ciajan-bcthe ennedy stresses tariff cutsSWEDEN“This is the year to decide dent said would include: increased one half billion dollar increase in,.. \ve need ... a wholly new J^ustna. and agricultural sales to world trade during this three yearonnroach—a bold new in- ?h® r!chest> fastest growing mar- period.h 11 It nf American trade" ket: increasin« sports; improve- „. . ,| gtrunient ol Amencan trade. ment of us of payments Since 19do, industrial growthwords, President position, and finally. “a traHin<r wifh*n the Common Market haslar-l'lie .. with these wotxLs, President position, and finally, “a tradingI Kennedy yesterday stressed the partnership with vast resources averaS°d ab°ut 7% a year. Europerjmnnrtance of the European Com- for freedom.’* averaged 5% while the US aver¬aged 2%. And in 1960, the Com¬mon Market countries accountedimportance oi me Europeanmon Market to the United States Just how vast these resourcesami to the free world. The Presi- are can be seen from the fact thatiOl|»: ofthe dent, in his State of the Unionaddress, told Congress that hewould shortly send it “a new five>year trade expansion action, farreaching in scope, but designed.with great care to make certainthat iis benefits far outweigh anyofVE According to the President, thebill will permit the gradual elimi¬nation of tariffs here in the UnitedStates and in the Common MarketI con those items in which both to- a market with half the land areaof the US produced 10% moresteel, 62% as much electricity,75% as many automobiles, andhad gold reserves worth 90% ofthe US gold reserve.The European economic com¬munity (Common Market) wasformed in 1958 by Belgium,trance, Italy, Luxembourg, theNetherlands, and West Germany.At the time, internal tariffs ofmember countries were cut 20'rd.ho get her supply 80% of the world’s By the end of last year, tariffs had.trade. been cut another 20%.Tn other goods, the bill will per- Impressive results immediatelymit a gradual reduction of duties followed formation of the CommonJtup to 50%, permit bargaining by Market. Between 1957 and 1960,|,1 major categories, and “provide internal trade by the members for about 25% of the world'strade.The administration’s greatesteconomic concern, as reflected bythe President’s speech, is theCommon Market’s vast potential.Britain, which recently decided toapply for membership, is expectedto become a full participant by themiddle of next year. Also expectedto join the economic union are thesix other countries of westernEurope in the European FreeTrade association. NORWAYDENMARKWEST GERMANYUNITEDKINGDOMNETHERLANDSBELGIUM»*4i*5rLUXEMBOURGFRANCEPORTUGA^/SWITZERLAND . JTALy‘l\\\-AUSTRIA^«orrialit hlil-in,dll for appropriate forms of assistanceto firms and employees adjustingto import competition.”Benefits to the US, the Presi- pumpod 44%. During the sameperiod, world trade rose 20%.The Common Market area ac¬counted for 60% of the twelve and If this enlarged Common Mar¬ket area were to continue to ex¬pand three times as fast as theUS economy, it would soon becomethe most powerful economic blocin the world.For these reasons, the President ... . , . . ,called the growth of the European a trad,ng partner behmd aCommon Market the greatestVol. 70 — No. 39 University of Chicago, Friday, Jan. 12. 1962 313 get Willett fellowships uEUROPEAN* ECONOMICCOMMUNITY(Common Market}economic challenge. “Assuming theaccession of the United Kingdom,there will arise across the Atlanticingleexternal tariff similar to ours withan economy which nearly equalsour own.”The President also spelled outthe national and international im¬plications of the market.Speaking of the domestic scene,the President said, “if . . . wehang back in deference to localeconomic pressures, we will findourselves cut off from our majorallies.“Industries will move theirplants and jobs and capital insideIhe walls of the Common Market.Our farm surpluses will pile up.Our balance of payment positionwill worsen. Our consumers willlack a wider choice of goods atlov/er prices. EUROPEANFREETRADEASSOCIATIONwould be affected adversely, theoverall effect for the US economywould be beneficial, the Presidentcontended.The President indirectly warnedlabor unions against unnecccssar-ily excessive wage increases. “Ourwage and price gains must be con¬sistent with productivity,” said thePresident. But he pointed out that“concessions . . . must of coursebp reciprocal, not unilateral. TheCommon Market will not fulfill itsown high promise unless its out¬side tariff walls are low. The dan¬gers of restriction or timidity inour own policy have counterpartsfor our friends in Europe.”Also emphasized were the over¬riding implications of US partici¬pation in the Common Market.“Our decision could well affectthe unity of the West, the courseAnd”millions of American of the cold war, and thegrowth ofworkers ... in your home statesand mine will see their interestssacrificed.”The President was, in effect,The first Willett faculty his PhD degree and also the plications of Soscki’s Kokoro,fellowship have been awarded Quantrell award for excellence in "An Introduction to Soseki,” and telling of the importance of USto three faculty members of underSiaduate teaching. reviews on books of Tanizaki participation in the Common Mar-' the College, announced Alan At present he is chairman ofSimpson, dean of the College. the Co,,e*e humanities staff, andhe helped to formulate the human Junichiro. ket to those congressmen who willProvisions for the fellowships, be subject to pressures of indus-which will be awarded annually, tries heavily protected by tariffs. our nation for a generation ormore to come.”Referring to the future, thepresident said, “together we facea common challenge; to enlargethe prosperity of free men every¬where—and to build in partnershipa new trading community in whichall free nations may gain from theThe fellowships, established to jties course in general education. were made last June by Howard The lowering of tariffs would put productive energy of free competi-I . encourage superior undergraduateteaching, went to Edward W.Rosenheim, Jr., associate profes¬sor of English, Karl J. Weintraub,assistant professor of history, andEdwin McClellan, assistant pro-rr.