Alabama students speak,at joint campus meetingby Caryle GeierBernard Lee and MarzetteWatts, student leaders of theAlabama State University pro¬test spoke at the joint meet¬ing of the Politics Club and thecampus NAACP last Thursdaynight.Watts described the eventsleading to the protest and theprotest itself by saying “Ourschool is run by white peopleand we do not have any say inthe policy of the school nor dowe have a student government to act for us. We had to form acommittee on campus to try andstage a p r o t« s t. We had seenwhat was done in South Carolinaand wanted to identify with thismovement. This committee hassince become the Alabama Stu¬dent Protest Committed iscontinuing to hold demonstrationsand sit-ins.Students enter snack bar“The first event was the non¬violent entrance of 35 Negro stu¬dents into the Montgomery courthouse snack bar. The other cus¬tomers left and the police plusVol. 69, No. 29 University of Chicago, April 8, 196i>-Coggeshall becomes vice-presidentThe appointment of Dr. LowellCoggeshall, currently dean of thedivision of biological sciences, as.i vice president of the Univer¬sity. was announced Thursdayafternoon by the office of thechancellor.Announcing the appointmentl.AK said, “Dr. Coggeshall hasworked brilliantly for 13 yearsto maintain the position of theUC medical school as one of thebest in the world.“We are very pleased to wel¬come Dr. Coggeshall to the Uni¬versity’s central administration.*'In his new position Dr. Cogge-shall will primarily be responsiblefor the development of the medi¬cal research program and facul¬ties at the university. In additionhe will seek to build up resourcesfor the general activities of thebiological sciences division — o»eof the largest in the University. Dr. Coggeshall has been deanof the division of the biologicalsciences of the University, and ;Frederick H. Rawson professorof medicine. He has an interna¬tional reputation as an authority |on tropical diseases, his knowl- §edge in this field having been ex- f§tensively used by the armed |forces both during and since the |war. From January 1, 1956 to IDecember 30, 1956 he served as §'special assistant for health and |§medical affairs to Marion Fol- §sum, US secretary of health, edu- |;cation and welfare. In December, §1956, as advisor on health prob- flems, he accompanied Richard ;Nixon on the vice-president’s visit Pto Austria to study the needs ofHungarian refugees.Dr. Coggeshall is past presidentof the American Cancer society 1(1957-58) and the Association ofAmerican Medical collegesTo select new chancellorTwo committees were namedtoday at the University of Chi¬cago to undertake the search fora new chancellor.The Board of Trustees and theFaculty of the University eachnamed five - member committeesto seek the successor to Chan¬cellor Lawrence A. Kimpton.Kimpton, who resigned a weekago today on March 29th, said hewould remain in office until asuccessor is chosen.The board members were ap¬pointed by Glen A. Lloyd, boardchairman who automatically be¬came a member of the committee.The Council of the Senate, theruling academic body of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, chose the rep¬resentatives for faculty group.Lloyd said that in the se¬lection of the new chancellor thetraditional procedure will be fol¬lowed under which the two com¬mittees will make recommenda¬tions to the Board of Trustees.In addition to Lloyd, analumnus of the University of Chi¬cago Law School (Class of 1923)and a prominent Chicago attor¬ney, the members of the trusteecommittee are:1. Marshall Field, Jr., presidentand publisher, Chicago Sun-Timesand the Chicago Daily News. Healso is president of Field Enter¬prises, Inc.2. Robert P. Gwinn, president°f Sunbeam Corporation, Chica¬go, and an alumnus of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, Class of 1929.3. Charles H. Percy, president,'"'‘11 & Howell Co., Chicago, alsoan alumnus of the University ofChicago, Class of 1941.4 Hermon D. Smith, president, Marsh & McLennan, Inc., Chi¬cago.Mr. Lloyd said that he will sug¬gest that three former chairmenof the University of ChicagoBoard of Trustees, because oftheir wide knowledge of Univer¬sity affairs, be asked to assist thetwo committees as consultants.The former chairmen are HaroldH. Swift, trustee head from 1914to 1949, Laird Bell from 1949 to1953 and Edward L. Ryerson from1953 to 1956.Arthur Friedman, professor ofEnglish, in his capacity as spokes¬man for the Council of the Sen¬ate, said the four major academicdivisions of the University — bio¬logical sciences, physical sciences,the humanities and the social sci¬ences — and the College wererepresented on the faculty group.Friedman said the faculty mem¬bers were:1. Dr. William Bloom, CharlesH. Swift distinguished serviceprofessor in the department ofanatomy. He is an authority onthe structure and development ofbone. An alumnus of Johns Hop¬kins University, Dr. Bloom is amember of the National Academyof Sciences, one of the highesthonors in U. S. science.2. Edward Hirsch Levi, dean ofthe University of Chicago LawSchool. He holds two degreesfrom the University of Chicago—a bachelor’s degree (1932) and adoctor of jurisprudence degree(1935). At Yale, where he was aSterling Fellow, he received hisJ.S.D. degree in 1938.3. John A. Simpson, professorin the department of physics andthe Enrico Fermi Institute for Nuclear Studies at the Universityof Chicago. He is one of theworld’s leading authorities oncosmic rays. He received his ABdegree from Reed College, Port¬land, Oregon, in 1940, and bothhis MS (1942) and PhD (1943)from New York University.4. Robert E. Streeter, professorof English, and former dean ofthe College (1954-1958). He re¬ceived his bachelor’s degree fromBucknell University (1938) andthe AM and PhD degrees fromNorthwestern University, in 1940and 1943.* His chief academicfields are American literature andhistory of the eighteenth and ear¬ly nineteenth centuries and rhet¬orical theory. He also is an au¬thority on the history of Amer¬ican periodicals.5. Napier Wilt, dean of the Di¬vision of Humanities since 1951,who also took part in the facultyadvisory group which assisted inthe selection of Chancellor Kimp¬ton. A member of the Universityof Chicago English faculty since1923, Wilt is an authority onAmerican literature, primarilydrama. He received his MA andPhD from the University of Chi¬cago in 1921 and 1924, respective¬ly. He earned his bachelor’s de¬gree at Indiana University in1917.There are three alumni on theboard of trustees’ committee —Lloyd, Percy and Gwinn — andtwo on the faculty committee,Levi and Wilt.Lloyd said that he plannedto call a meeting soon of the twocommittees for a discussion onprocedural matters. In 1942 Dr. Coggeshall tookleave to direct for the army airforce the establishment of med¬ical services for the air routesthen being built through Africa,and the Near and Far East. Oneof the particular responsibilitiesof this assignment was the pre¬vention of tropical diseases, in¬cluding malaria, among the sta¬tion personnel and the large num¬ber of troops and others beingtransported by the air routes. Healso served as a special consult¬ant to the Secretary of War, andin January, 1944, was commis¬sioned a captain in the US NavalReserve Medical corps. Amongother duties in the navy he wasdirector of a 5,000-bed hospital inKlamath Falls, Oregon, whichwas established for marine andnavy personnel who had contract¬ed tropical diseases.As dean, he has directed theUniversity’s medical research pro¬gram and the clinical care of pa¬tients, and the teaching and re¬search of the departments of non-clinical biological sciences depart¬ments. During his period as dean,the University clinics has had anotable period of expansion, sci¬entifically and physically. TheNathan Goldblatt Memorial hos¬pital, the Argonne Cancer Re¬search hospital, of the AtomicEnergy commission, which theUniversity operates, the GilmanSmith and West Wing hospitals,and extensive remodeling of theolder hospitals and facilities areamong the expansion activities hehas directed. paddy wagon came. As they werebreaking no laws it was impossi¬ble to arrest the students.White community rallies“$Ve were told we could nothave a rally or assemble anymoreon campus. The white communityof ^>tongomery and surrounding-tdWns rallied, armed with bats,against the Negro students. TheState board of education, of whichthe Gov. of Alabama is the head,ordered the nine “agitators” ofthe movement to be expelledfrom the university. Twentyothers were put on probation,"said Watts.“The next day during examshe explained, “the sit-in startedon campus. The students waiteduntil after exams to start the.mass walk out from the school.Many students were jailed aroundthis time with no real chargesagainst them but that they wereNegroes who dared protestagainst segregation.”“There is a new Negro in theSouth, said Lee. He doesn’t liketo be called nigger and he won'tbe anyone’s nigger. We now havethe two weapons of religion andeducation. With these weaponswe can have non-violent demon¬strations. Negro students will notfight under any circumstancesbut will avoid and move awayfrom violent attack; if arrestedthey will go peacefully to jail.The movement is a non-violentbut not pasive one; the Negrohas been passive for too manyyears.Klan falls in number“We will fight and give ourstrength and if need be our livesfor freedom. The klan and itssupporters are frightened anddesperate. They are falling innumber and can longer interri-gate or harm us. There is nothinganyone can do to stop the verydetermined Negro youth. Theywill no longer adjust or acceptthe way of life that is given tothem. A minority group is op¬pressing a majority group andthey will have to submit and givein to our demands” he said.Lee complimented northern stu¬dents for their support of thedemonstrations and explained theways they could help. “Keeppicketing Woolworths and otherchain stores; this hits them in thepocket where they feel it most.It also boosts the moral of south¬ern students who know they havesupport and are not alone in theirfight. We also need money forbails, and court cases. Try towork in your own areas to breakdown the barriers of Segrega¬tion.”This money can be sent to theSouthern Christian leadershipconference or the Committee todefend Dr. Martin Luther King.The primai'y aim is to defend andclear Dr. King. He is the ap¬pointed leader of the southern(Continued on pg. 2)Alice Schaeffer, FOTA chairman, hang* flag* with Sam¬uel Q. Spencer, publicity chairman. photo hr Price'We are a religious, not political movement1(Continued from page 1)Negro and they realize they mustprotect him from the mud sling¬ing tactics of Alabama officials.They will also handle the courtcases of students and provide liv¬ing expenses for them. Moneywill also be used for emergency•id to any southern area.UC invited to conference' Lee invited students from UCto go to a conference at Shoreuniversity from April 15-17 whichIs sponsored by the SouthernChristian Leadership conference.The purpose of the meeting isto coordinate students into astrong united group capable ofcommunicating across the Southand to the rest of the country.White Southern students who have picketed and aided themovement were also invited."The Mongomery ImprovementAssociation, which coordinatedthe successful non-violent Mon¬gomery bus boycott, has givenus the support of the adultNegro community and financialaid. The NAACP is doing every¬thing in the realm of the law tohelp us. Our initial support camefrom the Southern Christian lead¬ership conference and they arethe organization which will spon-ser students in court.”Students concerned aboutfinishing educationThe students are concernedabout returning to finish their education but they are more con¬cerned with broadening the pathfor freedom.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon1115 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2M0SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 «.m. - 11 p.m. Not political but religiousmovement"We do not look upon thismovement as a political one butrather as a religious movementusing economic pressure to aidthe fight Some political actionmay come out of this and othersmay think we are political but wefeel we are a religious movementNegro voters, have however,learned not to trust the campaignslogans and promises. They willcarefully consider a man's pastrecord ami current activities inDo )6u Think for Yburself?(TAKE A CRACK AT THESE QUESTIONS AND SEE IF YOU CONNECT*)metIf you were offered a high-paying summer job asan animal trainer, would you (A) insist on smallanimals? (B) ask for pay in advance? (C) find outwhy professionals won’t take the job? AD B□ C□"Time heals all wounds”is a statement (A) de¬nounced by antisepticmanufacturers; (B) astrue as ‘‘Time wounds allheels”; (C) that meansyour mind can build itsown scar tissue.AD B □ C QIn traffic, when a driverbehind you blows hishorn, do you (A) go andsock him? (B) wonderwhat’s wrong? (C) hopeit’ll settle his nerves?AD B □ C □When a pal bends yourear about why his filtercigarette is best, do youlisten most to (A) hischatter about how goodit tastes—regardless ofhow it filters? (B) his re¬mark that the filter mustbe good because it’s new?(C) his comments thatboth really good filtrationand real tobacco taste areimportant?AD Bd CDBefore you buy your next pack of ciga¬rettes, take a moment to think aboutwhat you really want. Most men and women who think for themselves havestudied the facts about filters and havechosen Viceroy . . . the one cigarettewith a thinking man’s filter and a smok¬ing man’s taste.*lf you checked (B) in three out of four ofthese questions, you don’t exactly flunk—butif you checked (C), you think for yourself!PamHI*packorerufh-proofPox.The Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows—ONLY VICEROY "HAS A THINKING MAN’S FILTER-A SMOKING MAN’S TASTE!OIW^O. Imrn * William ion Toboreo Carp. civil rights before they support whites and colored; It Is a n*hthim,” explained Lee. between justice and injustice. The"This is not a fight between whole world will be the victor.”Kristol discusses writing;strategy for young writerstween the responsibilities of thesenior editorship of Basic Books,and writing projects of his own!Admission to the discussion willbe limited, to about 100 collegestudents; (1) the first fifty t0register in Dean Simpson’s of¬fice in Goodspeed 203 by 5 pmMonday, April 11, and (2) otherstudents selected by members ofthe college faculty for their inter¬est in journalism.Fifth guest of seriesIrving Kristol will be the fifthguest in the 1959-60 series of in¬formal discussions entitled 'MyLife and Yours.” Other speakershave been the actor Morris Car-novsky, Senator William Benton,the poet John Crowe Ransom, andthe British legal expert, LordDenning.Irving Kristol, senior editor ofthe Basic books publishing house,will discuss "The strategy for theyoung writer," with a small groupof college undergraduates as partof the "My Life and Yours” seriesbeing sponsored by Alan Simp¬son, dean of the College nextThursday. April 14, at 8 pm inthe East lounge of Ida Noyes.Kristol had variety of jobsKristol has had a variety of jobsin his journalistic career. His firsteditorial assignment was as man¬aging editor of Commentary mag¬azine. He then served as co-editor,with the British poet and author,Stephen Spender of Encountermagazine, published in London.Kristol returned to the UnitedStates in 1958, and spent a yearas chief editor of The Reporter.He is now’ dividing his time be-HOBBY HOBSE RESTAURANTwe speciolize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Down to Dawn 1342east 53 st.••••••••••••••••••■••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••»•LACCENT ESTFRANCAIS...AIR FRANCE 4VAyfA trip to the moon? Someday, but not yet!While you’re waiting how about Paris or Rome?You can travel the world by AIR FRANCE jet,And still be just a few hours from home!HOW? WHERE7WHEN?Jet straight to Paris • John Schneiderfrom New York, Chicago,• AIR FRANCE, 683 Fifth Aveng#, New York 77, New Yorkor Los Angeles. See your • Please send me literature on special student travel ideas.friendly ira vel agent, • NAMEor mall coupon. • ADDRESSz SCHOOLMoveuptoqua/ify...MoveupfoSch/ifz!7cTHE BEER THAT MADE MILWAUKEE FAMOUSNOW SCHLITZ SERVED ON DRAUGHTExclusively mlJimmy’sand the university roomReserved exclusively ter Iniversity clienteleFifty-fifth and Woodlawn Ave.