Students picket theaters in thirteen citiesStudents in 13 cities joinedin protest against segregationin southern movie theaterslast Sunday — Abraham Lin¬coln's birthday. vTheaters in Chicago, NewVork. Boston, Philadelphia. St.F»»ui. San Francisco, and at leastsix. Texas cities were picketed bygroups ranging in size from 40 to*>iu students. The northern “sym¬pathy” demonstrations were di¬rected against theaters owned bythe ABC Paramount and Trans-Texas theater chains.Some 80 Chicago students pick¬eted all day at downtown theatershere. The students demonstratedfor eight hours in front of theRoosevelt, United Artists, andSme and Lake theaters. Thesetheaters are owned by Balabanand Katz [B&K], a local subsidi¬ses of ABC-Paramount.The two student groups whichorganized the national picketing.Students for direct action fSFDAlat Austin, Texas, and the NationalStudent association [NSA1. arenow trying to determine the re¬action of the theater chains. Timo¬thy Jenkins, of NSA, hopes to con¬fer next week in New York withthe he ad of ABC-ParamountLeonard Goldenson.While personally in sympathywith the student demonstrators,many of the managers of southerntheaters feel that theater inter¬grit ion would not be good bus¬iness. according to Houston Wadeot the SFDA. However, Jenkinshas stated that theater integra¬tion in the south could even re¬sult in a financial gain, merelybecause many Negroes who arecurrently barred from theaters re¬present potential customers.Texas state Senator FrankOwen, of El Paso, Texas, hascharged that the theater “stand-in.-.” were Communist-inspired.This was emphatically denied byHouston Wade, who helped organ¬ize the demonstrations.The Texas students are also seeking public support from atleast seven commanders of US AirForce basis. The Texas bases —located in San Antonio. Austin, ElPaso, Houston, and Dallas — areintegrated.More than 500 students demon¬strated in Austin, 200 in NewYork, 175 in Shreveport [Texas],150 in Dallas, 150 in Houston, 80in Chicago, 70 in Philadelphia, 70in St. Paul, and 50 in Boston,along with some “smaller” groupson the West Coast. No arrests orviolence resulting from the de¬monstrations were reported.The Chicago demonstration wasled by Bruce Rappaport, LenFriedman, and Jim Thcmasonfrom UC, and by Scott Arden ofthe Chicago Youth Committee onCivil Rights [CYCCR].A majority of the students pick¬eting came from UC, with the restcoming from Roosevelt Universityand CYCCR. A few people wererecruited while walking by thetheaters.Police were parked near thedemonstration to enforce “orderlypicketing” laws and to preventviolence.They were forcexi to get out oftheir cars only once, to send homea drunken heckler harrasing stu¬dents at the Roosevelt theater.Students in front of the State-Lake theater were also brieflyheckled. The heckler, a personalfriend of one of the policemen on Others were less friendly. Oneperson said, “I bet you sleep withthem, too.” Another asked, “Whydon’t you go to the Belgian Con¬go?”The demonstration drew edi¬torial comment from the ChicagoSun-Times, and other Chicago pa¬pers. In an editorial entitled, “Un¬deserved Spanking” the Timespointed out what they considereda “glaring defect” in the demon¬stration.The Times said, "... to have 1917, the B&K theater chain hasnever practiced segregation in itstheaters.”The editorial concluded by quot¬ing a B&K official as saying:“We’ve never barred a Negro fromour theater in our life . . . Thisis like spanking someone whodidn’t deserve it.”Jim Thomason, president of Stu¬dent government, has sent a letterto the Times claiming that theeditorial is “illogical” and showing“a curious lack of the issue in¬volved.” mount, placing economic pressureon them, would force ABC- Para-fount to compel their southernsubsidiaries to abandon segre¬gation.“In a one day demonstration wewere more interested in focusingattention on the moral question —that American citizens will notallow national corporations to bemoral in one part of the countryand convenietly immoral in an¬other.“We do not think the businesssubstance and validity, surely any In part ,he ,etter states: ''Wesuch demonstration must be based never said ,hat B&K ma"aserson some showing ot injustice in- were segregationists. w' "ever. . • i . . maintained they* could directlyvolving the pickets as represent- .atives of one side and the object c^arL§? t,hp policies of southernof the picketing as the disputant 'ttie^tqr? Ownfcg rhy the same firm'^Nthat owns B&K. Hovy^ver, it isThe editorial had earlier poised obvious that a boycotf<nf\North-out that “Since it was foundedJj» erh L^Ub^iiiiaril^ jof 4BC-Para- leaders involved — ABC-Para¬mount officials, officials of B&Kand other Northern subsidiaries,and officials of Southern subsidi¬aries — can totally disclaim re¬sponsibility for each other’sactions while they are associatingthemselves in the same businesscorporation. They do have influ¬ence on each other.”Vol. 69 — No. 59 University of Chicago, February 17, 1961 <>4«Sa|S*» 31duly the tno&ier, started yei- 9991 9 u 9 9 9 9 9 w“„ i union will rise next yeargo to the South and tucket? I’lltell you why, you’re afraid, that’swhy.”At first the students ignoredhim. Then they began singing“America the Beautiful.” Some ofthe passers-by joined the singing;the heckler left.Police called the demonstration“nice and orderly, on the whole.”Shortly after four o’clock, astranger walked over to a picketcaptain in front of the Rooseveltand gave her a box of candy, say¬ing, “This is for all of you.” The cost of attending theUniversity of Chicago willdefinitely be raised $10 perquarter next year, probably inthe form of a student healththe Maroon learned this week.Official approval of the raisewill not be given until Mon¬day’s meeting of the Board ofTrustees, but the Board’s deci¬sion is based largely on the recom¬mendation of the Chancellor’sstaff, and the staff’s recommenda¬tion will probably be that a healthfee be instituted. parable service, charges over $100per year.Dr. Herbolscheimer was notsure whether the new fee wouldmean more money for the healthservice. The new fee could actuallymean that money previously ac-signed to the service from theUniversity funds will be freed forother use. “However, I hope'wewill be getting more money,” Dr.Herbolsheimer said, “since thejob we are trying to do is an im¬portant one.”It is possible that some peoplewill be antagonized by the newfee, Dr. Herbolsheimer conceded,since they are now paying a visi¬ ble fee, where once there was noindividual charge. “But manyother universities have evenhigher fees,” she said, “and theyare not able to live within theirbudgets.”A fee increase nets more moneyfor the University than woulda comparable increase in tuition.Fees apply uniformly to all stu¬dents, whereas tuition is gradu¬ated according to tlie number ofcourses the student is taking.In addition, scholarships tradi¬tionally do not cover fees, sincethey are based on percentage oftuition rather than on a setamount of money.FM for UC droppedPlans for a University of Chicago FM radio station havebeen abandoned for the present, according to dean of studentsJohn P. Netherton.Netherton had hoped to establish a University owned, The new health fee will prob¬ably still not cover the cost ofservice which students receive.According to Dr. Henrietta Her¬bolsheimer, director of the Stu¬dent health service, a health serv¬ice in New York, offering com-Editor resignsNeal Johnston who has served as editor and co-editor ofthe Maroon since May, 1959, has announced his resignation.Johnston’s successor will be officially elected at this after¬noon’s Maroon staff meeting. Ken Pierce, Johnston’s co-editor,professionally administered FMstation, but “lack of interest inthe administration” forced cancel¬lation of his plans.University officials had origin¬ally applied for a permit to con¬struct an FM station last year,when it was thought that campusradio station WUCB would beginFM operation. When UC officialsdecided to prohibit WUCB frombroadcasting on FM, the permitwas retained in the hope that aUniversity-run station could be es¬tablished. The permit was due torun out on March 1.However, since during the pastweek it has “become obvious” toNetherton that a station cannotbe begun at this time, the deanhas written a letter to the Federalcommunications commission re¬leasing the assigned channel forreassignment to another group.Netherton believes that this is serving as acting editor untilthe election.Johnston stated that he is re¬signing in order to be able todevote more time to his academicresponsibilities. He is a graduatestudent in the English depart¬ment. in addition, he serves aschairman of the Illinois-Wiscon-sin region of the United StatesNational Student association.Staff members of the Maroonwere unanimous in their praiseof Johnston’s year and a half ad¬ministration, “I feel that theMaroon has improved in all re¬ spects since his election” was thecomment of one staff member.“He was a fine e d i t o r,” saidanother. “One of the greatestcharacteristics of his administra¬tion was the manner in which hebuilt up the staff.” In the pastyear and a half Maroon staffmembership has increased fromthree to over 50.Johnston was first elected co¬editor with Lance Haddix. LastMay he was elected as sole editor,but appointed Pierce co-editor dur¬ing the autumn quarter. .HU AC film debatedmeans there will never be a Uni¬versity FM station. He stated thatbe hopes to bring the subject upfor consideration by the Chancel¬lor's staff in the future, possiblyat the semi-annual Lakeside con¬ference, to be held later this year.‘This has been a busy year,”Netherton said, “and consequent¬ly those concerned: the develop¬ment office, the office of radioand television, and the public re¬lations office were too busy toRive my plan serious considera¬tion. I hope that when thingscalm down, in the near future, wewill be able to discuss the subjectmore fully.” The House Un-AmericanActivities committee vyas thesubject of a panel discussionbetween members of theYoung Americans for Free¬dom and the University ofChicago Students for Civil Liber¬ties last Friday.Before the debate a movie pre¬pared by the Un-American Activi¬ties committee (HUAC) wasshown. The controversial movie“Operation Abolition," deals withstudent demonstrations at a HUAC hearing in San Franciscolast May. The demonstrators aredescribed as “communist-in¬spired” and the movie insists thatalthough the students rioted nopolice brutality took place.In addition to newsreel films,the movie contains statements byHUAC chairman Francis Walters(D. Penn.), by Congressman Gor¬don Scherer (R. Ohio), and Con¬gressmen August Johansen (R.Mich.). Johanson states that those“(rioting) students are toyingwith treason."(Continued on page 8) Acting Chancellor R. WendeJI Harrison relaxing duringWednesday's Ad-building "fire-drill/' Police ordered some200 people to evacuate the building. They denied that theywere searching for a bomb. (See story on page 3.)new roleGrades dispute revealed O-board has, . T,. - .. , , . . . ,. . O-board will function as an did not "mean that O-board noA controversy between University of Chicago faculty and administration concerning “organization of students in- longer had a purpose.”students grade reports was aired this week. . terested in educational policy Oboard applicants and traineesWilliam Van Cleve, University registrar, has attacked the large percentage of ‘In- and practice at the Univer- who wish to continue in the newcompletes’ being given by many departments as ‘making the grades completely mean- sity” as of now, stated Chairman program will be admitted as mem-ingless,’ and one department chairman has charged Van Cleve with “setting up a smoke Karl Bemersderper following last bers next Sunday. One of the spe-gcreen to cover up an entirely different issue.” Sunday a,,emoon's mating. cifie changes in Oboard function. , and organization as a result ofThe dispute goes back to last "We are an autonomous stu- severance with the administrationautumn quarter, when Van Cleve However, Van Cleve pointed out tee. If the committee rules that dent organization recognized gen- lies jn thp seiecti0n of member-announced that for any “Incom- that his office had decided that it the student may receive an I, the erally related to education by the ,.We no ]onger wjn ]jmitplete” not made up within the re- would no longer follow this prac- student Is given fonr weeks to student activities office—and will our membership to 25 or be soquired amonut of time (one quar- tice, and that I’s would now stand make up the term’s work. conduct a program generally rela- hJ selective. Anyone who ex-residence, or eighteen as permanent grades of record if This plan, however, was called ted to education for the campus presses an interest in educationalter of residence, or _ ^ _months if the student has left the work is not made up. "silly” by UC acting-Chancellor R. as a whole,” Bemersderfer added, policy—or specific areas” of odi'i-residence) a grade of F would be Van Cleve also called for a new Wendell Harrison. Said Harrison, Affirming the statement made by capon here at UC may join ” heentered on the student’s record, system to decide which students "It is silly to think that a commit- George E. Playe, dean of under- exnlainedVan Cleve also stated that a should receive the Incomplete*. He tee should decide what a student graduate students, that there Although the present O boardfailing grade would be given to cited the example of the California should do rather than the student would be “absolutely no partici- jias not outlinod all its plans inany student who had registered institute of Technology, where a and his teacher. The committee pation” of the present O-board dpjail intends to hold* threefor a course, but whose instructor faculty member must submit his cannot know what the student did in the orientation program to be discussion meetings with varioushad failed to enter any grade for recommendation that a student re- in class, or why he did not com- planned by the dean’s office for- departments in the College thishim on the quarterly grade report, eeive the grade, along with a re- plete his work as well as the incoming students next year, Bie- Quarter -pjie first jwo onInstructors usually refuse to enter port on his reasons, to a commit- instructor can.” merskopfer emphasized that this a criticism” are scheduled witha grade when the student has done _^ the humanities department. Thefinal meeting will be with threeother departments—the topic fordiscussion has yet been selected.Ruth O. McCarn, assistant Students and assistant professor the University from having to "These discussion meetings willno work for the quarter.Faculty members protested VanCleve's policy on the grounds that•nly the faculty member, who isfamiliar with the student, is com- Dean McCarn to retirepetent to issue a qualitative grade, dean of students, director of ?f education, positions she has make ticklish decisions._ ” 7 nr*In PVPr 01 nro Tn 1 QsQ ehn hn. Ac a nronaral nKcortrofu primarily be information and ideaTh. , .. .. - . , , . held ever since. In 1959 she be- As a general observation, Mrs. gathering sessions—defining theCouncil of the Univer it t voca^,onal guidance and place- came director of vocational guid- McCarn said, “I think this is the ‘Chicago school of literary criti-the leading aoadem'crS,poliovnset’ ment> an^ assistant professor ance and placement. beginning of a new and exciting cism,’ for instance,” stated B. m-ting body of the University and of education will retire on August Mrs. McCarn said that voon- chapter of the University. The ersdesfer. He added that otherIt was decided that the registrar 31 of«this year after eleven years tional guidance and placement is University of Chicago can never aetixities would be of this nature,bad overstepped his bounds at the University of Chicago. her favorite job. She explained be dull, because the faculty isn’t hut that the “entire scope of ourMeanwhile, Van Cleve was at- Mrs. McCarn stated that she >» »>'* !*>*'“<>" du" and lhe aluden's du"' ac'iV'’'^,^tacking faculty policies on grades has no definite plans at this time. «*>'« *» «"d >" ^"‘ation. there Is exntement about ideas he vttamy of nl mernbe,s andof Incomplete. ’I’ is a cowards She explained that she never •’“fness. «><■ industry for many and concepts here. the oppoitunnies afforded us.grade, and I think that some of planned to have a career, but that University of Chicago graduatesthe faculty, a minority to be sure, each of her many interesting jobs without charge to them.Is being somewhat derelict in their Jed to the next. This year she has started print-responsibility, since they are not she received her bachelor of ing bulletins listing fellowshipsevaluating what the students are 7 received nor Dacneior oi th t are available to uc students.rcuuaung wnai me siuaenis are arts an(j master of arts in educa- .T ,doing ” .. . , . V\ hen asked about the Univer--However, ax things now stand, from the Universe of"Minnefofa. c«mpulSory retirement agethere seems to be a procrastinat- she later of 65, she stated that anyone Senate does not acton bookstore issueN°°fficia. action was taken ^ t^nveadga.e opera,,m.defer these things.” lecturing for the Chicago Ass^ci- b.ad We have an iron clad regula' by the Counci1 of the Umver’ day’s meeting of the Council.Norman McQuown, chairman of atjon for Family Living and be- l!fn‘ 801116 are r^ady .,0 at sity Senate on faculty and StU- Arthur Friedman, professor off^>®,°Sy d c p a r t m e n t, came the educational director of ^L^The^nnfed the'wisdom0 of dent government requests English and spokesman for theatatod that his department is "do- the Illinois Societv for Mental Hv- ever‘ s^e n.°*e^ *be wi_dom of . . _ .. Council said that, although the»>g what we can to get the num- giene in 1933 From 19^7to1948, haVing a ret,rement a^c to rel,eve that a committee oi thc Courher of I s down.” McQuown cited she served as a counselor to worn ■ ■ ■ • ■ ■Law school willa ruling, made last spring quarter, en at Northwestern university.•Bat a student could receive no , . , „ .more than three I s as permanmt w“ **grades and that an I eould net be U,is 'T"""of her disagreement with North-given in one of the department’sbasic ‘core* courses.McMQuown stated that "An Iis not a coward’s grade. There areall sorts of reasons that a person western’s discriminatory admis¬sions policy. At that time North¬western admitted Negroes, but re¬fused to house them and had ashould be riven the mark” Me «luota ®f approximately 10 peranouia oe given the mark. He * a. ,-j f jewish conferencecharged that Van Cleve was using teni 0,1 aonussion or ^ewisn hold conference action would be taken at leastuntil the Council’s next meeting,which is scheduled for nextmonth.However, another member ofthe Council, who asked that hisname not be mentioned, said that"The Bookstore will not go on. . . _ . „ _ . operating as it is at present forThe lflw school is holding s son Dunham presiding. Professor ycry long.” The faculty memberon conflict of in- S^anl<;y A- Kap,ao of the V.91 Ia^J continued saying, ‘There is aschool, will speak on conflict of gQOj possibility that a committeethe issue as "a cover for another In 1948 Northwestern terest Monday, February 20, interest in corporations and in iU ^ t ^ {Q investigato theIssue which has nothing to do with ”nlversity refused to comment on jn the law school auditorium, the executive branch. The com- meU “ Sthe I’s, the issue of the registrar Mrs* Yarn’s d.smissal. In a re- ” ’ ’ ~ ‘ ’ ^ ' liooKslorc-filing in a student’s record withthe grade of F.” cent interview, Roscoe This is part of a program made ^f°latoArj_ftre_^aro]d_^'t„^si^u/ A petition signed by facultylieytlM, PwH, Aumiriuqwciql student offerME CYCLE SHOP1*21 a. 55th ..DOING IT THE HARD WAY by W(GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!)easier 3-minute way for men: FITCHMen, get rid of embarrassing dandruff easy as 1-2-3 withFITCH! In just 3 minutes (one nibbing, one lathering, onerioting), every trace of dandruff,'grime, gummy old hairtonic goes right down thc drain I Your hair looks hand¬somer, healthier. Your scalptingles, feels so refreshed. UseFITCH Dandruff RemoverSHAMPOO every week forLCADINQ MAN’S positive dandruff control.CLIAIIDAA Keep your hair and scalpVllMMiUv really dean, dandruff-free!ivnib ngm ugwn idc iFITCH University of Chicago Bookstoremerits deliberation, and I ask theCouncil of the Faculty Senate toorganize a faculty or faculty stu¬dent committee to evaluate theBookstore and to discuss its fu-Allis 1S> pal L U1 a piugidiii iiirfuf . , .. , . . . ^... p«-UIpresident of Northwestern uni- »?ss™e th"ough a grant from ^"’and Roswe l B^Perkinf of mcmb6rs’. was Presented to theverslty atoM that he did not ,h' New World (oundfctt.on lor Dcgbev”se Plimpton' a n d Me "dncl via dean of students John■mow anything about the matter, advancing thought in the area ot YorkSjdney M Davis P' N‘''h‘'r"?n' 'fat week. The pell-_ . . practices and ethics of industry ^an, ixew York, sion yM. l^avis, ^ circulated by the Student-For the next two years, she ”nd commerce adjunct professor. New York Urn- F ,, Committ^ lor a Betterworked as a psychologist examin- „ . . „ . , , versity law school, Earl E. Pol- ..Ting defendants for the Municipal Francis Allen, professor of law, , k f Sonnenscheint T^utman, ?h°a°t fl of thiCourt of Chicago. will preside over the morning Lev|naon> Rieseri Carlin, and ^±1^‘SLSl.iraIn 1950, she first came to the ^f10” Nath’ Chif‘ago‘University of Chicago with ap- * ti™** At 5:30 the,e wiH ** a receP*pointments as assistent dean of C g 1 1 * tion in the Burton lounge, fol-The speakers are: Joseph Rauh ]OWed by dinner at 6:15 in theof Rauh and Levy, Washington, Burton-Judson dining hall.and Carl McGowan of Ross, Me- The evening session will begin „Gowan and O’Keefe, Chicago. at 7:30 with Soia Mentschikoff ture operationDonald Erickson of Arthur And- presiding. Frank H. Knight and In addition Jim Thoma. on,erson and Company will com- Thurman Arnold will speak on pres*dent ®f Studgat 5,0vei"1mrru’ment. Following this session the assumptions underlying the wrote a letter to the Council ask-there will be a lunch in the Bur- conflict of interest concept and ,hem }° consider the matter.ton-Judson dining hall. conflict of interest and public Thomason s letter, t°o, was com-The afternoon session will be- service. Charner M. Perry will mun,cated to the Council rGl £♦ o on . Ain the dean of students office,gin .t 2:30 with Professor AUl- comment. Jay Greenberg SFCCB chair-man, expressed mixed emotionsabout the Council’s failure to takeaction. “I am, of course, disap¬pointed that nothing was doneTuesday,” Greenberg said, “but Irealize that the Council, as a de¬liberative body, must have timefor sufficient time to consider allaspects of the situation. There¬fore, I am generally hopeful thata committee will be formed in thefuture.”