-vwi tst Japantoe UuguagP andliterature. His publications include Selected L. Willett, Sr., chairman of the these industries in competition tiveeffort...thegoalofapeace-Pr^ and Poetry of Jonathan board of the Willett company and with industries in western Europe, ful world of free and independentSwift and What Happens in Lit- ^ alumnus of the class of 1906. But even though certain industries states.”erature.Weintraub will use his fellow- Friedman alters viewship to work on a book of historic-graphical essays on differentAccording to Simpson, the re-'Cipients will be released Horntheir teaching duties during thespring quarter of this year andwill be given grants to help them< concentrate on special projectsin their fields of interest.“The Willett fellowship may beused by the recipient for anyform of research, writing, orcreative activity which willstrengthen his excellence as ateacher of undergraduates,” Simp¬son explained. types of cultural history. Heplans to study the ways in whichVoltaire, Guizot, Burckhardt,Lamprecht, Ortega y Gasset, andHuizinga treated the idea ofcivilization, and he will attemptto relate the methodical contri¬butions these historians havemade to the general developmentof cultural history in the last 200years.Weintraub, who immigrated tothis country from Germany, alsoholds three degrees from UC. Hehas been teaching in the Collegesince 1955 and received his PhDin 1957. Two years ago he re¬ceived the Quantrell award. He Backs specific' school aidMilton Friedman professor system than through any other equalities in standards of educai.i ,.i _ i a • i 4-1 nn nPnoe f i\\tschools of a very specific kind.In a debate with Maynard C.Rosenheim, whose interest is in18 century satire, plans to use his♦fellowship to work on a book onJonathan Swift and the Satirist’sArt, an analysis of satiric methodwith special reference to Swift.Rosenheim holds three degreeslfrom UC, and while he was a stu¬dent here was active in Pulsemagazine, the Maroon, was amember of “Blackfriars” and of«Owl and Serpent. He has been amember of the College facultyk since 1949, and in 1953 he received Social and Cultural Trends. *Edwin McClellan, who wasis wrell known in the College for quate schooling for their pupils.While Friedman agreed withKrueger that some states couldnot afford adequate education forhis course in the history ofwestern civilization, and, as astudent of Dutch history, he hascontributed to the development ofa course in general education. of economics at UC,* said lie TT ,and th,ath the.edu“U“naI eouVv... . . , ., , standards must be raised in time countrywould favor federal aid to jor existing generation ofprimary and secondary public school students.Friedman denied that federalaid would improve the deficien¬cies of the system. Only “bring¬ing central of the schools closerto the local populace” would im¬prove the school.“The only way to get betterschools is by competition, diver¬sity and variety among the dif¬fering localities,” he said.Krueger stated that existing in-Krueger, associate professor ofeconomics, Friedman stated thathe would not be opposed to a planof raising funds in states able tofinance adequate educational sys¬tems and turning over those fundsto states unable to finance ade- different areas of thehindered the free move¬ment of people from one area toanother. This mobility he said,is essential to our nation. Krue¬ger felt that the federal govern¬ment could help equalize edu¬cational standards through fede¬ral aid to needy areas and thusmaintain the freedom of move¬ment.The two men debated before theHyde Park high school Parent-teacher association yesterday af¬ternoon.students, he continued that “thereal issue is not finances, butwhether you shall have central-His publications in his field in- ized conlroi Gf education of di-ciude "From Historicism to So¬ciology; the Transition in German Winter rushing beginsversified quality and variety.”“The problem is not that teach-Historical Thinking," and “Recent ers arc underpaid but that good on campus in the winter rushNew students will have an ary 27th, but do not require re¬opportunity to get acquainted for two weekswith the various fraternitiesborn in Kobe, Japan, hopes tospend the spring quarter in Tokyo teachers can get low pay and thatpoor teachers can get high pay,”he said. “If the customer pays thebill the good teacher will getwhere he will study the works paid more, he said, favoring reof representative modern Japan¬ese novelists who distinguishedthemselves around the turn of thecentury. He intends to publisha collection of essays on theseauthors which will give the West- turn to more local control overschools.Krueger argued that becausethere were states run by adultswho were “too poor, or the poli¬tically ignorant or backward” to period, which will begin on Mon¬day.Represented at UC are ten na¬tional social fraternities, whichhave sent invitations to new stu¬dents to participate in rush pe¬riod, which lasts until February19.The first two weeks of rushingarc devoted to smokers—informalget-togethers in which prospective The period following formalrush is left open for the studentto make his decision and furtherhis acquaintance with the houses.Last year, about 150 pledgesjoined fraternities in winter rushand in autumn rush, which is notopen to first year students. Totalfraternity membership is now esti¬mated at 18 per cent of under¬graduate male student body.The ten fraternities on campusare Alpha Delta Phi, Beta ThetaPi, Phi Sigma Delta, Zeta Betaern reader a new understanding of provide decent education for their members visit each fraternity and Tau. Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gammathe development of modern Jap- students, the federal governmentanese fiction. must consider the present schoolMcClellan received his doctorate generation, and alter by a federal41Korl J. Weintraub from UC in 1957 and has been amember of the College facultysince that time. Ilis publicationsincude a translation of NatsumeSoseki’s novel Kokoro, “The Im- aid program, the quality of educa¬tion in such states.He stated that raising the qua¬lity of education could be donefaster through the federal aid can ask questions about them.Each fraternity will give twosmokers.Formal rushing ends on Friday,January 26th, when each frater¬nity will send out bids to thoseboys it wishes to pledge. The bidscan be accepted as soon as Janu- Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Psi Upsilon,Delta Upsilon, and Kappa AlphaPsi.The Interfraternity councilmaintains a strict watch on therush activities of the fraternities.They are subject to its rules andregulations.T IN ORIGINAL jEditorialFirst year students should not join fraternitiesWith fratrnity rush opening- Mon¬day, first year students have to makea decision which will affect their nextfour years at the University. Thedecision whether or not to join oneof UC’s ten fraternities is one whichall too often is not given the time andconsideration it deserves.During the next two weeks, first yearmen will be accosted by representatives ofall points of view on the fraternity ques¬tion. They will be told that living in afraternity house is the easiest way to beatliving in UC’s dormitories in the secondyear, that the fraternal spirit is one whichno college man should be without, andthat the fraternity’s food is absolutely thebest on campus.Others will tell them that fraternitymen are a bunch of jackasses, that thehouses are noisy and uncomfortable, andthat it costs more to live in a frat houseanyway.It has been claimed for years by UCfraternity members that fraternities hereare different. This is indeed true. Thereis less of the hazing, less of the torturous“hell weeks’’ which are found at so manyinstitutions of higher learning in the UnitedStates today.But there is, nonetheless, a tremendousamount of nonsense going on within UC’sfraternity system. Last year one frater¬ nity, loath to mistreat its pledges here,sent them off to Northwestern, where thegroup’s chapter subjected the unfortunatepledges to a great deal of physical andmental humiliation. And two years agoa fraternity prank narrowly missed be¬coming disastrous, when burning ragstossed down one house’s chimney by mem¬bers of another failed to set the house onfire.While these arc perhaps the most note¬worthy instances of fraternal stupidity,they are not the only ones which haveoccurred at UC recently. Egg throwingwars, beer can battles, and other nonsenseare reported every day.Perhaps these instances can be excusedon the understanding that a few childishindividuals are responsible for them. Whilethis certainly does not reflect well on thesystem, it is possible to blame 1he indivi¬dual more than the groups.But here is a far more basic reason fornot joining fraternities, a reason which isoverwhelming in its compulsion. Thisreason goes to the very nature of thefraternal idea itself.All the dogma of fraternities dogmawhich is, in many respects, far more un¬swerving than that of many religiousorders—rests on a basic, and pernicious,dichotomy. Every person in the world iseither a member of the old frat or not.If he is a member, regardless of all his other qualities, he is “in,” otherwise heis out.This belief—and without it the frater¬nities could not exist—is reinforced bysome of the most elaborate codified non¬sense to be found outside the local Masoniclodge. Secret handshakes, words, rooms,and heaven-knows-what-clse abound, at UCas well as anyplace else.This stereotyping is not restricted to thefraternity members themselves. Indeed, atUC as well as elsewhere, the first descrip¬tion of a man which pops into manypeople’s minds is, “He’s a Phi Gam,” ora Phi Sig or a Phi Belt. It is not difficultfor the fraternity man to become stereo¬typed; indeed, one's individuality is oftensubmerged.This feeling is accompanied by anotherwhich at first appears to be a reward tobe gotten from fraternity membership butwhich, on examination, turns out to be aserious drawback. This is the sense ofsecurity, of belonging, of being a memberof the ingroup which can easily be seenin so many fraternity men. It is, need¬less to say, a meaningless security, asecurity which can serve only to retardgreatly the process of maturing. The pin,the personalized beer mug and paddle(which, by the way, doesn’t hurt any theless for having one’s name written on it),all contribute to this feeling. Supporters of fraternities will answerthese arguments by ignoring them; theywill claim that all that matters in frater¬nity membership is the advantage of animproved social life. “You will learn howto live and get along with people,” theywill claim.This is patently untrue. There is noevidence to prove that fraternity member¬ship enhances social life in the least. Truethere is organized social activity, usuallyof the “mixex” type associated with someof our