hSft i*** ***Faculty mixed on segregationby John WilliamsMixed emotions were ex¬pressed yesterday by facul¬ty members and communityleaders when asked about'charges of discrimination in• University-owned housing.Sol Tax, professor in the depart-* nient of anthropology, said, “If itwere true that the University isdiscriminating now for some‘vague future good' I would com¬plain loudly indeed.“On the other hand, if in thevery difficult sleight-of-hand in¬volved in maintaining an inter¬racial neighborhood, the Univer¬sity is acting with tactical dis¬cretion for a matter of weeks andmonths, it may well be choosingthe lesser of immediate evils,”Cites UC pastTax cited the University’s pastefforts to keep Hyde Park-Ken¬wood an “inter-racial neighbor¬hood of high standards.”1 “If we are to fight for an inter¬racial neighborhood it means notonly keeping whites in neighbor¬hoods which threaten to becomeall-Negro, but also seeing to itthat Negro families join us in thissacred ‘University quadrant,’ ”continued Tax.“I suggest lhat the Universityl>e criticised for whatever shareit has in this anomalous situation,and encouraged to help change it;but it should be praised for parti¬cipation in a most difficult effortto build an integrated Hyde Pai k-Kemvood.”Meiklejohn commentsDonald Meiklejohn. professor ofphilosophy, felt that the Universitypolicy on the neighborhood was“generally sound and just.”“I am perfectly clear that theUniversity administration is dedi¬cated to the realistic pursuit of astable and genuinely integratedcommunity as a background forthe University. There may wellhave been individual cases where I would criticize particular stepswhich have been taken, but Mr.Beadle's claim of progress in thepast twenty years seems to mecompletely persuasive,” said Mei¬klejohn.Malcolm Sharp, professor in thelaw school, cited UC's pqst policiesin Billings and housing as so goodthat he hesitated “to criticize thepolicy described in the Maroon.”Sharp- stall'd that he didn'tunderstand the factual accountsof the situation and stated furtherthat he did not believe Beadle“meant to be understood as advo¬cating a policy of racial gradual¬ism for the community.”Lauds UC purpose“While I have not agreed fullywith the University’s position onurban renewal, I am sure that theUniversity’s purpose has been toarrest the slums for promotingstable racial integration,” he said.Gerhard Meyer, associate pro¬fessor ol' economics, disagreedwith the previously quoted facultymembers. He said that he is notsatisfied w'ilh the University’s pol¬icy but added that he also disa¬grees with the extreme positionof some of the University's critics.He said that the best policy wouldbe a compromise between theUniversity’s policy and the “pureidealistic” position of its critics.He also expressed the belief thatthe real policy of the University“has not been adequately des¬cribed.”Bert Iloselitz, professor of so¬cial sciences, declared that theUniversity should maintain a sin¬gle policy with regard to racialintegration. “The same policy olcomplete racial integration thatthe University employs with re¬gard to students should be main¬tained in all other areas, includingUniversity investments in realestate.”Hoeelitz argued that -the Univer¬sity, by its own policy of segre¬gation. does not persuade the pri¬vate realtors in the area to inte¬ grate. He said that this doesnothing to increase the number ofintegrated apartment buildings inHyde Park, which is very small.“If the University would set anexample of integration, privaterealtors would have to explain whythey don’t do likewise,” accordingto Hoselitz.Despres displeasedCommunity leaders severely cri¬ticized the University’s announcedpolicy. Alderman Leon M. Des¬pres of the fifth ward, describedthe University as “behind thetimes.” “In Illinois, the law per¬mits a private owner to disre¬gard a man’s character, achieve¬ments, moral finances or educa- and reject him because his remoteancestors came from Africa” ac¬cording to Despres. “In discrimi¬nating against Americans of Afri¬can ancestry, the University’s realestate office is acting w’ithin thelaw. However, the law' is behindthe times and should be changed.So should the University’s discri¬mination policy. In fact if the realestate office would only learn thefacts of life available in the so¬ciology department, the discrimi¬natory policy would soon bechanged. Interracial use of Uni¬versity property under high oc¬cupancy standards could set amagnificent pattern for all Chica¬go to follow.” > Reverend Brazier, minister ofthe Apostolic church of God, andofficial spokesman for TWO, sta¬ted that “The University admittedshould be changed to ‘The Univer¬sity confessed.' The administra¬tion of the University has beentrying to hide its segregationhousing policies for several years.“The University has been one ofthe most ardent supporters of re¬stricted covenants. We think itis a disgrace for a great Universityin a Northern city to maintain apolicy of segregation in their hous¬ing.”