed new registrarMrs. Maxine Sullivan, UC’s assistant registrar, has beenappointed registrar to replace William J. Van Cleve.Van Cleve is leaving his job to take an administrativeposition with the University - connected National OpinionResearch Center, Rossi views electionNo major political realignmentMrs. Sullivan is the first womanto be made registrar at UC. Shecame to the University in 1958 toserve in the Special Service of Bill¬ings Hospital.IN 1959, MRS. Sullivan assumedthe position of assistant registrar.No troubleMrs. Sullivan does not expect tohave any trouble with her change ofjobs. “I have worked with Mr. VanCleve, and I am aware of what hehas done all over the office,” shesaid.For the moment, Mrs. Sullivanplans no changes in the office of theregistrar. ‘‘But we’re noted forchafes in this office.” she added.Praise for the departing VanCleve came from Warner A. Wick,dean of students. ‘‘We are indebtedto Mr. Van Cleve,” Wick said, “forhaving brought the office of the reg¬istrar and its procedures to tlje high¬est contemporary standards of tech¬nical development. The transforma¬tion of the past six years has been remarkable, and I congratulate himfor his new opportunities at theNational Opinion Research Center.”Wick said that he felt that theimmediate objective of the regis¬trar’s office should be the refine¬ment of the office’s new techniquesto achieve greater convenience forstudents and faculty.Wick 'confident'“I AM CONFIDENT,” he said,‘‘that Mrs. Sullivan, whom thefaculty admires and the students re¬spect, is well suited to preside overthe office with skill, humanity, andgrace.”Women have filled a number ofhigh administrative positions at UCin the past. Miss Valerie Wickhemserved as director of admissions, andMrs. Ruth McCain held the job ofassistant dean of students.At the present time Mrs. AnitaSandke is director of the office ofCareer Counseling and Placement.Dr. Henrietta Herbolsheimer wasdirector of the Student Health Serv¬ice until last spring.Student suicides increase;most are good students*v Co«*»Jot« %t S«rvlc» student suicides in his report.The number of student sui- _ . , . . , , .. ... • A desire to destroy themselvesCldes has risen alarmingly in because they can no longerthe United States during the tolerate the discrepancy be- f( by Joan Tapper‘By mid-October it was clear that the Democratswould achieve a large majority of popular votes, and aneven larger electoral total,” declared Peter Rossi Fridayin the last of three social sciences-sponsored talks aboutlast week’s presidential election.Rossi, professor of sociology anddirector of the National Opinion Re¬search Center, is known for his stud¬ies of voting behavior.“In August, there was a questionof whether there would be a majorrealignment of voters,” Rossi stated.“But this never occurred. Now thereis only a temporary ooalition ofeastern Republicans and Democrats,”he said.BG 'disliked*“The Republicans rejected Gold-water because he was a ‘dislikedcandidate,’ ” Rossi added. “Hetended to frighten people with hisimage of being irrational and unrelia¬ble. Also Goldwater’s distrust of theFederal government is alien to alarge part of the American popula¬tion. The Federal government hascome bo mean a lot to the upper-in¬come, Republican group. But thevoters didn’t necessarily like John¬son; he seemed to be considered thelesser of two evils,” Rossi said.“Johnson’s image was of a competentand resourceful, if sometimes slip¬pery, man.”ROSSI EXPLAINED that fc washard to tell if the images determinedthe vote, or if it was the other wayaround. “The vote-intention seems todetermine how a voter will ration¬alize a candidate’s position,” he said.The issue shifted during the cam-UCal Creeks still out for bias| Peter Rossi |paign, according to Rossi, betweeninternational relations and race rela¬tions. “After the August riots, racerelations took precedence, bit laterwith the Tonkin incident, internationalrelations came back up in impor¬tance,” he explained.The fact that the Walter Jenkinsincident did not have any great ef¬fect on the campaign surprised Rossi.“If this had happened during the ’30’sit would have caused quite a fuss,”he said. “I think this indicates a basic change in the American people.We may be losing part of our parti¬san fundamentalism,” he said.Trying to determine what happenedto the expected “white backlash,”Rossi found it necessary to examinethe attitude towards Negroes cm thepart of whites over the last twentyyears. “There has been acceleratedacceptance, at least in the legalsense, recently,” he said. “In 1940only about 1% of people in the Southbelieved in the desegregation ofschools; now it’s about 40%.”“BUT BELIEF IN the rights oflegal equality are seen differentlyfrom the rights of enforcement,” hecontinued. “The passage of Califor¬nia’s Proposition 14 showed that.”There is a vague acceptance oflegal equality for Negroes and otherethnic groups, and at the same timean apprehension that people are goingto cash in on it, Rossi feels.BG no racistRossi found that the absence ofparty realignment over the CivilRights issue was not hard to explain.“First, Goldwater is not an out-and-out racist. His image resulted fromhis statements about the 1960 CivilRi^its Bill. And also the generalpublic agrees with breaking out of thelegal definition of segregation,” hesaid.“FOR A SWITCH in parties to oc¬cur,” Rassi continued, “there wouldhave to be a peculiar union of groups.Goldwater would have had to attractnormally Democratic voters peoplewith a high amount of prejudice, suchas the urban working class.”past few years, according *toa report in the November issue ofthe NEA Journal, official magazineof the National Education Associa¬tion.“Depressed boys and girls, vic¬tims of inner turmoil and increasing¬ly difficult outside conditions, aretaking this way out of theirtroubles,” Marguerite Clark of theCornell University Medical Collegedeclared in the current issue. In1962, about 550 young people between15 and 19 years old took their ownlives.Cornell University conducted astudy of suicide among college stu¬dents. Dr. Leif Braaten, former psy¬chologist of Cornell and author ofthe study, outlined four motives for tween how they appear to them¬selves and how they would liketo be.• A need to punish others whohurt them.• An urge to repent from somesin.• A cry for help — “Please res¬cue me. Don’t leave me alone.”Surprisingly, the Cornell doctorsfound that the student-patient whogets the highest marks is the onemost likely to commit suicide. “Stu¬dents with suicidal tendencies, were,as a group, good or very good stu¬dents. Nonsuicidal students, on theother hand, were often doing poorlyin their academic work,” the studynoted. LOS ANGELES (CPS) —Fourteen of the fifteen fra¬ternities and sororities sus¬pended at the University ofCalifornia for refusing to sign anon-discrimination pledge are stillunder suspension this week.One of the fraternities, Lamda ChiAlpha, signed the pledge and wasreturned to good standing this week.Twelve sororities and two fraternitiesart three of the University’s campusesremain forbidden to use the Univer¬sity of California’s name or facilities.In addition, they have been barredfrom many student-sponsored activ¬ities on their campuses.Eleven of the disciplined chaptersare at the Los Angeles campus.Involved are one fraternity, Acacia,FDC adds to LBJ landside victory‘‘Registration made a bigdifference in the margin ofGoldwater’s defeat,” said A1Raby, acting chairman of theFreedom Democratic Cluhs (FDC)of Illinois, in a Maroon interviewthis week.“I’m very pleased both with theoutcome of the election and the re¬sults of our own efforts. We set outto register voters and bring themto the polls and that’s exactly whatwe did.”Raby felt, however tiiat the jobof the Illinois FDC and the othercivil rights groups is far from done.“We must now put the emphasison organizing in wards. We have tostart planning congressional andmayoral campaign strategies — inshort we have to start work on ourown political machine,” Raby said. LAST MONTH, AT the foundingconvention of the Freedom Demo¬cratic Cluhs, Rady spoke of “thenew political three R’s: Reform orRemove and Replace.” He calledfor a movement toward the ejectionof the precinct captain. “We sufferunder hand-picked precinct captainswho court votes with favors andhandouts. This is the fabric and fibreof a controlled party in which we have no real representation and novoice,” Raby contended.