Vol. 69,From 7 to 10 last night,the north lounge of the Reyn¬olds club was the scene ofconfusion as Student govern¬ment and NSA election re¬turns were tabulated by theElection and Rules committee.Seated at a long table, E and R deputies, working in groupsof three, tabulated the results ofthe ballots from each academicunit and for the NSA delegation.Candidates gathered in smallgroups around the tabulators,watching the returns, while partyleaders walked back and forthElection returnsCOLLEGECollege—18 seatsMaureeii Byers ‘ Elliott LillienBert Cohler David MargoliesOzzie Conklin Dave NelsonLen Friedman Gail ParadiseJay Greenberg Buzz StennMaitland Griffith * Jim ThomasonLiz Heath(Listing is alphabetical and tentative. Five seats remainundecided as we go to press.) from counter to counter, attempt¬ing to estimate the number ofpeople on their slate who wouldbe elected to the Assembly. Inone corner of the room, WUCBannounced as many of the returnsas could be gathered from thetallies being made.A new and faster method forcounting ballots was used as theten ballot boxes were countedseparately, giving partial resultsfor each of the academic unitsquite early in the evening.The air of efficiency which sur¬rounded the Election and Rulesdeputies did not, however, lessenthe amount of tension which per¬vaded the room. With over 60candidates for 18 seats in the Col¬lege and 31 for 10 seqjs on theNSA delegation, the feeling ofcompetition remained high untilthe last of the returns were in. Carol "Sam" Silver (right) outgoing matriarch of SGstops to vote at polls in front of Cobb hall.Deny FM for WUCBDIVISIONSBiological Sciences—2 seatsRobert Proctor, ISL (8> Jan Berkhout,* (7)Humanities—4 seatsPeter McKeon, ISL (17) Joan Boyd, SRP (13)Kitty Scoville, ISL (15) Finley Campbell, ISL (12)Physical Sciences—4 seatsRichard Arnold, ISL (27> Max Plager,* (22)Jay Baker, ISL (25) Donald Reinken,* (22)Social Sciences—8 seatsDesmond Sealy, SRP (51) Peter Brownstone, SRP (40)Lawrence Landry, SRP (45) Alan Dowty, ISL (38)Vivian Scott, ISL (45) John Kim, ISL (38)Don Richards, ISL (41 > Norm Robertson, ISL (38). Medical School—3 seatsPaul Hoffer, G&PSP (29) Lawrence Hefter, G&PSP (20)Robert Hillman, G&PSP (21)Law—3 seatsGary Stoll, Independent (60) Fred Cohen, SRP (48)Dave Rothman, ISL (49)Business—3 seatsFrank Broude, ISL (24). Jan Dahler, SRP (15)Jerry Case, ISL (22)Federated Theological School—3 seatsNancy McFadden, ISL (31) Walter Baese, ISL (21)Fred Weinberg, ISL (26),*Social Service Administration—2 seats .Barbara Hunter, ISL (23) Eldene Bush, ISL (22)Graduate Library School--1 seatMary Elder, *(2) and Joyce Malden, *(2)* write-in "WUCB, the student radiostation, will not be allowed tobroadcast open-channel FMwithout a professional advisoradministrating the major af¬fairs of the station," an¬nounced John P. Netherton, deanof students. “The people runningthe station are amateurs, admit-edly amateurs in the good sense,but nevertheless amateurs. Run¬ning a station for a set numberof hours, every day of the yearis a job requiring some degreeof profesiqnal management.”Members of the five-man fac¬ulty board of the closed curcuitradio station were generally inagreement with this view. Mem¬bers of the station’s student ad¬ministration were not.“I think the plan to go FM isa promising one, but I do seedifficulties in entrusting a chan¬nel to an organization run totallyby students. One could not expectto get sufficient competence inthe station’s management yearafter year,” commented WilliamMcNeil of the faculty board.“Maroon history shows seriousups-and-downs in management;WUCB would show the same.”McNeil is a former Maroon edi¬tor.All of the board members con¬ sulted pointed out a distinctionbetween an unsupervised schoolnewspaper and an unsupervisedschool radio station. “The Maroonis much more clearly a studentactivity than a radio stationwould be; people would be muchmore inclined to view statementsmade over the air as officialviews of the school, than theywould be were the same viewsprinted in the paper,” Nethertonexplained.Others questioned argued thatwith other student groups, thegeneral public must come tothem, while an op e n channelradio station would be going tothe public.Netherton, along with severalboard members, is anxious tokeep the station within the uni¬versity ‘family’ and not have itintrude itself upon the outsideworld.Leonard Meyer, another boardmember, adopted the same viewbut with a somewhat differentrationale. Meyer, Who has not yetdecided whether the stationshould or should not go FM,argued that as the station broad¬ens its public, the character ofthe programming would inevi¬tably change.“This was true of the ChicagoReview and it’s true of FestivalNSANational Student AssociationDelegatesMaureen Byers Jim ThomasonGail Paradise(Listings are alphabetical and tentative. One seat remainsundecided as we go to press.)AlternatesJohn Kim John Schurman| Dave Nelson Vivian Scott(Listings are alphabetical and tentative. Two seats remaini undecided as we go to press.) "The people running the station are amateurs . « .* of the Arts. As the ‘fifth floor*got hold of Festival, say, and asit became something the admin¬istration increasingly wanted toInvolve outsiders in, it becameless and less of a student activity.“I think there is a good dealto be said for a station havingthe kind of intimacy such as nowexists at WUCB.. The personalquality of the present stationmight well disappear were it togo FM,” Meyer concluded.McNeill also saw some reasonswhy WUCB might be better offremaining a closed circuit station.“In order to retain its autonom-ity, and WUCB understandablyfeels somewhat jealous of itsautonomity, it might be neces¬sary to stay closed circuit.”Generally the faculty boardwas in sympathy with WUCB’sdesire to remain autonomous. *Tunderstand this desire,” Meyeradded. “I don’t necessarily thinkthat the University should de¬mand control of the station, butI think it inevitable that it will—there is too much at stake. Ifthis be true, spontaneous inven¬tion, which has been one of thogreat virtues of the present sta¬tion, will of course disappear.*Wednesday afternoon the fac¬ulty board met with John Nether¬ton, John Schuerman, stationmanager, and John Kim, programdirector, to discuss the problemsconfronting the station.The five-man faculty board wasadopted last fall, when Nether¬ton insisted upon its creation be¬fore allowing WUCB to apply fora channel from the FCC No solu¬tion to the problems came out ofthe meeting, according to Schuer¬man, only the elimination of onepossibility: complete control ofthe station by students.Schuerman quoted Nethertonas saying at an earlier meetingthat, “I want some one respon¬sible, someone in charge whom Ican fire if necessary.”“We think the kind of program¬ming we are planning is of valueto the entire community—to theentire Hyde Park community,*Schuerman stated explaining thostation’s position. “We would doa service to these people by mak¬ing the facilities of Chicago avail¬able to them in their homes, giwing them a contact with our fao-ulty.“We also think we’d be a greatContinued on n>ogt S)World News UC committee ; willNorthern schools give aid support Southern studentsWoolworth store. The placardsread, “We are picketing Wool-worths because they segregate intheir Southern stores.”The spontaneous outbreak of protests against segregated eating facilities in the South hasbrought support from colleges and universities outside the South that is mounting to whatmight be a genuine student movement.Across the nation college newspapers and students have joined to support the movementwith editorial comment and sympathy protests. .In New York the Queens college Phoenix, in a series of editorials on the sitdowns, calledthe student demonstrations the ~"expresion of the long-dormant student council of Catholic uni- the Associated students estab-American conscience; they are* versify adopted a resolution sup- lished a campus fund raisingthe draining of the festering sore porting the Southern protests ear- campaign to provide legal counsel©f mass guilt.” And, students at jjer that week. for the Southern demonstratorsHunter college have been stand- At Wayne state university in who have 1)0611 Jailed and at theing up to eat lunch to show their Detroit m 0 r e petitions were University of New Mexico thesympathy with the Southern stu- signed by goo students expressing students supported the Southerndents. a. m .. ~ .. actions with a student demonstra-The Bryn Mawr College News .. _ tion and picket in front of thecalled the protests a revolution ment, and commending the South- downtown Albuquerque F. W.which “sprang out of an old ern students who have particl- ' ^ “A'-“ ’awareness of the evils and inex- pated in the demonstrations forpediences of segregation and the (be restraint they have shown,new realization that its elimina- At (he University Gf Colorado,tion is as much the responsibilityof the Northern student as theSouthern Governor. The under¬standing that segregation is notonly morally wrong but also athreat to national security is nei¬ther new nor revolutionary; theunderstanding that integration isour problem and action to effectit is our responsibility is both.”Oberlin college in Ohio estab¬lished a fund to help pay thecourt fees of the 143 Nashvillestudents who were arrested forparticipating in sitdowns. The$2709.10 check Oberlin was able tosend represented a week and ahalf of fervent campus and towncampaigns to raise funds, andsurpassed the Fund’s goal by$709.10.Catholic university in Washing¬ton, in their paper the Tower, com¬mented on the arrests, convictionsand school expulsions of South¬ern students, saying, “the crimefor which these students havebeen expelled from school, andprosecuted, is none other than thepeaceful (please note) expression©f their opinion.” In addition the The UC Committee for the Support of the Southern Studentprotests was formed last Sunday night. A steering committeeof nine members was elected and provision has been madefor the appointment of four other individuals who havecampus organizational ties. ~Ed Riddick and Judy Bardacke The fund-raising was startedwere elected as co-chairmen; the Poiitics club-NAACP meetGail Paradise as fund-raising ing and $250 was collected at thatchairman; and Bob Brown and lime. The money was sent lo theCaryle Geier as picket co-ordina- Montgomery Improvement Asso-tors- ciation student fund.The aim, of the committee is .to assist the Southern students , ^ ., 1S speaking forwith moi’al support and financial . g ^ n ni& * 8 inaid. Picketing will be set up on an ^oc- 1S special assist-organized basis at the1 . tworth ant to Dr. Martin Luther Kingstores in the neighborhood. The and is working on the Committeecommittee will establish its own to Defend King and the Sou(hpickets and work with existing T , . .ones. There will be a fund raisinr r»ns,la" Leadership conference,campaign and possibly a concert Ue was also head of the Youthon campus. March for Integrated schools.Disarmament talks start in Genevacampuscharacter:BLACKSTONETORTPride of the faw school,Blackstone has never lost asnoot trial. But there’s noth¬ing moot about hit prefer¬ences in dreee. He finds thatwhen he’s comfortable, hejean trap a witness and sway# jury like Clarence Darrow.So he always wears Jockeybrand briefs while preparingbis briefs. Exclusive Jockeytailoring gives him a bonus©f comfort he gets in no otherunderwear. Pine Jockeycombed ootton is more ab¬sorbent, smoother fitting, too.To look your best, feel yourbest, take * tip from Tort.Always i..wist on Jockeybrand briefs, $1.25. Yourcampus store has them now ISOOPtR-l IHOOSPORSTtO • KfNOSHA, Wit. The first full-scale East-West disarmament negotia¬tions in 2 y2 years were begunin Geneva on March 15 bydelegations from ten Westernand Soviet nations.There have been no generaldisarmament talks between theEast and the West since the Lon¬don talks of 1927, in which theUnited States was represented byHarold Stassen. The present con¬ference was proposed at the BigFour foreign ministers’ confer¬ence on Germany in 1939 and ap¬proved by a vote of the UN as¬sembly last fall. Since the 1917talks some aspects of disarma¬ment have been discussed throughdiplomatic channels and confer¬ences on banning nuclear tests(one of which is still in sessionin Geneva), but there have beenno attempts to negotiate a com¬prehensive plan acceptable toboth sides.Western representativesThe West is represented in theconference by Canada, France,Britain, Italy, and the US, whilethe Soviet bloc includes, Poland,Czechoslovakia, Rumania, Bul¬garia, and the USSR. The talkswere opened with messages fromEisenhower, Khrushchev, and UNSecretary General Dag Hammar-skjold, all three of whom calledupon the conference to find aworkable plan for arms controlin the near future.Talks have centered around twobasic plans that have been sub¬mitted to the conference. Thefirst is the four-year global pro¬gram presented to the UN byPremier Khrushchev during hisvisit to the US last summer; thesecond is a unified Western plansubmitted on the eve of the con¬ference, calling for a three-stagedisarmament with no specifiedtime schedule. The main points ofdisagreement on these plans haveconcerned the inspection provi¬sions and the order of disarma¬ment steps.Two plans proposedThe Western plan, which gen¬erally calls for more prior plan¬ning and exchange of informationthan does the Soviet proposal,would progress slowly from col¬lection of data on existing forcesto control of conventional arma¬ments and finally to prohibitionof all nuclear and chemical war¬fare. Each stage would be markedby a very gradual extension ofarms control over an increasingnumber of weapons, and the en¬tire program would be directedand supervised by an interna¬ tional organization possessingbroad inspection powers. The pro¬posal also covers many relatedtopics such as the developmentof international law and spaceprograms.The USSR has objected to theWestern plan because it makesnecessary a prolonged study ofvarious problems and leaves thequestion of actual total disarma¬ment for the indefinite future.The plan was also attacked fornot providing for the early dis¬mantling of US foreign bases,although the US has said thiswould be done at the proper time.The Soviet Union has also shownfear of increased West Germanmilitary potential recently, con¬trasting it to their own claim ofhaving reduced the Red Army bysome 1.200.000 troops.Soviet plan 'immediate'The Soviet plan, on the otherhand, calls fop the immediate re¬duction of armed forces in thefirst stage, elimination of all con¬ventional forces in the second,and destruction of all nuclearweapons and missiles in the third.An international control organwould exercise an extent of in¬spection ’“corresponding to thestage reached in the phased dis¬armament.” Disagreements wouldbe submitted to the UN, and theentire plan would take placewithin a four year period.The West lias characterizedthis program as lacking in in¬spection guarantees and over allplanning. The Soviet Union liasannounced in return, however,that any inspection extending be¬yond the scope of disarmamentwould be “espionage.” In specificcases the two sides have showna wide divergence of opinion onwhat constitutes adequate inspec¬tion. The US position, as statedby delegation chief FrederickEaton, is that this country willnot “enter into substantial meas¬ures which would reduce our ownsecurity without adequate meansto insure that the commitmentsof other nations are being car¬ried out.”US won't share weaponsThe USSR fears that the US is gress that any nuclear weaponsused by NATO would be operatedby a US un t attached to each taskforce.Another stumbling block to theconference has been the tradition¬al US refusal to deal with RedChina. In view of the fact, thatany final settlement must takethis country into consideration,the US position has threatened tobe a handicap. This has beensomewhat cleared up lately, how¬ever, by Eisenhower’s recogni¬tion on March 16 that any finalsettlement “unquestionably wouldhave to take into account thearmaments of Red China,” al¬though “there has to be a verygreat deal of progress before weare into the stage of worryingabout Red China.” There havebeen no plans regarding the man¬ner in which China would be in¬cluded in an agreement.Meanwhile the US-British-So-viet nuclear test ban talks be¬ing held simultaneously in Gene¬va have produced one significantconcession from the USSR. At theJ88(h meeting the Soviets offeredto accept the Western proposalof banning ail nuclear tests ex¬cept small underground ones con¬sidered unverifiable by the West.This was made conditional onWestern agreement to join in re¬search to improve detection oftlie underground blasts. Although the Western nationshave announced that the USSRmust permit more inspections forbanned tests than it proposes to,they have pledged serious studyof the plan. Another objectionablefeature is Soviet insistence on a5 year moratorium on the smallunderground blasts while re¬search on their detection is beingcarried out. The West has de¬manded that adequate assuranceof detection precede any cessationof these tests. In their recentjoint statement, however. MacMil¬lan and Eisenhower showed awillingness to agree to a shortermoratorium on underground test¬ing if accompanied by strict in¬spection. Such a concession wouldmean that an agreement could bereached in spite of the fact thatcontrol of the smaller under¬ground tests would not be cer¬tain. But it is not considered like¬ly the USSR would accept the in¬spection provision in toto.France won't cooperateFrance, the newest atomic pow¬er, has in the meantime refusedto enter the nuclear test bantalks. In a statement delivered atthe 10-nation disarmament talkson March 22, Jules Modi saidthat the proposed agreementmeant “perpetuating discrimina¬tion for the benefit of the powerswhich have already made a suf¬ficient number of tests.”USSR youth uprisingrecently revealedOver 100 persons were killed and about 1,000 wounded ina three-day uprising which took place in Kasakhstan, SovietRussia last year. The story of the uprising was only recentlyrevealed by a number of Greek, Spanish and German citizensbeing repatriated from the SovietUnion.Most of those who took part inthe uprising were members ofKomsomol and young workers,assigned to work at the Kara- During the night troops wereflown from Army camps in AlmaAta and other cities, and a largeforce of police, home guard mi¬litia and other auxiliaries werecalled to service. But the youngganda Metallurgical Combine inKasakhstan, one of the Soviet people refusedi ta surrender. Theplanning to share its nuclear Central Asian republics. They uprising was finally crushed onweapons with other NATO coun- were transferred there from the tbe third day, October 5, whenUkraine, Byelerussia and other additional reinforcements arrivedEuropean parts of the USSR. and surrounded the rebels. Ac-The uprising was touched offby protests