Sunday 'stand-in' plannedy0j 69 — No. 58 University of Chicago, February 10, 1961 31UC students have planned a“stand-in” at three downtowntheaters for this Sunday, Feb¬ruary 12. This attempt to fur¬ther integration in the nationalABC Paramount chain, theaters ispart of a national effort beginningin the North on Lincoln's birth¬day.The Chicago stand-ins wereplanned by the NSA committeeof SG which later passed a resolu¬tion supporting both the Chicagodemonstrations and those alreadystarted or planned in other cities.The National Student Associationhas supported and encouragedthese demonstrations for memberschools.After observing the positive ef¬fects of the lunch counter sit-ins, southern students and northernstudents decided to renew theirefforts in new channels. Studentsat southern schools including theuniversities of Texas, North Caro¬lina, and Kansas City have beenpicketing to desegregate theaters.In Kansas City groups of stu¬dents were standing in at 20 thea¬ters and successfully convincedall twenty to discontinue theirpolicies of segregation. The ABC-Paramount chain was included inthe Kansas theaters.This would substantiate re¬marks made by an official ofABC-Paramount that if the dem¬onstrations continued to provethat public opinion was for inte¬grated theaters they would changetheir policies. As each local thea¬ter is under the national policyProfessors7 electionreport attackedA study of the charges ofelection fraud leveled by theRepublican press and partymembers at the Democraticparty in Chicago receivedsharp criticism from the Chi¬cago’s American.The study, conducted by Her¬man Finer, C. Herman Pritchett,and Jerome Kerwin, attributed ir¬regularities which came to lightto human error rather than dis¬honesty. The study was admitted¬ly based on press clippings andnot an independent investigation.The American stated yesterday,that the professors, “defendedthemselves against charges thatthey vvhitewashed the Democraticparty after a superficial study ofallegations of fraud in the Novem-bei 8 election.”See excerpts from the re¬port beginning on page 4.The conclusions drawn by theprofessors was that there was nobasis for the charges that whole¬sale fraud was responsible forthe outcome of the Novemberelections. In the report theycharge Chicago newspapers withcarrying allegations, makingthem charges, and then makingthe facts conclusions.According to the American,GOP leaders called the study anarmchair” investigation with dis¬regard to fact.Alts. Wayland C. Brooks, Re-publiean national committee wom¬an for Illinois, charged:“VVhat kind of armchair inves¬tigation did they make? Theyhad better get their glasses-hanged. Better yet, they shouldNmio down while we are makingput recount and see just howbaseless’ our charges,‘ Seventy percent of the paperballot box seals were broken andpeople who have been dead for•b years were found to have voted*n the election.‘ f never saw them (professors)around when we were making ourinvestigation.' This is a Demo--ratio attempt to sweep this messunder the rug.”tii reply to the charges madehy the American .and Republicanofficials, C. Herman Pritchett,chairman of the political sciencedepartment, stated “We expectedf° be criticized by the Republicans01 °wr report. That is why wevrr-ie carful to note our politics. If new evidence comes up that’san other matter. But until thenwe’U stand on our report. Thefacts brought out so far, in ouropinion, do not add up to fraud.”“I would expect anything fromthose who made the originalcharges and couldn’t substantiatethem. They are almost like de¬fendants. As for ivory towers, Iwonder about the thoughtfulnessand dispassionate processing inlooking at political leanings of thepeople. They are office seekers—and unsuccessful ones who arecrying out.” this would act as a mandate to allof them to admit Negroes on anequal basis with white patrons.Three Chicago theaters, who arein the Balaban and Katz affiliateof the ABC-Paramount will bepicketed. These are in the Loopand include The Roosevelt, TheChicago Theater, and United Art¬ists. According to Len Friedman,a spokesman for the group, “Wewill picket the Loop theaters be¬cause they will bring the mostpublicity and attention to the dem¬onstrations.”“The pickets will be held from1 pm until 9 pm as these are theirbusiest hours. Students will beleaving from Ida Noyes at 12:30,3:30, and 6, and will demonstratein three shifts. “We hope to getat least 100 people out demon¬strating, and urge all interestedstudents to come,” said Friedman.Impetus for the demonstrationcame from a call from NSA, Stu¬dent Non-viole.it Coordinatingcommittee, SNCC, and demonstra¬tors at the University of Texas.Stand-ins in the South were calledfor February 1, the anniversaryof the first lunch counter sit-insin Greensboro, North Carolina.The campus NAACP is workingwith SG in organizing the demon¬strations. Help is also being givenby the International Ladies Gar¬ment Workers union, the Pack¬inghouse workers, and the YoungChristian workers.All interested students areurged to call the SG office or signup there to join the pickets. Theymay also report to Ida Noyes atone of the scheduled times of de¬parture. George Playe discusses future plans for Orientation weekand O-board's role.O-board will notwork with dean PlayeThe Student orientationboard (O-board) votedWednesday 15-2 against work¬ing with Dean of Undergradu¬ate Students George Playe.This vote also indicated theboard’s decision not to work withPlaye on a program of “on goingorientation” — orientation con¬ducted throughout the year.This action came after theboard had presented Playe with alist of “defining criteria” whichstated their conception of the du¬ties of an orientation board. Al¬though agreeing with most of theboard’s proposals, Playe did notchange his decision, announcedlast week, to limit the activity ofBeadle inauguration setMay 4 has tentatively been set as the date on which George Wells Beadle will be inaugu¬rated as seventh chief officer of the University of Chicago.The 57-year-old Nobel prize-winning geneticist from California Institute of Technology'was chosen to succeed Lawrence A. Kimpton as UC’s Chancellor in January. He will arriveon campus to assume his duties about March 1.The inauguration date is not yet definite, according to William Morgenstem, secretaryof the University Final confirm¬ation must come from the Board from several hundred such groups mony, according to the January,of Trustees This aDDroval should usually attend- 1929 iSSUe °f UniverSity K^ort'of Trustees. Tins appio a . Robert Maynard Hutchins was a magazine reporting events atbe given in a few days, or at the flrst uc head to ^ officially UC, speeches welcoming the newmost a week, according to Mor- jnaugurated All previous officers president were given by severalgenstern, who is in charge of the had been connected with UC for university presidents.details of the event. some time previous to their selec- At the conclusion of these re-“A few details have to be ironed tion, and chose to begin their ad- marks, Harold Swift, then chair-out before everything is definite,” ministrations informally. man of the Board of Trustees, offi-Morgenstern stated, ‘ but these However, since Hutchins was cially proclaimed Hutchins as UC’sare resolved for all practical pur- new to the University at the time president. In a short speech,poses.” These details, he said, Qf his appointment, it was felt Swift said, “We a:’ from youinvolve reserving Rockefeller that a formal induction was called courage and vision, united withchapel for the a .tual ceremony, for. Delegates from 200 universi- enthusiasm for scholarship; weand obtaining a hall for the din- ties and colleges attended Hutch- ask for zeal in the search forner following the inauguration. ins’ inauguration, including 106 truth, and that our standards beheld high, if there be mediocrityin our departments, that you seeRepresentatives from all col- university presidents,leges, universities, and learned It is expected that Beadle’s in¬societies in the nation are invited auguration will follow in form to it that it give way to excel-to inaugurations, and delegates that of Hutchins. At that cere- lence.”In conclusion, Swift said, “Af-III!!! ter a thorough s “ch, extending„. ) lH ji over a period of nearly a year,MggggK | the Joint Committee of Faculty* J and Trustees recommended yourIII || if name to the Board qf Trustees forill ^e presidency of the University,Lu **101 Jig and by the unanimous action ofiTB *he Board of Trustees, it is myhonor and my great pleasure toM Jlai^l confer upon you the presidencyall its rights and responsibilities.*n t°ken thereof, the marshall willescort you to the President’s chairand I announce to this assemblagethat Robert Maynard Hutchins isbecome our fifth president.”Following the 1929 inductionthere was a luncheon for all visit¬ing dignitaries in Hutchinson com¬mons, and in the evening a ban¬quet attended by approximately900 citizens of Chicago was heldin the Palmer house.Robert M. Hutchins, being inaugurated as the fifth presi¬dent of the University of Chicago. This was the first formalinauguration in UC's history. O-board during O-week.“I am very sad about theboard’s action,” stated PJaye. “Wehad hoped the board would workwith us during next fall's revisedO-week. I still have every inten¬tion of inviting individual mem¬bers of the board to help us planand carry out next year’s orienta¬tion.”In a letter to Playe O-boardmembers had stated: “We feelthat student-to-student orientationis an essential part of Orientationweek; that as students with ademonstrated interest in andproven capacity for carrying outthis kind of orientation, we arethe group most qualified to carryit out ”0-BOARD[trainees:NO MEETING,THIS SUMMTNotice that appeared onthe bulletin board in frontof Cobb hall, signed by G.Playe.Playe stated, however, that hisoffice is currently engaged in “re¬casting” O-week. He said nextyear’s O-week will probably beshorter. Many of the discussions,lectures, and other orientation ac¬tivities will probably be spreadover the fall quarter.Both Playe and O-board mem¬bers emphasized that O-board liasnot been disbanded, but no one iscertain about the nature of thegroup’s activities.O-board has scheduled a meet¬ing for new members and traineesfor this Sunday at 3 pm in the IdaNoyes east lounge. “We hope tocontinue as an organization inter¬ested in educational policy andphilosophy,” stated Carl Bemes-dorfer, chairman of O-board.Among those proposals forshortening O-week now under con¬sideration are the use of eveninghours for entering students’ med¬ical examinations, and the givingof placement tests in the evening.A series of “attendance-required”afternoon "orientation sessions”for new students during the fallquarter has also been discussed.Playe stated that the O-weekprogram has occasionally receivedcirticism from members of thefaculty. He added that most ofthis criticism was not directed atmembers of the current O-board.Coggeshall attendsworld health meet S-G promotes theatre picketsLowell T. Coggeshall, vice-president in charge of medicaland biological programs of theUniversity, has been appointeda member of the United Statesdelegation to the World Healthorganization (WHO) meeting tobe held next month in New Delhi,India.| Lowell T. Cogeshall j The meeting is scheduled to con¬vene February 7 in the Indiancapital. WHO has one of the larg¬est memberships of all interna¬tional organizations. At present,103 member nations belong toWHO, including three associate(non self-governing) members.During 1960, WHO assisted inmore than 600 health projects in126 countries and territories.There was increased attention inareas which earlier had relativelylittle health protection. For ex¬ample, WHO gave assistance to72 projects in the African regionlast year compared to 12 in 1952.Coggeshall is an internationalauthority on malaria and othertropical diseases. For 13 years,until late 1960, Dr. Coggeshall wasdean of the division of biologicalsicences. As such, he directed theteaching, research and clinicalfacilities of the medical school, tenaffiliated hospitals, and the varieddisciplines.He has served as chairman ofthe committee on medical re¬search and development for theDepartment of Defense.Jimmy’sand the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave. Student government votedlast Tuesday to allocate $30for expenses necessary to or¬ganize a February 12th picketof Chicago subsidiaries of ABC-Paramount theatres, the chainwhose policies Southern studentshave been protesting recently inGeorgia, at the University ofTexas, and at the University ofNorth Carolina.This decision was based on theprinciple that "when such actionis directed toward the ending ofpractices which stand in the wayof a student’s full participation inthe educational process, Studentgovernment should give its sup¬port and use of its resources at itsdisposal for the encouragement ofthe activity.’’The action will apply to thosetheatres owned and opei'ated byBalaban & Katz, a subsidiary ofABC-Paramount, which owns mostof the large theatres in Chicago.The purpose of the action is togain northern support for thesouthern protests, with the ideathat this added support will pro¬voke the national chain of thea¬ters to change their policy in theSouth, iMaroon, February3, 1961)The assembly also passed a res¬olution supporting the presentO-board’s refusal to participatein O-week on strictly administra¬tion terms. “Student participa¬tion,” the declaration stated,"must be founded on the principleof an articulate student group,representative of students butautonomous from arbitrary con¬trol of policy and membership by Student government the adminis¬tration or any other group.”SG “recognizes O-board as theone student group through whicht h e University Administrationshould deal with matters of en¬tering student orientation.A debate on the validity of theHouse un-American activities be¬tween the Young Americans forfreedom and the Students forcivil liberties (formerly the anti- HUAC committee) will be spon.sored by the Assembly. The de¬bate will include the movie Ope*ation Abolition,” a movie depict,ing the anti-HUAC campaign oiearlier this year as Communistinspired. Following