Student Government names 4 to SFACFour judges were elected tothe Student-Faculty-Adminis-traction court (SFAC) lastnight in a stormy StudentGovernment meeting featur¬ing frequent recesses for poli¬tical maneuvering,vElected to two year terms onthe court were graduate studentsSteve Sachs and William Good¬man. Chosen to fill one year termswere law students Fred Cohn andJohn Br ooks. Law student MichaelVVolfson, serving his second yearof a two year term, was electedchief justice of the court.Sachs, Goodman and Cohn hadbeen nominated by POLIT,majority party in SC., to fill thetour vacancies on the court. Brooks was backed by the Practi¬cal Reform organization, withCollege student Warren Siegalsupported by the Independent Re¬form party.Election of Sachs and Goodmanwent smoothly, both being chosenunanimously. However, dissentionarose when the one year termswere discussed.Bargain cancelledPOLIT had promised PRO thatit - would back Brooks if PROwould back Cohn. PRO refused,and, after the first ballot, Brookshad received tf»e fewest “aye’*votes. Under the SG by-laws hisname was dropped, and the con¬test was between Cohn and Siegel.Although a majority voted forCohn he failed to receive the two- thirds vote required for election.A five minute recess was voted,during which PRO and POLITleaders conferred. After the re¬cess political squabbling continueduntil both Cohn and Brooks wereelected.Wolfson was chosen quicklychief justice by a majority vote.He defeated Sachs, who wasbacked by PRO and IRP. Wolfsonreceived POLIT support.The SFAC is composed of sixstudents, two faculty representa¬tives, and a representative ofthe administration. Current stu¬dent members are Wolfson andPeter Brownstone, a graduatestudent in political science.Donald Meiklejohn, professor ofphilosophy in the College andVol. 70 — No. 10 University of Chicago, October 25, 1961 31Welty analyzes fiction Harry Kalven, professor of law,currently serve as faculty mem¬bers of the court. No administra¬tion member has yet been ap¬pointed to succeed _Ruth O.McCarn, former assistant dean ofstudents, who left the Universitylast summer.The SFAC handles all disputesbetween students and studentorganizations, disputes arising outof the provision of the SG con¬stitution, and disagreements con¬cerning the Student Bill ofRights.The court became enmeshed ina lively controversy-last year whenit ruled that the newly establishedresidence requirement of fouryears for women and two yearsfor men violated the Student Billof Rights. Dean of students JohnP. Netherton at that time ruledthat the court had no jurisdictionin the matter, and refused toaccept the court’s decision asbinding.'Courf influential'Describing the court, ,SG presi¬dent Leonard Friedman stated,“The court is one of the most in¬fluential bodies in the University.Through its decisions it is able toprotect the rights of the student,vis a vis both the administrationand student organizations, asthese rights are guaranteed. Des¬pite the fact that the court’s de¬cisions in particular cases havenot been approved by the adminis¬tration. in several instances it hasbeen able to set a good deal of policy. The court in many in¬stances has been able to affecta cooling of what would otherwisehave been violent emotions, en¬abling those concerned to viewmatters more rationally.”In other SG action, Friedmanlaunched a violent attack on thepolicies of IRP. Handing the chairover to vice-president DavidLevey, he stated, “IRP endeavorsto attain the image which theynow hold of government, that ofirresponsibility and a propensityfor fun and games. The motionswhich they have introduced in. this assembly have been consis¬tently irresponsible, and, had theybeen passed by this body, wouldhave reflected badly on the en¬tire government.”One motion was passed at themeeting, which was attended bysome thirty assembly members.The motion called for an investi¬gation and report, by SG’s campusaction committee, of UC’s recentlyannounced $300 raise in tuition.The chairman of the committeeis mandated to meet with the ad¬ministration to attempt to dis¬cover some of the reasoning be¬hind the increase.The motion replaced one spon¬sored by IRP asking for a letterwriting campaign, to be sponsoredby SG, which would encouragestudents to write letters of“abomination and castigation”concerning the increase. Called“another example of IRP’S irres¬ponsibility” by POLIT leaders, themotion failed by a substantialmargain.Eudora Welty, distin-g u i s h e d American novelistand short story writer, spokeon “Learning- to write fiction”last night at Mandel hall.Miss Welly’s talk was this year'sfirst William Vaughn Moody lec¬ture. Some 800 people attended.In her speech, Miss Welty dis¬cussed the various parts of a workof fiction in an effort to pinpointits most essential characteristics.The distinctness of any givenwork is due to its theme, which theauthor “can choose, but not_ helpchoosing,” its point of view, whichshould transcend the personal, themeans by which the work is iftadeobjective,” she said.She also stated that the overallform of the w’ork should suggestsome pattern of life inherent inthe work. “This,” she felt, “cando the greatest thing—it maymove you.”'Learn by doing'From her own experience inwriting, she has concluded that“each story opens up a new pros¬pect, a now seUof problems.” Sheadded that ^learning by doing isthe only waV~to write.”