“It is remininscent of the Uni¬versities of Georgia, Alabama andArkansas.”Vol. 70 — No. 42TOO attend University of Chicago, Thursday, Jan. 18, 1962 » 31CORE meets to planUC segregation protestNearly one hundred per¬sons attended a meeting ofthe University of Chicagochapter of the Congress ofracial equality (CORE)last night to decide a planof action to prompt the Univer-WUCB slates marathonWUCB will hold a 27-hour mara¬thon to raise money for the Stu¬dent non-violent coordination com¬mittee on February 9 and 10,announced station manager Sher-win Kaplan today.Money raised by the station’stenth annual or fourth consecutiveeighth annual marathon wdll beused to aid Negro voter registra¬tion in the South.The broadcast, which will lastfrom 7 pm Friday to 10 pm Satur¬day, will originate from the Rey¬nolds club north lounge, is theonly time at which WUCB broad¬casts to a live audience.In addition to recorded music,the Marathon will feature liveperformances by many campusgroups, including Blackfriars, whowill present the first public pres¬entation of excerpts of this year’sshow, “Swing Out Sweet Rock,”and University Theater, who willdo excerpts from “Pal Joey."Cap and Gown will read thewinning essays in their currentcontest for the UC woman. Otherperformers will be the Musicalsociety, Folklore society, amongother campus organizations, ac-- cording to Anne Orwin, Mara¬thon chairman.Regular WUCB programs, suchas “We Come for to Sing” withJohn Kim, ‘Jabborwocky, .withShorty Spiro,’ ‘Word Pictures withBarbara Steinmetz,* and “Jazzwith Bill Peterman and TonyBrowne” will also be featured.Special shows for this year’smarathon are now being plannedby Drama critic Marty Rabino-vitz, and humorists (?) SteveWestheimer, Gene Kadish, BillSwenson and Bill Glowe.Various interviews With Univer¬sity personnel ranging from Presi¬dent Beadle to Harold, caretakerof the Reynolds Club are alsobeing planned.Refreshments during the mara¬thon will be provided by a selectgroup of WUCB bunnies underthe direction of chief Bunny BethCaldwell. The Marathon will concludewith a broadcast of the UC-Knoxbasketball game direct from thefield house.The Marathon begins with itstraditional broadcast of Hutchin’sFarewell address. According toKaplan, people “get tears in theireyes when his speech is read, even-if they haven’t heard of Hutchins.”The highlight of the marathonwill be the performance of thePro Nausea Musica. “The ProNausea is an ensemble foundedby Sir Frederic Beaehmann Barf,the famed British virtuoso who finally left us two years ago togo to Pot,” explained Kaplan.“Pot is Barf’s birthplace in theUkraine. As the Ukraine is thebread-basket of Russia, Pot is thebread-basket of the Ukraine. Potis marijuana in Russian.Janet Zlotow, Program Director,described the Pro Nausea’s musicas “little known versions of wellknpwn pieces.” This year’s pro¬gram is still a tightly guardedsecret, but conductor Bruce Ver-mazen promise's a perfonnance inkeeping with the quality of pastperformances.People back in C-shopThe C-shop will resume.itscounter service in February.At the same time the Com¬mons will discontinue itsbreakfast and dinner service.Effective February 5, the C-shopwill reopen with regular counterservice from 7:15 am until 2 pmMonday through Friday. Break¬fast and snacks will be served. Vending machines installed inthe C-shop last spring will beavailable for use until 7 pm Mon¬day through Friday, ard from 8am to 10 pm on Saturday.The Commons dining room willonly be open for lunch from 11:30am to 1:30 pm. Dinner andSaturday service will be discon¬tinued. sity to end segregation in all Uni¬versity owned aprtments.The meeting took place amidstan air of controversy which aroseafter representatives from COREand Student Government met withPresident Beadle Tuesday to dis¬close the results of some testcases.At Tuesday’s meeting, Beadlehad admitted that segregation ispracticed in “several” buildingsowned by the University.Last night’s meeting was heldto decide just what program stu¬dents wanted to take to protestthes policies.Friedman speaksLeonard Friedman announcedthat Beadle had been asked tospeak at an open meeting of stu¬dents Saturday night. Beadle re¬sponded that he would he out oftown, but according to Friedman,he will present a prepared state¬ment to student representativesMonday morning.It was decided to hold anothermeeting Monday night, to hearthe results of Beadle’s statement.By the time, CORE committies(public relations campus publicityand social action) will have metto make plans to start demon¬strations Tuesday in the eventthat they are necessary.The committee meetings willtake place in the New dormlounge at 4 pm today.Action TuesdayUntil Tuesday, however, no di¬rect action will be taken. This isbecause, according to Bruce Rap-paport, chairman of CORE, “Inthe CORE tradition, we are givingthe University adiminstration timeto reconsider and to state clearlyand publicly its position, in its own words, before CORE takesany action.”He continued by saying “Whenwe do take action, we will beprepared to carry it out as longas necessary until we have ac¬complished our goals - a com¬plete end to segregation in allUniversity owned property.”The group also voted upon apolicy statement which says: “Weurge the University to do the fol¬lowing:Terms stated1. Slate publicly that the Univer¬sity of Chicago will not discrimi¬nate on the basis of race, religion,or creed in the renting, ’easing,administering, or selling of anyproperty that is owned or con¬trolled by it.2. Refrain from supporting anyother realtor w'ho discriminates onthe basis of race, religion, or creed.3. Issue a directive to all per¬sonnel