Raise tuition $50 per quarterTuition rates will go up to $350 per quarter next year, or $50 more than is currently as¬sessed, according to John Kirkpatrick, vice chancellor of the University. These figures donot include the $20 per quarter general services fee. Altogether, then, fees for three quar¬ters of full registration next year will amount to $1110.“There will be no increase for students in the Divinity school or in the Graduate Libraryschool,” according to Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton. “Our tuition rates in Divinity arealready higher than those of 5comparable schools —• Harvard,Yale and Union,” Kirkpatrick ex¬plained. ‘‘The same holds true forthe Library school.”Tuition in the Divinity school won’t be completed for severalweeks,” Netherton commented.“A tuition increase sendsshivers through the entire ‘Ad’ The tuition increase is expectedto produce almost exactly thatamount. $50 per quarter fromeach student would produce aboutbuilding,” Kirkpatrick said, ‘‘and $750,000, according to Kirkpatrick.is currently $690 plus fees; the Li- though we’re bearing up well un- Subtracting 25 per cent of thisbrary rate, which is now the sameas the other graduate schools, willremain $900 plus fees.The Medical school, which thisyear assessed $33 more per quar¬ter than was charged in the otherschools, will raise its tuition only$17 per quarter to bring it intoline with the general universityassessment.Tuition rates for partial regis¬tration have not yet been deter¬mined. This issue will be resolvedby John Netherton, dean of stu¬dents, and his staff. Currently a der the cold, we don’t like it at all.We are frankly afraid of pricingourselves out of the market.”The new tuition rates werenecessitated by several factors: astationary enrollment, a need forunrestricted funds, the partialfailure of the University’s recentthirty-two million dollar cam¬paign, and the increased cost ofrunning the University.“We had hoped for and expect¬ed two or three hundred additionalstudents this year,” Kirkpatrickexplained. “Had they turned up, total for scholarship, the in¬creased tuition will contribute al¬most exactly half a million to theUniversity’s treasury.Scholarships will be increasedproportionately. Thus a studentwith a full scholarship, will stillpay no tuition. A student with ahalf tuition scholarship, will re¬tain a half tuition scholarship,only now he will be paying halfof $1050 instead of half of $900.“Several years ago, when tui¬tion was still $690 a year, I madea speech to the effect that onesingle divisional course costs $140 ft woujj have meant two or three of the first things the UniversityJohn I. Kirkpatrick, Vica-Chancellor of the University announced thattuition will be raised $50 par quarter starting next year. plus twenty dollars in fees, w'hilea full registration of three coursescosts $300 plus the $20 generalservices fee.“This final schedule probably hundred thousand extra dollars must do is lower tuition to a rea-in our general fund, and we sonable size,” Kimpton mused. “Iwouldn’t need such a large in- was quite wrong — quite reluct-crease.” antly wrong. I sincerely hope tui-Unrestricted funds are moneys bon levels off, but I can’t prom-which can be spent in any way *se- When we absolutely needthe University desires. Most con¬tributions made to UC are for more money and a tuition in¬crease is the only possible sourcespecified purposes, such as increased funds, what altema-building construction, endowment tive have we?”funds and so forth. Few peoplegive money which can be spentpaying for electricity and coal.The University recently con- Kirkpatrick expressed the opin¬ion that the new rates would notaffect total enrollment. He did ex¬press the fear that further in-Vov. 68, No. 13 University of Chicago, November 20, 1959Exam results disappointingannounces college examiner eluded an extremely successful fi- creases might very well backfire,nancial campaign; attempting to though.raise $32,000,000 it actually col- “We need this money mostlected twice that amount. How- urgently for faculty salaries. Ourever, very little of the money was salaries are high, in fact theynot committed. are the highest in the business.For the past few years the hut they aren’t high enough,”treasurer of UC has been using Kirkpatrick explained. “We musthalf a million of this campaign Pay these men and women whatmoney to underwrite the annual they are worth.”budget, but these funds are now The new rates will automatical-exhausted and an additional ly go into effect next June whensource of five hundred thousand the academic year 1960-1961 be-dollars had to be discovered. gins.“The results of this year’splacement examinations weredisappointing, in terms ofwhat we had hoped in plan¬ning the New College program,”stated Knox Hill, university ex¬aminer in the College.“29 quarter course untts repre¬sent a sum of what the combinedCollege staffs felt would providean adequate general education,”continued Hill. “Under the pres¬ent regulations no more than 24units may be required for a de¬gree. We had hoped that moststudents would place out of atleast 5 units, thus enabling them¬selves to cover the whole generaleducation curriculum throughplacement and course work.”6l1i% of the entering studentsthis year had to have some miti¬gation of general education re¬quirements in order to completetlieiv general education within thetwo-year limit, stated Hill. Thispercentage included a number ofstudents in the physical and bio¬logical sciences where the numberof general education courses re¬quired excluding the departments’requirements are 18 and 21 courseunits respectively.“A little over half the enteringstudents outside the natural sci¬ences required some mitigation,”stated Hill. "And 25% of the en¬tering class needed what we call'severe mitigation’—that is mitiga¬tion of four or five course units.”“The implication of these re¬sults,” continued Hill, “is that themajority of students entering thisyear from high school will not beRequired to take everything con¬sidered necessary by the staffstk)n°*rne<* with general educa-20% of those entering students planning to work in the biologicalsciences have abbreviated .theirprograms by placement, Hillstated. Of these 9% have acceler¬ated their programs by half ayear or more.“Because all students majoringin the physical sciences are ex¬pected to place out of the firstyear of mathematics and the firstyear of physics to fit their degreerequirements into a four yearprogram, and because both Math¬ematics 151-2-3 and Chemistry105-6-7 have been included as re¬quirements in their general edu¬cation program,” noted Hill, “stu¬dents in the physical sciences arerequired to take only 18 of theregular general education quar¬ter units. Acceleration is muchmore difficult for these studentsbecause of this, and more mitiga¬tion is often required.“11% of those students express¬ing an interest in the physical sci¬ences accelerated to some extent;3% were accelerated by % of ayear or more and an additional6% were accelerated by *4 of ayear, or the equivalent of fourcourse units.”In the social sciences and hu¬manities students placing out ofmore than five units would accel¬erate their programs. 43% re¬ceived some acceleration; 20%had programs shortened by atleast x/z of a year’s work, 10%accelerated by. more than % of ayear and 3% shortened their re¬quirements by a full years ormore.Because in the physical sciencesa student who places out of noth¬ing outside the natural sciencesmust have a quarter of Englishand a quarter of a foreign lan¬guage mitigated to maintain abalanced program, the division ofphysical sciences has had to con¬sider the possibility of inadequatecourse work in these fields, addedHill. “The section or division ofphysical sciences has stated,” Hillcontinued, “that where obviousweaknesses exist in the student'sgeneral education program, theadvisor may recommend that thestudent use his elective time toremedy these weaknesses.”Note: All percentages expressedin the preceding article are ap¬proximate. Special issue next weekIn accordance with the Darwin Centennial, theMaroon will put out a special issue on Thanksgiv-ing weekend. Convocation will be held on Thanks¬giving, a University holiday.Plan new Hum. sectionTo bring some of the world’sleading scholars and scientistswithin reach of undergraduates,by inviting them to offer occa¬sional courses especially designedfor the needs and interests of Col¬lege students, is one of the chiefconcerns of the new College. As afirst step in this direction, theCollege in cooperation with the division of humanities has ar¬ranged a seminar course in thewinter quarter by Ronald S.Crane, distinguished service pro¬fessor emeritus of English.Humanities 299, “Problems -ininterpretation: historical, philo¬sophical, literary,” will meet foran hour and a half two afternoonsa week, probably on Tuesdays andRobert M. Hutchins, chairman of the Fund far tha Republic and ex-Chancellor of UC, spoke at tha Second Dedicatory conference last Wednes¬day. The text of Hutchins' speech it reprinted an page 3. Thursdays. The exact time will beannounced later.Enrollment will be limited to be¬tween fifteen and twenty students,with preference given to the bestqualified seniors, juniors, and fi¬nally, if there is any room left,to graduate students. Studentswishing to register should applyto Mr. Mark Ashin, senior adviserin the humanities, Administration201.Humanities 299 will be designedas an integration course for ad¬vanced undergraduates in severalareas, showing how the under¬standing of major intellectualworks raises questions character¬istic of several different discip¬lines. The materials of the coursewill be one or more classics inwhich the interrelations betweenphilosophical, literary, and his¬torical considerations are especial¬ly interesting. Examples might beGulliver’s Travels or some ofHume’s Essays.Crane, chairman of the depart¬ment of English between 1935 and1947 and former editor of ModernPhilology, will be known to moststudents as the editor and authorof the introductory essay of Crit¬ics and Criticism, Ancient andModern, the authoritative volumeof what has been called the “Chi¬cago school” of criticism. Amongthe authors represented in it whoare still on campus are NormanMaclean, Richard McKeon, ElderOlson, and Bernard Weinberg.Four UCers fo appear on "QuizFour UC students will appear on the nationally televisedprogram The college Quiz bowl on December 27. An all collegecompetition will begin immediately to determine which fourstudents will represent the University on the program.the program, will fly the contest- to^ay. Ihey should be addressedants to New York for an all-ex- **obn *9™’•boX 3 f Reyr°^Spense three day visit, leaving on club. Any full time undergiaduateChristmas day. The four will be 1S eligible.in direct competition with repre- ™e hrst elimination sessionsentatives of some other college. 'Vl11 be belf m Handel hall a week» . from Monday. The finals will fol-A $1500 scholarship award goes jow shortiy and will probably beto the winning school, a $.i()0 broadcast over WUCB. The fourscholarship to the losing school, pontestants must be selected byThe team that wins returns the December 9next week to compete against an¬other college. Hershenson to speakWUCB, the campus radio sta- “A judge looks at troubled fam-tion, is handling the preliminary ilies” will be the title of a talk byelimination sessions to determine Superior court Judge Harry G.the final team. Applications must Hershenson at the KAM templebe turned in by one week from Sunday Morning Discussion group meeting at 10:30 am on Novem¬ber 29th in the Community hallat 930 East 50th street.Re-elected by Cook county vot¬ers this month to his second six-year term in the Superior court,Judge Hershenson has beenwidely acclaimed for his work inthe court’s divorce branch, wherehe presided for four years.At their annual election lastJune, members of the KAM con¬gregation, where Judge Hershen¬son has long been active, chosehim to head the Temple as itspresident.He is a past Depart ment Com¬mander of the Jewish War Vet¬erans, and received decorationsfrom the United States War de¬partment and the Italian govern¬ment for his work as MilitaryGovernor in Italy during WorldDUAL FILTER DOES IT!Filters as no single filter canfor mild, full flavor!Here’s how the Dual Filter does it:1. It combines a unique inner -filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL... defhnitely proved to make the smoke of a cigarette mild and smooth ...2. with an efficient pure white outer filter. Together they bring you thereal thing in mildness and fine tobacco taste!NEWDUALFILTERProduct rf <A&jDDce-£<»yyary is our middle name T. Cm )2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20, 1959 Members of the Company of the Foiir dramatic group rehearse a scenefrom Anoulih's Thieves' Carnival which they will present storting Novem¬ber 28, at John Woolman hall.school system in which he isseeking employment, will advisehim whether he should take theNational Teacher examinationsand which of the optional exami¬nations to select.A bulletin of information, tinwhich an application is inserted)describing registration proceduresmay be obtained from college of¬ficials, school superintendents, ordirectly from the National Teacherexaminations, Educational Test¬ing service, 20 Nassau street,Princeton, New Jersey. Completedapplications, accompanied byproper examination foes, will beaccepted by the ETS office dur-ing November and December, andearly in January. The deadline isJanuary 15, 1960.War II.The public is welcome at KAMdiscussion group meetings.Haseldon to preachat RockefellerReverend Kyle Haseldon, au¬thor of “The Racial Problem inChristian Perspective.” and min¬ister of the Baptist temple ofCharleston, West Virginia, willspeak at Rockefeller chapel thisSunday.Rev. Haseldon has been a trus¬tee of Carleton college, and ispresently a trustee of ColgateRochester Divinity school and Al-derson-Broaddus college.Active in church, civic, and edu¬cational fields, Rev. Haseldon is infrequent demand as a publicspeaker in these areas. He is alecturer for the Duke Divinityschool seminar for ministers 1959and for the Fisk institute on Hu¬man Relations.Schedule teachingexams Feb. 13The National Teachers exami¬nations, prepared and adminis¬tered annually by EducationalTesting service, will be given at160 testing centers throughout theUnited States on Saturday, Feb¬ruary 13, I960.At the one-day testing session acandidate may take the commonexaminations, which include testsin professional information, gen¬eral culture, English expression,and non verbal reasoning; andone or two of twelve optional ex¬aminations designed to demon¬strate mastery of subject matterto be taught. The college which acandidate is attending, or the Announce editorialcontestRolando Cubela Secades,pi*esidente de la federacionestudiantil, of the Universityof Havana has announced theJose Marti editorial writing con¬test open to students of all UScolleges and universities.The contest, sponsored by theStudents’ League of the Univer¬sity of Havana, “is to encouragethe exchange of ideas aboutdemocracy and love for freedom."Said Rolando Cubela, “We, theyoung people of the world, areentrusted with the perpetuationof faith in these principles. Wewant to make it known that inour country, as well as in yours,the present generation of stu¬dents considers this responsibilitya sacred one.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon311)5 l ake Park Ave.SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.m. - Up. Ml 3-201*0HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open from Dawn to Dawn east 53 st.Universal Army StoreHeadquarter* for sport and work wearFlop pocket wash & wear ivy league trousers — Wash & weor dressshirts — camping equip. — Complete line of keds footwear — trenchcoats — luggage and trunks.1144 East 55th st. DO 3-9572__ 10 % reduction with this '«..»«■PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO.“Hyde Park's Most Complete Paint & Hardware Store”Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th »t.TANENBAUM PHARMACY1142 E. 55th ' 5500 CornellBU 8-1142 Ml 3-5300Free DeliveryStudent and Faculty Discount on AllYour Drug NeedsHutchins speaks to law schoolRobert M. Hutchings and Harry Kalven at Wednesday'sconference.Oil being Invited to address it>le Hand, to produce responsi- to justify. My purpose this morn-flik distinguished audience on bility. From James Madison to ing is to suggest the possibilityi > ubiectof Power and Re- Heinhold Niebuhr the notion has that we as a people, as a com-* 10 S-v iiitv T turned first of boon that salv.ation lies in having munity learning together, mightsponsiDl y, _ - 'j- many contending centers of pow- learn how to assume consciouscourse, to the -hncyciopaea a er The p*ederalist #10 finds control of our destiny.Britannica. I oun ansihiHtv safe^ om faf,J>ons in having jn considering this possibility,was no ai.upftu;nr ho»ins a great many of them, fighting one 0f the groSsest errors we canand that the “ r KpH hv * la'g? ter*rito^. In the make is t0 assume that we havo"The word power, as used b> latest pamphlet published by the exhausted our intelligence andthe engineer • • • .... Center for the Study of Demo- imagination, that is, our capacityEagei, ascvntnnirnn cratic Institutions, Mr. Niebuhr, for learning. The fact is that wemind, I oo ,P "nnitUor ie^onin£ *° *be corporation and have hardly ever exerted it beonly to '-o'0'^nncihiiitv i« nnp !he iabor union- said, ‘What cause we never had to. To say,power nor Responsibility is one health we have is due to the fact for example, that there is some-ot the .i<a that these dubious sovereignties thing inherently degrading andSince the Encyclopaedia Britan- balance one another. Mr. Nie- corrupt about American politicsnica is described on the title page, buhr went on to deal with the a^d that therefore governmentwhich liears the imprimatui of function of government as fol- must govern as little as possiblethis University, as a New Survey lows: “It is only the purpose of is to overlook the fact that gov-of Universal Knowledge, w« must, government to see to it that the ernments have been transformedconclude that nothing is known over-all purposes are fulfilled because communities have learnedof Power or Responsibility. Since within the terms of the spon- to make them responsible. No-the Syntopicon is the Social Reg- taneous desires, motives, etc. of body living in Sir Robert Wal-ister of ideas, we must concludg all the centers of power. This is poie-s day could have imaginedthat Power and Responsibility the new liberalism as against the that in 150 years the Britishhave not yet “arrived”. How is old liberalism. The old liberalism would be setting standards ofit possible to have a symposium assumed that spontaneity, free honesty in public administrationabout matters of which we are enterprise, free market, all con- for the WOrld. It will not escapetotally ignorant, which may not tributed to the general welfare. our notice. I hope, that this trans-V ' VJ formation was accompanied, andin some degree caused, by thereformation of the British uni-ffigpSBg versifies..ItjB If a society is to be free andjust, all power in it must be madefjf responsible. This means that allpower must be brought to thettilraiff test of reason. The obvious wavof doing this is through the law.It no answer to that somelaws imn*aso!!;ibk Of cni:r--i‘in Jm1 s,i..i m w...JlSSr mak ■BMBMpyfwBfejiy ii'me 1,.