the movie A*thur MacEwan, president of (heStudents for civil liberties wil)speak on the movie and on ih«committee.3300 attended UC s first annual Folk festivalHighlights of Folk Festivalto be broadcast by WFMTRadio Station WFMT will beginbroadcasting highlights from"The First Annual University ofChicago Folk Festival” Saturdayon their regularC'Midnight Spe¬cial” program.Tareyton delivers the flavor... Ray Nordstrand, host of the"Special” and Assistant StaiionManager announced that tho Fes¬tival, taped in its entirety byWFMT, is expected to be broad¬cast as a series later this year.Until then, experts will be fea¬tured on the “Midnight Special”and on Studs Terkels “Wax Museum.”Terkels program is heard at10:00 a.m. Monday through Fri¬day while the “Special’ is broad¬cast on Saturdays at 10:15 p.m.and rebroadcast over WFMT andWUCB at 1:00 p.m. on Wednes¬days.Here's one filter cigarette that's really different!The difference is this: Tareyton’s Dual Filter gives you aunique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL, definitely proved tomake the taste of a cigarette mild and smooth. It works together witha pure white outer filter—to balance the flavor elements in the smoke.Tareyton delivers-and you enjoy-the best taste of the best tobaccos.DUAL FILTER Tareyton Pure#Wdu i f of •, ttne xican iJvtftieiCG —* cJo&seeo is our middle rmme Joseph N. Aaron, 77The ConnecticutHIhIbrI Life InsuranceCompany of HartfordSince 1S46, over 100 years, hotsafeguarded your family.135 S. LaSalle Si.Saiie 825 It A 6-IIMiO'returning sotire andsong to Hyde Pork"STUDY INSOUTHERNFRANCEFrench Language andLiteratureEuropean StudiesAn academic year for Americanundergraduates at the Universityaf Aix - Marseille with dosses it*English or French to satisfy curricu¬lum requirements.Students may live in French home*.Tuition, trans-Atlantic fores, roan*ond board at about . . . $1,700.Applications by March 15thFor information write by oir-nsadtoINSTITUTE FORAMERICAN UNIVERSITIES21 rue Gaston-de-SopertaAIX-EN-PROVENCEISL splits, merges with PRO, splits againISL, long-time monarch ofthe UC campus parties, diedlast week. Sunday night ISLagreed to merge with the newparty PRO into an even newerparty: PRO-ISL; by Tuesdaynight ISL had decided that itwould rather commit suicide anddisband taking its twelve-year oldname with it.All this happened only ninemonths after ISL swept controlof the Student Government by atwo-thirds margin.“Student generations last a cou¬ple of years, whole student erascan fit in a decade ” muttered oneformer SRP matriarch.Counters POUTOriginally the merger was plan¬ned as a three-way affair, unit¬ing UC’s three minority parties inan effort to stop the powerful newparty POLIT. This merger wouldhave combined ISL, PRO and IRPronce the Imperial RevolutionaryParty, then the Independent Re¬volutionary party and now theIndependent Reform Party.1Leader's of these three groupsmet on Sunday afternoon to tryto work out their party differen¬ces. IRP presented a list of es¬sential conditions, among themthat the new three-part party betermed IRP no matter what theinitials stood for. This proved im-pos*iblc for the other two partiesto accept.“IRP is a nonsense party andthey frankly and freely regardthemselves as a joke,” complainedone disgruntled negotiator.ISL and PRO were able toagree on a number of points.They were opposed to compulsoryresidence in the college halls, forthe creation of a co-op bookstore,for electing students in the col¬lege by residence and in the grad¬uate schools by division. Theyalso favored not having SG runby “a small group of people.”PRO caucused Sunday eveningin the room that ISL had re¬served; ISL met in the hall. WhileCAFE CAPRIl fu»:i K. 71m St.Presents:FRIDAYBRUCE ALLEN, folksingerSATURDAYJERRY WALLACEfolksinger.Shows: 9:30 and 12UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingFour barber* workingLadies' haircuttingShoe shiningFloyd C. ArnoldProprietoreaemifcSuburbanCar CoatsKnit collar, allpurpose lodencoot. Gunflaps, unusualdouble pockets.Loden redblanket lining.9535608 N. Michigan Avenue munching ISL cookies, PRO wait¬ed an hour and a half for ISLto decide what to do.Among the things the ISL cau¬cus had to decide was that it nolonger needed 14 people to consti¬tute a quorum.The ranks of ISL were sadlydeplcated two weeks ago whenmost of the party officers andrank and file deserted ISL to com¬bine with SRP to form POLIT.The ISL constitution still statedthat 14 people were necessary fora quorum, but the remaining par¬ty faithfu. were not so numerousas to make this large a group alikely possibility.Attendance at the ISL caucusranged from 7 to 12.Finally ISL did decide to mergewith PRO. ISL’s agreement wasdependent on the new party usingthe name ISL. This did not appealto most of the members of PRO.At this point ISLer Howie Rosen-field said “What’s in a name?”and PRO-ISL became the opposi¬tion party.The united front did not lastlong, however. Some ISLers dis¬covered that a number of the PROpeople belong to either the Inter¬collegiate Society of Individualistsor the Young Americans for Free¬dom, two new right-wing con¬servative clubs on campus.'Right' is leftThose party stalwarts still leftin ISL, though to the left of thosewho slipped off into POUT, arestill generally in 'he right of thegeneral political spectrum. “I’mstill a democrat,” commented oneISLer, “I want nothing to do withthose reactionaries.”Dorothy Dorf also complainedbitterly of a call she receivedTuesday afternoon asking aboutISL maneuvering apropos themerger. “I got a strange callfrom someone asking what wasgoing on. He said he was fndmthe Sun-Times and that his namewas Robert Pollack.” Pollack is a former drama cri¬tic for the Sun-Times. Miss Dorfknew this and also knew, as aformer Maroon editor, that theSun-Times would normally callthe Maroon, not the student gov¬ernment, were it indeed interestedin such information.Miss Dorf identified the voice asbelonging to a member of PRO;the individual in question deniedthis charge, but Miss Dorf re¬ mained firm.She then began circulating aletter announcing the dissolutionof ISL and the depositing of itstreasury in the hands of the UCFayette County drive committee.This letter was signed by sixteenpeople, more than the minimumquorum of 14, and almost the en-ture remaining membership.Tyler Haines, an officer of PRO,doubted whether this letter meant anything. “If th Sunday caucuswas legal, ISL ceased to exist atsuch time as it merged. It shouldhave turned its funds over to ISL-PRO. There was no ISL left todissolve itself.“If, on the other hand the Sun¬day caucus wasn’t legal, it wasa rump caucus and acted in amanner which deceived us in ourdeliberation.' It was misleadingand treacherous.”HU AC discussion tonightA panel discusson concerning the value and validity of the House Committee on Un-American Activities and the merits of the film “Operation Abolition,” dealing with theSan Francisco pickets of the committee last spring, will be held tonight between the YoungAmericans for Freedom and the University of Chicago Students for Civil Liberties.“Operation Abolition,” an account of the San Francisco demonstrations against the Housecommittee in May of last year, has been the subject of much dispute since its release dur¬ing the summer of 1960. The film - *was compiled from newsreel shots, Reporter for November 24, 1960, ported discrepancies in the film,filmed by TV cameramen who states: "The film itself opens The major portion of the de-covered the demonstrations for without any of the usual credits, bate, however, will be spent instations KRON and KPIX in San Instead, Congressman Walter discussing the merits of the Com-Francisco, by William Wheeler, launches immediately into the mittee itself. Presenting the prochief West Coast investigator for main theme of the picture, which side of the question will be Johnthe Committee, and Fulton Lewis is to suggest that the denionstra- McCarthy, chairman of the YoungIII. Subsequently, the film was tions were Communist-inspired Americans for Freedom, and Johnmade an official House document and Communist-led. In the at- Weicher. chairman of the UCand advertised by the committee tempt to prove this assertion, Young Republicans. In Weicher’sin a special publication, “The Com- both the narration and the way opinion, “Basically the committeemunist-led Riots Against the the film clips were edited deliher- has done much more good thanately distort a number of facts.”House Committee on Un-Amer¬ican Activities in San Francisco,May 12-14, 1960.” Its release haselicited charges from many quar- Begins with filmThe discussion, a result of a harm in its twenty-odd years ofexistence. I don’t doubt that therehave been places and times inwhich the committee has madeproposal of the UC Students for mistakes, but I think that theyters, notably the Washington Post, civil Liberties, will begin with a have been far outweighed by itsthe San Francisco Chronicle, the showing of the film in full, to be very useful work in uncoveringAmerican Civil Liberties union followed by a short statement _ . . , .and the Reporter that it presents from Arthur MacEwan, chairman Communists and Fascists and mand the Reporter, that it presents Qf the uc Students for Civil Lib. framing legislation to meet thea distorted view of the eventswhich actually occurred.A critique of the film in the erties, who will point out the re- threats posed by these groups.”Bicycln, Porta, Aecataorioaspecial student offer *ACE CYCLE SHOP1621 o. 55th st. GUITARSBANJOSMANDOLINSTHEFRET SHOP5535 DorchesterMl 3-3459THE BILLY BARNES REVUEFEBRUARY 10, 11, 12(See Ad in Theatre Section)Announcing .,. .THE 58th ANNUALWASHINGTONPROMENADEFormal OptionalMusic by Phil WalshDel Prado HotelSATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 189:30-1:00 Bids: $5 per couple SPECIAL OFFER...R>r2HeadedPipe CollectorsGenuine imported hand-carvedcherry wood pipe...that really smokes IThis unique two-headed pipe is areal conversation piece... a mustfor your collection! Hand-carvedin the Italian Alps and finishedin gay colors. Stands alone onits own tiny legs. Ideal foryour desk, mantel, or bookshelf...mighty good smoking, too!This is a wonderful value!Send for your two-headedpipe today!ShownAppoximatelyft Actual Six* /Clip Coupon..Sir Walter RaleighBox 303Louisville 1, Kentucky NOWSir Walter Raleighin thenew pouch packkeeps tobacco44% fresher!Choice Kentucky Burleys \Extra Aged 1Smells grand! Packs right!Smokes sweet! Can’t bite IMail Today!Please send me prepaid2-headed pipe(s). Enclosed is (1(no stamps, please) and the pictureof Sir Walter Raleigh from the boxin which the pouch is packed foreach pipe ordered.NAME.ADDRESS .CITY.. ZONE STATECOLLEGEThis offer good only in U.S.A. Not valid in states where prohibited, taxed, or other¬wise restricted. Offer expires June 30, 1961. Allow four weeks for delivery. IiII»RII■»II**.-tFeb. 10. 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Professors' report refutes fraud chargesFollowing are excerpts from theexamination of fraud charges andthe evidence brought forth tosupport the charges (see story,page 1).One of the first charges of elec¬tion irregularity was made by theCommittee on Honest Electionsbeaded by David H. Brill.On November 8th and 9th, inthe Daily News, the Committeealleged its "clean election drivehad prevented a minimum of onehundred thousand fraudulent votesin Cook County.” The very wordfraudulent prejudged the ease, andno basis for the one hundredthousand figure was ever given,although it became a figure oftenrepeated by top Republican offi¬cials and by the newspapers. Theonly particulars received from thisorganization were that most of theone hundred thousand would be, orhad been, ghosts who "were afraidto come out.” "This wras evidentlya figment of the imagination.”In another section of the samenewspaper one alleged ghost voterwas given a long write-up becausehe had been allowed to vote onaffidavit by a Democratic precinctcaptain. “Several” of such caseswere alleged, but only one morename was actually given; and itwas admitted that in that case theman concerned had actually livedat the residence sworn to.Of twelve hundred voting com¬plaints in the State’s Attorney’soffice, five hundred were regard¬ ing omission from the voting lists.And the "numerous complaints”sent in to the Tribune were forthe same reason. But the instancesactually given were less than thoseto be counted on the fingers ofone hand. They may have shownevidence of error, but certainlynot of fraud.Headlines misleadingOn November 10th, Chicago’sAmerican came out with the word"fraud” in a heavy headline en¬titled, "Hundreds Face VoteFraud Quiz.” It would have beenmore faithful to the public to havesaid, "Hundreds Face PossibleVote Fraud Quiz.” The tentativenature of the information actuallyat its disposal, may be seen fromsome subsequent lines in the samearticle where, quoting First Assist¬ant U.S. Attorney Alfred Manion,the American said, "Entire FirstWard precinct may be summonedbefore the jurors to answer com¬plaints about chain voting, mul¬tiple voting, and the buying ofvotes.” The reader should noticethe terms “may be” and "com¬plaints.” What has been done hereis to call names by false informa¬tion in the headline and then tohedge in the body of the article.By November 11th the Republi¬can National Committee got intothe act. It stirred up a commotionin Chicago by the announcementthat State and County GOP chair¬men in Illinois and five otherstates had been asked to investi-DR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometristin theNew Hyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th St. °f DO 3-7644Eye Examinations Contact LensesNewest styling in framesStudent Discount gate all charges of voting irregu¬larities, and that they should ad¬vise its chairman and the De¬partment of Justice. The Americanexplained this tactic by showinghow, if only the electoral votes ofIllinois and one or two otherstates could be seized from Ken¬nedy, then the election could stillgo to Nixon.Papers repeat allegationsThe allegations by State's At¬torney Adamowski were repeatedin all or almost all of the Chi¬cago metropolitan newspapers, andthis over a period of tw’o or