\v M Karl Barth to speak hereCrowds filled the bursar's office this week as studentsrushed to register for the winter quarter. Rev. Dr. Karl Barth, notedProtestant clergyman whospoke out against Hitler inpre-war Germany, will makehis first trip to the UnitedStates to lecture at the Uni¬versity of Chicago divinity school.Barth, who is the father of Mar¬kus K. Barth, associate professorin the divinity school, will beginhis lecture series on Monday, April23. He will present one lecturedaily, ending on Friday, April 27.The topic of his series will be“Introduction to Theology.” Barthwill also participate in two publicpanel discussions on April 25 and26.Barth is presently professor ofdogmatics on the theological fac¬ulty of the University of Basle, inSwitzerland.Vol. 70 — No. 35 University of Chicago, Friday, Jan. 5, 1961 31 According to Jerald C. Brauer,dean of the divinity school, “Pro¬fessor Barth is one of the greattheologians of the Christian churchHis influence on Christianity can¬not yet be adequately measured.”Barth is of Swiss descent and isan ordained minister of the Pres¬byterian church. He was a clergy¬man in Switzerland for 12 yearsbefore he moved to Germany in1921.In Germany, he served on thetheological faculties of the Uni¬versities of Goettingen, Muenster,and Bonn. While he was at Bonn,Hitler came to power and Barthbecame an ardent opponent ofNazism.His opposition was centered inthe Confessing church movementwhich opposed Hitler on the issuesof anti - semitism, tyrrannicalchurch government, and civil lib-ert ies.“The Confessing church move¬ment began as an ecclesialticalfight, but quickly became a move¬ment in the fight for humanity,”related Barth’s son, Markus.Barth was dismissed from hisposition at Bonn in 1935 as aresult of his anti-Nazi activities.He then accepted a professorshipwhich was created specifically forhim, at the University of Basle,which he still retains.Barth returned to Germany onlyonce after he was dismissed fromhis position at Bonn. This wasPeace union asks UC studentsto join in ride to WashingtonThe Student Peace union(SPU) lias asked for busl>»ads of University of Chicagostudents to join studentsfrom other universities in a‘ large scale” peace demonstra¬tion in Washington, February 16and 17.A general meeting to organizeUniversity of Chicago participa¬tion in the Washington project willlx- held tonight in social science122 at 7:30.Peace groups plan, as part ofthe Washington project, to picketthe White House, the Capitol, andother government biddings; visitindividually every' Senator andCongressman, and about 50 statedepartment officials; march onthe Soviet embassy, and hold amass rally. Leo Szilard, UC bio¬physicist, has already agreed tospeak at the rally.Ttie purpose of the Washingtonrally is to allow students to “ex¬press their conviction that tlieUnited States must begin a sus¬tained and forceful effort tosecure a meaningful peace.” ac¬cording to Gail Paradise, chair¬man of the Chicago SPU.The sponsoring organizations forthe Washington project are, inaddition to the SPU, the studentsection of the Turn Toward Peace,Harvard Tocsin, the Students fora Democratic Society, and theNational Student Committee for aSane Nuclear Policy.An ad hoc committee from theBoston area composed of studentsfrom Brandeis, Harvard, theMassachusetts Institute of Tech¬nology, ani Wellesley has formu¬lated a general policy for theWashington demonstration.The policy states, “A continuedarms race will in all likelihoodlead to all-out nuclear war result¬ing from any one of a number ofcauses: accident, miscalculation,or spread of nuclear weapons.Even if it does not, we are alreadyseeing the internal effects of thearms race: national welfare sacri¬ficed to ‘national security," . . .alienation of people from the de¬cision-making processes, erosion oflabor’s strike right.“The government the UnitedStates should not pursue a policy©f nuclear weapons testing, notonly because of the effect such re¬sumption would have upon worldhealth and opinion, but because it«s in no one’s interest ... to pro¬ceed with the improvement ofnuclear weapons. Are we more securp because the United Statesand the Soviet Union both havethe hydrogen bomb? And will webe more secure when both sidespossess the neutron bomb andother “better** weapons? It isdiftieult to believe that deterrencewill last forever, so that weaponsimprovement, in the long run,gains us nothing.