—^«iif-piiccinfl _ny>m»Aii<T7i -1n fic¬tion, Miss Welty was critical ofthose who hunt symbols not or¬ganically contained in a work.Adding a humorous note, shesaid “One way of looking at Moby•>i< k is that the symbol was so bigand strenuous that he had to bea whale.”Stressing the permanence of a,work of fiction and the dynamicand changing relationship betweenthe readers and the paths of thewriter, she said, “The presenttense should be used in tellingwhat w'e are doing and nearly allthat we know about it.”Following her lecture, Miss Wel¬ty read two of her short stories,“The P e't r i f i e d M a n,” and“Search.”Since her first collection of sto¬ries, A Curtain of Green, ap¬peared in 1941, Miss Welty hasbeen recognized as a highly origi¬nal and distinguished contempo¬rary American writer. She haspublished two other collectionsand four novels.A dramatization of her novel,The Ponder Heart, was success¬fully sfaged on Broadway in 1956.Miss Welty has received numer¬ous literary awards. Among theseire a $1000 fiction award from theAmerican Academy of Arts andLetters [1944] and the Wililam1'ean Howells medal in American fiction. This last honor, which shereceived in 1955, is given onlyonce a decade.Eudora Welty was born in Jack-son, Mississippi. Appearing herein the 1956 Moody lecture series,she explained the Southern influ¬ence upon her work. Miss Weltystated:“It seems plain that the artthat speaks most clearly, explicit¬ly, directly, and passionately fromits place of origin will remain thelongest understood.”She added, ‘The challenge ofwriters today, I think, is not todisown any part of our heritage.Whatever our place, it has beenvisited by the stranger, it willnever be new again. It is only thevision which can be new; but thatis enough.”The Moody lecture series was founded in 1917 in honor of Wil¬liam Vaughn Moody, 19th centuryAmerican poet and a member ofthe University of Chicago Englishfaculty from 1895 to 1907.In the past, the series has pre¬sented W. B. Yeats, MarianneMoore, Igor Stravinsky, and RalphVaughn Williams. Last year, An¬gus Wilson, Leon Kirchner, J. P.Donleavy, and Kenneth Burke ap¬peared.Tonight, Miss Welty will meetwith some 100 undergraduates atthis year’s second “My Life andYours” program.[My Life and Yours is a seriesof informal discussions foundedthree years ago by Alan Simpson,dean of the College, at which un¬dergraduates are given the oppor-tuinty to meet with distinguishedmembers of various fields.] Students unite to aidN. Carolina NegroesStudents from the University of Chicago, and North¬western and Roosevelt universities organized a city-widecommittee here Monday night to raise money for Negroes inMonroe County, North Carolina. Myron Brown and RobertaBruce, a Roosevelt student, wereelected its officers.A1 Hunter, a former U.C. stu¬dent representing the nation-wideorganization of which the commit¬tee is a part and which wascreated last August in New YorkCity, familiarized the group withthe committee’s purposes.According to Hunter, the com-Review new criminal codeRecent extensive changesin the criminal code of thestate of Illinois were exploredyesterday at an all-day con¬ference sponsored by the Univer¬sity of Chicago law school.Under the revised criminal code,the power to sentence offendershas been removed from the juryand vested in the judge in all casesexcept those involving the deathpenalty.Formerly the jury could estab¬lish the sentence in the five mostimportant felonies. This revisionbrings Illinois law into agreementwith that of most other states inthis respect.The revised code has also elimi¬nated common law crime andmodified the definition of legal in¬sanity.Punishments equalizedThe law governing gambling liasbeen strengthened and the punish¬ments for all forms of theft havebeen eqqalized. “In the new code,we have taken into considerationthe fact that deprivation by fraudor deception is just as serious asother forms of theft. All forms oftheft have been brought under onesection and the penalties equal¬ized.” said Francis A. Allen, pro¬fessor of law, a member of thecommittee that drafted the code.Speakers at yesterday’s confer¬ence discussed the various aspectsof the code in detail, as well as itssignificance in the context of ageneral trend toward criminal lawrevision. Allen, who was* in charge of theconference, said that the revisionof the Illinois code was of someimport in the national picture, asevidenced by the attendance at theconference of persons currently in¬volved in revising the criminalcodes of New York and otherstates.Speakers at the morning sessionwere Allen, Frank J. Remington,professor of law, University ofWisconsin; and Morris J. Wexler,secretary, Joint Bar association committee to revise the Illinoiscriminal code.Herbert Wechsler, professoY