^Siiy0l 69 — Ho. 60 University of Chicago, February 24, 1961 «> 3 1Dean defends residencyJ Roger Downey, performing during last year's marathon.WUCB marathon tohelp WUS driveThe following statement byDean of students John P. Nether-ton, discussing the residential col¬lege was made before a meetingof the College faculty yesterdayafternoon and is printed herewith their consent.The University has beencommitted to the idea ofa residential undergraduatecommunity for a long time. Iwon’t take your time today forreally ancient history, except toremind you — and enter in thisrecord—that a quite informativeaccount of the matter beginningwith the year 1892 appeared inthe Maroon for November 4,1960.f will, though, look back to May2,1. 1952, when the then Collegefaculty endorsed the essentialpoints of a document entitled “AResidential Plan for the College.”Some of you who are here to¬day will remember that sunnyMay afternoon when we met inBreasted hall, and the enthusiasmwith which the faculty turned itsattention to this matter. In intro¬ducing it, the spokesman of theAll students will have topay a quarterly student healthfee of $15 beginning this fall.The new fee was voted by theBoard of Trustees in their meet¬ing Monday.Until the Board’s action therehad been no separate fee for stu¬dent health services.With the new fee, total costs tostudents carrying a full programwill be $1,155. This consists of thenew fee, $1,050 tuition, and $60general service fee.Dean of Students John Nether-ton stated that he has “stronglyrecommended” a separate healthfee as the best way of raising ad¬ditional money. Dr. HenriettaHerbolsheimer, director of Stu¬dent Health service, also favoredthe fee, according to Netherton.In a memorandum dated Feb¬ruary 14, 1961, Netherton gavefive reasons for adopting the newfee. These were:“1. An identifiable charge inprepayment for health service isin keeping with current practiceboth in the University and out¬side. Blue Cross-Blue Shield de¬ductions are itemized on mostpaychecks; most of the bettercolleges and universities of thecountry have an identifiable stu¬dent health fee.“2. The eligibility for SHS (Stu¬dent Health service) of Lying-innurses, International house resi¬dents who are not registered stu¬dents, and post-doctorals regis¬tered pro forma has in effectobliged us to set up a separatehealth fee for those separategroups. Since the benefits areidentical, it would seem logical tocharge students the same fee.“3. Despite all efforts to correctmisapprehension on the point,many students, parents, and fac¬ulty quarter after quarter takethe present $20 fee to be in facta health fee. One reason for thisis no doubt the fact that separatefee3 are so well-known and widelyused. To charge a fee clearly oncosts would eliminate what I un¬derstand is a source of consider¬able friction between SHS staffand their clientele.‘‘4. All health service costs arerising at a higher rate than thegeneral cost of living, A separate Policy committee, Mr. Seidman,had used these words: “The Deanof the College and the Policy com¬mittee believe that a residentialplan is a matter in which the en¬tire faculty should be deeply in¬terested, because the intellectualdevelopment of the student is soclosely related to the total envir¬onment, both the physical and thesocial one, in which he finds him¬self. Although on most campusessocial life is traditionally sepa¬rated from academic experience,we believe that the social andacademic experiences of our stu¬dents should be related. If we areto realize the kind of academiccommunity we hope to build, fac¬ulty members must be interestedin and help to influence more thanthe classroom behavior of ourstudents.”The vote of approval was a un¬animous one.The following eight years sawmany important developments inthe history of the College. Theone that concerns us here, the de¬velopment of a residential under¬graduate community, proceededhealth fee would enable the Uni¬versity over the years to reflectthis disproportionate increase atthe point where it is actually oc¬curring, and/or to explain neces¬sary limitations of sendee in thesame terms.“5. To the degree that the pro¬posed step would put us some¬what nearer to operating SHS onan actual-cost basis, and perhapslead evenutally to an even morerealistic relationship between costand the fee, it would facilitatecalculations of the best way tomesh our own SHS coverage withthe health-insurance plan, and ofthe advantages, at any given time,of making the latter compulsory.”Dr. Herbolsheimer said that thefee would still not cover costs ofstudent benefits. SHS is notcharged for light, heat, power, orrent.Also, Dr. Herbolsheimer statedThe University of Chicagobasketball team has acceptedan invitation to the NationalCollegiate Athletic Associa¬tion (NCAA) college divisiontournament. This is the first timeany University basketball teamhas been invited to such a na¬tional tournament. The collegedivision is composed of thoseteams who do not play most oftheir games in “major confer¬ences” (such as the Big Ten orthe Missouri Valley).32 teams chosenRegional selection committeeschoose thirty-two teams out oftwo hundred and forty-five par¬ticipating schools. These teamsare then divided into eight groupsfor “regional playoffs.” The re¬gions do not have set boundaries,but vary from year to year. Thisyear Chicago will play in theGreat Lakes section. The gameswill be held at the fieldhouse onMarch 10 and 11. UC’s three oppo¬nents have not yet been chosen.Walter Hass, director of athleticsand member of the selection com¬mittee for the Midwest, said that apace. Two new resident hallswere built. There was a steadyincrease in student applicationsto live in the halls. The StudentHousing office adopted the firmpolicy of giving first priority tothe need of undergraduates foraccommodations in the House sys¬tem. For many years, all studentsunder 18 had been required to livein if they did not live at home.In 1958 we extended this to applyto all students in their first year.By Autumn, 1960, over three-fourths of the entering studentsand over half of all returningundergraduates were in the Resi¬dence Halls.Throughout academic 1959 -60we had been discussing ways andmeans of accelerating the prog¬ress towards fuller residentiality.As you know, attention was alsobeing given to the phenomenon ofacademic failure and “drop-out.”While the rate is not alarming,and is diminishing, any numberof cases, however small, repre¬sents a waste—or worse—whichwe must help students to avoid ifwe can. In Spring, 1960, it became(continued on page 10)that students receive indirect serv¬ices, such as consultation withdoctors in Billings or talks aboutgeneral health problems with resi¬dence heads, without addedcharge.She cited health fees at otheruniversities. Northwestern recent¬ly raised its fee to $20 a quarter.Harvard charges $68 a year for asimilar health service, with healthinsurance at $20 a year.Chicago participates in thesame insurance program with acost of $10 a year.Netherton stated that he ex¬pected student reaction to the newfee to be “questioning,” but hethought that students would ac¬cept the fee after they understoodthe reasons for it.He stated that the Trustees haddiscussed a separate health feefor three years.it might very well be Lincoln ofMissouri, Murray college, Parsonsof Iowa, or Concordia in RiverForest. There is also the possibil¬ity that Cornell of Iowa, fourthin the tournament last year, willbe in the Great Lakes region. Cor¬nell qualified automatically, as dideleven other schools, winners ofNCAA conference championships.By this method, only twenty-oneteams remain to be selected everyyear.The winner of the tourney herewill go on to the finals at Evans¬ville, Indiana. Last year’s cham¬pion was Evansville college. Thefinals are March 16, 17 and 18.Last year’s Great Lakes win¬ner was Wheaton, which has notdone well this year. Wheaton wasbeaten in the first round of thefinals last year.Coach Joe Stampf said, “Themen on the team have earned thehonor and privilege of represent¬ing the University.”Stampf has been coach since1956. When he took over the teamhad a forty-eight game losing WUCB will be solicitingcontributions of books andmoney for the South Africanstudent fund (SASF) tonightand tomorrow during its twenty-seven hour 9th annual marathon.The marathon will open tonightat 7 pm with a traditional re-broaucast of Robert M. Hutchins’farewell address. It will continuewith much live entertainment,featuring the Pro Nausea’s ap¬pearance at 7 pm tomorrow night,and recorded music.The marathon will end with abroadcast from the field houseof the UC Washington universityof Saint Louis basketball game.The marathon, which isWUCB’s only live audience broad¬cast of the year, will be held inthe North Lounge of Reynoldsclub. Admission is free.WUCB’s contribution to SASFwil lhelp 13 African students getcollege educations. After meetingrigorous academic standards,these students were acceptedfrom more than 100 applicants toparticipate in the University ofLondon’s external studies pro¬gram.The students are studying inJohannesburg in what resemblesan underground school. The gov-streak behind them. Since thenthey have been 57-19. Last yearthe record was 18-4.The team has a 15-3 record be¬hind them this year. They have,in addition, been facing a moredifficult schedule. Last Saturdaythey played the University of De¬troit, ranked in the top twenty inthe nation, and with an All-Amer¬ican contender. Detroit has re¬ceived a bid to the National Invi¬tational tournament and playsschools like Ohio State. They lostby twenty points, playing withthe second team part of the time.They managed, however, to holdthe Titans to the lowest scorethey had this season. The Maroonsare second defensively in the col¬lege division.Good for schoolAssistant Coach Jon Nicholsoncommented, “It’s a wonderful ex¬perience. It will do the school alot of good. Good publicity issomething an institution can al¬ways use. Win or lose this is goodpublicity.”The only difficulty is the prob¬lem of quarterlies, which coincide ernment has so far ignored, rath¬er than helped the students’ pro¬gram. WUCB hopes its contribu¬tion reaches the students beforethe government takes actionagainst their “university.”According to Bruce Vermazen,station manager, the marathon's“cast of thousands” includes atleast thirty four WUCB membersacting as engineers, coordinators,producers, and announcers, plusmany entertainers, and a largeaudience.Friday night’s program includesa live performance of “Tennights in a bookstore,” jazz withBob Applebaum’s jazz group, andrecorded folk music with JohnKim and Mike Wolf son and livefolk music Mike Michaels.Saturday morning’s programwill begin with a torch hour atmidnight. Mike Edelstein, SteveWestheimer, and Bill Petermanwill bring recorded jazz to Sat¬urday’s programming. The' col¬legium musicum will performchamber music.The Blackfriars, UT, the GleeClub and the meter readers willperform live. Barry Goldwater’sspeech of last Saturday on “Apositive conservatism for the’60s” will be broadcast at noon.with the week of the tournament.Although the team voted unani¬mously to accept the bid, therewas a good deal of considerationgiven to this. Fred Paulsell. mem¬ber of the team, said, “It adds agood finishing touch to the sea¬son. However, it is right duringtest week. The team gave a greatdeal of thought to this. GeneErickson said that although allexams on the 16th and 17th hadbeen postponed for them, win orlose, the situation would still bedifficult. Some boys have examsscheduled for the same day (Sat¬urday) that they are to play thedeciding game in the regionals.The crowd should be large.“People will come from all overChicago for this,” Fred Paulselland Jerry Toren both said.Toren added, ‘The competitionwill be pretty stiff. We don’t knowquite what we’ll run into.”This is the fifth year of the col¬lege division tournament. Thefirst basketball tournament of theNCAA was played in 1939.New health fee approvedBasketball team accepts NCAA bidJapan is split by old and newEditor's note: Dr. Tillich, anoted Harvard Theologian, gavea series of lectures in Japan dur¬ing the summer of 1960. Upon hisreturn he wrote an informal re¬port of his experiences for a num¬ber of his friends Dr. Tillich hasallowed the Maroon to reprintpart of his report dealing withJapanese life and politics. Weoffer it in the belief that manyof Japan’s contemporary prob¬lems may confront other non-Western nations as they develop;we believe Dr. Tillich’s insightsare important and deserve to bepublished.by Paul TillichA Japanese friend said tome: We are a schizophrenicnation, split by the conflict ofthe old and the new. Andwhen I told this to a high Amer¬ican representative, he asked me,“How long can this last withoutendangering the existence of thenation?”This is indeed the cardinalquestion which is also asked bymany responsible Japanese. It isespecially serious in relation tothe younger generation which haslost the traditional norms and hasnot received new ones. This pro¬duces a vacuum into which ques¬tionable or dangerous forces mayenter.An “ultimate concern,” an an¬swer to the question of the mean¬ing of life is lacking. Many arefeeling it. Therefore, the more Iemphasized this problem in mylectures, the stronger was the re¬sponse. The fear of some of theolder people that this may lead toa total moral disintegration seemsto me exaggerated. There is stillmuch inherited moral substancei largely created by centuries ofConfucial education) in most in¬dividuals, certainly in the studentswhich I saw in my lectures andon the campuses I visited. But,of course, this tradition is undercontinuous attack and is weak¬ened step by step.The last remarks point to thepolitical and religious realities Ihave encountered. There wereabundant occasions to encounterboth of them, the religious onesbecause I was introduced intomany of them as a visiting the¬ologian, the political ones becauseI was in Tokyo during the mostcritical three weeks of last June.Japan is not- anti-WestFirst, my impressions of thepolitical situation: They are theresult of many talks with peo¬ple, Japanese and foreigners, whowere deeply involved in the eventsand their interpretation in theworld press. I may sum up myideas about the situation as fol¬lows: First, the demonstrationswere neither anti-Western noranti-American. Second, the dem¬onstrations were organized by theCommunist student groups underleadership of its most radical(often called “Trotskyite”) ma¬jority. Third, the vast majority ofthe participants in the demonstra¬tions were non-Communist stu¬dents, often accompanied by theirprofessors and workers under the leadership of the two Socialistparties. Fourth, the motive ofthese groups was a double one,the fear of becoming involved ina new war by the security pact,and the hostility of the whole leftagainst the undemocratic attitudeof the Kishi government, especial¬ly the way it pushed through thepact. Fifth, the anti-American actsof violence were caused by the im¬pression that Eisenhower, throughhis intended visit, had become atool in the party politics of Kishi.Feeling is pro-AmericanThe.se statements require somecomment. One must first pointout that there is an astonishingpro-American feeling in Japan.MacArthur, the victor and com¬mander of the occupation forces,is almost a Japanese hero. Theydon’t forget that he has liberatedthem from the hated Tojo govern¬ment, a name which has a soundsimilar to that of Hitler in Ger¬many, and they have not forgot¬ten that he has given them a con¬stitution w'hich is democratic yet does not remove the symbolicfunction of the emperor.This basic feeling was in noway changed by the recent events,but there was some resentmenttand in Americans even morethan in Japanese) about the unin¬formed, over-simplified, Americanofficial interpretation, as well asnewspaper versions giving the im¬pression that there is only onecause for everything negative:communist propaganda. But prop¬aganda can merely bring o u twhat is already latently present.Great relief was felt by bothAmericans and Japanese whensome Senators and some Repre¬sentatives of the State Depart¬ment corrected the first mislead¬ing reports.The attitude of the vast major¬ity of the Japanese people tocommunism is negative. Even theleft-wing socialists are anti-com¬munist. The radical student move¬ment has been rejected by thecommunist party as too independ¬ent (although it was supimrtcd inthe demonstrations). But there are some particular elements inthe Japanese situation which welearned to understand.China is 'mother'The first one is the relationshipto China of 1500 years’ standing.China is called “the Continent.” Itis the ultimate source of Japan’sculture and religion. Many im¬portant Japanese scholars studyChinese history in all cultural andreligious aspects and contributefrom the Asiatic side to the East-West encounter , in Japan. Thefounders and saints of the greatBuddhist sects are Chinese. Chinais the mother, she remained themother in the Chinese-Japanesewar and she has not ceased to bethe mother in spite of her beingconquered by communism. Thisemotional element should not beunderestimated. < Nothing similaris true in their attitude towardRussia.)With respect to the participa¬tion in the demonstrations, onecould see that many students andothers participated because of thePraises Tillich's analysisSOUTH IMPORTMOTORS, Inc.CompleteVOLKSWAGENService &. SalesalsoExpert Body Repairs1527 E. 71st St.BU 8-4900 In recent years, many West¬ern people have gone to Japan.It is inevitable and under¬standable that each one seesJapan, hqr people and culturesomewhat differently. In a sense,the impressions of different indi¬viduals reveal as much about thepersons involved as about thecountry. And, Professor Paul Til¬lich’s reaction to Japan is no ex¬ception.Professor Daniel J. Boorstin hasreminded us that Americans byand large are obsessed by a paren¬tal image of Europe. Whether thisis desirable or not is anotherquestion; the fact remains thatAmericans, even when they visitEurope for the first time, feel asthough “they had been there be¬fore.”U.S. kin to EuropeThe ruins of Greece, cathedralsin Italy and France, castles alongthe Rhine, and quaint inns in theEnglish countryside, strangethough they may appear at firstsight, soon fall into place in theAmerican’s “world of meaning.”To be sure, they are not alwaysimpressed or pleased with whatthey find in Europe, but eventheir most critical comments aremade with the realization that Eu¬rope is an integral part of theAmerican’s historical and culturalexperience.This type of natural sense ofkinship does not exist betweenAsia and the West, so that whenAmericans, or any other West¬erner for that matter, visit Asiqfor the first time, they feel be¬wildered. Things they see, peoplethey meet, customs and mannerthey find appear alien to them.No less an interpreter of Japanthan Lafcadio Hearn experienceda “delightful confusion” when hefirst arrived in Tokyo, “for thereare no immediately discerniblelaws of construction or dec-ora¬tion: each building seems to havea fantastic prettiness of its own;nonthing is exactly like anythingelse, and all is bewilderinglynovel.”No wonder, many Western tour¬ists come home with very distort¬ed pictures of the life and cultureof peoples in Asia! And, how ex¬traordinary that a person likeProfessor Tillich tried, and to agreat extent succeeded, to under-THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOkm!L'Free v-c- Dr,i^ryLo'9e $1.95 rf1 «Extra Large $2.95 * ierry s1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045*- c H 1CAGO MAROON • Feb. 24, 1961 stand the texture of the complexsocial, cultural and political lifeof Japan during such a shortvisit!Credit no doubt goes to thekeen observation of Dr. Tillichhimself. At the same time, he wasfortunate in meeting a largenumber of the Japanese intellec¬tual elite whose views helped hisunderstanding of various aspectsof Japanese life and culture.Certainly, liis evaluation of theJune, I960 demonstrations reflectsthe sentiments of Japanese intel¬lectuals who are, in the main, notanti-American and are non-Com¬munist. I do not share, however,Tillich's view of the Japanesepeoples’ attitude toward MacAr¬thur and China. During my stayin Japan in 1958 I, too, ponderedthese questions. As far as I coulddetect, people in Japan are notcertain about their own destiny,caught in the whirlwind of the“revolution of rising expectations”in other parts of Asia on the onehand, and the cold war betweenthe Western democratic bloc andthe communist bloc.Many Japanese feel (hat theircountry is destined to developclose contact with China, regard¬less of the type of political orderthat exists on the Mainland. But,in spite of the fact that. Japanowed a great deal of her cultureto China, most people in Japan donot seem to feel that “China isthe mother,” to use Tillich’sphrase.Japan informed on EuropeCuriously, most people in Japanare not well informed about therecent history of China, despitegeographical proximity. For ex¬ample, Japanese intellectualsknow a great deal more aboutEuropean, and to a certain extentAmerican, philosophy, politics,economics, and art than abouttheir Chinese counterparts. Yet,when they encounter Westernersface to face, most Japanese be-come self-consciously “Asian.”This contradictory attitude—intel¬lectual acceptance of “modenrity”taken over from the West andemotional clinging to the Orientalworld of meaning — results in astrange