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 8, 1690SC votes to form 'StudentFaculty Seminars'COLLEGE CREDIT TOURTO EUROPEincluding month at Uni*, of ViennaLeove Juno 29 — 60 daft$1298 all expenseLocal representatives wantedUniversity Travel Co.IS Itrattle St. Cambridge 38, Mass. A SPECIAL NOTICE TO ALLSTUDENTS WHO SMOKE CIGARETTESIt would be extremely foolish for any student to discardany empty packs of Marlboro, Parliament, Philip Morris,or Alpine as of this date.SEE NEXT WEEK'S iSSUE 1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & QalleryCheese Small 12"1.30 Combination . , Small 12”2.25Sausage . . 1.65 Mushroom . . . 2.00Anchovy 1.65 Shrimp ... .2.25Pepper & Onion. . . . .1.50 Bacon & Onion. 2.00Free Delivery on All Pizza to VC StudentsAttention Chow Hounds!Special every Tuesday night — all the fried chickenyou can eat . . . $1.95by Len FreedmanThe 1959-60 SG Assembly heldlast official meeting on Aprilr, jn Law North, as it consideredtour bills, a mandate to the presi-fleut, two financial reports, anda constitutional amendment. TheAssembly passed or expressed itsapproval of everything presentedbefore it with the exception ofI he constitutional amendment.Student faculty bill proposedjudy Frost, chairman of theStudent-Faculty committee, andLeonard Freeman, writer of thebill, proposed the formation inorder to "Increase the formationof a Student Faculty SeminarsProgram communication betweenstudents and members of the fac¬ulty.” This bill empowered thecommittee to negotiate with thedean of students and the depart¬ment heads for the establishmentof a “Student Faculty Seminarsprogram.” The body of the billr eads “Faculty members who arewilling to participate should becontacted and asked to meet witheight to twelve students in theirhomes, if possible, on convenientevenings (preferably weekly orbiweekly) on topics of theirchoice. The seminars would belimited to one academic quarterm duration.” This bill appliesboth to college and universitystudents. It passed the assemblywith a role-call vote, 20-0-6.Resolution lauds KimptonA resolution congratulatingChancellor Kimpton on the suc¬ cess he has had during his nineyears in office, which reads:“WHEREAS during those nineyears many projects of worth,including a strengthening of thefinancial position of the Univer¬sity have been completed, Be itresolved that the Assembly ofStudent Government congratulateChancellor Kimpton on the suc¬cess he has had during his term,and wish him continued successin his future career.Offer support to studentsGail Paradise, chairman of theNSA’s committee on academicfreedom, presented a “Mandateto the President of SG," stating“In support of the student move¬ment for equal rights now takingplace in the South, USNSA hasrequested that the Student Gov¬ernments of its member Schoolspledge their support and aid ofthis movement. . . .” The bill em¬phasises that SG urges the NSAcommittee and the university stu¬dents to work in accordance withthe principles of NSA to endorsethe “‘sit-in’ movement and com¬mend all Southern non-violentdemonstrators” for their coura¬geous actions in fighting discrim¬ination. It will be presented tothe NSA conference as UC’s stu¬dent-government stand on thisissue.This bill and a bill asking forthe formation of an “All-Chicago Committee for Civil Rights”which would give their supportto the Southern students’ civilrights protests by staging sym¬pathy demonstrations in theirown localities and letter writingcampaigns to Southern leaders.Both bills were passed by theassembly; 13-8, and 13-9 respec¬tively.Emil Johnson, head of the Stu¬dent Service Center, explainedthis years’ operation. The centermade a profit of $107.00 winterquarter, but as it has been payingoff a $900.00 debt, is still losing$51.00.Assembly does not approveRon Sheldon, SG treasurer, pre¬sented the monetary report, dis¬closing that SRP owed $240 andISL owed $160 to governmentfor NSA travel expenses last yearand $600 for this year.The Election .and Rules Com¬mittee presented a constitutionalamendment stating that “Offi¬cers, chairmen, and representa¬tives shall be immediately sus¬pended for neglect of duty . . .”This amendment required a ma¬jority vote of all the members ofthe Assembly and failed to beapproved by the assembly by 3votes. Jim Thomason, majorityleader of I.S.L. in government,then announced plans to put thisamendment on the ballot by the Assembly considers measure proposed during last Tues*days meeting, photo by Bergerpetition of five per cent of thestudent body.The last item on the agendafor the meeting was a bill urgingthe expansion of athletic facili¬ties at UC presented by Paul Hof-fer, an independent from theMedical School. Strong contro¬versy within the Assembly imme¬diately broke out over two sec¬ tions of the “fact” that precededthe resolution which read, “2)Athletic programs play a con¬structive role in the physicalgrowth of the individual. Suchprograms also aid in developinga community spirit necessary forthe well being of any institution.3) Athletic events have provided(Continued to pg. 7)Universal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearFlap pocket wash & wear ivy league trousers — Wash & wear dressshirts — camping equip. — Complete line of keds footwear — trenchcoats — luggage and trunks.1144 East 55th st. DO 3-957210 % reduction with this couponUSEDnew TEXT BOOKSSTUDENT SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS— NOTE BOOKS-STATIONERY—LAUNDRY GASESBRIEF CASES-SPORTING GOODSTYPEWRITERS SOLD - RENTED - REPAIREDPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57th STREET2 BLOCKS FAST OF NANDEL HALLSTORE HOURS; DAILY 8:00 A.M. to 6;00 P.M. . . . EVENINGS — Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9:00 P.M.■" ' ~—B . - SB iii>the Chicago maroonStudent government shouldcontrol campus activity fundsThe Student government elec¬tions are coming up next weekand once again the student oncampus who is at all interestedwill have to find out for himselfwhat the important issues are.That is to say, unless you have asocial conscience, unless you findthat you are morally swayed toone side of the discrimination is¬sue. say, the fraternity question,or some other problem which hasto be settled in an ethical ratherthan a materialistic way, you willprobably not even bother to vote.Let’s look at a case where theGovernment elections are of vitalinterest to everyone on campus,whether they are morally boundup in politics and ethics or not.Consider the case at North Caro¬lina. There, the student govern¬ment is the prime organization oncampus and is paid attention byeveryone. Why? Because they dis¬pense the money to all other stu¬dent organizations on campus. At Chapel Hill, the SG is given abudget of several thousand dol¬lars which is apportioned out tothe newspaper, the radio station,the yearbook, and the Spanishclub. Everyone is interested be¬cause everyone’s group has astake in the budget and wants itscandidates on the slate and in of¬fice. Take away the North Caro¬lina SG’s moneybags and only acore of moral issues is left todebate about.Why couldn’t UC have a similarsetup? If you ask the averageadministrator around here, he’lltell you that the students over inLaw North are interested only inparliamentary procedure andwould foul up any budget theywere given in sessions of rhetoricand argument.And yet this Government is ca¬pable of handling financial mat¬ters. The Student Service centerhas just filed a very favorable re¬port on its year’s activities. This is the SG organ located in thebasement of Reynolds elub whichdeals in student loans and oper¬ated a dry cleaning service andused book agency.The Government could operatea comprehensive student activi¬ties budget and operate it well.However, no one seems to trustSG with that amount of moneyand thus it can never gain thefull amount of respect and author¬ity it should have.Why can’t the administrationprime this effort by allotting aportion of the student activitiesfunds to government? This wouldgenerate more interest in Govern¬ment and put the responsibility ofgoverning extra-curricular activi¬ties where it belongs—on the stu¬dents themselves.Only through active support bythe students in the coming elec¬tions can the students prove tothe Ad building that they are in¬terested in their own affairs.LettersPepper will stay on court;criticizes Maroon reportDear Mr. Johnston:If you have printed your re¬porter’s recent interview of mefar more accurately than you re¬ported your own, your readerswill find elsewhere in these pagesa fair statement as to my opinionof your April 1 editorial (“PepperShould Disqualify Self”). Inas¬much as I would require far morespace to correct each of your in¬accuracies of omission and com¬mission than you would have re¬quired to print the story right inthe first place, I shall content my¬self here with a few observations.I am not an incumbent officerof Interfratemity Council.It is not merely my “hope,” butthe stated expectation of Mr. ChiefJustice Roger Bernhardt, thatCase SO-13-11 will have been set¬tled by the Court on Monday,April 4, or at latest, on April 12.This is substantially before Ishall take office as treasurer ofI-F Council.You garbled my statement asto my feelings on the case beforethe Court. What I told you wasthat not only had I no opinion asyet on the legal points of thecase, but furthermore that I hadno leanings toward early or tothe deferred rush, and that I hadpurposely avoided discussing orthinking much about the latterpoint so as to be without inclin¬ation when the jurisdictional dis¬pute came to the Court.You omitted my reply to yourquestion regarding last year’schief justice, Ronald Terchek, inwhich I expressed my sympathywith his self-removal in the RobinFreeman case. I suspect his deci¬sion was based primarily upon thedelicacy of his job as an assistanthouse head in Burton-JudsonCourts.Would that you had been more"reluctant to revive that sawabout Calpurnia,” you were so“reluctant to revive,” inasmuchas you revived the saw incorrect¬ly - (i.e., you revived the wrongwife)—and a reference to the cor¬rect saw, wife and circumstanceswould only embarrass you fur¬ther. Apparently you enjoyed thesound of the name Calpurnia,however, because you included itin one of your questions in ourinterview — a question which, asyou will recall, was so clumsilyput as to require complete re¬phrasing (in which latter versionthe reference to Calpurnia waslost).Your conclusion, obviously ar¬rived at before the interview, wasthat I should ", . . reconsider . . . (my) . . . decision to remain onthe bench to judge this issue, orelse . . . decline at this point theoffice of IFC treasurer.” Not aword about resigning from Stu¬dent Government’s Student-Fac¬ulty-Administration Relationscommittee — on which I haveserved diligently this entire yearat the request of both the com¬mittee chairman, Miss JudithFrost, and th ISL Majority FloorLeader, James Thomason. Such in¬consistency indicates that youhave far more than I do learnconcerning impartiality.The question which goes beg¬ging here is wherein lies the con¬flict of interest. The fact that Iam treasurer-elect of IFC is ared herring, as is the fact that Iwas once quite active in ISL, thepresent majority party in StudentGovernment, which party andgovernment have sponsored theproposed amendment on whichthe Court is called to pass judg¬ment. More relevant would bethe fact that I am a fraternitymember and a former StudentGovernment member. This wouldimply a commitment to the notionthat neither my fraternity norStudent Government is entirelybad. But you neglected to observethat practically every studentmember of the Court has been aStudent Government member, afraternity member, or both, andthat every student member wasappointed by SG. I leave it to youto consider whether we shouldall disqualify ourselves or not.So my decision stands: I shallGentlemen:It is not surprising that theperspective of this city’s journal¬ists is sc narrow that they con¬sider the “ranking” of our uni¬versity the nost significant opin¬ion expressed by Dr. Pauling dur¬ing his visit, but that this shouldhappen in the Maroon!! Healso stated that 300 bombs couldvirtually annihilate all life inthis country. Presumably this isa more authoritative claim, andless easy to dismiss from consid¬eration. Even from the headlinepoint of view, which is a morestartling disclosure? This is toargue what dress is more becom¬ing while the house is burning up.I agree that Dr. Pauling wascareless in not stating his basisApril 8, 1960 participate in Case SO-13-11; Ishall take office as InterfraternityCouncil Treasurer next month; Ishall complete my work on theStudent Government Student-Fac¬ulty-Administration RelationsCommittee.F. Jay PepperAssociate JusticeStudent-Faculty-Administration courtP. S.: Note that you have re¬ceived this letter before the April4 SFA Court hearings. I am sorrythat so much space has been nec¬essary to straighten out yourmany errors. I note, however,that half of page 5 of your April 1issue was occupied with yourfaulty handling of the Torch edi¬tor case. Perhaps you might makea regular weekly feature of thissort of thing.Editor’s note: The Maroonshould certainly review its classichistory, just as Justice Peppershould read the editorials he crit¬icizes a little more varefully. Ourpoint was not that Mr. Pepperwas biased; if we thought thisthere would be little point of pro¬testing, for he obviously wouldnot disqualify himself. Rather, weargued that his continued connec¬tions with government and hisposition as treasurer-elect of theInterfraternity council would nec¬essarily raise the campus cry ofbias, thus prejudicing the campus’view of the court. By the way, thecorrect name of the SG commit¬tee on W’hich Mr. Pepper hasworked so assiduously is the Stu¬dent-Faculty relations committee.for judging universities—thoughI wonder why people aroundhere, secure in their greatness,are so nprvous about it. Suchsnappy provincialism is, I think,a reason why we have stumbledinto the world danger that Dr.Pauling is trying to eliminate.But if we must concentrate onlocal problems, why no explana¬tion from the student health cen¬ter for giving x-rays to all enter¬ing students? Dr. Pauling didmention that the skin test makesthis an unnecessary danger. Hiscomments on irradiation hazardsare to be respected, and I thinkeven this health problem is moredisturbing than who’s better thanwhom.