“This very convention serves noticethat we intend to make the Demo¬cratic Party more democratic” Rabysaid. “We must put forward not onlyprograms on issues—but candidatespledged to carry them out. We mustnot only complain about representa¬tives who ignore us—but work toreplace them.” and ten sororities. Alpha Delta Pi,Alpha Gamma Delta, Delta DeltaDelta, Delta Zeta, Gamma Phi Beta,Kappa Delta, Phi Mu, Pi Beta Phi,Sigma Kappa, and Beta Tau Alpha.The other three chapters are Acacia,at the Berkeley campus, and SigmaKappa and Pi Beta Phi, at the Davisbranch.The pledge, which chapter presi¬dents must sign amua&ty, reads asfollows:I hereby certify that members(of my fraternity) are free tochoose and accept new memberswithout discrimination as to race,religion or national origin.Dean of Students Byron H. Atkin¬son of the UCLA campus has ex¬pressed the bedief that many houseswill sign the pledge even though thedeadline has passed. Any house thatdoes sign will regain its lost priv¬ileges, he said.Aside from the 15 houses whichwere disciplined, only five of thestate’s 151 affiliated chapters failedto sign the pledge. The five were given extensions of the deadline andare expected to sign soon.Included among the Berkeley sign¬ers was Pi Beta Phi sorority, which,along with its sister chapter on theUCLA campus, attempted to havethe California courts enjoin the Uni¬versity Regents from enforcing thedeadline, preliminary to further legalmoves.The fact that the overwhelmingnumber of non-signing organizationscame from the UCLA campus ledAtkinson to observe: “This makes itperfectly otear that it is local influ¬ence in the Los Angeles sororitysystem, rather than national affilia¬tions, that have caused this invidiouscomparison.”The University must now face theproblem of enforcement. Some soror¬ities have indicated that in order toenter traditional campus events, theymight attempt to skirt the Universitypolicy by posing as ad hoc studentgroups. Traditionally, ad hoc groupshave had little trouble entering cam¬pus activities.LOSTRESEARCH DATAProbably on UC campus: 4 pages typed interview withSzudis, and about 20 pages of research data sheets onYucatan Indians, paper-clipped between brown card¬board covers.SUBSTANTIAL REWARD. PHONE EXT. 4393 Max Shulman'suproarious new novelanyone GOT AMATCH?CAP & GOWN PREVIEW!SEE REPRESENTATIVE PHOTOS OF 1965 UNIVERSITYYEARBOOK ON DISPLAY IN MANDEL CORRIDORTHROUGH FRI., NOV. 13ORDERS WILL BE TAKEN AT THEPRE-PUBLICATION PRICE OF $4.00FROM 10:00-12:30 and 1:30-4:00THROUGH NOV. 13 IN MANDEL CORRIDOR A cigarette tycoon with a sagging sales chart; a television“nicer” looking for his self-respect; a Southern belle dream¬ing of her war-time lover; and the most wonderful wife inyears of American fiction: the biggest, best, funniest novelyet by the author of Bally Round the Flag, BoyslAt all bookstores • $4.95Nov. 10, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Northern Student Movement meets in New YorkCall for radical reconstruction Roosevelt award to House;by Rita DershowitzCollegiate Press ServiceNEW YORK (CPS) — Anew direction for the studentcivil rights movement whichwould force <i r<:\dic<il recon- (distributionstruction of American society” tookform last weekend at a conferencesponsored by the Northern StudentMovement (NSM)."The function of the movementnow is the creation of a vehicle bywhich people can speak for them¬selves, because neither the tradi¬tional liberal ideology not the Gold-water alternative speaks for us,’*William Strickland, executive direc¬tor of NSM, declared.THE THEME OF the conferenceconference developed as the direc¬tion of future civil rights activitiesand the possible political organizationof the ghetto. Charles Silberman,keynote speaker and author of Crisis An award for “wise leader- Hauser has recently drawn at totsship and courage in the strug- tion as Chairman of the Advisoryelite which “maintains control of Tom Hayden, leader of the SDS proj- gle to free men’s minds from on Integration of the Publicthis country in its own hands by ab- ect in Newark, New Jersey, noted ignorance and prejudice ’ will 4‘T£aUser Report?”15 W ^sorbing any potential revolutionary a renewal of self-confidence, “a ^)e given Ph'lip M. Hauser,force.“Using tactics of appeasement andof some power in abargaining situation, such as thepoverty program, the power elite isnot distributing resources, we haveto regain the power to make de¬cisions rather than just bargain foran influence in the decision-makingprocess,” he declared.Aronowitz saw the mobilization ofpoor communities into an alternativepolitical movement as the vehiclefor gaining power. “It is a questionof developing class consciousness onspecific self-interest issues: urbanrenewal, housing, poverty, educa¬tion,” he remarked.BOTH NSM and Students for ain Black and White, charged that Ne- Democratic Society (SDS) have de¬grees have been unable to take theirnghtful place in American societybecause of a power imbalance. TheAmerican creed was never intendedto include Negroes,” he added.Silberman defined the present im¬balance as resting on the patroniz¬ing, condescending relation of thewhite man to the Negro and thegoal of the protest movement as arestructuring of Negro-white rela¬tionships. “When forced to negotiatewith Negroes, whites will begin tosee Negroes as equals, as men,”he said.Silberman said that in the proc¬ess of gaining political power theNegro is “no longer addressing him¬self to white prejudices, he is nottrying to change minds and hearts,but simply change actions.”STANLEY ARONOWITZ, trade-union organizer for the AFL-CIO,described a self-perpetuating power veloped community action projectsdesigned to organize ghetto inhabit¬ants into political pressure groups. sense that something can be done,”within a community that hasachieved certain improvements byorganizing for that purpose.Hayden declared that “urban re¬newal is a political and economicconspiracy to prevent Negroes fromexpressing themselves as an organ¬ized political force.” He said thatNew Jersey cities compete witheach other to reduce the number ofNegroes within their boundaries, andthat urban renewal was the agentof this dislocation.Charles Turner, leader of theNSM Hartford project, called for thecreation of a ghetto constituency, abase of power from which to con¬front political leaders. “The tenantassociations that we are developingare not an end in themselves, buta first step in which people can seeother alternatives, and can build anew sense of power,” he said. chairman of the UC depart¬ment of Sociology by theRoosevelt University AlumniAssociation at its Ninth An¬nual Homecoming.-Country Club U. ups tuition rates In the citation of the award, namedthe Eleanor Roosevelt Key award,the RAA credits Hauser with “insightinto the desperate need to improvethe condition of the impoverished olthe world” and for his “valiant ef¬forts to bridge knowledge and humankindness.”“THE WORLD IS my country, andto do good is my religion,'’ repliedHauser when asked what principlesguided him in his work.RU degree holderA 1927 recipient of a degree fromRoosevelt University’s predecessorthe Central Y College, Hauser re¬ceived his advanced academic de¬grees from UC.Otto Wirth, dean of the College ofArts and Sciences at Roosevelt, andwinner of last year’s DistinguishedService Award, will make U13 pres¬entation to Hauser.UC PRESIDENT George W. Bead¬le, attorney Alex ELson, and Wirthrecommended Hauser for the award,Indistinct rumblings of stu¬dent discontent are being For faculty salariesTHE ADDITIONAL funds are ear- has taken no definite shape, bui com¬plaints center on the fact that nobeard at neighboring North- marked especially for faculty sala- ^3^°^ was S1Ven to the ‘IKY>nin^western University. ries, which are already, “highest inThe University, located in suburban, the Big Ten, and among the highestdry Evanston and famous for its in the nation,” according to the DailySchool of Speech and its fraternities Northwestern.has raised its already high tuition to Miller also told NU students that$1800. The $300 increase was an- scholarship aid would be proportion-nounced last week by University ately raised to help those studentspresident, J. Rosooe Miller, and will who cannot afford to pay the addi-take effect with the 1965 summer tional amount. He added that he didquarter. not think the caliber of NU studentsTuition for the summer session will would be affected at all.be raised from $500 to $600. Student protest to the tuition hike Looking for other waysFranklin M. Kre-ml, Universityvice-president of planning and de¬velopment, stressed that, in the fu Four named to localRhodes competitionFour UC students have been nomi¬nated for state and regional com¬petition for Rhodes Scholarships,dean of undergraduate studentsGeorge Playe announced last week.The four are Marc Cogan, Eugeneture, Northwestern will try to find Groves, hkd Lieberman, and Edwardother ways of meeting its expenses, Spitznagel. All are fourth year stu-especially through alumni gifts. dents in the College.The scholarships for which theTHE LAST TIME Northwestern four are competing were establishedtuition was raised was last year when around the turn of the century byexpenses jumped from $1200 to $1500. philanthropist Cecil Rhodes. TheirUC experienced a similar increase stipend calls for four years at Ox-in costs this year when undergraduate ford University in England tuition-tuition moved from $1455 to $1710. free.