ambivalence in the Japa¬nese mind today. This may ac¬count for an attitude towardAmerica which is not the kind ofresentment that often character¬izes the reaction of the conqueredpeople toward their conqueror.But I certainly did not sense thatMacArthur was regarded by theJapanese as a “hero,” as Tillichseems to indicate.Tillich’s impression of Japan also points out a serious problemthat confronts Japanese intellec¬tuals. Japan, be it noted, is proudof the fact that she is one of thefew nations in the world that canprovide a complete education inher own language. Practically allimportant hooks written in otherlanguages are quickly translatedinto Japanese, and, more amaztagstill, they find a market. However,only a small number of Japaneseintellectuals can express them¬selves either in speaking or inwriting in other languages thatare accepted In the current worldof scholarship.This means that when Westernscholars visit Japan, they arepersonally exposed to a corre¬spondingly small part of theJapanese intellectual community,although large crowds may (-omoto listen to their lectures. Con¬sequently, most Western visitors’impressions of Japan are strong¬ly colored by the outlook andperspectives of the special classof Japanese intellectuals who cantalk to tnem. Only a few percep¬tive Westerners have managed tobreak through this barrier of language; happily, Professor Tillichis one of them.Joseph M. Kitagawa emotional thrill they got out of it.But here also an additional tact.,,cannot be made into the main fac¬tor without a distortion of f|)(.whole picture. Surprising for meand many others was the predom¬inance of the students in the dem¬onstrations. We were told thatthe students consider themselvesas the future leaders of the nationmuch more confidently than theydo in America. They will becomethe “mandarins” in the social hier¬archy and they are sure of it.This is a totally un-Marxist feel¬ing and dependent on the memoryof the bureaucratic hierarchies,both in Japan and China.Awakened from indifferenceSome Japanese observers werevery glad that the events awak¬ened the students from their |>o-litical indifference. Without a pas¬sionate support by at least someimportant groups the young Japanese democracy cannot develop.This explains also, at least partly,the participation of a large numher of professors in the demon¬strations, indirectly and directly.Many of them were moderatelysocialist and tried to exercise amoderating influence. Only a veryfew of them were communist.These points are illustrated bythe fact that on the day of themost violent demonstrations mylecture on “Religion and Culture''in Tokyo University was over¬crowded in a large. lecture halland the students listened atten¬tively from 3:30 to 6:00 beforesome of them went to the demon¬strations, while we with otherprofessors were the dinner guestsof the President of the Universityi who later came into trouble withthe government through an anti-Kish i statement). . . ..Some friends regretted thatwe came into the critical periodand were afraid that somethingmight happen to us. The latterwas out of the question. It couldhave been possible for my lec¬tures to have suffered under thedisturbances, but even this wasnot the case; students as well asprofessors were more oi*m to theultimate problems to which theworld historical and national problems pointed. And for me it was afirst-rate introduction into the so¬cial and political situation of theFar East, and a new look at theworld political situation generally.(edited by Michael Shakman)Conflict not 'formless'Professor Tillich is not thefirst to note that the nationsof Asia are in transition,poised uncertainly betweenArnold’s two worlds, “the onedead, the other powerless to beborn.”But he is one of the few tostress that this peculiar state isone of mere formless conflict, mo¬ral disintegration and disspiritedaimlessness, but of passionateseeking, insistent questioning, andextraordinary seriousness. ThatAmerican public opinion, guidedby the simplistic streotypes of thepopular press and the reflexivereactions of an unimaginativeGovernment tends to interpretthe symptoms of this new seriousness as a result of communistpenetration perhaps does more tokeep the East mysterious for usthan any other single factor, aswell as to facilitate communistpenetration.Professor Tillich’s comments onthe situation as he saw it inde¬pendent of the assistance of thesestereotypes and reflexes are therefore of particular value. Many ofthe points he makes — the eandi-HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Dawn to Dawn 1342east 53 st. date elite status of the studentgroup, the openness of the intelli¬gentsia to the “ultimate problems’’of our time, the absence of vir¬tually any personal hostility to in¬dividual Westerners, the surpris¬ing persistence of embattled traditional norms — could probablybe duplicated for almost all theAsian nations, certainly for In¬donesia.Others — the intensity of pro-American feeling, the importanceof Trotskyite radicalism — atepeculiar to Japan.Still others — the Japaneseview of China as “the mother” - -strike me as unconvincing. ButProfessor Tillich’s directly a n dhonestly observed picture of whathappened in Tokyo last summershould, in its stark contrast towhat we were so urgently askedto believe, induce in us a usefulscepticism about both newspapo)and official versions about whatis happening in Havana, in Vienti¬ane, or Leopoldville, and immu¬nize us against the disease oiattributing to communist subver¬sion what Is fundamentally a des¬perate search for a viable politi¬cal, social, economic, and, as Pro¬fessor Tillich suggests, moral andreligious, order.Clifford Geer**mSchools back integration pleaSchool boards within andoutside of Hyde Park area andthe Hyde Park Kenwood com¬munity conference have en¬dorsed the Kenwood school PTAstatement requesting that theChicago Board of Education stateand implement a policy of raciallyintegrated schools.Among the groups which havetaken action are the Hyde ParkHigh School PTA. the Southeastcouncil, the PTA boards of Ray.Reavis. Murray, Shakespeare,Wadsworth. Scott and Ruggles.and the Hyde Park-Ken wood com¬munity conference. This does notinclude those boards outside ofthe H v d e Park-Kenwood areawhich have approved the state¬ment.In February the Hyde ParkHigh school PTA unanimouslyendorsed the statement and theSoutheast council passed a mo¬tion commending the Kenwoodschool for its integration state-m e n t. Delegates representingabout 30 schools on the south sidereceived copies of the statementto take back to their schools forstudy and action.Boards approve statementThe hoards of Reavis, Murray.Wadsworth and Scott approvedthe statement; while the Rayschool approving the statement“in essence” has appointed a committee to study the prooosal further. The Shakespeare PTA sup¬ported the Kenwood statement bya majority vote at its last meet¬ing. All the school boa i ds areplanning to submit the statementto their PTA for approval by themembers.Last week the Hyde Park-Ken¬wood Community conference en¬dorsed the statement and earliera committee was formed to pre¬pare a letter recommending thestatement of the Conferenceboard.Mrs. Albert Kilburn, co-chair¬man of the Kenwood Human rela¬tions committee which preparedthe statement, said that she hadfound the support for the state¬ment “gratifying.”In addition to strong supportwithin the Hyde Park-Kenwoodarea, other community councilsand school boards outside thearea have indicated approval ofthe statement.Has minor reservationsDr. George Reed, Jr., chairmanof the schools committee of theChatham - Avalon communitycouncil, stated that his committeeapproved the statement with two“minor reservations.”The first was concerned withthe Chicago Board of Education.In a letter to the Kenwood Humanrelations committee, the Chalt-ham-Avalon council regarded thestatement by Judge Irving R.Kaufman that in New Rochelle,New York. “The Board’s attitude,as indicated by its overt conduct,has been one of negation. It haspublicly disclaimed all responsi¬bility for the Lincoln problem(segregation at Lincoln elemen¬tary school was a subject of dis¬pute),” as applying to the Chi¬cago Board.Their questions were, “Has theChicago Board of education exer¬cised obligation to implement theSupreme Court decision referredto in our opening remarks,” (the1034 decision) and “Have not ap¬peals that the board do so byruany organizations and individ¬uals been ignored or refuted?”The letter concluded that theBoard of education by denyingthat there is a problem, has de¬nied any need for action. “Thefacts speak for themselves.” These statements were made inregard to the fourth paragraphin the Kenwood statement that,“We know that our Chicago boardof Education is dedicated to aprinciple of equal education andthat the fact of segregated schoolsis as disturbing to the Board asit is to many citizens of Chicago.”The second reservation ex¬pressed by Reed’s committee wasthat the items in the Kenwoodstatement calling for 1) expansionof the Human relations bureau ofthe Board of education to provideadequate expert and immediatehelp to local schools when neededand 2) required in-service train¬ing for all teachers in the areaof human relations, “could notbe emphasized too much.”Reed stated that these werevery important for the reason that"even if we get integrated schools,overt actions of prejudice bysome school teachers, which area matter of bitter experience,could ruin any integration prog¬ress.”Have '<fe facto' segregationCommenting further on theBoard's policy toward the segre¬gated situation in Chicago, Reedsaid, “The board doesn’t seem in¬terested in the problem of segre¬gation. We have de facto segrega¬tion in this city. It is only residen¬tial segregation according to the board, but school segregationneedn’t necessarily follow fromthis.”Last week John E. Cooke, exec¬utive vice-director of the NorthKenwood-Oakland community con¬ference predicted that his organi¬zation would endorse the Ken¬wood statement at its next meet¬ing.The statement, besides request¬ing board action on integratingstudents in Chicago’s schools,called for integration of staffsamong Chicago schools to sup¬plement student integration.To implement the integrationprogram the statement calls forpractical revision of school boun¬daries, full utilization of emptyclassrooms, lowering of actualclass loads, expansion of guid¬ance services according to theschool’s needs, utilization of fundsto eliminate double shifts, assign¬ment of personnel to guaranteean interracial staff for everyschool on teaching and clericallevels, and restriction of substi¬tutes and inexperienced teachersper school.The statement calls also for fairappointment of minority person¬nel at top level positions in theBoard of Education, and in theDistrict offices, expansion of hu¬man relatipns programs, inservicetraining for all teachers in human relations programs, inservicetraining for all teachers in humanrelations, use of classroom mate¬rials which illustrate inter-groupliving, and a minimum standardeducational program at everygrade level and ability groupingsin every school.Mrs. Kilburn, explaining someof the provisions said, “In manyof Chicago’s districts there areall Negro staffs and a ‘white resi¬due.’ This is not true for all Negrodistricts, however.”“The integration of staffs pro¬vision is meant to offset in partthe fact that we on the south sideobviously cannot transport stu¬dents to the north side very feas¬ibly. But,” she continued “we cando something to insure distribu¬tion of competent personnelamong districts this far apart.”"The principals,” she stated,“feel that this provision inter¬feres with their right to hirewhom they please, and are there¬fore, reluctant to approve ourplan.”Board 'sees no problem'She said that another difficultywas that many of the Board mem¬bers sincerely feel that there ex¬ists no serious school integrationproblem. This is the “chink in thearmor.” The object now, accord¬ing to Mrs. Kilburn, is to convincethe Board that there is a problem. A further obstacle to the ac¬ceptance by the Board of the pro¬gram is the lack of availabilityof statistics to support the claimsof segregation. According to bothMrs. Kilburn and Dr. Reed theBoard will not make public theactual numerical statistics of thesituation.The Board’s reaction to thestatement, as given by President,was a restatement of the Board'spolicy on human relations whichstates that: “Better human rela¬tions among all peoples basedupon deeper mutual understand¬ing is a primary objective of theentire educational program inChicago’s public schools.‘The Chicago Board of Edue*>tion recognizes that the achieve¬ment of better human relationshas moral and spiritual as well aseducational aspects. It involves be¬lief in the rights of man and ourattitudes toward our fellow hu¬man beings. We teach for the pur¬pose of developing behavior thatis exemplary in both personal andgroup living in a representativesociety where responsibilities andduties are corollaries of privilegesand rights, and where respect forthe worth and dignity of the in¬dividual is fundamental.”According to William G. Caples,President of the Board, this state¬ment covers the situation.City council to vote on UC planChicago’s city council willvote March 22 on whether ornot to accept a University planwhich will net the city almostone million dollars in federalfunds.The plan, which calls for Uni¬versity expansion south of theMidway, has been the source ofa great deal of controversy sinceit was first presented to the Chi¬cago Plan commission last July.Residents of Woodlawn, the siteof the proposed expansion, havedeclared that UC and the South¬east Chicago Commission (SECC)“sprung the plan without consult¬ing those concerned.”Under section 112 of the Fed¬eral Housing Act of 1959, moneyspent by an educational institu¬tion on construction can result infederal “matching grants” to thecity. Although the University’s in¬itial plans are only concerned withthe construction of one building—a Center for Continuing Educa¬tion, sponsored by the Kelloggfoundation — and in addition toanother building, the city mustapprove the plan prior to the be¬ginning of construction if Chi¬cago is to qualify for the federalgrant-in-aid.Residents of Woodlawn objected to the plan at the first openhearing of the Plan commissionDecember 15 because they fearedthat approval of this constructionwould lead to blanket city ap¬proval of the University's entireSouth campus expansion project.This is a long range plan for re¬development of a 58 acre stripof land extending from StonyIsland to Cottage Grove between60th and 61st streets.The plan commission voted to refer this proposal in view of thecitizens’ protest. The ChicagoLand Clearance Commission wasasked to survey the South cam¬pus area to determine if theneighborhood had deterioratedenough to be considered a “rede¬velopment area.” However, thecommission subsequently ap¬proved a similar plan on January26.“This part of our plan didn’treally need city approval,” statedone University spokesman, “asthe University already owns allthe land involved in this firstphase of South campus. We areseeking city approval of this planto allow the city to receive fed¬ eral funds in return for themoney the University will spend.”The Plan commission alsoasked last January that the sur¬vey include a larger area — 60thto 67th, Cottage Grove to StonyIsland. SECC officials expect thesurvey to indicate the whole areashould be designated a redevelop¬ment area.Although the city council isonly voting on this first phase ofthe South campus plan, Chicagocould receive a total of 14.4 mil¬lion dollars in federal redevelop¬ment credits if the entire 58 acreSouth campus project is eventual¬ly approved.Various groups in Woodlawn have expressed antagonism to theplan. These groups include theTemporary Woodlawn Organiza¬tion, and the United WoodlawnConference.Eventually the University hopesthe South campus area to house:a new University Press center, anew Business School building, anew Social Service Administra¬tion Research center, a new build¬ing for Building and Grounds, anaddition to the American Barcenter, dormitories, and recrea¬tional and parking facilities, inaddition to the currently proposedCenter for Continuing Educationand an extension to the PublicAdministration Service center.UC will give Fayette $200The UC Students to AidFayette county will presentresidents of the county with$200 this weekend. This repre¬sents most of the money the com¬mittee has collected to help Ne¬gro citizens continue their driveto register and vote. The com¬mittee also has pledges andchecks for $100 and clothing con¬tributions.John McFerrin, chairman of theFayette County Civic and Wel¬fare league, and residents of thetent city will be in Chicago thisweek-end. Groups including theUnited Packinghouse workers andthe Kenwood-Hyde Park Reliefcommittee will meet with McFer¬rin and give him money for theleague.Ths UC committee had beendubious as to whom they shouldcontribute the money. They were later convinced that although-theleague had organizational diffi¬culties they were honest and hadthe support of the residents ofthe county. It was also felt thatMcFerrin was the legitimate lead¬er of the group and was to betrusted.The needs of the people in Fay¬ette have changed in the past fewmonths from food and clothingto crop loans and mortgage pay¬ments. Although most Negroeswho have registered have been evicted from their lands othersare still on tenant farms and needenough money for seed and toolsto farm a crop for this year.Anyone wishing to contributemoney or willing to work to col¬lect money for the Negro citizensof Fayette county should contactCaryle Geier at Kelly 26, or theMaroon office.Bicyclas, Porta, Accessories ]| special student offer <: ACE CYCLE SHOP j; 1621 o. 55th St. Jharper squareCROCERLANDFree Delivery1455 E. 57th St. DO 3 2444 TAl-SAM-'Y&NCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE A NOAMERICAN DISHESOpen DailyII A.M. to 10:» r.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OU11318 East 63rd St. BU 8 -9018 I Wear Contact LensesDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist1132 E. 55th St.at University Ave. HY 3-8372 Jimmy’sand, the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.RANDELL-HARPEItSQUAREBeauty and Cosmetic Salon5700 Harper Avenue FA 4-2007Mrs. Billie Treganza. Prop.Feb. 24, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3McFerren to speakJohn McFerren, chairman of the Fayette county Civic and.Welfare league, and Ed Riddick, vice-president of the Uni¬versity chapter of the NAACP, will speak at a BrotherhoodWeek celebration sponsored by the Chicago Committee ofRacial Equality (CORE) to be Disormoment or nucleor worDouglas citesas alternative 'world law'to oblivionheld at the Warren avenue Con¬gregational Church, 3101 W. War¬ren boulevard at 4 pm, Sunday,February 26.McFerren will give am up-to-the-minute report on the situationin Fayette and Haywood countiesIn Tennessee and the conditionsat Freedom Village, the tent cityhousing a number of Negro ten¬ant farmers and sharecroppersevicted in retaliation for register¬ing and voting.Riddick will review the sit-indemonstrations that started ayear ago this month.Reverend Ceynar, chairman ofChicago CORE, announced thatthere would be a brief review ofthe highlights in the history ofCORE, which was first organizedin Chicago in 1942 and led a seriesof sit-ins at loop restaurants thatbroke racial discrimination inmost eating establishments in thedowntown area. Included will bea summary of the campaign toend Jim Crow practices at theWhite City and other roller skat¬ing rinks. The Emergency Relief commit¬tee established by Chicago COREbut now autonomous has beenone of the large contributors offood, clothing and funds to assistthe Negro farmers and sharecrop¬pers in Fayette county.A get acquainted and socialhour will follow the program.Earl B. Dickerson, president ofthe Supreme Liberty Life Insur¬ance Co., and Eugene E. Frazier,president of the United TransportService Employees Union, AFL-CIO, are Chicago members of thenational advisory council of theCongress of Racial Equality.CORE now has more than fiftylocal chapters across the nation,and over 25,000 members.The organization is now plan¬ning an expanded program ofnon-violent direct action againstdiscrimination in the Deep Southand the Border States that willspread from lunch counters torestaurants, buses, bus .terminals,restrooms, and in some areas tobowling alleys, hotels, theaters,housing, and employment. William O. Douglas, associ¬ate justice of the United StatesSupreme Court, has calledupon the world’s leaders tosupport a "rule of law” as the"only alternative to mass destruc¬tion” by nuclear war.The leader of tin* groupwhich has been studying thefeasibility of the Point FourYouth Corps proposal will dis¬cuss his findings this Sundayon the “Chet Huntley Report¬ing” television program. Dr.Maurice Albertson, Director ofthe Colorado State universityResearch foundation, will ex¬plain some of the problemsinvolved in the Youth Corpsand how they can be sur¬mounted on the program, be¬ginning at 3:30 pm on channel5. Copies of his report, whichhas already been given to theKennedy administration, willIn* made available to the publicthe following Monday. The search for total and "fool¬proof disarmament” should be the"first item on the internationalagenda,” Douglas asserts.Douglas’ statements appear ina 32-page