PQL1T state winsLen Friedman electedstudent government headLeonard Friedman of POLIT was elected President of the Fifteenth Assembly of UC’sStudent government at its first meeting last Tuesday.Friedman and other members of POLIT easily controlled the Assembly despite theirslim one vote plurality. Independent Reform party’s (IRP’s) five members, under the leader¬ship of Elliot Lilien, voted with POLIT most of the evening. Robert Savard, an independentwrite-in from the business school, and D. S. Tsoules of Practical Reform organization alsobacked most POLIT candidates. ■■' ' r.. 7T ;POLITS David Levev and Jane POLIT. She was a delegate to order, Elliot Lilien introducedSaxe were elected vice president UC to the two regional con- a special order of business calledand secretary, respectively. In an Terences of NSA this year, and the “Pierce snack shop emergencywas co-ordinator of the' regionalheld here last weekend.Jerry Walker, also of POLIT,was elected chairman of the Com¬munity relations committee.Walker, a delegate from the divin-apparent deal for Savard’s back¬ing, POLIT leaders endorsed himfor treasurer immediately beforethe meeting was called to order,and he was elected easily.Agenda changedIn order to make certain of its Phillip Smith, also of the divinitymajority, POLIT had to arrange school.the agenda so that the president Walker and Smith have bothwould be elected after the other been concerned with the problemsofficers. The new president can of re-development in Woodlawnvote only to break ties, while the and the entire South side. Smithold president, James Thomason, is a member of the Temporaryfunctioned only as acting chair- Woodlawn organization which hasman, and hence could vote on all bitterly opposed some of U’s ex¬motions and elections. The elec- parfsion plans,tion of a member of POLIT as Walker criticalpresident automatically elimin- Walker criticized Smith’s posi-ated its one vote majority. tion on the gouth Campus pro-POLIT members were elected ject of the University, but saidto all positions on the executive he himself was critical of the Uni- bill.’* The bill would appropriate$100 to the snack shop to helpit open. Its opening has been de¬layed for months due to a short¬age of funds.Sidney Weissman of IRP saidtty school’ was opposed by PRO s the bill should receive immediateattention because “hundreds ofhungry Pierce students’’ weresuffering without their snack bar.The assembly unanimouslyvoted to place the emergencymeasure on their already crowdedagenda, but it adjourned withouttaking final action on it. Observ¬ers feel certain that the measurewill pass easily at the next assem¬bly meeting. (Photo by Berger)Leonard Friedman, newly elected president of studentgovernment. OFcouncil (the chairmen of all standing committees and the president,vice president and secretary com¬prise the executive council) withthe exception of the chairmanshipof the Election and Rules com¬mittee.Lilien winsElliot Lilien of IRP won POLIT versity and particularly of JulianLevi, executive director of theSoutheast Chicago commission.The assembly elected POLIT’sBruce Vermazen chairman of theCommittee on Recognized studentorganizations, and Karl Bemes-derfer, second place candidate inthe College with 403 votes, chair-endorsement for this position, and ^an °f the Student-Faculty rela-he won by more than a two toone margin. His endorsement, ac¬cording to one {pomber of POLIT,was a result of his large victorymargin in the campus electionstwo weeks ago (Lilien received501 votes, nearly one hundredmore than the second place can¬didate), and POLIT regarded thisas “a personal mandate for Lili-en."The chairmanship of the Na¬tional Student association (NSA)committee went to Caryle Geier tions committee. Bemesderfer isalso a member of POLIT.Immediately after James Thom¬ason had gaveiled the assembly Vol. 69 — No. 67 University of Chicago, April 28, 1961 BP»Deadline extendedThe deadline for first year stu¬dents' petitions to live out of thedormitory next year has bean ex¬tended from Wednesday, April 26to noon Monday, May 1. Petitionsshould bo handed in to the deanof students' office. Room, board rates raisedRoom and board rate willeach increase five dollars perquarter next year announceddean of students John P.Netherton.This means that a single inName four to UC facultyFour new appointments havebeen made to the faculty andtwo visiting professors havebeen appointed by ChancellorGeorge Wells Beadle.Denis V. Cowen, dean offaculty of law of the Universityof Cape Town, South Africa, willserve as professor in the lawschool; David Bakan, professor ofpsychology at the University ofMissouri was appointed professorof psychology in the College andprofessor in the department ofpsychology: Robert Paul Woolf,senior tutor in the social sciencesand instructor in philosophy atHarvard university will be assist¬ant professor of philosophy in theCollege; and Allen Debus willserve as assistant professor ofthe history of science in the Col¬lege and in the department of his¬tory. Fredson Thayer Bowers andAlan Dugald McKillop have beenappointed Frederic Ives Carpen¬ter Visiting professors.Cowen, an internationallyknown authority on the legalproblems of new nations, also willbecome director of the center of legal research (new nations) inthe law school of the University.Center is newThe center has been newly es¬tablished as part of the interna¬tional legal studies program ofthe law school. It was made pos¬sible in part by an allocation offunds from a $5,400,000 FordFoundation grant to the Uni¬versity of Chicago to expand itsinternational studies.The law school will developspecial studies and graduate pro¬grams in the problems of the newnations participated in both bylawyers from abroad and byAmerican legal scholars, Beadlesaid.Cowan’s books include writingsin the fields of international com¬mercial law, jurisprudence, andconstitutional law. He is the au¬thor of The Foundations of Free¬dom, which is being publishedthis month by the Oxford uni¬versity press.Bakan is an authority on learn¬ing theory and the. statistical as¬pect of experimental psychologyand is the author of the book,“Sigmund Freud and the JewishMystical Tradition.” He is current-Maroon to try sem i-weeklypublication for two weeksThe Maroon will begin experi¬mental semi-weekly publicationnext week.Plans currently call for the ex¬periment to continue for twoweeks. According to Ken Pierce,Maroon editor, “We feel that wecan more adequately cover allaspects of campus news throughbi-weekly publication. I hope thatin the not too distant future,when we are regularly publishingtwo or three times a week, that we will be able to do a better jobof covering those areas for whichwe presently do not have space.”“We also feel that publishingtwice a week will give our storiesthe immediacy which is necessaryin a newspaper and which we arecurrently lacking,” stated newseditor Jay Greenberg.The Maroon will appear onTuesdays and Fridays, and willbe available at the usual placeson campus and in Hyde- Park. ly writing a history of recent psy¬chology.Woolf is working on a book onEmmanuel Kant’s “Critique ofPure Reason,” a volume on civildisobedience, and a shorter workon the use of game-theory as ap¬plied to the strategy of nationaldefense.Debus received the first regu¬lar appointment in the Depart¬ment to the history of science.Debus, now at Harvard, is aformer research chemist. Hismajor interest is the history ofchemistry with special attentionto its development in the 17thcentury. He has been invited bythe second British Congress onthe history of medicine in Lon¬don to deliver the opening paperat its September meeting.Bowers is a bibliographer andElizabethan scholar from the Uni¬versity of Virginia. He is the au¬thor of “Principles of Bibliograph¬ical Description,” the recent four-volume “Dramatic Works ofThomas Dekker,” and many otherworks on textual and literarycriticism. He has lectured o nbibliography both at Oxford andCambridge, and is generally ratedthe most distinguished livingscholar in the field today. He ismarried to the novelist and short-story writer, Nancy Hale.McKillop, of Rice Institute,Houston, Texas, is a specialist inthe field of 18th century Englishliterature. Although he is prob¬ably best known for his early“Samuel Richardson, Printer andNovelist,” he has published manyother studies of novels and po¬etry of the period, including hisrecent ‘The Early Masters of Eng¬lish Fiction.” He is one of theeminent scholars in his field.Bowers and McKillop will lec¬ture on campus during the sum¬mer quarter this year. the new dormitories will costfifty dollars per month. Singlesin the new dormitory and Piercetower are already more expensivethan those in the older dormi¬tories.This rise in cost, the first since1958, will offset the increase inthe cost of raw food and labor.This is a 3 per cent increase inboard rates and a 4 percent in¬crease in room rates, while theincrease in labor cost is 10.4 per¬cent and in raw food cost 3.4percent, according to Netherton.The total increase next year forstudents will be seventy five dol¬lars — forty five dollars for thenew health fee and thirty dollarsfor room and board.Netherton explainsNetherton explained that aroom and board increase meantno additional income to the Uni¬versity and that therefore stu¬dents who are now on scholar¬ships will not be compensated ac¬cording to this rise in their bud¬get.Netherton announced the risein cost at a meeting with the stu¬ dent committee on residentialpolicy. He also discussed the hous¬ing regulations regarding stu¬dents who wish to petition to leavethe dormitories. As of yesterdaythe administration had receivedforty petitions from students whowished to live in apartments.Five of these netitions c»me fromfemale transfer students.Transfer students exemptThe transfer students will begranted their petitions automatic¬ally on the grounds that they aremembers of the class precedingthe class to which the new resi¬dence rule applies. Thus a stu¬dent who transferred to the Uni¬versity from another school thisyear will not be treated as a firstyear student in regard to housing.Netherton stated that the factthat there were only forty peti¬tions would enable the committeeto investigate thoroughly. He said“What the petitions have indi¬cated to me is that it would havebeen impossible to set criteriawhich would tell a student priorto petitioning whether such a re¬quest would be granted.”UC officials indifferentto students statisticsUC administration officials expressed indifference to newstatistics on the drop-out rate.Tyler Thompson, fourth year student in the College, re¬ported in the recent issue of the Phoenix, “I have found a 1.5to 1 difference in dropouts dur- .ing the second year between proposing to make a mistake inapartment - dwellers and dormi- terms of his academic success,tory residents.” Thompson based “The purpose of the residencehis conclusion on a study of the rule is to enable our staff to havedrop-outs in the class of 1962 be- information about all studentstween fall 1959 and fall 1960. contemplating moving out.”Earlier this year, UC officials George Playe, dean of under¬stated that twice as many apart- graduate students, said, “Ifment-dwellers dropped out than Thompson’s statistics actuallydormitory residents on the basis show no significant difference be-of a study of all drop-outs in the tween the drop-out rates of apart-College in the academic year 1958- ment and dormitory residents, heJohn Netherton, dean of stu¬dents, acknowledged the differ¬ence in the two studies and stated,From years of personal experi- has had an accident. All my ex¬perience contradicts such a con¬clusion.” ,Playe remarked that he is con¬ducting his own study by check*ence, I know of cases in which a ing the last 50 drop-outs in thestudent proposing to move out is College.Linford appraises 'new frontier' program(Editor’* note: The Maroon hasmiked Dean Alton Linford of theschool of social service adminis¬tration to comment on the wel¬fare legislation of the Kennedyadministration.Tby Alton A. Linford, DeanThe School of Social ServiceAdministrationReaders of the daily papersare asked to believe thatPresident Kennedy's “newfrontier” program in socialwelfare would simultaneouslybankrupt the nation and revolu¬tionize our society into the com¬pleted "welfare state.” We areasked to believe that many newand radical programs have beenproposed, all of which would adda backbreaking load to the tax¬payer’s back. Actually, sober ex¬amination of the Kennedy propos¬als reveals that almost none ofthem are new. Most of themwould only expand or strengthen existing programs, and many ofthem were recommended by theEisenhower administration insomewhat more limited terms.Democratic governments, r e -sponsive to the needs and wishesof their people, have been expand¬ing their services for well over acentury. This is no less true ofthe federal, state, and local gov¬ernments in this country. Howelse could we have developed suchwidely needed services as publicschools, highways and streets,parks, water systems, garbageand refuse disposal systems, andthe postal system? The same de¬mands that have led governmentsto offer those services have re¬sulted in their developing pro¬grams in public health, social wel¬fare, care of veterans, mentalhealth, public housing, urban re¬newal, and aid to farmers.Opponents of these programsoften use such scare terms as"socialism” and “welfare state”in the hope that the public will be frightened into blind opposi¬tion. Actually, government ex¬penditures for these services topeople should be regarded as “in¬vestments in man” rather than asburdens on the economy, aspointed out by Professor Theo¬dore Schultz in an article in TheSocial Service Review for June,1959. The same point has beenmade many times by ProfessorSeymour Harris of Harvard Uni¬versity and by Paul G. Hoffmanat the 1960 meeting of the Nation¬al Social Welfare Assembly.The Kennedy proposals regard¬ing social welfare may be classi¬fied under the following head¬ings:1. Federal aid for education,general education in elementary,high schools, and colleges, andprofessional training of physi¬cians and related medical per¬sonnel.2. Anti-recession measures, in¬cluding special aid to depressed30% to 50% DISCOUNTU. S. ROYALTIRESDELCO BATTERIES — Special Discounted PricesSee our complete selection of foreignand sports car tiresAL’S TIRE& SUPPLY GO."YOUR DISCOUNT TIRE HOUSE"30 Years of Dependable Service8104 S. Cottage Grove Are.HUdson 3-8585SUNDAY, APRIL 30, 3:00 P.M.RICHARD VIKSTROM, conductingTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRmembers ofThe Chicago Symphony OrchestraThird Suits in D Major for Orchestra BachMass in B Flat Major (Harmoniemesse) HaydnSoloists: Millicent Fritschle, Martha Larrimore, RogerPi Met, and Edward Warner. Edward Mondello, organistGeneral Admission, $3; Student (All Schools) Faculty of U of C, $1.50On Sale: University Bookstore, Woodworth's Bookstore & Chapel OfficeROCKEFELLER CHAPEL59th & Wood lawn Alton Linford, dean ofthe School of Social ServiceAdministration.