less progressive high schools. Asto the advantage of learning to live withpeople, we know of at least one studentwho moved from his fraternity house backto the dormitory because he wanted theexperience of living with a larger groupof people.We do not claim the omniscience whichis lacking in any of the many individualswho will be speaking to first year menduring the next two weeks. The decisionis, in the last analysis, a subjective one,and each individual must make his ownchoice. We do hope, however, that thestudents involved will be very carefulabout any decisions they make.And we hope that, when the decision ismade, we will see very few students isuccumbing to the temptations of fraternitymembership.LetterJohnston answered on Catholic educationTo the Editor:Since I am neither professionaleducator nor professional student,I may not be the type of spokes¬man for Catholic education thatMr. Johnston had in mir.d. I canonly speak from 16 years in Catho¬lic schools and two quarters atUC, where I was accepted as aMaster’s candidate without anydeficiencies. So far, I have notbeen particularly over-awed bymy own inadequacy, nor by thesuperiority of the education I amnow receiveing, nor by the ra¬tionality and literacy of the stu¬dents as reflected in the Maroon. Unlike Mr. Johnston, I do notfeel qualified to speak about Cath¬olic education in general. AlthoughI have been active in NSA andNFCCS, I haven’t read Newman.Reason and truth are not con¬tradictory. The absolute truth isGod, but there are a lot of rela¬tives which allow plenty of roomfor discussion. Even in theologyclasses, there is debate, and amongproponents of different theologi¬cal systems, often considerableacrimony.Last year, I wrote a monthlycolumn much like Mr. Johnston’sexcept that I was writing fromjftmkvry IS, T30pmUf RUSH5S5S iov>tV\ vjoooAl<xvjor\The Chicago Area Committee for aSANE Nuclear Policy announces aSPECIAL PUBLIC RALLY TOturn toward peaceJanuary 26thORCHESTRA HALL Friday * 8 pm216 S. MICHIGANLet UsMake1962The YearWe Turnedfrom an arms race - to a peace raceER. SEYMOUR MELMAN—Disarmament Expert; author of“The Peace Race"LILLIAN SMITH—Noted author of "Strange Fruit"JOHN KERR—Hollywood and Broadway Actor—Star of "Tea and Sympathy"Entertainment by the Second City PlayersFor tickets, complete and return this form to:Chicago Area SANE, Room 828, 410 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago 5, 111.Tel. 427 - 0290 or 427 . 0357Please forward Orchestra ticket(s) at $2.00 per ticketPlrase forward Balcony ticket (s) at $1.00 per ticketPlease forward Box ticket(s) at $10.00 per ticket.,..(a box of 6 seats for $50.00)♦When balcony tickets are exhausted gallery seats will be automaticallysubstituted.■ NAMEIj ADDRESS| CITY ZONE TELt (Kindly make checks payable to ‘‘Chicago SANE”)f_ _Bw the campus about campus prob¬lems. One such problem was anapathetic acceptance of profes¬sorial infallibility, partly a resultof the Catholic tradition of dis¬cipline in grade and high schools,and partly a consequence of theattitude of professors who had,consciously or not, come to de¬mand such acceptance of theirviews. I attacked the situationas I saw it.The repercussions? Congratula¬tions from at least 15 non-profes¬sors, fears for my future fromtwo non-Catholic professors, at¬tack from 6 or 7 (educated, in¬cidentally, at Yale, Harvard, andWisconsin), supporting letters tothe editor, and opinion questionson the final exam, graded for thevalidity of supporting arguments.At Rosary, where I studied forfour years, there is considerablestudent freedom. The discipliningfor breaches of dormitory rules,for instance, is done by a commit¬tee of students with power to sus¬pend and to recommend expul¬sion. The Faculty - Student Sen¬ate, a cross - sectional group, an¬' foreign «r hospital & clinicdealers in:• mg• morris• ausfin• riley• lambrcria5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob lesfermg psychiatristRECORDS• Bream• De La Torre* Segovia• Pete• Gary* JackBIGGEST DISCOUNTS!The Fret Shop1551 E. 57th StreetNO 7-1060 nually prepares course evaluationforms, which professors use at theend of the semester to elicit sug¬gestions about content, form, pre¬sentation, etc. To say that “Thereis no Catholic school which al¬lows the same measure of stu¬dent and faculty freedom as do(Harvard, Chicago, Michigan, Ber¬keley),” is absurd.Another example of the atmos¬phere at Rosary is the discussiongroup which meets once a monthto consider and challenge theviews presented by a panel offaculty experts on a given subject.The discussions are open to all:one session on birth control in¬volved a sociologist, and econo¬mist, a priest, and a biology pro¬fessor who is an atheist. No onewas horrified to hear establishedideas attacked.I rarely agree with Mr. Johns¬ton, especially when he makes pro¬nouncements such as "no conclu¬sion can be rejected without theconcomitant rejection of its deri¬vation." If it were not possiblefor one derivation to lead to morethan one conclusion, life would bevery restricted indeed.The Utopian ideal of “unquali¬fied freedom” for the student isrecognized as such by the student who enters a Catholic school,aware that the nature of the be¬liefs upon which the school isfounded will naturally affect themethod of education, aware thathis belief in God, like Mr. Johns¬ton’s in NSA, will not alwaysseem rational, but conscious thatthe advantages in terms of pre¬paration for life, for career, andfor maturity for outweigh the dis¬advantages.As I have said, I am jiot quali¬fied to speak generally, as Mr.Johnston does. I suggest that heoffer his views to editors of stu¬dent papers at reputable Catholicschools, perhaps Georgetown,Notre Dame, or Holy Cross, andask that the columns of their pa¬pers be opened to debate.No one, least of all an intel¬ligent Catholic, would claim thatall is perfect in the Catholic sys¬tem of higher education, but ablanket condemnation vermsequally rash. There is much inMr. Johnston’s pronouncements toremind me of just those dogma¬tic professors I protested againstat Rosary. It is an improvement1o exchange infallible teachers forinfallible students?Anne Rankin <LAST BIG SWEATER SALE OF YEAR!Now — the $19.95 value Norwegian All-WoolSki Sweaters are selling for $7.50—one at a time.Just the thing to conquer the cold weatherSCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS"HOME OF MULTIFORM"1542 East 57th Street NO 7-4040Open Tuesday through Saturday, 1 p.ttt. to 7:30 p.m.