£ m l. ituujjer J1Xh photo by n,iny h.iys dr>ign don mrmbeMENTHOSKISES 2REGLISSE 2Vi oz.' .BLACKCURRANTPATE (3 pack)CREME DE MARRONSDIJON MUSTARD:BAR-LE-DUC 3 1/4 oz. ......v 69cCALVE SAUCE TARTARS 6>/2 oz 79cSAUCE AIOLI 6>/2 oz. . 79cSAUCE TYROLIENNE 6>2 oz. . 79cSAUCE BEARNAISE 6'/2 oz 79cSAUCE'VERTE 6>/2 oz. . i 79cP&C FILET OF MACKEREL 4'4 oz. 39CP&C FRENCH SARDINES 4V2 oz. 69cRene Beziers PEAS WITH ONION 15 oz 49cFaugier MARRONS IN SYRIJP 9 oz 1.29Legal INSTANT COFFEE 1 3/4 oz 59CWHOLE MACKEREL in White Wine 13 1/4 oz 1.19WHOLE HERRING in White VWne 13 1/4 oz ,95cROSEWATER .... 49*MARRONS NATUREL 99*MARRONS in Syrup 14 oz. . . 1.79Faugier WHOLE MARRONS in Vanilla Syrup,9 oz. jars . . . .Wiole CHESTNUTS in Brine 11 oz PAT£ de FOIE -not the prohibitively .expensive goose-liver po(6, buto verytasty delicacy indispensible for snacking „ , ... .39«ESCARGOTS (Snails) combo 1.89CHESTNUT PURfeE 15 oz 59cSARDINES Bretone 1/4 oz .49cLU PETIT BEURRE BISCUITS one lb. tins 1.79LU CHAMPAGNE BISCUITS one lb. tins 1.59LU PETIT BUERRE BISCUITS 8 oz. . 89$LU RASPBERRY STRAWS 6 oz 99cMELANGE CHOISI 7 oz 79cEPE DENTILLES 4 oz 79c10| 2 oz. 69caislestv- * <£>: -. :v'l :'•>T "• • • ' ’ ■,v £353 *§§&;:• Jv FRENCH SARDINES : 59*Cointreau ORANGE MARMALADE . . . . 65$BAR-LE-DUC 65cOld Thymers FRENCH CANDY 4 oz. . . 89CLeonard French White VINEGAR 59$Delicatessen Department: Imported French Cheeses-ROQUEFORT, MUENSTER, CAMEMBERT, PORTSALUT,PONT L’ KVEQIJE, la FINE BOUCHK, BON BEL. BUIEFrance’s Popular Brand Cigarette at the Coffee Bar.GAULOISES CAPORALCREME I)E MARRONS 45$MARRONS GLACfiS . ....... 1.45Maurice LIVER PATE 4 39$SNAIL FORKS ■ • 59cSNAIL PINCERS 1.45SNAIL PLATES 89$: - ' VcFeconomie!gourmandise!l la carte!" ("Everyone! Go to the") . . . at the Aisles de France in"Tout le monde! A l’affaire! a la cart! afair! Grab your cart! Get the fare of yoithe Co-op. You’ll find a bit of France, par tout! Most of these products are in theinternational foods or gourmet departments, but look on the other shelves, too. Younever can tell what you’ll discover, chez co-op.<* c t -v' |§>> ip ifAt Iasi, you can take home 0 famousFRENCH BOUDOIR COOKIE from theCo •op. They come In a handy package.-'■;% .79$OUKI KOUKI are hazelnut biscuitsnamed for the export trade 49<Le CHAMPAGNE are for nibbling atopening nights of the theatre andOther champagne parties 75<All these are French-type lady fingerswith many uses.Lazeran Red BAR-LE-DUC JELLY 1% oz. .Bocquet Dijon MUSTARD 3'/2 oz. fancy jarsBlack Uny COCKTAIL OLIVES 7 oz Grielles BISCOTTES 10'/2 oz . .;.Vie Candy:FRAMBOISES 2'/2 oz. ??. 29CPASTILLINES 2'/2 oz 29cART LEMON PETITE 2V2 oz. 29c2‘/z oz. | 29c:: 29cDROP 2'/2 oz 29c49c17 oz . . ;. .59ciln’yaqueMAILLE,’aille" (“If it’s not MAIllE, it'se.*)39« w^mRGOTS (snails),in the can; theHeat the snailstions and putEat them out of the shellsproper accessories. (Ifyou’you can re-use the shells.)Snails and Shells: $1Glass FLAGEOLET BEANS 14 oz 79$Glass TINY PEAS 14 oz , 79$Glass CARROTS 14 oz. .79$Glass MUSHROOMS 14 oz 4 1.79Tins ENDIVES 15 oz. 65$White ROQUEFORT DRESSING 49$Red ROQUEFORT DRESSING 69$Parizot MUSTARD *..69$ORANGE PUFFS .89$, 1<-CO-OP SUPERMART 55th & LAKE PARK (In The Hyde Park Shopping Center) • Open Thurs. & Fri. EveningsM. L. STAUFFER 19644 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 10. 1964nmovie review THEATRE REVIEWGreen Eyes' a waste of honeyThe smartest thing the thoy ^ver spontaneous or sus- frenetic direction cannot co-ordinatemakers of GIRL WITH For example when Rita, try- these virtues> „ the la]ents ofGREEN EYES did was to “J** J* 1sopl™3tacab“d’ drops her the actors, into something greatertitle their picture after its her££,XL? d£ ‘""J, ” *'"al t^lb'ofKTST A TASTE OP HONEy! iST*“by16,F V0U'RE interested in seeingassesses a profound, homely beauty wrenches all lightheartedness'from how a Playboy bunny CQstume pro-Uiat both evokes and transcends the lke scene with a shot of water bein« jects a maximum of flesh above therealism of everyday life She is a thrown, at ^ panicked darli ° nipple meridian, then by all meansgreat gift to the art of Naturalism but at the camera. drop in at the Playboy Theatre forand a wonderful example of the The direction is full of such cal a free show at the well-lighted coffeemaxim, ‘‘Cinema is the homage Art shots plus ch5c jumpcuts counter. As for the screen attrac-pays to Reality (D.S. Greenberg, startling ^ldio transitions. At first lion, I suggest writing away forUnfortunately, in the film one senses these devices as evidence Some ^ of mta Tushingham Epstein in virtuoso role intension packed 'Enrico BY'Enrico IV, by Luigi PirandelloCast:Henry IV Alvin Ep *einCountess Matilda .....—..June TravisBaron Tito Leo LuckerFrida Susan RaeThe Marquis Terry IsraelDirected by Gene FrankelAt the Harper Theatre, 5238 S. Harperpays1963.)which is named for her, her win- QfVridTf^.liear mis^s in a ?fering over Peter Finch’s„ing talents are largely wasted. film fuU of energy if not originality. PerJ;yes are British cmema^twoThe most puzzling thing about The liveliness of the work at least greatest assets since SATURDAYGIRL WITH GREEN EYES is why bolsters one’s faith in the naive vi- NIGHT AND SUNDAY MORNINGSKGORE meets Thurs.Miss Tushingham and her co-star, vacity of British cinema. Surely,the forceful and intelligent Peter someday, when the ghost of CarolFinch, (GREEN CARNATION, THE Reed materializes, or when theNUN’S STORY) bothered to take British Orson Welles wanders inpart in this unrewarding project. The from the moors, the results will be University of Chicago Congress ofscript is full of bad dialogue and ex- something vital. Racial Equality (CORE) will meethibite an amazing lack of character But initial optimism dissipates as Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Ida Noyesdevelopment. The audience is given the film goes its superficially in- Library.very little indication of Finch s moti- ventive way. Like many other The three UC students who wentvat ions. It is at no time evident ex- British films, GIRL WITH GREEN down to Mississippi for the recentaotly why the hard-headed writer EYES is rich with a heady urban Freedom Vote, Dick Atlee, Steveand the young sales-gr.rl become naturalism and ripe with contem- Goldsmith, and Phil Russell, willlovers, or even friends. The exact porary social significance. These are speak about their experiences,nature of the resultant conflicts are the kinds of things cinema was made In addition there will be a dis-never made clear beyond the boun- for, the things that have filled cussbn of civil rights action in lightdanes of stereotype. British movies since the rise of of the election and the role of theTHE REVELATIONS—the writer social realism. student in this action. Gerhardis married, the writer has a kid— Characteristically excellent photo- Meyer, the faculty advisor of UCfall flat. We are often unsure wheth- graphy nails our attention to the CORE, and other faculty memberser or not the humor is intentional, screen and invests every shot or cut have been invited to participate inWhen the laughs are appropriate, with professional vigor. But the the discussion. On the darkened stage agroup of twentieth centurysocialites in eleventh centurycostumes are arguing, bicker¬ing, or just chatting. The play isthus far mildly amusing: we arepromised a look at a madman whobelieves he is the Holy Roman Em¬peror Henry IV, and who will allowno one in his presence who is inmodem dress. We expect a comedyof manners, perhaps with someslapstick thrown in.To a flourish of kettledrums HenryIV marches onto the stage dressedin the rags he is to wear at Canossa— and from that moment the playbecomes charged with high-voltageelectricity; from that moment atension builds which is not dischargeduntil tiie final curtain. Two men areresponsible for this: Alvin Epsteinand Gene Frankel.Epstein gives a performance inthe title role which can only be de¬scribed as virtuoso. Whenever he ison stage he is the center of interest, and he is on stage for most of ihehundred fifty minutes of the producetion. He is thus forced to act at thetop of his form, building peak afterpeak of emotional meaning, untilme would expect that he has passedthe endurance of his own flesh andblood.It is hard to appreciate how fiend¬ishly difficult the role of Henry IVis to play; in Enrico IV, as in SixCharacters m Search of an Author,one emotional crisis follows another,but in the latter play there are fourcharacters to take the brunt ofPirandello’s grueling requirements.By contrast, in Enrico IV, all ofdie supporting characters are butfoils, in one way or another, forthe single lead role of Henry, andthus the play stands or falls by hisacting alone. That the play was atriumphant success is for the mostpart due to Alvin Epstein's genius.THE UNSEEN GENIUS whoshares the credit for Enrico IV isGene Frankel, the director, an artistwhose record of successes includesThe Blacks and Brecht on Brecht.A master of the timely effect, heoften chose unusual, unsafe block¬ings, as a composer would choose aparticular dissonance, in order tocreate emphasis at the resolutionof the configuration.For example, he seated Henry andhis four minions around a table withtheir backs to the audience, so thatwhen Henry finally leaped across thetable and faced the audience, theeffect was truly startling and ar-STAND TALL!with the leaderin Worldwide CommunicationsIllinois Bell Telephone Companywill interview on campusNov. 