pamphlet entitled TheRule of Law in World Affairs,published by the Center for theStudy of Democratic Institutions.Douglas is a member of the Cen¬ter's committee of consultants."The vast gulfs that exist be¬tween various world culturesmean that the common groundfor world law will be narrow andselective,” Douglas says. "Itstarts, of course, with the ruleagainst aggressive war; and itproceeds from there 1o all thestuff which treaties, contracts,commercial engagements, invest¬ments, t ravel, communicationsand the like shape up into con¬troversies."There are only limited areaswhere today we can rightfullysay common ground cun befound. Yet they are important,indeed critical ones; and they willexpand as the peoples of the worldwork with their newly emerginginstitutions of law and gain con¬fidence in them.”Coldwater explains conservatismIn a speech entitled ‘‘A Posi¬tive Conservative Program forthe 60’s,” Senator Barry M.Goldwater stated that con¬servatism is “coming back underthe leadership of youth.” He saidthat those who are "witnessingthe failures of liberalism” arelooking toward the conservativepoint of view. The speech wasgiven before a young RepublicanConvention last week at Munde¬lein college.But “What is a conservative?”,asked Goldwater. Goldwater ex¬plained that the conservative notonly wants to conserve the goodproperties of a system, but alsotq improve on the bad properties.He said that, in fact, the "con¬servative force is the greatestprogressive force the world hasever known.”Power means peaceGoldwater next stated thatpeace has always "been kept bythe proper use of power.” He said,"We want the United States toact like a world power . . . forgetabout prestige,” what we need is"respect.”Certainly we want peace, ex¬plained the Senator, but not atthe cost of freedom. "If peace isall we want, we can have peace.”All we need to do is to accept iton Mr. Khrushchev’s terms. Hesaid, however, that he did not“know a man, woman, or child”who would accept peace at suchan "expense.” We want peace, hesaid, but also we want “vk*toryover Communism.”On the subject of Federal Aidto Education, (FAE) SenatorGoldwater said that what theforces of FAE want is not “bettereducation, but controlled educa¬tion.” He stated that much moneyis wasted when it is sent to Wash¬ington, and then sent back to thecommunity. "New Jersey,” he ex¬plained. "found that it takes $2.47to get back $1.00” for education.Keep taxes at homeThe Senator suggested that $3%billion more of the tax money stayin the community, rather than be¬ing sent to Washington. Thatmoney woyld be used for schoolsif they were most needed, but itcould be used for other commu¬nity needs if the school systemwas adequate.He said that it is “quality,” not"quantity,” that is important ineducation. As an example, he saidthat it would be much better tospend the small amount of moneyrequired to teach a foreign lan-4 • CHICAGO MA guage in the grade schools thanto buy large, expensive manuallabor classrooms for the publicschools.Goldwater said on Federal Aidto the Aged, that it has alwaysbeen a fact that the younger peo¬ple care for the old. Many old peo¬ple do not need aid, he said, aswitnessed by the fact that peopleover sixty-five are in the highestincome brackets.Individuals should be encour¬aged to care for themselves. Heexplained that if the Federal Gov¬ernment aided the various agegroups, "families would becomea mishmash of people.” He statedthat one principle of communismis to pit the young against theelders. "Certainly we (conserva¬tives) have feelings,” he said, butthese feelings are not only to helppeople, but also to keep that in¬dividual's freedom.Questioned on absenteeismGoldwater said that people haveasked him how he can afford tobe away from Washington on somany speech trips. Goldwater ex¬plained that he did not have toworry about the affairs in Wash¬ington while he was away, sincethe "unusual" cabinet was thereto handle them. He said that thecabinet is so unsual that it is “thefirst cabinet in history that canplay Yale in football.”Goldwater commented on the“new frontier” of President Ken¬nedy’s, and said that the Presidentis sending out scouts hither andyon to hack out new trails. Theyhad to call one scout back, how¬ ever, stated Goldwater, becausethe scout “found no missile gap.”Jokes about Catholicismgoldwater said that he was alittle hesitant about telling oneof the new Kennedy jokes sincehe was in a Catholic auditorium(and possibly also since therewere about twenty Nuns sittingin the balcony!, but he would goahead since one of his Catholicsecretaries had told it to him. Sen¬ator Goldwater said that “thePresident’s going to cut Massa¬ chusetts into two States HighMass and Low Mass.”Goldwater concluded his speechby saying that a few years agowhen someone wanted to convincea person not to consider SenatorGoldwater's opinion on some is¬sue. they would say that he wasjust a “‘conservative.’” Now days,he said, these people have to adda hyphen and the prefix “ultra orarch.” He said that when they cannot use the word conservative atall is when “we’ll” all be happy. Douglas writes that his beliefin the feasibility of a rule of lawis not “an expression of hopealone.” He points to several ex¬amples of "procedures which ho>man ingenuity has devised forresolving disputes,” such as con¬ciliation, arbitration, mediation,administrative settlement andjudicial determination. He alsocites the work of specialized agen¬cies of the United Nations, theInternational Court of Justice andthe European Court of HumanRights.“The rule of law is versatile andcreative. It can devise new reme¬dies to fit international needs asthey may arise,” Douglas de¬clares.Douglas says that the "centralproblem of our time,” I he preven¬tion of war, requires total disarm¬ament; "Partial disarament is asham except insofar as it leadsto the establishment of procedureswhich can be extended to full dis¬armament.“The danger of partial disarma¬ment is that ear-li side aims tokeep the weapon—or weapons—that best suits its strategic posi¬tion. Russia, for example, wouldgladly trade atomic bombs fortanks, since with tanks she couldstill dominate the land mass ofwhir'll she is the center.”Douglas declares that if war isto be abolished, nations must beprepared to give up some of theirspecial claims.“There is no reason for us toget tangled up in legalisms thatmarch inexorably to the conclu¬sion that total and complete sov¬ereignty must be retained. Forwe now* know that when thatclaim is pressed by all nations,everyone faces extinction in anuclear holocaust.”Education bill proposedA $2.3 billion program foraid to primary and secondaryschools will be introduced tothe House next Monday byFrank Thompson, representativeto Congress from New Jersey, ac¬cording to an assistant of Thomp¬son’s.The money will be allocatedover a period of three years andwill be used for construction andteachers’ salaries. The govern¬ment, rather than give the moneydirectly to the schools, will dis¬tribute the money among thestates. The states may Ihenchoose whether the funds shall gotoward construction or teachers’salaries, Thompson’s assistant ex¬plained.The first year, $666 million willbe given out to the states. Thiswill increase to $866 million by thethird year.Each state will receive at least $15 per student, based upon theattendance of the students in theschool.The hill will include a revisionof the federal law concerningwhat is called an impacted schooldistrict. An impacted district isone which already operates witha large amount of federallyowned property. These districtswill now he included in the largerfederal aid program.Tlie provisions of the plan re¬flect accurately those outlined byPresident Kennedy in his mess¬age to Congress Monday morn¬ing.Already there are indications ofopposition to the plan describedby Kennedy as “a modest programwith ambitious goals.” SenatorEverett M. Dirksen (Republican,Ill.), the minority leader, calledit too ambitious, said that it in¬volved “a terrific amount ofmoney,” and will propose a Re¬Beta chapter quits nationalThe Dartmouth chapter of BetaTheta Pi has severed its affiliationwith its national because of "ra¬cial discrimination against Wil¬liams college Beta and hypocri¬tical dealings with the Dartmouthchapter.”Trouble started in 1954As reported in the Universityof Michigan Daily, last Wednes¬day’s action resulted from a seriesof events beginning in 1954. Atthis time, a student referendumat Dartmouth set "September,1960 as the deadline date to re¬move discrimination clauses fromfraternity constitutions.”Asking each of the 24 fraterni¬ties on campus to obtain repliesfrom their nationals stating"what pressures would be put ona chapter if it pledged a NegroR O O N • Feb. 24, 1961 student,” the Dartmouth chapterreceived no direct statement fromtheir national only a letter say¬ing members of every racial andreligious group had been active inBeta.Oak Winters, president of theDartmouth chapter, claimed thatlast fall, however, "the nationalexerted pressure when two Betachapters attempted to pledge Ne¬gro students.”Bowdoin pressuredNational officers and alumnihad reminded the Bowdoin chap¬ter of a "gentlemen’s agreement”not to pledge Negro studentsand the national issued an injunc¬tion to the Williams Betas not toinitiate its entire pledge class’’until further notice.” A Negro student is a member of that class,the Daily reported.”Lance Haddix, president of theUC Beta Theta Pi. commented,"Our chapter is greatly concernedover this matter. Although we’vebeen led to believe that the Dart¬mouth withdrawal was hasty,Dartmouth Beta won’t be the onlychapter to withdraw if a finalresolution abolishing discrimina¬tory practices is not passed at thenational convention next summer^i-—""Stating that no Negro studenthas yet pledged the UC Beta chap¬ter, Haddix added that “our con¬stitution is an open one. We havepledged members of the Jewishfaith in the past and have not,to my belief, practised discrimi¬nation at any time.” publican substitute of $1 billion togo to grade school construction.Senator Barry Goldwater, <R.Arizona) proposes thal tax creditsbe substituted for direct federalaid.Speaker Sam Rayburn, thoughthe opposed federal grants forteachers’ salaries, indicated thathe would lead no fight against theplan.New York Democrat, AdamClayton Powell, chairman of theHouse education and labor com¬mittee has hinted that he mightintroduce an amendment barringaid from school districts practic¬ing segregation.However, Mike Mansfield, Sen¬ate majority leader, and Demociat from Montana predicted theprogram would pass this year.Later in the week, Hie collegeaid program will be introducedto the floor. Although none of theprovisions for this bill are defi¬nite, it is expected to include mostof President Kennedy's sugges¬tions.Kennedy’s plan for aid to col¬leges includes a five year programfor scholarships, an extension ofthe present loan program, and aidfor building dormitories, libraries,classrooms, laboratories and otherfacilities.The scholarships would heworth between $700 and $1,000 ayear, and would be administeredby the states. The total cost of thescholarships will be $577,500,000.Hie present program of lew-interest, long-term loans to edu¬cational institutions for buildingfacilities will be extended to fiveyears, and will cost $1.3 billion.An additional five year programdispersing $1.5 billion for co»*struction of dormitories, librariesclassrooms, laboratories and otherfacilities is also included in theplan./»This amazing little machine is actually a mathe- RAU|k| CQMTFX anywhere, far less expensive and every bit as'matical giant. It weighs only 6 pounds, slips into ** accurate as big, costly office machines. It’s onlyyour desk drawer or briefcase, yet it adds, sub- C A LCU L AT O R 10" long, T wide and 33A" high—about the size oftracts, 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, workable a 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 ofall is its price. Just $125.* See it and try it for yourself at..**f. f. ?tyTHE UNIVERSITY OF5802 ELLIS AVENUE BOOKSTORED. S. PASSMOIIE. ManagerFeb. 24, 1961 • CHIC* m a n o o N o 5Letterthe Chicago maroon ‘Who was Lumumbafounded — 1892i«su<'d every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer quarterby students ol the University of Chicago. Inquiries should be sent to the Chicago Maroon. Ida Noyes hall 1212 E 59thStreet Chica o 37 Illinois Telephones: MI :1-01100, extensions, 3265 and 3266 Distributed without charge on campusSubscriptions by mail. $3 per year Office hours: 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material. 4 pmTuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material. 3 pm Wednesday before publication. To the Editor:In recent weeks the crisis in theCongo has come to a head withthe murder of Patrice Lumumba. water, they took your sweetwife for glitter of cheap pearls,your incredible riches that no¬body could measure.Much of what is going on in the From your hut, the t o m-t omsAll unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board Signed Congo has been and is now being sounded into dark of nightcarrying cruel laments upeditorial mirenal represents the Individual opinions of the authors.mighty black rivers about shipsthat sailed to country where iholittle man wallows in an ant-hilland where a dollar is king, tothat damned land which theycalled a motherland.Many current policies of Since student organizations tre’s board members have met the status of the UAR and the There your child, your wife wereUniversity theatre have been should be run entirely by their many times with director Bill Soviet Union in the Congo than ground day and night by fright-* i mnmlinrc tbo nnlv llictifiration Altnn Kilt no M70rWincr aarppmpnt An tn urhot hac hnnn oroincrStudents should run UT obscured. Statements of many ofthe world’s leading diplomats con¬tradict one another. The UnitedStates has been very silent aboutthe Congo crisis, and has only re¬cently made some remarks ofnote. These, however, relate moreful, merciless mill, crushingthem in dreadful pain.You are man like others. Theypreach you to believe that goodwhite god will reconcile all menat last.At a university of 8,000 stu- criticism of Dag Hammarskjold, gv fjrr yOU grieved and sang themoaning songs of homeless beg¬gar thatdoors. sinks at stranger’svvilbrviif reference tn the members, the only justification Alton, but no working agreement they do to what has been goingf f th t Tit i- r> imarilv a for (urtailing student initiative has yet been reached about “who on there.t a t- o tV f ’t ' and resPonsibility *n tbe Univer- is going to do what.” The most outspoken commentstudent activity. is ac is theatre is an "educational Director-theetre member rela- on the Congo appeared in thesimply lepeate o en enoug , we justjfjcation/« We feel that a good tions have not lived up to Alton’s Chicago Defender (Thursday,hope that relations between thea- Unive,sit theatre in a University wishes last October: Feb. 16) which was frank in itstre members and their director, community is not necessarily aBill Alton, wi improve. theatre which has a series of ar- dents, there should be manv more and uncompromising in assailingThere is no drama department tistically and/or economically involved in the theatre than at the Belgians and the “Uncleat the University of Chicago, and successful productions; basically, present. I would like to expand the Tom," Tshombe, on their respon-it is obvious that the theatre was University theatre should provide entire program of UT activities, sibility for the death of Lumumba.never intended to serve as one. an opportunity for students to and have more student direction Who was Lumumba? What did,„I1,L11 „ __ _University theatre does not con- acquire and practice the arts of and independent student activity he stand for? These are questions and vour blood boiled through theduct courses resulting in academic acting, directing, lighting, cos- within the theatre.” which we find only hints for an- night you danced, you moaned,credit; its policy and philosophy tume design, etc. The theatre remains one of the swers in the daily press. But if obsessed by father’s passion,are not determined by the Uni- This means students should de- few large student organizations poetry is an expression of man’s Like fury of a storm to lyrics ofversity faculty, as is educational sign lighting for a production as without a comprehensive eonsti- deepest thoughts and feelings, a farnnv tune a strength burstpolicy. In fact the theatre’s salar- well as pun electrical switches; tution; perhaps a definition of the then the following poem by Pat-ied director is officially a mem- students should plan an entire function of University theatre rice Lumumba should shed someber of the Dean of student’s staff, publicity campaign as well as lick agreed to by Alton and theatre light on both Lumumba and theBut the theatre is different thousands of envelopes; and stu- members would be a solution to present situation in the Congo.Richard Merbaum And when a craze possessed youfrom most student activities. dents should design scenery as the division of resnonsibility prob-Earlier this year, we urged that well as build it. Our University lem. Also, a full time producerstudent organizations no longer thee.tre is quite fortunate in hav- might be appointed, who would de-be reouired to have faculty spon- ing an abundant supply of willing vote more time to the coordina-sors. We felt, and feel, that a any competent students, who wish tion of the different kinds offaculty sponsor was unnecessary to undertake responsible and erea- theatre activities than Alton aloneto most organizations, and should tive tasks in the theatre. And all can now afford,not be required. However, the op- of the theatre people we know Whatever the exact nature oferation of a theatre calls for a welcome expert guidance. the solution, we urge all admin- Your ashes strewn to the windgreat deal of specialized knowl- Unfortunately, this year Uni- istrative personnel and students that roams the desert,edge, and so UT, by its very na- versity theatre has not benefited concerned with UT to attempt at Your tyrants built the lustrous,ture, should be guided by a spe- as much as it should have from least once more to make the magic temples to preserve yourcially skilled person. We are thus the talents of its capable, if un- theatre a rewarding student soul, preserve your sufferingDown in the Heartof AfricaPatrice LumumbaFor a thousand years you, Negro,suffered like a beast,led to the following conclusion: salaried, membership. The thea- activity.Revision of NDEA seenDuring this session of Con- lenee or other illegal means. on the oath and affidavit and thegress the National Defense The House did not have time case for repealing the affidavitEducation act is scheduled to to rule on the Senate compromise, is at least as compelling as it wasbe rewritten. The original act and, "1th and Se"a,e llb last year'pvnires this vear and comps e,als dlssatlsfled wlth the com' Students must still choose be-expiies inis >eai, ana comes promjSe measure, the House was tween their academic freedomup for renewal; the general not encouraged to act on the issue and their finances — which oftensupport of the act fiom educa- during the post convention ses- means their educational future—tois, scientists and the military sion of Congress; so the Senate when the affidavit is placed be-assuies its repassage with virtu- compromise never became law. fore them,ally no changes except perhaps This year Kennedy will again ,.om,io ain the amount of money allocated work for repeal of the oath and S’ ’ "d„ COr‘for loans and scholarships. affidavit. With the White House t > 1*'But the loyalty oath and nega- leadership and a more unified 3 affile win S r °3tive disclaimer affidavit which Democratic party, the chances are * .. oy iciciveany applicant for a loan or sehol- indeed very good for success. Ind thiir rJifnTc Ifarship must sign remain a source The scheduled rewriting of the f"d ^ ™ore tha,Jof contention among both edu- NDEA is another factor which JJ* "atl" e. ? u IIcators and legislators. They eon- improves the outlook for this !?stitute the only blight on aid to year over last year. Students remain the only gioup out of you for a thousand yearsof misery in metallic voice ofjazz, in uncovered outcry thatthunders through the continentin gigantic surf.The whole world surprised wokeup in panic to the violentrhythm of blood, to violentrhythm of jazz, the white manturning pallid over this newsong that carries torch of pur¬ple through the dark of night.The dawn is here, my brother,dawn! Look in our faces, a newmorning breaks in our oldAfrica.Barbaric right of fist and the Ours only will now be the land,white right to a whip, you had the water, mighty rivers poorthe right to die, you also could Negro was surrendering for awepP- thousand years.In your totem they carved endless And hard torches of the sun willhunger, endless bonds, and even shine for us again they’ll dryin the cover of the woods a the tears in eyes and spittle onghastly cruel death was watch- your face,ing, snaky, crawling to you like The moment when you break thebranches from the holes and chains, the heavy fetters, the evil,heads of trees embraced your cruel times will go never lobody and your ailing soul. come again.A free and gallant Congo willThen they put a treacherous bigviper on your chest: on yourneck they laid the yoke of fire- arise from black soil, a free andgallant Congo — the black blos¬som, the black seed!educationDespite the concerted effortsof UC students and students atmany other colleges and universithe Senate, the oath and affida¬vit, which have caused many uni¬versities to withdraw from theNDEA loan program, have notyet been eliminated from the act.Edith suspected of subversion and redThe author of the original act affiliation; this is not as it shouldis Representative Carl Elliot (D., be.Alabama). .As chairman of theHouse Subcommittee on educa- universities in the programties, and despite the efforts of t; h m , recnnnsihle for must contribute one tenth for thePresident Kennedy last year in pr°oposning any SJJg in the b?U loan fund; the government stilland for holding hearings on vari- ^a® to limit the univer-ous aspects of the NDEA. s,ties dispensation of its ownAlthough he preferred last year funds,to “wait and repeal the oath and An additional reason necessi-affidavit all at once” he favored fates repeal of the affidavit. OverRepresentative Edith Green repeal of at least the affidavit 25 major Universities and col-(D., Oregon) has stated that she andi jn the face of conservative leges have, as a matter of con- _hopes the amendments to the act opposition from Education and science withdrawn from the pro- National news editor Gene Vinogradoffwill eliminate the oath and affa- Labor chairman, Representative gram. Last year they were ablefrom White House^his^ar P™?"