‘nagrin .. . shattering in hisimpact upon an audience”ny herald tribuneTonightSEE PAGE 14mdARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Refinishing ofShoes and Handbags• Colors matched t Toes cut aut• Vamps lowered S PlatformsramovedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR INDIES'HARROW HEELSHeels changed — Any style —Any colorBackstraps Removed and Sp/inga-lators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirtax 4-96221749 East 55th St. areas in the United States.3. Public housing and urban re¬newal.4. Measures to strengthen andexpand the social security sys¬tem and related public health pro¬grams.Even a casual look at this listwill reveal that the country al¬ready has substantial public pro¬grams in each of these four areas.A closer examination of them willreveal that many of the proposalsare puny indeed in relation to theproblems which they are intend¬ed to alleviate.Before examining the specificproposals in the Kennedy pro¬gram. one should ask tills ques¬tion: Why should the federal gov¬ernment project itself further intothe broad field of social welfare—a field that many people believeto be the peculiar province ofthe states and local governmentsand of private philanthropy? Theanswer is threefold:1. Some problems (unemploy¬ment and depressions, for ex¬ample) are national in their ori¬gin and scope and can be dealtwith effectively only by the na¬tional government.2. Many of these problems (pub¬lic health, education, urban re¬newal, child welfare, and publicassistance) are better dealt withby state and local governments,but the tax resources available tostate and local governments aresimply not adequate to meet re¬quirements. This problem stems,in part, from the ease with whichmuch taxable wealth may escapestate and local tax authorities bysimply being moved to anotherstate, and also, in part, to the con¬siderable disparity with whichwealth is distributed among thestates and the local governments.These problem areas lend vthem-selves to a partnership arrange¬ment in which the federal gov¬ernment provides all or a part ofthe required funds and the statesand local governments organizeand administer the services, oftenin accordance with general stand¬ards set forth in federal legisla¬tion.3. The general ohsolescence ofstate and local governments, thedomination of the state legisla¬tures by a rural minority, andrelated factors leave them ineptat dealing with many of society’ssocial welfare problems, many ofwhich arc centered in the metro¬politan and urban areas. Theo¬retically, state and local govern¬ments could assume greater re¬sponsibility and leadership thanthey do in developing programsfor urban renewal, public hous¬ing, public health, and public as¬sistance. Actually, state and localgovernments are too often ham¬strung by obsolete constitutionsJoseph H. Aaron, ’27The ConnecticutMutual Life InsuranceCompany of HartfordSince 1846, over 100 years, hassafeguarded your family.135 S. LaSalle St.Suite 825 It A 6-10*0 and city charters, obsolete taxlaws, and an absence of imagina¬tive and competent leadership.Given this situation, the peoplearc turning more and more to thefederal government for the fundsand the leadership required todeal with many social welfareproblems.The post-war "baby boom” hascreated such a demand forschools and teachers that stateand local resources have not beenable to maintain standards. Theresulting crowding in schools,with insufficient and inadequate¬ly prepared teachers, is affectingthe nation’s welfare In a vitalarea. The problem, though espe¬cially acute in low-income statesand communities, is nation wide.President Kennedy has calledfor federal grants for school con¬struction and for teachers’ salaries, college scholarships, andloans for the construction of col¬lege facilities. His plan calls fora modest $15 of federal funds peryear for each student in averagedaily attendance in the publicschools. The money would be usedfor school construction and/orteachers’ salaries at the discre¬tion of the state. Tx>W - incomestates would get proportionatelylarger grants than others.The President proposes addi¬tion al measures to assist col¬leges to expand their classrooms,dormitories, and laboratories; toinitiate a state - administeredscholarship program to collegestudents based upon need (up to$1,000 each); and to increase en¬rollment in medical schools.The chief measures in thePresident’s program to stimulatethe economy and to relieve needcaused by unemployment are:1. Increase in the minimumwage from $1.00 per hour to $1.25,and extention of this requirementto about 5 million workers notcovered.2. A stepped-up program forthe distribution of surplus foodsto needy people, especially in “dis¬tressed areas” through a food-stamp plan similar to one em¬ployed in the late 1930’s.3. An "area redevelopment”measure embodying technical as¬sistance, loans for private proj¬ects, and loans and grai.ts forpublic facilities and for training,retraining, and subsistence of thelabor force in chronically dis¬tressed areas. Similar measureswere enacted by Congress in both1959 and 1960, but both were ve¬toed by the President.4. Extension of unemploymentcompensation benefits for up tothirteen weeks to workers whohave exhausted their rights tobenefits under state programssince June 30, 1960, and are stillunemployed. This measure hasnow been enacted by Congress.Unlike regular benefits, which arepaid from funds collected fromemployers in each state, the em¬ergency benefits will be financed(Continued on page 8*MODEL CAMERAROBERTS 990 Tope Recorder4 Track Stereo, Record/PloyNSA Discount1342 E. 55th Hy 3-9259HEARBruno Bettleheim, Daniel Boorstein,and Rabbi Maurice BekarskyJUDAISM: A HERITAGE IN CRISIS —A WEEKEND INSTITUTEMay 27th and 28thBernard Horwich Community Center3003 W. Touhy Ave.To register or for further information,call RO 1-91002 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 28, 1961; >SuprCMC court rules Business speach heardagainst Anastopoloby Irene SidorThe Supreme Court ruled thisweek that an otherwise qualifiedcandidate can be refused admit¬tance to a state bar association ifthe candidate declines to answerquestions about membership insubversive organizations.Voting 5 to 4, the Court upheldthe Illinois Supreme Court whichhad ruled that the Illinois bar as¬sociation was within its legalright in refusing to grant mem¬bership in the association to UCi nst ructor George Anastaplo.Earlier on the same day (Mon¬day. April 24.1961) the Court sup¬ported the California bar associ¬ation’s exclusion of RaphaelKonigsberg from membership.The Anastaplo case originatedin 1950 when the graduate of UC’slaw school refused to answerquestions regarding affiliationsubversive group in the standardapplicant’s hearing held by theIllinois bar committee. Presidedover by 15 Illinois justices, hear¬ings are held to determine the“character fitness** of each ap¬plicant to practice law.George Anastaplo termed partsof the questioning process anabridgement of his rights of freespeech guaranteed under the Con¬stitution. On the basis of thisstand, he refused to comply withthe bar committee. The commit¬tee in turn refused his applicationon the grounds that such question¬ing is necessary and violates nofreedoms guaranteed under theConstitution.Anastaplo has fought this de¬cision for ten years in Illinoiscourts, appearing before the stateSupreme Court in 1959, and final¬ly, before the US Supreme Courton September 14 of last year.Throughout rehearings in theIllinois Supreme Court and re¬peated interviews before the barasociation committee, Anastaplo.has presented his own argument.Although not a practising lawyer,he may do this under provisionof a federal statute which guar¬antees the right of any citizen topresent an appeal in his own be¬half.Malcolm Sharp, UC law pro¬fessor, has called Anastaplo’s po¬sition throughout the ten-yearperiod one of “principle.” S u -preme Court Justice Hugo Blacksupports this view and cited An¬astaplo’s “courage” and “endur¬ance” in his dissent to the 5 to 4decision made this week. Blackcondemned the majority opinionin both the Anastaplo and Konigs-herg cases, contending that menshould not be made “afraid to befree.”The decision itself virtuallyeliminates the possibility thatAnastaplo may ever practice law.Final word has not been heard,however. Throughout the ten -year period, numerous dissentsand reviews regarding the variouscourt decisions have been pub¬lished. UC law professors RoscoeSteffens and Harry Kalven atpresent are reviewing the Su¬preme Court decision for legalpublications. Both professors aid¬ed Anastaplo in the preparation of several briefs and arguments,and together filed a brief for himto present to the Supreme Courton behalf of the American CivilLiberties Union.Anastaplo himself has declinedextensive comment on the recentdecision. Presently writing a doc¬ toral dissertation on the FirstAmendment, Anastaplo plans tocontinue teaching and lecturing atUC. The Court decision has notaltered his scheduled visit to St.John’s College this week end tospeak to students on “The Consti¬tution of the United States.” “Business must itself go to theoffensive.” This statement byX. X. Hoadley, vice-president andtreasurer of the Armstrong Corkcorporation, was the theme of alecture given Wednesday to Busi¬ness school students.Hoadley’s lecture, “Manage¬ment reaction to recent anti trustdecisions,” was delivered atBreasted hall as a part of theweekly programs sponsored by the Graduate School of business.Hoadley stated that the recentand pending court decisions onthe electrical corporations andalso the General Electric diesellocomotive case decisions are athreat to American business andeconomy. The militant investiga¬tions and prosecutions instigatedby the Eisenhower administrationand now carried through by At¬torney general Robert Kennedy,Cancer advance reported have caused big business to go onthe defensive.The attorney general’s action,shown by the recent front-pagepictures of corporation executivesA perfected method for inducing and then curing breast cancer in rats was reported last *n handcuffs, has serious conse-Monday by the director of the Ben May Laboratory for Cancer Research of the University duences* according to Hoadley.of Chicago. The immediate reaction is thatDr. Charles Huggins announced the discovery at the annual meeting of the National Acad-emy of Sciences. He suggested that the method, which produced one hundred percent results, Jq defense he said But thecould help free researchers from the guess-work required by marginal statistics. ione ranee an’d more serious con-hydrocarbons to laboratory rats — . - . .. . T ——“ : — seouencet will be that in effectand found one called DMRA to he and that, in that event, it is prob- cause induction of cancer n mice setluences win De mat, in eueci,most effective. A single feeding ablethat the hormones would sup- is a slow process, taking months Jl^vtennSrflpt a nd nmdnctproduced breast cancer in every Press human breast cancer. or years, and not all mice have an Extensive market and productBreast cancer is the commonest responded in the same way. development will be restricted andtype of cancer among Western The one hundred per cent re- economy as a whole will suf*peoples. Prior to Huggins dis- suits achieved in the basic experi-covery, cancer researchers have ment with DMBA provides a Its g . en to the P°int *hatworked primarily with mice. The standard by which to evaluate a corporation cannot even afforduse of rats is more desirable be- many treatments of the disease. be to° successful for fear of in¬dictment under the anti • trustlaws,” he continued.Firms that have just brokeninto the market where there is noimmediate competition are notsafe because they may controlover 20% of the market, may beclassified as a monopoly, andprosecuted.But, said Hoadley, the business-Some 300 student tickets UC history for which student tick- man is faced with a paradox —body changes associated with for the inauguration next ets have been made available. a growing America requires big-pregnancy. Rats given the drug Thursday of UC Chancellor Tickets will be available at in- ger and more extensive servicesand not treated with ovarian hor- George Wells Beadle are dividual deans’ offices until late while at the same time businessmones, if they became pregnant, available from deans of students a«ernoon of next Tuesday. At is being put under fire. Especial-developed cancer with unusual in the College and divisions. noon Wednesday all students will ly in view of the present situation,raniditv , , ., , . _ . . be able to pick up any tickets that he said, business should be freeP y' Tlckets were distributed bv have ^ ,eft over lrom dean ,0 grow t0 takc big rlsks_ and t0case within 7 to 10 weeks. Thehydro-carbons used are the kindwhich may exist in over-cookedfoods, such as hard-fried steakor fats, according to Huggins.The cancers were suppressed,and in many cases “completelyextinguished” by the ovarian hor¬mones estradiol and progrester-one. The hormones were reportedto suppress activity of the pitui¬tary gland which produces growthhormones on which breast cancerfeeds.In some cases, the animals werecaused to undergo some of the Inauguration ticketsavailable from deansHuggins said he does not know dean of students John P. Nether- Netherton’s officethat the technique, called a “tech- ton on the basis of the numbersnical break-through in breast can- of students in each division. Allcer research” by a member of the tickets are available immediately,National Academy, would cause and will be distributed on a first-breast cancer in human beings, come-first-serve basis.He stated that it is likely it would, This is the first inauguration inBuy your Cap and Gown Nowbefore the price goes up$4.00 now— $5.00 after May 1stCap and Gown may be purchased at theBusar's make profits.PIZZASFor The Price OfNICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780WANTEDGraduates and Undergraduate Studentsof the University of ChicagoBoth Men and Women, forPermanent, Part Time, or Full TimeEmploymentSet Your Own Time and HoursEarnings Above AverageInterviews Room 200, Reynolds ClubMonday, May 1st, 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.No Door-to-Door SellingAsk for Mr. O'Donnell — Stanley Home ProductsNow Is A Great Time For Campus PicturesLet our Photographic Department advise youon how more impressive shots may be made.Our Typewriter Department is equipped andstaffed to meet all of your typewriter needs.We sell, rent and repair all makes.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue D. S. Passmore, Manager ADVENTURERS!Submit to Adventure!Join Adventurers International./"V ; (Subscription to Aphrodisia — journal ofthe rare and unusual, 25% discount onall books and records, FREE TRIPS TOEUROPE, SOUTH AMERICA, AFRICA onour Bonus Point System, circulating filmlibrary, unique "Contact" answeringservice, sports car rallies, private parties,Turkish revels, Voo-Doo seminars, archeo¬logical expeditions to Asia Minor, Christ¬mas in the Canary Islands, Snow JobService, Annual Champagne Fiesta andother membership benefits.Membership $5ADVENTURERS - INTERNATIONAL39 Gramercy Park, NYCApril 28, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3ITrial continues in HUAC caseby Ron DorfmanThe trial of Robert J. Meis¬enbach, 22-year-old Univer-Bty of California senior heldcm charges of “assault with adeadly weapon” in connectionwith last May’s demonstra¬tions against the House Commit¬tee on un-American activities inSan Francisco reached the half¬way point earlier this week.San Francisco Assistant Dis¬trict attorney Walter Giubbinicharged that Meisenbach wasamong the students who “violent¬ly charged” police barricades, and that Meisenbach had assaulted pa¬trolman Ralph Schaumleffel.The defense, headed by formerAssistant District Attorney JackBerman, contended that thischarge was a lie and that thepolice, HUAC, and FBI DirectorJ. Edgar Hoover were purposelydistorting the facts.'Croup surged'Schaumleffel, under direct ex¬amination by Giubbini, testifiedthat “the group of several hun¬dred surged against us andpushed us back against the mainentrance, shouting, ‘let us in . . .get the cops . . . abolish the com¬mittee,’ and singing and chanting.CHRISTIAN SCIENCESERVICESare held on campus each Tuesday evening at 7:15 p.m.in Thorndike Hilion Memorial Chapel1150 East 58th StreetALL ARE INVITED TO ATTENDChristian Science Organization at the U at C “I crossed my arms in frontof my chest,” Schaumleffel con¬tinued, “and pushed forward infront of the barricades. I was cutoff from the rest of the officers. . . when I was 3 or 4 feet intothe lobby I slipped to the floor.I grasped my club from mypocket . . The billy, Schaumlef¬fel said, was snatched from hishand.“I regained my balance andlooked up. Meisenbach was 3 or4 feet away. He had the club andwas starting to swing. ... I washit on the left rear portion ofmy head. I grabbed Meisenbachand we fell to the floor andstarted wrestling. ... I tried tohelp Meisenbach to his feet andremove him from the crowd andplace him in custody.”Defense lawyer speaks*Berman, the defense attorney,said in his opening statement thatMeisenbach, whose previous activ¬ities had been “wholly non-poli¬tical,” had simply gone to theCity hall, where the “rioting” took# i In a series of poil$ conducted by I/M student^J- representatives in over 100 colleges throughoutthe nation.Light up an DM, and answer these questions.Then compare your answers with those of 1,383 othercollege students (at bottom of page).Question #1: In your opinion, who is the greatest living American?Answer:Question #2:Answer:Question #3:Answer:Question #4:Answer: Should the college curriculum, taking note of the growingimportance of science, require more science courses for non¬science majors than at present?Yes NoWhen you kiss your date, do you close your eyes?Close my eyes Don’t close my eyesCan’t remember.In your opinion, which of the following types of filters givesthe best connotation of purity? (check one)A filter which is white inside and is wrapped incolored paperA filter which is dyed a color and is wrappedin white paperA filter which is white inside and outCampus Opinion Answers:Start Fresh with JjM*it Stay ri’asS 'lrftfc;5/ ' ' «|:; •lwi * Myers Tobacco Co.WHi’iiiilii. n'.ii . .... I; Xv.v.. A. »-;nv.v:v ;•CHICAGO MAROON Answer, Question #1: Six highest scoringindividuals: 1. Kennedy —2. Eisenhower3. Stevenson — 4. Schweitzer — 5: Frost6. Sandburg(This question was asked February 1961.Note: Dr. Schweitzer is not an American.)Answer, Question #2: Yes 30% — No 70%Answer, Question #3: Close my eyes 76%Don’t close my eyes 11%Can’t remember 13%Answer, Question #4: A filter which iswhite inside and is wrapped in coloredpaper 21%A filter which is dyed a color and iswrapped in white paper 6%A filter which is white inside and out 74%I.*M was first to offer you a pure white modern filler— the famous Miraele Tip —pure white inside, purewhite outside. And I.*M’s modern filter enables youto fully enjoy the rich flavor of golden ripe tdbaeeos.So reach for flavor ... reach for L*M.The LAM Campus Opinion Poll was taken at over 100 colleges whereLAM has student representatives, and may not be a statisticallyrandom selection of all undergraduate schools.April 28, 1961 place because he “wanted to seewhat was going on.”Berman, with the aid of an >8-foot scale model of City hall andnews photographers from Lifemagazine, told the jury that “atthe moment Meisenbach allegedlyknocked Schaumleffel down, hewas standing 40 feet away againsta pillar.