against low pay andtries which are hurting the ne¬gotiations. This question wasraised particularly in regard toproposed West German bases inSpain. To clear up these points bad living conditions. After rout- cording to eye-witneses, the cas¬ualties numbered at least 100killed and several hundredwounded.Communist Party boss forwere prohibited by US law, and next day the youthful rebels am- sorted1bv "the^azakhstaY com-that in view of the Geneva talks bushed several truckloads of V ™ V,/ . embittered byPresident Eisenhower has sent aletter to Premier Khruschev in¬forming him that such transfers irig the local police and pillaginglocal towns, the young people setup barricades in the streets. ThecxJockeue •MNO ®briefs no such action would be consid¬ered in any event. Gen. LaurisNorstad had testified before Con¬ troops being rushed to Temir Taufrom Karaganda, seized theirweapons and prepared to fight. munist daily to be embitterouthe “interruption in constructionat the Karaganda Combine. Hispredecessor, Belyaev, one ofKhrushchev’s closest asociates,was suddenly relieved of his postlast year.MODEL CAMERAWholesaleCatalogue Prices oaComeros, Projectors, Recorder*1342 E. 55th HY 3 925*MAROON • April 15, 1960SFC throws out assembly petitionhad not been familiar with thetechnical term “declaratory judg¬ment” and had meant instead “ad¬visory ©pinion.” In his appeal hecited the legislative system of theState of Massachusetts whereinsuch advisory opinion was givenby court in cases where the con¬stitutionality of a bill was to beconsidered.Sitting on the court were LeonKass, student in the medicalschool, Donald Meiklejohn, pro¬fessor of philosophy; Phil Ep¬stein, medical school; RogerBernhart, law school; Peter Lang-rock, Law; F. JAye Pepper, bio¬logical sciences, and Phil Hoff¬man.Langrock asked Friedman if hewere not in fact asking the courtto be the Assembly’s council atlaw. Friedman answered yes,since this petition was for adviceonly, and the advice given wouldhave no weight as precedent.Bernhart asked why the courtshould waste its time in giving ad¬vice when the government mightthrow it out. Freedman answeredby saying that the Assembly hadalready proposed the bill and wascurrently waiting for the requiredtime to elapse before it could voteon it. He said he hoped the courtThe Student-faculty courthas thrown out Student Gov¬ernment’s petition for a rulingon the constitutionality of theproposed amendment to theStudent code governing fra-ternitv pledging.The amendment, already a partof the Interfraternity council'srushing rules, had been proposedat th<? last meeting of the SGassembly, April 5.Lennic Friedman, speaking ascouncil for the Assembly, openedhis appeal by saying that underthe Student Bill of Rights thecourt could issue declaratoryjudgments regarding the inter¬pretation of the Constitution, Billof Rights, or student code uponpetition of the Assembly (Article5, section B(8).The court ruled that this sec¬tion did not apply to this casesince no legislation had beenpassed by the Assembly at thetime of session (last Tuesday)and therefore any advice givenby the court could be used in apolitical way if the bill were againput on the floor.Friedman, a second-year stu¬dent in the College argued thatthe framers of the article con¬cerning the Student-faculty courtUC observes 'Law day'The UC Law school will provide one of the major events inthe nation’s observance of Law day, as the heads of the Eng¬lish and American judicial systems join dignitariesthroughout the world in the Law school program, accordingto Carl Larson of the UC press court of California. The studentrelations office. moot court competition will beOn Law day, May 1st, the cli- based on an actual case. It will bemax of a year-long series of heId at the Weymouth Kirklandevents dedicating the new $4,100,- courtroom. »000 Law School center takes At 9:30 am, Saturday, April 30,place. A three-day program start- three reports on selected law anding April 29th, has been arranged behavioral science research proj-as the final dedicatory occasion. ecjs wju be given in ClassroomUS Supreme Court Chief Jus- jj 0f the New Law buildings. Alltire Earl Warren and his English three reports will be by Lawcounterpart, Viscount Kilmuir, school professors. Allison Dun-Lord High Chancellor of Great ham will report on “The Trans-Britain, and Governor Nelson rnission of Wealth at Death,” Har-Roekefeller, of New York, whose ry Kalven Jr., will discuss ‘Thegrandfather founded UC, will par- Jury project, and the Court De-ticipate. Dag Hammarskjold, sec- jay study,” and Soia Mentschi-retary general of the United Na- koff Wju discuss “The Arbitra¬tions. will speak. tion Project.”The Supreme Court of Illinois At 2 pm, Karl N. Llewellyn,which usually sits at Springfield professor of law at UC, will dis-will conduct an actual session on cuss “The Study of Law as apending eases in the Weymouth Liberal Art.” He will be intro-Kirkland Courtroom of the new dueed by Professor Frank R.buildings Friday morning, April Strong, dean of the college of law,29th. Ohio State university, and presi-More than 250 Jurists, attor- dent of the Association of Ameri-neys and educators from many can Law schools in Classroom II,nations will represent schools and 0f the New Law buildings,institutions in a rare special con- At 3 pm, also in Classroom II, avocation May 1st. “blue ribbon” multidisciplinaryMay 1st has been proclaimed as faculty group will conduct aLaw day by President Eisenhow- round table discussion of “Theer to provide a demonstration of Role of Law in the Achievementthe nation’s devotion to “the rule Df National Goals.” The panel willof law as the keystone of peace be moderated by Walter J. Blum,and older in our national and in- professor of law.ternational life.” A reception for Chief JusticeAt 3:30 pm, Friday, April 29, Warren will be held at the MainProfessors Roger C. Cramton, lounge, the New Law buildings,Brainerd Currie, and Philip B. at 5 pm. The reception will pro-Kurland, of UC Law school, will vide participants in the dedica-conduct a panel discussion on tory celebration with an oppor-“Recent Cases in the United tunity for i n f o r m a 1 discussionStates Supreme Court.” The dis- with Warren,cussion will be held in Classroom Saturday’s program will be di¬ll of the New Law buildings. maxed by a talk by Viscount Kil-Friday evening, at 8 pm, final mu*r °f Creich, Lord High Chan-arguments will be heard in the cellor of Great Britain. Lord Kil-Hinton competition, the Universi- rnuir will talk at 8:30 pm in_thety of Chicago Law school student 275-seat auditorium of the Newmoot court program. Two student Law buildings, on Reforms inteams, finalists in a starting field the Law an<^ Legal System ofof 20 teams, will compete for a England: A Six Years View From$200 prize before a court com- the Woolsack,posed of Charles E. Clark, Judgeof the United States Court of Ap¬peals for the Second Circuit ofConnecticut, New York and Ver¬mont; John Hastings, Judge ofthe US Court of Appeals for theSeventh Circuit of Illinois, Indi¬ana and Wisconsin; and RogerTraynor, Justice of the Supreme would trust in the Assembly’s dis¬cretion to bring only importantquestions of constitutionality be¬fore the justices.In response to Epstein’s ques¬tion concerning the role of thedean of students in this actionFriedman said that ultimately thedean could veto any action takenbut that SG would have to be ad¬vised before it could pass a billwith which to approach the dean.Friedman said further that gov¬ernment did not feel qualified todiscuss this issue and was pro¬ ceeding with caution by askingthe advice of the court.Mike Kindred, speaking for theIF council said that this case ofthe use of the term “declaratoryjudgment" can be best exempli¬fied by inspecting the case of theGovernment’s sending money tothe Southern states. (Last weekthe court ruled that SG couldsend any money it raised on itsown but would have to apply tothe student activities office in thecase of withdrawing funds fromits own budget.) Kindred saidthat the decision handed down in this case was an example of de¬claratory judgment. Hoffmanasked Kindred whether the courtmake a judgment in this case.Kindred answered that the courtcould give advice if it wished todisband for a very good reason.The court’s decision was givenin light of a point raised earlierby F. Jaye Pepper who asked ifit might not be construed thatwhat the court handed downmight have to be more than a onesentence declaration and couldbe used for political intent.Speakers for 11F Council listen to the S-F-A court ruling on the Student code amend-| ment concerning fraternity pledging. photo by BergarLAK has staff meetingChancellor Lawrence A. Kimp-ton and his staff have returnedfrom their semi-annual confer¬ence at Kimpton’s Lakeside re¬treat.During the four day confer¬ence, held last weekend, the ad¬ministrators discussed financialneeds and long range plans ofthe University. Attending themeeting were dean of studentsJohn P. Netherton, vice-chancel¬lor John Kirkpatrick, treasurerParker Hall, comptroller DonaldCartlaand, and Julian Levy, chair¬man of the South Side Chicagocommission.Student housing was one of themajor problems on the confer¬ence’s agenda. It is expected thatthe number of students desiringrooms next year will be almostthe same as the 1657 beds pre¬sently available. Netherton at themeeting predicted that increasedenrollment will make construc¬tion of the second tower of theNew Men’s Residence hall neces¬sary by 1962.Another item discussed at themeeting was the scholarship pro¬gram of the University. It wasreported that unendowed scholar¬ship funds have been raisedwhich will make it possible forstipends to be raised in propor¬tion to the increase in tuition.Plans for the withdrawal ofGates-Blake as a residence hall tomake way for a college deans’office were also discussed, and,according to Netherton, “Planswere completed.” Also along thelines of student housing, it wasdecided that all temporary bar¬racks and pre-fabricated housing,originally erected after WorldWar II, must be demolished by the end of the year. It was alsodecided that replacements mustbe found for the barracks, whichcurrently contain 63 living unitsfor married couples.Library plans and improvementof lab school facilities in Blaineand Belfast halls were also onthe conference agenda. Tentativeplans were discussed for the ex¬pansion of Harper library, andthe acquisition of a place to storeseldom used books which current¬ly use, needed space in Harperwas planned.Julian Levy spoke to the group on the Hyde Park-Kenwood re--development program. Levy sta¬ted that the University had pro¬cured all necessary land and thatall legal arrangements had beenmade for the project. He saidthat the offers, and the releaseof funds.The Lakeside conference wasinstituted seven years ago byChancellor Kimpton. According tocomptroller Cartlaand, the pur¬pose of the conference is to findout “where we are so we’ll knowwhere we are going.”IJJLI'ACCENT ESrFRANCAIS.. *AIR FRANCE /\Fly AIR FRANCE taCalcufta,KhartoumoFOakar,Or maybe Milan to hear “PagllaccFWMadrid, Ouagadougou, Oslo or OlnarjOr a wee little jaunt to KarachILHOW? WHERB? Wf4 6N?Jet straight to Par/a • «(ohn 8chnef<fef• bom New York, Chicago, S AIR FRANCE, 883 fifth Avoiw* New York 8, New VIifi or Los Angeles, See your • Flflasa send ms literature on special student travel ideal,friendly travel agent, 2 NAME. • •££»♦-* • MUiir.M M • p> 11M IhSJl Coupon, ® ADDRESS,, «»«,«»«,« rrm«v, >>»♦ f,i>y>».J SCHOOL, rr.r«v»iTr»4* •(Bicycles, Ports, Accessoriesspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP jKM «. !M *I UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57H»Fine haircuttingFour barbers workingLathes' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor WHERE ARE YOU GOING?FIELDING'S TRAVEL GUIDE TO EUROPE 1960-61 EDITION $C95Complete, up-to-date information from all of Europe VTHIS IS ROME; A Pilgrimage in Words and Pictures. $495Conducted by Fulton J. Sheen, photographed by Karsh ■NEW YORK ON $5.00 A DAY $*195Inexpensive hotels and restaurants, sightseeing that's either low cost, Ior free. It can be done,RAND McNALLY VACATION GUIDE $<95New guide to vacations all over the United States IUniversity of Chicago Bookstore58TH AND ELLISApril IS, I960 • I ISir111 Chicago maroon LetterApathy denies freedomfounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and Intermittently during the summer quarter,by students of the University of Chicago. Inquiries should be sent to the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E. 59thStreet, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus.Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, 4 pm,Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pin Wednesday before publication.All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the Individual opinions of the authors.Bookstore changes for better;now how about lower pricesThe Maroon congratulates theadministration on the first steptaken toward improved book-buy¬ing on campus. The proposed re¬modeling of the interior of thebookstore should streamline thebusiness transactions there. Wehope with them that we have seenthe end of long lines, frustratedclerks and customers, and highlosses due to theft.We remain unconvinced, how¬ever, that some cooperative sys¬tem could not be set up so that students and faculty could receivesome sort of discount on the costof books. We are told that themarkup on books at this time isonly 20-25%, no higher than anyother commercial bookstore inthe city. We agree that this mark¬up is no higher and is perfectlysound and business-like. However,we are at the same time remindedthat there exist other campuseswith bookstores which offer a re¬duction in the list price of books.Such a system exists at Reed for example. Jerry Case, now astudent in the business school atUC, tells us that when he wasmanager of their cooperativebook store, a decrease of up to22% was seen in the standardbook cost.We still believe that the book¬store should be run as a studentservice rather than a profit-mak¬ing organization. We say wel¬come, however, to new servicesand streamlined methods of pro¬fit making.n ■ ■■■ ■—MeditorStudent funds are for UC studentsTo the Editors:I have been moved to write this letter because of the recent dispute over the use offunds, by the Student Government, for purposes not within what are normally consideredproper university or college functions. I am, of course, referring to the attempt by theStudent Government to use funds at its disposal * To the Editor of the Maroon:I may be mistaken, but Ihad thought that most peoplearound here believed that toshut someone up is to admitthat the arguments against hisvnews are pretty feeble — orelse that the rest of the peoplearen’t able to think for them¬selves. I had thought that mostpeople around here believed thata university is above all a placewhere open discussion shouldtake place on all matters of im¬portance.Now being somewhat naive, andassuming that they believe thethings they sav, I’ve been some¬what surprised at the lack of in¬dignation I’ve detected lately.Last week the University of Il¬linois fired a biology teacher forstating his views on sexual mo¬rality in a letter to the campusnewspaper. It’s true that he canstill write letters if he wants to.The hitch is that as far as theUniversity of Illinois is concernedhe’ll have to become a taxi driveror a shoe-shine boy to do it.If the man’s views are right,people at the University of Illi¬nois are being deprived of coun¬sels of wisdom. If his views arewrong, they are missing out onthe opportunity to be enlightenedby discussion which would bringout the defects in his position. Ineilher case, they will miss thechance to find out why certainways are wiser than others. If weadmit that understanding is valu¬able for deciding, then we mustalso admit that the people down-state have been deprived of some¬thing beneficial.So what’s this got to do with you and me? Plenty.Every time John Smith’s opin,ion is silenced because some .,e«son or group doesn’t agree withthat opinion, the chances arecreased that some day they’llquiet Bill Jones for the same rVa-son. And Bill Jones may be right— and he may be you or T.This being the case, it’s some-u-hat shocking that neither thestudents, nor the faculty, nor theadministration of our alma materhas said anything about the mat-ter tor at least not loudly enoughto be heard).Maybe if their colleagues wereto talk up, the people who firedthe outspoken biology teacher andthe people whose protest mighthave affected the outcome wouldfeel a bit ashamed for al leastembarrassed), and maybe they’dthink twice next time a .similarsituation arose.Maybe our students, and teach-crs, and -yes—even deans couldmake some small impression bywriting to the Board of Trustees,faculty, and student body of thestate university of the “Land ofLincoln."There might be a more effectivecourse of action. I don't know. Ihaven’t heard the question de-bated.But if nothing is said, then oneof the following statements istrue:1. Those who spout the pietiesabout the American way of lifeand freedom of thought and ex¬pression are full of baloney; or2. They’re really prettychicken hearted; or3. They just don’t give a damn.Harvey Flaumcnhafffor the payment of fines imposed upon certainstrikers in the South by the courts of one of ourStates. It has seemed to me that the real issueof this dispute has not been stated with sufficientforce or clarity, and has been totally ignored inyour editorial asking that the Student Governmenthave greater freedom in the use of funds at itsdisposal.Those funds, I take it, have their source infees imposed by the University upon every stu¬dent registered at this institution. It would there¬fore seem that every student may reasonably ex¬pect, however naively, that this money shall bespent not only with great care so as to avoidwaste, but also for purposes directly related touniversity activities. Proper university activitiesdo not include political causes of any nature what¬soever; they do not include any religious causeswhatsoever; and they do not include any labor disputes or racial disputes whatsoever. And theuse of funds for these activities cannot be justi¬fied, respectably, by a vote of the students or bydecision of the administration of the University.If students wish lo engage in fund raising drivesfor the support of sit-down strikers, Democrats,Republicans, whooping cranes, or tailors, theymay do so. They may also use their own money.But it is unjust and unconscionable to use money,ostensibly paid into the University confers for sup¬port of the University, for political, racial, orother like ends. It is also illegal and unconstitu¬tional.The reason for such attempted action by theStudent Government, and its supporters, no doubt,is the all too common grim determination of thoserelentlessly bent on “doing good’’ with other peo¬ple’s money.Stephen A. Land Play tickets availableUS