oflaw, Columbia University, spoke atthe luncheon session.Speakers at the afternoon ses¬sion were Judge Richard B. Austinof the U. S. district court, andCharles H. Bowman, professor oflaw, University of Illinois.The concluding lecture wasgiven by Norva’ Morris, professorand dean of the faculty of law,University of Adelaide, Australia.!Bruce Stark left presides over yesterday's meeting ofUC's NAACP meeting. Listening is Bob Brown, a mem¬ber of the group. mittee will raise funds for thedefense of Robert Williams andsend food and clothing to Monroe,North Carolina, Negroes. Thefunds to be collected are to goto Conrad Linn, Williams’ defenselawyer and a prominent civil rightsattorney.Williams, a past civil rightsfighter, has been under indict¬ment in Monroe for attemptedkidnapping in a civil rights dis¬pute, and has fled to Cuba, wherehe is now taking refuge. Soonafter his indictment, Negroes inMonroe county were denied reliefand state aid.The committee’s work involvesthe result of a freedom rider’strip through Monroe last summer. /Upon the arrest of many of the<~participants, the outraged Negro/community attempted to attack ar'7white couple passing through the /area.. iAids white co^pleThe pair was rushed to Williams’house where he took them insideto protect them. Then, calling theMonroe police, Williams warnedthat the couple’s lives were indanger unless the freedom riderswere released.__Ih£_palice-wet*e-s&nt out to TTeTffthe couple and pick up Williams,but found that he had already fled.Williams was charged with kid¬napping.During the meeting, the involve¬ment of the University of Chi¬cago’s branch of the National as¬sociation for the advancement ofcolored people [NAACP] and pos¬sible future action were discussed.Yesterday the social action com¬mittee of the local chapter of theNAACP decided that it could makeno future plans without furtherinformation about the new group.So far, very little is known of tliecommittee’s sponsors.The Social action committee iscontacting the Committee onracial equality, Student nonviol¬ence coordinating committee, andNAACP headquarters requestingfurther information.EditorialTables turned on Buckley Letters6Why do frats exist?’National Review editor Wil¬liam F. Buckley’s plaint thathe and his magazine are beingdiscriminated against on theHunter college campus soundscurious to us. Buckley has oftenproclaimed that it is the businessof a free nation's colleges to de¬termine what is right, and toteach that and only that, fuzzy-minded notions about academicfreedom to the contrary notwith¬standing.VThe letter which appears onthis page attacking the Maroon’seditorial stand on the cancella¬tion of a Communist party offi¬cial's lecture at Queen's collegestands as a monument to the ab¬surdity of the position whichholds that academic freedom isthe duty of the teacher—and ofall teachers—to propagandize theone and Righteous Word to theexclusion of all contradictoryWords.There is no excuse for Huntercollege’s timidity in refusingBuckley an appearance on cam¬pus. We say here with Holmes,Brandeis, Black and Douglas thathowever “abhorrent” a man’sideas, the surest way to dispeltheir influence is to give themthe widest currency possible.Should anyone doubt the validity of this, we merely point to therevolting spectacle which Buckleymade of himself this summerwhenhe told a Ceylonese studentthat he (Buckley) was speakingin over-simplistic terms because“I wanted to make sure youwould understand me.”We view the Hunter incidentwith the same scorn and distastewith which we attacked theQueens college no-politics rule.Academic freedom is not free¬dom for one or some limited num¬ber of political and intellectualideas; it is the freedom of stu-Dear Sir, _ *The president of Queens col¬lege was correct in preventing thesecretary of the United Stateskeeping with the position taken bythe Mayor of the City of New Yorkin preventing the head of theAmerican Nazi party from holdinga public rally in the city. In con¬demning the Queens college of¬ficial the Maroon editors seem tobelieve that every “political” posi- dents and teachers to examinecritically all ideas with some pre-tension to intellectual signifi¬cance. Without true academicfreedom we are no longer justi¬fied in calling ourselves teachersand students: to deny anyone theright to express or to hear politi¬cal opinions is to deny the powerof education.It is perhaps too much to hopelion has a right to be heard. Justas a food processor does not havethe right to put any chemical hechooses into his product, we shouldThe Communists use all meansincluding deception to forwardtheir aims. Why should studentsbe exposed to a clever and in¬genious propagandist of ourwould-be destroyers? There werenot a few brilliant people con¬vinced of a Communist conversionafter Geneva — only to see Red Dear Sir:Mr. Rosenfield, of Zeta, Beta,and l’au, Inc., wrote a most en¬lightening lettej to the Maroonlast week. I was relieved to readthat there is a justification for theexistence of fraternities.However, if, as Mr. Rosenfieldinsists, fraternities exist only forthe purpose