“Civil defense, as currently be¬ing ‘sold’ in the United States, isa dangerously misleading program. ... People have a small chance ofsurviving even the short termeffects (of a nuclear war). ... Itmay make war more likely byhardening people’s attitudes to¬ward negotiation and making usmore willing to resort to nuclearretaliation for Soviet misde¬meanors.“The only real insurance is in¬ternational disarmament.”The ad hoc committee also hasproposed a ten point program of action for the United States toreduce international tension.Included in this ten point pro¬gram are proposals that theUnited States proclaim that it willnot be the first nation to usestrategic nuclear weapons and thatthe United States repeal the Con-nally Reservation which reservesto the US the right to decidewhether an international disputeinvolving the US shall be judgedby the World Court.Critic, novelist Trillingto deliver Moody lectureLionel Trilling', Americancritic, novelist, and editor,will deliver the next WilliamVaughn Moody lecture onJanuary 23.Trilling, currently professorof English at Columbia university,will speak on a subject character¬istic of his work as a whole—“Theanti-heroic principle in literature.”A contributor for many years tothe major critical and literarymagazines in America and Eng¬land—The Nation, The New Re¬public, Partisan Review, The Ken¬yon Review, Encounter, andothers, Trilling had his first col¬lection of essays published as TheLiberal Imagination in 1950.The work is considered, alongwith Eliot’s Sacred Wood, Burke’sCounter-Statement, and Orwell’sCritical Essays, a landmark in thecriticism of modern time.A second collection of criticalessays, The Opposing Self, ap¬peared in 1955, the same year thatTrilling’s study of Freud and theCrisis of our Culture was pub¬lished.Trilling has served as a memberof the editorial boards of The Ken¬yon and Partisan reviews, and haslectured widely in American col¬leges and universities. He has'ed¬ited The Portable Matthew Ar¬nold, The Selected Letters of JohnKeats, and numerous other worksof literature.He began work as a literary critic about 1930, publishing hisfirst book, a study of MatthewArnold, nine years later. In it heexhibited a combination of thevalues of a sound basis of histori¬cal scholarship and textual fidelity.In 1943 he published his studyof E. M. Forster, which immedi¬ately became a key book in thecritical study of twentieth cen¬tury writing.A member of the National In¬stitute of Arts and Letters, Trill¬ing, a native New Yorker, re¬ ceived his entire higher educationat Columbia university, where hehas been a member of the Englishfaculty for 30 years.As professor there, he has madeuse of his work in criticism, fic¬tion, teaching, and editing a unitythat has defined him as one of themost influential figures in modernAmerican literature.Trilling’s lecture will be at 8pm in Mandel hall. Admission isopen to the public without ticketor charge. six months later when he was in¬vited to give a talk before a meet¬ing of the Confessing church move¬ment.However, the speech had to bepresented by another member. “ANazi policeman who was assignedto moniter the meeting preventedmy father from reading the speech,but did allow the speech to beread by someone else since theorders were only to prevent myfather from reading the speech,**Markus Barth recalled.Barth was then escorted by thepoliceman to the German-SwiMborder.Brauer hopes to be able to useRockefeller chapel for the lectures,because it holds more people thanMandel hall. He expects capacitycrowds.“We have already received tick¬et requests from all over thecountry',” he stated, but the maj¬ority of these attending will prob¬ably be theologists from the mid¬west, Brauer added.Brauer also pointed out thatBarth is very interested in Mozart,and has given lectures on the com¬poser.Barth is also an avid reader ofEnglish detective stories, Brauermentioned. He learned the Englishlanguage through these books.Markus Barth revealed that hisfather is also an ardent studentof United States history, especiallythe periods of the Civil and Revo¬lutionary wars. He has expressedan interest in visiting some of thebattlefields on which these warswere fought, he said.The Barth family began itsfight with the Nazis even beforeKarl Barth was banished fromGermany. Another son, ChristophF., Markus's younger brother, thenabout 14 or 15, wrote a letter thatwas critical of Hitler to a Jewishfriend in what was then Palestine,nmv