(Mrs.) Christine F. Harris4 • CHICACO MAROON •Maroon view narrow? Letters to the editorLet editor look at “lifeor is money enough?"To the Editors:Opposite the editorial page inthe April 1 issue of Maroon, Iread the splendid spread givenLife magazine under the title:“Your editor looks at life.” Now,like most Americans, I have beensaturated with this sort of tripefor a number of years, and I as¬sume automatically anymore thatsuch gush is 8 parts lie and 2parts insult. However, the im¬pression remains that the “breadand butter of Luce’s empire” hasfound an especially hungry mouthin the current Maroon “editor”(and his companion ad-writingghosts). It also seems, by this ad,that there are two possibilities:either Life must gain by associa¬tion with such honorables as“your editor” and what he standsfor, or “your editor”, and what hestands for must lose by associa¬tion with Life.I ask “the editor” outright* IfMr. Luce did not provide youwith a tidy cut for the use of your title in this ad (which motivationI find onerous but at least under¬standable), by what Idiotic innerconcatenation of personal integ¬rity did you and/or those respon¬sible suppose that the effect ofthis ad would be less than asmacking degradation of the fa¬vorite organ of this universityand its students? I’m disap¬pointed — somewhat less in itsmorals than in what I must nowassume is the Maroon’s new selfimage.Does the paper need money thisbadly? Well then sell it — haveour Deans swim underwaterwhile they shave — rent out signspace in Swift Hall — exact a feefrom Northwestern tourists:many things are more honorable.My feeling from seeing this lugu¬brious blurb cloying at the sta¬ture of the members of this uni¬versity was all negative. Really,let’s have no more of it.M. BuberByers explains athletics billTo the editors:In the meeting of Tuesday,April 5, a resolution was pre¬sented to the Assembly of Stu¬dent Government which called forthe improvement of the”athleticfacilities and programs of theUniversity. The bill, after havingbeen amended several times over,was finally submitted for a vote.The Assembly vote was 14 to 14.The chair, who votes only in thecase of a tie, voted in favor, thuspassing the bill. In all. 6 mem¬bers of the Assembly from ISL,including the chair, voted in favorof passage.Subsequent to the meeting,there was much discussion as tothe intent of the resolution, andto the intent of those ISLers whovoted in favor. We have beenaccused of voting in favor of thereturn of football. This was notthe intent of our vote.The section in question is arti¬cle 2 of the resolution which, asamended, states “(bo it resolved)that the existing intercollegiateprogram of the University be ex¬ panded.” A part of the originalresolution, which had asked thatthe program include across, foot¬ball, and hockey, was deletedfrom the final resolution on themotion of an ISL member of theAssembly.We voted in favor of the billon the understanding that article2 would be taken to mean thatsuch things would be undertakenas the building of more tenniscourts and the improvement ofswimming facilities. We do notfavor the return of football, inany form, to this campus.In our opinion, the athletic pro¬gram on this campus is not ofpirme importance to the Universi¬ty community. However, if theUniversity does intend to spendmore money on the program, wewould prefer that the programfor individual use be expanded.Maureen ByersRosalind ConklinAlan DowtyDan SchubertVivian ScottBetty WolfClassical error notedGentlemen:It was indeed gratifying to notein an editorial in your April 1stedition, that the classical back¬ground is not dead on your staff.It is merely dying a gruesomedeath.To begin with, while F. JayPepper is a charming fellow, theimplied comparison to Caesarleaves me cold. More importantis the fact that the one mind onyour staff who has heard of “thatsaw about Calpurnia” has heard wrong. A misquote is not in¬volved, because we don’t knowprecisely what Caesar said on theoccasion we are referring to. Itwas not Calpurnia to whomJulius was referring, but ratherPompeia, his third wife. Recom¬mended reading for your writer:Plutarch, Caesar.Suetonius, Divus Julius 74.Please leave the classics aloneif you cannot get it straight.Gerald E. KadishEditors-in-chiefLance Haddix Neal JohnstonBusiness ManagerWilliam G. BauerNews edit-orFeature editorProduction editorPhotography coordinator .Culture editorActing sports editor ....Rewrite editor Advertising ManagerWarren B. BernhardtJim ThomasonJay GreenbergDorothy DorfAlan BergerBob RieserMaitland GriffithAvima RuderEditorial staff: Elaine Adler, Donna Berg, Maureen Byers, Bill Capel, HiramCaton, Bert Cohler, Debby Dinitz, Jacqueline Friedman, Coryle Geier, MerylGoldman, John Juskevice, Clair Morgan, Marjorie Mundt, Tony Quagliono,Roxanne Russ, Danny Schubert, Harold Stotland, Gene Vinogrcdoff, FoyeWells.Photographers Garry Elman, Gmny Mill, Sidney Seal'"Cartoonist: Arnold PewtCirculation Mgr.; .Nothon SwiftCops have “stupid deterrent”in attempt to enforce lawsApril 1. 1960ivar Sirs:I really did not expect my let¬ter of March 11 cocerning the useof parking stickers by the Cam¬pus Police to provoke any com¬ment at all. Nevertheless I seethat not one. but two persons atIho University were graciousenough to attempt to enlightenmo Since their letters are, of my mind, somewhat irrelevant to themain issue which I raised, I fearthat my exposition was at fault. Iherewith make a last attempt topresent the situation as I see it.Nowhere in my previous com¬munication did I imply that it isa good thing to park in forbiddenzones, as Mr. Ginzberg seems tohave concluded. I was merelyquestioning the rationality of theNOpark: noEAST 4OF THIS POINT'Campus copsstudents/ only ticket cars clearly belonging to UCphoto by Boyd stupid and dangerous deterrenttechnique which the Universityseems to have adopted. Perhaps,therefore, righteous indignationon the part of Mr. Ginsberg andMiss March will be appeased if Ioffer an alternative proposal,which is equally effective, prac¬tically workable, and sane.At Northwestern, the campuspolice are empowered to ticketears parked in forbidden areas,the drivers of which are thensubject fo a fine. It is impossiblemerely to tear up the ticket, be¬cause they take your license num¬ber and trace you through it. Isubmit that an enforceable mone¬tary penalty of this nature is afar more civilized and equally ef¬fective method of deterring viola¬tions, than is deliberate deface¬ment.To conclude, I might mentionthat even our Campus guardshave the power to give such tick¬ets, but they only will ticket a carclearly marked as belonging to astudent of the University. I sub¬mit that an extension of this prac¬tice, already in use, will providepeace with honor for all con¬cerned.Robert RosenCriticism of Pauling ‘misplaced’Dear Sirs:Last week, a large audience ofD. of C, students and Hyde Parkresidents heard a distinguishedscientist speak in technical andquantative terms about the possi¬bility of the end of life on theearth. On Friday of the sameweek tho Maroon published a let¬ter in which a student objectedto Dr. Pauling’s “quantativetreatment of human suffering,”and maintained that Americansof ‘‘moral fibre” ought to be will¬ing to “throw a few megatons inIvan’s face” in order to defendthe “social order and moral tra¬ditions which have elevated himto his status as free man.”When I first read this letter, Iwas angry and disappointed todiscover that fellow student hadreacted in that way to Dr. Paul¬ing’s address. Later, I tried tomad it more sympathetically andto discover why its author hadopinions so different from myown. It seemed to me that hismistake had been a failure tojudge the relative size of the var¬ious issues ... that is, to be quan¬ta tat ive. Decimal places are im¬portant. Genicide is a twentieth-century word. It differs fromhomicide only by a few decimal points, but it is a great dealmore atrocious. The new weaponsdiffer from the old ones only bya few decimal places. But the ex¬tra zeroes are heavy and ominousWe can guide ourselves amongthe horrors which science hascreated only by using the lan¬guage of science, the language ofnumbers. Above all, we must ex¬ercise our sense of proportion. Ina world where we cannot expectmost things to be right, we mustsee that the essential things areright. In some cases, lesser thingswill have to be sacrificed for thesake of greater.I do not think that we will haveto sacrifice our social order andmoral traditions. We must haveworld government, but I thinkthat it is possible to limit the jur¬isdiction of such a government sothat it will not extend to the in¬ternal affairs of its memberstates. However, we will certainlyhave to give up some of our sov¬ereignity. The present United Na¬tions is not a government, be¬cause it does not have jurisdictionover individual citizens, and be¬cause there is no effective meansby which the, decisions of theworld court can be enforced. Nonation will seriously consider dis¬ armament until there is on effec¬tive international police force.Let me return to the impor¬tance of a sense of proportion,this time in a different connec¬tion. Many people feel that theindividual citizen is hopelesslyoutweighed by the gigantic, insti¬tutionalized forces of militarism.They are large, while he is small.To such an argument I wouldanswer: you can do large thingsif you refuse to allow yourself tolx? distracted by small ones. Itseems to me to bo lacking in pro¬portion for us to spend our timeon small matters while the largeand essential task of ending theinternational anarchy remains un¬done.What can we do? We can thinkdeeply, and then we can write . , .to newspapers and magazines,to congressmen, to Secretary Her-ter, to President Eisenhower, andto the candidates in the comingelection. I believe very stronglyin the importance of individualsin history. The gi’eat forces ofpopular action grow around what¬ever leadership is available. Ifnothing but bad leadership ap¬pears. they will continue to bemisdirected.John AveryStudent discusses ideologiesI >ear Sir:As a foreign student on thecampus this year, I have been fol¬lowing each issue of the Maroonwith great interest. I appreciated\ory much your invitation fornovys from foreign students,which appeared in the Februaryissue of your paper.1 am one .of thousands of for¬eign students in the United States.When wc return home again,many of us will be confrontedwith the ideological challengebrought by students returninghorn their training in Moscow andPeking. What do we stand for?Will we be able to meet their ehal-lange with a superior ideology?hi my opinion this is a crucialquestion, and the following itemwhich I have recently receivedhorn Norway illustrates thispoint.Soviet First Deputy Prime Min¬ister Mikoyan, on his way homefrom Cuba on February 16, gavea speech to the Oslo Students as¬ sociation. Afterwards Mr. Miko¬yan permitted questions, and thefirst speaker was Erik Egeland, ajournalist on the Morgenbladet, aleading Oslo paper:“We have heard Mr. Mikoyan’sconviction on co - existence,” hesaid, “but at home in Siberia lastOctober Mr. Khruschev spoke onthe same subject. According to‘Pravda,’ he said approximatelythis: ‘Co-existence must be under¬stood correctly. It means theworld battle goes on with allmeans short of military force.’“A rising number in the Westare meeting this ideological clial-lange and are able to answer it,not with anti-Communism or sel¬fish liberalism, but with a supe¬rior ideology, winning Commu¬nists and anti-Communists aroundthe whole world. (Communist stu¬dents interrupted, w h i s tl i n gangrily.)“I have seen them at work onfour continents,” continued Ege¬land. ‘That spirit and ideology will win that meets the deepestneeds of man. The simple fact isthat both East and West mustchange, if we are to create theworld we all need —a world free ofhate and exploitation, free frombitterness and lies. I challengeyou, Mr. Mikoyan, to fight againstthese fundamental evils in yourlife, in the lives of your comradesin the Russian empire and in usmen and women in the West, asyou, Mr. Mikoyan, invite a dele¬gation of the Moral Re-Armamentworld force to Moscow for anopen and frank discussion of thenecessity of speeding up a revolu¬tion deeper and cleaner than Com¬munism?”Mr. Mikoyan answered, “I don’tunderstand this .Moral Re-Arma¬ment. Let us see who has the high¬est morals, that is according tohuman dignity.”Anne-Berit AasNorwayCTS (advertisement)Your editorlooks atRegardless of recent pro¬tests this ad will continue torun. The Nation editorials canclaim that we are prostitutingourselves, the letters to theMaroon can call it pap, butso long as it instills in you afeeling about Life, we shallnever abandon it.★ ★ ★Look. I mean, Life, Life,buy Life. Why? Because it haspicture spreads, stimulatingarticles, unheard of featuresat collaborator prices. Get me?★ ★ ★Nowhere else can you seeBig Ben and witchcraft, 300years of build-up to a bitterdilemma for the Afrikaners, aportrait of a man listening tohis own words, Nikita Krush¬chev, a fireman's whisky pyre,a backward look before a high-level compromise, springtime'swoes on the waters of Mil¬waukee, and many, many merearticles of lasting interest. pull those slick pages throughyour fingers and see thoseslick articles that send yoursoul reeling through the worldof intellect and comedy, bathostreachery, everything, every¬thing imaginable, all that yousee in the swirling shadows ofa darkened pond as its gath¬ering shades impress theirsteeling, steely fingers uponyour sinful heart.★ ★ ★It begins like a carnivalride. Ya know. Yu gudda seefor yourself how the mag picksyou up and shows you a Taleof five little shorn lambs. (FiveHollywood girls who have justhad the greatest time sheer¬ing off their hair for a newHollywood production.)★ ★ ★Rocky's fight on fallout,(uh ha, uh ha, uh ha> "Whilemost Americans push to theback of their minds the perilof a nuclear attack and itsradioatcivity, at least one manis fighting hard — and some¬times alone—to get people toprotect themselves." (Naaaaa-aaaaaauk) "Legendary feats of★ ★ -j&t"THE PIONEERS"It gets you and it holds youfast and it turns you inside outto see"The boyhood of DanielBoone."★ ★ ★Take a look at this astro¬naut's description of the or¬deals he must go through:"It begins like a carnivalride. Slowly you tumble, twistand roll, while your bodylurches against the tight har¬ness that straps you to thecontour couch. Then you rotatefaster and faster, until youare whirling around violently,incredible — actually spinningin three different directions atonce: 1 ) head over heels, 2)round and round as if youwere in a swivel chair, and 3>sideways as if your arms andlegs were the spokes of awheel."★ ★ ★That's just a sample of theinside dope you'll get by read¬ing Life. I just don't know—It's so typical, I guess that'swhat you'd call it—typical ofthe kind of thing Life does foryou. Now here, by means ofthis one paragraph do youknow what I'm going to do foryou. I'm going to compare thisastronauts experience with thekind of experience you'll havewhen you read Life when you★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★Did you know that Bikinishave moved to the bedrooms?I did. I'm telling you. See foryourself in Life.★ ★ ★"Plot, counterplot (isn't thatcute; it's a play on words withAldous Huxley's novel: "Point,counterpoint," Aldous' broth¬er was here on campus lastNovember for the Darwin cen¬tennial! on flyways to Cuba.Do you know what kind of astory that is? I'll bet you don't.You see. Life has fooled youagain. Just full of surprisesJust full of 'um. But see, a"anti - Castro pilot says adouble-deal clowned rightplanes with the wrong men."★ ★ ★The Niagara Dig, biggestever in U.S. Their 70 - 1 nagbrings cabbies a bundle . . .But why do I keep ramblingon. You can see it for your¬self in this week's Life.★ ★ ★Says Rod, "I like to sing sadsongs for lonely people."April 8, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5G A D F IYThe former student’s taleI am now writing a novelcalled The University of Chaos.If I hadn’t gone to school here,I wouldn’t have had the informa¬tion and experience to write this.If I hadn’t been expelled, Iwouldn’t have had the time towrite it.You see, I entered here in thefall of ’56, and lived on the fifthfloor of Vincent house (you’veheard of it, no d ’bt). I foundthe hallway an oovns of thelifth floor to be populated bykeen minds and outstanding per¬sonalities. I found that I couldrIf you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou¬blesome problem.