threedays, giving a cumulative effectto the impression of scandal onthe public mind. But there neverappeared any evidence to supporthis challenge of the election, andhis charge of “skullduggery” thatw'as “shocking and disgusting.” Headmitted that he had no directevidence but based charges on“stories he had heard.”There were indications that thetallies had in some w’ay or anothernot been accurate. But they donot show who was at fault orwhy. It certainly did not add upto a kind of situation where thePresidency could change hands asalleged by those who had begunby charging that a hundred thous¬and irregularities had occured,and then reduced the figure to tenthousand and so on, getting lessand less each time they were chal¬lenged to produce evidence.The metropolitan press freelycarried the remarks of WilliamH. Fetridge, Chairman of the Mid¬west Volunteers for Nixon-Ixidge,regardless of how fantastic thestatements were.In the Dally News of November12lh it was stated that Fetridgerecalled that in 1952 Secretary ofState Carpentier was an apparentloser by "10,000 votes, but therecount made him winner by9,000.” This is a glaring exampleof quoting so-called responsiblePIZZASFor The Price OfNICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780 HARPERLIQUOR STORE1114 - 16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors ond beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEt A A “ 1233► A £L— i3i8”— 7699 sources without any regard to theauthenticity of their remarks. Forthe fact is that there was no re¬count in the 1952 election forSecretary of State in which thecontestants were Charles Carpen¬tier, Republican, and Edw’ard J.Barrett, the incumbent. It is high¬ly questionable whether a news¬paper should carry a quotationwhich they certainly should haveknown was false.Suggest recountAt this time it was suggestedthat if there w>as to be a recountin Cook County it w'ould be fairto recount the vote in the wholestate. In response to this, all thatMr. Fedridge could answer wasthat "there has never been anyhistory of fraud down there.” Un¬derlying this statement by Fet¬ridge, is the constant repetitionby the metropolitan press of thetheory that something had to bewrong because the DemocraticParty was a heavy victor in Chi¬cago. But the tremendous majori¬ties received by Republican candi¬dates Downstate were never cloud¬ed by accusations of fraud by themetropolitan press The fact isthat the mere heaviness of a voteeither way, does not prove thata tally is fraudulent.The Tribune reported that Con¬nell said, "There is no questionthat the Democrats stole the elec¬tion . . . the work was mainly doneby the professional vote thieves;those we’ll never catch.” But ifthere were evidence, they couldbe caught; if there was no evi¬dence, the city should not beslandered.In an article in the Tribune onNovember 15th, Mi’s. Suthers ad¬mitted by indirection the rebuttalthat mishappenings could have oc¬cured without any fraudulent in¬tention or practice when she said,’The problem now is to find outwhat happened — whether thenames were removed willfully orfrom ignorance.”On November 18th a Tribuneeditorial recapitulated the caseNEGRO HERITAGEA speciol newsletter, devoted tohistorical doto obout the Negro.Annually, 26 issues, $2. Subscribetoday.Pott Office Box 8153Chicago 80, Illinois for a recount in Illinois, namelythat the state might go to NixonAt that time the count showedthat Kennedy’s majority was alittle more than 6,000 and thisseemed to the Republican officialsa majority they could overcome.Then, they speculated, southernpresidential electors might givetheir votes to Nixon or throw theelection into the House of Repre¬sentatives. Then, without any ci.tation of proof, it went on to saythat, "much evidence has beenaccumulated already to indicatethat thousands of votes in thisslate, and particularly in thiscounty, were stolen.”Nothing that had been said orproduced up to that time justifiedmisinforming the citizens of Chi¬cago, or bringing shame on thecity in the eyes of the nation andthe rest of the world in this way.This point was underlined when,later on that same day, the DailyNews reported that United StatesAttorney Robert Tieken said hehad only forty “good cases of votefraud under investigation. As itturned out, only two indictmentswere returned. Presumably theother thirty-eight were not "good.’’Press 'hardened' claimsAs the days rolled by, the me¬tropolitan press, as w’ell as theRepublican officials, convincedthemselves that their allegationswere actually proven. They hard¬ened in their claims. By Novem¬ber 19, the Tribune was talking of"flagrant voting frauds.” It re¬peated the word "stole,” and ad¬ded remarks by Mr. Durham on"illicit” votes cast, under theheadline, “Complaints Drafted inGOP Recount Bid.” The tenor ofthe article gave the impressionthat frauds were already proven,not that accusations were merelygoing to be investigated.One of the tactics of the Tri¬bune was to print what it calls“guests” editorials — articles fromother newspapers. Naturally theywere articles that served to echoand re-echo the charges made bythe Tribune and the rest of themetropolitan press. For example,there was one printed in the Peo¬ria Journal Star on November 22.This had no more information ofa hard and provable kind lhan theChicago press. It merely summar-<continued on page 12)Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL- I m | 1I HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Down to Dawn 1342east 53 st.The best tobacco makes the best smoke!4 • CHICAGO JL- 9. BajsoHN TobMco 0»., WliMUn-S*l«m, N. (XMAROON • Feb. 10. 1961 8 LEND ACASA Book StoreGood Used BooksImported Cards, Gifts and Children's BooksRELIABLE TYPEWRITER SERVICE1322 E. 55th HY 3-9651Ml 3-3113talers hccastrcH lubricantskicas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli & michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespecialists Ik speed tuningcustom engine iMw’fttionsdutch.gear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coadwoikMb tetter MG psychiatrist*2306 e. 71st st.Chicago, MinoisCycling professor freed Ranger editor resignsAUSTIN, Tex. (UPS)—The The censorship decision was up*editor of the Texas Ranger, held by the Board of Texas Stu*campus humor magazine at dent Publications, Inc., the pub*“I wonder if I was the first person ever arrested for riding a bike?” asked Professor Mal¬colm Dole, in a telephone conversation with the Chicago Maroon Wednesday evening. “Evans¬ton, Illinois, is certainly the only place I know of in the world where it is illegal to ride abicycle in the city proper.” ^Northwestern University Chemistry professor Dole was recently arrested for pedaling his the University of Texas" re- lishers of the magazine. Ashbybicycle on Evanston streets reserved for autos by city ordinance, but was acquitted because signed last week in a flurry of bad ,5aded a ®pecial meeting ofthe restriction was not posted. — vehemence against censorship of . ® TSP Board to appeal the de*Since then, as he explains, “The Asked how he felt toward a how we finally arrived at the com- the magazine. cision of the censors. The Boardpublicity has been amazing.” statement made by one police ser- promise in which I agreed to stay Lynn Ashbv the resl-nino edi- voted Jhr“ to two to reject theA cvclist enthusiast for 27 geant who complained, “It is im- off Sheridan Road. . y’ “ 0 appeal on the grounds that it wasyears. Professor Dole has no in- possible to sit down, and discuss “I fully intend, to take this mat- «r’ Callef th<" censorship of the unjustified and without merit.'t0ntion of stopping now, despite this with him in a genial way,” t before the Fvanstnn Pitv «totaIly ,beyor?d the In a letter addressed to theS a.rest “I ride a bike for a Professor Dole replied, “If you £ + Cdy bounds of what lt was intended Board. Ashby said, “Since thevariety of reasons. First of all were arrested illegally, would you ordinance repea^T I°w anVto Sp”^”artide concerning Dr. Lo- Ranger calls itself the ‘students*5“ good for the health of a 57 feel genial?” mXTclear moreover Tha?l am gl resigned magazine of the University ofyear old man. Some people be- “When I tried to leave after be- acting not only on my own be“~,r ° 30(6 — ° - niversity, was Texas’ but it no longer is that,come exhilarated from skiing. I ing arrested, and was physically but on the behalf of cyclistsjust happen to get my exhilaration prevented, I suddenly thoughtfrom riding a bike—especially how ridiculous it seemed that theyin the cold weather. Furthermore, were actually guarding me forit’s a nice break at lunch to be riding a bicycle. Later at court aable to escape the laboratory on very agreeable judge practically acting not only on my own behalf, censored by a three-man Ranger I prefer to spend my” spa re timeut on the behalf of cyclists. Editorial Advisory committee. drinking beer, instead.”Open occupancy party setmy bicycle, and when I park there defended me. He clearly saw myare no expenses and no complica- point, mentioned that university T -rx siwaramcui iui aiurrman oe aeieo upon until corporationlions, it also leaves the car for professors were thought to be sen- Despres announced that t-ounsel John Melaniphy reports was organized to prove that theA spokesman for Alderman be acted upon until Corporation Despres said the petition driveother volunteer distributors at a PassaRe °f the ordinance,relaxed coffee hour.Gillis said the party would beheld Sunday afternoon in Despres’office on 55th street betweenWoodlawn and Kimbark. He saidthe Independent Voters of Illinois(IVI), the organization which didmost of the work on the petitionGallup pollYouth corps favoredby seventy per centA Gallup Poll reported in the Washington Post this weekshows that the Youth corps “is highly popular with theAmerican people.” Of those expressing an opinion, more thanseventy-five per cent favored the proposal to send young drive, was" organizing The partyAmericans on technical aid mis- ■ .... but that all UC students whosions to underdeveloped countries. Independents, but that the differ- h j d j t, drive woldd be wel-More significant, the article once between them was only sevensaid, was that almost seventy per and .on<j percentage points, re¬cent of the parents interviewed spectively.would like to see their sons par- Commenting on the poll, aticipate in the Youth corps. spokesman for Con g re s s manThe article said these results Henry Reuss (Dem., Wisconsin)are based on a survey of 1503 per- vvho originally proposed the Youthcorps last January, said, “We feelthis shows the overwhelming en¬thusiasm of the American popu¬lation for the Youth corps. Webelieve Congress will realize thatthis popularity is in effect a man-tioned voiced* outright "opposition late *or them tG approve theto the Youth corps, the article Youth corps bill when it comes upsaid. It also reported that older for consideration later this ses- Gillis, administrative assistant to roon Iast week that he was “sure proposal. He said the IVI’s goalDespres, said the party would be (Melaniphy) doesn’t like open was ten'thousand signatures byfurnish those vvho distributed the occupancy.” and hence expects Lincoln’s birthday; these will bepetitions with an opportunity to Melaniphy’s report will be one of presented to Mayor Daley by Des*turn in any late ones and to meet tbe maJor stumbling blocks to pres and citizens of the Fifth wardXT.. next week.SOUTH IMPORT MOTORS, Inc.CompleteVOLKSWAGEN Service A SalesalsoExpert Body Repairs1527 E. 71st St. BU 8-4900sons, selected at random from allparts of the country. A nearlyeven number of men and women,and Democrats and Republicans,were interviewed.Only six per cent of those ques The petitions were circulated insupport of Despres’ “open occu¬pancy” ordinance, a proposalaimed at giving Negroes and otherminority groups in the city a legallever with which to combat hous¬ing discrimination.The proposed ordinance will not THE BILLY BARNES REVUEFEBRUARY 10, 11, 12persons were generally less en¬thusiastic about it than younger.The results, according to age,wore t(ie following:Yes No NoOpin.% % %21-29 years 71 21 830-49 years 70 21 950 years andover 59 29 12The article also said that a fewmore Democrats favored the pro¬gram than either Republicans and sion.The spokesman also said thatPresident Kennedy’s enthusiasticbacking of the Youth corps vir¬tually assures action on it withinthe next few months.Ft. Lauderdale Spring VacationRound Trip Transportation andHotel Room ... 9 Days, $90.00ACCREDITED TRAVEL BUREAU343 S. Dearborn Chicago, III.HArrison 7-8260We all make mistakes..,ERASE WITHOUT A TRACEON EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTyping errors never show on Corrasable. The special sur*face of this paper makes it possible to erase without atrace—with just an ordinary pencil eraser. Results: clean¬looking, perfectly typed papers. Next time you sit downat the keyboard, make no mistake—type on Corrasable!Your choice of Corrasable inlight, medium, heavy weights andOnion Skin. In handy 100*sheet packets and 500-sheetboxes. Only Eaton makesCorrasable.A Berkshire Typewrjtef PaperBATON PAPER CORPORATION **JEY PITTSFIELD, MASS,* **!«»** * how to winWinning glances that lead to romance(s) are easy to comeby if you go buy ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic-made specially formen who use water with their hair tonic. ‘Vaseline’ HairTonic is 100% pure light grooming oil-replaces oil thatwater removes. ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic won’t evaporate, staysclear and clean on your hair. And just a little does a lot 1fTSctetf f *fTSCltAH fT*VASELINEFeb. 10, 1961 • CHICACO MAROON • 5* I*1. ?.» :.8jfef .