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 TWOSmall . .$1.00Medium ..$1.45Large . .$1.95Extra Large . $2.95Gteuf . $3.951518 E. 63rd Free l/.C. DeliveryMl 3-4045 HARPERLIQUOR STORE1114-16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors ond beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEpi * jm — 1233FA A—1318■ ^ ^ 76992 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 17. 1961■Press and COP continue to blast fraud report^ Chicago’s newspapers, injditorials and on television,and Republican officials, con¬tinued their attacks on a re-poil issued by three UC pro¬fessors, which asserted thatn0 evidence had been presented insupport of the fraud charges lev¬eled against the Democratic party0f Chicago during the past elecuHerman Finer, and his col¬leagues in the political science de-pan ment, Jerome G. Kerwin. andchairman C. Herman Pritchettwere referred to as “the threeblind mice of the Midway” in aneditorial in the Chicago Tribunelast Friday.The editorial continued charg¬ing I tie professors with a “dem¬onstration of naivete . . . and adeplorable absence of scientificmethod in research techniques.”Francis X. Connell, Republicancounty chairman, in a statementto the Tribune, said that the re-port. “was undertaken at the sug¬gestion of Mayor Daley, and Earlpush was their prime source ofinformation.‘To call the study anything but» whitewash,” he continued. “would be to dignify this verysilly pretense at scholarship.”Citing the fact that Adamowskiwas "deprived” of 6,186 votes in865 Chicago paper ballot pre¬cincts, Connell said, “No fraud?Congressman Dawson must belaughing himself sick reading thereport.”The Dally News, in an editoriallast Friday, said that the conclu¬sions of the three professors “maybe fairly stated in their quotationof Robert Tieken, the RepublicanUS Attorney, that the electionwas cleaner than most.”The News then said that a fewselections from the report wouldindicate “that the civic zeal oftheir endeavor sometimes warpedtheir judgment. . . . The truthof the matter is that all observerswho have troubled to get outin the precincts where the cheat¬ing takes place are convinced thatthere is fraud in Chicago elec¬tions. Whether it was worse thanusual last November 8 is certainlynot proved.”James C. Worthy, head of thenew volunteer GOP group, theRepublican citizens league of Illi¬nois said that the report wasAd building clearedPolice ordered 200 personsto evacuate the Universityadministration building Wed¬nesday.The officers denied that theywere searching for a bomb hiddenin the building, and merely toldreporters they were staging a “firedrill.” An estimated 200 personswith offices in the Ad buildingstood on the sidewalk in front ofthe building at 5801 S. Ellis, wait¬ing for the 18 policemen to finisha 45 minute fruitless search.“I don’t know a damn thingabout this,” states acting-Chancel-loi It. Wendell Harrison, on hisway out of the building. “I thinkit’s silly.” Bruse Rattenbury, ofthe University office of Public re¬lations, commented: “Perhapssomeone attached too literal a sig¬nificance to Ash Wednesday.”University registrar William Van Clove said,” We welcome anyrelief time we get,” while AlbertCotton, Bursar, wish <* the “firedrill would get finished” so thathe could “return to the workingday.”All those milling about the side¬walk did not appear to be serious¬ly inconvenienced by the drill.Overhead were remarks such as:“Look around, we may find a newsecretary in the crowd”; “I thinkthe Orientation board is responsi¬ble”; and “I wonder if we’ll bepaid for the time off."A worried secretary in the com¬ptroller’s office asked: “Where arethe checks?”The last person out of the build¬ing was Harry Price, director ofSpecial activities of the Public re¬lations office. Fviceis emergencewas accompanied by applauseAsked for comment, he said sim¬ply: “Go away.” "without much substance. Theprofessors were asked to do thisby the mayor. On the face of it,it is not an impartial, objectiveundertaking.”Frank Durham, formerly chair¬man of the Committee on Honestelections and now chairman ofthe Chicago recount committee,said, “The three uninformed, mis¬informed, unschooled and un¬learned professors who vindicatedKing Richards power machinewhich stole this last election canonly be likened to the three blindmice who see or know not evilor fraud.”William H. Fetridge, chairmanof the Nixon recount committee,accused the professors of issuingtheir findings after “flimsy in¬vestigation.”George H. Dapples, attorney forthe Nixon recount committee saidof the professors, “Obviouslythese men have no investigativepowers, and they made no inde¬pendent investigation of any rec¬ords. This report is merely anexpression of opinion rather thanan analysis of facts.”Mrs. C. Wayland Brooks, Re¬publican national committeewom-an from Illinois, suggested thatthe professors “come down whilewe are making our recount andsee just how ‘baseless’ our chargesare."Seventy per cent of the paperballot box seals were broken andpeople who have been dead for10 years were found to have votedin the election,” she charged.“This is a Democratic attemptto sweep this mess under therug,” she concluded.On Kupcinet’s Television show,"At Random” last Saturday,Charles Cleveland, political writerand columnist and reporter forthe Chicago Daily News, statedthat he was “shocked at the lack of academic standards in the re¬port. I did what I think the pro¬fessors should have done—I calledthe people who were quoted. Idon’t know any Republicans whotalked to the professors or towhom the professors spoke. I’dlike to know whom else he talkedto besides the m a y o r’s pressagent.“If you were going to studythe case, you should have donejust that. I don’t see what conclu¬sions you can draw from readingarticles. You should have done asmall amount of research. I didn’tjust read the papers; I made somephone calls and got some facts.There should have been a muchbroader study, I don’t go byjust what I read in the press, Iget more facts.”Cleveland then described whatwas needed to get an indictmentfor vote fraud, concluding that itwas very difficult to obtainenough evidence for an indict¬ ment. Only if 1) a conspiracy todeprive a person of his vote, or2) buying of votes by a certaininterested party, is proved, canan indictment be brought againsta person.The difficulty, according toCleveland, is that you may see aperson being paid, but you haveto prove that the payment is fora vote. A lack of evidence provedin court is the reason, he con¬tinued, for their being only 2 in¬dictments in December, and noneIn January, for vote fraud.Herman Finer, one of the threeprofessors, was also on “At Ran¬dom,” and defended himselfagainst the charges and state¬ments of Cleveland and the press,"I don’t expect them to criti¬cize me for what they wanted meto do that I didn’t do. The Tribuneeditorial does not say what thereport did do. It was solely ancontinued on page SHerman Finer (left) and Jerome Kerwin (right) discusstheir election study report at a press conference.Strozier honoredRobert Strozier, formerdean of students at the Uni¬versity, and former presidentof Florida State university,who died in Chicago last April,was commemorated by FloridaState in a memorial ceremonylast Friday. The school’s $2,000,000library was dedicated to Strozier’smemory. Napier Wilt, dean of thehumanities at the University, gavethe memorial address.The ceremony included the un¬veiling of a portrait of Strozier,the gift of the Florida State grad¬uates of 1957 and 1960.Margaret Strozier, widow of theeducator and assistant dean of students and chairman of theadmissions committee of theschool of social service adminis¬tration, also attended.For twelve years Strozierserved the University of Chicagoas a dean of students and profes¬sor of romance languages. He be¬came the president of FloridaState in September, 1957 andserved in that office until hisdeath.NEGRO HERITAGEA special newsletter, devoted tohistorical data about the Negro.Annually, 26 issues, $2. Subscribetoday.Post Office Box 8153Chicago 80, Illinois Joseph H. Aaron, ’27The ConnecticutMutual Life InsuranceCompany of HartfordSinca 1846, ovet 100 yeors, hassafeguarded your family.135 S. LaSalle St.Suite 825 HA 6-1060 Offer Good UntilMarch 2ndAd building employeesstanding outside the build¬ing during the "fire drill"■— bomb search.Eye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumoptometristH32 E. 55th Streetot University Ave.HYde Perk 3-8372 Appointment only Mi 3-8032FLORENCE RESNIKOFFCUSTOM JEWELRY DESIGNPrecious Stones Matched Wedding SetsThe only Chicago designer to be in¬cluded in "Design Quarterly's" sur¬vey of contemporary jewelry craftsmen4 PIZZASFor The Price OfNICKY’S 31235 «. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780 The University of Chieago'sLABORATORIES FORAPPLIED SCIENCESis seeking mathematicians, physicists, statisticians, aero¬nautical engineers and physical chemists for appliedresearch in the f elds ofOPERATIONS ANALYSISSOLID-STATE PHYSICSHIGH-TEMPERATURE PHYSICSSYSTEMS ANALYSISSYSTEMS DEVELOPMENTELECTRONIC PHYSICSA representative from the Laboratories will be at thePlacement Office to talk with those interested onFriday, February 17th.Feb. IT, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Fraternities criticized for discrimination(UPS) —Three national so¬cial fraternities — Alpha TailOmega, Sigma Chi, and PhiDelta Theta — were criticizedthis week because of alleged dis¬criminatory pledging practices.The high council of Alpha TauOmega conducted closed hearingswith its Stanford university chap¬ter before deciding whether thenational will expel the chapter forpledging four Jewish students. TheStanford chapter has voted un-amimously to keep its Jewishmembers, regardless of the con¬sequences.ATO National President GeraldJohnson answered the charges ofdiscrimination by explaining: “Wedon’t exclude Jews-if they embracethe Christian faith. ATO is center¬ed in Jesus Christ, its ritual isbased on the New Testament, andany rushee of pledge believing ina non-Christian religion would findthe ritual and some of ATO’sChristian practices offensive.”Charging Sigma Chi with beingthe only remaining fraternity onthe Cornell university campus withan “overt discriminatory clause,”four Cornell students picketed theSigma Chi chapter last weekduring rush period.The protest group carried signsWhich said “No more Jim Crow fraternities,” and distributed leaf¬lets which urged the reader notto join the fraternity because *tcontinued to be bound by its na¬tional chapter to uphold its dis¬criminatory clause.Sigma Chi's National Secretaryreplied to the protest by statingthat action on removal of the dis¬criminatory clause will definitelybe taken at the fraternity’s sum¬mer convention.Phi Delta Theta came in forstiff criticism for reusing member¬ship to a Jewish student pledgedby its I.ake Forest local chapter.Howard Hoosteger, Lake Forestdean of students, chaiged that thenational fraternity caused DonaldSchiller to he dep'edged early thisyear "because of his religious back¬ground f Jewish!” The Dean toldthe national that local chaptermembers argeed that religion wasbehind Schiller’s being depledged,despite the chapter’s desire topledge him.Schiller is at present living inthe Phi Delt house as a socialmember—that is, as a non-votingmember of the fraternity. He re¬fused to comment.The president of Lake Forest,William Cole, issued a statementTuesday expressing concern in theincident. It reads in part asfollows: “The long range committee atI^ake Forest college, studying thegeneral question of fraternities andsororities, has added to its con¬cern the case of a student de¬pledged by Phi Delta Theta be¬cause of his religion. .Discrimination in membershippracticed by any fraternity is inviolation of the Michigan Plan,passed in the early fifties. ThePlan provided that all student or¬ganizations must remove discrim¬inatory membership requirementsfrom their constitutions in orderto be granted official recongnition,and set October, 1953 as the dead¬line for such action.Adoped at UC at that time, thePlan created difficulties for thelocal Phi Delta Theta chapter, theonly fraternity on campus to re¬tain an explicit discriminatoryclause in its constitution. Thisclause was stricken and Phi DeltaTheta brought under the terms ofthe Michigan Plan within the oneyear extension (to October, 19541granted by the administration, inaccordance with a provision of thePlan.At UC, Phi Delta Theta presi¬dent, Tom Pascal, commenting onthe alleged religious issue behindSchiller's depledging by the nation¬al, said, “If this is the reason they depledged him, it is a bad thing."Though the national, in keepingwith Michigan Plan, can have noexplicit discriminatory clauses inits constitution, it still exercisesa "fair amount of control” overlocal membership.“Anyone,” pointed out Pascal,“can be refused membership bythe national, no matter who he is.”He explained that the fraternitymust submit a list of new pledgesto be reviewed and approved. Theamount of control exercised overmembership is the “difference be¬tween a strong and a weak nation¬al. Phi Delt,” he added, “is avery strong national.”“We are not too happy aboutnational policy,” Pascal said, andemphasized that “the ChicagoIn Foyette county chapter is not discriminatory.** u*stated that the fraternity hasJewish members. “If you took apoll you’d find that four out «five chapters are not discrimin¬atory.”The discriminatory membershipissue of Phi Delta Theta has longbeen a source of contention be¬tween the national and its locals.Pascal expressed belief that “withall the pressure being put on thenational,” they would abandondiscriminatory policies.Attributing national policy tothe "character of the people incontrol of the fraternity at thetime”, Pascal stated he would liketo see it “resolved that the nationalwill not put any pressure on mem¬bership of locals.”Students ordered outSPU to circulate Corps petitionThe student Peace union(SPU) will circulate a nation¬wide petition calling for ameaningful Youth Peacecorps, which might become a realbreak with the arms race. Accord¬ing to SPU national chairmanPhillip Altbach, the petition in¬tends to show that students arenot willing to accept a watereddowrn and meaningless youthcorps.Altbach stated tlia* he expectsabout 100,000 students to sign thepetition by the end of March,when it will be presented to thePresident in Washington.The petition itself will call formeaningful legislation to impli-ment the youth corps. It will sup¬port the concept of United Na¬tions control for the project as ameans for keeping it from becom¬ing another pawn in the cold war.[The petition will also urge thatthe youth corps be large enoughto be effective in the near futureHARPER SQUARECROCERLANDFree Delivery1455 E. 57th St. DO 3-2444 in dealing with some of the pro¬blems of the underdeveloped na¬tions. It supports the inclusion ofundergraduate students and otherswithout a college education in thecorps with a sufficient trainingprogram for all participants.SPU Secretary Mike Parker,who has been studying the infor¬mation available on the youthcorps to date, said that he isalarmed by the fact that manygovernmental officials seem to becontent to launch a very smallprogram, including o .ly ZOO or 300students to start. He emphasizedthat the various „ rivate agencies,such as the American FriendsService committee, send over al¬most this number.For the youth corps to be worthwhile, he stated, it must be dis¬associated from the East-Weststruggle and be aimed at actuallyhelping people in the underdevel¬oped nations. Parker indicatedthat the peoples of Asia and Af¬rica are not interested in Ameri¬can military aid or “mutual secur¬ity" pacts, but they are desperatefor competent technical assistance.Both Parker and Altbach agreedthat the prospects for an effectiveand meaningful youth corps arenot bright. The willingness ofmany government officials to com¬promise the program out of exist¬ence is very discouraging. Both emphasize that only massive stu¬dent support ean have any hopeof insuring a substantial program.The SPU plans to circulate thepetition on as many campuses aspossible. The organization hasmembers on about 200 collegecampuses and will seek supportfrom other groups. Members ofthe UC chapter of the SPU willbe setting up literature tables oncampus and will sponsor speakerson the youth corps. Two University of Michiganstudents were arrested, tried,and ordered to leave Haywoodcounty, Tennessee this week.The students had enteredthe troubled area to bring foodand clothing to Negroes involvedin the civil rights struggle. Theywere in a car, driving into thecity of Brownsville when policestopped them and accused themof driving through a stop sign.The students claim that althoughthey had in fact stopped, the dri¬ver was forced out of the car.Another student. David Giltrow,21, was also arrested when he at¬tempted to take pictures. Twodeputies took his camera and puthim into their car. They refusedto answer his questions as to whyhe was being arrested. A patrol¬man also removed a camera fromthe ear and hit Giltrow across themouth. The General Sessions judge de¬clared them guilty and then sus¬pended the convictions with thestipulation that all five of theMichigan students leave thecounty immediately. They did,however, obtain permission to dis¬tribute the hundred boxes of foodand clothing they had in theirstation wagon.The deputy sheriff followed thestudents to the collection pointand they deposited their cargo.He also followed them across thecounty line. The film from theircamera had also been confiscated.The students who were in Fa¬yette and Haywood counties hadgone there to give help to theNegroes caught in the-economicsqueeze that has been imposedupon them for registering andvoting. It is the belief of the stu¬dents that they were arrested andharassed because of the aid theywore giving and not because ofany laws broken.Occupancy petitions inDelegates from the Inde- him personnally responsible forpendant Voters of Illinois and "°^ive »eUon on l.he °rd.ln“nc'-^ The ordinance asks that it beother community organiza- made illegal for any home ownertions met with Mayor Daley or realty corporation to discrimi¬nate in their policies. It asks thattoday to present signed petitionsadvocating open occupancy.”Fifty-five representatives of the5th ward presented the mayorwith 36,600 signatures in favor ofthe ordinance. It is their hopethat this will be an impetus forthe mayor to take definite actionin passing the ordinance. It is alsobelieve*, that this will Drovide thenecessary push to Negro aldermento vote for the ordinance. any member of any race, religion,or nat onal origin be able to livein any neighborhood or apartmentthat they can afford to rent.This ordinance is based on the belief that discrimination In hous¬ing policies is detrimental to thewelfare of the entire city and in¬duces spread of crime and disease.It is now the hope erf some theorganizers of the 5th ward’s peti¬tion campaign that other areas ofthe city will also try to influenceboth the Mayor and their Aider-man in favor of the ordinance,SNCC leaders jailedSecurity FirstNational BankservingSouthern Californiawill have a representative on CampusFebruary 22to discuss:• Accelerated Management Training• Immediate Responsibility• Outstanding Promotional Possibilities• Ideal Living Conditions in aStimulating EnvironmentHe would like to interview M B A. candidates, as wellas candidates for die M.A. degree in Economics.Alumni pocsessing work experience in banking or arelated field are also invited to discuss opportunities.Please make necessary arrangementsat your Placement Office.