Israel.This letter came to the attentionof the Nazis and Christoph wasforced to flee to Switzerland. Heis now a professor of the OldTestament in Jakarta, Indonesia.Students startscience journalParticle, a new publicationwhich will act as a “mediumof comunication between seri¬ous students of science,” hascome to the University, announcedGerry Elman, associate editor.It will provide students with ascience journal in which they canpresent the results of their ownresearch work.Although undergraduates havebegun to carry on a considerableamount of original scientific work,few people are aware of it, accord¬ing to Elman. Student reportsusually remain unpublished, opelse they appear in specializedprofessional journals which only afew scientists and only a few stu¬dents read regularly, he said.Student work is, however, en¬couraged in many fields, notablyby grants from the NationalScience foundation for independentresearch during the summer.UC students, others, formnew national newspaperA new local newspaper,New University News, hasjust been published in HydePark.Published by the editors of themagazine New UniversityThought, it is a monthly news¬paper striving to “interest . . .students and other young peoplein the academic and professionalworld.”According to the editors, thepurpose of the News “is to informour readers of what others arethinking and doing, and to providea medium for the discussion ofcurrent problems and possible so¬lutions.”The first issue, now on sale inthe Reynolds club basement, con¬tains an article on the organiza¬tion of the Negro protests inAlbany, Georgia, written by the executive director of the StudentNonviolent Coordinating commit¬tee, James Forman.There is a story of threats ofreprisals if French theatre ownerscontinue to show films in whichBrigit Bardot appears. She per¬sonally, according to the story,has been threatened with re¬prisals by the right-wing organ¬ization Armee Secrete, if she failsto pay $10,000 to the general ofthe Armee.In addition there is a revue of“Second City,” the “intime” re¬vue on North Wells street inChicago, and a story on the Uni¬versity of Michigan’s center onconflict resolution, established in1959 to study the problem of pre¬venting global war, drawing itsdiscourses from all of the socialsciences. The editors have been planningthe News for several months ac¬cording to editor Ron Dorfman.It was produced, he said, because“there seems to be a great needfor this kind of communicationamong those whom we consider?our’ audience — students andyoung academic and professionalpeople. This is confirmed by thereaction we have gotten to ad¬vance copies in New York, Can¬ada, and the South.”The second issue of the News,which will appear at the end ofJanuary, will have articles onFrench Canadian separatism, areview of “L’Avventura,” anItalian film; an article on MahorClaude Eatherly, “who gave theorders to drop the atomic bombon Hiroshima,” and other stories,according to Dorfman.Editorial LetterStudent peace action asked Blast shelter crazeThe recent months in theUnited States have seen thedevelopment of two widelydivergent movements. On theone hand, the fallout shelter idiocyhas reached an incredible pitch. Atthe same time, we have noted thedevelopment of what could prove1o be a truly valuable peace move¬ment/The new drive for peace hasseen both great successes andgreat failures. A number of stu¬dents 'picketed the White houseduring Christmas interim. Thestudents came from schoolsthroughout the country. However,foreign car hospitalsee page 4 an attempted demonstration onthe University of Chicago campusfailed to materialize when only 18instead of the expected hundredsof students appeared.Latest in a series of plans callsfor a national student bus ride andpeace march to Washington. Sev¬eral UC groups are already activein planning the University’s con¬tribution to the demonstration,scheduled for February 16 and 17.While no organization has yetbeen decided on to coordinatepeace activity here, a definite pro¬gram should be planned soon.The threats of the past yearhave left the people of the UnitedStates in near-hysteria. The cli¬mate has been one in which theJohn Birch society can flourishand in which shelter constructorscan prosper. But it is also a timethat is ripe for a national cry forpeace. We cannot afford to letthis time pass.WML m But there is great danger thatthe time will pass, and that thegreat opportunity for steps