-.% u ■ win*' 'out the law a workvffispk jwBWppBBPy - iaBl of w9HH toSB anthat this school has no claim tobe a pari of a intellectual insti¬tution.To borrow a phrase from anexist, and which, if they do exist. We know that is not true. We unpublished paper by Bertrandhave a low or insignificant sta know there must be checks and do j0Uvenel, the law is the meth-tus? balances. The government, if it ()d by which potentia becomesIf you ask why I accepted this finds one center of power is too p0fc>stan, by which power be-invitation when I had been as- strong, must raise up another comes authority, by which it ac-smed on the highest authority center of power in the interest quires legitimacy in its possessionthat the subject was trivial or of justice.” and is constrained to reasonable-irrelevant, the answer is that my There is something unsatisfac- ness in its exercise. Office meansmotive was unworthy. I wanted tory jn the notion that the whole duty.to bask in the reflected glory of matter of power and responsibil- This idpa is famiiiar enough.m> old friends, the Dean and ity freedom and justice, is going In fact the deepest constitutional1-acuity of this Law school They to be K0lved because the centers conviction that we have is thatinclude my teachers my fellow' 0f power will balance one another governmental power must bestudents, and my colleagues at and that the role of government „iade responsible. When the Con-the \ ale Law school, and my Stu- is simply to see to it that the stitution was framed, governmentdents and colleagues here. I am supply of such centers is ade- d the individual were the onlybound to them by ties of obl.ga- quate. two entities in society. Govern-on and affection that run back Jn order to have any confi- ment was the one with the pow-1 some tascs oryyeais. new dence that jf enough centers of er. Now other centers of powerIn t|m rr T yS °l POVel?' power contend they will make may have a more direct andLn.t " ,vUggle‘ \i,arn ,PP> 10 one another responsible and give drastic effect on the individualsalule thorn as they enter upon us a just soci*y we must at. a|,d on ,he ufe of the countrytribute to Providence a greater than any 18th Century govern-interest in the welfare of the ment could have hoped to have.American people than either our This raises new constitutionalselected'into one that is* worthy history or our merits would seem questionsof your attention. I was relievedto find, through further research,that Britannica and the Syntop¬icon were entirely right. Neitherof the ideas in the title of thissymposium is very interesting initself. Responsibility cannot existwithout power. And power, byitself, is'simply an inconvenientfact of life. A. A. Berle, Jr., inhis new book, Power WithoutProperty, observes that almostnothing has been written aboutpower. And Professor McKeon,in his authoritative paper, makesthe same remark about respon¬sibility, adding that it is a com¬parative parvenu, born in 1787.These two ideas, or words, im¬press us only in combination. Incombination they lead us into allthe major legal and political prob¬lems of the West. The legal andpolitical history of the West maybe seen as the effort to makepower responsible. The problempf power and responsibility isidentical with that of a free andjust society. Freedom impliespower of some kind, and justiceimplies responsibility.The American tradition is thetradition of dispersing power andtrusting to luck, or to the Invis- Lobby in the new law building, designed for the Universityby Eero Saarinen.As Arthur S. Miller has said in says, “Does this inchoate publica paper about to be published by consensus have any relation tothe Center for the Study of Dem- settled law? The answer must beocratic Institutions, “Whenever that it does include settled prin-any organization or group per- ciples of law. But it also includesforms a function of a sufficiently capacity to criticize that law.important nature, it can be said From time to time it may demandto be performing a governmental changes in existing law.”function and thus should have its Mr. Berle finds the public con-actions considered against the sensus formed and represented bybroad provisions of the Constitu- the influence of leading business-tion. In the racial covenant cases, men and “the conclusions of care-the white primary cases, and the fuj university professors, thecompany town cases, the Court reasoned opinions of specialists,has shown that the concept of the statements of responsibleprivate action must yield to a journalists, and at times the solidconception of state action where pronouncements of respected poli-public functions are being per- ticians.” He goes on to say,formed . . . With the continuing “These, and men like them, arepluralizing of American society thus the real tribunal to whichand the increasing recognition of the American system is finallythe governmental power of pri- accountable. Taken together, thisvate groups, it can be forecastwith some certainty that the trendof the Court in ‘public izing’ pri¬vate groups will continue. Itshould become the important con¬stitutional law development ofthe mid-twentieth century.”Mr. Miller ends his essay withthese words: “The study of con¬stitutional law today should in¬clude not only what governmentscan and cannot do, but also whatthey must do.” But if govern¬ments must do more than theydid, the task of making govern¬mental power responsible is backwith us in new and disturbingforms. A United States senator re¬marked in my presence the otherday that Congress was ceasingto be a legislative body. If itbrought power to the test ofreason' at all, it did so not bymaking laws but by holding hear¬ings. Using the example of mili- Hutchins and Edward H.Levi, dean of the law school.a new era of Gracious Living.In order not to be altogetherderelict on this occasion, I mustbuild up the subject you haveLooking east across the court of the new law school. tary expenditures, he said that if group, so long as its members areCongress increased them, the Ad- ab]e to communicate their views,ministration would impound the becomes the forum of account-money. If Congress reduced them, ability for the holding and use ofthe Administration would re- economic power. Collectively theyschedule its purchases. Bureauc- are the developers of public con-racy in government and in sensus, the men first sought- topolitical parties and the complex- guide the formation of publicity of the operations of govern- opinion to any given application.”ment, present and proposed mean At first blush it would seemthat the constitutional theory o that if economic power is now re-responsible government requires Sponsjble to this tribunal, we dothe most thoroughgoing reexam- no^ ^eed to concern ourselvesination. We might learn some- very much with making economicthing about political parties and p0wer responsible. This tribunalpublic corporations ftom England, exjsfs And though its memberssomething about making the bu- may have some little difficultyreaucracy responsible fiom t le from time to time communicatingConseil d’Etat In France, and their views, they are always infrom Western Germany some- sessjon and aiways, presumably,thing about how government may engaged jn holding American busi-help make private economic pow- ness responsible,er responsible through internal The consensus wc are toW jsparticipation rather than external a]ways ahpad of ,he law bu,con ro ' some of its principles are wellWe cannot assume that if some- enoUgh defined to be called in-thing must be done to make cboate law7. The consequences ofprivate power responsible the gov- the •'violation of these standardseminent must do it. The alterna- may be serjous. One result, Mr.tives are not as we usually seem gerje says, may be that “theto think they are, between gov- S(andards set up by the consensusernmental control and letting pn- wdj suddenly be made into ex-vate power run wild until its pbcjt iaw in case of abuse offlamboyance is checked by colli- pQ^r.” Mr. Berle points to asion with other private poweis. wjde rarige'of issues on whichThere are other ways of bringing businessmen are likley to findpower to the test of reason, ways themselves in trouble if they dothat may do more to preserve things which, though now thoughtthe vitality and spontaneity of t0 be legally permissable, violateindividuals and groups than the jbe standards set up by the publiclaw can do. The law is general, consensus.and it is coercive. It is, therefoie, Well acquainted witha rather blunt mstiument. the notion that the institutions ofMr. Berle appeals to what he this country operate within limitscalls the “Public consensus”. He jumped to page 6Nov. 20, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROO N • 3the Chicago maroonfounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer quarter,by students of the University of Chicago. Inquiries should be sent to the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E. 59thStreet, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus.Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, 4 pm,Tuesday: deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pm Wednesday before publication.All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the individual opinions of the authors.UC should withdraw fromnational defense education actThe time has come for the Uni¬versity of Chicago to do morethan state its philosophic opposi^tion to the National defense edu¬cation act. The time, moreover,is proper and appropriate for ac¬tion.There are two major flaws inthe National Defense educationact, both growing out of the factthat the law was passed out ofconcern more for defense than foreducation. Our first objection iswith the unfortunate weightingof the loan provisions towardsthe phj^ical sciences. In the longrun, this policy is unfair, unthink¬ing and unrealistic, but we despairof anybody correcting it.The second point, however,might very well be cleared up.This is the burdensome loyaltyoath provision. Any student de¬siring a federal loan must attestto his loyalty to the United States.This provision is an obvious and inexcusable insult to the integrityof the students of the UnitedStates. As has been often stated,the oath is also functionless andsuperfluous. Moreover, whyshouldn’t a student belong to theorganizations the attorney generaldisapproves of?Chicago has objected to theoath. It has advocated its removal.The position of the University hasbeen made clear to Illinois’ twosenators. The association of Amer¬ican Universities (of which Kimp-ton is president) has stated anunequivocal opposition to the loy¬alty oath. Moreover, the Univer¬sity has made other loan fundsavailable to any student who ob¬jects to signing the oath.Yet this is not enough, for theoath is still there. The oath clauseshould be removed; the universi¬ties of America are capable ofpressuring the federal govern¬ment into just such a repeal.Harvard, Yale, Grinnell, St. John’s, Oberlin, Goueher, Antioch,Wilmington, Bennington, Reed,Sarah Lawrence, Bryn Mawr,Haverford and Swarthmore havealready refused to accept fundsfrom the National defense educa¬tion act until this clause is elim¬inated. This is fine company; UCshould be proud to be a memberof this group. UC should be amember of this group.The federal government wantsto give this money away. Thegreat schools of the countryshould refuse to accept the fundsuntil the objectionable clauses areremoved. The funds we have re¬ceived are nice, but perhaps it istoo nice, too tempting, and tooeasy. The Maroon urges Chicago'swithdrawal from this loan fund,until the entire federal law ismade philosophically acceptable.While this is far from being eco¬nomical, freedom, greatness andthe responsibility that goes withboth is not economical either.Strange things happeningin old nat sci II courseStrange things are happening in the coursecalled Biology 111 these days. This new course isthe successor to the old Nat Sci II program, butunlike Nat Sci II it has minimized the class dis¬cussion method in favor of three lectures eachweek by a PhD on the staff.So far, no one knows whether or not there isgoing to be a comp at the end of the year and,despite the memo from College Examiner KnoxHill, no one knows about the possibility of a compretake. At this point it seems enough that th£quarterly grades in this course will be countedas grades of record.Beyond that, the students we have talked withclaim they don’t know what to do in preparationfor the course, and who can blame them?Unlike last year’s course, there is no readinglist as such. Instead, the puzzled students buy asingle text (no syllabus — no original papers) andfrom this text they are told that during the quar¬ter they will hear some lectures on chapters 1through N where N is a large positive integer.When the students go to lecture, they hear termsand concepts there with which they are totally un¬familiar because they have done no preparatoryreading. The lecturer tells the student that if he isunclear about something, he need only go homeafter lecture and consult the appropriate passagesin his text.But here is where the problem begins for manystudents. If he doesn’t understand the basic no¬menclature of a biological process, cycle, etc . . .how can he understand the topic on which the lec¬ture is based? The problem becomes more serious when there is no class discussion to iron out theproblem. The,student must then rely on his ownresourcefulness to look up the answers in his text.This is assuming that he has been alert enough toscribble down all the points which were broughtup in lecture.His next problem is to run home and lookthrough the maze of cross references in his textuntil he has all the answers. All of this requires agreat deal of effort on the part of the student. Italso assumes a high degree of intelligence on hispart. He must follojv through on all the stepsabove mentioned with great meticulousness or heis lost. He can’t afford to miss one lecture andmore than that, he must be able to immediatelyglean the important ideas and terms for futurereference even though he may have no clear cutideas about the lecture topics at the time he hearsthem from the lecturer's lips. For many peoplewho have had nothing of instruction on these mat¬ters since high school biology, this is the heightof confusion.What seems to be lacking most, however, isclass discussion under direction of a skilled in¬structor. Without this, we can’t understand how asynthesis of reading, lecture, and laboratory workcan be effected. When the connection betweenthese three rubrics is broken, it is our opinion thata course of this nature is weakened.And now we ask if this is in line with the wholeconcept of general education. We had alwaysthought that the opportunity to question, to dis¬cuss, and to exchange views was vital fb the realunderstanding of a course.Need funds, interest forNSA to realize potential Ralph Marterie, maestro ofthe band that’s No. 1 withcollege students and No. 1with hit records, will behitting college campusesagain this fall as Marlboro’smusical ambassador ofgood will. Don’t missRalph and his MarlboroMen when they visityour campus.At its last session Student Government voted tohave a campus referendum on the question ofwhether or not UC should continue its membershipin the National Student association.Bringing this to a campus referendum is prob¬ably a good idea it is a question which should beraised now and then and one which should beanswered by the campus as a whole.There are certainly many flaws in the NationalStudent association. In many ways it is ineffect¬ual. It costs a good deal of money. Chicago dele¬gates are constantly finding that they are doingmore teaching than learning at the conventions.Nevertheless, the Maroon feels that membershipshould be continued. NSA could be a fine organiza¬tion, but it can only be as good as are the partici¬pating schools. The function of a teacher is notan ignoble one; Chicago delegates should be proudto function as such. We have an obligation to this01 ganization; that obligation is to improve it.NSA should be the organized voice of students.It should be the organized conscience of students.It should be the political educational force of stu¬ dents. It should be a pressure device for and ofstudents. It has not been remarkably successfulat being any of these things, but there is nothingto prevent it from being all of these things exceptindifference, neglect and the refusal of responsibleschools like Chicago to do our fair share of leading.The most distressing aspect of the entire ques¬tion is that if we drop membership, the reason willultimately be a financial one. The simple fact isthat no one seems able to afford the conventionexpenses of Chicago’s delegates.The political parties are supposed to pay formost of it. They can’t afford it. Student govern¬ment might be expected to pick up the rest of theexpenses, but the government budget is also toosmall. Student activities cannot afford the costof a ten day convention for ten delegates.It might very well turn out that the studentsof Chicago will be silenced as a national voice inthe organization best equipped for nationally voic¬ing the thoughts of students, because the Universi¬ty cannot find $900 to pay dues and send delegates.We note that the basketball team is flying duringits forthcoming Eastern tour.