* • CHICACO MAROON • Feb. 17, 1961 ROCK HILL, S.C. (UPS)— In response to a call for con-This small, segregated South cerned Southern students to joinThe delegation meeting with the Carolina town became the fo- i*1 demanding equal service, andmayor contained PTA presidents, cal point of a rejuvenated £°*n£ *° R necessary, 16 At-8 clergymen, a representative of South-wide civil rights movement *an*a students, including civilthe Hyde Park-Kenwood confer- this week, as four Negro leaders r*gbts leader Lonnie King, sat inence, and a representative from of the Student Non-violent Coor- a* an ah'wlute cafeteria, violatingthe Negro American Labor coun- dinating committee (SNCC) vol- state’s 1960 anti-trespass law.cil. Rev. Pritchard of the UC Di- untarily accepted 30-day chain Twelve refused to leave jail, whilevinity school told the Mayor that gang sentences rather than post **x others posted bond,the people of the city would hold bond or pay bail. Other students made plans toconverge on Rock Hill within thenext few days to show supportfor the SNCC leaders and theFriendship College CORE mem¬bers who first were arrested.More than 100 Negroes marchedtwo abreast down Rock Hill'smain street on Wednesday. Thedemonstration lasted for half anhour. There were no arrests andno violence.fortigw tv ImsrM I dak3-3)13Mlinfers ia:castrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli &michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespscfeftsts fe; speed tuningcustom engine installationsclutchgear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachworkbd festv MG psychiatrist2306 e 71 st st.Chicago, Illinois TAl-SAM-YMNCHINfSE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Dally11 AJt. to U:N r V.ORDERS TO UH OUT1318 Eaet 63rd St. 8U 1-901SThis amazing little machine is actually a mathe¬matical giant. It weighs only 6 pounds, slips intoyour desk drawer or briefcase, yet it adds, sub¬tracts, multiplies and divides. Students are finding it the easiest,fastest way to solve problems in engineering, chemistry, account -ing, physics and statistics. It’s the new Bohn Contex, brainchildof top international designers who have created a full-fledgedcalculator light enough to carry anyplace, easy to use, workableVmMN rONTFY anywhere, far less expensive and every bit as^ accurate as big, costly office machines. It’s onlyCALCUL AT O R 10" long, T wide and 3 high—about the size ofa textbook. No other hand operated machine offers such speed.!It has only 10 keys, enters 10 figures, totals to 11 columns,includes automatic decimal indicator. And it’s so simple touse you can learn to work it in minutes. Most remarkable of'all is its price. Just $125.* See it and try it for yourself at..AiTHE UNIVERSITYS#02 ELLIS AVENUE BOOKSTORED. SL PASSMORE, Manage*Feb. 17, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Poor coverage given to criticism of pressLast week, three UC professors pub¬lished the results of a study of presscoverage of the fraud charges leveledagainst Chicago’s Democratic party byRepublican officials and candidates. Theyconcluded that press treatment of thesecharges was misleading to the public ingiving an impression of large scale fraud,when no evidence was presented to sup¬port the charges made by Republican lead¬ers. This report has provoked a negativeresponse on the part of Chicago’s news¬papers and Republican officials.An examination of the report, of thearguments raised against the validity ofthe professors’ conclusions, and of theprofessors’ answers to the arguments, hasconvinced us that press attacks againstthe report have been unfounded, and thatpress treatment of the report has servedto substantiate the indictment of the re¬port, that the Chicago press did not meetits responsibility of objective and factualreporting.First, both the Chicago Tribune andDaily News completely missed the pointof the report, stating in their editorials©n February 10 that the professors con¬cluded that there had been no fraud. Theprofessors defined their motives in theintroductory statement of the report ason examination of the charges of fraudand the evidence presented in support ofthose charges. In a press conference lastFriday, Herman Finer, one of the profes¬sors who worked on the report, statedthat their most important finding wasthat the people who had charged fraudhad offered no "hard” evidence to backup those charges.There was never any pretense at a studyof the fraud itself; only a study of howthe press treated the fraud charges.Second, after misinterpreting the pur¬ pose of the report, no paper printed thereport in full, and only one printed anyexcerpts from the report (The Daily News—and there is something to be said forthe News because the paper printed onlyparts of the report pertaining to it). Con¬sequently, all that the public knows of thereport is what the four metropolitan pa¬pers have chosen to say, and what hasbeen said has been untrue or not enough.Tony Weitzel, columnist for the DailyNews, attacked the delay of the report;Charles Cleveland, political columnist andreporter for the News, called the reportpremature last Saturday on "At Random.”Cleveland’s argument was that the pro¬fessors should have waited for the resultsof the February hearings and recount.However, as C. Herman Pritchett andJerome G. Kerwin, the other two profes¬sors who worked on the report, pointedout, the results of any hearings or anyrecount would not alter the fact that thecharges of fraud went unsubstantiatedby the press and by the Republican of¬ficials who made them. The misrepresen¬tation of allegations as facts by the news¬papers is now history.Nor have Republican officials abstainedfrom criticism. They have referred to theprofessor as "Mayor Daley’s three blindmice” and as theorists who never descendfrom their ivory tower to the real worldof fact. They have called the report a"Democratic attempt to sweep this mess(the fraud) under the rug,” "a silly pre¬tense at scholarship,” and an effort to"whitewash” the Democratic party. Mrs.C. Wayland Brooks, Republican commit-teewoman from Illinois, said there wasmore evidence of vote fraud, and invitedthe professors to come down and see “justhow 'baseless1 our charges are.”The entire report is devoted to analyses of newspaper clippings, some of whichwere procurred from Mayor Daley’s pressagent Earl Bush, who, Finer explained,kept a collection of the political articlesin a file. Aside from recommending thata report be made to Daley, according toFiner, the professors made no other con¬tact with the Mayor’s office. And the re¬port never quotes Daley himself, nor anyother Democratic official. It simply ana¬lyzes press treatment of the charges.Nothing could be so untrue as the Re¬publican charge that this was an “worytower” investigation naive of facts andreality. As Kerwin pointed out, the UCpolitical science department has been staf¬fed by men active in politics since thetime of Charles Merriam, who himselfran for Mayor of Chicago.It was Merriam’s theory that politicalscience professors should participate inpractical politics, and Merriam was at UCat the time Kerwin came to the Univer¬sity.In addition to attacking the report andthe method used to reach the conclusionRepublicans and members of the pressrationalized that the only reason therewere so few indictments for fraud (twoin December, none in January) was thatthere was insufficient evidence to provethat buying of votes and conspiracy todeprive someone of his vote had occurred.Charles Cleveland, on "At Random”offered this explanation. There was, heinsisted, fraud, but not enough evidenceto prove it in court.But in our system of legal justice, aman is innocent until proven guilty; it islikewise with the Democratic party ofChicago. The press and the Republicansquoted in the press failed to realize this,and thus, could not avoid misleading theirreaders into thinking that widespread cor¬ ruption had accounted for Kennedy’s vi<story, when no evidence supported thi*charge.The biggest failing of the press, I.„wever, was that it refused to refrain fromeditorializing in the news. Obviously noone can prevent a publisher from havingand expressing his opinion; and the factthat all papers in this city represent onlythe Republican point of view on nationalissues is undesirable, but hardly Impro-per or illegal. This is as it should bo jfwe are to uphold the standards of freedomof the press.But where such a monopoly of opinionexists, it is even more important that suchopinion be separated from the news andthus confined to the editorial page.We do not fully agree with Finer’sanalogy of this situation with the Russiansystem of press censorship. Governmentcensorship is one thing; private discretionanother. But we cannot condone the in.discriminate use by a private fortune olpublic power. Newspapers must infoimtheir readers—not misinform them in anon-partisan fashion, The press had noright to mislead its readers as it. did inth case of the fraud charges, and in thecase of the professors’ report.The biggest failing of the Republicanparty was that it took a very serious riskin trying, with the aid of the press, tocreate such an atmosphere of uncertaintythat the Illinois electors would change to 1Nixon, and that the election would go tothe House of Representatives.As Kerwin said, it is dangerous in thesetimes to be without a president for evena few days, and this the Republicans werewilling to risk. We do not think the endof overturning the election justified theirmeans.the Chicago maroon Sun-Times shouldfmmnded — 1992Issued'every Friday throughout the University ol Chicago school year and Intermittently during the summer quarter,by students ol the University of Chicago. Inquiries ehould be sent to the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 K. 59thStreet. Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions, 3285 and 3288. Distributed without charge on campus.Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, 4 pm.Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 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.Student run FM station desirableIt is almost a year since dean of students JohnP. Netherton reversed his decision allowing cam¬pus radio station WUCB to apply for a permitto construct an FM radio station. But it is onlywithin the past week that it has become definitethat there will not be FM radio station on campusin the near future. For it is only recently thatNetherton has dropped his plan for a administra¬tion run station.The reason that Netherton dropped his plans isa simple one: he was able to find no supportlor it from the administration. This of course isIn addition to loud opposition to the idea fromWUCB personnel.Yet Netherton still refuses to give up his proj¬ect, and has announced his intention to bring itup once again before the semi-annual Lakesideconference of the chancellor’s staff this spring.We cannot understand why Netherton is still firmin his desire for University-run FM, still less canwe condone his refusal to reconsider WUCB-FM.An administration-controlled FM station is ob¬viously not wanted by either the administration©r the student body, an opinion with which we‘Where there’s heartily concur. On the other hand, there is adefinite need for a good FM station in the HydePark area. That ‘culture’ is a needed commodity inthis community has been proved many times: bythe more than twenty thousand people who at¬tended last summer’s Court theatre productionsof classical drama in Hutchinson commons, bythe large attendance at the Hyde Park theatre’s‘art’ films, by the overflow crowds at frequentconcerts at UC.But nobody, least of all the UC administration,seems willing to undertake the tremendous amountof work necessary to operate a good radio station.Nobody, that is, except the students. And it isprecisely this group that dean Netherton has bar¬red from running the station.It seems, temporarily at least, that UC studentswill not be operating an FM radio station. Butin his letter to the Federal Communications com¬mission, dean Netherton left open the possibilitythat another permit may be applied for.It is, therefore, not too late for the dean toreconsider. We hope that he does.smoke.. leave ivory towerWhile we are reluctant to de¬vote a great deal of space onthese pages to the Chicago news¬papers, we don’t feel we can ig¬nore the Chicago Sun Times’ re¬cent editorial which condemnsthe "sympathy” picketing of Bala-ban and Katz (B&K) theaters.The main point of the edi¬torial is that, since B&K the¬aters have never followed segre¬gationist policies, it is unfair topicket them. We feel the Sun-Times’ position is not based ona realistic consideration of thefacts.It is a fact that B&K is a sub-sidiaiy of ABC-Paramount, a na¬tionwide theater chain whosesouthern theaters practice segre¬gation. It is a fact that isolatedsouthern protests against segre¬gated theaters have not changedthe policies of those theaters. And it is a fact tht the Wool-worth’s and Kresge’s chain storesannounced a change in theirsouthern segregated luneh-eoun-ter policy only after they hadbeen subject to northern boy¬cotts and pickets.We can only conclude that iheeditorial writers of the Sun-'Pimes have removed themselvesfrom reality. While we feel it ismost fortunate that Amerieancitizens must make use of pub¬lic opinion and economic pres¬sure to secure basic liberties, weare aware that this indeed is afact.We urge those responsible forthe opinions of the Sun-Times toleave their "ivory towers” andbecome acquainted with the un¬fortunate realities of 20th cen¬tury America.- '>Acting editor-in-chiefKen PierceBusiness managerWe wonder just how humorousthis week’s "fire drill” in the Ad¬ministration building really was.Most of the building’s 200 in¬habitants remained lively andcheerful as campus and city police¬men ordered them to leave theirdesks and evacuate the building.Whether this attitude stemmedfrom a sense of the Ad-building’sInherent invulnerability, orwhether those concerned remem¬bered their elementary schooltraining and "remained calm,” itIs of course fortunate that theevacuation proceeded in an order¬ly fashion. After observing the■‘drill,” we also think it quitefortunate that there was no realseed to get out of the building.Police arrived at 2:50 pm to in¬vestigate an anonymous reportthat a bomb was planted some¬where in the building. The evae-« • CHICACO MA uation was completed by 3:10.The bomb was supposed to haveexploded at 3:00. Thus, at least50 people would have been caughtinside, had there been a bomb.One of the reasons for thetardiness of the evacuation wasthe fact that police didn’t receivethe warning phone call until 2:40pm. However, we feel thatWednesday’s false alarm exposedthe alarming absence of thoughtthat has been given to meetingemergencies of this nature. Forexample, persons leaving thebuilding were considerablyslowed because no one thoughtto unlock two of the exits fromthe building. While we have neverreally understood why thesedoors are normally locked, es¬pecially since nearly everyonewho enters or leaves the Al-build-ing attempts to use one of them,R O O N • Feb. 17f 1961 the doors certainly should be un¬locked in emergencies — evenfictitious ones. It is also possiblethat congestion would have de¬veloped even if all the doors hadbeen in use, due to their narrowapertures and awkward mannerof opening and closing.While these who left the build¬ing may have had a difficult time,many persons remained insidethroughout the drill. Apparently,police didn’t reach everyone onthe third and sixth floors, andno one else was responsible forinspecting these floors.In the light of these events, wefeel that some thought shouldbe given to the problem of evacu¬ating campus buildings. Some¬one should have the responsibilityfor unlocking doors and warningpeople. We think that in a veryreal sense the University owesa debt to Wednesday’s prankster. William G BauerEditor emeritus ....Production editor . . .News editorFeature editorEditorial secretary ..National news editor ....Culture editorSport* editorCopy editorResearch editorCollege editorsCalendar editor .Photography coordinator .Circulation manager . . ..Business office manager .Classified managerSubscription manager . ..Advertising representative Neal JohnstonAvima RuderJay GreenbergFaye WellsCaryle GeierGene VinogrodoffDotty Sharpies*Chuck BernsteinJohn JuskevictCo role QuinnHarry Adler, Judy Shapiro...... Donna BerfrAl Berger.... Note Swift. Joan HelmkklMaurice Zeitlto,.... Phil Hydl. #. .Perry Fin*Editorial staff: Phil Altbach, Mary Cloire Beck, Bert Cohler, Debby D'n'ttjRoger Downey, Gory Feldman, Gory Greenberg, Art MacEwan, AprSchwartz, Mike Shakman,Assistant editorial staff: Michael Botes, Doreen Blank, Linda Blondis,Brozgold, Bill Comerford, Alix Cromelin, J. R. Greenberg, Laura GwIsky, Marian Jolles, Ruth Katz, Richard Mandel, Doug McCuMouflJvStephanie Mora, Sandy Nelson, Jane Orr, D. V. Roe, Rona Rosenb on*Warren Sanderson, Vicky Shiefmon, Irene Sidor, John Steed,Takafuji, Mike Trump, Mark Weinberger,——LettersIRP states position on mergerIn your news story of last weekconcerning the ISL-IRP-PRO mer¬ger negotiations, you correctly re¬ported that IRP submitted a setof demands which defined theterms under \vhi9h they would ac¬cept a merger, and that amongthese demands was one which re¬quired the new party to take theinitials IRP. At this last condi¬tion negotiations foundered andlater collapsed. The story did not,however, attempt an explanationof the events occurring at themeeting and made no effort to ex¬plain why IRP’s delegates Insist¬ed so strongly on these provi¬sions. We feel that such an ex¬planation should be given.The requirement as to the namewas one of seven advanced byIRP. It was also the sole demandthat was not met by the othertwo parties. The fact that our op¬posites In ISL and PRO were ableto concede the following pointsgives some Insight into their ap¬proach to-the merger. Thosepoints were:1> IRP will not run on a platformsponsoring bi-cameral legisla¬ture.2> Representation by residencemust be the central plank.3> ISL must admit that IRP’scriticism of SG’s past and pres¬ent actions are valid and pub¬lish a letter to that effect.4> IRP would not give up its can¬didates in the law school.5» The party must not have adoctrinaire political bend to it.