of teaching [enabling,if you prefer! a group of im¬mature males to live [i.e. drink,play, and work! together whiletanks rape Hungary. Are collegestudents more immune to Com¬munist propaganda?It is ironic that the Maroon, thevery publication which seems tohave room only for a single polici-cal view — whose editors seemmore interested in forwardingtheir own political opinion than inpresenting material on which stu¬dents can base judgments—shouldbe excited because a “political”position is not being heard.Sincerely,Frank Grabarits nities exist at schools which do notmaintain fraternity houses. [Theremust be some non-nesidential cokleges in the country],Dartmouth college boys run asummer lodge in New England;obviously they epitomize the ido®i 'fraternity. How can they existwithout belonging to a nationalgroup? They need brothel's Ibig,preferably]. How can they co.'exist with groups at commuterschools -v- groups without houses,groups which are lucky to havetheir own room in a student unionbuilding — groups which taint thereputalion of the fraternity in itselement.If these non-resident ial frater¬nities exist, I would suspect that'there is a better reason for thefraternity system. I hope Mr.Rosenfield can come up with itbefore rushing is over.Curious BystanderLetter PolicyAll letters intended for pub¬lication must include the nameand address of the writer, ■although names will be with¬held on request.Letters should be typed onthe side of the paper only,with double spacing and 20-80margins.All letters over 250 wordsare subject to editing.that Buckley has learned a lesson participating ir. a do-it-yourself,from the actions of Hunter col- lets-play-house, being-responsible-lege. It is the supreme lesson of is fun game that involves payingcivil liberties: the tables can al- their own bills and hiring cooksways be turned. and housemothers, why do frater-Queens speaker ban laudednot permit speakers who are work-Communist party from speaking ing for the destruction of freedomon his campus. His action is in to have access to our colleges.What mates Artcarved Diamonds thefavorite of America’s College Queens?Actually there are many reasons. Artcarved diamond ringsmust meet traditionally high standards for color, cut, clarityand carat weight. Their award-winning styles are a delightto the eye. And, they take all of the guesswork out of buyinga diamond. Every Artcarved ring carries a written guaranteefor quality and permanent value that’s recognized and re¬spected by fine jewelers from coast to coast. We think you’llagree with America’s lovely College Queens.Stop in at your jeweler and be sure to see all the exquisiteArtcarved diamond rings—the rings you buy with confidence•and wear with pride.NATIONALLY ADVERTISED INAMERICA’S LEADING MAGAZINES^A.r1:c surged®DIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGSJ. R. Wood &. Sons, Inc., Dept. CP-21216 E. 45th St., New York 17, N. Y.Please send me more facts about diamond rings and"Wedding Guide for Bride and Groom." Also nameof nearest (or hometown) Artcarved Jeweler. I amenclosing 101 to cover handling and postage.NameAddressCity County or 2oneState _ Haller replies on DC methodsThe recent Maroon criticism ofthe committee on undergraduatediscipline merits reply, particularlysince otherwise students might planations presented by thestudent. Clearly confrontation,prosecutors, and defenders areirrelevant. arbitrariness is simply not so. [Wc-'will pass over the fact that thischarge is not especially compli¬mentary lo the other six facultycome to share the Maroon’s ratherstrange and inaccurate under¬standing ol how the committeeoperates. No member of the com¬mittee may properly discuss aspecific case, so turn instead toyour cirticisms of the committee’sgeneral procedures and your pro¬posed improvements. The pro¬posals can be divided into twogroups: those that are already ineffect and those that are probablyimpractical.i First, the editorial claims thatpenalties for violations of rulesshould be uniform. This is self-evident and is the major reasonfor having a permanent commit¬tee. In its decisions the committeeis very conscious of its previousdecision; and the Maroon’s chargethat the committee makes vary¬ing decisions in similar cases issimple fantasy.Also, the Maroon urges thatthere be a method of appeal fromcommittee decisions and claimsthat the committee is both origi¬nal and appellate “court” in allcases. This is, of course, not true.Appeal from the committee’s de¬cisions may be made to JohnNetherton, dean of students, andultimately to the president’soffice. In addition, the committeeitself serves as an appeal boardfor students when students feelthey have been unfairly discip¬lined by a dean or by the housingstaff for violations of social regu¬lations.Further, the Maroon advocatesthat the student be able to con¬front witnesses against him andeven advocates prosecuting anddefense attorneys. Perhaps abrief explanation of committeeprocedures will make clear whysuch a suggestion unrealistic.Students may be referred tothe committee by faculty, campuspolice, or