19 (at the Graduate School)Would you like to work with a company that starts you in aresponsible position? Insists that you move up in your job?Promotes from within? Gives you a present, as well as a future?Then the Bell Telephone System may offer just the oppor¬tunity you're looking for.You’ll learn the exciting field of communications.. .withadvancement dependent on your ability. You'll develop yourability to direct and work with people ... and you’ll be work¬ing with one of the fastest-growing, most vital industries inthe world.In your work, you’ll be associated with the company thathas developed the Telstar satellite and the transistor.If you are in the upper-half of your class - with either atechnical ora non-technical degree - Bell System interviewersare very much interested in talking to you. Simply make anappointment at your placement office.Bell System Team Interviews: resting.His direction was equally Strongin the less technical aspects: Mr.Frankel made the complex play,which might have been rather con¬fusing, quite clear both dramaticallyand philosophically. He was effectivein instilling a paradoxical qualityinto some of the roles, where mostdirectors would have been satisfiedwith mere inconsistency. And hemanaged to produce this play on thelimited stage of the Harper Thea¬tre, which is no mean accomplish¬ment. He is, in short, charismatic,and one is not likely to see a betterdirector on the Chicago scene.The supporting cast had nowherenear the quality of Mr. Epstein; in¬deed, only Leo Lucker seemed areally capable actor. Surprisinglyenough, though, the show was notharmed by this, because this onlyserved to draw more attention tothe main role. The only actors whowere really painful to watch wereTerry Israel and Susan Rae, whogave two of the flattest performancesI have experienced. The musical in¬terludes were appropriate, if not si-ways well performed. Nevertheless,the one-man-show manages toachieve success despite the ama¬teurish monkey business in the minorroles.UNFORTUNATELY, THE showwas poorly attended. Whether thisis because of a dearth of publicity^or because of the high (for HydePark) price of admission, I cannotsay. It seems a shame to me thatthe Harper Theatre production shouldplay to less than full houses, notonly because the company has puton such a magnificent show, but alsobecause success is necessary for 6professional company like this oneto stay in business. If the showfolds, Chicago theatre will have suf¬fered a great loss, one which itcannot afford.If you go to one other play thisseason, go to Enrico IV. You willnot be disappointed.David RichterLiberal Arts and Sciences;Business Administration GraduatesNovember 19Illinois Boll Telephone CompanyAn equal opportunity employerIllinois Bell TelephonePart of the Nationwide Bed System Hoftman gives concertBruno Hoffman, the only livingglass harmonica virtuoso, will givea recital of works by Gluck, Mozart^Beethoven, Nauman and others onFriday evening in the Law SchoolAuditorium.The glass harmonica, invented fej?Benjamin Franklin in 1762, was avery popular instrument in Mozart’stime. It is based on vibration ofwater glasses with moistened fin¬gers, and has remained unplayetisfnee 1808.The concert begins at 8:30. Tickete,available from the Music Depart¬ment, 5802 South Woodlawn (extenrsion 3885) are $2, $1 for students*Nov. 10. 1964 • CHICAGO MAROONALReflections of a YR poll watcherby Tom HeagyEditor's note: The following is a personal account of a student who helpedpoll-watch for the Young Republicans' "Operation Eagle Eye'' in lastweek's election.Shortly before the election Mayor Daley stated, “We’regoing to win this election by 500,000 votes; I have it right'in my pocket.” As part of Operation Eagle Eye, the Republi¬can poll watching effort, I spent most of Nov. 3 trying tokeep at least some of those votes inDaley’s pocket and out of the baJlotboxes.During the day I poll-watched intwo different precincts, both in Wood-lawn. In the first I observed multiplevoting, chain balloting, and incom¬plete voting instructions. In the sec¬ond after observing illegal assistance,and a host of illegal procedureswhich made more difficult the detec¬tion of vote fraud, I was threatendwith arrest by police and an assistantdistrict attorney, threatened withassault by the Democratic precinctcaptain and his assistants, and fin¬ally illegally expelled from the pollingplace.IN MY FIRST precinct I was inthe unfortunate position of watchinga great deal of fraud without beingable to do anything about it. Soonafter the voting began, a womanclaimed that she had dropped herballot for the Illinois Assembly be¬hind the voting booth. We immedi¬ately began to look for it but quicklyrealized that because of the construc¬tion of the booth, there was no pos¬sible way for this to happen. By thistime, however, the woman was gone—with the ballot.%A blank ballot taken from a pollingplace has only two known uses,scratch paper and chain balloting. Inchain balloting a person who wishesto sell his vote picks up a markedballot from a man standing near thepolling place, puts it in his pocket,goes to vote and is given a blankballot by the election judges.When he gets to the voting booth,he switches the ballots, deposits thefirst ballot (the marked one) in theballot box and takes tiie new, un¬marked ballot back to the vote buy¬er. Upon receiving the new ballot,the vote buyer pays the voter, marksthe ballot and is ready for the nextvoter.ALL VOLk5WAGE*P\DEALERS CAW SELLyou A NEW '65 VWSEPAKJ for.*1647OU£ PRICE IS THESAME. OUR SERVICEis excellent;superb—unquestionablyTHE DIFFERENCETHAT MAKESTHE PEAL/ jOUR USED CARSARE GREAT TOO!TOO^o GUARANTEEPARTS AND LABOR 30 DAYS'64 SIMCA4-dr. Sedan'*3 VOLKSWAGENSedan'43 KARMAN GtNAConvertible*62 VOLKSWAGENSedan'42 VOLKSWAGENConvertible‘42 KARMAN GHIAConvertible'42 MERCEDESConvertible 140 SL‘42 MERCEDESSedan•42 TR-3Convertible•41 VOLKSWAGENSedan’41 RENAULT4-dr. Sedan•40 VOLKSWAGENSunroof•40 VOLKSWAGENSedan•40 PORSCHEConvertible‘59 VOLKSWAGENConvertible $1195$1295SI 795$1145$1345SI 395SI 795$2195$1295$995$595$945$•95$2195$995 The only thing needed for this isone unmarked ballot. Once they gotit there was no way to stop theprocess except to search each voteras he came in. There is no legalprovision for searching a voter underthese circumstances, so there wasnothing we could do.FREQUENTLY ASSOCIATEDwith chain balloting is multiple vot¬ing. In multiple voting, a personregisters to vote under several dif¬ferent names either at fictitious ad¬dresses or the addresses of friends.Unfortunately one cannot just say“This is the third time you’ve beenin here today; you can’t vote anymore,” because he can just say “NoI haven’t.” And you have a stale¬mate. Since all of the election judgesare Democrats (including the “Re¬publican” ones) there is nothing youcan do.As the only Republican poll watch¬er in the precinct, I had to divide mytime between several different johs,and could not concentrate on watch¬ing the voters as they came in.Despite this, I saw several peoplevote twice and two of them threetimes—all in three hours. I am surethere were many more I did notnotice.There is no way of knowing wheth¬er the chain balloting arid multiplevoting were operated independentlyor together; but it does seem logicalthat it was a single venture. Ifyou’re paying a person to vote sev¬eral times you might as well makesure that he votes right.I ATTEMPTED TO find the placethey were exchanging ballots. How¬ever since there were six Democra¬tic workers in sight from the doorof the polling place and a multitudeof places where there could havebeen more out of sight, the job washopeless.In addition to the six workers out¬side the polling place, there was aDemocratic precinct captain, twoDemocratic pollwatchers, and fiveDemocratic election judges. As thelone representative of the Grand OldParty, I was outnumbered 14 to 1.It may seem so far that being apoll watcher was of no value becausefraud went on despite my presence.This is not at all true. Although therewere many types of vote fraud whichI was powerless to prevent, iw Iwitnessed an overt and dearly illegalact and protested, the judges wouldcorrect it and in the future actlegally (at least when I was watch¬ing them).ONE VOTER WAS drunk when hecame to the polling place and askedfor assistance in marking his ballot.I pointed out that drunkenness is notrecognized by the election code asa legal qualification for assistance,and the election judge who was try¬ing to help him vote immediatelyceased. Two voters had receipts of regis¬tration (easily forged) but were notlisted in the ledger of registered vot¬ers, and a third voter was listed inthe ledger but no longer lived at thataddress. None of them were legallyentitled to vote and none did.I left the first precinct at 9:30 togo to a Western Civ class and toeat lunch. At 1:30, freshly inspiredby Karl Weintraub’s discussion of thedecay of Athenian democracy, I ar¬rived at my second precinct. Troublebegan at once.I WAS ORDERED by the electionjudges to sit at the far end of theroom over thirty feet from wherethe voting takes place. When Ipointed out that the election codesays that a watcher may be in theimmediate vicinity of the registrationledger (the center of the voting area)I was told that I was “creating a dis¬turbance” and if I did not sat wherethey wanted me to I would beevicted. (If a watcher is creating adisturbance without justification suchthat the voting is disrupted, or ifthere are so many poll watchers fromone party that the polling place be¬comes overcrowded, a poll watchermay be evicted.)A policeman is stationed in eachpolling place, so I showed him theappropriate passage in the “Instruc¬tions to Judges” and he let me sitabout ten feet from the ledger—acompromise.All was peaceful until I noticedthat the judges were not comparingthe signatures of the voters an their“application to vote” with the sig¬nature in the registration ledger.Thus there was no assurance thatthat persons voting were the sameones who had registered.WHEN I POINTED this out tothem I was told, “This is the waywe’ve been doing it all day and wedon’t intend to change. You’re creat¬ing a disturbance; sit down and bequiet or you’ll be evicted.”Naturally an argument followed, inthe middle of which two huge Chicagocops came in. They had been calledby the Democratic precinct captainand were looking for someone namedThomas Heagy.Before they could arrest me, evictme, or whatever else they mighthave had in mind, I explained thesituation to them and they seemedto agree. They said, however, thatthey had no jurisdiction to force theelection judges to do anything andthat I should caU the Election Board.While they wouldn’t help me theynevertheless declined to arrest me,and left.IT DID NOT take lcog before Iwas in trouble again. This time itwas over the way they instructedthe voters how to use the votingmachines. There are very few peoplein Woodlawn who voted straight Re¬publican this election. However,there were some who may havewanted to split their tickets. In boththe precincts, the judges gave theimpression to voters (if they askedhow to work the voting machine orhow to mark the state assemblyballot) that one could only vote straight party. In my first precicntthey began to explain how to splita ticket once I had insisted that theywere required to. But in this precinctI was told “You’re creating a dis¬turbance. Sit down and be quiet oryou’ll be evicted.”In all of the incidents in which Itook part, I waited for a lull in thevoting before saying anything so thatI could not be accused of disruptingthe voting. In this case I waiteduntil the voter had stepped into thevoting booth before I mentioned tothe judge my objection to the man¬ner in which she had instructed thevoter. This will be relevant later.THIS TIME SOMEONE from Denvocratic headquarters came over. Bythis time I was (according to thejudges) not only creating a disturb¬ance but trying to make the judgestell the voters that they “should”split their tickets. He left after afruitless argument.The next incident was the last.Under the election Laws, no one mayreceive assistance in voting (as op¬posed to instruction) unless he hasone of three specifically defined dis¬abilities and that he must then fillout an affidavit attesting to his need,or if he Is unable to Ell out an affi¬davit, it is read to him, with thejudges acting as wi4 . sses. *The judges in my precinct wererepeatedly giving assistance to votersnot legally entitled to it and notrequiring those who were entitled toit to fill out an affidavit. In eachcase, of course, they also made surethat tlie person did not split histicket.I FINALLY PROTESTED in thecase of a voter who spoke Spanishbut no English. Legally this wasclassified as “illiteracy” and is alegal reason for assistance. She waswith her husband and the procedureshould have been that the electionjudges would fill out the affidavitin English, have her husband readit to her in Spanish and have hersign it.The judges refused. “Your’re cre¬ating a disturbance!” Not only that,but they started yelling at me thatshe was a citizen, which I had neverdenied. This time they called thedistrict attorney’s office, and instrode an Assistant District Attorneyof the Cky of Chicago, radiatingauthority as if he were Daniel Wardhimself.His first sentence (he seemed toknow exactly what the situationwas), “If this man is creating adisturbance, he should be evicted.”The judges happily agreed. His sec¬ond sentence was to the policeman,“This is the same as a court order,evict this man.” I was evicted.I later found out that he was oneof about fifty representatives of theCook County District Attorney’s Of¬fice, who were cruising the city in anentire taxi fleet rented by CookCounty State’s Attorney, DanielWard, for the express purpose ofpreventing Operation Eagle Eye frominterfering with the orderly theftof the election.You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty An.(4(4411 EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptoma tri si53-Kimbork Plaza1200 East 53rd StraatHYde Park 3-8372Ri-.J M. a Wmm hMm)TnatHT ana racniTyDteceaat NEW BOOKS BYCAMPUS AUTHORSThe Great Speckled Bird andOthers Stories by P. H. Lowrey$4.95Teeth, Dying and Other Mattersby Richard G. Stern .... $4.95The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.IMPORT MOTORSAUTHORIZED VW —. PORSCHE DEALERNEW CAR71st & BU 8 490°| STONY IS.643 4040CLOSED SUNDAY < ZIPPO LIGHTERSA Guaranteed LightFor All SmokersAlways Work — or Zippo WillFix Them FREEBRUSH FINISH —Contrasting High PolishWith University ofChicago Emblem *3505475The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTon all HAIR CAR!Haircuts Our SpecialtyJOSEPH'S5454 So. Short DrivtSHORELAND HOTELNO 7-5385Thursday & Friday 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Tuesday & Wednesday 9 a.m.-6 p.m.Saturday 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Closed Mondays I CALLED MY headquarters forassistance and stood in front of thepolling place to wait far my replace¬ments. A rather one-sided conver¬sation followed between myself, theDemocratic Precinct Captain ’ andtwo of his friends.I wouldn’t want to say I wasthreatened, but some of their com¬ments were: “You know the lastRepublican poll watcher in this pre¬cinct was last seen running towardsthe lake. I think his hat is stillfloating out there. ... We only haveone Republican in this precinct—he’sin the hospital now. . . . Don'tever come around here again or Imight get arrested for what I do toyou. . . . You better get out of here.The unfortunate thing was that Icouldn’t get out of there until myreplacement (and ride) arrived.Nor could I go back into the pollingplace where there was a policemanbecause having been evicted, to re¬enter it would subject me to im¬mediate (and even legal) arrest.Needless to say, I was very happywhen my reinforcements arrived.THEY WERE TWO lawyers fromOperation Eagle Eye. First they de¬manded to see all affidavits forvoter assistance which had beenfiled that day. Not only were therenone, but the judges didn’t evenknow where the blank ones were.They argued a while with a newrepresentative from the district at¬torney’s office, but didn’t get any¬where. As they left they heardone of the judges tell a woman whowas marking her State Assemblyballot, “put you x in the circle onthe left; make sure it crosses inthe circle on the left.” The circle onthe left is, of course, a vote for thestraight Democratic ticket.There were only two legal alter¬natives open to us. Either we couldcomplain to the district attorney’soffice (which had hired a taxi fleetto be more effective in promotingvote fraud), or we could complainto the board of election commis¬sioners, whose chairman recentlystated that he saw nothing especiallywrong with buying votes, (“I did itwhen I was a precinct captain.”)There is a possibility that a com¬plaint will be filed on my precinctand that we wall go to court. Thedisadvantages of this are:1. Since the election Is over theonly thing the court could do wouldbe to send election judges to jail;it could not