&] fj fC t>I Movie ‘stand-in’ support urgedOnce again, we in the Northhave been called upon to givemoral support to the Negroand white students in theSouth who are combattingsegregation in one of our so¬cial institutions. Last year wewere asked to stage sympathyprotests In front of chain storeswho refused to permit Negroesto sit at counters and tables. Now,we must support the Negro in hisfight for the right to be admittedto a theater.The Students for Direct Action(SEDA), were told last week byABC-Paramount that if the dem¬onstrations were sufficiently “im¬pressive” the chain would be like¬ly to change its policy towardNegroes in the South. Obviouslywhen we can do something effec¬tual to promote civil liberties, asIn this case we can, we are obli¬gated to do so. Already in Kansas city, groupsof students who have been stand¬ing in at 20 theatres have success¬fully convinced all 20 to discon¬tinue their policies of segregation.The ABC-Paramount was amongthese theaters.This is a good start, but it isonly a start. We cannot becomecomplacent at this sign of pro¬gress, fast though it has been. Wemust continue to demonstratethat public opinion is in favor ofintegrated theaters if we are toinfluence the national chain.Just as important as the effic¬acy of the action we can take, isthe principle for which we areworking. Now, as with the sit-ins,the issue is the ability of a personto be considered, not on the basisof his race, but on the basis of hisindividual merits or behavior. Wedon’t have to reiterate the impor¬tance of civil liberties. We must,however, be cognizant of another issue which is just as importantin regard to our present and fu¬ture status. This is the educationalissue involved.- Without resurrecting the dead,we might well remember the dis¬pute over integrating public ele¬mentary and secondary schoolswhich entered the national spot¬light through Little Rock, andwhich has not yet been resolved.We can do little about the publicschool crisis, but we can do some¬thing to prevent a shameful repe¬tition of discrimination in educa¬tion at the college level.The educational issue in thiscase is simple enough. Studentsin Georgia, at the University ofTexas, and at the University ofNorth Carolina have received as¬signments which involved seeingforeign movies shown at neighbor¬hood theatres. Obviously, whenthe Negroes were denied admit¬tance to the theater, their profes¬ sors were obliged to excuse thesestudents from their assignment,and the students were denied thatopportunity to gain from a collegeeducational experience.The easiest solution to this problem might be for professors inthese universities to refrain fromgiving assignments in movieswhich insist upon discriminatingbecause of race. The answer tothis is first that a better way tosolve the problem 'is to assertthe pressure needed to impressupon these theaters that the pub¬lic favors desegregation of thesetheaters.The second answer is that wedon’t have to resort to the lesserof two evils. All indications areLetter that our support of the stand ingwill provoke the theaters ?*change their policy. ABC Paramount officials have told members of the SFDA that impressivedemonstrations of public opinionwould influence them to changetheir policy. It is not as if wo mustbe content to advocate a smallerevil because we can do nothingourselves. The opposite is true.The best way in which wo canimplement this change in policyis by supporting the sympathydemonstrations which will ho heldthis Sunday at the theaters on nodby Balaban and Katz, a subsidiarybranch of ABC-Paramount. Wotherefore urge student partir-ipg.tion in this Sunday’s protests.‘Weeks’ show failure,the Chicago maroon not success of peoplefounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University ol Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer quarterby students of the University of Chicago. Inquiries should be sent to the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E. 59thStreet, Chicago 37. Ullnols. Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus.Subscriptions by mall, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material. 4 pm.Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pm Wednesday before publication.All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the individual opinions of the authors.HUAC film is distortion,but should he seen tonightTonight the film “Operation Abolition” isgoing to be shown on the UC campus. Manystudents spend Friday nights at the movies;we cannot think of a better movie for Uni¬versity youth to see. This film, which alleges totell the story of the student protest to the hearingof the House Committee on Un-American Activi¬ties (HUAC) in San Francisco last May, is actuallya most blatant example of distortions and lieswhich discredit the whole student community.“Operation Abolition” was probably put to¬gether by staff members of the HUAC. The com-Cutting-Room Floormittee subpoenaed news reels of the demonstra¬tions, cut out the footage they wanted, and putthem back together with their own commentary(by Fulton Lewis HI) in such a way as to tell acompletely distorted picture of the whole incident.We are well convinced that what happened inBan Francisco last May was not, as the film andthe HUAC tell us, a “Communist inspired studentriot,” but was rather a legitimate political demon•wtration undertaken by responsible, knowledgeableand sincere students.It may be true that the students were loud andperhaps rowdy; this we do not praise. However,when people are angered, it is difficult for themto act rationally; in this case these students hadjust cause for anger. They committed no actswhich could be termed riotous. If anyone was vi¬olent it was probably the police.* • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 10, 1961Though the movie tries to convince us other¬wise, it actually confirms these beliefs. The filmspeaks of “student violence,” but why is there nosuch violence shown in the film?We are shown a girl pushing away a big police¬man who is dragging her down the stairs. Is this“student violence”?We are shown one boy trying to struggle fromfour policemen, one of them holding each of hislimbs. Is this "student violence”?We are shown one boy being dragged down thestairs with his hands in his pockets. Is this “stu¬dent violence”?We are shown still more being dragged com¬pletely limp and thrown into the paddy wagon.More “student violence”?Furthermore, we know of people who werebeaten with police clubs. The film fails to showthis. In fact, it is this failure to show things whichis one of the film’s most useful tools of distortion.Half truths, partial stories, mixed up time se¬quence, sound cut out, incidents not shown — allof these help to give a completely warped pictureof the truth.It is quite interesting to note, that only one ofthe 60 arrested students is being charged with anycrime. This student, not one of the leaders of thedemonstration, is charged with being the one whoactually started the whole “riot.”Furthermore, in a picture in Life magazine thisstudent is shown during the “riot” standing behinda post with his hands in his pockets. The testimo¬nies given in this trial, which has just begun, mayprove to be a counter indictment of the San Fran¬cisco police and the HUAC.The movie charges that these students were“duped by hard core Communists, trained in revo¬lutionary tactics,” and that the whole incident wasled and planned by Communists. Being studentsourselves, we are well aware that students do havethe ability to think for themselves and to organizea protest against the HUAC. We feel it a directinsult to all students that we can be so easily“duped.”These charges that it was the Communistswho led and inspired the whole incident seems tobe based on the fact that the Communists are forabolition of the Committee. We would like to pointout that these demonstrations were supported byseveral religious organizations, including the Epis¬copal Diocese of California and the Berkeley Soci¬ety of Friends* labor organizations, including theCentral CaliJbrnia AFL-CIO Labor Council; twoCalifornia state assemblymen; seven hundred pro¬fessors from Bay area colleges. Were these groupsalso “Communist dupes”?As a final refutation of the validity of the state*ments and ideas which “Operation Abolition” triesto put across, we would like to point out thatWilliam Wheeler, West coast investigator forHUAC who helped make the movie, admitted on atelevision debate with one of the involved studentsthat the film “does contain distortions.”We urge all students to attend the showing ofthis film in Breasted hall tonight at 7:30 and tokeep in mind those things which we have pointedout. To the editor:This year Nas always, the cele¬bration of Negro History Week,World Brotherhood Week, RaceRelations Sunday, etc., does notpoint up the commemorative ex¬hilaration of the Americah peo¬ple but rather the tragic conse¬quences of our failure to matchdeeds with creeds in this Nation.All of these “special” occasionsare indicative of what RobertPenn Warren has described asour inability to live with our¬selves.Therefore when you attend, or(perhaps I should say) “if youattend,” the programs scheduledfor that week of Feb. 12-19, youshould be appraised of the ironywhich conspired to perpetuatethis fraud against those for whomthese occasions are planned. But.as one who has participated in asmany — if not more — of thesefrauds than any other person ofstudent credential — I am urgingour University of Chicago studentbody to participate in these pro¬grams just on the chance hunchthat some of you might learn alittle more of what it means to bedifferent in the “care little for dif¬ference” USA.An America without Negro His¬tory Week, World BrotherhoodWeek and the Race Relations Sun¬days is not immediately conceiv¬able since there would be a num¬ber of vested interests who wouldbe harmed. Jim Fairless couldnot, for instance, pose himself asWorld Brotherhood chairman forNCCJ (National Conf. of Chris¬tians and Jews) after engaging inthe same form of dubiety aboutjob opportunities for minoritiesas the other magnates of industrydo — and, for that matter, havealways done. President Eisenhow¬er (or former President) an dMayor Daley could not proclaimmeaningless and hypocriticalweeks in a nation where six orseven-year olds must attend schoolunder armed guard and whereone leading Midwestern city (Chi¬cago, no less) places one-fourth of its populace (non-white) !n aghetto eight and one-half mileslong, three miles wide, contrivingsome bulges (to use a term fiomBill Berry).American bourgeoisie life wouldno doubt be set on its voi\ ,eadby a real thrust in terms of a< ia!equality. . . . The insecure biokerclass would become more psychotic and the black proto-bomgeoisie might be forced 1»> (;ac¬tion its sycophantic imitating ofa culture that has produced TheWastemakers.”Men of real good will mighi hecompelled to re-examine the valuestructure of a society that b\ itsvery nature will foster "peaceablelanes” not only among whin - butfinally among blacks too; as therecent appearance of “First Family” eloquently shows us.When will we come to >< < theessential cant and stupidity <-f ourtactics in goading our bad onsciences with equally bad motives? ... Are black people, brownpeople, purple people, or whathave you, people or are then -<»m<other things?Indeed the very questions whichare posed concerning equality - "Isthe Negro ready for integration?’— a la Carl to Rowan) p;<sup-pose a racist answer based upona racist doubt? The phoney prosumptiousness and condescendingpretentiousness o f BrotherhoodWeeks then, needs to be con fumedif for no other reason than toremind us of how far we f.iefrom the goal of being honest onthe one hand and damn practicaland realistic on the other Manwill prevail, said William Faulk¬ner. . . . But he will, as W< sternwhite man, have first to learn lolive with himself and those whoby their very presence i regard¬less of color) are inextricably tiedto his destiny. To conclude v«rytritely, Donne was rightman is an island.”Ed RiddickVice President* Campus NAACPNoEditors-in-chiefKen Pierce Neal JohnstonBusiness managerWilliam G. BauerEditor emeritus Lance Hadcn*Production editor Avima RuderNews editor Jay GreenbergFeature editor y FayeEditorial secretary Caryle GeietNational news editor Gene VinogrcicloCulture editor Dotty Shotplei*Sports editor Chuck BernsteinCopy editor John Juskev-Research editor CoroleCollege editor. HarryCalendar edit©r Donno rfLettersExplainsTo the editor:The Student Government Con¬sultant Bookstore Board has helda series of meetings with Mr.Passmore the general manager ofthe store and his assistant man¬ager, Mr. Miller. Both men werecooperative in answering ques¬tions, and seemed eager for sug¬gestions to help improve the serv¬ice in the store.The possibilities of a Co-opera¬tive Bookstore were not discussedat these meetings for such achange in policy lies entirely inthe hands of the Administration.Mr. Passmore did state that theoperation of the store as a cooper¬ative would be little different thanit is now. There would be facultyand student representation re¬garding certain merchandise poli¬cies within the store’s operationsand there would be a different dis¬position of any profits or losses.Actually the development of thepresent merchandising and spaceallocation has been not one offorce on the part of Mr. Passmorebut rather a growth dictated bythe majority demands of student,faculty and employee customers.To quote just one example. Lastyear there were over 500,000 re¬quests for the merchandise car¬ried in the food and candy depart¬ment. That did not happen all atonce. It grew from a few candybars and a very few sandwiches.The management feels that w’henthat many people demand some¬thing, it should be heeded.The problems in book orderingand supplementary texts were dis¬cussed. It wTould appear that notenough is generally known aboutthese services. For instance, anybook in print may be securedthrough the bookstore’s specialorder system which has been inexistence as long as the store hasbeen.The University of Chicago Book¬store has one of the largest gen¬eral book (non-required) depart¬ments of any college store in thecountry. It has been one of thepioneers in the development ofsuch an activity in a college store.It has actively engaged in the en¬couragement and establishment ofgeneral book departments in otherstores through its activities in theNational Association of CollegeStores. This is the departmentthat handles special orders and ithas a battery of research tools totell whether a book is "in print”and by whom it is published.The books carried in this de¬partment are determined in sev¬eral ways. With from 10-15 thou¬sand new titles being publishedeach year by something over 700publishers it would be physicallyimpossible and most impracticalto try to stock them all. The man¬ager of this department dependsheavily on these sources for mak¬ing the selections for stock.