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 12. 1962fI if Culture Vulturetfce pTower!|'ines<,so IhZSShL shIv"!"? !"to ° toMmq cove where WFMT wos the only source of Kultur. But the snow weightedro"ot"/^ ,h,:rre: r/:/oia;s;o H:,rz ;„j ?• r::"Lw° :':d *l“,ric umm whi“ *— «-*On campusTheatre "Toys in the Attic," "Bye-Bye- cheers) should go see Mike Mi-Birdie,” and "Medium Hare." chac]s „ 4;30 thu a[lcrn00nAnd, if you'd rather give than .. T, XT"Iphcgenia” is coining! receive . . . Anybody who wants to \ . da Noyes Thcatrc- And lf youTTic Studcnit Activities Office sell tickets to the Second Annual s'* *n ^e k°x °^ce f°r four hours,has student discount tickets for U of C Folk Festival (loud, wild you get a free ticket.Job OpportunitiesRepresentatives of the following organizations will conductrecruiting interviews at the Office of Vocational Guidance andPlacement during the week of January 15. Unless academicrestrictions are indicated, these interviews are open to studentsof any department who will be available for full time employmentbetween now and September, 1962. Interview appointments maybe arranged through Mr. Calvin, Room 200, Reynolds club,extension 3284.January 15- Prudential Insurance Company, Chicago. Illinois, orother regional offices, will interview graduates of allUniversity departments for its General Training pro¬gram leading to administration ‘positions in thevarious Regional Home offices.January 16 International Business Machines, plant and laboratoryfacilities throughout US, will speak with prospectivegraduates at all degree levels in chemistry, met hema¬tics, physics, and statistics.January 17—Applied Physics Laboratory of Johns Hopkins univer¬sity, Silver Spring, Maryland, will interview graduatesin mathematics and statistics at all degree levels.January 18 Illinois Bell Telephone Company, Chicago, Illinois, w illspeak with graduates of all University departmentsfor assignment to the Management Training program.January 18 -UC Geological Survey, Chicago, Illinois, will interviewSB chemists and SB and SM candidates in mathema¬tics and statistics.January 19 -UARCO, Inc., Chicago, Illinois, will speak with gradu¬ates of all University departments interested in beingconsidered either for its General Business Trainingprogram or its Sales Training program.January 19 National Bureau of Standards, Washington, DC, willinterview prospective graduates at all degree levelsin chemistry (analytical, physical), PhD candidatesin mathematics and statistics, and physicists at alldegree levels.Classified AdsARTISTS, CRAFTSMEN,NEEDLEWORKERS1a-1 me sell your handmade vrift articlesin my »tore on Chicago’s North Side.Call DO 3-5716 or GR 7-0906.Did you know that a special studentrate is available for Miriam Makebaat the Gate of Horn? . . . throujrbJanuary 21»t on Sundays, Tuesdays,Wednesdays and Thursdays. Studentadmission $1.20. No Mimimjim. Justcall the Gate of Horn, 1036 North Statestreet. SU 7-2833. Bring Student ID.All those interested in rhartered busesto New Orleans for Mardi Gras, contactI>OA TOO, AO, 4U. Remember Karen, January 11.—t.he mangy OnesTYPING—reasonable, accurate, rapid —special RUSH service, (all: Ilona Rosen¬blatt or Karen Borchers, NO 7-3609.Up for adoption. 3 cute House mothers:have aprons will travel. Details to¬morrow. MusicChamber Music tries again inMandcl Hall, next Friday, January19. The New York WoodwindQuintet will give a program in¬cluding the first performance of anew quintet by Easley Blackwood,assistant professor of music at UC.Student admission for the 8:30 pmconcert is $1; tickets are on saleat the Mandcl Hall box office.Off campusTheatreA new group workshop in theperforming arts, the 51st StreetWorkshop, is holding open houseSaturday afternoons, January 13and 20 to find out who wants toplay how. The Workshop, whichlives at 1506 East 51st street, isfull of horpe folks like RobertBenedetti, who is the technicaldirector of University Theatre, andWilliam Bezdek, who is presentlydirecting “Iphegenia’’ for Actor’sCompany. If you can get throughthe snow, you can learn aboutacting, dancing, and film tech¬nique; they’ll give you hot coffeetoo.The Goodman Theatre (CE-62337) is r.ow presenting a pro¬gram of two one-act. plays, Saro¬yan’s “My Heart’s in the High¬lands’’ and Albee’s “The AmericanDream.” The Saroyan, which wasconsidered avant-garde when it wasfirst produced, is now considereda bit sweet; nobody calls the Al-bce sweet. Studs Terkel stars inthe nice ploy; Beverly Younger inthe not-so-nice. Performances willbe nightly except Monday untilJanuary 30; Friday and Saturday,at 8:30; weeknights, at 7:30.Aric CrownTheatreMcCormick PlaceFRI., Jan. 12 thru SUN., Jan. 28MON. thru SAT. - 8:30 p.m.SUN. MATINEE . 