Vol. 70 — No. 55 1962 *dS£]jjso> 31University of Chicago, Frida%k Feb. 9, 1Herb «iones as Alcibiades (far left) pleads for thelife of a soldier during ttie University theatre productionof Shakespeare's "Timon of Athens" which will open to¬night in Mandel hall at 8:30 and run throughout the week¬end. Tickets are on sale at the Reynolds club desk; a stu¬dent discount is available. Retain Loop ceftterNothing definite UC officials announced yes- day it was thoughi that the Uni- Most of the extension coursesterday plans to continue adult versity would abandon the down- which have been moved to theeducation classes at the Uni- *°wn center and m°ve a,| adV]t Quadrangles will be offered in the* pa t-i i t i x . education courses back to the ,versity S b4 hast Lake Street Quadrangles. Under the new ar- evening and on Sunday. Accord-downtown center. rangements, only credit courses mg to John T. Wilson, newly ap-Until the announcement yester- vtill be moved to the Hyde Park pointed director of the adult edu-campus. cation division of UC, the coursesPlans for retention of the will be the same in content sisdowntowm center were announced those offered during the day.after it was learned that UC They will be open both to regularwould be allowed to lease three students who hold daytime jobsfloors of the building from the and to students at large.Chicago Board of Education. The Students In residence at theT , . . /T__X ... . . Board is purchasing the building University will be allowed to takel he Interfraternity council (IFC) began a consideration of "immediate rush Wednes- to use as housing for a new city night courses, according to wh-day night. junior college. son. The courses are given forUnder the present rushing system, fraternities cannot pledge first year students until Commenting on the new decis- full credit, and examinations arethe winter quarter. The proposal brought before the FFC would allow rushing procedures !°n\““ ldentlcal to those ln the davtimeto begin the second week of orientation period.IFC considers fall rushhas had a long tradition of carry-No action on the pro|>osal was taken at Wednesday’s meeting. The proposal will be con- ing adult education beyond itsside red in individual fraternitychapters this week, and a final were Beta Theta Pi, Phi Gamma However, he added that “since thef .i tcv-. • . j • Delta, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Sigma issue has academic implications,v»teol Hie IFC is expected >n one L)rfta an(| ^ Tau. ,hc we would want to consult D,.anOi two weks. four against wei'e Alpha Delta Phi, Simpson (dean of the college).”Informed observers report that Delta Upsilon, Phi Kappa Psi, and campus. It recogni/.es that itseducational objectives involve an , , .*., . However, it has been decided tocommunitv service ... , .There is no definite decisionas to what courses will be offeredat night in any given quarter.the main reason the issue has * s* Upsilon. Newly appointed Dean of Stu¬dents Warner Wick said. “I off-campuseducational program of the high-est quality. the program’s popularityCredit courses moved to the offer twelve night courses duringthis year’s spring quarter, as aeoine op at this time is that thisyear’s rush was significantly smal¬ler than the rushes of the past twoyears, and that immediate rushmay provide more rushees. Quadrangles from the downtownarea will be the responsibility ofthe individual departments andwill be taught by regularfaculty members. One of The courses for next quarter havenot yet been decided.Courses to remain downtownUC will constitute, according to UCthe officials, "an integrated series ofJames Newman, assistant dean wouldn’t want to prejudice theof students, indicated that if a issue before having the argumentsproposal for immediate rush pas- put forward. The issue has notses the IFC, it will require ad- been put to me as yet and I haveministration approval before it no evidence for any decision if itcan become effective. He stated is my decision to make.” r . .The plan proposed at the IFC that "We would be happy to ex- Members of the IFC were re- ployed no regular faculty, lead- the University s traditional mter-with the IFC.” luctant to comment. ing to less effective courses. est in liberal education.criticisms of the old downtown offerings designed especially forcenter program was that it em- adults, developed primarily aroundmeeting will work as follows: In plore thethe second week of the orienta¬tion period, each fraternity willhave one smoker, but will not bepermitted any other contact withrushes. In