< 1) Recommendations and ex¬pressions of interest by facul¬ty and students.2) A general familiarity and aknowledge acquired throughmany years of experiencewith University requirementsand interests.<3) Through personal meetingswith the sales representativesof the many publishers whocall on the bookstore regard¬ing display of their new pub¬lications.*4) Trade publications, reviews innewspapers and journals.In regard to text books which isa department with its own man¬ager, the selection of books is al¬most entirely decided by the teach¬ing faculty. This faculty is askedthrough the Dean’s Offices to sub¬mit to the store far in advance ofthe quarter opening, the titles ofbooks to be used and the numberof students expected for eachcourse. Contrary to some belief,'he bookstore does not under or¬der the number suggested. Therewould be no point in so doing.Actually what happens is this:The faculty does its best in esti¬mating the number of students,but it is only a guess at best.When more students register thanwere expected there are notenough books to go around so the Bookstore hoardbookstore orders more but that individual has a complaint or sug-takes time which is irritating to gestion concerning the bookstorestudents,, faculty and the book- we advise speaking directly withstore, too. When fewer students the manager or indirectly to thisregister than were expected there committee at the Student Govern-are books left over which either ment office. While the Bookstorehave to be stored by the store un- admittedly has areas needing im-til they are used again or returned provement, such as arrangingto the publishers. Pocket Books according to sub-If the form 17 for the purpose ject and not Publishing House, weof advising the bookstore of these believe in the sincerity of thethings is not forthcoming or is managers when they state theirlate or is incomplete, delays in objectives. "If the Bookstore hadobtaining the books will necessar- any one prime policy it wouldily occur. It is one recommenda- positively be that the Bookstoretion by this Committee that Stu- is here to serve the Universitydent Government assist the Book- faculty, students, staff and em-store in impressing upon the fac- ployees in the best way that itulty the importance of this can. We believe that we serve androutine. are ;n personal contact with moreIn recent critical statements of University people than any otherbookstore operation by two facul- department in the University. Thety members Mr. Passmore com- magnitude of this coverage in-mented that "neither had .ever creases the possibility of errors inmet or talked to the bookstore specific areas from time to time,manager in regard to the com- Whatever the errors might be, theplaints they voiced in the Maroon, probability of their recurrenceThere might have been no need could be greatly reduced if thefor the public statements if they complaints were made known tohad.” The difficulties between the Bookstore manager at thecampus people and Bookstore per- time of their occurrence, with spe-sonnel is a result of too little com- cific details for the matter to bemunication. This committee would run down to its source.”like to see suggestion boxes ,placed in the bookstore and adver- mce e y,tisement in more campus publica- Howard Rosenfieldtions by the bookstore stating Chairman-their services and policies. If any Bookstore BoardCommends RevolutionTo the editor: the first time given the peopleI have long envied the individ- fp°d and shelter. For the firstual who, by virtue of his keen time the illiterate masses are be-politieal mind and sense of jus- ing educated. And still in the dis-tice, can remain absent from the tance — from Miami and Chicagorealities of his time and yet pass — we hear the yells. The strang-judgment upon them. His keen ers to history are crying "red;political mind and sense of justice commy; freedom of the press; dic¬are constituted of platitudes and tator; Russian satell. ...” Why, inglittering generalities which he heaven’s sake, don’t they go downhas swallowed, digested, and now there and open up their eyes andspits back in the faces of a hun- ears?gry people. He sits in his com- The state department won’t letfortable armchair criticizing a you. You have no protection. Therevolution which has given this testimony of nearly every Amer-people a freedom they have never iean who has been there is notknown — freedom from want. sufficient for our diplomats. We,The sole end of the Cuban revo- as students and "free” citizens,lution is the Cuban; any Cuban, who are able to see and hear foras long as he is willing to share ourselves should demand the rightthe toil. You feel this after two to execute our right to travel. Orhours on the streets of Santiago has a diet of generalities andde Cuba and Havana as well as falsehood, washed down with tra-on the hew cooperatives and gov- ditional U.S.A. style news-report-emment farms. That is why near- ing, made us too fat and comfort-ly every adult and youth, male able to make such a demand?and female, has enlisted himself, The Cuban government is avoluntarily, to defend his country cordial host and treats all touristsand revolution with his life. We with kindness. Former "ritzy” ac-here must use an unjust conscrip- commodations are now within thetion - range of the average purse. TheThe revolution is not just Fidel Cubans themselves are very hos-Castro’s. It belongs to all who pitable to American visitors. Whystruggled for it, need it, and are not? The truth can’t hurt them,willing to work for it. It has for Normar LinkeText books discussedMark M. Krug, professor inthe department of education,lectured last week at the His¬tory club on the treatment ofthe Reconstruction of the Southby high school text books.His main hypothesis was thattexts generally, in representingthe Reconstruction by the typicalterms of “radical carpetbag¬ging,” misinterpret the Recon¬struction as an exception to therule of the country, which, at thattime, was not true. Krug statedthat the entire nation was suffer¬ing from corruption at the timeof the reconstruction (1865-1877)."The period of reconstruction,”he said, “presents the greatestchallenge to text writers becauseit abounds in crucial and intenseproblems.” Text books are as aresult “often highly chargedwith undisquised emotional bias.”In addition high school texts arebased upon the hypothesis thathigh school students shouldn’t becalled upon “to do individualthinking.” There is, consequently,a “monotonous similarity,” amongthe ways in which high schooltexts treat the topic.Such texts tend to refrain fromrevisionist studies of the Recon¬ struction, thus failing to compi’e-hend growing insight of AbrahamLincoln in dealing with the Negroproblem, thinking and thus assert¬ing that much of what he did wasfor political reasons.'Still other texts depict Lincolnas suffering under pressure ofradicals, “doing little credit togenius of Lincoln.”"One waits for acknowledge¬ment of contribution of Negrotroops in high school and collegetexts, and it is overlooked bymany historians that many freeor half-free Negroes in South haveas good an education and experi¬ence as northern contemporaries,”continued Krug. "Negroes eagerlygrasped opportunity to gain edu¬cation.”Referring to Negro leaders,Krug said "I’m still waiting forany of these names to be men¬tioned in a text.” He followed witha discussion of certain Negroleaders who have been in Con¬gress and excelled.High school texts are generallybased on northern news reports,condemning Negro misrule andcarpetbagging, thus wasting mil¬lions in dishonest high schoolbooks. QnCanqns withMtcMnan(Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf*, “The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillie”, etc.)"THE SLOW RUSH"Illustrated below is the membership pin of a brand-new nationalfraternity called Signa Phi Nothing. To join Signa Phi Nothingand get this hideous membership pin absolutely free, simplytake a pair of scissors and cut out the illustration and paste itto your dickey.Let me hasten to state that I do not recommend your joiningSigna Phi Nothing. The only thing I recommend in this columnis Marlboro cigarettes, as any honest man would who likes afiltered cigarette with an unfiltered taste, who yearns to settleback and enjoy a full-flavored smoke, whose heart is quickenedby a choice of soft pack or flip-top box and who-gets paid even-week for writing this column.It is difficult to think of any reason why you should joinSigna Phi Nothing. Some people, of course, are joiners bynature; if you are one such I must tell you there are any numberof better organizations than Signa Phi Nothing for you to join—the Mafia, for example.But if you should join Signa Phi Nothing, let me give youseveral warnings. First off, it is the only fraternity that admitsgirls. Second, there is no pledge period; each new member im¬mediately goes active. Perhaps “inactive” is a more accurateterm; there are no meetings, no drives, no campaigns, no sports,no games, no dues, no grip, and no house.The only thing Signa Phi Nothing has that other fraternitieshave is a fraternity hymn. In fact, two hymns were submittedto a recent meeting of the national board of directors (none ofwhom attended). The first hymn goes:Hotcha, boop-boop-a-doop,Mother's making blubber soup.The second hymn is considerably longer:A Guernsey's a cow,A road is a lane,When you're eating chow,Remember the mein!Pending the next meeting of the national board of directors,which will never be held, members are authorized to sing eitherhymn. Or, for that matter, Stardust.Perhaps you are asking why there should be such a fraternityas Signa Phi Nothing. I will give you an answer—an answerwith which you cannot possibly disagree: Signa Phi Nothingfills a well-needed gap. — •Are you suffering from mental health? Is logic distortingyour thinking? Is ambition encroaching on your native sloth?Are your long-cherished misapprehensions retreating before asea of facts? In short, has education caught up with you?If so, congratulations. But tell the truth—wouldn’t you liketo make an occasional visit back to the good old days when youwere not so wise and composed and industrious—when youwere, in fact, nuttier than a fruitcake?If you pine for those old familiar miasms, those dear, deadvapors, join Signa Phi Nothing and renew, for a fleetingmoment, your acquaintance with futility. We promise nothing,and, by George, we deliver it! © mi m«* shuim*a* * •We, the makers of Marlboro, promise smoking pleasure andwe think you’ll think we deliver it—both from Marlboro andfrom our new unfiltered king-siWelcome aboardl ze Philip Morris Commander.BOB ESSERMAN'60 Chevy Impala HTWhite, Power,Low Mileage ...$2195'57Mercury HT.White. R., H.... 595'59 Plymouth Conv.R., H. Newest in .Chicago. P/S ... 1395'57 Dodge Conv. Redb White. R., H.Auto. P/S 595 STUDENTS . . .SAVE MONEYONFurniture, Rugs, Re¬frigerators, Stoves, TVSets, Hi-Fi’s, ElectricalAppliances..Vcw mnd Used atMR.ESSERMAN DODGE6130 S. Cottage Grove LUCKY’SDodge Dealer BU 8-3600 1526 E. 63rd St.Open Doily 9 till 9Sot. & Sun. till 6. HHJ 4-2577Feb. 10, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7" 1.{V\. Coming events on quadranglesFriday, 10 FebruaryMatins with sermon, 11:30 pm Bondchapel, Phil Hefner preaches.Varsity Swimming meet, 3:30 pm. Bart¬lett gymnasium, Chicago vs. Bradleyuniversity.Lecture series: “Cardiovascular and Pul¬monary Physiology,” 5 pm. Pathology117. “The molecular biology of col¬lagen,” Francis O. Schmitt, profes¬sor of biology, Massachusetts Instituteof Technology.Koinonia, 6 pm, cost supper, 75 cents:7:15 pm, discussion. “Contemporarychurch architecture” with CharlesStade. award-winning church archi¬tect; 8:30, coffee.Motion Picture series: The ExperimentalFilm V (documentary film group), 7:15and 9:15 pm, Judd 126. “The PleasureGarden,” “Fireworks,” “Loving,” andother films.Sabbath service, 7:45 pm., Hillel founda¬tion.Billy Barnes revue (University theatre),8 and 10:15 pm, International Housetheatre.Motion picture, 8 and 10 pm. Burton-Judson courts, “Earth" (Russian), thelast film of the Ukranlan peasant and painter Alexander Dovzhenko, whichbrought him international fame asa director, concerned with strugglebetween Kulaks, or peasant landown¬ers, and collectives.Fireside conversation, 8:30 pm, Hillelfoundation. “Judaism and heresy,”Rabbi Wallace Chamedes, interim as¬sociate director, Hillel foundation.Chamber Music series: Vienna Octet,3:30 pm, Mandel hall. Anton Fietz,Philipp Matheis, violins; GuentherBreitenbach, viola; Nikolaus Huebner,cello; Johann Krump, double bass:Alfred Boskovsky, clarinet; RudolfHanzel, bassoon; Joseph Veleba,French horn.Social dancing. 9 pm. Ida Noyes, 50 centsfor students, $1 for others.Saturday, 11 FebruaryRecorder society. 1 pm, Ida Noyes, in¬struction followed by Informal groupplaying.Billy Barnes revue (University theatre),8 and 10:15 pm, International Housetheatre.Radio series: The Sacred Note. 11 pm,WBBM. A program of choral musicby the University choir, Richard Vik-strom, director of chapel music, con¬ducting.THE BILLY BARNES REVUEFEBRUARY 10, 11, 12(See Ad in Theatre Section) Sunday, 12 FebruaryRadio series: Faith of our Fathers. 8:30am, WGN, Rabbi Lou H Sllberman,Vanderbilt university.Roman Catholic masses, 8 :30, 10. and 11am, DeSales house.Lutheran Religious services, 9 am. Gra¬ham Taylor chapel. Matins with dia¬logue sermon; 10 am Communion serv¬ice.Episcopal Communion service. 9:30 am,Bond Chapel.University Religious s e r‘v i c e, 11 am.Rockefeller Memorial chapel. ReverendW. Barnett Blakemore. dean. DisciplesDivinity house, and associate dean.Rockefeller Memorial chapel.Carillon recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller Mem¬orial chapel, Daniel Robins, Universitycarillonneur.Sunday Evening Supper — Discussionmeetings (The Episcopal Church atthe University, 5:30 pm, 5540 SouthWoodlawn avenue, buffet supper; 6:30pm, “Mission in a revolutionaryworld," Reverend George Tittmann,rector. Church of the Holy Spirit,Lake Forest, Illinois.Baptist Sunday Seminar Supper meet¬ings (The Baptist graduate studentcenter at the University), 5:30 pm,4901 South Ellis avenue, buffet sup¬per; 6:15 pm, “Marks of dlsclpleshlp:sect, church, and world." ReverendE. Spencer Parsons, Hyde Park BaptistChurch. United Christian fellowship. 