that administer Universityowned property to the effect of theabove.4. Provide for the implementa¬tion of this directive by establish¬ing an official board with equalrepresentation from the adminis¬tration, faculty, and the studentbody and delegating to that boardthe full power to a) hear anycomplaint relating to this policyand b) to make binding decisionson all cases brought before it.”At the meeting it was men¬tioned that current proceedingshere have been reported to localpapers.Rappaport was authorized to re¬lease another statement of CORE’Sposition, refuting much of Tues¬day’s explanation by Beadle of theUniversity’s off-campus housingpolicy.Labourite speaks hereA near empty C*shop, one of the reasons for restorationof counter service. Harold Wilson, a memberof parliament and one of themajor figures in the BritishLabour party, will speakthis afternoon on the subject:“Britain and the common market:the Labour party view’.”Wilson is currently secretary offoi’eign affairs in the Shadowcabinet of the Labour party.The common market is made upof six European countries: France,Luxembourg, Italy, Belgium, theNetherlands, and West Germany.The group was formed in 1958 tohelp trade among the membernations by erecting a single tariffwall. England applied for mem¬bership last year. The common market was oneof the major topics of PresidentKennedy’s state of the union mes¬sage last week. He proposed thatthe United Stales enter into atariff arrangement with the com¬mon market. This decision wasprobably influenced by England’sdecision to join.Wilson has held the posts ofdirector of economics and statis¬tics, head of the ministry of fueland power, secretary of overseastrades, and president of the boardof trade. He is the author of NewDeal for Coal, In Place of Dollars,and The War on World Poverty.Wilson’s talk will be at 3:30 pmin social sciences 122.UC peace group holdseducational seminars LettersFrats point to UC failureThe Washington project defense, bomb testing (strategic fraternity parties, the possibility sician meets painter and aeto'‘ Existing facilities for the arkhere are miserable. Music pia^today that it plans to begin the future of Germany, and the social organization I can hardlya series of seminars for stu- economics of disarmament. To the editor:_ _ As an opponent of the frater- of stepped-up intercollegiate ath-action committee announced necessity and fallout), Berlin and nity system as a positive form of letlcs’ . rnrimc nllHijn.llm - -The University of Chicago is on 1Ct rooms, auditoriums, and ade,. . . , , the whole - an impersonal in- ^iatf fac, lties f°r art Woik addtake issue with the principles of stitution Every first year stu- theatre are terribly deficientdents who will speak to t ongress- In addition, two meetings are your editorial (Friday January dent in the College recognizesmen during the ma^ch to be held being planned to discuss the Ken- J2) against joining fratcrnities.m Washington, D.C. on February nedy administration s foreign pol- __ ..... nwn16 !nd !7‘ Jhe wil1 ** icy and Prosent military strategy. 1*>w^er’ onf agonizing failure Uon Qf pa back in Sas. thc life of its community? Surelyconducted by UC faculty mem- Robert Paul Wolff and Robert °f the University becomes blatant- this is nnt trim and thn a.,..bers. Palter, both of the philisophy de- ly visible through the discussion Is the University such a sterileearly that he is pretty much on uncreative place that it doesn'tand it’s not only a recognize the importance of art i„pa being back in Sas- the life of its community? Stirkatchewan. this is not true, and the ever. . . .. creasing interest in and plannineConfrontation of members of Partment, will lead two of the There is no University community. The malaise goes deeper; there of art functions attest t0 this ^Congress and other government seminars. Many people talk about the bur- university There are a number of cern Then why doesn,t lh<- boaiflofficials is an integral part of the .. , ^ eaucratization of the University commUnities and the pity of it of trustees take action?demonstration, according to the Beddle OPI TV as well as the society. There is is lhal however much these com- Not onJy would a student unionmarch organizers. All those inte- constant debate over specialization munjties result from "natural” Play above role, but it wouldrested in attending the seminar George W. Beadle will ap- versus general education - a gVOupings of people, there is still function as the one central gathof-’RUUK124if? UoPrWKahrlDiStkpUeHbYT Pear in San Francisco Monday topic Which has far deeper rami- a great deal that each of these ^ point for a University whoseBu »-24o7, or Kail Stelt HY 3- . ... fications than the addition or sub- couid contribute to the other, but center 1168 ,n about ten different2362. evening on tlie television traction of two or three required don’t. places. It could provide facilities‘Science in Action,” courses. for all kinds of fruitful activitiesIt is signilicant that many steps which would involve more and dif.Educational meetings will cen- seriesStraws'Sicy'slatcmcnl Topi Produced by the California Aca- J“" a,Sct!o# cuU ha',c bc^n <akon in a posifive di- kWh S hi «vra»ics to be discussed include civil demy of Sciences. He will be the h to* Uniat? the [ectlon *° ^medy this