(This is one of the main prob¬lems of the present govern¬ment. IRP refused to concedethat any self-righteous doctri¬nal system applies to studentgovernment.)6» The party platform must sup¬port humor. (Stodginess andmoralizing, integral parts oft h e present student govern¬ment, have no place in such aweak structure.7' IRP will not change the ini¬tials of its name.It should be noted that PRO, whose central plank Is a bi-cam¬eral legislature, conceded thispoint “after only fifteen minutesof negotiations.”IRP refused to accept the mer¬ger except under our own namefor the following reasons:1) A large number of IRP’s fol¬lowers felt that PRO was merelyanother POLIT with a differentpolitical orientation. Statementsfrom PRO leaders like “We wantto form a conservative jpoalition,”“We don’t want our governmenttalking about Red China,” and“Bi-cameral legislature is just amodel, so that when students getout of school they will be able tostep into politics and understandthe system, which is not like un¬workable European govern¬ments,” put us on our guard. Theother two parties were unable tounderstand that IRP is not op¬posed to POLIT because it is lib-ral, but because it is doctrinaire,self-righteous, frequently of¬ficious, and runs a poor and un¬representative Student Govern¬ment.2) A large section of IRP.among which was Miss Heyman, threatened to leave the party ifthe merger went through.3) IRP did not wish to take re¬sponsibility for the political im¬pression on campus which PROhad made, i.e.; that of a rightwing group. We felt that in doingso we would be selling out thereasons for which the party wasformed.4) IRP did not wish to have itsname appear with ISL since wehad consistently attacked thisgroup for three years.It became evident as negotia¬tions progressed that PRO andISL had no real ideas, and wereattacking POLIT for theoreticaland personal reasons. These con¬siderations have been and are ofsecondary importance to IRP, andtherefore any merger was impos¬sible except under the proposedterms.Elliot Lilien, ExecutiveSecretary of IRPSidney Weissman,Marjory Heymen,Louise HoehlCommittee on NewMembersPRO pledges actionIn keeping with the last willand testament of one of our lateparents, ISL, we who becamePRO-ISL will, at our caucus thiscoming Sunday in Ida Noyes for¬mally change our name to thePractical Reform Party or PRO.Thus the name ISL will vanishforever from future ballots to bereserved for that dedicated groupwhich over a decade ago foundedStudent government on this cam¬pus.That a re-organization of thatgovernment is now necessarydoes not detract from what ISLaccomplished.That Student government is nolonger effective or responsible isnot ISL’s fault. It is the fault of those selfish few who to preservetheir own personal power in gov¬ernment. prostituted the principleof ISL. Not satisfied with corrupt¬ing ISL they abandoned her indistress and as rats a sinkingship, left her to die a pauper’sdeath a few weeks later.We pledge ourselves to the taskof bringing responsible self-gov¬ernment back to camous — won’tyou help us? Join PRO this Sun¬day.Willard Ayres,President of PROTyler Haynes,Caucus ChairmanDiantha McJilton,Membership ChairmanO-board corrects MaroonThere are two significant pointswhich we on the Orientationboard feel should have been in¬cluded in last week’s Maroon arti¬cle. They are the following:First, the dean of students isplanning a radical reorganizationand reduction of Orientationweek in which the major activi¬ties will be test-taking and phys-.ieal orientation, to be followed asrapidly as possible by registra¬tion and the beginning of classes.The Orientation board, as agroup, was offered no part in thisweek, although we were assuredthat some few of us. as individ¬uals, would be asked to partici¬pate in the execution of the week.Second, the dean is planning toconduct an “Orientation course”during the fall quarter, whichwill takd the form of required-atendance meetiags once everyweek or two for the members ofthe entering class. This programis to be planned and organized bya committee of deans, includingLean Simpson, Dean Wick, DeanPlaye, and Dean Mary Alice New¬ man. The Orientation board wasasked to carry out certain func¬tions designated by the dean ofstudents’ office; these included:offering incidental suggestionsas to the most effective organiza¬tion of individual meetings; andplanning, according to Mrs. New¬man, “as many as three” indi¬vidual meetings, provided thatthese meetings fit into the gen¬eral scheme of the orientationprograms laid down by the com¬mittee of deans.Having been offered this pro¬ gram on a take-it-or-leave-it basis,the Orientation board felt as awhole that it could only leave it.However, individual memberswere given the opportunity to ex¬press their willingness to help thedean of students’ office in thisnew program, and this individualaffiliation was the issue put tothe vote described in last week’sMaroon.Yours truly,Karl Bemesderfer,Chairman, 1960-61ISL dissolves itselfWe, the undersigned being dulyrecognized members of ISL andconstituting both a legal quorumand majority of the party dohereby declare the IndependentStudent League of the Universityof Chicago dissolved. Further¬more, we repudiate the sectionsof the ISL caucus of Sunday,SC vacanciesStudents who wish to apply to fill vacant seats in the SGassembly will be interviewed by the executive council of SGon Monday afternoon in room 214 of Ida Noyes hall at 4 p.m.There are now vacancies in representation from the graduatedivisions of biological science, humanities, and social sciencesand from the graduate professional schools of business and law.Students from other graduate academic units and under¬graduate students are also invited to apply. Exceptions may bemade to general policy and vacancies may occur in differentacademic units. There are also many positions in SG which canbe filled by non-Assembly members.SG’s general policy is to maintain a balance of representationas elected last spring: 18 seats from the college and 33 seatsdivided among the graduate schools and divisiqns in propor¬tion to registrationStudents who applied to fill vacancies last quarter are advisedthat their applications are no longer ^alid. February 5th, merging ISL withPRO, as having been done in theabsence of a legally constitutedquorum.In addition it is our wish thatthe existing funds of ISL ($20.52)be donated to the University ofChicago Committee To Aid Fay¬ette County.We take the action of dissolu¬tion because we feel that the lossof certain vital elements in theparty make it impractical forISL to continue as a viable stu¬dent political party on this campus.Harry Adler*Jay BakerBert CohlerDorothy Dor#Fran FroelichBob HauserSherwin KaplanDavid NelsonCail ParadiseHoward RosenfieldBarry SchlessingerVivian ScottBill ShewLenore SteinFrank Weingarten Ok Craps withAfexShnJman(Author of “/ Was a Teen-age Dwarf”, uThe ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)"I’VE GOT NEWS FOR YOU”I know all of you have important things to do in the morning-like getting down to breakfast before your roommate eats allthe marmalade—so you really cannot be blamed for not keepingup with all the news in the morning papers. In today’s column,therefore, I have prepared a run-up of news highlights fromcampuses the country over.SOUTHERN RESERVE UNIVERSITYDr. Willard Hale Sigafoos, head of the department of anthro¬pology at Southern Reserve University, and internationallyknown as an authority on primitive peoples, returned yesterdayfrom a four-year scientific expedition to the headwaters of theAmazon River. Among the many interesting mementos of hi*journey is his own head, shrunk to the size of a kumquat. Herefused to reveal how his head shrinking was accomplished.“That’s for me to know and you to find out,” he said with atiny, but saucy grin.NORTHERN RESERVE UNIVERSITYDr. Mandrill Gibbon, head of the department of zoology atNorthern Reserve University, and known to young and old forhis work on primates, announced yesterday that he had re¬ceived a grant of $80,000,000 for a twelve-year study to deter¬mine precisely how much fun there is in a barrel of monkeys.Whatever the results of Dr. Gibbon’s researches, this muchis already known: What’s more fun than a barrel of monkeys is&&£/’mine ftcctify hw lawkfften? •a pack of Marlboro. There is zest and cheer in every puff,delight in every draw, content and well-being in every fleecy,flavorful cloudlet. And what’s more, this merriest of cigarettescomes to you both in soft pack and flip-top box wherever cig¬arettes are sold at prices that do no violence to the slimmest ofpurses. So why don’t you settle back soon and enjoy Marlboro,the filtered cigarette with the unfiltered taste.EASTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITYThe annual meeting of the American Philological Institute,held last week at Eastern Reserve University, was enlivenedby the reading of two divergent monographs concerning theorigins of early Gothic “runes,” as letters of primitive alphabet*are called. \Dr. Tristram l.athrop Spleen, famed far and wide as the dis¬coverer of the High German Consonant Shift, read a paper inwhich he traced the origins of the Old Wendish rune “pt”(pronounced “krahtz”) to the middle Lettic rune “gr” (pro¬nounced “albert”). On the other hand, Dr Richard Cummer¬bund Twonkey, who, as the whole world knows, translated“The Pajama Game” into Middle High Bactrian, contendedin his paper that the Old Wendish rune “pt” derives from thoLow Erse rune “mf” (pronounced “gr”).Well, sir the discussion grew so heated that Dr. Twonkeyfinally asked Dr. Spleen if he would like to step into the gym¬nasium and put on the gloves. Dr. Spleen accepted the chal¬lenge promptly, but the contest was never held Decause therewere no gloves in the gymnasium that would fit Dr. Twonkey.(The reader is doubtless finding this hard to believe asEastern Reserve University is celebrated the length and breadthof the land for the size of its glove collection. However, thereader is asked to remember that Dr. Twonkey has extraor¬dinarily small hands and arms. In fact, he spent the lastwar working in a small-arms plant, where he received twoNavy “E” Awards and was widely hailed as a “manly littlechap.”)New from the makers of Marlboro is the king-size unfilteredPhilip Morris Commander—made in a brand-new icay for mbrand-new experience in smoking pleasure. Get aboard.IUC professors state purpose of reportA!- /our Mercury record dealer nowSEVERAL MILLION AMERICANSHAVE FOUND "ADULTERY”MOST ENTERTAININGWhich is your favorite selectionfrom the new Nichols and Maycomedy Smash record'. . AnEvening With Mike Nichols andElaine Mayr .TELEPHONEifc ADULTERY5ft DISC JOCKEYJfC MOTHER AND SONI Wear Contact LensesDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristU32 E. 55th St.ot University Ave. HY 3-8372Get these twelve great original recordings—in one12" LP album—for and ten empty Lucky Strike packs!All die professors agreed thatthe press misunderstood the pur¬pose of the report C. HermanPritchett said, “They (the press)did not understand what we weredoing:; we were attacked for some¬thing; we didn’t do."We studied the press treat¬ment of the election count. Ourconclusion was that the press ac¬count was misleading and theytried to build an image of fraud,thievery in the election which wasnot supported by facts in thenewspapers.”Jerome Kecwin added, "Thepress made itself a part in theaccusations. They were as muchplainants in the case as the Re¬publican party. Therefore, thepress was obliged to provide proofof the accusations. The press didnot do so. That was what thisreport was designed to show.”He continued that paper ballotcounting was tiring, complicated,and confusing and highly subjectto human error."What the Republicans in Illi¬nois were aiming for was to createenough uncertainty to keep theIllinois electors from going toKennedy, thus throwing the elec¬tion into the House of Represen¬tatives. Then the Republicansfrom the land of Lincoln wouldcombine with the southern demo¬crat segregationists and elect acompromise candidate,” continuedrlt»*e^a1NCustom-pressed by Columbia for Lucky Strike—an album of un forgettable 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,Sp r i n g Pa rk, Min nesota.REMEMBER HOW GREAT CIGARETTESUSED TO TASTE? LUCKIES STILL DOOT HE AMERICAN TOBACCO CO. Remove cellophane—openpacks top and bottom—ia-move inner toil wrap—tearpacks down side, flatten,and mail with SI.00 aadaiuppini label. To get "Remember How Great” album, enclose and mail $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. Iflending check or money order, make payable to "Remember How Great.”SHIPPING LABEL"Remember How Great”P. O. Box 3600Spring Park, MinnesotaTOYOUR NAME(PRINT YOUR NAME HERE)STREET.CITY .ZONE. r.STATE.Ofler good only In U S A and Puerto Picocorcungsrial reorig1Thes VTE**lector* COLUK*? Kerwin."But wo cannot risk not havinga president for even three days,”he said, "and the Republicans tooka grave risk in trying to buildsuch an image of fraud.”In response to charges that thereport was premature, Pritchettsaid that “It would probably havebeen better if it had come outsooner, since it refers to clipswhich were in the paper betweenNovember and December 8. But no recount will change the factthat the press coverage was mis¬leading and that the people weremisinformed.”Equally important to Finer wasthe fact that "No paper hasprinted the report in full. Ratherthey have garbled it, misinter¬preted it, and missed the pointof the report without airing thereport to the public.” (The DailyNews printed some excerpts frotiithe report last Thursday).(Continued from page 3)examination of over 1,000 clip¬pings from the Chicago newspa¬pers; the allegations, how the alle¬gations were supported, the rela¬tion of the story to the headline,and then to the editorials.”At a press conference last Fri¬day. Finer stated that the mostimportant finding was; “Peoplewho charged fraud turned up noevidence of fraud. The evidencethey did offer was extremely ten¬tative and flimsy.”On “At Random” Finer ex¬plained the reason the professorsdid not speak to Republicans. “Wethought they had amply expressedthemselves in the press; had theywanted to say more they wouldhave. No one who wanted to over¬turn the election would have keptgood hard evidence up his sleeve.” Finer, explaining the over¬whelming expense of investigat¬ing the irregularities and fraudand the professors’ inability toconduct such an investigation,said, “What we could do is to lookat the allegations and see if theallegations contain hard evi¬dence. The allegations carried inthe press regarding the past elec¬tions contain no hard evidence.Even the one incident cited overand over again is not very tell¬ing because of the unusual cir¬cumstances there.”Finer accused the Chicago pa¬pers of misleading and misinform¬ing their readers as we attack theRussians for doing. "In our pa¬pers only one pattern of societyis represented. The press has thelast word, and there is no one torefute the press.”9uui!iMiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiMiimiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiHimmiiiiiiiiiiimitiiMiiiimimmmmmiinim^■ ■ - rr > -i tr ii i iaR0 Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood iTWSfiflAL #UT UNUSUAL FOOD |DELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICES IESBMNimiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitHiiimmiiiiHitimiiiiiiiititiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiittiiiiiiiiiimiF UC students discuss1 f:HUAC opposition(Continued from page 1)Arthur MacEw&n, chairmanof UC Students for Civil Liber-ties, speaking after the showing,stated that "the real purpose ofthe movie is to attempt to justifythe actions of the committee.” Itcan only do this, he continued,"through the big lie technique.”MarKwan noted that the movie"doesn’t show the real brutalityof the police, the clubbings,” butrearranges the sequence of eventsto give an erroneous impressionof student violence.The discussion began with anopening statement by Leonard Friedman of the UC Students for :Civil liberties. Friedman made ihefollowing points:1) "Abolition of the committee”is the only answer to HUAC.2) "The committee is unconsti- Ttutional.” Its mandate is very »Vvague and its function of "ex-posure for exposure sake” is not 1a legal function of a congressionalcommittee. p3) The committee "doesn't dis- *,tinguish between an idea • un-V.favorable to it) and the person /holding the idea.” %4) The structure of the commit :tec leaves it no area to legitimate ’action. Mm5) It has served as an agent jSf.of intimidation. Its actions assume^the witness guilty until proveninnocent. Jgp(>) The committee Is able to racause “economic and social sattions" to be taken against “icooperative” witnesses. Jp7) “It creates a climate of fear -pof any opinion that diviates fromthe orthodox, and, even worse, fz'from what the committee thinks Jis orthodox.” p8) “It acts as a court, as theFBI. as every branch of go\ iment . . . there is no defense’vpagainst the committee.” JtfV/> JComing events on quadranglesFriday, 17 FebruaryMarins with sermon. 11:30 sm. Bondriinpel. Dick Lm, Divinity School stu¬dent. preaches. _lecture series: "Cardiovascular and Pul¬monary Physiology," 5 pm. Pathology117 "Limiting factors In the rate of*lr' flow in the lungs,” Dr. WallaceO Penn, professor of physiology. Uni¬versity of Rochester Medical center.Motion picture. 7:30 and 9:30 pm. So¬cial Science 122, "The Spanish Earth."presented by POLIT. Admission: 50cen ts.Lenten Vespers, 7:30 pm. Bond chapel.Arthur Dlers, Divinity school Ph D.candidate In Christian theology,preaches on Blessed ore those whoMourn. _ . _Sabbath services, 7:45 pm, Hillel foun¬dation.Motion picture, 8 and 10 pm, Burton-Judson courts, "Gervalse.”History of Religions club, 8 pm, IdaNoves library, "The role of Islam inthe modern world,” by Hassan Abdal¬lah, Arab Information center.Fireside conversation, 8:30 pm, Hillelfoundation. "What Is American Jew¬ish culture?” Abraham G. Duker, pro¬fessor of social studies and presidentof the College of Jewish Studies, Chi-Social dancing, 9 pm. Ida Noyes. 90cents for students and $1 for others. QoMotf Christian fellowship, 5:30 pm,Thorndike Hilton chapel, commonworship service.Baptist Sunday Seminar Supper meet¬ings (the Baptist graduate studentcenter at the University), 5:30 pm,4901 South Ellis avenue, buffet sup¬per; 0:15 pm, speaker and discussion,"The Bible and our standard ofauthority,” Charles Long, Instructor,divinity school.Sunday Evening Supper-Discussionmeetings (The Episcopal Church atthe University), 5:30 pm, 5540 SouthWoodlawn avenue, buffet supper; 6:30pm, speaker and discussion, "TheChurch: its authority and tradition,”Reverend Robert M. Grant, associateprofessor, divinity school.United Christian fellowship, 6 pm.Chapel house, buffet supper, 50 cents.Lecture series: The American Experi¬ment: Success and Challenge, 8 pm,Hillel foundation. “Democracy andaristocracy — Jefferson and Adams."Marvin Meyers, associate professor ofthe social sciences in the College anddepartment of history.Outing club, Ida Noyes, folk dancing.Radio series: The Sacred Note, 8:15 pm,WBBM. A program of choral music bythe University choir, Richard Vik-strom, director of chapel music, con¬ducting.Saturday, 18 February Monday, 20 Februaryttuadranguler Wrestling meet, 10 amand 2 pm, Bartlett gyymn&sium. Chi¬cago vs. DePauw, University of 1111-nols-Chlcago, and Knox.Recorder society, 1 pm, Ida Noyes, in¬struction followed by Informal groupplaying.Varsity Fencing meet, 1:30 pm, Bartlettgymnasium. Chicago vs. Indiana uni¬versity and the University of Wiscon¬sin.Social dancing, 9 pm. Internationalhouse, orchestra, Thai combo. Spon¬sored by the International House asso¬ciation Men $1, women 75 cents.Sunday, 19 February Conference on Conflict of Interest (lawschool), 10:30 am, Law School audi¬torium, morning session, "Conflict ofInterest in Congress,” Joseph L. Rauh,Rauh and Levy, Washington, D.C.;'Conflict of interest in law firms,"Carl McGowan, Ross. McGowan andO'Keefe. Chicago. 2:30 pm. afternoonsession, "Conflict of Interest in cor¬porations,.” Stanley A. Kaplan, pro¬fessor, law school; "Conflict of inter¬est in the executive branch,” RoswellB. Perkins, Debevoise, Plimpton andMcLean, New York. 7:30 pm, eveningsession, “Some comments on the as¬sumptions underlying the conflict ofInterest concept.” Prank H. Knight,Morton D. Hull Distinguished Service Professor emeritus of the social sci¬ences and philosophy; “Conflict ofinterest and public service,” Thur¬man Arnold, Arnold, Fortas, and Por¬ter, Washington.Elementary Yiddish, 3:30 pm, Hillelfoundation.Lecture (department of history), 4:30pm, Social Science 122, "Marriage inSixteenth and Seventeenth centuryEngland,” Lawrence Stone, lecturer,Wadham college. Oxford.Films on India's Villages (Indian civil¬ization course), 7 pm, Rosenwald 2,"Fifty miles from Poona,” and "NorthIndia Village.”Motion picture, 7 and 9 pm. Interna¬tional house, "New Faces” (USA).Tuesday, 21 FebruaryLntheran Communion service, 11:30 am,Bond chapel.Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 12noon, Ida Noyes, Bible study.Varsity Swimming meet, 3:30 pm. Bart¬lett gymnasuim, Chicago vs. Univer¬sity of Ulinols-Chicago.Lecture (microbiology club), 4 pm,Ricketts North 1, "Physiological con¬trol mechanisms in the bacterial cell,”Herman C. Llchsteln. professor, de¬partment of bacteriology. Universityof Minnesota Medical school.Colloquium (Institute for the study ofmetals), 4:15 pm, Research Institutes211, "A neutron diffraction study ofshort-rahge order in B brass,” Christo¬pher B. Walker, associate professor,department of physics.Hug Ivri and Advanced Hebrew, 4:30pm, Hillel foundation.First Annual Anton J. Carlson Memo¬rial lecture (department of physi¬ology), 5 pm. Billings hospital P-117,“In search of new biological dimen¬sions,” Dr. Albert Szent-Gyorgyik lab¬oratory of the Institute for muscle re¬search at the Marine Biological lab¬oratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts.Glee club, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes, Eastlounge, rehearsal.Dames club, 8 pm, 5306 South Black-stone avenue, strictly bridge, for In¬formation call Barbara Blake, MI3-9083. Lecture (department of art), 8 pm, So¬cial Science 122, "The sociology of theEnglish country house,” LawrenceStone, lecturer at Wadham college,Oxford.Wednesday, 22 FebruaryDivinity School Worship' service, 11:30am. Bond chapel, Reverend GeorgeTlttmann, rector, the Church of theHoly Spirit, Lake Forest, Illinois.Lecture series (graduate school of busi¬ness), 1:30 pm, Breasted hall, Cor¬win D. Edwards, professor, graduateschool of business.Meeting of the Faculty of the Divisionof the Biological Sciences, 4:30 pm,Billings hospital P-117Carillon recital. 5 pm. Rockefeller Me¬morial chapel, Daniel Robins, Uni¬versity carillonneur.Symphony orchestra, 7:30 pm, Reynolds.club. South lounge, rehearsal.Lecture (graduate library school club),8 pm, Ida Noyes library, "Educationfor librarianship In Greece.” LeonCarnovsky, professor, graduate libraryschool.Israeli Folk dancing, 8 pm, Hillel foun¬dation.Country dancing. 8 pm, Ida Noyes, be¬ginners welcome. Science Firlion club, 8 pm, Ida Noyes,talk by Lewis Grant on the politicsof the future, no admission charge.Thursday, 23 FebruaryF.piscopal Communion service, 11:30 pm,Bond chapel.Elementary and Intermediate Hebrew,3:15 and 4:15 pm, Hillel foundation.Track meet. 4 pm. Field house. Chicagofrosh-soph vs. Wright Junior college.Seminar (department of statistics),4 pm. Eckhart 206, "Problems of selec¬tion,” E. L. Lehmann, professor ofstatistics, University of California.Lecture (zoology club), 4:30 pm, Zoology14, "Population ecology of periodicalcicadas," Henry Dybas, associate cura¬tor of insects, Chicago Natural His¬tory museum.Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30pm, Ida Noyes, "I am the Resurrec¬tion and the life,” a Bible study.Dames club, 8 pm, 2205 East 67th street,sewing. Phyllis Freehauf, MI 3-1530.Poetry reading (the College and thedivision of the humanities), 8:15 pm.Social Science 122, Pierre Viala, actor,French poetry reading and Interpreta¬tion.Java, jazzThe Shorey house coffeehour, Coffee Plus, will be ini¬tiated next Monday, February20, from 9-11 pm. The plusrefers to musical entertainment,folk, jazz, and baroque.One type of music will be fea¬tured at each coffee hour and themusic will be live as often as pos¬sible.The first coffee hour will pre- at Shorey.sent some of all three: folk musicperformed by John Aaron, MikeMichaels, and Dave Galileesha, arecord featuring Sonny Rollinsand Tholonious Monk, and a rarerecording of Vivaldi’s Four Sea¬sons.Refreshments will be coffeeand cookies (home-baked). Fu¬ture coffee hours will have moreesoteric edibles, such as that raredelight, the blintz.Radio Tories: Faith of our Fathers, 8 30am, WGN. Reverend W. Barnett Blake-more. dean. Disciples Divinity house,associate dean. Rockefeller Memorialchapel.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, and11 am. DeSales house.Morning of Recollection for CatholicMen students, 9 30 am, Woodlawnresidence, 5544 South Woodlawn ave¬nue. starts with mass at 9:30 am. twoconferences, ends with benedictionat 12:45 pm.Lutheran Religious services, 9 am. Gra¬ham Taylor chapel. Matins with dia¬logue sermon, 10 am, Communionservice.Episcopal Communion service, 9:30 am.Bond chapel.Fmversity Religious service, 11 am.Rockefeller Memorial chapel. Rover-end Nathan A. Scott, Jr., associateprofessor, Divinity school.Lenten concert, 3 pm, Rockefeller Me¬morial chapel. Richard Vlkstrom willconduct the Rockefeller Chapel choirand members of the Chicago Sym¬phony orchestra, works by Palestrina,Holst, and Brahms.lecture, 4 pm, Breasted hall. “The CivilWar a Marxist view,” Herbert Ap-theker presented by POLIT, admis¬sion 25 cents.STUDENTS . . .SAVE MONEYONFurniture, Rugs Re¬frigerators, Stoves, TVSets, Hi-Fi's, EleetriealAppliances.\e$r and l*rd atMR.LUCKY’SlS2(i E. «3rd Si.Ml! 1-2577EUROPE.orSOUTH. AMERICAin 1961?We orronge for low-cost oir trovelon regularly scheduled oircroft toEurope and South America. Roundtrip summer season fore from NewYork to Luxembourg, for instance,is only $358.20. We can save you*424.40 on a round trip ticket toBuenos Aires!In connection with the studentflight to London on June 19, weoffer a 38 days' escorted tour of) 0 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 trovel.For full information,write toNr. Arne Brekke1207 E. 60th Street,Chicago 37,* call (days ar evenings)BU 8-6437. THIS YOUNG MAN IS A BUSINESS ANALYSTFOR THE TELEPHONE COMPANYWhen Gene Bernier received his degree in Busi¬ness Administration at the University of Michiganin 1957, he had top offers from several businesses.Gene chose Michigan Bell Telephone Companybecause: “This job was tougher to get. There wasno doubt in my mind that I was being carefullyevaluated for a responsible management job. Justgetting this job was a challenge.”One of Gene’s early assignments was writinga training manual for new employees which wouldexplain telephone accounting in simple everydayterms—a tough job even for a seasoned writer.But Gene did it. And his next step was a natural.In November, 1958, he was transferred to theMichigan Bell Economic Studies Section as editor of a monthly publication, “Michigan BusinessTrends.” In this work, Gene analyzes and reportsbusiness trends in Michigan as an aid to tele¬phone management people in decision making.Gene proved his skill in reducing complex eco¬nomic problems to simple terms. And, sixteenmonths after his transfer he was promoted toSenior Statistician.Today, Gene sums it up this way: “The ideaaround here is to get the best a man has in him.To me that spells opportunity.”If you want a job where you will get'real responsi¬bility and have a chance to move ahead as fast asyour ability will take you—then you’ll want to findout more about the Bell Companies. Your Place¬ment Office has literature and additional information.“Our number one aim is to hare in allmanagement jobs the most vital, intelli¬gent, positive and imaginative men wecan possibly find.’9Frederick R. K appel, PresidentAmerican Telephone & Telegraph Co. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESFeb. 17, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9' AWUCB holds ninth annual marathon—at lastby Laura GodorskyAfter presenting three con¬secutive eighth annual mara¬thons, WUCB will finallypresent its ninth annual mar¬athon next Friday and Saturday.Money and books to help educatenative African students wttl becollected during the marathon's 27hours of continuous programming.The University of London ishelping 13 Negro medical studentsovercome the inferior educationalfacilities South Africa offers them.WUCB would like to give as manynew and second-hand books andas much money as possible to thesestudents. It will contribute throughWorld University Service.Many perform liveIn addition to recorded music,the marathon features live perfor¬mances by many campus groups.This year’s entertainers includethe Blackfriars, who are expectedto do a preview of “Mad Money,”members of UT doing Chekhov’s“The Marriage Proposal.” the gleeclub, the meter readers, a poetrygroup, Bob Appleman’s jazz group,and the collegium musicum.Members of the faculty andadministration will be on hand to speak. A speech to be given to¬morrow by Senator Barry Gold-water will be played.“Ten nights in a bookstore,’”called by its producers, the EastHouse lounge sitters association,a morality plaiy, will be presentedtwice. The play made its debut atthe East House bookstore partyseveral weeks ago.A torch hour, with "soupy poetryto soupy music” will be presentedlate Friday night, said Janet Zlo-tow, WUCB’s candidate for MissUC. There will also be a shortJazz Archives show, with BillPeterman.Hutchins speech firstThe Marathon begin with abroadcast of Hutchin’s farewelladdress. According to Bruce Ver-mazen, station manager, people“get tears in their eyes when hisspeech is read, even if they haven’theard of Hutchins.”The highlight of the marathon,according to Roger Downey, pro¬gram director, will be the perfor¬mance of the Pro Nausea Musica.“The Pro Nausea is an ensemblefounded by Sir Frederic Beach-mann Barf, the famed Britishvituoso who finally left us two years ago to go to Pot,” explainedDowney.Returns to Pot"Pot is Barf's birthplace in theUkraine. As the Ukraine is thebread-basket of Russia, Pot is thebreadbasket of the Ukraine. Potis marijuana in Russian.”Sherwin Kaplan, chief engineer,described the Pro Nausea’s musicas “little known versions of wellknown pieces.”Downey continued, “the ProNausea has existed for years andyears. The idea was stolen byGerald Hoffnung and taken toEngland where it was successful.“Since Sir Frederic’s death, anumber of guest directors havehandled the Pro Nausea, and haveeven been drafted right off theplatform."Old favorites airedThe Chicago Pro Nausea willperform its famous old numbers,which include the Sub-zero sym¬phony by Bruckner, Haydn’s sur¬prise symphony with a “brand newsurprise," Concerto #4 from thewell-corrugated washboard by An¬tonio Vivaldi, and the “immortal”Fire already out Pacific 231 by Honegger.This year, the Pro Nausea ofChicago will be joined by itseastern counterpart, the New YorkPro Nausea. The New York group,explained Downey, uses such an¬cient instruments a.; the rebeck,hoplite, morass, hirschom, and thefabulous troubador sackbud in F.(This instrument was referred toby Coleridge in his lines: "Thewedding guest he beat his breastfor he heard the loud bassoon!]Lauded play returnsThe New York Pro Nausea willreturn the much lauded “Play ofMelvin” to Chicago. The “Play ofMelvin” is a “musical drama writ¬ten by students of the lab schoolof the Cathedral of Beauvais,” ac¬cording to Downey.“The New York Pro Nausea willjoin our home grown Pro Nauseain tracing the history of commer¬cialism in music through the ages.”Vermaen explained why the 1961marathon is ending the tradition ofconsecutive 8th annual marathons.It seems that the first 8th ann¬ual marathon was really the 6thannual marathon, erroneously call¬ ed the 8th annual marathon.Rather than follow the first eighthannual marathon with 7th annualmarathon, WUCB presented the2nd consecutive 8th annual mara¬thon the following year.Last year, the real 8th annualmarathon was presented.Although this year’s marathonhas been referred to as the 4thconsecutive 8th annual marathon,it U the 9th annual marathon.The marathon will conclude witha broadcast of the Chicago-Detroitgame on Saturday night. The ProNausea will appear immediatelyproceeding the game.Broadcast from loungeThe marathon is broadcast fromthe north lounge of the Reynoldsclub. This is WUCB’s only liveaudience show during the year,according to Vermaze.i, who ex¬pects a huge turnout that will di¬minish only between 3 and 5 a m.Kaplan described the marathonas the “big social event *>f WUCB.It gives the whole station achance to see who everybody elseis.”GUITARSBANJOSMANDOLINSTHEFRET SHOP5535 DorchesterMl 3-3459ness in Salem’s smoke is the very essence of springtime. Thismost refreshing cigarette of all is made even more so bySalem’s special High Porosity paper that “air-softens” thesmoke. You’ll be delighted with Salem’s springtime freshness— its rich, tobacco taste. Smoke refreshed . . . smoke Salem! • menthol fresh• rich tobacco taste• modern filter, tooDR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometristin theNew Hyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644Eye Examinations Contact LensesNewest styling in framesStudent DiscountSalem refreshes your taste"air-softens" every puffFiremen rush to save PierceFour pieces of fire equipment, including a hook-and-ladder truck and a pumper, and anestimated 20 firemen arrived at Pierce tower early Monday morning as a result of a fire ona bulletin board which had gone out by itself three hours earlier.The fire, on the seventh floor bulletin board, was reported about 4 am to Pierce securityguard Larry Fahey. Since little —-——damage was done and the fire wait until a more reasonable hour After going off duty, at aboutwas already out, Fahey decided to of the morning to report it. 7 am, Fahey phoned his reportto the campus security sergeantRobert Henry who in turn calledthe fire department to ask forsomeone to come out and inspectthe damage, as required by lawand the insurance company. Ac¬cording to Henry, ihis would havebrought out the chief of the localfire station with his car.Instead, the entire 16th Battal¬ion pulled up, with sirens wailing,lights flashing, and bells ringing.Twenty firemen streamed intothe building, some carrying ten-gallon fire extinguishers. Ac¬cording to one early riser, “theyseemed a little disappointed, andsort of milled around looking forsomething to put out.”Fault of callerAccording to Chief Reimer ofthe 16th Battalion, the overre-sponse was caused by the factthat the caller did not specifythat he wanted only an inspector.Reimer was told by some one atthe scene that the caller told thefire alarm office a fire had oc-cured but had been put out. Ac¬cording to Reimer, this necessi¬tated sending out the entire com¬pany, since the fire departmentrequires that at least two piecesof equipment be sent on a firecall.10 • CHICACO MAROON • Feb. 17, 1961Home study theologyoffered by divinity schoolTwo graduate level coursesin theology have been startedon a correspondence basis bythe home study department ofthe University of Chicago. Theprogram, started in September onan experimental basis seems toworking out very well, accordingto Perry LeFevre, assistant pro¬fessor in the divinity school. Twocourses are being offered in theprogram, one on "Tragedy, comedyand human existence" and one on"Introduction to religious existen¬tialism.” Both courses are intend¬ed mainly for ministers who wantto continue their education andw1k> are interested in modemtrends in theological knowledge. Others who are interested areeligible foe the courses, however.Dean Jerald Brauer of the di¬vinity school stated that "Thesehome study courses and otherswhich will follow are anotherexample of our abiding concernto provide relevant theologicaleducation in the best scholarlytradition.” He emphasized that theUniversity has a tradition of pro¬viding continuing education toministers. Brauer stated that thereis some possibility that these mailcourse will become the basis ofmore correspondence courses intheology. Approval is needed bothfrom the faculty of the divinityschool and from the Administra¬tion for such a move. The courses have been preparedby Perry LeFevre and NathanScott, both on the divinity schoolfaculty. LeFevre said that studentreaction so far has been very good.While the courses are not yetapplicable toward any degree pro¬gram, it is hoped that some pro¬vision will be made for this in thenear future. LeFevre also statedthat the idea of correspondencecourses in theology is a new ideain the United States, although theUniversity of London now offersa Ph.D. degree in theology. Bothteachers stressed the importanceof offering a problem of continu¬ing education for ministers andwere optimistic about the successof the program.Maroon classifiedsFor rentTwo Basement Apartments. $35. Nearcampus. Male student. Must be veryquiet. Call after 8: BU 8-5299.Furnished ApartmentsShoreland Apts. 5135 8. Kenwood. Offersl to 3‘i efficiency units attractivelyappointed Month to month occupancy.$80 and up. Elevator-fireproof bldg.Mgr. on premises.Basement Room Near Campus. Privatebath and entrance. Call: DO 3-3710.Unfurnished Apartment. Entire 2nd fl.of 3 story house. 4 lge. rms., 2 bed¬rooms, fireplace, lge. screen-glass porch,garden, driveway, garage, newly deco¬rated. U of C tenants. Phone: MI 2-7043.PersonalsCreative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.Nothing is more appreciated than a carepackage, except, a visit from the doctor.Roxann: Thank God you recovered yoursenses I’ll be In Chi. on March 10 and11. Deepest Love. — Cyrano.LostA Diploma: Adele J. Hunt, HowardUntv. 1923. Return to University regis¬trar, Information de6k.Orange Ladies’ Wallet in Int. House,Tues. Return to Int. House, Room 304.Reward.1 Large Blue and Gold Anchors.—N.U.r EUROPEUAJl o NEW CarPURCHASE a NEW Car*Rent a lata Model Car 1VOLKSWAGEN SIMCAMERCEDES RENAULTHILLMAN PORSCHEj^wffh Repurchase Plan available!a •. or bring it homo with you.Tb« pleasant, economical way tohovel in Iwope. Ve moke oil or*lodgements for the Plan you prefer.Writo for full dotailsUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge. Mass. Services Wanted6040-2 INGLESIDE AVE. CLEAN COM¬FORTABLE 2 ROOM FURNISHEDUNITS AVAILABLE AT VERY MOD¬ERATE RENTALS. SEE RESIDENTMGR. MRS. TAPIA, OR CALL BU U2757.2 Room Furnished Apartments. NearU. of C., International House. I CRH,and bus. Reasonable. Call: BU e-9424.Chatham Park Village ApartmentsA small town within a Big City. 3 to5 rooms, 1 and 2 bedroom units. $98to $135. Applications Invited from well-qualified prospective tenants who areseeking the usual in apt. accommoda¬tions. now or early spring. PrivatelyPoliced. 63 Fireproof Bldgs., close tocomplete shopping, churches, andschools. 22 min. to Loop by IC; adja¬cent to Unlv. of Chgo., Skyway to Ind.and Mich. Park-Uke terrain, ample streetor garage parkingModel apt., Offices on premises737 E. 83rd PI. TRlangle 4-7400Apt. t« Sublet. Furnished, good loca¬tion. Call R. Hancock. MU 4-0611 (eve¬nings) or see University City Realty Co. Typing. Reas. MI 3-5218.I Will Take Care of your child In myhome. Experienced. Mrs. Rudofski, 8529S. Kimbark, Apt. 2W. HY 3-7443.Sewing, Alterations, Hems. Bu $-0001.Experienced Typist. Theses, research,term papers, and general typing. Ac¬curacy guaranteed. HU 3-3792.Quick TypingProfessional; low rates; dissertations,cc’s, term papers, and mtsc. EditingIf desired. Approval by dlsertatlon of¬fice. BA 1-2166.For sale1984 Studebaker Station Wagon. GallMI 3-3879, evenings. Ride to and from 7300 North and RidgeAve. Monday through Friday coincidingwith working hours, 8 am to 4:30-5:30pm. Call: MUseum 4-6100, extension 5432.Help wantedDemonstrator for Cosmetics. Foreignexchange student. English speaking pre¬ferred. Call: WA 8-7553.Student Interested in Working In ArtGallery. 2 to 8 Wed. and Thurs. or Mon.through Thurs. eves. 7 to 9. ExpressionArt Gallery. 1713S. 85th. Call: FL3-8895.Part-Time (days) to prepare income taxreturns. Phone evenings: 8T 3-6681.Wanted—Student Travel Representative.Part-time, commission. AccreditedTravel Bureau, 343 S. Dearborn. HA7-8260. Job opportunitiesJohn B. Smith, superintendent of schools, Greenwich, Con¬necticut, will be interviewing teachers in the office of voca¬tional guidance and placement, Reynolds club 200, 5706 Uni¬versity avenue, on Monday, February 27th. He will have posi¬tions on all grade levels and in all subject-matter areas. Pleasecall Miss Mathews at Midway 3-0800, extension 3286, if youwish an appointment.Representatives of the following organizations will conductrecruiting interviews at the office of vocational guidance andplacement during the week of February 20. Unless academicrestrictions are indicated, these interviews are open to studentsof any department who will be available for full time employ¬ment between now and September, 1961. Interview appoint¬ments may be arranged through L. S. Calvin, room 200,Reynolds club, ext. 3284.February 20 — Food and Drug administration (Department ofHealth, Education, and Welfare) Chicago, Illi¬nois and other locations throughout the country— organic chemists, analytical chemists, andbiochemists at all degree levels.February 21 - Baxter laboratories, Chicago (Morton Grove),Illinois — S. B. and S. M. candidates in organicchemistry, biochemistry, and microbiology;graduates from non-science departments lorpositions in sales, public relations, and generalbusiness trainees.February 22 Connecticut General Life Insurance company,Hartford, Connecticut — positions in sales, ad¬ministrative and staff assistance, claims, under¬writing, actuarial, comptrollers, personnel, in¬vestments, and electronic data processing.February 23 - Cook County department of public aid, Chicago,Illinois — casework positions open to graduatesof any Department who are interested in thefield of human relations.February 23 - U. S. bureau of the census, Washington, D. C. —Bachelor’s or Master’s degree candidates inmathematics, statistics, economics, and sociol¬ogy.February 24 - Stewart-Wamer corporation, Chicago, Illinoisand Indianapolis, Indiana—Bachelor’s and Mas¬ter’s degree candidates in mathematics and sta¬tistics.February 24 -Texaco, Inc., Bellaire (Houston) Texas — S.M.,Ph. D. and postdoctoral candidates in chemis¬try, geology, geophysics, mathematics, and sta¬tistics for positions in fundamental and appliedresearch.February 24 — Young Women’s Christian association, Chicago,Illinois and throughout U. S. — women candi¬dates with A.B. or M.A. degrees for positions asTeenage Program Directors, Young Adult Pro¬gram Directors, Recreation Directors and Exec-tive Directors (Community or College and Uni¬versity). Interview appointments should bearranged through Mr. S. Peris, extension 3288.