JVe UaWcnity of 0»c««» LibraryPariodkcal & Docwneat RoomStudents bolt ISL; will reorganizeStudent politics on the Chi¬cago campus took a sharpturn towards the confused,due to a bitter series of eventsduring the past week and ahalf. It is extremely possibledial tSL, dominant Chicago party;o, i he last twelve years, will not,i!ruve the conflict raging throughits caucus.\ large sector of ISL leader-si. if) walked out of its party lastSunday night. Among the defec¬tors were Leonard Friedman, JohnKim. and Maureen Byers.Vs tor as I’m concerned, ISLas it has been known since 1948,has no further future in UC pol¬itic,,” commented Miss Byers. “Itai l that the loss of so many vitalelements in the party has weaken-I [SL to a point from which itwill not soon recover.”i oval party members disagree,t'-d. will certainly run a slatein the spring election.” comment¬ed Jay R. Baker, treasurer of thegovernment. “The party has lost. .me of its leadership in the gov¬ernment, but the leadership of the/mi iy has remained intact."Friedman, Kim and Byers havebeen joined by SO president JimThomason and other UC politic-ins, in attempting to form a newcampus political party.We will hold an open organ¬izational meeting Sunday nightd 8 pm in Ida Noyes,” announc-(1 Kim. “We expect to come upwith a viable and liberal partywhich won’t spend its time inparliamentary haggling.”Again, Baker disagreed. “I don’tthink there is a need for a newparly,” he commented. “Any reas¬onable program they might haveCan he carried out by ISL. Therejs no ideological conflict betweenthem and the party.”'The single event which precip¬itated this “walk out” concernedthe -eating of the Chicago Nation-d Student Association delegation.The ISL caucus slated individualslot this delegation; though con-itiitionally bound by the ISLparty caucus mandate, many of the ISL representatives on theexecutive committee of the gov¬ernment decided to vote in oppo¬sition to the ISL mandate.UC sends five delegates andfive alternates to the NS A na¬tional congress. These represen¬tatives are elected in a campuswide election each spring. Chicagois entitled to six delegates andas many alternates to regionalNSA meetings.Five of the six regional dele¬gates are the five national dele¬gates elected by the campus. Theexcutive committee* of SG fills inthe remaining delegate and thesix alternates.This year Chicago is entitled totwo extra regional votes sinceMaureen Byers and Neal Johnstoneach hold regional office, automat¬ically entitling them to a voteat the regional. The Chicago dele¬gate automatically consisted ofByers, Friedman, Gail Paradise,Johnston, and Thomason. The ISLcaucus direct decided that JohnKim should fill the national seatleft vacant when national dele¬gate Bob Brown dropped out ofschool. . This left two positions to befilled; three serious candidateswere nominated: Carvle Geier[ISL] Jay Baker ISL] and ArtMacEwan [SRPJ. MacEwan’s can¬didacy was supported by Byers,Friedman and Kim, but MacEwanwas ultimately defeated by thetwo ISL party members.“It was my clear understand¬ing,” commented Friedman, “thatthe caucus promised that Mac¬Ewan would be placed on the al¬ternate list. He wasn’t.”Instead, when the ISL caucusmeet a week ago Sunday, it seated five ISLers and one inde¬pendant: Dorothy Dorf, VivianScott, Liz Heath, Howie Rosen-field, and John Hodges-Roper plusindependant Gene Vinogradoff.MacEwan’s supporters control¬led the SG exec and tabeled themotion to seat the six alternatespicked by the caucus; they intend¬ed to take the question back tothe caucus for reconsideration.. However, in the ISL caucus lastSunday night, the motion to re¬consider met ultimate defeat.Though there was originally anine to six vote in favor of re¬ consideration, a combination of r•»voting and four late arrivals pro¬duced a final vote of 10 to 9against reconsideration.At this point Byers, Friedmanand Kim walked out of the meet¬ing announcing their resignationfrom the party. They were follow¬ed by Liz Heath, secretary of thegovernment.Rumors had been circulating foea week in SG circles that Fried¬man and Kim were planning toresign not only from the party,but also from the government it-(Continued on page 2)Vol. 69 — No. 56 University of Chicago, January 27, 1961 uriifltihbo 31.Jim Thomason, SG presi¬dent, pondering party split. Ford gives UC $5,400,000The Ford Foundation announced yesterday in New York a grant of $5,400,000 to TheUniversity of Chicago to strengthen and expand graduate training and research in non-Western and other international studies.The Ford grant is a keystone in the university efforts calling for an over-all expenditureof about $13,000,000 in these programs over the next decade.The bulk of the gift, one of the largest single dollar grants made to the University sinceits founding in 1890. is ear- _______— -“It is a university’s business to tentialities, and interests resultedunderstand man and the basis ofsociety. Historically, however, inthe United States higher educa¬tion has been preoccupied with, . Western man and Western soci- , _program of other international ejy gU|. there are other ifopor- pally China), and to the Sovietstudies. tant horizons largely untouched UnionR. Wendell Harrison, acting awaiting scholarly attention —chancellor of the University of major cultures which deserveChicago, said in accepting the investigation for their intrinsicmarked for support of study andresearch programs in South andSoutheast Asia, the Far East, andthe Soviet Union over the nextdecade. Support is also providedon a five-year basis for a broad in a decision to “give top priorityduring the coming decade tothree major areas: South andSoutheast Asia (principallyIndia), to the Far East (princi-grant;200 faculty sign petitionNearly 200 UC faculty members have signed a petition calling for an investigation intothe operation of the University of Chicago bookstore. _The petition is being circulated by the Student-Faculty Committee for a Better Book- country.■store (SFCBB), a committee created by an act of the Assembly of Student Government. „Wp eSDecial]v appreciate theCirculation of the petition began ————— - - ' worth and not only as sourcematerials for the solution of im¬mediate problems.“The trustees, officers and fac¬ulty of the university are enor¬mously grateful for this verygenerous grant in fields thatwere not previously given suffi¬cient scholarly attention in this• ist Tuesday afternoon.Also being circulated is a ques¬tioned re asking faculty members’opinions on various phases of book¬store operation. Over 200 answersto the questionaire have been re¬ceived.The petition reads; .“I feel that the future opera¬tion of the University of Chicagobookstore merits deliberation, and( ask the Council of the Univer¬sity Senate to organize a faculty-student committee to evaluate theBookstore and to discuss its fu¬ture operation.”Jay Greenberg, SFCBB chair¬man, expressed optimism over the next week, it will be sent to theCouncil of the Faculty Senate.Results of the questionaire werealso termed ‘most encouraging’ byboth Greenberg and Pierce. “Wehave, of course, only tentative re ‘no/ and ‘indifferent’ to the ques¬tions.Of those questionaires returned,79% felt that a discount on text¬books should be offered, 7% felt Ford Foundation’s recognition of,and provision for, two aspects ofplanning with which all researchinstitutions must cope: longrange support and flexibility.”Of the total grant, $3,800,000 is “We intend to bring togetherscholars from various culturaland educational backgrounds anddisciplines and encourage each tobroaden his own understanding,and facilitate his cooperationwith others in the planning ofundergraduate and graduate stud¬ies relating his specialty to theculture under study.Harris added that “the univer¬sity also proposed to engage inintensified research and develop¬ment in the African and MiddleEastern areas.”Similar high priorities alsowere established in the fields ofinternational relations, compara¬tive education, and internationallaw and organization by the com-that they should not, 3% were for support of the university’s ndttee.suits, based on what is indubitably ‘indifferent,’ and 11% did not an- non-Western area programs, to Harris explained the need forless than one third of the total swer the question. be divided approximately as fol- area studies as follows:return,” Greenberg said. “Only Question four reads “The Uni- lows: $1,786,000 for the South and “The United States is playingtwo of the questions have actually versity bookstore should be run Southeast Asia program, $988,000 an important role in the worldon a non-profit, non-loss basis.” for the Far East program, and today in scholarship as well as inThe same selection of answers $1,026,000 for Russian and Slavic political affairs. It is certainlyavailable as for the first studies. important, therefore, both inbeen analyzed as of now, and, fromthese, we feel that there is defi¬nite support for a change in book¬store policy.”The two questions which havebeen discussed are the first andfourth to appear on the ques¬tionaire. The first reads, “A Uni- wasquestion.On this item,‘yes’, 14% were‘indifferent’, andanswer. The remaining $1,600,000 is for terms of national and scholarly63% answered five-year support of graduate‘no’, 9% were training in social sciences, hu-14% did not inanities, law and education, andresearch in other internationalmovement. Said Greenberg, “I be- versity bookstore should offer disHove that we have made a greatdeal of progress in a very shorttime. We have, of course, hadsome difficulty in reaching facultymembers, but I would conserva¬tively estimate that 90 per centof those contacted have signed thepetition.“With response this good, I lookforward to a day in the very nearfuture when students, faculty, andadministration will sit down anddiscuss what certainly is a veryimportant issue,” Greenberg con¬cluded.Ken Pierce, planning coordina¬tor of the new committee, calledreaction of faculty to the petitionindicative of growing support forstudent bookstore protest.” Piercestated, “I feel that the large num¬ber of faculty members who havesigned and who will sign is con-crete evidence of the widespreadconcern about the Bookstore. Inview of these signatures I don’t•>ee how the faculty can continueto officially ignore the problem."Pierce explained that when cir-ulation of the petition is comple¬ted which should be some time interest to investigate and under¬stand non-Western cultures.”Administrators appointed tothe committee which preparedthe proposal were:R. Wendell Harrison, vice presi-Further tabulation of question- studies.counts on textbooks for faculty aire answers should be completed ^e Ford Foundation based itsmembers and students.” Faculty by next week, according to plan- grant upon a survey begun last dent, dean of the faculties, andmembers had a choice of ‘yes/ ning coordinator Pierce. April by a University committee acting chancellor; Napier Wilt,headed by Chauncy D. Harris, dean of the division of the hu-former dean of the Division ol manities; D. Gale Johnson, deanSocial Sciences and an authority of the division of social sciences;on Soviet geography. and Alan Simpson, dean of theHarris said that the appraisal College. In addition, deans l ran*made of university resources, po (Continued on page 2)Tuition increase dueTuition will probably go up debated is whether .his increase,. . * should be appended to tuition ornext year, according to an in¬formed high University offi¬cial. No definite decision hasyet been reached, though, he has¬tened to add.If tuition does go up, and thecurrent odds are better than fifty-fifty, the increase will certainlybe small, $10 or less per quarter.One of the points currently being to fees.Tuition was $690 in the aca¬demic year 1957-58. It has beenincreased annually since then:$840 in ’58, $900 in ’59 and $1,050this year.A final decision is expected sometime next week. Until then suchUC offices as the scholarship andloan office are biding tiieir time.Kennedy picks UC profmm m I see o,(see pageFraternities disagree with AIFCMembers of the nine fra¬ternities on campus almost allconcur that their houses are“solid,” “w e 11-b u i 11,” and"without major structural defects”,contrary to the opinion of theAlumni I-F council, although theydo feel that some repairs and re¬modeling are necessary.The Alumni council last weekstated that six of the nine houses•—all except Alpha Delta Phi, PsiVpsilon, and Phi Kappa Psi—werein need of partially or completelynew housing.“Our house is basically solid”,stated John Mills, president of Al¬pha Delt, “but it does need somerepairs. It could be rebuilt so thatit would be better than any otherhouse on campus and w7ould lastanother 100 years. Most of theother houses are in fairly poorcondition”, he continued, "exceptfor Psi U and Phi Psi.”Another AlphaJDelt, Fred Miller,stated that "ours is probably oneof the few houses on campus inDU house is ''fine"; butneeds more facilities. good shape, and it would be advan¬tageous to us to keep it. It’s in aprime location and is very valu¬able property.”Beta, described by a member ofanother fraternity as a “firetrap”,is “rumored to be the oldest steel¬framed building in Chicago” ac¬cording to president Lance Had-dix. “We have a fairly good physi¬cal plant”, Haddix continued, “butof course things do go wrong con¬stantly with such a very oldhouse.”Haddix approved of the plan torenovate the fraternity houses. “Ialways hoped this sort of thingwould go through,” he commented.“The alumni groups are not strongenough to support a new buildingprogram by themselves. If thereis any basis to this new rumor,I’m in favor of getting a substan¬tial amount of money to decoratethe house, at least.Nate Swift, a former housemanager at Beta, said that theproblem is that “our building wasnot constructed as a fraternityhouse. It w7as originally a Dutchconsulate, and has had varyinguses throughout the years. Ouralumni just gave us a new roofand boiler, but we still need con¬struction improvements.”“Delta Upsilion is in excellentcondition—no repairs are neces¬sary,” stated A1 Berger. Housemanager Bill Crane agreed. “Thehouse is in very good shape, es¬pecially considering its age. Wedo, however, need increased facil¬ities for our anticipated increasedmembership if the fraternitysystem is going to expand.”Aaron Barnes, president of Delt»Upsilon, also felt that the housewas “in good condition. In twentyyears there might be some struc¬tural problems, but there are nonenow.”Phi Delts questioned alsothought that their house was“basically in good shape”. Tom Pascal, president ol Phi DeltaTheta, said “the house is quitecomfortable--of course, we onlybought it three years ago, and itis showing signs of wear. I thinkit would be a good idea for theUniversity to build houses. Rightnow we have room for all ourmembers, but a space shortage inthe near future is quite likely.”David Auton, a former housemanager, pointed out the advan¬tages of fralernity living. "Peopleliving here enjoy living facilitiesbetter than those in the dormitor¬ies, although we may have to in¬crease our rates to pay for neces¬sary repairs to the house,” he said.“Although the fraternities are not.as new as the clean and" steriledorms, they are better places tolive in.”"I don’t know if I would be infavor of University owned frathouses—it depends on the condi¬tions attached,” Auton continued.“If some conditions prove unaccep¬table, I’d just as soon stay here—our house is as good or better thanany of the other houses, structur¬ally, and it ranks quite high inappearance.”Lowell Meyer, president of PhiGamma Delta and the Inter-Fra¬ternity council, thought that the Alumni plan showed “foresight”.“In five to ten years the olderhouses will all need strutural re¬pairs which are not noticeable tothe unexperienced person,” he said.“Our house is presently in verygood condition and a more en¬joyable place to live in than thedormitories.”“Right now our house is in goodshape,” commented manager DougWhite, “but the alumni are spend¬ing lots of money. It needs moreimprovements in the future, per¬haps a complete remodeling in fiveyears or so. It would probably bebetter to move into a new7 housethan to keep repairing this one.Things w'ill eventually start de¬caying."1’hi I’si’s president, Eliot Finkel,said that his house is basicallysound. “II could stand a few re¬pairs, though,” he commented. An¬other member. Steve Zarlenga, saidthat the Phi Psi house is “bigand bright, and it swings. It’s builtlike a stone.”We would like much more room—we need a house that can hold35 people,” remarked Joel Snyder,president of Phi Sigma Delta, “Thehouse was built in 1910, and someparts are almost antidiluvian bynow. Various fixtures and parts are in need of repair.” Neal Kome-sar said that “it’s getting crowdedhere, but the house is in K00(jcondition— except that the houseis kind of old.”“Psi Upsilon is one of the fewhouses on campus as a fraternity ”stated vice president Sam Gray,"but we have more members thatcan be accommodated.Alumni gave Betaboiler and roof.Ford makes grant to UC(Continued from page 1)cis S. Chase of the graduateschool of education and EdwardH. Levi of the Law school workedclosely with the committee intheir areas of special concern.The following members of theover-all university committee rep¬resent the major area interests:Milton E. Singer, Paul Klapperprofessor of social sciences andsecretary, committee on South Asian Studies; George V. Boh-rinskoy, professor of Sanskritand chairman of the committeeon South Asian Studies; HughMcLean, associate professor ofRussian Literature, and EdwardA. Kracke, Jr., professor of Mid¬dle Chinese Literature and Insti¬tutions and chairman of the com¬mittee on Far Eastern Civiliza¬tion; Bert F. Hoselitz, professorof Social Sciences, and David E.Apter, associate professor ofStudent leaders organize new party(Continued from page 1)self. Their roommate, Lincoln Ra-meriz had resigned his chairman¬ship ol the party caucus the weekbefore.An attempt at reconcilliationwas made following the caucuswhen Byers, Heath, Kim andFriedman met for four hours withHodges Roper and Johnston.“The straw that broke my back,Miss Byers complained, “w7as thelack of interest and willingnessto be informed on the part of amajority of that ISL caucus.There was just too much stalethinking for my taste.”"I think MacEwan was smear¬ed," Friedman asserted. “He’sone of the hardest working peopleon campus in the field of civilliberties and he's also one of thebest informed on national issues.” The ISL rebels dedided to fightthe issue in the exec committee.The exec substituted MacEwan forVinogradoff.“What the exec did Mondaynight was undemocratic and un¬constitutional,” complained Doro-thy Dorf. “I was elected by ISL,filled an ISL vacancy, have a de¬finite loyalty to the organizationand am remaining within theparty.”“In my opinion, this actionshows complete lack of integrityand responsibility. They had a re¬sponsibility to carry out the willof the majority of the party sincethey had their pow7er and theirposition by virtue of party mem¬bership. Therefore* their propercourse of action should have beento fulfill their responsibility tothe party, carry out the party'smandate, and then resign from the Exec,” asserted Baker.I thought that ISL was so im¬proper in refusing to hear our re¬quest for reconsideration, that Ino longer felt it was my party,”retorted Liz Healh.The formation of a new partywas suggested shortly before thefiery ISL meeting by SG presidentJim Thomason. Originally ByersFriedman and Kim had intented.to completely withdraw from cam¬pus politics, but they warmed toThomason’s suggestion.“I don’t necessarily envision amerger with SRP,” Thomason ex¬plained. “I hope to see a partywhose members can trust eachother and which can spend itstime doing things rather than em¬broiling itself in parliamentary de¬lay.”Elder statesmen of Chicago pol¬itics have been expecting someNew SC party organizedA small poster, entitled “The price of freedom—,” marked the official beginning of thenew Student Government Party, PRO. The Practical Revolutionary Party, as it is offi¬cially known, was started by a group of graduate and undergraduate students who feel thatStudent Government “in its present form ... is impractical, irresponsible, inaffective, andignored by the large majority of both faculty and students.”The first major caucus of the “central committee” was held last Sunday night. Therewere “12 to 13” people attending. ~At this meeting, Diantha McJil- ty, the administration, and the ment has failed and what we pro¬ton was appointed undergraduate- Public- We may know that SG- pose to do about it” She also, . , _ , elected by only 10% of the stu- stated that they want to get thischairman and Tyler Haynes wa.s dent body—does not reflect our thing off the ground," and to doappointed giaduate-chairman. maturity and good judgement, but this they need active members.The general objectives of the others do not. We must correct PRO, at present, has about 25new Party are a bicameral legis- this situation.” members, approximately halflature and a yitilization of Student Haynes stated that the group is graduate and half undergraduate.Government in general. The bica- discontented with SG in its pres- Of these 25, they have one mem-meral legislature would consist of ent form. He said, however, that her who is already in Studentan undergraduate house and a pro wanted to go fr>m the nega- Government. Haynes said thatgraduate house. They feel that in tive to the positive. Pro has mere- they eventually wa..t to put to-this way, bills pertaining only to ]y stated what they feel is wrong gether a slate, but both he andone group could be expressed in with Student Government; now Miss McJilton emphasized that theoixm discussion in that house they want to try to correct these major aspect of this Sunday’swithout wasting the time of the faults. meeting will be to interest peopleolher branch. They feel that much Miss McJilton, commenting on in joining the organ.zation. Missmore could be accomplished by SG the first public meeting of PRO McJilton stated that PRO’S “per-under these conditions. to be held this Sunday, January formance in the spring will de-In regards to the vitalization, 29 at 7:30, in the Law school pend entirely on whether we cantheir poster states that SG is room 1, said that the "meeting get active workers. It will all de-looked down tipon “by the facul- will explain how Student Govern- pend on what happens Sunday.”2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 27. 