military system a result Tickets to,Tennessee Williams’ Sweet Bird of Youth will lieavailable to UC students at reduced prices. Starting at theend of this week, these tickets may be purchased from theoffices of the music, drama, English, education, and humani¬ties departments; and from the *office of the Activities director a similar arrangements on tick¬ets to The Pleasure of His Corn-of our policy of deterrenceThe anonymous author of theletter states that the US militaryis “one of the greatest support¬ers” of our cause. We do not be¬lieve this to be the case. TheUnited States military system isa result of-our policy of deter¬rence. This we believe may pre¬vent war for a short period oftime, but must finally result inworldwide destruction. At thepresent time, both East and Westarc participating in a massivearms race, each seeking to pre¬vent the other from attacking.This situation is extremely un¬stable. The possibilities of me¬chanical or psychological acci¬dents, precipitating a nuclear war,increase as more and more com¬ponents and people become in¬volved. As other nations gainindependent control of nuclearweapons, it will no longer be pos¬sible to wage wars on a limitedscale without their developing in¬to a nuclear holocaust. Any oneof these situations can easily leadto an unwanted world war, forwhen missiles can travel fromhere to the Soviet Union in 18minutes, there is no time to in¬vestigate accidents. The resultsof such a war would, of course,be devastating.Deterrence also raises other ob¬jections. The expense of main¬taining a large deterrent resultsin a lack of resources for otherprograms more beneficial to so¬ ciety. The freedoms of individualsin a nation involved in an armsrace tend to become increasinglylimited. Individuals are notallowed to dissent from estab¬lished policies without being la¬beled “poor misdirected kids” or"crackpots” or “Communists.”Some people even fear to signtheir names to letters backinggenerally accepted policy.The anonymous writer of theletter attacking the Student PeaceUnion states:“However, the evil oppressiveforces that exist today would notlet such opportunity to devastateand oppress these people, underGod, go without action and wouldnot stop until evils worse thanannihilation were inflicted on allof ns . . ”The writer here implies thatany alternative to our presentmilitary policy must end in eitherannihilation or communist domi¬nation. We believe that there arecreative approaches to interna¬tional problems which may pro¬vide alternatives to these two un¬pleasant prospects. The abovequote concludes with the state¬ment that the evils will he inflic¬ted on “women and children aswell as men.” We would like alsoto point out that nuclear weaponsdo not discriminate by sex or ageas to whom they destroy.Further on the anonymouswriter states that we have “failed to show proof or evidence thatthe oppressive powers have orare carrying on those principlesor practicing disarmament or non¬violence.”This is true! We blame bothEast and West for the cold war.We see a genuine danger in ourvpresent foreign policy and we aredoing what we, as citizens, areable to do to prevent needlessdestruction. We think that manycrises have developed because wehave not submitted disputes toarbitration but have “stood firm.”We feel that some steps in theright direction are being made,such as the removal of the Con-nally or self-judgment reservationfrom the World Court treaty. Wedo not feel, however, that ourforeign policy is keeping stridewith the advanced technology ofthe age.Finally, the anonymous writermisrepresents the Student PeaceUnion throughout his Idler. TheSPU has not formulated policyfor its members. We are pri¬marily an educational group in¬tended to make students awareof the issues of the cold war. Weencourage all discussion and pro¬posals which lead to constructivealterations to the present armsrace.Sincerely,Michael ParkerPhilip AltbachJohn Seither The tickets, for the second bal-cony, will cost UC students *T.M. due ,# soon in chi.although they are ordinarily *priced at $2.50 to $2.75. Sweet Bird of Youth will beginThe tickets were given to UC a three-week run at the Black-by Robert Walker, chairman of stone Theater in the Loon begin*the Educators’ Theater commit- njng Monday, April 11. The Chi-tee, a group designed to further <>ago cast will include Geraldinetheater in schools and universi- Page, In the role which she played tties. Walker stated that he may for 11 months on Broadway; Sid-bo able to make for UC students ney Blackmer, and Rip Torni i ChicagoMar aonEditors-in-chiefNeal Johnston Lance HaddixBusiness Manager Advertising ManagerWilliam G. Bauer Warren B. BernhardtNews editor Jim Thomas©1*Feature editor Jay GreenbergProduction editor .Dorothy DorfPhotography coordinator . Alan BergerCulture editor • ®°h R*escrActing sports editor Maitland GriffithRewrite editor Avima RuderEditorial staff; Elaine Adler, Donno Berg, Maureen Byers, Bill Capel, H*Caton, Bert Cohler, Dcbby Dinitx, Jacqueline Friedman, Caryle Geier, fVGoldman, John Juskevice, Clair Morgon, Marjorie Mundt, Tony Quogl ^Roxanne Russ, Danny Schubert, Harold Stotlond, Gene Vinogradotf,Wells. ~Photographers Gerry liman, Ginny Hill, Sidney S*or » » .Arnold Pent.Natho®Circulation Mgr.;April 15, 1960Schwab lectures nationalscience teachers meeting“Science must be transformed from a literal minded empiricism to a complex in whichconceptual invention plays a vast role, in determining the facts we seek and conditioningthe meaning we confer upon them,” said Joseph Schwab, professor of natural sciences ofthe college and professor of education in the University, in a speech in Kansas City, beforedelegates to the eighth annual convention of the National Science Teachers association.Schwab went on to say that at the present tempo of research in the western world, theduration of a revisionary cycle — —in science is about 15 years, struments of instruction—the lec- them and us most assuredly does“Thus, a body 01 Knowledge ac- ture which aims to be simple, not flow freely, we are not onlyquired in the conventional way clear and unequivocal; the text- alone, we are hard-pressed. It isbv a graduate of I960 is likely to boow which aims to eliminate now time and past time for usbo largely inadequate by 1968 and doubt, uncertainty and difficulty; to make our own way.” If a stu-by 1975 as obsolete as notions of the test which aims primarily to dent is to keep pace with thebody humours, the^ethei or the discover what the student knows rapid changes in science, he mustimpenetrable atom. and how he applies what he develop to a greater extent theSchwab listed the following im- knows about a subject—these will competence to read and learn forplications of this revisionary pio- ^ inadequate or even inappropri- himself, said Schwab. Scientificcess for science education: It aje for mUch science teaching.” literacy of this type, he said, “in-means that the notion of cover- Until recently, Schwab said, the volves a growing up. a renuncia-age of conveying the current United States could compensate tion of dependency and passivityknowledge of a field, which was for ]ack Qf basic research by in favor of readiness to rely ononce the essence of science teach- “borrowing intellectual capital” one’s own resources.”from Europe. Schwab emphasized the impor-However, this is no longer the tance of the laboratory in science Ad\»ertisementYour editorlooks ating, is called into question. Itmeans that expert, authoritativepossession of a body of knowl- case he contended. This si ream education. He said the laboratoryedge, is no longer enough to of intellectual capital has dwin- should lead rather than lag be-qualify men as the best teachers dlod he said. hind the classroom phase of sei-of science. It means a u' "We are grown-up now and ence teaching. The laboratory, hecation of the science eac er mus mus^ jearn to take care of our- said, should become “a placebe something more than, perhaps s^jves>»» sadd Schwab. “Mean- where nature is seen more nearlysomething 9 u^_ _ _ , while, Russia has grown big, not in the raw and where things seenonly in technology but in pursuit are used as occasions for the in-of fluid (basic) enquiry. vention and conduct of programs“Since the stream between of enquiry.”the communication of conclusionsand training in ways and meansto pass them on.It means that time hallowed in LIFEExplain parking problem chasing after Africans whohad attacked men returningfrom work. The two most in¬teresting pictures in the sec¬tion (and the issue) showprime minister Verwoerd justbefore and just after he wasshot by a would-be assassin.The two cuts, grisly andhorrifying, exhibit the dra¬matic quality which has exem-There is something rather plihed the best sort of Lifework.In another section, fourfamous Rembrandt sketches,all on Easter themes, are repro-ubiquitous about Life maga¬zine: not only is the finishedproduct everywhere, but itsphotographers seem to be“For fifteen cents a day, any student or faculty memberof the University need no longer search for a place to park,”said Dean Ruth McCarn, chairman of the University parkingcommittee. “This is the actual cost per day for a five dayweek; the cost per quarter is$K)00." McCarn added, “Parking brought this action upon them-spaces are available for rental at selves as his officers will use thisboth the new dorm and law school tactic only upon a repeated of-parking lots.” fender.The job of the faculty member. Once a ticket is issued, a vi-three students, and six adminis- olator can do one of three things:trators who make up the Univer- He can immediately pay the finesity parking committee is to rec- Qf two dollars; he can wait fiveommend to the administration days, in which case the offensemeans of improving campus parking and to hear appeals of Uni will cost him five dollars; orstill, he can appeal the charge toversity parking citations. The the parking board. Of the eightycommittee usually meets once or so tickets issued each month,each month to decide these mat- about five or six are appealed,ters. Since the committee did not and about half of these appealshold its regular meeting in March are won There is no penalty fora longer meeting will be held thismonth.A ,T. Eidson, head of campuspolice, believes that parking is notas acute a problem as it has beenin the past, even though the rateof ticket issuance to parking of¬fenders has not fallen. He bolieves that the new Lying-In hos¬pital lot at the west end of cam¬pus has eased parking pressure.Eidson’s men issue only abouteighty tickets a month as theirjurisdiction over parking viola¬tions covers only University prop¬erty.It is up to the discretion of thecampus police officer whether ornot he gives a violator a ticket orplasters his windshield with largewhite stickers that proclaim to allthat the car’s owner has commit¬ted a parking offense. Accordingto Eidson, those drivers who havehad their windshields plasteredwith innumerable stickers have appealing a ticket and beingfound guilty.In the past various proposalshave been submitted to the Ma¬roon to relieve the parking situa¬tion; among these have been aproposal to build an undergroundgarage in the Midway and one inGadfly which proposed turningStagg Field into one giganticparking lot. Neither of these pro¬posals was seriously consideredby the committee.When Dean McCarn was askedabout the possibility that park¬ing in the circle just east of theadministration building mightonce again be permitted, she saidthat parking in that area consti¬tuted a fire hazard as emergencyequipment could not easily gainaccess to certain buildings.Honorary societiesselect new membersMaroon Key, a second,third and fourth year studentservice organization responsi¬ble for entertaining visitorswho have come to UC, hasselected this year’s new mem¬bers. Dean of Students JohnNetherton announced that the fol¬lowing are to be inducted at abrunch in International House onApril 24: Sally Akin, John Aker-man, Joel Ashen farb, BarbaraBabbin, Jon Berral, Jean Dames,Basil DeMeur, Dave DeRosier,Judy Frost, Paul Hyman, KathyKiblinger, Martha Kingsbury,John Funk, Sybil McCracken, Lo¬ well Meyer, Debra Mills, SueModel. David Moses. MildredShaw. David Silver, EdwardStrecker, Martha Temple, andJerry Woolpv.New Maroon Key members areselected by the Dean of Studentsfrom nominations made by thefaculty, the administration, andmembers of the Maroon Key.Owl and Serpent, a seniormen’s honor society, recently an¬nounced the election of new mem¬bers. Those elected were: MichaelEdidin, Jim Best, Neal Johnston,Harvey Flaumenhaft, JustinJohnson. Otto Feinstein, PhilHoffman, and Clarence Woods.>W SAuytHE Balvot* oor' s-tvffec>?* everywhere, too. For example, duced in the familiar red-last week numerous news- brown ink of the 17th centurypapers with nothing better to artist. The four drawings,do ran front-page headlines spaced over twenty years, showabout the surprise elopement an interesting series of devel-of heiress Gamble Benedict and opments in the master's style.Andrei Proumbeanu. Not con- There is a long and lovely, iftent with being surprised, Life somewhat irrelevant, section ofhad photographers at every color photos showing the re¬point along the route: from action to spring in New Yorkinitial flight to New York to city's Central Park: a singlehappy Florida honeymoon. yellow flower shooting up fromNow the necessity of run- grassless ground, studentsning seven pages (the first reading on the large grey rocksseven pages I might add) of of the park, birds flocking inthis week's 144 on the subject the leafless trees,might be called into question, There are two other arrest-nevertheless, the difficulty of ing features in the issue: thethe accomplishment is indis- first is a brief study of newputable. uses of concrete in architec-Anyway, there they are: ture, showing the flowingGamble and Andrei, the great- forms concrete is capable ofest pair of romantic lovers assuming.we're likely to see this month, The other article, this onesweeping the floor of their with even more words thancabin, taking blood tests, pictures, centers around thesleeping in their chartered rather confusing mission andplane chastely separated by an personality of one Tom Dooley,arm rest, wrestling on the an American doctor working inbeach and skinning fish. Laos when he is not solicitingThis is followed by an unu- funds for Medico, an organiza-sual, and rather interesting, tion that collects funds anddouble-page essay of five pho- recruits medical teams to helptographs, all taken at night, the desperately poor and dis-each showing little more than eased in one of the world'sa lit window. The catch is that underdeveloped nations, main-the windows belong to Nixon, ly in southeast Asia.Johnson, Butler, Kennedy and The rest of the issue is,Symington; all were waiting up unfortunately, mainly fillerlate to hear the results of the between advertisements:Wisconsin primary. Humphrey apparently nothing much hap-doesn't get into the act until pened last week. The photo-the next page, when he's graphs are all well done, someshown hanging out of a bus quite interesting in them-window. selves, but reader interest, atThree pages of English least on this campus, is notpomp, all surround the circum- likely to be caught by a re-stances of General de Galle's union of ninety old friends,visit to London follow, includ- a lengthy study of the cosmeticing a picture of Princess Mar- industry, a passion play pro-garef and Antony Armstrong- duced by some steelworkers, aJones, last month's modern study on how to tame a wildTristan and Isolde. This is fol- cat (via drugs), a shot oflowed by a two page, four-color $10,000,000 worth of jewelsOldsmobile ad. lying in a rather well organ-Two pages are devoted to 'zed pile or a reprint of themore pictures of the South Lord's Prayer with some 800African revolts. Life has given words of commentary by theexemplary coverage to this Reverend David A. Redding ofseries of events;, its photo- the First Presbyterian churchgraphs have been tense and Glendale, Ohio,dramatic. This week is no ex- In all honesty, however, weception as Life shows a Cape- should add that printed ontown roadblock with troops page 99 of this issue is one ofholding back striking Africans the most amazing photographsin a rebellious village. Another to ever be printed in any massphoto shows native police circulation family magazine,armed with sticks and spears We'll say no more about it.April 15, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5GAD F LYArouse academic silenceFor several years now, aca¬demicians and students of societyhave spilled much verbiage in de¬fining, attacking, and attemptingto explain the phenomenon of stu¬dent apathy. But few if any ofthese astute observers have con¬sidered the possibility that theyand their colleagues are in large measure responsible, that the ap¬pellation “silent generation” is asdeserved by faculty and admin¬istrations as by the students forwhom the phrase was coined. Thegreat majority of American pro¬fessors are submerged in thesecurity-seeking, promotion-buck¬ing process business of grindingOn Canqns withMsc Stallman(Author of “/ Was a Teen-age Dwarf \ "The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.)COLLEGE: THE FOE OF EDUCATIONIn your quest for a college degree, are you becoming a narrowsocialist, or are you being educated in the broad, classicalsense of the word? This question is being asked today by manyserious people—including my barber, fhy podiatrist, and mylittle dog Spot—and it would be well to seek an answer.let us examine our souls. Are we becoming experts only inthe confined area of our majors, or does our knowledge rangefar and wide? Do we, for example, know who fought in thelwittle of Salamis, or Kant’s epistemology, or Planck’s constant,or the voyage of the Beagle, or Palestrina’s cantatas, or whatWordsworth was doing ten miles above Tintern Abbey?If we do not, we are turning, alas, into specialists. What,then, can we do to escape this strait jacket, to broaden ourvistas, lengthen our horizons, to become, in short, educated?Well sir, the first thing we must do is throw aw ay our curricula.Tomorrow, instead of going to the same old classes, let us trysomething new. Let us think of college, not as a rigid discipline,but as a kind of vast smorgasbord, with all kinds of temptingintellectual tidbits to sample and savor. Let us dive in. Letour pent-up appetites roam and snatch where they will. out journal articles and text¬books; administrators have sunkup to their necks with the prob¬lems of running an educationalbusiness. But in their concernwith the business of academia,they have both forgotten the ideaof a university. For there can beno other reason for assemblingmen engaged in separate re¬searches than to have them talkto, arouse, stimulate one another.The superiority of a universityeducation over a public libraryeducation must lie in the oppor¬tunities for discussion and in theinteraction