problem, activities, and bring our specialistsenest scientist on the nt-oeram lure wmcn tonas to lsoJale tno but on the whole, the situation re- togetherUUUUUUUUUUH scientlst on the ^pi-ogiam, individual and then attemps to re- mains ouite the same. L. IL_JL_JL_JL_UL__J— — — — — The miracle of genetics, at < pm orient him by substituting falsePST on station KRON-TV. alternatives - basketball games, The University has n hardEVERYCOLLEGESTUDENTneeds thisbookto increasehis ability tolearnAn understanding of tlie truthcontained in Science andHealth with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy canremove the pressure which con¬cerns today’s college studentupon whom increasing de¬mands are being made foracademic excellence.Christian Science calms fearand gives to the student the fullassurance he needs in order tolearn easily and to evaluatewhat he has learned. It teachesthat God is man’s Mind—hisonly Mind—from which ema¬nates all the intelligence heneeds, when and as he needs it.Science and Health, the text¬book of Christian Science, maybe read or examined, togetherwith the Bible, in an atmos¬phere of quiet and peace, at anyChristian Science ReadingRoom. Information about Sci¬ence and Health may also be ob¬tained on campus through theChristian ScienceOrganization atThe Universityof ChicagoMeeting timeTuesdays at 7:15 pmMeeting PlaceThorndike Hilton Chapel1150 East 58th Street UC needs integrationTo the editor:Would not the cause of racial ions should be in the affirmative, So what does the University now enough role in any society whichplan to do? It plans to build new tends to isolate the individual e\cnfraternity houses. It plans to sup- before he enters college, but whenport those institutions whose very it tries to compound the felonyfoundations negate not only the by substituting the kind of insti-role that the University plays tut ion which it exists to opjxise,in the student development, but there is something very wrongHowever, I don’t think thatthe University’s housing policy also the function of this particularintegration in the Ignited States may not be as absurdt shocking or period in our lives — the period in much can be done until people!*Lv^nfimmoral as you have made it out whicih values are either reinforced begin to explore the problem witharound the University of C hicagot . .. . or challenged and then reworked, a pian for action. The majority ofls ls ° ‘ E,r'', ,‘>nt''»-naiiAPd” for the our faulty has been silent muchtoo o(ten when important doeiArc we to accept the fraternl- sions have been made. The taeties as the “cneapsulized” version ulty is fragmented and departof what we lielieve. society should ments are left to look seltislilva stable integrated community? to oe. mis is run io suggest mat and then “internalizedAnd, considering the marked ten- the administration is best able to rest of our lives,dency generally in this city toward explain and defend its jioliey. Norsegregated communities (either do I suggest that the University’sNegro or white), must not spe- policy should not be carefully exa-cial efforts be made to preserve mined periodically to reassure usCiai euons oe .u minea periouicaiiy io reassure us lhink not Therefore after themselves. In this processHyde Park as both Negio and that its objective remains just and ^ mnct alternatives the whole academic communityhas suffered, and will continue towhite? its means decent.If the answers to these quest- George Anastaplo One alternative which has been suffer until the faculty acceptsthrown around for a nunixu ot tbe responsibility unique in Anteyears and which seems to be nec- rjcan universities, of becoiressary is a student union. At pies- concornod with the problemsent there is no one area where ^be whole Universily, and admini-1!people and all the^ arts come to- sterjng the necessary program.. Richard Merbaumgether. There is no place where"artist meets physicist" and mu-Edifor-in-chiefJay GreenbergBusiness managerKenneth C. HeylManaging EditorAvima RuderAdvertising managerWilliam BasileHere’s deodorant protectionYOU CAN TRUSTOld Spice Stick Deodorant.. .fastest, neatest way to all¬day, every day protection! It’s the active deodorant foractive men... absolutely dependable. Glides on smoothly,speedily...dries in record time. Old Spice Stick Deodorant— most convenient, most economical deodorant money canbuy. 1.00 plus tax. Editor emeritus - Ken PierceExecutive news editor Gene VinogradotfCampus news editor Laura GodofskyNational news editor Michael ShakmanCity news editor Faye Well:}Assistant news editor Gary FeldmanBook review editor Ronnie RosenblattCopy editor Suzy GoldbergCulture editor Dorothy SharplessPhoto coordinators Dan Auerbach, A1 BergerPolitical news editor Ron Dor {manSports editor Chuck Bernsteir. £Business office manager Jean MacleanEditorial board: Laura Godofsky, Jay Greenberg, Pay Mitchell, AvimaRuder, Mike Shakman, Gene Vinogradoff. (Editorial staff: Barry Bayer, Clarence Bryant, Howard Carter, NancyDier, Debby Edel, Marianne Geisel, Sharon Goldman, Harriet Gorod,Richard Gottlieb, Sue Guggenheim, A1 Husfather, Bruce Jacobs, HafRogers, Murray Schacher, Vicky Sheihnan, Judy Shell, Mike Silver-J..acobe, Sherwin Kaplan, Joe Kasper, Robin Kaufman, Joe Kelly,Jerry Kodish, Dennis Larson, Antigone Lefteris, John Marx, Kefi.Meyer, Dick