All-campus pollStudents favor Kennedy 2UC students favor SenatorJohn F. Kennedy over VicePresident Richard M. Nixonin the coming Presidentialclodion by better than two toone, according to a recent surveyconducted by the Chicago Ma¬roon. However, the majority ofKennedy’s supporters chose AdlaiStevenson as the man they’d mostlike to see as President.Of the 479 residents of the NewPoems, C-Group, and the NewMen’s Residence hall who partici¬pated in the poll, some 282, or 59percent, said they would vote forKennedy if they could vote in thiselection. Nixon received 135 votes,or 28 percent. The remaining 13 percent, 58 students, said eitherthat they didn’t know for whomthey would vote, or that theywouldn’t vote.C-Group provided the greatestamount of Kennedy support, with85 percent of those polled choos¬ing the Massachusetts Senator,while 55 percent of residents ofthe New Dorms and the NewMen’s residence hall selected Ken¬nedy. Nixon received only 12 percent of the C-Group vote, butaveraged 32 percent in the othertwo dorms.Factors which contributed tothe greater Kennedy supportamong C-Group residents mightbe the greater age, and greater number of years spent at the Uni¬versity by those in C-Group. How¬ever, it should be noted that 30percent more residents of C-Group said their parents werevoting for Kennedy than did resi¬dents of the other dormitories.Following are additional find¬ings of the poll, along with thequestions asked:How would you have voted In1956 if you had been of age?Some 66 percent of those polledwould have voted for Stevenson,28 percent for Eisenhower, andthe remaining 6 percent didn’tknow.Thus seven percent of thosepolled, or 34 students, who areVol. 69 — No. 47 University of Chicago, November 4, 1960 c31 not sure of Kennedy in 1960 arecertain that they would have sup¬ported Stevenson in 1956; assum¬ing the same 28 percent are forNixon as would have been forEisenhower, the additional Ste¬venson support comes from the13 percent who are uncertainabout their choice in 1960.How will your parents vote inthis election?Again, Kennedy leads, but thistime by a smaller margin. Some43 percent of parents of the stu¬dents polled said their parentswould vote for Kennedy, as op¬posed to 30 per cent whose par¬ents are for Nixon. The parentsof C-Group students are thestrongest supporters of Kennedy,with 69 per cent backing him, and17 per cent for Nixon. Approxi¬mately 39 per cent of the parentsof students in the other two dor¬mitories will vote for Kennedy,32 per cent for Nixon.However, these figures do notprovide an accurate profile of the428 sets of parents involved, as98 students, over 20 percent, saidthey did not know how their par¬ents would vote.If there were no limit to thenumber of candidates for elec¬ Winston ChurchillEugene DebsCharles De GaullePaul DouglasDwight EisenhowerErnesto GucvareDag HammarskjoldChristian A. HerterRobert HutchinsAldous HuxleyEric HossPope John XXIIILyndon JohnsonNikita KhrushchevWalter LippmanDouglas MacArthurDavid MacDonaldChristian MackauerHarold MacmillanEugene McCarthyRobert MeyerWayne MorseLinus PaulingPrince PhillipHyman RickovcrEleanor RooseveltMort SahlIrving ShermanEric SevereidStuart SymingtonNorman ThomasHarry TrumanMy FatherDon’t KnowWould you vote for 1•>O•*>1oO12111115221113211411O1111o1135theIFC fines Phi Sigma DeltaA $200 fine was leviedagainst Phi Sigma Delta fra¬ternity as a result of a “dirty-rush” conviction by the Inter-Fraternity council (IFC) Tuesdaynight. This was the first timeIFC has fined a member sincePhi Gamma Delta was assessed asimilar amount in 1956.The IFC meeting opened withthe leading of a letter from JoelSnyder, Phi Sig president, apolo¬gizing to the Council for the pres¬ence of rushees in the Phi Sighouse after the legal closing lastFriday. The IFC rush code stipu¬lates that on smoker nights allrushees must be out of fraternityhouses not hosting smokers by7:30 pm. Phi Sig’s smoker was aweek ago Monday; Beta Theta Piand Zeta Beta Tau had smokersscheduled Friday night.Snyder’s letter explained thatPhi Sig had scheduled a dinnerfor Friday night and invitedpledges (which is legal), but thatdue to an unforseen delay in thePhi Sig kitchen the dinner wasdelayed. Snyder informed therushees present that should theystay through dinner, they wouldrun past the 7:30 deadline.The letter apologized for thisinfraction and asked that theCouncil forgive Phi Sig this in¬fraction.The Council seemed willing toaccept this statement when SteveGoldman of Beta protested thatHie letter totally misrepresenteddie situation. He yielded the floorto Howie Rosenburg of ZBT attiiis point; Rosenburg explainedthat his fraternity had evidence of a significant and voluntaryviolation of the rush-rules on thepart of Phi Sig.ZBT called in one of its newpledges who charged in essencethat Phi Sig had conspired to pre¬vent him from attending the ZBTsmoker.“I attended the Phi Sig smokerlast Monday,” the pledge ex¬plained, “and that night I was‘hot-boxed’ in the living room.”(A “hot-box” occurs when severalfraternity members attempt toput concentrated pressure on arushee to announce an Intentionto affiliate.) “That evening theyinvited me back to their house fordinner and a party Monday night.They offered to fix me up with adate.”Later in the week, he continued,he was told that the house partywas cancelled, but that severalmembers of the house would begoing downtown to some jazzclub. He was invited to“ go, andeven asked what kind of jazz hepreferred.The IFC rushing rules stipulatethat no house may hold any socialevent in its house which is incompetition with any scheduledsmoker. There is no specific ref¬erence to off-campus parties orsocial events.. Phi Sig, therefore, was indictedonly for having and holdingrushees after the legal closinghour.“Phi Sig was placed on proba¬tion last year,” Goldman argued,“and therefore it is especiallyliable for this violation. IFC musttake strong action.” Goldman’s reference was to a Council cen¬sure which occurred last winter.IFC rules prohibit a student fromsigning a University pledge cardwhile smokers are in progress;Phi Sig’s violation was in havingstudents sign national fraternitypledge cards.E. David Wanger, the Phi Sigrepresentative, argued that thecase should only be judged on its(Continued on page 20!Zimring isin divisionFred Zimring, research as¬sociate in the department ofpsychology, has been ap¬pointed to replace JeromeKerwin as dean of students in thedivision of social science. Kerwin,who^will retire from active teach¬ing at the end of the autumnquarter, left the deah’s office lastJune.The 35 year old Zimring hadformerly been associate dean ofstudents in the division. He hasalso served as a psychology coun¬selor at UC’s Counseling center.Zimring received his JD degreef$om UC’s law school in 1950.After practising law for a year,he decided to enter psychology,receiving his PhD from UC in1957. He has taught psycho thera¬py and counseling here, devotinga large part of his time to re¬search. tion, who would be your choice?Here Adlai Stevenson was theunchallenged leader, with 164, or37 percent of the 446 students an¬swering this question. Kennedywas second, with 59 votes (13 per¬cent), and Nixon was third with55 votes (12 percent). Other can¬didates receiving over ten voteswere:Nelson Rockefeller (26), BarryGoldwater (22), Henry CabotLodge (ID, and Hubert Hum¬phrey (10).Other choices for president are:Konrad Adenauer 1Chester Bowles 1Ralph Bunche 1 Democratic or Republican Illi¬nois Senatorial candidate in1960? W hat is his name?(Asked only of Illinois resi¬dents.)However, of the 42 students(25 percent > who stated that theywould vote for the Republicancandidate for Senator in Illinois,only three (seven percent) knewthat this candidate was SamuelWitwcr. One person guessed thatWilliam Stratton (current Repub¬lican Governor of Illinois) wasrunning for the Senate, and twopersons thought that EverettDirksen. Republican Senator fromIllinois, was up for re-election.deem of studentsof socialHe estimates that his job asdean will require about half histime, and expects to devote theremainder of his time to research.“I am eager about this job be¬cause there is a fine chance togather information and eventual¬ly to make policy recommenda¬tions about students," Zimringsaid. “Many students in the divi¬sion remain uncontacted, makingprogram arrangement difficult.We should work out a system of‘following’ all the students, so wecould know where they are, aca¬demically, at all times.”Zimring explained the problemof “lost” students in the divisionby saying, “Too many studentsare likely to flounder under thepresent system, due to the factthat they don’t have coherent pro¬grams. Many people get jobs be¬fore they write their theses, and sciencesthen don’t show up for anotherten years.“Also, in many departments, Iknow of cases of students goingfrom the master’s to the PhDprogram without ever being ad¬mitted to the PhD plan. The de¬partments have tightened up alittle in the past three or fouryears, but a lot more work isneeded.”At 35, Zimring is one of theyoungest deans of students in thesocial science division's history.However, he doesn’t feel that ageis going to affect his position.“Age doesn’t make any differenceat this University. People herelisten to you for what you say,and not for how old you are. Thetradition of the University of Chi¬cago is that people are appointedto a position because of their ca¬pacity rather than because oftheir age.”The Lord giveth and taketh awayLeft: Work is progressingrapidly on a new, concretewalk across UC's quad¬rangles.Right: A steel fence anda strip of barren land are allthat remain of what wasonce the favorite shortcut ofUC students and faculty.-Uncover illegal voting [Housing rule condemned]Several University of Chicago Young Republicans met at the County Board of ElectionshearingJlast Saturday, 'rtiis hearing was partly a result of the canvass work done by theUniversity group. Led by Willard Ayres and J. D. Annett, some thirty Republicans andten Democrats turned up 290 false voter suspects in the 4th Ward.Since this was one-sixth of the■aspects in the entire city, and proof that this person did not he was being advised by an Al-mnce another Republican organ- Jive in the Precinct. derrnan to sue Ayres. Annett, ofbutton turned up enough more When one of the non-UC Re- the law school, stated that thereto swell the 4th Ward list to over publicans, asked if he had to per- was very little chance of the suitone-half of the city list, the hear- serially see the person move to going through. The Republicaning was called. know that they did not live there, dub made no other big mistakesJames E. Murphy, assistant at- Murphy answered, "Yes.” and apparently not too manytorney for the Board of Elections This non-Chicago group, h\ small ones either,started the proceedings at 9 their 600plus list, found a voter Ayres pleasedo’clock, with the 3rd, 6th, and who "had been dead for fourteen . nlcascd with the66th Precincts being checked in years ... and voted in 1958." They ;^ings in general and espe-thc morning. The process was a also made the mistake of chal- daJ] with the outcome. He wasrelatively simple operation re- lenging a prominent citizen who # }m]e d5spleasedf however, thatquiring only a few questions. If had resided in that same home ^ could not evon spol,the voter and the canvasser both for at least thirty eight years. hig namp r after he signod itarrived Murphy would usually MifUhe ^ked "some 300 times."overrule the challenge o t e can- Rpnublicans also made He also protested that, “SeveralH onW the voter appear^ the failed to see the residence of Mr. show up didn’t have any dentifi-«me results usualfy occurred Upchurch, which was situated on cation, but were accepted Ayres*ame results usuaiiy occurreu. »- » woDertv There- was very pleased, though, withHowever, if only the challenger the rear or tne property, in re .f . 0,n . oqo c.,cmade an anDearance the voter fore, finding no voter of that the result that 240 out of 290 sus-nriadc an ppe ,narn<» that address they chal- pects were stricken from the lists,was supposedly dropped from the name ai tnai amires*. „ •„hinder of oualified reentered Jenged. When they found their He felt that this presented a pie-voters Q ’ reglSteml misKlake they dropped the chal- ture of the efficiency of his work-lenge, but Upchurch would not let ers with the "naive belief thatOnly 9 remain jt drop. As he left the building, elections should be honest.”At the end of the morning ses¬sion. only about nine out of about88 suspects of the 3rd Precinctremained on the books. This wasbecause only twelve people answered the summons that theyreceived in the mail. Of thistwelve, nine were reinstated, twowere dropped, and one was notchallenged.The 6th Precinct eliminated an¬other quantity by striking off"better than 80" of the 92 possi¬ble.In the afternoon, the Republi¬cans began having some trouble.Several men, apparently 4thWard Democratic workers, begantransporting people to the Boardin large numbers. Most of thesepeople were reinstated aftershowing identification and sign¬ing an affidavit about theirlength of residence in the Chica¬go area. The only way to get aperson off the list was to have Residents of East house, thelargest undergraduate men’shousing unit on campus, over¬whelmingly voted disapprovalof the new residence require¬ments last week. In a specialreferendum, each member of Easthouse was asked to give his opin¬ion on the following statement: "Idisapprove of the four-year resi¬dence requirement for women andof the two-year residence require¬ment for men."Of the 106 ballots returned, 83,or over 78 per cent, expressedagreement with the statementand 23 expressed disagreementKaplan speaksSherwin Kaplan, president ofthe East house council, said, ‘Thepurpose of the referendum wasobviously to show to the adminis¬tration the strong opposition ofthe students to the new residencerequirements. The house councilwas unanimously against this re¬quirement, but we felt that allow¬ing every member of the houseto express his individual disap¬proval would probably carry more weight with the adminis¬tration."Our opposition stems from thefact that we believe Universitystudents capable of living antheir own after one year of get¬ting acquainted with thq Univer¬sity surroundings. The adminis¬tration in imposing these regula¬tions seems to us to be greatlyexceeding their proper role ingoverning the private lives of thestudents.”Residents agreeOne first year student who Is amember of the East house coun¬cil gave the following reason forthe vote: "Most of the residentsI have spoken with agree withthe administration that dormitorylife has more advantages thanapartment life and plan to remainin the dormitories for the dura¬tion of their undergraduate years."However, there are many stu¬dents I have spoken with whosimply cannot work to their fullpotential in the somewhat chaoticatmosphere of dormitory life. Re¬quiring these students to remainin residence halls beyond theirfirst year will be quite harmfulto them.”Movies, discussion of Africa setSKI INWISCONSINSjgoocompleteFOR A WEEKEND★ Ski Lift★ Meals★ HotelMarco poloTRAVEL SERVICESince 12761S5C E. 55th St. BE 8-5944 The 1958 All-African con¬ference will be the subject ofthe first program planned thisyear by the African Studentsassociation (AS) to be heldFriday, November 4 at 8 pmat International house for thepurpose of informing Americansof the events which are takingplace in Africa today.Two movies will be shown aspart of the program. One will beabout the conference, which drewdelegates from all the accreditedAfrican political parties, trade un¬ions, student organizations andwomen’s organizations, held inAccra, Ghana in 1958. The moviewill be introduced by Dr. DavidE. Apter, associate professor ofpolitical science and chairman ofthe University of Chicago’s com¬mittee on the Study of New Na¬tions, who has recently finishedtraveling through Africa. Thesecond film will be a documen¬tary describing the development of Nigeria towards independence.The All African conference wascalled in 1958 by the then recent¬ly established secretariat set upduring a meeting of the indepen¬dent states of Africa The All Af¬rican Conference did not includeany official government represen¬tatives, but was a meeting of dif¬ferent groups in already inde¬pendent countries and organisa¬tions working for the independ¬ence of colonies. Tom Mboya, adelegate from Kenya's independ¬ence movement attended, as didother leaders in the independencemovement.Observers attended from inter¬ested non-African countries. Mes¬ sages of good will were receivedfrom President Eisenhower, Pre¬mier Khrushchev, and other headsof state.The problems of the emergingnew nations were discussed, aswell as the problems of nationsstill struggling to become free.The fact that none of the dele¬gates represented official govern¬ment view points increased therelative informality of the con¬ference.This program is the first oftwelve monthly programs plannedby the ASA's education commit¬tee.“This program Is part of aseries of programs to inform the University of Chicago communityof what is happening in Africa,”C’himere Ikoku, a member of theeducation committee, explained.Other events planned will betalks by experts on Africa, discus¬sions, and cultural shows of Afri¬can dancing and art. The 35 centadmission to the first programwill go to the association's educa¬tion committee so that it may con¬tinue its activities.The ASA is an organization ofAfricans studying in the Chicagoarea. It helps orient these stu¬dents to living in this country andprovides opportunities for themto meet fellow Africans andAmericans.New RulingWomen allowed in men's dormIf you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou¬blesome problem.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.BU 8-6711 Women will be allowed tovisit in men’s dormitories foreleven hours during the week¬ends, according t« regulationsissued by house councils and theStudent Housing office.Resident halls in Burton Jud-$379STUDENT SPECIALSPIZZA (ANY COMBINATION) $1.25 to $4.25LARGE BUCKETof Toasted, Golden BrownCHICKENAll Party Buckets Now IncludeCrisp French Fries & Creamy Cole SlowSMALLER BUCKET *229Till Will tod a Family of FivaVary Economically* Socket O‘Shrimp ..12.45• Socket 0‘RU»$ ,...$4.77r1636 East55th StreetCanRU 8-8440 • Shrimp A RHko ....$1.49• Rita A Chickoo ...55.89• Fost Ham*F Deliveryk • Carry-OatService1851 East87th StreetCallRE 1-9393 I Wear Contact LensesDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist1132 E. 55th St.ot University Are. HY 3-8372 son courts, East house, Hitchcockhouse, New Residence halls, andSnell house permit men to signin women guests on Friday eve¬nings or Saturday and Sundayafternoons and to leave theirdoois open or closed according totheir discretion. Periodic checksarc made by the house councilsto insure that rules are being fol¬lowed.The Student housing office hasgiven house councils priority indeciaing upon the rules and meth¬ods of enforcement. Of 150 menresidents interviewed, 140were satisfied with the present system. Comments ranged frem,"It’s to be encouraged’’ to “Theycause more disruption on thefloors."Those students who were dis¬satisfied with the status quohoped that the hours would beextended to week day eveningsand afternoons. John Hun toon,director of Student housing, com¬ments, "Open House is a joint ef¬fort program between the admin¬istration and house councils," andbelieves that Open House may beextended to weekday evenings orafternoons after the end of theautumn quarter.ACASA Book StoreGood Used BooksImported Cards, Gifts and Children's BooksRELIABLE TYPEWRITER SERVICE1322 E. 53th * HY 3-9651SHOP EARLY FOR CHRISTMAS—SAVE OH THESE PRE-PUB OFFERSAsimov: The Intelligent Man's Guide to Science 1 1.95 pre-pub. 15.00 After ChristmasFlower and Reese: The Taste of Courage 8.50 pre-pub. 10.00 after November 25.McGinnis :The Good Old Days 8.95 pre-pub. 10.00 after November 25.Newman: The World of Mathematics, 4 vols boxed. 8.95 pre-pub. 9.95 after Christmasand many more art and gift books at special savings!THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue D. S. Passmore, Manager2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 4, 1960McFerrin discusses Enrollment rise predictedNegro fight in South"We want to be free in thedeep South and the way tofreedom is through the ballotbox,” said John McFerrin,chairman of the Fayette countyCivic and Welfare league of Som-inerville Tennessee. McFerrinspoke on campus Monday nightduring his trip to Chicago.McFerrin has been the leaderof the drive to help Negroes reg¬ister in Fayette and Haywoodcounties in Tennessee. In 1958, 50people had successfully registeredand voted in the local and stateelection. Early in 1960 Negro resi¬dents of Fayette started to regis-ter. McFerrin and other leadersot the drive were immediatelyplaced on a blacklist.1500 registerSince that time almost 1500 Ne¬groes have registered there.Those people were also put on ablacklist and were denied thecredit, necessary to sharecroppersand other tenant farmers. Theywere further denied the right tobuy food, clothing, and gasolinefrom the stores they had for¬merly patronized.McFerrin explained the move¬ment and said that they were get¬ting help from different places inthe North. The Emergency Reliefcommittee for Fayette county hasIn'en established by CORE, theLeague of Negro Voters andother Chicago organizations tosend food and clothing to Fayettecounty.Youngsters fight“The young people of the Southhave shown they are willing tofight for their rights. We too arewilling to fight for our right tovote.” said McFerrin. He alsostated that the “civil rights billpassed by Congress is not doingany good. The ballot box is theonly way the Negroes can wintheir freedom and change theSouth.” -In discussing the government’siolc in the South, McFerrin saidthat no Federal Housing Adminis¬tration loans have been madesince 1939. Also no GI loans have been made since this time. “TheGovernment,” said McFerrin,“has to show they mean some¬thing by putting teeth in theirlaws.”McFerrin felt that the move¬ment and the Negroes’ desire forgaining their right to vote wasgetting stronger. He said that“Negroes want to get out of thereand everybody runs out on thedeep South. If I come out ofFayette county I’ll come out feetfirst."Ed Riddick, graduate theologystudent, made an appeal for fundsand led the audience in singing“We shall overcome.” The meet¬ing was sponsored by the UCCommittee to Support the South¬ern Students’ Protest and the Na¬tional Student association com¬mittee of Student government. UC officials expect some2000 additional students to beregistered on campus in 1968.The exact projected figure is7816. This is one of the con¬clusions drawn from a recent¬ly completed study undertaken byJohn Netherton, dean of students.Currently enrollment is 6007.Netherton cautioned that thesefigures are at best educatedguesses, and stressed that anyconclusions drawn from this re¬port are at best tentative.