1961 such sort of rift for some time.“ISL has moved sharply awayfrom its old strict ‘student as stu¬dent’ position in the past twoyears, but the whole party didnot move as fast as its leadership,” commented one UC partyhack.These events reminded many oldstudents of the political rift whichoccult'd in the Spring of 1957. Atthat time a number of ISL’s mostpopular vote gettei-s bolted theparty, arguing that it was theirpopularity which gave ISL controlol government but that their ownpolitical ideas received but scantrespect. Calling themselves the In¬dependant Association, they ran afull slate in that spring’s NSAelections.In the meantime, ISL itself ex¬pelled a number of party hacksfrom its own ranks; these politic¬ians, mostly graduate students,reconstituted themselves as theUgly Ten.With all these parties running,SRP succeeded in making a totalsweep of the election. Neither theIA nor the Ugly Ten survivedthe spring.Friedman feels, however, thatthe new party has a much betterchance of success.“Most of the people who haveworked in government this yearare with us. The people who start¬ed the discount-book service, thediscount - travel service and theconsultative boards arc ail with us.“ISL isn’t left with too manyactive people.”Others have pointed out thatSRP is currently in a much weak¬er position .than it was three yearsago when it profited from the ISLsplit.On the other hand, no partyother than ISL or SRP has suc¬ceeded in winning control of thegovernment in the last twelveyears, But, without having wonan election, this ne-7 party doesintend to assume control of SGfor the rest of the year. “ISL nolonger controls the government,”claimed one of the rebels. Political Science, represented in¬ternal ional and comparative in¬terests.Chauney D. Harris, UC profes¬sor of geography discussed twofundamental characteristics o fthe University of Chicago whichhave facilitated the developmentof area and international pro¬grams.He stated that the first is theUniversity tradition of pioneer¬ing, of striking boldly into prom¬ising new frontiers of knowledge.This tradition dates from its veryfounding in the heart of the Mid-11 lowest as a major private uni¬versity devoted to research andgraduate work.“The second fruitful traditionof the University is that of com¬munication among scholars ofmany disciplines. Chicago It a slong been famous as a campuswhere there is a common dis¬course.“Major concentrations of areainterests have evolved In threemajor world regions: the Russianand Slavic, the Far Eastern, andthe South and Southeast Asian.“Interest in the Russian andSlavic field at the Universitydates back to 1905."Interest in the Far Easternfield dates back to 1928, whenHarley F. MacNair joined the De¬partment of History.”A Committee on Far EasternCivilization was formed in 1950.first with a seminar, later withpublic lectures, and soon there¬after with a curriculum and degree program.Work in the South and South¬east Asian field, at least in San¬skrit, began with the founding olthe University.The Committee on South AsianStudies was formed in 1953. Dming the last decade a remarkablechain reaction of interest liasresulted in 27 faculty membersfrom more than a dozen depart¬ments pursuing active programsof study in South and SoutheastAsia at the present time.“International programs, suchas international relations, econom¬ic development, comparative edu¬cation, and international legalstudies, have grown concurrentlywith area interests. With the ma¬turing of the major area pro¬grams comparative studies cannow build on more penetratingunderstandings of the principalcultural groups that make up thegreat world civilizations.”The above considerations to¬gether with carefully drawn pro¬posals to strengthen and expandgraduate training and researchin non-Western and other inter¬national studies were the basisfor the Ford Foundation grant of$5,400,000 to The University ofChicago on January 26, 1961.Beadle will meet students Group receives *1100Undergraduate students will Wick continued,” simply because added, is how to serve coffee to Two checks, totaling $1,100, were presented to James For-have the opportunity to meet we 11 have so many more people, 1000 people.” man and Sterling Stuckey, representaitves of The Fayettenpw UC Chancellor George VV. we a.re doing everything pos- Originator of the idea for this county Emergency Relief committee today. A check for $600Beadle in an informal ques- j!1 ° *nsu2ie mtimacy'.For ®x‘ mee^lng was Alan Simpson, dean was presented by Mrs. Elma Foster, president of the Unitnon and answer session Wednes- ampl.e> we plan on Pitting the of the college. “It was the first league of First aid nurses. Theda\ February 1. . „ ros um in e we o thing Dean Simpson asked about Rev. T. E. Brown, Pastor of Pro- tion that is spearheading the Vo-than 1000 students will otn(Ya„ T*’ ,new Chancel- gressive Baptist Church, present- ter Registration drive in South-Morea stage.” If possible and practic- lor,” Wick explained.ia“Mv<iif>e atndPyours',’tsession able there wi" also 1x5 an in,orm 1'ai'lording to Warner Wick" aW *J~^Pth,n following the Mandcl formulated forant dean of the College. The meet- g’ing is set for 8:30 pm in Mandelhall.‘Tickets of admission may be ed a check for $500 on behalf of western Tennessee, under the lead-y —'“r duie IU i ne r ayeire county v,ivicur big pi oblem thete, Wick and UC s 3000 graduate students, and Welfare league, an organiza-^ #. fpicked up at the registrar’s officestarting this morning,” Wick ex¬plained. The registrar has printeda ticket for every one of Chica- Draft' Katzenbach to DCNo definite plans have yet been his congregation. ership of John McFerren. Thea similar session Both checks, were made pay- checks will be delivered by Johnbetween the^incoming Chancellor able to The Fayette County Civic and Rose Lassiter and Ed Rid¬dick, members of The EmergencyRelief committee, who are enrouteto Tennessee to lay the ground¬work for an adult education pro¬gram.Mrs. Foster, a member of Pro-„„-s more than 2000 undergrade Kfn!;edy’? °T™' k? able and wel1 eSThat fhTunit^eagte offim5U. The first 1100 students pre- Ppintment jwstewlay Of UC has teen on the faculty of the bought of by other members of aid mirses, which has bought to-sentlng their identification cards Pr°£esSor Nicholas Katzen- since e all quarter the faculty; well certainly miss gether First aid nurses from 35will receive passes. bach as assistant Attorney 1956, teaching courses in prob- him. Katzenbach, who is mar- churches, raised the money at aOnly one ticket will he issued General was verified by Ed- °- ■ in®lnat*onal law and ried and has four children, is also benefit banquet to help Fayetteper person, and each ticket must ward Levy, dean of the Law t ^ visins e *aw schools tu- popular with his students, ac- county, which was held at Anti-l>e picked up personally. school. A specialist in the field a Pr°£ram- to, ^lke Nussbaum, a och Baptist Church.The meeting itself will be fair- of international law, Katzenbach Born in 1922, he received his third yeaV av^ student who add- Expressing the sentiments ofly informal, according to Wick, is a member of the US delega- *lorn Princeton in 1945, his ed that he likes to drive sports the members of his church and theMost of the session will be con- tion to the UN, serving as con- L.L.B. from Yale in 1947 and £ars> and was very excited about Unit league of First aid nurses,sumed by questions addressed to sultant in the law of outer space studied at Oxford for two years buying a Triumph in Europe Rev. Brown stated that the con-Clumcellor Beadle and his an- and on the ad hoc Committee on as a Rhodes scholar. Katzenbach wfien he left. Nussbaum re- tributions “represent our interestswers. peaceful uses of outer space. came to UC from the Yale Law marked that he thought Katzen- in the destitute condition of Ne-“Obviously we won’t be able to Katzenbach, now on a year’s sch°°li where he was an assistant ba^b '*oldd do a very’ verY good groes in Tennessee, of people who,lx> as informal here as we are in leave for teaching and research Pr°fessor from 1952 to 1956. ”e bas always been inter- in their determination to be free,a normal “My life and yours,” at the Giaduate Institute of In- His government appointments . ed in tbe p?siti?q of tbe cann°t but add to the freedom ofhave been to the office of general ln intei national affairs, and will all.” Rev. Brown further indicatedcouncil to the department of the aPProach it from both a legal that Progressive Baptist churchAir Force, 1950-1952, consultant po.int of vi®w and that of Politi- will continue its support of theto the secretary of the Air Force, ca sc^ence>” . movement in Fayette county.1952-1954 and his present posi¬tion with our delegation to theUN, which he has held since1959. Katzenbach is also a mem¬ber of the American Bas Associ-SC gets report on co-opsat 4 other universities SG ok's petition plan°f ‘"d pa“re!ZirZ^• a, , n„.Pr ?ai C!_ .y “Tho information fahovni an advisor to the American Law its support Of “the establish- that> “As lonS as University policyA preliminary report on Co- store’s profits will b< both neces-operative Bookstores at two sary and sufficient for making a alion’s committee on the inter-colle](_-' M a honey1 for Student Govern- “The information Tabove] points !*n l° Tne Amoil(an Law its support of ‘the establish- l,iat> As long as University policyment use^ Information for the up the costs involved in running Inst,tute s committee for the re- ment of a committee com- fo" theK bookstore is determinedreport was obtained from a series a C°-°P bookstore on the refund statement of international rela- posed of faculty and students as soleJy by the Administration andof ohone calls made to Reed Col- system other than maintenance, tions. representatives of the academic execu ® by professional business-lego, Oberlin College, University costs, even following the reserva- Assistant Dean of the law community which shall have a exm-’essioTo^ToD^Har ad<??uateot Washington, and University of tion of an amount for expansion ^ James Ratcliffe com- and desireTof the acalmtemented yesterday that Katzen- store.” community in regard to the book¬store.’The declaration was based uponthe principle that the bookstore’smajor purpose is to supply booksfor the students and faculty, andthat this service is to be renderedThere are 110 fewer StU- of the entering class of 1959, who in a~ manner designed to best servedents on the quadrangles this dropped out is 76, about 12 per the academic community. The factquarter than there were at the cent of the class. George Playe, stated the resolution, that corn-beginning Of the autumn quar- dean ,of undergraduate students, Points, of greater incidence moreter, according to the registrar’soffice. This number includes thoseWisconsin. and other bookstore improve-Tho report concludes, “. . . that ments.”to have a successful co-op book- A more detailed and completestore at the University of Chicago report, based on inquiries madeon the refund system, lwhich fol- by mail to a number of U. S. col-lows as the most possible conver- leges and universities, will besion from the pri»sent system 1, it made shortly. The informationwill be necessary to persuade the will be used by Student Govern-administrators that a change in ment in a report to Dean Nether-ttie current use of all of the book- ton. College enrollment dipsTwo UC profs awarded remarking about this rate, said recently, have been voiced againstthat this was one of the lowest the bookstore, citing the inade-who graduated last quarter as °f d™P ‘n. any class' 0rderin? * ”,The American Council of ences and philosophy. Wright is a wen ^ those who left for other a s0 state<* that it wras more quired texts, the poor service, andLearned Societies has announced professor emeritus in the Depart- reasons. No exact data has been imP^rtant to know the reasons of ^discounts^on books,it will award prizes of $10,000 each ment of Political science, and is compiled which reveals the rea Jto UC professors emeritus Frank currently a professor at the Uni- sons for the students’ leavingH. Knight and Quincy Wright for versity of Virginia.. Compared with this time last a^ a student o* some years ago Aviating the conditionsdistinguished accomplishments in The two ex-UCers are presently there are 100 more students who stated that he was leaving ^ u> fhe lho°ve (.om!humanistic scholarship. m Washington, where they wil Qn the beginning of school for financial reasons. The nteKnight, who is currently work receive their awards tomorrow. It ., piainis.ing on his “last book” about social is expected that they will receive !be lalt quar.ter’. 19?°’ th.ere w.er! student had entered with a $1,.jO0 Also passed was a bill allowingfor drop outs than just how many Th>s faculty-student committee,dropped out. He cited as an ex- *t is felt, will aid in promoting anon-profit, cooperative bookstore.,, . . , . ,60 more students than there hadpolicy and economics, is the Mor more prize money for their workton D. Hull Distinguished Service in addition to the Council’s ten aeen a year ago t time,professor emeritus of social sci- thousand dollar awards. The total number of students,New French club formedNew French club this quarter.Members of the French depart¬ment will dine with club mem¬bers, announced Robert Click.Click, the club’s newly electedpresident, said the luncheon isplanned for Thursday FebruaryNorman B. Spector, assistantprofessor in the department ofromance languages and BernardWeinberg, professor and chairmanot the department of romance More UCers in rushThe entering students of for at least two ye rs. Only sec-this year seem to be consider- ond year students who wish toscholarship, had failed every appropriations orders to be actedcourse in his first vear “Now I upon by the assemb,y in an .emer‘y ' gency situation without having tocannot attribute that to financial first pass the appropriations corn-reasons,” said Dean Playe. mittee.“We like to know the relation- John Hodges Roper and Howardship towards us of students who Rosenfield were elected to the, . , . , NSA-Academic Freedom commit-are leaving; whether they send us tee and the chairmanship of theA luncheon with table talk speakers for French club meet- The club is also contemplating a card *n advance, or just leave Campus action committee, respec-entirelv in Frenrh will h#» thp ir»gs. showing French feature films to giving no apparent reason.” ti ?ly.lii-st event sixmsored bv the « ,‘a tbat, tba— * Blouet, manager of the Ambassa- Miss Ditlove, who lives in Westdor Hotels in Chicago, and former House, would like students whomanager of the George V hotel in are interested in attending theFrance, will speak before the club, club’s luncheon to contact herBlouet has expressed much inter- before February 6.eSjM„ French tensut Members ~mmentin* «« «» aWy'' more' interestecr'in'" fra- join » .fraternity are exempted-- — j. j dean Beliard, f New French club’s name felt that fernities than the entering ^rom tbis regulation.9. in Hutchinson Commons from genera , and M Ortoly assistant stStf lit vear according to °ther reaSOnS ranged frT anoon to about 1 om One need general, are being invited to the »s in Keeping witn tne trena students last year, according to si le statement that studentsnot be a member STthe club To club now by Click. for founding new colleges at UC. do not like dormitories becauseattend he said tratermties report an attend- bad iQod nQ[se and crowdin&ancf. at theitr s"?okers and to the rather elaborate one of-parUes greater than or equal to fered by Qne praternity studentt a o as year. wbo does no^ wjSh to be named.Alpha Delta Phi reports that 65 He said that although his frater-W Student Government has If there are enough reservation, a students have come to the smok- nityj Beta Theta Pi, did not havelanguages are expected to attend, announced that there has with 71 first class seats ers so far. This is a “lot better an unusua] attendance at smokers,other members of the department been enough response to their ^U1 b£ chartered for a roundtrip than last year,” said president he had observed a more favorableare being invited Furone flight that thev will from Seattle to Tok>o. The Japan John Mills. Steve Zarlenga, rush attitude to wards fraternities —Maurice A. Lecuyer. assistant now Shartof two flights Both fril> w.iU c“' M°°’ *“* wi“ alS° chanmanofPhi Kappa Pst, re- lcss prejudice against them. Heprofessor ot French in the College planes will leave New York on lea'e June 191 h. ports the test ot alt possible explained this to be a result of thehas expressed interest and en- approximately June 19th. The Any employee, student, or fa- turnouts — 90 people through erection of a new men’s dorm,thusiasm for the club’s projects first will return about September culty member is eligible. This in- house. occupied chiefly by first year stu-and existence. 5th and the second on about the cludes members of the downtown Several different reasons have dents. Because of their lack ofThe New French club held its 12th. There will also be a flight center. Also, members of the im- been cited for the unusually large contact with older students theyorganizational meeting Tuesday from Chicago to New York, and a mediate families of those eligible attendance at smokers and rush were less effected by their knownn«ght. it elected Glick president flight back to Chicago from New ma>' S°. excluding brothers, sisters, parties. The one given most often anti-fraternity prejudice, he said.and Danielle Ditlove secretary- York after the return for Etirope. and non-dependent children. was the new two year residence He added that new students weretreasurer. SG said that those interested Those wishing to receive further requirement for undergraduate showing interest in fraternities inGlick has been in touch with should submit their deposit of $100 information should call Charter men. According to this rule all spite of what he legardod as tooFrench-speaking people in the “as soon as possible.” Flights, Student Government, MI- undergraduate men must live in much optimism and too little workChicago area to get possible SG also plans a flight to Japan. 3-0800, extension 3272. the university dormitory system in the Interfraternity council."Jan. 27. 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Plan second Europe flightStudent analyses Cuban visitby Arthur Mac Ewan“If the Imperialists invade,all they will win, if they winanything, is blood and dust.”“I am not a communist,but if you convince me that theCuban Revolution is a communistrevolution, then I will become acommunist.”"For this new house, we canonly thank Fidel.”“Go back and tell the Americanpeople what you have seen. Allwe ask is that you tell the truth.”These statements were made byCubans. They are typical of thesentiment expressed to me by theCuban people during a recentfifteen day trip to the "newCuba” During that time I travelledabout the Island, saw the obviousrevolutionary developments,talked with students, workers,peasants, univeisity professors,and high officials. I found that thevast majority of them seemed tobe strongly behind the revolu¬tionary government and Fidel Cas¬tro. I also feel I saw a good manyof the reasons why. Prior to January 1, 1959, whenthe Revolutionary governmenttook power, Cuba was a most de¬cadent country. In natural re¬sources it was very rich, and afew individuals did live in extremeluxury; but the masses were inpoverty.Fifteen percent of the popula¬tion was habitually unemployed.In the countryside the peasantslived in flimsy, crowded huts; inthe cities there were large, crowd¬ed slum areas.Politics were at the height ofcorrupt ion.The revolutionary governmenthas achieved success only becauseit has made rapid material successin changing these conditions.In Santiago there is a newhousing development, "Nueva VistaAlegre.” Approximately 600 newhouses are being constructed here;about 550 already completed.These houses are being occupiedby only the very poorest peoplein Santiago. They used to live inmakeshift huts in a slum wherechildren with bellies bloated fromdisease played in muddy streets.Squalid slums typical of pre-Revolutionary Cuba.ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage Cr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st. These people were unemployed.Now with the aid of the govern¬ment they are building their ownhomes. After a man has put in1400 hours labor the house ishis.One out of every thirty personsin Santiago will have a new homewhen this and similar projects arecompleted.In old homes the rent has beencut in half; and any person whopays rent for twenty years willbecome the owner of this home.Rural life has undergone thegreatest change. The land, onceowned by great estate holders,latifundistas, is now being workedby cooperative farms, where thepeasant own the land, or by statefarms, where the land is adminis¬tered by the government agencyINRA [National Institute of Agra¬rian Reform].The real agrarian problem wasthat, for all practical purposes,there was only one crop: sugar.Now new crops are being deve¬loped Rice is one of the largeststaples in the Cuban diet. Twoyears ago Cuba imported almostall her rice.Chicken farms are being builtall over the country which willsoon supply the people with acheap, healthy addition to theirdiet.Sugar, which is so well adaptedto the Cuban environment, is notbeing neglected. According toVallejo, through the amount ofland devoted to sugar is being cutin half, the total sugar crop willnot be diminished. Also, new usesfor the by-products of sugar arebeing developed, e.g. yeast, alco¬hol, fibre-board, animal feed.In Pinar del Rio there is a to¬bacco cooperative which is a strik¬ing example of the new ruralCuba. The land is still being de¬now the people grow most of theirnecessary food right on the farm.The real change has come intheir living conditions. The peopleof this cooperative, who once livedin dirty, little bohios [the nameof the Cuban hut I, are now allliving in the clean, sturdy, brightlycolored, prefabricated homes. The A modern co-operative community built by the Castroadministration.Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL homes are all together in a cen¬tral location. In the center is anew school and a peoples store.There is also a small park, and atheatre is now’ being planned.Best of all perhaps is that a doc¬tor is now living on the farm.The Cubans believe that to havea free society they must have aliterate society. So 1961 is the“Ano de la Education” | the yearof education!. The goal is thatevery person will be able to readand w rite at the end of this year.The country’s largest fortresseshave been converted into schools^The old Cuban pentagon is nowthe Ministry of Education. Allover the country, in rural and ur¬ban areas, new schools are beingerected at a fantastic rate.In the extreme rural areaswhere local schools are imprac¬tical, "school cities” are beingbuilt. The first of ten such schoolsis now beilig built in the moun¬tains of Oriente. When completedit will have 20,000 resident pupils.Of course such a project will notbe completed for a few years, butthe students move in as sectionsare completed. To supply the ruralareas, large numbers of teachershave voluntered to go into themountains.And who Is building theseschools? For the most part, theRebel Army!Criticism of the C ban Revolu¬tion seems to be based on tw’o ar¬guments:. 1] that there is a lackof civil liberties in Cuba, and 2]that Cuba is Commt nist.The first argument does notseem to bother the Cubans. Ona personal level they discussedtheir government quite freely.Even a man who w’as very muchtSSij&g: "For flavor, you can't beat Camels”AVALANCHE HUNTER, SOUAW VALLEYSITE OF *60 WINTER OLYMPIC GAMES$ THE BILLYBARNESREVUE☆ *Feb. 8, 9, 10. 11, 12(See Ad in Theatre Section) anti-Castro had no qualms aboutexpressing his feelings, even »nthe aisle of a crowded train [al¬most all he said later turned outto be untrue]. Though is doesn'tseem to be the practice to "soap¬box” against the government inCuba, the people say that it couldbe done without fear of govern¬mental repression.However, to some extent, thegovernment does control the ra¬dio, press and TV, and teachers inpublic institutions who stronglycriticize the government are dis¬missed. The Cubans offered thesejustifications for such a policy:This is a time of revolution. TheCubans must get things donequickly. They feel they must rec¬tify decades of social and econo¬mic wrongs as rapidly as possible.Secondly, if the means of com¬munication are not controlled bythe government, 4hey will be con¬trolled by the very wealthy. TheCubans feel that the very wealthyminority would unjustly be againstthe Revolution and to let themmaintain a position where theycontrolled popular opinion wouldbe most, ridiculous.Finally, a distinction must bemade between criticism and coun¬ter-revolution. Constructive criti¬cism, the Cubans feel, is a far cryfrom destructive counter-revolu¬tionary action.Perhaps there is no single issueof controversy about which theCubans are more aware thanCommunism. From a carpenterat a new’ school to one of Fidel’sexecutive secretaries, the Cubansare most adamant in making itknown that they are not Commu¬nists.They may preach the brother¬hood of the laboring class; theymay preach internationalism andthe inevitability of the world re¬volution; they may speak of theexploitation of the masses by bigbusiness and of the neccessity ofnationalizing the means of produc¬tion; and in the same breath theywill tell you that they and theCuban Revolution are not Com¬munist. They claim that this re¬volution is tlieir own, that thisis strictly Cuba’s revolution.However, they will also tell youthat if the revolution and Fidelare Communist, then they too areCommunists.The best tobacco makes the best smoke! j ■fvmm* cfiLEVDOGAJM ) resB. J. Reynold! Tobacco Company, WinMoii Salem, N. C. Ck-.tww-.u4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 27. 1961 EX-CAMPUS COPTELLS ALL!Keeping college students under control con be a tough, harrowing job.And a man who's done it for 38 yeors is Coptoin Tom Creamer —■ex-chief of police at o large university. In his long career, he's hon-dled everything from outrageous pranks to some of the biggest riotsin college history!In this week's Saturday Evening Post, Coptoin Creomer tells how hematched wits with students. You'll leorn how a famous actor onceled o wild fist and fire-hose melee in his freshmon days. You'll reodabout the 1,000-student riot that made notional headlines. And you IIsee photos of the collegiate ''Good Old Days” — plus shots of today'sbiggest campus shenanigans! Be sure to read "l Was a Campus Cop'in this week's Post.Th'e Saturday EveningPOSTA CURTIS MAGAZINE Get hours of fiction,fact and fun in TheSaturday Evening Post.Get your copy today!T^pen occuponcy endorsedIVI acts on Despres billUniversity of Chicago students who are friends of open occupancy have been invitedby the 5th Ward Independent Voters of Illlinois to a rally on Wednesday evening, Feb. 1.At the meeting, to be held at 5510 Wood lawn, IVI workers and other interested resi¬dents of the fifth ward will prepare for the final week and a half of a petition drive tosecure 10,000 signatures for open occupancy.The petition calls upon Mayor Richard J. Daley and the City Council to end discrimi¬nation and segregation in Chicagob> enacting an open occupancyoidinance submitted to the coun¬cil by Alderman Leon M. Des¬pres 15th ward].The Despres ordinance, whichhas been referred o a joint coun¬cil committee, would make it il¬legal for any owner or renting ham - Avalon Park community will be “welcomed with opencouncil, will describe the efforts arms.” He stressed that it is im-to maintain the high standards portant for these people to at-and inter-racial character of the tend the Wednesday meeting.The petition campaign, whichbegan on Jan. 12, eighteen clergy¬men in Hyde Park and Woodlawnand by all the Parent Teacherssouth side communities Chathamand Avalon Park.Ernest Kauffman, 5487 Cornell,chairman of the fifth ward IVIagent to refuse to sell, rent, or told the Maroon that any students Associations in the area. Studentlease because of race, color, or who can work . . . ring doorbells Government has also passed a re-ancestral origin. Patterned after or solicit signatures on campus solution in favor of open occu-similar laws in New York city during the last days of the drive pancy.and in Pittsburgh, a fine of notless than ten dollars or morethan 200 would be levied againstoffenders, with each day of viola- SG gives informationIn an effort to provide the campus with more informationon international student affairs, the Student government hasordered copies of The Student, the magazine of the Inter¬national Student conference (ISC). Fifty subscriptions,enough for all residence halls, have been ordered.In an effort to insure distribution, SG has paid the initial sub¬scription costs of $2 per year. It is hoped that each house willreturn this money to reduce SG’s costs. Repayment is, however,not mandatory for continued reception of the magazine.United States National Student association is a member of theISC and participates in its international programs. The Studentcontains articles by and about students throughout the world.Through the ISC, an attempt is made to bring students from differ¬ent countries into contact with each other and help promote under¬standing between the students of these countries.The distribution of the magazines is one part of SG’s programto encourage international awareness on campus. Other action thathas been undertaken is receptions for visiting foreign studentsat both formal and informal gatherings. It is also hoped that theresidence units will want to participate in this part of the program.USSR lacks academic freedomtion constituting a separate crime.At the Wednesday meeting,two forerunners in the fight foro|»en occupancy in Chicago andthe state of Illinois - ill speak tothe petition passers. AttorneyDonald Frey, chairman and found¬er ol the citizens committee forFreedom of residence in Illinois[F.O.R.] will tell the group of hisorganization’s continuing fight forpassage of a State Fair HousingPractices law. Frey is chairmanof the civil rights committee ofthe American Bar association.Dr. Welton Taylor, a bacterio¬logist at Children’s Memorial hos¬pital and president of the Chat- Several students from Afri¬ca who have recently returnedfrom the Soviet Union reportthat academic freedom is vir¬tually non-existent there. Mi¬chael Dossey Ayih, a studentfrom Togoland, has recently senta letter to the governments of theAfrican states telling them of ex¬periences he and other Africanstudents had in the Soviet Union.His report mentions such items asrestriction on student organiza¬tion, distorted news reporting,and a general disregard of acade¬mic freedom.He noted that a group of stu-New sit-in plannedA Texas anti-segregationgroup is seeking Northernsupport for a “stand-in” to beheld on Lincoln’s birthday.University of Texas “studentsfor direct action” have called fornationwide demonstrations Febru¬ary 12 against motion picturetheatres that practice segregation,ot which are owned by theatreChains whose southern theatresrefuse to admit Negroes.The demonstrations are directedChiefly at theatres owned by theABC-Paramount and Trans-Texascorporations. All local theatresOwned by the Balaban and Katzcorporation would be affected, asB&K theatres are subsidiaries ofABC-Paramount.In local demonstrations this year, white and Negro membersof the Students lor Direct Action[SFDA1 have attempted to pur¬chase tickets at several Southerntheatres. According to the “DailyTexan,” newspaper of the Univer¬sity of Texas, students in ticketlines have asked to purchase tick¬ets “if everybody is being admit¬ted. As each person was refusedentrance, he went to the back ofthe line and came through again.”One Texas theatre-owner toldstudents: “We [Trans-Texas thea¬tres] have a policy and I have toenforce it. My feelings havenothing to do with t.”The SFDA feels th^t nationwidedemonstration will serve to showthe theatre chains the extent oftheir movement.Loan DeadlineJanuary 30th is the last day on which students can submitapplications for tuition loans to be used in the Winter Quar¬ter 1961.Applications may be picked up in the Office of Financial Aid,Administration 201, any weekday from 8:30 to 5:00.HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-Q-Beef and WafflesOpen from Down to Down 1342east 53 st.HANDEL- II AH PE IISQUAREBeauty and Cosmetic Salon5700 Harper Avenue FA 4-200711850 PAYING SUMMER JOBSEARN YOUR TRIP AND EXPENSESIN EUROPECOMPLETE TOUR INCLUDINGROUND - TRIP TRANSPORTATION $345FOR APPLICATION PROSPECTUS WRITE DIRECTLY TOfENCLOSE $1 FOR EACH PROSPECTUS)AMERICAN STUDENT INFORMATION SERVICEJAHNSTRASSE 56a • FRANKFURT/MAIN • GERMANY dents studying in Russia repres¬enting fourteen African nationsurged that a report of this situa¬tion be widely circulated amongforeign students in the Soviet U-nion. Their aim in doing this Isto demonstrate opposition to co¬lonialism and racial discriminationwherever it may be. The reportnotes that a group of students re¬presenting nine African countrieswere refused peimission to set upan organization to assist them¬selves in orienting to Soviet soc¬iety. When the group applied forrecognition from the authoritiesat Moscow University, they wereinformed that the Universitywould not recognize regionalgroupings of students. They laterreferred this decision to the Afro-Asian Solidarity committee, agroup which is supposed to fosterrelations between Russia and Asiaand Africa. The solidarity com¬mittee also refuses their request.In fact, the representatives of thecommittee all happened to beRussians, according to the Afric¬ans.At one point the committeemembers told the African studentsthat they were obviously “imper¬ialist agents” because they spokeEnglish and French. They werealso told that the setting up of“political organizations” is notwelcomed by either the Universityof Moscow authorities or the Afro-Asian Solidarity committee.The African students explainedthe action of the Russians as fol¬lows: “Our belief is that thereare two main facts involved. First, Soviet students are not permittedany kind of representative organ¬ization. Therefore the existenceof our completely democraticgroup in the midst of Moscowwould have served as an unfortun¬ate example for Soviet students.Second, although the Soviet Unionsends publications and pipes news¬casts to all corners of the world,with its interpretation of currentevents, it does not permit anysingle independent publicationfrom outside the Communist blocto circulate freely in the SovietUnion. If our organization hadbeen permitted to exist and speakits mind freely, it would havebeen the only independent voiceIf 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 8-6711eacmtsImportedOuterwearOld Worldcraftsmen, anddesigned onthe Continentby Europe'sleading fashionexperts. Beltoptional. Olive,black & natural.$35.95608 N. Michigan Avenue within the Soviet Union.” Theygo on to say that, although inter¬pretation may sound fantastic, itis consistent with their experi¬ences in Russia.While affirming their oppositionto colonialism in any form andstating that they are not makingtheir declaration to discourage stu¬dents from going to the SovietUnion, they went on to make thefollowing statement: “We cannotaccept countries which try to useus, as individuals, for their pro¬paganda purposes but at the sametime insulate their own peoplesfrom contact and free informa-tiion. We reaffirm our faith inpurely African leadership and ina purely African way of life.”GUITARSBANJOSMANDOLINSTHEFRET SHOP5535 DorchesterMl 3-3459 Joseph H. Aaron, ’27The ConnecticutMutual Life InsuranceCompany of HartfordSince 1846, over 100 years, hatsafeguarded your family.135 S. LaSalle St.Sake 835 RA 6-1060The 1st AnnualU of CFOLK FESTIVAL| February 3# 4, 5/ Tickets Available February 3 and 5 Only.£ Mandel Hall Box Office — $2.00 - $2.50PIZZASFor The Price OfNICKY’S 31235 E. 55th NO 7-9063. MU 4-4780Net tbit: a student who TMtl Perspicacious...studies drowsily no matter sharp! NSDox keeps youhaw much sleep be gets. awake and alert—safetylIf you find studying sometimes soporific (and who doesn’t?) the wordto remember is /VoDoz®. NoDoz alerts you with a safe and accurateamount of caffeine—the same refreshing stimulantin coffee and tea. Yet non habit-foraiingNoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. piSo to keep perspicacious during study andexams—and while driving, too— j* J* "V.always keep NoDoz in proximity.Tfct Mis stay awaits tablet — avsHabls svsrywfcsra. Another tins product ol Gross la bora tofisaJan. 27. 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5HUAC movie slanders honest dissentThe House Committee on Un-AmericanActivities is, in our minds, one of thegreatest existing dangers to real Amer¬ican democracy, as we conceive it. TheHouse committee’s movie Operation Abo¬lition similarly seems to us a threat to thedevelopment of a sound and significantstudent movement, a thrat of the greatestOder.An answer to Operation Abolition isnow available, and it is an answer whichevery serious student knows. We refer toa long-play record: The Sounds of Protest.We commend this record to anyone whoregards himself as a serious student, oras a serious American.Operation Abolition is an attempt onthe part of the committee to explain awaythe student protests directed againstHUAC last spring in the California Bayarea. The explanation? The students wereobviously Communists or Communistdupes. This type of thinking is a slanderupon the American student, is a threatto all forms of dissent, and, if successful,will put an end to protest.The film is a vicious collection of halftruths, un-truths, and total lies. Perhapsthe most amusing and most revealing linein the movie’s narration (the narrator,incidentally, is Fulton Lewis III) soundssomething like: “The students then begansinging “we shall not be moved,” a songfrom an old Communist song book.”The movie would have it that becauseCommunists participated in the demon¬ strations and because Communists woulddesire the elimination of HUAC, the stu¬dents who demonstrated were obviouslydoing the will of their pinko peers andwere therefore dupes of an internationalconspiracy whose significance they couldscarcely graps.Through such innuendoes and slander¬ous‘linkages, plunging into the “guilt byassociation” maelstrom with a relish andabandon which has characterized thewhole of the committee’s history, the filmwould have the naive spectator believethat opposition to HUAC is but little bet¬ter than out and out sedition.When shown at places like Harvard thefilm has been met with hoots of outragedderision. But there are few communitiesoutside of the academic world withenough understanding of the true natureof the student movement. In general,Operation Abolition has met with amaz¬ing success.It has been shown successfully atdozens of backwards colleges by ROTCunits, it has been accepted without amurmur of protest at myriads of back-wood institutions. The American Legionhas screened this mysteriously anonymousmovie at hundreds of high schools andjunior high schools.The film was recently screened by aPTA group near the University of Mich¬igan. One of the editors of the MichiganDaily asked that he be on the panel whichwould discuss the movie, on the grounds that he could well express the studentview of the movie. His request was de¬clined: he would be too controversial. Hedid present his case, finally, from thefloor of the PTA meeting to ringing si¬lence. One angry man rushed up to himafterwads shouting “You can’t talk likethat! This is a democracy.”The situation is serious. If OperationAbolition continues this success the lib¬eral battle for political freedom will beset far backwards. If HUAC continuesas it has begun, it will become a moredangerous and subversive force than thecommunist movement which it titularlyattempts to destroy could ever be. If westudents stand silent in the face of thischallenge, we will discover ourselves to¬tally excluded from the political processfor years to come.Again, each of us has a moral obliga¬tion to familiarize ourselves with the vi¬ciousness and the faultiness of this film.The Sounds of Protest is a record pro¬duced by SLATE, a campus political partyat Berkeley. Lasting about an hour, therecord is composed from radio tapes andofficial transcripts. It is not an objectivecatalog; it is a response to an attack ofvilification.Thel ong playing record may be pur¬chased from SLATE for $2. The addressis SLATE, P. O. Box 893, Berkeley 1, Cali¬fornia. The record is well worth the cost.We would suggest that everyone en¬deavor to hear this record. We think that any student has a responsibility to seeOperation Abolition. We hope that thefilm will be brought back to campus soonand guarantee t '.give it extensive ad’vance publicity. I lally, we wish to quotethe concluding wo. fls in the booklet whichaccompanies The Sounds of Protest:“And what does all this bode for thefuture?“The diligence, competence, thoughtful¬ness and courage shown by so many stu¬dents in the whole matter, up to and in¬cluding their production of this record,surely signifies much promise for thenear future of social, political and moralconcern by American college students. Asfor the Committee, its abolition at anytime in the foreseeable future may not belikely; but I very much fear that it neverwas.“Yet, I think this now surge of opposi¬tion to its existence and its methods isnot in vain. Strong, vigorous dissent —.even minority dissent — can help to checkits excesses and inspire those whose fearof it may have stifled the impulse to so¬cial concern and criticism.