? ®arden .(D" North Caro‘ in many instances to make good Politicol news editor Coryle Ge,erfrom the White House this yeai, lma), held hearings on this as- the subsequent lack of funds. Culture editor Dottv Shorelesscombined with other factors, the pect Qf the bill. This year they may not so easily Sports editor Chuck Bernsteinchances for success ate leason- Barden, an extremely conserv- find the money (as in our own Copyeditor John Juskeviceably good. Regarding last year’s ative southerner, who disliked aid case they cannot). Research editor Carole Quinnletter writing campaigns, she to education bills in principle, has ... , . , College editors. Horry Adler, Judy Shopiropointed out that like any other resigned as chairman of the Edu- As f"ese sch°°ls h™ it neces- Calendar editor Donna Bergdrives for or against any meas- cation and Labor committee, and sary to swallow their consciences Editorial secretary .... Michelle Seligsonure, they must be repeated as the has been replaced by Adam Clay- and ”turn ^e+^DEA J!,oto.9'?phY coord'"otor k,A /wtlegislation is reevaluated before ton Powell (D New York) a Wlth the affldavit> the precedent Circulation manager .Note Sw'ttCongress. strong Kennedv’ eamoaiener. ’ °f fed.e™l c?nt™1 over universi¬ties with federal aid will be once Editor-in-chiefKen Pierce^ ■ Business monogerWilliam G. BauerEditor emeritus Neal JohnstonEx-editor emertus Lance HaddixProduction editor Avima RuderNews editor Jay GreenbergFeature editor Faye WellsBusiness office manager Joan HelmkinClassified manager Maurice ZeitlmSubscription manager Phil Hvdestron,g Kennedy campaigner.Kennedy’s attempts as a Sena- Representative Powell told ~ .tor to have the oath and Affida- group of UC students and pro- anc or ah es abJisned. Kepubli- Advertising representative Perry Finkvit repealed were partially sue- fessors at a luncheon last October oans ar)d Democrats have longcessful last year. The Senate af- that he would work with Ken- fouf?ht tf\is danger since the inter tabling the issue until after nedy for the repeal of both the ^eption of the,.^st aid to educa’civil rights legislation was passed, oath and affidavit. tion program, why can t congressadopted a compromise proposal The cooperative efforts of Ken- rea.^e. t*iat w^at ** has,tried toeliminating the affidavit but mak- nedy, Elliot and Powell, with the av0ld 1S actually happening?ing it a criminal offense punish- planned revision of the NDEA, The answer is that the pointC*unCfS for rtpeal must be driven home by student AnittaM ediH)riol ttoH: Michoel Botes Lee Brozgold, Alix Crcmelin, J. R-thousand dollar fine, or both to better than they ve ever been. and faculty action, possibly sim- Greenberg, Laura Godofsky, Doug McCullough, D. V. Roo, Rona Rosen-apply for an NDEA loan or sehol- Despite the favorable political ilar to that of last year, posibly blott Irene Sidor John Steedarship while “a member of the climate, it would be desirable for different. With chances for re-Communist party” or any organ- students and faculty to renew peal so good, students and facul- WM>»oa'op*»y rtoff: Don Auerbach, Al Berger, John Osgood, Pete Stenn, Dougization advocating over throw of their efforts to inform Congress- ty ought not indeed to be so si- Thornton, Sam Leinhardtthe U.S. government by force, vio- men and Senators of their views lent. Sports staff: Mike Cones, Mike Eisenberg, Judy Shopiro6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 24, 1961 Editorial board: William Bauer, Joy Greenberg, Ken Pierce, Avima Ruder,Gene VinogradoffEditorial staff: Phil Altboch, Mary Claire Beck, Bert Cohler, Debby Dinilz,Gary Feldman, Gary Greenberg, Art MacEwan, April Schwartz, MikeShakmonLettersOccupancy petitionI would like to sound a note ofcaution to all those people whosigned the open occupancy peti¬tion which was circulated aroundcampus recently. Before I do. how¬ever. let me say that I am both astudent at the University and aresident of the Hyde Park area.My warning is this: rememberlaws can cut both ways. If a lawis passed today setting the limitson a person’s right to sell or renthis house or apartment to whomhe pleases, then it is equally pos¬sible for the same law with a dif¬ferent majority to tell a personhe may not be allowed to rent orsell Jo a particular group of peo¬ple.Remember the Kefauver CrimeHearings of 1950. At that timevery few persons protested thebonding of civil liberties in thename of expediency, mostly because the people involved werecriminals, gamblers and other as¬sorted hoodlums. Later these'same tactics were used by SenatorMcCarthy, but this time againsta different sector of society.Anybody can crusade under theguise of fighting prejudice. If the persons signing the open occu¬pancy petition are really con¬cerned with better housing forminorities, I suggest they attackthe tax laws making it more pro¬fitable to own slums than legiti¬mate low cost housing, or attackthe Chicago building code whichprevents the use of prefabricatedNo ‘guilt byAs a Student government mem¬ber of the Practical Reform Or¬ganization, I wish to reply to theattacks upon this organization.Certainly if one is to fairly eval¬uate an organization, he shouldbe interested in what the organiza¬tion stands for, and not in thenoxious MeCarthyistic p r i n c i -pie of “guilt by association.”An analysis of our platformhardly suggests that PRO is aconservative group, i.e. bicameralgovernment, based on representa¬tion by resident units in the Col¬lege and by graduate divisions inthe other house; the cooperative ‘harmful’components or other cost-savingtechniques.If the only way of eliminatingprejudice is by making it illegalfor each person to make up hisor her own mind on likes and dis¬likes, I wondrt’ if the price isn’ttoo high.Janies R. Donnelleyassociation’bookstore; student control of stu¬dent activity funds; our favorablestand toward NSA, etc. By com¬parison, POLIT seems almost re¬actionary on campus matter withits opposition to all reform pro¬posals, and their admitted inter¬est in conserving the status quo.I believe that the discerningstudent will recognize that the im¬portant issue here is npl whethera party is left, right, Guelf, Torie,Prohibitionist, or what-have-you—but whether or not it favors thestatus quo or reform for StudentGovernment.Jim McGregorSchubert review is criticizedrestatement of the various themesthe reviewer might profit from acourse in 19th century music This frothy attempt to labelsome of the most vibrant andbeautiful chamber music of allT was shocked by last week’sreview of the Vienna Octet concertgiven February 10th.This letter will only mentionthe “critic’s” appraisal of theSchubert Octet in F major, typicalof the overall review. The reviewerlaudably expounds: “The op. 160Octet in F major by Schubert de¬serves respect for its beauty andwit and for its structural balance.The piece is also rather long andrepetitious, and must be playedwith both polish and inspirationto sustain interest in the listener.”I have listened to a Vienna Oc¬tet play this same work almostevery Sunday morning for eightyears, and far from finding inter¬est burdened, this listener parti¬cipates completely in the intimateand powerful piece. I would liketo question where Is the repetitionin this work? If it is Schubert’sI wish to express regret con¬cerning the Maroon’s inexcusablypoor job of reporting the Febru¬ary 10 debate between pur organ¬ization. Students for Civil Liber¬ties, and the Young Americans forFreedom.The article told about the movie“Operation Abolition” which wasshown, told about our criticismsof the movie, told about our sideof the debate, and ended. Therewas no report given of the argu-I see that at long last the greatfilm, Operation Abolition, is ac¬tually hitting the U. of C. campus.Is there a bit — just a bit — ofgenuine academic freedom actual¬ly showing its head at this re¬versed and stately haven of Freespeech, Free assembly, and Freethought? If so — bravo!I do recall that not too manyyears ago when Bob Andelsohn(a divinity student) wrote adynamic piece called:: “The Mid¬way — Springboard for Commu¬nist Propaganda,” he was prompt¬ly eased out of same, despite hisB average. Is U. C. becoming justa bit more liberal toward freedom,as it has, in the past, so oftenbeen so liberal to some enemies offreedom?We have a mile-high stack ofclips on the film Operation Aboli¬tion -which is bound to becomethe best known motion picture inthe current struggle for freedom.The Communist party hates thisfilm, and makes no bones aboutii. The darlings of same CP arein the forefront of its condem¬nation. That speaks well for thepicture, Sir. where he would discover thematicrestatements are the practice ofall 19th century composers. OneDuring World War II, notedAmerican philosopher-mathemati¬cian Morris R. Cohen wrote:“We are adopting the thingsthat made our enemies power¬ful, and incidentally thethings that made them ourenemies. The first result ofany war is that the adver¬saries exchange vices. Ourment presented by the YoungAmericans for Freedom.Of course, we appreciate the re¬porting of our side of the argu¬ment. However, we feel it grosslyunfair that this was the only sidepresented by the ^Iaroon. We cannever win the fight for civil liber¬ties by such tactics, precisely thetype of tactics we are fighting.Arthur MacEwan, ChairmanUniversity of Chicago Stu-dents for Civil LibertiesBut lr^ake no mistake aboutthis—there is far more praise forthis splendid contribution toAmerican understanding of theCommunist menace. The greatestindication of its popularity amongthose who “know and care” aboutthis country is that great sup¬port for showing and publicizingthe picture comes from all thelittle people. There is scarcelya community in or near Chicagowhich has not shown, or in theprocess of planning to show, thedent government staggers on.The performers blame the audionce for staying away from the time as “rather long and repeti¬tious” only reflects ^he shallowdanger is that we shall copy„ the militarism that corruptedGermany and Japan.”The late Professor Cohen ranksas one of America’s wisest andnoblest minds. His brilliant teach¬ing career took him to such di¬verse and distinguished institu¬tions as Columbia, CCNY, ChicagoUniversity, Yale, Harvard, JohnsHopkins, and Stanford.Professor Cohen died not longafter expressing this propheticview. What he feared has prac¬tically overtaken us. We havebeen unconsciously but certainlycreating an America dedicated toforce.While there is still time, theWhite House, the State and De¬fense Departments, and the Sen¬ate and House Committees thatdeal with the armed services andforeign affairs, might well heedthe wise man’s warning.Cyrus Eaton,University Trusteerecordpicture.And the greatest proof of thefalsity of charges against the filmare the carbon-copy condemna¬tions. There is scarcely an originalparagraph to be found in all theattacks against it, complete withpre-fabricated adjectives so dearto the “hearts” of those who don’tgive a damn for America!John K. Crippen,Executive SecretaryAnti-CommunistLeague of AmericaGovernment is 6circus9At the last count there were five show. The latest act (PRO * saysstudent political parties on cam- maybe the show is stale andpus. From left to right: POLIT, should be reworked. The otherSRP, PRO, ISL, & IRP. Like a acts promptly ostracized the cri-three-ring circus without an audi tics and said PRO performersence — complete with self-pro- couldn’t fill vacancies in the side-claimed clowns (IRP) and fast show. Oh well, maybe next year’sbuck operators (POLIT* — Stu- circus will be under new man¬agement.Bored spectator,Donald NelsonMaroon story \poor9HU AC film is truedoes not have to be a sophisticated attention and participation givenmusic student to be moved by by the reviewer,these emotional melodies. Joe SchmidtEaton cautions US On Campus withMax§hu]man(Author of “I VFas a Teen-age Dwarf”, “The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.)WORDS: THEIR CAUSE AND CUREToday let us take up the subject of etymology (or entomology,as it is sometimes called) which is the study of word origins(or insects, as they are sometimes called).Where are word origins (insects) to be found? Well sir, some¬times words are proper names that have passed into the language.Take, for instance, the words used in electricity: ampere wasnamed after its discoverer, the Frenchman Andre Marie Ampere(1775-1836); similarly ohm was named after the German G. 8.Ohm (1781-1854), watt after the Scot James Watt (1736-1819),and bulb after the American Fred C. Bulb (1843-1912).There is, incidentally, quite a poignant little story almut Mr.Bulb. Until Bulb’s invention, all illumination was provided bygas, which was named after its inventor Milton T. Gas who,strange to tell, had been Bulb’s roommate at Cal Tech! In fact,strange to tell, the third man sharing the room with Bulb andGas was also one whose name burns bright in the annals ofillumination—Walter Candle!The three roommates were inseparable companions in col¬lege. After graduation all three did research in the problem ofartificial light, which at this time did not exist. All Americaused to go to bed with the chickens. In fact, many Americanswere chickens.Well sir, the three comrades—Bulb, Gas, and Candle-promised to !>e friends forever when they left school, but success,alas, spoiled all that. First Candle invented the candle, gotrich, and forgot his old friends. Then Gas invented gas, got rich,bankrupted Candle, and forgot his old friends. Then Bulb in¬vented the bulb, got rich, bankrupted Gas, and forgot hisold friends.Candle and Gas, bitter and impoverished at the age respec¬tively of 75 and 71, went to sea as respectively the world’soldest and second oldest cabin boy. Bulb, rich and grand, alsowent to sea, but he went in style—as a first-class passenger onluxury liners.Well sir, strange to tell, all three were aboard the ill-fatedLusitania when she was sunk in the North Atlantic. And,strange to tell, when they were swimming for their lives after theshipwreck, all three clambered aboard the same dinghy 1Well sir. chastened and made wiser by their brush with death,they fell into each other’s arms and wept and exchanged for¬giveness and became fast friends all over again.For three years they drifted in the dinghy, shaking hands andsinging the Cal Tech rouser all the while. Then, at long last,they spied a passing liner and were taken aboard.They remained fast friends for the rest of their days, which,I regret to report, were not many, because the liner which pickedthem up was the Titanic.What a pity that Marlboros were not invented during thelifetimes of Bulb, Gas, and Candle! Had there l>een Marlboros,these three friends never would have grown apart because theywould have known how much, despite their differences, they stillhad in common. I mean to say that Marlboros can l>c lit bycandle, by gas, or by electricity, and no matter how you lightthem, you always get a full-flavored smoke, a filter cigarettewith an unfiltered taste that makes anyone—including Bulb,Gas, and Candle—settle back and forget anger and strife andsmile the sweet smile of friendship on all who pass!^1961 MAxShuhnfta♦ * *Another peaceful smoke from the makers of Marlboro is thebrand-new unfiltered king-size Philip Morris Commander.Try one soon and find out how welcome you’ll be aboard."Ophelia, I've fold you and fold you: Theback rooms are nof for married couples only'TAVERNLIQUORSMAROON • 7Feb. 24, 1961 • CHICAGO' -Papers stolen from library Job Opportunities_ . . > • « TT II 1 * - J_ /.II > . > . . u A 4- d-\ rl r\ f rtooll • ™Police and University offi¬cials have not yet been ableto identify the thief of an un¬named number of documentsfrom the UC library's Special col¬lections. The burglary has beenfurther confused because it is im¬possible to determine exactlywhat was stolen.Police in San Francisco re¬ceived last week a collection ofdocuments — some D. H. Law¬rence manuscripts, at least one ofwhich is that of an unpublishedpoem; several letters written byAbraham Lincoln and one by hiswife, Mary Todd Lincoln, and sev¬eral manuscripts of Carl Sand¬burg’s — according to a memo¬randum issued by the University’spublic relations office.The documents were turnedover to the San Francisco author¬ities by James Murray, a poet,who said that an acquaintance ofhis had left them in his residence.Murray identified the acquaint¬ance as Martin Gould, an ex-em¬ployee of the library’s special col¬lections department.Gould worked in the library forabout two weeks last quarter, ac¬cording to Robert Rosenthal, Cur¬ator of the Special collections. Ro¬senthal said he was fired for gen¬eral incompetence.Confusion has arisen, however,about Gould’s real name. SeveralUniversity officials — particular¬ly Bill Alton of the Universitytheatre — have identified Gould(from what source — whetherpotograph or description —could not be determined) as Mar¬tin deMoscato.There is no record in Dean ofStudents Netherton’s office of aMartin deMoscato or a MartinGould ever registering as a stu¬dent. But Alton said deMoscatoappeared in UTs production of '‘Heartbreak House” last fallThe FBI has offered to enterthe ease as soon as the value ofthe missing documents can be de¬termined. But at the moment thelibrary cannot undertake an in¬ventory to discover what is miss¬ing, and, according to Rosenthal,no value was officially attached tomany of the documents now Inthe possession of San Franciscopolice.“This is not like a bank’s ojfera-tion where you add up and check your figures at the end of eachday,” said Rosenthal. “Our inven¬tory is something comparable to abank’s trying to inventory all itscurrency by serial number.”Because of the confusion aboutthe identity of Gould and the dif¬ficulty in determining the valueof the documents, there is no onebeing held by San Francisco po¬lice, nor has any warrant yet beenissued. There is additional eon-fusion about the role Murrayplayed in the affair.A set of anchors taken from Northwestern university werefound at UC last Friday, draped around the flagpole.