^It is expected that the propor¬tion of married undergraduateswill decrease both absolutely andrelatively. There are now some174 married College students,which is eight percent of the Col¬lege enrollment; in 1968 Nether¬ton expects only 5 percent.The now established upwardtrend on overall undergraduateFraternities vetonew rush planThe long debate ruling forearly rush by the fraternitieshas been ended. The fraterni¬ties in Inter-fraternity coun¬cil last Tuesday night voted to re¬vert to the old system of “deferredrush.”The proposed system of orient¬ing entering students to the fra¬ternity system this fall wouldhave begun next week with aseries of smokers at each chapterhouse. As originally passed, themotion provided for open rushuntil the first Suhday followingThanksgiving. However, the IFrush committee had decided toadopt several amendments to theplan which would eliminate a fra¬ternity member’s association withan entering student outside ofmealtime. These and other recom¬mendations considered after therush committee had met with theadministration will not be takenup until next year. The old program of rushing willnot allow a fraternity to approachentering men until the Winterquarter.It was later found by the meet¬ing's parliamentarian, Lee Val¬entine of Beta Theta Pi, that theaction to initiate early rush wasillegal in point of fact because itlacked the necessary 2/3 vote ofthe IF council.Other action taken by the coun¬cil last Tuesday repealed theirmotion of two weeks ago to makethe IF ball informal. The ball, tobe held at the Shoreland hotel onNovember 19, will now be a for¬mal affair. enrollment is expected to con¬tinue. Some 3316 students are ex¬pected to replace today’s 2172bachelor's candidates. College of¬ficials soon hope to hit a stride ofa 6 percent annual increase In to¬tal college registration. Currentlythe increase has been around 2percent per year.A maximum registration of4500 is the goal of the graduatedivisions and schools. Currentlyonly 3835 students are registeredfor advanced degrees on campus.Downtown excludedThese figures do not includeany expectations as to the devel¬opment of the University down¬town extension, University Col¬lege. Current enrollment there isabout 2000, mostly adults takingevening courses.Ultimately, according to AlanSimpson, dean of the College, theUniversity hopes that equal num¬bers of graduates and undergrad¬uates will be registered here.The study also contains a re¬port on projected student housingdemand for the next eight years.Initially divided into graduate andundergraduate needs, the reportis subdivided into space demandsfrom men, women and marriedstudents. Currently 670 Collegemen live in the dorms; this is 49percent of the total students inthis category. Fifty-nine percentof all female College students livein the dorms, of 474 individualstudents. Of the 174 married un¬dergraduates, exactly 50 percentnow live in College housing units.There are almost as many grad¬uate as undergraduate men in thedorms. The exact figure is 460,WHERE THE UoiCMEETS TO EATGo\iW’<iFINE FOOD137 1 East 57th Street but this is only 15 percent of thetotal possible figure. Only 13 per¬cent of graduate women arehoused by the University, that is100 even. Again, half of the pos¬sible married students alreadylive in University residences; 777individual students.The University expects the rela¬tive proportion of graduates liv¬ing in UC housing units to re¬main constant, however, changesare expected in the College.By 1968 some 69 percent of allCollege men should be in thesystem. Eighty-four percent ofCollege women will be housed Inthe dorms or in -other UC accom¬modations.Units producedAt that time, if the current pre¬dictions should come true, theUniversity will be p r o d u c i ngsome 4146 housing units for stu¬dents living on campus: 1913 formen, 1227 for women and 1006for married students.The male-female ration current¬ly dominating UC social life willundergo no radical change, ac¬cording to the study. In 1968 halfthe campus wlil be inhabited byunmarried men and single womenwill constitute slightly less thanone quarter, married studentsconstituting the rest. In the Col¬lege the figures , projected aremen 57 percent, women 38 per¬cent, with married collegia!es ac¬counting for 5 percent of the to¬tal.For PRINTING Call JAY!OFFSET A- LETTERPRESS * MIMEOGRAPHINGDAILY U. OF C. PICKUPSC«II JAY Letter & Printing ServiceMY 3-0802 1950 East 75th Streetithin the city5 RoomDuplex££ VILLAGE APARTMENTS 737 East 83rd Place TRiongle 4-7400 Now Leasing for Those Who QualifyChatham Park Village is a privately ownedgroup of apartment homes on a beautifultwenty-three acre site in the midst of Chicago’sexclusive Chatham Park.BEAUTIFULLY LANDSCAPED — 63 vine cov¬ered buildings. Unlimited parking on the Vil¬lage’s private streets. Garages available.ALL ELECTRIC KITCHENS—JANITOR SERVICECHOICE OF RENTALS5 room Duplex $130.00 $ 135.004 room Town House (2 bedrooms $122.004 room Town House (1 bedrm., w/DR) $119.00314 room Garden Apartment $110.003 room Town House $ 98.00MODEL APARTMENTby Marian Quinlan, A.I.D. Open DailyNov 4, 1960 • C N I C A AL SAX TIRE CO.Announces . . .SPECIALDISCOUNTStoU OF C STUDENTSAND FACULTYWe CarryA Full Line OfFOREIGN &SPORTS CARTIRESExpertWheel BalancingBrake WorkFront EndAlignmentU.S. ROYALJIuiRlcIe tireswithTYREXHEDOCED 706.70-15tubed typeblackballOther sizes proportionately low priced6.00-10 7.10-1$2for»2l*> 2 for *27MPlus tax and treadabla tiraa•TYREX ia a collective trade-mark atTyrax, Inc.FREE INSTALLATIONThis week only!Drive in —Free ParkingEAST PAY PLANAL SAX TIRE CO.6052 Cottage GroveDO 3-5554Anti-HUAC committee WalEis describes U S economycanvasses neighborhoodCanvassing of the Secondcongressional district to urgevoters to write to their con¬gressman by the students forthe abolition of the House Com¬mittee on Un-American Activitiescontinues this week.The canvassers are presentingeach voter they talk to apaper giving a brief history ofthe Un-American Activities com¬mittee and a letter urgingthem to write to CongressmanBarrett O’Hara. They are askedto request O'Hara to support theresolution to be introduced byCongressman James Roosevelt(D-Calif.) in January 1961. Roose¬ velt’s resolution proposes to abol¬ish the .Un-American Activitiescommittee.According to committee mem¬ber Jesse Auerbach, the canvas¬sers are receiving a “very friend¬ly and favorable reaction . . .especially in the Negro communi¬ty.” About 40 people were outcanvassing last week, but morepeople are desired. Students inter¬ested in helping are requested tomeet at 6 pm today at the Studentactivities office.The anti-HUAC group alsoplans to hold a debate or rallysoon, and to circulate petitionsurging the abolition of HUACwithin a week. “The American people, andthe world, need have no fears,no doubts, no misgivings, nouncertainties about the abilityof our economy to grow rapid¬ly,” asserted W. Allen Wallis,Dean of the University of ChicagoBusiness School, in a speech yes¬terday to the Public Relations so¬ciety of America.Wallis stated that the economicoutlook for the 60's depends onthe coming election, hut did notattempt to make specific eco¬nomic predictions. Instead, he re¬viewed the economic policies andachievements of the Truman andEisenhower administrations, say¬ing that " . . . the most convinc¬ing evidence that our economicperformance will improve, furtheris the fact that it has been im¬proving ho much in recent years.”Discrimination is studied“Twenty - seven millionAmericans still suffer to someextent from housing discrim¬ination because of their race,”says a Fund for the Republicreport, issued October 31 inNew York.The study entitled Residenceand Race, is the final volume of a series of reports prepared bythe commission on race and hous¬ing established by the Fund witha grant of $305,000.Written by the Commission’sdirector of research, Davis McEn-tiro, professor of social welfareat the University of California,the study appears in book form as^XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXVXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXVVVXXXXM>% \i !II CAREERS INLARGE-SCALESYSTEM ENGINEERING...the new technologyThe MITRE Corporation offers graduating engineersand scientists special opportunities to broaden theirdisciplines along new avenues in computer-based, real¬time system engineering.System engineering and development at MITREunites a wide spectrum of disciplines in the design^analysis and integration of electronic environments.These are composed of complex interacting communica¬tion networks, radar systems and high-speed digitalcomputers. Their function is to collect, transmit, processand display data essential to high-level decision-making.MITRE is technical and system engineering consult¬ant for aerospace Command and Control Systemsbeing developed for the United States Air Force,- andalso for an experimental Air Traffic Control systemcommissioned by the Federal Aviation Agency. In inte¬grating the contributions of the electronics industry,MITRE, in,a literal sense, places staff members at thecenter of the nation’s electronic capability... affordingunique opportunities for professional and personal growth.Employment opportunities exist in:• Electronic research and development ofcomputers, communications and radars• Operations Research• Advanced Systems Analysis• Feasibility StudiesCAMPUS INTERVIEWSTuesday, November 8SEE YOUR PLACEMENT DIRECTOR TODAYto arrange a convenient interviewTHEMITREPost Office Box 208—Bedford, MassachusettsA nonprofit syAcm engineering corporationformed under the sponsorshipcj the Massachusetts Institute of Jecbiwlogy 1J a publication of the University ofCalifornia press.The report establishes guidesby which individuals and com¬munities may reduce discrimina¬tion in housing in the UnitedStates. Its recommendations arebased on a three-year researchprogram by the Commission,which drew upon the experienceof some 50 experts in economics,real estate, sociology, psychologyand other fields. On the basis ofthe information amassed in thisenterprise, more extensive thanany other ever undertaken in itsfield, he summarizes the situationof housing and race in the UnitedStates and points out how it canbe changed. “The groups whichstill suffer to some extent fromhousing discrimination,” hewrites “include 39 million Negroes,Japanese, Chinese and Filipinos,2.5 million Mexican-Americans,one million Puerto Ricans, and 5million Jews.”“Discrimination is perhaps theleading unresolved domestic prob¬lem of the nation,” McEntirepoints out, and housing segrega¬tion is a crucial aspect of the sit¬uation. “People who cannot freelychoose where they will live aregravely hampered, not only in bet¬tering their living conditions bvitalso in their use of community fa¬cilities and institutions and intheir paxticipation in communitylife.”He reports findings of severalstudies on changing American at¬titudes. Two scientifically con¬ducted polls in 3956 mund that aslight majority of white respond¬ents in the North and West wouldbe willing to live in the same gen¬eral neighborhood with Negroes.Even in the South, about a thirdof whites would be willing to doso.McEntire notes that race re¬strictions in the United States area grave disadvantage in our rela¬tions with Asia and Africa. Hewrites, however, that .“the factthat the US is a racially mixed na¬tion is potentially an importantasset in its relations witli Asiaand Africa, (if) white and non¬white citizens stand on an equalfooting as members of the Amer¬ican community.” lie also considered the role ofgovernment in promoting eco¬nomic growth.lie delivered his speech at 32:45p.m. to a luncheon gathering inthe grand ballroom of the ConradHilton hotel in Chicago.Wallis reassured his audiencethat there is no reason to believethat the Russian economy willcontinue to grow as fast as it hasbeen, but cautioned, “To keepAmerica strong, we must keepAmerica growing not only in ma¬terial comfoxts, but in mind andspirit.”Acknowledging that both presi¬dential candidates have pledgedeconomic growth, Wallis never¬theless said, “Indeed, in my judg¬ment, the differences between thecandidates on domestic economicpolicies dwarf in magnitude andimportance the differences be¬tween them on all other issues.”To state the relative positionsof the candidates, Wallis com¬pared the economic developmentsof the Truman and Eisenhoweradministrations. First of all, hedemonstrated that the rate of na¬tional economic growth has beengreater under Eisenhower than itwas under Truman. The gross na¬tional product, which is, accord¬ing to Wallis, “the broadest meas¬ure of production in our economy.”has increased 20% under Presi¬dent Eisenhower as comparedwith eleven percent under Presi¬dent Truman. These figures areadjusted for price increases.Wallis said, in addition, that un¬der Eisenhower salaries, spendingfor scientific research and spend¬ing for education have increasedunder Eisenhower more than theydid under Truman, while the rateof increase of consumer priceshas slowed down.Considering the period 1948-1957the only period which he consid¬ers valid for measurement of thiscountry’s post-war economicgrowth (because it does not beginor end with a war boom or a de¬pression), Wallis concluded thatthe economy is growing rapidly.Gross national product, accord¬ing to Wallis, had grown 30%faster since World War II thanthe long term rate, although in¬dustrial output is not growing asfast as sei’vices such as engineer¬ing, medicine and education. Out¬ put per man-lxour has risen 50';faster in this period than the loneterm rate, and output per unit oflabor and capital has grown 40<faster. Disposable income per can"ita has been growing 20% faster.Wallis continued, "There is*n\\xxx\xxxxx\x\\\xx\\\xxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxvv^4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 4, I960 ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfe*»ional Oyringmud Refiniahing ofShoca and Handbags• Colors matched • Toe* cut outO Vamps lowered 9 PlatformsremovedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHeels changed — AnyAny color styleBackstrops Removed and Springe -lators inserted —-• Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St. W. Allen Wallisground for suspecting that somew’ho now claim that our recentrate of growth has been unsatis¬factory have their tongues intheir cheeks, and are merely re¬acting to the political temptationsof the moment.” He supportedthis statement by pointing outthat the gross national product in1954 exceeded by $20 billion thegoal set for that year by the Tru¬man Economic Report of 1950, inspite of the post-Korean War re¬cession.Next, Wallis took up the role ofthe government in stimulating n o-notnic growth. He asked, "Shouldthe government guide the econ¬omy itself? Should it attempt tobuy growth by massive expendi¬tures finan<*ed either by highertaxes or inflation? Should it regulate production, Investment, andconsumption—and perhaps pricesand wages, too — in the light ofthe judgments of Its officialsabout what will contribute mostto our national interest?Reserves fight to discriminateWSU excludes publicWayne State universityclosed its McGregor Memorialconference center yesterdayto all off - campus organiza¬tions in an effort to prevent fu¬ture rqeetings of Communist-sup¬ported groups. This action wasprompted by a court injunctionwhich ordered Wayne State toallow the Global Book forum,whose secretary is a Communist,to meet there last week.Wayne State had told the groupthat it could not hold its meetingon- campus, but circuit judgeGeorge E, Bowles issued an in¬junction preventing the univer¬sity from interfering with themeeting on the grounds that thebuilding had been opened to useby the public, and the universitycould not discriminate in grant¬ing use of its facilities. Bowlesx*uled that “denial of the festivi¬ties of the center . . . was dis¬criminating and capricious andin denial of the constitutionallights of the plaintiff, GlobalBook forum, and its members.”The University had denied useof the center to the group on thegrounds that the group had tried to perpetrate a “fraud” on theschool. Law school dean ArthurNeef, who presented the univer¬sity’s case, said that the Forumwas motivated by commercial in¬terest to sell books.Defending the Forum, attorneyErnest Goodman said that thegroup’s main purpose was toschedule public lectures and dis¬cussions on current topics. Iksaid that although books weredisplayed at the meeting, theirsale was not a policy of thegroup.John Fraser, McGregor’s man¬ager, said no non-u n i v e r s i t ygroup would be allowed to con¬tract a room in the building untila “definite policy has been estab¬lished as to eligibility require¬ments for off-campus organiza¬tions.”New regulations will be drawnup by a committee headed by theassociate dean of the law school,Jphn Gavin, and Charles Quick-“The new policy will be one \vecan live with and probably willl>e contained in a legal, constitu¬tional document,” said professorArthur Neef, Wayne State vice-president and law school dean.DR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometrist««i theNew Hyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th St. * DO 3-7644Eye Examinations Contact LensesNewest styling in framesStudent DiscountWorld students confer in SwitzerlandCongolese student repre¬sentatives hear resolutioncondemning maintainanceof Belgian troops in theircountry during recent up¬heavals. NATIONWIDE BOOK SEARCHSERVICESend 25c for results — by moilZOLLINGER'S BOOK SHOP1150 Vi W. Belmont Ave.THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree F.C. DeliveryTerry 9s1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045 "Imagine!Coming tothe Unit ersityand Not BeingOutfitted byBeacon.”Special.1 Pc., Coat, Vest & PantsWest of England Saxonies,Shetlands ti Cron ntellT needs.ram N MICHIGAN ADDRESS ,CITY ZONE STATE .ArtcarvedDIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGSBeloved by brides jor more than one hundred years {1850-1960)gives you nationwideproof of value.As for design—you’ll findthe newest, brightestdiamond ideas in town.So make a date today. Get the girl—then write toJ. R. Wood & Sons, Inc., Dept. Cr*60, 216 E. 45th St., N. V. 17, N. V*for your free guide to wedding etiquetteand valuable tips on ring buying.The 9th annual meeting ofthe International student con¬ference was held at Klosters,Switzerland from 21 Augustto 1 September 1960. The con¬ference evidenced the grow¬ing power, and ambition, of theinternational student movement.The number of countries repre¬sented increased from 64 to 73with the addition of delegationsfrom United Arab Republic, Kon¬ya, Basutoland, Pakistan, India,Korea. Spain, Palestine (Gaza),and Puerto Rico. Yugoslavia re¬mained the only iron curtaincountry attending, although agroup of free Hungarian studentswere seated.Growth of powerThe conference stressed a uni¬versal desire for world peace andfor autonomous .national govern¬ments. The delegates declaredtheir opposition to all forms ofcolonialism, totalitarianism, rac¬ism, and imperialism. The Con-ference attacked France for hercolonial status in Algeria and ob¬jected to the complicity of NATOnations.Objections were raised againstapartheid in South Africa, againstAmerican “efforts to underminetiie Cuban revolution . . .” byeconomic sanctions, and againstAmerican interference in Nicara¬gua under provisions of theBryan-Chammoura treaty. Fur-ther objections were voicedagainst Trujillo of the DominicanRepublic, and Franco of Spain,against violation of academicfreedom in Hungary and EastGermany and against “colonialmaneuvers” in the Congo.The growing power of the stu¬dent movements was emphasizedby the attendance, for the firsttime of a Korean delegation. Ko¬rean students were the major in¬fluence in the Korean uprising oflast April.Movements outlinedT h e Conference outlined itspractical program for the coming>car. Prominent among thesewere plans for technical assist¬ance to national student move¬ments in need of typewriters andduplicating equipment. Iho or¬ganization of a student workcamp to help in the reconstruc¬tion of Chile, devastated in Aprilby several violent earthquakes, aprogram of assistance for studentrefugees from the Algerian war,from Hungary, from LatinAmerican dictatorship, and fromItcd China. Regional seminars areplanned for Africa, Asia, LatinAmerica, and the Carribbean. aswell as special seminars on Cen¬ tral Africa and the annual semi¬nar in Europe. Student delega¬tions will be sent to Japan, Korea,China, and to Africa.The Conference called upon allmember national student move¬ments to support the following:1) activities within Confer¬ence principles for maintainingpeace.2) all student movements•(thting against oppressionand for national autonomy.3) the struggle against ex¬ternal interference by onestate in the internal affairs ofanother when such interfer¬ence may affect students di¬rectly.4) the development of in¬ternational student cooperationon questions common to stu¬dents of all countries. The Con¬ference participants instructedtheir investigative arm,-the Re¬search and Information Com¬mission (RIC), to continue itsstudy of Paraguay. Nicaragua.Algeria, South Africa, EastGermany, Hungary. Spain,Portugal, and the DominicanRepublic. RIC has also beeninstructed to examine the stu¬dent sit-ins in the South, andthe case for Puerto Rican in¬dependence in the near future.Studies are being undertakento provide documentation onPortuguese Africa, SouthwestAfrica, and on segregation inthe United States, for use bynext years Conference.National issuesSpecific action was taken onparticular national issues at theConference. The Conferencewarmly welcomed the independ¬ence of the Congo, and con¬demned the maintainance of Bel¬gian troops in the country againstthe “expressed wish of the Con¬golese people . . .”In regard to Cuba, the confer¬ence stated that “the reductionof the sugar quota by the UnitedStates Government is an econom¬ic means aiming at stopping thetransforming role of the Cubanrevolution . . .” and urged all na¬tional student organizations “...to strongly protest against theimperialist aggression in so faras it endangers self-determinationand thus . . . the lives and free¬dom of the students and peopleof Cuba.”The Conference welcomed forthe first time the representativesof the Dominican students in ex¬ile, and condemned the Trujilloregime for “. . . the persecutions,tortures and assassinations ofuniversity teachers and studentsand condemned the Dominican Government for refusing to per¬mit members of RIC to enter theDominican Republic.”Academic freedomIn commenting on education inEast Germany, the Conferenceconcluded that “. . . the educa¬tional system in East Germany isabused as a partisan political in¬strument for the promotion of aState ideology and ... (this)gives evidence of a totalitarian-rule being imposed . .Tlje Con¬ and color in order that all itspeople may freely express theirlegitimate aspirations.” The sup¬pression of human freedoms inSouthwest Africa was also con¬demned and the “RIC was calledon to report on the systematic vi¬olation of basic human rights inSouthwest Africa and on thestudies made by TrusteeshipCommittee of the United Nationson the situation in Southwest Africa.”The repressions of students inSpain was noted, as was the sys¬tematic use of torture. PresidentEisenhower’s visit to Spain andhis cable to Franco after the sum¬mit meeting were condemned ashaving strengthened Franco’s po¬sition . . . thereby making greaterrepression possible. The lack offundamental freedoms in Spainwas denounced.Students lead uprisings in Korea last April. They attended the world conference for thefirst time this year.ference also condemned the “...continued suppression of democ¬racy and academic freedom inHungary . . .” It was noted thatthe Hungarian government alsorefused visas to the RIC investi¬gating team.Turning to South Africa, theConference declared that theSouth African government offereda “totalitarian policy of apar¬theid” . . . and concluded that itwas based on the “myth of whitesupremacy.” The Conference de¬manded that . . . “equal politicalrights be accorded all persons inSouth Africa irrespective of raceSKI INTAOS, N.M.ONE WEEK149including:A Round-Trip Train FareA Ski LodgeA All MealsA Ski LiftA EntertainmentMarco poloTRAVEL SERVICESince 12761658 E. 55th St. HE 8-5911 What everycollege manshouldknowaboutdiamondsLucky man—you’ve wonthe girl. Next question—what of the diamond ring?Mow big? J low much?What style? What quality?Artcarved gives the answers**With an Artcarvedengagement ring you canbe sure yon are gettingyour full diamond's worth.Every ring is guaranteedin writing for cut, color,clarity and carat weight.And only Artcarved'Permanent Value Plan—Kennedy civil rights stand is forthrightIn the two previous issues theMaroon has concluded that SenatorKennedy’s record and proposals oneducation, urban renewal, aid to de¬pressed areas and other domestic is¬sues of vital importance warrants ourendorsement of him for the office ofPresident.In this issue the Maroon commendsSenator Kennedy for his record on civilrights and his realistic appraisal of thegoals of U. S. foreign policy.Few, if any, representatives or senatorshave been as outspoken in their supportof equal rights for all Americans as Sena¬tor Kennedy; few, if any, have betterdeserved the strong endorsement of highofficials of the NAACP and other groupsworking for the end of segregation. In arecently issued statement Roy Wilkins,E x e c u t i ve Secretary of the NAACP,praised Senator Kennedy's record as fol¬lows;"The Senator’s record, ... including cer¬tainly his forthright and repeated supportof the Supreme Court decision of May 17,1954 (in the Brown vs. the Topeka Boardof Education case, the famous "segrega¬tion case”), . . . must be regarded ... asone of the best voting records on civilrights and related issues.”Wilkins’ praise was based on the factthat Senator Kennedy, in his fourteenyears of service in the House and Senate,has supported every civil rights bill ofany kind to come before Congress. As afreshman Representative one of his firstvotes was in favor of a bill to outlaw thepoll tax.In 1950 Kennedy and Nixon, both mem¬bers of the House, had their first majorclash