Montague, Martin Naftalin, Roger Peters, Paul Philips,Mike Rivard, Lorraine Rogers, Murray Schacher, Vicky Sheifman,Judy -Snell, Mike Silverman, Andy Stein, Maryann Taranowski,Robert Trostle, Jane Whitehill, John Williams, Donna Wilson.Sports staff: Mike Canes, Mike Eisenberg, Rich Epstein, Maitland GriffithBusiness staff: William Baslie, Betsy Ebert, Marie Gottschalk, Phil Hyde,Steven Klein, Jean Maclean, Nate Swift, R. A. Wilson.Issued 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 afl correspondence to;Chicago MAROON, Ida Noyes hall. 1212 E. S9 street. Chicago 37, Illinois*Telephones: MI 3-0600, extensions 3265 and 3266. Deadline for all calendar-copy is 4 pm of the day before publication. Deadline for all editorial amiadvertising copy is 4 pm of the day two days before publication. Subscription^by mail is $4 per year. The MAROON is distributed free at various point,,around the Chicago campus.Unsigned editorials on this page represent the opinion of the MAROOeditorial board. Signed material represents the opinion of the Individual author.i&e STICKDEODORANTS M U L T O N ft Appointment only Ml 3-<032FLORENCE RESNIKOFFCUSTOM JEWELRY DESIGNPrecious Stones Matched Wedding SetsTfce only Chicago designer to bo included in '*Design Quar¬terly’s" snrvey of contemporary Jewelry craftsmen.CHICAGO MAROON • dan. 18. 1962■5Discuss leadership needNoted French scholar, HenriPeyre, yesterday discussed“Excellence in Leadership”before the committee on so¬cial thought.Peyre, Sterling Morton profes¬sor in French at Yale, was intro¬duced by John U. Nef, chairmanof the committee, as the messen¬ger of French universalism in theworld today.Explaining the term, Nef re¬ferred to a paper he had pub¬lished. . . in the realm of faith,beauty, and cultural life at itsbest, France presents the univer¬salism that all sensitive personstoday are seeking in the thermo¬nuclear world.”l’eyre, Nef said, “has contrivedhy his extraordinary natural giftsand charm to become an integralpart of the most interesting ele¬ments in the higher learning andculture of the US.”Nef lauded Peyre’s contributionsto American life. “He (Peyre),more than anyone else I know hasextended in that difficult period— when France has almost alwayshad a bad press in this country—the study of the French langu¬age, of French literature, and ofFrench thought.”He stressed that Peyre’s con¬tributions in this field were ofimportance to the development ofthe committee itself.More recently, Peyre expressedcritical views of American higherlearning in a series of articles and books. He argued that there Isa profound uneasiness amongsome of the most sensitive per¬sons in this country—particularlyamong the youth—over the “drabprosaic set-up” of American uni¬versities and institutes—a drab¬ness which will not be remediedby the obtaining of money suffi¬cient to buy "spectacular” pro¬fessors.Nef stated that the committeeon soeial thought has been tryingto transcend, through its facultyand students, just this type ofset-up.Peyre concluded his talk, whichhe based on the comparison be¬tween faith in the science of manand faith in Christian revelation,by saying:“Men are believing creatures,and if they believe in the scien¬tific validity of laws which pre¬destine them to a particularcourse of development, their be¬liefs lead them as it were to obeythe laws . . .“Insofar as the work of learnedmen has had an influence, it ismore the belief in inexorablelaws governing human behavior,than the truth of these as laws,that has given some outwardjustification to scientific approach¬es to the study of man—I meanthat so much belief in theme hasbrought some of the consequencesthey predicted as scientists.“The course of human historyduring the past hundred years has demonstrated much less the val¬idity of laws put forward bysocial and behavioral science thanthe consequences of believing thatthe course of human developmentis materially predetermined andthat the human mind is capable oftelling us how.”“The partial eclipse during thepast hundred years of the hope ofrealizing a Christian society andthe allegedly scientific law ofcivilization and decay are bothevidence of the vital importanceof belief in determining the courseof human development.”Survey Chinese education(Editor's note: Much of thematerial in the following story isbased upon an article published. by the Institute for Internationalt i Youth Affairs in their magazine“Youth and Freedom'’).by Ronnie BrennerSince 1949, when theCommunists came to powerin China, increasing empha¬sis has been placed oneducation. According to Peking’sreports, practically the entirepopulation is caught up in a flurryof books and courses.Some 150 million peasants andworkers are said to be taking partin literacy courses and spare-timeeducation, while the regular insti¬tution claim an enrollment ofnearly 100 million students.Use spare dimeChinese education today, alongwith standard forms of educa¬tional institutions, utilize a profu¬sion of pseudoinstitutions (mostlyin the field of spare-time educa¬tion).The purpose of the “spare-time”institutions is to eliminate illiter¬acy, which has been and still isone of the greatest stumblingblocks to Communist plans forindustrialization of the country.