of people and ideas.It is of no mean importance thatsuch ideas should be divergent,for otherwise there is no reasonto discuss. Clearly, if the universi¬ties are failing to turn out inter¬ested, articulate, and creative,cholars and citizens, they arefailing in their appropriate en¬deavor. The apathetic student canonly take part of the blame, forhe is emulating an equally apa¬thetic example.Perhaps the silence from aca¬ demia would be more understandable if universities were stillunder fire from the MeCarthysand the Jenners. Such open at¬tacks are no longer evident, andindeed they would be terribly outof step with the growing respectfor universities (albeit for thewrong reasons). But this is notto say that the threat has dis¬appeared with the open attacks;on the contrary, it has becomemore subtle and more internal¬ized into the academic commu¬nity.University administrations, stillreeling under the open attacks ofthe ’40s and early '50s, are in¬creasingly concerned with theirpublic image. This is especiallytrue in state supported institu¬tions subject to the whim of thelegislators and electorate. Thisconcern for public image has beenreflected down to the lowest fac¬ulty member, — so much so thatgood public relations and Madi¬son Avenue discretion have be¬come the major instruments foradvancement. Of course, one mustalso serve on a few of the Presi-let fmzr/t MtWe will start the day with a stimulating seminar in Hittiteartifacts. Then we will go over to marine biology and spend ahappy hour with the mollusks. Then we will open our pores bydrilling with the ROTC for a spell. Then we’ll go over to journal¬ism and scramble a font of Bodoni. Then we’ll go to the medicalschoql and palpate a few spleens. Then we’ll go to homeeconomics and have lunch.And between classes we’ll smoke Marlboro Cigarettes. This,let me emphasize, is not an added fillip to the broadening of oureducation; it is an essential. To learn to live richly and well isan important part of education, and Marlboros are an importantpart of living richly and well. Do you think flavor went outwhen filters came in? Well, ha-ha, the joke is on you. Marllxaro,with its Selectrate filter, delivers flavor in full measure, flavorwithout stint or compromise, flavor that wrinkled care derides,flavor holding both its sides. This triumph of the tobacconist'sart comes to you in soft pack or flip-top box and can be lightedwith match, lighter, candle, Welsbach mantle, or by rubbingtwo small Indians together.When we have embarked on this new regimen—or, more ac¬curately, lack of regimen—we will soon be studded with culturelike a ham with cloves. When strangers accost us on the streetand say, “What was Wordsworth doing ten miles above TinternAbbey?” we will no longer slink away in silent abashment. Wewill reply loud and clear:“As any truly educated person knows, Wordsworth, Shelley,and Keats used to go the Widdicombe Fair every year for thepoetry-writing contests and three-legged races, both of whichthey enjoyed wildly. Well sir, imagine their chagrin when theyarrived at the Fair in 1776 and learned that Oliver Cromwell,jittery because Guy Fawkes had just invented the spinningjenny, had canceled all public gatherings, including the Widdi¬combe Fair and Liverpool. Shelley was so upset that hedrowned himself in the Bay of Naples, Keats went to Londonand became Samuel Johnson, and Wordsworth ran blindly intothe forest until he collapsed in a heap ten miles above TinternAbbey. There he lay for several years, sobbing and kicking hislittle fat legs. At length, peace returned to him. lie composedhimself and, noticing for the first time the beauty of the forestaround him, he wrote Joyce Kilmer’s immortal Trees . . . Andthat, smartypants, is what Wordsworth was doing ten milesabove Tintern Abbey.” <© i9«o m.«* * *Poets and peasants alike know that if you like mildness butyou don’t like filters, you can’t do better than■ Marlboro’scompanion cigarette—Philip Morris,6 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 15, 1960 The most beautifulnew look in diamondsENGAGEMENT RINGSYou have to see it to believe it! Looks like a diamond starfloating on her finger. And it makes any diamond look bigger,brighter, more beautiful. Don’t even think of any other en¬gagement ring until you see the dazzling “Evening Star"* col¬lection at your Artcarved jeweler’s.And, for real proof of value, ask your jeweler about Art-carved's famous nationwide Permanent Value Plan. It givesyou the right to apply your ring’s full current retail price,should you ever desire to, toward a larger Artcarveddiamond—any time—at any of the thousands of Artcarvedjewelers throughout the country.IMPORTANT. Every genuine "Evening Star" diamond is guaranteed in writing,for color... cut... clarity... and carat weight and only Artcarved stompsthe exact diamond weight in the ring. It's a genuine "Evening Star" onlywhen the name is stamped in the ring.Beloved by brides for more than one hundred years (1850-1960)Arte a rve dDIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGSJ. R Wood &. Sons, InC., Dept. CP, 216 E. 45th St., New York 17, N. Y.FREE: Send me more facts about diamond rings and "WEDDING GUIDE FORBRIDE AND GROOM.” Also name of nearest (or home-town) Artcarved Jeweler.Name.Address-City .County or Zone. dent’s faculty committees andkeep the journal articles flowing,but no matter — one cannot con¬cern himself with issues, discus,sion. controversy. To quote fromD. George Williams book. Someof My Best Friends Are Prnfe»sots: "The typical professor is tncontinual dread of antagonizing,irritating, or disturbing ‘the ad¬ministration’ especially if he hap.pens to know that most modernuniversity administrators main¬tain a secret dossier on each oftheir professors, and that intothis dossier goes every scrap ofgossip or criticism that reachesthe administration.”And the professors have re¬acted to this atmosphere by los¬ing interest in public discussionand avoiding overt diversity ofopinion. They permit fear tobeget apathy, and both to begetsilence.Can this be happening here atthe great University of Chicago?After all we have witnessed nopolitical firings; we do not havea secret faculty dossier system.But the true state of affairs wasindicated by the Chancellor in hisState of The University address,when he referred to the unani¬mity of opinion that now prevailsin the faculty with regard to theNew College. And while he re¬garded this as a virtue and as areflection of considered judg¬ment, I cannot but view this asa dangerous unanimity of silenc e,of fear, and of apathy. Where wasthe protest from the faculty mem¬bers whose opinions were disre¬garded and whose heads werejumped when the Administrationsuppressed the Chicago Review?Where was the protest when theUniversity converted the fund forthe world-famous Walgreen Lec¬tures into a Professional Chairin the Business School? Can itbe possible that the New Collegeis above criticism? And why thegreat silence on larger issues?The firing of Professor Kochat the University of Illinois issuch an issue. I do not intend toinsult the intelligence of mylearned readers by arguing thepoint of whether a violation ofacademic freedom has occurred.Pericles and I’Hr+”CVCNING STAR" DESIGN PAT. APPLIED FOR. RINGS ENLARGED TO SNOW DETAIL. COPR. I960, J. R. WOOD 4 SONS, IN L'HOMME DEDISCERNEMENTpense k la Sun Life duCanada lorsqu’il pense al’assurance-vie parce qu’ilsait que la Sun Life est unedes grandes compagniesd’assurance-vie du mondeet que ses plans de policesk la page sont le fruit de89 ann6es d’exp4rience auservice du public.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr., '481 N. LaSalleFR 2-2390 Chicago, III.FA 4-6800Je reprdsente la Compagnled’assurance-vie Sun Life duCanada. Nos plans mod ernespeuvent litre adapts d vospropres besoins. Puis-je avoirToccasion de vous exposerquelques-uns de ces plans?Sans obligation, 6videmment.SUN LIFE ASSURANCECOMPANY OF CANADABookstore will become 'self-service'& •‘Self service” will be theWOrd most descriptive of the*new” bookstore. Studentswilll be able to enter the book¬store next fall and select theirown books from open shelves in¬stead of waiting in long lines fora clerk to wait on them.Henry Berry of Henry Berryassociates incorporated has beenhired by the University to inspectthe problems of the present book¬store set-up and submit a plan tothe administration for remodelingthe facilities there.Berry submits blueprintsBerry, in a meeting with theMaroon and members of the Stu¬dent Government bookstore com¬mittee opened up blue prints hehas submitted to the Universitybookstore for a remodeling pro¬gram. #Also present at the meetingwere Clarence Schultz, supervisor courses. Students entering thestore will deposit their packagesand other books at a station be¬fore they enter the self servicearea. Krogman explained thatthis will undoubtedly cut downon the losses due to theft.The reduction in number ofclerks is not expected by Berryalthough he claims that his plansat Northwestern enabled thatstore to reduce its employed helpfrom 20 to five in number.Under the new program thebookstore will be able to servicea University of about 9.000 stu¬dents Berry said. He also men¬tioned that all the new fixturessuch as display cases and rackswill be movable so that they mayeasily be moved to a new locationin case the University decided toerect an entirely new structurefor the bookstore at some futuredate.Among other advantages in the Headed by Ron Shelton, the com¬mittee investigated the efficiencyand services available in the book¬store and offered to the students.A series of Maroon editorials andnews articles considered the muti-farious aspects of this investiga¬tion.Reduced prices desiredThe Bookstore committee’s par¬ticular concern was, first, withthe present burden of high bookcosts — a burden which it be¬lieves is a concern of a significantpart of the student body, andwhich Student government feelsto be not totally unavoidable.A second major concern of thisinquiry is to attempt to clarifyfor the student body some of theexisting misunderstandings as tothe policy and operation of thebookstore.Bookstore makes profitObserving that the bookstoremakes a profit, the question ofthe Bookstore committee is:"Should the University, throughone of its business operationssuch as the bookstore, derive aprofit (beyond that necessary forcontinued operation) from theacademic community, particular¬ly in regard to profits gainedfrom the sale of books (e.g., text¬books) that are a requisite tothe formal education whioh theUniversity fosters and offers tous?”The purpose of this inquiry isto ascertain the facts and princi¬ples underlying its operations, sothat the committee may moreintelligently assess our answerto this question. Crowds line up to get waited upon at the food and supplycounters in the bookstore.If the bookstore is foremost aservice to provide to students andfaculty those books which areessential and requisite for workin the University, then this serv¬ice would, it seems, be at a maxi¬mum if it were non-profit. At thesame time the University has aneed for funds to maintain andexpand its operations. The com¬mittee has no objection to thefact that as an enterprise thebookstore makes profits, but SGobjects to profits derived fromthe sale of textbooks and coursebooks.Should bookstore make profitThe second question, then, is:‘‘Is there some way, satisfactoryto both students and faculty andthe interest of the University and(Sr^ its administrators, to reduce theburden of the costs of books, es¬pecially texthooks?”In summary, the real problemand question is: ‘‘Given that thebookstore makes a profit, couldor should that money be divertedto the students—through rebatesat the end of the year, throughdecreasing profit margin, orwhatever else might be conceived—rather than be used in the gen¬eral fund of the University as itpresently is?”iVoiv OpehKronthal's Delicatessen1700 E. 87th Street SA 1-4632Formerly on 53rd and Dorchester.Finest in imported and domesticmeats, sausages, cheese, and cannedgood. GRAND OPENING—May 1st.Students mill through crowded aisles in attempts to finddesired books.of alterations with the buildingsand grounds committee, and Wes¬ton Krogman, business managerof campus operations.Some of the changes Berry out¬lined were: a self service area inthe text book section containingseveral shelves with four footaisles in-between to facilitate stu¬dents in selecting their booksthemselves; a snack bar sectionin the back of the store wherecameras are now sold; a schoolsupplies section where greetingcards are now on display; a wid¬ened entrance at the northeastcorner of the building; check-outareas with turnstiles; special of¬fices for the trade book superin¬tendent, department orders, cam¬era and typewriter sales.Berry remodels bookstoresBerry, whose only business isthe remodeling of bookstores, hasbeen special advisor and contrac¬tor for over 30 colleges and uni¬versities and has redesigned thebookstores at Northwestern,Southern California, and Valpa¬raiso.The self-service center will con¬tain text books shelved accordingto courses and will also containUsed books for those particular»■** FOR 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 fftw Yorkand Europe as well as a meeting place *for members to socialize and have fun;shopping tips 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 Club17/OX M»? interior changes will be an in¬crease in storage space. An esti¬mate of 2000 lineal feet of vol¬umes will be able to be storedwithin the building at one time.This is an increase of over 700lineal feet over the present capa¬city. An increase in the numberof titles in paperback will beseen. Krogman said that about2300 titles will be available fromstock.SG report citedWhen the store is sold out ofa particular title, the name of thebook will be posted in the appro¬priate section.Following is an abstract of theStudent Government bookstorecommittee report prepared forthe Maroon by Ronald Shelton,bookstore committee head.A special committee wasformed this year because of stu¬dent interest in the bookstore. 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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 in either low or high key areavailable: Ballads, Torchy 'N Blue,Coo I Jazz 'N Rhythm, SophisticatedSonys.Only $12.95 per Kit(sftecify vocal nmpe when ordering)Write for complete information.?CcH.necjH* Hall,New York I V N Y rvvyyvv>TTTTTTy?TTr*T>y?TtTTTTTTTTtVT»T*yTVSITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage Gr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.Phil MooreAUCTIONDue toLOSS OF LEASE AND DISSOLUTIONOF BUSINESS WE WILL SELLTODAYFRIDAY, APRIL 15th1636 East 55th StreetAssets ofVictory Paintings And Gift Galleries★ ★ ★Oil Paintings — Art Objects — Gifts — LampsEtchings — Occasional Furniture — Etc.★ ★ ★Telefonken Hi-Fi AM and FM — 17 to 27inch TV Sets and other miscellaneous itemsA- Ar A’AMERICAN AUCTION ASSOCIATES, Inc.847 West Madison StreetMO 6-7777 FREE!!ZENITHSTEREO PHONOSFor Students of U. of C.3 BIG PRIZES AWARDEDYes, we will award 3 beautiful ZENITH STEREO¬PHONIC 4-SPEED AUTOMATIC PORTABLEPHONOGRAPHS to the lucky student winnersin a drawing to be held at 12 Noon on Friday,May 6th at the UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE.HERE’S ALL YOU DO TO ENTERBetween now and May 6th, simply save all the emptypacks of MARLBORO, PHILIP MORRIS, PARLIAMENTand ALPINE cigs.Only the brands listed above will be eligible for thedrawing. As you accumulate these, write your name,address, and telephone number on each pack and depositthem in the huge container in the bookstore. On May 6th,3 will be drawn out and declared winners of thestereo sets.NOTHING TO WRITE, NO RHYME OR JINGLE TOCOMPOSE, JUST THE EMPTY PACK ITSELF IS APOTENTIAL WINNER.Remember, the more you deposit the greater are yourchances of winning. Start smoking these brands now andget a head start.You Need Not Be Present To Win!Winners will be notified by May 9thApril 15, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7 ILit'rt1■Original approval risible(Continued from page 1) proposed open channel broadcast- One student on the station in- consultant for advice in terms of dom of action should there be.relations value to the uni- in&- “I can imagine the great terviewed was not so charitable, continuity and the technical prob- among people who are not action-versitv ” harm which an irresponsible sta- “The decision to stop work on lems of running the station. The able under law if anything goestion, could do; there is no point FM was made after much less faculty board would have veto wrong. Any violation of the FCCThe history of the proposed -n jockjng the barn door after discussion than the original deci- power over all new programming, code would be handled betweenFM band is long and complicated. the horse has been stolen,” sion to start. The advisory board The board did not consider this the FCC and the trustee*?, notA dream of station members for j^etherton pointed out in explana- was not called in until after the formanv but did not seem to be with the people running the stayears, the project became serious tion of his change of policy. decision was made. The advisory very mvjch in favor of it. One tion.”in" Jnnw ctntinrf “None of us thought this out board had gone along with it, board member explained that the One proposal which is currentlyapDlv for a construction permit sufficiently to begin with,” Ne- ^bat e!?e c<?uld the£ doJ The faculty people Involved simply being considered by the radio sta-fronT the FCC * therton continued “and I must administration had spoken. *d not have enough time to ful- tion staff is the use of multi-plex. ^ . Not all of the station shared fill the obligations created by this broadcasting, erroneously calledAfter the permit was granted take the major responsibility for fhis vieW| but almost t0 a man tem . side-channel broadcasting. ThisIn early March, Netherton, began this. Foitunately, we can still station expressed a desire to Pointing out that the construe- would involve sending an auxi-to develop reservations about the correct our mistakes. . resist the introduction of a pro- tion permit issued by the FCC liary signal on an existing sta-fessional radio man as station was isued in the name of the tion’s band. To pick up thesemanager. board of trustees, Alex Sutner- broadcasts a special adapterFeeling that there was some land argued: “How much free- would be necessary,legitimate need for control, #• • • f ■Definite increase shownWUCB would have a paid tech¬nical consultant, a programmingEllen Coughlin Beauty Salon51 OS Lake Park Ave.SPECIALISTS IKt HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mom. - Sat. — 9 n.m. - 11 p.m.Ml 3-2060in admission applicationsut soft! What taste fromyonder FILTER-BLENDns WHATS UP FRONT THAT COUNTSThis filter, be it e’er so pure and whiteMust needs give flavor too, full clear and brightElse would the trusting smoker, filled with hopeAgain be dashed, dejected be... and mope.And thus we come to Winston’s obvious truth ~It's what's up front that counts —and 'tis, forsoothIn that the fine tobaccos, in the endAre by exclusive process —Filter-Blend—Become the tastiest taste that e’er hath playedAcross your dancing taste-buds, man or maidlBe ye not slow, therefore, to test the witOf what we say: that Winston, friend, is it;For that with ev’ry smoke ye do delayYe are not gath’ring rosebuds while ye maylii04 We are advertised by our loving friendsKINO HENRY VI. PART III. A£Y V. SC. IllJ. Reynolds tobacco co..wiHSTO»-8'AiE*.»