in thedirection of peace will be lost. Wehope that the students of the Uni¬versity of Chicago will take ad¬vantage of their opportunity toact. We hope that a successfulpeace movement can be built.Maroon meetingThere will be a meeting ofthe Maroon staff this after¬noon at 4 pm in the Maroonoffice, room 303 of IdaNoyes hall. All staff mem¬bers, and those wishing tojoin the staff, ore askedto attend. To the Editor:While in New York dur¬ing the holiday, several ofmy friends attending East¬ern colleges informed methat their school^were plan¬ning, or in the process of building,fallout shelters. It seemed unbe¬lievable to me especially after theshelter program being a businessmanipulation for profit with theaid of slate legislation. I feel themadness of which I was informedshould be exposed to all.Both Harvard university andHaverford college are discussingthe possibilities of their construct¬ion, Wellesly and Amharst collegeshave, or are in the process ofbuilding, fallout shelters, andBryn Mawr college is planning adetailed shelter system on whichI shall elaborate. These plans upto the present are as follows:1) Blast shelters will be in¬stalled which are more costly andFifty-Seventh at Kenwood =UNUSUAL FOOD |DELIGHTFUL |ATMOSPHEREPOPULAR |PRICES |MiiittnmtiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiitiiiitiiiiiiitiiiiKiiiiiimiiiiiiiiitiiitiitiiimHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiitiiiiniiiiiiiuimiiitmtiiiib:• •A SUN LIFE POLICY FOR EVERY NEEDFOR YOUANDjg^ YOUR FAMILY...The Income Endowment plan guarantees life in¬surance protection if you die within a specifiednumber of years. If you live, the endowmentbenefit falls due on the maturity date; you cantake the funds in cash or as income for life.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr., '481 N. LoSolle Chicogo, III.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-6800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAIf you livein theHyde Parkurea... THE FRET SHOP1-3, 5-10 p.m. Weekdays10-5 Saturday & SundayInstruments, New, Used, AntiqueGuitars, Banjos, Mandolins, etc.Supplies — RepairsPhone NO 7-10601551 East 57th St. JOSEPH H. AARONAll Forms of InsuranceSUITE 825135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060Jimmy’sand the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.4 PIZZASFor The Price Of 3ICKYS123 5 E. 55th NO 7-9063. MU 4-4780It’s a wonderful way to widen your worldevery day in ’62. You’ll always find NewYork’s comprehensive newspaper more in¬teresting, more informative, more satisfyingto read.It’s easy to arrange this useful service. Thedaily issues of The Times will be deliveredright to your home on the day of publication;the Sunday issues on Monday. And you payonly a few cents more than the local news¬stand price for this convenience.To order, just mail the coupon or telephoneHyde Park 3-0935.You can enjoyhome delivery of mStM^rst^etrchioagois,m.The NeiV Yorlc Times .**1 Please have The New York Times deliveredat my home as checked below—and bill me.on the dayof publication □ Daily only ($2.75 per month)□ Sunday only ($2.50 per month)□ Daily and Sunday ($5.25 per month)Name.Address.Apt. (if any). .Phono. more efficient than the old fall¬out shelter.2) The Civil Defense departmenthas requested that Bryn Mawr cotup a training program dealing withthe special medical problems whichresult from radiation. Bryn Mawrconsiders the undertaking proba¬ble.I'm delighted to hear of theplanned massive convergance ofcollege students on WashingtonD C. this coming February 16. Itseems to be an effort on the partof college students to secure ameaningful peace. Hundreds ofcollege teachers from severalEastern schools signed their namesto a public plea for more peace¬ful efforts on the part of ourgovernment towards other nationsin the world. There has not to myknowledge, however, been anymarked objection from any of thestudent bodies or faculties con¬cerning the shelters.It would seem sad and ironic ifthese high principled students andfaculty could allow without pro¬test the passage of such subver¬sive activity as the constructionof fallout shelters on the very in¬stitutions of our country whichshould guide by reason in the faceof a psychological hysteria forprofit so lypified by the growthaf the "fallout” industry.Arthur KaufmanOnr of Kifrff I*ark'x Fi»»#**#ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRSPECIALIZING IN:Heels ChangedHeels RepairedToe* Cut