—Photo by BergerSG bookstore opensBeadles appearGeorge Wells Beadle, newlyappointed chancellor of theUniversity of Chicago, andMrs. Beadle, will appear inthis year’s Faculty revels pro¬duction, Empty Saddles in theBach Coral. See a story on theBeadles’ appearance in nextweek’s Maroon. The Student governmentdiscount bookstore will beginselling all required springquarter reading materials forthe Humanities I and II sequencesat a 15 per cent discount on Mon¬day, February 27, according toLeonard Friedman, SG Vice-Pres¬ident. The Bookstore has alsostocked the required texts forPhysics 201 and Physics 237 andwill sell them at a similar reduc¬tion.The SG book ordering servicewill begin taking orders on Febru¬ary 27, for any hardbound or pa¬perback editions published by Ad-dison-Wesley, John Wiley, Harp¬er, or Houghton-Mifflin, Fried¬ man continued.The ordering service will selltrade books at 20 per cent dis¬count and paperbacks at a reduc¬tion of 15 per cent and guaranteesdelivery of all orders by the firstweek of the spring quarter.Both the bookstore and the or¬dering service will operate fromthe Student service center in theReynolds club basement. The serv¬ice center is open from 11:00-1:00and from 3:30-5:00 Mondaythrough Friday. A program is being developed through Teachers CollegeColumbia university, to recruit American Teachers for EastAfrica — Kenya, Tanganyika, Uganda, and Zanzibar. Needed iare 150 young Americans in their twenties, preferably unmar- iried, to go to East Africa this year, and to leave before the jend of June. There are three types:Group A—50 young teachers who hold at least a Bachelor’s <1degree, are professionally trained and certified, and jhave some experience in secondary school teaching. £Group B—About 50 liberal arts graduates of the Class of ’61 iwho have the Bachelor’s degree but no professional ?;preparation for teaching.Group C— About 50 graduates of the class of ’61 who have aBachelor’s degree and have finished professional »jpreparation in education but have had no experi- |ence beyond practice teaching.Orientation programs will differ for the three groups. All |who successfully qualify at the end of the training programwill receive two-year appointments as regular teachers in EastAfrican secondary schools. Fields needed: English, History.Geography, Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Biology.Details on this program are available from Mr. Richey and fMr. Rehage in Education, or Mrs. McCam, Reynolds Club 200.Any persons who are interested and qualify should list theirnames with one of the above.Representatives of the following organizations will conduitrecruiting interviews at the office of Vocational Guidance andPlacement during the week of February 27. Unless academicrestrictions arc indicated, these interviews are open to stu¬dents of any Qopartment who will be available for full timeemployment between now and September 1961. Interview ap¬pointments may be arranged through L. S. Calvin, Room 200.Reynolds Club, extension 3284. •February 27 - New York Life Insurance company, Now YorkN.Y. — SB and SM candidates in mathematics 'and statistics for positions in actuarial depart¬ment. Sophomores, juniors, and seniors in abovedisciplines for summer actuarial program.February 28—Aetna Casualty and Surety company, Chicago. .Illinois—training program in group sales.February 28 Standard Oil division of American Oil company.Whiting, Indiana SB and SM chemists for tech¬nical service, PhD chemists for research.March 1 - Lincoln National Life Insurance company. FortWayne, Indiana — SB and SM candidaies inmathematics a n d statistics for actuarial posi¬tions. Sophomores and juniors in above disci¬plines for summer actuarial program.March 2 - G. D. Searle and company — Skokie, IllinoisSB and SM chemists <analytical, organic t; SBand SM women graduates in biological sciences.March 3 - Standard Oil division of American Oil company,Chicago, Illinois bachelor’s and master’s degreecandidates in economics and business for staffpositions in economic analysis, project evaluation, and corporate policy matters.Business conference March 1For PRINTING Call JAY!OFFSET * LETTERPRESS ★ MIMEOGRAPHINGDAILY U. OF C. PICKUPS___ f®1* a JAY Letter & Printing .ServiceBY 3-0802 1950 Eos* 75th StreetDR. A. ZfMBLER, Optometristin theNew Hyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th St. * DO 3-7644Eye Exommotions Contact LensesNewest styling in framesStudent Discount The University’s ninth an¬nual Management Conferencewill be held on March 1, atMcCormick place, Chicago’snew Exposition center.More than 1,000 business execu¬tives are expected to attend theConference, which is sponsoredby the graduate school of busi¬ness and the Executive ProgramClub, an organization of Univer¬sity alumni.▼ ▼▼ ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼ ▼ v ▼ ▼ ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼ ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage & meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th $t. <4<4444 HARPERLIQUOR STORE1114-16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported ond domesticwines, liquors ond beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEmm A M 1233k A £L—1318■ —7698 A highlight of the day’s pro¬gram, which includes many wellknown business leaders and exec¬utors, will be the Executive Pro¬gram lecture by Ralph J. Cordi-ner, Chairman of the Board andChief executive officer of the Gen¬eral Electric Company.“The purpose of this confer¬ence,” said Neele Stearns, associ¬ate dean for special programs ofthe graduate school of business,and director of its executive pro¬gram, “is to examine with busi¬ness executives the new tools,ideas and forces which are influ¬encing management practices . . .“It is crucial to the health ofprofessional education for management that there be maintainedcontinuing communication be-M0DEL CAMERARoberts 990 Tape Recorder4 Trock Stereo, Record/PlayNSA Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NOW PLAYING"NEVER ON SUNDAY"StarringJULES DASSINMELINA MERCOURIBast Actress —— Cannes Film Festival/w/ DearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763Spectat student rate far all performances seven days • weekJim* Show Cashier Four 1.0. CmrtI THE FINEST IN BEAUTY CARE FOR THEDISCRIMINATING WOMANDOrchester 3-7366 and 3-7367DE WAREN'S House of Beauty1601 E. 53rd St..Specialist in Hair Shaping,Styling and Permanent Raring tween the practitioners am! tLacademicians. The Managementconference is an important agencyfor maintaining and developingsuch a liason.”More than six months of plan¬ning has gone into preparation-for the one-day conference. Tenpanels covering questions of major interest to business leaderswill precede Cordiner’s address,the first group of panels beginning at 1:30 pm, the second >• ne¬at 4.Among the topics to be examined are: “American Foreign Pol¬icy and National Defense,” “Lead¬ership, Motivation, and Creativ¬ity,” “The Agricultural Dilemma,1'and "Industrial Research — Technological Change — InvestmentPolicy.”Cecil Campbell, Vice-presidentWalgreen, Inc., Chicago, who ischairman of the 1961 ManagementConference said. “The Manage¬ment Conference has grown inimportance and influence duringthe past eight years.AC ASA Book StoreGood Used BooksImported Cards, Gifts and Children's BooksRELIABLE TYPEWRITER SERVICE1322 E. 55th HY 3-9651C H I C A GO MAROON • Feb. 24, 1961 Eye ExaminationFashion EyeweorContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenboumoptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetot University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372English department to offer five prizesFive prizes are being offeredl>y the English department forpoets, essayists, novelists,playwrights, short story writ¬ers, musical composers, and read¬ers of poetry. The prizes will allbe awarded spring quarter, 1961.The Academy of Americanpoets prize of $100 will be award-,.,1 to an undergraduate for thebest poem or group of poemssubmitted during the year. Madepossible by a bequest of the late\frs. Mary Cummings Eudy, theprize will be given for the sev¬enth time in the spring of 1961.The poem or group of poemssubmitted has no restriction asvo length, but all manuscriptsmust be typewritten and in theEnglish office not later thanApril 1. No manuscript may besubmitted which has already beenis sponsoring the showing as partof its pre-International PeaceW eek activities.Last year during Peace -Week,J00,000 marchers in Englandtalked from Aldermaston to Lon¬don, a distance of four days. As adirect result of this one walk, aminor British political partyadapted a platform which callsfor the abolition of nuclear weap¬ons and a fight to adapt a similarprogram is now being waged suc¬cessfully in the British Labor published or which has has al¬ready received a prize. Entriesshould be unsigned but accom¬panied by a sealed envelope con¬taining the name of the writer.The John Billings Fiske prizesin poetry offers prizes of $150,$75, and $25 annually for an orig¬inal poem or cycle of poems. Nocompetitor may offer more thanone contribution, but this may bea cycle including several relatedpoems. There is no limitation asto length, subject, or form. Allregularly registered students inthe University, graduates as wellas undergraduates, are eligible tocomplete.Competition is not open to pre¬vious winners of the first prize.Only unpublished poems maybe submitted in the contest, andthe University reserves the right"Shadow of Hiroshima.” It fol¬lows the effects on individuals ofthe Hiroshima bomb and its re¬percussions through the wholeJanpanese society.The films will be followed bya brief explanation of the localpeace walk from the Great LakesNaval Station to the Loop andof the SPU petition now being cir¬culated in support of a UnitedNations sponsored Youth corps. of first publication of the win¬ning contribution.Each contestant will sub¬mit his contribution typewrittenand signed with a pseudonym. Asealed envelope should be en¬closed containing a card bearingthe pseudonym, the name of the<Spntribution, and the name andaddress of the contributor. Con¬tributions should reach the Eng¬lish office, Wieboldt 205, not laterthan May 1.An annual prize is awarded fora critical essay on some subjectrelating to the humanities or thesocial sciences in the David BlairMcLaughlin Prize for the writing-of prose. The amount of the prizefor the Spring Quarter, 1961, is$100, first prize and $50, secondprize.This competition is restricted tostudents who have completed lessthan two years of college workfollowing graduation from highschool; and students in the Col¬lege who entered the Universityprior to graduation from highschool.The essays will be judged onthe basis of their originality, theclarity and cogency of the argu¬ment, and the skill displayed inthe use of English prose. Contri¬butions may not be more than3,600 or less than 1,500 words inlength. The essay should not besigned, but should be accompa¬nied by a sealed envelope con¬taining the name of the writer.Honors and preceptorial essayswill be considered for this award,if copies are submitted in the pre¬scribed manner.The essays in typewritten formSPU screens films• The Meaning of Aldermaston,” a documentary film onihe 1960 Aldermaston Peace Walk, and “Shadow of Hiro¬shima,” will be shown next Tuesday, February 28 at 8 pm inBreasted hall of the Oriental institute. Student Peace Union should be turned in to the officeof the dean of students, Adminis¬tration building, Room 201, notlater than May 1.The Olga and Paul Menn foun¬dation offer a first prize of $1,000and a second prize of $500 in eachof the following categories: anoriginal short story or novel, anoriginal play of one or more acts,and an original musical composi¬tion.Typewritten manuscripts o rmusical scores written in ink,submitted under a pen name andaccompanied by a sealed envelopecontaining the contestant’s realname must be submitted to Wie-boldt’s 205 by April 1.First, second, third, and fourthprizes of $125, $100, $75, and $50,respectively, will be awarded inthe annual Florence JamesAdams Poetry Reading contest.The preliminary competition willbe held in Bond Chapel at 3 pm,on April 21, 1961. The finals willbe held at the same lime andplace on April 28, and will be pub¬lic and featured event of the An¬nual Festival of the Arts.The contest is open to all stu¬dents in the University fi'om theages of 17 to 26, inclusive, whohave completed at least two quar¬ters of residence and are regis¬tered for two or more courses inthe present quarter.A former winner in this contestmay not compete again for thesame or a lesser prize.In the preliminaries, the timeallowed each contestant is fourminutes; in the finals, ten min¬utes. • All selections read must havethe approval of the departmentof English, represented by Mrs,Judith S. Bond, who may be con¬sulted between 9:30 and 10:30 am,Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays inthe Modern Poetry Library, Ha*-per W-62.In order to carry out what isbelieved to have been Mrs.Adams’ intention, more stress islaid in interpretative reading thanon declamatory aspects of vocalexpression. Therefore the readingis from a book, and is not “recita¬tion.”Students wishing to enter thecontest must register by April 17in the English office, Wie¬boldt 205.John Netherton, dean ofstudents, crowns DottySchlotthauer, the candidateof Beta Theta Pi, Miss Uni¬versity of Chicago of 1961.—-Photo by Hyde Park Hearldparty.This year half a million are ex¬poet ed for the Aldermaston Marchand thousands more will partici¬pate in other demonstrationsaround the world.“The meaning of Aldermastongoes beyond the physical aspects•>f the march and tries to presentthe psychological reasons for par¬ticipation and asks questions con¬fining the basic moral issues in¬volved,” according to SPU.An opportunity to study theissues involved in nuclear warwill be given by the showing of.ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Refinishing ofShoes and Handbags• Colors matched • Toes cut out• Vompj lowered • PlatformsremovedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES’NARROW HEELSHeels changed — Any style —Any colorBackstrops Removed and Springa-lotors inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St.OPERA MARCH 5THHOUSE AT 8:00 P.M.frank Fried PresentsFOR ONE NIGHT ONLYTHEODOREBIKELDirect from "The Sound of Music"His Only ChicagoAppearanceTickets: $5.00, 4.00, 3.00, 2.00Plus . . ,ODETTAOrchestra HaltFriday, March 248:30 PM.$1.75 - $2.50 - $3.00 - $3.50Box office opens FEB. 20th. Ticketson sole ot Discount Records, 201N. LoSolle; Hyde Pork Co-op,Credit Union, 1526 E. 55th St.Moil orders to OPERA HOUSE, 20N. Wocker Dr. Pleose enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope withmoil orders.A Triangle Production It's what's up front that countsifilter-blenpI -a Winston exclusive-makes the bigtaste difference. You get rich tobaccos that are speciallyselected and specially processed for full flavor in filtersmoking. Make your next pack Winston!H. s. EtyncHtTobattoCo.. Wintton-Stlra. K. C.WINSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should!Feb. 24. 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9FOR YOURCHILDREN...-^2Addresses College facultykeep a head of the game!it's clear f •&it’s clean...it’sVASELINE HAIR TONIC'vAseuNC* is a ftsaisreMo trademark of ChCsc»*ou<*N«FON9’ft me# Any plan for a child’s education that fails totake life insurance into account, is incomplete.Through the Sun Life, policies can be arrangedto pay all or part of your children’s collegeeducation whether you live or die.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA(continued from page 1 )clear that the rate of academicfailure is very substantially high¬er among non-resident students,the proportion being somewherebetween two and four to one, de¬pending on other variables. All ofthe intricacies of cause and effecthere are still under study, but thygeneral conclusion is inescapable.With this preventive considera¬tion added to the already well-understood positive advantages ofa College community which isresidential in maximum degree,and with the concurrence of theCollege Dean and the Director ofHousing, the Dean of Students ex¬tended the residence requirementto apply to undergraduate men intheir first two years, and womenin all four. The requirement is ofcourse not retroactive, but appliesto students entering the Collegein Autumn, 1960. and subse¬quently.Ken Pierce, third-year student in the College, has beenelected editor-in-chief of the Maroon. Pierce succeeds NealJohnston, who announced his resignation last week. Objection widespreadAs you know' from the Maroonand otherwise, there is widespreadstudent objection. The StudentGovernment, various House Coun¬cils, and even the Inter fraternityCouncil—from motives that areUC enters bridge contestThe University of Chicagois one of the more than 150colleges and universitiesthroughout the United Stateswhich have entered the 1961 Na¬tional Intercollegiate Bridge tour¬nament.All play will be by mail andw'ill be conducted on the individ¬ual college campuses. The Uni¬versity session will be held tomor¬row afternoon, starting at 1:15pm in the Ida Noyes lounge. Thehands will then be returned totournament headquarters wherethey will be scored by EdwardOswald, a contract bridge author¬ity, who will determine campus,regional, and national winners.Prizes will include trophy cups for the colleges winning the na¬tional titles, one cup for the col¬lege for the pair scoring higheston the East-West hands and onecup for the college of the North-South hand winners. Each of thefour individual national winnerswill receive a smaller cup for hispermanent possession. Each col¬lege competing in the tournamentfor the first time in 1961 will bepresented with a plaque designedto bear the names of the fourindividual campus champions. Inaddition, each of these winnerswill receive a certificate suitablefor framing.Last year, 2,453 students repre¬senting 143 colleges located in 48states and the District of Colum¬bia and Canada, participated in the tournament. Teams represent¬ing Columbia university andNorth Cai'olina state won the na¬tional championship titles and tro¬phy cups. More than a hundredother students won regional andcampus honors.The National IntercollegiateBridge Tournament committee, apart of the games committee, As¬sociation of College Unions, isinterested in developing contractbridge as an interesting supple¬ment to the collegiate social pro¬gram. The committee requiresthat the approval of the dean orother administrative official begranted before a college can beregarded as officially entered inthe tournament. nothing if not altruistic — havetaken resolutions in protest. Stu¬dent objection seems to me tocenter on four points: 1) thepoint of principle that any insti¬tutional requirement concerningstudents’ places of residence is animproper invasion of privacy: 2)certain deficiencies in the physicalcomfort and convenience of resi-dense in University housing: 3>the suddenness of the action,taken without involving studentsin discussion and explanation inadvance; and 4> what is presumedto be an intention of arbitraryrigidity in the administration ofthe plan.Answer obviousThe answer to the first objec¬tion is obvious. The commitmentto a residential college is an edu¬cational decision on which thefaculty and administration havebeen unanimous for years. Forthis educational policy to be en¬forced is no more an invasion ofstudents rights than are facultyactions on curricular matters. Themechanics of its enforcement areof course extremely important,and in my view a rightful subjectof student concern. I will comeback to this point. ment- style accommodations isnow in just that preliminar\ stageat which it is appropriate to seek-student opinion and advice on alldetails of the organization of resi¬dential life in those accommoda¬tions. This will be done. At thesame time, I propose to bring un¬der discussion, with the same stu¬dent representatives to be con¬sulted on that matter, the mechan¬ics of administration of the newtwo - year - four - year regulations.We note that while the regula¬tions will first come to beai onany group of students next Au¬tumn, when pre.sent first-yearstudents will be living in, they donot come to bear on third-yearwomen until a year later, and onfourth-year women in Autumn.1963. There is time, then, for vir¬tually the same kind of consulta¬tion that mi^ht havq, been had inadvance of last summer’s an¬nouncement. Let me make quiteclear a point that could otherwisebe misunderstood: the regulationsexist; it is the administration ofthem on which consultation willbe had. in response to what arewell-taken points in the third andfourth of the student objectionsI have described.As for objections based on fa¬cilities in the Houses, one answeris that some of these objectionsare extravagent, and that by anyobjective standard our studenthousing facilities are excellentones. The second answer is thatthey are of course susceptible ofimprovement, and that a continu¬ing effort is being made in justthis direction. I am glad to an¬nounce that funds have recentlybeen appropriated to bring thefollowing improvements to PierceHall immediately: full equipmentfor the snack bar. lamps and walldecorations for the House loung¬es, lamps for student rooms, ping-pong and pool tables, pianos forthe practice rooms, fireplace ac¬cessories. patio furniture, and a“hi-fi” for the penthouse. Therewill be more improvements. Thelargest single one now pendingis the provision of apartmenthouse accommodation for unmar¬ried undergraduates. This shouldgreatly increase the variety andattractiveness of our total systemof student housing. Will invite studentsTiming poorThe objection to the timing ofthe new regulations has founda¬tions that I am not inclined todeny. It is very distinctly a pointof University policy to discusssuch matters with students in ad¬vance. The urgency of the situa¬tion with which we were con¬fronted last Spring seemed to me—and still does to justify settingthe policy aside, at least in part,in that instance.The existence of the fourth ob¬jection, based on a presumptionthat the administration of therules will be unacceptably rigid,suggests what can be accom¬plished by way of partially meet¬ing both it and the third objec¬tion ex post facto.The planning of the new apart- Students will be invited to onter these discussions in a con¬structive spirit. I am optimisticabout the likelihood of their responding in just that spirit. Oneof the grounds for my optimism isthe accomplishments already tothe credit of some, at least, of theeleven Student Consultant Boardsof the Student Government. Thosewere formed last fall by agree¬ment with my office and elevenother administrative offices whosedirectors agreed to sit with thestudent Boards on a regularschedule, to discuss the operationsof their offices as these affectthe student. For the consultationI am announcing here, I will pro¬pose that the student representtion7 consist of the Student Con¬sultant Board for Student Hous¬ing, augmented by the presidentsof the several undergraduate 4Houses. I hope that we can alsohave the benefit of consultationwith representatives of the College faculty. If that idea commends itself, the details canreadily be worked out.Let me presume to close witha word of exhortation. I suggestto you that one of the characteristics to be desired in the Collegeof the University of Chicago isthat it should be an exemplary in¬stitution, a model for the country,in regard to the forms and thesubstances of two way communication between students and fac¬ulty outside the classroom. Thatthere is outstanding intelligenceand ability on both sides can hard¬ly be doubted; all that is requiredfor good communication is a willand an effort on both sides.John P. NethertonDean of StudentsGentlemen preferred by blondes, brunettes, and redheadsprefer ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic. That’s because most men usewater with their hair tonic — and ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic isspecially made to use with water! The 100% pure groomingoil in ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic replaces the oil that water removesfrom your hair. In the bottle and on your hair, the differenceis clearly there! Just a little ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic does a lot! RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr.f ’48I N. LaSalle Chicago, HiFR 2-2390 • FA 4-6800THE TAREYTON RINGMARKS THE REALISING!SC discusses advisorsStudent government elected a new treasurer at last Tuesday’s meeting. Samuel Peltzman,a graduate student in economics, who received his seat in the assembly only Monday night,was elected Treasurer of the Assembly by acclamation.The previous treasurer, Jay Baker, announced his resignation at the meeting, and in thesame speech, nominated Peltzman as his successor. Baker did not state specific reasons forhis resignation, but several prominent SG officers have been forced to resign or at least tocurtail their activities because ofa lack of time. jn another important move, thePeltzman said his lack of party assembly passed with only oneaffiliation should aid him in main- .dissent a bill striking the Studenttaining good relations with the Code requirement that student or-various assembly factions. ganizations have faculty sponsorsAs treasurer, Peltzman will han- *° obtain official recognition,die the accounting on nearly $380 Passe(t by the assembly, thein cash assets. In addition, SG has bill requires that student organi-approximately $900 invested in zab°ns have a “sponsor,” but nobooks for their discount ordering recloirement as to the sponsorsservice. In giving his last treas- Position or relation to the Univer-SG delegates discuss a proposed bill at last Tuesday'smeeting. urer’s report before resigning,Baker said he expects the order¬ing service stock can be sold andreconverted to cash.PRO prepares platform sity is made.In explaining the need for thisalteration of the Student Code,Clark Kissinger, Chairman of theCommittee on Recognized Stu¬dent Organization (CORSO), saidthat many organizations are hav¬ing trouble finding faculty mem¬bers willing to sponsor them.