«.d. If you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou¬blesome problem.PETERSON MOVINCAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.: BU 8-6711from our University ShopDISTINCTIVE SPORTWEAR FORLATE SPRING AND SUMMERWool-and-Orlon* Acrylic Blazers, $404 Wash - and - Wear* Dacron* Polyester andCotton Plaid Odd Jackets, $35India Madras Plaid Odd Jackets, $3SDacron - and - WorstedTropical Odd Trousers, $19.50* Wash - and - Wear*Odd Trousers, $12.50 and $15.50'Colorful Sport and Knit Shirts, $4 to $8.50Bermuda Length Shorts, $7.50 to $12.50•DuPont’* tradenurkISTAftUSHIDItl*74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.NSW YQRK • CHICAGO ♦ LOS ANGUS* * SAN FRANCISCOa • CHICAGO MA R O O N • April 15, 1960 Charles D. O’Connell, director of admissions at UC, toldthis Maroon reporter last Monday that there will be a definiteincrease in the number of applications which the Universityreceives this year. As of March 31, * 5 more applications hadalready been submitted than in all of last year, as determinedat the end of last summer. Among the applicants are 225transfer students.The number of students whichthe University accepts “will de¬pend upon the number of quali¬fied students who apply,” estimat¬ing that the entering class of fall,1960 will number about 600.O’Connell guesses that thequality of the applicants is hold-ing up well, but added that itwas a little early to tell a greatdeal about the applicants in gen¬eral.Despres cites city corruptionEd. note—Leon Despres is Chi¬cago Alderman from the fifthward which includes the VC areaAs an Independent, he is one ofthe three city aldermen notelected by the Democratic organi-ation in 1959. The following com¬ments are taken from an articleby Despres in The Nation, andare reprinted here with permis¬sion.by Leon DespresThe recent confession ofone slight 23-year-old burglarthat his numerous accompliceswere Chicago policemen hasgreatly upset this city. The con¬fession reached the ears of a Re¬publican State’s Attorney, and inJanuary its publication, the ar¬rests of the policemen and the en¬suing scandals destroyed the glit¬tering facade which five years ofadroit public relations had labori¬ously built up for the Daley-head¬ed Chicago Democratic machine.Daley rises above partySince 1955, Richard J. Daley hasruled Chicago as Mayor and asChairman of the county Demo¬cratic organization. In his publicimage, he has appeared to riseabove party. Chicago’s school ad¬ministration is' very good, thecity’s finances are handled by adistinguished comptroller, streetsare cleaned and repaired, garbageis collected, the water and sewagesystems do their job, and assortedpublic works flourish. To top itall, the City Hall publicity ma¬chine has been working so end¬lessly and so efficiently that Chi¬cagoans tend to forget that littlehas been done to solve the city’sbasic problems: corruption, segre¬gation, neighborhood decay andgeneral metropolitan confusion.In Its successful advance, theDemocratic machine here has cor-raled seven local governmentswith annual budgets totaling overa billion dollars, patronage pay¬rolls of thousands of employesand a golden treasury of privi¬leges for the faithful. Its controlis tight. In 1959, it re-elected May¬er Daley and secured control offorty-seven aldermen out of fifty— an enviable 94 per cent ma¬jority.Travail begins with MorrisonMayor Daley’s travail beganlast October, when Richard Mor¬rison, in jail awaiting trial forburglary, told the Public Defenderthat he had reached an arrange¬ment with certain policemen inthe Summerdale district wherebythey helped him with burglariesduring their working hours, hekeeping all stolen cash and theytaking the stolen merchandise.Often he paid protection money,too. The Public Defender checkedthe facts, and then in January theRepublican State’s Attorney sentout arresting squads to pick upthe policemen. The stolen goodswere found in their homes. Thedevelopments shook Chicagoansfar more deeply than the fa¬miliar “unsolved” murders. Whenthe watchman is a thief, who issafe?City Hall removes CommissionAbout a week after the Initialrevelations, City Hall removedthe loyal old Police Commissionerand appointed an equally loyal new Acting Commissioner, whosefirst act was to demote the Chiefof Detectives, a man of independ¬ence who had helped the State’sAttorney uncover the scandal. Bythis demotion, the administrationserved clear notice to everyonethat, as to further disclosures, the•'lid was on.” Since then, the Po¬lice Department has worked con¬scientiously to keep from makingpublic any more scandals than ab¬solutely necessary.Wilson chosenMayor Daley then picked a com¬mittee of four Chicagoans and Or¬lando W. Wilson, California pro¬fessor of police administration, tofind a new police commissioner.On recommendation of the com¬mittee, the Mayor appointed Mr.Wilson. Is it the Mayor’s hopethat the prestige of a citizens’committee, plus the appointmentof a distinguished police chief,will make halfway measuresseem publicly acceptable until themachine can resume its normalcontrol of the police department?So far the Mayor has promisedto do almost everything about thedepartment except try to take itpermanently out of partisan poli¬tics — yet nothing less will ac¬complish the reforms that areneeded.- Appointment- a first stepThe appointment of a new com¬missioner is only a first step to¬ward a new Police Department.For the present, Mayor Daley hasput forward an interim city ordi¬nance which his huge City Coun¬cil majority can pass or repeal onequally short notice. But onlystate legislation can give thecommissioner the independencehe needs. Yet the prospects forstate action are poor unless theMayor and the Governor canagree on what specific legislationis needed.Thus, protected only by a may¬oralty promise of support and bythe revocable ordinance of a ma¬chine-dominated City Council, Po¬lice Commissioner Wilson willfind himself fearfully handi¬capped in putting through thedrastic departmental reformsneeded.Cosf of political machineThe cost of a political machineto Chicago is more than just abad Police Department. The ma¬chine always tries to avoid ailsteps, however necessary, whichmay disturb voter complacency,arouse resentment, threaten solidprecinct control or affect the priv¬ileges which it purveys. The cityis falling behind in the war onneighborhood decay; an ineffi¬cient Building Department is fail¬ing to provide decent enforcementof a housing code so modest thatit does not even meet the min¬imum standards set by the Amer¬ican Public Health Association.Without any internal checks, andwith incredible confusion and agood deal of “payola,” the depart¬ment limps along to the greatbenefit of Chicago’s multi-million-dollar slum industry.Residential segregationResidential segregation is Chi¬cago’s number one problem, yetthe machine scarcely even talks about it, much less tries to solveit. The Daley administration hashelped Chicago become the “mostresidentially segregated city inAmerica” (U. S. Commission onCivil Rights); it has never givenany leadership to the forces fa¬voring housing integration oropen occupancy, which alone cansave the city’s neighborhoods andits integrity. One lily-white publichousing development of the Chi¬cago Housing Authority stillstands as an eldquent example ofsegregation to the rest of the city.Why scandals now?Why did the Chicago policescandals erupt now? The timingwas due, F think, to the reactionof the victors after Mayor Daley’sre-election in April, 1959. At thattime Daley had an opportunityfor greatness which he rejected.The victors misinterpreted theirvictory as a complete endorse¬ment of the status quo, and re¬laxed.The result was that last year,one scandal after another beganbreaking out. Any one of themcould have been fatal to the ma¬chine had not Daley built up a re¬markable reserve of press andbusiness support in his own be¬half.Bail-bond scandalFirst came the bail-bond scan¬dal, exposing a network ofbailiffs, clerks and bondsmen,helped by orders of the MunicipalCourt Chief Justice, who hadvoided hundreds of thousands ofdollars in bondsmen’s liabilitieson forfeited bail bonds. The ChiefJustice admitted he had gone onhunting trips .with the chiefbondsman, but said he had re¬paid all expenses. The Chief Jus¬tice was indicted, freed by ajudge, and indicted again — andagain freed, this time by anotherjudge.Then came the traffic-ticket scandal. It showed that a groupof Municipal Court employees, po¬licemen and ward politicians hadprofited by millions of dollars intraffic-ticket fixes and fine pay¬ments which had never reachedthe city treasury. Two morejudges were indicted, and alsosome traffic referees, court em¬ployees and ward politicians. Asa result, the party has droppedthe Chief Justice for re-electionthis year and is seeking to saveits Municipal Court ticket bynominating in his place an out¬standing candidate, AugustineBowe, distinguished lawyer, chair¬man of the city’s Commission onHuman Relations, and ex-presi¬dent of the Chicago Bar Associa¬tion. (Echo of the nominations ofStevenson and Douglas in 1948!)But along with Bowe, the machinehas presented a “safe” river wardcommitteeman and a “safe” poli¬tician as candidates for courtbailiff and clerk, offices whichcontrol fat budgets and more than1,083 patronage employees.Payroll scandalThen came the payroll scandal.For wreeks, the press ran dailystories about hoodlums, non-work¬ers, convicts and other unsavorycharacters on city payrolls, menwho found their way to non work¬ing jobs only through the carefulefforts of a political machine ofwhich they were a part. This timethere were some dismissals, butno indiciments.So the 1959 scandals accumulat¬ed, each eroding the machine alittle more and together creatingan atmosphere ripe for a majorscandal. Then came the police- burglary explosion. The haloaround the city administrationhas gone and the old predatoryaspects of the machine have beenpublicly revealed. The machine isgambling now that it can besaved by delay, by superficial con¬cessions, perhaps — if it is lucky— by some diversion of public Re¬tention.In many ways, the situationhere is reminiscent of conditionsin New York City. The resem¬blance can be found not only inthe prevalence of corruption anda lack of progressive leadership,but also in the way both municbpalities are failing in their na¬tional roles. Chicago and NewYork, with their tremendous po¬tential resources, could contributeboldness, energy, imagination andliberal leadership to the nationalDemocratic Party. With painfullyfew exceptions, neither has doneso in the past; nor does eithershow any signs of doing so whenconvention time rolls around inthe summer.Chicago wards importantThe course of the nation isclosely connected to what hap¬pens in the wards of Chicago andNew York. Is it naive to hope thatthe current scandals in Chicagomay at last smash the machinewhich has for so long held thenation’s second largest city inthralldom? Surely the scandalshave given this city the chanceof a lifetime to take politics outof the police department and cor¬ruption out of politics, and to giveit a government worthy of thecity’s cultural and industrialgreatness.TAl-SAM-'Y&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Dally11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 foreign car hospital & timeMl 3-3113dealers ur.<castrol lubricants1ucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli & michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespecialists ik speed tuningx custom engine installationsclutch - fgear box •electrics 1brakessuperchargingcustom coachworkhob tester MG psychiatrist2306 e. 71st st.Chicago, Illinois3 ML, Contact X,byDr, Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372 Cheerful, newly decoroted, ottroc-tively furnished apartment. Safe,fireproof deluxe elevator building.Doorman. Night watchman. Maidand linen service available. Rea¬sonable monthly rates from $87.50. Too ManyLARGEBILLSfor Big Cars? QUARTERSCRAMPEDin SmallCars?Go Rambler **esl ^ ^ ^°°m an<*Comfort, Small Car Economy and Handling.Cut car cost* by hundreds of dollars with the compactRambler... save when you buy, save when you drive,save when you trade again. Get room for six big 6-footers. High, wide doors. Turn more easily, park any¬where. See Rambler soon . .. first to understand andmeet your new motoring needs. Choose 6 or V-8.GET FREE AUTO X-RAY BOOK AT YOUR RAMBLER DEALER'SRAMBLER AMERICAN2-Doer Deluxe Sedoq*1795Manufacturer1* JUK*Jt»d delivered {trie* *t Kenojhe, Wixonsin, lor 2-DoofDtluxe Sedan, afcove. SUta and >ocal U««, U any, optional equipment, eitra.April 15, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9IMMEDIATE DELIVERY J. Gunther gives manuscriptsof books, other works to UCJohn Gunther, author and foreign correspondent, has given the manuscripts of his “In¬side” books as well as others of his works to his alma mater, the University.The papers include records of interviews with crowned heads, statesmen, and politiciansall over the world for the past 30 years, ranging from President Eisenhower and the Em¬peror of Japan, to Leon Trotskyand Dr. Albert Schweitzer, and 11^ *TI|Bincluding statements by dozens of ^ ■ ■ CIViV I GVWother leaders who have helpedmake history in the past decades.Gunther graduated from theUniversity in 19^2. He receivedhis first journalistic experienceas literary editor of the Maroon.After graduation he beganwork as a foreign correspondentfor the Chicago Daily* News, andin 1936 published the first of his“Inside” books, Inside Europe.Since then Gunther has writtensimilar books including InsideAsia, Inside Latin America, InsideUSA, Insida Africa, and InsideRussia Today.The University will take legaltitle to the manuscripts over aperiod of years. Access to themanuscripts will be granted dur¬ing Gunther’s lifetime only withhis permission, but they will befreely available to scholars onrequest. A brand new surface of en-tout-cas, regarded by sportsmen asthe best yet invented for trackevents, was given to UC thisweek by the City of Chicago.The $100,000 surface was madeby a secret process and importedfrom England for the 1959 Pan-American games held in Chicago.The decision to give the ma¬terial to UC was made after com¬plaints by sportsmen about de¬ struction of the expensive run¬ning track surface. The en-tout-cas material was placed in drumsto be transported to Stagg field,where it will be applied to thetrack after the present surfaceis prepared.Walter Hass said that he wouldinvite the Big Ten to hold its out¬door meet in 1961 at Stagg fieldto take advantage of the newtrack surface.Ubiquitous Piero departsThe perfect life for a Hyde Park resident begins at Lying-inhospital, continues through turbulent years at the Lab school,U high, and the University, and ends with a RockefellerChapel high requiem mass. Few achieve this best-of-all pos¬sible existences even in part andone renowned Hyde Parker died stench of a southside summer orlast week without benefit of any¬one of these sacraments. Pievo, mid-the ennervating cold of a,. , ...... , west winter lashed to a conveni-the doe. went to that nirvana of em kl me|er while his wst.infinite fire hydrants, and human- whUe master tippIod in wannthless freedom. and security inside. Can we com-Those who frequent the big pare such selfless fidelity to thethree on 55th street (Jimmy’s, noble pratings of poets and philo-Compass, and UT) have no doubt sophers? You're damn right wealready noticed the absence of can and invidiously too! Whatone habitue — the ubiquitous reward can we tender? We offerPievo. He would endure with the only a humble acknowledgementstoicism of Seneca the tumid of our own inferiority.Lonnie Bovar gazes soulfully into the eyes of Mike Hrindaduring a rehearsal of Blackfriar's latest musical, "SilverBeils and Cockle Shells, , photo by Berger<£laeet HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Dawn to Dawn 1342east S3 st.of RochesterPRESCRIBES HIGHQUALITY MICROSCOPESAT LOW PRICES!Pictured model itElgeet-Olympuj ECBi* *FREE literature available »eComplete Elgeet-Olympui Line.#All Elgeef-Olympus MedicalResearch and Student-Teach¬ing Microscopes meet andsurpass school and college re¬quirements. Interchangeableaccessories meet the de¬mands of professionalgrowth. A microscope will befurnished on trial to the chair¬man of your Faculty Commit¬tee for approval upon re¬quest. 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Together they bring you the best ofthe best tobaccos - the mildness and taste that pay off in pleasure!HERE’STHE DUAL FILTERDOES IT;NEWDUALFILTERFaculty reacts to Koch firingWho’s academic freedomwas violated last week at theUniversity of Illinois whenpresident David Henry firedIjeo Koch, professor erf biolo-rv, for having written a letterto the Dally mini, student news¬paper at the school, in which headvocated pre-marital sexual rela¬tions? Opinion varied widely onthis question among Universityof Chicago faculty on this ques¬tion.Quite surprised**j must say it did surprise me,"commented Warner Wick, assist¬ant dean of the College. "The fel¬low didn’t say anything that Ber¬tie Russell hasn’t been saying foryears. It is unfair to interferewith a man’s aeao. :c status forany statement he makes as a cit¬izen As a professor, in class, ear¬ning out his professorial duties,some restriction to his field isproper.”Wick added that he was speak¬ing of what he regarded as aproper policy, not as inherentrights.But others disagreed. R. Wen¬dell (‘Tat”) Harrison, dean of thefaculties, asserted that "As a mi¬cro biologist, I shouldn’t insistupon my own soc iological theo¬ries publicly; this is especially♦ rue when those theories are ob¬viously designed to cause trou¬ble.”Harrison stated that he was insympathy with the editorial pub¬lished in the Chicago Sun Timeslast Monday in which it was ar¬gued that academic freedom wasthe right of a faculty member tosjieak freely within his own field,hut that academic freedom was aconcept not applicable in caseswhere the individual spoke out¬side its field.Violation of freedomMalconie Sharpe of the lawschool disagreed with the editor¬ial w'hen he read it. ‘‘As I viewthis affair from the newspaperaccounts I have read, I regard thefiring as a violation of academicfreedom."Koch was not dealing with asubject in which he had specialcompetence, hut he was partici¬pating in public discussion on amatter of public importance. I donot think that a professor, evenif he has no tenure, should be dis¬charged for expressing views onreligious, social, economic or po¬litical matters. That includesviews about aspects of the insti¬tution of marriage.”Sharpe cautioned that any pro¬fessor should exercise carefuljudgment on what he says on anypublic matter, but he asserted that a university should not sitin Judgment on the professor’sjudgment“Cases may be imagined ofpointless and unbalanced state¬ment,” Sharpe added, “but so faras I know those cases have neveroccurred in our history and arenot to be expected. English department, felt thatKoch was as courageous as fool¬ish in saying out loud what is‘‘generally taken for granted inaction.”Ashin felt that ‘‘the universityadministration acted unjustly inmeeting his behavior with severereprissal. His views should haveOther faculty members felt thata violation of academic libertyhad occurred, but felt that Kochhimself had been the violator.IX)well Coggeshall argued thatKoch went beyond his responsi¬bilities to his field.