on the civil rights issue. The billover which the clash came called for theestablishment of a Fair Employment Prac¬tices commission (FEPC) to end discrimi¬nation in the hiring of government em¬ployes and employes of firms that heldgovernment contracts. FEPC had firstbeen established by President Rooseveltin 1941; the commission was continuedafter the war by President Truman whenhe signed Executive order 9664. But Con¬gress had killed FEPC by failing to appro¬priate any money for the operation of thecommission.In 1950, after several years of frustrat¬ed efforts, the House liberals succeeded inbringing to the floor the first bill to estab¬lish FEPC on a permanent basis. But Re¬ publican Samuel McConnell, wishing tocontinue the good relationship betweenthe GOP and the Dixiecrats, introduced atotally ineffective substitute.Kennedy and other liberal Democratsvigorously opposed it, but 68 percent ofthe Republicans — including Representa¬tive Richard Nixon — passed the McCon¬nell substitute.In 1952 liberal Democrats in the Senatetried once again to pass the FEPC meas¬ure. But the bill never got through theLabor subcommittee; two Republicans andone Dixiecrat joined in blocking a favor¬able report. One of the GOP Senators wasRichard Nixon; the other was Robert Taft.In 1954 the only real effort to pass theFEPC bill during the Eisenhower adminis¬tration was made. Senator Kennedy, thena member of the Senate Labor subcom¬mittee, argued vigorously for the favor¬able report of the bill and voted for itwhen the question was called in commit¬tee. But the failure of the Administrationto take any lead or even to speak in favorof the bill caused the GOP Senators todefeat it once more.In 1957 came the biggest test of SenatorKennedy’s attitude towards civil rights,for in that year the first major civil rightslegislation* since the Civil War was de¬bated in Congi'ess.In that year Senator Kennedy split withsome Senate liberals who favored a weakbill in the hope of keeping the partyunited. He was one of the few Senatorswho voted and spoke in favor of TitleIII of the Act; this title would have giventhe Attorney General power to protectwith injunctive relief all rights guaran¬teed by the Constitution (including integ¬rated schools).He forcefully opposed the B r i c k e ramendment of Title III, which gave to theAttorney General the power to protectonly voting rights. And he succeeded ingaining the support of all liberal Demo¬crats, including those who had feared aparty split; Title III, which the NAACPlater pointed out could have avoided theLittle Rock crisis, was defeated by theusual combination of Dixiecrats and Re¬publicans.Senator Kennedy was not content to lethis support of strong civil rights measuresrest with voting and speaking within theSenate chamber. In March of 1957 SenatorKennedy publicly announced his positionin a major article on the future of theDemocratic party for Life magazine. In it he stated that the party would have toface the civil rights issue forthrightly or"forfeit our claim to national leadership.”What were President Eisenhower andVice President Nixon doing about civilrights while Senator Kennedy was becom¬ing the civil rights champion? Eisenhowerhad backed Title III of the act in his orig¬inal statement orf it; later, however, hewithdrew his support when it threatenedthe happy relationship between Dixiecratsand Republicans. Thereafter a great ma¬jority of GOP congressmen opposed TitleIII and substituted the weak B r i c k e ramendment for it.But administration opposition came asno surprise to liberal Democrats: twodays after the historic Supreme courtruling in 1954 President Eisenhower wasasked if he had any advice to give theSouth in his capacity as moral leader ofthe country. His answer; "Not theslightest.”He has consistently refused to expressany opinion about the Court's decision.A short while ago he said that even "mywife does not know my opinion” of the de¬cision. When he finally did comment ondesegregation in general he expressed hiswish that it "would go a little slower.”Walter Lippmann wrote of the crisis inLittle Rock which finally forced Eisen¬hower to call out the National guard; "Thesituation is one in which the whole cli¬mate could be changed by a President whotook command, who spoke clearly, in nouncertain terms, to the patriotism, thecommon sense, and the good will of thepeople. . . .”Vice President Nixon, who voted againstFEPC in both the House and the Senate,has now announced his "strong supportof civil rights measures.” He cites his rec¬ord as chairman of the President’s Com¬mittee on Government contracts, a recordwhich, although it goes back to 1954, ispractically devoid of instances of effec¬tive enforcement of the non-discriminationclause written into every government con¬tract.In the spring of this year the Nixoncommittee made national headlines by de¬manding the employment of Negroes onconstruction work on the Capitol; Nixonshould have known that his committeehad no jurisdiction over the reconstruc¬tion work.Despite the headline, the Nixon commit¬tee has never in all of its six years ofoperation recommended the cancellation of a single government contract. Insteadit has done little but mail brochures togroups of businessmen.The Maroon feels that the Issue of civilrights tells more about the two candidatesand their respective parties than anyother; the issue is unique in forcing poli¬ticians to make a choice between moralleadership and the increased politicalpower brought about by friendship withthe Dixiecrats. Vice President Nixon is notunique among Republicans for choosingpolitical power; Senator Kennedy is notunique among Democrats for choosingmoral leadership.The undisputed basis for Senator Kcunedy’s strong stands in both 1957 and1960 is moral; he risked the loss of Southern support and, indeed, is likely to losemany of the Southern states in the coming election.The Maroon believes the same qualityof moral leadership that Kennedy exec-cised In civil rights matters has producedhis realistic (and sometimes unpopular)pronouncements on the goals of U. S.foreign policy.He has consistently argued that theU. S. should not attempt to buy under¬developed nations into its sphere of in¬fluence.Chester Bowies, perhaps Kennedy’s topforeign policy adviser, stressed this pointin a speech in Mandel hall on October 22.He said, "The United States must realizethat newly independent countries in Afri¬ca and Asia want and are entitled to com¬plete freedom from foreign subversioneither at the hands of (he U.S.S.R. or theUnited Slates.”At the insistence of Senator KennedyDemocrats have already begun a totalre-examination of the ends and means ofU. S. foreign policy. The Maroon feels thatsuch a taking of stock is long overdue andwarrants increased confidence in the {Util¬ity of Senator Kennedy and his advisersto rectify the present state of affairs.Senator Kennedy, then, warrants ourendorsement for his record and proposalson aid to education, aid to depressed areas,for his urban renewal programs and forhis action on other domestic problems.We especially commend him for his lead¬ership in the field of civil rights and hisrecognition of the current Ineffectivenessand misorientation of U. S. foreign policy.On the basis of all of these Issue we urgethe election of Senator Kennedy on XXvember 8.the Chicago maroon After remodelingfounded — 1892 Redesigned storeMemo, from Immanuel Kant ma^cs a Prof1^* IxnivA #■* /m»» t t Krt «»me t it 1C? /?! f f mi ll tTO: University administrators, faculty members, and students.FROM: Immanuel Kant."All actions relating to the rights of other men are unjust if the maxims on which theyare based are not compatible with publicity.”This principle is not merely to be regarded as ethical and as belonging only to the doctrine ofVirtue, but it is also to be regarded as juridical and as pertaining to the rights of men. For amaximum cannot be correct if it is such that I cannot allow it to be published without therebyat the same time frustrating my own intention, which would necessarily have to be kept entirelysecret in order that it might succeed, and which I could not publicly confess to'be mine withoutthereby inevitably arousing the resistance of all men against my purpose. It is clear that thisnecessary and universal opposition of all against me on self-evident grounds can arise from noth¬ing else than the injustice which such a maximum threatens to every one. Now we have a new andshiny bookstore. It is clean,efficient, orderly, and greatlypreferable to the old store. Ayear ago we ran a series ofeditorials on the bookstore,requesting several changes inpolicy, and the current redesignedand modern store has satisfiedseveral of our major requests. of the west it is difficult for diestudent to become a scholar.Carillon performs ‘excessively’There are some people on this earth, per¬haps even upon this campus, who enjoylistening to the bagpipe. Other minoritygroups like the accordion, and another smallbut loud segment of our enlightened populationactually find some pleasure in harmonica. Wehave always been desirous of protecting the rightsof minorities, and therefore will quitely enduresmall amounts of harmonica, accordion and bag¬pipe music. We would even take a trio now andthen, just in a spirit of true democracy.There is another body of individuals which en¬joy carillon music. While this remains a continu¬ing mystery to us, it’s their aesthetic. It is unfor¬tunate that it is impossible to enjoy the carillonwitesut involving everyone else in the neighbor¬hood, but again, everyone does need to get a bangout of life and we are inclined *o try to quietlyforgive and forget that small and lonely band ofcarillon adherents.But, with the advent of a new carilloneur, who,opparently still dominated by the Protestant ethic and/or operating under the delusion lhat he isbeing paid by the hour, we have been hearing agood deal more bell music than we are accustomedto. A good deal more than we can silently take,we might add. The new design has made itpossible to stock more titles, yetthe limited area given to booksseems considerably more spaciousthan the old, and browsing is con¬siderably easier and more pleas¬ant. The probability and con¬venience of theft has been mark¬edly reduced, and the honest book¬buying student need no longersupport the petty thief. Theprocess of buying books, especial¬ly text books during the quarterlypanic has been made much morerapid, convenient and even pleas¬ant.Considering the great initial advantage that thebell boys have, we must insist upon making somenoise ourselves.We will take the Sunday morning concertswhich wake us up. We will endure the Wednesdayafternoon concerts which so insidiously invade ourown private office in Ida Noyes hall across fromRockefeller tower. But, four additional hours onSunday evening is a little too much of a bad.thing.Perhaps one of the reasons that acting Chan¬cellor Harrison elected not to move into the Cham-cellor s house during his term of office is that heknew full well that the Chancellor’s home is situ¬ated at the foot of the Chapel. Just as one avoidsapartments next to the elevated tracks, perhapsthe property value of the South campus areamight be decreasing. All these changes we applaud.Yet, the principle area of ourcomplaint, and the major stu¬dent objection to the current sys¬tem has not been affected onewhit by all the new designs,painted walls and flourescentlights. We are speaking of theprice of books.The tools of the scholar andthe would-be scholar are therecords ot the past. These recordsare the ver> books which are of¬fered for sale at the Bookstore;without them the scholar can dolittle. Without easy and cheapaccess to the intellectual history As any “State of the Universi¬ty” address will show, underKi-mpton, this University directeditself towards the production ofscholars and scholarships. Thisbeing true, it would seem to nsthat Chicago should do everipthing posible to assist in theprocess which makes a scholarof the student. This means thatbooks should bo sold as inexpen¬sively as possible.Indeed, not only does our book¬shop not offer a student discount,it is one of the few academicstores that does not even offet afaculty discount.We can see no necessity for theUniversity making r*. moy fromits book sales Fspeeialiv m 'hearea ot required texts, it wouldseem to us that books should beprovided at cost.It is true that, the bookstoreprofits are used for good Vur'poses: as part of the general fund,they pay for scholarships andprofessor’s salaries and speciallectures. Yet we don’t think thatprofit from this source is thatnecessary.Books are expensive, and moststudents are broke. Eitherthrough the establishment of alarge student co-operative, or bymerely offering across-the-boarstudent discounts, the Universitycould perform a great service forall concerned. We frankly thinthis more important than freshlypainted walls and shiny new bookracks.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nor. 4,-:1;i Phi Sig fine is impartialThe Inter-fraternity coun¬cil. not a body with which theMaroon has had any greathistoric alliance, took two sig¬nificant actions at its last meet¬ings, actions with which we read¬ily concur. The proceedings oc-cured with dispatch and we thinkwith impartiality.Of perhaps the greatest sig¬nificance to the campus was theretraction of the decision to insti¬tute Autumn quarter rush thisyear. After reconsidering theproposal, passed by the varioushouses last week, the vote cameout 3 4. After this, It was discov¬ered that the Initial vote wasmeaningless, since all changes inthe rushing procedures requiresa Vs majority, and the new plannever had that much support.Moreover, we are not so naiveto think that the Council’s ration¬ale was the same as ours. Therejection of the plan, in all prob¬ability, was not a rejection of theprinciple of early rush so mucha» tho realization that thus planat this time is totally impractical.Yet the majority of the Councilmembers did come around to re¬ality. did change their minds, anddid make the right decision.The problem of the Phi SigmaDelta “dirty rush” case is of con¬siderably less importance to therest of the campus, but of greatsignificance to the fraternity sys¬tem. Phi Sig was convicted andfined for a willful violation of theletter of the rushing code and thespirit of fair competition.Arguments to the effect that“spirit” has nothing to do with the assessment of a fine do not,and cannot, impress us. Jn mak¬ing a sentence, a judfee quiteproperly considers the whole at¬titude of the defendant, the cir¬cumstances of the offense, andthe intent of the law.The clear intent of the IF codewas to prohibit one fraternityfrom scheduling any social eventwhich would compete with anyscheduled smoker. Phi Sig seemsto have thought that they founda loophole in the law and thatby taking rushes to a loop jazzclub they were operating withinthe code.They certainly were not operat¬ing within the meaning of thecode and if they continue to insistLettersMaroon isTo the editor:I have now read four issues ofthe Maroon. I could hardly be¬lieve what I saw in the first issueand waited a month to be abso¬lutely impartial. But it now be¬comes painfully obvious that theMaroon lacks every conceiv¬able quality of a good collegenewspaper. It’s the most biased,cheap, radical paper I have seen.To put it succinctly, it’s trash.Why don’t you keep your edi¬torials on the editorial page?Why do the Socialists seem tohave half the paper for them¬selves? Why haven’t you evergiven the facts about Mr. Nixon?It appears you have first sup¬ported Mr. Kennedy and then that they were, they are eitherblind, forgetful or dishonest. Wecannot have much respect withthe attitude Phi Sig presented. Itattempted to hide the off campus‘party,’it categorically denied thatany such event was planned aslate as the morning of the event,and continued to feign total innocence of any attempt to keepprospective pledges away fromthe other smokers.The fraternity system was cor¬rect in refusing to countenancethis violation of the code. It seemsto us that the Council struck asound, if painful, blow for theprinciple of fair and honest rush.In this effort we can but add ourfull support‘trash’taken a “don’t bother me with thefacts, my mind’s made up” atti¬tude. Granted, if you presentedthe facts you would have to re¬verse your support; but theMaroon has gotten into sucha rut that facts are used onlyif they support your opinions.A student supported newspaperhas a responsibility to presentthe honest news, and not to boa mouthpiece for a few loud¬mouthed agitators.Perhaps you would do well tofind out what the word “news”means. What you now presentand the way you present it can¬not be called news, but is some¬thing on the order of what theDaily Worker would do.B. RileySimpson ‘deserves congratulation’To the Editor:Dean Simpson deserves congra¬tulation on at least one facet ofttie New College: the attempt toattract more normal, outgoingstudents to the University. Thetypical members of the enteringclass are far from the neurotic,withdrawn stereotype of the UCstudent. They turn their aggres¬sive impulses outward, as is shown in particular by such inci¬dents as the Pierce Tower bombsand the fire alarm which was setoff at 2:45 AM in North House—pranks which art typical of thenormal college. 11 is trend, if en¬couraged, could lead to biggerand better thinj;—truly earth-shaking.The situation will improve evenmore when housing space per¬ mits men, as well as women,undergraduates to be required tolive in the dorms for four years.Then all students will benefitfrom the constant aura of to¬getherness which may drive someto thoughts of violence, but willleave no quiet corners for rest,contemplation, or study,Millea LevinVicky Shiefmanindividual Initiative NeededEditor: responsibility for solving theYour two recent editorials sup- economic and social problemsporting Senator John F. Kennedy that the citizen faces. Second,lor the presidency seem to be that the national government isbased on two premises. First, that the one best suited for meeting1 he government should assume to local and individual needs,an ever increasing extent the Both these points are regret-Editor-in-chiefNeal JohnstonBusiness manager Advertising managerWilliam G. Bauer Phil GasteyerManaging editorKen PierceEditor emeritus Lance HaddixAssistant managing editor Avima RuderEditorial secretary Caryle GeierNews editor Jay GreenbergSubscription manager Phil HydeNational news editor Gene VinogrodoffInternational news editor Al DowtyCulture editor John DietmonnSecretory to the culture editor Dotty SharplessSports editor Chuck BernsteinCopy editor John JuskeviceResearch editor Carole QuinnCalendar editor Donna BergPhotography coordinator Al BergerCirculation manager Note SwiftBusiness office manager Joan HelmkinClassifieds manager Maurice ZeitlinSpecial projects Alan FernEditorial staff: Bert Cohler, Debby Dinitz, Roger Downey, Dave Kahn, ArtMacEwan7> Pat Maynard, Dave Nelson, Jim Thomason, Steve Westheimer.Photography staff: Danny Lyon, John Osgood, Nate Swift.Sports staff; Mike Canes, Mike Eisenberg, Judy Shapiro. able in that they make govern¬ment competitive with individualinitiative and cultivate the notionthat our salvation lies in materialservices from a distant center.Benevolent government can be avicious circle; to carry out itsprograms, government removesprivate accumulations of capitalby taxation, thus forbidding theindividual or the local unit ofgovernment from acting effec¬tively for economic and socialimprovement.Many people support federalprojects in their local area because the federal government ispaying half or 90% of the cost.How falacious! The taxpayer pays100% of the cost, either he or hisprogency, plus a sizable sur¬charge for having the federal gov¬ernment administer the project.It is difficult to see why somany hold the President or theCongress responsible for everyfluxuation in the economy andexpect government rather thanhimself to rectify any difficulties.Is one to accept the theory thatwe are helpless entities in aneconomic and social order, andthat any discomfort or dislocationof the individual should be caredfor by the government? By thisline of reasoning, society oweseveryone a living, and those un¬able to compete favorably shouldenjov comfort legislation. On thecontrary, this nation becamegreat under individual initiative,initiative often nurtured by ad¬versity. OnCannwfi WithMax Stolman(Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf,” “The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillisetc.)THE PARTY WEEKEND: ITS CAUSEAND CUREWith the season of party weekends almost upon us, my mail oflate has been flooded with queries from young inmates of women’scolleges wishing to know how one conducts one’s self when onehas invited a young gentleman for a weekend, so let us todaytake up this burning issue.Well, my dear girls, the first thing to remember is that youryoung gentleman is far from home and frightened. Put him athis ease. You might, for instance, surprise him by having hi3mother sitting in a rocker on the station platform when he getsoff the train.Next, what kind of corsage should you send your young gentle¬man? Well, my beloved maidens, orchids are always acceptable.So, indeed, are phlox and delphinium. In fact, most any florawill serve. Do try, however, to avoid carnivorous plants.If you find, my esteemed fillies, that your local florist has runout of stock, do not be dismayed. Make a corsage out of paper.But pick good, stiff, durable paper—twenty dollar bills, forexample.Remember at all times, my fond wenches, to show your younggentleman courtesy and consideration. Open doors for him,walk on the traffic side of the path, assist him to the punch bowl,rip his parka, light his Marlboros. (What, you ask, if he doesn’tsmoke Marlboros? Ridiculous, my precious nymphs! Of course,lie smokes Marlboros! Don’t you? Don’t I? Doesn’t everybodywho knows a hawk from a handsaw? What other cigarettegives you such a lot to like? Such easy-drawing filtration? Suchunfiltered taste? Such soft pack or flip-top box? No other, mysweet minxes, no other. Marlboro stands alone, and any manworthy of you, my estimable damsels, is bound to be a Marlboroman.)If you will follow the simple instructions stated above, mygood lasses, you will find that you have turned your younggentleman into a fast and fervent admirer. There is nothingquite like a party weekend to promote romance. I am in mindof a party weekend some years ago at Miss Pomfritt’s Seminaryfor well-born females in West Linotype, Ohio. Serafina Sigafoos,a sophomore at this institution, majoring in napkin folding, sentan invitation to a young man named Fafnir Valve, a junior atthe Joyce Kilmer School of Forestry, majoring in sap and boles.Serafina had been ape for Fafnir since high school, but Fafnirpreferred a girl named Gelia Fleshwound, the high school drummajorette who once threw a baton so high she impaled a south¬bound mallard.Anyhow, Serafina sent an invitation to Fafnir, and he came,and she showered him with kindness and cuff links, and thenhe went away, and Serafina sat anxiously by the mailbox,wondering whether she would ever hear from him again. Sureenough, two weeks later she got a letter: “Dear Serafina, Canyou let me have fifty bucks? Yours, Fafnir.”Whimpering with ecstasy, she ran to the bank and withdrewthe money and mailed it to him. From then on, she got thesame request every week, and as a result, she became very wellacquainted with Ralph T. Involute, teller of the West LinotypeBank and Trust Co., and their friendship ripened into love, andtoday they are happily married and live in Stamen, Oregon,where Ralph is in the extruded molasses game and Serafinais a hydrant. © i»ao m»i shuim*** • *Every weekend is a party weekend with Marlboros—or Marl¬boro’s unfiltered companion cigarette—mild, flavorful PhilipMorris. Try the newest Philip Morris—the sensational king-size Commander. Have a Commander—welcome aboard!Hartley Hoskinsif ■hhmmSSHHHHIHMBHBMBHHBILettersManion comlains Maroon distorted his viewsDear Editor:A reader has sent me the Octo¬ber 21st issue of the Maroon con¬taining a report of a recentspeech by Linus Pauling at theUniversity of Chicago. Accordingto the somewhat ambiguous ac¬count, I was represented byeither Dr. Pauling or the Maroonreporter as having said that Iam willing to sacrifice 60 mil¬lion Americans to be able todestroy all the Russians becausethe Russians are Godless.”This is the most fantastic liethat I have ever seen in print.Fortunately, the “At Random”WBBM recording will bear meout. Here is the truth. In thetelevision interview, I used a fig¬ure cited in a survey made bythe Rand corporation to refute acontention by Dr. Pauling that ina nuclear war with the SovietGovernment, we would suffer atleast 120 million casualties andcivilization would disappear inthe process.The Rand survey—with whichDr. Pauling was familiar — putthe maximum casualties in sucha war at 63 million, and estimatedthat the population loss would befully recovered in this countryIn five or ten years.I did not say that the Russiansare Godless, or express the wishthat the Russians should be de¬stroyed. On the contrary, I ex¬pressed the wish and hope thatthe Russian people—who prob¬ably have more religious faithper capita than we have—couldbo liberated from the tyrannicalslavery in which they are now held by the Godless Soviet Com¬munist Government,I further stated that, becausethe Soviet Government is offi¬cially Godless and unmoral, ithas not kept nor will it observeand obey any agreement when itit to their Communist interest tobreak it. Dr. Pauling advocatedfurther agreements w i t h thisGangster Regime which is nowbreaking an existing agreementto suspend nuclear testing.In the course of the televisioninterview, Dr. Pauling said thatPatrick Henry‘s declaration,“Give n*e liberty or give medeath” is “popycock.” At leastI quoted Patrick Henry — withwhom I agree—accurately. Dr.Pauling or the reporter quotedme inaccurately. The statementattributed to me by the Maroonis false and libelous.I consequently request you todetermine definitely whether itis a report of what Dr. Paulingsaid to the audience at the Uni¬versity of Chicago or whether itis a deduction by your reporter.Meanwhile, will you please pub¬lish this explanation in the nextissue of your paper and send mea copy. I am requesting WBBMto verify what I actually said onthe television interview in ques¬tion.Clarence Manion(Editor's note—The lette.raboi'e is reprinted in full, in com¬pliance with Dean M anion's re¬quest. Upon receiving the letter,the Maroon procured tape record¬ings of the events in question—Linus Pauling’s speech in Man- del Hall, and the “At Randomtelevision shoiv of October 15.The tape recording of Paulingstated in part: .