the housing office forviolations of regulations. But be¬fore a student actually comes be¬fore the committee, the chairman[Dean Playe] must be convincedthat the violation is serious andthat the facts are clear. Thus, inmost cases in which there isdoubt about facts, the studentwill not even be acted against. Innearly every case that actuallycomes before the committee, theonly witness is the student him¬self, and the committee acts onthe basis only of facts and ex- In those few cases in whichthere is doubt about the facls[perhaps once per yearj, thecommitf&e carefully cross exam¬ines witnesses and then explainsto the student the allegations ithas received and the sources ofthe allegations. [Contrary to theMaroon, there are no unrevealedwitnesses]. The student is en¬couraged to comment in full onthe testimony. No additional pur¬pose, except cieat ion of hardfeelings, could be served by actualconfrontation. In the final analysisthe committee must make its de¬cision on the basis of that evidencewhich seems established beyondreasonable doubt.The final proposal by theMaroon is that students havesome part in the committee’s de¬cisions. Such a proposal is prob¬ably negotiable. My own experi¬ence, however, is that most stu¬dents do not wish to have a partin disciplining their fellow stu¬dents and do not wish to be dis¬ciplined by them.Another portion of 1he Marooneditorial requires comment. Isuppose that students regarddeans, by nature of their jobs, tobe fair game for criticism. Butthe Maroon’s charge that GeorgePlaye, dean of undergraduate stu¬dents, is arbitrary and that thecommittee is a reflection of hisEast houseDea" Mr. Newman,The residents of East housewould like to make a formal pub¬lic apology for a sin which wehave all committed. We promisethat we will hereby stop using theelectric shaver outlets now in the ^embers on the committee]. Alterserving with Dean Playe on thecommittee for two years, I cansay that I know of no one with agreater regard for fair proceduresand a greater concern to avoidinjustice to^ students. Indeed,Dean Playe was the one whooriginally established a standingcommittee on undergraduate dis¬cipline because he recognized thainjustice that might otherwiseresult; and he therefore desired a ,committee that would developuniform penalties and would actonly after a full hearing and fuJ/discussion. The Maroon to thecontrary notwithstanding, theprimary purpose of the committeeis fairness to students.Finally, all discussions or dis¬ciplinary matters should conclude1on one note: that disciplinarymatters are not a significant partof life at the University of Chica¬go. The committee hears only ?handful of cases each year, and inmost cases imposes only a lightpenalty or no penalty at all. Theplain fact is that Chicago studentsare treated with a good deal Itrust because they demonstratethat they are, in fact, trustworthy.Mark H. Hallerassistant professorof historyapologizesbathroo*ns which have been re-1*cently installed, but even morerecently been omitted from th4house improvements. Thank You.Barry Runbackcorresponding secretoryEast House CouncilEditor-in-chiefJay GreenbergBusiness manager Advertising managerRaymond Mitchell Ken HeylManaging EditorAvima Ruder2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 25. 1961MSport NewsIntramural leaders viein fraternity league UN 'must remain dynamicPsi Upsilon was favored in yes¬terday’s game against Phi KappaPsi as the unbeaten teams clashin the farternity football league.I.ast week Psi Upsilon crushedZeta Beta Tau 33 to 2, while PhiKappa Psi squeezed by Delta Up¬silon 19 to 13. Matched in thecontest will be leading scorersPearson of Psi Upsilon and Mc¬Kenzie of Phi Kappa Psi. They Chamberlin, 19; East T, 0.Vincent* 6 ; Thompson Southwest-, 9.East III, 24; Shorey Southwest, 6.Divisional LeagueLauglln House, 7; CTS, 0.Res Ipsas, 7; Jacks, 7.Business School J, 27;School II, 13.Midway Monsters, 6; Fine ArtsQuintet, 0.Mudders over the Academy by 9forfeit. by Ken Pierce of time” has been replaced by a disturbance detected in SwedenSpecial to the Maroon picture of a continent marked by Monday was in fact caused by aBOSTON, Oct. 24—A dra- Soviet m,"™r b”mb’niatic defense of the United disintegration.” Stating that his nation did notNation’s role as an agency for Herskovits stressed that neither rec08nize llre division of ,he worWinternational action was pre- of these extreme views is correct. into Eastern and Western blocks,sented here today, on the 16th an- “No one can question the force Wachuku said that he is againstBunin*** niversary of the UN. of the African drive to achieve “inhuman atomic testing no mat-Robert K. A Gardiner, UN di- economic betterment through ter who conducts it. It’is to ourrector of public administration, technological advancement ...said the UN must remain “a neu- Yet . . . the rise of cities, the ad- m'n jn*cies^ to Prcvent the twen-tral, dynamic instrument for ac- justment of the worker from a tieth century powers from com-tion at the international level,” seasonal to a daily schedule of la- mitting the suicide of the humanbecause both large and small na- bor, housing and migraiton” are race.’