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20, 1959 The better the makin’s, the better the smokeYou’re smoking better when it’s MarlboroGadfly PolicyGadfly is an attempt on the part of the Maroon to pro¬vide provocative ideas to the campus at large. The columnis meant to be written by students and faculty memberswho wish to have their ideas expressed in the Maroon, andis not a Maroon staff editorial column. Articles will beprinted unsgined, and the author's name will be held M»the strictest confidence by the Gadfly editor.The opinions expressed in the column Gadfly do notnecessarily represent the editorial policy of the Maroon,or its staff.G A D F LYAnimadversions on liberals and loyalty oathsIt is not surprising that astoon as the news arrived thatour Eastern pace-setters haddecided to reject federalmoney a hullabaloo should beraised here for this campus tofollow suit. Why we should nottake federal loans this year whenwe took them last year is notclear, but, then, since Harvardtook money from the governmentlast year, maybe it wasn’t so badthen.More important than the ques¬tion of when we should avoid thefederal loan program is the ques¬tion of whether we should avoidH at all. Outside of the fact thatthe nasty words “loyalty oath’’are attached to the program, itSeems difficult to understand justwhat is wrong with the program.Is it the source of the money?That would be a strange argu¬ment coming from those who at¬tend a school founded with themoney of the greatest robberLetters to Gadfly baron of the turn of the century.Is Standard Oil money any dirtierthan federal money?Is it where the money goes thatis objectionable? That too wouldbe strange since what is per sewrong with using money to sup¬port yourself while in school?Is it the fact that the federalloans are interest-free while otherloans carry some charge? Theonly “bad” feature of this is thatit makes the federal money moreappealing than other funds; butthis isn’t evil unless some reasonhas been shown for saying thatfederal money is bad money.Let us go to the heart of thematter then and assert that themoney is “tainted” because of theloyalty oath which l>orrowersmust sign if they are to receivefunds. What is wrong with loy¬alty oaths?The evil of the oath cannot bethe simple fact that the money isearmarked in one way or another. Indeed most money the Univer¬sity receives does carry some re¬strictions with it, such as: that itmust go for a certain department,or only to the grand nephews ofCivil War nurses, etc.Nor should the fact that it isthe federal government which isearmarking the money be espe¬cially significant since much ofthe money the government dis¬burses is earmarked. (States andcities can receive urban renewalaid, for instance, only if theymatch the federal gifts with cer¬tain sums of their own.) The evilhere is far more local, it is said,it’s the particular strings whichare attached to these loan funds.Many “liberals” do not like loy¬alty oaths. They find somethingreprehensible in the fact thattheir elected representatives seekto insure the security of constitu¬tional government. Without argu¬ing the pros or cons of the “lib¬eral” position of the oath, we find it decidedly illiberal for these “lib¬erals” to take the stand taken inthe Maroon editorial this weekadvocating that the Universitycease subscribing to the federalloan program.If a particular person doesn’twant to sign a loyalty oath inorder to borrow money, well andgood. No one is forcing him tosign, and non-federai funds arestill available to him. But if thatsame person goes farther andasserts that no one should be ableto get money by signing suchoaths, what has happened to thepersonal liberty so dearlyespoused by our liberal comrades?There just may happen to besome people on campus who needmoney, who are highly apprecia¬tive of the interest-free aspects of the loan, and who are not averse—or afraid—to declare their loy¬alty to democratic government inthe United States.Liberals have fallen into theircommon habit of trying to legis¬late liberalism for all. Becausethey don’t like to sign loyaltyoaths, they don’t want anyone elseto be able to sign them. This ismore totalitarian than the gov¬ernment’s position, which at leastgives individuals the choice ofsigning or not signing.The issue of loyalty oaths is apersonal one on which each per¬son must sometime make hispeace with himself and his gov¬ernment. If the liberals wouldleave it at that, we should bequite indebted to them.JustinianVan Doren’s ‘posture’ relevantDear Franc-tireur:If “moral postures seem sotransient that it is downrightdangerous to try to operateby them,” I cannot but ad¬mire your daring in concern¬ing yourself over the questionwhether an institution or an indi¬vidual “did right” and declaringthat under stated conditions “aliberal . . . should be righteouslyindignant.” Consider, O productof a child-centered school, wheth¬er the happy egoism that consid¬ers that a member of the facultyof a great university is all thathe professionally needs to be ifhe can effectively teach the likesof you some of the things you donot know is not a moral posturetoo. I should hesitate to call itone of it did not introduce itselfby the honored name of liberal¬ism; but surely a liberal is aliberal by virtue of his moral at¬titude — must I say “posture”?Or is it only the conservativeswho posture -only the bad guys?As to the question whether Co¬lumbia university was “right" or“rather petty” in firing CharlesVan Horen for being “a perjureror deceiver to some degree.” Ishould like to point out that VanHoren’s guilt as a man is not soirrelevant to his profession asyou, Franc-tireur, seem to think.Besides being “a man who ap¬pears to have committed a crimesomething like perjury.” he is aman who has confessed to cheat¬ing on a quiz. He could hardlyhave chosen a sin that would havebeen more closely bound up withthe teacher-student relationship.But the interests of the studentsare not the only valid reasons fordropping a member of the faculty,and I emphatically deny that allwho do not think so must losetheir title to the noble name ofliberal. Probably Van Doren’s res¬ignation was accepted out of re¬gard for the interests of learningand of the learned — the facultyrather than the students at Co¬lumbia — and because a demon¬strated willingness to prefer per¬sonal gain and false glory to truthand real honor is a fatal disqual¬ification for the pursuit of truth. It was some derogation of VanDoren’s dignity that he engagedin the quiz program in the firstplace — like supplementing ameager scholastic income byworking as a circus clown — andthen to cheat at it into the bar¬gain! How much money would rec¬oncile you to Charles Van Doren’spresent position, Franc-tireur?But then, I forget: you hardlyknow what sort of crime he ap¬pears to have committed to somedegree.CatoCharacter IS important!Last week’s Gadfly tells us that we must not consider aman’s character when hiring him to teach, for to do so, it issuggested, is to be politically conservative. Political naiveteof this sort is so shortsighted, that one need not fear manypeople will be misled by it. But the fallacies in his considera¬tion of moral questions are perhaps not so easily seen.An examination of his argu-mont reveals his fundamental as- swer should be so well known tosumption to be, that the qualities most people, I am inclined to feelof a man are separable from the the Gadly’s author does not needman himself: “The question to be i0gjcai rebuttal so much as heasked about a man s vices are needs a little more experience,whether they affect his teachingSURPRISING VALUESAuction bought clothing — pants,hats, furnishings, shoes at thelowest prices.Guaranteed Fit1C MEN'S WEAR1547 E. 63rd“Over 25 Years in theNeighborhood" ability and nothing more.”And consequently this leadshim to say that a deceitful manmay be a good teacher. But this iscontrary to our experience; dis¬honest and deceitful men do notmake good teachers. The reasonfor the error lies in the fact thatthe qualities of a man are onlytheoretically separable from theman himself, and not practically.For a detailed rebuttal of theGadfly one would then combinethe well known argument whichconcludes that a deceitful man, nomatter how much he “knows,” isnot to be trusted in the use of thatknowledge, with an attack on thefalse use of analogy in the sup¬porting examples (for the authorseems to think deceit is an issuesimilar to homosexuality). Butsince the arguments of this an-$400 Per MonthSick BenefitsFor FacultyiIn case of long illness whenUniversity salary, benefits andsavings end — major InsuranceCompanies now have availableNon-Cancellable Plans that payup to $400 per month at extreme¬ly low premiums.For Brochure No. AH4 write orphone Sidney Blackstone (U ofC and Harvard Alumnus) at 5476Everett Ave., DOrchester 3-0447. John Keller Editors-in-chiefKenneth Lance Haddix Neal JohnstonManaging editorOzzie ConklinBusiness Manager Advertising ManagerWilliam G. Bauer James SchardienNews editor Ken PierceFeature editor Jay GreenbergPhotography coordinator Steve CarsonCulture editor „ Maggie StinsonSports editor Bill SpadyEditorial board: William Bauer, Ozzie Conklin, Jay Greenberg, Lance Haddiz,Neal Johnston, Kenneth Pierce, Kitty Scoville.Editorial staff: Joel Ashenfarb, Frances Brown, Jeanne Crawford, DebbyDinits, Dorothy Dorf, Francesca Falkensetin, Dean Fischer, Moitlond Griffith, Matthew Hirschorn, John Juskevice, Elliott Landau, David Noble, TonyQuagliano, Kitty Scoville, Tamor VergaPhotography staff Maria Begen, Al Berger, Ginny Hill, Sid SealineCartoonists Ron Burton, Arnold PerryBusiness staff Joan Helmken, Francis Herder, Pat Mosser,Joel Schwartz, Maurice ZeitlerCirculation managers Warren B. Bernhardt, Nathan B. Swith, Jr.ANDThe vest which has been miss¬ing from most suits of clothesin recent years has been founddesirable again by gentlemenof fashion. Accordingly, theproprietor has in stock finesuits from famous makers,each accompanied by a match¬ing vest.From *70°°JSrittanu, Ltd.7104 South JefferyOpen Mon. and Thurs. Eves.Free Parking at Cyril Court Garage, 1948 E. 71st PI.PLazo 2-4030Nov. 20, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Help wantedHyde Park Theatre: Staff opening soon,male and female, must be availableXmas holidays. Pt. time, 3-5 eveningsor 15 to 30 hrs. Apply in person.ServicesSewing, alterations, hems. MU 3-3941.Yonr papers typed on electric portable.Rush Jobe a specialty. HY 3-2780, room133.PersonalCreative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.Ophelia: Marry, this is miching mal-lecho. Hamlet.Warren: I love you. Patsy Stien.Beaverboard: I am filled with the burn¬ing passions of love. Grubby.Grubby: Forget the rabbit and bringthe kleenex. Beaverboard.Eck: If you’re interested, they are avail¬able in matched “his and her" sets.Club Five. Co-op apartment, 5460 Woodlawn. 5large rooms, cabinet kitchen, doublesink, recently modernized and deco¬rated. $49.50 monthly. Adults only. MI3-4081.“See Mexico on a shoestring.” Guide tohotels and restaurants in major cities.Send $1.00 to Arnold A Co., 807 GrandAve. Waukegan, Ill.Mahogany leather top coffee A endtables, gray A chrome dinette set, newWhirlpool refrig, with 60 lb. freezer,occasional chairs, cherry spool daybed.MI 2-4918.1955 Chev. convert. Like new—new tires,new top, low mileage. Orig. owner.Auto, trans., power steering, radio andhtr. $800 MI 3-2480 after 11 a m. or NO7-9071 after 6 pm.For rentLittle Girl: Coming soon—a personalin person. Old Man. l-li'i-2-3 rm. furnished apts. Reason¬able. Near University of Chicago. 6107Dorchester. PL 2-9641.4 rm. apt., 2nd fir., unfurn., newly dec¬orated. School nearby, 6 minutes toLoop. $100.00 mo. MI 2-4918.Small student's room & priv. bath —clean. Near campus, co-op, I.C., etc.PL 2-1667.Only the Alpha Delts have Gmelichs.Carhito: Escribeme. India.Dr.: Babysitting can be fun. j.Viva Ecuador! WantedNeed ride daily, Northwest Evanston tocampus, share expenses. Mr. Davis —ext. 2306. Hutchins cont...set by public opinion. The flour¬ishing trade of public relations isa testimony to this fact. Presum¬ably there are, and always willbo, leaders of public opinion. Itmay be that some of them arethe kind of people that Mr. Boricappoints to the tribunal to whichAmerican business is accountable.Some doubt is cast on his selec¬tions, at least as far as SouthernCalifornia is concerned, by a state-ment of Professor Gilbert Brig-house of Occidental college thatappeared in the Los AngelesTimes on October 28. Mr. Brig-house said that neither intelli¬gence, honesty, industry, norloyalty was necessary for busi¬ness leadership. He said, “One ofthe greatest leaders in SouthernCalifornia, for instance, is an im¬becile. But, when they really needsomething done, this is the manthey go to.”But let us assume that thetribunal exists, no matter who itsmembers are. Mr. Berle may beright in saying that businessmenhad better watch out for it. Butit must be admitted that todaythis tribunal is working rathererratically. Its operation, in prac¬tice, is as inexplicable and unre¬liable as that of the InvisibleHand.In the fields with which I ammore familiar than I am withbusiness no such tribunal appearsto exist, or, if it exists, it is totallyineffective. Nothing appears to in¬fluence our educational institu¬tions, nothing, that is, except money. I see no inchoate law thatthey are obeying. I see none thatthe media of mass communica¬tion obey. If they had been ubey-ing the most elementary rule ofinchoate law — don’t cheat — thequiz show scandals could nothave occurred. And I am pre¬pared to wager that the corporateinterests that control televisionwill not be penalized through hav¬ing inchoate law become explicitlaw. It is significant that the lawproposed by Mr. Kintner of NBCis one that would cause the com¬panies little inconvenience.I raise the question whetherour-institutions are equal to thetask of developing public con¬sensus, inchoate law, or law. Isee no grounds for optimism inthe present operation of the pub¬lic consensus or of the loose, in¬formal unorganized tribunals thatare said to form and represent it.What we need is criticism. Theissue is whether the kind of spon¬taneous, sporadic, uninstitutional¬ized criticism with which we havealways been familiar, which addsup to the voices of unrelated solo¬ists singing in different keys, oreven singing different pieces, isadequate in our present societyto bring power to the test ofreason.We should be able to look tothe universities, the press, and theprofessional associations. Theydo not seem to be in the best ofhealth. The universities have be¬come folk institutions, reflecting,rather than criticizing, the so¬ciety. They are now dedicated tochaperonage, vocational certifica-LUCKY STRIKE presentsCfreo/v TDrcfncod:Dr. Frood, Ph.T.T.Dear Dr. Frood: I read a great deal so Inever have time for girls. Am I missinganything? LiterateDear Literate: Only a few marbles.Dear Dr. Frood: The guy nex to mecopys frum my paper. What shood I do?TruthfilDear Truthfil: Warn him. Quick!' <0) C0> €O*Dear Dr. Frood: When I refuse to goout with unattractive girls, my friendssay, “Beauty is only skin-deep.” Whatdo you say? FussyDear Fusty: That’s deep enough.)A. T. Co. Dlt. FROOD’S MORAL OF THE MONTHBrevity is the soul of wit. Which is why the sight of a girlin a Bikini invariably brings a smile to a man's face.Dear Dr. Frood: Do you think nextyear's dresses will cover the knees?Clothes- ConsciousDear Clothes-Conscious: They'd bettercover more than that.»O*Dear Dr. Frood: I admire my roommatevery much, so I try to be like him. Hesmokes Luckies. Do you think I shouldsmoke the same cigarette he does?AwedDear Awed: No. Ask him for an un¬used Lucky. N Dear Dr. Frood: Do you think a boyshould kiss a girl on their first date?ShyDear Shy: She would seem to be thelogical choice.DR. FROOD ON QUERIESBEST LEFT UNQUERIEDYears of experience have taught menever to ask a girl these questions:Shouldn't we skip the garlic?What happened to the fraternity pin ?Wow! Is that your roommate?Do you mind turning out that light ?You mean that isn't a beanie?How come you never wear shorts?Why don't you smoke your own Luckies ?COLLEGE STUDENTS SMOKEMORE LUCKIES THANANY OTHER REGULAR!When it comes to choosing their regular smoke,college students head right for fine tobacco.Result: Lucky Strike tops every other regularsold. Lucky’s taste beats all the rest becauseL.S./M.F.T.—Lucky Strike means fine tobacco.TOBACCO AND TASTE TOO FINE TO FILTER!Product of c/& (Jirfaeco~£crya&ny — i/o&jbco- is our middle name tion, and specialized research. Themedia of communication are notcritical of practices upon whi<hthey think their prosperity (|(,pends. The professional associations, even in what used to becalled the learned professionshave tended to look like thepropaganda divisions of pressuregroups. I suggest that if we aregoing to learn how to make pOMer responsible through criticismwe are going to have to find outhow to make the institutions ».fcriticism responsible.Although I see few signs thatthe universities, the media ofcommunication, and the professional associations are interestedin becoming centers of independent criticism, there are some indications that we may eventuallydevelop new institutions for thepurpose. The recommendation ofthe Commission on the Freedomof the Press that a continuingagency be established to appraisethe performance of the media isbeing actively debated. SenatorJohn Sherman Cooper has intio-dueed a hill calling for a nationaladvisory council on education. Ata recent meeting of the Consult¬ants to the Center for the Studyof Democratic Institutions, atwhich both Mr. Berle and Mr.Niebuhr were present, there wasunanimous agreement upon theneed for a new body, a new'organof criticism, to assist in the moresystematic development of thepublic consensus with regard tothe economic order. There aresome stirrings among scientists,engineers, and medical men thatmay give us some hope that theseprofessions may ultimately try togive some reasonable direction tothe greatest irresponsible powerat large in the world, the powerof technology. If we as a peopleare to assume conscious controlof our destiny, we shall have tolearn how to take conscious con¬trol of this power, which nowrules us with a tyranny so fa¬miliar and so absolute that wedocilely follow in its wake, whereever it leads, and seem preparedto obey all its commands, includ¬ing the command to commit sui¬cide.We have a new society and anew world. Old slogans and ob¬solescent institutions adapted todifferent days are blind guidesthrough the present crisis. Theclarification of the issues of pow¬er and responsibility, of freedomand justice, calls for all the intelligence and imagination we canmuster. It is reassuring that thisgroup, under the most favorableand distinguished auspices, is addressing itself to the task.Robert M. HutchinsGifts for All OccasionsK0GA GIFT SHOPQunliiti and SorrierIs Our MottoImported and Domestic Dry GoodsChinaware - Jewelry - KimonosSondals - Greeting CardsMisa Koga 1203 E. 55 St.ME 4-GH56 Chicago 15. III.The TREVI“Hyde Park's FinestEspresso House"9Sun., Tues., Thurs.4:00 pm - 1:00 amWeekends5:00 pm - 3:30 amSHOW TIMETues., ( 9:00 - 1:00 amThurs. ,, 9:00 - 1:00 amFri., 9:30 - 2:30 amSat., 9:30 - 2:30 am1553 E. 57thCampus Bus Stopmt the door6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20, 1959rn&mrthen itmvm > behoovedWOUNJU-IE,I JUST WteMTjftSK BGt*lOUT FORftWit someTIME* |Y)E TOUWHVOU THAT6irls AreOFTEN MflSTffcOF DEtEIT! 