“(Manion urgesthat we plan to attack and de¬stroy Russia, and he says it isworthwhile to sacrifice 60 millionAmerican men, woman, and chil¬dren, and larger numbers stillin England, France, and so on todo so.*Why does he urge this terri¬ble act? Because he says theRussians are Godless, they don tbelieve in God, they are amoral,and they should be destroyed.Well, Dr. Erich Fromm was on(the “At Random TV programwith us), and he said that hewas Godless, he was an atheist.And I said that I was Godless.And so our adversary then, 1 think, hoped that we would beamong the CO million.”Although this tape aloneshowed that Pauling was quotedcorrectly in the Maroon, theMaroon also obtained a tape rec¬ording of the “At Random” tele¬vision program, so as to deter¬mine exactly what Manion hadsaid.On the program, Manion dis¬cussed the movie “On the Beach’’with its producer Stanley Kra¬mer. Manion stated:“So the implication of the mot-*ie “On the Beach’’ that therewould be a few people left (afteran atomic war) is not true, notthat 60 million casualties any¬time, anywhere wouldn’t be ahorrible thing to contemplate,but it uxiuld be worse in myjudgment to sacrifice freedom than it would be to sacrifice r,omillion people.”A WBBM TV official notedthat, in the context of the discus¬sion of Russia and the UnitedStates, “sacrificing freedom”meant refraining from war withRussia.While the Maroon wasn’t aide,to check the entire program tosee whether or not Manion ac¬tually said the Russians wireGodless, the same television offi¬cial slated that “practically evi n/time Manion turned around hesaid that Russia was GodlessTherefore, we conclude thatthe Maroon's coverage of Paul¬ing’s lecture was entirely accu¬rate, and further, that Paulinghad some basis in fact for hisstatements.The Editor)Student writes ode to deanTo the editor:Simpson AgonistesI walk throughout the longschoolroom questioning,A kind of old nun in a whitehood replies;The children learn to cipherand to sing,To study reading books andhistory,To cut and sew, be neat ineverythingIn the best modem way . . .— Yeats,Among School ChildrenAnd will it be worthwhile, after all,When have clean shaven, suited,skirted onesOur dirtless little isle inheritedIf one, twisting a ponytail be¬hindAn undisturbed head,Should say: “I came for this?”Is it with pretty colors on adressThat we may penitently hoperedressOutraged togetherness?When we have gathered all thechildren home;Filters forflavor-finest flavor by far! When finally the sponge deniesits pores;(When Sunday bells shall pealeto call them toTalk of the Best Dressed Manup in the sky);(When they shall all be housedin dormitories),Then how should they presumeTo spit out all the butt-ends oftheir days and ways?And how should we presume?Stephen Sittler‘Praises’UC dormsWith vitreous arguments con¬cerning our comprehensive dormsystem being tossed around bymembers of the Maroon and allthe rest of the campus, I proposea quite needful consideration: Letus reconsider. Perhaps, we thestudents, have been too violentin our flailing against this raiofully constructed organism, called“dorm.”If we would step back, so tospeak, and gaze on our well or¬ganized houses, we should be en¬lightened to new ideas and b< t-ter thoughts. Socially, dorm liv-ing enriches our experience andlightens our academic pathway.We recognize the value of ourmechanism which lies within ourvast, articulated approach to life,Brave New Dorm.Dean SmithL'HOMMEPREVOYANTfNsalt qtie, pour garantlr A 8afamilie et A lui-m6me la*6curitA de l'avenlr, il n'ya rien de mieux qu’un pro¬gramme d’a*surance-vieform A de polices Sun Life,adaptAes A set beseins py-ticuliw?,.NEW DUAL FILTERProduct of c/& JntuAcean <J<jfax£o~£c>/y>any- — cJofxvcco is our middle name © » r c8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 4, 1960 Tareyton Ralph J. Wood Jr., ’48I M. LoSolte Chicago, IU.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-6600}« rsprleerde la Corhpagnfad’assurance-vie Sun Ufa duCanada. Noe plant moaemetpeuvent Stre adapt ^t A vQtDropret betoint. Puit-fe avoirt occasion da vout expoterquclgues uns de cet plans fSant obligation, ivldemment.SUN LIFE ASSURANCECOMPANY OF CANADATareyton has the taste—Dual Filterdoes it! Here’s how the DUAL FILTER DOES IT;1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL... definitely proved to make the taste of a cigarette mild andsmooth .. • ... -2. with a pure white outer filter. Together they select and balancethe flavor elements in the emoke. Tareyton’s flavor-balance givesyou the best taste of the best tobaccos. •*“'Alumni hear lecture seriesThree University of Chica¬go professors participated ina series of lectures about cam¬paign issues delivered to themembers of the UC alumni asso¬ciation.One of the speakers. WalterJohnson, chairman of the UCHistory department, claimed thatth<* major campaign issue wasstrength in the Presidency. “Ifone feels the President shouldplay a limited role, then VicePresident Nixon should be elect¬ed." he said. He continued by pre¬dicting that although Nixonwould play a stronger role thanI» resident Eisenhower, hewouldn’t strengthen the execu¬tive branch as much as SenatorJohn F. Kennedy, his Democraticopponent.I )ismissing age, religion, andimages as irrelevant issues, hestated that the main question inthe campaign was: “Which manin which party can best help theAmerican people in adjusting toadvances in science and civillights?” In reference to thisstatement, he noted that. “TeddyRoosevelt was 42 when he becamepresident, U.S. Grant was 46. Onewas a good and the other a badPresident.”Regarding the “image being di¬rected that Nixon was a poor boywho worked in his father’s gro¬cery store,” Johnson retorted, “I worked in my mother’s storewhen I was a boy. I don’t thinkthat qualifies me for the presi¬dency.”“Historians may well look backon this year as the year of over¬looking the great Issues,” he con¬tinued.“In many people’s minds criti¬cism has become an ugly word.The irony of this position is thatit’s nowhere more ardently em¬braced than in Moscow or Peip¬ing.”Hans Morganthau, director ofthe Center for the Study ofAmerican Foreign and MilitaryPolicy at the University of Chi¬cago and currently a visiting pro¬fessor at Harvard University,asserted, in another address inthe series, that the question ofcivilization’s survival must trans¬cend all other problems.“Any fool or knave,” he stated,“will have it in his power to de¬stroy humanity, or to set off thechain reaction that will do so.In five years a Castro or someonelike him will telegraph: ‘A nuc¬lear bomb in Grand Central Sta¬tion will destroy Now York, ifthe United States docs not do soand so.’“This typo of thing is Inevit¬able. Any nation can blackmailany other and face it with sur¬render or partial destruction. Woare entering an era of enormous danger to ourselves and to allmankind.”According to Morgenthau, youcan “test” the candidates onforeign policy “by their willing¬ness to face and tell you thetruth about the situation in whichthe United States finds itself, andnot that this is the best of allpossible worlds.”Drastic changes in the last 10years have made U.S.,foreignpolicy obsolete, Morgenthau said.The fact that the United Statesno longer has a monopoly ofatomic weapons; the revival ofthe Lenin ideas of conquest ofthe world; and the ability ofother countries to develop atomicpower have created new priori¬ties, he continued.America, he said, must restoreitself as the economic leader toemulate. Increased Soviet power and prestige and American "pla¬cid satisfaction with what it hasachieved” is undermining thattraditional leadership, he warned.In the third speech, Dean AllenWallis of the Business school cri¬ticized both political parties for“growthmanship.” Wallis servedon the Cabinet Committee onPrice Stabilization for EconomicGrowth during the Eisenhoweradministration.He accused both parties of dis¬torting the economic picture bypicking periods that favor them.He stated that the only periodthat gives an accurate indicationof post-war economic growth is1948 to 1957. This is a goodperiod, said Wallis, because itbegins and ends with a peak year.Taking this period, it can beshown that economic growth hasbeen exceptionally good, he con¬ tinued. “Any body that sayswe’re becoming second rale isputting himself in the ludicrousposition of saying once we werethird rate,” he concluded.Attacking K e n n e d y’s state*ments during the campaign, hetermed the comparisons withRussian growth “nonsense,” say¬ing that our lead over the Rus¬sians is shortening in some areasand increasing in others. He pro¬nounced the democratic fiscalpolicy “dangerous,” stating thatthere will be gradual inflation ifthe Democrats win, even thoughmost Democrats, including Ken¬nedy are opposed to it.The inflation that will resultfrom the policy will lead to mildprice controls, he continued. Wal¬lis expected the Federal Reserve’sefforts to increase the amount ofmoney in circulation to have agood effect soon.Heartbreak House opensWilson will lectureAngus Wilson, English nov¬elist and critic, will speak on“Conformity and the novel”next Wednesday evening at8:30, in the 214th William VaughnMoody lecture. The lecture is tobe given at the new law schoolauditorium, and admission will bewithout ticket or charge.Wilson is making his first lec¬ture tour in America this fall, andhas already spoken in New York,California, and Iowa, according toMorton Zabcl, professor of Eng¬lish. He will also discuss his workin a presentation of the “My lifeand yours” series, next Thursdayat 8:30 pm in Ida Noyes eastlounge.Zabel speaks of Wilson as “oneof the outstanding novelists ofcontemporary English literature,and one of the leading writers ofthe post-war period.” Born in 1913in South Africa, he began to writein 1946. Zabel notes that with thepublication of his first book ofstories, The Wrong Set, in 1949,' he was immediately recognizedas one of the original and distinc¬tive talents of his generation. Thewit and satire of those tales worefrom the first accompanied byevidences of a genuinely seriouscritical purpose, and a keen per¬ception of the social and moralconditions of the time.”In 1952 W’ilson published hisfirst novel, Hemlock and After,followed in 1956 by Anglo-SaxonAltitudes, and The Middle Age of Mrs. Eliot in 1958. He has alsowritten a critical study of EmileZola (1951), a play, The MulberryBush (1955), and many criticalessays and reviews for Englishand American periodicals; his tel¬evision plays, “After the Show,”was produced in London in 1959.Wednesday’s lecture will be thefirst of this year’s WilliamVaughn Moody lecture series,which has presented Y. B. Yeats,Marianne Moore, Eudora Welty,Stravinsky and Ralph Vaughn-Williams, among many otherspeakers, during the 43 years ofits existence. The lectureship wasfounded in 1917, in h o n o r ofMoody, 19th century Americanpoet and a member of the UCEnglish faculty from 1895-1907,three years before his death.Three further speakers are ex¬pected to be presented in tlie lec¬tureship this year. “Heartbreak House” byShaw, the first Universitytheatre production of theyear, opens in Mandel Hallnext Thursday. The presentationwill bo enhanced, according to UTdirector Bill Alton, by the useof a revolving disc—a permanentaddition to the theatre group’sequipment — which permits thepresentation of multi-scene showson the Mandel hall stage.Rick Ames, Judy Deutch, E.Martin deMoseato, Ellen Fields,and Eve Twose star in the pro¬duction, which uses sets designedby Dolores Alton. “Of the tencast member s,” Alton com¬ mented, “five are in the College,three are graduate students, oneis the wife of a graduate student,and one is a University em¬ployee.” ►“The only technical difficultyin the production is the shortageof tech crew members, a peren¬nial problem at UT,” remarked technical director Frank Marrero.Technicians are always in de¬mand for Theatre productions,and all those interested in techwork in future presentations areurged to come to the UT officeon the third floor of the Rey¬nolds club at any time to volun¬teer.Eye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetat University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372CHRISTIAN SCIENCE REVEALS GOU AS“A VERY PRESENT HELP”You ore cordiolly invited to attend this free lecture byOTTO G. ZIEGENHAGEN, C.S.B.Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church,The First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, MassachusettsMONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1960 at 8:00 P.M.in SWIFT HALL COMMON ROOMALL ARE WELCOMESponsored by Christian Science Organizationat The University of ChicagoSKI IN THE ALPSDURING CHRISTMAS*5 5260Seventeen Day Trip includes:Round-Trip Air FareTwo Ski Lodges (of your choice)MealsTransportation to and from Ski Lodges and EntertainmentfRarco polo 'Iraticl 3crfliccTravel Adviser! Since 1276No Charge for Oar ServicesOpen Doily 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.; Also Mon. Eves.1658 E. 55th St. BU 8-5944 Shade* of Aladdin's lamp-the genie is back! AndEsterbrook is the sorcerer that turned the trick . . . withthe Esterbrook Classic fountain pen! It works magicwith ink! Makes it write smoother . . . makes writingwith it easy to read!But that’s not all! The Esterbrook Classic FountainPen offers you a choice of 32 points. Pick the point thatsuits you best and—presto!—begin writing the way you’vealways wanted to write!Choose from as many colors as you’d find in an Ara¬bian Street Scene ... six in all! Put magic in your hand¬writing . . . with an Esterbrook Classic fountain pen lSde/ittooH ffbn&• T.K. Tk« Botoafenmk Pm Co. Tf.o Sato'brook OfOMfSFountain Pon*2.95Otbar Est«rbrooftp*n* fromMo. ± icixn a r u \ r k r. n m a r n n M • 9For 68 yeorsDorms focus, guide student lifeIn the nearly seventy yearssince the founding of the Uni¬versity, the residence hallshave served as a focal pointfor the social, recreational, andresidential life of the studentbody.“The fundamental point isthat the University when it openedhad a distinct view of the extra¬curricular activities of students,”commented Richard Storr, who iswriting a histoiy of the Univer¬sity, “the view that these activi¬ties should be meaningfully or¬ganized. This was the origin ofthe house system.When the University opened onOctober 1, 1892 space, and espe¬cially space for student housing,was at a premium.“The neighborhood of the Uni¬versity was sparsely settled. Itwas impossible to allow severalhundred men and women studentsto appear only to learn that therewas no place in which they couldlive. Indeed, without the assur¬ance that there would be placesto receive them they were notlikely to appear at all,” remi¬nisced Thomas Goodspeed in hishistory of the early years ofthe University.“A dormitory for women wasfound in the Beatrice apartmentbuilding on 57th and Dorchester.The D rex el apartments wereleased for men students. The pro¬visions for men includeu, in addi¬tion, the Divinity and Graduate ganized living which involved thesacrifice of the real functions ofthe home. The boardinghouse,the hotel, and the rented fur¬nished room do not furnish prop¬er means of expression for thoseprinciples which characterize thefamily.“The first aspect of the familywhich should characterize the res¬idence hall is corporate life. Itshould afford an opportunity fortraining in those qualities of dis¬position and character which areessential to citizenship.“The college hall should affordan opportunity for the growth ofthose moral attributes whichshould mark human relations.Persons living In isolated inde¬pendence loce the chance to gainbreath of view, tolerance of opin¬ion, kindliness and generosity inact and in word, afforded by res¬idence with others.’”In the spring of 1892 Snellhall, opened for use. It wasthe gift of Mrs. Amos Snell asa memorial to her husband. Al¬though designated specifically asa men’s residence hall, Snellhoused temporarily in the springof 1893 the women who had beenliving at the Beatrice.The women’s quadrangle — in¬cluding at first Kelly, Beecher,and Foster — opened at the be¬ginning of the University’s sec¬ond year and solved the pressinghousing problem. But just twoyears later the Weekly noted that"if the crowded condition of theThe Beatrice apartments, used as the first residence hallfor women in 1892. A fire in September destroyed muchof the building, which is slated for demolition. University dormitories forebodeswomen and one third of themlive in the Women’s Quadrangle.Each hall has a head, a womanselected by the trustees from thefaculty (there were three womendeans and six female facultymembers at the time); one whois hostess at all social events con¬nected with the hall and withwhom the girls may consult asthey would with their own moth¬ers."Ail rules connected with thegirls have been introduced andvoted on by the house membersthemselves, with the exception ofchaperonage, which was pre¬scribed by the University butwhich receives the heartiest en¬dorsement from the students.The fourth Women’s Quadran¬gle dormitory, Green, donated byMrs. Kelly and dedicated to herparents,k Turpin and MarthaGreen, opened in 1899 and com¬pleted the women’s residence com¬plex.The house system was describedin 1904 by Nott Flint, a UC grad¬uate, as an integral part of theUniversity. “With its urban situ¬ation, its large body of graduatestudents, and the strenuousnessof its atmosphere,” he stated, “theUniversity would have been ingrave danger of being an unsocialand unhomelike place, had it notbeen for the house system.“All students living on the quad¬rangles, in fraternity houses, anda number living at home are or¬ganized into what are practicallyclubs.“The college authorities believethat the social life of the Univer¬sity should center more ami morein the University houses. Theyhope to provide means for devel¬oping a fine social atmosphere bythe formation of comparativelysmall groups hound together ina large central organization.”This plan of small houses unitedin a autonomous dormitory groupwas fulfilled in part with the con¬struction of the Burton Judsoncourts in 1931.“The residence buildings shouldnot be mere dormitories,” urgedPresident Burton in 3925, "butplaces of humane educational res¬idence. They should provide op¬portunity on one hand for per¬sonal contacts, under the mostfavorable conditions, with olderpersons and fellow students, andfor the silent influences of goodbooks and art. They should pro¬vide for a library, a commonroom, and a dining hall in eachunit. They should provide roomsalso for resident fellows or tutorsand perhaps other members ofthe faculty, making more inti¬mate conversation possible withindividuals or small groups thanis practicable in more publicrooms.“The aim should be to preservethe best features of our fraternityhouses and women’s halls, butwith better facilities for the exer¬tion of intellectual influences. La Maison Franeaise, another ex¬perimental dormitory, was unus¬ual in that “only French is spokenby the residents, and' the chiefcare of the iiead, a French woman,is that the women may learn theimportant details of French life.Greenwood house, an apartmentbuilding across the Midway, wasrented by the University to pro¬vide housing for woman students,in much the same way that theBeatrice was rented in 1892.When Hutchins became presi¬dent,” commented Professor half of the returning students a re¬living in the dormitory system.This rise may be accounted t„rin part by the additional roomsavailable this year and in part l,vthe growing lack of inexpensiveapartments and rooms in the 1 niversity area. Further increasesare anticipated by the housing of-flee when the new residence re-quirements begin to take effort.In the past few years, dormi¬tories have come to be more andmore important in campus so<i;i|life. Besides the faculty fellowThe newest University dorm, the New Men's residencehall, opened for occupancy this autumn.dormitories fnow Gates-Blake).” anything, there will be a great in-The Beatrice was the center of crease in the number of studentscampus social life that first year, this fall. Every room in Foster,"One sees in the history of the Kelly, and Beecher is occupied.”first year of the Beatrice,” Storr a report on women’s housing , .. , ,pointed out, "a sample of the at 1he University was issued later rentu,re ,n «K»pe»«ve housekeep-house life that the University in October of 1895 by the Weekly. ,nff’ for "on,en ,n 1<rank O-“During the 1920s, many varie¬ties of student housing were tried.Drexel house, described as “Atried to establish Marion Talbot,at first the assistant dean ofwomen, organized social life inthe dormitory. She was influencedby Alice Freeman Palmer, thendean of women, who had a strongsense of the importance of thelife of the girls’ houses in thesense of social clubs.”Dean Talbot wrote much ex¬plaining the purpose of a housesystem in a college and expres¬sing hers and the University’sideas on the subject."The very use of the term ‘dor¬mitory’ shows how little concep¬tion college authorities have ofthe real function of a building inwhich the student is to receivesome of the most profound andlasting impressions of her wholecollege life."The student during the collegeyears should be kept under influ¬ence which will later make hershrink from those aspects of or- Hara’s 1928 Guide to the Campus,"Out of 1,400 students, 450 are was located at 58th and Drexel. Storr, “the University went intoa slump as far as this part ofstudent life (housing) was con¬cerned. There is a sharp differ¬ence between llutchin’s regardfor the educational aspects of theUniversity and the day to day liv¬ing of the school.”In spile of both Harper andBurton’s concern for the educa¬tional opportunities inherent ina dormitory system, most stu¬dents did not live in the dormi¬tories until recent years. And forthose that did, the dormitorieswere thought of as plaees to sleepand eat, rather than as centers ofcampus social life.The construction of Burton-Judson courts in 1931 terminatedan era. Except for the pre fabsthrown up hastily after the sec¬ond World War for (he returningG. I. .students and their families,no new dormitories were essayedfor over 25 years.A new building program com¬menced with the building of theNew Women’s dormitory in 1957.This program of dormitory con¬struction continued with the open¬ing of the first tower of the NewMen’s dormitory this fall.The proportion of entering andreturning students living in thedormitory system has risensharply in the last few years. In1956 only 20 per cent of the re¬turning students and half of theentering students moved into Uni¬versity housing. This year 76 percent of the new students and overHyde Park residents gather hay from a field in front of Greenwood hall, once a UCdorm, early in the century. program frecently revised to in¬clude both more faculty membersand more faculty student con¬tacts), and the dormitory athleticprograms and coffee hours, moreusual social events frequently oe-cur in the dormitories. Largescale water fights occasionallytake place indeed, in March of3958 a water fight involving ninefraternities, the C-group dormi¬tories and the new Women'sdorm was waged.Fertility rites staged by B .1residents were among the moreoffbeat diversions of dormitoryresidents last year, but the publicamatory displays in the centrallounge of the New Women’s doi mevoked far greater repercussions:talks by housing director JamesNewman and househead MargeRavitts and codification of loungebehavior rules by the house coun¬cils, as well as much arousedcomment by dormitory residents.The most recent development inthe housing system is the an¬nouncement of residence require¬ments for all students who enterin the future. “There is a delib¬erate desire,” state Alan Simpson,dean of the College, “for the de¬velopment of the college as a resi¬dential system. The developmentof a residential college educationoutside the classroom, the devel¬opment of a residential college iasdistinct from making some bous¬ing available to a limited numberof students) is an extension ofthe res|>onsihilities of the College.