“When the hoses were turnedon an instant later, Meisenbach,who was blind as a bat, wentbehind the pillar and wiped hisglasses. He got scared when hesaw a student, Kevin Mcaughey,brutally beaten and thrown downthe stairs, and he was leaving thebuilding when a police club cameskittling down the stairs behindhim.'Found himself tackled'“He picked it up and the nextthing he knew he was beingtackled by Schaumleffel andgiven a real beating. He was soscared he had an involuntarybowel movement.”Under cross-examination byBerman, patrolman Schaumleffeladmitted that, contrary to the re¬ports of the Un-American activ¬ities committee and Hoover, Mei¬senbach did not start the generalrioting.Schaumleffel also admittedthat, contrary to his testimonyunder direct examination, hisbrush with Meisenbach had comeafter the hoses had l>oen turnedon and off.The prosecution called twomore witnesses, who said theyEye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetat University Ave.HYde Park 3 8372Student and FacultyDiscount had seen the events that Schaum-leffel described from the stairwaytwo floors above the scene, exact¬ly as Schaumleffel d e s c r i l> P <jthem. Berman said of these twowitnesses that “they are im¬peached by their own testimony.”Berman called 16 witnesses forthe defense, from a list of 209faculty members, students andothers. Wednesday he called asurprise witness, Douglas Kinneyof the US Naval academy at An¬napolis, who was in San Fran¬cisco at the time of the disturb¬ance.Kinney testified that he hadseen Meisenbach being held bythree policemen while Schaumlef¬fel beat him with his nightstick.Berman told the Maroon that hewas “running down a lead nowthat may really blow this thinesky high.”Proves film liedBerman said that the Meisen¬bach trial had “put the lie to‘Operation Abolition’ (the filmprepared by HUAC), and the FBIreport.”Meisenbach himself was to goon the stand yesterday. The trialis scheduled to be over early nextweek, at which time, Borman said,he hopes the jury of 10 womenand 2 men will “not only acquitMeisenbach but give him a voteof confidence.”The San Francisco papers havecovered the trial in great detail,Berman said, “going so far as toanalyze points of evidence andsequences of testimony. Every pa¬per Is overwhelmingly in our fa¬vor.”CANOE TRIPSinto the Quetico-Superior Wilder¬ness. For individuals or groups.Write Bill RomCANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTERSEly, MinnesotaD & G CLOTHES SHOP851 E. 63rd St.Dacron and Wool NaturalShoulder Suits $39.95ANNOUNCES MANY CAREER OPPORTUNITIES ASREVENUE AGENTSPECIAL AGENTTAX EXAMINER' CAREERS OFFER1. Rapid plannad promotions2.Highly diversified axporionca3.Comprehensive training program4.Fine caroor dovolopmont opportunities5.Important responsibilities in a minimum of time4. Meeting and dealing with people from all walks of liftQUALIFICATIONS REQUIREDGraduates with majors in accounting or business adminis¬tration. Other fields of study such as economics, finance,law ond other fields may qualify.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACTYOUR COLLEGE PLACEMENT DIRECTORRECRUITMENT COORDINATORINTERNAL REVENUE SERVICEP.O. BOX 1193CHICAGO 90, ILLINOISPresident recommends NDEA changesby Gene VinogradoffSpecial to the MaroonWASHINGTON — TheKennedy administration for¬mally recommended to Con¬gress yesterday that the dis¬claimer affidavit in the NationalDefense education act of 1958(NDEA) be eliminated when thfeAct is revised later this year.The recommendation was con¬tained in the package of adminis¬tration proposals for the revisionof the NDEA. Administrationspokesmen have stated that therevised NDEA will be a majorpart of the New Frontier’s aid toeducation proposals. .The disclaimer affidavit, whichall students applying for NDEAloans or fellowships are requiredto sign, has been the major pointof contention in the NDEA. Manycolleges and universities, includ¬ing UC, have withdrawn fromNDEA programs because they ob¬ ject to students being forced tosign it.Persident .Kennedy has foughtfor the abolition of the affidavitand a loyalty oath contained inthe same section since 1958. Hehas now named Abraham Ribi-coff, Secretary of the Departmentof health, education and welfare,to plan the administration’s strat¬egy to remove it this year.Other charges plannedIn addition to eliminating theaffidavit, the administration’s pro¬posals would alter the present actin several major respects.First, the administration pro¬posed to double the amount ofmoney contained in the NDEA’sloan program. NDEA loans aremade directly to students throughthe universities they are attend¬ing. Students who receive loansunder this program do not beginrepaying them until after com¬pleting their full-time studies, andthey then repay them with only a If a student becomes a teacher,ten per cent of the principal is dis¬counted for each of the first fiveyears lie is engaged in teaching.T h e administration proposalsalso call for doubling the max¬imum amount of loan money eachschool could receive. The presentmaximum is approximately $250,-000.The proposals would establisha scholarship program within theNDEA. As first envisioned byRepresentative Carl Elliott (Dem.,Alabama), the NDEA included ascholarship program built alongthe lines of the loan program, butit was knocked out when the billreached the House floor. Adminis¬tration leaders are hopeful that itcan be passed this year.Increase askedThe administration also wantsto increase the number of gradu¬ate fellowships in the programfrom 1500 to 5000. Most of themwill continue to go to scientistsFiring of professorstirs controversywide competition. A spokesmanfor the House education and labortwo per cent interest rate.and mathematicians, but the newfellowships would be of three dif¬ferent types.Some would pay for three yearsof post-graduate study. The sec¬ond group would pay for the finalyear of a student’s doctoral pro¬gram, and the final group wouldThe University of Arizona that his services would be term- pay for one year of postdoctoral(Tucson) has announced that inated. workit will not renew the contract MacEwan came in 11th in a f the feliowshlns would heof Dr. Alan MacEwan, assist- field of 20 for nominations to the fellowships wouldant professor of plant physiology. Faculty senate. He failed of elec- awarded on the basis of nation-University officials stated that tion, however.MacEwan was being dismissed MacEwan has presented a statefor “incompetence.” MacEwan ment of grievances to the Fac- committee said he imagined suchcontends that he is being dis- ulty Grievance committee, which competition would have to be or-(harged for political reasons. is now meeting jn closed session, ganized like college board exam-The University said it was act-ing after investigation of com¬plaints from two students whosaid that he “talked over ourheads.”During the Christmas, 1960 in¬terim, MacEwan and his family,including his two sons, who arestudents at UC, took a trip toCuba. Upon their return he andhis wife made several speechesin the Tucson area giving theirviews of the Cuban situation andthe Castro regime.He also became active in thepeace movement in Tucson, anddelivered several addresses onthat subject. His speeches werewidely reported in the press.The local peace group, early inJanuary, scheduled a vigil at anearby Strategic air commandbase. Shortly after the announce¬ment of the vigil, a colonel visitedthe president of the university andgave him a list of people con¬nected with the university whowere involved in the peace group.MacEwan was on the list.Shortly after this incident, justbefore the start of the secondsemester, MacEwan was informed EUROPEAN AUTO RENTALCHEAPEST PRICES BY FARCHECK AND COMPARENEW REDUCED RENTAL CHARGE APRIL 1961VW Sedan Month:IVx Month: Month:2>/a Month:3$ 372 411 430 464Volvo 544Opel Rek $ 442 471 498 540Velve Amazon. . $ 482 521 553 580if ALL PRICES ARE INCLUSIVEDocuments ond Insurance: collision/liability★ FREE DELIVERY IN:Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Le Havre, Paris, Frankfurt/Main, Oslo, Stockholm, Hamburg, Copenhagenir UNLIMITED MILEAGEFor Information Write ASSOCIATED STUDENT AUTO RENTALC/O MR. T. DIAMOND6211 N. Talmon, Chicago, 45, Illinois AM 2-0789 inations, with one exam beinggiven to all applicants.Title six of the present NDEA,which provides money to promotethe study of foreign languages,would be made permanent (itmust now be repassed, like therest of the NDEA, every threeyears).The administration proposalswould make all of the loan, schol¬arship and fellowship programspermanent, and would therebyeliminate annual Congressionalbattles over the provisions ofthe act.Another section of the adminis¬tration proposals call for the 'im¬provement and re-organization” ofthe Office of education. Thespokesman for the education andlabor committee, Ray Smith ofthe University of Michigan, ex¬plained that the purpose of thisre-organization would be to givethe education office more leewayin administering the bilLProcess inefficientAt present, Smith said, the of¬fice must review each university’sapplication for participation inthe programs through a long andrigid bureaucratic process makingadministration less efficient thandesired.Smith explained that Congres¬ sional consideration of the ad¬ministration proposals may notget under way for nearly a month.He said the President is anxiousto have Congress act on themsoon, but that two other majoreducation bills are now beforethe House committee.Hearings will have to be held,and the subcommittee to conductthem has not yet been named.Smith predicted that it would bethe subcommittee now chaired byRepresentative Edith Green(Dem., Oregon), but he said therewas no way to know for certain.Abolition predictedHe also predicted that the abo¬lition of the affidavit would haverough going in the House. “Theaffidavit is undoubtedly a harm¬ful thing,” he said, “but most Con¬gressmen find it hard to speak forits abolition when others accusethem of yielding to Communistpressures.”He described the political di¬mate facing the general packageof proposals as “fair.” Other ob¬servers are certain that Congr esswill enact some major sections ofthe President’s education pro¬gram, but they do not know whatthe reception of the specificNDEA proposals will be.Have a ballin Europethis Summer(and get college credits, too!)Imagine the fun you can have on a summer vacation inEurope that includes everything from touring the Conti¬nent and studying courses for credit at the famous Sor-bonne in Paris to living it up on a three-week co-educa-tional romp at a fabulous Mediterranean island beach-clubresort! Interested? Check the tour descriptions below.FRENCH STUDY TOUR, $12.33 per day plusair fare. Two weeks touring France and Switzerland,sightseeing in Rouen, Tours, Bordeaux, Avignon, Lyon,Geneva, with visits to Mont-Saint-Michel and Lourdes.Then in Paris, stay six weeks studying at La Sorbonne.Courses include French Language, History, Drama, Art,Literature, for 2 to 6 credits. Spend your last week touringLuxembourg and Belgium. All-expense, 70-day tour in¬cludes sightseeing, hotels, meals, tuition for $12.33 perday, plus Air France Jet Economy round-trip fare.STUDENT HOLIDAYS TOUR OF EUROPE,$15.72 per day plus air fare. Escorted 42-day tourincludes visits to cultural centers, sightseeing in France,Switzerland, Italy, Austria, Germany, Luxembourg, Den¬mark, Sweden, Norway, Scotland, England, Holland andBelgium. Plenty of free time, entertainment. Hotel, meals,everything included for $15.72 per day, plus Air FranceJet Economy round-trip fare.CLUB MED1TERRANEE, $13.26 per day plusair fare. Here’s a 21-day tour that features 3 days onyour own in Paris, a week’s sightseeing in Rome, Capri,Naples and Pompeii, plus 9 fun-filled, sun-filled, fabulousdays and cool, exciting nights at toe Polynesian-styleClub M6diterran6e on the romantic island of Sicily. Spendyour days basking on toe beach, swimming, sailing —yournights partying, singing, dancing. Accommodations, meals,everything only $13.26 per day complete, plus Air FranceJet Economy round-trip fare.rMR. JOHN SCHNEIDER• c/o AIR FRANCEI 683 Fifth Avenue, New York 22, N. Y.| Gentlemen:| Please rush me full information on the following:J Q French Study Tour □ Student Holidays Tour| Q Club M6diterran6eI Name ■— ■■ - ■■ ■ ■ —————Address.City. College..Zone State.AIR®FRANCE JETApril 28, 1961 • CHICACO MAROON»Student actions on housingmerit administration attention LetterReligions pretentiouYesterday assistant dean of stu¬dents James Newman told arepresentative group of studentsthat dormitory rates were goingto be increased ten dollars perquarter.Mr. Newman’s position in mak¬ing this announcement to a stu¬dent group which had recentlybeen told they will have to live inthe dorms for at least two years(four years for women) is a deli¬cate one, and we don’t envy himfor it.In fact, we sympathize with allof the University administratorswho have witnessed these monthsof student protest against thedorm rule with the ulcerousknowledge that sooner or laterthey were going to have to tell700 petition signers that, not onlywill they have to live in the dormsnext year, but they will have topay more for the privilege.However, although we knowthat no dormitory residents aredeliriously happy with an in¬ crease in fees, we think that per¬sons in the University’s businessand housing offices, and on thestaff of the dean of students, neednot have considered the announce¬ment of the increase with so muchtrepidation. We think the fee in¬crease and compulsory residenceare separate issues, and we arecertain that the student body willview them as such.The reason for the fee increaseis simple and, unfortunately, con¬vincing. The paid employees inthe dormitories, who belong to aunion, demanded a raise. Theextra fees will cover most of thisincrease, but the University is it¬self absorbing several thousandof these additional dollars.Perhaps the most upsetting partof this whole affair is the appre¬hension with which UC adminis¬trators viewed the announcementof the increase. Anyone who an¬ticipated that this announcementwould add fuel to the anti-dorm rule conflagration has an irre¬sponsible view of student respon¬sibility.Most students (and many fac¬ulty members) have objected tothe dorm rule because it is anunnecessary restriction on stu¬dent freedom and comfort whichwill stifle the development of asuccessful residential college.This is a complex argumentwhich we feel has been put forth.The assumption that these samestudents will use an increasewhich the University didn’t wantas a club to swing at “the admin¬istration” indicates to us that UCadministrators haven’t been lis¬tening to students very attentive¬ly these many months.We, however, are not discour¬aged. In fact, we remain doggedlyconfident that as long as somekind of discussion continuesamong students, administrators,and faculty members, this unnec¬essary rule will be eliminated.Anastaplo stand commendedThe U.S. Supreme court, in another 5-4 de¬cision, upheld Monday the right of the Char¬acter and Fitness committee of the IllinoisBar association to withhold admission to thebar from an applicant who refuses to answer ques¬tions concerning his political beliefs and associa¬tions.'I he case was that of UC Law school graduateGeurge Anastaplo, who is now an instructor atthe Downtown center. Anastaplo was nevercharged with having Communist leanings or as¬sociations, but the Character and fitness commit¬tee asked every applicant who came before Itwhether or not he was or had ever been a mem¬ber of the Communist party or subscribed to Com¬munist beliefs.Anastaplo discussed freely with the Committeehis interpretation of the Constitution and theDeclaration of Independence, which, he maintained,included the right of the people to revolt shouldconditions become intolerable and constitutionalredress fail.Professors Kalven and Steffen of the UC Lawschool submitted briefs amici curiae on behalf ofAnastaplo. Anastaplo, as he has since his casefirst entered the courts years ago, argued his owncause before the Supreme court.Despite the legal maxim which holds that thelawyer who defends himself in court has a foolfor a client, we applaud Anastaplo’s single-mindeddedication and self-sacrifice in opposing the Bar association’s gross invasion of the rights and liber¬ties of American citizens. If men trained in thelaw succumb to the temptation to sacrifice theirown liberties on the altar of national security thenthere is no hope for the rest of us.There is nothing that students — or, for thatmatter, responsible adults — can or should do toeffect redress or grievances against decisions ofthe Supreme court. The answer lies rather innational self-education to the dangers to libertyinherent in recent court decisions in Barenblatt,Uphaus, Braden, Wilkinson, Konigsberg, and nowAnastaplo.The majority of the Court is reacting towhat it feels is the national mood. The Court wasfrightened by the furor aroused by its 1957 de¬cisions upholding civil liberties. Only one votein the Senate allowed the Court to retain its appel¬late jurisdiction in conflicts between individualfreedoms and national security.Since 1957 the composition of the Court haschanged and the trend is running the other way.But the composition of the Court is due to changeagain very shortly. Both Black and Frankfurterare waiting for each other to retire. It would in¬deed be unfortunate if President Kennedy decidedto maintain the “balance” on the Court by appoint¬ing men who would vote exactly as those two nowdo, if for no other reasan than the fact