“I don’t think it was in goodtaste, I don’t think he helped any¬one and I don’t consider this aviolation of academic freedom,”the new UC vice president and re¬tiring dean of biological scienceand medical school commented."He had every right to say thisbefore his faculty colleagues, butto make this sort of announce¬ment to the students served nouseful purpose. If he is criticizedfor this, he deserves it. He cannotdefend himself by citing academicfreedom in this sort of situation.”Poor task shownMany of those interviewed feltthe poor taste was shown inKoch’s decision to allow a stu¬dent newspaper to print the let¬ter, but even on this point therewas disagreement. Some arguedthat what Koch wrote would havebeen totally acceptable in a maga¬zine or journal, but was in execra¬ble taste when published in a pa¬per directed at students. Others,like Malcome Sharpe, argued thata college newspaper is like anyother sort of newspaper or publi¬cation.Mark Ashin, professor in theDr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRISTEyes examined Glosses fitted1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Paint & Hardware Store"Wollpoper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHI 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th *t.Syracuse UniversityACADEMIC PROGRAMSABROADFULL SEMESTERSABROADforundergraduatesITALY. (Florence)Fall 1960s11GUATEMALA(Guatemala City)Spring 1961 SUMMER ABROADI960*for graduatesor undergraduatesFRANCE(Caen) French—6 creditsENGLAND(Stratford-on-Avon)Dramatics — 6 creditsJAPANArt Study Program3 credits* Application (leadline flay I, J.%‘0. Write note to:ACADEMIC PROGRAMS ABROADUNIVERSITY COLLEGE — DEPT. D610 E. FAYETTE ST., SYRACUSE 3, N Y. been refuted by showing the pos¬sibly harmful consequences ofwhat he was advocating. But fir¬ing him produces the atmosphereof a witch hunt, not a seminar.Koch very naiveWilliam Blakemore, dean ofDisciples divinity school and As¬sociate Dean of the chapel, com¬mented on the issue “not as atheologian, but as a human being:I can only say that Koch was verynaive. I don’t think he under¬stands the relationship betweenpersonality and sex. He looks atsex only in terms of its socialeffects."The University of Illinois wasjustified in firing him, particular¬ly since he was speaking of activ¬ities within the University thatconcern the whole institution. Hehad a very immature approach tothe issue.”“I think that if Henry had notfired Koch, Henry should haveHyde park's first cafeespresso been fired,” said Monsignor Jo¬seph D. Connerton, director of DeSales house.‘‘This is not a viola¬tion of academic freedom, forthere is nothing academic eitherin the obtusely immoral state¬ment of Mr. Koch or in the man¬ner in which it was delivered.Also freedom should never becompletely disassociated from re¬sponsibility.”Not matter of controversyAsked if he felt that an instruc¬tor should impose limitationsupon himself in terms of a con¬troversial topic like this, Conner¬ton replied “I do not consider thetopic a matter of controversyamong persons who are above thelevel of moral morons. I feel thatthe students’ protest against thefiring of Koch indicates an imma¬ture attitude toward the rightcalled ‘academic freedom.’ ”To the question of whether aprecedent had been established atthe University. Connerton replied,"I am not on the faculty of theUniversity of Chicago. My posi¬tion is one of independence frombut cooperation with the Univer¬sity. Danger of an occasional fac¬ulty member’s losing a job doesnot compare with the harm doneby statements like Mr. Koch’s.”One anonymous faculty mem¬ber, when asked if he thoughtacademic freedom applied only toexperts speaking within theirfield, asked in return: “Who’s anexpert in sex? I think we are allrelatively well schooled in thatfield.”This same faculty member,when asked if he felt a univer¬ sity had an obligation to protectits students from the advocateand advocates of immoral theo¬ries, replied: “If that were thecase, practically every male in theschool would be thrown out. Thatwould doom co-education.”Warner Wick replied to thesame question by stating thatthere is no point in trying be¬cause you cannot succeed.Issue raises questionsPhillip Hauser, who was him¬self recently under some fire forstrongly advocating birth controlclaimed that “something less thanastute university administrationcontrolled the case. It has raisedquestions that need not neces¬sarily have been raised about aca¬demic freedom.”Hauser acknowledged that heapproached the question withsome reservations because “I feelthat the faculty member in ques¬tion has shown questionable judg¬ment in what he did, in the con¬text in which he did it. However,moral questions are not decidedby experts, but by value systems,cultural mores and so forth.”The case is currently being con¬sidered by the American Associ¬ation of University professors, theNational Student association, andthe American civil liberties unionis debating whether or not itwants to work on the ease. HarryKalven of the UC Law schoolfaculty has just completed a re¬port for the last named group.In the meantime, Koch’s firinghas prompted a letter to theMaroon. See pages 4 and 6 of thisissue.%open daily till 1open weekends till 21369 East 57th Street 30% OFF On QualityDRY CLEANINGAll work done by o regular Chicago Wholesaler whose plantother retail stores in addition to his own outlets. You get thisbecause of our non-profit policy and low overhead. serve*serviceTrousers . r. 50c Shirts 50cJackets . . 50c Dresses 95cSuits . , . . 95c Suits (2 piece) . . .95cTopcoats 1.00 Light Coat 95cOvercoats 1.10 Heavy Coat . . . . 1.10New! 20% off on All LaundryUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERReynolds Club BasementHours: 11:00 - 1:00 — 3:30 - 5:00Men who face wind and weather-choose the protection of...liceAFTER SHAVELOTIONSkin protection, that is. Old Spice refreshes and stimulates, guards against the loss of vitalskin moisture. Feels great, too. Brisk, bracing, with that tangy Old Spice scent. It does seemto attract female admirers, but what red-bloodedman n»*<“ds protection against girls? 1.00 plus tax S H U U. T O MAnrti IS 1Q60 • CHICAGO MAROON •1 1- ■" \ ■ " ' :.’>■■■• —• Coming events on quadrangles •Friday, 15 AprilTrack meet. 9 am, Field house Na¬tional AAU Women's Indoor cham¬pionships.Good Friday service with sermon accord¬ing to the Lutheran use. 11:30 am,Bond chapel.Community Good Friday service (HydePark - Kenwood Council of churchesand Rockefeller memorial chapelt. 12noon. Rockefeller memorial chapel?The Reverend Walter Harrelson, dean,the Divinity school.Jazz club, 2:30 pm, Ida Noyes libraryVarsity baseball game. 3:30 pm Staggfield. UC versus the University ofWisconsin.Maroon staff meeting. 4 pm. Ida Noyeshall. East lounge.Vespers wilh sermon according to theLutheran use. 7:30 pm. Bond chapel.“Jesus as Lord.” the Reverend JosephSittler. professor. Federated Theologi¬cal faculty.Passover Sabbath service (Hillel foun¬dation), 7:45 pm. 5715 Woodlawn ave¬nueBirthday of Khalsa (Sikh study circle).8 pm. Swift hall commons “Birth ofStkhism.” Marguerite Allen, founderand former editor, Sikh Review, Cal¬cutta, India.Lecture, 8 pm. Social sciences 122 Bay¬ard Rustin will speak for the UCCommittee to support the southernstudent protests.Fireside conversation (Hillel founda¬tion I. 8:30 pm. 5715 Woodlawn avenue“Of Poles. Germans, and Jews: theWarsaw Ghetto uprising.” Dr Abra¬ham Duker. president, College of Jew¬ish studies.Saturday, 16 AprilRecorder society. 1 pm. Ida Noyes hall.Varsity baseball game. 2 pm, Stagg field.UC versus the University of Wiscon¬sin.Track meet. 5:30 pm. Field house Na¬tional AAU Women's Indoor cham¬pionships.Motion picture (YPSL), 7:30 and 9:30pm, Breasted hall. “The Young andthe Damned.” Admission. 90 cents;students. 60 cents.Kadio broadcast, “The sacred note,”WBBM. 11 pm. A program of choralmusic by the University choir. Rich¬ard Vikstrom. director of chapel mu¬sic, conducting.Sunday, 17 AprilKadio broadcast, “Easter Service.” WGN,COLLEGE CREDIT TOURTO EUROPEincluding month at llnir. of ViennaLeave June 29 — 60 day*$1298 all expenseLocal representatives wantedUniversity Travel Co.IS Brattle St. Cambridge 38. Mass. 8:30 am. A special program of choralmusic by the University choir. Rich¬ard Vikstrom, director of chapel mu¬sic, conducting.Roman Catholic Easter masses (DeSaleshouse). 8:30, 10, and 11 am, 5735 Uni¬versity avenue.Episcopal Easter Communion service,9:30 am, Bond chapel.Lutheran Easter Communion service,10 am. Hilton chapel.Easter bell music: Carillon recitals, 10am, 12 noon, and 4:30 pm Rockefellermemorial chapel.Chime concerts, 10 am and 12 noon,Mitchell tower. David Frodin, studentchimer.University Easter Religious service. Itam. Rockefeller memorial chapel. TheReverend W Barnett Blakemore. dean.Disciples Divinity house, and associ¬ate dean. Rockefeller Memorial chapel,will speak on “Christ, the Light ofthe World.”Track meet. 2 pm. Stagg field UC Trackclub development meet.Praetorians (new men’s club), 3 pm,Ida Noyes hall, room 300.Channing - Murray student discussiongroup. 7 pm. 5638 Woodlawn avenue.“A sectarian witness.” Kermlt Eby.Bridge club, 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes hall.Duplicate bridge will be played.Monday, 18 AprilWilliam Vaughn Moody lecture. 8 pm,Mandel hall. The American poet JohnCrowe Ransom in a program of read¬ings from his works, with a commen¬tary on some aspects of modernpoetry.Motion picture. 8 pm. Internationalhouse assembly hall. “The Red Shoes”(USA).Tuesday, 19 AprilSeminar (Institute for Computer re¬search). 10:45 am. Research institutes480. “Information representation In anintelligent computer.” Peter H.Greene, research associate, committeeon mathematical biology.Matins with sermon according to theLutheran use, 11:30 am. Bond chapel.Varsity baseball game. 3:30 pm. Staggfield. UC versus the University ofWisconsin-Milwaukee.Meeting of the Council of the UniversitySenate. 3:40 pm. Business east 106.Colloquium (Institute for the Study ofmetals). 4:15 pm. Research institutes211. "Nuclear resonance absorption insolids.” Hans Fraunfelder. departmentof physics, the University of Illinois.Lecture (department of zoology), 4:30pm, Zoology 14. "Experimental studiesof the responses of two species ofTribolium to fresh and conditionedflours.” Arthur W. Ghent, graduatestudent, department of zoology.Lecture (department of history). 4:30pm. Classics 10. “Problems in modernIndian education.” Professor Dc D.Karve, member. Bombay Legislativecouncil, and life-member, DeccanEducation society.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship. 7:30pm, Ida Noyes hall, south receptionUniversal 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 coupon room. Inter-denominational Biblestudy on prayer, followed by an in¬formal coffee hour.Concert, 8 pm, New Law Center audi¬torium. Bach’s “ A Musical Offering”will be performed by musicians of theBach society.Television series. “All things consid¬ered,” WTTW (Channel 11), 9:30 pm.Wednesday, 20 AprilReligious service (Divinity school), 11:30am, Bond chapel. Tracy Strong, visit¬ing professor, Federated Theologicalfaculty.Lecture (Graduate School of business),1:30 pm. Breasted hall. “Some aspect*of a drugstore chain,” R o b e rt G.Knight, vice-president and treasurer,Walgreen Drug stores.Varsity tennis match. 2 pm. Varsitycourts. UC versus Illinois Insitute oftechnology.Meeting of the faculty of the divisionof the physical sciences. 3:30 pm, Eck-hart 133.Varsity track meet, 4 pm. Stagg fieldUC versus De Paul university.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm. Rockefellermemorial chapel. James R. Lawson,chapel carillonneur.Hillel Folk Dance group, 7:30 pm. 5715Woodlawn avenue.Parapsychology society. 8 pm, Socialsciences 106 “Plans for the secondChicago-Cambridge ESP experiment.”Open meeting.History club, 3 pm. Ida Noyes hall.“Patriotism and provincialism.” Dan¬iel J. Boorsttn, professor, departmentof history.Illustrated lecture (Chicago society ofthe Archaeological institute of Amer¬ica and Oriental institute). 8:30 pm.Breasted hall. “An unplundered Tho-los tomb at Nestor’s Dominion atPylos.” Spyridon Marinatos. rector andprofessor of archaeology. University ofAthens, Greece, and Charles Eliot Nor¬ton lecturer for 1959-60, ArchaeologicalInstitute of America.Radio broadcast, 8:30 pm. WUCB Moll-ere’s “The Misanthrope.” Direeter forradio by Richard D'Anjou and pro¬duced by Anne O'Brien.Thursday, 21 AprilVarsity baseball game. 3:30 pm. Staggfield. UC versus Chicago Teacherscollege.Zoology club, 4:30 pm. Zoology 14“Androgenic activity in the ovary.”Dr. L. Descltn, University of Brussels,Belgium.Seminar (department of economics),7:45 pm. Business east 106. “Wage dif¬ferentials: theory and measurement.”Melvin W. Reder, professor depart¬ment of economics, Stanford univer¬sity.Lecture series. “The medieval origins ofthe novel” (division of the humani¬ties and department of Romance lan¬guages and literatures), 8 pm, Socialsciences 122 “Tradition and design,”Eugene Vlnaver, professor of Frenchlanguage and literature, University ofManchester. England, and AlexanderWhite, visiting professor of French,department of Romance languagesand literatures.Friday, 22 AprilThe Eucharist according to tbe Lu¬theran use, 11:30 am, Bond chapel.Outdoor concert, 12 noon. Hutchinsoncourt. Music from Haydn, Brahms,Bach. Gabrieli, and Dukas by the Uni¬versity Glee club, directed by H. ColinSlim.Carillon and chimes concert, 12:30 pm, Rockefeller memorial chapel andMitchell tower. James R. Lawson,chapel carillonneur, and James D.Reiss, student chimer.Jazz club. 2:30 pm. Ida Noyes library.Florence Jane Adams Poetry - readingcontest, 3 pm. Bond chapel. Prelimi¬naries.Lecture. 4 pm. Mandel hall “Technicalproblems in connection with the studyof the ultrastructure of skeletal mus¬cle fibers.” Fritlof S Sjostrand. pro¬fessor of zoology. University of Cali¬fornia at Los Angeles, and professorof histology. Karolinska insitute,Stockholm. Sweden. Maroon staff meeting, 4 pm Trtf. whall, east lounge.Formal opening of the Sixth Annu.iFestival of the Arts. 4 pm. Lexingtonhall. Public reception. RtOMMotion picture (Doc films). 7159:15 pm, Judd hall 1261. “Blood of «Poet’’ by Jean Cocteau and “Tin.Pleasure Garden.”Lecture series, “Works of the mind”(University College), 8 pm. 64 EastLake street. "Hobbes's ’LeviathanThomas McDonald, lecturer in theliberal arts. University CollegeBlackfriars, “Silver Bells and CockleShells,” 8:30 pm. Mandel hall• Classifi ed ads •For sale LostCompletely mod. year - round. 1 bdrm.house. 1 block from Indiana Dunes StatePark. 22 x20' attached rm for studioworkshop or conversion into familyroom or 2 more bdrms. On 2 lots, onesaleable. Furnace, water supply <5r hotwater, all automatic. 45 minutes fromUC campus via tollroad or South ShoreRailroad Refrig., deep freeze, stove. TV,air conditioner, etc., included Immedi¬ate possession *8.800 Call WH 4-2779 or Attache case—copy of Paul Tillich'sSystematic Theology vol 2; Wittgen¬steins' Blue and Brown Book' also setof notes Reward offered. Call BenLllves. PL 2-9815.ServicesTyping. NO 7-7799.Chesterton. Indiana. WA 9-1937. Sewing, alterations, hems. DO 3-1550Arvin Radio, two speakers FM AM, *50;Rudge English bicycle. 