1 OHCt DMSDAGlfct6WO *tllt> *Hfc MTS AHfcNCH TEACHER ATBtNNUuGIOH, SOT SHETURHEB 0\)T To BE AHtfRATOHS HOCIOE-fetRTf PlCKtfc! AS $«E <OASthuowHG THROOERHER. RA&EiHiS, OneDW, I NOTICEDHUtKU.6tRftV SINUSDNDW HER .Fingernail*! Letters to theSuggests new tuition solutionIt has come to my attention the same dining facilities, nor turbances in the neighborhood,that OUr university is in need simply alternating floors, but Moreover, consider the intimateof money, it is a good thing rather that each room should have and increased social intercoursethat I heard of our straits, forl STALKED ftWGRltVftUJAV SHE GAVE |WE RQUICK CUP ON WEI CRANIUM UHfH HERI huckieoewy Bucket __ioHicH HAD BEEN CONCEALED]ON HER PERSON-SUPPED VOO ASORT OP HUCKLE¬BERRY HUHEMn BUT THATOJAS FARFROM theWORST OFIT VOONGrmAN- TUE JUST NEVER UUEDDOWKl THE EM6A BRASS*MtNT Of DATING A GIRLWHO HAD 5UCK ft FIGURETHAT p CONCEALED _HUCKLC6ERRV BUCKET'COULD GO UNNOTICED* two inhabitants: one male, one arising from such circumstancesfemale. Think now, before you (one of the avowed desires of theare inclined to laughter or scepti- administration is that the stu*cism, upon the economies of such dents should have a balanced so*a system. cial and academic career while onFirst, because one would not our campus). Last, consider theneed separate facilities for men savings on heating bills thatI have a proposal which will remedy the situation.It seems that when we arefaced with this problem (whichseems too often) we resort to oneof two methods of solving it: 1)either the Chancellor and hisdeans (some several hundredstrong) canvass for it or 2) theuniversity is subjected to variouskinds of economies. But since theChancellor et al do not seem tobe inclined to soil their hands withsuch un-intellectual endeavor, wehave most often been recUTced tousing the latter alternative. So beit; as I said, I have the solution. -one so simple that it should have because of this larger volume of money,would result from this solution,for it may be assumed that onthose cold winter nights whichare now the horror of all stu¬dents, there would be substantialSince truly liberal education isone of our aims here, this propo¬sition does not seem to me to bebeen obvious to everyone beforenow.I humbly suggest that the solu¬tion to these mundane problemslies in the establishment of a co¬educational dormitory system. Bythis I do not mean merely usingLaw student answers Almonbased upon qualities which arenot reflective of the total perso¬nality but only of productive ca¬pacity (and too often race), aword might be said about the“type” of people who are onstrike.They are sincere and good peo¬ple who had the pride to preferto work for low wages rather thanto go on welfare, who have a deeployalty to the patients and there¬fore hope for a rapid settlementof the strike, and who had thecourage and determination to puttheir jobs and incomes in jeopar¬dy over a matter which for themwas one of principle. In short,they stood forth for what theybelieved — an all too rare virtuein an age of capitulation.Jules Bernstein, Law '60THEWISEMANknows that only life insur¬ance can provide him withan immediate estate andthat the Sun. Life ofCanada offers him the fin¬est in service and up-to-date policy plans.RepresentativeI represent the Sun Life As¬surance Company of Canada.Our modern plans can hetailored to fit your own in¬dividual needs. Mau I dis¬cuss some of these plans withyou? There is no obligation,of course.SUN LIFE OF CANADARalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LaSalleFK 2-2390 Chicago, III.FA 4-6800 sons, I meekly submit that gradeaverages would rise as a resultof the reduced frustrations, ten¬sions and repressions and allother maladies of student lifewhich now consume valuablestudy time. I have little doubtTo the Editor: that relati°ns with the people ofThe assertions made by Mr. Arthur Almon, director of the struck hospital on Ellis, which muclTtetteAoo^sTresult^thSwcio piinted in last weeks Maroon seem to deserve reply, since they appear to have some proposed change; for with thepersuasiveness for students. reduced number of students livingMr. Almon’s arguments run as follows: in apartments, there would be1—Because of the nature of our services “we must have the workers do as they are told, fewer parties, scandals, and dis-We cannot quibble and arbitrateanything.**Mr. Almon himself demonstrat¬ed the thrust of his policy on thesecond day of the strike. Whenone of the chronically ill persons,who both worked and lived in thehome and who had voted againstunionization, refused to do extratasks made necessary by thestrike which he felt himself phys¬ically incapable of performinghe was fired and put into thestreet. (The Union then found hima place to live.)Beyond this illustration, Bil¬lings, which has a contract withthis Union, does not find its hos¬pital routine disrupted by griev¬ance procedures or arbitrationclauses; relations with the Unionare quite amicable.2 We are a charitable institu¬tion. We are non-profit.Ironically, this means that inorder to run a charitable institu¬tion unskilled employees (not di¬rectors) must work for sub-stand-_aid wages and thereby subsidizepatient care. In other words, in¬stead of the community fully sup¬porting this medical institution,those least able to do so are re¬quired to make the sacrifice. Suchan inequitable allocation of costscan hardly be justified byras seem¬ingly an humanitarian institutionas a hospital.3 Wages are not bad “consider¬ing the type of people we haveWorking here,’*Assuming the best possible in-fei 'ence from Mr. Almon’s remark,he seems to be saying that sincehis employees accept employmentat low wages these wages mustreflect, through the mechanism ofthe market, what these people de¬serve.For the prophets of the freemarket this assumption is nodoubt true. Yet it is also true thatthe market turns men into com¬modities and often deals harshlywith them as such — (Negroes —“First fired and last hired” or “Ican’t get the job without a PhD.”)Yet it is precisely because theharshness of the market has beenrecognized to some extent that aNational Minimum Wage, Unem¬ployment Insurance, and SocialSecurity have been injected intoour economy, and workers haveorganized themselves into unions.It might be added here that Illi¬nois provides no minimum wagelaw for its intrastate workers, likethose at the hospital.Since the value which the mar¬ket assigns to an individual is and women, it is quite clear thatmuch money would be saved.Since men and women have basi¬cally the same needs, this propo¬sition should be self-evident.Second, because students wouldno doubt be clamoring for en¬trance the volume of residentswould rise and the cost/stu dentcould be lowered considerably, the least untoward. And if oneThis, too, seems quite clear. Third, considers our (avowed) need ofand the unwillingnessand/or inability of the administra¬tion to do anything about it, itseems to me the only answer tothe problem. Again let me assertT ^ j-,- * ,, , that the economies produced byS.lTg„r,f: this system would preclude thenecessity of a raise in tuition.Winslow Warlockresidents, food and services couldbe purchased at larger quantities,thereby providing greater savingson these costs.McPhee assumes postRoderick F. McPhee, assistantto the Dean and secretary of thecommittee on appointments, willassume a new post on January 1,1960. He will be special assistantto the committee for the advance¬ment of administration, affiliatedwith the American Association ofSchool Administrators in Wash¬ington, D. C.Announcing a comprehensivePostgraduate Education Program forengineers, scientists and mathematiciansEver since the founding of the company some forty years ago, IBM has recognized educa¬tion as an integral and continuing part of a professional person’s life.Through formal educational programs within the company, and through affiliations withuniversities, it has long been possible for IBM employees to earn scholastic credits.Now a comprehensive Postgraduate Education Program, surpassing any previous programs,has been initiated at IBM for plant and laboratory personnel.ADVANCED DEGREE UNIVERSITY PLAN A qualified engineer, sci¬entist or mathematician, who has been with IBM at least a year,may compete for a fellowship or a scholarship in selected fieldsat the university which he believes offers the finest opportunitiesfor advanced study. All benefits that would normally accrue if thecandidate were on active employment will be retained.• Doctoral Fellowships: Selected candidates will receive full tuition,fees and regular salaries for full-time study up to three years.• Masters’ Scholarships: Selected candidates will receive full tuition,fees and regular salaries for an academic year of full-time study.ADVANCED DEGREE ON-SITE PLAN A qualified engineer, scientist,or mathematician will have the opportunity to undertake part-time graduate studies at an IBM plant or laboratory, concurrentwith active employment.• Masters’ Degrees: Candidates will be' able to complete theirstudies at company expense under programs operated in conjunc¬tion with universities near IBM facilities.ADVANCED STUDY PUN (NONDEGREE) These studies offer con¬tinued educational opportunity throughout a career at IBM. Theyare not generally degree-oriented. Given at or near IBM facilities,they are designed to help retain mastery over basic engineering,science, and mathematical subjects and to gain knowledge inadvanced fields such as number theory, finite mathematics, mag¬netism, solid state physics, and network analyses.For a descriptive folder about the new IBMPostgraduate Education Program, write to:MANAGER OF ENGINEERING EDUCATION,DEPT. 843, IBM CORPORATION,590 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK 22, N. Y. IBMINTERNATIONAL BUSINESSMACHINES CORPORATIONNov. 20, 1959 » CHICAGO MAROON • 7■Darwin hiis the boardsfl Centennial calendarDARWIN CENTENNIAL CELEBRATIONCalendar of Coming EventsTuesday, November 241:39 pmMandel hallISSUES IN EVOLUTION — “INTRO¬DUCTION.” Sol Tax will discuss "Theimpact of Darwin’s ideas on all as¬pects of man and his universe...”2:09 pmMandel hallISSUES IN EVOLUTION — I: "THEORIGIN OP LIFE.” Chairmen: Har¬low Shapley and Hans Gaffron. Dis¬cussion of the molecular basis ofevolution; the implications that lifeIs of widespread occurrence in theUniverse.C:00 pmHutchinson Commons and Coffee ShopCENTENNIAL DINNER. Presiding:Chauncey D. Harris, Dean, Divisionof Social Sciences.9:30 pmMandel hallWELCOME. Lawrence A. Kimpton,Chancellor, “THE DARWIN CENTEN¬NIAL CELEBRATION.” Sol Tax. ’ DAR¬WIN THE TRAVELER,” Sir CharlesGalton Darwin: an Illustrated lectureon his grandfathers' adventures. SION.” Sol Tax.1:30 pmJudd hall 126INSTITUTE FOR HIGH SCHOOL BI¬OLOGY TEACHERS. Lecture andfilm. EVOLUTIONARY ASPECTS OPSOCIAL COMMUNICATION IN ANI¬MALS. THE PLACE OP EVOLUTIONIN THE CURRICULUM. Sir JulianHuxley.1:30 pmMandel hallINSTITUTE ON SCIENCE AND THE¬OLOGY. Lecture. "Creation and Evo¬lution in present-day Roman Catho¬lic thought,” the Reverend J. Frank¬lin Ewing, Fordham university.“Creation and Causality in the his¬tory of Christian thought,” JaroslavPellkan, Federated Theological fac¬ulty. Panel discussion “Warfare ofScience with Theology." Chairman,Jerald C. Brauer, Federated Theologi¬cal Faculty.8:30 pmMandel hall•TIME WILL TELL” “I was born my friends in Shrewsbury town by the banks of the Severn River. My fatherwas a medical man who could doctor your stomach or liver. I sat for a portrait in a velvetsuit. It was said that I looked quite Nobby. What I liked best was beetles and worms, forcollecting ’em was my hobby.“At the age of eight, I went to school where for all of the live-long matin, ProfessorSamuel Butler held forth of the virtues of classical Latin. His whole presentation was ex¬tremely dull to a youth who wasThursday, November 26Wednesday, November 259:45 amMandel hallISSUES IN EVOLUTION—II: “THEEVOLUTION OF LIFE.” Chairman:Sir Julian Huxley and Alfred E. Emer¬son: The forms and processes of life;the validity of evolutionary progress.2:45 pmMandel hall“THE LADDER OF LIFE.” Advanceshowing of a film on "evolution in ac¬tion” prepared by CBS for broadcaston Conquest, November 29.3:30 pmMandell hallIllustrated lecture, “The ORIGIN OFTHE GENUS HOMO,” L. S. B. Leakey.Mr. Leakey, physical anthropologistof the Coryndon Memorial museum,Nairobi, Kenya, recently announceddiscoiery of a fossil skull linking theSouth African man-ape’s develop¬ment to full-fledged man.12:30 amMandel hallISSUES IN EVOLUTION—“CONCLU- 9:45 amMandel hallISSUES IN EVOLUTION—“MAN ASAN ORGANISM.” Chairmen: GeorgeGaylord Simpson and F. Clark How¬ell. Discussion of the operation ofnatural selection on man; the bio¬logical changes that have occurredwithin mankind within the past hun¬dred years.3:00 pmRockefeller Memorial ChapelDARWIN CENTENNIAL CONVOCA¬TION. Presiding, Lawrence A. Kimp¬ton. Chancellor. Convocation Address:“THE EVOLUTIONARY VISION,” SirJulian Huxley. Awarding of honorarydegrees, followed by official delegatesgreeting the recipients of honorarydegree in Ida Noyes hall.6:00 pmHutchinson CommonsTHANKSGIVING DINNER. Presiding:Edgar A. Anderson, President, Societyfor the study of Evolution.8:30 pmMandel hall"TIME WILL TELL.” An originalmusical play written for the Celebra¬tion by Robert A. Ashenhurst andRobert Poliak. Opening performance:all seats $3.00. not ambitious; and he called medown for spending my time inobserving the birds and fishes.“When my father saw me wast¬ing my time, he remarked “youhave not got far son. But there’sa chance that you could succeedin the role of a countrified par¬son.” So meekly I toddled off toCambridge town to obtain therequired degree sir, but a tastefor poi't and hunting the fox cameto mean rather more to me sir.Betting on a race, whether win,show, or place, came to meanrather more to me sir.”Thus does “TIME WILLTELL,* a musical written byRobert A. Ashenhurst and RobertPoliak for the Celebration, de¬scribe the early Darwin.“And this year, November 23rdthrough the 28th, scientists rang¬ing from astronomers to zoolog¬ists will meet at UC to honor Dar¬win and discuss the effect ofDarwin’s ideas on today’s sci¬ences,” said Professor Sol Tax,chairman of the centennial com¬mittee. Harold Haydon's conception of the set ofversion of the life of Charles Darwin. 'Time Will Tell" musicalSir Charles will participate in and also commented on all otherPrnfpccnr Tax describes the lhe Panel discussion and also manuscripts with his notes beingrroiess r ‘ deliver an illustrated lecture on circulated to the other members.“THE WORM TURNS’*Shakespeare said it this way:“The smallest worm willturn, being trodden on.’*But Miguel de Cervantesbeat him to it in "DonQuixote", Part II, Book 3:“fven a worm when trodupon, will turn again."“MUSIC HAS CHARMS’*The 17th Century playwright, William Congreve,was the first to set down this classic metaphorconcerning the powers of sound and rhythm.You’ll find the whole quote in "The MourningBride", Act I, Sc. 1:"Music hath charms to soothe the savage breast,To soften rocks, or bend a knotted oak.""RHYME OR REASON”Edmund Spenser, 16th Century poet, expected apension. He didn’t get it. So he wrote this rhyme:"1 was promised on a time/To hove reasonfor my rhyme;/From that time unto this season,// received nor rhyme nor reason."Jockey UnderwearOf all the kinds of underwear, only Jockey brand is espe¬cially tailored to feel better because it fits better. Thissuperior comfort is assured by exclusive construction fea¬tures that no other underwear has duplicated. Tb enjoyreal comfort, insist on Jockey brief—the world's first andfinest. Look for Jockey at your campus store. Darwin Centennial Celebration as , . „ ,,-it • *1, i • . —, f his grandfather s round-the-w’oild The Danels are scheduled for“a milestone in the history of . . * .. - . nn PaTs_ are. ~ncaT. Ior.evolution.”“It will be the most eomprehensive and intensive examination trip on the Beagle, on Tuesday, 1:45 pm. Tuesday Nov. 24. andNov. 24, in Mandel Hall, at 8:30. 9-30 am. Wednesday, through Sat-The observations Darwin made urday, Nov. 24, through 28.The five panels are entitled 1;t all aspects of man and his tion of ‘The Origin of the -Spe- “The origin of life”; II: “The evo-liverse ever held at one time ^ies, on November 24, 1859. This lution of life;” III; ‘‘Man as aof the impact of Darwin’s ideas on that trip ^ to the pubHca-onunivc — — , ,and place,” Tax said. hook was tbe hrst to cons,der biological organism;” IV’; “TheThe program revolves around life as an evolutionary Process, origin and nature of man”; andthe unrehearsed three hour panel of the 50 panel participants V; Social and cultural evolution.”sessions. 50 invited authorities have prepared background paperswill conduct on each of the five on evolution in their special fields. - »nLndays on “Issues in Evolution.” A These have been circulated among comp re-TOKegrandson of Charles Darwin will ab the panelists. When the author- regulationsattend. He is Sir Charles Darwin, hies assemble at the panel discus- ohnnoe* of nnvof the National sions, all talk will be spontaneous me cnanhe5 01 an> giaa*rv in Great Bri- and no papers read. The papers record should rest entirelyand the 15 hours of discussions upon the results of a singlelater will be incorporated into examination covering thea set of three volumes called "Evo- work in question,” headed an in-lution after Darwin: The Univer- struction memorandum sent tosity of Chicago Centennial.” The the heads of all College staffs lastgeneral editor is Sol Tax, pro- week, according to Knox Hill,fessor of anthropology at UC. University examiner.Sir Julian Huxley, a grandson A grade of record may be citherof Thomas Huxley, the scientist a quarterly grade given as a finalwho was a contemporary of Dar- grade, or a comprehensive grade,win, will participate in the Cen- based on either a single examina-tennial. He has submitted a paper ,ion or a cumulative average ofmore than one quarter s work ina given course.former directorPhysical laboratorytain.EUROPEWe’ll see the visual plus Russia,Scandinavia. Yugoslavia and N.Africa.'A different trip—for thosewho don’t want to be herdedaround. Also shorter trips.Budget priced.