OutVamps LoweredOrthopedic WorkZipper RepairsPmfeMsional Dyeingon«f Refinidiitig ofSli«e* and Handbags4’ofors HatvhodFAirfax 4-96221749 E. 55th St.SEWING MACHINESERVICERepairs on Americanond ForeignRentals: $6 a monthSpeciol Rotes for Facultyand StudentsBilly Williams6141 S. GreenwoodBU 8-2083CoBEAUTY SALON_y Expert-Permanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302^9 Wear ontact oCeendeibyDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372ot University Ave.Culture Vultureand. with feet in said impediment goes sloshina V.u *Ure sen.ds 9rec*»n3s ®f **>* New Year in a soiled galosh,whining through the murky dawn' O where trough the January mire to where the sun - blood morning red - comespierce its breast against c/jagged mountain Dea^On^I^ S'^hS ,nlva,n* .° where or when will night time fail and fall ondicy waters flowing throuah Dhilosonhi^c J ^ not for long, long sighings of the wind, O not for short eternities ofof our time. 9 9 ph,losoPh*es °f ^ords on flowery banks supine. That, the whispered answer. That, the promiseOn CampusMusicThere is word about that thefolksters are to fret tl^ir timeupon the boards of Mandel hallcome February 2, 3, and 4. Therewill be singing and dancing andtalking and strumming and hum¬ming and plucking and picking.Tickets are on sale already andlast year some folk from Svvarth-more, Penasylvania, filled halfthe hall, so it appears that it istime to look ahead.RadioIJC has made an educationalsplash on WBBM radio, and so„ have those appealing paperbackswhich look so fine against adormitory wall. "The World of thePaperbacks” is presented eachSaturday at KM!) pm on WBBM.’ January 6 a CBS reporter willdiscuss W. J. Cash’s The Mind of. the South; January 13 will sportDC associate professor of Eng¬lish, Raven I. McDavid; will ex-* plore the world of linguisticsrhez paperback, and es|>ecially itsimpact on psychiatry and foreign^affairs; Laura Fermi, wife of thelate Enrico Fermi, will be heardon January 20 talking of her book' on Mussolini, and Atoms in theFamily, too . . ,CinemaWill the movies stifle thetheatre within the next 20 years?Far be it from this poor bird topredict, but one’s intuition whis-, pers of valiant attempts and re-sultant films for more thanfoolish pleasure. Tonight, for in¬stance, Documentary Films ishaving the kick-off showing ofits new series, which, after sixmonths of research, it is callingforeign car sales Images of the American Negroon Film.” Tonight’s show, at 7:15and 9:15 in Judd 126, 5835 SouthKimbark, is subtitled “Mr. Grif¬fith Makes a Point” and includestwo ‘ slides that move” from year1895, and most of Birth of a Na¬tion’s second part (1914). Thelatter depicts the plight of theNegro in the reconstructed Southas Carpetbaggus Vulturus (thisbird denies any relationship tosaid fowl) swept in from theNorth. Tickets are 60 cents andcan be purchased at the door.Charlie Chaplin will spread hiscomic carpet in Judd hall onSaturday night at 8 and 10 pm.This Charlie Chaplin festival isgiven every year, and he neverceases to be a welcome compan¬ion as the decades pass. Admis¬sion will be 50 cents.International house movies arcone of those things that the NewYear cannot rout. Their scriesrestarts Monday the eighth withan American flick with the mor¬ally disappointing title of ’’NeverSteal Anything Small.” A slightpolicy change is in evidence atthe 59 and Dorchester building:henceforth there will be twoshowings, at 7 and at 9, and theywill be projected in the Eastlounge and the admission chargeis 50 cents.Also Monday, January 8 willbo the start of a new series offilms by the Indian Civilizationcourse. The fare of the prelimin¬ary session will be films in theinstrumental music of India:Drums of India, Yadva Vrinda,and A (’hairy Tale. Show timewill be 7 pm in Rosenwald 2,and to enter is blessedly free. Extra, ExtraShorey House lounge w ill be thesite of a preview of sorts on Mon¬day at 9 pm sharp. The plus withthe coffee will be Blues singerBig Joe Williams, with RansomKnow ling on bass. These gentle¬men will be a fealured attractionat the Folk Festival in Febru¬ary. Admission is a cool 30 cents.Off CampusMusicDieter Kober, who is the Vul¬ture’s favorite Chieagoland con¬ductor, is opening the tenth sea¬son of the Chicago Chamberorchestra this Sunday (January7) at 3:30 in the James Simpsontheatre of the Natural Historymuseum — for free. The musicalpotpourri will have as its basicingredient Bach’s