“If student protest does not take usforward into the millenium, it may atleast prevent our sliding backward intothat tyranny of thought which the Com¬mittee seeks to establish. And if, in Liberty as in Wonderland, one must run likethe wind to lemain in the same place,then this is no small achievement.”the Chicago maroon SG distributes magazinefounded — 1892Time to call off book boycottFor almost a month a student-faculty boycott of the University of Chicago bookstore has been inprogress. -The boycott was first announced in the Maroon, and has since been supported by both stu¬dents and faculty, individually and through organized movements.We feel that it is now time for the boycott to end. Although no official statements on the extentto which Bookstore business has been reduced have not been available, we feel thta there has indeedbeen a significant effect on sales. We have proved our point.But there is a more important reason for terminating the boycott. Methods such as boycotting areuseful in arousing interest in a movement. They are fine for awakening campus concern. But now theinterest has been aroused, the concen has been awakened, and we must rtun our efforts toward find¬ing a permanent solution to the bookstore problem. The time for rational discussion has arrived.We base a good deal of our hope for the eventual improvement of the bookstore in the newly formedStudent-Faculty Committee for a Better Bookstore. It is the committee’s aim first to call the situationto the attention of the Council of the University Senate through a faculty petition, and then to en¬courage discussion and negotiation among student, faculty, and administrative personnel.For the present we can only urge all faculty members to sign SFBB’s petition asking for the for¬mation of a committee to study bookstore operation. For the future we ask discussion, for it is onlythrough discussion that a permanent solution can be found. Student (Government has re¬cently decided to make copies ofThe Student available to all Uni¬versity residence units. This is adecision which we wish to heat¬edly applaud. The Student is afine and useful magazine, wellknown to and well read by Ma¬roon editors and SG officers foryears back. Unfortunately veryfew students have ever had anopportunity to peruse throughthe publication. This problem isnow solved, we hope, to every¬one’s advantage.The Student is a monthly mag¬azine published by the Coordinat¬ing Secretariat (COSEC) of theInstitutional Student Conference(ISC). National Unions of Stu¬dents from all over the worldmeet every eighteen months tocompose the ISC, and though itis boycotted by the Eastern states, it is truly international. The Stu¬dent. therefore, must also be in¬ternational in tone, material, andflavor.Regular reading of the publica¬tion can produce a real knowl¬edge of the social, economic andpolitical situation students findthemselves in throughout theworld, a subject almost totallyignored in the commercial press.We think it valuable to compre¬hend the absolute inferiority ofthe Union of South Africa’s tribalcolleges, the intensity of LatinAmerican student editors, t h ePakistani’s desire for dignity, orthe Swede’s sense of fun.This is a very useful, interest¬ing and important magazine forany student to have at his dis¬posal, and we compliment stu¬dent government for a wise ex¬penditure of its funds.Religion shouldn 9t be factorin conscientious objectionEver since Congressman Henry Reuss in¬troduced his plan for a youth corps lastSpring, students have been rather reluctantto be too vocal in their habitual and conti¬nual complaints against the total uselessnessof service in the United States Army. Noone wishes to prejudice the possibility of successfor the Reuss’ point four youth corps plan byallowing anyone io equate support for the Ruess’plan with draft dodging and cowardice. Therefore,for the duration, we’ll leave the army alone.But there is a related question which has gen¬erally been ignored along with the Army. It canno longer be ignored. This is the problem of theconscientious objector.We do not intend here to endorse the idea otconscientious objection. We do not wish to totallyand unequivocally reject the use of force in thesettling of disputes. The Spanish Civil War seemsto have been a just war, a set of circumstancesin which we could countenance the use of force.The second World War also remains a just warin our minds, a situation where force was usedwith the desire to protect and preserve democracy,human life and human dignity.But, while we do not hold the position of theconscientious objector we do hold that such aposition s justifiable and tenable. So far we arein agreement with the United States government.Where we part company with the government,however, is in its insistence that membershipin a peace church is a necessary condition for re¬gistration as a C. O.This strikes us as totally unjust, and while aneasy and efficient solution for separating the realconscientious objector from the sham and thefalse, a totally undemocratic procedure.Cannot an untheist conscientiously object to theuse of force, of violence, to the killing of humanbeings. In a country where church and state aresupposedly separated, can the state properly in-6 • CHICAGO MAROON • sist upon a religious test for certain prerogatives,i.e., permission to register as a C.O.?We have ecently received a copy of a letter ad¬dressed *o a draft board by a young man whowished to register as an objector but could notin conscience list himslef as a member of a peacechurch. While we must keep his identity confi¬dential, we would like to quote from a letter hesent to a ^elective service appeal board."Man must continually compromise his beliefsto be part of society; like others I have done this.However, my beliefs regarding the sanctity, ifyou will, of human life are so basic that if Icompromise them I have nothing left. I denythe state the right to take human life, eitherthrough capital punishment or through forcing itscitizens into military participation. I realize thatin both these areas my beliefs are not supportedby the laws of the United States.While considering myself a patriotic and dedi¬cated citizen, I cannot respect such laws, willwork to have them changed, and as they affectme, when in contradiction of what I sincerelybelieve, I refuse to obey them.“The selective service regulations accord thisright only to people who refuse to obey by reasonof religious training and belief.” A refusal basedon essentially philosophical, humanitarian, or moralgrounds, it ;s claimed, is inadequate. At this point- challenge not the application of the law to mycase, but the justice of the law itself.“Such a separation of religious beliefs fromthose of a philosophical humanitarian or moralnature is utterly unrealistic, and I challenge thecompetency of the Selective Service system tocreate, justify, or define such a division. The onlyjust criterion I can see according someone theright of conscientious objector is the sincerity ofhis beliefs.”These are sentiments and conceptions with whichwe thoroughly concur. We wish that the entireproblem would receive a good deal more attentionin the future. LetterSupport ISL of pastTo the editor of Jhe Maroon:Although we have announcedour resignation from the Isl Cau¬cus, we would like to state pub¬licly our continued wholeheartedsupport of the policies and pro¬grams of last year’s ISL plat¬form.We welcome assistance fromall students who would like to help us implement that platformand similar prqgrarns.Jim Thomason, President, SGLeonard Friedman,Vice-President, SGElizabeth Heath, Secretary, SGJohn Kim, E & R Chairman, SGClark Kissinger,CORSO Chairman, SGEditors-in-chiefNeal JohnstonBusiness managerWilliam G. BauerEditor emeritusProduction editorNews editorFeature editorEditorial secretaryNational news editorWar correspondentCulture editorSecretary to the culture editorSports editorCopy editorResearch editorCollege editorCalendar editorPhotography coordinatorCirculation managerBusiness office managerClassified manager . . .Subscription manager . ,Advertising representative Ken PierceAdvertising managerPhil Gasteyer. . . Lance Haddix. .Avima Ruder. . Jay Greenberg... . . Faye Wells... . Caryle Geier... Gene VinogrodoffJohn DietmannDotty Sharpless■...... Sandy Nelson.... Chuck BernsteinJohn Juskevice....... Carole QuinnHarry Adler........ Donna Berg......... Al BergerNate Swift...... Joan HelrnkinMaurice ZeitlinPhil HydePerry F-inkSG president leaves Hot just ang old bear gardenYou must believe . . . Ned RosenheimMy actions of this week, breaking the mandate of the ISL cau¬cus and initiating the formationof a new political party, seem in¬consistent with my stated beliefsin the past and with my commit¬ments. I feel I must offer an ex¬planation.For three years I have been amember of ISL. For two and ahalf years I have served as anofficer of Student Government,and at various times as Chairmanof the ISL Caucus and MajorityFloor Leader. Never have I votedagainst the party. To me PartyGovernment was absolutely essen¬tial to working effectively for theinterests of students whether oncampus, or in the broader con¬text of the national and international student community. In par¬ticular. the position which ISLhold as a party had to prevail.The ISL position, and the po¬sition I still support, was to provide services for students andstudent organizations, to assertthe student right to a role in acadomic policy formation, and torepresent the student on com¬munity. national, and internationat affairs.To my mind the successes ofthe last two years have provedthe superiority of the ISL positionover the position that the solefunction of Government is to rep¬resent student opinion on campus,national, and international affairsand that the service projects wereuseless. Now a political realignmen I is possible and desirable.This realignment is not possibleAmid the current debate — rag¬ing on campus and in the Maroonas to the merits and demerits olthe Bookstore — a number of peopie have suggested a cooperativebookstore as an alternative Thisis a worthwhile suggestion andlias its precedents at many otheruniversities. (The Harvard coop-erative bookstore does over twomillion dollars worth of businessa year.)WHAT IS A CO-OP?In 1844 a small group of weav¬ers who lived at Toad Lane inRochdale, England, establishedthe first cooperative. They pooledtheir money, drew up a list ofprinciples, and selected one oftheir members as manager. Theprinciples which they followedproved both useful and necessarytor the survival and growth ofthe cooperative movement. Coop¬eratives today range from CARE(Cooperative for American Re¬lief to Everywhere) throughcredit unions, mutual insurancecompanies, to the local grocery.(The Hyde Park Co-op owns thelargest supermarket in the entireMidwest although it started in thedepression in the apartment ofone of the founders.)There are 10 principles whichall successful cooperatives folJow. The first nine were originall.v adopted by the weavers, andGreen house, in a meeting twoweeks ago, voted to circulate apetition among the members ofthe house, to determine supportol the Student Government intheir resolution against the newregulation. Although the petitionis not yet completed, the generalsentiment of the house at its mostrecent meeting was opposed to therequirement, or, in favor of Stu¬dent Government’s resolution, ac¬cording to Judy Sigan, Greenspresident.North house prepared a reportexplaining both sides of the issue,<‘nd put ballots in each resident’s•hail box, asking for a vote for or by merely expanding ISL mem¬bership. We cannot expect themembers of other parties to giveup their banner for the banner ofISL. But the largest block to theexpansion of ISL is the samething that caused my resignationfrom ISL. ISL has several un¬happy traditions, including theuse of parliamentary tactics inthe caucus merely to block opendiscussion and an instinctive at¬titude on the part of some groupsOpen letter to the student body:We have called a meeting forSunday, Jan. 29, 1961 at 8 pm inIda Noyes Hall to form a newstudent political party. We feelthere is no longer an essentialdifference between the “outlooks”of many members of the two ma¬jor parties on campus and thatthe total effectiveness of the twoparties would be greatly in¬creased by the formation of asingle party encompassing theviews of these students.We envision that this party willdeal with “the student in the to¬tal community” — in StudentGovernment, in campus activi¬ties, and in local, national, andinternational issues. We envisionthat its purposes will be:In government: to maintain thetraditional functions of gov¬ernment, further projectsstarted by this year’s gov¬ernment, and to treat thoselocal, national, and interna¬tional issues on which gov-the tenth was soon added fromexperience.1. Open membership. Anyonemay belong (even Passmore).2. Neutrality in religion andpolitics.3. Democratic control. Eachmember has one and only onevote, regardless of the number ofshares of stock he holds. This isthe principal difference betweena cooperative and an ordinary cor¬poration.4. Patronage refunds. A cooper¬ative sells at generally prevailingprices. At the end of the year,after deducting its operatingcosts, taxes, reserves, dividendsand other expenses, it refundswhatever is left to its patrons inproportion to their purchases.5. Limited interest on sharecapital. A fixed interest is paidon stock which is usually re¬deemed at par when a membermust leave. Often patronage re¬funds are retained to finance theexpansion of the co-op and sharesof stock are issued in their place.This allows cooperatives to fi¬nance their own growth whilestarting with meager resources.6. Continuous education. Theseprinciples, for example, have beennecessary to successful coopera¬tives. Each member should knowthem.7. Cash trade and honest deal¬ing. No discounts or credit sales.against the resolution, and foradditional comments; however, fi¬nal results of the polling are notyet in.West house plans polling of theresidents of the house in the nexttwo weeks. The council took noaction House president MarthaKingsbury, stated that some re¬sentment against the regulationwas expected, but not necessarilya majority.Kelly house unanimously en¬dorsed SG’s position last week,and house governments in Piercetower have come out in oppositionto the residence system, as hasInter-Fraternity council. ISLin the party that the sole motiveof other groups in the party is toseize “power”.These tactics and attitudes areabsurd in the context of studentpolitics. I felt the only way to berid of these traditions and, hope¬fully, to rid the campus of* them,was to vote against the partymandate and to form a new stu¬dent political party. Notes from theU of ChicagoActivities CommitteeYou probably heard the loudand general sigh of relief thatwent whistling down the Mid¬way after the appointment ofthe new chancellor. As a BJboy said, “A decade is a longtime to go without a leader.”Apparently, that same week,something else was loosed onthe Midway; for, one of theoutdoor janitors, recently,speared fragments of a disin¬tegrating manuscript. Natural¬ly, he turned it over to theclassics department.Their reconstruction of thedocument seems to indicatethat it is the minutes of theUn-Chicagoan Activities com¬mittee whose members (MissPauline Pickett, absent fromall of the sessions because shefelt it was her duty to boycottany committee which was notformed to boycott something;Mr. Folk, noted for his playingof the stringless banjo; andMr. Jones, a Northwestern ex¬change student) have been in¬vestigating the men mentioned,from Time to Time, as possiblechancellors.We will let the reader decidefor himself about these textualquestions, however, and sim¬ply give, without further com¬ment, the fragments that havesurvived the Illinois weather.The first meeting wasopened by Mr. Jones with afew remarks on Big Ten foot¬ball which, in their presentcondition, do not make sense.Mr. Folk began the question¬ing.Mr. Folk: You play—I mean—pick at a guitar?Mr. Stevenson; No.Mr. Folk: We like peoplewho pick a guitar.Mr. Jones: Perhaps he playssomething else. Do you playsomething else?Mr. Stevenson: I once triedthe piano but. after ’56, it nolonger seemed worthwhile.Mr. Folk: You can’t carry apiano around with you, any¬way — I mean — anyhow.Mr. Stevenson: That wouldbe inadvisable, certainly.A spectator: A statesman¬like statement.At this point the manuscriptis confused but, apparently,several middle-aged w o in e nwere ejected from the roomwhen they tried to get Mr. Ste¬venson’s autograph on certainof their unmentionables.Mr. Folk: Since you donemost of your training in political science, aren’t — I mean— ain’t you likely to favor that— I mean — that there de¬partment — I mean like overthe English department?Mr. Stevenson: Certainlynot. I think I need only men¬tion the close association I for¬merly had with a Chicagopoetry magazine to assuagefears of that nature. In fact,one of my fondest desires isto help close the gap betweenwhat we might call our politi¬cal and poetical cultures.At this point the meetingwas briefly adjourned to allowMr. Stevenson to read a notebrought by a sister of JohnKennedy. When the meetingresumed, Mr. Stevenson wasgranted permission to make astatement.Mr. Stevenson: I have justbeen offered a job on Harvard-on-the-Potomae’s first stringdebating team. It will, ofcourse . . . years for me toconsider the acceptance of suchan honor, an honor, but also agrave responsibility in thesedays of incipient crisis; how¬ever, in several yearsApparently (and again themanuscript is unclear), at thispoint Mr. Stevenson was car-rled away in the maternal armsof his admirers, so the ineeh ing was adjourned after a briefstatement on fraternities byMr. Jones.A number of pages are miss¬ing but an educated guess isthat several weeks passed between the above and what fol¬lows.At Mr. Nixon’s request themeeting was opened by thesinging of the National An¬them and a recitation of theBoy Scout oath. Then Mr. Folkbegan the questioning.Mr. Folk: Do you pick at aguitar?Mr. Nixon: Ah, no, but Ihave . . . His name is Ch . . .You may . .. heard of him. Thewhole family loves his ... Imight add.Mr. Folk: As I say — I mean— like I say, I don’t trust noman . . .Mr. Jones: Some candidateshave expressed a willingness tohire some football players forthe U. of Chi. How do youstand on this issue?Mr. Nixon: I couldn't dis¬agree more completely. On theother hand, to quote one ofour beloved statesmen, “It’s allright with me.” Of course, weshould not straddle the fenceon this issue, and while we can¬not overemphasize the impor¬tance of football, we must notoveremphasize football, But,remember, I don’t swear.Mr. Folk: What do you thinkabout the migration of scholarsto the West?Mr. Nixon: There is certain¬ly a clear-cut issue here. Atthis time, I would only like tosay that we should appoint afact-finding committee to findout the facts. I might add.however, that any professorbrought back from Californiashould be given opportunity tovote by absentee ballot.Mr. Folk: I have here in myhand a photostatic copy of anengraving of a hand - printedmanuscript which claims thatyou were a member of theYoung Republicans in 1938 andthat . . .#At this point, the meetingwas briefly adjourned to allowMr. Nixon to read a notebrought by the brother of Nor¬man Vincent Peal. When themeeting reconvened. Mr. Nixonwas allowed to make a state¬ment.Mr. Nixon: I have just beenrequested to run for Governorof Puerto Rico. At this time, Ican only say that if I run, Iwill bend every effort to keepthe religious issue out of thecampaign. I might add in pass¬ing that some of my bestfriends are Jesuits and thatmy . . .We can only hazard a guess,but apparently, at this point,the meeting was interruptedby Miss Pickett, who demand¬ed that the committee paymore attention to her boycott.After a brief discussion, thecommittee agreed to pay moreattention and the meeting wasthen adjourned.As the outdoor janitor whodiscovered the manuscript said,“It’s things like that Commit¬tee on un-Chicagoan thingsthat’s helping to change theimage of the college. And theadministration needs help.Changing images is like chang¬ing clothes and how would youlike to undress in front of aChicago Trib. reporter?”The beargarden salutes(Hons J.)Hflf- Morgenthai*' At the beginning of the sec¬ond class session of PoliticalScience 261, Professor Morgen-thau was asked whether hewished to collect the greenclass cards at that time.Professor Morgenthau re¬sponded, “Another piece of bu¬reaucratic nonsense. You cankeep them if you want to. I’mnot going to collect them un¬less I'm ordered to.”How to set up a co-opDear Sir: Jim Thomason‘New frontier? at UCernment can be effective.On campus: To provide for po¬litical self-education throughactivities such as speakers,films, and discussions.On local, national, and interna¬tional issues: To representand express our beliefs andfacilitate actions to imple¬ment these beliefs.This is to be an entirely openmeeting and we welcome all stu¬dents interested in furthering theaims stated above.(Signed by:)Harry Adler, Philip Altbach,Maureen Byers, Fred Cohn,Mike Fleischer, Leonard Fried¬man, Caryle Geier, MaitlandGriffith, Elizabeth Heath, JohnHodgess Roper, Barbara Hun¬ter, John Kim, Clark Kissinger,Larry Landry, Paul Levy, AitMacEwan, David Margolies,Dick Merbaum, R. A. Ratner,Vivian Scott, Jim Thomason,Cene Vinogradoff.This follows from the principle ofpatronage refund, thus no dis¬counts are necessary and havebeen found from experience to beinadvisable.8. Continuous expansion. Larg¬er volume means less cost oneach sale.9. Brotherhood with other co¬ops. Retail cooperatives band to¬gether as members of wholesalecooperatives. (Campus coopera¬tives often belong to the NorthAmerican Student CooperativeLeague.)10. Professional management.In order to succeed, a cooperative must adopt modern and effi¬cient management methods, andthe employes must have suffi¬cient incentive to maintain peakefficiency.Campus cooperatives can andhave succeeded and succeeded ina big way. The average campuscooperative bookstore pays atleast 10% patronage refund to itspatrons (in one case, it was ashigh as 18%). However, in everycase where a cooperative book¬store has succeeded there hasbeen faculty as well as studentparticipation. Opposition shouldbe expected. On most campusessurveyed by the CooperativeLeague, the initial formation ofthe co-op bookstore encounteredadministrative opposition. Indeed,as recently as 1958 some adminis¬tration officials did not evenknow that their campuses had co¬operative bookstores even thoughin a number of instances thestores were multimillion dollar in¬stitutions. Once successful coop¬erative bookstores have beenpraised by the administration.Such bookstores, however, havenot started out with boycotts ofexisting institutions. Rather, theyhave begun with a committee offaculty and students, who, aftergathering as much information aspossible, have hired a manager(often a student at first and on apercentage basis) and have grownby offering superior service,stock, and in the long run, lowerprices.I would like to see a co op book¬store on this campus. A goodplace to start might be the con¬sulting of faculty members whohave worked with the Hyde ParkCo-op.WILLARD AYRESProtest dorm ruleAdditional campus residence halls have taken action on1 he new housing requirement that women must live in dormi¬tories until they are twenty-one and men for their first twoyears of college. :Jan. 27, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 1'Faith, knowledge: man's uniqueness — GWBby Harry AdlerBefore taking office, byMarch 1, George W. Beadle isstudying the problems whichwill face him as eighth headof the University.Discussing the major prob¬lems of his new post, the newChancellor said, “It is always diffi¬cult, to say just what the Univer¬sity’s biggest problems are. I don’thave enough facts yet to give adefinite answer. In general, mymost important job will be tomaintain and improve the strengthand scholarship at the Universityof Chicago.”While he has yet to familiarizehimself fully with the situationhere, the Chancellor did expressviews on many subjects, including:Disclaimer affidavit: “I am verymuch opposed to the affidavit ofdisbelief required for loans underthe National Defense Educationact. Closing minds on any issueis inconsistent with freedom ofthought; this freedom of thoughtmust be preserved, especially inthe universities.”Beadle called the loyalty oath"much less objectionable.”Residential college: When askedabout required dorm residence atCal tech, where he had been act¬ing dean of faculty just before theappointment, the Chancellor re¬plied that the present policy wasto urge undergraduates to live inthe dorms.