3 p.m.JL MfhmJtegiDirect from# Baliwith The Orchestra of thetabanan palace gamelanI. KETUT MARIOaand I. GUSH RAKASEAT NOW: ATMcCORMICK BOOKING OFFICELower Level $4 - $3 . $2Upper Level $3 - $2FOR MAIL ORDERS: Send remit¬tance to:ARIE CROWN THEATREMcCormick Place, Chicago 16, withself-addressed, stamped envelope Limelight Theatre1544 E. 57thJanuary 12 and 21Jim KwiskinBlue Grass, Ragtime,and BluesJanuary 13Bill TetterFlamingo GuitaristJanuary 20Judy TorneyFinnish Folk SongsAll shows on the hours9:30 — 12:30 dark theatredark Cr madisonfr 2-284550e::^ w limesfor college studentsA open 7:30 a m.late show 3 a.m.A different double featvire dallyA Sunday Film GuildA write in for free program guideA little gal-lery for gals onlyA every friday is ladies dayall gals admitted for only 25cA Clark parking - 1 door south4 hours 95c after 5 p.m.FILM GUILD CLASSICSfri. - 12th - “desire in thedust”“strangers when— we meet”sat. - 13th - “Voyage to thebottom of thesea”“two rode to¬gether”sun. - 14th - “maltese falcon”“treasure ofsierra madre”All students interested in investigatingfraternity lifeare invited toAlpha Delta Phi Smoker7:30 pm. Monday, January 155747 University AvenueNOW PLAYING"THE MARK"STARRINGStewart Whitman - Maria ShellRod SteignerS7 DearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763Speciol Student Rote on Mondays and FridaysJust Shaw Cashier your i.D. Card Funs“Alarums and Excursions” con¬tinues its cheerful run at SecondCity, 1842 North Wells. Perform¬ances are nightly except Mondayat 9 and 11, with an extra 1 amshow on Saturdays. Call DE7-3992for reservations.DanceThe Dancers of Bali are comingto the Aric Crown theatre in Mc¬Cormick Place to dance around inall sorts of ritualistic, holy, andotherwise southeast Asian frolics.Performances are 8:30 Mondaythrough Saturday evenings and at3 on Sunday afternoons.ArtThere’s a big Matisse show atthe Art Institute, which is nearwhere the IC lets people off, anda big Thomas McClure show at theFeingarten Galleries, which is at103 Oak street.The Arts cluh of Chicago, 109East Ontario street, will have anexhibition of works by Paul Kleefrom January 16 to February 20.Call SU 7-3997 and they'll tell youthe hours you can go see thesefunny cut up people.Flicks-HitherBJ Friday night shows “Thefable of a daring safari into theAfrican wilds in search of a nurs¬ing explorer who had gone lookingfor the legendary diamond minesof King Solohion.” Strangely, themovie is called King Solomon’sMines. Showings are at 8 and 10;admission is 50 cents.Doc films’ latest installment in its study of the Negro is "St.Louis Blues” with Bessie Smith,and “Hallelujah,” with what theDoc film people call “darkies.’*Performances are at 7:15 and 9:15in Judd. 126. Series admission is3.00; single admission, 60 cents.MusicFritz Reiner will conduct iheChicago symphony orchestra onceagain, after a long absence, Janu¬ary 18 and 19 (Thursday at 8:15and Friday at 2) in a performanceof Strauss’ “Symphonia Domesti-ea” and Beethoven’s Concerto no5 in E flat major, the “Emperor.’*The concert this afternoon willbe conducted by Leopold Stakow-ski and will include Mozart, Over¬ture to the Marriage of Figaro;Beethoven, symphony in E flatmajor, “Eroica;” Khrcnnikoff, In¬cidental music to Much ado aboutnothing; and Tchaikovsky, Fan-tesy, and Overture to "Romeo andJuliet.”On Saturday, January 13 fea¬tured Walter Hendel will conductworks by Rossini, Marcello, Casel-la, Mozart, and Wagner. This con¬cert begins at 8:30, the one thisafternoon at 2.Flicks: YonThe Hyde Park theatre is hold¬ing over La Dolre Vita, that docu¬mentary of life’s endless nothing.foreign car salessee page 2INTERNATIONAL DANCINGFOLK DANCINGOPEN NIGHTLYDrinks ServedNo MinorsSINGING AND GAMESChess and Checkers, etc.ZE PLACE5095 S. ARCHER AVE. THE AMERICAN OPERA CO.presentsCarmenJanuary 20, 21 — 8:15 pmRigolettoJanuary 27 — 8:15 pmElevenfh St. Theatre62-72 E. 11th StreetFor student ticket rate callHA 7-1733 ar B! 8-7700for reservations(Offer not good at Box Office)BIRDHOUsE COMEDY-FOLKFESTSUNDAY, JANUARY 14 ONLYFleming Brown Fred GeisBig Joe WilliamsShows 8 & 10 pm. - Students $1.001205 N. DearbornLAKE /?PAR K AT S^RD(Vyde park NO 7 9 0 7 1the yde park theatreFRIDAY, JANUARY 12An Exetended EngagementNew York Film Critics' Award WinnerBest Foreign Film Of The YearFrederico Fellini's"LA DOLCE VITA”Marcello Masteroianni + Anita EkbergFor This Engagement Only — No Student RateSTARTING FRIDAY. JANUARY 19Winner of 6 Infernational AwardsHenri - Georges Clouzot's"LA VERITE"Brigitte Bardot ^ Charles Vaneland"THE RISK"Special Students Rates With Student I.D. CardsFREE WEEKEND PARKING AT 5230 S. LAKE PARK AVE.Jon. 12, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3iiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiimiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiimmiimmiiiiitiiiiiiiiiimiliiimiii Newsbits imimimimimmmuiHiiiimmmimmiiiimmiHiiiiiiimiiimimiiiimmiuimiiiiiiiiiiu,Mendelson to discuss French crisisk., onnn^mmK rionc.r was also one of the wartime scien- Women walk for BeatSaul Mendelson, lecturer inhistory at Roosevelt univer¬sity. will speak on the “Crisisin France” on Sunday after¬noon.Mendelson, an authority onFrench and Latin American poli¬tics. will be the first speakerin the Young People's Socialistleague's public forum series. Hewill speak in the Ida Noyes lib¬rary at 3 pm.The formation of a neo-fascistsecret army organization andtrends toward the disintegrationof the de Gaulle regime as wellas left-wing response in Francewill be taken up by Mendelson.Among future speaker* in theYPSL series will be NormanThomas, former socialist partycandidate for president, discussing“The military-industrial complex.”Other planned discussions willinclude “The pathological person¬ality of the American Negro,” presented by Sam Riely, educationdirector of the Chicago area ofthe Negro American Labor Coun¬cil; “Nazis