that thetenuous majorities in recent civil liberties casesdestroy both the prestige and the power of theCourt. To the Editor:I have fought many a wearybattle while I have been at theUniversity all these years, but Inow feel compelled to take upcudgels against what I considerpretentiousness on the part of twoof our campus religious groups,the Unitarians and the Anglicans,even though each may find theother strange company.The immediate provocation ofmy attack on the first group wasa lecture delivered recently atFenn house by Wallace Ruster-holtz on the history of Unitarian-ism (part of a series widely adver¬tised on campus). The lectureturned out to be a review of theattacks on the Church’s dogma ofthe Trinity, and the speaker'spresentation was emotionallycharged with his own strong anti-Trinitarian bias. The dogma of so-called “modern Unitarianism” wasthe gauge against which the ade¬quacy of the Unitarianism of va¬rious historical figures (Servetus,Socinus etc.) was measured. Butof the dogmatic character of thispresupposition the speaker exhib¬ited no awareness.When I indicated to him thatthe Trinity dogma is an ex¬ceedingly complex and subtle doc¬trine with implications for everyother doctrine of the faith, andthat it has had many brilliant de¬fenders, Augustine, Thomas, etc.),he dismissed all this with the as¬sertion that he couldn’t be both¬ered with such “balderdash.”The whole episode confirmedme in an impression of Unitarian¬ism that I have had for sometime, viz., that their rejection ofdogma and creed is itself a dogmaand creed. If anti-dogma is itselfa dogma in Unitarianism, andconsequently if the dogma of theTrinity cannot secure an honestand sympathetic hearing, or evenacceptance among Unitarians,then their much vaunted claim tobe “liberal,” and “a Church offree spirit,” etc., is meaninglessand empty. I have seen as muchdogmatism and fanaticism amongthem as I have in more conserva- Sfive churches. Certainly some oftheir European brethren, as inPoland and Transylvania, havebeen more honest about the mat¬ter and have embodied their creedin confessional formulations likethe famous Racovian Catechismwhich has commanded the resnectof even the omeat Protestant the¬ologian Karl Barth.The pretentiousness of the An¬glicans is along different lines,and has to do mainly with theclaims made for the possibility oftheir communion serving as on in¬strument for the reunion of theChurches. The immediate m0V0-cation of this attack was the re¬cent presentation on ecume?v- ityat Canterburv Club bv Canoe The¬odore Wedel who made a largenumber of extreme and irrespon¬sible statements.He. like many Anglicans, hasthe delusion that their commu¬nion is a “bridge” that could re¬unite the Catholic and Proto«tanttraditions, on the presuppositionthat both elements are held to¬gether in the Anglican tradition, aclaim that is highly questionable,at least historically. A verv eoodcase can be made that the Lu¬theran Church has been more suc¬cessful in this regard, but Angli-cans are simply not aware of that.It is just this ignorance and lackof understanding that imne'ios areal substantial reconciliation ofthe churches.Furthermore, the exaltedclaims made for Anglican ordersare rendered highly doubtful inview of their non-recognition byt he Roman and Orthodox commu¬nions. both of which are whollyunsatisfied with the orthodoxy ofthe Anglican communion, and inthis regard feel much closer tothe Lutheran Church. Our firstobligation is simply to becomeintimately acquainted with our re¬spective traditions, and certainmagnanimous individuals mustidentify themselves with morethan one tradition in order to in¬carnate this ideal of understand-Howard N. ManxTribune bias is unfalteringIt’s nice to know that somethings never change. Take theChicago Tribune for example.Recently the Tribunecharged that there were somethings wrong with the NationalStudent Association. In particu¬lar, the conservative paper rannews stories and an editorialwhich stated that NSA was un¬fair to those conservative stu¬dents who were members.So last week the Tribune wasespecially invited to attend ameeting of the Jllinois-Wisconsinregion of NSA, held at UC. Theman from the Trib attended aspecial NSA press conference.NSA personnel especially askedsome of its conservative membersto attend this conference. UC’sdean of students, John P. Neth-erton, also attended.The dean, about 20 students,and the reporter talked for anhour about the aims and ideals ofNSA. They talked about the edu¬cational and political values ofNSA and student movements ingeneral. Netherton told about anational association of collegedeans which had heartily en¬dorsed NSA.The man from the Trib spentthe rest of Friday and Saturdaylistening to student leaders from20 Illinois and Wisconsin schools.He spent two days with con¬cerned students discussing jus¬tice, freedom, and education.Apparently, all this conversa¬tion was too much for the re¬porter.Writing in last Sunday’s Trib¬ une, the reported seemed to be asinterested in the fact that one ofthe students had a beard andanother wore tennis shoes as inthe ideas the students discussed.Apparently the Tribune feels thattennis-shoed liberals are even lessto be trusted than plain old every-Letter: day liberals.After reading Sunday’s storywe do find ourselves in agreementwith one of the Tribune’s argu¬ments: in expecting the Tribuneto ignore its biases, NSA was in¬deed being unfair to the paper’sconservative editors. Editor-in-chiefKen Pierce‘Red Cuba9 eulogized Business managerWilliam G. BauerEditor emeritusProduction editor. . . Advertising managerRaymond A. MitchellNeal JohnstonAvima RuderTo the Editor:Home Is the HunterO, Cuba is ablaze, my boyAnd Castro’s quite delightedJust think of all that blood, O joyThat keeps the blokes incited.It marks the Migs, it tops thetanksWhich Saint Nik fondly gaveO, sheer delight, it coats the ranksOf all who misbehave.It clings in mists about the airIt haunts the market placeIn fact, it flows most anywhereYou find the bearded race,O, red’s the color of His cheeksBeneath that saintly stubbleAnd red’s the flag He always seeks •To wave before his trouble.O, burn the books a flaming redThey tell a vicious lieAnd then rest up in blood-warmbedThere’s more to crucify.It all must be the sun, you say?It’s very hot Down ThereBut, lack, alas, it has Fair PlayAmong U.C.’s Aware.Yes, red religion, red rewardAnd bright-red indignationO, shades of pink, this PrimalHordeAwaits discoloration.Ronald DeZureKenneth Francis KearsleyLetter policyThe Maroon publishes letters to the editor on subjectsof interest to the student body. No unsigned letters willbe printed under any circumstances, however, t’ e writer'sname will be withheld, or noms de plume used, on request. News editor Jay GreenbergFeature editor Faye WellsNational news editor Gene VinogradoffPolitical news editor Caryle GeicrNeighborhood news editor R°n DorfmonCulture editor Dotty SharplessSports editor Chuck BernsteinGadfly editor. Robert Strozier, Jr.Copy editor John JuskeviceResearch editor Carole QuinnCollege editors Loura Godofsky, Judy ShapiroCalendar editor Donna BergStaff consultant Ken BeniaminPhotography coordinator ^ BorgerCirculation manager ......Nate Swi tBusiness office manager Joan HelmkinClassified manoger Maurice ZeithnSubscription manager • • ^hil hly eEditorial board: William Bauer, Jay Greenberg, Ken Pierce, Avima Ruder,Gene VinogradoffEditorial staff: Harry Adler, Phil Altbach, Willard Ayres, Michael Bates, MaryClaire Beck, Lee Brozgold, Alix Cromelin, Betsy Ebert, Gary Feldman,Suzy Gc'dberg, Gary Greenberg, Art MacEwan, Doug McCullough, BReiser, D V. Rao, Ronnie Rosenblatt, Mike Shakman, Irene Sidor, JohnSteed.The Maroon is Issued every Friday during the school year anti In* ^mlttently during the summer quarter, by students oi the umve 2Chicago Inquiries shouid be sent to the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes • ^E. 50th Street, Chicago 37. Illinois Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions wo3266. Distributed without charge on campus. Subscriptions by man, S-J P" * lftl)Office hours: 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar ... ,neb.4 pm, Tu»-dny. deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pm,day before publication.CHICAGO MAROON • April 28, 1961LettersProtests Phoenix reviewDear Sirs:I wish to protest against a re¬view of PHOENIX by AvimaRuder and Harry Adler whichappeared in last week’s MAROON.Normally it is unfitting for aneditor to come to the defense ofhis contributors against adversecriticism. But for two years bowI have witnessed what seems tohe a veritable tradition of hol¬low erudition and ill - foundedcriticism in your reviews ofPHOENIX (due mainly. I sup¬pose. to an attempt — often suc¬cessful — to be funny), and Iam finally brought to the pointof writing this, hoping to sug¬gest to your readers that the con¬tents of PHOENIX might reallynot be so insipid and “jejune” aswould seem from reading thesetruly insipid and jejune reviews.One wonders whether Ruderand Adler read the stories andpoems in any but the most cur¬sory fashion. They find an “ego¬centric brat” where the authorhad shown a boy cut off fromthe love he desires from his fath¬er. In a story where the realfocus was on a Japanese prosti¬tute, all they could find was a('.I “gone a-whoring,” They ob¬jected to “fraternity cartoons” al¬though this issue contains no car¬toons about fraternities.Against their “criticism” I willnot argue that almost all of thepoetry and fiction has won somesort of award, one story, whichthey called pointless, having hadpoint enough to win second placein last year’s M e n n contest,another having won first prize in the FOTA literary contest,etc. I would only submit, in con¬juring up Henry James for sup¬port, that if you can’t bring your¬self to accept the writer’s subjectmatter (because of your moralscruples, your inability to projectyourself into a situation — forwhatever reason) why then leavethe thing alone. But if you pro¬pose to produce really meaning¬ful literary criticism, then thequestion is: given the subject mat¬ter, just what does the writerdo with it? to what extent is hesuccessful in working it into anaesthetic entity? Ruder and Ad¬ler made an attempt at such anice and difficult task, being moreinterested in impressing readerswith their own wit, superiority,and ' “profoundly of language”than in writing a worthwhile re¬view..It was their pleasure to find Mr.Bialosky’s article on Ezra Pound“erudite and well written” butthen decided that it had no placein PHOENIX which is a “studentDear Editor:It is generally acknowledged bystudents and their voice, The Ma¬roon, that the food in the UC dor¬mitory system is not very tasty.Many have come to suspect thatthe meals are not even well bal¬anced and do not provide propernutrition. Despite this, we werestill very surprised to discoversome spoiled potatoes among the literary publication.” By thiscriterion they should also haverejected Tyler Thompson’s arti¬cle and “If You Want an Educa¬tion,” the two things they liked,since neither is, propei’ly speak¬ing, “literary.”PHOENIX would like verymuch to see reasonable, construc¬tive criticism based on an intelli¬gent analysis of the stories,poems, etc. that appear in theissue. That sort of criticism iscreative in the finest sense of theword, and then “good” and “bad”take on value and significance.By comparison, the stuff of Rud¬er and Adler is garbage (albeitperhaps humorous garbage); itis merely verbal gymnastics, de¬void even of semi-serious thought,the calibre of which, I dare say,would never make the pages ofPHOENIX. I regret having tomeet it so consistently in the col-ums of the MAROON. /Sincerely,portions served to us for dinneron Wednesday the 19th. We talkedto several others who complainedof the same thing. We feel that aslong as the University requires usto pay for the food it serves, atleast the food should not bespoiled and ill-prepared.John SmiskolTim SimonEd McDaidCraig Dietricheditor PHOENIXBlasts dorm foodShocked by map’s distortionDear Sir:I would like to comment on themaps displayed publicly by per¬sons from the Federal Republicof Germany at the Festival ofNations at International house onSunday, April 23, 1961. Thesemaps represented erroneously theextent of German territory, in¬cluding parts of Pomerania andSilesia east of the Oder-Neisseline and all of East Prussia. Theseare labeled on the map (see pho¬tograph) “under Soviet adminis¬tration” and "under Polish admin¬istration” and are stated to havebeen “placed under provisionalPolish or Soviet administration in1945.” Furthermore, the afore¬mentioned areas are includedwithin the frontiers of Germanyaccording to the legend. All theseareas are also noted to have ex¬isted “within the “Frontiers ofGermany as of 1937.”I will not deal in detail withthe particulars of recent history.These are ably documented inWilliam L. Shirers The Rise andFall of the Third Reich. Needlessto say, claims to and subsequentannexation of adjoining territo¬ries were standard procedure oft h e Hitler regime and led toWorld War II, and the conse¬quent death of millions of peopleand the devastation of Europe.The areas in question were cededto Poland and the USSR as onlypartial reparation for damage in¬flicted to those countries by theNazis. Information on the detailsof the demarcation of the presentborders between Germany and itsneighbors can be obtained in anylibrary.The present government of Ger¬many has expressed in the past,and doubtless will in the future,opinions intimating that the areaseast of the Oder-Neisse line legiti¬ mately should eventually be con¬sidered part of Germany. I main¬tain that any claims to these areasby Germany are invalid, morallyand legally. This type of manifes¬tation is indicative of an un¬healthy atmosphere in Germanyat this time. It shows a lack ofunderstanding of the issues andthe role of Germany in the past.It has taken Germany fifteenyears to develop admirably fromthe devastation of the war andagain establish a military organ¬ization. Such claims to foreign ter¬ritories, unoccupied by Germansand ceded as reparations for dam¬ages in the last war are too rem¬iniscent of the past.It is very unsettling that theindividuals who represented WestGermany at the Festival of Na¬tions in International House choseto present such a map, with all its implications, to the publicview. One wonders just how wide¬spread such opinion in Germanyis in support of these territorialclaims and who supports them.We must not allow recent historyto repeat itself and we must notforget what happened.In view of the implications ofthe map I should also point outthat Eastern Germany is indicat¬ed as “under Soviet occupation.”In the interest of objectivity, lack¬ing otherwise on the map, the cor¬rect name of the eastern part ofGermany is “German DemocraticRepublic.” It is unfortunate thatthe persons organizing the ex¬hibit representing the Federal Re¬public of Germany should havechosen to use this map, printed inStuttgart, with all the misrepre¬sentations on it.Steven ObrebskiUniversity TheatrepresentsHOME OF THE BRAVEby Arthur LaurentsREYNOLDS CLUB THEATREMay 12, 13 and 14 — 8:30 p.m.Admission $1 Tickets at Reynolds Club Desk Oa Campus withM&SMman{Author of“l Was a Teen-age Dwarf,” “The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis,” etc.)A ROBE BY ANY OTHER NAMEAs Commencement Day draws near, the question on everyone’slips is: “How did the different disciplines come to be marked byacademic robes with hoods of different colors?” Everybody —but everybody—is asking it. I mean I haven’t been able to walkten feet on any campus in America without somebody grabs myelbow and says, “How did the different disciplines come to bemarked by academic robes with hoods of different colors, hey?”This, I must say, is not the usual question asked by collegianswho grab my elbow. Usually they say, “Hey, Shorty, got aMarlboro?” And this is right and proper. After all, are they notcollegians, and, therefore, the nation’s leaders in intelligenceand discernment? And do not intelligence and discernment de¬mand the tastiest in tobacco flavor and smoking pleasure? Anddoes not Marlboro deliver a flavor that is uniquely mellow, aselectrate filter that is easy drawing, a pack that is soft, a boxthat is hard? You know it IBut I digress. Back to the colored hoods of academic robes.A doctor of philosophy wears blue, a doctor of medicine wearsgreen, a master of arts wears white, a doctor of humanities wearscrimson, a master of library science wears lemon yellow. Why?Why, for example, should a master of library science wear lemonyellow?Well sir, to answer this vexing question, we must go back toMarch 29, 1844. On that date the first public library in theUnited States was established by Ulric Sigafoos. All of Mr.Sigafoos’s neighbors were of course wildly grateful—all, thatis, except Wrex Todhunter.'Mr. Todhunter had hated Mr. Sigafoos since 1822 when bothmen had wooed the beauteous Melanie Zitt and Melanie hadchosen Mr. Sigafoos because she was mad for dancing and Mr.Sigafoos knew all the latest-steps, like the Missouri CompromiseMambo, the Shay’s Rebellion Schottische, and the James K.Polk Polka, while Mr. Todhunter, alas, could not dance at allowing to a wound he had received at the Battle of New Orleans.