3-speed, likenew, *60 each: Encyclopaedia Brltan-nlca. year books, atlas, large diction¬ary. bookcase, *200 Call MI 3-3097, any¬time Crew-cut. Ivy league or plain trimFrank the Barber. Room 631, Hvde ParkNational Bank Bldg.Do you waste half of your time peckln-away at a typewriter? Well, don't Letme do your typing for you. I'm accu¬rate, speedy, reasonable, and I canspell! I'll type anything; from bookmanuscript to thesis to three-page es¬say. Call me at NO 7-8966.WantedUsed set of the Great Books, includingSyntopicon Chicago Maroon. Box 127,1212 E 59th St. PersonalRide needed to campus from North Ave.and Lk Shore Dr Mon . Wed * Frl Creative Writing Workshop. PI. 2-8377to arrive campus by 9:15 Will shareexpenses. John Miller, MI 2-9345. Just think—not another Gates CoffeeHour until Tuesday. April 26!Experienced seamstress, part time. TheRed Door. 1328 E 57th St. Rocks: Let's make next week a bitcalmer. Pebbles.UC vs. Cambridgein ESP experimentApplicants for the second long distance Chicago-Cambridgeextrasensory perception (ESP) experiment are now' beingscreened by the Parapsychology society. The first experiment,during May, 1958, attracted international attention and re¬sulted in a win for Cambridge.KGDL (CROSSWORD No. 11ACROSS1. Pasture palaver4. Take on9. Small change(abbr.)12. Hipster’sultimate14. Brigitte says“yes”15. LikeSusan Hayward16. Ex-miss17. Brando's earthybeginning18. Colorado resort20. Breezy callto arms22. They’re behindWagon Train24. Hires for tears25. Lovers' quarrel26. Small Air Force27. Sound fromWillie thePenguin28. What Momwants to knowwhy you don’t32. Constable’sfinish34. It’s good for asqueeze or two35. Killed a lot36. Star in Virgoand indespicable38. To be inLatin I40. Song of the 20'g41. Comeup to theMenthol Magicof Kool45. Stevenson’sinitials46. Just the thingfor a fifthwheel (2 words)47. Anti-bugjuice48. Sen. Kefauver49. It’s profitablefor Olmedo DOWN1. Sea (French)2. Alone withoutAl3. He's definitelyout (2 words)4. Avoids6. Where to putyour fingeron her number’ 6. Like aTV movie7. It goes begging8. Williams.Mack, Husing9. toKool's MentholMagic10. DeeJaynecessity11. Girl youleft behind13. Crank’slast name19. Little pairs20. Talk.Southern style21. How your throatfeels, whenyou’re stnokiagKool23. Scatter29. Tax30. Yoa (French)jj31. Wrap up inLaw School?32. It can befrozen;a Kool ia33. Came totown (2 words)37. High places38. French for38 Across39. “ myAnnie . . .”40. Lou of dough42. Shortfor Latin43. Common verb44. StiU 1 21215YOU NEEDof KGDLOl»60, BOOWN A MtUAMSON TOBACCO COAf. *“'*'**CHICAGO MAROON • April 15, I960—ii wsawsu— According to an article w'hich ap¬peared in the March, 1959 Univer¬sity of Chicago Magazine, the ex¬periment produced suggestive evi¬dence for the transmission of geo¬metrical patterns by ESP over adistance of more than 4,000 miles.The second Chicago-Cambridgeexperiment was planned this win¬ter at Cambridge, when StephenI. Abrams, president of Parapsy¬chology society, visited there tolecture at Gonville and Caius col¬lege. The Cambridge Society forCANOE TRIPSAn exciting vacation of fishing andcamping in tile Quetico - Superiorwilderness. For everyone—no experi¬ence required. Only $6.00 per day.Write now for complete informationto Bill Rom. CANOE COUNTRYOCTFITTF.RS, Ely, Minnesota.faiopemtoSteamshipRound Trip $400 «pfrequent sailingsThrift Rinat Trip by AIR_SHANNON IONOON PARIS$408.60 $453.60 $493.20|Rates 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.Om 100 TomStudent Class Tours $A70Travel Study Tours V# #Conducted ToursUniversity Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines,has rendered efficient travelservice on a businessbasis since 1926See your local travel agent fortolders and details, or write usUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mass. Research in Parapsychology isheaded by Dr. Robert Thouless.past president of the British Psyehologieal association, and Pro¬fessor C. D. Broad. It was founded in 185 8 as the CambridgeGhost society.The experiment, to he carriedout during the first week in May,will involve identification of geo¬metrical patterns sent betweenChicago and Cambridge at therate of one every twenty seconds.Prospective members of the ESPteam will be given a preliminaryESP test and then required to de¬vote an hour a day to the experi¬ment for each of four consecutivedays. The winning team will bedetermined on the basis of themean number of correct guessesper team.According to Abrams, who ischief experimenter, the experi¬ment is not a joke, and the con¬test gimmick has been added onlyto add to subjects’ motivation.THE RED DOOR *for£Women's Handmade <Clothes, Imported Gifts >/and Jewelry, xI 1328 E. 57th STREETOpen to 9:00Sundays: I! :00 - 3 :003 N Ms 3 1 s 3\3 h Tl IT 3 d V d SU3/V\SNV ICIWCommittee system works Exec council given powerStudent government at its nant and the man y advancesa ^ ^ X mm r JL J M last meeting oil April 5, passed which they have made might beW W PII IP TIT a m m. C J ■ C an act Which empowered its lost. The UC administration feelsIV M a 1*0 a a a W alllllwifid executive council to legislate that anY decisions that the Execu-in five important areas during a hve council makes should be 'v»thThe activity of Student with making plans for needed ernment members. The procedure three week period, without the the consent of the assembly,government does not stop campus improvements, chiefly by for joining this committee is the specific consent of the assembly. Apparently, the executive coun-•ifter the meeting on Tuesday ma*ntaining contact with the vari- same as for NSA-AF. Jim Thomason, chairman of the oil believed that the act was urf>*nieht Six standing commit- °,us University services involved. The Community Relations com- Election and Rules committee, cntly needed for both legal andt 'os as well as a special ^tudent Consultation boards, each mittee examines the University’s told the Maroon. “The executive administrative reasons.*committee meet composed ol three or four stu- role in the Hyde P< rk community council enabling act will give The executive committee has’ dents, meet regularly with mem- and works to insure that the ef- SG’s various committees the pow- been delegated power to legislateBookstoreto discuss bills and re«sn. Z ’ 7*V‘ *^6~*«* .y w.m mem- anu woi ks io insululions before they are brought to ^>erS °* University offices such fects of that role are worthy of er to continue negotiations andassembly, investigate activi¬ties and issues, and make reportsto the whole Assembly on theirwork.Election and Rules (chairman,Jim Thomason), is responsible forsupervising elections, examiningproposed amendments to the ba¬sic documents (Constitution, By-Laws, Student Bill of Rights) tak¬ing charge of the procedures ofresignations, filling vacancies, cit¬ing for neglect of duty, etc. Elec¬tion to E & R is by vote of theAssembly. Five assembly mem¬bers are selected, and two addi¬tional members are chosen by thedean of students.Cofso oversees activitiesThe Committee on RecognizedStudent organizations is respon¬sible for the Student code, whichgoverns all student activities, andexamination of charges of viola¬tion of the Code. The five mem-bers of CORSO (chairman, JohnKim) are elected by the Assembly.National Student association-Academic Freedom committee,headed by Gail Paradise, informsthe campus of the activities ofNSA, carries NSA programs andprojects to the campus, repre¬sents the students of this campusin the national student movement,and presents a campus programfor Academic Freedom week. Anunlimited number of assemblymembers are elected to NSA AFby the majority vote of the As¬sembly.Student’s can joinInterested students on campuscan also be seated on the NSA AFcomimtte if they are approved bythe chairman and the Executivecouncil of Student government.The Student-Faculty Relationscommittee sent questionnaires toall faculty members this year aspart of their program to promoteand improve student-faculty con¬tact and to stimulate more exami¬nation of the principles behindour education experience. Thepresent chairman of S-FR is JudyFrost; election to the committeeis similar to that for NSA-AF.Campus Action is concerned fMtonWflutesC Q *. s.Cer*pus 4s.r. r.c:CommundyReldt ionsAcademicFneedomK S.4 DepartrrjentSPublic Relations5(lic(crj{ /UJiWkmg£{u.deServicesStudent Try ve /XnL SikiJ. {FxcltdnjzAclivtfies (oorj.Ft tl^tlC CL in the five following areas: (1)student fa'eulty seminar program;(2) womens’ hours; (3) athleticfacilities for students; (4) co-opbookstore; (5) Aims of Educa¬tion lecture series.Until April 26, the SG execu¬tive council will be working espe¬cially hard in two of their fivefields of power. The council istrying to codify the maximumpenalty for womens’ late hourviolators and hopes soon to estab¬lish a co-op bookstore wherepaperback textbooks may be pup-chased at a discount.The executive council enablingact carries an amendment whichallows for review by the assem¬bly of any decision made by thecouncil.as: Student health, library, Finan- both the University and the com- make decisions during and aftercial aid, Employment, Bookstore, munity. A frequent issue brought the election period and until theand the Parking committee of the up by this committee, chaired by next meeting of a new assemblyAdministration. To maintain such Manny Dietz, is the acceptance of on April 26. Without this act, cer-boards, CA needs many non-gov- discriminatory tain committees would lie stag- EUROPE 1960If you are planning a trip to Europein I960. you may wish to checkthe following:1. Lowest air fares by scheduled air¬line, e.g. round-trip for one allyear 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 j-ny 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 full information, call or writeMr. Arne Brekke, 6009 S. WoodlawnAve.. Chicago 37, Ill. Butterfield8-6437. Campus agent for IcelandicAirlines. Five years of experience inEuropean travel.GLADIS rest aurant1527 E. 55th DO 3-9788We Speciolixe in Well-Balanced Meals otPopulor Prices, ond Midnite SnacksOPEN ALL NIGHT — ORDERS TO GO 9Ae PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3 4433The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 E»«t 57th St.MU 4-92361411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 —HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & QalleryCheese 1 12“ Smell 12“1.30 Combination . . 2 2"1.65 Mushroom . . . 2.0U1.65 Shrimp 2.251.50 Bacon & Onion. 2.00Free Ifelivery ©t» All Pitta to MJC StudentsAttention Chow Hounds!Special every Tuesday night — all the fried chickenyou can eat . . . $1.95Net this: • student who TW*I Perspicacious...tatudtas drowsily no matte* tHorpI N5D5« keeps ya»bow much sleep ke «**• awoke end otert-sofelylIf you find studying sometimes soporific (and who doesn the vordto remember is NoDox«. FoDoe alerts you with a *if<- and accurateamount of caffeine— the same refreshing stimulantin coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-formingNoDoa is faster, handier, more reliable. fL ^So to keep perspicacious during study and N 'W*1exams—and while driving, too— |always keep NoDoz in proximity.Tbs iet sus snake taum, aliens m^nkna. hmOto.IM.MWjUaXLM'r*** APPLIED PHILOSOPHY 221Thought Process of WomenDr. A. TractEmphasis on philosophy of getting dates. Background of dateless stu¬dents who use sticky hair creams or alcohol hair tonics. Fundamentallogic of students who have discovered that ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic takescare of hair even when used with water. Philosophy of the Enlighten¬ment: one may use all the water one wants with ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic.Students who use ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic think—therefore they unsoughtafter by lovely females. Cause: ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic. Effect: Dates.Materials: one 4 or. bottle ‘Vaseline’Hair TonicIn the bottle and on ;the difference is clea./ - .... * :' .f„ v .* ■* ... t-■ . .:V. ■ - ' ■ , ' :■ ’■ • ' L•VASELINE’ IS A REApril 15, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • Ti HINSA regional meets hereApproximately 150 representatives from 25 colleges and universities will attend the springIllinois-Wisconsin regional convention of the National Student association (NSA) to be heldat UC next weekend^ April 22-24. Twelve workshops consisting of students and experts onthe subject are planned.NSA was founded in 1946 when twenty-five American students attending the World Stu¬dent congress at Prague became aware that the United States stood alone without a repre¬sentative student group. Their in- — " *%rest led to calling the China- workshops are currently in prep- speaker will be Dr. Christiango Student conference in Decern- aration. Mackauer, professor of history atber. 1946 to consider formation of Plenary sessions, for the pur- UC. Mackauer, who fled Germanysuch an organization. It was held pose of passing legislation and in 1939, will speak on the sup-on the UC campus at Mandel hall, electing officers will be held on pression of academic freedom.Representatives from 300 colleges April 23 and 24. Items on the The major policy making bodyand 25 student organizations pre- agenda will probably include free- of USNSA is the national execu-paied recommendations on its dom Gf the press, the recent fir- tive committee composed of thecharacter and structure, and elect- jng Qf a University of Illinois national officers and the chair¬ed a continuations committee to professor for writing a letter ex- man of each region. The execu-prt-'pare a draft constitution and pounding his views on pre-mari- tive committee meets twice a yearorganize the constitutional con- sex> the report of the regional and can be called into session invent ion. president, and the report of the emergencies. The National con-This was held in September, chairman of the National Execu- gress of NSA meets once a year;1917, at the University of YVis- tive committee. this year’s congress is to be heldconsin and was attended by repre- a banquet will be held on the in August at the University ofsentafives of 350 colleges. Estab evening of April 23. The guest Minnesota,lishing the principle of member¬ship by student government rath¬er than national organization,they formulated a constitutionfor ratification by individual col¬leges. elected officers and mappedout a program for the new asso¬ciation. At present, the Illinois-Wisconsin region is one of 20 re¬gions in the United States. jn keeping with the recent Oscar awards and the Black-Of the workshops planned for friars show, the theme of this year’s Beaux Arts ball will bethis convention, four are non- “Characters from great cinema productions.” “The entirelegislative and eight legislative. campUS jg invited to attend the costume ball highlighting theDelegates will attend one work- 1960 Festival of the Arts,” saidshop in each category. The non- LaUrie Loibl, chairman of the version of “Pillow Talk.” It islegislative workshops include: ball. The affair will be held at rum0red that Bert Cohler (ex)“National and International Stu- Ida Noyes hall on Saturday April m<xl boss of ISL will’do adent Movements ’ ‘The Role of 30, from 9 until 1 am. Music will £ene from his latest triumph> <Tothe Student ^ College Policy be provided by two bands, and re- Be or Not to Bo.” It is also ru-Formation, The Role of the freshments are on the house. mored that our next chancellorStudent in the Community, The Miss Bunny Gladstone, publicity will attend the ball.”Aims of Education. The legisla- chairman for the ball, said “In Les Grands Prix are offered fortive Workshops are “Military vjew Qf the fact that there are individuals, couples, and groupService Obligations,” “Loyalty not enough great cinema produc- costume displays. The entire com-Oaths,” “Civil Rights," “Academ- tions to satisfy all ardent and im- pany will be invited to participateic Freedom,” “Government Aid aginative students, characters in a grand march at which timeto Education,” “The ‘Michigan’ from near-great, mediocre and bad their costumes will be reviewedPlan,” “In Loco Parentis,” and movies are welcomed. It is ex- by a panel of judges chosen from“Freedom of the College Press peeted that Chancellor and Mrs. the faculty.and Radio.” Kimpton will portray a scene Tickets may be purchased at theEach workshop will consist of from “Houseboat” and that Phi FOTA office, Reyqnolds club 201,panelists — students and experts Sigma Delta will again present at a price of $3.50 per couple. Theon the subjects. Participants have “Wild Strawberries.” The new tickets will also be available atnot as yet been completely dorm lounge lizards are prepar- the door.Beax Arts theme is'Cinema characters'Caryle Ceier models the latest in suggested sunbathingattire. photo by BergerOutlaw bathing suitsResidents of the New Dormsrecently received the rulingthat swimsuit apparel was for¬bidden in the dorm’s centralcourt. Petitions signed bymost of the residents askingthat the law be repealed, weresent to the North, West, and EastHouse councils. The councils, act¬ing on the petitions, are now cir¬culating a joint petition of theirown, asking that the followingrules be imposed for bathing suitwear in the courts: that no eat¬ing in the courts be allowed; thatall bathing suits be completelyfastened at all times; and that boys’ suits be of the boxer vari¬ety. and girls’ suits one-piece,with no perforations. It is believed that the directors of thethree houses formed the newdorms will agree to the newhouse council petition.The petitions originally object¬ing to the no-bathing suit ruledid so on the following grounds:1) that a modest bathing suit isnot indecent apparel; 2) that thecourt is, at any rate, completelyinvisible from the street; 3) thatit is better to have residents sun¬bathing in their private courtthan on the midway.chosen. Working papers for the ing an edited (by Jim Newman)Ivy LeagueIs ft ever Ivy! Why, Coke is the most,correct beverage you can possiblyorder on campus. Just look around youiWhat are the college social leadersgoing for? Coca-Cola! So take a lealout of their Ivy League book and do thesame! Enjoy the good taste of Cokel BE REALLY REFRESHEDBottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by Hillel begins holiday feast“It is true that we are an exceptionally large family,” said Rabbi Maurice Pekarsky ashe began the Hillel foundation Passover celebration, “but we hope that you will all par¬ticipate, as you would at any other family seder, in the songs and prayers.”The seder, a traditional Jewish ceremony, is held on the eve of Passover, a holiday ofthanksgiving for the liberation of the Jews from slavery in Egypt. The Hillel seder wasconducted alternatingly in Hebrew and English, and included an hour long dinner as partof the ceremony. ——Amone the traditions of Pass of the slavery of the Jews inover whfch were included in the Egypt and the exodus across the Jorusalom fspiritual home of the,ap ,, . , - Red sea, and the wish that all men Jewish people),seder were the prayer of thanks- - , . , , , „, .. / be free by next Passover The seder also included an ex-giving for the redemption from and that all Jews might be able planation of the various symbolsPharaoh; the retelling of the story to celebrate next year’s seder in used in the ceremony—the mat-Have You iHscocered Enrico for Lunch?Chuck Wagon BuffetMONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY• soup & salad • chicken• lasagne • saladsALL YOU DESIRE—-$1.25Cafe Enrico & Qallery1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300 zah, egg, and lamb's shank, theasking of the Four Questionsabout “Why is this night differentfrom all other nights?” by theyoungest child, and the stealingof the Afikomin, or center Matzahby the children, to be redeemedlater in exchange for gifts, andserved to the company.In addition, a special prayer forthose killed in the ghettos andconcentration camps, especiallythe defenders of the Warsaw ghetto, was said, to remind the gueststhat persecution is by no meansconfined to ancient Egypt.Hillel foundation, an agency ofthe B’nai B’rith, is intended as areligious and social center forJewish college students.STUDENT JOBMEDICAL LAB TECHNICIAN- 32 hrs. per weekMonday and Thursday — 1 1 :00 P M. to 7:00 A.M.Saturday and Sunday—2:30 P.M. to 1 1 :00 P.M.THIS IS A GOOD JOB FOR FRESHMAN MEDICAL STUDENTjb ContactMISS SHONYOIngleside Hall — 950 E. 58th St. — Ext. 158Th« Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, I no.Culture VultureThere comes a time in the life of every young vulture when he must stand up, jut forth his beak and issue his ApologiaSummai Cum Laude (or softe, depending on your mood). But I digress — at such times, the young culture vulture must standfirm, throw out chest, and with a tlint-like gaze, look the world straight in its eye; and afraid of nothing, he must pro¬claim to the world the pr.nc.ples of h.s existence ... For remember— No man is an llande, Entire unto selfe . . . Again Idigress. There has been some criticism of the profusion of levity in the column; and, being somewhat concerned, I took flightand sojourned hack to Death Valley where resides my mother vulture in her retirement; "Good pickings" was the reason shegave for living out there. Well, anyhow, I told her my problem; "Ha ha, foolish boy" she said, fondly touseling my head feath¬ers, and tenderly gnawing at my knee, whereup, she proceeded to tell me about the long and glorious tradition among us vul¬tures. skip all the faldderall about Adam and Eve Vulture, and get down to the juicy part. "Culture, if handled straight,can become a very dry and generally