Suite No. 3 inD, and will also include Ameri¬can composer Franz Waxman’sSinfonietta for String Orchestraand Timpani. Symphony No. 60by F. J. Haydn will receive itslocal premiere.The fifth in a series of “master¬pieces of Ihc world's literature ofChamber Music” by the Fine Artsquartet will take place next Wed¬nesday, January 10, at 8:15 atthe Studebaker theatre, 418 SouthMichigan. With ID’s, studentscan buy tickets just before con¬cert time for a minimal output.Leopold Stokowski, former giantof the Philadelphia orchestra, willbe conducting the Chicago Symph¬ony for two weeks. Today andtomorrow night he will be com¬plemented by pianist Byron Janisin a program of Moussorsky,Tchaikovsky, and Wagner.SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORM — THE UNIQUE STORAGE UNITS1542 EAST 57th STREETOpen Daily 12 noon to 8 p.m.page 4RECORDSAll Labels; ListedOthers AvailableService Center,Reynolds Club$2.50HARPERLIQUOR STORE1114-16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported ond domesticwines, liquors ond beer ot lowestprices.IKEE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4-i3?«^ ^— 7699 ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti 9 beef 9 sausage and meatballsandwiches*Free Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 1015 1427 East 67th St.dark theatreclork Or modi sontr 2-284550c time*far college students★ open 7:30 a m.late show 3 a.m★ different double feature dally★ Sunday Film GuildJ mnf ln, f,or lree Program guide★ Uttle gal-lery for gals only★ every friday is ladies dayail gals admitted for only 25c★ Clark parking - 1 door south4 hours 95c after 5 p.m.FILM GUILD CLASSICSfrl. - 5th . “white ehrist-mas’’ & naughtymarietta'*sat. 6t.h . “the 2nd great¬est sex’* and“can . can”7th . “rigdetto” and“pagliacci** INTERNATIONAL DANCINGFOLK DANCINGOPEN NIGHTLYDrinks ServedNo MinorsSINGING AND GAMESChess and Checkers, etc.ZE PLACE5095 S. ARCHER AVE. If you're goingto have the blues,have them withBIG JOE WILLIAMSShorey House LoungePierce Tower9:00 P.M., January 8th30 cTHE GREEN MANAssassin extraordinary, whose best - laid plans gang aftagley in the labyrinth of contemporary Britain, where police¬men want to be left alone to play chess and doctors aren’tsure they should bother with bodies that aren’t on theirlist - who could play him exceptALASTAIR SIMJill Adams & Terry • ThornesMake It A Date At TheB*J CinemaFriday, Jan. 5th Admission 50c8 and 10 pm Jazz and folk musicCarmen McRae has started atwo-week stint at the Birdhousedown on Rush street, but the“lady with a haunt in her voice”will be clearing out on Sundayevenings when the BirdhouseComedy-Folkfest takes over. Thislatter is a show' of local talent,and so serious is the emphasison LOCAL that there are audi¬tions every Saturday afternoon atnoon at a place called Hooley’s,1146 North Wells, for all folk-singers, comedians, and other“oddball” acts. For information,call IDlewood 3-2298.ArtPaintings by the Israeli artistShalom of Galileo will be on ex¬hibit from January 7 through27 in Good speed hall. The show¬ing will be open from 10 am to5 pm on Monday through Fridayand from 1 to 5 pni on Saturday.A preview for members and guests of the University’s Renaissancesociety will be held Sunday from4 to 6 pm.The A •Disc1367 E. 57th StreetRECORD OF THEWEEKVerd: RequiemMOSCOW PHILHARMONICAND STATE ACADEMICCHORUSCONDUCTED BYIgor MarkevitchPARL 154 $3.98DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. po 3-7644EYE EXAA^INATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESnewest styling in frames^ STUDENT DISCOUNTIt SFEmrd on inspiration when (heUnited Nations building in New Yorkwas formally Inaugurated in October1952—an appropriate Inscriptiontarred in fool high letters in the graniteparapet facing the building In Decem¬ber 1961, the chosen inscription seemedless felicitous. It reads:‘They shall beatthetr swords into plowshares and theirspears into pruning hooky nations shallnot lift up sword I , „■ Frem the current muagainst nation, nei¬ther shall they learnwar any more ef NATIONAL RfVIEW.Writ* forfr«»copy.150 E.35 St.,N«wYorll| 16.N.Y,Different Russian movie every WeehFri. and Sat. 8 pm.; Sun. 3 p.m.Student Rates - January 5-7IVAN PAVLOVa film biographyRUSSIAN ARTS CLUB2952 W. NORTH AVE. Willy Wrightis now appearingat Hooley'sVoulez-vousWednesdaythrough SaturdaySteaks, HamburgersOld Style on tap•HOOLEY’SVOULEZ-VOUS1745 N. WellsWH 4-8110RDHOUsE COMEDY — FOLK