the following week,each fraternity will be given anevening which they must use asthey please. Dinners, cocktailhours, and parties will be al¬lowed with rushees. In the nextweek, fraternities will be opento rushees at reasonable hours. issueWUCB marathon starts tonighttime station member, Stephen J.Shorty Spiro, but a gnome. Afterconsecutive several arduous seasons, Sir Fred-by Amory BlaineThe fourtheighth annual WUCB mara- erick retired, yielding the baton hearsal leader Bruce Vermazen,thon starts tonight to run 27 to Sir David Noble, who was in former^ ri&ht-fiejder of WUCB’sended performances of Mahler’s"Da* Lied von der Pferde.”Last year’s conductor will be re-V Other features of the proposedplan include a two quarter mini¬mum pledge period for all pledges, ductoryand the distribution and collect¬ion oi bids by the IFC.A similar rushing period be heldin the last weeks of January.A straw vote at Wednesday’sIFC meeting indieated that theplan i\ill probably fall to receivethe 2/8 vote necessary for pas¬sage. Presidents of five fraterni¬ties indicated that their fraterni¬ties Mill probably vote for imme¬diate rush and presidents of fourfraternities indieated the opposite.The five fraternities in favor hours through the UC-Knoxhoop tilt.President Beadle’s intro-remarks will smash averbal champagne bottle on theprow of ace announcers GeneKadish and Steve VVestheimer,who will officiate at the first lapof this year’s event.The radio station’s entire staffwill he involved in the traditionaleffort to provide a weekend’s en- turn succeeded by Sir Max Run-nerbien, former principal cornistof the Pro Nausea, now a dough¬boy.The function of the stu¬dent non-violent coordina¬ting committee is discussedon page three of today'sMaroon. softball team and sometime stu¬dent with Sir Max Runnerbien.WUCB fourth consecutive,8th annual marathon program7:00 pm President’* introduction.Hutchins farewell address.7:30 ‘Actor’s company.8:30 ''Folklore society.10:00 Jazz archives with BillPeterman.11:00 Classical music.3:00 am Sasha Casement and DavidYzbick, Improvisations bymoonlight. 5:00 Classical music.7:00 ‘Morning show with DavidYzbick and Bert Johnson.8:00 ‘Breakfast with Dorothy Dortand Marty Rabinowit*.9:00 Classical music.10:00 ‘Jazz with Tony Browne.12:00 pm Jabberwocky with ShortySpiro.1:00 Rlackfriars previews.3:00 ‘University theatre.4:00 ‘Russian choir.5:00 *We come for to sing: Folkmusic with John Kim.6:00 ‘Cap and Gown.6:30 ‘Pal Joey previews.7:00 ‘Pro Nausea: The inter¬nationally acclaimed orches¬tra, presenting well knownmusic in little known arrange¬ments.8:00 'Basketball game: U of C vs.Knox college, direct from theficldhouse.The ensemble’s repertoire hastertainment and raise money for varied over the years, but as farSeries beginsA five part faculty dis¬cussion of civil liberties andcivil rights begins today onpage 5. a worthy cause, this year theSouthern Non-violent Coordinatingcommittee’s voter registration pro¬gram.Usually the best attendedfeature is the annual concert per¬formance of the Pro NauseaMusica.Neither Sir Thomas Beechamnor Sir Frcdrich Baechmann Barfwas the founder of the group.That honor belongs to Sir Fred¬erick Beckman. Bart., who is nota Ukrainian, according to long- as memory reaches it has includedRespighi’s "Sewers of Rome” and >Haydn's Symphony No. 9-4.Some works have been droppedfor various reasons: Bruckner's“Sub-Zero Symphony” was con¬sidered unseasonable, Telia ikow-sky’s “1943 Overture” was danger¬ous to property since it featuresan atomic explosion, and the samecomposer’s “Swine Lake" wasabandoned when the PN’s corpsde ballet broke its leg and had tobe shot. The same sad occurrence COP candidate blastsKennedy governmentCongress, sharply ^”naJiyUS character - 'fact, myth' Ben Rosenthal, who is seek¬ing the Republican nomina¬tion forattacked President Kennedyand the Democratic party lastnight.Rosenthal outlined basic differ¬ences between the two parties,stressing the Republican belief inlocal government as opposed to Rosenthal also pointed out thaturban affairs should be dealt withas the problems ofin various parts of thecountry are different. This prin¬ciple of regional rather thannational action, he added, shouldalso be applied to agriculturalproblems.He went on to say that few pri¬mary’ fights occur in the Demo-the Democrats tendenej to take cra^jc party because there is littleeverything to Washington.” This diversification among its members. Democratic policy, in his opinion, on sniad issues. On large issues,American national charac- "Americans work harder