* People who objectedstrongly to this policy, however,were excused from the require¬ment.Dorm rules at Cal TechThere was little trouble in ad-jninisteiing this rule, he said, be¬cause the dormitories were attrac¬tive enough to make students wantto live in them.Beadle emphasized that he hadnothing to do with the adoptionof the dorm regulation, and thateven if he had, conditions at Caltech could be quite different fromthose at UC. He did state how¬ever, that at the time the rule wasadopted he felt sympathetic to theright of students to live outsideuniversity housing if they wantedto do so.Maroon coverage of his appoint¬ment: “You’ve been very kind andgenerous. I expect that this won’tcontinue indefinitely.”Pauling and the House Commit¬tee on Un-American Activities: “Idon’t know much about the legalaspects of Pauling’s refusal to re¬veal the names of his supporters.I did read a very interesting art¬icle on that aspect in the Bulletinof Atomic Scientists by a Univer¬sity law professor rHarry Kalven].Legality aside, I think it was atleast unwise of the committee to push Pauling to disclose thenames.”Communist professors: “Al¬though each case must be judgedon its merits, there are circum¬stances when the addition of some¬one like a professor or exchangestudent from a Communist coun¬try would be helpful.“You must communicate withsomeone who disagrees with you.This must be done at all levels,from government down to non¬governmental, unofficial levels.Academical institutions can playa key role to reduce w*orld ten¬sions through increased communi¬cation.”Sit-ins — how hard to push?Sit-ins: Beadle stated that hewas “sympathetic to the aims” ofsit-ins. “The question is, how hardd( you push?” Beadle thought thatthe effectiveness of sit-ins depend¬ed on wrhether the good resultscaused damage to public opiniontoward Negroes.In loco parentis: Beadle said thepolicy at Cal tech toward controlover the private lives of studentswas to “bring students in 'andpretty much turn them loose.”He felt that the problem of howmuch freedom ought to be givento students w'as a difficult one.Such questions as how much coun¬selling, and whether or not itshould be mandatory complicatethe issue. He favored “the maxi¬mum amount of freedom, with stu¬dent responsibility,” that waspractical.Beadle was born in Wahoo,Nebraska, October 22, 1903. Hisschooling took him to Wahoo highschool, the University of Nebraska,and Cornell.His early research in geneticswas concerned with the geneticsand cytology of Indian corn11926-31] and the genetics of fruitflies [1931-40].In 1945 Beadle became head ofCal tech’s biology department. Hebegan to work closely with LinusPauling, who had been chemistrydepartment head since 1936.Pauling had studied at Cal techunder Beadle's predecessor, Tho¬mas Morgan, a biologist who hadbeen working to integrate biologyand chemistry. Pauling became in¬terested in applying his own fieldof chemistry to biological prob¬lems.Nobel prize workAt the same time, Beadle wasexperimenting with chemical theo¬ries to explain some aspects ofgenetics.Beadle and Pauling did jointresearch for several years on thechemistry of genes. Under the sti¬mulation of the partnership, thebiology and chemistry depart¬ments increased in size and enroll¬Chancellor and wifemeet with students ment rapidly. Their joint work re¬ceived grants from the Rockefellerfoundation, the National founda¬tion for Infanlile Paralysis, theNutrition foundation, and theFrasch foundation. Beadle’s laterwork in the chemistry of genes,in cooperation with A. T. Tatum,won him the Nobel prize for medi¬cine.The Nobel prize-winning workwas research with the Neuroporacrossa, a pink bread mold. Amongthe results of the research wasthe first definite proof that genescontrol growth. The work wasconsidered a step toward the even¬tual cure of cancer, since it shedlight on normal growth processes,something that was necessary forthe eventual understanding of theunnatural growth processes thatcause cancerous tissue.While most of Beadle’s workhad been financed by governmentgrants, he nevertheless attackedthe attempts of the governmentto extend security regulations.When he was serving as pres¬ident of the American Associationfor the Advancement of Science in1956, Beadle joined with the restof the AAAS board of directorsin opposing the expansion of se¬curity clearances to non-confiden-tial research. The board stated:Security and research"If, — as is likely — we shouldbe numerically outnumbered, oursuperior strength must come frommaking better use of the materialand human resources we do have.It follows that ability to makepositive contributions to the na¬tion’s welfare and progress shouldbe a primary criterion of a per¬son’s suitability for any positionother than positions that mustproperly be closely guarded.”In a separate statement, Beadlesaid that, while a certain amountof security is necssary, “there aredangex*s if the security system setup to protect seci’ets is not pi-oper-ly used. If, for example, it is ex¬tended too long in time, more canbe lost by slowing down our scien¬tific advance than is gained fromkeeping information from theenemy.”As pi'esident of the AAAS coun¬cil in 1955, Beadle presided at themeeting which declared that thaassociation would meet only innon-segregated cities.At a 1955 forum on “Resoui’cesfor the future,” Beadle favoredsome action to check the risingbirth rate. He stated that “withthe present rates of populationgi’owth something will have tohappen before too many genera¬tions.” Without answering himself,he asked the audience, “Can we goon indefinitely defending as a fun¬damental freedom the right of in¬dividuals to determine how manychildren they will bear, withoutregard to the biological or cul¬tural consequences?”During the interview, the Chan¬cellor stated that the problem ofwhat to do about rising birth x*atewas “enoi’mously complex.” “Allthe scientist can do is make somepredictions about: what is likelyto happen if present conditionscontinue. But as soon as we startsaying that we should follow oneChancellor and Mrs. George W. Beadle met with approxi¬mately 20 leaders of campus organizations at an informalreception held last Saturday morning.Those attending the gathering included Dean of students policy or another, we go beyondJohn P. Netherton, assistant dean — —— science. Religion, morality, socialof students Jim Newman, director Mrs. Beadle mentioned that she science, for example, must be con-of student activities Perry Cons- has written a guide to Europe and side red, too.tass and representatives of Uni- Europeans, entitled “Three Ruins . . ...versity Theatre, Inter-fraternity are Inhabited”, soon to be pub- Act-ion on birth ratecouncil, Orientation board, Black- lished by Doubleday. Mrs. Beadle “And as a geneticist I realizefriars, the Orchestra, Festival of is a former fashion editor and that all men are not the same.for the “Los Angeles Unless we pay attention to theKey, and the “women’s”Miri'or.”the Arts, MaroonMaroon.Each representative explainedthe purpose of his ox*ganization toMr. and Mrs. Beadle. Thoseattending were impressed with theinterest and enthusiasm displayedby the Beadles. Beadle had ex¬pressed intei’est in meeting withstudents less than one week afterbeing appointed Chancellor threeweeks ago.In reply to one student question¬er Beadle repeated his oft-stateddesire to take office by March 3,after helping his tw?o successorsbecome acquainted with their jobs.LBeadle has been serving as Actingdean of the faculties as well aschairman of the Biology depart¬ment at the Califoi’nia Institute oftechology.]a qualitative levels of population, asChancellor and Mrs. Beadle talk to Ken Pierce of theMaroon and Miss Maxine Blau.• CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 27, 1961 Mr. Beadle considers the problems of the future.well as the quantative levels, wecould come up with somethingvery bad."But wc have to do something.The present exponential i*atc ofinci'ease is impossible.”Beadle has made a few publicstatements on his educationalviews. As a member of the Pres¬ident’s I960 Science AdvisoryCommittee, Beadle helped writea report presented to the pres¬ident November 20, 1960.The committee states, “Toomany university administratoi*ssuppose that facilities can bebought and managed like base¬ball teams. It is not so. Univer¬sities need brave trustees andstrong administrators, but in theend they are what their facilitiesmake them.”Beadle, in a commentary on thecommittee’s repor*t, states, “Thereare many — a decreasing number,I hope, — faculty members whobelieve it unwise, immoral or bothfor a part of a faculty member’ssalax-y to be paid from a govern¬ment contx*act or grant. In thiswe must learn a new way of life,for it is clear that in more andmoie ways and to a greater andgreater extent faculty salaries willcome from government funds.”Teaching requisitesDui’ing the interview, the Chan¬cellor discussed the question ofthe PhD as a requirement foi*professors. He stated that theexercise of a “special kind ofjudgement” was the proper meansof evaluating teaclxing ability,x*ather thaix such arbitrary me¬thods as total volume of publishedmaterial or attainment of a PhD.He stated that he would try toplace qualified men in positions,without resoriing to such rigidstandards.While the Chancellor stated thatmore rigidity was necessary inEx-professorOscar Broneer, former pro-*fessor of classical archeologyat the University, will lectureon “Gods and Games at theCorinthian Isthmus” to membersof the Oriental institute and theArcheological Institute of Ameri¬ca next Monday at Mandel hall.Broneer had been conductingexcavations in Greece, at theIsthma near Coi-inth, for the Uni-vex’sity while he was a professorhere. At this spot was locatedone of the four important sanctu-ai'ies in Gx*eece, where athleticgames wex’e held. Broneer willlecture on the results of his exca- evaluating teachers at the loweilevels of instruction, he hoped itwould be possible to “rise abovethese.”The Chancellor’s ultimate hopesfor the type of education and cul¬tural advancement are outlinedin his speech given to the AAASas retiring president At the endof his sjK'ech, entitled. TheUniqueness of m a n,” Beadlestated:The uniqueness of man“Thi'ough the understanding ofheredity that man has gained with¬in the past half-century, he hasacquired the powder to direct ihcevolutionary futures of the ani¬mals he domesticates and theplants he cultivates. At the sametime and in the same w’ay, he haswon the knowledge that makes ifl>ossible deliberately to determinethe course of his own biologicalevolution. He is in a position totranscend the limitation of lh»natural selection that have so loinset his coui*se.“But knowledge alone is notsufficient. To carry the humanspecies on to a future ol' biolo¬gical and cultural freedoxn, know¬ledge must be accompanied Incollective wisdom and courage <an order not yet demonstxah'd *nany society of men. And bevondknowledge, wisdom, and couragefaith, too, will he essential. Manmust have faith in himself. Hemust have faith in the rightnessand goodness of his goals. Andmany would add that he mustcontinue to have spiritual faith.“Faith, belief, and the urge' i<’go on and on have themselvescome out of man’s past as a pariof the evolutionary pattern thathas fashioned him into the unique-being he is. In his uniqueness, b<is capable of attaining heights faigreater than his most magnificentcultural achievements of the pas*will lecturevat ions, according to Gus Swiitof the Oriental institute.Broneer now lives at old Orinth in Greece, where he hullhimself a house.He is tout ing the country und<the auspices of the ArcheologiiInstitute of America, as Charl<Eliot Norton lecturer.Broneer was born in Swedeiand came to this lountry in 191.Fur yeax's, he was professor <Archeology at the American scho¬ol' classical studies in An theirDui-ing the second World War heworked for Greek War Relief Hecame to the Univereity in 1950,and retired from active teachinglast June.Study reveals basis for choosing ucby April SchwartsThe question is ‘'Why do stu¬dents come to study at UC?”Another is “What should a uni¬versity contribute to the student,especially this university?”Alfred North Whitehead, in hisbook The Aims of Education, al¬most epigrammatically sets downhis theories of what a universityeducation should do for a stu¬dent. He writes, "We should ban¬ish the idea of a mythical far-offend of education. The pupils mustbe continually enjoying somefruition and starting afresh.”He stresses that "the justifica¬tion for a university is that itpreserves the connection betweenknowledge and the zest of life ”Today’s universities are creat¬ures which have set for them¬selves the task of giving a liberaleducation to their students. Thiswas not true of the earliest edu¬cational institutions. According toMargaret Clapp (ed.) in TheModern University, “They seekonly to transmit cultural or tech¬nical knowledge in terms under¬standable to the layman. As such,they depart wholly from the aris¬tocratic concept of educating thegentleman, from the intellectualconcept of educating the ablestminds, and from the creative con¬cept of adding to the sum ofknowledge. They make the uni¬versity not solely a community ofscholars but a community of citi¬zens.”Miss Margaret Perry, Asst.Dean of Students, feels that thereason a student would "pack hisbag and travel 600 or more milesto UC, despite the presence ofother universities in hishome area, would be primarilythat he prefers UC’s method of«Htucating students.” Jim Vice,Asst, to the Director of Admis¬sions, suggested that distancefrom the university would makea difference in reasons for choos¬ing UC. "Students from theBronx High School of Science aremore sophisticated school - wise,and, not living in the shadow ofUC as Chicago students, mightchoose UC for some concrete rea¬son, for instance our extensiveplacement testing or liberal artsprogram. A Science student couldprobably differentiate betweenour liberal program and Har¬vard’s. Chicago students livingnear UC have usually pretty muchassumed’ they ‘would always goto UC’ by living in the glitter ofthe school, having teachers whowere alumni of UC . .In order to determine what thestudents felt the ingredients ofthe UC-type education is, a pollwas sent to a random of students,questioning primarily what theyfelt an education should consistof and accomplish, and the rea¬sons for their choosing to studyat UC over other schools. Thoughperhaps the students couldn’tas accurately crystallize theirreasons for choosing UC in thespace provided in the poll, theiranswers do indicate why theycame here and how they feelabout it now.Of nearly 300 questionnairesgiven to students living at theNew Residence Hall and Burton-Judson Courts, a total of 49 werereturned (about 17 per cent), 35from the New Dorms and 14 fromB-J. The New Dorm’s inhabitantsanswered more convincingly; ofB J’s 14, eight were filled in withjoke answers with varying levelsof wit. (“What do you feel theaims of education are? To createclasses—we can’t have a classlesssociety, you know.” "Place ofbirth: Hiroshima. Major reasonfor coming to UC: Revenge, Fer¬mi.” "Major reason for coming,0 UC: I like Dempster Pass-more.”From ail over USOf the students answering thepoll, 20 were men. Seventeen stu¬dents lived near Chicago, "near”areas including Illinois’ neighbor¬ing states. Twenty lived- moder¬ately far, this being the circle witha radius extending to the easternseacoast, and the rest lived inmore distant areas.Twenty-two students decided toSO to UC one half year beforehigh school graduation, while the rest (about 50 per cent.) chose UC imparling of information is con-one year to four years before cerned, no university has had anygraduation. Those polled were justification for existence sinceabout 55 per cent first-year stu- the popularization of printing indents, 30 per cent second-year the fifteenth century.” UC muststudents, 10 per cent third-year offer something more than "bookstudents, and five per cent fourth- learning” then,year students. Four students In the essay section "What arequestioned had transferred from the major reasons you came toanother college. UC? What first attracted you?”,▲ ■me the words most frequently seenAims of education were «.liberality” and « inteiiec-The main questions covered on tual stimulation”. Although mostthe questionnaire were: “What of the students replied that theirdo you feel the aims of education main reasons for choosing UCare?” "What are the major rea- were contained in the list of fac-sons you came to UC? What first tors, some .students mentionedattracted you?” and "In what that that which originally attract-way has or has not UC lived up ed them was the tutorial pro¬to your expectations?” A list of gram, and the combination offactors which might have swayed small undergraduate body withstudents to study at UC was also the facilities of a large university,printed, to be numbered In order The lack of heavy party life, littleof influence. These included: emphasis on football, and the lack"UC’s location in a big city, the of social comformity were factorsearly entrant program, the stu- for some students. One first yeardent catalogue, UC’s distancefrom home, departmental excel¬lence, placement test program,cultural and recreational benefitsof the city, the general fame andrenown of UC, the promise ofsmall classes, and the chance tohave distinguished men as in¬structors.”Of those listed as the factor ofprime importance, "general fameand renown of UC” (40 per cent),and “departmental excellence”(25 per cent) far outshone theothers.. The high percentage ofthose most swayed by "generalfame and renown” would tend tosuggest that most incoming stu¬dents really didn’t know too muchabout the school, but were luredby UC’s reputation and wantedto associate with it. "The chanceto have distinguished men as in¬structors” (25 per cent), wasmost mentioned as second choice,while a combination of “depart¬mental excellence, promise ofsmall classes, and the culturaland recreational benefits of acity” (each about 20 per cent),were equally asserted as thirdreason for choosing UC. Somestudents polled wrote in theirown primary reasons for comingto UC, including "the comp sys¬tem,” "a scholarship offered,”"the promise of a beginning of asolid liberal education,” and "thepresence of intelligent men.”"Placement examinations” as afactor was checked only about 5per cent of the time fdr each ofthe first, second and third mainfactors. This leads one to believethat most of the incoming stu¬dents were not familiar with thisprogram at UC, or else felt thatthe generalizations "fame and re¬nown” and "departmental excel¬lence” best expx'essed their mainreasons for corping to UC. Theplacement examination programis a distinctive feature of UC.“The college of the University ofChicago demands competence inthe liberal arts. It makes no claimthat the only means by whichcompetence can be achieved is inthe classroom. This is the basicphilosophy behind placement ex¬aminations.” (Maroon, Novem¬ber 13, 1959). Whitehead com¬ments that, "So far as the mere student, tongue in cheek, wrote"The University of Chicago is aBaptist institution with atheistprofessors, teaching ThomaissianCatholicism to agnostic Jews whoare socialists. This diversity isthe major attraction.” One girlwrote simply, "I visited Swarth-more and didn’t like it.”The students tended to separateinto two factions when writingwhat they felt the aims of educa¬tion were, the two camps beingroughly labeled “practical aims”(such as equipping the student toearn a higher salary), and "ideal,philosophical aims.” In books oneducation, also, evidence of thesetwo features of an education fre¬quently were mentioned. They donot necessarily have to be mutual¬ly exclusive, although one is usu¬ally stressed more than the other.Robert Ulich, in his essay "TheAmerican University and Chang¬ing Philosophies of Education,”writes "... the purpose it (theAmerican college) has set for it¬self—liberal education. Situatedas it is in between the high schoola type of middle school whichhas accepted more and more so¬cial responsibilities at the expenseof strictly academic ones, andgraduate schools with a definiteobligation to active professionaltraining, the college will alwayshave to navigate precariously be¬tween the Scylla of providingsuperficial information about ev¬erything and anything, and theCharybdis of encouraging tooearly specialization of later grad¬uate studies.” To swing to the"ideal, philosophical aim” we haveonly to step into Whitehead again,who will say, “. . . the ideal ofa university is not so muchknowledge, as power. Its businessis to convert the knowledge of aboy into the power of a man.”It would be far more meaning¬ful and eloquent to have thestudents’ answers to the question"What do you feel the aims ofeducation are?” speak for them¬selves, without any attempt toedit, analyze, and draw conclu¬sions."What do you feel the aims ofeducation are?”"For me, education is to satisfya craving for knowledge in gen¬ eral. The satisfaction comes whenI “know” I understand a fact oran idea. Education prepares youto understand experiences, andreciprocally, experiences help youunderstand facts and ideas.”"Preparing the student to livethe most effective and meaning¬ful life he can. To me this pre¬supposes an excellent liberal edu¬cation. A college education shouldunder no circumstances be pri¬marily a training program forfuture employment.”"To enable me to make a lotof money and do little work toearn it.”