(In 1950, conservative estimatesheld that less than 20% of theChinese were literate). For thisreason, the regime is devotingmuch time and effort to the eradi¬cation of illiteracy, especiallyamong youth and industrialworkers.According to a University ofChicago political scientist, TangTsou, China is working very hardto eliminate illiteracy, but the de¬gree of success being realized isimpossible to evaluate from with¬out.Intellectuals a problemPeople in the universities, theintellectuals, pose many problemsfor the Chinese Communists, asfor every totalitarian regime. Theintellectuals’ support is needed be¬cause of his traditional prestige asteacher and molder of publicopinion, and because the regimeneeds his skills in order to realizeits plans for industrialization andnational development. But his“inquiring mind” tends to “ques¬tion the validity of Communistdogma.”Writers, too, have not faredwell under Communist rule, Ac¬cording to Tsou, “politics does nothelp what genius a writer has.”Put he also notes that recent Chinese literature has been good.After the take-over in 1949, theCommunists introduced various“reforms,” which were essentiallyjustifications, in Marxist-Leninistterms, of what had already beenestablished.These features existed when theCommunists took over:(1) Pre-school education inkindergartens for children threeto seven years of age;(2) Elementary schooling last¬ing for six years for children whohave reached the age of seven;(3) General and specializedmiddle schools usually of sixyears’ duration, generally dividedinto junior and senior middleschools of three years’ durationeach;(4) Institutions of higher learn¬ing, and(5) Miscellaneous special insti¬tutions including the spare-timeschools.Graduate promotedGraduates of elementary schoolsare promoted to middle schoolsthrough examination. The “generalmiddle schools” are basicallyacademic in character and are in¬tended to prepare young peoplefor the universities.They devote about 40% of totalclass time to Chinese language andliterature, history, and politicaleducation; approximately 26% to mathematics and physics; x and17% to geography, biology, andchemistry; the rest to physicaleducation, music, and arts.The “specialized middle schools”are basically of two types: theteachers’ middle schools and thevocational middle schools. Thevocational middle schools are oftwo to four years’ duration, andcover a wide field of specialities.Most of them are attached to in¬dustrial establishments and theircurricula are adjusted to specificneeds.Blast technical schoolsThe technical schools have beensubjected to continuous criticismbecause of the poor quality of in¬struction and inadequate equip¬ment. Their graduates frequentlylack the qualifications necessaryto fill the jobs for which they havebeen trained.The teachers’ middle schools en¬roll graduates of elementaryschools for a three-year juniorcourse upon completion of whichthey can continue in the seniorteachers’ middle schoool for thesame duration.The quality of teachers’ middleschool students—future teachers—is generally low. .The best stu¬dents are either channeled intothe general middle schools by theauthorities directly, or try to getthere on their own.Colorado paper hitUniversity press service—The issue of whether a collegenewspaper should representthe views of the majority ofstudents or of the editor has beenthe subject of a controversy inColorado.In a recent editorial, the RockyMountain News of Denver, Colo¬rado accused the University ofColorado Daily of having an “ir¬responsible editorial policy.”“Since this (the Colorado Daily)is the only campus daily, thecasual reader would be inclinedto believe that it presents a fairrepresentation of the views of theaverage Colorado university stu¬dent,” stated the News.“’This we emphatically believeis not the case,” the editorial con¬tinued. The Daily “sneers at thetraditional homecoming festivities. . . demands US assent to theadmission of Red China to theUnited Nations, contrary to bi¬partisan and State department policy. It repeatedly has supporteda soft approach to Castro’s Cuba,”the News wrote.The editorial also condemns theboard of student publications fornot doing anything to “direct theColorado Daily along policies morenearly in keeping with the spiritof the Colorado university cam¬pus and the best interests of thestate supported university.”In response to the News editor¬ial, the Daily printed an editorialcalling the Denver paper irrps-ponsible. It says the News is“apparently unconscious of thefirst amendment,” and “a news¬paper so ostensibly patriotic ap¬parently doesn’t Understand theessence of our system.”REMEMBER:for service,foreign carhospital On Campos withAfefihuhan(Author of “Rally Round The Flag, Boys”, “TheMany Loves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.)IS STUDYING NECESSARY?Once there were three roommates and their names were WalterPellucid, Casimir Fing, afid LeRoy Holocaust and they were alltaking English lit. and they were all happy, friendly, outgoingtypes and they all smoked Marlboro Cigarettes'as you wouldexpect from such a gregarious trio, for Marlboro is the very es¬sence of sociability, the very spirit of amity, and very soul ofconcord, with its tobacco so mild and flavorful, its pack soking-size and flip-top, its filter so pure and white, and you willfind when you smoke Marlboros that the world is filled with thesong of birds and no man’s hand is raised against you.Each night after dinner Walter and Casimir and LeRoy wentto their room and studied English lit. For three hours they satin sombre silence and pored over their books and then, squintyand spent, they toppled onto their pallets and sobbed them¬selves to sleep.This joyless situation obtained all through the first semester.Then one night they were all simultaneously struck by a mar¬velous idea. “We are all studying the same thing,” they cried.