««l«44t«tH«t444MM*444«44l4HM4MaM44««4l4Mlt«MC««44««4««4(IM|M4«4*t»M«*«Unpaid V8 Convertible V8 Sport Sedan Impale V8 Sport Coup#18JET-SMOOTHCHEVROLETSPRICEDLOWER!than competitive \models!!! Hnpaia V8 2-Door Sedan : Bel Air V8 4-Doot Sedan:Bel Air V8 2-Door Sedan S Bwcayne V8 4 Door Sedan8iscayne V8 2-Door Sedan 1 Nomad V8 4-Door 9 Passenger Station WagonEvery one •! the 19 Chevrolete yon tee : Homad Six 4-Door 9-Passenger Station Wagon • Nomad Six 4 Door 6 Passenger Station Wagonhere ie priced lower than comparable j*competitive models.* Proof of how easy |it Is to fit a Chevy into your budget. And jevery model givee you Chevy's Jet- jsmooth ride and dozens•f other engineering andstyling advantages you gggcan't find in anythingalas selling at anywhere Nomad V8 4-Door 6-Passenger Station Wkgon j Park wood Six 4-Door 9 Passenger Station Wagonnear the money.*Batad on a comparison of manufacturers* •_suggested retail prices (including Federal tea) for i Jmodels with 11 Blnch wheelbase or above j Parkwood Six 4-Ooor 6 Passenger Station Wagon J Park wood V8 4-Door 9 Passenger Station WOgon:j Parkwood V8 4-Door 6-Passenger Station Wagon j Brook wood Six 4 Door 6 Passenger Station Wagon j trookwowt V8 *-hoor BPassengerStation Wagon••eeseeeeeeaessseeseeeeeeeseeeaseseeeessestetseseeteases*sseeeseeeeeeeeesessee#•#•••eeeeeeaeaeSee the new Chevrolet cars, Chevy Corvairs and the new Corvette at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer'sFeb. 17, 1961 • CHICACO MA ROON • T1!•jn Los AngelesBeadleGeorge Wells Beadle, newlyappointed Chancellor of theUniversity, spoke at a recep¬tion for University alurtini ofthe Los Angeles area last Friday.Beadle discussed his reasons forjoining the University oi Chicago,and his plans and ideas for thefuture of the school.Calling the University “a placeof intellectual ferment, now as ithas been for seventy years,” Bea¬dle explained his move from Cali¬fornia. I do not need to remindyou people,” Beadle continued,“that the University of Chicago isa great university. With the moraland financial encouragement ofJohn D. Rockefeller, WilliamRainey Harper made it so. He‘fathered together one of the greatfaculties of all time. He and theyattracted students of the highestquality.Hutchins innorates“Robert M. Hutchins saw to itthat the spirit of innovation andexperimentation continued. Hisnew undergraduate college —whose program many of you ex¬perienced—so inspired hundredsof students that they are nowcounted among the intellectualleaders of the nation. His insti¬tutes became Meecas for brilliantscientists from all parts of theworld. There is still, as I said,the liveliest kind of intellectualatmosphere at the University. Itwill continue,“Lawrence Kimpton made a dif¬ speaks to University alumniferent and equally important ma¬jor contribution to the health ofthe University, partly by spear¬heading a drive to strengthen itsfinancial position, partly by mod¬ernizing its physical plant, andpartly by helping to reverse thetrend toward physical and cul¬tural deterioration in the neigh¬borhood.”Beadle then described the pro¬cess of redevelopment in HydePark-Kenwood and the SouthCampus project. He then discus¬sed four problems faced not onlyby the University of Chicago, butby all universities: the problemsof faculty, students, money, and‘‘sharing the fruits of academicscholarship with the citizenry atlarge.”Considering the problems offaculty lured from the universi¬ties by high-paying jobs in govern¬ment and industry, ‘We must offer advantages,” Beadle empha¬sized, “that have more appeal thanmere dollars.”These advantages include “timeand opportunity for free inquiry,wherever it may lead, and thechance to inspire the next genera¬tion of scholars." Beadle statedthat such opportunities must con¬tinue to be provided in abundanceat Chicago.Attracting studentsThe problem in attracting stu¬dents, according to the new chan¬cellor, is to get the ones who“respond to the particular intel¬lectual atmosphere, demands, andopportunities that a given insti¬tution has created for them.“Chicago undergraduates havethe reputation of being able, in¬dependent, resourceful, and crea¬tive. We need more such under¬graduates, for among them are likely to be those rare individualswho contribute in a really signi¬ficant way either to man’s knowl¬edge about the universe or to hiswisdom in applying that knowl¬edge,“We need to recruit more stu¬dents who expect an educationat the University of Chicago tobe a great intellectual adventure.”Beadle stated that the trusteeswere “busy exploring ways ofadding to the financial resourcesof the University” to pay for “thenew buildings which are needed,the increased salaries we musthave, and the various other thingsrequired to keep a University outin front.”Communication with publicCommunication with the gen¬eral public, Beadle feels, is espe¬cially important. “Academic schol¬ars.” he commented, “are nolonger the recluses they once were. Increasingly, they advisethe government Increasingly the)give time to the education of thepublic. It is well that they do, andeven better ways of communica¬tion should be found, for theirefforts may well be decisive infinding solutions to such vital so¬cial and economic problems asarms control, population growth,and intelligent use of natural re¬sources.”Urges supportBeadle urged his audience tosupport the University. “The trustees are an uncommonly activeand dedicated group of men; theadministrative officers are able;and the faculty is enthusiastic.If all alumni have the interestthat you have shown this evening,” Beadle concluded, “and addtheir support, the University isheading for some very goodyears.”'Warless world' is now possibleFREEDOM OF THE PRESSWORKER FORUMpresentsThe CIVIL WARCENTENNIALA Morxist ViewSpeaker: Dr. HERBERT APTHEKERAuthor - Editor - LecturerSunday, Feb. 19, 7:30 p.m.FINE ARTS BUILDING410 S. MichiganMusic Room 633Admission at Door ... $ 1.00(Students . . . 50c) The abolition of large scalenational military organiza¬tions and the achievement ofa warless world has become adistinct possibility for the firsttime in history, declares a reportpublished today by the Center forthe Study of Democratic Institu¬tions.The 72-page publication, entitledA World without War. suggeststhat civilian and military policy¬maker take time out from their“war games” to devote some at¬tention to the “peace game,”which takes account of the "worldof reality.”A description of “the peacegame” which forms the major por¬tion of the publication, is writtenby Walter Millis, military histori¬an and foreign affairs analyst whois directing the Center’s study ofwar and democratic society.The report also includes a dis¬cussion of “the peace game” by agroup of Center consultants whichincludes, besides Millis, Robert M.j )T»<r«rmr«r»»»nryrryr*tfrytt?rr»r»wtttwwwv'ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches;ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage Cr meatball; Free Delivery Ox'er $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st. Hutchins, president of the Center,chairman; William O. Douglas,associate justice of the U. S. Su¬preme Court; Rev. John CourtneyMurray, S. J.,- of Woodstock col¬lege; Reinhold Niebuhr of UnionTheological seminary; HarrisonBrown, professor of geochemistryat California Institu* * of Techno¬logy; and Scott Buchanan, formerdean of St. John’s College.Millis stated, “Our fundamentaldilemma, simply stated, is that ifwe continue to res’ our entire na¬tional policy on a military concep¬tion of the international problem,as we have been doing, it will landus in world suicide. On the otherhand, if we try to < scape from orneglect this military concept, it islikely to end in the triumph ofworld communism, or at any ratethe destruction of a set of valuesthat we consider very importantto this life on earth.In A WORLD without War Mil¬lis does not attempt to explainhow war is to be abolished. Heproceeds by asking the reader toassume that “peace has brokenout — that nations have abolishedwar by international agreementand ratified their undertaking byreducing their armaments to po¬lice force level. They are thenasked to say. what could be ex¬pected to happen.”Abolition of huge military ma¬chines would not mean the elimi¬nation of violence of competitivestruggles between nations, Milliswrites. But disputes hitherto sub¬ject to determination by thethreat of or use of force couldbe controlled or adjudicated by an expanded system of internationallaws and contracts, treaties, vari¬ous trade and financial compacts,and such agencies as the WorldCourt and the United Nations.Millis feels that a world withoutwar could be achieved withoutworld federalism, because many ofthe means of resolving interna¬tional disputes without war arealready at hand.In addition to dismantling theirmilitary establishments, nationswould have to abolish their waroffices and rely solely on police units for maintenance of Internalorder. Such units could be so de¬signed as to be unable to commitaggression on neighboring states.Millis concludes that a worldwhich had initially agreed to ex¬clude international organized warfrom its affairs would be a “vi¬able” world. It would have, orcould develop, institutional meansfor deciding those basic issues offreedom and justice which we haveimmemorially confided to the warsystem.Wash prom setWashington Promenade, theStudent union formal dance,which includes the crowningof Miss University of Chicagoof 1961, will be held tomorrownight from 9:30 pm to 1 am at theDel Prado hotel. Tickets are $5.00per couple.The eight finalists of the pre¬liminary judging by Mrs. AlanSimpson, wife of the dean of the College, and Joshua Taylor, as¬sociate professor of art, will formthe queen’s court. The queen wasselected in an all-campus electionheld Wednesday, February 15,and Thursday, February 16.David Frodin, chairman ofWash Prom, explained tliat thisyear’s contest differed from thoseheld in recent years because it isprimarily a beauty contest.Shown above are seven of the eight finalists In the MissUniversity of Chicago contest. They are (left to right)Lonnie Bovar of the Folklore society, Renee Rupert of Eso¬teric, Dottie Schlotthauer, candidate of Beta Theta Pi,Heather Wilson of second floor North house, Llani Cripe ofQuadranglers, Barbara Mayer, candidate of the varsity bas¬ketball team, and Jan Zlotow of WUCB. Not pictured itIndira Berndtson of fourth floor West.UNE POLICE SUN LIFE POUR CHAQUE BESOINPOUR VOUSVOTRE FAMILLE...I,a police Dotation avet revenu garantit une protec¬tion d’assurance-vie »i vou» mourez au court d’uneprfriode d£termin£e. Si vouj vivez, le Wn^fice de dota¬tion devient payable & la date d’£ch6ance; vous pouvesretirer let fond* en espfcce* ou tout forme de revenupour la vie.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LoSoHo Chicago, IB.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-6800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY. OF CANADACagers try for sixteenth winby Chwck BernsteinTomorrow night is thenight Chicago’s battling cag¬ers will try for their 16th winof the year and 14th in a row,when they challenge the powerfulUniversity of Detroit Titans in themotor city. WUCB will broadcastthe game live from Detroit at7:20 p.m. It will be the first livebroadcast from another city thatthe campus radio station has everdone.Titans toughThe Titans, 13-7 at press-time,are headed for the National Invi¬tational Tournament in NewYork’s Madison Square Gardenafter the regular season. Undoub¬tedly they pose as the toughestMaroon foe in years. RankingSports news among the top 20 teams in thenation, they have knocked off suchpowerhouses as Notre Dame, In¬diana, and Dayton, and lost toOhio State by only 11 points.Notre Dame coach Johnny Jor¬dan called Detroit the best set ofbasketball players his Irish havefaced this season. Two of themwill provide a formidable chal¬lenge to the Maroons vice-like de¬fense, which is second in the na¬tion with an average allowanceof 48.4 points per game.The pair is Dave DeBusschere,6'6 all-American, and CharlieNorth, 6'5 all-American candidatewho is averaging 18 ppg. To makematters worse for UC, Detroitpicked up junior college transferJohn Morgan, also 6'6, to ‘bolster’its front line.Tuesday — Opening up a 15point lead at halftime, the Ma¬ roons coasted to a 61-51 win overChicago Teachers college at thefieldhouse for their 13th consec¬utive triumph.Fighting against a haphazardCTC press to forge ahead 18-3,Gerry Toren’s aggressive rebound¬ing kept the listless Maroons ontop, as he pulled 13 off the boards.Once again, Chicago got well-balanced scoring as Gene Ericksenhad one of his big nights with 22points. Joel Zemans backed himup with 15, and Toren had 13.Galesburg, Ill., Feb. 11 — Knox’sstalling offensive tactics nearlyupset the Maroons, but the Mid-waymen bore down and sunk sevenof eight free throws in overtime,to pull the weirdest game of theyear out of the fire 32-27. It wasChicago’s twelfth win in a rowbut stopped its streak of victoriesby more than 20 points at six. Hoping to overpower the Si¬washers, who had lost high-scoringcaptain Dannie Littell because oftwo broken ribs the previous night,the Maroons blew several easylay-ups at the start of the game.Then Knox went into its stall of¬fense, waiting near the time lineuntil it could break loose for asure basket.Knox falls shortKnox didn’t get too many oppor¬tunities against UC*s crack de¬fense, because it made only onefielder in the first half.This came on a scoop shotby stellar guard Otey Cowan at13:56. Cowan was the game’s highpoint man with eleven.Larry Lias retaliated with theMaroons’ first field goal at 11:37to tie the score at 6-6. But ineptMaroon shooting, coupled withesigle eye Siwasher free throw’Cagers have tough schedule aheadIn his last five games, the for¬mer Detroit Austin Catholic highschool all-American has rackedup 37 points against Toledo, 18against Western Michigan, 35against Loyola, 32 against Xavier,and 26 against Notre Dame.Pomerantz, also a 6'6 junior,Vvas termed by the St. LouisGlobe-Democrat as one of thegreatest high school players everto come out of St. Louis. Afterscoring 1,744 points in less thanthree seasons and averaging 32ppg in his senior year for Univer¬sity City high, he was one of thecountry’s six most sought afterprep cagers. He also was a first-string prep all-American team¬mate of DeBusschere’s.Pomerantz enrolled at Cincin¬nati, where last season he wasthe understudy to Oscar Robert¬son. Playing under Big O, prob¬ably the greatest college playerGame BroadcastWUCB will broadcast thebasketball game without De-troit tomorrow live from De-troit, Mich. Game time is 7:20pm.In the next eight days, theMaroons must thwart thescoring threats of two nation¬ally known stars, Dave DeBus¬schere of Detroit and SandyPomerantz of Washington of StLouis.DeBusschere, 220-poundjunior, paces the Titans, whomthe Maroons face tomorrow, withan average of 22 points per gameand is fourth in the nation in re¬bounding. An all-American lastseason as a sophomore, DeBues-schere was the only man in thecountry to average over both 20points and 20 rebounds per game.He scored 25.6 ppg and pulled 20rebounds per game.Three of the nation’s topcoaches raved about DeBusschere.Notre Dame coach Johnny Jordanranked him with Jerry Lucas andTerry Dischinger among the fin¬est players in the nation. DickMcGuide, Detroit Piston coach,said he is good enough to playprofessional basketball now. Day¬ton’s mentor, Tom Blackburn,said, "He’s as good on offense asOscar Robertson.” He is also anoutstanding pitcher of majorleague potential.Ruling stirs chaosA ruling by the Art institute of Chicago that all institutestudents enter the building through a rear entrance has raiseda controversy both within and without the institute.The official reason for the new restriction, according to aspokesman for the institute, is tocut down on confusion and to"keep the institute’s main en- P0^ Picasso, with his beret, weretrance from being tracked up.” to try £et through their frontHowever, students of t h e door- ru j** he wouldn’t be ableschool protested the ruling on to 8®*the grounds that the building’srear entrance, on Jackson boule¬vard, is dangerous, since it is darkand unprotected.Other complaints came fromsources not connected with the in¬stitute. "It seems to me,’’ said oneman, "that they are trying to keep‘beatniks’ from going through thefront door. Some of the peoplewho attend the classes are artists,complete with berets and beards,and the directors might want toget them off the front street.”The ban on entering includesinstructors, and one instructor,who also works at UC, has al¬ready been banned admittance atthe front door.A final dissenting opinion con¬cerning the ruling was added byanother outsider. Said he, "Sup- of all time, he saw little actionand averaged only 3.6 ppg.Washington’s assistant coachRick Meckfessei said, "He’sgood enough on offense to playfor any team in the nation ex¬cept Ohio State.” However, hisexceptional offensive talentscouldn’t offset his defensive andrebounding shortcomings. As aresult, Pomerantz was unableto break Into the Bearcats’ start¬ing line-up. He dropped out ofCincinnati after the fall semes¬ter, and enrolled at Washington,where he immediately became eli¬gible.Pomerantz Is currently averag¬ing 24.7 ppg, with outputs of 15,29, 27, and 28 in four games. TheBears dropped the first two on theroad, one to Wabash, in a game inwhich Pomerantz did not start,and the second to DePauw, theythen beat Indiana State and Kan¬sas City. Now 7-9, the Bears were5-7 before Pomerantz joined theteam, but Meckfessei stated thathe would have made the differ¬ence in three or four of thoselosses. So he will provide an extraattraction for Maroon fans andan unplanned challenge for defen¬sive master-mind Joe Stampf andhis charges.Fencers top IrishThe Maroon fencers pulled oneof the greatest upsets of the sea¬son as they handed the highly-touted and heavily favored NotreDame squad its second defeat ofthe year.In gaining its most importantvictory of the last decade, thefencing team won its third meetof the year, equaling the combined total of the 1958, 1959, and 1960seasons.Every member of the team con¬tributed at least one victory tothe defeat of the Irish, who cameinto the match after six conse¬cutive triumphs, most of themagainst Big Ten schools.Elliott Lillien, captain and num¬ber one saber man, won all threeof his matches. Kolar, anothersaber fighter, added two victories,as did Milgram and Wais of thefoil team. Resnick of the foil team,Shelton, Crane, ard Kaye of theepee team, and Chesnin of thesaber team each added a win,making the final score 14-13.Two Big Ten schools, Wisconsinand Indiana, will challenge the im¬proving and maturing Maroons atBartlett Gym at 1:30 on Satur¬day. This is their last home meet,and should they sweep it, theywill be undefeated at home thisyear.Tracksters beat DePaulThe track team defeated DePaul62-42 on the eighth, for their firstwin of the season. The most out¬standing competitor was PeterJoseph, who won the broad jumpand the low hurdles, and wassecond in. the sixty yard dash.Other winners included VicNeill in the half mile, Garry Geh-man in the quarter, followed byMarty Baker, and Steve McCreadyin the high hurdles. tosKing, which canned 16 of 18 at¬tempts in the first half, put Knoxon top after 20 minutes of action,18-14.After halftime, Knox couldn’tsustain the pressure, and managedonly one point in 16 minutes whilemissing several wide open layuptrios. Meanwhile the revived Ma¬roons got two consecutive jumpballs, started to rebound, andwent ahead 19-18 at 13:09 on aspectacular drive-in by Joel Ze¬mans. The Big Z was called forcharging, and as an omen ofthings to come, Kip Welzel missedthe free throw.In the next seven minutes, UCfinally was able to break the Knoxfull court press with ease. A left-handed hook shot by Gene Erick¬sen, John Davey’s push shot fromthe side, and another lay-up byZemans put the Maroons ahead25-19. It looked like they wouldhave that lead for good. But thegame Siwashers had other ideas.J. B. White opened up with a30 footer at 4:29, and after Knoxstole the ball Jay Graening cannedanother long jumper to put theSiwashers within two points ofthe Maroons. Otey Cowan, wrhohad sat out most of the half withfour fouls, sunk a third long jumpshot to tie the score at 25-25 with1:11 left. The Maroons played forone shot, but Davey’s one-handerwent in after the buzzer soundedto send the game into overtime.Cowan sent Knox ahead 26-25at 3:43, but Ericksen tied it upat 1:55. Overanxious, the Si-washers committed three costlyfouls in the final minute and GerryToren, Liss, and Davey bore downin the clutch each netting bothends of the one and one. The boxscores:Ohigao 61FG FTZemansTorenEricksenLissDaveyTomas’icDevittWinterPaulsellLahti 3-61-22-20-02-31-10-00-00-20-0 Teachers 51FG FTCronwall 3 5-7BeaversMolisLandryGogl’an&eCarligSmithPounds 1-21-16-60-01-11-20-0Totals 26 9-16 15 Totals 18 15-19 13Halftime — Chicago 87, Teachers 22Shooting — Chicago .382 (26/68),Teachers .333 (18/64)Rebounds — Chicago 50, Teachers 3*.Chicago 32 Knox 27Zemans FG3 FT2-3 P3 White FG1 FT6-8 p»Toren 1 3-6 5 Weleel A 4-8 4Ericksen 1 7-9 3 Bice 0 1-1 8Davey 2 2-7 4 Cowan 2 7-7 SLiss 1 2-2 2 Graening 1 0-0 STomas ic 0 0-1 1 Bandes 0 1-1 1Napierski 0 0-0 aTotals 6 16-28 18 Totals 4 19-25 SSHalftime — Knox 18. Chicago 14Shooting — Chicago .267 (8/30), Knox.235 (4/17).Rebounds — Chicago 19, Knox T9.SOUTH IMPORT MOTORS, Inc.CompleteVOLKSWAGEN Semico A Sales•1mExpert Body Repairs1527 E. 71st St. BU 8-4900PAUL’S HARDWARE & PAINT SUPPLYHyde Parle’s Largest Hardware StoreSTUDENT DISCOUNT906 I. 55th Ml 3-9754If you are going to. move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou¬blesome problem.