(He was struck by a falling praline.)Consumed with jealousy at the success of Mr. Sigafoos’slibrary, Mr. Todhunter resolved to open a competing library.This he did, but he lured not a single patron away from Mr.Sigafoos. “What has Mr. Sigafoos got that I haven’t got?” Mr.Todhunter kept asking himself, and finally the answer came tohim: books.So Mr. Todhunter stocked his library with lots of dandy booksand .soon he was doing more business than his hated rival.But Mr. Sigafoos struck back. To regain his clientele, he beganserving tea free of charge at his library every afternoon. There¬upon, Mr. Todhunter, not to be outdone, began serving teawith sugar. Thereupon, Mr. Sigafoos began serving tea withsugar and cream. Thereupon, Mr. Todhunter began servingtea with sugar and cream and lemon.This, of course, clinched the victory for Mr. Todhunter be¬cause he had the only lemon tree in town—in fact, in the entirestate of North Dakota—and since that day lemon yellow has ofcourse been the color on the academic robes of library science.(Incidentally, the defeated Mr. Sigafoos packed up his libraryand moved to California where, alas, he failed once more. Therewere, to be sure, plenty bf lemons to serve with his tea, but,alas, there was no cream because the cow was not introducedto California until 1931 by John Wayne.) © iwi Maxshuimao* * *And today Californians, happy among their Guernseys andHolsteins, are discovering a great new cigarette—the un¬filtered, king-size Philip Morris Commander—and so areAmericans in all fifty states. Welcome aboardlApril 28, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7limited roSTUDENTS ANDFACULTY OFTHIS SCHOOLAN RCA VICTOR • 21 INCHorotherfabulousprizesinLORILLARD'S CAMPUS SWEEPSTAKES1An RCA PortableStereo Set Mark 38An RCA TransistorClock Radio A Royal Portable Typewriter A Polaroid Land CameraEnter Today! Print your nameand address on the back of a pack (or reason¬able facsimile—see rules) of any one of these 5Lorillard products—and deposit it in theLorillard Sweepstakes entry boxes, located onand around campus. Enter as many timesas you like.01961 P. lorillard Co.READ COMPLETE SWEEPSTAKES RULES HERE:J, Each entry must consist of one empty pack of anyof the following brands: Kent . . . Newport . . .Old Gold Filters, Straights ... Spring OR—a plainpiece of paper which has the “hand” drawn blockletters of any of these brands drawn in any size.Your name and address must be written on the back.2. Deposit your completed entry in the LorillardCampus Sweepstakes entry boxes.Closing time and date indicated on campus posters.There will be a random drawing in which the prizewinners will be selected in consecutive order. Draw¬ing will be held under the supervision of the collegenewspaper staff. Enter as many times as you like.Only one prize per contestant. Entrants need not bepresent at drawing to win.3- Lorillard Campus Sweepstakes Is open to allstudents and faculty of this school.4. Lorillard Campus Sweepstakes is subject to allFederal, State and Local Laws.5. Students and faculty whose immediate families areemployed by the P. Lorillard Co. or its advertisingagencies are not eligible.ENTER Contest closes midnightTODAY! Moy 19, 1961 v-"-- «$#** | ; J mum.:.'"\ * I iwmif\ KENT I !■K*NG-S*zePRODUCTS OFP. LORILLARD COMPANYFirst with the Finest CigarettesThrough Lorillard ResearchDROP OFF STATIONS FOR LORILLARD SWEEPSTAKESUniversity Bookstore5800 S. Ellis Ave.Billings Hospital Gift Shop954 E. 59th St.Reynolds Club5706 S. University Ave.Reynolds Club Barber Shop5706 S. University Ave.Ida Noyes Hall1212 E. 59th St.Tropical Hut Restaurant1320 E. 57th St.Stineway Drugstore1335 E. 57th St.Stern's Drugstore6100 S. Ellis Ave. UC Downtown Center (Coffee shop)Lake St. & Garland Ct.Burton-Judson Courts1005 E. 60th St.New Women's Residence Hall5825 Woodlawn Ave.Pierce Towers5514 S. University Ave.Walgreen Drugs1554 E. 55th St.PRIZES ARE ON DISPLAY ATSTINEWAY DRUGSTORE1335 E. 57th ST.CHICAGO MAROON April 28, 1961 Discusses welfare plan(Continued from page 2)by treasury advances to the states,later to be repaid from a tempor¬ary increase of 0.4 per cent inthe federal unemployment tax inthe calendar year 1962 and 1963.For the first time in the twenty-five year history of unemploy¬ment compensation, funds col¬lected by the federal governmentwill be distributed to the statesfor benefit purposes. This meas¬ure could be the first step towardreplacement of the various stateplans with a nationally adminis¬tered system of unemploymentcompensation — a step whichmany experts have called forsince 1940.5. Temporary expansion of theaid-to-dependent children programto permit federal assistance fundsto be paid to needy families whenthe parent is unemployed. Federalchild’s need arises from the death,are now available only when thefunds for aid to needy childrenabsence from home, or physicalor mental disability of one par¬ent.While the present amendmentauthorizes federal aid to familiesof the unemployed only until June30, 1962, there is reason to hopethat this is but a prelude tobroadening the ADC title of theSocial Security Act to permit thisform of assistance to go to anyfamily with a needy child, orbetter still, to any needy person,regardless of age, physical con¬dition, or cause of need. One canlegitimately question the sound¬ness of legislation that authorizesfederal aid to assist states to pro¬vide assistance to selected groupsof needy people and to deny suchaid to other equally necessitousgroups. In order to help meet themounting problems of sub-stand¬ard housing and the widespreadblight and decay of our centralcities, President Kennedy hasrecommended a nine-point pro¬gram that essentially steps up,enlarges, and modifies existingfederal programs. The federalgovernment has maintained aseries of programs in this generalfield since the mid-1930’s, witheach succeeding Congress addingto and modifying the programsin various ways.The Kennedy proposals wouldprovide increased federal fundsfor public housing, federal loansand Insurance of mortgages onprivately built and individuallyowned homes, a considerably ex¬panded federal grant program forurban renewal, and loans for con¬struction of community facilities.The American social securitysystem is largely based upon theSocial Security Act of 1935 andits subsequent amendments. Thesystem consists of two insuranceprograms fold age, survivors, anddisability insurance and unem¬ployment compensation), fourfederal aid programs (for needyaged, children, blind and dis¬abled persons), and some modestgrant programs for crippled chil¬dren, maternal and child health,and public health. Only the oldage, survivors, and disability in¬surance program is administeredby the federal government; theothers arc state administered withfederal aid.The chief gaps in this systemare: 1. medical care; 2. disabilityinsurance for temporary disable-(Continued on page 9)THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree l/.C. DeliveryTerry ’sSmallMedium . ..Large . . ..Extra LargeGiant $1.00$1-45$1.95$2.95$3.951518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045ACASA Book StoreGood Used BooksImported Cards, Gifts and Children's BooksRELIABLE TYPEWRITER SERVICE1322 E. 55th IIY 3-9651A man with Alopecia Universalis*doesn’t need this deodorantHe could use a woman’s roll-on with impunity. Mennen Spray wasmade for the man who wants a deodorant he knows will get throughto the skin ... where perspiration starts.Mennen Spray Deodorant does just that. It gets through to theskin. And it works. All day. More men use Mennen Spray than anyother deodorant. Have you tried it yet? 64d and $1.00 plus tax•Complete lack of body hair, including that of the scalp, legs, armpits, face, etc.■Artea rvecTDIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGSFor PRINTING Call JAY!OFFSET * LETTERPRESS ★ MIMEOGRAPHINGDAILY U. OF C. PICKUPSCmtl JAY Letter A Printing ServiceNO 7-2410 1950 East 75th Street I Wear Contact LensesDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist1132 E. 55th St.ot University Ave. HY 3-8372You see it in her eyes—but the reasons aren't all roman¬tic ones. Her diamond ring is an Artcarved. This meansit meets rigid standards of excellence in cut, caratweight, color and clarity.Nor is this simply a verbal promise. Artcarved’s writtenguarantee explains how the exclusive Permanent ValuePlan lets you apply the full current retail price towardthe purchase of a larger Artcarved anytime, at anyArtcarved jeweler throughout the country. You will beproud, too, of Artcarved’s award-winning styling, likethe Evening Star shown here. To be sure it's an Art¬carved: Look for the name inside the ring, and ask foryour written Artcarved guarantee.Of course, being engaged is wonderful, but sealing theengagement with an Artcarved ring makes it morewonderful than ever—forever!A R. Wood & Sons, Inc., Dept. SP-11216 E. 45th St., New York 17, N. Y.Please send me more facts about diamondrings and "Wedding Guide for Bride andGroom". Also name of nearest (or home¬town) Artcarved Jeweler. I am enclosingICY to cover handling and postage.Where there’s Life...there’s Bud® *MHEUSEI-BUSCH.INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • MIAMI • TAMPA Why are some girls prouderof their rings than others?Name.GOOD COURSE to take is the onethat leads to the King of Beers.Next time you’re away fromthe books, enjoy a refreshing glass ofBudweiser.A study of the reading tastesand habits of the Maroon's read¬ership is being conducted by theMaroon, the dean of students’office, and the National OpinionResearch center (NORC).Some ten per cent of the Uni¬versity’s 5,500 students have re¬ceived nine page questionnaires.“We hope to publish the resultsof this study later this quarter,”stated Ken Pierce, editor of theMaroon.James Davis, senior NORCstudy director urged all personsreceiving questionnaires to returnthem promptly to any of the tenplaces listed on the questionnaire.AH UC giris with * ... goodfacial bone structure, distinc¬tive features and animation,"parade your (carton’s worth(^animated features)—don’t walkto your nearest phone booth,and dial MADEMOISELLE, ex¬tension 3018.Mademoiselle magazine Is de¬voting a section of its Augustissue to photographs of auguststudent models Imitating realmodel students—but they needmodels.Models should be between 5’5* -5*9* in stocking feet, assumingthe stockings are regulation stock¬ings, photogenic, and **. . . a littleslimmer than normal (size 10)."“After a year of dormitoryfood I can manage that,” com¬mented one would-be model(after) reading the size 10 re¬quirement.Mademoiselle, represented byits Mid west editor, Mfss PeggyMatthews, is offering $5 an houror $25 a day for models, and willpossibly not spend a cent. Inter¬views were held yesterday.Representatives of the ladies’magazine will arrive on campusduring the week of May 8th andremain until the photographsare taken—or until they becomediscouraged.Included in notices regardingthe search for models is the fol¬lowing plea: "Your cooperation will be appreciated if you willpass this information along toany girls living off-campus.” Onedisgruntled UC male mademoi¬selle-lover was heard to mutteras he read this note:"It seems they suspect moreabout the campus than I thought,unless they are going to run a*before’ and ‘after’ article on fash¬ion. and photograph the ‘before’section here."The notice concludes by askinggirls to . encourage any girlyou feel would be a good modelbut is too shy to apply.” But neverfear, shy girls; a false rumor hasit that American Girl is comingnext year. (Continued from page 8)ment; and 3. federal aid for gen¬eral assistance to the residualneedy (persons who are not aged,young, blind, or disabled).President Kennedy proposes todo nothing about insurance fortemporary disablement or feder¬al aid for general assistance. Ref¬erence has been made above tohis proposals to strengthen unem¬ployment compensation and ADCfor children of the unemployed.His other social security propos¬als include increasing and extend¬ing benefits under old age, sur¬vivor’s, and disability insurance,and adding a modest hospitalMaroon readers studied‘We must get responses from al¬most everyone who received aquestionnaire if the study’s re¬sults are to reflect the opinionsof the University’s student bodyas a whole.”Address.County or ZoneStatebenefit to aged beneficiaries ofthis insurance program.The proposed hospital benefitfor the aged is the one whichPresident Kennedy has pushedhardest, but which has leastchance of enactment. Despite itsmodest provisions, this programis violently opposed by organizedmedicine and commercial insur¬ance interests who charge that itis a "foot-in-the-door” for a gen¬eral medical-care insurance pro¬gram. These forces beat Kenne¬dy’s efforts to secure approval ofa broader medical care measurefor the aged in last summer’sshort session, and they are givena good chance to beat thiswhittled-down version.Examination of the Kennedy social welfare proposals leads tothese conclusions:1. For the most part his sug¬gestions would provide modest ex¬tensions of existing programs thatare well established and that havewide acceptance among the Amer¬ican people.2. The President has proposedno new or radical measures todeal with urgent social problems.He has not even proposed anybold measures to close the ob¬vious and glaring gaps in the ex¬isting social security system.3. Despite their modest nature,many of his proposals are meet¬ing with such strident and stub¬born opposition that many ofthem are not likely to be achievedin this session of Congress.FIRST CULTURAL ATTRACTIONatMcCORMICK PLACE THEATRE *BALLET SCHEHERAZADEperformed by theRegional Ballet Ensemble of ChicagoAndA Symphony by theChicago Businessmen's OrchestraSaturday, May 6th — 8:30 p.m.all tickets $3.00Telephone WA 2-6914 afternoons or evenings for tickets►►►►kAAiApril 28,1961 • CHICACO MAROON • 9Indian conference soon^M-Solten^ COAVAlOHT © IM1, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY. COCA COLA AMO COKE A»E AEOlSTCACO TA»OCM*»«JBottled under authority ofThe Coca-Cola Company ByThe Coco-Cole Bottling Co. of Chicago, Inc.SophomoresJuniors — SeniorsFull-Time Summer WorkCollege Men: Make application now to secure Summer Employ¬ment and build your future with the world’s largest Corporationdealing in America’s most sought after product — A GOODEDUCATION.Our history dates back nearly 200 years, but we are now intro¬ducing a new non-competitive publication, called the Great IdeasProgram, featuring the revolutionary new SYNTOPICON.Due to the great demand for this item in Illinois we are expandingNationwide. Our leads are generated by a multi-million dollarnational advertising program, as well as repeat sales to old cus¬tomers’ referrals, and sales by special invitation.We need aggressive young men with an eye to the future, who candiscuss our products intelligently. You will be earning in excessof $750 per month, after a short training period.Send in a short resume including address, telephone number, anda recent photograph to: Great Ideas Program, PO Box 4306,Chicago 80, Illinois.OR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometristin theNew Hyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th St. . DO 3-7644Eye Examinations Contact LensesNewest styling in framesStudent DiscountITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAORDER 3 PIZZAS AND GET ONE FREE!spaghetti • beef • sausage and meatball sandwiches <Free Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.The goals of American Indi¬ans will be the subject of theAmerican Indian Chicago con-ference scheduled to takeplace on the University of Chi¬cago campus, June 13th to 20th.The basic question has been de¬bated by hundreds of tribesthroughout the nation at a seriesof regional meetings this month.According to Sol Tax, professorof anthropology, a pattern ofagreement seems to be emergingon the basic issues facing Amer¬ican Indians.A steering committee of Amer¬ican Indians will begin meetingon campus April 26 to prepare forthe June conference. They willtake up matters raised in thepreliminary regional sessions.The June conference will be thefirst time that delegates of allIndian tribes have ever had theopportunity to come together fora unified study of their commonproblems. Only Indians will be“nagrin . . . the real stuffof dance theatre . . "ny timesTonightSEE PAGE 14 active participants; non-Indianswill be observers or advisors.Tax, who is coordinating theconferences for the University,said the official goal of the meet¬ings will be to draft a Declara¬tion of Indian Purpose, a state¬ment of the aims and objectivesthat Indians hold in common.“No such statement has everbefore been made,” he said. “ManyIndian spokesmen have, over theyears, expressed the desires andneeds of particular groups ofIndians. Their words, all too fre¬quently, have been taken as appli¬cable to every Indian.