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.BU 8-6711 get a pretty good education with¬out bothering to go to classes.But our floor was considered un¬ruly, and, in my second year, wehad a house head in Vincent whomanaged to drag us (the fifth)down with him, and I was sentinto Coulter, and everyone on thefloor was dispersed elsewhere; toDodd, Matthews, Linn; and thelesser offenders dropped dowrn toother floors in Vincent.My third year, I began in ahotel, but in December movedinto East house, where I lasted acouple months — being expelledfrom school in January, 1959.You see, I had been readingsome of my stories to fellow stu¬dents, and the administration tookalarm. A certain LincolnesqueAdministration and Faculty fel¬low told me that I was beingkicked out for my own good, helpwas available; and, if I saw a psy¬chiatrist and got "a clean bill ofhealfh” I could re-enter in a year.So, I went three times a week toa psyche until my trip to Europein the summer.During this time. I worked on my novel "Billy: the Boy withthe 5000 I.Q.”After working a couple of weeksfor a mail order firm, I camedown to campus, and saw an Ad¬ministration official with a nameresembling a Lowland nation(the one noted for its dykes).This gregarious chap called me aSunday afternoon novelist, andtold me about T. S. Eliot’s beinga bankclerk. Yes, he said, I shouldwork for about 10 months, thentry re-entering.When I told this Dean that mypsychiatrist had said all alongthat he saw no reason why Icouldn’t be in school, the deansaid: Yes, it might be alright foryou to be back, but would it be alright for us to have you back?I went on to' a couple morejobs, left home, and moved toHyde Park. Getting my bondscashed, I proceeded to become acapitalist, while working on mynew novel, The University ofChaos.Now that I am on my own, Iam even less anxious to re-enter,as tuition would take a huge biteout of my income. But I enjoythis neighborhood quite a lot, andfind it easier to appreciate whenI am unencumbered with courses.My writing, which began inten¬sively in my first year, is nowtaking the Novel form, whereasit was confined to smaller pro¬portions when I was a student. j>iy gieaiesi woik, I am told 1Sstill that small play which Ihanded over to the house headand was read by him, by the ]jn.colnesque fellow, and by his up-and-coming protege.I do not want to sound as if iam criticizing this University. iam weak in math and science,and have been fairly out of placein any university. This Univer¬sity provided me with a lot ofcompany. It provided the nobletypes that populate my novel, itprovided the fifth floor, and thenmade it legendary by breaking itup. I was given the theme for anovel, and—in being expelle dwas given the time of write it.Stephen MagnusUC demonstrations unjustSMfoooli the pen that’sworth writing home about! Dear Sir:I am writing to voice my sup¬port of the action of those Uni¬versity of Chicago students whohave contributed money for Ne¬gro students jailed as a result ofsit-ins at lunch counters in theSouth. At the same time, I wishto protest the action of student groups who picketed Woolworthand Kress stores in the North.I am in sympathy with the Ne¬gro students who participate innon-violent demonstrations, suchas lunch counter sit-ins, to obtainthe rights that are unquestion¬ably due them. However, whilesympathy picketing of a Wool-Sf/l€ tjflilUH PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433A CHEAP PRICE IS NO CORE!I tor pimple*, acne, foe* lick net*. Tim# and again cheap price remedial II have been tried and found wanting. Why? become it take* mere II effective Ingredientt than cheap price remedies can give yew to clear wp I| year akin ef these ailments. CLARIMACIN is net a cheap-price remedy. || Discovered by a famous skin specialist, CLARIMACIN contains • effective || omdically approved Ingredients, a deep working cleanser and a built-in f| manager — a complete 3-way treatment kit. It must clear year face la |1 10 days or it costs you nothing. Sold on money back guarantee. Don't || throw your money away on cheap price remedies. Save it and get || CLARIMACIN ati 1Parks Pharmacy, €357 W. Ormak Rd., Berwynllarasck Pharmacy, €401 W. 43rd St., BerwynBob Hoft Drugs, 6820 Windsor Ave., BerwynBlack’s Pharmacy, 3001 W. Montrose Ave., ChicagoChesta Pharmacy, 4143 S. Archer, ChicagoHarding Pharmacy, 3932 W. Fullerton Ave., ChicagoKsiazek Drugs, 1900 E. 87th St., ChicagoMulay Pharmacy, 3400 W. 79lh St., ChicagoRosen Pharmacy, 2958 W. Devon Ave., ChicagoScott Pharmacy, 2549 W. Devon Ave., ChicagoPavlicek Drugs, 5539 W. Cermak Rd., CiceroKothe Pharmacy, 1900 S. Cicero Ave., CiceroJablonski Pharmacy, 6501 Pershing Rd., StickneyBoffa Drugs. 3359 W. Chicago Ave.. Chicago worth or Kress store In Chicagomight attract attention to ihocause of Negro students in theSouth, I feel that the question ofjustice to the management of theNorthern stores should be examined.If the national management ofthe Woolworth chain could, by theissuance of an order or policystatement, bring about integra¬tion of the lunch counters in itsSouthern stores, then I feel thatpicketing of the Northern storeswould be a justifiable method ofexerting pressure. I am con¬vinced, however, that this is notthe case, except in some fiingcareas such as San Antonio, Texas.In the Deep South, there is onlyone thing that the WoolworthCompany can do — it can doseits stores. Any order to integratewould be ignored. The pressureof public opinion in the affectedareas of the South would not per¬mit any other actions.Charles W. RyanSoc Sci DivisionEye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372Imagine—being shipwrecked on a deserted islandwithout an Esterbrook pen! Even a sun-tannedRobinson Crusoe would turn pale at the thought.Just sampling Esterbrook’s 32 custom-fitted penpoints until you find the one suited to your writingpersonality is more fun than opening coconuts.The Esterbrook Classic fountain pen starts writ¬ing instantly the minute it touches the paper. Feelsso “right” in the hand ... and looks good, too!Choice of six colors.If somehow you’ve missed owning an Esterbrook•—get with it! Dig the message in the bottle. Get anEsterbrook. Get lost.Sdnftoo/i* T. M. Tha Katerbrook Pan Co. THE CLASSICFOUNTAIN PEN*2.95Other Esterbrookpens slightly higher IT’S A GREAT FEELINGTo Wear An Arrow Sport ShirtAdding a bit of dash to the campusscene are these traditional sport shirtsthat boast easy good looks, lastingcomfort. Fine “Sanforized” fabricsenhanced with Arrow’s authenticbuttondown collar. Carefully tailoredin pullover style, $4.25,and regular models, $4.00.-ARROW-Wherever you go .. .you look botfot In an Arrow thlrtTHERE S A POINT CHOICE OF 33-ONE IS CUSTOM-FITTEO FOR YOUI6 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 8, I960Sports bill causes great ruckusEmil Johnson explains fi¬nancial operations of Serv¬ice center. (Continued from pag. 3)a proving ground for the theoriesof racial and religious equalityand have enhanced the generalacceptance of these doctrines.”Opposition to the second sen¬tence of Fact 2 argued that acommunity spirit should be de¬veloped within the University onan academic rather than on an* athletic basis and that the wellbeing of any institution would beharmed rather than furthered byan athletic “togetherness” withinthe institution. Ed Riddick (SRP-Havighurst decidesnot to resign post FTS) then spoke against Fact 3of the resolution claiming thatthe implicit ideas conveyed bythe section, however innocent theauthors of the bill may have been,were that somehow the athleticfield was an acceptable place totest and formulate opinions aboutracial equality and that the ac¬ceptance in some places of equal¬ity of the races on the athleticfield meant a general acceptanceof the doctrines of racial equality.Amendments were thenbrought to the floor to delete thesecond sentence of Fact 2 andalso to delete Fact 3 in its en¬tirety. The Assembly subsequent¬ly passed both these amendmentsover the strong objections of theauthor of the bill and other inde¬pendent graduate students.Bill causes controversyHaving thought the situation over for a month, Robert J Great controversy within theHavighurst, professor of education and member of the cotm amoTnt'oi unparliamentarymittce on human development at the UC, has decided not to debate, also arose over the secondresign his position on the UC staff. Havighurst said that section of the actual resolution“After thinking further about the ^ ’ whi',h “miprofnw* ho it r«.matter, I feel the opportunitiesat Chicago are too great for meto want to leave at this time, andI have asked the administration toignore the letter of resignationwhich I submitted last month.” ~ . . . _T „ .Havighurst, now 59, was think- * ad 7°C‘ety ,n ISew Zealand, and the third section of the actualing of resigning because of the y omers- resolution which then read as itUC’s rule that a professor mustretire at the age of 65. He wantedto continue his work for a longertime.Born in Wisconsin, Havighurstreceived his bachelor of arts atOhio Wesleyan university, h i sPhD at Ohio state, and was ateaching fellow at Harvard uni¬versity. He taught chemistry,physics, and scientific education,at Miami university. University ofWisconsin and Ohio s ta t e, re¬spectively, and was associate di¬rector and director of the generaleducation board of the Rockefel¬ler foundation. In 1941, he joinedthe UC staff as professor of edu¬cation, and later joined the com¬mittee on human development.As a member of the Commit¬tee for human development, Hav¬ighurst has participated in nu¬merous studies on adolescents,the middle-aged, older people, and which read, “(therefore, be it re¬solved:) 2) That the intercollegi¬ate American Indian. Among the ate program of the university bebooks of which he is either author expanded to include such sportsor co-author are Older People, as lacrosse, football, and hockey.”Social Competence of Middle- Graduate students who arguedAged People, Studies of Children in favor of this section said thatMortgage InsuranceEducational InsuranceConnecticut Mutwol LiteJoseph H. Aaron, *275524 S. Everett Are.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986 3 SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMS far AMERICAH JEWISH STUDENTSoffered by THE STUDENT ZIONIST ORGANIZATIONTOURSTUDYWORK in ISRAELFor 6 months or 1 yearSailings: June 30, 1960 — February, 1961 TOTALCOST *750AMERICAN WORK STUDY PROGRAM IN ISRAEL (AWSPI)INISRAELSUMMER {Round trip by AirLeave June 26 — Return August 17, 1960SUMMER INSTITUTE IN ISRAEL TOTAL $OQCCOST WUSTUDYDURINGTHE SUMMER HEBREWAt the South Brench Hotel, South Branch, N J.July 3 to August 21, 1960College i^dH£B^EW J^N^T^Tim JULP AN)IN THE UNITED STATESTOTAL SOARCOSTNAME. AGE.SCHOOL.ADDRESSI >m interested in further information In regard to the following pro¬gram/ or programs.American Work Study Program in Israel □ June 30, 1960 □ Feb., 1961Summer Institute in Israel □ Hebrew Institute in the United StatesClip and mail to: YOUTH DEPARTMENT, AMERICAN ZIONIST COUNC515 Park Ave., New York 22. N.Y- PLaza 2-1234Men who face wind and weather*choose the protection of...uceAFTER SHAVELOTIONSkin protection, that ia. Old Spice refreshes and stimulates, guards against the loss of vitalskin moisture. Feels great, too. Brisk, bracing, with that tangy Old Spice scent. It docs seeobto attract female admirers, but what red-bloodedman needs protection against girls? 1.00 rlu,u» S M LI I-TO M had been amended, “3) That theUniversity of Chicago be pledgedto a policy of extending no finan¬cial or academic aid to any cur¬rent or potential student on thebasis of his athletic ability,” elim¬inated the relevance of all thearguments against the return ofthese sports to campus, and, inparticular, the return of football.They argued that the return offootball to campus would not fallwithin former Chancellor Hut:chins’ objections to “athleticism”Opponents of this section citedthe physical danger involved inthese sports. Len Friedman (ISL-College) argued, “that all thesports mentioned are dangerous without sufficient practice, andthat the academic standards atUC make sufficient practice invpossible.” Mr. Hauser (ISL-Cotlege) further argued that. **. . «supporting a football team thatplays even a partial in ter collegeate schedule requires heavy fl>nancial expenditures.The section was then amendedto read, “2) that the existing ha.tercollegiate facilities of the Uni*versity be expanded.” A roll caffvote was then requested on thafinal motion as amended, and thavote resulted in a 14-14 deadlock.Maureen Byers, president of SG^then cast her vote in favor of thabill.On Campos MthMaxShulman(Author of “I Wat a Teen-age Dwarf’, “The ManyLovet of Dobie Gillif”, etc.)"NO PARKING"As everyone knows, the most serious problem facing Americancolleges today is the shortage of parking space for students’ cars.Many remedies have been offered to solve this vexing dilemma.For instance, it has been suggested that all students be requiredto drive small foreign sports cars which can be carried in thepurse or pocket. This would, of course, solve the parking prob¬lem but it would make double dating impossible—unless, thatis, the boys make the girls run along behind the car. But thatis no solution either because by the time they get to the promthe girls will be panting so hard that they will wilt their corsages.Another suggested cure for our parking woes is that allstudents smoke Marlboro cigarettes. At first glance this seemsan excellent solution because we all know Marlboro is thecigarette which proved that flavor did not go out when filterscame in—and when we sit around and smoke good Marlboroswe are so possessed by sweet contentment that none of uswishes ever to leave, which means no gadding about whichmeans no driving, which means no parking problem.But the argument in favor of Marlboros overlooks one im¬portant fact: when you run out of Marlboros you must go getsome more, which means driving, which means parking, whichmeans you’re right back where you started.Probably the most practical suggestion to alleviate the campusparking situation is to tear down every school of dentistry iathe country and turn it into a parking lot. This is not to saythat dentistry is unimportant. Gracious, no! Dentistry is im¬portant and vital and a shining part of our American heritage.But the fact is there is no real need for separate schools of den¬tistry. Dentistry could easily be moved to the school of miningengineering. Surely anyone who can drill a thousand feet foroil can fill a simple little cavity.This experiment—combining dentistry with mining engineer¬ing—has already been tried at several colleges—and with somevery interesting results. Take, for instance, the case of a dentalstudent named Fred C. Sigafoos. One day recently Fred waxout practicing with his drilling rig in a vacant lot just offcampus. He sank a shaft two hundred feet deep and, to hissurprise and delight, he struck a detergent mine. For a whiUFred thought his fortune was made but he soon learned thathe had drilled into the storage tank of the Eagle Laundry.Walter P. Eagle, president of the laundry, was mad as all get-out and things looked mighty black for Fred. But it all endedwell. When Mr. Eagle called Fred into his office to chew himout, it so happened that Mr. Eagle’s beautiful daughter, PatientCriselda, was present. For years Patient Griselda had beenpatiently waiting for the right man. IThat’s him! she criedupon spying Fred—and today Fred is a full partner in the EajjULaundry in charge of pleats and ruffles. °liwa 84'Ua“"Speaking of laundries reminds us of cleanliness which Inturn reminds us of filtered Marlboros and un filtered PhilipMorris—both clean and fresh to the taste—both availablein soft pack and flip-top box.April 8, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7 ■!