in Germany today,”by Joseph Brumberg and a rep¬resentative of the German con¬sulate; “Problems of the Ameri¬can labor movement,” with pro¬fessor Joel Seidman and “TheNew Deal and New Frontier,” withGeorge Rawick, editor or NewPolitics; and “African National¬ism,” with Charles Ore, authorand African expert.Former UC professorgiven humanities awardArthur Holly Compton, pro¬fessor of physics at the Uni¬versity of Chicago from 1929to 1945 and now professor-at-large at Washington university,located in Saint Louis, Missouri,has been given that university’s1961 humanities award.The award, which is bestowed annually by an anonymous donor,carries with it a citation and agift of $1,000. “Each year theaward goes to a person whose life¬time best exemplifies the universalideal of the Fatherhood of Godand the Brotherhood of Man, to aperson with a deep and continuingconcern for the physical and spiri¬tual welfare of the community,”said the Globe Democrat, a SaintLouis newspai>er.Compton, one of the world’smost distinguished men as well asa top physicist, holds a Nobel prizefor his findings about X-rays. He vyas also one of the wartime scientists who helped unlock the powersof atomic energy.Phoenix meets FridaysBeginning this afternoon, thePhoenix staff will meet everyFriday at 4:30 to work on itsforthcoming issue, which willcenter around “The consequencesof disarmament.”All students interested in con¬tributing essays, poetry, photo¬graphy, or art, and those inter¬ested in joining the staff havebeen invited by editor RobertLamb to attend.Chicago schools studiedChicago MaroonIssued every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday throughout theUniversity of Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer monthsby students of the University of Chicago. Address all correspondence to:Chicago MAROON, Ida Noyes hall. 1212 E. 59 street, Chicago 37, Illinois.Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions 3265 and 3266. Deadline for all calendarcopy is 4 pm of the day before publication. Deadline for all editorial andadvertising copy is 4 pm of the day two days before pub/ication. Subscriptionby mail is $4 per year. The MAROON is distributed free at various pointsaround the Chicago campus.Unsigned editorials on this page represent the opinion of the MAROONeditorial board. Signed material represents the opinion of the individual author. A UC professor will heada study of the administrationof Chicago’s school system.The professor, Morris Jano-witz, of the department of soci¬ology, explained that the mainpurpose of the study was to dis¬cover “to what degree the con¬cepts of sociology can contributeto the understanding of the prob¬lems facing the administration ofthe school system.”He stated that the study wouldtreat the school system as a “com¬plex social organization. Most stu-Calendar of EventsFriday, 12 JanuaryLutheran matins: Bund chapel, 11:30am.Rifle club: Fieldhouse, 3 pm.Seminar: "Ion transport in biologicalsystems,’’ Fred M. Snell, Researchinstitutes, pm.Seminar: "R, .inements of the contrallimit theorem for random vectors inRk," Mr. Rao, Eckhart 207, 4 pm.Phoenix: meeting to prepare newPhoenix, all interested may attend,303. Ida Noyes, 4:30 pm.Motion picture: "Images of the Ameri¬can Negro." Judd 126, 7:15 and 9:15pm. "An artist.”Russian arts club: “The Young Guard.”7:30 pm. 2952 W. North avenue.Sabbath service: Hillel foundation, 7:45pm.Lecture: "Works of the Mind.” "Plato’suse of myth in the dialogues,”Richard McKeon, 64 E. Lake street,8 pm.Motion picture: Burton-Judson courts,8 and 10 pm. "King Solomon’s Mines.”Varsity Basketball game: Field house,8 pm, Chicago vs. MacMurray col-_ lege.Fireside discussion: "Crime and punish¬ment: in retrospect,” Herman Finer,professor of i>olitical science, Hillelfoundation, 5715 W’oodlawn avenue,8:30 i>m.Saturday, 13 JanuaryEnglish class: International house, 10-12am.Track meet: Field house, 12:30 pm.Open meet.Varsity gymnastics meet: Bartlettgymnasium. 2 pm.Duplicate bridge: International house,students admitted free to alt frac¬tional point sessions, 2 pm.Motion picture: "The Young Guard.”Russian arts club, 7:30 pm, 2952West North avenue.Motion picture: Judd 126, 8 and 19pm. "Staag 17,” 50«.Radio: "The World of the paperback,”W’BBM, 10:45 pm.Sunday, 14 JanuaryRadio: "Faith of our Fathers,” WGN,8:3(1 am.Roman Catholic masses: Calvert house,8:30, 10, 11, 12 am. Episcopal communion services: Bondchapel, 9:30 am.Lutheran communion service: GrahamTaylor chapel, 10 am.University religious service: Rockefellerchapel, 11 am.Record concert: Alpha Delta Phi, chap¬ter house. 2 pm.Russian arts club: "The Young Guard,”3 pm, 2952 West North avenue.Lecture: "The crisis in France,” SaulMendelson, 3 pm, Ida Noyes, 25c.Carillon recital: Rockefeller chapel, 4pm.United Christian fellowship lecture:"Old testament myth and modernman,” Porter foundation. 4:30 pm.Vesper service: Thorndike Hilton chap¬el, 6:30 pm.Seminar: "Christian social existential¬ism,” 5810 Woodlawn avenue. 7 pm.Bridge: Ida Noyes lounge, 7 pm, free.Discussion: "What is abstract art 7"Fenn house, 7:30 pm.Lecture: "Hassidism—an evening withZalman Schacthter,” 8 pm. HillelEpiscopal evening prayer: 8 pm, 5540Woodlawn.Folk dancing: Ida Noyea hall, 8 pm. Chamber music concert: Ida Noyes lib¬rary, 8:30 pm.Radio: "The secred note,” WBBM, 10:30pm.Radio: "From the midway,” WFMT-FM, 11 pm.Monday, 15 JanuaryLecture: "The successful failure of thechurch.” Chapel house. 