“The ability to think and rea¬son. An understanding of thingsand people.”"To enable every educated mannot only to have some degree ofcompetence in all the major fieldsof human knowledge, but also tointegrate and interrelate thesefields, so that, they form a mean¬ingful whole.”"To acquaint a person, howeverslightly, with subjects he wouldnever contact otherwise.”“It becomes increasingly clearas one progresses in college that‘an education’ cannot be handedto you or shoved into you in fouryears. What you should gain incollege is a broadening of ap¬proach to the education that con¬tinues throughout life, both ingeneral areas and in a specificmajor interest.”“Democracy is dependent uponthe capacity of the common manto make reasoned decisions. Toaccomplish this the individualmust be educated in all the areasof human life—the humanities,the social and natural sciences."Ideally, education should havethe humanistic aim of aiding allindividuals to develop their high¬est capabilities. A bit more prac¬tically, though: the social task ofeducation should be twofold: (1)to create the intellectual elite nec¬essary for the leadership of so¬ciety (by seeking out the giftedfew, bringing them into contactwith human knowledge and in¬spiring them with the desire tolearn), and (2) to create in thegeneral public the right opinionsV were disappointed with the fouryear residence requirements forwomen, while the men complainedmore bitterly about the dormfood. A few students suggestedthat the relationship between thestudents and faculty should becloser.Some disappointedThe greatest bulk of disappoint¬ment came in the areas of intel¬lectual atmosphere and size ofclasses. About 15 per cent com¬plained that the intellectual fer¬vor was not as great as they hadanticipated, that intellectual dis¬cussions between friends werehard to find.About the same percentagecomplained that Ihe classes werenot small enough. One girl wrote,“The student body does live upto my expectation of eager schol¬ars, they are all hardworkingstudents, very few interestedscholars. Small classes and fre¬quent use of discussion seem tolead only to a general paling ofignorance, rather than any en¬lightenment by the professor.Small classes do not seem to haveany distinct advantages per se;to be sure if 75 per cent of theclass of 20 was bright, interestedand articulate, then small classeswould be to some purpose, butwhere only three or four of the20 ever speak, then classes twicethe size would raise the level ofthe discussion, and free a lot ofincompetent teachers to do thingsthey can do well.”An article by David Boroff,featured in Harper’s magazine,entitled "American Colleges, whattheir catalogs never tell you,”brings out the same point con¬cerning small classes. Boroffwrote. "There is little doubt thatthe teacher-student ratio has beena sacred cow. The former presi¬dent of Fisk University once ob¬served that without a superiorteacher ‘the small class merelyassures the transmission of medi¬ocrity in an intimate environ¬ment. Available evidence suggeststhat the size of a class has littleinfluence on educational efficien¬cy’“(Dining room at Pierce towers)• , , Others here do but complain.which are favorable to rule bythese elite.”"To make a whole man.”“Snob appeal — being able tosay T have a college degree’.”"I don’t know. I want to learn,understand and be able to discusswhat I have learned intelligently.”"Education begins at birth andcontinues in a sense as long asone is able to perceive at all. Butthe most intense academic sidepresented in the univerities en¬ables one to learn and developconsciously to act to the full ex¬tent of which one is capable inwhatever field he chooses to act,and to have a firm basis for allchoice.”The last question taken was"In wha’t way has or has not UClived up to your expectations?”Although 20 per cent of -thosepolled replied that UC far sur¬passed their expectations andabout 13 per cent were pleased,the remaining 67 per cent wereunhappy with some aspect ofcollege lift1, in varying intensities.Nearly 11 per cent of the girls On the back of a returned sheetwas the following complaint: "Ithink this is a bad poll, because(1) it pre-supposes that highschool students have a rationalreason for choosing a particularschool, an opinion which I knoyfrom personal experience to bevery fallacious, and (2) it pre¬supposes that young undergrad¬uates know why (hey came here.In my own case and, I think, inmost cases, they don’t until muchlater in their college career ifever.”Although the subject of “why astudent picks a particular college”is hazy and it is not easy, per¬haps not possible, for the studentto set on paper complete answersfor the reasons of his choice, andalthough there may be quite afew “right colleges for every¬body, and therefore no universitypossesses unique charms; a uni¬versity is a tangible thing, andcertainly students must have verygood reasons, even if only per¬sonal good reasons, for pickingone university above another.”Jan. 27. 1961 # CHICAGO MAROON • 9Lt*9-8na (S6utU9A940sAop)||D540 *tr.»3«*»!q.> ‘1WJIS1109*a1021 oiiav'*>141 otajia.n *U0l|t>U«40|W{f]Nj40,| :jaABJ+uouoijejjnsuco aaaj*961$JOJBjAempueDS ujsAep51pue'00*SU$ A|uojoj.adojn]uiApnjs jos>jaa/wjnojsnjdssuj -uncooiJ°jn°IPWoaisa ,sAep8£eJ3^°9M'619unf uouopuoq044uap -04sat|4M4!Muoq^auucou| jsaiiysouong 0443>P!4d|J4punojeuo Ofr*frZfr$no^9Aesue:>aM *SZZ$A|UOs!'"ue4SU!joj '6jnoqujaxn-j04>|JOA ujojjajejuojsjnaxadp4 -punojaqx'eauoujy44no$ pueadojng044jejojiepa|n -paipsA|je|n6ajuo|aAej4 jie4Sod-mo|joja6uejjea/y\ a96i»! vDiaiwvHinos jo3doani ZLE8EWd»PAH 3AyA4fSJ3A;uf)40 433J4SM4SS3ZE\[ 4SU4atuo4do cunoquasoyjjn>jjq sasuaj40041103 joaMaA^uoiqso-j uoqouiujDx^3X3 ,110143353440314mipy335) Zl'll'01'6'8<1®J 30A3US3NUV8 A11I83H1 uosjjoM.aqilMpue uqyuqofq;iMafsnui>qoj —aujs<nJ«JatuojJ.u(Mi:11 gt>do•Bj;saqajopubuqoiA iojo4aoouo3—AqsAe|eqey uio; 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m*3ui -aajjoIBaisnpy,,aq;uioajz onaBaaaojHs.qoBa'STJ° uo?4Ba4saqoaoubpubg'do Ba;saqaao3uia;saojsjuaui oaowoaij—uaaqaAV00=A 63Ajenuep'Aepunj qa4sijBajpusuiimuqof q;iM‘a;B4SouAbmsaoq —HBqjaqMiaAjisj«a»«dSt=A 2ZAjenuep'Aepjnje^ •iBaadoajaiduioo)oSbuja npuiAaciaq^nBassnoy00=11 •0ui8on AuoqdiuAs—aauqonaaSt=6 •BJjsaqo -aoaoj04.1001103—qo;xi?a esdo AposdBqyo;iv-suiqoaa00=6 „uapiBi\[aq;pusq;Baa„ ;sod"do‘s3uia;sjojp uiflon4a;.iBn^)—;aaqnqos ’(SWl)04 aaauo3Auoqq—AqsuiABa;s t’'ON‘6'do‘onui; ■1403puB‘s3uia4s‘uqoiAJOj euio;aaouo3—tuouiqiv00=8 W)SXUBSao jojjuibisb;ubj--jaBzoj^i •3.8dosa; saqaaopubuiioia-iojbui o;aaauo3-AounozBio—0S=A ■3uoa4suiaysmoq qaoMsiqxUBUiaajajnia qjiMsoAjqaay—iud00=1 •j[Bqbpirnanoqub ioj3uiuaoiuAppqaaMqoBq -MOi|SSiiuMomaqx—08=L LZAaenuep'AepujWTOoatSaOlHd IdVlfldOd anaHdsONiv indiNsmo |aoodivnsnNn IpOOMU9)||el)4U3A3J-A4jjj iiiiiiiiiiMiiHiiitimiiiitkiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiwiiiiiiiiiiHmmmiHiiMiiiiitmimiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiHittii uid0S=frpueoequaoM;aq‘otqaj‘Aepijjuo00sspiouAayaa!JJO juauiaoBupuBaouspinoibuoijbooaoq;uiA\aTAaajutn?M‘Aosaaf .waN‘uosipBpy‘siooqosoqqnjuosipBjy‘qaiapan‘HuieqnM'•*IN •saouapsiBaiSojoiaui sa;BnpBa3uauiOM-i\[sPUB'3'S•(0|ub8jo‘jBaqAjBUB) sjsuuaqoIMSPuea'S—siouquaiqoqs'aiasasa'0~£AiBn.iqaj •uiB.iSoad 3uiuibj;ssauisnqiBjaua3—siouquoSBoiqo"aui‘oaaBfi—zAaBnjqaj •sjaAa[aa.i3apqe;bs;sid isAqjpubs;siuiaq3’AasaafMaN‘uo4aauijjpuB'siou ■HU‘o3Baiq3‘(X^\L'V)Ausdujooau;aaiauaajsaAV—IAaBn.iqaj •saauiBjjsa{BSsbsuoijisoj-sa;B4S pa;iuqaqiinoq3no.iq;saqausq‘uoi4BJodjo3pooMaapuq—1Aatmjqaj •Aj;s!U4aq3[BaisAqjui sajepipuBaaqd-I0JsSuiuadoauios!s[aAa[aaj3apqB jbSUB1014S14B4Spus‘sjspisAqj‘suB!ai4Buiaq4Biv'ajBJS qaoAMaN‘uotjB.iodJooauiqoBp\[ssauisnaiBuoiiBU-iajui—1£A.iBnuef •spAajaaaSapqBjbsuBpi;si4B4Spub‘s;spisAqj suBiai4Buiaq4Bj\[JsjpAai’aqdpue[M'SI®sjsiuiaqo —BUiBqB[vpuB‘BiuaojqB3‘buiiSjia"0a'uo;8uiqsBA\ oiqo‘uoijBJjsiuiuipyaoBdspuBsaqnBiiojay[buoijbn—0£AasnuBf t«2:£uoisuajxaqniospiouAaH‘00Zuioohif-vieD S1JIMq3noaq;paSuBJJBaqAbuisjuauijuioddBMaiAaajuji%i .iaquiajdaspuBmouuaaMjaqjuauiAoiduiajojajqB[iBABaqqiMoqM juaujpBdaaAubjos;uapn;s04uadoa.iBSMaiAJa;uiasaq;‘pa;Baipui aaBsuoi4Dra;sajaiuiapBaBssa[un0£AaeniiBfjoqaauiaq;Suianp ;uauiaaB[jpunaauBpxno[BuoqBaoAjoooijjo°MI4®SMapaajui3ui -;inaaaa;anpuoaqiMsuoi;bziub3.io8uk^oj[ojaq;josaAt4B4uasaadayComing eventsFriday, 27 JanuaryMatins with sermon, Cora Click preach¬ing, Bond Chapel, 11:30 am. United Christian fellowship, 6 pm, Glee Club, 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes EastChapel house, buffet supper, cost 50 Tbunge, rehearsal.cents.Lecture series: "Religion and culture,” Monday, 30 January ”lllel -rounaauon. e{} pe„„ Faj]<e member of the it/-'- u n » , . ,W *“««». «» P-. Hine. «—• new six man Student Union which UP* h„ . eXpla‘n!dHug Ivri and Advanced Hebrew, 4:30 Upcoming MlSS UC Contest,” Stat-pm. Hlilel Foundation. SU plans Wash Prom“Wash Prom,” a traditional UC event, will be held at theDel Prado hotel this year. “We’ve already begun workingon the details involved in setting up the dance—and theat the Corinthian Isthmus," OscarBrofteer, Professor Emeritus of Classl-lng professor, divinity school. foundation.Newborn Conference, CLIH Dora DeLeee Lilms of India’s Folkdance and MusicHall, 1 pm. ... T . M (Indian Civilization Course),Maroon Staff meeting, 4 pm, Ida Noyes Rosenwald 2room 303. All staff members and those oj Maharashtrainterested in Joining the staff should “Vadya Vrinda,” "A Chalry Tale." Ad-attend. „ . ,, , mission free.Liver Conference Gastroenterology, M-4 Motion picture, 7 and 9 pm, "FatherClassroom, 4 pm. Brown, Detective” (Great Britain),Ophthalmology research seminar: international House."Pathogenesis of Venous Occlusion, program of Illustrated Lectures, 8:30Goldblatt Conference room, 4 pm, Dr. pm Breasted Hall. “Gods and GamesKlein.Lecture series: "Cardiovascular and pul-monary physiology,” Pathology 117,5 pm. "Further studies on the pul¬monary vascular bed, with particularerference to the wedge segment,” Dr.H. Swan, consultant in Physiology,Mayo clinic.Sabbath dinner, Hillel house, by reser¬vation, 5:45 pm.Sabbath service, Hillel house, 7:45 pm.Motion picture: B-J courts, 8 and 10pm “Treasure of the Sierra Mjidre.”Motion picture: Judd 126, 7:15 and 9:15pm Experimental film III, “Fall ofthe House of Usher” and "Wedlock.”Koinonia: 6 pm, Chapel House, supper175 cents). 7:15 pm. Bond chapVl, dis¬cussing "Organ: Its function andmusic," with demonstration by Prof.Herman Gotsch. Meeting of all bridge groups, call JuliePowell, 5207 Blackstone, HY 3-4963. new six-man Student Union whichwill run SU for the duration of F*e&gy Falke. “All other contests, .. _ , _ , are publicized as beauty-personal-Izatlon Course), 7 pm, Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30 the quarter in the absence Of any tvn„ thinoc hi.t tbi,.BengaJ- Ts°ng,® Pm Ida Noyes. Speaker, Arthur Mat- executive officer Dave Fmmnn ^ thlng.S ~ut’ ln t*lls m'ra, Drums of India, thews of the China Inland Mission. eAe<~UUVe oillcer. uave r,mmon, stance, We Simply want goodl »» "A Pholer Tolu " AH lr.r.4 MT •/ Opresident last quarter, has trans- looks » she stated further.ferred to Florida State university. Deadline for entries, which mayAccording to other members — be submitted by any recognizedStan Irvine, Dave Frodin, Rich student campus organization, isProfessor of Religion and Personality, Mevershure Rich Carlson and FebrU8ry A faculty board con-Divinitv school, university of Chicago. Mcjeisduig, Kitn carison, ana sjstjng of Mrs Simpson, wife ofthe Miss UC the <}ean Gf the college, Ned Ro-Kelly-Foster coffee hour, 9 pm.Wednesday, 1 FebruaryDivinity School Worship Service, 11:30am. Bond Chapel, Dr. Seward Hiltner,Divinity School, University of Chicago.cal Archaeology, the University of Symphone orchestra, 7:30 pm. Mandel Carl TeitelbaumChicago. hall, rehearsal. , . . .Country dancing, 8 Pm, Ida Noyes, be- contest will be primarily a beau- senheim, instructor in the hu-I uesday, 5 I January ginners welcome. ty contest.” “We would like to manities, and Josh Taylor, also ofLutheran Campus Parish Services, 11:30 Israeli Folk Dancing, 8 pm, Hillel foun-am, Joseph Bond Chapel. datlon. crown a ‘beauty queen’ as Miss *be humanities department, willinterview all contestants at a tea• Maroon classifieds •For rentSaturday, 28 January Basement Room Near Campus. Privatebath and entrance. Call: DO 3-3710. ern kitchen, piano, fully furnished will be held in the Chicago Music Hallrooms. Cost: $47.50 per month. Call: on the fourteenth floor of_the OrientalJudy J. Miller at MI 3-3041.ServicesRecorder Society: 1 pm. Instruction fol- Apartment to Sublet Immediately, tolowed by informal group playing, jje shared with male. Near CO-OP, Sewing, Alterations, Hems. BU 8-6001. Social Chairman at WA 2-8117.Ida Noyes._ _ * . _ I.C. Furnished, utilities. 9-5 pm, Mon.- planned for February 8 — pickingeight finalists. “The student bodywill then have its say in an all¬campus election,” stated DaveFrodin.Organizing two weeks ago, theTheatre building, 32~~w7"Randolph at board, which is planning the con-.F„adpUS»l.Fsechoo, test and the Wash Prom, has eon-m?tM.“For“orr.g?nto?mautrphoSe’ sidere<1 °,hor SU functions to de-cide whether or not changesFourth West Rush Smoker, tunnel, 5 prj ask for Miss Strausky; PLP«i- „ or Mildred Rapp: BU 8-9184, 10Radio Series: The Sacred Note, WBBM, 2-4340;II pm. Personals Delta Upsilon Smoker Tonight. 7:30 should be made. “The hangoutpm, 5714 Woodlawn. Everybody welcome. , . , ...will be operated as it has in the780 kc., 11 pm. A program of choral Nice 4 Room Apartment FireDlace era- ■■ ■ _ , , . , . Life Is just a bowl of popcorn at themusic by The University Choir, Rich- rage 1 block UP of C. MI 3-7043. ’ Help Asked to Replenish Blood Bank at Kelly-Foster Coffee hours Tuesday, 9-11. Pet¬ard Vikstrom, Director of Chapel ! ’ 1 __ ±. . JHlllngs HospitalMusic, conducting.i a r si ty" Gym nast ic* Mee t, 2 pm. Bartlett fble^ room ^urnls^k^mUs SStabto vou dlated families . •Gymnasium, Chicago vs. University of fen.very “oderate rentals. SSee rest- ^ In her nam^ Is^eeded! Copperfieldden Mgr., Mrs. Tapia, or call BU 8 2757. Call Blood Bank, at 5579 campus phone Notice! All personal negatives and con-and tell attendant you wish to help tact sheets not removed from theMrs. John Pyle — wife of the Episcopal Accidents will occur ln the best reg-Dlckens, DavidDubuqueVarsity Swimming Meet, 2 pm, BartlettGymnasium, Chicago vs. WashingtonUniversity (St. Louis).Varsity Track Meet, 2 pm Field House.Chicago vs. Northwestern University Chatham Park Village Apartments what Mrs Pvle has usedA small town within a Big City. 3 to 5 rep,ace wnat Mrs py»e has tea¬rooms, 1 and 2 bedroom units. $98 to$135. Applications invited from well- Creative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377. coordinator.Maroon darkroom by Wednesday willbe destroyed. A1 Berger, Maroon photoBasketball Games, Field House, 6 and qualified prospective tenants who are8 pm. Chicago “B" Team vs. Glen- seeking the unusual In apt. accommo-., _ - ^ , Cocktail Hour. Supplementary to theview Air Force; Chicago Varsity vs. datlons, now or early spring. Privately dormitory sponsored coffee hours.Wayne State University. policed 63 Fireproof Bldgs., close to -young Professional Group is planningcomplete shopping, churches and a series of cocktail hours. Our firstschools, 22 min. to loop by IC, adjacentto Unlv. of Chgo. Skyway to Ind. andMich Park-llke terrain, ample streetor garage parking.Model apt. offices on premisesTRiangle 4-7400University Theatre, Reynolds Club Theatre. 8:30 pm. "Tonight at 8:30."r**nday, 29 JanuaryR.-idio Series: Faith of Our Fathers,WGN, 720 kc., 8:30 am. The Reverend 737 E- 83rd PI.Charles D. Kean, Church of t heEpiphany, Washington, D.C. / 11 _ I ^ ^ _ JRoman Catholic Masses, De Sales PlGlp WOnTGQHouse, 8:30, 10. and 11 amLutheran Religious Services. Graham Part-Time (days) to prepare income taxTaylor Chapel, Matins with Dialogue returns. Phone evenings: ST 3-6681.Sermon, 9 am; Communion Service,Wanted — Occupational Therapist.Ep''f'P, (,f™ Z Service, Bond a.O.T.A. registered, for new rehab cen-Chapel, 9:30 am.University Religious Service, Rocke ter in progressive, fully accredited hos-,, „„ pltal. Pre-Voc. experience desirable.uJMale or female, age 25 to 55. Minimumof 3 years experience. Salary up to$7,500 according to background. Con¬tact The Personnel Department, Meth¬odist Hospital, Gary. Indiana for inter¬view.Reverend W. Barnett Blakemore, DeanDisciples Divinity House, and Asocl-ate Dean, Rockefeller MemorialChapel.Organ Recital, Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 3 pm. Works by Hindemith,Bach, Brahms, Alain. Dupre, andFranck. Edward Mondello, UniversityOrganist.Sunday Evening Supper-DiscussionMeetings (The Episcopal Church atthe University), 5540 Woodlawn Ave.,Buffet Supper, 5:30 pm Speaker andDiscussion 6:30 pm. “The Urban Sit¬uation,” the Reverend Paul S. Kyger.Chairman, Division of Urban Work,Diocese of Chicago.University Theatre, Reynolds Club The¬atre, 8:30 pm. “Tonight at 8:30."Outing Club, 8 pm. Ida Noyes theatre,folk dancing, no chargeBridge club, 7:15 pm, Ida Noyes lounge,first floor. Beginning and experiencedindividuals and partnerships invited.Duplicate bridge will be played andA c.B.L. fractional master pointsawarded on the new higher scale.United Christian fellowship, 5:30 pm,Thorndike-Hilton chapel, commonworship service.THE BILLYBARNESREVUE☆Fob. 8, 9, 10, 11, 12(See Ad in Theatre Section) WantedA Female Student to share a 5-roomapartment 2 blocks from campus. Mod- CHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen DailyU A M. to 1«:30 P.M.ORDBMS TO TAM OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 MODEL CAMERAWholesaleCatalogue Prices onCameras, Protectors, Recorders1342 I. 55th HY 3-9259fvtvvvvrrvvvvwi>>!>>►1►► Bicycles, Parts, Accessoriesspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 e. 55th st.aAASASaaAAAAAAAAAAAA STUDENTS . . .SAVE MONEYONFurniture, Rugs, Re¬frigerators, Stoves, TVSets, Hi-Fi’s, EleetriealAppliances.Vcti- and Used atMR.LUCKY’S1526 E. 63rd St.HE 4-2577A SUN LIFE POLICY FOR EVERY NEEDFOR YOUACASA Book StoreGood Used BooksImported Cards, Gifts and Children's BooksRELIABLE TYPEWRITER SERVICE1322 E. 55th HY 3-9651 AND YOUR FAMILY...The Income Endowment plan guarantees life in¬surance protection if you die within a specifiednumber of years. If you live, the endowmentbenefit falls due on the maturity date; you cantake the funds in cash or as income for life.ReprcsentotiveRalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LaSalleFR 2-2390 Chicago, ill.FA 4-6800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADANOT THIS WEEK... NEXT WEEK!A One-Time-Only Gigantic Record Sale!VI" High Fidelity — Major Labels — Reduced 50 to 70%!Classical, jazz, spoken, folk, children's, opera records. Build up your record collection,and buy more for gifts. So many wonderful titles, we can't begin to list them. Watchfor the full page ad in next week's Maroon!THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue D. S. Passmore, Manager fitrkuttrk, Ufa.7104 South Jeffery Avenue20%OFFON ALL ITEMSUpon Mon. & Thurs.,fill 9Featuring a complete lineof natural shoulderclothes and accessoriesfor discriminating gentle¬men.Free Parking ut theCYRIL COURT GARAGE1948 E. 71st PI.Jan. 27, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Need students for jurors lEggs smash Alpha DeltJurors are needed for amock malpractice trial to beheld in the law school’s Kirk¬land courtroom Saturday,February 18.The law school will providecounsel for the trial, while themedical school provides expertwitnesses and advisers. BernardMeltzer, professor of law and UCalumnus, will act as judge. David Rothman, a student inthe law school, is seeking stu¬dents to act as jurors.” The onlyrequirements are interest and alack of technical knowledge ofboth law and medicine,” Rothmanstated.Students interested in servingmay send their name, address,and phone number to Rothman,in care of the law school. Broken eggs and brokenwindows in the front of theAlpha Delta Phi house are thetemporary testimony to a fra¬ternity prank played early Wed¬nesday morning.John Mills, president of AlphaDelt, explained the incident.‘‘Some members of Beta ThetaSketch German constitutionProf. Wilhelm Grieve. Ger¬man ambassador to theUnited States, spoke hereWednesday on the subject of“Constitutional control of foreignaffairs in West Germany.” Themeeting, jointly sponsored by theGermanics department, the Pol¬itical Science Association. thegraduate Germanics club, andother groups, was well attended.Herman Finer of the Political sci¬ ence department chaired the meet¬ing. Grieve, who was appointedambassador to the US in 1958after a career at Freiburg Uni-verstiy and some work with theFederal German Ministry of For¬eign Affairs, spoke about the na¬ture and effectiveness of the WestGerman constitution.The ambassador traced the stepsof the development of the German‘‘basic law” or constitution, whichJimmy’sV.and the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave. was adopted in 1949. Since thattime, it has been amended to in¬clude the possession by Germanyof armed forces. He emphasizedthat the Bonn constitution stress¬es a system of checks and bal¬ances and closely resembles theconstitutions of the European par¬liamentary democracies. In writ¬ing their constituttion, the Ger¬man authorities carefully tried toavoid the faults of the Weimarrepublic, in stressing the import¬ance of a stable government.Grieve stated the power in theGerman state resides, accordingto the constitution, in three offices,that of the President of the Re¬public, who is basically a figure¬head. the Federal Chancellor, andthe Parliament. The importantarea of foreign affairs is carriedon by the Chancellor and his min¬isters, who have responsibility forit. Pi,” he stated, ‘‘had too much todrink Tuesday night, at about 4a m. Wednesday threw twelve eggsand some tomatoes — the makingsof a Spanish omelet — at the frontof our house. Several memberswho were up studying heard thenoise, but thought that it wassnowballs that were thrown.