*:*if:w't• if■lIf•faCourt lifts SG injunctionHoffman and Pepper sit on court.photo by KastmanPROGRESSIVE PAINT Sr HARDWARE CO."Hyde Pork's Most Complete Point Cr Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountMY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th •». by Avlma RuderAt last Monday’s meeting, theStudent-Faculty-Administrationcourt lifted the injunction forbid¬ding Student government fromsending funds to pay the finesof Nashville, Tennessee students.In the case of Bromberg and Saddversus Byers and Sheldon, thecourt voted 7 to 1 to release themoney. The dissenting vote wascast by Justice Peter Langroek.John Kim, council for the de¬fense in the SG case, brought inAnn Bancroft, who testified thatshe had mailed notification of theSG meeting at which $160 wasappropriated to aid the Southernstudents participating in sit-downstrikes, to all SG members, in¬cluding Bromberg and Sadd.Justice Pepper wished to knowwhen the members would receivethis notification, if the cards weremailed on Saturday. Miss Ban¬croft stated that the cards wereusually received on Monday.Can SC send money?The issue of whether or not thegovernment has the right to sendmoney to Tennessee was raised.According to Dean Newman ofthe activities office, what moneythe government gets from theUniversity comes from campusfees and the revolving fund ofthe school. All expenditures mustbe approved by Beatrice Byles,Auditbr for Student organiza¬ tions. Hence it can only be spenton campus. However, if SG hasmoney of its own, there is norestriction on where it is to bespent.Student government has only$10 of its own other than theUniversity apportioned SG bud¬get. The Student Service centerand Flight to Europe profits be¬long to SG, but spending thismoney will require another actof the Assembly.SG must aid UC firstBromberg said that the Assem¬bly provides for its own financ¬ing, and has its own budget pro¬gram in accordance with the prin¬ciple embodied in the constitu¬tion. He interpreted this to meanthat the government can only'dothings it can finance itself. Theprinciple embodied in the Pre¬amble of the Student code is thatto further the interests and wel¬fare of UC students, the Studentgovernment will cooperate withUC authorities to formulate stu¬dent unity. The Student govern¬ment must promote the welfareof students at UC. Brombergasked if there was any basis forbelieving that this money ($160)voted to be sent to Tennesseewould aid UC students. Brom¬berg does not think that there isa distinction between furtheringthe interests of the students andproviding for their welfare. HeGhost Charge HauntsLucky Strike’s Dr. FroodDear Dr. Frood: I am writing my termpaper and would like to know how theaverage professor differentiates betweenresearch and plagiarism?Lit. MajorDear Lit: Plagiarism is when you copyyour paper from a book. Research is whenyou copy your paper from more thanone book.•&» *&>Deor Dr. Frood: I was shocked when1 read of ghostwriting firms preparingterm papers for certain college students.But 1 was doubly horrified, upset andstunned when I heard a rumor that you,Dr. Frood, also use a ghost. Tell me itisn't so, Doctor.Jacob MarleyDear Jacob: I categorically deny youraccusation. I do not use, nor have 1 everused, a ghost to write this column. I admit,however, that when confronted with cer¬tain difficult student problems, I havecalled upon my late departed UnclePurdy for advice and counsel.«0» O*Dear Dr. Frood: I have just been in¬formed that there are over 100 brands ofcigarettes on the market today. Why somany?Harvey J. WatnerdamDear Harvey: Conceivably, there are100 people in the country who do notsmoke Luckies.©4. r. cw Dear Dr. Frood: I am a sophomore whohas finally mastered every syllable of theWhiffenpoof Song. To my chagrin, Ihave just discovered that I am not at¬tending Vale. Any suggestions?Jivy LeaguerDear Jivy: Fake it, man, fake it!to* t&iDear Dr. Frood: I have just completedmy doctorate thesis on “The Socio-Politico-Religio-Economico Aspects ofTribal Development in Central Africa,1805-1809.” I believe my work has im¬mense popular appeal and would like tohave it published in pocket-book form.How does one go about doing this?Ethelbert PingbankDear Ethelbert: One changes the title to“Love-Starved in Mau Mau Land.” ” Dear Dr. Frood: Iam going nuts—nuts,I tellyou!—trying tosolve this puzzle.Please! What is thesecret?PuzzledDear Puzzled:*0*Dear Dr. Frood: I didn't make the crewbecause I get seasick. 1 couldn't makethe baseball team because the resinbag gives me a rash. 1 was kicked off thetrack team because cinders kept gettingin my eye. And I had to drop tennisbecause I get vertigo watching the ballgo back and forth. What can a greatathlete like myself do now?Sig LeeDear Sig: Why don’t you expose over¬emphasis of college athletics in a leadingnational magazine?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 J&tuM'eevn — c/vdaxeo is our middle name brought up a second point. Student government in sendingmoney is representing the wholeUniversity, and there may hosome students who do not concurwith the idea of the sit-in strikeand would not wish to have theirmoney sent.Kim said that the Universitypolicy is determined by the deanof students’ office, and not beforethe S-F-A court. There is no pm.vision under the S-G constitutionthat Student Government cannotspend as it wishes the money itraises itself. The NS A committeeshall work through Student gov¬ernment to implement all NS Adecisions. This includes the Nsadecision to support the Southernsit-in demonstrations. The prob¬lem before the court in this caseis the question whether SG shallrepresent the student as a stu¬dent or as a citizen. At the gov¬ernment meeting (that Brombergand Sadd failed to receive noli lo¬cation of), Neal Johnston <Col¬lege) moved a resolution, a spe¬cial order of business, to sendmoney to the South through CurtGans, vice president in charge ofnational affairs of NSA. Kim saidthat this was a perfectly coristitutional move.Government issues discussedThe question under discussionis the freedom of power to raisemoney versus the freedom ofpower to spend it. The measureto send money to the South wascompared with a resolutionpassed in sympathy of the South¬ern movement.Bromberg then stated that Kimsaid that the question of whetheror not sending money to studentsin Nashville furthers the inter¬ests of students here was a poli¬tical question, and as such shouldbe decided by the Assembly, notby the S-F-A court. Brombergwarned that the action of sendingmoney to the South may be ilk -gal according to the criminal lawsof the state of Tennesse. SG can¬not carry on a program to paythe fines of people convicted inTennesse, Bromberg stales, be¬cause this is contrary to the publie policy of this state.Kim said that the NAACPsends money down South. Brom¬berg is asking for a definition ofthe benefits accruing to UC stu¬dents from sending money to theSouth, and the Court can’t dothis. He asked if the question ofbenefits to UC students was poli¬tical, or if it comes under theconstitution.Company of the FourpresentsBen Jonson'swild & witty forceThe Alchemist8:00 p.m.—April 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 102:00 p.m.—April 2 & 9Tickets: $1.50; students $1.00ot motinees1174 E. 57th St.Ml 3-4170 FA 4-4100FOR THEIndependentTraveler...Here is an opportunity to join a uniqueorganization made up of people inter¬ested in unregimented European travel.Members have a source of travel informa¬tion and referrals with no commissionsinvolved; bases of operation in New Yorkand Europe as well as a meeting placefor members to socialize and have fun;shopping lips and discounts, lists of Eng¬lish speaking doctors and dentists; lowcost travel insurance, hotels and foodsources; social activities, and many otherservices. If you are planning to travel toEurope ... send for full information onthe benefits of membership to...OverseasGuest Club509 FIFTH AYE, N.Y. 17/OX 7 51571 • CHICAGO MAROON April 8, 1960Phil MovieDouglas speaks on civil rights legislationSenator Paul Douglas of Illi¬nois spoke on “Civil Rights Legis¬lation’’ last Saturday, March 26,at the conference of the collegedivision of the Catholic Interra¬cial council.Douglas began his speech byrecounting the happenings of thelast few weeks' in the Senatechambers because of the new civilrights bill. “We’ve been goingthrough a struggle in the Senatefor the past six weeks — and thecountry wants to know what’shappening,” he said."The greatest social weaknessin American life is our treatmentof the Negroes. There are differ¬ent approaches to the problem (ofdiscrimination) and legislation isonly one. But legislation can cre¬ate a minimum standard of con¬duct, and th n individuals bytheir own acts can raise the levelfurther.”The historical background ofthe segregation issue begins afterthe Civil War, when the thir¬teenth amendment, outlawing thepossession of slaves, the four¬teenth, making all equal citizensin the eyes of the law, and thefifteenth amendment, making allcitizens eligible to vote, wereenacted.'The fourteenth and fifteenthamendments have been, for themost part, disregarded in theSouth. All civil rights legislationsince the time of their passagehas been aimed at enforcing thesetwo amendments."In 1954, in the Brown case(dealing with segregation in theKansas public schools), the Su¬preme Court ruled unanimously,after three years deliberation,that segregation on the basis ofrace was discriminatory."In 1955, a supplementary de¬cision by the Court announcedthat these matters (discrimina¬tion cases) would be dealt withby the Court in the judical pro¬cess — with all deliberate speed."The orders to desegregateschools have been obeyed in theborder states, but not in the DeepSouth. And as to voting rights,Negroes are disenfranchised inmost country districts, but theydo vote in some Southern citiesNegroes cannot afford to takethese voting rights to the Su¬preme Court; the burden (ofproof of discrimination) fallsupon the class with the leastamount of money, and they can'tafford it. Also, seven Southernstates have made it a penal of¬fense for anyone outside the im¬mediate circle of those involvedin one of these cases from contrib¬uting money or legal aid. Thusthe NAACP can’t help."An act passed in 1957 gaveNegroes some additional measureof civil and voting rights. Theact provided that if Negroes weredenied voting rights, the Attor¬ney-General of the United Statescould file suit with the SupremeCourt on their behalf. “However,when the President’s Commissionon Civil Rights investigated lastyear, they found that the Attor¬ney-General had filed no suits. **The commission also foundthat there were 57 counties in theSouth (with a total Negro popu¬lation of 217,000) in which not asingle Negro voted. Sixty-fivecounties had only 1-5 percent ofthe Negro population voting.'Two solutions were posed tosolve this problem of non-regis¬tration of Negro citizens. TheCommission proposed a planwhereby if nine persons in a county felt discrimination waspresent in registration for federalelections, they could appeal to thePresident, who would appoint anelection commissioner to registerthem.“An alternate plan proposed bythe Attorney-General, suggestedthat referees be appointed to havepower in both state and federalelections to counter discrimina¬tion. The referee plan has manyBach society at UCTuesday, April 19 serious weaknesses. The com¬plainant must first of all proveto the federal district court that(a) he is qualified to vote and (b)there has been discrimination inhis registration. He must then goback to the same election boardthat has already rejected himonce, and reapply for registra¬tion. The District court may thenappoint a referee. The complain¬ant must prove discriminationagain to this referee, who willthen have hirq registered. FewNegroes have resources, patience,or courage enough to go throughthe whole procedure.“Nine Southern states started afilibuster, calling for a quorumevery hour or two. The burden of providing this quorum of 51 fellupon 63 people.“The House has passed a wat¬ered-down version of the originalcivil rights bill.“The race trouble in Africa af¬fects the entire world (three-fourths of which is ‘colored’) andfocuses attention on our prob¬lems. Our treatment of the Negrois our greatest internal sin andour greatest external weakness.“If man is only an animal, thenone animal has the right to en¬slave another animal. But if manhas something of the divine inhim — we are all brothers andsisters and injustice not only in¬jures others, but injures all ofus, too.”The Bach society will performJohann Sebastian Bach’s “A Mu¬sical Offering” Tuesday, April 19as part of the 1960 Festival of theArts. 'The work, seldom per¬formed, is one of Bach’s most in¬tricate and intellectual composi¬tions,*’ said Miss Alice Shaeffer,chairman of FOTA.Ray Stillo, the Chicago Sympho¬ny orchestra, is the oboeist; Nan¬cy Humphrey is the harpsichord¬ ist and director of the Society;George Sopkin is the ’cellist; andAbram Loft the violinist. The lat¬ter two musicians are membersof the Fine Arts quartetThe performance will be held inthe New Law Center auditoriumat 8 pm, April 19. Admission is$1.00 and tickets are available atthe Festival office, Reynolds club201. Present job opportunitiesApplicants for summer posi¬tions as members of the Collegeboard of the various major de¬partment stores are now beingconsidered.These positions, while they areprimarily concerned with .selling in the College shops, also offerthe opportunity to do some model¬ing and to participate with thebuyers in the selection of collegestyles for the coming year. Forfurther information call MissNovosel — extension 3288.HEADING HOME?While you’re on vacation, see IBM about your future.• ...» _ JIf you’re a senior or graduate student who sbdhasn’t found out the facts about the varied careeropportunities at IBM, now is the time.You’ll get a warm welcome at any of the morethan 200 IBM Branch, Regional, and DistrictOffices. Just call, ask for the manager, and makeon appointment.He will tell you what sort of company we are ...What we do . . . how rapidly data processing isgrowing. And he can tell you what we offer quali¬fied graduates in earnings, career training, job sat¬isfactions and opportunities for rapid promotion. We want ambitious men and women with goodscholastic records for openings in direct and in¬direct sales, applied science, administration, pro¬gramming, systems, manufacturing!, engineeringresearch, and product development.See your Placement Officer for more information,and please fee! free to call me for the location ofthe IBM office nearest your home:J. J. Keil, Branch ManagerInternational Business Machines Corporation9415 South Western AvenueChicago 20, IllinoisPATA PROCESSING DIVISION IBMFORSINGERSPhil Moore, famed arranger-coachfor Lena Home, Marilyn Monroe,Diahann Carroll, Sinatra, etc. nowmakes it possible to give your voicetruly professional styling andbroaden your “pop” repertoire atan amazing low cost.fOft SINGlItS ONLY are kits de¬signed for your voice. You get: 6special routines of all-time hits;printed orchestrations and lyrics;an LP with Mr. Moore’s vocaldemonstrations alternating withorchestra backgrounds for yourrehearsals; a Career Singing Book.4 Kits «n either low or high key areavailable: Boiladt, Torch/ 'N •/«#♦,Cool Jomx 'h( Rhythm, SophisticatedSongs.Only $12.95 p*KH<wVy vocal range when ordering)Write for complete information.,p• Coming events on quadrangles •Friday, 8 AprilThe Eucharist according to the Ln-theran use, 11:30 am. Bond chapel.Jazz club, 2:30 pm, Ida Noyes library.Come to listen or to play."Undergraduate Mathematics club, 3:30pm. Eckhart 206. Lance Small will givea talk on "Topology” intended forstudents in Mathematics 153 or above.Maroon staff meeting, 4 pm, Ida Noyeshall, east lounge. All Maroon staffmembers and anyone Interested injoining the staff are invited to attend.Mathematical Biology meeting, 4:30 m.5741 Drexel avenue. "A mathematicaltheory of the effect of size on therate of migration in the cellular slimemolds.”Vespers with sermon according to theLutheran use, 7:30 pm, Bond chapel.Folksing (SRP), 7:30-10 pm. Reynoldsclub, north lounge. SRP will announceits candidates for Student Govern¬ment and the National Student asso¬ciation and its platform for the com¬ing year. Leading the folk sing willbe Dick Merbaum. Karl Finger, EdRiddick. Nick Gravenider. MannyMeyer, Sue Pollerd, and John Ketter-son.Sabbath services (Hillel foundation),7:45 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue.Fireside conversation, 8:30 pm. 5715Woodlawn avenue. "Stories and musicfrom the Haggadah,” a pre-PassoverOneg Shabbat.Saturday, 9 AprilRecorder society. 