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia, Box C4Pasadena, CaliforniaVTTVTTVTVVT yTTV VTVTTTTTTTTTTTT WWWW WWW W TTTTVWTTITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghettiraviolimostaccioli sandwiches:beef,sausage & meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st. “Any staff may propose an ex¬ception to this rule, if it can justi¬fy that exception and guaranteeto be able to administer it," theinstructions concluded.MODEL CAMERAWholesaleCatalogue Prices onComeras, Projectors, Recorders1342 E. 55th HY 3 925910% Discount to UC Students and PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW NET PRICES8-LBS WASHED & FLUFF DRIED ... 5910-LDS. FLAT WORK T"DR-SS SHIRTS >• 22Quality Dry Cleaning, rapid service, reasonable pricesFree Pick-up and Delivery (Min. of $1.76)Phone PLaza 2-9007UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1024 E. 55th St.Plan centennial panels“I am very fully conscious that the views I have expressed run entirely counter to manyof the optimistic hopes of the present age. I myself see no prospect of escape from the re¬turn to hard conditions of life, and much of my motive in setting my views down is thehope that they may be contradicted by others who have a deeper knowledge than I canclaim of the laws of nature,” said Sir Charles Darwin, grandson of the author of the Theoryof Evolution. This quote comes from “Can Man Control His Number?” a paper written bySir Charles for the Darwin Cen- - —— 1tonnial Celehration. ft is one of Ity. appears with the COmp]etion Panel III, “Man as an organ-the 44 papers *hich have eijcu- of the pattern in the manner ism » win attempt to define man’slated among the 50 authorities of a watch whieh can keep tjme structural and historical place inwho will parttcipate inpanel1 ses- on]y after it bas been assemb]ed nature It wiU point out what bio.sions on t e P and the last screw put into the logical changes have occurredDarwins 'The Origin of the Spc- proper p!ace within mankind during the pastc'es-_ _ , would certainly be a tri- hundred vears. For man is theThe Darwin Centennial Cele- umph of science if it could be latest successful or dominantbration revolves around five «"* demonstrated convincingly that type of life. And his dominancerehearsed panel sess onR ^ c 1 life must have arisen by a process began in the culmination of thewill discuss the processes o e\o- which could hardly occur in the observable trend toward biologi-luiion aft('r aivvin. lifetime of any one of the planets cal progress, which is one com-Over the past wo }eais, or y which accompany billions of stars ponent of the evolutionary proc-sbientists have prepared and ex- jn millions of galaxies. ess. Man represents the highestchanged amongst themselves “Such a future finding,” said level of physical and mental or-forty papers on aspects of evolu- Mr. Gaffron, “seems, however, ganization within nature,tion in their special fields, which unlikely; for history has shown His mental powers and poten-infrUnneomv z0ro0evy’ a^eologv that wrth incrpasing knowlpdge tials a^e dfseuS in Pan^ IV,’TTta StoHrl our position in the universe is •'The origin and nature of mind.'1these ratters trace the fartherand farther away Panel IV must consider whethergroup, these- papers tiate the from any imaglned center of im- the processes'of the mind likegrowth of evolutionary knowl- nortanee piotesses oi-ine minu. iiKethe nact hnniirpH vp«r<! poi lance. .. . processes of digestion and ofedge over the past hundred years In pondenng the wonder of growth are a function of theand forecast research and thought life we mav b ] d . hv K»owin. ai.. a iuncnon oi me• iu. fallow ’ mdy e lca astra" °y body. And whether, as man sin the century to folio . some preconceived notion we al- knowledge and culture growsThe panel discussions are based rPadv hold for insfanrr that all Knovv iet,£e ana culture growsupon durations raised In these have‘"orlgS^from Sn1e”ofP human 0^rrSea", ”ne single oca Is it TpZg i e. natural select”n based*^ ‘, _. . . really necessary for the solution uDon uhvsical anneal can vetThe first panel discussion, “The of our n,obl«>m to find out how P° ,p / , ah?eai’ ■ei~ T:fo» rai«o« ciirii ono«; our P,ODRrn 10 Ilna out how operate towards the further 1m-Ongin of Life, iaises suc h ques tb,s part1Cular cell reached its provement of the human speciestions as “Can we proceed under Dlaoe of eminence in the historv proxemem 01 xne numan species,the assumption that life is a proe- of life? j don-t Relieve so The >Jan can produce a raoe ofess which escapes our complete ,obIem is ,# „plaln not the pluses it he will only put as.deunderstanding only for reasons of appearance of one narticular oklfash,oned ldeas humanits complexity?” Once this is pKrd?a7 cell but raThe^ the b,wdln*’ <‘ontends geneticistagreed upon “there is no reason ^lons Storing the emer H Mu,,er’ Dlstinguish«d Serv-to doubt that wre shall rediscover, gence cf an entire class of prim-one by one, the physical and ordja]chemical conditions whieh once * . . . . ,determined and directed the ,The ?u<*t,on ** how any kindcourse of evolution,” says Hans of complexity can arise which has ^ & _Gaffron, professor biochemistry **,e eharactenstics that we attrib- ness says Muller. He needs “anice professor of Zoology at Indi¬ana University, in bis DarwinCentennial paper.In reproduction, man must de¬velop a greater social conscious-at UC, and co-chairman of thispanel.Once Charles Darwin had con¬cluded that all life owed some¬thing to a primitive past, thenlife at one time, must have re nte to, or recognize, in living increasing recognition that thecells saul Gaffron, “after all, chief objective in bringing chilw hat we want is dnly to recreate dren jnto the world is not thea simple living cell. glorification of the parents or an-Panel II, “The Evolution of cestor . . . but the well-being ofLife,” co-ehaiimened by Sir Jul- the children themselves and,voived around a relatively few, ian Huxley and Alfred E Emer- through them the next genera-cxceedingly primitive types. And son, will consider the problem ofeach living thing evolved from lifes origin from non-living sys-some less complex ancestor and terns and of those intermediateshowed modifications that en- stages between living and non-alded it better to meet the stress living Panel II must concern itselfOf its environment. with long term trends in evolu-Modern science, carrying this tion. VVhether general principlesthought even farther hack, now applying to the course of evolu-bolieves that there must have tion at 11 levels can be definedbeen first primitive living cells and whether a concept of continu¬er groups of cells. And if nature °us evolutionary progress is validcould make these first cells, the are questions to be considered byscientists conclude, so can man. this panel. tion.“When people come to realizeTAhSAM-Y&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANT“What exists,” says Gaffron,' is only the scientists’ wish notto admit a discontinuity in natureand not to assume a creative actforever beyond comprehension.“To the scientists it Is at leastconceivable that ‘the living qual-Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRISTEyes examined Glosses fitted1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352 Retirement InsuranceAnnuitiesConnecticut Mutuol LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986 Specializing inC.WTOVESE AM)AMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018Bicycles, Ports, Accessoriesspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 «. 55th it. <<<<<<i***^*AA*4A*tAAAAAAXAaXA. DOCUMENTARY FILM CROUPPresentsPeter Lorre In Fritzlong's "M""The film's true center is the murderer himself. PeterLorre portrays him incomparably as a somewhat infantile,petty bourgeois who eats apples on the street and cculdn tpossibly be suspected of killing a fly."Admission50c Fri., Nov. 20Soc Sci 1227:15 b 9:15 PMLast Sale This Year! Two Weeks OnlyAll New Books 98c to 7.98v.Art books ^values to 20.00), Americana, biography, travel,medical and technical books — never before offered at theseprices.Quantities limited, so hurry while they last!UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. ELLIS that in some measure their giftsas well as their failings and dif¬ficulties — physical, intellectual,and temperamental—have gene¬tic basis ... a big step forwardwill have been taken in the mo¬tivation of human reproduction,”says Muller.The mores of society, he claims,do not yet recognize the respon¬sibility of the individual in hisreproductive functions to hissociety.“So long as illegitimacy isavoided, the individual is not con¬cerned to be under any genetic obligation but deems it his rightto have as many or as few chil¬dren as he personally wishes,*declared Muller. “This being theease, his choice in the matter islargely determined by irrationalfactors and shortsighted aims.*Doom, not glory, awaits man IIhe continues to pollute his vali*>able-genetic material with heredi¬tary defects, predicts Muller.Eventually man may become soburdened by these defects thathe will be ineffective biologicallyand will go the way of the din»saur and sabertooth tiger.Why are so many collegemen switching to pipes?Campu*Yacht 44.95SEND YOUR ANSWER IN 2S WORDS OR LESSWIN 4 YEAR WARDROBE261 PRIZES IN All1st Rflza—A famous Botany “SOO" wardrobeevery year for 4 years (2 Suits, 2 Sport Jack¬ets, 2 Pair of Slacks, and 1 Topcoat.)Next 5 prizes—Ultra-praelelOR Imported SonyTransistor Radio/Next S prizes — World-famous pocket sizeMinolta ''16” CameraHext 2S0 prizes—Kay wood le Campus PipePick up an official entry blank at your regu¬lar tobacco counter, or write KaywoosicPipes, Inc., New York 22, for one,.HINTS TO WIM> Why men smoke pJp«»-There’s a rich, fulfilling, "all's well" feelingthat a man gets only from a pipe. A relaxed,calms-you-down contentment that's associ¬ated exclusively with pipe smoking. And you‘ " PW" * —get all the pleasure of smoking withoutinhaling,Why pipe smoker*choose K AY WOODIgIfaywoodte Briar Is Imported, agedselected, hand crafted, hamtubbed, tested, Inspected, amonly then does It earn the coveteiKaywoodre Cloverleaf. That’s whKaywoodie hefts airily light; alwaysmokes cool and sweet. The excltllive Drinkless Fitment inside th<pipe condenses tars, moisture amIrritants as nothing else can. Tr» Kaywoodie. One puff is wortl1,000 words.CHOOSE YOUR KAYWOODIEaccents the male lookNov. 20, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9weaK,j4p #* 'NO FLATFILTERED-OUTv FLAVOR!I|f NO DRYTSMOKED-OUTTASTE!Friday, 20 NovemberMatins with sermon according to theLutheran use, 11:30 am, Bond chapel.|an club meeting, 2 pm, Ida Noyeslibrary.Political science department open hourseminar. 3:30 pm. Social Science 302'“Research in „ municipal politics.-’James Wilson.Motion picture series: “The Germanfilm,” 7:15 and 9:15 pm, Social Sci¬ence 122. “M.”Hillel foundation Sabbath services. 7:45pm, Hillel house, 5715 Woodlawn ave¬nue.Division of the humanities and LiterarySociety of Chicago lecture, S pm.Swift common room. “Das Faustprob-lem bel Thomas Mann.” H. H Boi-cherdt, professor, University ofMunich.Folklore society wing-ding. 8:30 pmReynolds club lounge. Members, free,non-members, 25 cents.8tarlight dance, 9 pm. Internationalhouse assembly, hall. Semlformal.Saturday, 21 NovemberRecorder society meeting, 1 pm IdaNoyes hall. The first part of the. Disciplesmeeting will be devoted to Instruc¬tion. A recital scheduled for Decem¬ber 3 will be planned. .WUCB-Radio Midway, 2 pm. Mitchell-tower studios. ■. Regular general startion meeting.Lecture. 6 pm, Judson dining hall. MissEllen Rask. authoress and lecturer.Will be the guest of Chamberlin house See special Darwin Centennial calendar on page 8Sunday, 22 NovemberRadio broadcast:“Faith of our fathers.”8:30 am, WGN. The Reverend J. Ed¬ward Dirks, the Divinity school, Yaleuniversity.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30. 10, and. II am, De Sales house, 5735 Univer¬sity avenue.Episcopal communion service, 9:30 am,Bond chapel.Lutheran communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel. , «, . ■ «University religious service. 11 am. Tuesday, Z4 November3rd Unitarian church. Coffee will beserved. .Radio broadcast: “The sacred note,"8:15 pm, WBBM. Program of choralmusic by the UC choir. Richard Vlk-strom. director, Heinrich Fleischer,organist.Monday, 23 NovemberMotion picture: “Teahouse of theAugust moon,” 7 and 9 pm, Interna¬tional house. Hiilel foundation. 7:30 pm. Hillel house.5715 Woodlawn avenue. Folk dancingled by David Moses.Country dancers. 8 pm. Ida Noyee hall.All dances* taught.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel. James R. Lawson, chapelcarillonneur.Episcopal evensong, 5 05 pm. Bondchapel.W9YWQ meeting. 7 pm, Reynolds clubthird floor. Meeting of UC amateurradio club, code practice. Thursday, 26 NovemberThanksgiving day —a University^holiday. ■ •Episcopal holy communion, uBodd chapel. «* .am.-Community Thanksgiving day “JII am. Rockefeller chapel. “The ciVi •'of gratitude.” the Reverend E-Suer.. Hyde Parkchoi r w- SaiiajteRockefeller chapel. The ReverendKyle Haseldon, minister, the Baptisttemple. Charleston, West Virginia.Russian circle. 4 pm, Ida Noyes thirdfloor. Scenes from Dostoevski's “Crimeand Punishment” in Russian with anintroductory lecture and synopsis inEnglish. Donation: $1.Calvert club. 4:30 pm, De Sales house.5735 University avenue. “Report onthe Seventh World Youth festival,” cer Parsonschurch.Episcopal church counciltice, 8 pm, Brent house.The Eucharist according to the Lutheran use, 11:30 am, Bond chapel.Panel discussion: “Issues In evolution,”1:45 pm, Mandel hall. "The origin oflife.”lnsitute for the study of metals collo¬quium, 4:15 pm. Research institutes211. “The lattice spacings of close-packed alloys based on noble metals,”T. B. Masalski, Mellon institute.Giese and Brian Buckley, studio. Sketch class, live models. Stu-VincentEsqCarillon concert. 4.30 pm. Rockefellerchapel. James R. Lawson, chapel carll-lonneur.student fellowship dinner Show starts Nov. 26Time Will Tell, an original musical comedy traefnfCharles Darwin’s “evolution,” will be presented NovemfftLexington studio. 7:30 pm, Lexington 26, 27, and 28, at 8:30 pm, in Mandel hall, 57th street-'ar^f?ctllHU «lrnfoh cIqcc Me,* mn/tale Qtn . 9 . r. 7 . _ 9 a 1 U<dents please bring owndZinTmatSl University'avenue, in conjunction with the University of Chi-1rials, instruction will be given. Dona¬tion 25 cents.Intervarsity Christian fellowship, 7:30pm. Ida Noyes library. Non-denoml-national bible study in the book ofActs, followed by an informal coffeehour.Glee club rehearsal, 8 pm. Ida Noyeshall. All singers welcomeand program. 6 pm, University Churchof Disciples of Christ. 57th street andUniversity avenue. “Should a Catho¬lic be President?” Virgil Kraft, asso¬ciate minister, Chicago Peoples’church. Television series: "All things consld- nnc(, „nri RnUo,,i PnllaU- invnetBridge club meeting, 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes ered.” 9:30 pm. WTTW (channel 11). rtnu rvout 11 1 ouuk, invcsi-hall. Duplicate bridge will be played. “Policing television.”for dinner and a discussion immedlv Musical society meeting, 7:30 pm Ida aa/ i j •> r u iateiy following. •/ ?[oy£sL haIi- A1 lhos» *J' Wednesday, November^ Divinity school religious service, 11.30am. Bond chapel.University symphony orchestra rehear¬sal. 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes theater. cago’s Darwin Centennial Celebration.. ' -SSLThe three-act musical, with a cast of 4o and a chorus of$$|jwas written especially for the ——centennial celebration by Robert as Emma Wedgewood Diu9ra|Ashenhurst. assistant professor and Win Stracke, folk-singei puMin the Graduate School of busi- guitarist of TV and radio,bosun on “The Beagle.”Ted Liss is directing the sho|pPOuting club meeting. 7 pm Ida Moveshall. - 'Intrafraternity ball. 9 pm. Del Pradohotel. - ■ V*"/,:'-* ciiamber music are cordially Invited.Channing-Murra.v club meeting, 7:30p, pm. 5638 Woodlawn avenue. “Current• concepts of humanism.” Dr. Buckrer, ment broker and former dramacritic for the Chicago Sun-Times.Playing lead roles in Time WillTell will be Rick Riccardo asCharles Darwin; Jo Anne SchlagNevertoo strong.You can light either end!HERE'S WHY SMOKESee how Pall Mall’s famous length of fine, rich¬tasting tobacco travels and gentles the smoke—makes it mild—but does not filterthat satisfying flavor?TRAVELED* THROUGH FINE TOBACCO TASTES BESTOutstanding...and they are Mild! You get Pall Mall’s /■famous length of thefinest tobaccosmoney can buy. Pall Mali’s famouslength travels andgentles the smokenaturally... Travels it over, under,around and through %Pall Mali’s fine tobaccos...and makes it mild!Skt.Cft Product of (J& J&nsMC&n Jv&o&x—3v&uaeo- is our middle name Mrs. Marion Carnovsky is pr<|ducor. Roland Bailey is direefojof the chorus.The Thursday night (Than^f;giving Day) performance.,.is^^gserved for the distinguished scicn;'•.■'jf-tists attending the celebration.(including Sir Charles Darwiff-'iMgrandson of the play’s leadchaff-:Mactor, and Sir Julian Huxl}^- %4lgrandson of the famousHuxley who defended the original.Darwin’s theories). Awill be available that night at t1i&4box office at $3.Seats for the Friday and Satur| ■day night performances willjH4$3. $2, and SI. For mail orfemake checks payable to the;flap;win Centennial Celebration *a1id!send to the Mandel Hall Box^Qlf*fice, 5706 S. University, Chicago’37. Tickets will also be sold at|tlje;-.box office daily for two weeks'ffi’v:fore the show. i-rWumaErrataFast week’s science series sirHole was by William CaspartyfIt was incorrectly by-lined Kolf:ert March. JgffeIn last week’s article on‘*tli|!sfrike at the Home for the Incurahles, it was erroneously?;stated that with the new wor‘week, the “majority of workV*will not get over $1.00 an hptir|ft should read, “The majorityof workers will now get $1.00an hour.” ... . fX*We believe that to be'helpful we must be bofhpsincere and ready to servem]May we be helpful'""'to**'you? Our business is" rrfoffing and storage.;**iv*p.