“The result has been a federalpolicy for dealing with the Indianthat vacillates from extreme toextreme — now patronizing him,now oppressing him, now ignor¬ing him — and that hurts, asmuch as, or more than, it helps.”It is the hope of the Chicagoconference that the Indians them¬selves, having at last gotten to¬gether, will be able to sort outthe desires and needs they trulyhold in common, so that a coher¬ent guide may be offered to publicand private organizations in¬volved in Indian affairs.Tax pointed out that “the taskwill not be an easy one.” Hestressed that there are many dif¬ferent kinds of Indians who fol¬low many different ways — di¬versity in location, in professionand in culture.However, he said, evidence is accumulating that the Indians dohave a common purpose and thatthey will be able to find and for¬mulate it at the Chicago confer¬ence in June.Tax has been able to pick outof his correspondence with Indi¬ans the following eight pointsupon which all groups appear toagree:1. Indian ways are right waysfor Indians.2. The traditional rights of in.dian nations have never been lostand should not be jeopardized.3. Indians whose economic re¬sources have been taken awayneed financial help, but want tomanage their own affairs.4. Knowing that their Indianculture discourages avaricious behavior, some Indians will alwayswant special protection againstthe loss of community rights andresources.5. Indians want education, totake full advantage of the re¬sources of the modern world, andthey can get this without necessarily adopting the values of thewhite man.6. Wrongs of the past must beUndone wherever possible.7. Present wrongs must beended at once.8. Measures must immediatelybe taken to protect from now onall Indians’ rights as they havenever been protected before andto help the Indian people achievebetter health, education, and eco¬nomic well-being.Perfectly in tune with your taste—that’s ChesterfieldKing. Every satisfying puff is Air-Softened toenrich the flavor and make it mild. Special porouspaper lets you draw fresh air into the full kinglength of top-tobacco,' straight Grade-A all the way.Join the swing to£ Liggett & Myen Tobacco Co,.Coming events on quadranglesFriday, 28 Apriliiivinlty School Spring conference, •Swift Hall Common room, "The¬ology and the religious commitment,”Joseph Harautunlan, professor of sys¬tematic theology. McCormick Theo¬logical seminary; 1:30 pm, Henry N.Wieman, professor of philosophy.Southern Illinois university.1 utheran Religious service: Matins withsermon, 11:30 am. Bond chapel.Mathematical Methods workshop: Spe¬cial Session I (graduate school ofbusiness), 3 pm, Business east. Gar¬field Cox lounge, “International busi¬ness operations game of the JJnlver-sity of Chicago: economic and man¬agement aspect,” Hans B. Thorelli,professor, graduate school of business.Florence James Adams Poetry Readingcontest, 3 pm. Bond chapel, finals.Maroon staff meeting, 4 pm, Ida Noyes,room 303. All staff members and thoseInterested In joining the staff shouldattend.Awarding of Student Art, Literary, andPhotography Prizes and reception, 4:30pm Reynolds club, presented by Mrs.George W. Beadle and Mrs. Glen A.Lloyd.Motion picture (documentary filmgroup), 7:15 and 9:15 pm. Social Science122, Foreign Film Festival program I:"The Childhood of Maxim Gorki."Sabbath service, 7:45 pm, Hlllel founda¬tionMotion picture, 8 and 10 pm. Burton-Judson courts, “Naked Night,” di¬rected by Ingmar BergmanContemporary Dance program, 8 pm,Mandel hall, Joyce Trlsler and com¬pany.University theatre, 8:30 pm, ReynoldsClub theatre, “Home of the Brave,” byArthur Laurents.Saturday, 29 AprilRecorder society, 1 pm, Ida Noyes, in¬struction followed by informal groupplayingUniversity theatre, 8:30 pm, ReynoldsClub theatre, “Home of the Brave.”lieaux-Arts bail, 9 pm. Law School lob¬by, theme: famous paintings.Sunday, 30 AprilRadio series: Faith of our Fathers, 8:30am, WON, Reverend Tom Driver, Un¬ion Theological seminary.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11 amand 12 m. DeSales house.Lutheran Religious services, 9 am, Gra¬ham Taylor chapel, Matins with dia¬logue sermon; 10 am, Communionservice.Episcopal Communion service, 9:30 am,Bond chapel.University Religious service, 11 am.Rockefeller Memorial chapel. Rever¬end Theodore Gill, president, 8anFrancisco Theological seminary.Concert, 3 pm. Rockefeller Memorialchapel, Third Suite In D major, Bach;Mass In B flat major (Harmonie-messe), Haydn. Rockefeller Chapelchoir and members of the ChicagoSymphony orchestra, Richard Vlk-strom, conducting.Carillon recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller Me¬morial chapel, Daniel Robins, Uni¬versity carillonneur.Seminar-Supper meeting (Baptist Grad¬uate 8tudent center at the Univer¬sity), 5:30 pm, 4901 South Ellis avenue,buffet supper; 8:15 pm. speaker anddiscussion, “The Christian teacher,”Perry D LeFevre, associate professor,divinity school.Supper-Discussion meeting, EpiscopalChurch at the University), 5:30 pm,5540 South Woodlawn avenue, buffetsupper: 6:30 pm. speaker and discus¬sion, “Buddhism as a living alterna¬tive,” Joseph M. Kitagawa, associateprofessor. Divinity school.United Christian fellowship, 5:30 pm,Thorndike Hilton chapel, vesper serv¬ice.United Christian fellowship, 6 pm.Chapel house, buffet supper, 50 cents.Bridge club, 7:15 pm, Ida Noyes lounge,first floor. Duplicate bridge will beplayed.( banning Murray group, 7:30 pm, Fennhouse, 5639 South Woodlawn avenue,Bruno Bettelhelm will discuss his re-cent book, "The Informed Heart.”Folk dancing, 8 pm, Ida Noyes, begin¬ners welcome, for Information contactSteve 8achs, 44 Hitchcock.Radio series: The Sacred Note, 8:15 pm,WBBM. A program of choral musicby the University choir, Richard Vlk-' vvi t f 's w • ww r» vvvV-rBicyclos, Parts, Accassariatspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 «. 55th it.**«««**aaaaaa*aaA*aaa*aEUROPE, orSOUTH. AMERICAin 1961?We arrange for low-cost oir travelon regularly scheduled aircraft toEurope ond 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,ond 15 days In Scandinavia for$196. We arrange for purchaseof European cars of any make otwholesale prices, or for low-costrentals. Free consultation on travel.For full information,write toMr. Arne Brekke1207 E. 60th Street,Chicago 37,•r coll (days or evenings)BU 8-6437. strom, director of chapel music, con¬ducting.Concert, 8:30 pm, Mandell hall, Quartetin c minor, Faure; Trio In c major,Haydn; Quartet in g minor, Brahms;Chicago Plano quartet: Fritz Slegal,violin; Milton Preeves, viola; RobertLaMarchlna, cello; Marlon Hall, piano.University theatre, 8:30 pm, ReynoldsClub theatre, “Home of the Brave,”Monday, 1 MayVarsity Tennis match, 1:30 pm, Varsitycourts, Chicago vs. DePaul university.Lecture (society for social research),4:15 pm, Cobb 107, “The police andinstitutions of liberty,” by ArthurStlncbcombe, professor of sociology,Johns Hopkins university. For Infor¬mation call Ernest Llllensteln, DO 3-8537.Law School Alumni dinner, 5:30 pm,Blackstone hotel, "Lawyers and Lawday,” Byron White, deputy attorney-general of the United States.Films on the Achievement of IndianIndependence (Indian civilizationcourse), 7 pm, “Six Tears of Freedom,” “Invisible Keystone,” and “Assign¬ment India.”Motion picture, 8 pm. Internationalhouse, “Camille," (USA).Television series: Meeting of Minds, 8pm, WTTW, “The mandate of busi¬ness,” W. Allen Wallis, dean, gradu¬ate school of business; William Rob¬erts, vice-president, Bell and Howellcompany; George Tomashevich, assist¬ant professor of anthropology andsociology, Lake Forest college.William Vaughn Moody lecture, 8:30 pm,Mandel hall, "Tradition and Individu¬ality In an age of technology,” LeonKlrchner, American composer andmusician.Tuesday, 2 MayLutheran Communion service, 11:30 pm,Bond chapel.Varsity Baseball game, 3:15 pm, Staggfield, Chicago vs. University of Illi¬nois, Chicago.Varsity Track meet, 4 pm, Stagg field,Chicago vs. Bradley university.Colloquium iInstitute for the study ofmetals), 4:15 pm, Research InstitutesDivinity meet heldThe relationship betweenthe role of the theologicalscholar and his religious com¬mitment will be discussed to¬day at the annual faculty-studentspring conference of the divinityschool. The conference, which be¬gan yesterday, is taking place inthe common room of Swift hall.Joseph Haroutunian, professorof systematic theology at McCor¬mick Theological seminary, andHenry Nelson Weiman, professorof philosophy at Southern Illinoisuniversity, will consider the con¬ ference problem. Haroutunian’sspeech, which will be followed bya discussion, will start at 9 am.Weiman, whose discourse willalso be followed by a discussionperiod, will begin at 1:30 pm." ‘Passionate Subjectivity’ 1 nGnosticism and Existentialism asa reason for theology” and "Re¬sources for theology — withinand outside the church” wereamong the subjects discussed yes¬terday.All University faculty and stu¬dents are invited to attend today’ssessions. 211, “Theory of sound absorption InInsulators,” Truman O. Woodruff,General Electric Company Researchlaboratory.Hug Ivri and Advanced Hebrew, 4:30pm, Hlllel foundation.Christian Science service, 7:15 pm,Thorndike Hilton chapel.Wheatridge seminar (Lutheran Churchat the University), 7:30 pm, Interna¬tional house.Glee club, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes, eastlounge, rehearsal.Dames club, 8 pm, 5429 South Woodlawnavenue, strictly bridge, call MadollneKutz, MI 3-9190.Louis Block Fund Lecture series: Topicsin Neurophysiology (department ofphysiology and section of blopsychol-ogy), 8 pm, Abbott 133, "The steam¬roller and the walnut, or what Is N2?”N. Y. Klang, Harvard university andMassachusetts Institute of technology.Wednesday, 3 MayDivinity School Worship service, 11:30am. Bond chapel.Varsity Tennis match, 1:30 pm. Varsitycourts, Chicago vs. Marquette univer¬sity.Lecture (department of linguistics andcommittee on social thought), 3:30pm, Social Science 122, “The grammarof poetry,” Roman Jakobson, SamuelHazzard Cross professor of Slaviclanguages, literature, and generallinguistics, Harvard university, andInstitute professor, Massachusetts In¬stitute of technology. Seminar: Augsburg Confession (Luther¬an Church at the University), 4:30pm, Chapel house.Carillon recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller Me¬morial chapel, Daniel Robins,Episcopal Religious service: Evensong,5:05 pm, Bond chapel.Inauguration dinner, 6:30 pm, McCor¬mick place, In honor of Chancellorand Mrs. George W. Beadle.Dames club, 8 pm, Ida Noyes, boardmeeting, call Florence Twiggs, PL 2-2014.Lutberan Religious service: Jazz Mass,8 pm, Bond chapel, written by FrankTlrrow. An opportunity to meet withthe composer will be afforded by acoffee hour which will follow in Swiftcommons.Israeli Folk dancing, 8 pm, Hlllel foun¬dation.Country dancers, 8 pm, Ida Noyes, be¬ginners welcome.Concert (department of music andFromm Music foundation), 8:30 pm,Mandel hall, The Lenox Quartet andLeon Klrchner, piano: works byKlrchner.Thursday, 4 MayThe Two Hundred Ninety-second con¬vocation: The Inauguration of Chan¬cellor George W. Beadle, 11 am, Rocke¬feller Memorial chapel, 10:45 am, aca¬demic procession from Ida Noyes tothe chapel; the inauguration programwill be carried by loudspeakers out¬side the chapel; admission by ticketonly.Jimmy’sand the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.LUCKY STRIKE PRESENTS:DeaR-DRiFROOD:dr. prood’8 thought FOR the day: A lude learning canbe a dangerous thing—especially in a multiple-choice exam.DEAR DR. FR00D: I have been training ourcollege mascot, a goat. He has learned how toopen a pack of Luckies, take out a cigarette,light up and smoke. Do you think I can gethim on a TV show?Animal Husbandry MajorDEAR ANIMAL I'm afraid not To make TV now¬adays, you've got to have an act that's reallydifferent. After all, there are millions of Luckysmokers..DEAR DR. FROOD: I have calculated that if the population explosioncontinues at its present rate, there wilt be a person for every squarefoot of earth by the year 2088. What do you think of that?Statistics MajorDEAR STATISTICS: Well, one thing’s sure, that will finish off the hula-hoopers-* once and for all. DEAR DR. FROOD: I am a full professor—andyet I stay awake nights worrying about my abil¬ity to teach today's bright young college stu¬dents. They ask questions I can’t answer. Theywrite essays I don’t understand. They use com¬plicated words that I’ve never heard before.How can I possibly hope to win the respect ofstudents who are more learned than I am?ProfessorDEAR PROFESSOR: I always maintain that noth¬ing impresses a troublesome student like thesharp slap of a ruler across his outstretchedpalm.DEAR DR. FROOD: You can tell your readers for me thatcollege is a waste of time. My friends who didn't go tocollege are making good money now. And me, with mynew diploma? I'm making peanuts!Angry GradDEAR ANGRY: Yes, but how many of your friends can dowhat you can do—instantly satisfy that overpoweringcraving for a peanut. DEAR DR. FROOD: Could you give a word ofadvice to a poor girl who, after four years atcollege, has failed to get herselfinvited on a single date?Miss MiserableDEAR MISS: Mask?i a s *■THE RECRUITERS ARE COMING! THE RECRUITERS ARE COMING! And here’s Frood to tellyou just how to handle them: These representatives of big business are, on the whole,alert fellows. They may be aware that college students smoke more Luckies than any othertegular. Let them know that you know what’s up—offer them a Lucky, then tap your craniumknowingly. Remember—today’s Lucky smoker could be tomorrow's Chairman of the Board.CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change!Product of J’/nutxican c/(rfraccG-^cnyMry — i/o&uscc- is our middle name©j.r.e*April 28, 1961 • CHICACO MAROON • 1!IPTHE FROMM MUSIC FOUNDATIONandTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGODepartment of Musicpresentthe musie ofLEON KIRCHNERon Wednesday, May 3, 1961 at 8:30 p.m.Mandel Hall, 57th and University, Chicago, IllinoisPARTICIPANTS Leon Kirchner — PianoThe Lenox QuartetADMISSION FREE Tickets are obtainable at theDepartment of Music, Room 1025802 SOUTH WOODLAWN AVENUEAt the box office of Mandel Hallone hour before the concert 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 HARPERLIQUOR STORE1114 - 16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported ond domesticwines, liquors ond beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4=^2— 7G99Welcome springhearts!Take an Evening Walkto theGreen Door BookshopQuality Paperback*Now Open Every Evening te 12:301450 E. 57th HY 3-5829(DGQDICIA Most Pleasant Coffee House-Book ShopTHE NEW GREENWINDOW ROOMof the Le BohemePresentsJazz Chicago StyleJVosr AppearingMitchell Roberts Triowith Rick MartinFri., Sat. & Sun. at 9:00 p.m.963 W. Diversey THEFRET SHOPaitnoiinre*Andrew Kyriazes, concertsoloist, will give group in¬struction on the mandolinMeet your teacher Saturday,April 29, 1 1 :00 a m.Open Evenings, 5-10 p.m.and WeekendsInstruments, New, Used, AntiqueGuitars, Banjos, Mondolins, etc.Supplies — RepairsPhone NO 7-10601551 East 77th St.AN UNPAID TESTIMONIALNapoleon Bonaparte says:Td never have lostto ttdUiudon*...if I'dbeen wearing aJockeu® mrano MPOWER-KNITT-SHIRTJockey'TSSTQ: You mean ... 7A;Oui! I spent so much timetugging at my baggy, saggyT-shirt... I couldn’t concentrateon the battle.Q: I see. Well do you realize thatJockey’s new T-shirt is Power-Knit with a quarter again asmuch resilient combed-cottonyarn to stay soft and keep its per¬fect fit, even after countless wash¬ings? The new Seamfree® collarwon’t sag; the full-proportionedbody won’t bag. And the deep-tuck tail stays every inch as longas the day your Jockey PowerKnit T-shirt came fresh out ofthe package.A: NOW he tells me!Hfe what's up front that countsUp front is I FILTER-BLEND I and only Winston has itlRich, golden tobaccos specially selected and speciallyprocessed for full flavor in filter smoking. • • - v .B. I. Reynolds Tob.fN) Oomptrty, Winston-Sslem, N. C.WI NSTON TASTES GOOD /ike a cigarette should!Sports newsBaseball team vanquishes WabashThe saying, “If you don’tsucceed at first, try, try,again,” was proved to be arewarding one by the ChicagoMaroon baseball sqtiad last Sat¬urday at Stagg field. Burdenedwith a ten-game losing streak, theMaroons struggled to six hard-earned runs and held on grimlythrough a rocky ninth inning todefeat Wabash college by a 6-5score.The game started as so manyothers have for the Maroon base-ballers, on the wrong foot. Wa¬bash pulled out to a two run leadin the first inning on two hits,two walks, a hit batsman and anerror. Chicago scored a run in thebottom of the first on two walksand a tricky-bounce single byMike Gessel, and then added two more In the fourth on DennisDekeyral’s bases loaded line sin¬gle to right.The Maroons added to theirlead in the fifth inning by scoringthree runs without benefit of ahit. Three walks, a hit batter,and an infield ground-out drovethe University of Chicago base-ballers into a seemingly com¬manding 6-2 lead.Chicago pitcher Kent Woold¬ridge held the Wabash team incheck until the eighth inning,when the Maroons handed awaya gift run on two errors, closingthe gap to 6-3.The ninth opened with Woold¬ridge walking the first two battersto face him. First year pitcherBill Peterman came in to relieve,but was touched for a pair of run producing singles sandwichedaround a force out. Again the callwent out to the bull-pen, and aceright-hander Nemon Taylor camein to try to hold on to the slim6-5 Chicago lead.Taylor got the first man to popto Chicago catcher Gessel andthen bore down to work on oppos¬ing pitcher Wilson of Wabash.With the count two balls and twostrikes, Taylor fired a fast ballpast the futilely swinging Wilsonand Chicago had captured its ini¬tial win of the year.The Maroons played Illinois In¬stitute of technology yesterday atStagg field and will take on NavyPier next Tuesday also at home.Starting time for that contest willbe 3:15 p.m. BOXWabash (5)AB R HNl'kers’n, ss 3 0 0Llppard, 3b 5Calvin, cf 3Perden, lb 4Hedges, c 3Gahl, rf 4Billings, 2b 5Nichols, 11 5Wilson, p 4 SCOREChicago (6)AB R HLevy, 2b 4 11Radmer, 2b 3 0 0Gessel, c 3 11Thompson, cl 3 2 2Canes, 3b 2Wo’ldr’dge, p 3Olson, rfDevltt, lbDelceyral, IfPeterman, pTaylor, p at the Ohio Relays Saturday.Their time on the muddy trackwas 3:27.The sprint medley team won itsheat but only finished fifth.A meet scheduled with NavyPier for last Tuesday was can¬celled. The next home meet isTuesday against Bradley.36 5 8Line Scoreii ii eWabash 200 000 012—5 8 0Chicago 100 230 00x 6 6 428 6 6 Golfers, netmen in meetTrackmen triumphThe Maroon mile relay team ofDon Williams, Jim Mackenzie,Marty Baker, and Jerry Gehmanfinished first in the college race UC’s golfers and tennis teamare entered in the Great LakesCarnival at Greencastle, Ind., to¬day and tomororw. They willcompete against DePauw, Val¬paraiso, Washington of St. Louis,and Wheaton.Classified AdvertisementsFor rent For rent Earnsublet for 2 Yrs. 7-Rm. Apt. Ideal forfamily or sev. adults. Newly dec., com¬pletely fum. Appliances, air cond.,linens, etc. New Hyde Park. Near UC.IC, shopping. $185 a month. MU 4-3428.2- and 3-Room Furnished Apartments.Private baths. $70-$85 per month. Walk¬ing distance of U. of C. HY 3-2525.1156 E. 54th PI. Unfurnished 4-Rm. Apt.May 1. Ml 3-8319.5-Room Apartment to sublet for theSummer. Excellent location. Call: MI3-0699.4-Room Furnished Apartment to share.50th and Dorchester. Male universityGrad. Student or fac. member. Eve¬nings: WA 4-7520 or before 5:00, exten¬sion 387^.4-Room Furnished Apt. to sublease forthe Summer. Double bed and 5-yearcrib. Also a TV set. Available May 20.