“The usification of a new resi¬dential policy for undergraduatesis threefold. It lies (1) in thevalues of a residential life per so,(2) in the conditions of our neigh¬borhood, and (3) in the expecta¬tion of better academic perform¬ance.”“We are continually convinced,”dean Newman has said, "Thatlife in ihe residence halls has edu¬cational advantages. Living in thiscommunity is definitely an edu¬cational experience. Life in thehall leads to an understanding ofdifferent kinds of people, and thedevelopment of tolerance and dif¬ferent abilities through social in¬teraction. The residence halls area place where the student ranfind himself.”Percy addresses students"My decision to associatewith the University was oneof the most important of mylife. It’s a dynamic institution one of you can contribute an ac¬tive part in politics, no matterwhat field you enter.“You should try to be objectiveeven in a partisan campaign. The second world war. The Koreanwar was unfortunate and couldhave been avoided — with hind¬sight. Also, we have allowedthings to happen which shouldn’t Triumvirate organizesMome Paths girls' clubA new women’s club—theMome Raths — is being or- ^eet* a" sJster ”°y“We demonstrate this by showingwhenever weaffecting change of all types rca* V£duo lies in the debating of have happened such as the space ganized on campus. "The idea! m / nlotiw fh a OUrl TV* l coil A Orn n /Invin 4- V-» y-v TT’J a/wi !_ •_ il- _ ^“'1 _ 1 _ V T T _throughout the country,” saidCharles Percy, chairman of theRepublican platform committeeand UC trustee, to an audience of100 College students last Thurs¬day night.After graduating in 1041 fromUC as a fourth year marshal toHutchins, Percy joined the firmof Bell and Howell. At the age of23, he was chosen member of theboard. At 29, he became presidentof the company. In 1949, he wasnamed one of the ten outstandingyoung men in the US by the Jun¬ior Chamber of Commerce. Hereceived the public service awardof the UC Alumni association in1953.In this, the first of the 1960 61“My life and yours” series talks,Percy discussed education, poli¬tics, and business.Percy views education as a con¬tinuing process which does notend with a degree or the class¬room. After hearing of partici¬pation in the Student for the Abo¬lition of the House Un-AmericanActivities committee, he said, “Iwas violently opposed to Mc¬Carthy but I feel that if thefunctions of the House committeewere properly carried out, itwould be beneficial, but when dis¬torted, the committee becomesbad.’*With regard to the studentloyalty oath required for all gov¬ernment scholarships and loans,Percy said, “I feel that it is adisgrace — most Republicans do."He told the students that “each issues and in- formulating theideas of the nation.“There is no clear-cut distinc¬tion between foreign and domes¬tic policy for to be strong abroad,we must be strong at home."In outlining our foreign policy,he commented that “the greatestmistake made in 15 years was thedemobilization of troops after the and missile gap during the Eisen- vvas born in the C-shop. Wehower administration. Yet we decided that the other clubs wereneed not look at the gloomy sidefor after no effort in these fieldsfor many years, with money anddetermination, we have almostclosed the gap.”Percy remarked that the de¬bates between presidential candi¬dates have many weaknesses. not sisterly enough, and came tothe conclusion that a new girlsclub was needed,” commentedMyrna Helmer, one of the found¬ers of the new organization.“We have lots of club spiritalready,” said Carey Linn,another of the three founders.Election day protest plannedDelegates attending the civil liberties. He will also speak the right to vote, with protectionStudent Nonviolent Coordin¬ating conference, SNCC,issued a call for nationwidedemonstrations on electionday. It is hoped that this ac¬tion will call attention to the de¬nial of voting rights in the South,and to the need for meaningfulcivil rights action. on loyalty oaths and the possibili- by the federal government,ty of their removal. Jenkins will through appropriate legislationconfer with SG and other student with “teeth in it.” They also wantIn conjunction with these demonstrations.action groups while he is here.The SNCC project is meant toserve notice to both the victoriouspresidential candidate and thenew Congress that effective civilrights action must be first ontheir agendas. SNCC is empha¬sizing two main themes in thedemonstrations Timothy Jenkins,National Affairs Vice - president,United States National StudentAssociation, will speak at an elec¬tion day rally at Altgeld hall,Roosevelt University. He willalso speak on campus Wednes¬day, November 9, 7:330 pm, inSoc Sci 122.In speaking on the “Socialchange of the student movement”Jenkins will discuss the southernstudents protests and the fightfor civil rights in the North andthe South. He will also discussFayette county, voting rights andJob opportunitiesRepresentitives of the following organizations will conductrecruiting interviews at the Office of Vocational Guidance andPlacement during the week of November 7. Interview appoint¬ments may be arranged through Mr. L. S. Calvin, room 200,Reynolds club, extension 3284.November 8 Mitre corporation, Bedford, Massachusetts willInterview prospective graduates at all academic levels inMathematics, Physics, and Statistics. Graduate studentswill be interviewed for summer employment if schedule isnot filled with students seeking permanent positions.November 9 -National Cash Register company, Dayton, Ohio,will interview SM anc’ PhD candidates in chemistry talispecializations), mathematics, physics, and statistics forpositions in the Company’s broad research program.November 9 Avco Research and Advanced Development divi¬sion, Wilmington, Massachusetts, will speak with SM andPhD, candidates in mathematics, physics, statistics, andchemistry (analytical, organic, physical). Graduate stu¬dents will be interviewed for summer employment if sched¬ule is not filled with students seeking permanent positions.November 10 Whirlpool Corporation Research laboratories,St. Joseph, Michigan, will interview SM and PhD candi¬dates in physics and chemistry (inorganic, physical). Willalso interview graduate students for summer employment.November 11- Lawrence Radiation laboratory, Livermore, Ca¬lifornia will speak with mathematicians, physicists, andstatisticians at all degree levels. Will also interview ad¬vanced degree chemists although the number of positionsin this area is quite limited. “We who can register and vote,enjoy the freedom of speech, andthe right of protest know thatthese are precious democraticrights that must be preserved andextended to all Americans.“We are voting ourselves and areurging everyone else who canvote to do so to help win thesesame rights for the millions ofdisinfranchised citizens of theSouth.”Although the demonstrations arcnon-partisan they are trying toinfluence the new president andCongress to take definite politicalstands on certain issues. Theywant Congress to enforce the1957 Civil Rights act and to assure Rule 22 of the Senate stricken sothat civil rights legislation willnot be blocked by filibustering.The demonstrations are beingsponsored nationally by SNCC,and supported by the NationalStudent association. The NSAcommittee of SG, the UC Commit¬tee to Support the Southern Stu¬dents Protest, and SG are alsosponsoring the demonstration.The election day demonstrationwill be held on Tuesday, Novem¬ber 8, at 3:30 pm, opposite Roose¬velt university, 430 S. Michigan.All UC students, other studentsand interested people are invitedto take part in the demonstration. The motto of the new club is“Little fingers in all sorts ofthings,” and the crest is “a varia¬tion of the Mafia sign,” accordingto Carol Lasko, the third of thefounders.The club plans to have “moresocial activities, especially withthe fraternities,” remarked MissLinn. “We plan to hold meetingson the roof of Swift hall, at 64thand Cottage Grove, and at neigh¬borhood bars.”“Our first club activity,” notedMiss Helmer,” has already takenplace. We went trick or treatingfor beer on 63rd street, and werequite successful.”The club expects to get the pro¬per approval from Mrs. MargeRavitts, official sponsor of Inter-Club council, the Student Activi¬ties office, and Maxine Blau,president of Delta Sigma and theInter-Club council, and to beginits rushing activities next week.Get In TheMedicia most pleosont coffee houseitabitFrench Breokfost Sunday 10-11376 E. 53rdLJ L..J all the Free Press booksTHE GREEN DOOR1450 East 57thBritish and AmericanQuality Paperbacks BOOKSHOPHY 3-5829rtorwgu ear kaspitai l> eftncMl 3-3113dialers in:castrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli & michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespiciafists in* speed tuningcustom engine installationsclutch • ygear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachworkMi lastsr MG psychiatrist2306 e. 71st st.Chicago, illinois FIRST STRING. You candepend on that refreshingBudnelser* taste. Which is whythe campus crowd agrees—where there’s life...there’s Bud®• TAMPAg§| .m -■■■■%■•• <><•• ■ jRussian students visit UC Auden wi" <|iscuss p°etnrat magazine's annual feteas part of nation wide tour“We have suffered so; mothershave lost their sons and daugh¬ters, wives have lost their hus¬bands. How could your newspa¬pers say we want war again afterthis.” This statement was madeby one of the eight exchange visi¬tors from the Soviet Union whoarrived on campus yesterday eve¬ning. The visitors, six men andtwo women, are on a sixty daytour of the United States whichwill take them from the east towest coast. They will spend fivedays at UC.Guests of fraternitiesOn their arrival from Detroitthe group was transported tocampus in the cars of Universitystudents. Zeta Beta Tau. DeltaUpsilon, and Psi Upsilon are act¬ing as hosts to the men. Thewomen will be guests of the newwomen’s dormitory.The visitors, who range in agefrom 26 to 37, represent variedprofessions. Their occupations in¬clude mechanical engineer, news¬paper editor, philologist, trans¬port engineer, Konsomol mem¬ber. journalist, and youth worker.On arrival at UC the groupwere diner guests of the frater¬nities at which they are staying.The two women, Valentin Shzhe-tin and Londa Meburishvili, wereguests of Phi Sigma Delta. Al¬though the women had troubleexpressing themselves in Eng¬lish, they tried to explain that their newspapers were frank and“always told the truth.’*Hope for peaceThey said that they had comehere only because the papers hadwritten so much about the “greatpeople of America and the richgovernment that we wanted tosee it. Our youth wants to knowabout you. They are waiting forus to tell them what we haveseen and learned.’*The women expressed greatfaith in American youth, believ¬ing that they too, like the youngpeople of Russia, sincerely seekfor peace and friendship. “Webelieved too. that your govern¬ment wanted to work for peacebut since the U-2 we don’t know.”When asked what they wouldlike to do in Chicago, the womanexpressed a great desire to visit“as many museums and librariesas we can.” Miss Meburlishvih,a fan of Laurence Olivier’s,wanted to get to see Beckettwhen the group returned to NewYork. In the Soviet Union shehad seen the Hollywood films,Marty, Roman Holiday, and Warand Peace.They asked why there were sofew female engineers and expres¬sed surprise at not seeing anywomen factory workers on theirrecent tour of the Ford factoryin Detroit.We have a sputnikWhen asked to compare theRussian and American standardsof living, Miss Meburishvililaughed and said “The American people live well but so do the Rus¬sians!” In repy to a chalengeon this answer, that America hasso many more cars than the So¬viet Union, she smiled and said“We don’t have as many cars asyou do for our factories were alldestroyed during the war. Yes,you have many more cars, but wehave a sputnick!”The group was brought by theInternational Hospitality centerof Chicago. The organization,under the direction Gina Frank,coordinates programs in Chicagofor world visits and students.Their host at UC, and coordina¬tor of all their activities on cam¬pus, is Dean Max Putzel. Thegroup’s escort and interpreter isDon Fuller. W. H. Auden, Poetry maga¬zine’s Poet of Honor this year,will speak at the ModernPoetry association’s sixthannual Poetry day celebration onFriday evening, November 18, atthe Civic theatre at 8:30 in theevening.Tickets for Auden’s talk, atwhich he will read his poetry withinformal commentary, are pricedat two and three dollars, and areavailable by mail from the Mod¬ern Poetry association, 1018 N.State street.Auden is Poetry magazine’ssixth Poet of the Year. His im¬mediate predecessor was T. S.Eliot, who last year attracted thelargest crowd ever gathered inChicago to hear a poet read, ac¬cording to Marvanne Schaefer ofthe magazine’s staff. The other poets who have beenhonored with this award wereArchibald MacLeish, John CroweRansom. Carl Sandberg, and Robert Frost.Auden’s literary honors inAmerica have included the Poetryaward of the American Academyof Arts and Letters in 1945, thePulitzer prize in Poetry in 1918for The Age of Anxiety, the Bo!lingen prize in 1953, the NationalBook award in 1956 for The Shieldof Achilles, and the AmericanPoetry society award in 1959. Hewas named a Guggenheim fellowin 1942 and 1945. Poetry maga¬zine gave Auden its Guarantorsprize in 1937, and in 1953 gavehim the Chicago prize, a specialaward for the best poem pub¬lished in the fortieth anniversarynumber of the magazine.Student directory is outThe current edition of theStudent directory, a listing ofregistered students and theiraddresses and phone numbers,is now available.'‘This year’s Student direc¬tory will contain all the informa¬tion of the past directories, but ina more open, more readableform.” Slated Geoffrey Plampin.editor of official publications. Thedirectory came out Tuesday.The 132 page booklet, availablefor 50 cents in the corridor ofMandel hall and at the bookstore, lists the home address, Universityaddress, and the phone number ofevery student. It also contains alist of student organizations andtheir officers, the members ofStudent government, residenceheads, and administrative officers.The directory for this year haslarger pages and is double-spacedin an attempt to make the bookmore readable. On the cover is apicture of the new law building,taken by Alan Fern, assistant pro¬fessor of the humanities.Material for this year’s issuewas taken from student censushit* 1 CiCA,It's what's up front that countsUp front is [ FILTER-BLEND 1 and only Winston has it!Rich, golden tobaccos specially selected and speciallyprocessed for full flavor in filter smoking.I20JBEES * R. J. Reynold* Tobecco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.TASTES GOOD /ike a cigarette should! cards filled out at the beginningof the quarter. This informationwas sorted and typed out by anIBM machine, then photographedfor printing.The distributors of the diree-tory, Alpha Phi Omega, are thenational service fraternity, andthe University bookstore, whomake a five-rent profit on everyropy sold. Plampin estimates thisyear’s circulation at 1,500.The office of publications re¬ceives 45 cents for every copy.This covers only the printingcosts; no allowance is made forthe costs of compiling the direc¬tory or for a profit. The officesupplies free copies of the direc¬tory to every residence hall andfraternity house, to certain stu¬dent activities, and to all Univer¬sity offices.At one time Student govern¬ment put out the directory. Afterthe 1956-57 issue, however, it wasturned over to the office of pub¬lications, “There is little prospectof SG resuming this activity inthe near future.” stated JimThomason, president of Studentgovernment.The first University directorycame out in 1903, containing in¬formation on both faculty and stu¬dents. A separate Faculty direc¬tory was established in 1906, withthe joint directory maintained inaddition to this until 1916. In 1916the present policy of separate di¬rectories was begun. The nextFaculty directory will come outin the middle of December.Scholar dollarstravel fartherwith SHERATONHOTELSSTUDENT.FACULTYDISCOUNTSSave on the going pricesof going places atSheraton Hotels.Your Sheraton card getsyou special save-money rateson singles and greater savingsper person when you share aroom with one, two or threefriends. Generous group ratesarranged for athletic teams,clubs and college danson-the-go.Send for your SheratonStudent I.D. Card orFaculty Guest Card withcredit privileges. Please tellus where you are a studentor full-time faculty memberwhen you write to:,MR. PAT GREENCollege Relations Dept.Sheraton Corporation470 Atlantic AvenueBoston XO, Mass.Congressman discusses Africaby Jay GreenbergBarratt O’Hara, chairmanof the House Sub-committeeon African Affaire, sees in theproblems of Africa today asituation analagous to that ofthe United States immediatelyafter the Revolutionary war.O’Hara, who represents Chica¬go’s 2nd Congressional district,which Includes the Hyde Parkarea, says that he is “optimistic”about recent African develop¬ments.“Most of what we heard aboutis really birth pains,” O’Harasaid. “We in the United States ex¬perienced almost the same typeof events. When the Revolution¬ary war ended, many of the sol¬diers of Washington’s armymarched on the capitol, then lo¬cated at Philadelphia, demandingpensions which they claimed weredue them. These were men whohad fought with Washington, whohad been present at Cornwallis’surrender, and who had under¬gone much suffering during thewar.Soldiers protest“This was a march of protest,”O’Hara continued, “and the mili¬tia had to be called out againstthe soldiers. This event couldhave been interpreted by outsid¬ers as meaning that we were notyet ready for sovereignty. Like¬wise, in Africa, the recent violenceis not a true index of the realspirit of dedication that existsthere.”O’Hara traced African discon¬tent to minor actions on the partof colonial powers while theywere in control. “In Guinea, forexample,” he said, “when theFrench left they took even thecuspidors and the pencils. Thenthey said, ‘Go ahead, if you wantto achieve freedom, build it onyour own.’ This created popularresentment, and many of thecrises there today grew from it.”The 78 year old Congressmanbelieves that new African nationsdesire to be friendly with theWest rather than with the Com¬munist bloc. “They are not stu¬pid,” he said, “and they do notwant to leave colonial statusmerely to become the colony ofanother nation.Nations have problems“However,” O’Hara continued“the nations do have immediateproblems which must be met. TheSoviets never bargain, so natunally Africa accepts her offers,since they never have strings at¬tached. This is the advantage thatthe Russians have over us. TheAfricans, however, are fearful,they are accepting cautiouslythey are accepting and hopingthat they don’t have to pay any¬thing back.”The Congressman pointed outthat many Africans criticize theUnited States for voting on theside of the colonial powers on im¬portant questions in the UnitedNations. “This has been one ofthe most embarrassing circum¬stances in the whole situation,”he said. “I believe that it is prin¬cipally one of understanding.These people cannot understandhow a former colony, now leaderof the free world, can take a po¬sition with the colonial powers."There have been a number oftimes,” O'Hara continued, “thatnative Africans have discussedwith me the length of time thatwe took before we gave independ¬ence to the Philippines. We took40 years, but during this time we helped to prepare them for sov¬ereignty. We sent schoolteachers,nurses and doctors, and we did itwith a sincere desire to preparethem. The African nations have adifficult time trying to figure outwhether today’s colonial powersare sincere when they say thatthey are trying to prepare Africafor freedom. It is quite possiblethat the English have been talk¬ing to the Africans about our pol¬icy with the Philippines.”O’Hara called for a program ofactions rather than promises. “Ifwe want to change Africa’s opin¬ion of us,” he said, “we muststart a positive program. We willbe judged by what we do. Per¬sonalities are also important. Un¬til Franklin Delano Roosevelt be¬came president, we were alwaysunder the greatest suspicion inLatin America. During Roose¬velt’s administration, however, allthis good will changed. It changedbcoau.se they felt he was sincere.”The Congressman warned thepeople of the United Statesagainst trying to “buy” Africafor the western bloc. "You don’tmake friends by purchase,” hestated. “You don’t make friendsamong peoples by seeking out aleader and saying ‘I’ll give youmoney if you will be my friend.’“This, of course, does not meanthat you can’t use money to helpyour friend to his feet, that isquite a different thing. Most peo¬ple are appreciative when you dothis. But no man is appreciativeif somebody who doesn’t like himgives him money because he hap¬pens to be powerful.”Program proposedNinety day crash courses, de¬signed to train people to teachthe routine administration ofday-to-day jobs to Africans, wererecommended by O’Hara. Univer¬sities would establish these pro¬grams “to provide the neededmanpower for these jobs.”“It is surprising,” O'Harapointed out, “how few peoplethere are in Africa who can han¬dle routine matters, such as book¬keeping, office work, or handlingstock in a store. Another part ofthis program would involve thesending of technicians to helpwith more advanced problems, (ifcourse this will require money.But it Is not the same as actuallygiving money, in that it will an¬tagonize nobody.”O’Hara next turned to a discus¬sion of the political situation asit exists in Africa today. “Whenthe Belgians were about to with¬draw from the Congo,” he noted,“They told all the white Belgiansliving there that they could re¬turn to Belgiam when independ¬ence was granted without anyloss of civil service rank or status.Understandably, most of thesepeoples elected to return. For ex¬ample, in Belgium, faculty mem¬bers of their university live inbeautiful homes, with swimmingpools, and a beautiful club. It isthe most beautiful place imagin¬able for a teacher to work. Andall the professors are dedicatedmen. "Naturally,” O’Hara continued,“many of the white faculty mem¬bers elected to return to Belgiumfrom the Congo’s two universi¬ties. When Congo premier PatriceLumumba was in Washington hesaid that over two-thirds of thefaculty had elected to leave. Thisleft a vacuum. But Lumumba,who is definitely a very intelligentman, has been trying in the lastfew months to build a well-inte¬grated, international faculty.Requirement changed“One noteworthy example ofthe changes that have been madeby the Congolese government,”O’Hara continued, “is the changeof language requirement in ele¬mentary schools from Flemmishto English. All Congolese hadbeen irritated by the Flemmishrequirement, as that language isspoken in only a very small por¬tion of the world.