*Harriers meet WrightThe cross country “B” team tions will continue to need such an among the many problems of Afri-are tied for second place with 12 went into action this afternoon in instrument. cans unknown in the US.”Son beads'’ the^ndividu^soirers WashinK<1J)n Par^ against Wright Gardiner was addressing the Herskovits listed three reasons... -.0 no;.,*,, junior college at 4 pm. Ted Havdon 1600 delegates attending a meet- tending towards increased accura-W1 P° sent ton, Gene Gar- ing of the US commission for cy >n the US image of Africa'The nirturr was much Ihe same ~, ~ ' commission lor 1,1 vjo mmgc uiin ’’R" leapue IJnheafen Psi I?1; Goldsto"e. Fred UNESCO [United Nations Educa- * The growing number of Afir-'by Kil RaWneras,e"as7ckef"Bm E&mT** ^scoring leader Steve Holland, who Scott> Don williams, Mike Jacob-has accumulated 27 points, tookon winless Tufts North “B” [0-21.Get set for a game scoring rec-*ord in this one.The games called off last Thurs- son, and Tony Preto into the race The Africar) horn official was • The initiation of African areaIn a triangular meet in Mil- Crit.ical of some policies of the study programs in American uni-waukee Saturday, the harriers African nations in the UN. versities;picked up a tie and their second said> “Since many of the new • The dramatic dying of colo-win. They edged Marquette nati°ns have had no responsibili- nialism, which has increased USday will be played on a future 29-30 and tied Wisconsin of Mil- ties> bas been fashionable for interest in Africa.The official ruling on waukee 28-28. Fred Kurz led !hem to be on the critical side. Karlier. .Nieeria’s minister ofSaturday.game postponement is made at Maroon runners in 16:15, followed pnt now, they are finding some fore|gn affairs, Jaja Wachuku, told3 pm on the day oi the game. by pat Palmer, Hal Lieberman, to correct on their own side reporters that he condemned theThe all-University golf tourna- Bill Sco1t and John Bolton.ment was played on a cool, damp as well.’ Russian explosion of a 50 megatoncourse last weekend. With abouthalf the scores in, and beforehandicapping, the loaders are :Norm SnncR, Shorey South ....77Have Hume, East III ..S3C. Keithiihn, Beta Thetas ....85JoePlagued by Soccer team travelsThe Maroon soccer team meets in international action which Mrpowerful Wheaton this afternoon Hammarskjold started.Keithahn Beta Thetas 85 ^ Chicago IS 1-2, ^ js ^ a fighting army>Younr-Tun.1.* North*". .V.V.ll ?Lhlle the Crusaders, with their but a peBee army. The fateagued by unseasonable ->a man squad, sport a 5-3-1 record. Hammarskjold refused to armweather, the tennis tournament Saturday coach Ron Wangerms troops properly for fighting.”will be moved indoors on Wednes- el?ven re1urn to s,agg fie,d> andday and Thursday. Tournament *ry stoP **ie Washingtonplayers may make reservations at o1 ^t. Louis Bears,the intramural office. The Soccer team lost to theSquash players--An all-Univer- Pui-due Soccer club, 6-0, Sunday,sity squash tourney Js being on the Co-Rec field in West La-planned for early November. The fayecte, Indiana. The Maroon de¬game, popular among graduate fen.se tightened after the first Boil- Gardiner, the 1600 delegatesstudents and faculty members, ermaker goal in the middle of the hear<l Melville J. Herskovits, direc-will be played with a handicap f|rst quarter and parried the Pur- *°r of Northwestern university’sdue attack until late in the second African studies program, urge theperiod when the Purple hooters *to change its image of Africa’sscored on a corner kick. Purdue nationsscored once more in the third Herskovits told the delegatesquarter and thrice in the final that “‘our earlier image of somno-Per*°d- lent Africa drowsing in the mistsGardiner called for world under- atomic bomb, if the seismographicstanding of “the great experiment Jaja Wachuku, Nigerianminister of foreign affairs,addresses the UN confer¬ence.Gardiner said that UN directaction in Egypt, in Tunisia and inthe Congo had attempted to “letthe people involved make up theirown minds.”In addition to the speech by THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITORAN INTERNATIONAL DAILY NEWSPAPERComes from Boston by air deliveryond is available otUNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE5802 SOUTH ELLIS AVENUEondWOODWORTH'S BOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57Hi STREETsystem.INTRAMURAL FOOTBALLSCORESCollege House Red LeagueH> ndbrson Southwest, 30; TuftsSouthwest 0.Classified AdsFor Rent tractively appointed. Month to monthoccupancy 380 and up. Elevator, fire¬proof building. Manager on premises.Your HOME AWAY FROM HOME6040 Ingle.ide AvenueA well maintained building catering toUniversity students. One and two roomsfurnished from $38.50 monthly. Cleanand comfortable. See resident manager,Mrs. Leo Tapia or Call: BU 8-2757. Furnished Room. Rent can be made upin night time babysitting. Drexel and57th. Female only. Kitchen privileges.Call after 6. MU 4-79067. dence-—8:40 Belden (2300 