than any fessor of the social sciences, com- leads to a centralized, paternalistic however the partv js spnt sharplyter is a combination of both other people in the world and then merited that these cover the same type of government and a deplor- while th’e Republicans stand on af-ict . „ give most of what they make. They fundamental aspects of Americans able increase in bureaucracy. niatfm-mtact and myth according to a £ar( with a casual Tak0 „ casy. „ dm.s Dc Toequeville. He sag- He accused Kennedy ot handling U"',ed pl®,'0rn\ .1 a n e 1 of four protessoi’S and then rush off like crazy.” gested that if these common traits national problems on a petty poli- Rosenthal used the Cuban epi-speaking last night before a meet- “Crude, material, vulgar” is the endured over a century in spite tical level, using the president’s sode. as an°t‘1ier,instaace ol Demo-u>® oi the history club. European conception of an Ame- of the many social and economic recent request for an urban af- r"“ °‘ Add up the composite chara- rican, garnered largely from Hoi- changes taking place, there fail's department as an example,cteristics,” and it is possible to lyw’ood films and the behavior of must be something intrinsic in our Kennedy, he stated, felt that suchgot an idea of the great complexity tourists. Yet he finds "optimism, social order that accounts for this, a department would strengthenthis question, said Maldwyn egalitarianism, and voluntarism” John Cawelti, associate profes- the Democrats in the cities, as .*ones- are the three qualities of the Ame- SOr of the humanities and head of wrell as creating many new patron- IS °°kb> Kennedy.Jones, visiting professor ot his- rican character Jones finds most the first year humanities course, age positions. I*1 acb be stated, we may wellvtory and a native of Wales, said desirable. found it difficult to talk about the He interpreted Kennedy’s nomi- bo at the beginning of a KennedyJjo was conditioned before coming “Optimism: their willingness “to idea of a national character; nation of Robert Weaver, a Negro, dynasty. "Eight years of thebore on what to expect of Ameri- try anything once, especially if it he found any such character full to head the new department as a president, then eight for Bobby,cans in general. “However, my per- hasn’t been tried before.” Egali- of paradoxes. For example, he move get the Negro vote. The and eight more for their younger*>na! experience does not corres- tarianism: "To come to an Ameri- says, that optimism expressed in Democrats constantly represent brother Ted,” he said. "Thatj*)ntt to any of these generaliza- can family and see democracy at the writings of popular American the Republican party as being brings us to 1984, and I thinkluns * work is a truly revealing experi- authors is hardly reflected in the against the Negro, he stated, but somebody wrote a book aboutAccording to Jones, there are ence.” Voluntarism: “Americans works of more serious writers of Kennedy has shelved promised that.”any contradictory impulses in the are tending to become joiners.” the past century like Twain, civil rights legislation since his Rosenthal addressed a meetingi^n national cbaracAor, Marvin Meyrns «usoci*tow<»n»- Faulkner ot Hemingway, election. of the campus Young Republicans.cratic maladministration, callingit "inexcusable.” No one seems toknow’, he said, just who is run¬ning our foreign policy, though“informed sources" state that itiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiii Newsbits iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiEnglishKathleen Raine, Englishpoetess, critic, and Blakescholar, will give the 221stWilliam Vaughn Moody lec-lure on Tuesday, February 27,at 8:30 pm in Mandel hall.She will discuss "Poetry andremem be ranee, a defense of thetraditional view of poetry,” andread from her own poems.Miss Raine is the author ofStone and Flower, Living in Time,The Pytheness, The Year One,Collected Poems (1956* and otherworks.Freedom rider speaksat Hillel tonightA freedom rider will speakon his experiences in theSouth at tonight’s Hillel fire¬side program.Henry Schwarschild, a memberof the freedom riders committeeof the Congress of Racial Equal¬ity, will discuss “Judaism andsocial justice: reflections of afreedom rider” at 8:30 pm at theHillel foundation, 5715 Wood-lawn. His talk will be proceededby Sabbath services, at 7:45.Science group awardspsychology grant to UCA National Science founda- poetesstion grant for undergraduatescience education has beenawarded jointly to the Col¬lege and the department of