‘This is an example of thethinking of African leaders,”O’Hara stated. “They feel thatthey are men with a mission.They are not the ignorant peoplethat many outsiders think theyare. The Speaker of Congress inNigeria, for example, was bomand grew up in Nigeria. He thenwent to Dublin for a few years,where he studied and then prac¬tised law. He is now, in addition tohis job as Speaker, premier of oneof the provinces and chief of histribe.”The Congressman stated thatmany people in the United Statesdo not understand the true natureof tribes in Africa, but rather con¬sider them wild, unorganizedgroups. “I asked the Nigeriangentleman who I just mentionedabout the tribe structure,” hesaid, “and he mentioned that oneof the things that we don't un¬derstand is the similarity betweentribal government and local gov¬ernment in the United States.These local governments, beforethe invention of the automobilemade communication so muchless of a problem, were closelyanalogous to the African tribesof today. The mayor of the townwas the tribal chief.”Language a problemThe existence of several hun¬dred different languages in asmall area and the large per cent-age of illiteracy was noted byO’Hara as seeming to present agreater problem than it actuallydoes. "It is true that in Ghana,for example, 235 different dialetcsare spoken,” he stated, “and thatthe only common tongue is aslave dialect, consisting of onlytwenty or thirty words, which is left over from the slave-tradingdays of the late eighteenth andearly nineteenth centuries. How¬ever, let me point to the exampleof a girl I once knew. She wasfrom Maine, and although shewas a brilliant and highly educa¬ted young lady, I was completelyunable to understand anythingshe said, because of the way shepronounced words. The Africandialect problem is not too differ¬ent. When education comes toAfrica, a common language will,too.“As to the illiteracy,” O’Haracontinued, “I am not too muchconcerned. Wliat percentage ofthe people in England could readand write 150 years ago? Not avery large one. And what per¬centage of the people in the Uni¬ted States could read after theRevolutionary war? Again, notvery many. The governments ofAfrica consider illiteracy theirgreatest problem, and are deter¬mined to do something about itin the near future.”People have spiritO’Hara feels that the majorcharacteristic of Africa is that“Wherever I went, whateverstrata I observed, I found aspirit of dedication. These peoplefeel that everything in life ischange. Of course, whenever weare going forward with change,the people are a little fearful ofleaving the established status quo,but these people are often willingto take the change.“While in Kenya, for example,”O’Hara continued, “I stopped inat the mansion of the British gov¬ernor general. It was a large,palatial mansion, with oil paint¬ ings of the royalty of Kenya. Itsmacked of the days of Britishimperialism. The governor-gen¬eral’s wife’s father had been agovernor general, and her grand¬father had been a prime minister.I asked this lady ‘How do you ac¬cept this change?’ She told me,‘Everything is change, and prog¬ress is for the better. I only hopethat it doesn’t come too soon, andthus cause disorder.’ ”Meets TomboyaAfter his discussion with thegovernor general, O'Hara metKenyan premier Tomboya. “Wedrove through the streets of thedistrict which Tomboya repre¬sents,” O’Hara recounted. “Al¬though all the homes were cleanlykept, homes were crowded andcongested, and, in general, lifefor the residents of the districtwas none too bright. Tomboyawas the elected representative ofthe district. Yet for this one rep¬resentative, the crown had ap¬pointed nine. Although Tomboyawas the elected representative,he actually had but one-tenth ofa vote. We can see from thisexample why the people of Africaare so restive in their desire togain independence.”O’Hara next discussed the re¬cent violence in the Congo. 'Theoutbreak in the Congo,” he stated,“surprised everyone. The Belgianshad put the curtain down on theirCongo activities for about tenyears. I went over there with thefirst Congressional group to visitthe Congo in this ten year period.During this time, the Belgianshad done the best job of any ofthe colonial powers in Africa.(Continued on page 15)Joseph H. Aaron, ’27The ConnecticutMutual Life InsuranceCompany of HartfordSince 1846, over 100 years, hassafeguarded your family.135 S. LaSalle St.Suite 825 RA G-IOCOTAhSAM-WJCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen DallyH A.M. te 19:34 PJLORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 TRAVEL THE FOUR WINDSSee and SkiPARIS-ZERMATT2 Weeks - >598’°See us or call us on MondayS South Michigan CE 6-2321TT<nn>Trr*'»,rTTrrrTrrr»?tTyrITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage & meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st. MEMO FROMJ. EDWARD FEINWhy it pays to ownlifelong security beforeyou're on your own!Many college graduates today enjoy the peace of mindthat comes from knowing that their families are pro¬tected by life insurance. Among these graduates arethose who are saving many dollars because they tookout their insurance while still at school... thereby tak¬ing advantage of the low premiums offered b/ NewYork Life.Included in the program are several different types ofplans. And because of the non-hazardous nature of yourstudent occupation and your age, low premiums aremade possible. In addition, under my personal arrange¬ment you can defer payment of the premium until afteryou graduate.You’ll find it a good idea to get all the facts on NewYork Life’s student insurance program and why it willpay you to get started before you graduate.Send for your free copy of the informative booklet,“It’s Your Move, Joe ..write ., * phone T.. or visitJ. EDWARD FEINCampus RepresentativeNew York LifeInsurance Company134 S. LoSolIe CE 6-5438Nov. 4, 1960 • CHICACO MAROON • »3Coming events on quadranglesFriday, 4 NovemberTelevision series: Seminar Sixty. WBBM-TV, 6:30 am, Alan Pern, assistant pro¬fessor of the humanities in the Col¬lege.Matins. 11:30 am, Bond chapel, the Ttov-erend Fredrick Streng. Lutheran I'hD.student at the divinity school willpreach.Newborn conference, 1 pm, Lying-Inhospital, Dora DeLee hall.Maroon Staff meeting, 4 pm Maroonoffice, Ida Noyes 303. All staff mem¬bers and Maroon seminar participantsare urged to attend. All those Inter¬ested in joining the staff are welcome.Lecture series: Personality Theory (de¬partment of psychology!, 4 pm. SocialScience 122. "Lewinian theory of per¬sonality,” Jacob S. Kountn, associateprofessor of education, Wayne Stateuniversity.Lutheran Council, 6 pm. Chapel house.Kolnonia, the Lutheran group, meetslor food (75 cents) and fellowship(free).Lutheran Council, 7:15 pm, Chapelhouse. The Reverand Paul Heyne willlead a discussion of "Religion in a freesociety,” stressing the pluralistic ten¬sions. This is in line with the fallquarter theme. ‘‘The Individual, tneChurch and Society.”Motion picture series: American Contri¬butions to the Cinema (DocumentaryFt m group). 7:15 and 9:15 pm, SocialScience 122, "Our Relations.”Motion Picture, 8 and 10 pm, Burton-Judson Courts. “Madame Bovary.”African Students* Association of Chi¬cago, 8 pm, International house, pre¬sents “Freedom for Africa,” a filmwhich tells the story of the first AllAfrican People?" conference held inAccra, Ghanda in 1958. Admission: 35cents.Chamber Music series: New York ProMusica, 8:30 pm. Mandel hall. Vocaland instrumental music of the MiddleAges. Renaissance, and early Baroque,Noah Greenberg, director.Sabbath Services, 7:45 pm. Hlllel foun¬dation.” God, graven images, andceremonial art,” a discussion by Dr.Stanley Gevirtz. department of orien¬tal languages and civilizations. RabbiDan Isaac, graduatevstudent. depart¬ment of English, Mr. Samuel Green-gus, graduate student. Oriental insti¬tute, will follow at 8:30 pm.Social dancing, 9 om. Ida Noyes theatre,sponsored by the International houseassociation. Admission: Students. 50cents; others, $1. tice session. Instruction !n all levelsof climbing. Conducted by experi¬enced climbers. Bring tennis shoesand old clothes. Assemble at NewDorm parking lot. Climing area fif¬teen minutes from the University.Recorder Society, 1 pm. Ida Noyes, ln-E-ruction from 1 to 1:30 pm and thengroup recorder playing.Varsity Soccer game, 2 pm. Stagg field,Chicago vs. Indiana university.Folk Song Festival. 8 pm, Mandel hall.Peggy Seeger, daughter of the wellknown American folk musicologists.Charles and Ruth Seeger, and EwanMacColl, Scotland's greatest writerand singer of the era, sponsored bythe International house associationfor the benefit of a room scholarship.Admission: $1.50 and $2.Radio series: The Sacred Note, WBBM.11 pm. A program of choral music bythe University choir, Richard Vlk-strom, director of chapel music, con¬ducting.Sunday, 6 NovemberSaturday, 5 NovemberCross-Country Meet, 11 am, Washing¬ton Park, Midwest Conference cham¬pionships.Outing club, 1 pm. rock climbing prac¬OUR UNIVERSITY SHOPattractive, exclusive suits and sportwearlor college men and prep schoolersOur interesting Fall selection of clothing for under*graduates wearing sizes 35 to 42 is now ready. Includ*ed are good-looking new worsted suits in distinctivecolorings, new designs in sport jackets and ruggednew outerwear... as well as traditional favorites. AUreflect ourquality, styling and taste, and are as modcr*ately priced as we can make them. Our "346” fur*nishings are also designed for undergraduates.We invite you to come in and enjoy the expert serv*Ice and expanded facilities of our University Shop.Fall catalogue sent upon request.Suits, $70 to $30 * Worsted Flannel Trousers, $21.50Tweed Sport Jackets, $30 * Tweed Topcoats, $80Our 0:cn Make rr316” Cotton Oxford Shirts, from $3.75.ISTAbUSHtO 1*1*D MRUms.gjupTfBjflens jfurnishlnga, Jjate74 £. MAtMSON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICACO 2, ILL.NEW YORK • tOSTON • PITTSBURGH • SAN fRANCISCO • LOS ANGELE*CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 4, 1960 Monday, 7 NovemberRadio series: Faith of Our Fathers.WGN, 8:30 am. The Reverend JosephSitrler, professor of theology. Univer¬sity of Chicago.Roman Catholic Masses, 8:30, 10, and11 am, DeSales house.Episcopal Communion Service, 8:30 am.Bond chapel.Birthday of Guru Nanak, the Founderof the Sikh religion, 10 am, Sikh tem¬ple, 908 E. 61st street. The celebrationwill be in oriental fashion. There willbe speeches on Gu’u Nanak’s life andother allied subjects. Refreshmentswill be served after the services. Spon¬sored by the Sikh Diwan society.Lutheran Communion Service, 10 am.Graham Taylor chapel. 57th and Uni¬versity (above Thorndike Hilton chap¬el). Pastor Saffen will preach on“Signs, wonders, and faith.”University Religious Service, 11 am.Rockefeller Memorial chapel. TheReverend Wilhelm Pauck, professor ofChurch History, Union TheologicalSeminary.Varsity Soccer game, 2 pm, Stagg field,Chicago vs. St. Louis university.Carillon Recital. 5 pm. RockefellerMemorial chapel, Pcblns.United Christian Fellowship worshipservice, 5:30 pm, Thorndike Hilton- chapel.Supp'-r-D:scussion meeting, 5:30 pm,Brent house. Episcopal Student cen¬ter. 5540 S. Woodlawn avenue. Discus¬sion. 6:30 pm. “Atomic testing: WhatPrice Knowledge?” Robert J. Moon,associate professor, department ofphysics.Bridge club, 7:15 pm. Ida Noyes lounge,first floor. Beginning and experienced,individuals or partnerships. Duplicatebridge will be played. Elementary Yiddish classes, 3:30 pm.Lecture series: Personality Theory (de¬partment of psychology), 4 pm, SocialScience 122. “Occupational role andpersonality," Everett C. Hughes, pro¬fessor, department of sociology.Lecture (Botany club). 4:30 pm, Botany106. “The effect of photoperiod on thethe water uptake of Xanthlum,"Benito S. Vergara, research associate,department of botany.Louis Block Fund Lecture series: Onto¬geny of Resistance and ImmuneMechanisms (department of microbi¬ology), 5 pm. Breasted hall. “Develop¬ment of non-specific resistance me¬chanisms,” Dr. Richard T. Smith, de¬partment of pediatrics, University ofFlorida.Television series: Meeting of Minds.WTTW-Channel 11, 8 pm. “The brainmystery." Ward C Halstead, professor,department of psychology and medi¬cine; Dr. Frederick Gibbs, professorof neurology. University of Illinois:and Dr Harold Hlmwick, GalesburgState Research hospital.Motion Picture. 8 pm. Internationalhouse, “Gate of Hell” (Japan).Christian Science Lecture (ChristianScience organization at the Universityof Chicago), 8 pm. Swift hall commonroom. “A very present help,” Otto G.Zlegenhagen, member of the Board ofLectureship of _ the Mother Church,The First Church of Christ, Scientistin Boston.Lecture (Committee on Southern AslanStudies, Indian Civilization course).8 pm, Rosenwald 2. “Vedanta andExistentialism,” T. K. Venkatesh-varan, fellow In the Center for theStudy of World Religions, Harvarduniversity. unbalanced designs," Robert R. Read,visiting assistant professor of statis¬tics. -Louis Block Fund Lecture series: Onto¬geny of Resistance and ImmuneMechanisms (department of micro¬biology). 5 pm, Breasted hall. “Im¬munologic tolerance-consideration ofmechanisms,“ Dr. Smith.Carillon Recital, 5 pm. RockefellerMemorial chapel. Daniel Robins, Uni¬versity carlllonneur.Episcopal Services, 5:05 pm, Bond chap¬el, Evensong.Israeli Folk dancing, 8:30 pm. Hlllelfoundation.Symphony Orchestra, 7:30 pm. Southlounge of the Reynolds club, rehearsal.Country dancing, 8 pm. Ida Noyes, spon¬sored by the Country Dancers. Begin¬ners welcome.Discussion senes. 8 pm, William Wal¬lace Fenn house. 5603 South Wood-lawn avenue A roundtable on “Unl-tariamsm and You" will be moderatelby three members of the First Uni¬tarian Church. Paul Hanchett. Wal¬lace Ruterholtz, and the ReverendCarl Wennerstrom.William Vaughn Moody Lecture. 8 30pm, new law school auditorium. "Con¬formity and the Novel.” Angus Wilson,English novelist, story writer, andcritic.Lecture (Oriental Institute). 8:30 pm.Breasted hall. "Further explorationsin Kurdistan on man's earliest settledlife,” Robert J. Braldwood. professor.Oriental Institute and department ofanthropology. Bruce Howe, researchassociate. Peabody museum, Harvarduniversity. Meeting: Board of Adult Education 3 sopm. Administration building 202Lecture (Zoology club), 4:30 pm, Zoology14. “A quantum-theoretic approach tosome genetic phenomena,” RobertRosen, research associate. CommlUeaon Mathematical Biology.Lecture series (department of medicineand physiology), 5 pm. Abbott 133“Electrophyslology of the heart. Part1.” Dr. Chandler McC. Brooks, pro¬fessor and chairman, department ofphysiology. State University of NewYork. Dow ns t ate Medical CenterInter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7 30pm, Ida Noyes. All arc welcome.Student-Faculty Seminar (departmentof economics), 7:45 pm, Business East106. “The labor theory of value inpractice In the Soviet Union," T. WSchultz. Charles L. Hutchinson disttnguished service professor andchairman, department or economicsUniversity theatre: “Heartbreak House"by George Bernard Shaw, 8:30 paMandel hall. - 'Friday, 11 NovemberThursday, 10 NovemberTuesday, 8 NovemberLutheran Communion Service, 11:30 am.Bond chapel. Pastor Faillettaz, Cele¬brant.Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 12noon, Ida Noyes hall. Bible study,bring your lunch.Colloquium (Institute for the Study ofMetals), 4:15 pm. Research Institutes211. “Mixtures of Fused Salts.” O. J.Kleppa, associate professor of chemis¬try, Institute for the Study of Metalsand department of chemistry.Hug Ivri, 4:30 pm, Hlllel foundation,Hebrew conversation.Pre-med club, 4:30 pm, Abbott 133, clubelections.Louis Block Fund Lecture series: On¬togeny of Resistance and ImmuneMechanisms (department of microbi¬ology), 5 pm. Breasted hall. "Develop¬ment of specific immune mechan¬isms,” Dr. Smith.Glee Club, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes theatre,rehearsal.Lutheran Theological Fellowship, 8 pm.will speak on “The How and Why”Swift commons. Seward Hlltner, pro¬fessor, federated theological facultyof Psychology In the Theological Cur¬riculum.” Episcopal Services, 11 30 am. Bond chap¬el. Holy Communion.Lecture (department of psychology),2 pm. Swift 106. "The problem oflong-range prediction of human be¬havior ” Lloyd G. Humphreys, pro¬fessor and chairman, department ofpsychology, University of Illinois. Maroon Staff meeting, 4 pm. Maroonof rice, Ida Noyes 303. All staff mem¬bers and Maroon seminar participantsare urged to attend. All those inter¬ested in Joining the staff are wel¬come.Lecture series: Personality Theory (de¬partment of psychology), 4 pm, SocialScience 122. "Constructive alternati-vlsm,” Lee Sechrest, assistant profes¬sor of psychology. Northwestern uni¬versity.Lecture: (Microbiology club), 4 pm,Ricketts North 1. “Genetics studtes onlmmunologlcally competent cells," DrG. J. V. Nossal, assistant professor ofgenetics, school of medicine, Stanforduniversity.Lecture series: departments of medicineand physiology. 5 pm, Abbott 133.“Electrophyslology of the heart, partII.‘ Dr. Brooks.University Theatre: Heartbreak Houseby George Bernard Shaw, 8:30 pm,Mandel hall.Classified AdvertisementsFor Rent Tutoring in German grammar offeredCall SO 8 2333.6040 Ingleside Ave. 1 and 2 room fur¬nished units. Clean and comfortable—available at very moderate rentals. Seelesident mgr after 5:30 pm or jail BU8-2757. Russian Tutoring. First or second yearReasonable rates. BU 8-5229; MI 3-0963P ipers. Term Papers, and Thesis: Typed.Picked up and delivered if you wish.TR 4-8539. After 6 pm.Five room basement apartment. $75. CallHY 3-9681 after 6. For SaleThird Floor Front Apartment. 5525 S.Everett Ave.—five rooms, two baths,newly decorated. $131 per month: avail¬able Nov. 15, 1960. Call PLaza 2-3586.Wednesday, 9 NovemberLecture series (graduate school of busi¬ness), 1:30 pm, Breasted hall "Econo¬mics and corporate planning.” DanielC. Hamilton, associate professor, grad¬uate school of business.Hebrew Classes, 3:30 pm. Hlllel founda¬tion, first section: 3:30 pm; secondsection: 4:30 pm.Seminar (department of statistics), 4pm, Eckhart 207. "On quadratic esti¬mates of the Intraclass variants for Would You Like a Handsome One-RoomApt. with private tiled bath, wall towall carpet, attractively furnished inmodern elevator building? Special stu¬dent rates. Come to 5510 Cornell. Need “help?” the originator of Madmagazine has done It again—only thistime for college students! He’s createda hilarious new magazine ca'led Htip!Want to see how fupiy an adult satiremagazine can be? Send 50 cents to Help!Dept. F-3, Box 6573, Philadelphia 88.Penn.Services Used Furniture Bargai is. Good condi¬tion. Call evenings, Mrs. Zegart: Ml3-2731 or RE 1-7799.Sewing, Alterations, Hems. BU 8-6001. PersonalsTyping. Reas. MI 3-5213. Creative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Dawn to Dawn 1342east 53 st. When the election is done.Whoever (J. K.) has won—We'll step by step dineOn the day after: November 9TheodosiaWicke. You may buy back your scul for$31.50.—J.W.Gimpy: Well, like maybe It’* not toopiercing after all. Champ.Rush the Mome Raths.Mister...you’re going to wearthat shave all day!START WITH THIS NEW FORMULA BEFORE*SHAVE LOTION, stop 4 o'clock stubble trouble!You con shave blade-dose, oil-day dean, with¬out ‘'tenderizing" your face, when you usePro-Electric Before-Shave lotion. It containsISOPHYl* to give your shaver extra glide-power—refreshes you with that brisk, bracing Old Spicescent. 1.00 no federal tax.ABoorstin blasts debates I Africa's value notedCOLUMBUS, Ohio—Daniel J. Boorstin, professor of history (Con,inued ,rom Pa9« 13)charged at UC last Friday that politicians and newsmakers They had ^eld elections with nohave joined to create “pseudovents” to make the “great de- ™ore restrictions than we havebates” little more than a $400,000 quiz show. herc in the United States-Boorstin told the first session p nl . .. — :— 4^e,glf?S ***? establishedw example of the pseudo-event, of social security tnd minimumhow it is made, why it appeals, wage laws,” O’Hara continued.of the "American Perspectives”conference at Ohio State univer¬sity that rather than a "real”event in history, the debates wereone example of what he called"pseudo-events” in modern politi¬cal life.Boorstin, who won the Bancroftaward for historical writing lastyear, defined a pseudo-event asone which is "more dramatic andmore vivid,” "easier disseminat¬ed,” and "more sociable, moreconversable and more convenientto witness” than real events.In the Kennedy-Nixon debates,Boorstin said a number of "excit¬ing” pseudo-events have been cre¬ated — for example, the Quemoy-Matsu issue. of its consequences for democra- "They had created the Universitycy in America. In origin, t h e of Leopoldville hospital, whichgreat debates were confusedly col- was one of the finest that I havelaborative between politicians and seen anywhere in the world. Therenewsmakers. Public interest has Is certainly none better in thecentered around the pseudo-event United States. They charged onlyitself: the lighting, the make-up, 50 cents a day, all medical, roomthe ground-rules, whether notes board fees included, for awill be allowed, etc.” ward with four people in it."Far more interest,” Boorstin "But all this came too late,”said, "has been shown in the per- O’Hara concluded. "All these in-formance than in the Debate.” novations were instituted too lateScience opens houseThe sixth annual Science scientific programs at the Uni-Open House Will be held on versity and an authority on theSaturday, November 19. Prin- chemical properties of the rareWhile a debate raged over the cipals, teachers, and OUtstand- carthf and Plutoniurn, ho thetwo tiny islands, Boorstin ob¬served, “it concerned an until-then quieseent public problem,and put into the most factitiousand trivial terms the gTeat andreal issue of our relation to Com¬munist China.” ings science students from highschools and colleges in Illinoisand several neighboring stateshave been invited to attend theOpen House.On the nineteenth, the OpenHouse will commence with aBoorstin, who delivered the meeting at 1 pm in Mandel hall,first address in the two-day hu- Dr. Warren G. Johnson, vice principal speaker.At 2 pm an opportunity to seedemonstrations in the labora¬tories of the Institutes for BasicResearch will be made availableto the group. The demonstrationswill cover a wide range of areas—from space satellites and elec¬tronic structures of atoms tomanitics conference, said: president in charge of special glass blowing. to do any good in the Congo."The Congressman cited theproblem of having Africans studyoutside their own countries asone of the major ones of today."Before independence was grantedin the Congo,” he explained, "theBelgians allowed nobody to studyoutside the Congo, not even inBelgium. The Belgians were mostfearful of having people study inthe United States. This was oneof the major bars to having awell educated African population."However,” the Congressmancontinued, "when Lumumba cameto Washington, we offered him100 scholarships for four yearsand 200 shorter ones. He, and thewhole Congolese population, wentwild with enthusiasm. Lumumbasaid that that is exactly the sortof help that they wanted.”"Let me conclude,” O’Hara said,"by saying that if we lose Africa,we will lose the world. In recentyears, the State department hasbeen concentrating completely onAsia and the Middle East, and notat all on Africa. Only 1 per centof our aid in past years has goneto Africa. I have been fightingfor a long time to get a morejust distribution of our aid pro¬gram, and now, in the last fewmonths it looks as if our policyis going to become more realistic. "Africa is a beautiful place,”the Congressman noted, "a placethat all too few Americans haveseen. Africa has a great futureand a great deal of potentialwealth. For example, the largestsawmill in the world is locatedin French Equatorial Africa; it isowned by an American companyand supplies much of the plywoodused in the United States. TheCongo, of course, is one of therichest areas of mineral depositsin the world; it is an area of veryhigh strategic worth."Many people have gotten richin Africa,” O’Hara said. "I my¬self know of several people, chil¬dren of the poverty of India, whohave come to Africa and becomeextremely wealthy men. This hashappened many times, and tomany different people.”O’Hara also called for a morerealistic foreign policy towardAfrica. "The state department es¬tablished, two and a half yearsago, an Under Secretary of Statefor African Affairs. However,only about half of geographicalAfrica was included under thisdepartment. After a fight of overtwo years, we have recently got¬ten the Sudan back in Africa.With policies like this, we