FESTSUNDAY. JANUARY 7thBILL TEXTER DODI KALLICK BORIS WEINTRAUBAND OTHERS8 and 10 P. M. Students SI1205 N. DEARBORNRay de la TorreInternationally Celebrated Classic GuitaristStudebaker TheatreSaturday, January 13 at 8 p.m.TICKETS S3 ond S2For tickets or information write or phone:CMC PUBLIC CONCERTS430 S. MICHIGAN AVE. CHICAGO 5. ILL.TEL. WA 2-3585 EXT. 224NOW PLAYINGTHE MARK FFSTARRINGStewart Whitman - Maria ShellRod SteignerDearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763Speciol Student Rote on Mondays ond FridaysJust Show Cashier Your I.D. CardJon 5, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON\ <vRadio show begins Series to discuss EichmanA new radio show featuringdiscussions of various topicsby distinguished Universityof Chicago scholars will beginSunday on station WFMF.The program is called “Fromthe Midway.”The first program will he a re¬broadcast of the speech Leo Szil¬ard, professor of biophysics and aclose associate of the late EnricoFermi, made in Mandel hall lastmonth.In the speech Szilard outlinedthe need to make nuclear war im¬possible. He then gave a planwhich US citizens could put into effect to convince the US andSoviet governments to reachagreements on nuclear disarma¬ment.The three succeeding shows inJanuary will feature JosephSchwab, professor of natural sci¬ences and education; Hans J. Mor-genthau, professor of political sci¬ence and director of the center forthe study of American foreignand military policy; and RalphEllison, recently a visiting profes¬sor at UC and winner of the Na¬tional Book award in 1952 for hisnovel, Invisible Man. Hans Zeisel, professor inthe law school and departmentof sociology, will inauguratea series of discussions ofsome of the important ethicalissues illustrated by the recentlyconcluded trial in Israel of AdolphEichman.Titled “Conscience, Command,and Moral Responsibility: Reflec¬tions on the Eichmann Case,” theseries is part of the Friday fire¬side program of the Hillel founda¬tion for the winter quarter.Professor Zeisel, speaking on thetheme “Who are the guilty?” willanalyze the collective nature ofthe responsibility for the attemptedCalendar of EventsFriday, 5 JanuaryLutheran matins: Bor.d chapel, 11:30am.Meeting, first meeting of students in¬terested in working on Particle, newundergraduate science magazine, IdaNoyes Hall. 3:30 pm.Varsity wrestling meet: Bartlett gym¬nasium, 4 pm, Chicago vs. Elmhurstcollege.Lutheran Friday fellowship: Chapelhouse, dinner and lecture by Dr.Arthur Voobus. 7 5c.Motion picture: “Images of the Ameri¬can Negro on Film” Judd 126, 7:15and 9:15 pm.Washington project 1962: Social scien¬ces 122, 7:30 pm.Freshman basketball: Field house. 7:30pm, Chicago vs. Thornton junior col¬lege.Sabbath service: Hillel foundation, 7:45pm.Motion picture: Burton-Judson courts,8 and 10 pm. “The Green Man.”Discussion: ‘'Who are the Guilty,”Hillel foundation. 8:30 pm.Saturday, 6 JanuaryEnglish class: International house, 19am.Track meet: Field house, 2 pm.Duplicate bridge: International house.2-6 pm. students admitted free toall fractional j>oint sessions.Motion picture: Judd 126, 3 and 10pm, Charlie Chaplin film festival.BOB NELSON MOTORSIMPORT SERVICESPECIALISTSHAS"DAVE" MURRAYSERVICEUNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingFour barbers workingLadies' haircuttingShoe shiningFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorEye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetat University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscountTAhSAM-Y&tNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTOIVESE AIVDAMERICAN It IS II EfOpen Dally11 A M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63 rd S». BU 8-9018 Radio: “The World of the Paperback,”WBBM, 10:45 pm. _Sunday, 7 JanuaryRadio: “Faith of our Fathers,” WGN,8:30 am.Roman Catholic masses: Calvert house,8:30, 10, 11 and 12 am.Episcopal communion service: Bondchapel, 1 :3<) am.Lutheran communion service: GrahamTaylor chapel, 10 am.Radio: “Program of the Week,” WKMF1 1 am.University religious service: Rocke¬feller memorial chapel. 