“They just don’t want to be putThe Practical reform organ- the letters PRO printed down the ization of SG which we propose,, to the trouble,” Kissinger said,ization (PRO) met last Satur- side. we suggest that SG should be He a]so explained that it isC,ay night in Ida Noyes. At the PRO also released a statement empowered to represent the stu- jjiogical and unnecessary for somecaucus a wide range of items to the Maroon this week. The dent body in planning the student organizations to have a facultywere discussed from the rules of statement follows: activities budget. We believe that sp0ns0r at all. The girls clubs, hethe Party, to the design of the Taxation without representation SPe ,1° details of reorganization said, are the best example: all listpostpr. At the present time part of the should be wor, . out *?y a const!- Marge Ravitts, resident head ofThe caucus accented Robert’s tuition and fees all students pay tot-tonalI commission which would \yest House, as their sponsors,Rules of Order, as amended by are used to support various stu- but under the present article ofibe erouD as their official rules dent activities. This amounts to a reorganization from faculty and student Code Mrs. RavittsThese amendments included giv- student tax which must be paid does not qua)ify as a faculty spoil¬ing the chairman the right tomake motions and to speak on is¬sues.Another item of business was tochange the Party name fromPRO-ISL to PRO. This action re¬sulted because ISL declared thattheir merger with PRO had notbeen official, and that they haddecided to disband.The PRO caucus discussed thepossibility of having some oftheir members seated in the va¬cant Student Government (SG)seats. Willard Ayres, president,and Diantha MeJilton, member¬ship chairman, encouraged allPRO members at the meeting toapply for SG seats. None of themembers have been seated yet,however.The PRO caucus appointed apublicity committee and accepteda design for posters. The designis merely a standard size sheetof paper, turned sideways, with this campus and of others acrossby all, without either representa- the nation. sor.tion or recourse as to how it isspent.As part of the overall reorgan- If elected this spring PROpledges to establish such a com¬mission with these ends in view. The bill includes a section allow¬ing any student organizationwhich so desires to name a fac¬ulty sponsor who “may act solely in an advisory capacity to the or¬ganization, and shall in no waybe responsible for its actions.”Kissinger said this section wasincluded to make certain that nofaculty member or official of theadministration will be in a posi¬tion to dictate policy to any stu¬dent organization.The question of such faculty oradministration control was firstraised by Neal Johnston, seatedonly Monday as a delegate. Johns¬ton .said that student newspapersat many other universities areeither edited or censored by fac¬ulty members or administrators,and he wanted to make clear thatsponsors here have no such pow¬er.After passing the assembly thebill goes to the office of the Deanof Students, who will have twoweeks in which to veto it. If hedoes not act within that time thebill automatically becomes a partof the Student Code. Kissingersaid CORSO had originallywanted to do away with sponsorsaltogether for a number of rea¬sons, but Dean of Students JohnP. Netherton had informed himhe would veto any such bill.The assembly also filled sev¬eral committee vacancies.Tareyton delivers the flavor...Study inGuadalajara, MexicoThe Guadalajara Summer School,a fully accredited University ofArizona program, conducted in co¬operation with professors fromStanford University, University ofColifomia, and Guadalajara, willoffer July 3 to August 11, art,folklore, geography, history, lan¬guage and literature courses. Tui¬tion, board and room is $245.Write Prof. Juan B. Roel, P.O. Box7227, Stanford, Calif.EUROPE, orSOUTH. AMERICAin 1961?We arrange for low-cost air travelon regularly scheduled aircraft toEurope and South America. Roundtrip summer season fare 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 of10 countries plus four weeks ofstudy in Europe for only $775.00,and 15 doys in Scandinavia for$196. We arrange for purchaseof European cars of any make atwholesale prices, or for low-costrentals. Free consultation on travel.For toil Information,norite toMr. Arne Brekke1207 E. 60th Street,Chicago 37,•r cell (toys or ovooio(s)BU 8-6437. Here’s one filter cigarette that’s really different!The difference is this: Tareyton’s Dual Filter gives you aunique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL, definitely proved tomake the taste of a cigarette mild and smooth. It works together witha pure white outer filter—to balance the flavor elements in the smoke.Tareyton delivers-and you enjoy—the best taste of the best tobaccos.DUALFILTER Tareyton PureMUMMiJUJutt d tXC — S&tate iimtr mtddU mime c•Feb. 24, 1961 • CHICACO MAROONComing events on quadranglesFriday, 24 FebruaryMatins with sermon. 11:30 am Bondchapel, Peter Kjeseth. PhD candidatein New Testament preachesUrban Studies workshop (department ofeconomics), 3:30 pm, Cobb lOi, “Ar¬ranging school districts in a metro¬politan environment,” Luvern L. Cun¬ningham. assistant professor, Colum¬bia university.Maroon Staff meeting. 4 pm. Ida Noyes,room 303. All staff member^and thoseinterested in joining the staff shouldattend.Lecture series: “Cardiovascular and Pul¬monary Physiology.” 5 pm. Pathology117, “Correction of acidosis withoutthe use of sodium,” Gabriel G. Nahas.associate professor and director ofresearch in anesthesiology, college ofphysicians and surgeons. Columbiauniversity.Sabbath dinner. 5:45 pm. Hillel founda¬tion, by reservation.Koinonia. 6 pm. Chapel house, cost forsupper 75 cents.Lenten Vesper service. 7:30 pm. Bondchapel. David Hesla preaches on “Bles¬sed are the meek.” A coffee hourfollows in Swift hall, coffee shop,where the congregation is invited toquestion and visit with the preacherof the evening.Sabbath service, 7:45 pm. Hillel founda¬tion. only undergraduates are eligible forofficial awards and prizes.University theatre. 2:40 and 8:40 pm,Mandel hall, “The tidings brought toMary,” by Paul Claudel.Basketball games, 6 and 8 pm. Fieldhouse, Chicago 'B“ team vs. WrightJunior college: Chicago varsity vs.Washington university (St. Louis).Dames club. 8 pm, Ida Noyes library,couples bridge party, call Pat Winey,HY 3-8639.Latin American Student association. 8pm. DePaul Center theatre, 25 EastJackson, panel discussion on thesituation in Cuba, admission $1.Sunday, 26 FebruaryRadio series: Faith of our Fathers, 8:30am. WGN. Reverend Nathan A. Scott,Jr., associate professor, Divinityschool.Roman Catholic masses. 8:30, 10, and 11am and 12 noon, DeSales house.Lutheran Religious services, 9 am. Ma¬tins with dialogue sermon. GrahamTaylor chapel, Lutheran campus pa¬rish. Sunday school in the Cloisters;10 am, Holy Communion service.Episcopal Communion service, 9:30 am,Bond chapel.Radio program, 10 am. WFMF. “Base¬ball” is the topic discussed by HarryKalven, Jr., professor of law; NormanF. Maclean, professor of English, andBill Veeck, owner, the Chicago WhiteSox. Alec Sutherland, director of edu¬cational broadcasting, is the modera¬tor.University Religious service, 11 am.Rockefeller Memorial chapel. Bishop.Anders Nygren of Sweden, currentlyat the Ecumenical institute, Evans¬ton, Illinois.Friends of New University Thought. 4pm. Ida Noyes. All welcome.Music recital, 4 pm. Burton-Judsoncourts. Judson lounge, works by Bach.Schumann. Katchaturian featured,student performers, refreshments, noadmission charge.Calvert club, 4 pm. Breasted hall. 58thand University. “Government, politics,and Catholics,” lecture by ProfessorJerome G. Kerwin.Carillon recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller Me¬morial chapel, Daniel Robins, Univer¬sity carillonneur.United 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; 6:15 pm. speaker and discussion,"The gathered community: our con¬ cept of the Church,” Frank G. Nelson,director, Baptist graduate studentcenter.Sunday Evening S u p p e r-Discussionmeetings (The Episcopal Church atthe University), 5:30 pm, 5540 SouthWoodlawn avenue, buffet supper; 6:30pm, speaker and discussion. “TheChurch: Its Bible,” J. Coert Rylaars-dam, professor Divinity school.United Christian fellowship, 6 pm, Cha¬pel house, buffet supper.Lecture series: The American Experi¬ment: Success and Challenge, 8 pm.Hillel foundation. “Politics and moralchoice—Lincoln.” Bernard Weisberger,associate professor, department of his¬tory.Radio series: The Sacred Note, 8:15 pm,WBBM. A program of choral musicby the University Choir. Richard Vtk-strom. director of chapel music, con¬ducting.Collegium Musicum, 8:30 pm. Bond cha¬pel. concert, works by Josquin, Ockeg-hem, Isaac. G. Gabrieli, and Dufay.University theatre, 8:40 pm. Mandel hall.“The tidings brought to Mary,” byPaul Claudel.Monday, 27 FebruaryElementary Yiddish, 3:30 pm, Hillel< foundation.Films on Peoples of South Asia (In¬dian civilization course). 7 pm, Roseti-wald 2. “Vanishing Veddahs,” “OurOriginal Inhabitants.“ “Home of theKodavas." Tibetan Traders,” “Hima¬laya—Life on the Roof of the World.”Motion picture, 7 and 9 pm. Interna¬tional house. “Happy is the Bride”(Great Britain).PRO caucus, 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes.“Coffee Plus,” 9 pm. Shorey house. 9thand 10th floors of Pierce tower, musicWUCBSunday, February 2647:00 Couperin — Pieces on Con¬cert for Cello and StringOrchestra.Benda — Trio Sonata in Efor Two Violins and Piano.Rameau — The Opera-Bal¬let Les Fetes D’Hebe ou LesTalents Lyriques.Vivaldi — Concerto II forBible vigil. 8 pm. Crossroads Studentcenter, 5621 South Blackstone avenue,“Lent is the springtime of theChurch,” with Reverend David Ef-roymson.Motion picture, 8 and 10 pm. Burton-Judson courts, “The Oresteia."Fireside conversation, 8:30 pm Hillelfoundation, "Anti-Semitism and so¬cial crisis.” A. Abbot Rosen. Mid¬west- regional director, Anti-Defama¬tion league.University theatre, 8:40 pm, Handel hall.“The tidings brought to Mary,” byPaul Claudel.Social dancing. 9 pm, Ida Noyes, admis¬sion 50 cents for students and $l forothers.Saturday, 25 FebruaryRecorder society. 1 pm. Ida Noyes, in¬struction followed by informal groupplaying.Bridge club, 1:15 pm, Ida Noyes lounge,first floor. Annual intercollegiate cam¬pus bridge tournament, hands pre¬pared and scored by nationally recog¬nized bridge authority, nationwidecompetition, all may play although• Maroon classifieds •For rent2 Room Furnished Apartments. NearU of C, International House. ICRR, andbus. Reasonable. Call: BU 8-9424.SiMO-2 INGLESIDE AVE. CLEAN. COM¬FORTABLE 2 ROOM FURNISHEDUNITS AVAILABLE AT VERY MODER¬ATE RENTALS. SEE RESIDENT MGR.MRS. TAPIA. OR CALL: BU 8-2757.GUITARSBANJOSMANDOLINSTHEFRET SHOP5535 DorchesterMl 3-3459 Chatham Park Village ApartmentsA small town within a Big City. 3 to 5rooms, 1 and 2 bedroom units. $98 to$135. Applications invited from well-qualified prospective tenants who areseeking the unusual in apt. accommo¬dations, 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 lnd.and Mich. Park-like terrain, amplestreet or garage parking.Model apt. Offices on premises.737 E. 83rd PI. TRiangle 4-74005455 Blackstone. 2>i Rm. Apt.—unfur¬nished. $85 including utilities. Call:Nelson, PL 2-9874.Furnished ApartmentsShorelane Apts. 5135 S. Kenwood. Offers1 to 3 >2 efficiency units attractivelyappointed, month to month ocupancy.$80 and up. Elevator; fire-proof • bldg.Mgr. on premises.Help wantedPart-time to prepare Simple Income TaxReturns. Evenings 6-8. ST 3-6681.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 rubbing, one lathering, onerinsing), every trace of dandruff, grime, gummy old hairtonic goes right down the drain! Your hair looks hand-somer, healthier. Your scalptingles, feels so refreshed. UseFITCH Dandruff RemoverSHAMPOO every week forLEADING MAN'S positive dandruff control.Keep your hair and scalpreally clean, dandruff-free!FITCHSHAMPOO Tutor tor Beginning Course in Bio¬chemistry. BU 8-5171. Evenings andWeekends.ServicesProfessional; low rates; dissertations,cc’s, term papers, and misc. Editing ifdesired Approved by dissertation office.BA 1-2166.Typing. Reasonable. MI 3-5218.I Will Take Care of your child In myhome. Experienced Mrs. Rudofski, 5529S. Kimbark, Apt. 2W, HY 3-7443.Sewing, Alterations, Hems. BU 8-6001Typing — Accurate; reasonable rates,HU 3-3792.PersonalsCreative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.LOST—Lady's wallet, cream colored,containing all my identification. Invicinity Reynolds Club. Mandel Hall,and Hutchins Quad. Contact Pat Arden,2938, Dept, of Econ.Roxanne: March 10 Is certain. Won¬derful to get your message. At last, wecan defy convention.*** Cyrano.Themis; See you at the Campus Hang¬out—Link.Have Pipe. Will Playe.Promenades Our Specialty.Welcome home Jay.Come home, all is forgiven. Beargarden.Offer Good UntilMarch 2nd from 9:30 to 10:30 pm, jazz and clasai-call records and live folk music.Tuesday, 28 FebruaryLutheran Communion service, 11:30 am,Bond chapelInter-Varsity Christian fellowship. ISnoon, Ida Noyes, Bible study.Colloquium (institute for the story ofmetals), 4:15 pm. Research Institutes211, “The present dilemma in super¬fluidity.” Russell J. Donnelly, assist¬ant professor, department of physics.Hug Ivri and Advanced Hebrew, 4:30 pm,Hillel foundation.Glee club. 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes, eastlounge, rehearsal.Outing Club meeting. 7:30 pm. IdaNoyes, to discuss final plans for theInterim ski trip to AspenDames club. 8 pm. 6709 South Merrillavenue, chit-chat bridge, call NancyBronberg, MU 4-7760.Wednesday, 1 MarchNinth Annual Management conference(graduate school of business and theexecutive program club). 11 am. Mc¬Cormick place, registration; 1:30-3:30pm. session. I. concurrent meetings:3:30-4 pm. coffee; 4-6 pm. session II,concurrent meetings: 6-7 pm, cock¬tails; 7-9 pm, dinner.Divinity School Worship service. 11:30am. Bond chapel. Peter Kjeseth. stu¬dent in the Divinity schoolCarillon recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller Me¬morial chapel. Daniel Robins.Purim celebration, 7 pm. Hillel founda¬tion. Megillah reading, folk dancing,movies and hamantasehenSymphony orchestra, 7:30 pm, Mandelhall, rehearsal.Country dancing. 8 pm, Ida Noyes, be¬ginners welcome. Israeli Folk dancing. • pm. HilleldattonLecture (history club), 8 pm, Ida Nor„“My year at Moscow universltv»Thomas Rtha, instructor, departmentof history. *Thursday, 2 MarchEpiscopal Communion service, li joBond chapel. mElementary and Intermediate Hebrew3:15 and 4:15 pm, Hillel foundation 'Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship 7 mpm, Ida Noyes. Gunnar Urang, studentIn the Divinity school will speak Aninformal cuffed hour will followGraduate Library School Club meeting8 pm. Burton-Judson courts. Judsonlounge. Miss E. Ferguson, member ofthe ALA headquarters staff, will speakon the activities of the American Li¬brary association.Lecture (Sigma XI). 8 pm, Eckhart 133“Viruses, virulent and otherwise "Earl A. Evans. Jr., professor and chatr-man. department of biochemistryDames club, 8 pm, 1413 East 60th streetsewing, call Nidta Scharlock HY s'.6797.215th William Vaughn Moody lecture8:30 pm. Mandel hall. Allan Tate’American poet and critic, “Deadfriends: John Peale Bishop, PhlcpaPutnam, and Hart Crane" and withreadings of his own poems.Friday, 3 MarchMatins with sermon, 11:30 am. Bondchapel. Wi Jo Kang, Korean Lutheranpreaches.Urban Studies workshop (department ofeconomies). 3:30 pm, Cobb 101. “Prob¬lems of urban growth In Asia." Nor¬ton S. Gtnsburg. professor, depart¬ment of geography.program guide ]Flute, Strings, and Cemba¬lo, op. 10. No. 2, “La Notte.”Dowland — Lute Pieces.8:15 The British InformationServices weekly presenta¬tion.8:80 Humanities 112 Programproduced by Barry Bayer.9:30 Beethoven Quartet No. 1in F for Strings, op. 18. No.1.10:00 Schubert — Soags of theHarper, op. 12.Chopin Concerto No. 1 ine for Piano and Orchestra,op. 11.Weber — Overture to theOpera “Preciosa.”11:00 Ysaye — Extase for Violinand Piano.Mahler — Symphony No. 1in D.Monday February 277:00 Bartok — Three Burlesquesfor Piano, op. 80.Flindemith •— Symphony.“Die Harmonie der Welt"(1951).Honegger — Sonata for Cel¬lo and Piano.8:00 Marty's Night Out — The¬atre and films reviewed byMarty Rabinowitz.8:15 This Week at the UN.8:30 Bach — Suite No. 2 in b forFlute and Orchestra.Beethoven — Overture to“Coriolan,” op. 62.Brahms — Quintet No. 2 inG for Strings, op. 111.9:30 Berlioz — Symphonie Fan-tastique, op. 14.Debussy — Danses: Saereeet Profane for Harp and Or¬chestra.10:30 Schonberg — Quartet No. 3for Strings, op. 30.11:00 Somethin’ Else — modernjazz with Mike Edelstein.Tuesday, February 287:00 Bach — Cantata No. 140,“Waehet auf. ruft uns dieStimme."Mozart — Country Dancesfor Orchestra, K. 606, 600,609, and 602.Bruhns — Prelude andFugue in e for Organ,8:00 Events* That Leaped Histo¬ry — with Richard Mizrack. 