stop fraudulent votesthat have already been cast.2. The judge we would have togo before is part of the machineand was himself elected partly byfraudulent votes. In 1962 when aRepublican State’s Attorney indictedover 600 people for vote fraud, everycase was thrown out of court afterless than five minutes.THE MOST UNFORTUNATEcharacteristic of vote fraud is thatit is self-perpretuat ing. As long asthe machine controls the State’s At¬torney’s office and the county judge-ships, vote fraud in Cook County willcontinue on a major scale. And un¬til vote fraud is eliminated the ma¬chine will control these offices.Vote fraud has, however beensignificantly decreased through Op¬eration Eagle Eye and various non¬partisan efforts and can be decreasedeven more by an extension of theseefforts. The more crude methodssuch as having election judges votehundreds of times before or after thepolls open is impossible when thereis a poll watcher there.There are two main steps thatshould be taken to further this ef¬fort. First, Operation Eagle Eye,Independent Voters of Illinois, Bet¬ter Government Association, andmany other non-partisan organiza¬tions run poll watching efforts onelection day. They all have exactlythe same goal, yet there appears tobe no coordination between them.As a result there were many pre¬cincts Tuesday which had an ex¬cess of precinct watchers, and othersI Continued on page seven ITELEPHONE SALESPart-Time for NewspaperAfternoons or EveningsHA 7-2117 Mr. King• CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 10. 1964>>Q I1 theatre review MUSIC REVIEWO'Neills 'Desire' is impressive Schuller is never dulldesire under the elmsby EUGENE O'NEILLDirector: Don GarnerAbby Rut man Retty MillerEphraim Cabot: Michael HlggentEben Cabot: Richard JordanCIRCLE-IN-THE-SQUARE COMPANYMANDEL HALLUnder the everpresent shade ofttie elm trees in the Cabots’ yard,Eugene O’Neill has set his Oedipaltale of love, hist, and infanticide,titled, appropriately enough, DesireUnder The Elms. The twisted tri¬angle—Abbie Putnam Cabot, Eph- Betty Miller, as Abby, seemed tome not to f?t the role physically;with her sharp face and quitemature bearing she presented a firstimpression of being 50 father than35. But after the first impressionwas overcome, she played well inthe part of a frustrated, disappointedwoman who craves security, thenfinds that she would rather havethe attractive young man than allthe farms in the country.raim Cabot, and Eben, who isEpliraim’s son through a previousmarriage, play their story in an oldfarmhouse haunted by the ghost ofEben’s “Maw” who won’t go to restquietly in her grave until Eben getsthe farm which is rightfully his.The Circle in-the-Square’s produc¬tion of the play was extremely welldone, suffering more from lack ofaudience response—and audience—thtm any internal faults. The mostdisappointing player of the eveningwas Richard Jordan, who stumbledaround the stage like an exhaustedmarathon runner at crucial momentswhen he should have been able tohold the audience on the edges oftheir chairs.Eben is Epraim’s youngest son, arebelious man-boy who at first fearsand hates Abbie, his father’s prettyyoung wife, because of her claimon the farm. His hatred turns to lustand then to love, aided by the youngwoman who married the 70-year oldEphraim solely for security, andnot through any pretense of affec¬tion. I WAS EXTREMELY disappointedin the crucial seduction scene playedby Eben and Abby. The combinationof inadequate directing and an al¬most nonexistent audience added upto a scene which was melodramaticrather than tense, and which pro¬duced a result exactly opposite fromthat which was intended instead ofhaving been drained mentally, oneexpected a further high point whichdoes not materialize until much laterin the plot.The best performance of the even¬ing, in the most complex role of theplay, came from Michael Higgensas Ephraim Cabot, the old farmerwho settled his farm as a youngman, and resisted the opportunityto move to richer soil because hefelt that his God required his stay¬ing and working hard on the landwhich he had claimed. Higgens didwonders with the biographical solilo¬quy which could really havedragged; it runs for something overfour or five minutes. The colossalloneliness of such a man, one whohas married three times looking fora woman who could really under¬stand his deep commitment to theLiberals condone fraud'Icontinued from page sixiwhich had none. There should beestablished a central clearinghousefor poll watching.Second, the greatest type of fraudu¬lent voting today is multiple vot¬ing, also called ghost voting. Ifthis is done carefully there is noway a poll watcher can stop it. Itcan be stopped, however, by canvass¬ing. The method of canvassing isvery simple, you just go door to doorin a suspect precinct and see whichpersons are registered at non-ex¬istent addresses, and which are reg¬istered at existing addresses, butwho don’t actually live there. Whilesimple, this is a tedious job requir¬ing huge amounts of manpower.These ghost voters can then bestricken from the list of registeredvoters before the election, and willnot be able to vote.MANY PEOPI.E AT UC don’ttake vote fraud seriously. Theyeither say that it doesn’t matter(pointing to the huge GOP losses inCook County Illinois) or that as longas the votes are being stolen forthe right side they don’t care, orthat it doesn’t matter because thereis vote fraud down state by theRepublicans. I believe that to useone of these to rationalize the con¬doning of vote fraud is profoundlywrong.True, clean elections wouldn’thave changed the results this year,but they would have in 1960 whenNixon lost the state by only 8,000Friday, November 13. 8:30 P.M. — Law School AuditoriumBRUNO HOFFMANIn a program of original compositions for the GlassHarmonica by Gluck, Mozart, Beethoven and others.Admission, $2.00 U.C. Students. $100Tickots at Music D*pL; or ot Law School Auditorium on evening of concert.TAPE RECORDERSHave you tried tape recording lecture notes?Rent one and try or let us advise you on other uses.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.} DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudeat & Faculty Discount land, was well developed by Hig¬gens.In the third act of the drama, theaction is so intense that the actorswere able to forget the small houseand really become involved withthe action of the play Abbie has hada child by Eben, though she letsEphraim think it is his. Eben lovesAbbie and his child, but his loveturns back to hatred when he dis¬covers that Abbie actually wantedthe child only to secure her claimto the farm, thus cheating him ofhis rightful claim.Abbie, now fully in love withEben, murders the child in orderto prove to him that he is more im¬portant than anything in the world.It is at this point that the actionpeaks, then fall into pathos becauseof poor directing.WHEN EBEN DISCOVERS themurder, he runs to get the sheriff.Then, reajjzing too late that he lovesAbbie, he runs back to her. His en¬trance after fetching the sheriffshattered the tension of the scene;he stumbled in, almost fell on thefloor, and sank into Abbie’s arms toask forgiveness for having sent herto prison for life. Ugh!In spite of the abortive last scene,which is really O’Neill’s fault any¬way, I felt the theatre impressedby the performance. Circle in theSquare had done a good job, andthey might have done an excellentjob, had they been motivated to itby a large, responsive audience. Jean Martinon relinquishedhis unsteady grasp over theChicago Symphony last weekto the even shakier baton ofguest conductor Louis Lane. Yet,although the concert furnished a staffdose of malignant musical mangling,it turned out to be one of the mostsignificant in recent Chicago Sym¬phony history.The reason was the presentation ofSeven Studies on Themes of PaidKlee, a tour de force confirmingGunther Schuller’s facility with awide range of styles, from serial tothird-stream to Near Eastern folk.Although far from “avant-garde,” itwas the first work I can recallhearing this orchestra perform bya contemporary composer activelyaware of what is going on aroundhim.Tone color is the most impressiveattribute of this jagged composition.Orchestral resources are used spar¬ingly (“Abstract Trio,” for example,is played by fluctuating groups ofthree performers), yet, when neces¬sary, Schuller doesn’t shrink backfrom splashy sonority: the terrifyingclimax of “An Eerie Moment” re¬quires three men on timpani alone.Jamie Beth Galevotes; or in any other race in Illi¬nois or Cook County past or futurewhere the result was or will beclose. Remember that the numberof votes stolen each election inCook County is 100,000 (according toOperation Eagle Eye leaders). Calendar of EventsTuesday, November 10IT HAS ALWAYS been a mysteryto me how so many liberals towhom democracy is supposedly animportant value can condone votefraud on the grounds that it is forthe right side. What could be amore sinister corrupter of the dem¬ocratic process? Nor does the ex¬istence of vote fraud down state af¬fect the evil of vote fraud in Chi¬cago. Furthermore, from a purelypractical point of view it should bepointed out that there is far less,if for no other reason that k ismuch easier to steal votes whenyou have a concentrated popula¬tion.It should be admitted that theexxperiences I have outlined aboveare unusual. Poll watchers rarelyhave that much excitement. Butthey almost always do witness acertain amount of vote fraud, andthey prevent by their presence agreat deal more that they neverknow about. There are some peoplewho are convinced that vote fraudin Chicago exists only in the mindsof Republican publicists. To thoseI can only say that you are invitedto be a poll watcher in 1966 and seefor yourself. CONFERENCE: Roger Williams Fel¬lowship Conference. Divinity SchoolCommons.MEETING: University Senate, MandelHall, 4 pm.LECTURE: “Higher DimensionalKnots,” Jerome Levine, Professor Uni¬versity of California, Berkeley, Eckhart206, 4:30 pm.LECTURE: Philosophy and Interna¬tional Relations, McKeon, 5747 Univer¬sity Ave., 7 pm.DISCUSSION: William McNeill in in¬formal discussion with students. TuftsLounge. 