North), Funand refreshments for alumni, parents andthose interested in participating in theexpirement. — RSVP to the Experimentoffice by Friday. — DE 7-5403.Sewing, alterations, hems.Call: BU 8-6001.For Sale & Wanted Who says Max isn’t coming?Chatam Park Village Apartments(1 and 2 bedrooms—8 to 5 rooms)$103 to $142 per monthApplications being processed for wellqualified prospective tenants. Convenientto U. of Chicago and Skyway. Idealfor graduate students. Modern all-eteetric kitchens, 24 hour heat, 63 FIRE¬PROOFED BUILDINGS, PRIVATELYPOLICED. Ample street parking or gar¬ages. Close to shopping and transpor¬tation; park-like with suburban atmos¬phere. Model apartment.737 E. 83rd PI. TRiangle 4-7400 For Sale—'58 Anglia (English Ford),R. & H. OR 6-2915, after 5 p.m.Wanted — College girl two morningsweekly for babysitting. HY 3-3349.Announcement & ServicesExperiment in International Living, An¬nual Halloween Homecoming GatheringSunday, Oct. 29, 6:30 at Zartman’s resi- BOB NELSON MOTORSIMPORT SERVICESPECIALISTSHAS“DAVE” MURRAYSERVICECreiger Manor1 V-i to three room furnished apartmentsnicely appointed. Elevator building.Quick access to university via publictransportation. Mgr. on premises. Call;PL 2-9327. SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORM1542 EAST 57th STREETOpen Tuesday through Saturday. 1 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.Furnished ApartmentsShoreline Apartments, 5135 Kenwood Av.Offers on to 3\4s efficiency units at-REMEMBER:for service,foreign carhospital Second yccLT ond transfer studentsare invited to theAlpha Delta Phi smoker7:30 pm Wednesday, October 255747 University Avenue from our University ShopOUR GOOD-LOOKING SUITSstyled by us, in sizes 35 to 42Our University suits are cut on Brookstraditional models in a range of attractivematerials including unfinished worsteds,Worsted flannels and worsted cheviots.The distinctive colorings include black-olive, black-brown and unusual olives..*$nd greys, browns and navy. $65 to $80Jllso Tweed Sport Jackets, $50Topcoats, jrotn $80established ibidBring In Your Negatives In Color Or BlackAnd White For Christmas Cards And FoldersCHECK OUR PRICES AT THE PHOTO COUNTERUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE vmEven's furnishings, flats74 E, MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, Jl£>NEW YORK * BOSTON • PITTSBURGH ♦ $AN FRANCISCO \ LQ3 ANCtLtS5802 ELLIS AVENUEOct. 25,1941 • CHICAGO MAROON •T' ' 9 vHunter bars Buckley ‘Tropic’ sale stoppedThe National Review hasbeen prohibited from conduct¬ing forums at Hunter collegein New York. Editor WilliamF. Buckley, Jr. charged last weekthat the ban constituted discrimi¬nation against the Review.The ban was based on a policytoward outside organizationsadopted on June 7 by the Huntercollege administrative committee.The new policy prohibits groupsthat sponsor particular points ofview from using college facilities.Buckley claims he has been en¬joined from using Hunter hallssince January. He then receiveda letter from Fritz M. Marx, deanof the college, stating the Reviewwas “a political group represent¬ing a distinct point of view of itsown.”“The Review,” Buckley contend¬ed, “is not a political organization,and any ruling to that effect isarbitrary and discriminatory.”Hunter has received severalthousand dollars in payment foruse of its halls, said Buckley.“One would think Hunter wouldreceive this money gladly and gobuy some books with it in placeof pursuing a vendetta againstconservatives,” he added.In a contradictory statement inthe Michigan Daily, Buckley said,“We are told that the modernuniversity is supposed to be neu¬tral on all issues discussed in itshalls. The aim of education, how¬ ever, is to produce right conductin the individual at the expense ofsome points of view. If the uni¬versity takes nop osition, it says ithas no idea of what good conductit.” And furthermore “they areclaiming they will never knowwhat good conduct is.”In accordance with their newpolicy statement Hunter officialsexplained they will allow pro¬grams of outside organizations tobe voiced in their halls “insofaras these are determined to becompatible with the aims of Hun¬ter college as a public institutionof higher learning. Tropic of Cancer, a novel byHenry Miller, has been la¬belled smut, and has beenbanned by Chicago and tensuburbs. As a result of this twosuits have been filed against thepolice chiefs -one to enjoin con¬fiscation, the other to collect dam¬ages.The first suit was filed on Oc¬tober 16 by a group of North¬western University professors ledby Professor of Speech FrankHaiman. and Isabel Condit, ahousewife in Morton Grove. Thesecond suit was brought by a pub-Today's EventsWednesday, 25 OctoberFederal tax conference, 9 am, Pruden¬tial building.Study-conference of higb school teach¬ers of Russian, 12 noon, Universityhigh school, room 109.Lecture, “Growth through a positiveapproach to diversification,” 1:30 pm,business east 103.Study-discussion, “Basic Judiasm,’’ 4:30pm. Hillel foundation.Episcopal evensong, 5:05 pm, Bondchapel.Student Forensic association, 7 pm. IdaNoyes theater. Discussion of resolved:That laTior organizations should betinder the jurisdiction of anti-trustlegislation.Lecture-discussion, “The Biblical poet'sview of man,” Stanley Gevirtz. deirt.of oriental languages and civilizations.7 pm, Hillel foundation. Porter graduate fellowship, “Protest-ant-iM'oletarian encounter in Europe, '7:30 pm. Chapel house.Fraternity rush smokers, 7 :3rt pm. DeltaUpsilon and Alpha Delta Phi.Lecture. 