‘‘In the morning, we discoveredthe coagulated eggs smeared onthe house .and I notified the stu¬dent activities office. Kent Kirwanof that office than called loaneeHaddix, Beta president, to ask foran account of the incident.”Beta and Alpha Delt haveagreed that the matter will besettled between the damaged fra¬ternity and the individuals in¬volved in the escapade. “They willeither clean off the house them¬selves,” Mills commented, “or payfor the cleaning costs.”Beta president Haddix does notfeel that his chapter can be heldto account for the actions of itsindividual members. "I don't thinktheir private lives xmcern me any¬more than the private lives of theother members of the Inter-Fra¬ternity council,” he stated. ‘‘Allin all, I think its a rather pettysquable of the type that period¬ically occurs between most fra¬ternities.”Haddix did not approve of AlphaDelt’s action in contacting theLUCKY STRIKE PRESENTS:DQR.DR: TrSOD :DR. FROOO'3 THOUGHT FOR TH6 OAV: A penny saved is a penny earned. And if you couldput away a penny a week for one year ... why, you will have fifty-two rents!s&mtDear Dr. Frood: Our college mascotis a great big lovable Saint Bernard.He loves everyone—except me. Infact, he has bitten me viciouslyeight times. What can I do to gethim to like me?Frustrated Dog LoverDEAR FRUSTRATED: Mother him. Tocarry this off. I suggest you wear araccoon coat, let your hair and eye¬brows grow shaggy and learn towhimper affectionately. Dear Dr. Frood: Most of my life hereis extracurricular. I carry the drumfor the band, pull the curtain for thedrama society, wax the court for thebasketball team, scrape the ice forthe hockey team, clap erasers forthe faculty club and shovel snowfor the fraternity houses. Do youthink these activities wilt really helpme when I get out of college?EagerDEAR EAGER: I don’t think the col¬lege will let you out. Dear Dr. Frood: On New Year'sEve I foolishly resolved to bemore generous with my Luckies.My friends have held me to this,and I've been forced to giveaway several packs a day. Whatdo you think would happen if Ibroke this resolution?ResoluteDEAR RESOLUTE: It’s hard totell, really. Lightning, a runawayhorse, a tornado—who knows?Dear Dr. Frood: Before vacation, my girl and Iagreed to exchange Christmas presents. I sent hera nice hanky. You can imagine how I felt when Iawoke Christmas morning to find a sports carfrom her. What can I do now?DistraughtDEAR DISTRAUGHT: Remindher that Easter giving time isjust around the corner. Dear Dr. Frood: Can you help me convince my girl thatI’m not as stupid as she thinks I am?,AnxiousDEAR ANXIOUS: Perhaps, but you’ll have to convince mefirst.TO GET A QUICK LIFT, suggests Frood. step into an elevator and light up a Lucky. In-’stantly, your spirits will rise. When you savor your Lucky, you're IN—for college studentssmoke more Luckies than any other regular. They’re a wised-up bunch who’ve knownall along that Luckies taste great. Get the cigarettes with the toasted taste—get Luckies.CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change!® a. r. o*» Product of <J/ic J&n*\uc<tn — c/o&uoetr is our middle name,i2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 27, 1961 student activities office. “I don’tneed any threats,” he remarked,“to take care of a problem as pettyas this, where guilt, if you cancall it that, is readily confessedby those responsible. I feel thatthere is no need to drag us be¬fore the student activities officeas property destroyers. Incidentssuch as this have occured before,and members of Alpha DeR havedestroyed our property.Mills was unable to give anestimate of the amount of damagedone to his house. I have calledseveral companies,” he explained,“but they are having difficulty ingiving us an estimate, having hadno prior experience in cleaningfrozen eggs off concrete.”The Spanish omeletteAlphe Delt facade is shownabove.THE BILLYBARNESREVUE☆Fob. 8. 9, 10. II, 12(See Ad in Theatre Section!ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Refinishing mlShoes and Handbags• Color* matched • Too* cut owt• Vamp* lowered • Platform*removedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES’NARROW HEELSHeel* changed — Any *tyl* —Any colorBackstrap* Removed and Springo-lotors ineerted — Shoo* stretched— Zipper* repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St.Mr. Glixoa 1121 E. 82nd St.IsOffering outstanding values in fineneighborhoods — South Shore, BeverlyH11 Is, Mt. Greenwood. Convenient toUniversity.In South ShoreFine, S room, brick, 2 baths, excellentcondition, vicinity 76th Sc Clyde $18,900In Beverly HillsFine. 7 room, modern brick, one andone-half bath, vicinity 100th and Clare¬mont ....$27,500Exceptional and deluxe, 5 bedroom, *bath, brick home, In North Beverly, vi¬cinity 90th and Claremont ....$28,90eVery fine, spacious and gracious stucco.7 rooms all on one floor, wooded lot inneighborhood of professional P*°P"~vicinity 107th St Prospect f 19,900In Mt. GreenwoodModern well constructed and well laidout 2 story, 5 rooms, brick, master bed¬room 23'xl4', finished basement rec¬reational room, vicinity 105tb St Homan. . . exceptionally fine value at.. $18,9oeThese prices are not necessarily abso¬lute. Offers will be considered In mostcases If you like the home. Many otherfine values listed. For Information callBA 1-0603Cagers try for 8th straight winby Chuck BernsteinChicago’s sizzling cagers goafter their eighth straight wintomorrow night in an 8 pmfieldhouse game againstWayne State The Tartars, whoare 5-6, meet Washington of St.Ixjuis tonight in Detroit. UC’srecord in 9-2.One of only two teams to scoreover 60 points against the Ma¬roons last year, Wayne edgedChicago, 6460, in Detroit. TheTartars have lost record breakingscorer George Duncan, but havea more than adequate replace¬ment in Freddie Prime, 510 soph¬omore who is one of the shortestforwards in college basketball.Prime is currently averaging 19points per game.Probable Starting Line-upsNo Chicago Wayne No.Zemans. 6'3 F 5'10 Prime 3132 Toren, 6'4 F 6'4 Coates 4550 F.ricksen, 6'6 c 6 6 l.awor 5524 Davey. 5'10 G 5'9 ZeiRler 1512 Liss, 6'1 G 6'0 Strmyr 23UC tuned up for Wayne byteaching Dubuque a lesson in de¬fense Tuesday, 79-51, and pum-meling Denison Saturday, 70 49.A combination of Gene Ericksen’sheight, John Davey’s shootingeye, and a harassing defense ledto the win over the Dubuque Cru¬saders. After a short slump, Erick-sen hit his stride again with 24points and 11 rebounds to pacethe Maroons. Scoring almost atwill, he racked up 14 points in thefirst ten minutes. Meanwhile Da-vey tossed in three long one-handers and put the clamps onhigh scoring Dick Yapp as theMaroons built up a comfortable47-25 halftime lead.UC started where it left offright after the intermission, lim¬iting the usually hot shootingCrusaders to two points in fourminutes. At 12.20 to play, Chicagoforged ahead 65-38, and coachJoe Stampf gave the second stringa chance to see action. The num¬ber two unit outscored Dubuque,14 13.Hard - working Mike Winterstarred for the subs, fightingthrough under the basket for six points and pulling ten rebounds.Fred Paulsell backed up Winterwith eight rebounds in 12 minutes.The Maroons jumped to a 36 20halftime lead against an ineptDenison five, and coasted to a70-49 win Saturday at Granville,Ohio. Joe Stampf’s emphasis onteamwork continued to pay divi¬dends. UC displayed a well bal¬anced attack which had three menin double figures.Joel Zemans, the Maroons lead¬ing scorer with an average of 16ppg, led the way with 15. Sricksenand Davey followed with twelveapiece.Chicago 79 Dubuque 51FG FT P FG FT PZemans 5 1-2 3 Van'd’bu 0 2-4 5Toren 3 1-2 1 Harken 2 8-12 2Erlekaen 8 8-12 3 Lock 3 0-2 5Li 66 3 0-0 2 Yapp 8 7-10 2Davey 5 0-1 • Rathje 2 1-1 3Eby 0 5-6 5 Bowyer 2 2-4 3Tomsivc 3 0-1 4 Epperly 0 1-2 2Devltt 0 2-2 2 Kapinskl 0 0-1 0Lahti 0 0-0 3Winter 2 2-5 2Paulsell 1 0-1 0Totals 30 10-32 25 Totals 15 21 ,-36 22Halftime—Chicago 47, Dubuque 25Rebounds—Chicago 66, Dubuque 48Shooting—Chicago 400 (30/75),Dubuque .264 (15/57)Chicago 70 Denison 49FG FT P FG FT PZemans 6 3-3 1 McClint’k 2 1-2 3Toren 3 2-4 2 Oviatt 1 1-2 2Erlcksen 4 4-5 4 Gorman 3 4-6 4Davey 5 2-3 3 Shu ford 4 4-6 2Liss 4 0-0 2 Andrews 2 1-2 1Eby 1 4-5 2 Brookbank 2 0-0 0Devitt 0 0-0 1 Brooks 0 0-1 1Tom'ovie 2 0-2 3 Drechsel 0 0-0 2Lahti 0 2-4 3 Nelson 0 0-2 1Winter 1 1-2 1 Rhodes 1 1-1 3Foster 1 2-4 0Keeler 0 3-4 1Totals 26 18-28 22 Totals 16 17-30 20Halftime—Chicago 36. Denison 20Rebounds—Chicago 58, Denison 35Shooting—Chicago 406 < 26 64),Denison .320 (16/50)EUROPEA low-cost unregimented tour—o different trip ond o uniqueroute. We see the usuol—butolso Berlin, Scondinovia, Russia,ond North Africa.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia, Box C—Pasodeno, Cal. Athletics octiveThe UC campus will be hum¬ming with athletic activity to-tomorrow. Four varsity teamsswing into action here and thewrestlers battle Notre Dame atSouth Bend. Only the fencerswill be idle.At 2 pm, the swimmers takeon the University of Washingtonin Bartlett pool, while upstairsin Bartlett gym Bob Kreidlerspits his gymnasts against IllinoisNormal. In the meantime, theMaroon track team opens its dualmeet season at the fieldhouse,hosting Northwestern.Seeking their eighth straightwin, the red hot cagers wind upthe festivities with an 8 pm gameat the fieldhouse against WayneState. This is preceded by a pre¬liminary game at 6 pm betweenthe Maroon freshmen and Glen¬view Naval Air Station.Wrestlers whippedAugustana pinned the Maroonwrestlers Saturday, 26-8, at RockIsland. UC won only one eventand received five gift points asFred Hoyt, 123, won by a forfeit.Cliff Cox, 137, maintained hisundefeated dual meet status forChicago. Since entering college inOctober, the only time Cox hassuccumbed was in the finals ofthe Knox Tournament.Coach Ron Wangerin attributesthe failure of the team to lack of experience against Augustana. Heis looking forward to tomorrow’smeet at South Bend against astrong Notre Dame outfit.Faced with the situation ofmost U Ccoaches, he has lost menbecause of injuries, studies, andquitting, while others have notlived up to pre-season hopes.The way they fell:Augustana 26—Chicago 8123- Hoyt won by forfeit139 -Baillie pinned by Shockley,7:17137—Cox beat Worthe, 5-1147—Hill pinned Nemickos, 2:27157—Williams pinned Siedel, 3:25167—Beier pinned Nielsson, 1:38177—Thorner lost to Suter, 7-0hby—Herstedt beat Tallitsch, 2-1exh at 147—Hill beat Watson, 13-5exh at hvy—Karasch beat Narske,3-2Swimmers stoppedWisconsin of Milwaukee whip¬ped the Maroon swimmers, 61-33,Saturday in Bartlett pool. UC wononly three events. John McCon¬nell won the 220 yard backstrokein 2:32.3 and A1 Elshtain won the200 yard breast stroke in 2:27.7UC’s relay team of Holmquist,Cavallo, Calef, and Reisberg wonthe 400 yard relay in 4:08.6.Gymnasts fallWest Virginia tipped Bob Krei-dler’s gymnasts, 50-46, Saturdayin Morgantown. It was a six eventprogram with no competition intrampoline.all Hie Free Press booksTHE GREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 East 57th HY 3-5829British and AmericanQuality PaperbacksFor PRINTING Call JAY!OFFSET * LETTERPRESS if MIMEOGRAPHINGDAILY U. OF C. PICKUPSCallHY 3-0802 JAY Letter Sc Printing Service1950 East 75th StreetIBMWILLINTERVIEWJANUARY31 Candidates for Bachelors or Masters Degrees•re invited to discuss opportunities In:Engineering and ScienceSystems Engineering and SalesThis is a unique opportunity to find out aboutthe many career opportunities at IBM. TheIBM representative can discuss with you typ¬ical jobs, various training programs, chancesfor advanced education, financial rewards,and company benefits—all important factorsthat affect your future.SOME FACTS ABOUT IBMAn Unusual Growth Story: IBM has had one ofthe exceptional growth rates in industry. Ithas been a planned growth, based on ideasand products having an almost infinite appli¬cation In our modern economy.Diverse and Important Products: IBM devel¬ops, manufactures and markets a wide range01 products In the data processing field. IBMcomputers and allied products play a vital role In the operations of business, industry,science, and government.Across-the Country Operations: Laboratoryand manufacturing facilities are located inEndicott, Kingston, Owego, Poughkeepsie•nd Yorktown, N. Y.; Burlington, Vermont;Lexington, Ky.; San Jose, Calif.; Bethesda,Md.; and Rochester, Minn. Headquarters islocated in New York City with sales and serv¬ice offices in 198 major cities throughout theUnited States.The Accent is on the Individual: No matterwhat type of work a person does at IBM, heis given all the responsibility he is able tohandle, and all the support he needs to dohis job. Advancement is by meritThe areas in which IBM is engaged have anunlimited future. This is your opportunity tofind out what that future has to offer you.Call or stop In at your placement office to ar¬range an appointment with the IBM repre¬sentative for the date above. If you cannotattend an interview, write or call the managerof the nearest IBM office:Mr. J. J. Keil, Branch ManagerIBM Corporation, Dept. 8829415 8. Western AvenueChicago 20, III.PRescott 9 8000IBM■■■IvHlTli You naturally have a better chance to grow with a growth company. THE BILLYBARNES REVUEFeb. 8, 9, 10, 11, 12(See Ad in Theatre Section)Gymnasts are practicingin Bartlett gym.See AL SAXFor Secial Student& Faculty DiscountCONDITIONEDReg JI9$450 $|lwValue I all■ CARS1. Inspect lining for full drum contact2. Check complete hydraulic system3. Carefully repack front wheel bearings4. Add heavy-duty brake fluid5. Adjust brakes (all 4 wheels)SALEU.S. ROYALAuiRide TIRESwithTYREXPEOVCEO 706.70-15tubed typeblackwallOther sizes proportionately low priced0.00-16 7.10-152 for >21W 2for*2790Plus tax and treadable tires•lYDfX Is a collective trade-mark atTyre*. Inc.fltll INSTALLATIONThis week only!Drive in —Free Parking£ASY PAY PIANA L S A XTIRE CO.6052 S. Cottage Groveright off the campusCall DO 3-5554Free Inside Customer ParkingJan. 27f 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 134 .MI a Ready Billy Barnesby Dotty SharplessMaroon Culture editorThe “Billy Barnes Revue,”to be presented in the Inter¬national House Theatre Feb¬ruary 8-12, is one of Univer¬sity theatre’s major productionsfor the 60-61 season under theirrecently expanded program. Therevue is being produced for UTby Mike Einisman and directedby Jerry Mast. Cast in the revue’seight parts are students with avariety of musical comedy andstraight dramatic experience,both on campus and off. AliceShaeffer and Cindy Whitsell arefamiliar musical comedy perso¬nalities, having accumulated be¬tween them stardom in Blackfriars’ “Time Will Tell,” “Scapin,”and “Gondoliers.” Judith Niss-man is a newcomer to UC theatre,though by no means a newcomerto the stage. She has studied dra¬matics quite extensively in NewYork. The fourth and last femalerole will be filled by JudithDeutsch who made her brilliantcampus theatre debut in “Heart¬break House” last fall. BlackfriarHeery Lynn began his theatrecareer at the age of three andmore recently belonged to theLo.s Angeles Shakespeare group.Jerry Hyman, a first-year stu¬dent, will be taking his first ma¬jor role and will grace it with afine baritone voice. The “un¬known” discovery of the year isdestined to be Artie Harris whohas never set foot on the stage before but whose uninhibited off¬stage antics make him a naturalfor the show. Director Jerry Mastwill be anchor man with a smallrole in the revue; he has hadleads in several UC productionsas well as Hollywood movie ex¬perience.The Billy Barnes Revue experi¬enced fantastic success both onand off Broadway arm had a longrun in Los Angeles. UniversityTheatre has bought the produc¬tion rights with the intention ofbringing to this campus and tothe Chicago area in general, ashow of professional caliber, con¬tinuing their policy of presentingexciting evenings of theatre. Sellout crowds are expected at theshow which has been praised bycritics in the following glowingterms: “This is what a revueshould be. It is filled with flaw¬less gems.” “The happiest off-Broadway event of the year. Mag¬nificent up and down the line.” I The campus got its first preview of The Billy Barnes Revue when its cast of eight per¬formed at the recent "WUS Presents."'Tonight at 8:30' opensA bathroom on the seashore is the setting of “Em-bers”one of the three one actplays being presented thisweekend by University theatre.This first weekend of plays in theI Wear Contact LensesDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist1132 E. 55th St.at University Ave. HY 3-8372 Faculty Revels start“Empty Saddles in the Bach Corral” or, “a roly posygathers no moss” is the title of the new Faculty Revels pro¬duction. Members of the faculty, their wives, and UC alumniwho are members of the Quad Club are rehearsing threenights weekly in Ida Noyes theater : —in preparation for the show, due to through their parts and seeingopen March 10 and 11 at Mandel that the as a whole is readyto go”. Raymond Lubway is in“No -I won’* tell you what it’s charge of the choreography. Setsall about,’’ flatly stated Alec Su- for “Bach Corral” are being de-therland, author of the script and signed by Alan F’ern, humanitiesthe troupe’s director, when asked instructor in the college,by the Maroon what had inspired Some of the performers includethe title’. ‘But, may I say this: Henry Sulcer, vice presid it ofI ha\e never heard better music the Universtiy, Mrs. Ruth Nether-in a Revels theater show. Mr. ton, Mary Schulmann, GrovenorRoberts has done a tremendous coopgp and Jeffery Plangam. Sut-job. Arthur Roberts, a physicist herland stated that they “hopedat the Argonne National Physics be abie to use one of the aeous-Institute here, composed the mu- tically refined new Lab schoolsical score for the show. assembly rooms for some of ourRoland Bailey and his wife Zena rehearsals.”are again choral director and pro- Tickets will go on sale Februaryducer of the Revels. They govern 6 for Quad Club members, andthe mechanics of putting the February 20 for general admission,thirty-three-odd cast m e m‘b e r s winter “Tonight at 8:30” seriesofiened last night, and will be per¬formed tonight, tomorrow andSunday evenings in the Reynoldsclub theatre at 8:30. “If MenPlayed Cards as Women Do” byGeorge Kaufman and “We WereDancing,” by Noel Coward, willalso be given.“Embers” was originally writ¬ten by Samuel Beckett for theBBC, and it has been adapted bydirector Marty Roth for its firststage performance. “Unlike suchfull length plays as “Endgame”and "Waiting for Godot,” “Em¬bers” has a plot line,” stated Roth.“Unusual props — a toilet and a bathtub —- are needed for the pro¬duction.”"We Were Dancing” has a handwoven set, covered wit’, handmademan-eating flowers, according toAnn Folke, production manager olthe student-produced, student-di¬rected series. The Noel Cowardshow also features a hand tiedbamboo curtain, with 1068 knotsindividually tied by Lee O’ConnerTickets for both, this weekendand next weekend’s performancesare still available, both at thetheatre office in room 303 of theReynold's club, and at the Rey¬nold's club desk. Tickets to allperformances are $1.00New abbot rehearsesBlackfriars, despite changes in production personnel, is“ready to start rehearsal for ‘Mad Money,’ ” announced DougWhite, the new Abbott. Abbie Sheldon, last quarter’s Abbess—the only one in the history of Blackfriars—resigned twoweeks ago because she found shecould not devote sufficient time should not affect organizationalto give careful attention to the ma,ters. I he script was finisheddetails of production”. Abbie ex- an(* . *1',‘N ° u 1 s ^^.re 1,1 l<islplained further that she "had "adn-medfound it neccessary to work parttime this quarter”.“But,” she continued, “the tran¬sitions in the Blackfriars boardHARPER SQUARECROCERLANDFree Delivery1455 E. 57th St. DO 3-2444 Schedule original (evueJust a Reminder —the student unionHANGOUT9:00-11:30 Men. Hmi Thurs. — Ida Noyes5t00-8:30 Swnday — Cloister ClubAnnouncingThe 58 th AnnualWASHINGTONPROMENADEDel Prado HotelSaturday EveningFebruary 18, 1961 9:30-1:00Bids: $5 per couple “7-1/8", a new musical re¬vue, will be presented at thePoint theater at 55th streeton the Lake. The revue, ac¬cording to Martin Rabinowitz, di¬rector, will “return the traditionof satire and song to Chicago’sSouth Side.”There will be two performancesat 8 and 10 pm on February 17and 18. Sunday, February 19,there will be a performance at8 pm only. Tickets will be on sale■>*’***&■- ■ «s-v, - -Lost WeekendBOB CAMPwithBOB GIBSONOpens Tues.RAKHELIsraeli Songstress with| DON CRAWFORDBlues & Ballads StylistTHE GATEOF HORN753 !N. DearbornSI 7-2833 at the student service center byFebruary 1.The revue stars Rick Ames,Lonnie Bovar, Jennifer Gillman,Walt M o w 1 e s , Abbie Sheldon,Richard Tracy, Amie Wallach, Ja¬nie Whitehill, and Tom Winder-hold.Dick Weiss and Mel Rosen havewritten twelve songs for theshow. The book has been writtenby Bob Reiser, Mike Resnick, andMartin Rabinowitz. Weiss andRabinowitz were the writers oflast year’s Blackfriars’ show, _“Silver Bells and Cockle Shells.”They teamed with Reiser towrite this year’s Blackfriars’show, “Mad Money.”