3rd floor Pierce Tower, 7 pm.MOVIE: Macbeth (directed by OrsonWelles), Social Sciences 122, 7:15 and9:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: Israeli folk dancing,Hillel, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: Recent Developments inIndian Foreign Policy by Professor L.Rudolph, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.COFFEE HOUR: Elder Olson readinghis own poetry, refreshments served,Thompson House, Pierce Tower. 8 pm Thursday, November 12FOLK DANCING: Instruction followedby request session, International House.Non-residents 50c, 8-10:30 pm. LECTURE: The Revolution of Syste-matics, Robert R. Sokal, University ofKansas. Zoology 14, 4:30 pm.LECTURE: “The Narrator m DonQuixote; Master Peter’s Puppet Show.”George Haley, Associate Professor,Dept, of Romance Languages andLiterature, Social Science 122, 8:30 pm.Wednesday, November 11LECTURE: “Model of ContractileProcess,” Abbott 133, 8 am.LUNCHEON: Chug Ivri luncheon, Hil¬lel, 12 noon.COFFEE HOUR: “Jewish Religion andContemporary Social Problems,” Prof.Seymour Siegel, Hillel, 4 pm.SEMINAR: “The Implication of theOntogeny of the Immune Response inthe Chick,” Dr. Pierson J. Van Alten,Anatomy 101, 4:30 pm. FOLK DANCING: Beginner-intermedi¬ate class with Andor Czompo, IdaNoyes, 8-10:45 pm.MODEL CAMERALEICA, B0LEX, NIKON, PENTAXZEISS, MAMIYA, OMEGA, DURSTTAPE RECORDERS1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259 BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentreM. G.SpriteTriumphComplete RepairsAnd ServiceFor Ail Popular ImportsMidway 3-45016040 So. Cottage GrovePIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PK. BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICEKE 6-6606 — KE 6-3891CHICKEN - SANDWICHESPIZZA &ITALIAN FOODS TYPEWRITERSNEW AND USEDRepairs on Any MakeType changes on Mathematical,Medical or Foreign Key Boards.Let us advise you onkeyboard arrangementThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. is always striving far something alittle out of the ordinary.The orchestra handled the scorefairly well, consider rig its lack ofexperience with the post-Webern era.Perhaps whoever is in charge willtake a cue from the favorable audi¬ence reaction and try some moreprogramming adventures.The rest of the afternoon wasspastic. Many of the notes werethere, some even ;a the right places,but no attempt was made to moldthem together. G y o r g y Seboklaunched into Bartok’s Second PianoConcerto with the sensitivity andvolume (but not the accuracy) of amusic box. Lane compromised themusic by holding bade the orchestra,but the piano was still (perhaps for¬tunately) inaudible. Somehow, every¬one stumbled into the final measuresalmost simultaneously, which mighthave led more than one player toquip to a colleague, “Surprise meet¬ing yon here!”THE PROGRAM OPENED withan attempt to soft-sell Mozart'sThirty-Second Symphony and back¬fired with a bombastic rehearsal ofthe Sibelius Fifth.Pete RabinowitzNOT THAT THE work is withoutshortcomings. The blues elements in“Little Blue Devil” (especially whenplayed as rigidly as they were here)don’t seem comfortable in their“classificai” milieu; the music of“Arab Village,” while perhapsauthentic, seems more contrivedthan hypnotic. But even when hefails, Schuller is never dull, for he AW C’MONSWEETIE -IEMME IN... 4m:... AFTERCARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins,Rockefeller Chapel, 5 pm. -f Ip LAST NITE?f<32> FORGET IT/mjFOLK DANCING: Country Dancers,Ida Noyes, 8 pm.LECTURE: Eyewitness Report on VietNam, Sid Lens, member of the Execu¬tive Board, Chicago Council on For¬eign Relations, Social Science 122, 8pm.ILLUSTRATED LECTURE: "TheChanging Face of Ancient Rome,” R.Ross Holloway. Assistant Professor ofClassical Archeology Brown University,Breasted Hall, Oriental Institute, 8:30pm.LECTURE: “Molecular Pharmacologyof Muscle,” Abbott 133, 8 am. I GOT THENEW. JAMAl-"NAKED CITYTHEME"the JOHNNYNASH-"COM- ,POSER'S CHOICEALBUMS...LECTURE: “The Site of Action ofSeveral Inhibitors of Bacteriophage In¬vasion,” Harvard Reiter, Ricketts North1, 4 pm. 9-4-.•WELUcmon inNov. 10. 1964 • CHICAGOFast for freedom:dorm pledges sought Graduates may study elsewhereThe campaign for this year s Fast for Freedom beginstoday, when students who are on board contract in Univer¬sity, housing will be able to sign up to support SouthernNegroes._____Residence Halls and Commonsdept, has agreed to pass on the leotion during the Fast itself. nwamount of money it will save by contact Dick Schmitt of UC CU h.not buying food for the students 324-6789.who agree to skip meals at the XHE FAST IS being co-ordinateddorms on November 19, tlie day by ^ u.S. National Student Asso-ot the Fast. ciation, and is sponsored on the UCIn the Fast of last February 26. campus by Student Government, Stu-RH&C set the amount it could donate dents for a Democratic Society, UCper student at about SI.60. This Friends of SNCC, and UC CORE,represents the price of food per Southern Negroes whom the Faststudent which would have been is ^signed to help have typicallybought especially for the meals on fireci from their jobs in re-tiiat one day, excluding the staples prisai for their participation in civilwhich are already on hand tor every rjghts activity. They have usuallymeal. been cut off from public aid reliefDesks will be set up in Pierce. programs by local officials who areBJ. and New Dorms today with m charge of dispensing the funds andpledges for students who wish to government surplus food,support the project to sign. These , ,will then be given RH&C. NSA sports that over one hun¬dred member schools across theSTL DENTS AND OTHERS not country have agreed to take part inliving in the dorms will be able to the Fast campaign. In last year'sdonate the price of a day’s meals at effortj total participation was 42.booths which will be set up around _ „ , ,, „.campus on November 19. which is KEV. DR. MARTIN Luther Kinga week from this Thursday and one Jr- i5 among several notablesweek before Thanksgiving. have endorsed the Fast. Others ln-In addition to collections of money elude Roy Wilkins, president of thein the Fast for Freedom, UC Friends NAACP; A. Philip Randolph of theof SNCC is helping in a major drive Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Por¬to collect food and clothing which ters; Arthur Flemming, secretary' ofwill be sent to indigent Negroes in Health, Education, and Welfare un-the South. Collection points will be der President Eisenhower and nowestablished on campus in the coming president of the University of Ore-days. .S00*According to Heather Tobis. of Other national organizations whichUC friends of SNCC, volunteers with are helping the Fast for Freedomcars and people who can spend some campaign are the National Councilof their time helping out in the ware- of Churches, the National Studenthouses helping to ship the food and Christian Fellowship, the Nationalclothing are needed. Persons who Federated Catholic College Students,can help are asked to call her at and the B'nai B'rith Hillel Founda-1409 New Dorms. Helpers for col- tion. Graduate students at UCare eligible to apply for ad¬mission to the TravelingScholar Program sponsoredby eleven universities through theCommittee on Institutional Coopera¬tion (CIC), it was announced lastweek.Through this program, they maytravel to the campuses of other par¬ticipating institutions for short-termstudy or research in more thantwenty different disciplines. art. romance languages, economics,English, philosophy, anthropology,and classical languages and litera¬tures.A UC student, Cad Baar, was aTraveling Scholar to the