7:10 pm, Protestant-proletarianencounter in Europe; Howard Schomer,president, Chicago theological semin-I ary: Chapel house, 5810 Woodlawn.Gargoyle club, 8 j>m, Ida Noyes hall;selection of campus cheers and cheer¬leaders.Nuclear medicine lecture, “Irradiationof mice and men,” 8 pm, BillingsPI 17.Israeli folk dance, 8:15 pm, Hillel foun¬dation. lisher and claims $300,000 dam¬ages.Tropic of Cancer was written inthe 1930's and was originally pub¬lished in France by the Shakes¬peare and company publishers.The book was banned by theUnited States post office, but aftercareful study of the matter theban was removed.Grove press, publishers of D.H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterly’sLover, said that they felt thatsince this book had been received“with little incident” it would beeasy to publish Miller’s novel.(■rove has published the hard¬bound volume selling at $7.50 forsome .time .without .opposition.Only since the recent release ofthe paper back edition has Groveencountered resistance.On October 10 police from DesPlanes and Glencoe raided storesin their respective cities, confiscat¬ing 120 copies of the book. InMaywood, Robert Ar-Penny of 306South Third street was arrestedunder Maywood's “anti-smut or¬dinance.”For the next several days theaction of police in these and othernorthern suburbs drew consider¬able attention and on October 13Richard Daley, mayor of Chicago,WUCB GuideWednesday, October 257 pm.—Vivaldi, Concerto Gruano in G,op. 3 No. 8.Schubert, Three Pieces for Piano, op.post.S—Debussy. Preludes, Irook I. Respighi,Botteeelli Tryptieh.ID—Tomkins, Four madrigals. “Fusca,in ttiy starry eyes,” “Yet again assoon revived.” “Weep no more, thousorry boy,” and “When David heard.”Webern. Symphony, op. 21 (1928),Bartok, Symphony for Orchestra.li—Khachaturian, Suite from the Bal¬let, "Gayne.” Bartok, Quartet No, 2 for String*(1917).Rimsky-Korsakoff, Capriccio Espag-nol. Lab school slates bazaarThe University of Chicago accepted at the Sunny gymnasiumLaboratory school will hold a 5S23 Kenwood tomorrow from, . , 3 to 7 p.m. and on Friday lrombazaar next week to increase 8.30 a m to 5 p mits scholarship fund. The sale will be Monday, fromContributions of clothing, toys, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and next Thurs-books. and household wares will be day from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. announced that he had appointeda committee to study Tropic »(Cancer.On October 16, the book wasbannNi in< Chicago and severalsmall shop owners were arrested.As the bans and threats of con¬fiscation began spreading to otherareas of Illinois, the AmericanCivil Liberties union (ACLlf|came to the aid of the booksellersand filed suit.The ACLU brief states that thedefendants “agreed to coropiretogether, with each other and withsubordinate officers to prevent”,without due process of law anyonein his community from selling thebook and thereby “make it impos¬sible for the plaintiffs and otherresidents of the said municipalitiesto have lawful access to the saidbook therin, to buy it and to readit.”The ACLU has stated that themunicipal police don’t have thepower or competence to ban thisbook.Several of the chiefs involvedsaid that they had not actuallyconfiscated books and knew of nolaw under which they had powerto do so. One chief said that hehad been away on vacation at thetime ami had had no knowledge ofthe matter.Most book dealers are unhappyabout the turn of events which isresponsible for the removal ofTropic of Cancer from their shelv¬es. One book dealer stated, “whenit sold for $7.50 it was literature;now that it’s available for 95 cents f*it’s obscene.” *REMEMBER:for sales,foreign carsalesShel Siiverstein!Whathave you done?rRiTTF,N a hackle-raisingAHA book, that’s what.® IS foMW5EE THE BAST'the baby is fatTue BABY islug baby cam crySEE-WE BABYPlay baby fl-W.Pretty, fW,8Aer'tfOfW L0YF5 8^ethan sue LOt/65 YOU.The alphabet will never bethe same again. Children(over 16) will never be thesame again. What willpeople say?People will say: Cet meUNCLE SHELBY'SABZ BOOKjust out. $1.59. Sim and Schuster Tareytondeliversthe flavorDVALFILTERDOESIT!"Tareyton's .Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!Slugging Junius (Pretty Boy) Cassius takes off the brassknucks to enjoy his favorite smoke.Says Pretty Boy, “Ecce Tareyton, one filter cigarette thatreally delivers de gustibus. Try Tareytons. Next time youbuy cigarettes, take a couple of packs vobiscum.’- 99 ;.ACTIVATED CHARCOALINNER FILTERPURE WHITEOUTER FILTERDUAL FILTERTareytonfroduct of </&'j/mtxiean — Jo&nco- it our middle name © 4.“rr<|4 • CHICAGO MAROON Oct, 25. 1961