1 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Baseball game, 2 pm. Stagg field. UC"B” team versus Wright Junior col¬lege.Radio broadcast, "The sacred note,"WBBM, 11 pm. A program of choral music by the University choir, Rich¬ard Vlkstrom. director of chapel mu¬sic, conducting.Sunday, 10 AprilRoman Catholic masses (DeSales house),8:30, 10, and 11 am, 5735 Universityavenue.Episcopal Communion service, 9:30 am,Bond chapel.Lutheran Communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel.Baisakhi celebrations (Sikh study cir¬cle), 10-12 am. 829 East 60th street.Free lunch to be served after thecelebration. All welcome.University Religious service, 11 am.Rockefeller memorial chapel. TheReverend Tom F. Driver, Union Theo¬logical seminary.Carillon concert, 2:30 pm. Rockefellerchapel. James R. Lawson, chapel carll-lonneur.Bach's “St. John Passion," 3 pm. Rocke¬feller memorial chapel. The Univer¬sity choir and members of the Chi¬cago Symphony orchestra. Admission,$3; students, $1.50.Lecture (Calvert club), 4:30 pm, 5735University avenue. "Church and Statein contemporary Italy.” Open to all.Interview of Paul Tillich (Disciples Stu¬dent fellowship), 7 pm, 5655 Univer¬sity avenue.Bridge club, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Duplicate bridge will be played.Channing - Murray student discussiongroup, 7 pm. 5638 Woodlawn avenue."The quest for security In our time."Monday, 11 AprilColloquium (Department of geography),4 pm, Rosenwald 41. “A mirror forFinland: a study in Finnish historicalgeography, 1750-1850."GLADIS restaurant1527 E. 55th DO 3-9788We Specialize in Well-Balanced Meals atPopular Prices, and Midnite SnacksOPEN ALL NICHT — ORDERS TO GO Microbiology club, 4 pm, Ricketts north1. "Fixation of complement by anti¬body aggregates.”Botany club, 4:30 pm, Botany 106. "In¬teresting plants of the Chicago re¬gion."Lecture (Department of history). 4:30pm. Classics 10. "Ireland in the UnitedKingdom, 1800-1922.”Lecture (Federated Theological faculty),4:30 pm, Social sciences 122. “Thetheological meaning of the history ofreligion.”Motion picture, 8 pm, Internationalhouse, assembly hall. "Cangacelro"(Brazil).Lecture (Department of art), 8:30 pm.Social sciences 122. "Agutlontus’ ‘Op¬tics' and Ruben's Color: a book anda picture.”Tuesday, 12 AprilThe Eucharist according to the Lu¬theran use, 11:30 am. Bond chapel.Varsity golf match, 1 pm. Longwoodgolf course. UC versus Roosevelt uni¬versity.Colloquium (Institute for the study ofmetals), 4:15 pm. Research Institutes211. "Random packing of spheres."Varsity tennis match. 1:30 pm. Varsitycourts, UC versus Roosevelt univer¬sity.Passover service (Hillel foundation),5:30 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue.Hillel Passover Seder, 6:15 pm, 5711Woodlawn avenue. By reservationonly.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship, 7:3Cpm, Ida Noyes hall, room 213. "Oppor¬tunities for Christian witness on cam¬pus."Television series, "All things consid¬ered,” WTTW (Channel 11), 9:30 pm.“The crisis In American religion."Wednesday, 13 AprilReligious service (Divinity school), 11:30am. Bond chapel.Varsity tennis match, 1:30 pm. Varsitycourts. UC versus De Paul university.Lecture (Graduate School of business),1:30 pm, Breasted hall.Baseball game, 3:30 pm, Stagg field. UC"B” team versus the University ofIllinois (Chicago). >Varsity track meet, 4 pm. Stagg field.UC versus Central Michigan college. Carillon concert, 4:30 pm. Rockefellermemorial chapel. James R. Lawson,chapel carlllonneur.Hillel Folk Dance group, 7:30 pm, 5715Woodlawn avenue.Thursday, 14 AprilZoology club, 4:30 pm. Zoology 14. “Ori¬gin and evolution of social behaviorIn bees.”Discussion forum (Student committeeon medical problems), 7:30 pm, DoraDeLee hall. "The Forand Bill.”Holy Communion service according tothe Lutheran use, 7 30 pm, Bondchapel.Lecture on the Israeli political system,8 pm, Ida Noyes. Sponsored by Stu¬dent Zionist organization.Maundy Thursday service of Holy Com¬munion. 8 pm. Rockefeller memorialchapel. Meditation by The ReverendHarold Walker, Jr., director, Porterfoundation.Lecture series. "The medieval originsof the novel” (Division of the human¬ities and Department of Romancelanguages and literatures), 8 pm. So¬cial sciences 122. "The beginnings."Friday, 15 AprilTrack meet, 9 am. Field house. NationalAAU women's indoor championships. Good Friday service with sermon ac¬cording to the Lutheran nse, 11 30Bond chapel. m-Community Good Friday service (Hvd.Park - Kenwood Council of churchyand Rockefeller memorial chapel) 1?"«°n -1 Pm. Rockefeller memorialchapel. The Reverend Walter Harreison, dean, the Divinity school.Jazz club, 2:30 pm, Ida Noyes llbrarvCome to listen or to play. w'Varsity baseball game, 3:30 pm Staerfield. UC versus the University ofWisconsin.Maroon staff meeting, 4 pm. Ida Noyeshalt, east lounge. All Maroon startmembers and anyone interested inJoining the staff are invited to attend.Vespers with sermon according to thaLutheran use, 7:30 pm. Bnod chapel"Jesus as Lord.” 'Passover Sabbath service (Hillel foun¬dation), 7:45 pm. 5715 Woodlawnavenue.Birthday of Khalsa (Sikh study circle)8 pm. Swift hall commons. "Birth ofSikhism.”Fireside conversation (Hillel founda¬tion), 8:30 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue"Of Poles, Germans, and Jews: theWarsaw Ghetto uprising.”ClassifiedFor rentModernized 2 bdrm. furnished farmhome In middle of 15-acre wooded tract.1 mile from Tremont, Indiana (Ind.Dunes State Park). 45 minutes fromUC campus via South Shore railroad ortollroad. Previous occupant UC facultymember. May 1st thru Sept. 30th. $500.Call WH 4-277# or Chesterton, Indiana,WA 9-1939.§&t am y°u ?If you see an elephant in this ink blot, your problem isyou’ve never met one. Because an elephant doesn’tlook anything like this blot. Like some of the newcars, he has a trunk in the front. He also has morein the way of ears than anyone really needs.We know about elephants because we have seenthem in the movies. We know about L*M filter ciga¬rettes because we make them.You can learn a Ipt about elephants by simply look¬ing at them, but you have to smoke an L*M to knowthat LSM has found the secret that unlocks flavor ina filter cigarette. And to know that in today’s L*M,with its patented Miracle Tip, fine tobaccos can beblended not to suit a filter but to suit your taste.We suggest you go to the movies and look at someelephants. And try an L*M.FILTERSUGCETT A MYERS TOBACCO GO. Reach forflavor...Reach forM• i«90 Liggett * Myevo Tobecce 0*10 • C H I C A G O MAROON • April 8, 1960 Rooms for rent In fraternity houseReasonable rates. Call Mr. PotemkinPL 2-9477.Single room, men. cooking privilegeslinen, weekly maid service. $38 6032Ellis. HY 3-3730.For saleBargain—1959 Mercury 40 h p. outboardmotor. Used only 10 hrs. Kurt OrmondMI 3-0800, ext. 260.LostVan Gronicka Russian book. If foundplease contact Maggie Stinson, NewDorm.I Large turtle. Answers to name of Flor-lent. Last seen in 1320 New dorm. Finderplease return to 1319x.Help wantedA foreign student from Africa or Asia,male or female, preferably female, towork from 8 am to 12 noon. Must havebackground in math and science. CallPL 2-8676. Mr. Anderson.ServicesSewing, alterations, hems. DO 3-1556.Crew-cnt, Ivy league or plain trim.Frank the Barber, Room 831. Hyde ParkNational Bank Bldg.PersonalCreative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.Little One: Have a Jolly weekend. TheWalker.Cheerful, newly decorated, attrac¬tively furnished apartment. Safe,fireproof deluxe elevator building.Doorman. Night watchman. Maidand linen service available. Rea¬sonable monthly rotes from $87.50.Have a WORLD of FUN!Tronrtf with fITAOwye mm tree* $675Orient) SEt \ 43-65 0wMoor fc*cLd*cw11*0* r*4it_Aim lew-cost tripe to AAeairn$16* up. South Amorim U9f up.Hawaii Study Torn $5M up on*Around the World $I8M77® fW ' Aefc Tour Tfpvel Agent Jf m to McMgea AwCkUegg 4, U MSS?would mn vr]«-M,laes12alI-r.%>t*taL Johnson describes primariesby Walter Johnsonchairmandepartment of historyPresidential preference pri¬maries usually have not beenimportant in the final choiceat the nominating convention.This has been partly so since onlya minority of states have a presi¬dential preference primary —inI960, only sixteen will have sucha primary. Moreover, of these six¬teen states, only five of them bindthe delegates at the conventionto support the candidate who wonthe primary vote.Primary winner no 'sure in'No candidate runs in all thesixteen primaries; and even if hedid and won them all, he wouldarrive at the Democratic conven¬tion this July with 584 possiblevotes, but he will need 761 to cap¬ture the nomination. And the 584vote figure assumes that theeleven states with presidentialpreference primaries which donot commit the delegates by lawto vote for the winner of the pri¬mary will cast their delegationvote for the front-runner in theirprimary. This is not a safe as¬sumption if one studies previousconventions.Two presidential nominatingconventions come immediately tomind in which front-runners inthe primaries were unable to winthe nomination. In 1912, formerPresident Theodore Rooseveltwon 278 votes in the primaries, toPresident Taft’s 48 and SenatorRobert M. LaFollette’s 36. But inthis ease only 13 out of the then48 states used the primary andconvention and won the nomina¬tion for the incumbent President.But it proved to be a disastrousvictory for Taft and the Republi¬can party since Theodore Roose¬velt and his followers walked outof the Republican party andformed the Bull Moose party. vn<r.. nation-wide test of the “people’s Take Wisconsin, for example, stance, that a Republican can voteIn Wle non“* choice”. Moreover, one should where you don’t have to state in the Democratic primary. PriorD . . .... point out that certain primaries your party affiliation to vote in to last Tuesday’s voting, therePrimaries held in seven states are subject to possible abuse, this primary; this means, for in- was much speculation that Re-Of these 13 largest states dele¬gates, only seven have primaries,and of these seven only the pri¬maries of California, Indiana, andOhio are really binding on thedelegates. Thus, except for thesethree, the other ten large statesdo not commit their delegates asa result of a presidential primary.The biggest state of all, NewYork, with 114 convention votes,doesn't have a presidential pri¬mary; it uses both the state com¬mittee and congressional districtprimaries as the way of selectingits delegates, but it does not havea general primary in which presi¬dential aspirants can run. Start¬ing with New York’s 114 votes,the other largest states at theconvention will be California andPennsylvania, each with 81 votes,Illinois with 69, Ohio with 62,Texas with 61, Michigan with 51,Massachusetts with 41, and NewJersey with 41, Missouri with 39,North Carolina with 37, Indianawith 34, and then Georgia andTennessee, each with 33.Primaries sample opinionAt best, with our scattered,haphazard primary system, theprimaries should be regarded assamples of public opinion to as¬sist the delegates at the conven¬tion in making their final judg¬ment but certainly not to be de¬cisive with only sixteen primaries,and a small minority of these inwhich the delegates are bound tosupport a candidate.These primaries have not in thepast been significant nationally indoing the one thing that isclaimed for them: that is, demon¬strating the popularity and vote¬getting ability of a candidate. Andsince there are only sixteen ofthem, they cannot provide any publican Catholics would crossover and vote for Senator Ken¬nedy. Whatever the reason, if Re¬publicans did vote in the Wiscon¬sin Democratic primary, theyhelped select the oppositionparty’s candidate — hardly thepurpose of the primary system,and it would obscure how popularthat candidate was with the rankand file of his party.Republicans cross party linesSome observers of the 1956Minnesota presidential preferenceprimary were convinced at thetime—although naturally this isdifficult if not impossible toprove—that a number of Republi¬cans voted in the Democratic pri¬mary. Since there was no contestin the Republican primary, theseobservers suggested that someRepublicans voted for Senator(Continued on pg. 12)ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dye in#and Refinishing ofShoes and Handbags9 Colors matched • Toes cut out• Vamps lowered • PlotformsremovedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES*NARROW HEELSHeels changed — Any style —Any colorBach strops Removed and Springa-lators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St.Walter Johnson considers the history of primary winners.Kefauver won primariesThe other convention I have inmind was the Democratic one in1952. Senator Kefauver won anumber of primaries, but his vot¬ing strength on the second ballotat the convention here in Chicagowas only 362-1/2 and 615-1/5 voteswere needed to win the nomina¬tion. On the third ballot the draft-Stevenson movement swept theIllinois governor to victory.It can be argued that more Im¬portant than the 16 states withprimaries—and their 584 conven¬tion votes—is the fact that if onecandidate could get the entirevote of the 13 largest delegationsto this convention, plus some 15THECALVERT CLUBPresents"Church and StateIn Contemporary Italy"A Public Lecture ByERIC COCHRANEDept, of History, U. of ChicagoSunday, April 10 at 4:30De Sales House5735 University AvenueEUROPE 1960If you are planning a trip to Europein 1960, you may wish to check onthe following:1. Lowest air fares by scheduled air¬line, e.g. round-trip for one ailyear New York - Glasgow, $372.Round trip for dependent east-bound before May 15 and afterAugust 15, $251.2. Free advice about European hotelsand transportation.3. Purchase or rental of any makeEuropean car, also in connectionwith student flights.4. Choice of two all-expense escortedtours, 40 and 48 days, with depart¬ure by ship on June 10 and by airon July 2.For fuU information, call or writeMr. Arne Brekke, 6009 S. WoodlawnAve., Chicago 37, Ill. BUtterfield8-6437. Campus agent for IcelandicAirlines. Five years of experience inEuropean travel. J lest choice ol power teems Multiple UillightsFor economics! transportationParkwood b-Door Station WagonmsmimBiscoyne S-Door SedanFull Coilcushioning Msgk-Mirrof finishSafety Order frameSingle My lockingFuel economy Air Conditioning-temperature* made to order—for all-weather comfort. Get a demonstration 1Tfee Dinah Shore Chevy Show in eolor Sundays. NBC-TV—the Pat Boone Chevy Sbewrocm weekly, ABC-TV.Jmpala ConvertibleIII f!ANT BUY ANY CAR FOR LESS... UNLESS ITlS A LOT LESS CAR!There's no secret about it—Chevroletcan give you more basic comfortsand conveniences because it makesmore cars and builds them moreefficiently. As a matter of fact, ifother low-priced cars gave you whatChevy does, they couldn't afford tobe low priced. But see for yourselfwhat we mean. You have more ways to GO in Chevywith 24 engine-transmission combina¬tions to choose from—more than anyother car in the industry. You also gethydraulic valve lifters in all popularengines—another Chevy exclusivethat hushes noise to a murmur andprolongs valve life. Fuel economy?The new Economy V8 gets up to 10% more miles on every gallon and Chevy’sHi-Thrift 6 is famous for the way itskimps on gas. Credit Full Coil sus¬pension for the unruffled ride—onlyChevy among the leading low-pricedthree has the friction-free cushioningof coil springs inrear. Try it for yousoon—say, tomorrfor economical transportationSee your local authorized Chevrolet dealer for fast delivery, favorable dealsApril 8. I960 • CHICAGO MAROON • tl(Continued from pg. 11)Presidential primaries act as stimulantKefauver to weaken the influenceof Senator Humphrey and Gov¬ernor Freeman who were sup¬porting: Governor Stevenson.Whatever the validity of this con¬tention, it is significant that Min- 1952, after he had lostnesota dropped the presidentialprimary for I960.Another abuse that has devel¬oped in primaries over the yearsis that with lots of money spentfor one given candidate and anorganized block of voters turn¬ing out. a primary can l>e won bya given candidate who by nomeans could win if there were abig turn-out of the vole. The per¬centage of voters who turn out ina primary in this country is gen¬erally very low. ranging fromtwenty to thirty per cent of theregistered voters. So a turn-outof this size hardly reveals thatthe candidate who wins in such aprimary is the "people's choice,"as is frequently claimed.Signs of popularityStill, with all the valid criti¬cisms that can be made of presi¬dential primaries, over the years the Wisconsin primary has been vania to throw him their support Senator’s challenge to other can- move into the age of space, thea particularly important one. this early in the campaign. And didates to meet him in the pri- age of rockets and missiles, it’sWendell Wilkie's defeat there in by no means was this vote a maries is based on the idea that the first time that fifty states win1944 led to his withdrawal from death blow to Senator Humphrey, no one who has not won a few vote for a president. There’ll bethe race. Senator Taft's victory in The next important primary is primaries deserves to be taken more popular votes east than evert to General West Virginia on May 10 where seriously by the nominating con- before; and there will be moreEisenhower in the earlier New Humphrey apparently has the vention. electoral votes In the electoralHampshire primary, proved to be edge over Kennedy. Chance of nominating winner college than ever in our history —a powerful stimulant to the Taft Kennedy challenge ignored It seems to me that if Senatorcampaign. While Senator Ken- Kennedy’s challenge to other Kennedy’s challenge became annedy has just won two-thirds of candidates for the Democratic unwritten rule of our politics thethe Wisconsin delegates, I don’t nomination to fight it out with presidential conventions would bebelieve that his margin of victory him in the primaries has been bound to nominate not the choicein the popular vote was decisive ignored by all the candidates ex- of the delegates at the conven 537 electoral votes In I960, ofwhich 269 are necessary for vlo-tory.Will one party have controlAnother unique feature of thisenough to persuade Democratic cept Humphrey and Senator tion, but the winner of three or presidential election is that neverleaders in such states as Pennsyl- Wayne Morse. The Massachusetts'Friars will include movieby Jim Best"It's just — a typical place.