“The revue takes a cynical lookat contemporary life,” says Rabi¬nowitz. A featured skit, “Detec¬tive Story,” is a satire of TV’s“cool, jazz-type, private eyes.” her statement and said that Abbiewould be “Abbess emeritus” of theboard. Other members are MikeEinisman, who moves up from“hospitaler” to White’s formerposition as “prior”, Ken Davidson,the new “hospitalar”, and SueGriffin, “scribe”.Cast members of "Mad Money,” amusical about four “respectableand rather prominent residents ina small town, who, bored by theirregular existences, decide to rob abank” are James Reiss as George,the Doctor; Jerry Mast as Ed,the Lawyer; Keith Anderson asDanny, the Young Man; CindyWhitsel as Sarah, the Doctor’sWife; Annai Wallach as Joan, Ed’snewly recruited Gun Moll: Step¬hanie Mora as Amy, Danny’s GirlFriend; Dick Tracy as the unwit¬ting Mayor; and Rick Ames whoportrays the “inscrutable” BankGuard.Sunday and Weeknights—No Cover — No AdmissionFriday and Saturday, $2Never a MinimumAnnouncing a New Low-Cost Service to StudentsBig City Motor Club And Triad Insurance Agency★★★★★• CHICAGO MAROON8209 S. Cottage Grove AvenueTowing, Road and Battery Service We specialize in the placing ofBail Bond Cards •' °uto liob,lity insurance tor stu-Financial Responsibility Bonds f"” f 7"“”'Am. | r , , <"<> extra charge).Auto Insurance of all KindsLow-cost Financing and Refinancing of ^ Males, from 20 yrs.Used Autos ^ Females, from 17 yrs.Complete Protection Against the Chicago WinterInsure Against Losing Your Driver's License and PlatesCALL IS TODAY FOR DETAILS f ISO 7-8009W'. S. Sidney^ President Company Of The FourpresentsShe Stoops To Conquera merry comedy byOliver GoldsmithFeb.2.3.5,8,10.12 8 p.m.Feb. 4 A 11—H A 8:30 p.m.1174 E. 57th St.Admission, $2.00; Students, $1.50Ml 3-4170 — FA 4-4100 Abbie Sheldon is shownabove announcing resigna¬tion.NOW PLAYINGSCHOOL FOR SCOUNDRELS'Coming Feb. 3"NEVER ON SUNDAY"straight from a record-breakingrun at the Esquire TheatreDearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763Special student rate for all performances seven days m weakJust Show Cashier Your I.D. CurdJan. 27, 1961Culture VultureMans fate is to be tragic. Man's tragedy is that he is man: he is frail, he is helpless in the face of his destiny. Once heunderstands the infinity of his helplessness, he is lost in a void of questioning, questioning gods who do not, who can¬not, answer Once he understands, he has leapt from the brink of human solidarity and must” find solace where there is none,in the emptiness of himself. What should man's striving be directed towards? Towards clasping the community of man to hisuncomprehending bosom, or towards truly understanding his fate and the consequent knowing pain? He must understandthe lies of nations and of states. He must be free from the bonds of falsity, free to praise the monument of glory which anoccasional man can create with another. "We must love one another or die."On CampusTheatreThe winter grey is about tobreak forth into a blaze of illum¬inating talent, dramatic talent toset our hearts ablaze with joyand love of fellow man. Univer¬sity Theat e has a staggeringschedule in the coming weeks,but the strength of their convic¬tions will, presumably, carrythem through. Last night the ex¬perimenters descended, to sallythrough their diverse experi¬ments. The first platoon of playsand players will be strutting uponthe Reynolds Club stage andcringing behind its venerable cur¬tains through Sunday night. “IfMen Played Cards As WomenDo,” commences the trilogywhich includes both comedy andtragedy and is guaranteed topurge the soul of every conceiv¬able emotion. Samuel Beckett’s“Embers” will dispense with allthe tragedy lurking in our souls;“We Were Dancing,” by No4lCoward will take care of the hu¬mor in our hearts and perhapsreplace the tragedy. February 2,3, 4, 5 the second platoon willcharge onto the field Of actionand with outstretched arms willpresent us with a French tragedy“The Two Executioners” by Ar-raba, a tale of our original sin¬ful parents “We Have Scotch’dthe Snake, Not Killed It,” anoriginal by UT-er Joe Ehren-burg and a “Portrait of theMadonna” by Tennessee Williams,which sounds soothing. All seatsare $1, and the number is limited.The Billy Barnes Review is inhot pursuit of the strictly dra¬matic contingent, but presumablynot treading on its heels. Febru¬ary 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12 the Reviewwill bring to this campus the pro¬fessional sparkle that may do thetrick of turning aside the gothicgrey depression. The ticket officein Mandel Hall is still in hot com¬petition wjth the folksters, anddoing well. Hop over and indulgein both.FilmsThe Documentary Film winterseries is so oppressed — so ex¬alted, rather — by staggeringcrowds that they are hieing offto greener fields: Judd 126 whichwill hold twice as many starry-eyed viewers. Tonight’s programwill feature a 1928 French ver¬sion of Poe’s “The Fall of theHouse of Usher” for comparisonwith last week’s American ver¬sion. Qui triomphera, les Franc¬ois ou les Americans? Time andHistory have given one answer;• he films may reverse the deci¬sion. Performance times, asusual, will be 7:15 and 9:15.EXPRESSIONART GALLERY171314 E. 55thStudents Have YourPrints Framed AtExpression Art GalleryMonday thru Saturday, 2-5Evenings, 7-9Call PL 2-8895CLARK theatredark fir madisonfr 2-2843AtEVERYFRIDAYPer Couple★ college students ad- \milted for 50c \ SpCCIalA ladies day every fridayall gals admitted for 25cdr different double featuredallydr open 7.30 a.m.; late shov4 a.m. Church and state have alwaysbeen at each others’ throats,sometimes more than others.Alec Guinness has pinpointed aparticular governmental organ¬ization, England’s Scotland Yard,and as a sleuthing cleric outdoesthem, humorously and delight¬fully. He plays the role of anavant-garde, before the scenes,one-man patrol board, grabbingthe criminals befor the law’s longarm gets to them and attemptingto reform their corrupt or help¬less souls. “Father Brown, Detec¬tive” will be shown in the Inter¬nationa] House East Lounge at7 and 9 on Monday. Admission50c.At B-J tonight will be the storyof three gold prospectors and ofthe corrupting influences of thefilthy lucre which they dig outof the dirty ground. “Treasure ofthe Sierra Madre” stars Hum¬phrey Bogart and Walter Huston.Bogart, all through his actingcareer had trouble playing any¬one but Humphrey; in this film,however, he practically succeedsin subordinating his civilian selfto the self of the story, and indoing so performs admirably.Showings at 8 and 10 in JudsonDining Hall.A scene from "She Stoopsto conquer.Off CampusTheatreOne of the great classics of thecomic theatre, “She Stoops toConquer,” by Oliver Goldsmith,will be presented as the thirdoffering in Company of theFour’s 1960-61 season. “The Mis¬takes of the Night,” the play’s subtitle, aptly summarizes its hi¬larious intrigue: an old housemistaken for an inn, a countrygentleman for the innkeeper, hisbeautiful (of course) daughterfor the barmaid, the familiarbackgarden for the “CrackskullCommon” of notorious fame. Theroles are choice: Kate Hardcastleof quick and mischievous wit,wooed by the stammering, stag¬gering Marlowe; simpering, sillyMrs. Hardcastle, and Tony Lump¬kin, her great booby of a son.A special background of Englishairs and ballads is being preparedto stimulate the audience’s imag¬ination and soothe his ruffledspirit. . . . Coffee with the eastand staff follows every perform¬ance. Feb. 2-5 and 9-12 are thedates. Curtain at 8:00; students$1.50; call MI 3-4170 or FA 4-4100for reservations.Artistic critics have the sharpweapon of words with which torent their wrath upon the world.Fairly frequently the artistsstrike back in satire or spoofery,and of all those who have, G. B.Shaw is the most successful.Shaw advertised “Fanny’s FirstPlay” as being written by an un¬known playwright name of XxxxXxxx. In spite of the protestsof the leading London critics,"Fanny’s First Play” enjoyed afantastic success of 622 runs. OnMonday, Jan. 30, The Shaw So¬ciety of Chicago will present thegreat spoof, and the cast willfeature many prominent Chica¬goans. Reservations should bemade in advance by phoning CE6-5542. Students are always wel¬come at $1.ArtThe 64th Annual American Ex¬hibition is going into its finalHARPERLIQUOR STORE1114-16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer of lowestprices.IKEE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4 — 1233— 1318— 7699THE FINEST IN BEAUTY CARE FOR THEDISCRIMINATING WOMANDOrchester 3-7366 and 3-7367DE WAREN'S House of Beauty1601 E. 53rd St.Specialists in Hair Shaping,Styling and Permanent WavingLAKE/7pARK AT S5 r O : NO 7 - 907 ^the p-yde park theatreStanley Kromer, producer and director of “The Defiant Ones" ond"On Hte Beach" completes his trilogy of motion pictures with important,exciting and controversial themes with —•TAiarv •PtNCIR __ WWDIWC __ «»«NeTracy March Kel.lv"InheritTmeWind'ftflmid thru UNITE0 ARTISTS"Triumphant! One of the mostbrilliont displays of acting everwitnessed."—N. Y. Time*Student rate 65c, all performances. weeks at the Art Institute. Thefirst few rooms in the extensivegallery ease one gently into thethroes of modern art, some ofwhich a Chicago newspaper de¬scribed as “space man art.” Thespace men grow more talentedand more out with each passingyear. The exhibit includes therealistic, the bold, the brave, thesoft, and the atrocious, but it isall a matter of taste. The cham¬pion of the show is tucked in aninconspicuous corner and entitled“Small Green No. 2.” Its blocksof green surrounded by green aresublime in their purity.An intriguing show opens nextFriday, Feb. 3 at the SuperiorStreet Gallery. It is the first Chi¬cago showing of the paintings ofBob Thompson, a 23 year oldgenius from New York. A Colum¬bia University art historian hasdescribed the young man’s paint¬ing with a vividness which theVulture could never i-eproduce:“Thompson’s paintings are alllandscapes. Some are brightly col¬ored with a horizon rhythmicallybroken by mountains, valleys, andheavy foliaged trees. The maincharacters are large nude womenand excited massive beasts thatpress close to the front of thepicture space in active poses,beasts languidly touching women,as if in a dance. The women en¬joy the greatest love and atten¬tion; they are richly embellishedwith blegant hair-dos, tall andgraceful. We enjoy these fleshy,supple figures.” Do we?MusicThe grand old man of the Chi¬cago Symphony, Fritz Reiner, isprogressing sufficiently up the road of recovery to be able to re¬turn to the podium in the latterpart of March. In the meantimewe must wait, but the programsare good, to ease our grief. To¬morrow night, Jan. 28, the Chi¬cago Symphony Orchestra Choirwill present their second concertof the season, a program of Bach,Poulenc, and Mendelssohn. Thefirst half of the program will bea cappclla (the most exacting andmost rewarding choral technique)renditions of the beloved Bachmotife. “Jesu Meine Freude,” andthe Mass of the contemi>orarycomposer, Poulenc. The orchestrawill join the chorus for Mendels¬sohn’s “Walpurgis Night,” themusical setting of a poem byGoethe, concerning the triumphof Christianity over paganism.Margaret Hillis, conductor, ’willdrop the baton at 8:30.CinemaDarwin, monkeys, Hillsboro,revivalists, newspaper men,school teachers combine forcesin the Stanley Kramer productionof the dramatic Scopes trial. “In¬herit the Wind” paints vividlyeach emotional height and pitfallcreated by the golden-tongued,bible-slingir^g Matthew HarrisonBrady ‘played by Fredric March)and the acidulous attorney forthe defense of Richard Cates andfree thought, Henry Drummond(played by Spencer Tracy). Bra¬dy’s ultimate defeat is as heart¬breaking as Drummond’s defenseof man’s mind and his originality.Student rates are always in ef¬fect at the Hyde Park.THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWO*m®!‘ iJ-J! Free li.(. DeliveryMedium $1.45 *Large $1.95 rfl %r *?-»5 Jerry sGiant $3.95 %/1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045VT V VVT VTTTTTTVTVTV VTTTVVTVVVV TTVTVTyTTVV V WW fUTTIThanks to Your Support There Are Only a Very Limited <Number of Tickets Available for Saturday Night's Per- \formance of the 1st ANNUAL U of C <<FOLK FESTIVALTickets AvailableMandel Hall Box OfficeGood Seats on Sale for Fri. and Sun.UNIVERSITY THEATREPROUDLY ANNOUNCES IT'S PRODUCTIONOFFeb. 8.9.10.11.1^INTERNATIONAL HOUSE THEATRE1414 E. FIFTY-NINTH STREET .'Nitely at &30exrept Friday& Saturday:Two showsnitely at rur: cast. Judith deutsciY. 'jERBY^uar. ji'dithKjssman, alice inn shaefter,t oo & 10:15 CINDY UHITSKIA,, ARTHUR HARMS, JERRY D. HYMAN. KERRY t.YKN. 4 :l 't, v“AirJan. 27. 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15Social science contest Recession greatest nowThe College is offering atotal of $450 in prizes thisyear in two essay contests be¬ing held by the social sciencesection. The contests, accordingto Professor Donald Meiklejohn,head of the section, are open toany undergraduate maintainingregistration from now until theend of the Winter quarter. Thedeadline for submitting essays toeither of the two contests is nextMay 1.Meiklejohn said the MonroBernhard prize of $150 will beawarded to the author of thebest essay “developing proposalsfor a ‘social invention,’ that is,for the explanation and defenseof some new proposal in the field of social institutions.” He listedthe graduated income tax andfree public libraries as examplesof “social inventions.” Studentshaving inquiries about the Bern-hard contest should submit themto Professor Reuel Denney(Gates-Blake 432», the chairmanof the committee administeringthe contest.The second contest offers threeprizes — $200, $125, and $75 — forthe three best essays tracing theorigin, development or functionof political institutions. Theseawards are made availablethrough the Harold T. Goettlerprize fund, Meiklejohn said. Hesaid inquiries concerning thiscontest should be directed to him(Gates-Blake 127». “There is nothing magic will carry the economy to highabout a bie numb eY. The ,evels of capacity use in 1962.?t j 04- * . ;ii Solomon’s views on the Ameri-Umted States will continue ts can SCen<? were present-growth for four years, said ^ january 17 jn an address givenEzra Solomon, professor of fi- the Executive Program club atnance in the graduate schoolof business.Solomon was commenting abouthis outlook of future Americaneconomy. He estimated that/thetrough of the current recessionwill be reached this quarter.He further estimate/ that thegross national product [GNP] willrise 24 billion dollars to 526 bil¬lion dollars by the end of 1961.“This will not be a full-employedlevel, but it is very likely that itwill induce a new' wave of in¬creased capital expenditures whichTerkle interviews SlimMemphis Slim is a blues singer whom many people have described simply by saying “hehas soul.” At the WUS Marathon Memphis Slim showed students why he is consideredone of America’s authentic folk-singers. Studs Terkel taped his singing and an interviewfor his radio program, Wax Museum.Memphis Slim grew’ up in Chicago and Memphis, Tennessee. He said he first camearound and learned the blues in Memphis but “nobody learns the blues in Chicago.” Hesings the blues in the traditionalSouthern Negro style. This style jazz, Memphis Slim said. “I like Bessie Smith’s, but she had a wayconsists of singing or talking all music. I understand so much of presenting a song, an excep-about the way you feel at any of it that I appreciate it. and the tional way of selling a tune.”time. things I don’t understand interest“All nationalities have different me.” “Blues aren’t only songs of suf¬fering. Blues are what happensblues and different ways of ex- “Bessie Smith was the greatest to you in your life and inside,pressing their feelings. For this blues singer of all time. She and Supposing I met a new' girl and Ireason, there is a difference be- Ma Rainy have helped carry down just wanted to say what I felttween Negro blues and ‘white the blues the way they always about her. I’d sing the blues forblues,’ ” said the dynamic singer, were,” said the folksinger. “Billie her. You can Iso blues toWhen asked if he liked modern Holiday’s voice was nothing like ‘signify.’ ” Memphis Slim definedWUS campaign successfulas drive nears *1500 goalThe week-long World University service (WUS) drive hasgone even better than expected, according to Dorothy Dorf,a member of the WUS committee.The drive began a week ago with the “WUS Presents”spectacle in the Reynolds club. —With the help of appearances byMemphis Slim and Studs Terkel,arranged by Mike Fleischer, a pro¬moter of the Folklore Society Fe¬stival, Gerald McBoing-Boing car¬toons, and film shorts, more than$50.00 was collected for WUS. Theprogram also featured a jazz com¬bo brought together by Ken Pier¬ce, excerpts from University Thea¬tre’s “Billy Barnes Revue,” andentertainment by the Blackfriars.A large part of the WUS col¬lection is expected to come fromdormitory canvassing, which be¬gan Monday evening. Faculty con¬tributions, too, Dorothy said, arehelping WUS towards its $1500goal $300 more than was collect¬ed last year.Dorothy gave special thanks toChaplain Pyle of Brent House andto the Unitarian Church for theirefforts. The proceeds from theChurch’s Sunday dinner at FentHouse have been given to WUS.“Everyone,” reported Dorothy, “has been very generous. I w'antto thank especially the religiousorganizations, the student activit¬ies office, and the administration,all of whom have been very co¬operative.” this as instigating or agitatingfor something.When the blues singer wasasked if blues were dying out hesaid of course not. “There’ll al¬ways be blues, get happy blues,sad blues, rock and roll blues andjazz blues. The blues are, afterall, the foundation of all jazz andeven rock and roll. Rock and rollisn’t really good, tough, and goodblues and jazz musicians don’tplay it too much.”In reply to a question as towhether w'hite people could un¬derstand Negro blues, MemphisSlim said, “It doesn’t matter whatnationality7 you belong to, butwhat you’re like inside. the Hotel Sherman.In his speech, Solomon said thatsince the second quarter of 1960when “the fourth postwar cycleof economic expansion reached itspeak ... we hav> been having amild contraction in aggregatebusiness activity.”This recession is to be expected,explained Solomon. “There isnothing magic in the 60’s. Reces¬sions come at the rate of three adecade.”Solomon told why “this down¬turn, as a whole, will probably bemilder than any we’ve experiencedsince the war and certainly milderthan the 1957-58 decline.”The first reason is a “switchfrom heavy inventory accumula¬tion during the first half of 1960to a policy of inventory liquidationnow,” which has ‘ reduced tjie de¬mand for output by some $15 bil¬lion a year.”The “decline in output and em¬ployment” caused by the inven¬tory i>olicy switch has led consu¬mers to be more reticent to“spend available income or incurdebt in order to purchase housesand durable goods.”Thirdly, the boom proceedingthis recession was only very mild.“Total expansion of business capa-city during the boom was smallerrather than larger than the rateswarranted by the growth in theeconomy.”Characterizing business duringthis recession, Solomon said "itlooks it lot worse than it is.”According to Solomon, however,the “short run outlook for durablegoods usage is not terribly bright,and” he does not “foresee any risein final sales for this sector in1961.”The unemployment situationmakes the “present downturn look severe.” In January and Febru¬ary, according to Solomon, the“unadjusted level of unemploy¬ment is likely to reach six millionpersons, or an apparent rate otover 8 per cent — numbers farlarger than we have witnessedsince before the w’ar.”Solomon feels the end of the re¬cession is going to be spurred 04by the “service sector of the de¬mand for output.” Then, “themanufacturing sector, when itdoes respond, will be followingrather than leading the upturn."Solomon is more cptimistic thanthose who believe a majority ofindications “that generally pre¬cede the arrival of a recessionarytrough" must show “signs of arise before the economy as awhole stops declining.”These indicators include “th^length of the manufacturing workweek, the flow of new orders, thereported rate of profit on busi¬ness sales, the level of corporateprofits, the pride of industrial rawmaterials, the money supply, therate of inventory change, and therate of business failures [invert¬ed].He believes that a “rise in theseindividual indicators and the eco¬nomy will occur together duringthe present cycle.”“It would be reassuring to havestronger signals from the tradi¬tional leading indicators, but atpresent the only series indicatingan upturn is the stock market.”Nevertheless, the “com|*>nents oftotal demand” lead Solomon to be¬lieve that the present “recessionwill reach its lowest point duringthe first quarter of 1961.”Because consumers become “les>cautious when employment op[>oi-tunities improve” non-durable ex¬penditures will rise.“In the aggregate, the estimateof final demand for ‘he 4th quar¬ter add up to an increase ot 17or 18 billion dollars over the 4thquarter of 1960 — for a total otaround $523 billion.”I Ride The Midway! XDR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometristin theNew Hyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th St. #t DO 3-7644Eye Examinations Contact LensesNewest styling in framesStudent Discountkk 11THE BILLYBARNESREVUE☆Feb. 8. 9, 10. 11. 12(See Ad in Theatre Section) University Theatre PresentsTONIGHT AT 8:30Two Productions of Experimental TheatreJanuary 27-28-29February 2-3-4-5Limited Seating Reynolds Club TheatreTickets $1 MIDWAY RIDING CLUD, INC. i742 East 61st Street• LARGE HEATED INDOOR RING• FULL SCHEDULE OF CLASSES UNDERPROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTIONBeginning — Intermediate — Advanced — Jumping• EXCELLENT BOARDING FACILITIES• HORSES FOR HIRE — ACCESS TO CHICAGO'S IFINEST BRIDLE PATHS:Jackson Park — Washington Park — Lakefront• SPECIAL GROUP RATESMidway 3-5771M. CHASE, Manager‘TREASURE OF THESIERRA MADRE'Humphrey BogartWalter HustonDirected by John Huston“This story and Huston's whole handling of it oreabout os near to folk ort os a highly consciousartist can get; both also approach the global ap¬peal, to the most ond least sophisticated membersof an audience, which the best poetic drama andnearly all the best movies have in common.”—James Agee Tonight8 & 10 p.m.B-J Cinema50c Next FridayRASHOMONCrand Prize Venice FilmFestival.Academy Award as BestForeign Film.National Board of Re¬view Selection as BestForeign Film. CRTMl 3-3113tubes to:castrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelii &. michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors lines#«ciaKfU * speed tuningcustom engine metaRetron*clutch •gear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachwofkM bttir MG psychiatrist2306 e. 71st st.Chicago, Illinois16 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 27, 1961