psy¬chology, announced Alan Simpson,dean of the College.Under the grant, a limitednumber of stipends will be madeavailable for outstanding stu¬dents in the College to pursuefull-time research during thesummer quarter, or to substitutefor part-time employment duringthe academic year.Interested students should at¬tend a meeting ou Monday, at4:30 pm, in Abbott 210.The general purpose of thegrant, under the direction ofTheodore Schaefer, assistant pro¬fessor in the College biologysection and psychology depart¬ment, is to provide more oppor¬tunities for College students togain research in the behavioralsciences.Some of the funds will be usedto establish and maintain a lab¬oratory and research facilities forundergraduates who wish to dooriginal research.Church-state separationdiscussed by minister“Separation of church andstate” will be discussed bythe regional director of Pro- to givetestants and Other AmericansUnited for Separation of Churchand State (POAUSCS).James Winham, a former South¬ern Baptist minister, will speakSunday, at 7:30 pm at the Fennhouse, 5638 Woodlawn.At the national convention ofPOAUSCS on Monday, Winhamcriticised the proposal of theVeterans administration (VA) togive a veterans hospital it nolonger needs to a religious group.POAUSCS feels that the hos¬pital should not be given away,and that the religious groupshould be required to compensatethe government for the hospital.They state that this “giveaway”violates the idea of separation ofchurch and state in that a low orno cost disposal of the propertywould be government support ofa religious institution.The talk is being sponsoredby the Channing Murray club,a Unitarian-Universalist spon¬sored student group on campus.SPU holds conferenceDr. Howard Schomer, presi¬dent of the Chicago Theologi¬cal seminary, will address theopening session of an all-dayconference on “Nuclear imperative Moodyand Christian decision” Saturday.Schomer, a participant in therecent New Delhi meeting of theWorld Council of Churches, willdiscuss the “Responsible optionsfacing the Christian intellectualtoday.”College and seminary studentsfrom about 20 Midwestern schoolswill attend the all day confe¬rence.The Student Peace union willsponsor the series of meetings inorder to confront Christian stu¬dents with some of the problemsfacing religion in the nuclear era.A panel of speakers will focuson some of the specific problemsand approaches to the world situ¬ation from the Christian context. lecturePOUT shows 'North Star*A movie dealing with the WorldWar II treatment of the Russianhomeland by the Nazis and sub¬sequent Russian responses tofascist atrocities, will be showntomorrow night by POLIT.“North Star,” written by LillianHeilman, was made during thejieriod of world war II rapportwith Russia, then one of theUnited States allies.The film was suppressed rightafter its release because of post¬war tensions between the UnitedStates and the Soviet Union.During the McCarthy era, a newending was added to it.POLIT will show7 the originalversion of "North Star,” how¬ever, at 8 and 10 pm in Judd hall.Classified AdsFor Rent 1'. Nl HPLarge room with two closets, kitchen ** ,in<l Sun, In-foie In. Ml .t-3 •» - 4.Room For RentSingle male student with reference,bus and "It.” Call during weekprivileges. Two blocks from commons.Call HY 3-8460. Furnished room for woman or wgal. Kitchen privileges; and 4apartment east of IC. FI.2 room furnished apartment, S87 per evenings and weekendsmonth. 57th and Dorchester. FA 4-5933. oikingroom:-0273.6040-42 INGLESIDE AVE.Clean, comfortable furnished apts. in awell maintained bid*, catering to Uni¬versity students. Now’ available: asingle, a double and a 4 room apt.1a>w. low rates. Call resident manager,Mrs. Tapia: BU 8-2757. WantedMale? Need a room? We need a room¬mate. ('heap living, but nice. Short,pleasant walk to UC. Call: 684-7349,evenings.ServicesYour Future in Electronics at HughesAs the West’s leader in advanced electronics, Hughes is engaged in some of the most dramatic andcritical projects ever envisioned. Challenges for your imagination and development are to be found insuch diversified programs as:I Project Surveyor (soft lunar landing)3-dimensional RadarsPlasma Physics, Ion PropulsionSolid State Materials and Devices Communications SatellitesDigital Computer SystemsHydrospace ElectronicsInfraredThese are among the more than 500 outstanding programs now in prog¬ress at Hughes. These programs require the talents of E.E.'s and Physi¬cists who desire to work with professional scientists in research, de¬velopment and manufacture.In addition, Hughes sponsors advanced degree programs for aca¬demic growth. These programs provide for advanced degree studyat many leading universities. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS and PHYSICISTSB.S., M.S. and Ph.D. CandidatesMembers of our staff will conductCAMPUSINTERVIEWSFebruary 20, 1962Find out more about the wide range ofactivities, educational programs, reloca¬tion allowances and progressive benefitplans offered by Hughes. For interviewappointment or informational literatureconsult your College Placement Director.Or write: College Placement Office,Hughes, Culver City, California.An equal opportunity employer.Creating a new world with ElectronicsI ' Sowing, alterations, hems. BU 8-6001.Artists, Craftsmen, Needleworkcis:Let me sell your handmade gift articlesin my store on Chicago's North Side.Call DO 3-5716 or OR 7-0906.Typing: reasonable, rapid, accurate.Special RUSH service. Call Rona K<> en-blmt or Karen Borchers, NO 7-3609.PersonalsUnde Lennythunder. S.Q. him been known toTrun.: Am •till well.MODEL CAMERAWe have one of the finestselections of photographicequipment on the south si<le.1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259You 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 8-6711EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th Stree«of University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount* foreign or hospital t chafedeolers in:• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambretta5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707aervicc clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-31 13bob lestermg psychiatrist2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 9, 1962Marathon aids SNCCSNCC role has changed Hyde Park-Kenwooddiscussed at YMCAHyde Park’s YMCA will present, a series of discussionsOn February 1, 1960, four ports on what was going on, as- age to do the basic organizationalNed'O students entered a sess direction of the move- work and to provide the coordin-., i p nient, and plan the annual South- atlon that is necessary if the"00"0_ s’ w‘de conference which is re- movement is to effectively about “Hyde Park-Kenwood, todav and tomorrow.” The lec-boi-o, North Carolina. They sponsible for charting the direc- achieve Southwide action. tures will all be held at the YMCA, 1400 East 53rd street,went to the segregated lunch e movemen . Tied tQ ^ese organizational where tickets are now available.counter and asked for service, By the summer of I960, the needs is a financial problem. Up Thp fir„t lect „ will t 8and when refused, remained raP*dly developing integration to this point, SNCC has depended nm this rom;np Mon da v when Accent’ John McKnight of theseated at the counter until the J^ent necessitated a change largely upon receiving funds i^norstate rep^at^ Noble ^nlal^nf TheVdl„tol.p dosed SNCC s lole from one of com- from individual contributions Lee will speak on Hyde Park as ^ ^ Sandbach of the H>deMou c lObeu. munication to onp nf pnnrHinQfirxn .. J , Park co-op, will be members ofwhich have been solicted by it exemplifies grass roots demo- , * February 26SNCC leaders and friends of the cracy- State representative Abnermunication to one of coordinationNews of the sit-in spread Leadership and direction werequickly throughout the South and needed on a continuing basis if 7~ Mikva will discuss the neighbor-within a few weeks thousands of the movement was to sustain it- committee. With the expansion hood as „an incubator for jea(jev. Education in Hyde Park will bediscussed on March 5. Curtis Mel-students spontaneously following self and at the same time develop of the staff, the need for addi- ship for the nation” Leon Des- nick’ district superintendent, Chi-tho example set by the Greens- more sophisticated programs. tional funds has become great, pres, eighth ward alderman, will cago Public schools, will talk onboro group and began staging During the following academic A fund raising drive for SNCC be tbe discussion leader, Hy^e Pub,lc scbools: Re.vf*similar sit-ins at lunch counters. year gNCC began to Dlav a more • raising anve 101 bNCC rend William O. Goedert, assist-The Student Non-violent Coor- dynamic role in the Southern stu- *s Progress. Among the groups On February 19 Herman Gold- ant superintendent, Catholic Arch-dinating committee (SNCC) was dpnt movement expanding ae ParticiPating as sponsors are the stein> executive assistant to the diocese of Chicago school board,formed shortly after that first tivities to includ; wade-ins kneel- National Student