“Why, then, should each of us study for three hours? Why noteach study for one hour? It is true we will only learn one-thirdas much that way, but it does not matter because there arethree of us and next June before the exams, we can get togetherand pool our knowledge!”Oh, what rapture then fell on Walter and Casimir and LeRoy IiS?SiWate*-'5fy it/f/ittrfat (fdfttelteJThey flung their beanies into the air and danced a gavotte andlit thirty or forty Marlboros and ran out to pursue the pleasurewhich had so long, so bitterly, been missing from their lives..Alas, they found instead a series of grisly misfortunes.Walter, alas, went searching for love and was soon going steadywith a coed named Invicta Breadstuff, a handsome lass, but,alas, ho{x*le.ssIy addicted to bowling. Each night she bowledfive hundred lines, some nights a thousand. Poor Walter’sthumb was a shambles and his purse was empty, but Invictajust kept on bowling and in the end, alas, she left Whiter for apin-setter, which was a terrible thing to do to Walter, especiallyin this case, because the pin-setter was automatic.Whiter, of course, was far too distraught to study his Englishlit, but he took some comfort from the fact that his roommateswere studying and they would help him before the exams. ButWalter, alas, was wrong. ,His roommates, Casimir and LeRoy,were nature lovers and they used their free time to go for longtramps in the woods and one night, alas, they were treed bytwo bears, Casimir by a brown bear and LeRoy by a kodiak,and they were kept in the trees until spring set in and thebears went to Yeliowstone for the tourist season.So when the three roommates met before exams to pool theirknowledge, they found they had none to pool 1 Well sir, they hada good long laugh about that and then rushed to the kitchenand stuck their heads in the oven. It was, however, an electricoven and the effects were, on the whole, beneficial. The wax intheir ears got melted and they acquired a healthy tan andtoday they are married to a lovely young heiress named Gang¬lia Bran and live in the Canal Zone, where there are many niceboats to wave at. © 1902 MuSbuim**In case you icorry about such things, their wife is a Marlborosmoker, too, which adds to the general merriment. Marlborois ubiquitous, as well as flavorful, and you can buy them inall 50 states as well as the Canal Zone.SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORM — THE UNIQUE STORAGE UNITS1542 EAST 57th STREETOpen Daily 12 noon to 8 p.nt.TYPEWRITER KEYBOARD CHANGESOur typewriter servicemen can change yourkeyboard to any combination you need.Perhaps our Typewriter Service Department canhelp you plan for the addition of needed keys.Come in and let them be of service to youUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELUS AVE. CHICAGO 37. ILL.Jan. 18, 1982 • C H I C AiimiKtiiimiimiimimiiiiimiiimiimiiimiiiiiiitiHiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiitiitmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiii Newsbits iitmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiEntries must be unsigned, butaccompanied by a sealed envelopecontaining the writer's name.The English department willpresent the Academy of AmericanPoets, the John Billings Fisk;award, and will sponsor the Flor¬ence James Adams poetry reading,contest.The Academy of American Poets;will award $100 to the under¬graduate submitting the best poem;or group of poems of any lengthby April 2 to the English office.,?Wiebolt 205.Tile departments of llU- social invention or a single clusterinanities and social sciences of lheiaare offering; University of Past developments in the organ-Chicago students with writ- ization of labor, the elaborationing ability opportunities to com- or markets, the transmission orpete lor monetary awards during tradition from the older to thethe spring quarter. younger, and the introduction of‘The Monro Rernhard prize of new forms of leisure are previous$150 will be given to the under- winning topics,graduate who writes, the best The political institutions prizeessay of six thousand words or', contest, open to all currentlyless on a social invention. Essays, registered undergraduates exceptwhich must be submitted to Gates- former winners, is seeking papersBlake 107 by May 1, will be clearly and significantly related tojudged on the basis of literate and the origin, development, structure,informed attention to a single or functioning of political institu¬ tions. Winners will receive awards for a critical essay on some sub-ol $200, $125, or $75. jest relating to the social sciencesWhen applying, contestants or humanities,must submit a short written state- This competition is restricted toment indicating clearly the scope students who have completed lessof their topics and listing the than two years of College worksources with which they plan to following