**With tongue in cheek the 1960Blackfriar show Silver Bellsand C’oekel Sheels begins withthis tribute to tinseltown. Thestory involves the attempts of aHollywood director to do an wiji ^ a fjve minute technicolor"adult fairy tale, a witch to be- students are $1.00, 1.25 and 1,50;for non-students, $1.00, 1.50, 2.00and 2.50. Group rates are avail¬able for groups of twenty or morepeople but tickets must be or¬dered well in advance of the showas the supply is limited.An added feature of the show four of the primary fights. Thiswould mean that the nominatingconvention would stop being a de¬liberative body.Each presidential election hasunique features; 1960 will beclearly no exception. The 1960presidential election will be thefirst time that voters will judgecandidates at a time in whichthe world and the United States before has the party, in this easethe Democrats, opposed to theincumbent President won controlof Congress in three successiveelections — 1954, 1956, and 1958.Or, put another way, never havewe had a President of one partyfor two terms who has had a Corigress controlled by the oppositionparty for six out of his eightyears in office.Bicycles, Ports. Accessoriesspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP <162) e. 55th st. j come mortal, and a warlock toreturn to hell. As in past years,the show is replete with good dia¬logue, situation comedies, and 16foot-tapping songs.Tickets for this year’s show sequence, depicting Holly¬wood’s attempt to do SleepingBeauty as an "adult" movie. Inge-mar Bergmann (alias John Calla¬han) will direct this extrava¬ganza, which will be filmed in theWieboldt lounge early next week.may be purchased in the Mandel Featured in this film clip will becorridor ticket booth daily from Cindy Whitsell as Sleeping10 am to 5 pm. Ticket prices for Beauty, Jerry Mast as PrinceCharming and Lonie Bovdr as theWitch.STUDENT JOBMale or FemaleGovernment Contract AdministrationExcellent job for student who can work 30 hours per weekand can type accurately.Visit or pf. one:MISS SHONYOStudent Personnel Office—Ingleside Hall956 E. 58th Street Ext. 3158 UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingFour barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorKGDL KROSSWORDACROSS 3. Where the nutacome from1. Fraternal letter 4. Cricketers'6. Haywire ora wag9. Crewdrivers 5. This is basic,19. This is poison in basic11. Sport for 6. like switchingWillie the to KoolsPenguin (3 words)(2 words) 7. Upright13. Seat-of-the- (2 words)pants condition 3. Necessity for14. They go Pop’s carwith outs 12. Traveling15. Grand, hand (2 words)or band 16. Curvaceous17. Small accounts figure20. Little 17. It’s good laorganization the hole21. Strike out 18. Modern art.26. With dames sounds 1 2 3 ■n9U13 I5 6 7 8,0■ No. 10*ARE YOU KQDLenough toKRACK THIS?*29. Hayseedyman's nama30. What Harvardmen fish for31. A little lessthan many32. A kindof Abner33. Between youand themattress35. (.in alternative37. EveryoneKool’sMenthol Magic41. Khan man42. “Jernt"41. Kind of cent45 Libido45. Backward idolin Italy47. Bess’s curve4K, An age49. N. C. collegeDOWNI deBoulogne2. Reachingwithoutthe ring educational (pi.)19. Classy classes21. Kools are _favored bydiscerningsmokers22. It follows"Hi"23. jam24. It's coolinglike a Kool25. Ointment item27. Creme -creme28. Pedal wiggler33. Buy a cartonof Kooia at yourfavorite34. Count,for instance35. It precedes30 Across36. Unopened38. America's mostrefreshingcigarette39. Prefix meaning“within"40. Kind of dive43. KnowledgeablefellowYOU NEED THE°F KQDL ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 satVi 1yart T 11 1.sEl w3SH EE03 3 HH 3 0 1S y V 0V i 3 aba/vtSNtf TGDXOleso, BROWS a WtU-IAMSON TOBACCO COBS.CHICAGO MAROON • April 8, 1960 Temporarily short on cash?Upon presentation of your validatedStudent Identification Card youcan receive a $10 loan for aperiod of two weeks.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERReynolds Club BasementHours: 11:00 - 1:00 — 3:30 - 5:005H™Baseball team plays practicegame with Wilson Jr. collegeThe UC baseball team playedWilson Jr. college Tuesday, April5, at Stagg field. In spite of thecold early spring weather, theteam was working out the off sea¬son kinks.Under the tutelage of CoachKyle Anderson about 35 aspirantshave been working out in the fieldhouse, since January 20. Amongthe players are the veterans fromlast year’s squad, team captainBill Bauer, Ira Levy, Dick Thomp¬son, Bill Eckerly, and NeimonTaylor.Coach Joe Stampf has turnedin his basketball shoes for base¬ball spikes to assist coach Ander¬son in building the Maroons forthe present season.The starting line-up was com¬posed of Levy (2b), Bauer (If),Bill Gessel (ss), Steve Potemkinfib), Art McBroom (3b), JackMerskin (c), Eckerly (rf) andTaylor (cf). Most of the squadparticipated in the practice.A combination team of “B” menand freshmen will officially openthe Maroon 1960 baseball seasonagainst Wright Jr. college, on theStagg field diamond, Saturday,April 9, at 2 pm.Five frosh returnReturning members from lastyear’s freshmen team are WallyJankowski, Howard Fields, LouIlirsch, Brian Hoffman and DonWillet. Outstanding first yearmen are Dan Eby, member of thebasketball team and graduate ofIT High, Bill Comerford, an out¬standing southpaw pitcher in Lit¬tle league and high school play,and Jack Merskin, a letter winneron the wrestling team.Home games for the comingseason are as follows: Wisconsin,April 15-16; Wisconsin-Milwaukee,April 19; Chicago Teachers, April21; Illinois tech, April 28; Illinois-Chicago, May 5; Chicago Teach¬ers, May 14; Illinois-Chicago, MayK17; Lake Forest, May 19; Chi-cagoland Tourney, May 21; andAlumni game, June 9.Golf team winsThe UC golf team opened the1960 campaign by defeating Con¬cordia college, lO^-T^, at WhitePines golf club, Tuesday, April 5.With the weather conditions lessthan ideal and only one round ofpractice, the scores were in theeighties.The scoring was as follows:I-arry Costin 3, Henry Halliday 3,Fred Paulsell 2%, Dave Kreisman2, Bob Leibman and Dave Silver 0.The next match will be Tues¬day, April 12, against North Cen¬tral college at the Longwoodcountry club, Steger Road in Chi¬cago Heights.Fencers place 19thAt the NCAA Fencing cham¬pionships held this past week-endat Illinois, the three-man Chicagoteam turned in a very creditableshowing and finished nineteenthin the nation. This was particular¬ly surprising in view of our poorrecord during the regular season,1 TO. Ron Shelton competed inepee, Jim Milgrim in foil, and Elli¬ott Lilien in saber.Shelton, fencing in top form,led the Maroon effort with 10 vic¬tories, reversing many previous losses, and upsetting Jerry Old,the All-American from the Uni¬versity of Kansas. Ron finished15th in the strong epee field, and,off his strong performance, be¬comes a contender for nationalhonors next year. Milgrim like¬wise produced his best effort ofthe year and early established theChicago team’s role as spoiler inthe tournament with a win overYale, which, as it eventually turn-^ out, cost the Eli’s sixth place.Milgrim was 20th in the country.In saber Elliot Lilien, althoughlosing to many of the same menhe had beaten handily during theregular season, administered de¬feats first to the Big Ten cham¬pion from Iowa and All-AmericanStew Reuter of Columbia, andthen to All-American Ed Parmi-chek of Penn, the last victory cost¬ing the Pennsylvania sabermanthe national championship. Lilienfinished 19th overall. The returnnext year of eight out of the ninestarters on this year’s squad,point to a successful 1961 for theChicago swordsmen.INTRAMURAL NEWSSpring Quarter is here and theyear is drawing to a fast close.Intramural points are being givenout to last quarter winners. Theseare the point standings for collegehouses and fraternities as of April8, 1960. Spring Quarter will helpor’hinder the leaders according towho wins the big intramural ac- 4. Dodd 5805. East IV 578166. Chamberlin .4347. Mead 3868. Salisbury 370ft9. Foster 353 Vs10. Mathews11. East I 47Deadline dates for entry blanks: April 10—Horseshoe entries due.April 12—Softball entries due.April 13—Tennis entries due.Equipment available: SpringQuarter Nature Lovers!!! Picnicequipment for wekend excursionsmay be checked out through theIntramural office during thespring quarter. Contact Intra¬ mural office, extension 277, fordetails.The Ail-University Rifle Tour¬nament will be held on April 25and 29. All University studentsmay compete. To obtain informa¬tion please contact the Intramuraloffice. Entries are due on the 18thof April.Eadie wins scholarshipJohn Eadie, a graduate stu- London during the forthcoming ish government to United Statesdent in history, was awarded academic year. Eadie is one of 24 graduate students.a Marshall scholarship for students selected for the Marshallstudy at the University of aid offered annually by the Brit-tivities.Fraternities1. Psi U 1090^2. Phi Delt . 731 y23. Delta U . 6444. Z.B.T . 544 ft5. Beta . 5006. Phi Gam . 4517. Phi Psi . 4228. Phi Sig . 3919. Alpha Delt . 94College House1. East III ...708 "a2. East II ...7053. Vincent .. .624 In appointing Marshall scholars,the selectors look for distinctionof intellect and character as evi¬denced both by scholastic attain¬ment and by other activities andachievements. Preference is givento candidates who combine highacademic ability with the capacityto play an active part in theUnited Kingdom university towhich they go.Short lists of recommendedcandidates are drawn up by fiveregional committees, each com¬posed of the British Consul-Gen¬eral for the region and five UnitedStates citizens.SPRING COLORSPRESERVE THEM ON AGFA COLOR PRINTSSEE FINISHED FILM AND PRINTS IN LESS THAN A WEEKENJOY THEM ALL YEAR AROUNDGET YOUR FILMS TODAYHAVE THEM DEVELOPED ATUniversity of Chicago Bookstore58TH AND ELLIS THEFAMILYMANis conscious of his respon¬sibility tP his family. Hetherefore has a Sun Life ofCanada insurance programspecifically designed totake care of his wife andchildren.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LaSalle Chicago, HI.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-68001 represent the Sun Life As¬surance Company of Canada.Our modem plans can betailored to fk your own in¬dividual needs. May I dis¬cuss some of these plans withyou? There is no obligation,of course.iSUN LIFE ASSURANCECOMPANY OF CANADAThe CoUegeLAUNDERETTE1449 Eaot 57th 9».MU 4-9236open daily til! 1open weekends till 21369 East 57th Street HARPER LIQUORS EASTER SPECIALS1114 E. 55th St. Phones: FA 4-1233 — 1318 — 7699Canada Dry BourbonRegularly $4.69*3.49 fifth3 for $10.00 FREE DELIVERYFrom 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. Imported WinesFRENCH98e fifthScotch Vat 69Regularly $5.95Now *4.98 fifth CHIANTI98C /mM quartOld Forester BondedRegularly $6.25 -*4.98 fifth White HorseRegularly $6.25Now *4.98 fifth GERMAN*1.19 fifthCanada Dry Gin90 PROOF*3.79 /uil quart Haig & Haigt ' Regularly $6.25Now *4.98 fifth MOGEN DAVID orMANISCHEVITZfull quart 98CALSO DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED WINES AND BEERS ...» flyift.m■I' itIHiH:IApril 8,1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13Art shows grace FOTA festival of the arts eoFour art exhibits will be featured in this year’s Festival of the Arts, April 22-30. MissAlice Schaeffer, FOTA chairman, said that these exhibits will include a student art exhibit,a faculty art exhibit, a sculpture exhibit, and a photography exhibit. All exhibits will openSunday, April 24 at 2 pm.The chairman explained that all works must be mounted suitable for hanging or display,and must bear the name of the artist and title of work on the back. She said that all worksmust be delivered to the Festivaloffice from 9-5, April 15-18, andbe accompanied by the entryblanks below. Exhibitors mayclaim their works at the Festivaloffice from 9-5, May 13-15.Faculty Art exhibitAll faculty members and theirspouses are eligible to exhibit.The show is open to all media andwill be hung in the lounge of IdaNoyes hall.Photography exhibitAll persons affiliated with theUniversity may compete for the$10 first prizes to be awarded ineach of two categories: black-and-white, and color. This exhibit willhang in the North Lounge of theReynolds club throughout theFestival. each category'. No more than fiveworks may be submitted by eachartist. Judges will make a pre¬liminary selection for the show'to be hung in the lobby of theNew Residence halls. Prizes will be awarded on April 27.Interested persons may fill outthe accompanying blank and sub¬mit it with their works at theFestival office in Reynolds club201.NameAddressPhoneMediumTitlePrice artexhibitStudent Art exhibitAll students registered at themain campus of the Universityfor the spring quarter, 1960, areeligible to compete for prizes inpainting, watercolors, and graph¬ics. A $50 first prize and a $25second prize will be awarded in Art collection on display at IdaOver 400 paintings, lithographs, are being made available to alland other art works from the students starting April 12.Joseph Randall Shapiro collectiony nirry? w ww rrYrrrrrfITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage Cr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st. The collection, with works bysuch artists as Chagall, Picasso,Rouault, and Miro, is now on dis¬play in Ida Noyes and the NewDorm lobby. It will be availableon a first-come, first-served basisnext Tuesday, Wednesday, andThursday from 2:30 to 4:30 pm.The rental charge is 50c, whichincludes insurance and handling.Shapiro recently augmented thecollection with 24 Rouaults, andover 20 other paintings. Whenasked why he added still morepictures this quarter, Shapiro re¬plied, “Your question reminds meof a story about a mqther took her 7 year old son to see Ben Hur.Viewing a shot of the arenawhere victums were being fed tothe lions, the little boy startedto scream and cry. His mothertried to calm him down, but thechild sobbed even more. *Two lit¬tle lions didn’t get any Chris¬tians!’ he cried.“Well," continued Shapiro, “wooriginally had 80 paintings andreceived 200 applications forthem. Its those students whodidn’t get to participate— thelions without any Christians —that I’m concerned about. Therehas been an overwhelming de¬mand for the pictures. “We will increase the collectionso that all students who applymay have pictures. If 1000 stu¬dents want to participate in theprogram, we’ll get 1000 picturesfor them. A great demand willcreate an awareness of the needfor such a program, and it willbecome nationally known.