cannothope to maintain any prestige inAfrica.”New Johnson book studies presidencyWalter Johnson, chairmanof UC’s history department,has recently completed a book1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, apenetrating historical study ofthe American presidency since1929. By examining the adminis¬trations of Hoover, Roosevelt,Truman and Eisenhower, WalterJohnson demonstrates "the poten¬tialities, restrictions and demandsof one of the world’s most vitaland exacting roles.”Here is an excerpt from the au¬thors foreword:The years since the stock mar¬ket crash have been years of ex¬traordinary, and often bewilder¬ing, change. The creeping chaosof the depression, the drama ofthe New Deal, Adolf Hitler andthe Japanese, the struggle forcontrol of American foreign pol¬icy, the expansion of Americanpower in the war, the founding ofthe United Nations, the death ofStudent government is tak¬ing applications for leadersfor its annual Co - operativeFlights to Europe. Anyone oflegal age, with European travelexperience, and leadership andadministrative- ability is eligible.An open meeting will be heldfor prospective leaders at 3:30pm on Thursday, November 10in the East Lounge of Ida Noyes. Franklin D. Roosevelt, the drop¬ping of the atom bomb, the men¬acing Soviet Union, the TrumanDoctrine and the Marshall Plan,the limited war in Korea, therapid decline of European em¬pires and the emergence of newsensitive nations in Asia and Afri¬ca, the hydrogen bomb with itstotal destructive power, rocketsand space satellites, made othereras seem uneventful. . . .Although the continuity ofideas and institutions is an impor¬tant theme in the history of a na¬tion, the recurring domestic andinternational crises after 192 9shook cherished traditions andforced extraordinary alterationsin the attitudes of the Americanpeople. . . .Pivotal point of the reshapingof the role of government in theeconomy and the nation in worlddecisions was political, particular¬ly presidental, leadership. Fromthe austere Quaker, internationalThe flight leaders will have theirshare of the flight expenses pro¬vided free. An interview board,composed of last year’s flightleaders, the assistant dean ofStudents, the director of the Tra¬vel department and the presidentof Student government will ex¬plain at the meeting what the jobentails. The board will submitrecommendations to the Execu¬tive Council who will make thefinal decision on November 16. engineer, businessman, and hu¬manitarian to the patrician, coun¬try gentleman, politico-statesman,to the hard-bitten Midwesternself-made man and party politi¬cian, to the professional soldier,famed as a conciliator and unifierof a brilliant group of Allied gen¬erals, the type of leadership fur¬nished the nation was strikinglyvaried.Although there are many waysof describing these years of pro¬found change, I analyze in thisbook what leadership did and didnot, could and could not, achievein aiding the adjustment of thenation in the twentieth century.Walter Johnson was born forty-four years ago in Nahant, Massa¬chusetts. He did undergraduatework at Dartmouth, majoring inhistory, and received an MA andPhD from the University of Chi¬cago. Besides being Chairman ofthe Department of History at Chi¬cago, he has lectured widely atother universities here and abroaother universities here andabroad. Considerable work on1600 Pennsylvania Avenue wasdone while the author was Harms-worth Professor of American His¬tory at Oxford (1957-1958).Dr. Johnson’s previous bookshave included William AlienWhite's America, The UnitedStates: Experiment in Democra¬cy, and How We Drafted AdiaiStevenson. He also edited White’sletters and Roosevelt and the Rus¬sians: The Yalta Conference, byEdward R. Stettinius, Jr.Flight leaders neededGovernment holds meetingReports of the Committee onRecognized Student organizations(CORSO), Student - faculty - rela¬tions committee, Campus Actioncommittee, and Community Rela¬tions committee were given atlast Tuesday’s Student govern¬ment meeting.The CORSO report introduceda debate on whether or notCORSO should recognize the In¬ter-Varsity Christian fellowship.Max Flaeger (ind.-physical sci¬ences) pointed out that he hadread in the Inter-Varsity Chris¬tian fellowship magazine that ifKennedy is elected president, thePope will come to the UnitedStates.Plaegcr Introduced a bill topostpone recognition of the Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship. A debate began, followed by a split,over the question of recognitionof this organization. Student Rep¬resentative party (SRP) wishedto postpone recognition of theInter-Varsity fellowship, sinceSRP felt that they didn’t want torecognize any anti-catholic organ¬ization.After a close (15-13) vote theInter-Varsity Christian fellowshipwas recognized and CORSO wasmandated to investigate the pos¬sibility of the Inter-Varsity Chris¬tian fellowship violating the stu¬dent code.Maureen Byers reported on thework of the Student faculty rela¬tions committee.Miss Byers reported that by thewinter quarter the faculty semi¬nars program will bo in exist¬ence. Bert Colder reported that theCampus Action committee is con¬sidering the possibility of an allcampus referendum on the newhousing regulations.Dave Nelson Reported that theCommunity Relations committeehas received the support ofNAACP, and is debating whetheror not to open a student-run hous¬ing file.Elliot Lillien, representing theIndependent Revolutionary party(IRP), initiated a debate overwhether or not to close the win¬dows. Ranken (Ind.) pointed outthat there were many smokersin the room and the windowsshould be left open. A debate con¬tinued for five minutes. JimThomason, president of (he As¬sembly, ruled favorably on Lil-lin’s request. In Chicago, where he lives with eluding those of Senator Paul H.his wife and three children, Dr.Johnson has been active in pol- Douglas and Governor Stevenson,itics for many years. He has whom he accompanied around thehelped on various campaigns, in- world in 1953.SUBSCRIBE NOW!CHICAQO CONCERTS,INC.Presents Six Outstanding Vocal RecitalsFriday Ereninys — Ciric TheatreSONQ SERIESCONSUELO RUBIO, sopranoDecember 9LOIS MARSHALL, sopranowith Clark Brody, clarinetJanuary IBDONALD BELL, bassFebruary 3ERNST HAFLIGER, tenorSchumann's Dichterliebe and Chicago premiere ofJanacek's Diary of One Who VanishedFebruary 24MAUREEN FORRESTER, contraltoMarch 10ELISABETH SCHWARZKOPF, sopranoHugo Wolf programApril 21SUBSCRIPTION SALEONLY, DEADLINENOVEMBER 28!Tickets may be obtainedthrough The StudentService Center, basementof The Reynolds Club,hours 11 :00 to 1 .00 and3:30 to 5:00 Mondaythrough FridaySubscription Tickets $13 and $21 in Balconyand $30 on Main FloorInformation also available on six eoneert series of1HUSIC OF THE BAROQUECHICAQO CONCERTS,INC20 North Wocker, Chicago 6CEnfrol 6-4554a io<n a CHICAGO MAROON • ISNews bitsStudents parade for KennedyPhilharmonic orchestra. MaestroC. M. Giulini will conduct the Oichestra on November 26. The pro¬gram will be announced.Redevelopment displayAn exhibit of the NEWHyde Park—“Redevelopmentof a Neighborhood” — hasbeen put on display at thePrudential building, East Ran¬dolph drive.The exhibit shows the progressof urban renewal in the HydePark-Kenwood neighborhood. Itwill be on display in the lobbyuntil November 12th.UC Students for Kennedyand the campus Young-Demo¬crats will participate in thetorchlight parade to be heldfor Kennedy this Friday in down¬town Chicago. A rally will followthe parade at Soldier's field whereKennedy will deliver his mainaddress in Chicago to an expectedcrowd of several hundred thou¬sand. Over one million people areexpected to participate in the pa¬rade. including 150 students fromthe University.The rally will be Kennedy’smain appearance in Chicago dur¬ing the campaign.The parade begins at 6:00 p.m.,and will terminate at 7:00 p.m. atSoldier’s field. Downtown Ken¬nedy offices are arranging forbuses which will transport stu¬dents from the university to thestarting point of the parade.These buses will leave from theWoodlawn side of New Dorms atat 5:30 p.m. Friday.In order to insure a large turn¬out, notices were mailed to allactive members of Students forKennedy off campus, and wereposted on dormitory bulletinboards.Like the Bowles speech, thisi* a major effort of Studentsfor Kennedy, according to JoanFromm, co-chairman of the group.The participation in the rally cul¬minates the intensive campaign¬ing in which the Students forKennedy has participated for thepast four weeks. Among the ac¬tivities sponsored by the grouphave been: luncheon for AdamClayton Powell, a speech on for¬eign affairs delivered by Chester Bowles in Mandel Hall on October22, precinct canvassing which willcontinue to election day, and dis¬tribution of literature for SenatorDouglas in the area of the Loopfor the past two weeks.Gene Vinogradoff, co-chairmanfor Students for Kennedy, re-had been fairly effective duringthis campaign, and that it hadaccomplished something.Historic movie to be showOn November 22, the UCDocumentary Film group willpresent D. W. Griffith’s “Birthof a Nation.” The film, star¬ring Henry B. Walthall, MaeMarsh, and Lillian Gish, willbe presented in Social Sciences122 at 7:30 only.“Birth of a Nation” establishedthe basic nature and capacities ofthe motion picture, which areakin to the musical compositionrather than the literary or-dra¬matic forms. It is essentially dis¬junctive with an unrealistic buteffective succession of long shots,medium shots, and alternatingcross-cut scenes. In 1916. whenthe film was first released, it con¬vinced people that the motion pic¬ture was a new form of expres¬sion with unbelievable power tostir the imagination.Series admission cost SI .00. Nosingle admission tickets will besold.Bruere named chairmanRichard T. Bruere, profes¬sor of Latin, has been namedChairman of the departmentof classical languages and lit¬eratures. Napier Wilt, Dean of the divi¬sion of the humanities, an¬nounced Bruere’s appointment.Professor Bruere succeeds Ger¬trude E. Smith, Edward OlsonProfessor of Greek, who becameemeritus this summer.Bruere was born in New York,New York, in 1907 and attendedPhillips Exeter Academy. He re¬ceived his AB and PhD from Har¬vard university in 1928 and 1936respectively.Bruere was a Norton Fellow ofthe American School of ClassicalStudies (Athens) in 1936-37. liecame to UC in 1937 and was ap¬pointed full professor in 1954.During World War II, he was alieutenant commander in the USNaval Reserve.Since 1949, Bruere has been di¬rector of Latin studies at UC. Hisacademic field of special interestis Latin epic poetry. He has con¬tributed articles to philologicaljournals and for ten years hasbeen managing editor of Classi¬cal Philology.Skirbal! speaksRabbi Henry Skirball, di¬rector of Northwestern Uni¬versity’s II i 11 c 1 foundation,will lecture on “Russia’s waron Zionism” next Saturday.The lecture is under thesponsorship of the Student Zion¬ist organization (SZO). Informalconversation will follow the lec¬ture, which begins at 7:30 p.m.Rabbi Skirball was the associ¬ate rabbi of UC’s Hillel foundationlast year. He has recently re¬ turned from a visit to the SovietUnion.The Student Zionist organiza¬tion also is planning to attend adiscussion led by colonel ShaulRamati, consul of Israel, on cur¬rent trends in Arab propagandaand the role that the UnitedArab Republic continues to playin tormenting unrest in theMiddle East.Colonel Ramati will speak atthe Israeli consulate on November16.In addition, the Student Zionistorganization is selling tickets tothe Chicago premiere of the IsraelThe Instruments are the nu¬cleus of what the group hopeswill be a complete collection ofRenaissance and Baroque wood¬winds and strings. The Universityhas recently acquired a bass violada gamha, the first of a set ofthree ganihas, and this will beplayed at the concert.Other instruments to be usedinclude harpsichord and recorder;viola d’amore (a viola with 6bowed strings, and in addition aset of thin wire strings whichsound in sympathy with theothers); a set of krummhorns(bent wooden instruments with a double reed enclosed in a capi;and a three holed pipe and tabor(a small drum>.The program includes representative examples of music originally written for these InstrumentsSeveral compositions will be performed in various instrumentations in order to demonstrate thedifferent possible sonorities.Selections from the ISth-century Glogttuer and IxTchcimer SongBooks, and a group of 16th centurv lieder will be performed, aswell as a rococo sonata for violad’amore and two flutes, and acantata by Dietrich Buxtehudefor soprano, two recorders, harpsichord, and viola da gamba.Baroque concert plannedA concert of German Renaissance and Baroque music onauthentic instruments will be presented by the CollegiumMusicum on Saturday, NovemlxT 12, at 8:30 pm in Bondchapel. Howard Brown, Lenore Coral, Yolanda Davis, JoelEigen, Peter McKeon. and JennieRiesman will perform.IBM WILLINTERVIEWNOVEMBER22 Candidates for Bachelors or Masters Degreesare invited to discuss opportunities in:Marketing and SalesThis is a unique opportunity to find out aboutthe many career opportunities at IBM. The IBMrepresentative can discuss with you typical jobs,various training programs, chances for advanced education, financial rewards, and com¬pany benefits —all important factors that affectyour future.SOME FACTS ABOUT IBMAn Unusual Growth Story: IBM has had one ofthe exceptional growth rates in industry. It hasbeen a planned growth, based on ideas andproducts having an almost infinite applicationin our modern economy.Diverse and Important Products: IBM develops,manufactures and markets a wide range ofproducts in the data processing field. IBM computers and allied products play a vital role in the operations of business, industry, science,and government.Across-the Country Operations: Laboratory endmanufacturing facilities are located in Endicott,Kingston, Owego, Poughkeepsie and Yorktown,New York; Burlington, Vermont; Lexington, Ken¬tucky; San Jose, California; and Rochester,Minnesota. Headquarters is located in NewYork City with sales and service offices in 198major cities throughout the United States.The Accent is on the Individual: No matter whattype of work a person does at IBM, he is givenall the responsibility he is able to handle, andall the support he needs to do his job. Advance¬ment is by merit.The areas in which IBM is engaged have an un¬limited future. This is your opportunity to findout what that future has to offer you.Call or stop in at your placement office to ar¬range an appointment with the IBM representative for the date above. If you cannot attend aninterview, write or call the manager of the near¬est IBM office:Mr. J. J. Keit, Branch ManagerIBM Corporation, Dept. 8829415 S. Western AvenueChicago 20, III.PRescott 9 8000IBM You naturally have a better chance to grow witha growth company.INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATIONCHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 4, 196016 »Sports NewsSt. Louis beats soccer tea mby Mike EisenbergSaturday Chicago’s soccerteam penetrated into soccer-crazy St. Louis, only to gettrounced, 14 to 0. After thegame against Washingtonuniversity and a look aroundf he city, the Maroons realizedwhy the St. Louis Billikens,whom they face Sunday at 2 pmat Stagg field, will probably re¬peat as NCAA champions. In St.Louis, every grammar school hasits own soccer team and a foot¬ball was a rare sight in the pub¬lic parks which were the sceneof dozens of soccer games."Strange as it may sound, sev¬eral Maroons turned in their bestperformances of the season inthe Washington gam o,” com¬mented Ron Wangerin, assistantroach. Bob Reynolds and HelmutLaumer showed improvement ondefense, in which UC specializes,while on offense Fred Hoyt andMike Eisenberg looked much bet¬ter than in previous games.Tomorrow Chicago plays hostto Indiana at 2 pm. This gamemay prove to be close, and themidwaymen have a chance to sal¬vage one win for Alvar Herman-son in his final game as coach.He has tutored UC soccer teamsfor more than 20 years and willretire at the end of the year.Since the Billikens have scored32 goals to their opponents one,while sweeping to five straightwins, the outlook is bleak forSunday, but a triumph either to¬morrow or Sunday will enable theMaroons to tie its 1939 record of1 and 6. Wrestling practice beginsCoach Ron Wangerin an¬nounced that wrestling practiceofficially begins Monday. For sev¬eral weeks a number of first yearmen have been working outunder assistant coach A1 Gibbons.Many have high school experi¬ence and some have placed highin state tournaments. Wangerinis counting on only three vet¬erans to bolster the team.The men with high school ex¬perience are Jim Baillie, 135pounds; Lee Clifford, 150; RogMeredith, 145; Rich Nielson, 170;Cliff Cox, 135; Mike Watson, 155;Gary Derer, 170, and Larry Kap¬lan, 158. Besides these, Wangerinpicks Kees van dcr Stere, 175;Dave Aftine, 165, and Herb Tal-litsch, 205, as the best of the be¬ginners.Returning are Dave Silver, 147;Fred Hoyt, 123, and Mike Eisen¬berg, who held the 130 slot beforea back injury sidelined him formost of the campaign."All eight weight positions arestill open as far as I’m concerned,and anyone eligible is welcome totry out for the team," Wangerinadded.Cross-counfry losesThe cross-country team lostto Northern and Western Illi¬nois on Saturday, at MacombPark, Illinois. It was recordedai two losses, since it was scoredas a "double dual" (Chicago isconsidered to have played bothschools separately), rather thantriangular.Northern defeated us 16-44 and Western did a bit better, winning15-47. (The lowest score wins incross-country).Dave Stern of Northern wasfirst, taking the rugged, three anda half mile course in 18:06. PatPalmer was first for Chicagoagain, though far behind the win¬ner, as he finished eleventh. VicNeill was thirteenth and JohnBolton, Tom Clark, and DennisRusche were fifteenth, eighteenth,and nineteenth.The next meet will be held Sat¬urday at Washington park,against Albion college. The recordis now 2-7, and the team is stillhoping to better last year’s rec¬ord of 2 8.Football season nears endA grudge match pitting thetwo top football teams in thecollege house intramuralleague is developing as theI960 season draws to a close. EastII and East III, who one year agoplayed off for the house cham¬pionship, are storming towardsanother climatic struggle.East II, the defending houseleague champions, brushed pastDodd and East I, their closestcompetition in the blue division,by scores of 12-6 and 25-6. TheEast III group, with five firststringers back from last year’ssecond place finishers, needs onlyto defeat East IV to clinch theirdivision title. East III is unbeaten,untied, and unscored upon thisyear.In the fraternity league, Psi Upsilon seems headed for anotherchampionship. Psi U. edged PhiGamma Delta six to nothing to al¬most assure the league title. OnlyPhi Kappa Psi, with five wins andone loss, remains in the way ofthe Psi Upsilon powerhouse.The championship of the divi¬sional league hinges on the out¬come of the Law School-BusinessSchool contest. Both are unde¬feated so far and possess big, fastteams.Linn house dominates play inthe "B" league, though tough op¬position can be expected from theEast II B’s. Both teams are asyet unbeaten and untied. Banks attends UCErnie Banks started work¬ing for his college degree Mon¬day night. The Chicago Cubs’great slugging shortstop istaking English and sociology atUC’s downtown center.Since graduating from highschool ten years ago, Bankshasn’t returned to the classroom,but he hopes to work for a degreeeven though it may take severalyears. He feels that with moreeducation he will be better equip¬ped to go into business afterhanging up his spikes.Wally Hass, athletic director,emphasized that Banks was notgiven an athletic scholarship.Basketball team works out in preparation for comingseason.Big Ten prefer NixonRichard Nixon swampedSenator Kennedy in a presi¬dential preference poll con¬ducted on seven of the BigTen campuses this week. Toppinghis democratic opponent on everyone of the campuses, Nixon’s ad¬herents registered 21,032 ballotsas compared to the 15,085 cast forKennedy.In other polls at other cam¬puses, political preference seemedmore varied. Kennedy came outon top at Albertus Magnus (NewHaven, Connecticut), Harvard,Maryville (St. Louis) and the Uni¬versity of North Carolina. Nixonwas favored at Cornell, Duke,Eastern Michigan, Princeton, Tri¬nity and the University of Texas.In a survey conducted by theHarvard Crimson, Kennedy de¬feated Nixon by over 1,000 votes,3461 to 2412. The Crimson alsoreported that the faculty favoredKennedy two to one.At Princeton this percentage was reversed. According to a pollconducted by the Daily Princeton-ian some 70% of that campusfavors the Republican nominee,1187 to 490.The Big Ten survey did showsome differences in the politicalorientation of its campuses how¬ever. The race turned out to befairly close at Michigan whereNixon’s margin of victory was320 votes. At Northwestern, theRepublican victory was totaled asNixon’s receiving 2,032 to Ken¬nedy’s 1058. Nixon’s largest plur¬ality was at Ohio State with a4,053-2,303 vote registered.Three Big Ten schools did notparticipate; Michigan State uni¬ versity, Purdue university, andthe University of Minnesota.The student senate at Purdueapproved the election, but the ad¬ministration disapproved thestate election segment of the polland would not let the poll be setup. MODEL CAMERAWholeioleCatalogue Prices onCameras, Projectors, Recorders1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 Bicycles, Parts, Accessoriesspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP> 1(21 .. S5th •>.lfliMl WUCB program guideWUCB broadcasts at 640 kilocycles am. When it's own productions are not being broad¬cast, WUCB retransmits. Chicago's fine arts station, WFMT, 98.7 meagacycles FM. Indian ritual performed—UC students participateFriday, November 47:30 am The Morning Show.Every weekday morningfrom 7:30 to 9:00 am.7:00 pm Hanson — SymphonyNo. 4 (1943).Buxtehude—^Sonata in P,op. 2.Brahms—Pieces for Piano,op. 118.0:00 Handel — Concerto No. 1in G for Harpsichord, op.4, No. 1.Goldmark — Symphony inE flat, op. 26, “Rustic Wed¬ding."0:00 W. Allen Wallis speakingon T h e Candidates andEconomic Growth. Profes¬sor Wallis is dean of theUniversity business schooland is a member of theEisenhower administra¬tion.9:90 Donizetti — Linda dl Cha¬monix (opera).Sunday, November 67:00 ' This Week at the UN.7:15 Commentary — RichardMizrack.7:30 Hans J. Morgen than speak¬ing on The Candidates andAmerican Foreign Policy.3:00 Surfeit and Glut — FiveHours of Jazz, with SteveWesthelmer and Mike Ed-elstein. Monday, November 77:00 Ravel — Le Tombeau doCouperin.Beethoven — Piano TrioNo. 7 in B flat, op. 97,"Archduke."Marty’s Night Out — The¬ater and cinema reviewedby Marty Rabinowitz.Commentary — WilliamKelley.Mozart — DivertimentoNo. 11 in D, K. 251.Orff — Carmina Burana.Walter Johnson speakingon Nixon and Kennedy:8.008:158:309:0010:00 Beethoven — SymphonyNo. 2 in D, op. 36.Fat City — folk music, liveand recorded, with NormLinke.Wednesday, November 97:00 The Musical comedy—thisweek Candide.SG ReportCommentary — WalterMiale.Betthoven — M i s s a So-lemnis.We Come for to Sing —folk music, with MikeWolfson and John Kim.11:008:008:158:3011:00Their personalities and Thursday, November 10qualifications.11:00 Somethin’ Else — Modemjazz with Mike Edelstein.Tuesday, November 8During the evening WUCB willrebroadcast such returns as willbe available to them.7:00 Krieger — Four songs.Bartok — Dance Suite.• Debussy — La Mer.8:00 Jazz for the Layman, withJohn Brink.9:00 Moussorgsky — Orches¬tral Excerpts from the. opera Khovantchina.Berlioz — Symphonie Fan-tastique, op. 14.Schumann — Song Cycle,op. 42, "Fracnliebe undLoben." 