11 am.Record concert: Alpha Delta Phi chap¬ter house, 2 pm.Lecture: Young People’s Socialist league,Ida Noyes hall, 3 pm.Carillon recital: Rockefeller memorialchapel, 4 pm.Lecture: “Reflections on New Delhi1961,” W. B. Blakemore. McGifferthouse lounge, 5751 Woodlawn, 50c,4:30 pm.Lecture: "The relevance of the CTrurchto the world revolution,” BishopJames Mathews, Swift commons, 5:30pm.Vesper service: Porter foundation,Thorndike-Hi It on chapel, 6:30 pm.Three Pizza's ForThe Price Of TwoSmall $1.00Medium ..._ SI .45Large $1 -95Extra Large S2.95Giant $3.95Free U.C. DeliveryTERRY’S1518 E. 43rdMl 3-4045 You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today,PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-671 1 genocide of Europe’s Jews.“Crime and punishment: in re¬trospect,” the program for Janu¬ary 12, will feature Herman Finer,professor of political science, whowill consider certain aspects ofthe trial itself.Finally, on January 19, DonaldMeiklejohn, professor of philoso¬phy and head of the social science section, and Malcolm P. Sharp,professor in the law school, willaddress themselves to the moralissues raised by Eichmann’s de¬fense as they dicusss the relation¬ship between the individual andthe totalitarian order in a pane!entitled “Conscience and com¬mand.”Classified AdsFor RentProfessors or Students: Give your¬self and family a wonderful Christmasgift. Spacious 9-room apartment, newlydecorated, double plumbing and newkitchen. Close to U of C. See at Rf>35S. Kenwood, after 2:30 pm. Mr. RufusBaehr.1 rooms, nicely furnished, tile bathand shower. J 72.50 including utilities.5143 Kenwood. Call: 90 8-0439. Wanted: Roommate, girl, preferablyupper-classman, to share 5-room apart¬ment with 2 bedroom*. $40 a month6106 S. Ellis. Call: 288-2957.For Sale & ServicesLecture: “Civil liberties in the coldwar.” Professor Malcolm Sharpe,Fenn house, 7:30 pm.Polit caucus: Discussion of the prob¬lems of student government and ofthe formation of a new peace group,East lounge. Ida Noyes. 7:30 pm.Folk dancing: Ida Noyes hall. 8 pm.Lecture: Rockefeller chapel. “Thetwelve-ton work* of Krenek andT.enel.” and the “Passacaglis ofBach." 8:30 pm.Radio: The Sacred Note, WBBM, 10:39pm.Monday, 3 JanuaryAdvanced Hebrew readings: Hillelfoundation, 4:30 pm.Motion picture: International house,“Never Steal Anything Small,” 50c,7 and 9 pm.Rifle club: Field house. 7-19 pm.Indian civilization course films: Rosen -wald 2, 7 pm. “Drums of India.”“Vadya Vrinda,” “A Chairy Tale.”Crafts workshop: 8:00 pm, UniversityClinics Guild, at the home of Mrs.Kenneth DuBoit, 6019 Ingleside, MU4-3919.Coffee plus: Guest. Big Joe Williams.Chicago blues artist. Shorey house.Pierce tower, 9-11 pm. 3ki rooms, unfurnished, newly paintedand floored, new kitchen, clean, backporch with storage, $100, water andheat. BU 8-4652 (after 6 pm weeknites). Roommate wanted if can't rentabove, female.Have 6 room low-rent apartment toshare with 1 or 2 men. Call: X5S66or RE 1-6572. $245 OLYMPIA STAND. TYPEWR. FORSALE. $135. LIKE NEY. 1-YR. GU\RPRIVATELY OWNED. Ml 3-0800, ext2304.Typing: reasonable. rapid. accurate.Special RUSH aervice. Call Rona Rosen¬blatt or Karen Botchers, NO 7-3609.WantedTopic I History syllabus — the GreekPolis 1953 Edition only. Joan Saks, DO3-4846.Public RelationsPart-time assistant social research or¬ganization. Some typing. FA 4-8301.MODEL CAMERALeica, Bolex, Nikon,Hasselblad Dealer1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNT ' foreign car hospital & clinicdealers in:• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambretta5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob lestermg psychiatristGOLD CITY INNSpecializing in Cantonese FoodOrders to Take Out10% Discount to Students With This Ad5228 Harper HY 3-2559= "Socrates revels at =TAVERN&LIQUORS55th and EllisMl 3-0524NEW PENGUIN ARRIVALSSen: Hinduism 95cShaw: Plays Pleasant and Unpleasant .... 95cShaw: Back of Methuselah $1.25Gurney: The Hittites $1.45UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. ELLISTHE EPISCOPAL CHURCHAT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO9:30 a.m. JANUARY 7thSung Eucharist Bond ChapelSermon byTHE RT. REV. STEPHEN NEILLFormerly Bishop of Tinnevelly, South IndioSecretary, Department of Studies,World Council of ChurchesSUNDAY EVENING AT BRENT HOUSE5540 WOODLAWN AVE.5:30 p m Supper 6:30 p m Open House7:30 Evening PrayerALL ARE WELCOME Sxx3s%xx%»%sasxxsx%%ss%%sssx%xxs(%%%96%3a^aasxx%xsi%%| 1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & QalleryFeaturing Our Hors d'oeuvres TableFree Delivery to U. C. StudentsON ALL PIZZAComplete Italian-American RestaurantPIZZA PIESSmallCheese $1.45Sausage 1.80Anchovy 1.80 Small ^Bacon and Onion .... $2.15 /Combination 2.40 dMushroom 2.15 J£ Pepper and Onion .. 1.65 Shrimp 2.40CHICAGO MAROON Jan 5, 1962