*v .... .,r ■//?PETERSON MOVING: AND STORAGE CO;1011 E. 55th St./" BU 8-6711Rave a WORLD of film60 o*pSPtHO LESS ■WfiTravel with fITA.Unbelievable low CostEurope, fr#m $675Orientf43-65fr«m $99$Many four* Includecollege credit,;AUo low totl trip, to Mexico$169 up. South America $699 up,Hawoii Study Tow $598 up andAround the World $1198 up.27th fW Atk Your Trovel hg«Ms B WMk ™u *"■WORLD TRAVEL Chitofe 4. HA 7-HiT10 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20, 1959—Wiggens speaks on press' power"THE POWER AND RESPON¬SIBILITY OF THE PRESS” ....An Address by J. R. Wiggins,Executive EditorThe Washington PostDelivered at ttie QuadrangleClub, University of Chicago, inconnection with the Law SchoolDedicatory Conference, Novem¬ber 18, 1959.That we are met here at the lawschool to discuss the distributionof power and responsibility in oursociety, says something about thebreadth of the study of law as itis here conceived.Surely this is a good andhealthy thing in an age when ourspecialization tends to becomenarrower and narrower.The trouble with such an exam¬ination of power and responsibil¬ity, of course, is that it is likelyto exhume all the old generaliza¬tions, to turn our attention to re¬statements of what goes withoutsaying.-I may as well say at the begin¬ning that this examination leadsme to the conclusion that some ofthe things about the power andresponsibility of the press that gowithout saying no longer are go¬ing. This is my own melancholyappraisal and I give you leave tobe as cheerful as you like.The primary responsibilitiesand functions of the press weknow:11) To tell what is happeningin the world and what people do,feel, say and think about.• 2) To supplement this func¬tion of the news columns witheditorials that shape opinion.These are the responsibilities ofwhich Thomas Jefferson wasthinking when he made that re¬mark declaring he would rather,if he had to choose, have a presswithout government than a gov¬ernment without press.These were the functions in themind of Rebecca West when inher book on “The Meaning ofTreason” she said:“It is the presentation of thefacts that matter, the facts thatput together are the face of theage: the rise in the price of coal,the new ballet, the woman founddead in a kimono on the golf links,tiie latest sermon of the Arch¬bishop of York, the marriage of aPrime Minister’s daughter. For if people do not have the face of theage set clear before them, theybegin to imagine it; and fantasy,if it is not disciplined by theintellect and kept in faith withreality by the instinct of art,dwells among the wishes andfears of childhood, and so seeslife either as simply answeringany prayer or as endlessly emit¬ting nightmare monsters from awomb-like cave.”Now the question is, do citizenshave the face of the age set clearbefore them?*I doubt it. It is not because thepress as a whole is deterioratingthat I doubt. It is rather becauset h e responsibilities it has as¬sumed have increased at so rapida rate.The American citizen's need toknow is greater than ever before;and the means of gratifying thatneed, much as they have im¬proved, have not everywhere kept.enSeiJ Wear Contact J'ebyDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372 J. R. Wiggins delivered hisspeech at the Law school Dedica¬tory conference.pace with this accelerated require¬ment.Do citizens today know as muchabout their state governments asformerly? I doubt it. There arcplenty of state capitols in theUnited States covered now, asthey were 100 years ago, by onereporter to a newspaper, andoften by a single reporter for awire service.The press, in its reporting of in¬ternational affairs, has scored itsmost enormous improvement. Weare so big that we are shaken byevents everywhere in the world.And our press has adapted to thisnew and enlarged interest withsome agility.Now, we must not let the im¬ pression run that newspapers canbe content with the reporting ofthe serious news of governmentand politics about which I havebeen talking.Other news — news of the sortthat Rebecca West was also talk¬ing about — makes laws that areinfinitely more numerous andequally influential on the conductof citizens — the laws of custom,covention and usage — themores of society.Society must maintain a climateof law and of opinion friendly tothe discharge of such responsibili¬ties, if the press is going to beable, by its own exertions, to ful¬fill its role. There must exist insociety, if this function is to becarried out: the right to get infor¬mation, and the right to distrib¬ute.The right of citizens to acquireinformation has suffered a se¬rious erosion, as a result of animpulse to governmental secrecyenormously increased by twoworld wars, by the tension of thecold war period, and by the di¬minishing faith of citizens in theprinciples of the Enlightenment.Where the security classifica¬tions could not by the fartheststretch of the imagination be ex¬tended to cover other cases ofwithholding, informal categorieshave been devised to justifysecrecy.Nor is only the federal govern¬ment involved. At state and citylevels, the infection of secrecy hasleft its mark, and citizens aretold that they have no right toknow about the transactions oftheir own government.Even the courts are not im¬mune. Notwithstanding genera¬tions of instruction in the dangerof closing judicial proceedings,more and more courtrooms inthis country now close their doors.Motives that have led to theseclosures are good. Still, a free people ought to view with horrorsecret arrest, secret trial andsecret punishment, phenomenawith which the citizens of everytotalitarian country have hadtheir sad and bloody experience.All these encroachments on theright to get information threatento change the nature of a self-governing society. The citizenwho is partially informed has noopinions of his own but only theopinions of those who select forhim the information he is to beallowed to have.The freedom to distribute is an¬other freedom that is in constantperil. All the other freedomsmean but little if they conferonly the right to print and storeprinted matter in a warehouse.Yet this right is repeatedly jeop¬ardized by labor disputes that sus¬pend distribution of newspapersfor weeks and months at a time.Moreover, the Post Office De¬partment, with scarcely a whisperof protest, repeatedly intervenesin the distribution of matterthrough the mails. Printed mat¬ter originating in Communistcountries is frequently intercept¬ed. Citizens certainly have theright to read printed material,however odious to government.The interventions against Lysis-trata and Lady Chatterly’s Loverand kindred publications areequally dubious, if we mean tohave here in this country the free¬dom to read what we choose. Clubs mustRegister by Dec. 1 'Any group wishing recogni¬tion as an official student or¬ganization and the use ofstudent organization facilitiesmust file their registration formsby December 1. These forms areavailable in the student activitiesoffice on the second floor of IdaNoyes. These applications willthen be considered by the Com¬mittee on Recognized Student Or¬ganizations (CORSCM.Only such registered groups areallowed use of University facili¬ties for meetings and events;after December 1 only groupswith .current recognition will havethese privileges.After this date a student groupwhich plans to use Universityfacilities must file a complete ap¬plication with Student activitiesoffice at least forty-eight hoursbefore the planned event.Any ten students may form astudent organization, providedthey have a faculty adviser.Official recognition for groupssubmitting application both be¬fore and after Decembep- 1 isgranted by the Assembly of Stu¬dent government. Recognition canonly be denied a group by a two-thirds vote.Herman Camera, Inc.• We specialize in service• We advise honestly• We corry all standard makes6 S. LaSalle St.DO 2-2300ACASA Book StoreX Cards X - Imported & Domestic - Foreign LanguageFeaturing one of the best 5c collections in the city.Also imported-Children's Books, Cards & Small Gifts.RELIABLE TYPEWRITER SERVICE1322 E. 55th HY 3-9651Captures yourpersonalityas well asyour personNow with ... CoronaStudio1314 E. 53rd St.MU 4-7424r foreign car hospital L clinicSA 1-3161dealers in:castrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli & michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespecialists in: speed tuning .custom engine installationsclutchgear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachworkMi letter MG psychiatrist7215 exchange ave.'Chicago 90,illinoisMaroons lose last game to Wheaton nilChicago’s determined soccer not until January 30, Kreidler be- are top contenders in the House were evenly matched on thesquad played what coach l^ves the team will need all the league. . , ground. ^ Tuesday’s firm! play-Alvar Hprmansnn termed “a practice time possible if they are A three-way tie in the Touch off game AKK beat CTS 6-0 toj M • f Wh^atnn to develop enough to compete on Football Divisional league delayed win the divisional league. ThecTi a dt,d equal terms with the rugged op- the championship play-offs a few win places AKK against Vincentlast Saturday on a snow-COV- ponen^s on this season’s schedule, days. However, Psi U confirmed “R” in thp semi-finals on Weiered field, but the luckless - . ’ ‘ its winnim? waMaroons dropped their final Fencing prospects dim B” in the semi-finals on Wednes-its winning ways and defeated day, Nov. 18. The winner of thisT opk"nf"nii,mhrr^Vand'"exneri- East ir> champions of the House game wil play Psi U on FridayTheChicaeoanriot'^he^lead^In enc? plus an abundance of "tab league 1M on a cold windy, to determine the all-UniversityIhe Chicagoans got the lead in ftnnnnpnts fare rainy field. The first half saw champion.fendng clal A.var Hermanson both teams unable to gain yard- Thirty-eight teams are ached-s.oiecl on a nass finm /.otan theB1&59 6Q season with four a8e as the field prohibited good uled to play in the double elimina-returnees forming the eight man footing. The second half was a t i o n pre - Christmas Basketball HUMID HUB DQQ0sams BHD HSEPQHHBEISHII nSSEpibbcio fibuieibbbdillQD HErffraaannnoagiL'jmane maa Ef 1EEIH OBBI1Bmfflffl HHibsodsob HBfflcaasEDB0BOGSscored on a pass from ZoranSibincic. but Wheaton came backwith single goals in the secondand third periods to win.The loss gave the Maroons afinal season’s mark of one win,one tie, and five losses. RomanWirsczcuk, Russ Zajtcuk, NemonTaylor, Wally K a s z u b a . BillHauser, Randy Denney, Wood,and Sibincic were cited by Her-manson as the mainstays of hissquad throughout the season.Overall, he felt the Maroons hada good season. Sickness, somevery close matches, and largerand more experienced opponentsplagued the team all year. The BOB"□GHB 0U3MSNV TQDHteam’s nucleus the Maroons face different story as Psi U forged tournament There are ten play- Hold Starlight- dance'ahead with 2 touchdowns and ing dates with the Field house . .with the win, moved into the and Bartlett gym as the sites, tonightfinals Qf the play-offs. This tournament is a tune-up for International house’s annualThe three-way tie in the Divi- teams who will enter regular Starlight dance will be held thissional league was made up of league play after the holidays, evening from 9 pm to 12:30 amChicago Theological Seminary, No pre-tournament favorites can at the International house assem-Alpha Kappa Kappa, and the be picked because of general mix- bly hall.Gene Kadish, Elliot Lillien. John Kingfishers. In the play-off AKK ture in the tournament of many A1 Peter’s orchestra will playWahl and Gary Crane comprise beat Kingfishers in an over- unknown first year and graduate at the dance, which will be semi-- - tima 'rh5rtv TYir'1’ winds ham- students participating for the formal. The dance will be eitherboth teams first time.a rugged rebuilding program be¬fore their first match with theUniversity of Detroit on Janu¬ary 8.The quartet of returnees in¬clude Ron Shelton, Ed Scheiner,Jim Milgram, and Bob Riopelle.the remainder of the team.Intramural newsThe College house section ofthe Intramural swimming meetwas won by Mead. Trailing Mead time. Thirty mphpered passing and dated or stag.Alum may be all AmericanMaroons are losing most of their were East IV and East II. In theregulars, but a large ciop of first fraternity section the tide has b d:m «oa<ivyear students will return for ac- turned a^ain For the last two . 7 y 7tion next year. years Psi u resigned as the intra- Former Chicago football great, Elmore C. Patterson, has been nominated by the Uni-Kuypers, Driessel lead mural swimimng champion of the versity for one of twenty-five positions on the Sports Illustrated Silver Anniversary All-gymnasts University. The two years pre- American roster for 1959; selections for the honor are being made this week by a board ofA pair of rapidly improving ceding their championship, ZBT judges consisting of General Douglas MacArthur, Herbert Brownell, Harold “Red” Grange,second year students, Joe Kuy- was the Fraternity swimming and over twenty others.pets and Ken Driessel are pacing champion. This year Psi_U lost Silver Anniversary awards are based on distinguished living during the 25 years since acanidate’s final year of collegefootball, and their essential ideais to exemplify the fact that“athletics and education arejoined in the pursuit of roundedhuman values.” Each of thisgymnastic coach Bob Kreidler's the championship to ZBT by ateam of underclassmen after the slim margin of 5 points. Thefirst two weeks of intensive work- swimming meet was a big successouts. Kunio Kato, Vic Mlotok, with more participants this yearJohn Nelson, and Jim Wilson are than in the past,from last season’s squad, while The Intramural wrestling pre-Joe Stevenson and Ed Manniko liminaries were held Monday with year’s 71 candidates were distin-bolster the first year student 43 entrants. The semifinals and guished 25 years ago as outstand-ranksf finals and consolations will be ing football players and leadersThough experience is scarce, held Thursday. Phi Delt is the on their campuses, but today theyKreidler notes definite progress, leading qualifier in the Frater- represent the successes whichWhile the Maroon’s first meet is nity section. East II and Vincent they have achieved since thattime in fields which include law,politics, medicine, religion, edu-tion, business, coaching, finance,and science.While a student at UC. ElmoreC. Patterson established himselfas one of the finest linemen inthe country during the three-yearperiod of 1932-34. He was cap¬tain of the team in ’34, and wasLiberty Magazine player’s poll. Inaddition to this he was selected□ □□ CnrLIU all the Free Press booksTHE GREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 East 57th HY 3-5829Chicago's most complete stockof quality paper backsKQDL KROSSWORD No. 8ACROSS1. Big laugh5. It’s very con¬stricting8. Berries inBronx?12. Repulsive typ«13. Fail withoutthe “F”14. Sundry assort¬ment15. Make it dill-yand it’s aSwedish17. Not a womanauthor18. Nut who soundsbuggy19. Odd-balls are21. Currentexpression23. Start hunting24. His heroinemade cigarettes(not Kools!)26. Doggy frosh29. Gew’s com¬panion30. Pitts’ fore¬runner31. Double-hull boat33. It’s either34. Pony-tailtemptation35. Menthol Magicmakes Koolstaste40. Describingbathrooms43. Feel seepy-’Have a littlesnoozy44. Unbalancedupper46. Subject ofMexican bullsession47. Heel’s alter ego48. Snicker49. Old card game;go away 50. It’s backwardin fraternity51. Watch overDOWN1. Atomic oraerosol2. Exclamatorymolding3. Small boys’club4. Festival5. Sheepishexpression6. Texas’ money7. “Come up,up toKools”8. LoUabrigidian9. He's in balance10. Monroe-likekiss feeling11. Area of defense16. Tell all20. Rutgers' routine22. Kool isAmerica’s mostrefreshing „25. “Iz so?”26. Snooty Londonstreet27. The 50 best28. Humor’s blacksheep30. Goofiest31. Not a pro'32. Numbers’racket35. Baby beds36. Kool, from thewrong end, 3ee37. Pound ofpoetry38. Shaw’sSt. Lawrence39. Cheer from thebottom up41. Not a bit odd42. Colored fatally?4b. Type of green 1 2 31215ft18 r 9 10 114rARE YOU KODLENOUGH TOKRACK THIS?35 36 37 38434649 with the University, and in 1953was awarded an Alumni associa¬tion citation. He is currently amember of the Board of Gover¬nors of Psi Upsilon.In the world of business andcharity he has served or is nowserving in a host of administra¬tive positions. He is vice presidentof J. P. Morgan Co., and directorof five different insurance companies: He was a trustee andchairman of the finance committee for the Carnegie Endowmentfor International Peace, and heldthe same positions includingtreasurer for the New York Tradeschool. He served as treasurerand on the board of managers ofthe Memorial Center for Cancerand Allied Diseases, was treasurer and a member of the boardof trustes of the Sloan-KetteringInstitute for Cancer Researeli.the most valuable player by his served as treasurer and directorteammataes, All Big Ten center, of the Normandy Realty cor¬and All American. He was a poration, and was a trustee ofmember of Psi Upsilon fraterni- the Harvey school and the North-ty, and Owl and Serpent. In 1935 ern Westchester hospital in Mt.he was elected president of his Kisco, New York.c^ass’ He resides in Mt. Kisco withHe has maintained strong ties his wife and five sons.Elmore C. Patterson, nom¬inated by UC for 1959 Sil¬ver Anniversary All Americaroster.30% OFF On QualityDRY CLEANINGAll work done by a regular Chicago Wholesaler whose plant serve*othur retail stores in addition to his own outlets. You get this servicebecause of our non-profit policy and low overhead.Trousers 50cJackets 50cSuits 95cTopcoats . . 1.00Overcoats 1.10 Shirts 50cDresses .95cSuits (2 piece) . . .95cLight Coat 95cHeavy Coat .... 