“The program has two majorobjectives. First, to acquaint thestudents with the experience ofhaving an original work of artto live with. There is a hope thatthere will be a level of qualityso that the art work will have aneffect on the students* lives.EXTRA-CURRICULAR.When you have time away fromthe books, enjoy it morewith BudweiserWhere there’s Life.. .there’s Bud®KINS OF BEERS ♦ MHEUSEft-MtCK, Mfc . ST. LOUIS . NEWARK . LOS ANGELESjJIIAMl . TAHP*H • CHICAGO MAROON • April 8, 1960 photo by BergerShapiro collection lies in heaps before Walter Jeshke,Ida Noyes mogul, gets a chance to hang them.THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree lJ.C. DeliveryTerry ’s1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045Clark theatreC AC at all timesW SDeci.ll student price dark Cr modisoaopen 7:30 o.n*.late ihow 4 o.»w-C Ac at all times lote *how 4 *V special student price Ijust present your i;d. cord to the coVhier of the bo*off>ce"every triday i« ladies' day— womoiv admitted for 2Scfri. 8th“susan slept here”“1st travelingsaleslady”fri.15th“tea for two”“7 little foys”fri. 22nd“the vintage”“helen niorganstory” sat. 9th“no name on thebullet”“never so few”sat. 16th“les girls”“young man witha horn”sat. 23rd“a summer place”“the 3rd voice” sun. 10th“the last angryman”“he who must diesun.17th“top hat”“follow the fleetgun. 24th“the last 1» days”(of Adolf Hitler)“the goddess”Culture VultureUnfurl the banners! Let your hearts sing! Yes, you guessed it, tomorrow is the anniversary of Ponce de Leon's discoveryof Florida. There! So let us all raise our voices in song honoring Ponce. Three good hearty cheers — Hip Hip Hurrah! Hip Hip• Hurrah! Hip , , , eh, you get the general idea. So, pretense and ceremony adieu, let us adjourn to the higher mysteries.On campusTheaterHuzzah! I shout, Horray- Bra-vissimo! and again Huzzah! Why,you might ask, am I hurling forthsuch accolades? Why?!! — Be¬cause University Theater Is busyat work on not one, not two, butFour! Yes, count them — Fournew productions for the Springquarter. . . . Come gather yeround while I tell you all aboutthem.The next Item Is a radio adapta¬tion of The Misanthrope, by Mo-here, scheduled to be performedover station WUCB on the lastWednesday of April. A compara¬tive first for University Theater— Admission is free!! All oneneeds is a radio set somewherein the very immediate vicinity ofthe dorms, and he can hear theplay for nothing; let it never besaid that pay-as-you-go radio hasInfiltrated into our campus.The deeper significations of theplay are very deep and very sig¬nificant Indeed. Algerenon P.Nerd, professional student in theHumanities, said of the play —‘This . obviously one of Moli-ere’s lai °r neo-Fausteoian plays;it concerns the conflict betweenthe heretofore unsubstantiveforce, as contrasted with the pri-mordially paralleling, yet at thesame time Indeed Millsojan con¬cept, primarily relating to thequantity which we all know sowell.” . . . And I say — Why Not!!But I digress. Dick D’Anjou.director of the play, also directedthe Court Theater production ofanother Moliere play, The Imag¬inary Invalid, two years ago; andjudging from the great successof that production, we can expectsomething very fine from thenew show. The Misanthrope.Next items — In conjunctionwith the Festive of the Arts, UTis presenting a double-barreled,sockerootie, evening of theater—a one act farce, Voyage et Amourby Dan Geroulld, and a demon¬stration of modern dance byNeville Black and his company.This double bill, described by Mar¬vin Phillips, director of Univer¬sity Theater as "One of the mostexciting dance-drama programsin UTs history,” will be present¬ed Wednesday through Saturday,April 27-30.Black and his Company havescheduled a rip snorter of a pro¬gram, including dances to themusic of such different compos¬ers as Bach, Rameau, Stan Ken¬ton, and many others. Dan Ger-oud, the author of Voyage was aformer instructor of the Humani¬ ties here in little old Chicago. Andimagine, tickets for the wholeshebang cost only $1 through$1.50 apiece! Performances beginat 8:30 or thereabouts at theReynolds Club theater.**. . . Look Out!"“Where?”“It’s right behind you.”“Oh no! Look — It’s gettinglarger.”“Good Heavens, it’ll devour usall!”“It’s coming straight towardus! . . . It’s . . . It’s . . .“That’s right, it’s Gittle’s Aunt,the rollicking new Blackfriar pro¬duction for 1960. Tickets, pricedfrom $1.00-$2.50 are now on saleat the Mandel corridor box office.Scheduled to be performed at 8:30pm on April 22 23, Gittle’s Auntis the moving tale of an innocentEskimo waif and his adventureswith the sensual Egyptian moviestarlet, Ramesses Zaza.There remains just one moreweek to see The Company of theFour’s production of Ben John¬son’s The Alchemist; perform¬ances are scheduled 8 pm April8-10, and 2 pm Sat., April 9 atJohn Woolman hall on 57th street.Admission is $1.50 for the eve¬ning performances, and $1:00 forthe Saturday matinee. I repeatthat tickets for this hilariousfarce are hard to obtain; so run,don’t march down to your nearesttelephone and call FA 4-4100 orMI 3-4170 for tickets right away;and remember, I’m not just abird a-chippin’ his teeth in Dixie.MusicDon’t forget, this Sunday at3 pm the University of ChicagoChoir with members of the Chi¬cago Symphony Orchestra, willperform Bach’s St. John Passionat Rockefeller chapel. If this,31the fourth Chicago Choir presen¬tation of the year, is anywhere asgood as the previous three, wecan expect a very fine afternoonof music. Tickets are on sale atthe Chapel office, Universitybookstore, and Woodworths,priced at $1.50 for students and$3.00 for otherwise.Festival of the Arts will presentA Musical Offering by J. S. Bach.Scored for four instruments, Nan¬cy Humphrey, musical director of the Bach society will play theharpsichord, and Ray Still, of theChicago Symphony the oboe, withAbram Loft on the violin andGeorge Sopkin on the bass viol.The presentation of J. S.’ seventy-minute ditty will be on Saturday,April 19 in the Law School audi¬torium. Tickets priced at $1 foreverybody will be on sale at theFOTA office, Reynolds club 201.MoviesTonight B. J. Cinema will pre¬sent the 1956 film Picnic, star¬ring William Holden, Kim Novak,and Rosiland Russell. Based onthe play by William Inge, thefilm concerns a lonely drifter andthe tremendous impact he hasupon the sleepy f a c t o ry townwhich he passes through in histravels; with Mr. Holden playingthe drifter, I can personally saythat this is one of the most power¬ful films I have ever seen. Showings are at 8 and 10 pm at JudsonCommons; admission forty cents.Next week, BJ Cinema is sched¬uled to show The Male Animalby James Thurber.International house is showingthe 1954 Brazilian film, Canga-ceiro. This, the first Brazilian-made film to be released in theUnited States, is the story of anoutlaw band’s pursuit of one oftheir own members who had de¬serted. Scheduled for 8 pm, Mon¬day, April 11 at the Internationalhouse assembly hall, admission isfifty cents.Off campusTheaterThe Blaekstone Theater has of¬fered a student discount rate fortheir forthcoming production ofTennessee Williams’ play, SweetBird of Youth. With this specialdiscount it is now possible to get$2.75 and $2.50 second balconyseats for the new low price of$1.50. But one warning — Theshow begins this Monday, April11 and runs for only three days,and there will probably be a tre¬mendous run on tickets; so getdown to Blaekstone box office, 60East Balbo street, near the ArtInstitute and get your ticketswhile the getting’s good. Perform¬ances are at 8:30 Monday throughFriday, with a Wednesday mat¬inee at 2 pm.Redhead, the Broadway musi¬cal starring Gwen Verdun andRichard Kelly is now playing atthe Shubert Theater, 22 West Monroe. Tickets priced from$2.20-$6.60 are now on sale at thetheater boxoffice. Curtain risesnightly except Sunday at 8:30,with two matinees Saturday andWednesday at two in the after¬noon; again, Hurry! Show closesApril 19.MusicIt is sort of futile to mentionit at this time, but Van Cliburnis playing down at Orchestra hallnext Tuesday, April 12 where hewill perform Schuman’s A minorpiano concerto. If you can begor steal tickets, by all means doit; of course if you can buy themthat’s even better, but less likely.Tonight at Orchestra hall Rich¬ard Dyer Benett, counter tenor,is singing what has been called a“six century hit parade.” For his concert Benett is singing old Eng¬lish love songs, sea chanteys, andAmerican railroad and canalsongs.MoviesStarting tonight and for theweek to come, the Hyde Parktheater is showing Room at theTop and Tennessee Williams’Suddenly Last Summer. SimoneSignorct, just this week won theAcademy Award for her portray¬al of a beaten down love-hungrymiddle aged woman ’ in Room.While the film as a whole doesn’t,I feel, quite live up to JohnBraine’s novel from which it wasadapted, it still provides a veryworthwhile motion picture expe¬rience. Suddenly Last Summer. . . well, you know about That!... I don’t.foreign cv bopibl $ dWeMl 3-3113Msrsfccastrol lubricantslucas electrical" partsarmstrong shockspirelli & michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors lineqtectafefefc speed tuningcustom engine Installationsclutch.gear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachworkbeh tester MG psychiatrist2306 e. 71st st.Chicago, Illinois Steamship $400 upRound Trip frequent soiling^Thrift Round Trip hy AIRSHANNON LONDON PAHS$408.40 $453.40 $493.20|Ratos to other destinations onapplication. By using stop-overprivileges, your entire transporta¬tion in Europe may be containedin your air ticket.DRIVE YOUR OWN CARWe make all arrangements for you.Cars available on Rental, Purchaseor Repurchase-guarantee basis —or bring the car home with you.Ow tOO Tt«nStudent Class Tours tiVQTravel Study Tours TConducted Tours **University Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines,has rendered efficient travelservice on a businessbasis since 1926See your local travel agent forfolders and details, or write usUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Hdrvard Sq.,‘ Cambridge, Mass. LAKE ^ P A R K AT S^RD : N O 7 • 9 O 7 1the p-yde park theatreStarts Friday. April 8thACADEMY AWARD WINNER"Best Actress" "Best Sreenplay"-Neil Paterson’sSIMONESIGNORET Adaptation ofJohn Braine'sNovel"Room at the Top is bound to revise our concept of the word ''adult'os applied to the screen. Not because it uses most of the four- andmony of the five-letter words that adorn contemporary literature. . . But, more importantly, because it incorporataes the point ofview, the frankness, above all the veratity of the contemporarynovel. There hos been no attempt to "litk" John Braine's ocridbook to conform to movie morality."•—Saturday Review of LiteratureA powerful, disturbing piece of cinema realism. On the face of if,the film is a social satire: a hilarious lampoon of British provincialsociety, on ironic study of Angry Young Manners and morals, aSwiftian extravoganza on the problems of a social climber in asociety without stairs. But behind the comic mask there is the tragedyof social change, which is here expounded os the ogony of moralgrowth, os the spiritual disaster of a young mon who might be colledthe Julien Sorelof of the welfare state."—Time Magazine.— and —"A wholly admirable renderinginto film of a ploy that is at oncefascinating and nauseating, bril¬liant and immoral."To top writing talent (Tennessee Williams & Core Vidal)the award-winning directorial skill of Joseph Mankiewicx("All About Eve") with perhaps the sharpest ear inHollywood for the nuances of dialogue . . . the sensitive,mood-catching setting and costuming of Oliver Messel. . . and the two award-nominee performances by KATH¬ERINE HEPBURN and ELIZABETH TAYLOR.Starts Friday, April 15thIngmar Bergman's"Seventh Seal"and"Smiles of a Summer Night'April 8, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15Robert Strozier visits UCRobert M. Strozier, president of Florida State university and former dean of students atUC, will return to Chicago for a visit on Monday, April 18.Strozier’s name has been mentioned frequently in discussions of possible successors tochancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton. Before being appointed as Kimpton’s successor in theposition of dean of students in 1946, Strozier served as associate director of Internationalhouse and professor of romance languages.During: Strozier’s eleven year(pfoi dean many extracurriou* rather than administrative initia* Strozier offered his sentiments onlar activities were given extended tive in the extra-curricular pro- the character of UC. He said, 'Al*autonomy. When in 1957 he re- gram, student activities were most all Chicago students are im-signed to accept the Florida state Kl'en freedom to flourish and patient with anything whichposition a Maroon editorial said, grow. smacks of discrimination or even“Under his policy of student, When he left the University, appearances of it. The Universi¬ty’s long-time record in this re-Four poets lecture;West to live in dorm gard is almost above reproachbut, in response to student re¬quests to clarify our policies. Iremoved from our application foradmission the questions regard¬ing race and religion and the re¬quest for a photograph.“In these ten years,” he eon-Four young poets will read selections of their works here tinued, “I have had joy and frus-on Tuesday, April 26. They are Robert Mezey, John Logan, tration, pleasure and heartache, IDonald Justice and Peter Everwine. Perrin Lowrey, assistant have sat in the capitol at Spring-professor of humanities, has commented that “most critics ,ie,d and heard vitriol about ourconsider the men to be master University, followed by a brilliantpresedists, though they are vir- The witch Die-ccrc etc will defense by Mr. Hutchins,tually unknown by their own gen- speak here on A*fn 35 as a part , “Actually,” Strozier concluded,eration. , _ J . . . . I get scant sympathy from any-Mezey, a man in his early 20’s, jf. th?If19!° ^fstival of the Arts- body at the University. My facestudied at Kenyon college with Miss West will appear on campus remains round and florid.; I amJohn Crowe Ransom. Logan, an just five days after her new book, obviously well-fed, and I missedassociate professor of humanities South of the Angels is to appear. on^ two da>’s from my office inat Notre Dame, can be heard at Miss West will speak at 8 pm, el,eve1?,years’ Teach V*™6a reading this Sunday for Poetry *^1 ot; ~ . °f colds. ... It is altogether tooseminar. Justice was a student at **** 25 n breasted haU* 0rien‘ evident that I did, do, and wiUStanford under Yvor Winters and tal instltute> 58th and University, enjoy being dean of students.”is presently a professor at theUniversity of Iowa. Everwine’spoetry, according to Lowrey, is“impressive.” Their works haveappeared in The New Yorker,Harpers, The Kenyon Review.All four may be heard on cam¬pus as part of the 1960 Festivalof the Arts, at 4 pm, Tuesday,April 26 in the Ida Noyes library. At Orchestra Hall —TONIGHTS. HURONDYER-BEHHETIII I ProfTi® of $Mfs and Ballads •“ REMARKABLE r~irnNaTICKETS: $1.55, 2.50, 3.50 at box office Hare You RHgcovcrcd Enrico lor Lunch?Chuck Wagon BuffetMONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY• soup & salad • chicken• lasagne • saladsALL YOU DESIRE —$1.25Cafe Enrico & Qallery1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5535 — HY 3-5300Author in residenceJessamyn West, author of CressDelahanty, Friendly Persuasion,Dr. N. J. 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Smoke refreshed, smoke Salem!NOW MORE THAN EVER An important break-through in Salem'sresearch laboratories brings you thisspecial new High Porosity paper whichbreathes new freshness into the flavor.Each puff on a Salem draws just enough• menthol fresh • rich tobacco taste • modern filter, tooSalem refreshes your tasteH6 • CHICAGO MARO ON • April 8, 1960