4 pm.English class: InternatKonal house, 6:30pm.Motion picture: International house,"Left, right and center,” 7 and 9pm, 50c.Rifle club: Fieldhouse, 7 pm.Indian civilization films: "Moham¬medan world,” "Rajput Glory,” "Pagefrom History.” "Mandu. City of Joy,”"Forgotten Empire,” 7 pm, Rosen-wald 2.Forum: Arthur J. Goldberg, Secretaryof labor, "Labor problems: some ofthe major economic issues of ourtime,” Sinai temple forum, 8:15 pm.SI.Coffee plus: Shorey house, 9-11 pm.Richard Stern will read selectionsfrom his own fiction.MODEL CAMERALeica, Bolex, Nikon,Ilasselblad Dealer1342 E. 55th HY 3-925?NSA DISCOUNT BERLIN UBER ALLES?WILLIAM OSTFELD, magazine writer, speaker, publisher,well-versed on German affairs, will speak on abovesubject; movie showing, “Meeting on the Elbe"; at7:30 PM, Hall A-4, 9th floor, 32 W. Randolph Street,Chicago, on Jan. 19. Admission $1.00; Students 50c;£ Sponsored by Chicago Council of American-Soviet Friendship^lllllll!!lllllllll!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!llllllll!lllllllllllllllllllllil^H "Every day is ladies day at.gH TAVERN ~~n &2j LIQUORS= 55th and Ellis =55 Ml 3-0524 |liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiHiiiiiii dies of school systems have beenon the pychological traits of stu¬dents, and their emotional andintellectual aptitudes,” he con¬tinued, “while school administra¬tive systems have been largelyneglected by sociological re¬search.”Janovvitz felt that while muchresearch had been done on theteacher-pupil relationship, a betterunderstanding of this relationshipcould be obtained by “going thenext step up.” and looking at theadministration of the school sys¬tem.This study should, Janmvitzsaid, provide a “case study ofproblems facing the school system,lor the educational profession andcivic groups interested in improv¬ing the system.”The administration approach tosuch problems as student careerguidance, the control of deviantbehavior in students, and the ca¬reer development of the admini¬strators, will be among the areasstudied.The study will be conducted byJanowitz, with a colleague, DavidStreet, now at the University ofMichigan. Janowitz has received$60,000 from the Russell Sagefoundation in New York City, tobe used over a period of threeyears.Janovvitz, besides his work insociology, is visiting Ford founda¬tion professor in the graduate bus¬iness school.foreign car hospital Women walk for peaceThe Chicago area women forpeace will stage a peace walkin support of last September’sjoint US-Soviet statement of dis¬armament principles presented tothe United Nations general as¬sembly. The peace walk, whichis part of a world-wide move¬ment, will begin at noon onMonday at the southeast corner ofState and Washington streets.Discuss segregatedschools“Segregated schools and HydePark” is the topic of a publicmeeting to be held on January 17,at 8 pm, at Quaker house, 5615Woodlawn. Speakers will be Mrs.Irene Turner, 5342 K i m b a r k ,school education chairman of Phil¬lip Murray PTA, and Harold Ba¬ron, 1352 East 48 street, researchspecialist for the Urban league.The meeting will be sponsored bythe Women’s International Leaguefor Peace and Freedom.Five members appointedto UC medical groupFive new members have beenappointed to the Council on Medi¬cal and Biological Research of theUniversity of Chicago.The council now comprises 35civic and business leaders who areseeking broad support for medicalresearch at the University.The new members are: W. New¬ton Burdick, chairman of theboard of the Pioneer Publishingcompany; Thomas Cass, vice pres¬ident of Container corporation ofAmerica; John T. Llewellyn, If,president of Chicago MalleableCastings company; Graliam Mor¬gan, president of United StatesGypsum company; and Bryan S.Reid, Jr., a partner in Gacon andWhipple company.% %RUSHSMOKERlet page 2 1:3oPM ’I r AMONpfvY ttJ MUARY es-SS S 5 WOOD LAWN 'P(.IIANDELLHAHPEH8QVA1IIEBeauty and Cosmetic Salon5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Mrs. Billie Treganza, Prop.EUROPECosts too much to take just thefirst tour heard of. Spend 4c &learn about a bargain unregi¬mented fun tour.Reduction for three or more.EUROPE SUMMER TO'IRS255 - C Sequoia - Pasedena, Cal.“Jawahajulal Nehru. India’s JudgeRoy Bean, continues his campaign ofpcace-by-lynch-law. JIaoing emergedvictorious from the lieroical War of 1961against the Portuguese settlers of thesixteenth century, he has nou) movedagainst the hoss-thtef of Kashmir, Sheik.Abdullah. The old ltangin' Tree, nowgray and leafless, still stands tn Langtry,Texas. Maybe we should wrap it upand ship It to Nehru | from tK, wrrlnt ;,lu#as pari of this year'sTechnical Assist¬ance to India?" ofNATIONAlREVIIW.1 Write for free copy150 E.35 StyNtwYerk[16jN.Ye ON AFRICA IN TRANSITIONHempsfone—AFRICA. AMORY YOUNG GIANT @ $7.95W hat is happening! in Africa today — socially, politically,economically, historicallylialiaander—THE NEW LEADERS OF AFRICA @ $5.00Traces the location of a continent in terms of thepersonalities uho created it.HegJiei—THE NEW FACE OF AFRICA @ $5.00A first hand account of the explosion that is sweepingthe continent south of the Sahara.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue WinterRushSmokersJan. 15Phi Kappa PsiAlpha Delta Phi 5555 Woodlawn5747 University Jan. 22Delta UpsilonBeta Theta Pi 5714 Woodlawn5737 UniversityJan 16Delta UpsilonPhi Bamma Delta 5714 Woodlawn5615 University Jan. 23Phi Delta ThetaKappa Alpha Psi 5625 UniversityIda Noyes HallJan 17Phi Delta ThetaBeta Theta Pi 5625 University5737 University Jan. 24Zeta Beta TauPsi Upsilon 5554 Woodlawn5639 UniversityJan. 18Zeta Beta TanKappa Alpha Psi 5554 WoodlawnIda Noyes Hall Jan. 25Phi Sigma DeltaAlpha Delta Phi 5625 Woodlawn5747 UniversityJan. 19Phi Sigma DeltaPsi Upsilon 5625 Woodlawn5639 University Jan. 26Phi Kappa PsiPhi Gamma Delta 5555 Wooodlawn5615 UniversityAll First Year Men Invited4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 12. 1962