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.BU 8-6711 For PRINTING Call JAY!OFFSET * LETTERPRESS * MIMEOGRAPHINGDAILY U. OF C. PICKUPSCmII JAY Letter A Printing ServiceHY 3-0802 1950 East 75H» StreetHOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize InRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpe» tree* Down to Down 1342east 53 st. We all make mistakes..ERASE WITHOUT A TRACEON EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTouch-type, hunt-and-peck, type with one hand tiedbehind your back—it’s easy to turn out perfect paperson Corrasable. Because you can erase without a trace.Typing errors disappear like magic with just the flick ofan ordinary pencil eraser.There’s never a telltale erasuremark on Corrasable’s special surface.Corrasable is available in light,medium, heavy weights and OnionSkin. In convenient 100-sheetpackets and 500-sheet reamboxes. Only Eaton makesCorrasable.A Berkshire Typewriter PaperEATON PAPER CORPORATION : E; PITTSFIELD, MASSFeb. 17, 1961 • CHICACO MAROON • 13r WUCB program guide | cummings to readFriday, February 17 Monday, February 207:90 am The Morning Show —Each weekday morning foran hour and a half1:00 pm Jazz Archives — withBill Peterman. This weekBix Beiderbecke vs. LoutsArmstrong.7:30 Mozart — Concerto No. 34in C for Piano and Orches¬tra, K. 491.3:00 Cherubini — Requiem Massin C.J. C. Bach — Sinfonta in Bflat, op. 18, No. 2.0:00 Beethoven — Six Bagatellesfor Piano, op. 126.Brahms — Symphony No 2in D, op. 73.10:00 Chopin — Etudes for Piano,op. 25.Dvorak — Slavonic Rhapsody in G, op. 45, No. 2.13;4.» Bruckner — Symphony No.4 in E flat, “Romantic.”Berlioz — Overture to Wav-erley, op. 1.Saturday, February 187:20 pm VARSITY BASKET¬BALL — LIVE FROM DKTROIT, UC vs. THE UNIVERSITY OF DETROITWITH IRA FISTELL ANDCHUCK BERNSTEIN.Sunday, February 197:008:158:309:3010:0011:1 Beethoven — Missa Solemnis in D, op. 123.British Information Serv¬ices weekly presentation.Humanities 112 Programproduced by Barry BayerBusoni — Concerto for Vio¬lin and Orchestra, op. 35a.Respighi — Gli Uccelli ‘TheBirds.”Schubert — Symphony No.1 in D.Brahms — Academic Festi¬val Overture, op. 80.B a r t o k — Contrasts forClarinet, Violin, and Piano(1938).Prokofieff — Sonata No. 1in f for Violin and Piano,op. 80.Schonberg — Three Piecesfor Piano, op. 11.Study inGuadalajara, MexicoThe Guodalajora Summer School,a fully accredited University ofArizona program, conducted in co¬operation with professors fromStanford University, University ofCalifornia, and Guadolajara. willoffer July 3 to August 1 T, art,folklore, geography, history, lan¬guage and literature courses Tui¬tion, board and room is $245.Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.O. Box7227, Stanford, Calif. 7:06 Beethoven — Concerto In Dfor Violin and Orchestra,op. 61.Mozart — Quartet in F forOboe and Strings, K. 370.8:00 Marty’s Night Out — The¬atre and films reviewed byMarty Rabinowitz.8:15 This Week at the UN.8:30 Schumann-—Symphony No.1 in B flat. op. 38, “Spring.”Chausson — Concerto inD for Piano, Violin, andString Quartet, op. 21.9:30 Bax — The Garden of Fand.Bartok — Out of DoorsSuite for Piano.10:00 Strauss — Death and Trans¬figuration, op. 24.Webern- Six Songs, op. 14.Stravinsky — Cantata(1952).11:00 Somethin’ Else — modernjazz with Mike Edelstein.Tuesday, February 217:00 Bach — Cantata op. 169,“Gott soli allein meinHerze.”Handel — Concerto No. 13in F for Harpsichord andOrchestra.8:00 Events That Shaped Histo¬ry — with Richard Mizrack.8:15 Mozart — Sonata No. 4 inE flat for Piano, K. 282.8:30 Beethoven — Symphony No.7 in A, op. 92.Schubert — Sonata in a forViolin and Piano, op. 137,No. 2.9:30 Brahms — Quartet No. 2in a for Strings, op. 11,No. 2.Wolf — Four Songs for So¬prano and Piano.Wagner — Siegfried Idyll.10:30 Bartok — Violin Duets onFolk Songs (1931).11:00 Fat City — Folk Music withMark Ray.Wednesday, February 227:00 Musical Comedy—this weekGuys and Dolls.8:00 Pergolesi — Concerto in Gfor Flute, Strings, and Con-tinuo.Blow — Ode on the Deathof Henry Purcell.Vivaldi — Sonata No. 2 inF for Cello and Harpsi¬chord, op. 14, No. 2.Germiniani — ConcertoGrosso No. 1 in B fit, op. 3,No. 3.9:00 Mozart — Symphony No. 38in D, K. 104.Beethoven — Romances inG and F for Violin and Or¬chestra, op. 40 and 50.Dvorak — Excerpts fromBiblical Songs, op. 99.10:00 Tchaikovsky — SymphonyNo. 6 in B, op. 74, “Pathe-tique.”Debsusy — Petite Suite forOrchestra, ll:00..Weber — Overture to theOpera “Der Freichutz."Faure — Quintet for Pianoand Strings, op. 89.Barber — Essay for Orches¬tra No. 1, op. 12.Stravinsky — Octet forWind Instruments.Thursday, February 237:00 Bartok — Quartet No. 6 forStrings (1939).7:30 Jabberwocky — with ShortySpiro.8:30 Mahler — Kindertotenlied-er, “Songs on the Death ofChildren.”Saint-Saens — Sonata in Dfor Violin and Piano, op. 75.Soler — Sonatas for Piano.9:30 Haydn—Oratorio “The Sea¬sons.”Tomorrow NightTHE 58th ANNUALWASHINGTONPROMENADEFormal OptionalMusic by Phil WalshDel Prado HotelSATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 189:30-1:00 Bids: $5 per couple e. e. cummings will readsome of his poetry Sunday,March 5, in the StudebakerTheater, 410 S. Michigan at3 p.m. He will be sponsored byLake Forest college and ChicagoChoice, a new literary magazine.cummings, acclaimed as one ofthe finest lyric poets of our time,has published eight volumes ofpoetry; two books of plays; Eiml,a diary of his 1931 trip to Rus¬sia; and a highly original warbook, The Enormous Room.cummings’ poetry is notablefor its avant-garde technique andstrong originality of phrasing.He believes that “there are pos¬sibly 2xk or impossibly 3/individ¬uals every several fat/thousand years, expecting more would be/'neither fantastic nor pathologicalbut/dumb."The new semiannual magazine.Chicago Choice, will have its promiere after the reading. The firstissue features work by such namepoets as cummings, John Ciardiand Howard Nemerov, plus a sp<>cial section devoted to the worksof new Chicago poets.Tickets for the cummings readings are available at all Krodiand Brentano’s bookstores, bymail from Chicago Choice, Box1359, Chicago 90, or at the door.Box seats are $3; reserved seatssell for $2.50; regular admissionis $1.50. and student ticketsare $1.Vienna Octet reviewedAt 8:30 on Friday evening,February 10, the Vienna Octetplayed at Mandel hall, as partof the University concerts se¬ries, giving a program of Hinde¬mith and Schubert. As the concertbegan the confidence of the groupin dealing with the technical prob¬lems of the music was noticeable.The 1958 Oktet by Paul Hinde-mith filled the first half of theconcert. Like much of Hinde¬mith’s music, the Oktet, beneatha bleak exterior, draws a seriesof contrasting moods rangingfrom heavy sarcasm (at the ex¬pense of an inoffensive tune) tointense lyricism, and genuinegood humor. I wondered, whenthe piece was over, whetherand the players had actually got¬ten anywhere, but perhaps that graphs taken by Danny Lyonis not the point What did bother d John <*.good ^i, open inme was the thought that this “ *work, written within the last Mandel hall corridor on Tues-'Home of the Brave' postponed;'Tidings' production still setthree years, is so very much thesame as the music Hindemithwas writing in 1948, and also in1938, and in 1928, and 1918.The Op. 166 Octet in F Majorby Schubert deserves respect forits beauty and wit and for itsstructural balance. The piece isalso rather long and repetitious,and must be played with bothpolish and inspiration to sustaininterest in the listener. Care andprecision the Vienna Octet had,but gloss and spirit they had not.The playing was better than per¬functory, but not unified in style,and problems of intonation and tune that were not so evident inthe busy Hindemith work werenoticeable here. To play such along, sweet piece so unremarkably in a darkened hall is to in¬vite Kerr’s opinion, which thisreviewer narrowly missed delivering.The Vienna Octet is, on t h ewhole a group of competent players. but the night I was there,they couldn’t get very excitedabout their music—perhaps theyknew it too well — and I can remain calm at home, at lower expense.Photos exhibitedAn exhibition of photoUniversity theatre’s produc¬tion of “Home of the Brave,”by Arthur Laurents, has beenpostponed until late April, ac¬cording to Frank Marrero, tech¬nical director of the theatre, whois to direct the play.Bill Alton, director of the the¬atre, stated that Marrero has hadto go to California this monthto direct a film. Marrero madethis commitment before joiningthe University staff, and was nowobligated to fulfill it.“The Tidings Brought to Mary,”by Paul Claudel, will still be pro¬duced in Mandel hall February 24, 25, and 26. There will be amatinee performance on Satur¬day, February 25. Alton, who willdirect the production, commentedthat February 23 is the sixth an¬niversary of Claudel’s death. LeeO’Connor, technical director ofthe production, urges all personsinterested in technical work tocontact her in the theatre offioe,room 303 in the Reynolds club,or call ext. 3297. day. The photographs willbe displayed for about twoweeks, according to Lyon.Most of the photographs are ofthe UC campus and the HydePark neighborhood. A few photo¬graphs of Europe and of California are also included.According to Lyon, the photographs will be on sale at “reasonable” prices.Lyon, a second year student,and Osgood, a third year student,exhibited some of their photographs in the lounge of the newdorm last quarter. Lyon feelsthat this exhibit will be betterthan last quarter’s.Both Lyon and Osgood arcphotographers for the Cap andGown and for the Maroon. Osgood has had photographs in theUC alumni magazine and otherlocal magazines.UC choir plansLenten concertForty-five members of theChicago Symphony orchestrawill assist the Rockefellerchapel choir in the annualLenten concert, Sunday afternoon,February 19th at 3:30 pm in theChapel. The program will high¬light modern variations on 13thCentury Gregorian chants.SpecialDuring NATIONAL BEAUTY SALON WEEKFeb. 12-18Latest Hair Styleand Permanent WavebyRANDELL’S BEAUTY SALON5700 Harper Avenue Holst’s “Hymn to Jesus,” wri»ten in 1919 and based on thesacred music of the middle ageswill be among the compositionssung. “This hymn is seldom performed,” said Richard Vikstrom,conductor of the Rockefellerchoir, “because to do it properlythe choir must have an orchestral accompaniment which ineludes a harp and a celeste,”Other compositions to be performed include Palestrina’s Stabat Mater, and the Naenie andAlto Rhapsodie by Brahms. Thesoloist will be Miss Martha Larrimore, contralto.General admission is $3.00; stu¬dents’ tickets are $1.50. Ticketswill be on sale at the Chapel pre¬ceding the concert.plus One 8 x 10Portrait byLOUISE BARKER $ 20 551459 East 57th St.Call Miss Allen at FA 4-2007 • DO 3-6869 Clark theatredark & rnaJnanfr 2-284550a* ell timaa ft special* collegeprice• ladle* day mrj fridayaU gala admitted tor 2Se* different doable feature Sadr• open 1:3$ turn.late shew 4 p.m.* write in for free program gsti*14 • HCulture VultureSpring fever in February! Who ever heard of such a thing. But here it is, bigger than life and not to be ignored. We awokeone morning and found that the mounds of dirty grey had disintegrated into lakes of mire on our concrete campus walks. Thebreeze told us not to despair, so we noticed the reflections of gargoyles in the standing black waters and felt like squooshingbarefoot through the oozing mud. And then we awoke again and saw a patch of morning blue through our dusty windows andput on Bermudas. The sun had soaked up the stagnant waters and was now bending its efforts towards warming our brains andour winter-white backs. We cut our classes and bounced down the street in brand-new sneakers, munching cold hot-cross buns,straining our eyes for a glimpse of new born green buds which in our imaginations were bursting forth from every slender branch.With coats flung across our shoulders we headed towards the point to laugh away the memory of winter.On campusTheotreIn remembrance of things pastthe Vulture would like to mentionbriefly that the Billy Barnes Re¬vue was the happiest thing thathas happened to this campus inmany a moon. The show’s tuneshave been pouring from thisbird’s cracked and croaking throatfor days, though there is a possi¬bility that the cast will cut a rec¬ord and save the songs from end-loss dishonor. The cast performedwith a flair that kept the audiencefar from the throes of embarrass¬ment which are all too common incollege type productions. The Vul¬ture wishes that she could haveseen it more than twice. . ..The near future is offering Uni¬versity theatre another chance toundertake an ambitious work, onewhich will embellish the presentfour performances of Paul Claud¬el’s I/announee F a 11 e a Marie(The Tidings Brought to Mary).The play has the simplicity of afolk tale, yet is a masterpiece ofdramatic poetry; its tone is al¬most that of a medieval mysteryplay.This month will mark the sixthanniversary of Paul Claudel’sdeath. He has been acclaimed bysuch greats as T. S. Eliot, as theoutstanding French poetical mas¬ter of the age which producedAndre Gide and Paul Valery.The play, translated from theFrench by Wallace Fowlie, willsport a east of six, half from theUniversity student community,half not. Tickets are available atthe Reynolds club. live folksters, Mike Michaels, JonAaron, and David Gedalecia.Poetry ReadingThe continental influence fromla belle France is permeating ourgrey stone fortress of learningnot only the name of Claudel, butalso by virtue of Pierre Viala, arecitalist of modern French lyricpoetry. But he is more an actorthan a cut and dried recitalist. Hedoes not read, he does not recite,he interprets. Viala infuses intoeach poem the essence of its poet,the atmosphere its poet was striv¬ing to create. He is able to do thiswith the preciseness which accom¬panies the native language; thereare no translations to cloud theissue. Too few such genuine for¬eign cultural events are in evi¬dence in this country; pull outyour French 1 grammars andbrush up your Francais. His po¬etic, dramatic recital will be pre¬sented in Social Sciences 122 at8:15 on Thursday, February 23.MusicTo heighten further the beauti¬ful mourning of the Lenten sea¬son, the University choir, underthe direction of Richard Vikstrom,will join members of the ChicagoSymphony on Sunday at 3 pm fora concert of religious music byBrahms, Palestrina, Holst, andKodaly. It will be elevating forthe soul, whether one’s giving upsweets for Lent or not. Ticketsare $1.50 for students, on sale atWoodworth’s and the bookstore.Coffee Hours abound on thiscampus, and are enjoyable if notexactly edifying. Shorey house(the pent house of Pierce tower)is determined to rectify this situ¬ation. No experience should beempty of culture, so Shorey ispresenting Coffee Plus everyMonday evening from 9-11, start¬ing February 20. From 9:30-10:30they will present a half-live, halfrecorded program of Classics,Jazz, and Folk music. The pre¬miere concert will include Vival¬di’s The Four Seasons, SonnyRollins and Thelonious Monk, and CinemaIt is a fortunate occurrence thatthe cinema has advanced beyondthe slap stick silent, pie-throwingdays, for the vast majority of thiscampus’ cultural events are vis¬ual, are thrown upon a screen ina darkened room. The highlightof cinematic culture this weekendis being sponsored by the spank¬ing new political organizationwhich emerged from the dyinggasps of ISL, POLIT.Tonight at 7:30 and 9:30 in Soc.Sci. 122, POLIT will present afilm which is bespeckled with bril¬liant names from the field of thearts. The Spanish Earth is thestory of the issues behind theSpanish Civil war, dramatizingthe effect of the Fascist uprisingand invasion on the ordinary cit¬izen. The forceful script was writ¬ten by Archibald Macliesh, LillianHeilman, and John Dos Passos,and is narrated by Ernest Hem¬ingway — enamoured as he iswith this particular war. The background music was composedby one of modern music’s mostpleasing advocates, Vergil Thom¬son.The added short, A Tribute toWilliam Butler Yeats, is no lessworthwhile, and will grasp any¬one in its mighty grip who hasthe least weakness for the lateMr. Yeats’ soulful works. Thereadings in the movie will be bythe husky-voiced, inimitable Siob-han McKenna. Admission is 50c.B-J continues their foreign kicktonight with the world wideaward dinner, Gervaise, starringMaria Schell. The movie is re¬ported to be B J’s most grandioseeffort of the quarter, and alsoMiss Schell’s most brilliant per¬formance. The film is drawn froma rough, frank, starkly realisticstory by Emil Zola. Director ReneClement takes Zola’s cry of rageat man’s fate and fashions it intoa touching story of a woman’sruin. The deep dark peasant an¬ger of Zola is not destroyed, how¬ever; "he shakes his fist from thegrave, and shakes the audiencelike beans in a rattle.” Showingsat 8 and 10.UC shocks the world in a num¬ber of different ways: it is thebirthplace of radical new ideas, ofradical new radicals (no ideas toback their revolutions up seemnecessary, unfortunately), andonce it was the site of learningfor two youthful murderers. Thatmurder has been the object ofmany subjective and objectivestudies, and has even been trans¬posed onto the silver screen. Uni¬versity cinema will present theshocking screen story Compulsionon Saturday night in Mandel hallat 8 and 10.ArtAll life is art; all art is life, ifit is truly art. Modern life sul¬lies the true essence of being veryoften, and modern art, to this un¬trained Vulture’s eye, often sul¬lies the concept of art which theclassics expounded and which is so pleasing to the soul. The Ren¬aissance society of the Universityof Chicago has a new exhibit totitillate the imaginations of thosewho are trained to live modern,and to attempt to brace the un¬initiated for the onslaught of thesoaring sixties — if anyone couldpossibly have avoided that deluge.The title of their show is Facesand Figures. How unfortunatethat they must explain them¬selves. The show will run throughMarch 18: Mondays-Fridays, 10-5;Saturdays 1-5.Off campusTheatreSatire and song were broughtto Hyde Park last week by an“on campus” organization. ThePoint theatre is now trying to dous one better by bringing theirversion of satire and song toSouth Side audiences. 