5:30 pm,Thorndike Hilton chapel, commonworship service, followed at 6 pm bybuffet supper at Chapel house, cost50 cents.Bridge club, 7:15 pm, Ida Noyes lounge,first floor. Beginning and experiencedindividuals and partnerships invited.Duplicate bridge will be played andACBL fractional master points award¬ed.Lecture series: The American Experi¬ment: Success and Challenge (Hillelfoundation Sunday evening graduategroup coffee hour, 8 pm, 5715 SouthWoodlawn avenue. “The Declarationof Indepedence,” George Anastaplo,lecturer in the liberal arts, Univer¬sity college.Billy Barnes Revue (University theatre),8:30 pm, International House theatre.Radio series: The Sacred Note, 8:15 pm,WBBM. A program of choral musicby the University choir, Richard Vlk-strom, director of chapel music, con¬ducting.Monday, 13 FebruarySeminar, 12:30 pm. Swift Hall Coffeeshop, “Theological significance of Gra¬ham Greene.”Elementary Yiddish, 3:30 pm. Hillelfoundation.Films on Cities in India, Medieval andModern (Indian civilization course), 7pm, Rosenwald 2, “Jaipur,” “Mewar,”“Madurai,” “Tanjore,” Delhi,” etc.Motion picture, 7 and 9 pm. Interna-It AN DELL-HA It I* I AtJAKEBeauty and Cosmetic SalonNATIONAL BEAUTY WEEK — FEB. 8 THRU 185700 Harper Avenue FA 4-2007am™ ii LIU ill -'(MMWWWWpnGet these twelve great original recordings—in one12" LP album—for and ten empty Lucky Strike packs!Custom-pressed by Columbia for Lucky Strike-an album of unforgettable hits!Look at this album. Imagine these 12 great artists, greathits together on one record! Here are the original record¬ings—magnificently reproduced by Columbia Record Pro¬ductions ($3.98 value). Never before have all these greatartists been brought together in one album! Never be¬fore have you been able to buy these great hits at such abargain price! To get your album, fill in and mail theshipping label at right with $1.00 and ten empty LuckyStrike packs to “Remember How Great," P.0. Box 3600,Spring Park, Minnesota.REMEMBER HOW GREAT CIGARETTESUSED TO TASTE? LUCKIES STILL DOCTHt AMERICAN TOBACCO CO. To get "Remember How Great” album, enclose and mall $1.00 and 10empty Lucky Strike packs, together with filled-in shipping label. Pleaseprint clearly. Orders received after May 31, 1961, will not be honored. Ifsending check or money order, make payable to “Remember How Great.”Remove cellophane—openpacks top and bottom—re¬move inner foil wrap—tearpacks down side, flatten,and mail with $1.00 widshipping label. SHIPPING LABEL“Remember How Great”P. O. Box 3600Spring Park, MinnesotaTOYOUR NAME(PRINT YOUR NAME Hist)STREET.CITY .ZONE. .STATE.Offer good only In U S A and Puerto Rico tional house, “The CupboardBare” (France).Television series: Meeting of Minds spm, WTTW-channel 11. “The legalityand morality of sit-ins,” Marc Galan-ter, assistant professor of the socialsciences in the College, and FatherWilliam Keneally, visiting professorof law, Loyola university.Tuesday, 14 FebruaryLutheran Communion service. 11:30 amBond chapel. Faculty and UniversityBoard meeting: Council, 3:40 pmBusiness East 106.Colloquium (Institute for the study ofmetals), 3:30 pm. Research Institutes211. “Mechanical effects at the super-conducting transition,” J. L. OlsenEidgenossische Technlsche HochsclnileZurich, Switzerland.Pre-Med club. 4 pm. Social Science 122Dr. Milton Weinberg, heart specialistand associate professor In surgery atthe University of Illinois Medicalschool, will talk on his work as aresearcher, teacher, and practitionerHug Irl and Advanced Hebrew, 4:30 pmHillel foundation.Basketball games, 6 and 8 pm. Fieldhouse. Chicago freshmen vs. Kendallcollege: Chicago varsity vs. ChicagoTeachers college.Glee club, 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes eastlounge, rehearsal.Wednesday, 15 FebruaryEpiscopal Communion service, 7 30 amBond chapel.Divinity School Worship service. 11 30am, Bond chapel.Lecture series (graduate school of busi¬ness), 1:30 pm, Breasted hall, JoelGoldblatt, Goldblatt Brothers. Inc.Faculty and University Board meeting:Divinity school, 3 pm, Swift Commonroom.Carillon recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller Mem¬orial chapel, Daniel Robins.Episcopal Religious service: Evensong5:05 pm. Bond chapel.Ash Wednesday Lenten Vespers, 7:30 pmBond chapel, Vern Faillettaz, N TPh D candidate In the Divinity schooland NLC campus pastor, preaches on“Blessed are the poor In spirit.”Israeli Folk dancing, 8 pm, Hillel foun¬dation.Country dancing, 8 pm, Ida NoyesIllustrated lecture (archaeological insti¬tute of America), 8:30 pm. Breastedhall. “Geometric sculpture in Haltand the problem of the Etruscans."Emellng Hill Richardson, formerly lec¬turer In ancient art, Yale unievrsltv7/’'returning satire andsong to Hyde Park"ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Refinishing ofShoes and Handbags• Colors matched • Toes cut out• Vamps lowered • PlottormsremovedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHeets changed — Any style —Any colorBackstraps Removed and Springa-lators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfoi 4-96221749 East 55th St.a SwinglineStapler nobigger than apack of gum!98*(Includingstaple**SWINGLINE “TOT”Millions now in use. Uncondi¬tionally guaranteed. Makes bookcovers, fastens papers, arts andcrafts, mends, tacks, etc. Avau-able’at your college bookstore.SWINGLINE••Cub” Stapler $1.29• • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 10, 1961 AON© ISLAND CITY, NEW YORK.Sports newsMaroons win eleventh in a row. total 13With 13 wins under theirbelts, the Maroons invadeGalesburg tomorrow to battlearch-rival Knox. The Siwash-ors are 5-5 in Midwest conferenceplay, and have an overall recordof 6-7. Among their losses was a92 81 defeat by North Park, in agame that Jerry Baker and TedEcker of North Park both rolledUC just had too much defenseand strength for the scrappyquint from Lisle, Ill. At first itlooked like the Cards were goingto make a game of it after TerryHooton funncled three jump shotsin the first eleven minutes toknot the score at 12-12.Merle Lahti led the second!string onslaught with elevenpoints while Fred Paulsell hadnine.Saturday — Well-balanced scor¬ing, accurate shooting, and a fullcourt press spelled victory for theMaroons, as they swamped ahighly-regarded Beloit outfit, 72-49.Midway in the second half, how¬ever, Beloit turned the defensivetables on the Maroons. Playing in¬spired ball, the Bucs closed thegap to 44-38 with 14:20 to play onRon Nelson’s lay-up. At 11:40 JimKuplic kept the Bucs in eonten-If 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 8-6711Eye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetat University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372TAl-SAM-N&NCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE A INTOAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 Boat 63rd St. BU 8-9018fjjwpek'S/I Steamship $375 up 1Round Trip frequent sailings JJkrift Round Trip by AIR_SHANNON LONDON PARISI $298.00 $313.00 $331.60I Rotes to other destinations on requestCRIMSON SERIES ofSTUDENT TOURSfor folders and detailsSee your local travel agent or write usUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mass. tion with a long jump shot, 48-42,but Larry Liss, UC’s mainstayall night, canned a jump shotwith 9:50 to go to ice up the gameat 52-42. Sinking 19 points, thesharpshooting Liss played thefinest game of his college career.He joined Joel Zemans. who hadten, and Gene Ericksen, who got13, in the charmed sophomore sen¬sations’ circle. Gerry Toren wasthe fourth double figure man inthe well-balanced attack with 15. Chicago 72FG FT4 2-3ZemansToren 7Ericksen 5Daey 1Liss 7Eby 0Tomas’vic 4Paulsell 0 1-43-61-35-71-41-32-2 WinklerNelsonRathKuplicHodgeVarnadoGallowayMunroMcClellonBeloit 49FG FT P2 0-1 32 2-413-153 0-013011 0-11-30-00-01-1Chicago 77FG FT4 5-6ZemansTorenEricksenDaveyLissEbyDevittTomas'vic 2Winter 1Lahti 2Paulsell 3 2-22-32-50-10-00-00-00-27-73-5 St. Procopius 41FG FTHootenHanleyChorvatJurewiczDurayAdamsSkibyPopielewski 1Kasper 0Power 1Tompkins 0 2-20-03-50-13-60-00-07-80-00-00-128 21-31 16 13 15-23 20 28 16-32 19 16 17-25 24The Maroons, having tasted vic¬tory in their 18-14 upset of NotreDame, found winning ways totheir liking, upsetting powerfulWabash 18-16 Saturday, February3, and continuing the onslaughtagainst Valparaiso, defeating Val¬paraiso 23-11 at Bartlett Gymna¬sium on Tuesday, February 7th.In winning their last three meets,the wrestlers have equalled lastyear’s team’s three victories; the wrestlers have a 4-3 record withonly two dual meets and the quad¬rangular remaining on the 1961schedule.Wabash spotted the Maroons afive point lead when they forfeitedthe 123 lb. weight division to FredHoyt of Chicago. Co-Captains JimBaillie and Cliff Cox pinned theirmen in 6:54 and 7:49 respectively.Marty Karasch notched his firstintercollegiate win with a 5-4 vic¬tory to insure the triumph. "Teamspirit,” emphasized Jim Baillie,“was the key to our win.” Chicago vs Wabash 18-16123 Won by Hoyt (C) forfeit130 Baillie (C) pinned Granger 6:54137 Cox (C) pinned Rogers 7:49147 Doherty <W) decisioned Watson 8-6157 Etten (W) pinned Seidel 2:32167 Witt (W) outpointed Eisenberg 8-4177 Karasch (C) defeated Hargitt 5-4Hvy. Erikson (W) pinned Tallltsch 2:67Chicago vs Valparaiso 23-11123 Won by Hoyt (C), forfeit130 Baillie (C) defeated Draheim 5-2137 Co* (C) pinned Fairchild 7:07 ,147 Itleason (V) decisioned Nenilck 2-2157 Seidel (C) won by forfeit167 McCarey (V) defeated Eisenbeffg 6-1177 Herschfield <W) pinned Karasch 3:47Hvy. Taliitsch <C) won by forfeitExh. 123 Hoyt (C) tied Mellerlng 4-4Exh. Hvy. Taliitsch (C) tied Herbst 1-1.PAUL’S HARDWARE & PAINT SUPPLYHyde Park's Largest Hardware StoreSTUDENT DISCOUNT906 E. 55th Ml 3-9754 VWVV W V W WWW W VvVw W WW V W WWWWWWWWWWWW W WWWW W fifftTITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA 1spaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage & meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.Soon to receive his Ph.D., partially through an IBM education program. Harold Mechanic (B.S. in Mathematics, CCNY’53, M.A., Columbia ’55) is constructing ingenious mathematical models of advanced IBM data processing systems.a mathematician works in the mainstream at IBMAdvanced data processing systems—whether designedfor business, industry, science, or government—havebeen made possible by the talents and abilities of themathematician.Harold Mechanic, for instance, is working in areas ofsystem simulation. He and his colleagues have donesome of their most interesting work in building mathe¬matical models to study the performance of proposedTele processing* systems. After transforming the modelsinto computer language, numerous possible system con¬figurations were fed into a giant computer to determinean optimum arrangement of components. Thus, like manymathematicians at IBM, Harold Mechanic is able to usethe computer as a tool to advance both theory and tech¬nique of systems analysis. If you are receiving your degree in mathematics, youmight do well to investigate the unusual opportunities atIBM. Working alone, or as a member of a small team, youwill find many chances to make important contributionsto your field. You will also be eligible for excellent educa¬tion programs.Positions will be open in mathematics research, computerprogramming, and applied mathematics. The IBM repre¬sentative will be interviewing on your campus. He will beglad to give you further information. Your placementoffice can make an appointment. Or you may write, out¬lining your background and interests, to:Manager of Technical Employment,IBM Corporation, Dept. 888,590 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N. Y.•TrademarkYou naturally have a better chance to grow witfra growth company. IBMFeb. 