7:00 {Cncsco — Dixtuor, op. 14.Grieg — Concerto in a forPiano, op. 16.8:00 Music of the World, withGeorge F. Hawk.8:90 The Spoken Word —Charles Laughton readingfrom the Bible.9:00 Frescobaldi — Suite from“A Musical Garland" (Fi-ori Musicali). An Indian ritual, the cere¬mony of drawing near (Upa-nayana) was performed bythree authentic Brahmins,clothed in white and barefoot,Monday night at Internationalhouse. The rites performed werethose usually given to male Brah¬mins at the age of six. They arcthe introduction to the first stageof the religio is life—studentship.This period lasts for forty-eightyears, if the person is devout.During this time sacred texts,primarily the Vedas, are studied.It must be admitted that theperformance was somewhat west¬ernized. Signs reading “north,”“south," “east," and “west,” wereposted, and the Brahmins woresigns identifying their roles. Theteacher or acaraya was SuhasChatterge, research associate inBengali, the performer or priestwas DPS Dwarikesh, researchassociate and lecturer in Hindi,and the part of the sixycar-old boy was taken by Shayam Karandikar, a student in the University.During the ceremony therewere several sacrifices, disappointingly of various vegetablesand condiments, not of animals.They were burnt so that theycould thus rise to heaven. Thepleasant aroma of cinnamon,ginger, turmeric, and a few moreexotic spices filled the room forThe ceremony ended with thereligious rites of the giving otthe fee to the priest, and a prayerand sacrifice to wisdom by theboy. The ceremony closed with averse recited by the boy: “O Sad-asaspati, I desire to become likeIndra. Make of me a learned manby virtue of the Lord of all Gods.I will become a learned man, hav¬ing a good mind, being handsome,having faithfulness, and truthful¬ness which is worth hearing. Ishall become renowned, capableof proclaiming it through my ownintelligence.”Tonight at 8:30 presentsTouch system or hunt-and-peck—Results are perfect with{EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTypewriter PaperWhatever your typing^ talents, you can turn outneat, clean-looking work thefirst time, with Eaton’sCorrasable Bond Paper.Reason why: Corrasable hasa special surface—it eraseswithout a trace. Just the flickof an ordinary pencil eraserand typographical errorsdisappear. No smears, nosmudges. Saves time, temperaud money!Corrasable Is available in several weights —from onion¬skin to heavy bond. In handy 100-sheet packets and 600-sheet ream boxes. A fine quality paper for all your typedassignments. Only Eaton makes erasable Corrasable.EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDA Berkshire Typewriter PaperEATON PAPER CORPORATION :*Ej PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS This quarter’s Tonight at8:30 series of experimentaldrama will be presented De¬cember 1 to 4 in the Reynoldsclub theatre. Three plays,“The Drafting of SextusBorden" by Omar Shapli, “TheMarriage Proposal" by AntonChekhov, directed by WilliamBezdek, and “The Private Life ofThe ColletteLAUNDERETTE1449 Em* 57th St.MU 4-9236 the Master Race” by BertoldtBrecht, directed by Maggie Stin¬son, will be performed.This is the seventh annual pre¬sentation of student producedand directed plays as part of theTonight at 8:30 series, whichstresses one act plays and pro¬ductions of unusual works, ac¬cording to Ira Fistell, member ofUniversity theatre's studentboard. Tickets for the perform¬ance are priced at $1.00, and willbe sold at the Reynolds club deskand by mail to University theatre(UT), 5706 South University ave¬nue.There will be a second Tonightat 8:30 in January of this year,and scripts and student directorsNOW PLAYING"A BATTLE OF THE SEXES"Starring:Peter Sellers, Hobert Morley, Constance CummingsDearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1753Special student rate far all performances seven days a weekJust Show Cashier Your i.D. Card are being solicited by the dramagroup. Any students wishing todirect a particular show in thewinter production are requestedto submit their names and th<*names of the rlays they wish todirect to the theatre office.Tonight at 8:30 originated as anindependent group in the 1940’s.The association was dissolvedwhen a University dean discov¬ered that few of the Tonight at8:30 members were enrolled stu¬dents, and that most of themwere living in the thearte offices,and that the treasurer of the or-ganizatior had just left for Mex¬ico wi h the total box offices rovenues of the last production.The remnants of Tonight at8:30 later formed the highly suecessful Playwrights theatre onthe Near North side. UT latertook ovei the function of Tonightat 8:30 and still later its name.CLARK theatredark tr madisonfr 2-2843641lilrilHOUSE HERBIE MANNSEXTETAFRO-CUBAN JAZZ1 week-nights $1.50fri. 8t sat. $2.00Opening Wednesday, \nv. 9thJOHN COLTRANE QUARTETFirst Set 8 p.m.Dearborn St. at Division Per Couple* college students admitted (or 50c cnppiftlif ladies day every friday x#|W»l9lall gals admitted (or 25eif dl((erent double (eaturei dailyif open 7:30 a.m.; late show, 4 a.m.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingFour barbers workingLadies' haircuttingShoe shiningFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorGraduate and Professional School Students (And Undergraduate Women)YOU'RE INVITED TO A PARTYFriday evening, November 4, 8:30 p.m. in the beautiful M fir M Club on thesecond floor of the Merchandise Mart. The Young Professional Group of Chicogo is asocial group. The women are mostly models, airline stewardesses, nurses, or universitystudents. The men are young doctors, lawyers, architects, etc., or students in graduate or professional schools. Our party will be a mixer.'You may bring a date if you wish,but most of us will not. There will be about the same number of men and women. Dresswill be informal, admission $1.50. Reservations are NOT necessory but if you have anyquestions, please phone our social chairman at WA 2-8117,CHICAGO MAROON Nov. 4, 1960Culture VultureOne evening (0, it was quite a long time after sunset) Christopher Robin, Pooh, Piglet, and Owl were sipping honeyed-beerdeep in the back, back chamber of Benny Bear's hole (which, as we all remember, is located directly under the 55th tree north-southeast from teyore * swamp). Shall we discuss the great books?" said Owl who was very proud of being able to spell andof being able to drink more honeyed-beer than any other animal in the forest. Christopher Robin frowned and flexed his cricketarm, Reading rots the brain and besides I cant! Pooh gave a little "grr" of sheer delight and whispered his sheer unbeliefthat such a thing had been said- especially by Christopher Robin. Piglet concurred by curling and uncurling his tail and thiswas quite awkward for he was sitting at the moment. But Owl persisted for he knew that the acquisition of knowledge wasa valuable end in and by itself (and for all time, for that matter). Although he couldn't exactly say it that way Owl knew in hisKeart—just as he knew he could read the sign that said "Trespassers W" — that happiness comes only by thinking about it.Isn't it pretty to think so. 7 7 *On CampusTheqfr#The prospect of G. B. Shawencountering Messrs. Gilbertand Sullivan on the Midwaythis brisk autumn is, to saythe very least, slim. However,two examples of their artisticprogeny will be strange bedfel¬lows during the next two weekson Mandel hall stage. The vultureforvently hopes that nothing un¬toward will come of this unionbesides the natural, sanctifiedpleasure one usually associateswith gaelic grouchiness and lightVictorian gentility. GBS is repre¬sented by his acid-etched attackon moral flab, Heartbreak House;and the two prophets of empireby a rather estoric selection fromtheir work called The Gondoliers.Heartbreak House is UniversityTheatre’s premiere productionand it also mark* Bill Alton's de¬but as director of the theater.Opening night is November 10;the play will run through thethirteenth.The U. High alumni associationwill present two performances ofThe Gondoliers on Nov. 18 and19 in Mandel. The productionboasts a gigantic cast of 50 andmusical direction by RolandBailey, no well-remembered lorhis handling of the Darwin showscore last year.CinemaInfidelity and the emotionalbankruptcy it often leads to areshamelessly displayed tonight asthe wicked, wicked Mrs. Bovaryravorts behind her husband’sback in BJ’s re-run of HollywoodFlaubert, Madame Bovary in theJudson dining room at 8 and 10.The bird has long cherished thetender Saturday afternoons of hisyouth spent in third - rate moviehouses watching oat burners, hor¬ror flicks, and the incomparablelaurel and Hardy. Tonight theDoc Films society proves Prousteorrect and recaptures the past,purified in the slapstick distilla¬tion of Our Relations, tonight at7:15 and 9:15 in Social Sciences322. Bushido, the code of the Samu¬rai, the chaos of medieval Japan,and technicolor all conspire tomake Gate of Hell a palpablemasterpiece of a film. Monday atInternational house.MusicDecember brings deb parties,hootch, and la vita dolce, gener¬ally speaking, but Christmas andits poignant conspicuous con¬sumption appears somewhere to¬ward the middle of the month.The traditional precursor lor thenativity scene occurs when thechapel choir trudges into Rocke¬feller caroling us with The Mes¬siah. This tradition perpetuatesitself on December 3 and 4.Tonight the UC chamber musicseries presents the New York ProMusica in a concert of vocal andinstrumental music of the MiddleAges, Renaissance, and earlyBaroque. Mandel at 8:30.The Collegium Musicum Is anoble organization that willcharge a mere pittance, in factnothing, permit us to submergeourselves in its little underworldof German Renaissance and Ba¬roque music next Saturday atBond chapel. So, it’s a bargain.Tomorrow night, Nov. 5, atMandel, the International HouseAssociation, in a worthy cause,their scholarship fund, will pre¬sent a concert of folksinging fea¬turing the talents of another See-ger clan member, Peggy, and thenoted Scotch folklorist, EwanMacColl. These two enter the uni¬versity community holding quiteimpressive credentials. This sum¬mer MacColl and Miss Seegerwere awarded the Prix Italia forthe best European radio show ofthe year. LectureMoody presents the 214th Wil¬liam Vaughn Moody lecture nextWednesday, the ninth. The love¬able Morton Dauwen Zabel of theloveable English dept, will nodoubt bring his silver tongue tointroduce the guest speaker,Angus Wilson. Mr. Wilson’s topicwill be Conformity and the Novel.At 8:0 in the law school audi¬torium.Off CampusTheatreStarting Tuesday, November 8,the Second City players at theircoffee house - cabaret will erodeaway a little bit more of the whitecliffs of pomposity. On that aus¬picious day they offer for our edi¬fication a new satirical review,The Seaeoast of Bohemia. Depicting the problem of why bother togo forward in the sixties, thisGraustarkian fantasy will haveto compete with a bevy of televi¬sion sets on stage election night.Election results will be incorpo¬rated into the show. But if theyreveal that Huntley - Brinkleyhave feet of clay . . .The Goodman theatre may betrying to transform the Bard intoBelasco-Puccini as far as costum¬ing their current production ofTaming of the Shrew is con¬cerned; however Leo Ciceri of theCanadian Stratford festival andold Will surmount even wild westoutfits, bandanas, six guns, andVictorian riding habits.For those of us who avoid theinsidious tube called TV like a re¬ formed lush does West Madisonstreet it comes as a downrightinvasion of our smugness andprivacy that WGN (yes, WGN)is again carrying the Play of theWeek series. This year each pro¬duction is televised twice, onceon Sunday night and again onFriday night. Tonight, The Girlsin 509. Sunday and next Friday,Giradoux’s Tiger at the Gates.Like they say, consult your news¬paper for the exact time.MusicThe Iberian peninsula has suf¬fered grievously over the centur¬ies- Moors, inquisitions, fascists.Thus, it is easily understood whyBizet chose Spain as the localefor his story of flesh and desireboth in and out of the bull ring.The Lyric opera tonight baits thesame old bull. Tomorrow, LaBoheme.The vulture most dolefullyapologizes for a glaring omissionin last week’s column. Last Fri¬day the well-known San Franciscocellist and very old friend of thecultured bird, Edith von Fursten-berg, enjoyed her Mid-west debutat Bremer hall. Next week Missvon Furstenberg will appear withthe Louisville string quartet, un¬fortunately in Louisville.The Bach Society next Fridaywill present the second of its fourconcert series at the Unitarianchurch, Woodlawn and 57th. Theprogram will include Scarlatti,Vivaldi, and, of course Bach. Aren’t you disturbed that Svia-tislov Richter will probably re¬turn to Lenin-land without yourhaving heard him. His concert atOrchestra hall tomorrow is a sell¬out to the rafters.By way of a footnote to his ap¬pearance on campus two weeksago Mike Seeger, lord that fam¬ily’s prolific, is now delivering hisauthentic folkmusic at the Gateof Horn.Perhaps the most interestingexperiment in communal livingthrough solid jazz experience andsound can be found at the Bird-house. This N. Dearborn estab¬lishment furnishes our technoc¬racy’s best automated refresh¬ment and the sort of music thatmakes one forget our subservi¬ence to the big machine. John Col-trane opens November 9.CinemaHiroshima, Mon Amour is thefeature attraction at the WorldPlayhouse. Generally, this film istoo much. It tries rather heavy-handedly to combine anti - bombsentiments with sentiment andsucceeds only in smothering atender love story under a mass ofrhetorical questions and half-baked pacifism. The acting is sup¬erb. It’s a brilliant failure.The Hyde Park theatre’s cur¬rent bill is the Indian film, Apa-rajito, and the Japanese filmUgetsu. The greater east Asia co¬prosperity sphere on Lake Park.Follow the ReturnsELECTION NIGHTat theflWPICI53rd at DorehesterSKI ANY PLACEWE PLAN THEMOST FOR YOURMONEYTRAVEL SERVICESince 12761658 E. 55th Si. BE 8-5944 Ever; Monday nite at the College ofComplexes Bill Smith, Bearded Beat¬nik candidate and spokesman, willdiscuss one of the great pholosoph-ers. The only cat in the world whocan make THINKERS swing. 9 p m.515 N. Clark. IEL, RES. DE 7-16th MonthChicago’s Long-Run Musical Hit!MEDIUMntwtar,.HAPPY MEDIUM,.•0/ N. RUSH St.n i ynit|p a.iwM« ... »««ta« an nUAnblnb *• DOWNSTAGE room1 Ik.w, MM,: Tm,M liM a IhMImm. IiM k Mta-Mmi lM. Tk.rl JJ.II a Hi!M a M KM a M.H, Ml ImL mill MLMAH. OktHI HOW LAKEthe ^ P A R K AT$3RC>t^yde park : N O 7 - 9 O 7 1theatreTheDisc1367 E. 57th St. HY 3-5151Record of the WeekLANDOWSKANADYN SONATASPiano and HarpsichordLM 6073 $7.98 Opening Tuesday, November 6SHAI K. OPHIRElection Wight Special50% Off oil Food and DrinkThe Gate of Horn753 N. Dearborn — SU 7-2833The Folklore Societypresent*RICHARD CHASEnoted folk storytellerwithGeorge & Gerry ArmstrongSmU Nov. 12ih P m-Ida Noyes TheatreMembers 75c Others $1.00 "Brilliant . . . one of the cinema'soutstanding masterpieces!"—TimeAnd"GORGEOUS!.. . full of beauty... the sensuousdetails are intriguing." n. y. t;w"BRILLIANT!... a drama of the sins of greedand violence told with power, poetry andpictorial persuasion..." -**«**•- Cu*"A MASTERPIECE!" -u*A Oaty’ SiWlf-MwIUI Nojoli frai • fmtuM hf W*. $««•*•»student rates 65c all performancesNov. 4, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 19mrnmmammStudents deliver feed to Fayei Je county“Less than twelve hours bycar from Chicago is Fayettecounty Tennessee where Ne¬groes are being forced out oftheir homes and starved becausethey want to vote,” said MarkEastman, a UC student who justreturned from a trip to Fayettecounty.An independent group of stu¬dents travelled down to Fayettecounty to deliver a truckload offood and to gather films and in¬formation on the situation there.The following is part of theirreport on conditions in Sommer-Ville, Tennessee, a town locatedin Fayette county:“We were able to travel aroundthe town while we were thereand see the effects of the ‘eco¬nomic squeeze’ on the Negroesjof the town. Those people whohad registered to vote in the com¬ing election, some 1500, were denied all credit In the town andmany had been refused food andclothing although they were will¬ing to purchase them in thetowns stores. Stores owned byNegroes were unable to purchasesupplies from their usual whole¬salers.Although food has been comingIn from the North and fromstores in Memphis, Tennessee,there is a severe lack of food inthe county. The real problem isyet to come. As the crops comein, Negro sharecroppers and ten¬ant farmers are being thrown offtheir land. There are very fewlegal documents or contracts toprotect these farmers. The fewcontracts which do exist will ter¬minate on January first, and thesmall amount of existing credit,necessary to people who livewithout money until their cropscome in, will be stopped.Nine to one vote convictsPhi Sig of "dirty rushing" John McFerrin, head of the Fa¬yette county Civic and Welfareleague of Sommerville, Tennesse,is storing food for what he fore¬sees as “the difficult times tocome.” McFerrin also is settingup tents as temporary housingfor those Negroes who have beenremoved from their homes and“still have enough strength tostay around for Election Day.”McFerrin hopes that they will allstay and “use the right they arefighting to gain.”Emergency relocationOne of the Negro farmers whohas moved into a tent had pre¬viously been sharecropping on afarm owned by another Negro.The Negro landowner, a school¬teacher in Fayette county, waspressured into removing his ten¬ant because the tenant had regis¬tered. Many of the residents hadtried to register and were unsuc¬ cessful. Economic pressure hasalso been used against those whounsuccessfully attempted to reg¬ister.The medical clinics in Fayettecounty have stopped treating Ne¬gro patients. They had at firstrefused to treat only those whohad registered and their families.At thisj time they will not treatany Negro patient and no doctorsare available to Negroes in thecounty. One registered Negrocould not even find a doctor topronounce his Just deceased fa¬ther dead.It is the opinion of some whitepeople in the county that “thepressure is being exerted bythree people who control thecounty. They are supposedly adoctor, a lawyer, and a banker."Nobody knows how much truththere is in this speculation.”Campus actionCaryle Gcier, Civil rights sub¬I Continued from page 1>_merits and that past Phi Sig ac¬tions should not be made rele¬vant.“We did have some pledges inour house after hours,” lie ex¬plained. “For this we have al¬ready apologized. We Invited someof them to go out with some ofus, but we told them all thatother smokers were going on. Weplaced no pressure on any ofthem to stay or go with us.”At this point Ansel Edidin, IFpresident, stepped down from thechair. Edidin, who is a Phi Sig,had volunteered to give lip thegavel sometime earlier, but thegroup had no objections to hisrunning the meeting.Goldman then moved that as apunishment, Phi Sig not be al¬lowed to pledge any students dur¬ing winter rush. He argued thatPhi Sig’s efforts to subvert rushcould be of a most destructivenature and severely hamper allrushing. “We need to assess apenalty which will hurt, so they’llremember.”(A common though unvoicedassumption throughout the pro¬ceedings was that Phi Sig wasattempting to out out ZBT. Botlihouses are predominantly Jewishand tend to rusli the same men.This charge was totally and cate¬gorically denied by Plii Sig presi¬dent Snyder.)Goldman’s motion received lit¬tle support; John Mills of AlphaDelta Phi argued that this pen¬alty would hurt the entire fra¬ternity system at a time whenserious efforts were being madeto build the system. A new proposal was made tofine the fraternity $200 for violat¬ing both the letter and the spiritof the rushing code.A representative from Phi Gam¬ma Delta pointed out that thepunishment should contain somestipulation as to payment dead¬line. He pointed out that whenhis fraternity was fined $200 itsimply didn't pay and graduallythe fine was reduced first to $100and finally to $40.The final assessment demandsthat Phi Sig must pay $100 bythe end of this quarter or loseits rushing privilege for the win¬ter quarter.After a brief discussion thismotion also passed by a 9-1 mar¬gin.Phi Sig will probably not ap¬peal this decision, according toSnyder. “We feel that we havebeen dealt with impartially in theCouncil. We did not knowingly orwillingly violate the code, how¬ever.”“As a Phi Sig,” Edidin com¬mented, “I really don’t think webroke the rules. We conscienti¬ously tried to obey them to theletter. As president of the Inter-Fraternity Council, since theCouncil has made this interpreta¬tion of the rules, I wish to assistin plugging up the code so thateveryone will know, in the future,that this sort of action is regard¬ed as illegal.”IF decisions cannot be appealedto any other legislative body, al¬though there is some conjecturethat the Dean of Students has thepower of review. Studens unloading truck at John McFerrin's store in Som¬merville, Tennessee. They plan to show films taken of thesituation in Fayette County.New plan consideredA proposal to abolish facul¬ty advisors as a requirementfor recognized student organ¬izations is currently beingconsidered by the Committee onRecognized Student Organiza¬tions (CORSO) of Student Gov¬ernment.No action has yet been takenon the proposal, but a question¬naire on the values of the facultyadvisor system will be sent to student organizations and to theadvisors. A student code amend¬ment concerning the relation ofthe advisor to his group shouldbe reported out of the committeewithin a month.John Kim, chairman of thecommittee, said, “The presentsystem seems not to be workingwell. Although no plan is by anymeans definite at this moment,we will be looking for a way tomake the system more meaning¬ful.” committee chairman of the NS\committee of SC, had started thecampus drive for aid to Fayottocounty. The UC Committee toSupport the Southern StudentsProtest and other interested indi¬viduals helped to collect moneyand to inform the campus of theconditions in Fayette county.Mark Eastman, Kevin Krown.Ed Cohn, and Len Levin, studentsin the College, worked to collectmoney and then planned to takethe food down there themselves.Gavin MacFadyen, a former stu-dent at Shimer college, and BillHard, a UC student who Is a so-cial worker for Cook county,drove the truck to Fayettecounty.The truck and a ear left thequadrangles separately at around2 pm on Monday, October 31. Thetwo met at Cairo, Illinois, the“last safe spot of the trip.” Fromthere they proceeded to Tennes¬see and arrived in Sommerville atG am. After unloading and hidinethe truck, the group traveledaround and spoke to both Negroand white citizens of the town.Although they had no troublegetting to the county, both thetruck and the car had difficultieswhen they left. The car was stop¬ped by the Fayette county sheriff,who questioned them and toldthem, “UC don’t want you hanging around.” After they left thesheriff and the county, theycrossed Into adjoining Haywoodcounty. The sheriff of thatcounty was waiting for them, liequestioned them and then escort¬ed them to the county line.The truck was Intercepted bythe White Citizens’ council, whosurrounded the truck with carsand harassed the driver MacFay-den, driving the truck, took thetruck through back and dirtroads to Memphis, Tennessee.From there he was able to driveon federal highways back to Chi¬cago.Aims of tripThe students from UC and theother people who worked to getthe food there and the informa¬tion back to Chicago are tryingto achieve two results. They wishto supply these people with thefood and supplies to continuingtheir fight to register and vote.Their other main objective is toprovide information to UC stu¬dents and students on other cam¬puses about what is happeningin little publicized areas of Amer¬ica.It is their hope that students atother colleges will also take aetion to aid Fayette and Haywoodcounty citizens. Any studentwishing to help them may con¬tact Kevin Krown in PierceTower or Caryle Geier at the SCoffice.unusualTory IIA is the first of a series of test reactorsbeing developed under the Lawrence RadiationLaboratory’s nuclear Ramjet program.A reactor for ramjet propulsion must operateat high power levels yet be of minimum sizeand mass. Its design must consider the very highpressure drop across its length, the stress loadsdue to flight maneuvering, and the extremely high radiation flux level which itself leads tosevere heat transfer and radiation damage prob¬lems. Because the operating temperature exceedsthat at which most conventional structural ma¬terials fail, the core itself consists of bundledtubes of sintered uranium and beryllium oxidefabricated with central holes for continuous airpassage. One of many unusual projects at theLawrence Radiation Laboratory — the onlynational laboratory active in virtually allphases of the atomic energy program.ON NOVEMBER 11Lawrence Radiation Laboratory staff memberswill be on campus to answer your questionsabout a career in nuclear research.They will interview outstanding;chemists electronic engineersphysicists mechanical engineersmetallurgists ceramic engineersmathematicians chemical engineersCall your placement office for an appointment,LAWRENCE RADIATIONLABORATORYof the University of CaliforniaBerkeley & Livermore, California(San Francisco Area).20 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 4, 1960