7Vi is whatthey call the show, and from allreports it is bizarre as its unlikelysounding title. There will be twoshows (8 and 10) tonight and to¬morrow, and an 8 o’clock show onSunday. Tickets are $1.Music"In a season when chamber mu¬sic seems to be thriving, it isfrustrating to see quality go beg¬ging.” And so, under the auspicesof the newly organized Instrumen¬tal Arts Foundation, the ChicagoPiano Quartet will be heard in aseries of three chamber musicconcerts, the first to be heldWednesday evening, February 22at 8.20 at Concert hall, Orientalbuilding 32 West Randolph street.This ensemble — violin, viola,cello, and piano — "born with aflair, a verve, an innate style incollaboration,” will present intheir opening concert Brahms’Quartet No. 3 for piano and strings in C minor, op. 60, Pro¬kofiev’s Sonata for cello and pi¬ano, op. 119, and Faure’s QuartetNo. 2 for piano and strings in Gminor, op. 45. Student tickets areonly 75c.Orchestra hall is scheduling ev¬ery sort of exciting talent for thecoming dying weeks of winter. Tomention two only briefly: richcontralto Marian Anderson willbe in the spotlight this Sunday at3:30,,and next week at the sametime, classical guitarist, AndresSegovia, will be the featured art¬ist. The tickets are relatively ex¬pensive for us struggling students($2-$5), but culture is priceless,and money is nothing.JazzWhat makes people call Can¬nonball Adderly by that particu¬lar descriptive name? If you arecurious and missed him at theSutherland last weekend, he andhis quintet will be at the Bird-house, 1205 N. Dearborn, throughFebruary 26. One doesn’t need anID to get in either. Shows nightly.CinemaThe Hyde Park is presentingthis week the most artistic andunusual dance musical ever made.Invitation to the Dance stars GeneKelly, representing our fair con¬tinent, and a host of stars pickedfrom the theatres and ballet com¬panies of New York, London,Paris and Rome, including IgorYouskevitch and Tamara Tounabova. The movie is three separatestories incorporated into onesweeping panorama of the dance.On the same program will beI.eft, right, and Centre, a polit¬ical satire starring Ian Carmi¬chael and Alastaire Sim, the twoscoundrels from the school forLAKE /?PAR K A T ^ R Dthe 0-yde park NO 7 9071yde park theatreThe (DGtPXCtX ,tti* Green Door, A Met Pleasant Coffee Reuse - Seek ShopPaperbacks, Children's Reeks, New York TinesServing Nightly, 7:30-12:30 Saturday, Noon-1:30 n.m.Serving French Brook fort Sundays, AH DayChess, Monday and Tuesday Evenings, and Saturday Afternoons1450 East 57th Street Reek Sbep Open Daily 10 a.n.EXPRESSIONART GALLERY1713 Vz E. 55thHare Your CertificatesAnd Prints Framed AtExpression Art GalleryMonday thru Saturday, 2-5Monday and Thursday Eves., 7-9Coll PL 2-8895 NOW PLAYING"NEVER ON SUNDAY"StarringJULES DASSINMELINA MERCOURIBest Actress — Cannes Film FestivalIWJ DearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763Special student rote for all performances seven days a weekJust Show Cashier Your i.D. CardGERVAISEMaria SchellN. Y, Critics Award—Best ForeignPicture, 1957"Fully deserves its ten world-wide owords—Zunser, Cue Mogozine"Best fHm from ony source." — British Film Acodemy"One of the best screen bos offered this yeor."—Crowther, N. Y. TimesTonight 8 and 10—B-J Cinema Next WeekTHE ORESTIAAeschylus' greot ploy done in theout hen tic clossic monner—Greek dialogwith English narrative commentary, di¬rected by N»cKolos Webster, winner oftwo internotioriol film festivol owords otVenice. Student Rate 65c All PerformancesA deft, ddft British comedy , . .starringIAN CARMICHAELALASTAIR SIM the pair ofscoundrels from theSchool for Scoundrels'— And —EXCLUSIVE REQUEST RE-SHOWINGrfv.i5iiiiiirf.ifiiiiiittiiirifeiii-.--n inMii^. wigINVITATION TO RBIIIW| llilli1' Jwf m "’■■■; s ■ •'THE DANCEGENE KELLYTAMARA TOUMANOVA- IGOR YOUSKEVITCHThree Donee-Pantomime Dromotic Episodes1. Circus 2. Ring Around the Rasy 3. Sinbod the SailorStarts Next Friday, February 24— First the first time together! —Ingmar Bergman's“WILD STRAWBERRIES” & “THE MAGICIAN”Feb. 17, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 151. Edwin Booth—PRINCE OF PLAYERS, byE. Ruggles. Life and times of the greatestgenius of the American stage. Illus.Pub. at $5.00. Sole $1PORTRAIT OF JESUS, by H. King. Famouspaintings and engravings showing 27 impor¬tant events in His life. King James version.Pub. at $2.75. Sale $1SPRINGS OF ADVENTURE, by W. Noyce. Ex¬plorers from Columbus to Hillary motivatetheir bold and dangerous deeds.Pub. at $4.00. Sole $12. WILLIAM JAMES, by L Morris. The signi¬ficance of his "philosophical pragmatism."Pub. ot $2.50. Sole $1HEROES BEHIND BARBED WIRE, by H. K.Hansen. Why 80,000 Chinese and KoreanPOWs chose Western freedom. 46 photos.Pub. at $5.95. " Sole $1THE CONFLICT OF RELIGIONS, by P. H.Ashby. How the world’s major religions differ— and what they have in common.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1Herman Melville's TYPEE. The classic SouthSeas adventure novel. Pub. at $1.98. Sole $1THE LOTUS EATERS, by Gerais Green, authorof "The Last Angry Man." Bizarre cast ofcharacters in a Florida resort.Pub. at $4.95. Sole $1LIVING MAGIC, by R Rose. ESP to miracu¬lous cures among aborigines of modern Aus¬tralia. Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1THE IMAGE OF THE HEART, by D E. Schnei¬der. A study of psychosoma tics.Pub. at $6.00. Sole $1THE MEXICAN VENTURE, by T. C. Call.From strife-torn beginnings to modern times.Illus. Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1THE PISTOL, by James Jones. Latest novelby the author of "From Here to Eternity."Pub. at $3.00. Sale $13. THE SPIRIT OF THE SPANISH MYSTIC,ed. by K. Pond. Anthology of 16th and 17thcentury writings. Pub. at $3.95. Sale $1PRACTICAL PROSE STUDIES, by R. O.Bowen. Advice and models of good prose writ¬ing by Edmund Wilson, Margaret Mead, oth¬ers. Pub. at $3.75. Sole $14. RENAISSANCE CAVALIER, by J. S. White.Character structure of Renaissance man. Illus.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1SENSE OF HUMOR, by Stephen Potter. 100gems of humor and nonsense from Boswell,Dickens, Shaw, Priestley, others.Pub. at $4.00. Sale $15. STENTHAL'S SELECTED JOURNALISM,ed. by G. Strickland. Irreverent writings onliterature, ideas, politics — and women.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $1.496. THE GENTLE TAMERS: Women in the OldWest, by Dee Brown, Elizabeth Custer, Calam¬ity Jane, Lola Monter, Adah Menken, CarrieNation and other lively ladies, informally por-troyed. Illus. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $2.98COMPLETE DUCK SHOOTER'S HANDBOOK,by Robert Scharff. For buff and beginner.Good-looking, easy-reading, covers every typeof duck, gun, accessory, plus information onsafety, locations, dogs, etc. 100 photos.Pub. ot $5.95. Sale $2.98GREAT THOUGHTS OF GREAT AMERICANS.Jefferson, Lincoln, Mark Twain, Will Rogers,FDR, Ike, many others. Ed. by C. Bridge.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1THE AMERICANS. Photos by Robert Frank.Intro., Jack Kerouac. 89 deeply moving, un¬conventional photos of cowboys and politi¬cians, funeral parlors and opening nights;crap tables, jam sessions, etc.Pub. at $7.50. Sale $3.98GAME COOKERY in America and Europe, byR. R Camp. Best recipes for duck, goose,pheasant, rabbit, venison and sauces, stuf¬fings, culinary equipment for them.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $2.987. HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR MIND, byBaruch Spinoza. Examine your contradictoryemotions and points the way to true happi¬ness. Orig. $2.75. Sale $1San Francisco Earthquake—THE DAMNDESTFINEST RUINS, by M. Sutherland. Hour-by¬hour, day-by-day narrative of horror, hero¬ism and humor amidst the holocaust.Illus. $3.50. Sale $1.988. THE WORLD OF CAVES, "by A. Lubke.Explains the fascination in exploring under¬ground as a spine-stingling scientific chal¬lenge. Comprehensive guide and history, withphotos of famous caves.Pub. ot $5.00. Sale $2.989. ROOTS OF CONTEMPORARY AMERICANARCHITECTURE, ed. by L. Mumford. 37 es¬says prefaced by the dean of American critics:Thoreau; Frank Lloyd Wright; Sullivan; Hud-nut; Bauer; others Orig. $6.00. Sale $2.4910. THE SATYR1CON of Petronius Arbiter,trans ascribed to Oscar Wilde. The classic de¬bauch, set in Nero's bawdy Rome.Pub. at $2.50. Sale $1 FAMOUS FIRES,- by H. Clevely. CocoonutGrove; Hartford Circus; Triangle Shirtwaist;German Reichstag; Texas City; 20 other his¬toric blazes; and new facts on Chicago, SanFrancisco fires. Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1.9811. Founders of the Confederacy; THEYTOOK THEIR STAND, by M. W. Wellman.The first rousing months of these leaders—-Stonewall Jackson, Edmund Ruffin, MaryChestnut and Robert E. Lee.Pub. at $4.50. Sale $2.98FROM THE HORSE'S MOUTH. 22 great his¬toric figures describe the events in their ownwords. Pub. at $3.95. Sale $112. MONEY, MEN AND MACHINES, byCatchings & Roos. Critique of Federal ReserveBoard and its policies. Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1PROUD FORTRESS, by A. Andrews. Com¬plete history of Gibraltar through centuriesof sieges and wars. Illus.Pub. at $3.75. Sale $113. THE PATH TO ROME, by Hilaire Belloc.Classic narrative of the great author's pil¬grimage—on foot. Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1BUDDHISM AND ZEN, by N. Senzaki & R.McCcndless. On the philosophy-religion thatis sweeping the West. Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1THE PROBLEM OF JESUS, by J. Guitton. Thehistorical evidence for the content of the Gos¬pels. Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1MADAME de CHANTAL, by H. J. Heagney.Interesting phases of French ecclestical his¬tory. Pub. at $3.50. Sole $114. SEEK FOR A HERO, by W. G. Schofield.Incredible story of John Boyle O'Reilly, Irish19th century rebel. Pub. at $3.95. Sale $1NAPOLEON AND MADAME GEORGE, by E.Saunders. Great actress who was the FirstConsul's mistress. Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1WOMEN OF PARIS, by Andre Maurois. Pho¬tos by Nico Jesse. 125 candid camera shots.Only $1THREE DIMENSIONS OF PUBLIC MORAL¬ITY, by H. W. Schneider. The meaning of"Liberty, Fraternity, Equality" today.Sale $1Honore de Balzac's CESAR BIROTTEAU. Oneof his best novels of 19th century Paris life.Pub. at $3.50. Sole $1REVOLUTION OF THE LONELY, by P. J.Bouman. Kaleidoscopic history of the past,agonizing 50 years. Pub. at $4.00. Sale $1FILM AND EDUCATION, ed. by G. M. Elliott.Symposium on non-commercial film-making.Pub. at $7.50. Sale $1DEVELOPMENT AND LEARNING, by W. F.Bruce. Emotions, social patterns in childhoodand adolescence. Pub. at $2.75. Sale $1The Life and Music of RICHARD RODGERS,by D. Ewen. Biog. of the most popular com¬poser in America. Illus. Pub. at $4.95. Sale $115. MATHEMATICAL TABLES AND FOR¬MULAE, by F. J. Comm. Standard tables—•useful desk reference. Pub. at $2.75 Sale $1"PICTURES OF PARIS" 1961 ENGAGEMENTCALENDAR. 60 full-page photos, 6 in fullcolor, facing day-by-day entries. Desk-size,7x9". Pub. at $2.50. Sale $1.49YOUR MEMORY, by O. W. Hayes. Learn thissimple, proven way to develop a super-powermemory in less than a week.Pub .at $2.75. Sale $116. A HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN PEO¬PLE TO 1865, by H. J. Carman and H. C.Syrett. Special emphasis on economical andsocial history, with valuoble appendices and^bibliography. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $1.9817. POLITICS AMONG NATIONS, by H. J.Morgenthau. Encyclopedic modern survey,with maps, charts, bibliography. Over 600 pp.Pub. at $8.00. Sale $1.9818. THE GREAT CHICAGO FIRE, by R. ACromie. Searing, factual hour-by-hour ac¬count of the epic bloze that left 100,000homeless. $5.00. Sale $1.9819. SOCIAL LIFE: STRUCTURE & FUNC¬TION, by J. Bennett and M. Tumin. Synthesisand reference work on sociology, anthropologyand psychology. 725 pp.Pub. at $5.50. Sale $1.9820. AN INTRODUCTION TO EDUCATIONIN AMERICAN SOCIETY, by R. E. Callahan.Readings from Huxley, Conant, Dewey, oth¬ers. Pub. at $5.75. Sale $1.9821. Great Russian Novel—ST. PETERSBURG,by Andrey Biely. A masterwork of suspenseby a writer justly compared to Dostoevsky.Pub. at $4.75. Sale $122. AN APACHE CAMPAIGN in the SierraMadre, by Cavalry Capt. J. G. Bourke. Intro,by J. Frank Dobie. He pursued Geronimo'sApaches! $2.75.' Sale $1MRS. R.: The Life of Eleanor Roosevelt, byA. Steinberg. Our most beloved and remark¬able First Lady's own story.Pub. at $5.00. ' Sale $1.49BUNDLING—A Charming American Custom,by H. R. Stiles. The Puritans' way of courtship,told with wit by a noted scholar.Pub. at $2r50. Sale $1 LIVING WITH STRESS, by N. E. Gross. Showsyou how to understand and control your reac¬tions to tension and stay healthy.Pub. at $3.95 Sale $1HOUSEWIVES' GUIDE TO ANTIQUES, byLeslie Gross. How to judge values, detectfakes, combine furnishings—everything youneed. Pub. at $4.00. Sale $1DICTIONARY OF PHILOSOPHY, ed. by D DRunes. Every term, idea, and system ofthought defined, from beginning to Zen.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.9823. PICTORIAL HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY,by D. D. Runes. Socrates, Moses, Suzuki, andEinstein; Upanishads and Existentialists; afascinating pictorial survey of philosophersand their thought, with nearly 1,000 illustra¬tions and text by an authority. 8'/2x1 1. 406pp. Orig. Pub. at $15.00. Sole $5.95Letters of Mary Shelley—MY BEST MARY,ed. by Spark & Stanford. Selected correspond¬ence of the poet's wife.Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1THE AMERICAN COLLEGE, ed by P. F. Val¬entine. Survey of leading institutions.Pub. at $10.00. Sale $124. D. H. Lowrence—POSTE RESTANTE, byH. T. Moore. The influence of locale on Law¬rence's writings. Pub. at $3.50. Sole $1MARIE, OR SLAVERY IN THE UNITEDSTATES, by Gustave de Beaumont. First Eng¬lish translation of clossic French novel.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $125. THE RACIAL THINKING OF RICHARDWAGNER, by L. Stein. Pub. at $4.75. Sale $126. THE THEATRE OF AUGUSTIN DALY, byM. Felheim. America's first real impresarioond his famous stage. Pub. at $5.00. Sole $1AMERICAN CONSTITUTIONAL CUSTOM,by B. C. Rodick. Origins and development.Pub. at $3.50. Sole $1GODOY—Master of Spain, 1792-1808, byJ. Chastenet. With contemporary portraits byGoya. Pub. at $4.00. Sole $!YALE STUDIES IN MODERN EUROPEANLITERATURE AND THOUGHTLEON BLOY, by R. Heppenstall.Pub. at $2.50. Sale $1ERNST JUNGER, by J. P. Stern.Pub. at $2.50. Sale $1JACQUES RIVIERE, by M. Turnell.Pub. at $2.50. Sale $1MANZONI, by W. Wall.Pub. at $2.50 Sale $1HUGO VON HOFMANNSTHAL, by H. A.Hammelman. Pub. at $2.50. Sale $1MISTRAL, by R. Lyle. Pub. at $2.50. Sale $1EMILE VERHAEREN, by P. M. Jones.Pub. at $2.50 Sale $127. WHAT THEY BELIEVE, by G. E. Coving¬ton. Religious, moral, ethical concepts of 800young people. Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1MUSIC OF THE AMERICAS, NORTH ANDSOUTH, by P. H. Apel. A survey, from tribalchants to jazz and 1 2-toners.Pub. ot $3.95 Sale $128. PORTRAITS, by Desmond McCarthy. Es¬says on Henry James, Conrad, others. *Pub. at $3.50. Sole $129. MASTERWORKS OF TURGENEV. Twocomplete novels and nine of his best shortstories—one of the giants of Russian litera¬ture. Special $130. MASTERWORKS OF BROWNING. Thebest-loved poems of both Elizabeth and Rob¬ert, including the complete Sonnets from thePortuguese. Special $131. MASTERWORKS OF EMERSON. The fa¬mous Essays. The first and second series com¬plete, plus others on Nature, Conduct of Life,and English traits. Special $132. MASTERWORKS OF HAWTHORNE. TheScarlet Letter and The House of Seven Gables"complete, plus the best of the Twice ToldTales. Special $133. MASTERWORKS OF IBSEN. A Doll'sHouse,' Hedda Gabler, and seven other com¬plete plays—the cornerstone of the moderndrama. Special $1MASTERWORKS OF WILDE. The Picture ofDorian Gray and five plays complete, plus hisbest poems, essays and fairy tales.Special $134. MASTERWORKS OF VOLTAIRE. Can-dide and all the other romances complete, thewitty Dialogues and Philosophical Criticism,etc. Special $135. AMERICA'S LITERARY REVOLT, by M.Yatron. Comparative study of Edgar Lee Mas¬ters, Vachel Lindsay, and Carl Sandburg—-their common outlook in an America ofchange and growth. Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1.9836. SOLOVYEV—Prophet of Russian-West¬ern Unit, by E. Munzer. The seminal thoughtof the Russian Christian philosopher.$4.75. Sale $1 37. PROJECTIVE PSYCHIATRY: Clinical Ap¬proaches to the Total Personality, ed by Abt& Beliak. Contributors include Sachs, Levy,Wertham, Lindner and Proshansky.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9838. EXPRESSIONISM IN ART, by SheldonCheney. With 210 reproductions of greatpaintings, sculpture, architecture, scene de¬sign, etc. A history of this most importanttrend in modern art. $5.00. Sale $3.9839. A SHORT HISTORY OF EXISTENTIAL¬ISM, by Jeon Wahl. The doctrines of Kierke¬gaard, Heidegger, Jaspers and Sartre areclearly explained. Pub. at $2.75. Sole $140. THE HISTORY OF BIOLOGY by ErikNordenskiold. The classic history of the riseof the biological sciences through the agesand the great men and researchers and theirdicoveries. 629 pages, illus. Brig. pub. at$10.00. Reprint, library ed. Special $4.50BEERBOHM TREE, by Hesketh PearsonWarm biography of England's legendaryactor-manager. Pub. at $3.75. Sole $1DIARY OF AMERICA, ed. by J. & D. Berger.The colorful story of our country unfolded inthe writings of 100 diarists, from earliesttimes to present. Over 600 pages.Pub. at $6.95. - Sole $2.9841. THE ILL-STARRED STEWARTS, byW. D. Holmes. Colorful biographies of thebrilliant but ill-fated family of English mon-orchs. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $142. THE CONSPIRATORS AND THECROWN, by H. R. Williamson. True accountof the impassioned rivalry between the daugh¬ters of Henry VIU and their struggle forpower. Pub. at $3.95. Sale $1FROM PILLAR TO POST, by A Mehdevt.Madcap adventures of New Yorker magazinewriter and Persian husband.Pub. at $3.75. Sole $1JOURNEY FROM THE ARCTIC, by D. CBrown. Mystery ond magic of the Land of theMidnight Sun. Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1THE RISE OF THE HOUSE OF DUVEEN, byJ. J. Duveen. The fabulous art dealer and hismillionaire patrons. Illus. Pub. at $5. Sale $1HOW TO NO NOTHING WITH NOBODYALL ALONE BY YOURSELF, by Robert PaulSmith. More "Where Did You Go." Illus.Pub. at $2.95. Sale $1WOMEN OF ROME, text by Albeto Moravia,photos by S. Waagenoar. 1 10 remarkable pic¬tures. Only $1Van Wyck Brooks' SCENES AND PORTRAITS.Memoirs of intellectual America.Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1MEMORIES, by Desmond McCarthy. Recollec-tons ond criticism. Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1FRANZ BOAS: The Science of Man in theMaking, by M. J. Herskovits. Contributionsof the great anthropologist.Pub. at $2.50. Sale $1CAME TO OXFORD, by Sir Muirhead Bone.32 large exquisite drawings, text on the beau¬tiful city. Pub. at $4.90. Sale $143. PICASSO AND THE BULL, by V. Mar¬rero. A theme that runs all through the fa¬mous painter's work. Illus.Pub. at $3.00. Sale $1EDWARD EVERETT HALE, by J. HollowayHistorian, writer, friend of Emerson, Haw¬thorne, Whitman. Pub. at $4.95. Sole $1THE ART OF THE LOGOS, by J. A K. Thom¬son. The storytellers of ancient Greece andtheir narratives. Pub. at $2.50. Sale $1THE AMERICAN FESTIVAL GUIDE, by H RCoates. Over 200 annual U. S. and Canodiancelebrations. Pub. at $4.00. Sole $1J. K. Huysmans: THE FIRST DECADENT, byJ. Laver. Fin de siecle French novelist-sensualist. Pub. at $6.25. Sale $1THE MIRROR OF CONRAD, by E H. Visiak.The great writer as seen in his own writings.Pub. at $4.00. Sale $1THE WAY OF THE CONDUCTOR, by KarlKruger. What the orchestra leader does andwhy. Pub. at $3.95. * Sale $1THE FINAL FACE OF EVE, by Evelyn Lan¬caster. From the world's most famous psychia¬tric case: She was 3 different personalities!$4.50. Sale $144. STORY OF A YEAR: 1848, by R. Post¬gate. The "Communist Manifesto" and theGold Rush; revolt in Europe; etc. Illus.Pub. ot $4.50. Sale $1.9845. NOTES FROM THE WARSAW GHETTO,by E. Ringelblum. Trans, from shocking eye¬witness accounts of Nazi atrocities.Pub. at $5.95. Sale $1.9846. PICTURES IN PERIL, by H. H. Pars. Last-minute rescues and painstaking restorationsof art mosterworks. 31 half-tones.$7.00. Sale $1.9847. SANFORD BALLARD DOLE and HisHawaii, by E. M. Damon. Biog. of the "strongman" who ruled the Islands; with historicphotos. $5.00. Sale $1.98THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ayenue D. S. Passmore, Manager16 • CHICACO MAROON • Feb. 17, 1961