uninteresting subject," she said, nostalgically munching on an old silent movie script;but by spicing it up, we vultures try to put some zest into the old subject; we try to make the column something that is atthe same time enjoyable and informative . . . There ain't no reason why culture cain't jest be fun!" Ma finished, spitting outthe old movie script • Mouldy! Afterwards, I returned to my lair atop Mitchell Tower with new hoj>c in my heart! A newsong upon my lips! and so forth. So, let's get down to business and really yock it up! Whoop-la!ON CAMPUSTheaterThe time has come, the vulturesaid, to talk of many things . . .Let’s start with University thea¬tre. Last week I said that UT wasperforming four, count them,Four! new shows for the Springquarter; but upon counting them,you may have found only three—Fear thee not! There really isfour . . . Come, pull yerself up acracker barrel, an’ we'll chaw the |fat awhile.Item number one: The Misan¬thrope by Talouse Moliere is be¬ing produced by station WUCB in jtconjunction with UT. Translatedfrom the original Swahelian intomodern Gaelic and adapted for :wireless by Richard Wilbur, the *play concerns itself with the tern- £pestuous love affair between Mel- Cvin Nietzsche, an itinerate otterpelt trader, and the hot-blooded |Tokelau Island spyess who callsserself, cryptically — Madamoi- sS’selle Anthrope. Dick D’Anjou, di¬rector of this daring venture intoauditory media, J who bumblingly tries to perform and 7-9 pm Wednesday evening;“the pefect crime”; this could be through April, you may still seesomewhat blood - curdling, how- the photographic exhibition ofever, as the N. Y. Times said Juan Fujita featuring pictures ofabout the film “Everybody in it the . . . fheh . . . heh) . .. Indianais completely mad.” Showings sand dunes,will be at 7:15 and 9:15 pm at .Judd 126, admission 50c.B.J. films has scheduled JamesThurbur’s The Male Animal to beshown tonight. Since I know vir¬tually nothing about the film, itwould be useless for me to babbleon about it; however, I do knowa bit about James Thurbur, and ifthis reflects his usual zany senseof humor, the show should pro¬vide a rioutously funny evening.Anyhow, admission is the usual40c and showings will be at 8 and10 pm in the Judson Commons.Next week, however, big doingsare afoot—There will be the filmversion of Arthur Miller’s famous OFF CAMPUSTheaterSecond City is still goingstrong with their new revue, TooMany Hats; they’ve been goingso strong, in fact, that they haveadded 5 new shows weekly totheir usual 8. As of last week,there will be performances at 9and 11:30 pm Tuesday, Wednes¬day, Thursday, Friday, and Sun¬day, and at 9 pm and 1 am onSaturday evening. Second Cityalso now welcomes unto its bosomAnthony Holland, straight fromNew York, where he was in theoff Broadway production of Jeanplay, Death of a Salesman. „On Monday, International house ,<lne t's ® aleony.films will show The Red Shoes. 1 als° Wlsh to sayBased on the tale by Hans Chris¬tian Anderson and starring MoiraShearer and Anton Walbrook, say again thatThe Blackstone theater has of¬fered a special student discountto its current production of Ten¬nessee Williams’ Sweet Bird ofYouth whereby $2.75 balconyseats may be procured for thenew low low; price of only $1.50.hall.Art Performances are at 8:30 pmMonday through Friday, with aWednesday matinee at 2 pm.MoviesIn response to many requests,the Hyde Park is bringing backIngmar Bargman’s famous film,The Seventh Seal; taking placehas announcedthat anyone who so desires may renting Hang Down Your Head of the music, much of which will this wa® the first film ever todrop in and see the performance Tom Gittle at 8:30 pm in Mandel be in the modern jazz idiom, is Present a ballet in its entirety;in person at the Reynolds club hall, next weekend, April 22-23. “Great!” the extremely beautiful musicallounge on Wednesday, April 20. This week I shall digress from my There has been a vicious rumor score- which traces the Plight of “'T hl>w is running for oniwItems number two and three usual procedure of tossing out circulating that the show is really the heroine who must dance and weeks more so Hurry' Hur(keep count): As you all know, tantalizing tidbits of plot to whet entitled “Silver Bells and Cockle dance until she drops dead, has Hurf , dow’ the Black-UT, in conjunction with the Fes- your appetite, and will restrict Shells” but of course, that’s too become a well-known concert ^ ticket office 60 E Balbotival of the arts, is presenting, myself a discussion of the show’s ridiculous to believe Tickets Piece* This should provide an un- ~what has been modestly called niusic. priced from $1 to $1.50 are avail- forgettable movie experience . . .The Greatest Show on Earth- no In order to give the music full able at the Mandel hall box office personally, I’m looking forwardnot the rodeo. They are perform- justice, I called in an expert, every single day of the week. to seeing it. Showing will be ating a two part show—the first Vivaldi Hairlip, viola da Gamba t ^ pm in the Int. house assemblyhalf will be a one act farce, Voy- player for the Jazz society; Mr. Musicage et Amour by Dan Gerould, a Hairlip, as you jazz fans know, Last Call! Just one last remind-one time member of our Humani- played double foot basson and er that Bach’s Musical Offeringties staff; and the second half will clavichord for Rock Maninoff and will be offered for the one and Harold Haydon, humanitiesbe a demonstration of the modern his Screaming Strings. Hotlips only time next Tuesday evening teacher at the University, will ex- in Medieval Sweden, at the timedance by Neville Black and his Viv, as they call him where he is at the New Law school auditor- hibit his paintings at the Little of the Black Plague, the film in¬dance company. Marvin Phillips, currentlly playing at “Dante’s In- jum. Presented by the Bach so- Gallery during May. You may re- eludes some of the most unfor-director of the entire evening has ferno,” a favorite downtown col- ciety in conjunction with Festival member that just this past fall gettable scenes ever put on film,scheduled the performances for lege hangout, said of the music— 0f the arts, the piece is scored Mr- Haydon completed a mural Playing with Seventh Seal is an-Wednesday through Saturday, “Swings! Daddyo! Man! that mu- for harpsichord, violin, cello, and for the Temple Beth El in Gary, other Bergman classic, Smiles ofApril 27-30. I realize that such a sic, like wow! The primarily con- oboe. Tickets priced at $1 apiece Indiana. Many of these paintings a Summer Night. Quite differentbill sounds somewhat outlandish, trapuntal texture of the opening for students and outsiders alike, exhibit his particular contri- than most Bergman films, Smilesbut take it from me, it is really fugue soon modulates into q flat are available at the FOTA office, bution to the field of art — what is a good old farce done in thehappenings, straight from the vul- major from where the second Reynolds club 205 or at the door, has been called “binocular vision,” ribald French bedroom comedytrumpets state the opening motif, performance begins at 8 pm. a realization that a person sees manner. These two films pro-there it remains in the ground an object slightly differently with vide a very inviting combinationbass, in free rondo-sonata form, Movies each of his eyes. The Little Gal- of deep philosophy on the oneover which the seventh bassoon Tonight Doc films begins its lery is located at 1328 E. 57th hand and good low-down humorweaves a series of arpeggios build- Spring series of films with the street, and is open Monday on the other. ... Should be prettying, hair6-pulling and so forth, *ng ,UP a bne Quadra-demi- prench movie, Bizarre, Bizarre, through Saturday from 1-5:30 pm good.Myer Braiterman of University semiquavers on the harpsichord, Tliis fantastic comedy in the oldTheater has returned from New similar to t.he. te°bnique employed prench farce manner, tells theYork, bald, but otherwise intact, by „a®S01}* !n.. . seventy-third story cf a rather inept murderer. . , ” Mr. Hairlip is a former stu¬dent of Humanities I in the col¬lege.ture’s mouth . . . that is beak.Now then, that elusive itemfour: Yes, zounds! It has finallyhappened—jifter a great deal ofdiscussing, arbitrating, harangu-earrying the news—the originaloff-Broadway production of DosPassos’ U.S.A. will, I repeat, mostdecidedly, unequivocally and with¬out question, be brought to littleolde Chicago in the middle of May To discard levity for a moment—What I’ve heard of the music,and I’ll admit that it hasn’t beenparticulars follow—the stage much, was very good; such num-adaptation of Dos Passos’ famous bers as . . . Thunder Lightningtriology was written by Paul and In the Rain Cha cha elia, andShyre and the author—himself; That was a Darn Nice Funeral,described as “Brilliant,” “Uproari- which sounds like the waltz thatous,” and “Exciting” by three dif- never made it, both seem to beferent reviewers, the entire New very enjoyable stuff; and I amYork production, cast and all will informed by Marty Rabinowitz,move into Mandel hall from May , . . . . Dirk Wpis<;18 through May 22. Tickets for lyricist’ and Dlck ’Ve,SS’ con*all performances, priced at $1.50 Poser of the show, that the restand $2.50 with special studentand faculty rates, will be on saleat the Reynolds club desk as ofMay 2.So much for University Theater.As you well know, Blackfriars,those irrepressible fellows ofthird floor, Ida Noyes will be pre- THE NORTH SIDETHEATER GROUPpresentsThe Chicago Premiereof Noel Coward's“NUDE WITHVIOLINApril 22nd and 23rd32 W. RandolphCurtain Time 8^0Donation $1.50; Student rate $.90 LAKEthe PARK AT. S3 R Dyde park : N O 7 - 9 O 7 1theatreAuto InsuranceHome Owners InsurancePhone or write »Joseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986 Cl ark theatre, C at all timesspecial student price dork & modisonopen 7:30 o-m.lote show 4 o;m.just present your i.d. cord lo Ihc cpshier ol the bo*9tfice‘’every tridoy is ladies* day woiy*i'»>' admitted for 25cfri. 15th“tea for two"“7 little foys”fri. 22nd“the vintage’*“helen morganstory” sat. 16th“les girls”“young man witha horn”sat. 23rd“a summer place”“the 3rd voice” sun. 17 th“top hat”“follow the fleet”sun.24th“the last 10 days”(of Adolf Hitler)“the goddess” Starts Friday, April 15thTwo extraordinary films by Ingmar BergmanSUMMERNIGHT“It is wholly extraordinary, beingat once mystical, realistic andpoetic. ... It stands in the com¬pany of the great foreign films.”— Winston, N.Y. Post "Its omorous incidents are spicyin a thoroughly tasteful and ele¬gant way, and its philosophicalconclusions ore made attractivewith the most redolent of intel¬lectual herbs."— Crowther, N.Y. Times“Bergman is unquestionably one of the most forceful and fasci¬natingly original artists who now confront the U.S. in any medium."•— Time, March 14th Cover ArticleApril 15, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15Ransom, "Bach" open festivalTHREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree l/.C. DeliveryMonday, April 188:00 pm. William VaughanMoody lecture. John Crowe Ran¬som will read and comment on hispoetry. Mandel Hall, 57th streetand University avenue.John Crowe Ransom, poet andcritic will give a program of read¬ings from his works with a com¬mentary on seme aspects ofmodern poetry, under the aus¬pices of the William VaughnMoody lecture series this Monday,April 18, at 8 pm in Mandel hall.Ransom was here a short whileago as one of the speakers in the“My life and yours" talks spon¬sored by Dean Simpson of theCollege. The responce was so en¬thusiastic that he was invitedback to give the Moody lecture.John Crowe Ransom is ‘ notonly a very distinguished poet,but a very great teacher who hastaught some of our most famousyoung writers,” commented Jos¬hua Taylor of the College Hu¬manities staff and the Art de¬partment. He taught RobertLowell, Anthony Hecht, who is avisiting lecturer in the Englishdepartment this quarter, AlanTate, Robert Penn Warren,Ciena th Brooks, and many otherprominent young writers.Ransom was the editor for 20years of the Kenyon Review, oneof the best known literary quar¬terlies in the United States.| John Crowe RansomBesides his activities as poetand teacher, Ransom is a re¬nowned critic, and his book TheNew Criticism popularized hisstyle of literary criticism,Tuesday, April. 198:00 pm. Bach’s “A Musical Of¬fering” will be performed bymusicians of the Bach society.Nancy Humphrey, harpsichord;Abram Loft, violin; George Sop-kin, cello; Ray Still, oboe. NewLaw Center auditorium, 1121 East60th street. Tickets are $1 atFOTA office. Wednesday, April 208:30 pm. Moliere’s “The Misan¬thrope” will be presented byWUCB- Radio Midway. Directedfor radio by Richard D’Anjou.produced by Anne O’Brien. Northlounge, Reynolds club, 57th streetand University avenue.Friday, April 2212:00 noon. Outdoor concert forwoodwinds, brass, and voice. Mu¬sic by Haydn, Brahms, Bach, Gab¬rieli, and Dukas, performed bythe University Glee club withwoodwind and brass players fromthe University symphony orches¬tra, H. Colin Slim, director. Hutch¬inson court, 57th street and Uni¬versity avenue.4:00 pm. Formal opening of theFestival. Reception, Lexingtonhall, 5831 University avenue.7:15 and 9:15 pm. DocumentaryFilms presents “Blood of a Poet”by Jean Cocteau and “The Pleas¬ure Garden.” Judd Hall, 126 Kim-bark. 50 cents.8:30 pm. Blackfrtar’s “SilverBells and Cockle Shells” ... aHollywood tale in which witchesand wizards scamper throughfilmdom’s version of SleepingBeauty. Mandel hall, 57th streetand University avenue. Tickets,$1 to $2.50 to Mandel Box office.Saturday, April 231:00 pm. Gallery Crawl. Bus tripto Fairweather Harden, Superiorstreet, Feigen, and Frumpkin artgalleries. Bus leaves Ida Noyeshall, 1212 East 59th street. Tick¬ets 50 cents at Festival i ffice.8:30 pm: Blackfriars “SilverBells and Cockle Shells.” (Repeatperformance of April 22.)Sunday, April 2411:00 am: Religious services.Visiting speaker: Roger E. Ort-mayer, professor of Christianityand the arts. Southern Methodistuniversity. Rockefeller Memorialchapel, 59th street and Woodlawnavenue.Monday, April 254:00 pm: John Read, art filmproducer, showing and discussinghis films. Library, Ida Noyes hall,1212 East 59th street.4:30 pm: “Religion and Art.”George Cohen, Associate Profes¬sor of art, Northwestern univer¬sity. Social sciences (122), 1126East 59th street.8:00 pm: “The Writer and HisWork.” Jessamyn West, Festivalof the Arts visiting artist, (novel¬ist, and short story writer, TheWitch Diggers, Friendly Persua¬sion, etc.) Breasted hall, OrientalInstitute, 1155 East 58th street.9:00 pm: Wing-ding by the Folk¬lore society, plus the FOTA skitcompetition winners. Ida Noyes hall theatre, 1212 East 59th street. E v e r w I n e, and John Logan.Tuesday, April 26 Ranked among the best of today’s4:00 pm: Four young poets young poets; their works have ap-reading their own works. Robert peared in all important magazinesMazey, Donald Justice, Peter printing poetry . . . The NewInternational house will pre¬sent its twelfth annual Festivalof Nations, its contribution to theFestival of the Arts, on Sunday,April 24. This event, which at¬tracts hundreds of people fromthe Chicago area, will include aprogram of exhibits, films, a foodbazaar from 3 to 6 pm plus anevening variety show at 8 pm.The films and exhibits are freeto the public, the national dishesoffered at the food bazaar willbe sold at nominal prices, and theevening program admission priceIs fifty cents.Approximately 40 nations arescheduled to participate in oneor more events. This year, theUnited States will participatewith a display of authentic Amer¬ican Indian handicraft contribu¬ted by the All Tribes Indian cen¬ter. As in the past, foreign resi¬dents of International house will Yorker, Harpers, Kenyon Reviewetc. Library, Ida Noyes hall, 1212East 59th street.8:30 pm: William VaughnMoody Lecture. “The film on art”by John Read, British art filmproducer and Cannes Film Festi¬val winner. Mandel hall, 57thStreet and University avenue.Wednesday, April 272:00 pm: Awarding of student artand sculpture prizes; presentedby wives of University of Chicagotrustees. Lounge, New Residencehalls, 58th street and Woodlawnavenue.7:00 pm: Filin. Martha Grahamin “Appalachian Spring.” Classics(10), 1050 East 59th street.Thursday, April 288:00 pm: Gallery Talk. “ModernSculpture” by Joshua Taylor, as¬sociate professor of art. Renais¬sance Society galleries, 1010 East59th.Pictured above is Alice Schaeffer, chairman of the Festi¬val of the Arts, April 22-30. Miss Schaeffer has not beenoutside of the festival offices in 23 days, thus setting some¬thing of an endurance record for FOTA chairmen. Through¬out that time, Miss Schaeffer has not met or spoken witha single human being—just FOTA committee chairmenand assistants.While the Maroon has not been able to establish anydirect contact with the festival office, experienced observerson the FOTA scene report that this year's festival will bethe biggest ever. A few details of the festival have beenleaked to us, and are mentioned here. We hope to have moredetails, and possibly even direct communication with MissSchaeffer by next Tuesday, in time for our special Festivalof the Arts issue.Art exhibitMonday is entry deadlineFour 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 exhibita 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 Festival —Int house to presentFestival of Nationswear their native dress duringthe day.Guests of honor to the Festivalof Nations include the membersof the consular corps, membersof the International House Boardof Governors, and their wives. office 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 and• will 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.Student 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 inall the Free Press books each category. No more than five be awarded on April 27.works may be submitted by each Interested persons may fill outartist. Judges will make a pre- the accompanying blank and subliminary selection for the show mit it with their works at thoto be hung in the lobby of the Festival office in Reynolds clubNew Residence halls. Prizes will 201.Name .AddressPhone .MediumTitle ..Price . .THE GREEK DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 East 57th HY 3-5829Chicago's most complete stockof quality paper bocksWe'll tee the usual PLUS.You're not herded around.A college tour that's different.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia, Box 4Posodena, California ^Vr1llllf'.)llllllllllllllllllllllllllll!f!llillilllllllUl!llllll11llllIllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllll!lllltlllllltllllltlltlllllillllll£Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood =UNUSUAL FOOD |DELIGHTFUL |ATMOSPHERE jlll1lllflU!llllllllll1illllltlilllllllllll1llftlimillHlillilllllllltlllllllllHinitllllllll3tl!llll||l!l!lllllltMllllt1ltllillllUtlinli16 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 15, 1960