$77.50 per month. Call: MI 3-2993. Onlymarried students allowed.6044-2 S. INGLES1DECLEAN, COMFORTABLE, 2-ROOM FUR¬NISHED APTS. IN A BUILDINGCATERING TO UNIVERSITY STU¬DENTS. SPECIAL RATES NOW INEFFECT. SEE RESIDENT MANAGER,MRS. TAPIA, OR CALL: BU 8-2757.2-Room Furnished Apartments. NearU. of C., International House, ICRR,and bus. Reasonable. Call: BU 8-9424. Chatham Park Village Apartments(1 and 2 bdrms. — 3 to 5 rms.)$103 TO $142Applications now being processed forwell-qualified prospective tenants forearly fall leasing. Mod. all ELEC kitch¬ens. 24-hr. heat, 63 FIREPROOF ‘BLDGS.PRIVATELY POLICED, ample streetparking or garages, close to shoppingand transportation, park-like, with sub¬urban atmosphere. Model, apt.737 E. 83rd PI. TRiangle 4-7400Furnished ApartmentsShorelane Apts. 5135 S. Kenwood. Offers1 to 3'/2 efficiency units attractivelyappointed, month to month occupancy.$80 and up. Elevator, fireproof bldg.Mgr. on premises. Earn $85 weekly during summer aboardpassenger ships as waiter or waitress.MUST BE U. S. CITIZEN. For completedetails send $1, Lansing InformationService, Dept. B-20, Box 74, New York61. N. Y.ServicesSewing, Alterations, Hems. BU 8-6001.Typing. Reas. MI 3-5218.WantedTour One or Two Girls to share 6-room fur¬nished apartment. $42 a month. Avail¬able June. Own bedroom. Must see toappreciate. MU 4-8584.Economical Group TourThe Yucatan and Campeche Mexico —Land of the Gods — and the home ofthe Maya — fourteen wonderful days Inthis land of enchantment. For Informa¬tion write or phone Mr. A. Mlnehart,3130 N. Central, Chicago 34, Dllnols.NA 2-5955. People to Work on new UC Humor Mag¬azine. Come to meeting in Ida Noyes.7:30 pm Sunday.Whoever Mistook my Raincoat In Har¬per Study Halls — I have yours. Bun-berry coat. Call: MU 4-8620.Will the Music Student who discussesEinstein please claim his Freud book.Call: 141 lx West. BU 8-6610.For sale PersonalsSpacious Cool 4-Room Apt- to sublet forthe Summer. Completely furnished,within walking distance of U. of C. $90per month plus electricity. MU 3-0376.Cregier Manor1)4- to 3-Room Furnished Apts , nicelyappointed. Elevator building. $80-$120per mo., utilities Included. Quick accessto University via public transportation.Mgr. on premises. Call: PL 2-9237. Oriental ArtWell carved Camphor wood Chest withcrate, 41" x 21" x 18". Ivory “balls”(eight seamless, well carved and chis¬eled concentric shells, contained withinone another). Reasonable. Call: MI 3-0800, Ext. 200, H 48. Creative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.O Jason. Would not the search for theGolden Fleece be easier with a Cap andGown. Cap and Gown $4.00 before May1; $5.00 after the 1st.Please come — We need the money!?!!Coffee Kelly-Foster Tuesdays 9-1.Ellen Coughlin Beauty SalonNOW OPEN IN OUR NEW LOCATION5060 Lake Park Are. Ml 3-2060Open Mon. • Sot. — 9 m.m. - IJ p.m.AFTER SHAVELOTION Refreshing antiseptic action healsrazor nick*, helps keep your skinin top condition. 1.00 plM KMSHULTON New York e Toronto Other shoes may look like Keds, but only U.feeling." Because Keds have a patentedcushioned inner sole. And because Kedsare built over tested, scientific lasts, to titell feet perfectly, even narrow ones. Kedsare right for class, gym, tennis court ordorm. Machine-washable (and they evenlook good clean). His: Keds "Court king."Hers; Keds "Champion." Get your U S.Keds at good shoe or department stores. S. Keds# can give you "that great '■shockproofed arch cushion andiLOOK FOR THE BLUE LABEL*•both U. S. Rod* »«d blv« !«b*l »r« r**iM»r*d Utdtmtfkf of ^United States RubbernOCKEFUlER CENTER, NEW YORK >0, NEW YORKMad Money 'genuine musical comedyMad Mon<Sy, this year’sBlackfriars’ presentation, hasa book and lyrics by Mel andPeggy Rosen, with some as¬sistance from Bob Reiser andMarty Rabinowitz on additionallyrics and adaptation for thestage. The music was composedand orchestrated by Mel Rosen,and excellently conducted by themusical director, Roland Bailey.The production was directed, withimagination and ingenuity, byRobert Ashenhurst.Unlike several of its predeces¬sors, Mad Money lives up to itsown billing. It is genuinely “amusical comedy,” and this reviewwill evaluate it in terms of thestandard professional product. Ifthe adverse criticism which fol¬lows seems harsh, remember thatthe same yardstick governs wordsof praise; there will be no drearyimplication that Mad Money isgood—for an amateur show.”A good musical requires a plot.which moves along without di¬gressions or extraneous compli¬cations; it does not have to beplausible. Its theme must not bepompous or phony — but it mayvery well be hackneyed. Char¬acters may be superficial, butthey should be sharply definedand interestingly varied.Mad Money has one extraneoustwist in plot; the episode involv¬ ing Far Out Eloise, though com¬petently performed by Abie Shel¬don, should have been cut fromthe script. The book also fails tomeet the professional standard ontransitions from dialogue to songand back again; these were fre¬quently awkward. A number ofscenes lacked the definitive finalpunch or “tag” which cues theaudience for applause; even skill¬ful direction cannot always makeup for this lack of technical pro¬ficiency in the writing.The music, heard to best ad¬vantage in the well-played Over¬ture and Entr’acte, was alwaysadequate; occasionally it was asgood as good, solid brassy, show-type music ever needs to be. Theproduction numbers, especially“Opus de Bank” numbers 1, 2and 3, were cleverly tied into theplot and imaginatively directed.The other songs successfully ad¬vanced the plot or enhanced char¬acterization — however, therewere too many of them. The showsuffered from one structural de¬fect very common in non-profes¬sional musicals: the authors arebeset by a conviction that EVERY¬BODY must sing.Singing and acting were gen¬erally not up to the standard setby the book and music, and aimedat by the director and musical di¬rector — who were clearly hamp-THE LIMELITERSORCHESTRA HALLSaturday, April 29 8:30 PMPrices: $1.73 - $2.50 - $3.30 - $3.85Tickets available at:DISCOUNT RECORDS — 201 North LaSalleHYDE PARK CREDIT CO-OP — 1526 E. 55th StreetFrank Fried Presents ered by Insufficient rehearsaltime. Chorus numbers and en¬semble numbers sung by princi¬pals were largely unintelligible;only the titles of musical num¬bers on the program provided aclue. Group acting by the Choruswas sketchy and haphazard — acommon complaint which cannearly always be corrected by ad¬ditional rehearsal. Individual act¬ing bits by chorus members Belle-ruth Krepon, Jennifer Gilmans,Sue Freis and Inge Krarup wereall well-performed.In principal roles: Gene Rad¬ish made the most of Phil, thebank guard — a part with humorbased entirely on reversed wordorder for familiar phrases. JerryHyman, in the small but juicypart of the Mayor, displayed toadvantage his gift for absolutelyperfect timing. His excellent sing¬ing voice is unfortunately toolight for the hollow cavern ofMandel Hall. Keith Anderson.*asDanny, delivered several ballad-type numbers in a pleasant tenorvoice; Stephanie Mora’s singingas Amy was less effective, sinceher delivery is somewhat stolidand pedestrian, and her voicequality is unattractive. Both theseperformers acted with humor andappeal. Amei Wallach, an actresswith good style and a flair forcharacterization, suffered in thesinging aspect of her role fromTheme,” “Repentance,” and “The an extremely limited and uncer¬tain vocal range.Jim Reiss, a perfectly adequateactor with a fine singing voice,was hurt by physical mannerismswhich were visually unnervingand sometimes even painful towatch. Alice Schaeffer, as theschoolteacher wife turned gunmoll, and Jerry Mast, as the sharptype who gets hit by true love atlast, both performed with that re¬liability and competence which isso reassuring to an audience.Their solo numbers, “Rapunzel’sTheme,” “Repentance,” and ‘The Legalest Tender,” came close tobeing show-stoppers.Departure from the profession¬al standard of musical comedywas most sadly evident in thetechnical aspects of the produc¬tion. Sets and costumes at bestwere undistinguished; at worst,they were tacky. The lighting waspoorly conceived and miserablyexecuted. Technical errors in theactual running of the show worefrequent and all too apparent.The production as a whole neededunified design.Nancy LorieDance program setDaniel Nagrin, an excitingcontemporary dancer, will pre¬sent a solo performance inMandel hall this evening at8:00 pm. “A Program of DancePortraits” is part of the SeventhAnnual Festival of the Arts.Joyce Trisler and company, orig¬inally scheduled for the evening,has been cancelled because of ahip injury suffered by Miss Tris¬ler during a rehearsal. She wason campus Wednesday night,however, to give an Emily Talbotlecture entitled ‘Techniques inContemporary Dance” and embel¬lished with demonstrations by hertroupe.Mr. Nagrin is the winner of theDonaldson award for the best male dancer, of the 1955 season,and has just completed a brilliantthree-year tour of the nation withthe solo performances he will pre¬sent this evening.Nagrin’s repertoire includesseven dances, the most impressiveof which is a provocative satireon the contemporary concernwith the self in the face of epieevents, entitled ‘IndeterminateFigure.”Tickets may still be obtainedfrom the Mandel Hall Box Officeor by calling MI 3-0800, ext. 3280.Admission is $1.50, $2.50, and$3.50. Tickets for the Trisler program will be honored for thisperformance.WUCB program guideFriday, April 287:00 Jazz Archives — with BillPeterman7:30 Jannequin—Two ChansonsDes Pres—Fanfare and Mo¬tet8:00 Monteverdi — Lagrimed’AmanteFOTA PRESENTS11 Daniel NagrinDANCE PORTRAITS f rTonight Only Mandel Hall, 8 p.m. $3.50-2.50-1.50 Kodaly—Psalmus Hungari-cusMozart—Concerto No. 12 ina for Piano.9:00 Tchaikovsky—Concerto No.1 in b flat for Piano, op. 23.Mozart—Quintet in c forStrings, K. 406.10:00 Bach — Brandenburg Con¬certo No. 4 in G.Brahms—Sonata No. 3 in dfor Violin, op. 108.Stravinsky—OdeStravinsky — Concerto forPiano and Orchestra.11:00 Dvorak — Five SlavonicDances.Mozart—Concerto No. 14 inE flat for Piano.Teleman—Concerto in e forOboe.Sunday, April 307:00 Hindemith—Der Schwanen-dreherCLARK Theatredark & madison50- at all timesforcollege students fr 2-2845MAYjust present your i.d.card to the cashier open 7:30 a. m. — late show 4 a. m.ft different double feature dailyft Sunday Film Guildft write in for free program guideft little gal-lery for gals onlyft every friday is ladies day —all gals admitted for only 25c| MONDAY |TUESDAY | WEDNESDAY THURSDAY | FRIDAY I SATURDAYSUNDAY 1) jack sern a abeUnda lee“the nights oflucretia borgia”forrest tucker“counterplot” 2) van Johnsonsteve cochran“slander”robert taylor“house ofthe 7 hawks” 3) rlchard klleykathryn grantJames edwards“phenix city story’yale wexler“stakeout ondope street” 4) henry fondaanthony perklns“the tin star”victor mature“china doll” 5) spencer tracyrobert ryan“bad day atblack rock”orson wellestrevor howard“the rootsof heaven” 6) shelley winterselizabeth taylormontgomery cllftIn george Stevens’“a place in the sun”slmone slgnoret“the adulteress”7) academy award winner“serengeti shall not die”robert mltchum, deborahkerr, peter Ustinov,glynls Johns“the sundowners”a Sunday film guild program 8) steve reeves“giant of marathon”ray strycklynwlllard parker“young jesse james” 9) robert strausscameron mltchell“inside the mafia”mamle van dorenbrad dexter“vice raid” 10) Jeff hunterspencer tracy“the last hurrah’’dana andrewsJoan fontalne“beyond a reason¬able doubt” 11) James cagneydorothy malone“man with athousand faces”randolph scottangela lansbury“lawless street” WEEKEND LA12) kay kendallkenneth more“doctor inthe house”dirk bogardebrlgltte bardot“doctor at sea” FF FESTIVAL13) peter sellers“big-timeoperators”(“smallest showon earth”)terry-thomas Inklngsley amis*“lucky jlm”14) weekend laff festivalCharlie chaplln, ben turpln“chase me charlle”buster keaton“an old Spanish custom”plus the keystone oops In“cured In the excitement”a Sunday film guild program 13) gla scalajack hawklns“2-headed spy”werner klemperer“operationeichmann” 16) curt Jurgensdawn addams“house of Intrigue”audle murphybarbara rush“world in mycorner” 17) paul muniluther adler“last angry man”lloyd bridgesklm Stanley inpaddy chayefsky’s“the goddess” 18) vera milesJames Stewart“fbl story”randolph scottVirginia mayo“west-bound” 19) Joan collinsJack hawklns“land of thepharaohs”Jack sernasrossanna podesta“helen of troy” 20) tony curt laedmond o’brlenkarl maiden“the greatImposter”dolores hart“where theboys are”21) two european classico“the cranes are flying”“best russlan movie seen Inthe US since world war II—Time“hiroshima, mon amour”“undoubtedly a master¬piece”—Saturday Reviewa Sunday film guild program 22) ruth romanpaul anka“look in anywindow”george Banderscorrtne calvet“bluebeard’s 10honeymoons’’ 23) ruby deoSidney poltlerJohn Cassavetes“edge of the city”marllyn monroesterling haydensam jaffe InJohn huston’a“asphalt jungle” 24) burl Ivesrobert taylor“power and theprize”frank slnatragina lollobrlgldapeter lawford“never so few” 25) robert wagnerbroderlck crawford“betweenheaven & hell”Charlton hestoneleanor parker“naked jungle” 26) curt Jurgensrobert mltchum“enemy below”elizabeth taylordana andrewspeter finch“elephant walk” 27) dark gablemarllyn monroemontgomery cllftin John huston’s“the misfits”lee remlckyves montnnd“sanctuary”28) a Sunday muslcalegene kelly, mltzl gaynor,kay kendall “les girls”kirk douglas, lauren bacall,dorls day, Juano hernandez“young man with a horn”a Sunday film guild program 29) John saxonaudle murphy“posse from hell”mlchael rennleJames macarthur“3rd man onthe mountain” 30) van hefllnalan ladd,Jean arthur Ingeorge stevens’“shane”slmone slgnoretlaurence harvey“room at the top" 31) eartha klttsammy davis, Jr.“anna lucasta”curt Jurgensbrlgltte bardot“and Godcreated woman” June 1) donna -.-cUrlchard widmark“backlash”Sidney poitlereartha kljt“mark ofthe hawk” 2) kirk douglasanthony qulnnsllvano mangano“ulysses”victor maturehedy lamarr Incecll b. de mllle’s“samson & delilah” Strauss — Czardas, Waltz,and MarchChopin—Four Mazurkas8:00 Beckett—Waiting for Godotwith the original cast.10:00 Bloch — Concerto GrossoNo. 1 for Piano and Strings.Brahms—Quintet for Clari¬net and Strings.11:00 Mennin—CanzonaMahler—Symphony No. 4in G.Monday, May 17:00 Gervais — Suite de Sym¬phoniesDebussy—Quartet in g, op.10.Handel—Concerto for Harp¬sichord in g.8:00 Marty’s Night Out—theatreand film reviewed by MartyRabinowitz.8:15 This Week at the U.N.8:30 Holland Festival 1960 -second of four programs.9:00 Strauss—Till Eulenspiegel.op. 28.Telemann—Trio Sonata inE.Schonberg — Pierrot Lun-aire.10:00 We Come for to Sing—theannual May Day program.11:00 Somethin’ Else—jazz, withMike Edelstein.TAKCAM-YMJCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHfifOpen DallyII A.M. to 10:30 PM.