8:15 Brahms — Concerto No. 2in B flat for Piano and Or¬chestra, op. 83.9:00 Beethoven Symphony No.2 in D. op. 36.Dvorak — Quartet No. 6 inF for Strings, op. 96,“American."10:00 Saint-Saens ■— Introductionand Rondo Capriccioso forViolin and Orchestra, op. 28.Bartok — Divertimento forString Orchestra (1939).Lalo Quartet for Strings.11:00 Fat City — folk music withMike Michaels.Wednesday, March 17:00 Musical Comedy this weekGypsy.8:00 Mourct — Symphonies forViolins, Oboes, and Horns.Handel — Concerto in Rflat for Organ and Orches¬tra, op. 7, No. 1.Schubert—Sonata in B flatfor Piano, op. post.9:00 Beethoven' — Sonata No. 1in D for Violin and Piano,op. 12, No. 1.Brahms — Trio in B for Vi¬olin, Cello, and Piano, op. 8.10:00 Mozart — The Abductionfrom the Seraglio (complete opera).Cambini — Concerto in Gfor Piano and Strings.Thursday, March 27:00 Boulez — Le Marteau sansMaitre.7:30 Jabberwoeky — with ShortySpiro.8:30 Beethoven — Septet in Eflat for Wind Instrumentsand Strings, op. 20.Ibert — Divertissement forOrchestra.9:30 Tsehaikowsky — Suite from“The Sleeping Beauty," op.66a. Five folk songs sungby Rita Streich.10:00 Roussel — String Trio, op.58.Falla — El Amor Brujo(Love the Magician).Schoenberg — Variationsfor Orchestra, op. 31.11:00 Foss — Concerto No. 2 forPiano and Orchestia.Stravinsky — Symphony inThree Movements.EUROPE-NEAR EAST->395Special Conducted Student ToursMeet us in Venice and tour the Mediter¬ranean; sailing to Greek Islands, Rhodes,Cyprus and Israel. Includes guided tours,folk dancing, seminars, life on a kibbutz,etc., 27 days only $395 and up.for All Your Travel Needs ♦Call, Write or Visit Us Now IROYAL STUDENT TOURS (Oiv. of PATRA Inc.)665 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C. • Te!.: PLaza 1-554012 * C HICAGO MAROON • Feb. 24, 1961Sports newsBasketball teams in action tomorrowBoth the first year andvarsity cagers will have bigchallenges on their hands to¬morrow night in the lastdouble-header at the fleldhousethis season which will feature thetwo Maroon quintets.In the 6 pm preliminary game,the freshmen go up against highscoring Wright junior college,with Ken Moses, former Marshallhigh guard. Moses is the country’sleading junior college scorer withan average of over 30 points per-game. Wright whipped Lyons jcin a game earlier this season 152-102 and Moses has scored over 40points several times.The varsity hopes to get backon the winning track againstWashington of St. Louis at 8 pmin their last fieldhouse appearancebefore the NCAA Great Lakes re¬ gional tournament. Now 7-11, theBears are tougher than their rec¬ord indicates, because they haveSandy Pomerantz, 6'6" understudyto Oscar Robertson at CincinnatiU last year.6'3” Joe Zemans, the Maroonsleading scorer at 14.8 ppg, onceagain draws the roughest defen¬sive assignment. This time it’sPomerantz. Coach Joe Stampfsaid, "Joe did a good job on (De¬troit’s all-American Dave) De-Busschere. He’s a tough man ondefense.”Since joining Washington atmid-season, Pomerantz, who wasWUCB will broadcast the bas¬ketball game with Washington ofSt. l/ouis tomorrow night at 7:4ft.Ira Fistell and John Kim will beat the microphone.Joe Stampf, basketball coach (center), cheers the Maroonson at Detroit game. an all American prep teammate ofDeBussehere’s, has averaged 25ppg in six games, and has turnedin totals of 30, 29, 28, and 27. Heshould be one of the best menUC's crack 49 ppg defense hashad to stop. Stampf reported,"Pomerantz is very good. He’sa big man and can hit from allover the court.”Detroit, Mich. Feb. 18 — NITbound Detroit ran wild in theopening 314 minutes of the secondhalf and .spoiled the Maroon’s 13game winning streak and dreamsof a stupendous upset, 59-39, be¬fore 7,264 fans.Playing cautious ball, the Ma¬roons easily broke an annoyingTitan press and held the leadthree times in the first half. Theirbiggest lead, 13-10, came at 12:21,on baskets by Gene Ericksen andZemans.The teams were even in fieldgoals at halftime, but the Titanscashed in on six of eight freethrow attempts to take a 34-19lead. Since UC couldn’t driveagainst the big UD front line, De¬troit committed only eight foulsin the entire game, and Chicagodidn’t get many charity tries.Compared with the way theyjumped off after the intermission,it looked like Detroit had merelytoyed with the Maroons in thefirst half. UD really turned on thespeed. John Morgan broke for aneasy lay-up on the opening jump.DeBussehere sunk two quickbuckets, and before the Midway-men turned around they weretrailing 34-19.Eight minutes elapsed beforeChicago netted a basket. GerryToren hit with 12:59 to go. The6'4" senior played the greatestgame of his career, bottling upall-American candidate CharlieNorth and rebounding viciously. When Toren fouled out, he hadscored 14 of UC’s 28 points.Dave DeBussehere gave the Ma¬roons a sample of what it’s liketo play against an all-American.The nation’s 26th leading scorerand third highest rebounderracked up 20 points and was allover Chicago’s offensive back-board. Since DeBussehere pulled21 rebounds, UC couldn’t buy asecond shot."DeBussehere is one of the fivegreatest college players I’ve everseen,” said assistant coach‘Whitey’ Nicholson. "He couldplay pro ball right now and he’sonly a junior.”Held to their lowest scoring to¬tal of the year, the Titans, whoaverage 77 ppg, got some con¬solation besides their 15th winagainst 7 losses. They limited theMaroons to the smallest total UDhas allowed in eleven years. Thebox score:Detroit 59 Chicago 39I G FT P FG F' r PDeBus’ch're 9 2-3 1 Toren 5 4- •4 5North 2 2-2 3 Zemans 4 0- ■0 2Morgan 4 2-4 1 Ericksen 3 0- ■2 2Chickowski 1 0-1 1 Dav)ey 0 0- •1 2Vtlleimire 6 2-2 1 Liss 2 0- ■1 0Munson 0 1-4 0 Winter 1 0- -0 0Wright 0 0-0 1 Devitt. 0 0- -0 1Schoenherr 1 0-0 0 Paulsell 2 1- -2 1Kovalesky 1 0-0 0McDaniel 1 0-0 025 9-16 8 Totals 17 5 -10 13Spring registration beginsAdvance registration forstudents in academic units onthe quadrangle will begin onMonday.Students in the college may pre-register from February 27- March17. Students in the graduate divi¬sions, medical school, graduateschool of education, and socialservice administration may pre¬register from March 6-17. Stu¬dents in the law school may pre-register from March 6-8; studentsin the graduate library school,from March 6-10; and students inthe graduate school of business,from March 13-16.For all students, registrationconsists of four steps:Step 1—Obtaining registrationpackets from the registrar. (Stu¬dents in the professional schools,except the graduate school of edu¬cation, can obtain their packetsin the offices of their respectivedeans of students.)Step 2— Obtaining approval ofregistration from advisors anddeans.Step 3—Submitting completedand approved packets to the regis¬trar.Step 4—Paying, or arranging<o pay, fees to the bursar.All undergraduates must formDext quarter’s schedule in agree¬ment with their approved regis-•ration forms, obtainable in Blake hall 120, after all the cards intheir packets are filled out.A-B report to Blake 12 on Feb¬ruary 27; C-D, on February 28;E-F, on March 1; G-H, on March2; I-L, on March 3; M-N, on March6; O-Q. on March 7; R-S, on March8; T-V, on March 9; W-Z, onMarch 10. Undergraduates unableto report as scheduled above mayregister from March 13-17.Undergraduates wishing tochange their sections for thespring quarter must register fromMarch 13-17. No section changesare permitted without the expressapproval of the Dean. Changeswhich need be made for springquarter after the student has sub¬mitted his completed and ap¬proved packets to the registrarwill not be accepted until March29.After securing the dean’s ap¬ proval, all cards must be turnedin to the registrar for fee assess¬ment. The registrar will issueclass admission tickets and bur¬sar’s cards to the student. Regis¬tration will be complete on pay- Halftime—Detroit 24, Chicago 19Rebounds—Detroit 47, Chicago 39Shooting—Detroit .368 (25 68), Chicago340 (17/50)Errors—Detroit 6. Chicago 10Fencers triumphThe UC fencers knocked offanother big school Saturday whenthey ran all over Indiana by ascore of 19-8. Triumphant in allthree weapons, they took the foilmatches 6-3, the epee 8-1, and thesaber 5-4.Their winning streak at homewas finally broken by Wisconsinlater in the afternoon, 17-10.Coach Alvar Hermanson has ledhis 1961 fencers to more wins thanany team since 1960. They closeout the season tomorrow at IowaCity, dueliag Iowa and OhioState.Wrestlers supreme ^UC’s wrestlers picked up their is now 6 2. Both Mike Watson anaMarty Karasch turned in theirbest jobs of the year and gainedpins. Fred Hoyt, 123 pounder, wasagain outstanding. He got his fifthforfeit of the year, which shouldapproach a new UC record.Tomorrow the team ends itsseason at Western Michigan. Theywill be about 12 point underdogs.Results:C'hicago 27, IIT S123— Hoyt by forfeit130—Nugent beat Baillie, 4-2137—Cu* pinned Regan. 7:47147—Eisenberg by forfeit157— Watson pinned Miller. 7:28167—Tregay edged Thornei, 7-5177—Karasch pinned Hendricks. 3:34hvy—Talliisch tied King. 1-1exh—Didier pinned Neniickas, 4:46Tennis motch setIsn’t it too early to start playingtennis? Coach Bill Moyle and hisnetmen say no. They meet Iowa,Marquette, and Northwestern ina round robin tournament at thefieldhouse tonight, tomorrow, andSunday. The Maroons lost onlytwo meets last season and lostonly one man, Bernie Hoffman.Jerry Cooke, number one lastseason, is only a sophomore.Gymnasts defeatedBob Kreidler’s gymnasts drop¬ped a double duel meet Saturday.Wisconsin stopped the Maroons61 -51 anil Ball State gained a 66-46 win. Joe Kuypers took threefirsts against the Badgers in thefree exercise, trampoline, andtumbling. Pete Wilson, Ken Dries-in the three events,the three events.Unknowns champsThe Unknowns, led by formerMaroons stars Gus Pearson andMitch Watkins, won the all uni¬versity 1-M basketball title. PsiUpsiion won its umpteenth fra¬ternity league championship.Other winners: East II—collegehouse blue; Thompson S—collegehouse red; CTS—divisional blue;Unknowns—division red; Psi U—B league r«*d.ment of fees or satisfactory ar- fifth win against three losses byrangements for payment. routing in 2<-8 Tuesday.College students who do not pre- Co-captain Cliff Cox remainedregister will pick up a packet undefeated in dual competition byfrom the registrar and then pro- pinning Regan for his eighth wineeed to the office of the dean of of the year. After dropping a closeundergraduate students between 4 2 decision, co-captain Jim BaillieMarch 13-17 or on March 27-28,the dates of regular registration.Students entering the univer¬sity for the first time and studentswho were in residence in wintermay register either on the ad¬vanced dates or during regularregistration, March 27-28. A newstudent will be required to handin a copy of his certificate ofadmission to the registrar at step3 of registration. Joseph N. Aaron, 77The ConnecticutMutual Life InsuranceCompany of HartfordSince 1846, over 100 years, Hassafeguarded your family.135 S. LaSalle St.Sake 825 RA 6-10604 PIZZASFor The Price Of 3NEGRO HERITAGEA speciol newsletter, devoted tonistoricol data about the Negro.Annually, 26 issues, $2. Subscribetodoy.Post Office Box 8 Y 53Chicago 80, Illinois NICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780HELP WANTED$350 per month or more port time,ull time $20,000 per yeor ond up.Men ond women wonted to retoilOf wholesale in Chicogo or onystate or locality. New ond unusuolopportunity. Coll MU 4-0413 eve¬nings or after 2 p.m. The (DGCOIdX *<<■» Green DoorA Mm( Pleasant Coffer House - Book ShopPaperback*, Children’* Hook*, New York Time*Serving Nightly, 7:30-12:30 Saturday, Naan-1:30 a.m.Serving French Breakfost Sundays, AH DayChess, Monday and Tuesday Evenings, and Saturday Afternoon#1450 Ea*t 57th Street Book Shop Open Baity 10 a.m. We all make mistakes.. •ERASE WITHOUT A TRACEON EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDDon’t meet your Waterloo at the typewriter—perfectlytyped papers begin with Corrasable! You can rub outtyping errors with just an ordinary pencil eraser. It’sthat simple to erase without a trace on Corrasable. Savestime, temper, and money!^ Your choice of Corrasable inlight, medium, heavy weights andOnion Skin in handy 100-sheet packets and 500-sheetboxes. Only Eaton makesCorrasable.A Berkshire Typewriter PaperEATON PAPER CORPORATION ;’e) PITTSFIELD, MASS.Feb. 24, 1961 • CHICACO MAROON • liBrecht, Celber, Genet, Ionesco reviewedby Ken PierceNEW YORK —One week¬end of Broadway and off-Broadway theater recentlyprovided an opportunity towatch four playwrights who areconcerned with the “cage” con¬temporary man has made out ofhis civilization.Two of the plays—“In the Jun¬gle of Cities,” by Bertolt Brecht,and “The Connection,” by JackGelber—are currently playing atThe Living theater. “The Bal¬cony,” by Jean Genet is at theCircle In the Square, in Green¬wich village, and Eugene Iones¬co’s “Rhinoceros,” opened amonth ago on Broadway at theLongacre. All of the plays presentmodern men grappling with acomplex society into which theywere born.Drama is realBefore the first curtain of “Inthe Jungle of Cities,” the follow¬ing message from the author isflashed on a screen: “Watch nowthe inexplicable wrestling matchbetween two men and witness thefall of a family uprooted from theprairies into the jungle of the bigcity . . .” One of the two men in¬volved in the “wrestling match”is George Garga, a young manwhom we first meet clerking in abookstore. His antagonist isC. Shlink, a Chinese lumber dealerwho has spent 40 years developinghis lumber business.Schlink is indeed an inscrutableOriental. He speaks of his skin,thick as an elephant’s, whichserves to repel and contain allemotions. This monumental stolid¬ity, and his obvious identificationas a representative of an economicsociety, indicate that Brecht in¬tended him as “civilized" or citi-Clark theatredork & modisonfr 2-284550at all times m specialV collegeprtce* ladies day every fridayall sals admitted for 25e* different doable feature daily* open 7:30 a.m.late show 4 p.m.* write in for free pros ram soldo fied man, living apart from na¬ture. (It is interesting to note inthis context that his occupationis cutting down trees.)Garga would never have beeninvolved with Shlink if his familyhad not moved to the city fromthe prairie. In his encounter withShlink, Garga becomes cold¬blooded, less “human.” At onepoint he tells shlink: “My laugh¬ter is your sunshine; what’s hu¬man to me is your dinner.” Atthe end of the play Schlink isdead and Garga is rich; but whichone has forced the other tochange? What has the city doneto the family from the prairie?It would seem that the naturalvitality that was Garga and hisfamily has been vanquished atthe play’s end, as Garga contem¬plates moving to New York.The characters in “The Connec¬tion,” also presented by the reper¬tory Living Theater, have alreadylost their battle with society. Theyhave no purpose in life—they sim¬ply wait for the arrival of their“connection,” the supplier of hero¬in. The play itself serves as aconnection, between the audienceand the world of the dope addict.Jack Gelber seems to have in¬tended his first play to be a docu¬mentary—the large number of adlibbed lines, the jazz band onstage, the setting, all strive tomake the drama uncompromis¬ingly “real.”Both “The Connection” and “Inthe Jungle of Cities” are tightlydirected by Judith Malina. Bothproductions have excellent casts,and are definitely worth seeing.Genet is far out“The Balcony” at the Circle inthe Square, is a little farther out,farther from Broadway, and far¬ther from the Living Theater’shigh standards. Jean Genet is hereexploring a “dehumanizing” ef¬fect of civilization. By means ofhistory, men are immortalized,not as individual human beings,but as agents in a soeietial frame¬work, as “functions.” Three of thecharacters are undistinguished la¬borers, who wish to masquerade(function) as a Bishop, a Judge,and a General respectively. Theyfind satisfaction for these andother more obvious wishes in abrothel, which also serves to pro¬ tect them from a revolutionaryarmy. The only man who can savethem from the army is the policechief, a “man of action” apartfrom masquerades.As soon as the chief quells therevolutionaries, Bishop, Judge,and General begin to play theirroles in the real world. The play’sconclusive irony is that the manof action ceases to act productive¬ly in the real world once he hasbecome “functionalized" as aHero.While Genet’s script is thought provoking, and a few of the per¬formances are convincing (not¬ably A1 Viola as the chief of po¬lice), this production is frequentlyamateurish. Grayson Hall as themadame relies too heavily on toofew gestures, and F. M. Kimballis an awfully stagey workingmanand Bishop. Missed cues and toomuch backstage noise were alsoevident.Ionesco is also concerned withthe vitiating effects of civilization.His answer, as expressed in “Rhi¬noceros,” is simply and literally to turn everyone into a rhino¬ceros—that is, everyone exceptthe one resident of a mediumsized town who has always beendrunk and lazy and therefore re¬moved from “civilized” society.Eli Wallach plays this “humanbeing;” Zero Mostel is a reputablecitizen who becomes a rhinocerosonstage; and Morris Carnovsky isa logician and one of the firstpersons to become a rhinoceros.Director Joseph Anthony makesuse of much very funny vaudeville in this production.Musical revue 'shoddy“Seven and One Eighth,” anoriginal musical revue writtenby Bob Reiser and MartyRabinowitz, with music byMel Rosen and Dick Weiss, waspresented last weekend by thePoint Theatre company. In viewof the fact that the productionwas disastrously under-rehearsedand showed little evidence of di¬rection in any sense of the term,it is difficult to evaluate eitherthe basic material of the revueor the quality of individual per¬formances.The sketches included a spoofon folksinging festivals, a parodyof the “tough private-eye” school,and three excerpts from the lifeof that excessively well-knowncharacter, Hamlet. Prince of Den¬mark, as he might be viewed by(guess who) Tennessee Williams,Noel Coward, and Rodgers andHammerstein. The Noel Cowardparody provided Amei Wallachwith her only real opportunity:her rendition of Gertrude in theclipped British manner was excel¬lent. The Rodgers and Hammer¬ stein bit was enlived by CarolHorning’s successful performanceas a fairy godmother who drop¬ped in via Bali Hai; this sketchalso achieved some staturethrough a skilful blending of R& H tunes which covered showsfrom “Oklahoma” to “South Pa¬cific.”Music is ineffectiveMusical numbers included anopener in which the company sta¬ted its wish to be “Individuals,”and a second act opener in whichthe cast announced that Sin waswhat they wished to be in. Themusic throughout was ineffective,though this may have been dueto the extremely tentative ap¬proach of the piano player. CarolHorning distinguished herself bypaying no attention to this defi¬ciency, and therefore qualifies asthe performer whose appearancewas most reassuring to a nervousaudience. “There’s Caro 1,” onesaid. “Well, anyway, she knowswhat she’s doing.”Amei Wallach and Dick Tracy,(yes, really —) carried the burden of the musical numbers; this wasunfortunate, since both of themcan act and neither of them cansing. Chuck Vernoff contributean amiable stage presence and acertain degree of know how aboutindulging in a series of backbreaking embraces with variousyoung ladies.Bob Reiser displayed an unfor¬tunate tendency to break upwhich rendered the "musicians atwork” bits less effective t h a nthey might have been. MarthaAnsara, who is gifted with a remarkably pleasant speakingvoice, also suffered from a tendency to break up, possibly out ofembarrass ment at the things shewas required to do.The Point Theatre company isto be commended for ambition,initiative and spunk. It is to behoped that they will acquire aproducer and/or director whowields a rod of iron, and who willimpress upon them the notionthat it is not all right to presenta show which looks as if theywere performing it at their owncast party.Nancy LorieWUCB Marathon GuideThe following programs will be presented in the north lounge of Reynolds club thisweekend. In addition, there will be recorded music and occasional visits from members ofthe faculty and administration. Admission to the Marathon is free. WUCB will be solicit¬ing contributions for the South African Student Fund, administered through WUS. Thisis the station’s only live audience broadcast of the year, and all students are invited toattend.Appointment only Ml 3-8032FLORENCE RESNIKOFFCUSTOM JEWELRY DESIGNStowes Matched Wedding SetsTbo only Chicago designer to be in-ala dad m “Design Quarterly's" sur¬vey of contemporary jewelry craftsmen 7:00 Openi ng ceremonies fol¬lowed by the farewelladdress by Robert M.Hutchins9:00 Folk music: John Kim andMike Wolfson9:30—Ten Nights in a Bookstore.The newest of moralityplays. LIVE!!!10:00—Live — Bob Applebaumand his jazz group.11:00—Fat City: Live folk musicwith Mike MichaelseomiOHV © (Ml. Th£ coca COLA COMPANY. COCA-COLA ANO COME A*e MOSTCAEO TAAOCMAAKS14 GREAT BETWEEN COURSES!Get that refreshing new feeling with Coke IBottled under authority ot The Coca-Cola Company by The Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Chicago, Inc.• CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 24, 1961 Saturday12:00 The Torch Hour withJanet Zlotow1:00-3:00 am—R e c o r d e d Jazzwith Mike Edelstein andSteve Westheimer7:00—Mr. and Mrs: WUCB’smorning show with realfood7:30—WUCB’s morning show,without food, but withDave Yzbick9:30—University’s theatre pre¬sents The Marriage Propo¬sal by Chekov10:30—Live — The University Col¬legium Musicum12:00—Barry Goldwater’s recentspeech at Mundelein col¬lege1:00 pm—1The University Glee 1:302:00 club, liveJazz Archives with Bill Pe¬terman-The Meter Readers, reading meters b p t h iambicand troachic3:00 - Folk music with Kim andWolfson8:30—Ten Nights in the Bookstore — Live4:04—A live performance by theBlackfriars7:00 —PRO NAUSEA, conductedby Sir Max Runnerbienwith guest conductor Mi¬tya Pandowdy8:04 - Basketball: Live from theField house. UC versusWashington Univ. of St.LouisMl 3-3113tfsalsrs fiecastrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli & michelin tiresvandervel! bearingsbeck distributors linespecialists fir speed tuningcustom engine inetafUmon*dutch •gear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachwofkMl testa MG psychiatrist2306 e. 71st st.Chicago, IllinoisCulture VultureTrundling through the soggy thicket which was his normal habitat, Eeyore paused to consider the sorrow of the times.How greatly winter seemed to have changed all the happy times of the frosty fall. So many of his forest friends, andcivilized ones, too, had disappeared over the horizon; or maybe they were just in winter hibernation. Eeyore hoped so, buthe didn't feel sure of things at all. It was so difficult to have faith when the objects of that very faith slowly drop from sight.Eeyore DID see Tiger everyday and sometimes they discussed the way life used to be, and sometimes Very Small Beetle andRabbit would bounce into and out of view as quick as that. Once he had seen Christopher Robin bumping down the stairs onhis bottom, as was his usual habit, but instead of chortling with glee he was shedding large luminous tears, and Pooh wasn'twith him. Eeyore had joined Christopher on the bottom step and they wondered about Piglet whom they rarely saw, and Owlwho had flown off to fight the ignorance of the world, or some such thing. They sighed and remembered the leisurely hoursof camaraderie in the dusky glades of the forest where the sunlight rarely entered, the hours of drinking molten honey out ofearthenware mugs which seemed like crystal goblets. They sighed again and wept a tear.On campusTheatreWhen Paul Claudel died sixyears ago, ft was universallyrecognized that the era in Frenchletters dominated by the great•masters” — Proust, Valery, Gidehad come to an end. An erasuch as that never truly comes totn end; it is being continuallyrevivified in people’s minds wheni hey read a book, or see a play,or hear a concert from that age.University Theatre will re-enactthe spirit of those times thisweekend when they present fourperformances of Claudel’s ‘‘TheTidings brought to Mary.”The play has been recentlytranslated by Wallace Fowlie, anex member of the faculty. Its ac¬tion revolves around the intricaterelationship of two sisters (to beplayed by Renee Capellini andJane Ballou) who are totally dif¬ferent in temperment and yet in¬dissolubly joined. The interac-tion of their personalities is ofsuch impact that it renders theplay both human and super hu¬man at the same time. Ticketsare still on sale at the ReynoldsClub.Our fair faculty have gone totown on their annual revels andhave come up this year with amusical western whose dubioussounding title is “Empty Saddlesin the Bach Corral.” The showwas written and is being directedby Alec Sutherland, head of theRadio and Television office hereon the muddy quadrangles. Frompast reports, these reels hit thepinnacle of sparkling success, orthey dive into the very depths ofiniquity. Whatever the case maylx* this year, tickets are on saleat the Quad club for perform¬ances on the 10th and 11th of thismonth.MusicThat time of year has alreadyspun around when various “se¬nes” give their last concerts. Thelast of the Chamber Music Seriesconcerts on March 3 is a sure signthat winter is thinking of loosingits hold on our blue-cold necks.We are not trying to push theChamber Music Concerts aside,not at all; if all winter was asedifying and uplifting as they,would that it lasted the year'round.The final concert, to be present¬ed in Mandel Hall at 8:30, willusher winter out and spring inwith the flowing tones of sopra¬REVELSIs Qood Likea FacultyShow Should!March 10 and 11Mandel HallTickets $3On SaleAt the Quadrangle ClubFor Reservations Call:HY 3-8601 orExtension 3696 no, Bethany Beardslee. Living Mu¬sic Inc. (see below in Off Cam¬pus) claims that her appearancewith them on the 5th will be her“eagerly anticipated Chicago de¬but.” Unless the University hasrecently seceded, it appears thatwe have beat another organiza¬tion at their own game. MandelHall will be blessed by this sopra¬no’s Chicago debut, and ticketsare on sale there for the gala oc¬casion at $1 for students.The University of Chicago Sym¬phony orchestra is proud to an¬nounce that the winner of theSecond Annual Concerto Contestis Gerald Rizzer. He will performthe Beethoven Piano Concerto No.4 in G Major with the Orchestraat their Spring Concert. Honor¬able mentions were awarded toJeffrey Kranzler, Skip Living¬ston, and Janet Zlotow.But first things first: Sunday,March 4, at 8:30 in Mandel Hall,will see the orchestra’s winterconcert. Under the direction ofColin Slim, the student musicianswill perform "The UnanswerableQuestion” by Charles Ives, Web¬er’s “Overture: Der Freischutz,”the Beethoven Violin Concertowith Ivan Sellin on violin, Ber-liotz’ “Roman Carnival Overture,”and Schumann’s Second Sympho¬ny. It is an ambitious program,but admission is free.Something new has appearedon the UC musical horizon: an allstudent recital of individual tal¬ents. Much outstanding talentmust of necessity go unobservedin a large community, and thisrecital is a vital attempt to rem¬edy the situation. The recital willtake place at 4 pm on Sunday(Feb. 26) and will feature five stu¬dents in five different forms ofexpression: Bendequz Varga willplay Brahms’ Rhapsody No. 1 andDebussy’s “Gardens in the Rain,”on the piano, or so the Vulturepresumes; Soprano Jean Dames(not to be confused with JamesDean) will sing “classical songsof Europe”; Brunson McKinley,on the classical guitar, will per¬form a Bouree expressly adaptedto his instrument; the third move¬ment of Mozart’s first flute Con¬certo will be presented by Sylvia Woodby; and finally, modern pi¬ano classics by Ravel and Khacha¬turian will be interpreted for thelistening audience by James Hil-gendorf. Be proud of your fellowstudents! There is no admissionfee.CinemaAs soon as Documentary Filmsends one series, they start an¬other, so how is one to tell thepassage of the seasons? Tonight’sfilm, one of the earlist soundfilms made, is part of the celebra¬tion for the twentieth anniversaryof their creation. In line withtheir policy of bringing the bestof all possible films to this cam¬pus, they are showing the original“Blue Angel” in Judd Hall at 7:15and 9:15. The film feature EmilJannings and Marlene Dietrich.Miss Dietrich, in this film whichcatapulted her to internationalacclaim, plays a petty bourgeoisBerlin tart and nightclub singerwho nonchalantly seduces, andthen morally destroys Emil Jan¬nings, a high school professor.Most of the original prints ofthis film are out of circulation,and though it is playing in NewYork, tonight will probably be thelast time that it is shown in theMidwest for a long while. Admis¬sion is 75c.B-J cinema will draw its audi¬ences back to the Golden Days ofGreece, into the poetic and tragicdrama of Aeschylus. This super¬lative version of “The Orestia” isdone in the authentic classic man¬ner — chorus et al — even to thepoint of using the purity (and in¬comprehensibility ) of originalGreek. Fear not! There is an Eng¬lish narrative commentary asbe premiere-type, and Chicago de¬well, to cause the light of under¬standing to dawn in the observ-ei’g’ eyes and to sully its authenticpurity. Shows at 8 and 10; admis¬sion 50c.Off campusMusicMusic is gushing forth from ev¬ery corner of the city to clearaway the last of the grimy pilesof snow. Much of the music is tobe premier-type, and Chicago de¬University TheaterPresentsPaul Claudel's“TIDINGS TO MARY”-in Mandel HallFebruary 24th, 25th, 26th8:40 P.M.Matinee Feb. 25th, 2:40 P.M.Tickets: $1.50 Student-Faculty: $1Available at Reynolds €lub llexk buts of the featured artistsabound.The Chicago Symphony’s Fri¬day afternoon concert on the thirdday of March will feature AnnieFischer, piano soloist from Buda¬pest, in her Chicago debut. Sheand the Symphony will collabo¬rate on Vaughn William’s “Fanta¬sy on a Theme of Thomas Tallis,”Bartok’s Concerto for Piano No.3, and Brahms’ Symphony No. 2,D Major, Opus 73. The Bartokwill be Miss Fischer’s highpoint,as he is a fellow countryman andone of the composers she concen¬trates on. Student rates are in ef¬fect for these Friday afternoonconcerts.On that same March 3, in theCivic Theatre, the Chicago Concerts will present Joan Sutherlandin their Music of the Baroque se¬ries. Miss Sutherland, a lyric-coloratura soprano, has been ac¬claimed for opera and concertsuccesses in Venice, Vienna, andLondon. In the March 3 conceit,she will present her specialty —solo cantatas by Bach and Handel,and will be accompanied by theLittle Symphony of Chicago.Introducing to Chicago signifi¬cant music by notable composerspast and present, Living MusicInc. has come into being. OnMarch 5 they are featuring Beth¬any Beardslee in her Chicago de¬but (Ha! See above.), and com¬poser Easley Blackwood, brightyoung man of the UC music de¬partment.The four works on the programare all premieres, either local ornational: Per.golesi — Arias from“Adriano in Sirica” (US pre¬miere!, Boulez-ieme Improvisa¬ tion sur Mallarme (US premiere),Blackwood — Concerto for FiveInstruments ■ Chicago premiere),and Purcell — Music t<3 Dryden’sOpera, “The Indiana Queen” (USpremiere).Accompanying the concert, tobe hold at the Recital Hall of Mc¬Cormick Place, will be an infor¬mal “coffee hour” during whichthe audience is invited to meetwith the performers and visitingcomposer.PoetryChicago must have caught e ecummings’ fancy, for he was herelast year and is back again for areading on Sunday, March 5 atthe Studebaker Theatre, 410 S.Michigan. Sponsored by Chicagochoice and Lake Forest College,the poet of serious demeanor andbalding pate will read from hisrecent works. The currents of ter¬ror at ignorance which he createsfrom his simple words grips theaudience and fills the hail withan audible silence. Tickets are onsale at the bookstore (probably)for the student rate of $1.CinemaIngmar Bergman, the “poetwith a camera” will be represent¬ed t\Vo-fold at the Hyde. Park din ¬ing the coming week. Both “WildStrawberries” and “The Magi¬cian” have been played before andare returning because of the cas¬cading praise which Bergman al¬ways gets. In addition, his filmsare so subtly and movingly deepthat they must be seen a pluralityof times. The camera work isbold, beautiful — frighteninglyso. Don’t miss them this timearound.EERIE, RABELAISIAN...EXCITING!' -N. Y. f im#tIngmar Ottoman'snothing short-New Yorker'. . . o superb motion pictureof miraculous"LAKE /PARK AT S? R D : N O 7 9 O 7 1the (vyde park theatreStudent Rate 65c All Performances"Whot on absorbing side-show Bergman hasprepared for all who enter his tent."—Saturday ReviewFIRST TIME TOGETHER“ONE OF THE FEWINGMAR great MOTIONBERGMAN S PICTURES OFI i OUR TIME.” Itil* | — N. Y. Po.f Mlla, Ii>beautifulsmash nglyTimeseeFeb. 24, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15NSA holds regional conventionby Neal Johnston“It was one of the few timesin my life I was consistentlyin the majority,” commentedone member of Chicago’s dele¬gation to the Illinois-WisconsinRegional assembly of the Nation¬al Student association (NSA) heldlast weekend at the University ofIllinois.The assembly passed a wholespate of “liberal'' bills, though notwithout opposition.The key issue before this re¬gional body was the House Un-American Activities and its filmtreatment of last spring’s anti-H U A C demonstrations in SanFrancisco.HUAC criticized "The Assembly was bitterly criti¬cal of the movie “Operation Aboli¬tion” and, citing the film as butanother example of the Commit¬tee’s activities, called for the im¬mediate abolition of HUAC’. Thisresolution passed in oiie of theclosest votes of the Assembly.The major non - substantivequestion haunting the Assemblywas the age-old NSA problem of‘Tepresentativity.” Should an NSA delegate vote his conscience all bills to read: the Ulinois-Wis-or vote the position of his cam- cousin Regional assembly, ratherpus? Does the NSA have a man- than the more normal the Illinois-date to take up political ques- Wisconsin Region. They arguedtions, or must it confine its at- that the Regional Assembly couldtention to purely educational only speak for itself and couldWOrk? not represent the entire region.The leading exponent of the lat- They were voted down,ter view was Northwestern uni- In °*her r<^,onversity, which argued that they strongly endorsed the Foi.it Fourcould not vote on an issue with- Youth corps, stating The Pointout first having ascertained the Four Youth corps embodies a dy-general concensus of their cam- namlc new approach to technicalpus. Those vocally adopting the assistance and human relations—other view were representatives the person to person operationfrom Chicago and Wisconsin who which can do more than any pro-argued that any proper govern- gram now in existence to increaseing body is itself deliberative and the mutual understanding of ITSmust function above the level of citizens and citizens of the enierg-“an adding machine.”' ing nations. It can also contribute. XT - greatly to the economic and socialAccording to Neal Johnston, ^van^nie„, ofchairman of the region, this dif- areas”ference ol opinion erupted into d in the' corps accordin(rsome of the most h^fer flooi. Region, should be effectives£ss. "b-nr^ rldat the National Student congress not ^ written into me um.last summer the region tended to Exemption impliedvote as an almost unanimous According to Gene Vinogradoff.block,” Johnston, a student at UC, UC student who headed the NSAconcluded. committee studying the corps. Lt.Northwestern attempted to put Gen. Lewis B. He rs hey* IIS admin-its position into law by amending istrator of selective service, draft exemption “can be established Each region meets in assemblythrough an administrative policy at least twice a year in full assoniof the selective service board bly, and attempts are ma<l0 tr.rather than through politically schedule two or three single toyi.difficult legislation.” conferences during the year ComOn the question of direct action ing up in the next few weeks areto eliminate discrimination, the Regional NSA seminars on Nui rhregion stated that “although NSA ern civil rights problems (a: Shias a confederation of student bod- mer college) and on internali(o,aiies cannot commit its member- programming on the cami fatship to nonviolent action, it Is in Beloit college).Chicago had the largest of alldelegations at the recenth con¬cluded regional. Its six delegateswere Jim Thomason. Car vieGeier, Jay Baker, John HodgesRoper. Leonard Friedman andGail Paradise. Maureen Byers andNeal Johnston each had a vote asregional officers. Chicago alsosent six alternates: Dorothy Dorf.Howard Rosenfield, Art Mae-Ewan, Gene Vinogradoff. VivianScott and Liz Heath. Seven oh-sympathy with efforts to peace¬fully protest discrimination andsegregation throughout the na¬tion.“Therefore NSA feels that itshould take whatever action iswithin its power to make such ac¬tion more effective on the nation¬al and the regional level, and thatstudent bodies and interested in¬dividuals should make every ef¬fort to implement these programson the local level.”The body also urged member , _ TT/^ . , 4 it, , . , , ? servers from UC brought the totalschools to take whatever proper B loraito twentv-one.Tate to read at lectureAllen Tate, poet and critic, will speak on “Dead Friends: John Peale Bishop and HartCrane” and read from his own poems on Thursday evening, March 2, at 8:30 pm in Mandelhall in the 215th William Vaughn Moody lecture. Tate’s lecture will be open to the publicwithout ticket and without charge.Tate was born in Winchester,Kentucky, and educated at Van- In 1953.54 he was Fulbright Pro- Morel acclaimedderbilt university. He began his fess0r of American Literature at His single novel, The Fathers,career in poetry while he was still the University of Rome, and in first published in 1938, was re-a student at Vanderbilt, where he, 1958-59 he served on a Fulbright issued in 1959 to much critical ac-along with John Crowe Ransom, appointment in England. Since claim in England and America.Robert Penn Warren, Donald 1952 he has been Professor of He edited The Sewanee ReviewDavidson, and others, formed the English at the University of Min- jn 1944.46, and has been the edi-group known as “The Fugitives, ’ nesota. * tor of numerous collections ofand published their first poems in The title of one of his volumes, poetry, prose, and criticism. Hethe magazine called The Fugitive The Man of Letters and the Mod- has received the Bollingen Awardduring its three-year career be- ern World, describes his own ca- and other prizes in poetryi andreer, since he has addressed him- in 1959 the Sewanee Review de¬self to the full responsibilities of voted a special issue to his workthe man of letters in our century. on the of his sixtiethseeking always to mediate be- , . , ... , _. ...tween the values of tradition and birthday, Wlth studies his versethose of the modern critical and and prose by a large group ofcreative intelligence. contemporary critics and poets.Kerwin to speak action is necessary to eliminatediscriminatory off-campus studenthousing.The legislative committee onthe NDEA reported out a bill pro¬testing disclaimer affidavits, butignoring loyalty oaths. Upon amotion on the plenary floor fromthe Chicago delegation, a sectionadding a protest against loyalty e^e to * ,e 'acant position oj reConstitution changedIn other action, the Regionchanged its constitution to allowits chairman more latitude inspeaking for the region, electedRocky Keohane of Shimer coltween 1922 and 1925.Poet is activeSince then Tate has been con¬tinuously active as one of themost prominent and influentialpoets and critics of the United creative intelligence.States. In 1928-30 he spent twoyears in Europe as one of the firstrecipients of a Guggenheim Fel¬lowship for Writing. His Poems:1928-1931 appeared in 1932; The oaths.Twelve bills handledAll in all the plenary disposedof some twelve bills in a sessionlasting from 7 pm until 1:30 am.This left some dozen bills passedby legislative committees whichthe plenary did not have time todiscuss. Most of these bills werereferred to the Regional Execu¬tive committee for action.USNSA is a confederation of al¬most 400 member colleges anduniversities representing somemillion and a quarter students. Itwas founded in 1946 at the Uni¬versity of Chicago and now hasits permanent headquarters inPhiladelphia. Below the nationallevel it is organized into twenty-one regions. Illinois-Wisconsin isthe second largest of these re¬gions with twenty - four memberschools with a total enrollment ofover 110,000 students. gional international affairs vicepresident, and elected Lee Steuartof Northwestern to the newly cre¬ated position of regional civilrights co-ordinator.Mediterranean and Other Poemsin 1933; and his first volume ofcritical studies. Reactionary Es¬says on Poetry and Ideas, in 1936.Many further books of poemshave followed during the pasttwenty-five years, the most recentbeing his collected Poems in 1959and his Collected Essays, also in1959.Tate has taught and lectured inmany American and Europeanuniversities and colleges — NewYork university, Harvard. Bran-deis, Southwestern. Princeton,Chicago, Yale. Indiana, Oxforduniversity, Leeds university, etc. Professor Jerome G. Ker¬win, recently retired from thefaculty of the political sciencedepartment, and about to be¬gin teaching at Stanford Univer¬sity will lecture Sunday, February26, on “Government. Politics andCatholics.”Kerwin was one of the threeUC professors who studied and re¬ported on the Chicago press’snews stories concerning the al¬leged vote frauds in the last na¬tional election.Author of “The Catholic View¬point on Church and State,” Ker¬ win will lecture under the aus¬pices of the Calvert Club at 4 pmin Breasted Hall. There will be aninformal reception in Ida Noyesimmediately after the lecture.JOSH WHITETonight 8 p.m., Cohn AuditoriumComer Sheridan Road and EmersonNorthwestern UniversityEvanston, III.Tickers on sale at the door — $2Sponsored by the NU Society of Folk Arts If you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou¬blesome problem.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.BU 8-6711 SAVE MONEYwith those low student rates!*Q Archil. Ferem (I yr. res- *4-JO- 1.15M ATLANTIC MONTHLY 11 mcc.l 1.00COLLAGE <1 yr. 4 epphaaOe).. J 00Dewnbeat (1 yr. ref. fit 3.10(SQUIRE (• mec.) 2 00FORMS (1 yr. ref. $7.30) 3 00_ FORTUNI <1 yr. ref. $10) .... 7.30OL AMOUR Il6 mec) 2.00“ ORAPNIS (I yr. ref $11) IMSHereer't Menthly (I yr. ref $4) 1.00HI-FI Steree Review 41 yr ref $3) 2.30HOLIDAY 111 mec) 1.90Ladle*' Heme Jaerpal 4 22 me).. 1.15A! LIFE (1 yr ref $S.95I 4.00* LI FI 421 wkc) ...-. 1.01LOOK 41 yr reo $4) 2.00MADEMOISELLE 41 yr ref $1) . 2.30MeCALL'S (21 mec) 3-00TNI NATION <1 yr cep |EI ... 0.00■-:ii New RapebMc <1 yr rtf $1) ... 3 00NIW YORKER 4$ mec) 1.00NIWSWIIK 417 wkO 1.50PLAYSOY 41 yr ref $4) 3.00 IIRIALITIU 41 yr ree $13) .....10.00-RCADIR’S DIGUT II mec new). 2.001RIDBOOK (1 yr) 3.001The Reporter <1 yr ref M) .... 430 "SAT IVENINO POST 1)9 wk»>.. 3.90 ■Saterday Review (I yr ref $7) . 4.001SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN (I yr).. « 0C|SKI MAGAZINE (2 yrcl 1 00SPORTS ILLUSTRATED (23 wfcC 1.971TIME 427 wfct) 1 971TV OUIDE (44 wke) 3.111US Newc * WR (39 whe new).. 3.17VOGUE (1 yr 20 ImmmI 5.001*$RDER NOW, publisher will Mil ya* liter ISTUDENT SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE ■1743 N. Kcnmere, Lea Anfdec 27, CaHt. -Inc laced $ Seed rehccrlptUx telcity□ new □ renew O f Ht Freni- dan »<’Vnt %THIS WEEK ONLY!Offer Good UntilMarch 2ndORESTIAAeschylus' great play clone in the authentic classic manner—Greek dialogue with English narrative commentary, directedby Nicholos Webster, winner of two international film festivalawards ot Venice,Tonight 8 and 10 p.m. • B-J CINEMA • 50< Next WeekWATERFRONTMorion BrondoEva Marie SaintDirected by KazanScare by BernsteinWinner of 8 Academy AwardsIncluding Best Picture GATE OF HORN'S“Little Folk Festival"The Tarriersincluding the Scruggs-style banjo ofEric WeissbergRakhel HadassSongs of Israel and the Middle EastDon CrawfordSongs: driving and drollJ Admission: Friday and Saturday, $2„00; Sunday, $l>50 £•j* No Minimum? _ %>t**tMt4,»**»*,#*,»M»*>**fIM»*,t**t*>»*’tw»**»**»**H**»'v>»*,»**»**#****,5*,,dM5**»*>I*,J'*»**)**»*,#**»**t*''»**»*>t*v‘»M^*'M'' ' *’ '16 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 24, 1961