1.10How! 20% off on AU LaundryUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERReynolds Club BasementHours: 11:30 - 1:30 — 3:30 - 5:30When \tour throat tellsyou its time -for a changeyou needa real change...YOU NEED THEof KODL" w>• 1»1». Urowm Jk Wmum .on Tobacco Cor*. t*The Laboratories ForApplied SciencesUniversity Of ChicagoIs seeking students or students' wives for part-time employment as clerk - typists. Excellentsalary.Contact Mr, Russell» 6220 DREXEL AVE.Please Phone First — BU 8-662512 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20, 1959SSST!emotional upsets whereuponthe student fears he may losecontrol of himself.Tell emergency room procedureStudents know that they may use the Emergency room at Billings for help with criticalhealth problems arising during times when Student Health service is closed. This arrange¬ment has been in effect for many years, most likely since the Clinics was opened in 1927.No fee has been charged registered students for this service; the Emergency room merelycollects from Student Health service. Because the charges for any emergency service —be it road service for cars health service for people, are justifiably high, and since it isnot the function of the emergency ——slaff to spend its time on minoiv Health service is closed and toor routine problems, all of us waR until regular Student Healthshould be concerned in the dis- service hours seem unwise.noet and proper use of this facil jf students are anxjous about PROCEDURE FOR CHECKINGity. symptoms, they should certainly arttsfsPlea for proper use seek help without delay. Acute, „ . , .. Emergency room reports onThe emergency room renders a anxiety m a young person away student| ha'e al Ven re.valuable service which should no from home can be a real emer- viewed b student Health service,be abused. The staff should not gency. Of course students should Henceforth this review may re-be asked to devote time and exercise some common sense and suJt jn the studont himself 'eienergy at odd hours for care of not take to the Emergency room cha d the Emergency roo£trivial or chronic conditions which conditions which are of such costs if it appears that the Emer¬ald just as well have been han- minor nature that they can await room been used for adied during regular day time opening of Student Health serv- non.emer . In suoh instanceshours by the Student Health serv- ice. The Student Health service students will be invited to compice physician. medical, nursing and technical t0 student Health service and de-Review of the reports on the slaff de™te ™ore time to fend their position—that is, whyEmergency room service to stu- study of health problems than can thpy should not be charged fordent shows that abuses are fre- any Emergency room staff and the sepming]y improper usequent on Saturday afternoons, can also draw on the specialty which th have £ad/ of thisStudents seem not to remember clinics and laboratories of Billings expensive service,that Student Health service closes whlch aie also °Pfn duri"g the In establishing this review pro-Saturday at noon and that it is sam? hours as Student Health cedure student Health servicebest to come into Student Health service. does not wish to set up a lot ofservice before 10 am. so that lab It is difficult to list all the red tape, but does intend to bringwork and examination can be symptoms or signs which should into operation a mechanism tocompleted by noon. The Emer- dictate immediate medical care, guard the resources of Studentgency room is under no obligation Patients themselves have some Health service for all studentsto do diagnostic work-ups and pre- responsibility for appropriate against costly improper usage byscribe for the non-emergencies health education regarding criti- a few.which straggle in. cal circumstances and for judgWhen the Emergency room ment as to when to use a corn-staff recognizes a situation as a munity resource, especially ifnon emergency, not much is done they themselves may have to payfor the person other than estab- the charges,lishing the fact that he does not Students who are suffering student Health service hourshave an “emergency.” The clini- from any of the following should ^ways entails an extra fee. Thiscal notes on these Emergency not hesitate to go to the Emer- 's commonly $5.00 and some ofroom reports usually say “Return gency room for immediate care colleges are considering rais-to Student Health service” which when Student Health service is *ng this *ee because it by no Check credentialsNAACP faces votingproblems in election“The 40 or 50 UC members of the National association forthe Advancement of Colored people, Chicago branch, mightmake an important difference in the result of this year’sNAACP presidential election,” commented Jack Sawyer,NAACP coordinating committee ———member., j Griffin, past president of North-Theodore Jones, incumbent side NAACP; and Ruth Porter,president, won by a narrow mar- PTA leader and chairman of thegin last year. In that election United Woodlawn conference aremany voters entered the hall with- among the committee’s leaders,out proper credentials, and voters’ Timllel E]ack ,h lcad Atickets were handed out prior to MMes Cartman, ex-chairman ofe mee tng rough unauthorized Tjle ),.gai ,-edress committee; andchannels, according to an elec- Carler j lormer chairman oItions committee report. Westside NAACP and presidentThe supervisory committee for of the Westside Businessman’sthe coming elections will be association, are also directing thechosen next Friday at 8 pm in the groups activities.Steel workers’ meeting hall, “We support the NAACP con-7745 »/2 Cottage Grove avenue. The stitution, Roberts’ Rules of Order,annual election will take place and observation of NAACP na-December 11 at Dunbar high tional policies,” noted Geraldschool, 29th street and South Park Bullock. Coordinating committeeavenue.^ representatives at UC are Sawyer,During his term, Jones abol- David Greenstone, and Nancyished NAACP neighborhood units, Ahearn.adjourned the membership meet-How emergencies are handledon other campusesOn most campuses, health serv¬ice to students beyond regular ing, packed the elected executiveboard, and ignored a protestsigned by a majority of the mem¬bers, according to the coordinat¬ing committee. -is what the student should have closed:done in the first place.If, however, a problem of realemergency nature comes >to theEmergency room, all appropriatesteps are taken — the staff sparesno detail in diagnostic, consulta¬tion and therapy. The director ofStudent Health service and thedean of students are frequentlycalled on critical problems so thatthey may aid in decision makingand notification of family.What is an emergency?Webster says an emergency is“an unforseen combination of cir¬cumstances which calls for imme¬diate action.” A health emergency,as far as students’ use of theEmergency room is concerned,should be limited to a conditionwhich,arises or one which be¬comes worse when Student ferent kind of pain in abdomen or chest.2. Excessive bleeding from anysource. means covers costs. Students at- „ . . , ... the University of Chicago have, . , . . , . , , the advantage of a medical cen-rni’cmr Lrinrl r\t no in i n o Kdnter and emergency room right onthe campus.In only two or three other uni¬versities is there such proximity.3. Excessive nausea and vomit- We hope that through wise useting or diarrhea. of this resources and the review-4. Temperatures of 102 degrees procedure to control abuses, itor more. will not be necessary to levy a5. Acute trauma, from falls, as- fee for a11 Emergency room care,sault and battery, lab acci- Henrietta Herbolsheimer, M.D.dents and etc. Director6. Acute anxiety, depression or Student Health serviceGL ADIS r e s t a1527 E. 55th rantDO 3-9788We Specialise in Well-Balanced Meals orPopular Prices, and Midnite SnacksOPEN ALL NIGHT — ORDERS TO GO Musical society meetingSundayThe second Musical societymeeting of, the quarter will beheld thj,s Sunday evening at 7:30The coordinating committee, jn the East Lounge of Ida Noyes,formed in August, 1958, hopes to according to Society presidentinject new life into the organiza- Lenore Coral. Following a recitaltion. Integrated housing and by some of the Society’s chamberschools, civil rights, fion-discrim- niusic ensembles, plans for a pub-inatory employment procedures, jjc concert, forming new ensem-and youth mobilization are its bles and encouraging membershipstated aims. will be discussed. Membership isGerald Bullock, NAACP re- open to all students interestedgional director; Faith Rich, for- in serious cha mber music,mer education chairman; Rev. T. whether instrumentalists or not.after every shaveSplash on Old Spice After Shave Lotion. Feel yourface wake up and live! So good for your skin.,.so good for your ego. Brisk as an ocean breeze,Old Spice makes you fed like a new man. Confident.Assured. Relaxed. You know you’re at your bestwhen you top off your shave with Old Spice! JOO AFTER SHAVE LOTIONby SHULTONplus to* mMMMduring the Thanksgiving holidaysselect your clothing and furnishingsAT OUR UNIVERSITY SHOPIn our New York, Boston, Chicago andWest Coast stores, an interesting selectionof good-looking suits, sportwear, eveningclothes and outerwear awaits your visit...made to our exacting specifications in sizes35 to 42...and all moderatody priced forsuch fine clothing.Suits, $60 to $70 • Sport Jackets, from $45Topcoats, jrom $75 • Outerwear, jrom $50ISTAIlliHIOItltHIN^Hens furnish in 90. j$als % f hoesU E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.NEW iOKK • CHICAGO • LOS ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCOmxr~ ►Nov. 20, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • ISi.UC laboratories hold open housePhotos by BergerStory by Eliot LandauEvery year, for the last fiveyears, the Basic Research insti¬tutes of UC have opened theirdoors in mid-November to aboutone thousand students and teach¬ers from the high schools in Illi¬nois, Indiana, Wisconsin, andMichigan. This year, on Novem¬ber I4th, UC gave its fifth annualScience Open House. The pro¬gram was pretty much the sameas last year’s since much of thework being done at the Institutesis long range work but still thereWi're many additions and changesin the program.At 1:15 pm. last Saturday, thisyear’s open house started in Man-del hall with Herbert L. Ander¬son, director of the Fermi insti¬tute. welcoming about 1,100 stu¬dents and teachers to UC. Thisyear’s guests contained a startlingexception however, for there weremany college students present certain things concerning cosmicrays.Prof. Simpson noted, “Physicsis working towards and obtaininghigher energy levels than beforein particle accelerators in variouslaboratories but we still can’t re¬produce most of nature’s accelera¬tions with astrophysical particles(cpsmic rays'." He explained howthe earth's magnetic field trapsmany subatomic particles be¬tween its force fields and causesthe formation of the Van Allenbelts of radiation which exist out¬side of the earth’s atmosphere. Hediagrammed the belts and showedhow the trapped protons, elec¬trons, and a few other types ofparticles, first get trapped in thefield and then how they moveback and forth from north tosouth in the belts and form theseareas of high intensity radiation.He pointed out that these areasare dangerous to man and wemust send rockets up to investi¬Visiting guests view the table and target gun of the 450million electron-volt synchocyclotron (particle accelerator)at the Accelerator building in the Research institute.from other midwestern institu¬tions; many more than in pre¬vious years. Dr. Anderson told thepersons present, “You have cometo see what work is being done inour institutes and to increase yourknowledge by seeing not onlywhat is being done but how andwhy it is being done. You will dothis by seeing the demonstrationsof our equipment and by talkingto the men who use it."Dr. Anderson then introducedJohn A. Simpson, a member of theUC team who work on cosmicrays and who helped design andmake the UC instrument whichwas a part of the payload of theExplorer VI satellite. The instru¬ment was designed to measureThe CeWetieLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 gate them so we will better knowhow to shield our space explorers.He also told the students aboutthe Explorer VI satellite and itspart in the program of research.It moved in and out of the VanAllen belts taking samples of theradiation at different levels andgathered quite a bit of knowledgeabout other things, especially sun-flares.Simpson restated a comment ofAnderson’s and added to it insaying: “Science is a field rich inits inheritances from years beforebut in view of the increasingamount of work being done westill need more scientists. We needmore applied as well as theoreticalscientists because without the for¬mer, we can’t do the work of thelatter; and without the latter,there is no need for the former asthere will be no problems to workon or people to realize them andset them up."After expressing “a nuclear sci¬entist’s desire to know more aboutthe lower energy levels of theHARPER LIQUOR STORE1114-16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported and domestic wines, liquorsand beer at lowest prices.free r A A —PHONE !■ ZL—1318DELIVERY ■ #■% "fl1 __ 7«99THREE PIZZAS FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree lr.C. DeliveryTerry9s1518 E. 63rd Ml 3 4045 energy spectrum,” Simpson fin¬ished his talk amid the thunderousapplause of the guests, relin¬quished the rostrum to Andersonwho then outlined the rest of theday’s program and wished thegtfests an “exciting, interesting,and educational experience."The group moved to the insti¬tutes themselves, to observe whatUC is doing in basic atomic re¬search, radio-biology, and metal¬lurgy. *The first stop for many peoplewas the cold temperature labora¬tory in the basement of Fermi.Once there they were given anidea of the queer behavior ofmany materials at temperaturesvery near to Absolute Zero. Theywere shown how super frozenlead can easily be shattered witha one inch bar of soft rubberwhich was at room temperatureand how that same piece of rub¬ber, previously elastic, when su¬percooled, was also easily shat¬tered by a piece of solder. Dr. Ro-mauld Szara, of the Cold TempLabs expjained the work beingdone in his laboratory. It includedexperiments in ion mobility attemperatures one-fifth of a degreeFahrenheit above absolute zero,investigations into the hydrody¬namics of liquid helium and ad¬sorption in the4 same medium. Healso told of work being done onelectrical conductivity in super¬cooled materials and the interest¬ing phenomenon of liquid hydro¬gen’s and liquid helium’s abilitiesat counteracting gravity.From there the group proceededto the 450 million electron voltsynchrocyclotron in the Accelera¬tor Building. Research AssistantRobert March explained to thisreporter how the synchrocyclo¬tron accelerates particles to fan¬tastic energy-levels. March statedthat they were trying to measurecertain effects of sub atomic par¬ticles and their scatterings whenthey decay or collide with otherparticles. He added that the bub¬ble chamber that the researcherswere using would help them tobetter see the reactions whichthey were investigating and thatthe scientists were trying to dis¬cover more about polarized prcrton scattering and as well as basicfacts about the family of smallparticles known as mesons andhow they break up, or decay, andact in mediums other than vac¬uums or ordinary air. He ex¬plained that the new particle ac¬celerator being built at Argonnelaboratory (the national researchlaboratory run for the AtomicEnergy Commission by UC) hadan energy level of 12,/2 billionelectron volts and that it was tobe used for greater precision workin high energy physics.There were many other ex¬hibits. Another one of the bestattended, if not also the mostseemingly complex, was the keva-tron laboratory exhibit. The kev-atron is a particle accelerator, likethe synchrocyclotron, but it is ofa much lower energy level thaneither the synchrocyclotron or theArgonne Betatron. Sr. Jesus Cue¬vas demonstrated how the keva-tron takes stripped lithium ionsand accelerates them with from75 to 500 thousand electron voltsof energy for the experimentsSee Russiain 1960Economy Student/ Teacher summertours, American conducted, from $495.■ Russia by Motorcoach. 17-daysfrom Warsaw or Helsinki. Visit ruraltowns plus major cities.■ Diamond Grand Tour. Russia,Poland, Czechoslovakia, Scandinavia,Western Europe highlights.■ Collegiate Circle. Black SeaCruise, Russia, Poland, Czechoslo¬vakia, Scandinavia, Benelux, W. Europe.■ Eastern Europe Adventure. Firsttime available. Bulgaria, Roumania,Russia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, West¬ern Europe scenic route.■ See your Travel Agent or writeMaupintour/400 Madison Ave., New York 17, N. Y. which ho and his colleagues areworking on. “At present,” hesaid, “we are interested in meas¬uring the saturation of the lithiumparticle beam in a vacuum and inhelium, propane, nitrogen, andhydrogen.“We measure the thickness ofthe beam, its density, and variousother things to determine the ra¬tio of interference with the beamin a gas to the same measure¬ments of the interference in an¬other gas or in a vacuum,” Cuevassaid. He pointed out that thishas many practical applicationswhich, like those in much of thework in the institute, are yet tobe found but that he already sawapplications, as have other scien¬tists, in the field of space travel.He stated that his work had bear¬ing upon the idea of using ionbeams as a means for inter-stellartravel.Some of the group then, went upto the lounge to relax, have re-to the lounge to relax; have re¬lounge was Argonne’s new’ lowpower reactor which was justbuilt at Argonne’s reactor testingstation in Idaho Falls, Idaho. Thedemonstrator. Gus Milak of Ar¬gonne laboratory, explained hisreasons for wanting to come tothe open house. “I consider it aprivilege,” he said, “to explain thereactor and other Argonne workto such a wonderful group of in¬quisitive young minds. 