graduation from highbegin their investigation. school and students in the CollegeEssays will be judged on the w^° cnteied prior to graduationbasis of the evidence they give of lrom h*£h school,the writer’s ability to formulate Essays, which may not be moreand to distinguish the elements of than 3,000 nor less than 1,500a problem, to assess the relevant words long, must be submitted byhistorical evidence, to appraise May 1 to room 201 in the Admini-alternative solutions, and to stration building,organize and present data andconclusions clearly.The social sciences departmentis sponsoring both the MonroBernhard award and the politicalinstitutions competition. Topicsfor both these essays must be ap¬proved in Gates-Blake 107. wherefurther information can be ob¬tained.The social sciences departmentis also sponsoring, in conjunctionwith the humanities department,the David McLaughlin prize forthe writing of prose. Prizes of$100 and $50 are awarded annually CalendarThursday, 18 JanuaryEpiscopal holy communion: Boaid chapel,11:30 am.Lecture series: “Basic genetics.” Billing*PI 17, 12:30 t>m. "(Jenes and popu¬lation. II,’’ Dr. Crow.Medical house staff rounds: BillingsMl 37. 1 pm.Lecture: “Britain and the common mar¬ket: the labor i>arty view,” HaroldWilson, social science 122, 3:30 pm.Elementary Hebrew: Hillel, 3:30 pm.Varsity wrestling meet: UC v». NorthCentral college. Bartlett gym, 4 pm.Seminar: “On the efficiency of op¬timum nonparametric procedures in the two sample case,” P. W. Mikul-;sky, Eckhnrt 208. 4 pm.Rifle club: Fieldhou.se, 4.6 pm.Lecture: “Difficulties of Russian word?stre8H,’* Valentine Kiparsky, Wieboldt-commons, 4:30 pm.Conference: Obstetrics and gynecology:clinic. Billings clin. Dora Ice hall.Tumor conference: Billings Ml 37. 6 pm|Conference: Mcdical-surgical-pediatricJcardiac. Billings north basement 29-5 pm. ”Lutheran vespers: Bond chapel, 5:0vpm. ~ •Music group: University clinics mild!8:30 pm, home of Dr. and Mrs. LeoiilJacobson. 1222 East 38 street. Call!Mrs. Ned UreenlMTg. PI, 2-7608. fSAnyone interested in buying a Seim orMk VI sax wit-h Otto Link mouth piecereasonably, priced, call; NO 7-260S,, after6 pm.Sublet 6 mos;furnished, lightand Black stone:t.eorge May Appear, Beta tonight.*- geo ore'Room-' fin Kent.’- '$.1 u month, ,.in homeof:;;; university staff member. Lightcooking privileges: v'J'16 Kenwood. Mi' Pie. ' ' . . *• your shuttle service isWe will cali you FridayHouse to. share. >Two bereft bachelors,'' n ant- o" in life tab* i> i < house1tenant w ho deserted us toi nia it.il-'. _ s■ ' ■ ' '' ' ' ‘Have 6-rooni-; furnished South Shore,apt >o Jim. oi sublease. _X.3r.66 oriUK J-6 .7 ■Furnished room in itime sitting or ..rent,kitchen privileges,k Presented by Pall Mall Famous CigarettesWantedMine (days) to prepare : simple*income tax returns. Neighborhood of-.uings, SP 3-6681 orBE 3-1053.Wanted: I • .ceptioniat-typist-;bookkeeper for Creative Programmed-?Learning Firm, 50 w.p.m. Must be ableto handle people. Excellent job forstudent’s wife. Half a block from theRandolph' I(‘ station. Call Tvler Thomp-rson any night 10-12. pm, at 363-2352. iy|Wanted: girl to share 5vicinity 54 and University^,onable rent. After Feb. •M» "-nt; it. a. a.Phone:Typing:: reasonable, input acetate.Special RUSH service. Call Uona It., .■ i.-Matt or Karen Borehers, NO 7-3600.vt’.TISTS, CRAFTSMEN,NEEDLEWORKERSlet me sell your handmade gift articles''in my store on Chicago’s North Side.■<al HO 3-5716 or C'.U 7-0006.PersonalsDear fellows: Closed for Crock TragedytIphigenia in Aulis. - Bubhie •REMEMBER:for sales,foreign carsalespresentsCarmenJanuary’ 20, 21 — 8:1 S pmftigolettoJanuary 27 — 8:15 pm ;f'Eleventh St. Theatre82-72 E. 11th StreetFor student ticket rate eoiiHA 7-1733 or Bl 8-7700tor reservations(Offer not good at Boa Office) Girl watchers are honorable menW° Who may watchhonor. Since he can't possibly, take notes, as the birdwatcher does, we must rely on his word. Therefore, whenan experienced girl watcher tells you he saw nine beau¬tiful girls while on his way to class, he saw nine beautifutgirls. And when he tells you his Pall Mall is the cigaretteof the century, believe him. It is.Any male is eligible to become a girl watcher. There isno age limit, although most girl watchers are over tenand under one hundred and four. There are no height orweight requirements, although taller men enjoy an obvi¬ous advantage at crowded parties.The only strict require¬ment is one of character. The girl watcher is a man ofHERZOG’SDEPARTMENTSTORE448 East 55th Street Pall Mall’snatural mildnessis so goodto your taste 1So smooth, so satisfying,so downright smokeabletWHY BE AN AMATEUR?JOIN THE AMERICAN SOCIETYOF GIRL WATCHERS NOW!FREE MEMBERSHIP CARO.Visit the editorial office ofthis publication for a free membership card in the world’sonly society devoted todiscreet, but relentless, girl watch¬ing Constitution of the society on reverse side of card.This ad based on the book, “The Girl Watcher's Guide.” Text:Copyright by Donald J. Sauers. Drawings: Copyright by EldonDsdini, Reprinted by permission of Harper & Brothers.After 32 years we must vacate:our: building is coming down. Wenow have bargains throughout thestore on all well-known brands ofmerchandise— .HURRY, HURRY, HURRYBefore We're All Sold Out Jtr&jteo- i’i «*r mttlit? eemtProtettJan. 18, 1962