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd S». BU 8-9*8See the New York Hit Musicalat theDEL PRADO HOTEL53nl and Hyde ParkSpecial Student Discount forTuesday, Wednesday and ThursdayPerformances $1.75I VCulture VultureAchievement of excellence is a time-consuming process; genius is largely a matter of persistence. Woven into the pursuitof all that is pure and true is the thread of time, and crouched along that fragile line are the black-clad fates, robed in the guiseof carelessness and sloth, ready to snip the thread and abort the pursuit of excellence. Carelessness is not the sole factor whichmakes attainment of excellence an unattainable vision. Perhaps worse is the inexplicable element in man which makes himrush frantically from project to project, spreading himself thinly over a vast area of varied endeavors. Pursuing truth on manyfronts, he becomes the idealized ''well-rounded individual;" the product is a hollow sphere, devoid of the depth of perceptionwhich might make him great were he to concentrate his energies. Man gains scope through knowing a little about a lot, but tograsp anything that resembles greatness he must know a lot about an infinitestimal amount.On campusTheatreDue to a common technical de¬ficiency in theatrical circles, in¬sufficient rehearsal time, ArthurLaurent’s Home of the Brave willbe presented by University the¬atre during the week-end of May12, 13, and 14, not this week-endas scheduled.DanceThe week seems strife with cul¬tural tragedies: This evening'sdance program by Joyce Trislerand Company has been cancelledbecause of a hip injury sufferedby Miss Trisler in a particularlystrenuous rehearsal.An equally compelling attrac¬tion has been substituted, how¬ever. A Program of Dance Por¬traits will be presented by DanielNagrin at the scheduled time (to¬night at 8 pm) in the scheduledplace (Mandel hall, 57th st. andUniversity avenue).Tickets are still one sale at theMandel hall box office, and ticketsfor the Trisler program will ofcourse be honored.MusicThe closing concert of t h eRockefeller chapel series will pealforth this Sunday at 3 pm. TheSpring Concert is a tribute to theseason through the media of bothchoral and orchestral works.Haydn’s Mass In B Flat Major(Harmoniemesse) will be thechoir’s fare while the participat¬ing members of the Chicago Sym¬phony will present Bach’s ThirdSuite in D Major for Orchestra.Tickets are on sale at the book¬store, at Woodworth’s, and at thechapel office. Regular admission,$3.00; student rate, $1.50.Right on the heels of the choir’srites of spring will be a FOTAsponsored concert by the ChicagoPiano Quartet. T h i s illustriousquartet will blend the dulcet tonesof violin, viola, cello, and pianointo renditions of the Quartet InC minor, Opus 15 by Faure, Trioin C Major by Haydn, andBrahms’ Quartet in G Minor,Opus 25. Tickets are $1 for this3:30 pm performance in Mandelhall, and are on sale at the Man-del box office or at the music de¬partment.Leon Kirchner, one of the pres¬ent day’s most gifted composers,will be in the limelight next week.On Monday at 8:30 in Mandel, hewill speak on Tradition and indi¬viduality in an age of technology.This lecture is the current one inthe William Vaughn Moody se¬ries. There will be no admissioncharge.Wednesday May 3 (same timeand plaee as above), Kirchner will‘nagrin . . . the best maledancer on two feet . . *danton walkerTonightSEE PAGE 14<tSHOSHANA DAMARIIsrael’s Greatest SingerTHE CLANCY BROS,and .TOM MAKEMIreland’s Greatest SingingGroupheyiTHEVGATEOF HORN1«6 N. State SU-7-2833 be featured at the piano in anall-Kirchner concert including theString Quartet No. 1, the Trio forPiano, Violin, and Cello, and theSiring Quartet No. 2. His workshave been described as being, eachone, an individual confession. Toofew creative works with such anelement of truth are set beforetoday’s public. Too few artistsdare to so create. Kirchner will bebacked by the Lenox Quartet. Ad¬mission is free, though tickets areavailable from the University ofChicago concert office, 5802 SouthWoodlawn avenue. Enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope.CinemaThe rash of movies is destinedto be with us always, it appears.There is nothing inherently wrongwith the silver screen, but thiscow-bird has the uneasy feelingthat watching a movie (unless ofextremely high caliber, as thisweek’s campus selections undoubt¬edly are) is not even creative pro¬crastination. On with the pre¬views . . . sigh.Our triumphal campus politicalorganization (which which which?)is presenting the John Ford movieadaptation of Erskine Caldwell’sTobacco Road. Perhaps POLITstands for social reform on cam¬pus. The movie will be shown Sat¬urday the 29th at 7 and 9:15 pmin Social Sciences 122. Admissionis 50c.B-J is presenting us with aclassic, or rather a classic in the field of cinematic psychoanalyticinnovations. Ingemar Bergman’sNaked Night is a penetratingview of the evil, black side ofman’s personality. It is a studyin humiliation and sadism. Whatis this neighborhood trend to¬wards the psyche-thriller? Showsat 8 and 10. Admission 50c.This week (tonight, in fact, at7:15 and again at 9:15) ushers ina new phase of the DocumentaryFilm group series: a foreign filmfestival. The kick-off will be TheChildhood of Maxim Gorki, a filmfrom . . . from ... to be shownin Social Sciences 122.Craggy-faced Robert Taylor, an¬gel-faced Greta Garbo, and theman with the profile (it must bea Barrymore — and it is. Lionel)will star in the Monday night In¬ternational house presentation ofCamille, based on Dumas’ novel“La Dame aux Camelias.” Admis¬sion is 50c; show time 8 pm inthe Assembly hall.Off campusTheatreLoop drama is copious and no¬table; thus:A Raisin in the Sun is approach¬ing the end of its run at theBlackstone theatre, 60 Balbo st.The play concerns itself withSouth Side Chicago integrationproblems, but emerges infinitelymore universal than it sounds.For tickets call CE 6-8240.May 1-6 at the Goodman the-LAKE /?PAR K AT ^ R Dthe (Ayde perk NO 7-9071rryde park theatreRussian ShowFriday, April 28 - Thursday, May 4TURGENEV'Simmortal classic"Fathers and Sons(English subtitles)— plus —"A Winter FantasyA dazzling array of Soviet performers(in color)alsoMr. Magoo in "Ragtime Bear"Student Rates Only Upon Presentation of Student ID CardsrrWeekendPatronPARKINGNOW FREEon FridaySaturdayand SundayAT CITY PARKING LOT5230 S. Lake Park Ave.(Just North of Walgreen's)Have Your Parking Ticket Stamped ot Theatre Box OfficeNOW PLAYING"NEVER ON SUNDAY"StarringJULES DASSINMELINA MERCOURIBest Actress — Cannes Film FestivalfW] DearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763 atre, Hal Holbrook is returning toChicago with his distinguishedone-man show about America’sbest beloved humorist, MarkTwain. Twelve years of planningand researching went into theshow. It is worth the time and themoney. Call CE 6-2337.William Gibson’s drama of theyoung life of Helen Keller, andher dynamic teacher Annie Sulli¬van opened at the Erlanger the¬atre, 127 N. Clark, last Monday.The Miracle Worker is in Chi¬cago for a lengthy run, but seeit now before the close atmos¬phere of summer and comps sti¬fles creative procrastination. CallST 2-2459 for reservations. .The Fantastieks is still gracingthe South Side, but isn’t stayingmuch longer. This bit of profoundfantasy is a must. Playing at theDel Prado, 53rd and Hyde ParkBlvd., one can call HY 3-9600 fortickets.MusicA three - day Mozart - Schubertextravaganza (May 2-4) is thesixth in a series of eight free con¬certs sponsored by the Free Con¬certs Foundation. To be presentedat the Simpson theatre of the Chi¬cago Natural History museum, the festival will feature such avariety of artists as Leon Fleisherat the piano, Benny Goodman onthe clarinet, and Leslie Parnasson the cello. Variety is the spiceof life . . . Schubert and Mozartare life. Admission is free.Aaron Copeland will be the com¬poser in attendance at the last ina series of concerts by LivingMusic Inc. at the Recital hall ofMcCormick place on May 7 (Twoperformances, 4:30 and 8:15).Copeland’s Nonet for Strings willbe given its Chicago premiere, aswill be the original scoring ofBach’s Sixth Brandenburg Con¬certo, and Rondeaux and Motetsby Machaut. Copeland’s ViolinConcerto will also be featured.Student rates of $2 are in effectfor this concert where the com¬poser will be on hand for explana¬tion and interrogation. Call Hill-crest 6-3751 for information.Poetry ReadingTwo Big Table poetry readingsare on the docket for the first twoweeks of May. On the 1st (Mon¬day), John Logan will be the poeton the spot at Second City, 1842N. Wells, and on the 15th. RobertCreely will emerge in the centerof activity.Special student rate for all performances seven days • weekJimi Qhaw Cashier Your I.D. Card Q>0m m AMJWfc 3-9.50.m MAT If-HOi) M&)'ABACTORi'm amahs enfaZ'RASSeC IU FEOWT Of ACTORS,-in om m moppice!MST CALL AKiC7 eAHcasvkm That hod wawt twoR&emvoM m playwrights1 ft0%m SAH T tOAPT Tk!0'o tw dewMOOICAU Revug,m tmainea* mcAnoom Jat'A PZifFZRWHICH 16 HAW ITS M&i7fee^im at PIAYWM6HT6at mcond city W MAY 9 ffto THAT? 4AMI06 roo MUCH% WRc CASl/AUWHAT If H6 ASft Me SWeOTioiOS7X C0UWT ATAfJP if if A0OX Office 6HCOlQ MTpfeecMAc sofsrio^.IF we Ab<6 HOUOP. ,ham op? mamm,/ ' (—e) rU\r i1 u■ /Tt-s %Call Playwrights far ReservationsTuesday through Thursday fir Sunday: 9:00 PM—$1.75 fir $2.50Friday and Saturday: 8:30 & 11:30 P.M. — $2.50 -$3.50Never a Minimum, Closed Mondoys1846 North Wells, Chicago 14, III.Phone ANdover 3-5150April 28, 1961 • CHICACO MAROON • 15J. P. Donleavy addresses students at ayours" discussion held last week. My life andNSA region meets hereDonleavy links money, art“I very rarely reflect on anything besides money. The only thinking X do on ideals, morals,and issues is how to make them into money,” said J. P. Donleavy, Irish novelist and play,wright, at “My life and yours” last week.Donleavy discussed his writing, his background, his reading habits, other writers, censor¬ship, publishers, the reading public, education, cemeteries, Ireland, England, and the UnitedStates with some 85 undergraduates, surprising many of them with his outspoken views.“My life and yours” is a seriesof informal discussion programs, _ , _ .. ^ ,initiated by Alan Simpson, dean New York said he has never been the young writer to keep writingof the College, to which under- worried about selling his work, rather than read others’ works,graduates are invited to meet with He s always found his writing jje faV0rs frank writing, anddistinguished representatives of ‘‘sort of fascinating reading. Hav- insiders a biography of Jimmvtheir fields. ing held even the first things he s £>urante written by a “hack"'The easiest thing in the world written, Donleavy said he s made wrjter better than most literaryis to make money in writing,” ah those who send him rejection? noveis an(j one 0f the best bookssaid Donleavy. “If you’re original bis ' enemies for life. he's r e a because it “coveredat all, you can make money hand According to Donleavy, a book ground rarely covered by Ameri-j over fist. The only social respon- jts reader gets interested can writers,” who tend to avoidsibility of a writer is to make . . things,money” m *imshes it, and remembers BDonleavy enjoys his work. He it- His definition of a "good book Donleavy doesn’t read m anylikes the idea of putting down on includes Peyton Place," he said. con.SKlors tl'.Bpaper what he feels like and "sort „ . . . .. . nove> ,he„ most worthwhile liter-of laughing at it and then selling . J* ^ the standpoint ofh 6 said, all you have to do is “stay a writer. He reads many pro-The 35-vear-old author of The steady hec*use everyone is going vincial newspapers “that" don’tssjjssftjs ^..what ^ -less upset, even delighted, about print.’The University played hostlast week-end to the Ulinois-Wisconsin region, UnitedStates National student asso¬ciation spring meeting.Over 200 students from approxi¬mately 28 colleges and universi¬ties attended the two-day confer¬ence. The conference consistedlargely of discussion groups andworkshops ending in a legislativeplenary session.The Spring assembly opened onFriday night with a panel debateon fair employment practices leg¬islation. Harry Kalven, professorin UC’s law" school, moderated thepanel with Alderman Holman andLarry Landry, a graduate student,speaking in favor of legislation.C. Keith Rooker, an editor ofthe UC Law Review, and FelixSinger, author, poet, and liber¬tarian, spoke against fair employ¬ment practices legislation.Workshops with education astheir primary aim were held Sat¬urday morning in different class¬rooms in Cobb hall. St. ClairDrake, professor of sociology atRoosevelt university who recent¬ly returned from two years inAfrica served as a source in theinternational affairs workshop.Statements from a Cuban studentand others who had visited Cuba,were delivered at this workshop.Student opinions ranged fromtotal support of Castro to a wishthat the US would forcibly takeover Cuba and keep it as a pro¬tectorate for ten or twenty years.Orientation discussedOther workshops discussed suchdiversified issues as orientationof first year students and thefate of civil liberties in America.Guests included Kermit Eby, so¬cial science; Dean Playe; DeanWatson, dean of Roosevelt; DeanNetherton; and Sister MaryannIda of Mundelein.The afternoon sessions con¬sisted of several legislative work¬shops covering the topics intro¬duced that morning and otheroften discused topics. These work¬shops gave many controversialresolutions to that evening’s plen¬ary session.The session began with themost discussed internal questionin the Illinois-Wisconsin regionof USNSA: amending the consti¬tution to read “we as students ofthe Illinois-Wisconsin Region ofUSNSA” instead of “we the stu¬dents . . Although this might be con¬sidered merely a question of se¬mantics by many people, to oth¬ers it questions the validity ofUSNSA as the representative ofstudents of America. It also, theysay, makes it possible for manyother groups to speak for thestudent movement.Wonderlic wranglesProposers of the change, KayWonderlic of Northwestern be¬ing the most notable, say that thisis more honest, as NSA has noright to speak for schools that arenot members of the Association.They believe that it will be morehonest to speak as students andnot attempt to speak for all thestudents that they can’t possiblerepresent.After a lengthy battle thisclause of the constitution was notchanged. Minor constitutionalchanges included the removal ofa requirement that one of the ex¬ecutive officers of the regionmust come from each state.An attempt was made to reversethe last decision of the region tosupport the abolition of theHouse committee on un-Americanactivities in its present form. Al¬though this had passed in com¬mittee, it was defeated on thefloor.Both a minority report, critical¬ly supporting American interven¬tion in Cuba, and a majority re¬ port, condemning the UnitedStates for its role in the invasionbut not mentioning Castro, weretabled and not discussed by thebody.Mike Neff of the University ofIllinois was elected as chairmanof the region and Marcia Kirkpat¬rick of the University of Wiscon¬sin was elected executive vice-chairman. Although these candi¬dates ran unopposed, Kathy Stew¬art of Rosary college refused toallow unanimous consent and ina roll-call vote Rosary, North¬western, and other schools ab¬stained from voting.As the evening gave way tothe late hours, delegates of the“Northwestern faction,” so calledbecause they seem to get theirpolitical leadership and innovationfrom Miss Wonderlic and theNorthwestern delegation, keptleaving the hall, one remainingbehind to call a quorum. Severaldelegates would go outside to askeverybody to come in only to haveseveral people wearing blue dele¬gates badges continue to standoutside.When the quorum counts weresuccessful they would return tothe hall and comment on thetime that was being wasted andthe late hour. The main argu¬ments were that it was merelya rump assembly and that it wastoo late for anybody to thinkstraight. failure. They worship you.To be successful, Donleavy feelsa writer must commercialize hiswork, something the “beat” gen¬eration has done. He also feelsa writer must auction his work—that is, have publishers fight andbid for it. (Donleavy now hasmany publishers fighting for Sof his novels.)Donleavy, who considers him¬self “nearly illiterate,” advises As for Shakespeare, Donleavysaid that there was one line he senjoyed immensely: “Out, out,brief candle.” Donleavy also likesthe simplicity of Russian narra-tive and the wonderful grip onthe English language that JohnGalsworthy has.A college education, accordingto Donleavy, is good because itmeans the student can postponeworking.PAUL’S HARDWARE & PAINT SUPPLYHyde Park9* Laryesi Hardware StoreSTUDENT DISCOUNT906 E. 55th Ml 3-9754A SUN LIFE POLICY FOR EVERY NEEDFOR YOUAND YOUR FAMILY...The Income Endowment plan guarantees life in¬surance protection if you die within a specifiednumber of years. If you lire, the endowmentbenefit falls due on the maturity date; you cantake the funds in cash or ae income for life.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LaSalle Chicago, III.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-6800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADANAKED NIGHTDirected by lngemor Bergman**. . . A study in humiliation tind sadism. In this film, Bergman takes along sustained look at the darkest side of the human personality. The plotdevelopment includes scenes of hysteria, eroticism, nudity, and is oftenreminiscent of the masochistic German school of the 1920's."John Giliettin, a Program far theLondon National Film TheatreTonight at 8 and 10 p.m. B-J Cinema 50<Next FridayAlfred Hitchcock'*THIRTY NINESTEPS I mmfrom our University ShopCOOL WASH A WEAR SUITSmode on our exclusive modelsThese good-looking, practical suits willserve you well for school now...for travel,tin Summer. Included are:.Dacron* Polyester and Cotton Poplins mTan, Olive or Dark Olive, $45Dacron9 Polyester and Cotton Cord Suits, $40Dacron* Polyester and Orion* Acrylic Suitsht Hairlines and Glenurquhart Plaids, $47.50ISTA8USHSD181*S$cns f'umisliiugsjfats echoes7t E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVB, CHICAGOjtli%NEW TORJC ► BOSTON J_mTS8y RC H.2. IAN f RAN CISCO AhO*O CHICAGO MAROON O April 28, 1961- ■ ■■ ■■■■■’"1