1 am reallyimpressed by the knowledge andcommon sense that the people vis¬iting here have exhibited in thequestions they have asked me andI certainly would like to be backhere in the future. It really is apleasure to see the interest thatthese sfudents and teachers havein science. I feel that the student'sinterest is indicative of the finescience educations which many ofthem are receiving and I hopethat it continues.”Among the exhibits mentionedby students as particularly im¬pressive were the synchrocyclo¬tron, the ColdTemp Labs, the kev-atron, the ultra-violet and radia¬tion cell division exhibit, compu¬ Professor J. A. Simpson,director of Fermi Instituteexplains Van Allen radiationbelts to 1,100 people atMandell hall.shapes needed for lab work in allof the institutes. Many were alsointerested in the fine shops thatwere available for making preci¬sion parts for various pieces ofequipment in the institutes, suchas the many spectrometers usedin the metals institute for t h eanalysis of various metals andtheir experimental sub-states.A group of boys from Evans¬ton Township High School saidthat they wished there were twoopen houses during the year be¬cause a lot of their fellow stu¬dents who wanted to attend wereunable to. Harry Price, of the UCpublic relations office, said: “Ihope that some day in the futurewe may be able to hold two openhouses but at present we are un¬able to do so. If the students wishto see more of the institutes, andspend more time asking questionsof the researchers, they shouldtalk their teachers into forming agroup for a tour. We will be gladto have them.”Many students also wished thatthey had had more time so thatthey could have seen more. Allof the teachers present felt thatit had been a great opportunityThis is the Icevatron which accelerates stripped lithiumions for gas density tests in Fermi Institute.ter banks, and the work beingdone on -computer miniaturiza¬tion. The girls seemed to be mostimpressed by the precision glassblowing exhibit where expertsblow glass into the odd and variedCheerful, newly decorated, attrac-tievly furnished apartment. Safe,fireproof deluxe elevator building.Doorman. Night watchman. Maidand linen service available. Rea¬sonable monthly rates from $87.50. for their students to see what wasgoing on in science today. Mr.Robert Anspaugh, of EvanstonTownship High School, and Dr.Robert Anderson, of WesternMichigan University, summed upthe science open house as follows:“We hope that UC continues itsfine work in the advancement ofscience and in modern scientificresearch and we were both trulygrateful for the opportunity tocome down here and see for our¬selves what we had only readabout previously.espressocopen daily till 1open weekends till 21369 East 57th Street14 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20, 1959Culture VultureON CAMPUS Sunday is St. Cecelia's day. Rejoice, all ye peoples. Be joyful, sing praises unto thepatron saint of music, balm of the world. Sound ye the trumpets, the sacquebuttes,the cornets, the harps and the dulcimers. Hark ye to their glorious sounds and givethanks for their joyous notes. Harken not unto the infidels, the players of rock androll, but turn from them your ears.Let the music of the true worshippers of sainted Cecelia sound o'er the earth. Re¬joice O ye people, and sing odes for our worshipful patron, St. Cecelia.TheatreAfter five tries in five perform¬ances, Pepel, the Unburied Rus¬sian is dead, and, we hope, safelyand comfortably interred. He willlive long in the hearts of the peo¬ple (an old Russian proverb); infact, he’ll be remembered fondlyuntil the next University Theatreproduction sometime next Janu¬ary. The UT Elmers for Pepelwent to Steven MacDermott forhis performance as AlexanderAlexandrovich, and Phil Hyde forlighting. University Theatre hasannounced that scripts for theTonight at 8:30 series should beturned in by December 1st, andanyone interested in acting or di¬recting should search the pagesof the Maroon to find the smallsquib announcing the time andplace of the '-8:30" meeting.Hyde Park’s newest dramagroup, the Comapny of the Fourstages its second production ofthe year, Thieves’ Carnival, byJean Anouilh, in John Woolmanhall November 28, 29, and Decem¬ber 4-6. The play revolves aroundthe antics of three bumbling con¬fidence men who try to mulct awealthy English family vacation¬ing at a run-down watering placein the south of France. For res¬ervations (and you’ll need them,for the last production, The ChalkGarden, people were turned awaytwo out of four nights), call MI3 4170.The Darwin Centennial startsnext week with a bang: Bob Ash-enhurst and Robert Poliak’s spec¬tacular to end all spectaculars,Time Will Tell. It seems that thechorus will be one of the bestparts of the show; they sing inperfect Oxford accents, and arebrrrightt andd cherrrful! Plusthe fact that the songs have someof the funniest lyrics going. Thisis a perfect way to get cultureand have fun at the same time.Lovely.Motion picturesBurton-Judson presents us witha winner this week: The Moonand .Sixpence. The story takenfrom W. Somerset Maugham’snovel, concerns a well to do busi¬nessman who leaves London fora garret in Paris where he canpaint in peace. From there, hegoes to Marseilles and finally toan island in the South seas. NextFriday, B-J will show Cry, theBeloved Country with CanadaLee and Sidney Poitier. B-J filmsare shown at 8 and 10 pm in Jud-son dining hall. Admission isforty cents.Tonight, Doc Films is showing"M” starring Peter Lorre as apathological killer. Made in 1931,this film presages what was tohappen to the German people.Shows are in Social Sciences 122at 7:15 and 9:15.International house has Tea¬house of the August Moon thisMonday. The movie stars MarlonBrando, Glenn Ford, and Ma-chiko Kye, and is based on thenovel by V e r n Snyder. Eastlou.ige, 7 and 9 pm. Admissionfifty cents. MusicThe Musical society will holdits second meeting Sunday, No¬vember 22 at 7:30 in the eastlounge of Ida Noyes. Severalchamber music groups will givean informal recital, and additionalgroups will be formed from thoseattending.There seems to be a perfectdearth of concerts and sundryother musical events this week.Maybe no one dares fill the voidleft by George London’s comingand going. The only other recitalscheduled is for next Sunday, the29th, when Heinrich Fleischer,University organist until the endof the quarter, will play worksby Bach, Couperin, CesareFranck, Andre Raison, andReubke. As the little postcardwith the information on it says:“Admission is without ticket andwithout charge.”OFF CAMPUSMusicThe Chicago Baroque playersare giving us, of all things, someBaroque music this Monday. Theprogram includes the works ofsuch delightful people as Handel,Rameau, L e c 1 a i r e, and Bach(Johan Sebastian, that is. NotCarl Phillippe, Emanuel, or anyother of that numerous crew, un¬less the announcement .of the pro¬gram is using the word Bach as agenus, in which case it might beall of them.) The Baroque play¬ers will give forth at 8:30 in theGoodman theatre. Student admis¬sion seventy-five cents. the characters who are character¬istically clad, and that is aboutall. This doesn’t sound like much,but then, West Side Story isn’t aspectacular, it’s a spectacularspectacle, and besides, we likeWest Side Story, and anythingthey do is just fine with us,(three editors of one sort or an¬other, and a poor insignificantpeon of a vulture). So that’s justabout all there is to say about'West Side Story, except that welike West Side Story, we likeWest Side Story, we like WestSide Story.Just as a small aside, tonightand tomororw, and Sunday are the last performances of Schil¬ler’s Maria Stuart.The Arnold Moss Shakespear¬ean Festial players are presentingMeasure for Measure, and theTempest next week. The two pro¬ductions, both starring ArnoldMoss, will run alternate nights.The Tempest will be performedTuesday, Thursday, and Sundayevenings (November 24, 26, and29) and Saturday afternoon.Measure for Measure will runWednesday, Friday, and Satur¬day evenings (November 25, 27,28) and Sunday afternoon. TheShakespearean Festival playersare supposedly the American counterpart of England’s reper¬tory company, the Old Vic. Andthey certainly are repertory ifthey can run two shows the sameday with the same people in thecasts. Student groups of ten ormore at any matinee or eveningperformance except Saturday andopening nights, may buy ticketsat reduced rates. Main floor $2.00,balcony $1.50. Arrangements canbe made for students to meet theactors after the performance todiscuss the play and observe thebackstage mechanics of a profes¬sional theatre. For more informa¬tion, call the Civic theatre, Frank¬lin 21436.Brahms concert reviewedby Robert H. McMahanLast Sunday afternoon, the audience in Rockefeller chapel was presented with an unusualprogram featuring vocal works by Brahms. George London, bass-baritone of the Metropoli¬tan opera, was the guest soloist for the afternoon. The remainder of the ensemble includedRichard Vikstrom conducting the University of Chicago choir with Millicent Fritschle, so¬prano, and an orchestra made up of forty-four members of the Chicago symphony.The program opened with “Naenie,” opus 82, a terse choral setting of a poem by Schiller.This rarely-heard piece proved an ——effective prelude to the more pre- The last work °f the afternoon from the idyllic ‘‘How Lovelytentious works which followed. was A (»ern,an Requiem, opus 45. is Thy Dwelling Place” to theThe choir produced a lustrous This Piece called all the ensemble great climaxes in the next to thetone, illuminating the serene at- *n<0 act*.on anc* provided the ma- last section.mosphere of the poem where Jor P°l'(ion of the program. The Again the chapel’s acousticsmythical figures move about ful- composition of the Requiem was seemed to "play tricks since thefilling their tragedy of art and spread out over several years; words, sounding muddled in onelife. It is a pity that Brahms was "fas developed on several area, emerged crystal clear innot inspired by other works of a earher sketches and, though not anoiher. Though well-performed,similar nature, or he might have a traditional requiem as regards the piece produced the impressionprovided a choral literature more sPc(>ific liturgical text, it is based 0f a long afternoon, perhaps be-nearly as ambitious as his or- on P01'tions of the Bible which <-au.se it is about 25% longer thanchestral and chamber music. relate to the ephemeral nature of necessary. Though it abounds inLondon was the featured soloist mankind- V technical and dramatic effects,in the “Four Serious Songs,” opus The performance was very ex- they are drawn out almost to the121. This piece was orchestrated citing, the chorus and orchestra point of boredom, perhaps a re-from sketches by Brahms made blended perfectly and realized the suit of the composer’s lack ofwhen the piano version was pub- total range of dramatic effect transcendental faith.This Saturday’s opera is Wag¬ner’s Flying Dutchman, a modernvariation on the Wandering Jewtheme. The plot concerns a Dutch¬man who barters his soul for thesuccessful circumnavigation of acertain cape. As a result, he rrtustsail his ship forever unless savedby a woman’s love. He is allowedto leave the ship once every sevenyears, and during one of theseperiods, he meets Senta, the wom¬an who will eventually save him.The cast for the Flying Dutchmanincludes Brigit Nilsson, and Tom-islav Neralie.TheatreBy all rights, I should titlethis week’s West Side Story pitch‘‘Costumes I Have Known,” butthere isn’t too much to say con¬cerning the costuming of this par¬ticular show. They’re good, they¬’re colorful, they’re characteris¬tic of the people wearing them,that is, they help characterizeClark theatre dark b madisonopen 7:30 a.m.tote show 4 a.m.C at all timesspecial student price fr. 2-2845just present your i.d. cord to the cashier ot the boxoffice'every fridoy is ladies' day — women admitted tor 25c"fri. 20th‘‘designing woman”"dr. in the house”sat. 2ist"horse soldiers”“watusi”«un. 22nd"from here toeternity”“people will talk” fri. 27th“reluctantdebutante”“the matchmaker"■at. 28th“the big circus”“the hangman”sun. 29th“the diary otanne frank”“law and disorder” fri., dec. 4“i was a malewar bride”“dream boat”sat., dec. 5“rio bravo”"king’s thief”sun., dec. 6“with a song inmy heart”“call me madame” Iished shortly before the com¬poser’s death. The texts are bibli¬cal and deal with the prospectof,death. It* is pessimistic musicwritten by a man whose last yearsbrought him lavish public ac¬claim, but also the death of hisbeloved friends.It is no wonder that these piecesare hard to listen to; there is noconcession made toward pleasingan audience and the music re¬mains austere and melancholy,though not self-indulgent. Thesoloist presented the text quitefaithfully and his vocal techniqueleft little to be desired. His voicehas a brilliant character, rich inhigh harmonics. This is very effec¬tive in close-up recording arrange¬ments or in the wide open spacesof the Metropolitan. However, incertain places inside Rockefellerchapel the fundamental tones ofhis voice seemed reduced in rela¬tive intensity. This produced anindistinctness in pitch which,though disconcerting, was not thefault of the performer.CINEMATHEATREChicago at MichiganStudent Rate.75upon presentation of currentI.D. cordEvery Day Except Sat. yde park theatre Student rate 65cpresentation of ID cardStorts Friday, November 20th:"smart ond sizzling! A cracking Frenchthriller in a style of intense realism." —Bosley Crowther, N. Y. Time* "Superior . , . Clever,Devilish, Ironic." — Al-pert, Saturday Review ofLit.Made byNew WaveDirector,EdouardMolinardstarringJeanneMoreau BACKjojjvj trail*ln the New Wave (La Nouvelle Vague) of creation that has sweptacross the French movie industry in the past year, at least 30 youngmen without previous film experience have gone into production . . .and already a half-dozen of them hove received critical acclaim andthe franc approval of the public. Among the leaders . . . EdouardMolinard.— and —Kenneth Amis' prize-winnnig, much dis¬cussed, hilarious lampoon of Britishuniversity life!i* r:. * '4h :. mmmmmsmm- - ifT*J 4 “A very funny picture!”★ ★ ★ ★N. Y. Daily NtwilOottimj COHtlnuchyjim1AM (AtMKHAIl • HNT THOMAS • MUCH fitlFFITMNrtrtUwfc) Jhwo* A(ktf"Slapstick for the sophis- |ticate, . . . delectable |||comic touches . . . gems . - mof satire!" — New YorkPostNov. 20/ 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15Government sends NSAdelegation to regional It's officialWUCB votes for FMStaff members of student radio station WUCB voted unani-mounsly last Saturday to petition the Federal Communicationscommission for an FM broadcasting license. Application willStudent Assembly approval of the all campus referendum to be held on the question of be made before November 30.continued UC participation in the National Students’ Association, selection of delegates to “Allowing for the usual two months for the FCC’s reply,the NSA Regional convention, and consideration of the proposed Student Activities Council and the additional time needed for installation of new equip!constituted the business of the third SG meeting of the school year. The Assembly passed ment, we expect FM broadcasts ~a bill urging an all campus referendum on the question of continued UC participation inNSA after arguments on both sides.Some supporters of continued — firstsaidUC particiaption in NSA felt thatthe presentation of a negativelyworded referendum to the campuswould mean its defeat and thatthe campus was not sufficientlyenough informed of the purposeof NSA and Chicago's participa¬tion in it to make an intelligentchoice. In support of their posi¬tion, these people pointed out thatNSA was founded at a meetingheld on the UC campus and thatUC had always taken a leadingrole in forming NSA policies.They also remarked on thenecessity of NSA as the one organfor unified student opinion in theUnited States on such questionsof importance to students as theloyalty oath required of all stu¬dents receiving loans under theNational Defense Education act.Many of those who support awithdrawal from NSA claim thatthe yeai'ly dues are too large forbenefits gained, that the problemsof students on the Chicago cam¬pus are unique and thus can’treally be solved through NSAparticipation, and that the opin¬ions , of the NSA delegation are often not those of the entire stu¬dent body. They also feel that theknowledge gained from NSA con¬ferences is often not shared with the student body so that it accom¬plishes nothing from NSA mem¬bership although it pays for themembership. to begin on March 28, theday of the new quarter,”John Schureman. station man¬ager. “The two thousand dollarsneeded to purchase the transmit¬ter and antenna will probablycome from alumni contributionsEast house purchases red foxThe whole thing started when Jerry Adams decided he wanted a pet.Jerry, who lives on the second floor of East house, and the 14 other residents of the floorat first wished to purchase a skunk. They raised 25 dollars, but skunks proved to be too ex¬pensive. “Besides,” said Jerry, “we couldn’t be sure that the skunk had been de-odorized.”“I first learned of the fox when ~~a delegation of boys invited meup to visit their pet,” says JohnHammet, head of East house.“There was an awful smellthroughout the whole secondfloor, for the fox wasn’t house-broken.“At first the boys tried to sellthe fox at a profit, but they wereturned down by several people.We even had trouble giving itaway, as the Society for the Pre¬vention of Cruelty to Animalswould have gassed the fox, andBrookfield zoo didn’t want it.However, Lincoln Park zoo was delighted when we offered themthe fox, and we brought it therelast Friday. It is now living inthe Small Animals section of thezoo.”When asked about a messageon the East house bulletin boardwhich reads: "Anyone wishing tocontribute two dollars towards the purchase of a hippopotamus,please contact Theo Harris,” Ham-met replied. “I am not specificallyagainst foxes or hippos, but I amgoing along with UC policy. Ithink its generally understoodthat there will be no more pets inEast house.”Ken Pierce solicited by John P. Netherton.Dean of Students.”“Since the new transmitter willhave a broadcasting radius ofabout five miles,” Schuremansaid, “we must adjust our pro¬gramming to a new audience.More discussion shows, with fac¬ulty members as guests, areplanned. We will try to avoidthose ‘inside’ comments and newsitems which are meaningful onlyto campus residents. However,much of the seven hours of dailybroadcasting time will still be directed towards students.”A five man regulatory committee has been named to aid in de¬termining the new station’s polfey. Its members include: JamesNewman, director of student ac¬tivities; Alec Sutherland, directorof educational broadcasting;Leonard Meyer, head of the hu¬manities section; Donald Meikle-john, head of social sciences section; and. William McNeil, pro¬fessor of history.Due to circumstances beyond our control and responsibility,there will beNO JAZZ CONCERTon November 21st and December 5 thFull refund on series tickets will be available from the Student Representative Party./ oaiem S special High Porosity paperAir-Softens" every puffInvisible porous openings blend fresh air with eachpuff for a milder, cooler, more refreshing smoke.Salem research creates a revolutionary new cigarettepaper that makes Salem taste more Springtime-freshthan ever! Richer,too.Smokerefreshed...smokeSalem,Created by R J. Reynolds Tobacco Companymenthol fresh • rich tobacco taste • modern filter, tooNOW MORETHAN EVER Salem refreshes your tastet6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20, 1959