Universityof Michigan in the field of politicalscience. are then made by the graduate aviser and an appropriate professat the host university, with the £proval of the deans of the respect*schools.Receives creditThe Traveling Scholar plan, insti¬tuted two years ago, facilitates thecrossing of institutional lines. A stu¬dent requests permission from hisgraduate adviser to study for asemester or two quarters on anothercampus. Necessary' arrangements The student registers, pays 1fees, and receives credit at his horuniversity.A GRADUATE student interestin this program should first obuthe approval of his graduate adviseFollowing such approval, he shoecontact Warner A. Wick, DeanStudents, Administration Building,Holding membership in the CICare the University of Chicago, theUniversity of Illinois, Indiana Uni¬versity, the State University of Iowa.The University of Michigan, Michi¬gan State University, the Universityof Minnesota, Northwestern Universi¬ty, Ohio State University, PurdueUniversity, and the University ofWisconsin. Swift finds Sardis streetTHE TRAVELING Scholar Plan,which has just completed its firstyear of operation, enables the gradu¬ate student to take advantage of thespecial resources offered by othermember institutions. These includespecialized course offerings, researchopportunities, and unique laboratoriesand library collections. Gustavus F. Swift Jr., ar¬cheologist of the OrientalInstitute, has unearthed abroad colonnaded street ofseventeen centuries ago in Sardis,ancient capital of Turkey. tified hill, which served as a citad<We came on the colonnaded atreand the sculpture at a level oontaiing remains of a large complexprivate and public structures builtRoman times.”He is working with the Harvard-Cornell expedition, which has beenexcavating there for seven years,and is directing the project in south¬ern Sardis.Dr. Stanley F. Salwak. Director ofthe CIC, commented that ‘‘the planhas attracted nationwide attentionand applications indicate tliat theprogram w'ill be used even more thusyear.”UC hosted ten The road was found when a groupunder Swift’s direction, was unearth¬ing a civic center at Sardis this pastsummer. A sculptured head of ayouth mounted on a pillar, thoughtto represent a mythical hero, or aGreek monarch, was also discovered. The burial mound of King Gygefounder of the great Lydian Kindom in the seventh century BC., w;also uncovered by the expediticthis summer. The mound is an artficial mountain of earth, clay, arlimestone, 700 feet in diameter ar120 feet high. Exploration into tlmound revealed an inner moursome 300 feet in diameter, circleby a six foot high wall of masonry.Last year, UC was host to tenTraveling Scholars in the fields ofmathematical biology, physiology, ‘‘WE HAVE FAIRLY well exploit¬ed this area in past seasons,” Swiftcommented. “So this year, we dugexploratory trenches branchingsouthward and along the lowerslopes of the city’s acropolis, a for- THE HARVARD-CORNELL expdition, under the direction of Pr<lessor George M. A. Hanfmann <Harvard, is sponsored by the Amercan Schools of Oriental ReseardCornell University and the FogArt Museum of Harvard.ASSIFIED ADSKansas SC bans bias WANTED FOR SAIT]LAWRENCE, Kan. (CPS)— The student government atthe University of Kansas haspassed a resolution setting aone year deadline for removal ofdiscriminatory clauses in the con¬stitutions of all university organi¬zations.The resolution has to be approvedby university chancellor W. ClarkeWescoe, but it is unusual in thatit makes the University of Kansasone of a handful of universities whereaction against discriminatory poli¬cies in campus organizations origi¬nated with the student government.Such action is usually initiated by aschool's administration. has and continues to have a clausein its constitution which promotesdiscrimination on the basis of race,religion, color or national origin anddoes not remove that clause withina year (fell of 1965) shall no longerbe recognized by the university. APARTMENT for SUBLET duringTHANKSGIVING wanted by grad stu¬dent. Johns Hopkins, 11/25-11/28 in¬clusive. Call collect after 9 pm. 301-467-0214.ROOMMATE WANTED. Share Ige. fi¬rm. apt. with 2 girls. 57th and Kim-bark, own bedrm.. $48.30/mo. & util.,avail, about Jan. 1. Call Sally, ext.3882. 8:30-5. Happiness is the Sunday edition of theNew York Times delivered right toyour doorstep lor the rest of the aca¬demic year just in time for brunch.. . . Students $14.50 for 20 weeks (55cperi to: Friendship Products, Inc.P.O. Box 7083, Chicago. ROOMMATE WANTED: Share 6 rnapt. with fem. grad, student or care<woman. Own rin. & bath., $05, 30;2574 or WE 9-3525, x-359.TYPING AND EDITING: Term papetheses, articles, book manuscripts. c<respondence & stenorette transention. Smith-Corona Elec. Call: 011508, 1-4 PM only.THE RESOLUTION, passed 23 to7 after nearly two hours of discus¬sion, states that any organizationat the University of Kansas which Walter Bgoya, who introduced theresolution, said it was not aimed atany one group. “There are manyorganizations on the campus whichsegregate members of minority ra¬cial groups from participation incampus activities and thus deprivethem of the full enjoyment of a bal¬anced university life,” Bgoya saidin a prepared statement.‘ Many of them do so overtly anda few of them bluntly and outrightlysay that members of minority racialgroups cannot belong to their organi¬zations,” he said. PERSONAL 1964 VW station wagon. 9 sea ter. de¬luxe model. 1500 engine, excellent con-diton and low price. UC facultyowner. BU 8-8372 (pm) or ex. 2740. FOR RENTWe are the second-best fraternity;best is the Idea of Alpha Delt. the TYPING AND EDITING: term papers,theses, etc., close to campus. 324-2089. 4 rms., lovely view of Murray pa$105. 643-5896.WILL the person who returned thecheck to Judd Hall on 11/4 pleasecall ext. 3812. FLY TWA to EAST COAST-BOS..NYC, WASH./BAL. Campus Rep: MikeLavinsky, 745 Linn House. MI 3-0000. Near UC 4 marr. cpls. desired. Shaiour 20 rm. Victorian mansion. EarcpI. has mst. bedrm., pvt. bath, nafirpl. Sc use of entire res. Indpark fac. Ext. grnds. $125. G37-052!What Social Rules Committee?WANTED: RIDE TO BUFFALO. N Y.Wed., Nov. 26 or Thurs., Nov. 27. After office hrs. & wknds. Telephoneans. service, rush typg., mimeo. Sten¬cils run while you wait. 684-2450.Share driving and expenses. Thosegoing to NYC area can go by way ofBuffalo with little time loss. Will com¬pensate for this. Please contact DavidAbraham, 1303 Pierce. GRAETZ AM-FM-SW transistor porta¬ble radio. New from Germany. Cost$160, sell $65. DO 3-4300, ext. 410. TOWNHOUSE—3 bed rms, batlRadiant heating, patio, huge yaiPioneer Co-op, 5437 Dorchester, 618325.LOST AND FOUNDSIGN UP NOW for SG Charter Flightand Bus to New York. Flights toBoston and San Francisco, at 20r„under commercial fare. Ext. 3272, 1:30-4:30 Mon.-Fri. BRAUN HOBBY AUTOMATIC elec¬tronic flash. Very powerful. Cost $124,sell $00. DO 3-4300. ext. 410. LOST: 1 Silver Hamilton ladies wrwatch, on campus; reward. Call3-0480.Typing-Term papers, theses, etc. Reas.HY 3-2438.ONE WEEK ONLY A black and white tom cat has adoj:Hitchcock House. If you have hdeserted by such an animal pl<contact Ml 3-0800, ext. 2<>0.STUDENTSBRING THIS COUPON TODISCOUNT RECORDS, INC. Purveyors of Fine Wine, Liquor & Beersince 1933WINE CELLAR FOR GREATER SELECTIONGOOD FOR 33'/3% OFF LIST PRICEON ANY FOLK & JAZZ LP ON THESE LABELSVANGUARD • FOLKWAYS • VERVEELEKTRA • ATLANTIC • PRESTIGECAPITOL • MERCURY FAMOUS GILL'S BEERDISCOUNT VOLUME SPECIALji V2-GAL. - GAL.INCLUDING THESE GREAT ARTISTSBAEZ • GETZ • ODETTA • SEEGER • PETERSON • MANNSHEARING • KENTON • BIKEL • GIBSON • COLLINS • WATSONIAN «. SYLVIA • VAN RONK • CHAD MITCHELL • FITZGERALDPAXTON • ST. MARIE • WILSON • LEADBELLY • RAWLS Gallon35Vi Gal.67cALL BEER —NO FOAMWON T GO FLAT BARRELS■A bbl.DeliveredSTAYS COLDWITHOUTICE 15 HOURSCliSCOUIlt records inc.201 N. LA SALLE ST. (Corner Lake)Open Mon., Thurs. 10-8; Daily Incl. Sat. ?-A Phone CE 6-2187 2 DRIVE-IN WINDOWSDiscount prices on all popular brand whisky1238 East 47th St. KEnwood 6-6500 Httchcok 62. Retrenchiw£rd.LOST: Probably on UC campus; 4 pftyped interview with Szudis, and aboi20 pgs. of research data sheets oYucatan Indians, paper-clipped bttween brown cardboard covers. Substantial reward. Phone ext. 4393.Exotic grey kitten up for adoptiorMust have good references. 667-7341HELP WANTEDIf you like MONEY, adventure, anexcitement, and can type 50 wpnand are free on Mon. and Thurs. af—come to the Student Activities Olfice. Call ext. 3591.Early morning job—5 am to 9 anFrii'Tuesday and Friday morning. Averag$25 week. Must have car, go tStudent Activities Office, ext. 3591.WANTED: Amateur ham radio operator for part-time work paying $2/hiCall ext. 4393.FINE DRY CLEANINGJames SchultzCleaningPressingAlterations1363 EAST 53rdPL 2-966210% STUDENT DISCOUNT• CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 10, 1964