10, 1961 CHICAGO MAROON • 9'Tonight at 8:30' has 'new direction’Tonight at 8:30, University the¬atre’s current series of shortplays, struck out in a new di-.rection last week-end with theproduction of two works by stu¬dents of the University of Chica¬go, along with the more familiar“Portrait of a Madonna” by Ten¬nessee Williams.The first one-act play presentedwas “The Time Is Ripe” by DavidIngle. This work contained a num¬ber of interesting situations andhuman problems, any one ofwhich would have been sufficientfor a play of this duration. As itstands now the play is in need ofgreater length and full-scale treat¬ment consisting, as it does, of anumber of expositions, but no de¬velopment of any of the issuesraised.The problem of the educatedAfrican who wants to achieve hiscountry’s liberty by politicalmeans is shown contrast edagainst his more violent compa¬triot who clamors for action now.The problem of the English rulingforce, with its respect for law. isshown contrasted with the whitesettlers who are for expediency.Finally, the leader of the rulingforce is shown pitting his presentcourage against a past cowardice. Compelling and human prob¬lems are raised by these situa¬tions. Ingle chose to lower themwith a coup de theatre instead ofhuman and compelling answers.To get an audience involved withthese ancient and contemporarydilemmas and then solve themwith a few pistol shots is tocompletely evade the dramatist’sresponsibility.Rick Ames, in the overly com¬plex role of the English command¬ing officer, continued to do re¬liable and careful work. JoffreStewart was not verbally intel¬ligible at all times, but he wasmore than clear physically as hisdesire for immediate actionpoured itself into every vein ofhis taut body.Franklin Weirtgarten was fartoo bland as a supposedly dis¬turbed settler brimming ov e rwith the juice of prejudice. JaneWhitehill has such a sweet andbeautiful face I find her hard tobelieve when she is supposed tobe mad at someone. CharlesPegues did a very good job as thepolitically-minded African, whilethe versatile David Ingle tripled,not only as author and director,but as convincing actor in therole of another English settler.m (D€(r>IC[X at th* Green DoorA Mom! Pleasant Coffee House - Book ShopPaperbacks, Children's Kooks. New York TimesServing Nightly, 7:30-12:30 Soturdoy, Noon-1:30 a.m.Serving French Breakfast Sundays, All DeyChess, Monday and Tuesday Evenings, and Saturday Afternoons1450 East 57th Street Book Shop Open Daily IO a.m.NOW PLAYING"NEVER ON SUNDAY"StarringJULES DASSINMELINA MERCOURIBest Actress — Cannes Film FestivalDearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763Special student rate far all performances seven days a weekJust Show Cashier Your t.D. Card The second new one-act play,“We Have Scotched the Snake,Not Killed It,” was by Joe Erlien-berg. At the base of it this piecehas some potentially good andpoetic ideas — the discovery, byAdam, of disillusion, and, by Eve,of pain and death. However, in hisdesire for “universality** Erhen-berg introduced two modern se¬quels for Adam and Eve, the pointbeing, I suppose, that men andwomen have not changed. Thedramatic necessity for this, exceptfor the trivial point of “proving”the title, was not clear.The offensive and needlesslycarnal quality of the second scene(the first modern Adam and Eve)seemed a severe reflection on theauthor (and the director) who,in exploiting local effects, lost alldirection for the play’s best ideas.Even stranger still was the intro¬duction of another modern pair of lovers (this time Adam is bookish,presumably to appeal to U. of C.audiences) whose function andpurpose was also completely elu¬sive. This .Eve, however, did adda note of unexpected charm whenshe turned the Garden of Edeninto the Grand Concourse and toher Adam declared, “You don’tlove me at AWL.”Jane Whitehill, home at. last,made Eve a charming first lady,while Walter Miale, a startlinglyunclad Adam, had a distinctlyfetching quality.The final play of the eveninghad the effect of a lesson by themaster to his two disciples. Ten¬nessee Williams’ “Portrait of aMadonna” showed the single-minded purpose we missed in thefirst play, and the delicate re¬straint and use of visual effectsso lacking in the second.Renee Cappellini walked off with the acting honors of thenight, partly because she had thebest part to play, mostly becauseshe played her part the best. Herbeautiful voice, touchingly modulated, had just the right trace ofa refined Southern accent. In herportrayal of Lucretia Collins, agirl hopelessly lost in fantasiesof the past, Miss Cappellini’s care¬fully controlled performance pro¬jected both schizophrenia andcredibility, a not easy task.Like Blanche Dubois of “Street¬car,” Lucretia depends for herkindness upon strangers. CharlesPegues was excellent as an un¬likely and ironic provider of thiskindness, while James Bradleyeffectively showed indifference,contempt, and deafness to the dissonant peals of the Southern belle.Marshall BialoskyWUCB program guideFriday, February 107:30 Prokofieff — Sonata No. 6in A for Piano, op. 82.8:00 Schubert — Symphony No.9 in C.Bizet — L’Arlesienne SuiteNo. 1.9:00 Brahms — Quintet in f forPiano and Strings, op. 34.Chopin — Waltzes Nos. 1-5for Piano.10:00 Verdi — Aida (completes opera).Sunday, February 127:00 Bach—Cantata No. 21, “Ichhatte viel Bekummernis.”Beethoven — Trio No. 6 inE flat for Violin, Piano, andCello, op. 70, No. 2.9:30 Jacob—Excerpts from “TheHours of Burgundy,” forOrgan.Leo — Concerto in D forCello, Strings, and Con-tinuo.10:00 Handel — Royal FireworksMusic, OrchesterkonzertNo. 26 in D.Haydn — Symphony No. 99in E flat.Dowland — Three Songs.11:00 Schubert — Moments Musi-caux for Piano, op. 94.Brahms — Tragic Overture,op. 81.Vieuxtemps — Concerto No. 5 in a for Violin and Or¬chestra, op. 37.Monday, February 137:00 Mozart — Quintet No. 5 ing for Strings. K. 516.Beethoven—Symphony No.8 in F, op. 93.8:00 Marty’s Night Out — The¬atre and films reviewed by8:30 Berlioz — The Damnationof Faust, op. 24.10:30 Liszt — Spanish Rhapsodyfor Piano.Bartok — Ten Easy Piecesfor Piano (1908).Tuesday, February 147:00 Milhaud — Quartet No. 12for Strings.Stravinsky — Les N o c e s(1917-23).Bloch — Concerto GrossoNo. 2 for String Quartet.8:00 Greig — Peer Gynt SuitesNos. 1 and 2, op. 46 and 55.8:30 Beethoven — Quartet No. 5in A for Strings, op. 18,No. 5.Mozart — Rondos in D anda for Piano, K. 485 and K.- 511.Sibelius — Symphony No. 3in C, op. 52 (1907).Copland — Danzon Cubano(1942).Albeniz — Three Pieces forViolin and Piano. 10:00 Kodaly — Quartet No. 2 forStrings, op. 10 (1916-18).Gounod - Ballet Music fromthe Opera “Faust.”Falla — El Amor B r u j o(1915).Wednesday, February 157:00 Musical Comedy—this weekOklahoma.8:00 Bach — Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 in D.Rameau — Excerpts fromthe Operas “Dardanus.”“Castor and Pollux,” and“Hyppolyte and Aricie.”Handel — Suite No. 7 in gfor Harpsichord.9:00 Beethoven — Eleven ViennaDances for Orchestra.Mozart — Symphony No. 28in C, K. 200.Brahms — Four SeriousSongs, op. 121.Paganini — I Palpiti for Violin and Piano, op. 13.10:00 Voice of America -- a recording of a discussion ofbaseball by Professor Norman Maclean of the EnglishDept., Alec Sutherland, andBill Veeck.10:30 Faure — Suite for Orchestra, Dolly, op. 56.Britton — The Young Person’s Guide to the Orches¬tra (1946). -11:00 Orff — Carmina Burana(scenic cantata).UNIVERSITY THEATREPROUDLY ANNOUNCES IT'S PRODUCTIONOFFeb.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE THEATRE1414 E. FIFTY-NINTH STREETNitely at 8:30except Friday& Saturday:Two shows’ nitely at8:00 & 10:15 THE CAST: JUDITH DEUTSCH, JERRY MAST, JUDITH NISSMAN, ALICE ANN SHAEFFERCINDY WHITSELL, ARTHUR HARRIS, JERRY D. HYMAN, HERRY LYNN, •10 CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 10, 1961 Thursday, February 167:00 Bartok — Quartet No. 5 forStrings (1934).7:30 Jabberwocky — with ShortySpiro.Tchaikowsky: 1812 Overture, Vienna State Philhar¬monic, Eugen Jochum,Cond.; also Shelly Berman.8:30 Mozart — Concerto No. 26in D for Piano and Orchestra, K. 537, “Coronation.”9:00 Schubert — Trio No. 2 in Eflat for Violin, Pino, andCello, op. 100.Bizet — L’Arlesienne SuiteNo. 2.EUROPE orSOUTH. AMERICAin 1961?We arrange for low-cost oir travelon regularly scheduled aircraft toEurope and South America. Theround - trip excursion fare fromNew York to Luxembourg, for in¬stance, is only $225. We can saveyou $424.40 on a round trip ticketto Buenos Aires!In connection with the studentflight to London on June 19, weoffer o 38 days' escorted tour of10 countries plus four weeks ofstudy in Europe for only $775-00,and 15 days in Scandinavia for$196. We arrange for purchaseof European cars of any make atwholesale prices, or for low-costrentals. Free consultation on travel.For full information,write toMr. Arne Brekke1207 E. 60th Street,Chicago 37,or coll (days or evenings)BU 8-6437.Culture VultureThere is no more delightful occupation in all the world than browsing in a book-lined shop, whether it be on Ellis avenue orthe Seine's left bank. The sight of a familiar and beloved title brings rushing back the memory of a summer's day on a sun¬drenched hill when first we turned those magnetic pages. What beauty of symmetry lay in the black typed words; what gusts ofpromise and expectations of excitement lay between the lines! What beauty was there! We fell upon the hill and kissed thegrass in windswept, drunken joy! A mere glance at a title revivives the ecstasy, revives the intense experience we had with theauthor while lost and found in the flowing of his thoughts. We felt his words reach out and grab us by the arm to shake us fromthe somnulence which accompanies so much of youthful flitting to and fro and nowhere. Responding to the shake, we awoke toa living force which had sprung from between definitive covers. "Aha!" we said and tried to make the life-force falter beforeour scrutinizing interrogation. But it was he who had something to give to us; he imparted to us an ineffable strength to girdour inner selves, a strength which sent us racing to the crest of the hill to sing to the infinite blue and embrace the buffeting winds.On campusTheatreAfler the ball (of last weekend)was over, the Billy Barnes Revuewas still a thing of the future. Itis now an event of the present,and Mayor Daley, as well as nu¬merous other dignitaries of stu¬dent stock, have beeri infusedwith its youthful enthusiasm. Atleast that is the hope. Perform¬ances will run through theweekend, then suddenly with thefinal curtain call on Sundaynight, the Revue will join thegraveyard of the past; it will liveon, however, in newsprint re¬views (which disintegrate) andin the spirits (which must notdisintegrate if mankind is to per¬petuate its essence) of those whodug into their pockets for ticketmoney. There may be some left(some tickets, that is; filthy lucreis always in short supply), sowhy not?MusicEaster must be “cummen” in• appalling how time flies, if theVulture may be allowed to viewthe situation in such a prosaicvein), for the UC choir’s LentenConcert is next in the Rockefellerchapel Concert series. The con¬cert on Sunday, February 19, willembrace choral works which arestrictly to the point as far as thespirit of the season goes, and area flawless acoustic delight as faras technical music loving exertsits influence.Palestrina’s setting of the poig¬nant Stabat Mater will be a highpoint with the beauty of its sor¬rowful “dolorosa” and “lacri-mosa.” Holst’s Hymn of Jesus,Brahms’ Naenie and Alto Rhapso¬dic, and the Te Deum by Kodalydeserves no less b e f o r e-h andEXPRESSIONART GALLERY1713 Vi E. 55thStudents Have YourPrints Framed AtExpression Art GalleryMondoy thru Saturday, 2-5Call PL 2-8895Clark theatredork & modisonfr 2-284350at all times m specialv collegeprice♦ ladies day every fridayall gals admitted for 25e* different double feature daily♦ open 7:30late show 4 p.m.* write in for free program guideWear Contact LensesDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristH32 E. 55th St.•t University Av*. HY 3-8372 praise. Tickets are $1.50 for stu¬dents and can be purchased at thebookstore, Woodworth’s, or theChapel office.The big sounds seem to be invogue on this campus at the pre¬sent time. The sounds of musicand drama have been so cymbalic(sic) as to drown out the moretender, shyer efforts of expres¬sion. One such effort has caughtthe Vulture’s eye and filled herheart with sympathies from by¬gone days: Every Saturday at 1pm in the baronial reaches of IdaNoyes, the Recorder society of¬fers instructions and a chancefor informal group playing of thatmost pastoral of instruments.Picture a flower clad hill, re¬splendent with shepherds fifinggentle tunes on their simple wood¬en pipes. Technically the recorderhas become truer in pitch, butbarely more complicated in de¬sign; the tunes remain clear andrelatively simple, but the reper¬toire has been advanced and en¬hanced by such greats as Bach,Mozart, and Telleman. Keep thisorganization in mind; it is vitaland its music is honest.CinemaB J jumping on the bandwagonand going international. Followingup last week’s Japanese film willbe a Russian one entitled Earth.Earth is the last film made by theUkranian peasant and painter,Alexander Dovzhenko, and the onewhich brought him internationalfame as a director. It concernsItself with the struggle betweenthe Kulaks (peasant landowners, for the uninitiated) and the col¬lectives, a struggle which neverends and seems to be moving tothe West. The showings tonightstart promptly at 8 and 10 in theJudson dining hall across thewindy Midway.A French movie, The Cupboardwas Bare (free translation, nodoubt), will belnternationalhouse’s Monday offering to cul¬ture hungry members of the UCintellectual community. It starsthat one-man show, Fernandel,who hands in a wildly funny per¬formance, if you have a taste forthat particular man of comedy.Flashing his inimitable toothysmile, Feranandel leads the audi¬ence on a mad wild-goose chasefor an illusive bedroom wardrobecontaining a cadaver . . . the bodyof his best beloved maiden aunt.How he loved her! Admission is50 cents; showings at 7 and 9.UC’s most popular student or¬ganization (as proven by the lastfour Friday nights) are due toraise their rare name anothernotch tonight as they present theirfinal film in the current experi¬mental series free of charge.Doc Film’s final programs willinclude Fireworks — “a film ofsome controversy; the less saidabout it the better,” to quote thepress release, and “Pleasure Gar¬den,” the most popular film theyhave ever presented; tonight’sshowing will mark the fourth timein as many years that it has beenrun. To accommodate the expectedhordes, there will be shows at7:15, 9:15, and 11 in Judd 126.For PRINTING Call JAY!OFFSET * LETTERPRESS * MIMEOGRAPHINGDAILY U. OF C. PICKUPSC«ll JAY Letter & Printing ServiceHY 3-0802 1950 Eost 75th Street*** %4 ‘ Off campusTheatreSounds of wind along the Welshcoast, smells of sea air and saltyhumor tempered by the delicatespirit of a master, will soon arriveat the Goodman theatre to dispellthe raw, rough winter winds ofChicago’s lake front situation.February 24 - March 14 DylanThomas’ Under Milkwood, star¬ring Ivor Harries, will grace thememorial theatre’s stage. It is aplay for voices, originally writtenfor radio broadcast, full of thewarm humors of its characterswho are painted in words of themost charming preciseness. Frommidnight to midnight we followthe poetic lives of simple folk? ina small Welsh fishing village, andcome away with smiles inside. Stu¬dent rates are $1.50 and $2. Tele¬phone for reservations at CE 6-2337.Let there be laughter in life; letthere be laughter in theatre,which is timeless life. Laughtershall descend before long at theCivic theatre. under the title ofThe Hostage. Coming direct fromBroadway, Brendan Behan’s ripsnorting comedy is destined to the success it experienced in London*Par is, and New York.Raving critics have describedThe Hostage as irreverent, hilari¬ous, ludicrous, lusty, racy, uproar¬ious, and on and on and on. Be¬neath its riot of gaiety, The Hos¬tage reveals its creator’s penetrat¬ing, vital mind and his humanquality which gives birth to aphilosophy of life respective kind¬ness to humans and animals aboveall else, and which has nothingwhat-so-ever to do with societyunless it makes “the roads safer,the beer stronger, the food cheap¬er, the old men and womenwarmer in the winter, and happierin the summer.”The unexpurgated hit will runfor two scant weeks beginningFebruary 20. Tickets are availableonly through the box office, 20 N.Wacker Drive, Chicago 6.CinemaThe Hyde Park will feature theWorld of Apu during the comingweek. This cinematic giant com¬pletes the closely woven tapestryof Satyajit Ray’s famed trilogyincluding Pather Pancliali andAparajito. The World of Apu isdevoid of stupendous battlescenes, devoid of chariot races,devoid of a cast of thousands.POINT THEATRE55th & the Lakepresent* t T/.’ n nemo musical rerueFive Performances Only!Feb. 17f 8 and 10 p.m. . . . Feb. 18, 8 and 10 p.m.Feb. 19, 8 p.m.Admission $1Tickets available Student Service CenterLAKEthe PARK AtS^RDyde park : N O 7 9 O 7 1theatreJ* .*« ♦{* «£♦ ♦*« *1* ♦*« *Jt| Ride The Midway!'MIDWAY RIDING CLUD, INC. ;742 East 61st Street j| • LARGE HEATED INDOOR RING |• FULL SCHEDULE OF CLASSES UNDERPROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTIONBeginning — Intermediate — Advanced — Jumping V• EXCELLENT BOARDING FACILITIES• HORSES FOR HIRE — ACCESS TO CHICAGO’S !FINEST BRIDLE PATHSJackson Park — Washington Park — Lakefront ;i;• SPECIAL GROUP RATES |Midway 3-5771M. CHASE, Manager £ Student Rate 65c All Performances“One of the most vital andabundant movies ever made*—Tim* Magarm*" 'The World of Apu'honors the screen. Alovely telling of a sen-'sitive story with ex¬quisite, distinctiveimagery."—Bosley Crowther,N. Y. TimesCompletes Satyajit Ray's world-famed trilogy"Pather Panchali"epic statureSeSyayX T&fyjr*ihe IdovUl«*f Gf>. . ineffably moving for audiences—Arthur Knight, Saturday Review"A masterpieceeverywhere."" 'The World of Apu’ contains one of the loveliest intimations of thewhole world of love and marriage that movies hove ever shown."-—Archer Winsten, N. Y. Post"We ore foce to face with a great film, a classic in our time."—Paul V. Beckley, N. Y. Herald Tribune— And —... a deft, droll British fifcn adaptation ofJAMES THURBER'S"the Battle of the SexesBased on his story "The Cotbird Seat"with PETER SELLERS and ROBERT MORLEYvs. CONSTANCE CUMMINGSNew York Times: "The Battle of the Sexes" is comedy spiked withforce — a maximum of wit! A tongue-in-cheek ribbing that cleavesto the spirit of Thurber's lampoon. Mr. Seller's humor is both vocaland physical. A man who can toss o line as well os project it."rrFeb. 10, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • HProfessors' cite inaccurate reporting(continued from page 4)ized and reiterated what thatpress had said, and then addedmore vilification and denunciationthan its brothers in Chicago.Chairman of the Cook CountyCentral Committee, Francis X.Connell once again repeated that"votes were stolen/' But he wasonly able to cite a single casewhich became the most notorious;this was in the 50th Precinct ofthe 2nd Ward. He said, “In thecase of Nixon versus Kennedy, adozen or more votes were reportedto the election board for Kennedythan were recorded on the ma¬chine."Connell continues: "These largegaps between what the machinesregistered and what the electionjudges said was the count showsthere was large scale vote steal¬ing.” But he adduced only onecase.The hollowness of these chargesregarding the results of the vot¬ing machines is sharply revealedby the results of the recount ofthe voting machines conducted byboth parties. The final results ofthe voting machine tally and thedefective and objected to ballotsas certified by both the Republi¬can and Democratic judges showedan increase of 312 votes for Nixonout of 1,780,000 votes cast — oran error of less than one-fiftiethof 1 per cent. Statisticians uni¬versally would say that this lowpercentage of error is a tremend¬ous tribute to the recording of thecount on the voting machines byelection officials.Republicans unsureFrom time to time, the Republi¬can Party chiefs had misgivingsabout their own accusations. Forexample, in the Dally News of No¬vember 21st, Francis X. Connell,who had made many accusations,is reported to have "acknowledgedthat in many instances the dis¬crepancies Lin the machine resultsand the vote counts turned in byprecinct election judges] could beaccounted for by the fact thatabsentee ballots included in thejudges’ tally are not recorded bythe machines," although he arguedthat the number of the absenteeballots could not account for themajor difference in the two setsof figures. But he does not tellthe public in what instances.On November 23rd a DailyNews headline said: “ContinueHunt For Fraud." In the articlein which it mentions that 460aides would be summoned forquestioning, it states that “thesearch for evidence of electionfraud continued unabated." Thatis, it was not yet found. Then itreports tnat Republican leaders"were frankly admitting that thevotes picked up by their candi¬dates in the big vote-machinecheck will fall far short of whatit needed to change their defeatsto victories.The Republican complaints havenow dressed themselves in themantle of electoral nobility’, bring¬ing in the theme that they hopein the long run to point out theneed for reform of the country’selection machinery. It is not Chi¬cago; it is not Illinois: it is thenation that they have now setout to serve! And if they’ cancorrect voting frauds, this will bea service to their nation. This isa reversal of attitude for thosewho have hitherto purported tobelieve that one hundred thousandvotes had been stolen from thedefeated party in Cook County.This theme of electoral reformis taken up in the Daily News -editorial of November 23rd. Theimpression conveyed is that theGOP is the only organization in# the state or the nation that wish¬es to preserve “the integrity ofthe vote count,” as it is called inthe headline, and that any irreg¬ularity is a fault only of theDemocratic Party.In the Chicago Tribune of No¬vember 24th a new element wasintroduced in thb Republican char¬ges when Meade Alcorn, the Re¬publican National Committee’s check “sputtered to its conclu¬sion." Several /omen judges fromthe 8th Precinct, 31st Ward,Northwest Chicago, had been in¬terrogated by James E. Murphy,attorney for the election boardand James H. McLaughlin, itschief investigator, ’’hey includedRepublicans as well as Democrats.Their faults, which had favoredWal’d against Adamowski, seemedgeneral counsel intervened, saying to be honest mistakes. For exam-that “on the basis of on-the-ground investigations I have nodoubt that Illinois could wind upin the Nixon column," and thatsome votes “in other states lookequally suspicious." This state¬ment was unsupported by evi¬dence.The Tribune, on the same day,printed a long editorial with theheadline, “Mounting Evidence OfA Stolen Election ” The only ex¬amples of evidence given by theTribune to back a charge of thisseriousness were the 50th Pre¬cinct, 2nd Ward, and the materialbrought in. about herself butabout nobody else, by their ownwriter, Norma Lee Browning, whoprovided a series of articles on pie, they did not understand splittickets, where the voters markedin the circle for a straight Demo¬cratic ticket but then also markedin a vote for Adamowski. Inother cases his name was so .ardown the list and the only Re¬publican on a split ticket that itwas not noticed. The judgesclaimed exhaustirn by the hardwork in crowded quarters and that they had been harrassed byRepublican watchers’ “hollering"for 15 to 20 hours. Mr. Berkowitzcalled this explanation “brazenand arrogant."GOP lowers claimsAs time went on, even the Re¬publican national officials loweredtheir claims. Roy Sheaff, counselfor the GOP minority on the Sen¬ate Committee on Elections, saidhe had received 200 to 300 allega¬tions of irregularities, but .ie“could not label them fraud be¬cause the definition of fraud is upto the courts.” But the Republi¬can officials of Cook County, es¬pecially Mr. Connell, splashed thebiggest of figures once more: theAmerican, December 9th, stated100,000 ‘disfranchised” and 100.000“ghost" voters. The Tribune, December 15, put)lished an editorial with the head¬line, “The Lesson Of The StolenVotes.” It repeats the story towhich it had become addicted:“There is no doubt now thatthousands of votes were stolenfrom Vice President Nixon.” Thenthe newspaper, having made thiscategorical assertion continues.“Although it is highly probablethat Mr. Nixon actually won Illi¬nois, proof of his victory is lacking." Despite this admission, theTribune sought to supply theproof that was lacking by declar¬ing that the Democrats “confessthe truth by indirection" becausethey “cry that there were Repub¬lican frauds in Cook County andDownstate which counterbalancedthe Democratic frauds.”1 Billy Barnes' reviewedCindy Whitsell and Artie gamut from uproarious humor Two serious numbers stand outHarris'proved to be the stand- t0.,a I^rcepUve seriousness Do- in the whole attain ‘The Pen,^ spite the handicap of regional brooke Story and “Blocks.” Bothhow and why he had been de- outs in the Billy Barnes Revue jokes in some spots (i.e. City of penetrate the why and what happrived of her vote.The Tribune editorial continues,“there is nothing new’ about votethievery in Chicago. It goes onat every election. This year themotive for fraud w’as not only thepresidential election, but the racefor State’s Attorney, an officewhich, during the last four yearsunder Benjamin Adamowski, has which opened last Wednesday Angels and Hellahahana) the pens when the charm of marriagefor a five day run at the Inter¬national House Theater. MissWhitsell mugged and cow’eyedher wav through the review whichhas some of the cleverest skitsin it that have been seen on theChicago stage in a long time, script has some kind of appeal wears off. Jerry Hyman and Alicefor everyone, the teenager, the Schaeffer turn in their best pcidowager, and even the player, formance in “Blocks" while HarrySome of the funniest parts are Lynn, Miss Schaeffer, and Judy“listen to The Beat” which fea- Deutsch carry off honors i nbedn embarrassing to the Demo- Second City notwithstanding. Har- Oedipustures Art Harris’ “Brando" and“Home in Elsinore,” (“Hamlet"as you like it) “Home in Thebes"with a cool Jocasta and a drollcratic organization by exposingmany scandalr ”This amounts to saying thatsince there was a motive forfraud, fraud must have been pre¬sent. Surely in a democratic na¬tion where people have the rightto support rival candiates, anyonehas the right, as a proper motive,to beat the opposing candidate,whether for the Presidency or Mr.Adamowski for the State’s Attor¬neyship, without being chargedwith fraud.Appeals to citizensOn November 26th the Tribuneappealed to all citizens to purifythe election process “so that thefranchise has the dignity andmeaning it is supposed to have.”But once again, its linking ofpurity in the election process withevents in Chicago was highly pre¬judiced and partisan. For example,it said, “The evidence of massivevote frauds in the Presidential "Pembrooke." Ip fact, “Pernbrooke” is the only spot whereJudy Deutsch really goes over,the remainder of her stage ap(Judy Nissman and pearances are characterized by i*frenetic nervousness that makesone uncomfortable.In other skits, the pace eitherrowdy schoolboy to a sidebursting a farce. Unfortunately, Jerry has tends to be too fast or the actiononly stage presence to carry the is confused,number off, he still can’t sing.ris, who claims this to be his first Harry’ Lynn) and Jerry Masts’stage appearance ran the gamut “Tyler My Boy" which starts outof roles from “Big Daddy" to a in a serious vein and ends up as“Wild One a la Brando" with anaccomplished ease that mkes onewonder if there isn’t about tenyars of experience in his imagin¬ative brain.The rest of the cast holds upwell under the strain of the revuebut somehow do not have thesame skill as Miss Whitsell andHarris. Alice Schaeffer, JerryHyman, and Harry Lynn, especial¬ly, have their moments too. JerryMast, who also directed the show’,Judy Nissman, and Judy Deutschprovide solid acting and some¬times singing skill but somehow’,do not make the standout appear¬ances of even Miss Schaeffer, Hy¬man and Lynn. Yet, the wholecast seems to balance out, pro¬viding a whole that surpasses thesum of the individual parts. And Mike FelischerAppointment only Ml 3-8032FLORENCE RESNIKOFFCUSTOM JEWELRY DESIGNPrecious Stones Matched Wedding SetsI The only Chicago designer to be in¬cluded in “Design Quarterly's" sur¬vey of contemporary jewelry craftsmenelection is apparent." The evidence ^!e.u*S° fet)ms t0 a feelingwas apparently that “The minutesampling of precinct manipulationspermitted by the city canvassboard was enough to suggest thatfraudulent voting in Chicago wasenough to steal the electoral votesof the state from Richard Nixon.”Can a “minute” sampling be re-gared as evidence of massive votefraud? The only “facts” adducedin this editorial were once againthe 50th Precinct and once againthe reports of the Tribune’s ownreporter.The Daily News. December 9th,I960, reported that the ballot re- that the whole crew is workingtogether, the stronger players,with rare exceptions, buoying theweaker ones up.The review itself runs the THE 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 WaringTHREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree IJ.C. DeliveryT erry ’sMl 3-4045 THE BILLY BARNES REVUEFEBRUARY 10, 11, 12(See Ad in Theatre Section)Small .. .$1.00Medium . . .$1.45LargeExtra LargeGiant r:....... . . $3.951518 E. 63rdEARTH Next WeekGERVAISEFrance 1957The last film of the Ukranian peasant painter,Alexander Dovzhenko, which brought him inter¬national fame as a director. Concerned with strug¬gle between Kulaks, or peasant landowners, andcollectives, <N. Y. Critics Award — BestForeign Picture, 1957“Fully deserves its tenworld-wide awards"——Cue MagazineTonight 8 and 10 — B-J Cinema Maria Schell A SUN LIFE POLICY FOR EVERY NEEDFOR YOURThere are special Sun Life plans which provideinsurance on the life of a partner or key manin your firm, thus protecting your interest inthe business.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr., ’461 N. LaSalle Chicago, Hi.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-6800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 10, 1961