association, the superintendent of of the Chicago will discuss the quality of Hydesit in in Greensboro. It came as ;ns. „nH frAPf1nm ~ .. . .. Police Department, will review the Park’s private schools; and Roh¬an outgrowth of the “National ’ ' emocratic Action, recent changes in administration ert J. Havighurst, professor ofstudent conference on the sit-in SNCC has grown in two years ple Northern Student Movement and organization in the police education at UC, will speak on themovement” held in April of that from an organization which em- Coordinating committee, the Stu- department and its significance meaning of good schools to Hydeyear, which brought together sit- ployed one person to a total staff dents for a Democratic Society, for Hyde Park- Park-in leaders from the various South- of s|xteen> it has started a voter the Young Christian Students, the The responsibility of' business In addition there will be tju eeprn states involved in the move- „ for the quality of life in Hyde more discussions on building andment at that time. ... the South, dtv.ston of the Young park wiJ ^ ^ subject of >|he planning in Hyde Park, recreationInitially SNCC was to offer aS as cont*nu'nK 'ts other emociats, and the Young Peo- third program. Herman Cohn of and culture, and Hyde Park - Ken-onlv a ' moans of comnmni- tivities. SNCC must, in order P^e’s Socialist league. Cohn and Stern, Byron Lane of wood’s history and future.cation between the different pro- conduct the kind of programlest areas in the South. Kepre- which its leaders envisage, recruitsentatives of the Southern states large numbers of people who pos-met periodically to draw up re- sess leadership, ability and eour-Job OpportunitiesRepresentatives of the following organizations will conduct re¬cruiting interviews at the office of vocational guidance and place¬ment during the week of February 12. Unless academic restrictionsare indicated these interviews are open to students of any depart¬ment who will be available for full time employment between onwand September, 1962. Interview appointments may be arrangedthrough Lowell Calvin, Reynolds club 22, extension 3284.February 12 - Glens Falls Insurance company, Glens Falls, NewYork, will interview prospective graduates of anyUniversity department tor positions as specialagents, claims underwriters, acturial, etc. Will alsointerview third and fourth year students in mathe¬matics and statistics for summer actuarial program.February 13 - Humble Oil and Refining company (ENCO), Chi¬cago. Illinois and other midwest locations, will speakwith graduating students of any University depart¬ment interested in being considered for company’sMarketing Management Development program.February 15 - United States Naval Weapons laboratory, Dahlgren,Virginia, will speak to mathematicians and physi¬cists at all degree levels and SB and SM candidatesin statistics. Schedule permitting, will talk withgraduate students in these disciplines for summeremployment.February 15 - Underwood corporation. New York, New York, willinterview graduates of any University departmentfor positions as sales management trainees. Thecorporation will make every effort to locate traineein area of his geographical choice.February 16 - Research Analysis corporation (formerly OperationsResearch office of John Hopkins university),Betheda. Maryland, will interview advanced degreecandidates in mathematics, physics, statistics, andphysical chemistry. Calendar of EventsFriday, 9 FebruaryExhibition: First of three exhibitions bythe Lexington group. Emily Chand¬ler. Julie Rogers, John Forwalter,Medici, 1450 E. 57 street, for themonth of February.Exhibition: “Books from East andSouth Asia,’’ Harper library, 0 am-1 pm.Exhibition: Contemporary sculpture,Lexington gallery. 9 am-5 pm.Lutheran matins: Bond chapel, 11:30am.Hug Ivri: Hillel. 1 pm.Rifle club: Field house. 3-5:30 pm.Meeting: Faculty of the division of thephysical sciences, Eckhart 133, 3:30pm.Reception: for Lexington group display,Medici, 6:30.8:30 pm.WUCB marathon: Reynolds club, be¬ginning of 27-hours’ continuous pro¬gramming to raise money for SNCC,7 pm.Sabbath service: Hillel. 7:45 pm.Film: “The heart sings.” Russian artsclub. 2952 W. North avenue. 8 pm.Motion picture: “Gigi,” Burton-Judsoncourts, 8 and 10 pm. 50c.Play: "T imon of Athens.’’ Shakespeare,Mandel hall, 8:30 pm.Fireside: “Judaism and social justice:reflections of a freedom rider.”Henry Schwarzchild, Hillel, 8:30 pm.Saturday, 10 FebruaryExhibition: First of three exhibitionsby the Lexington group. EmilyChandler, Julie Rogers. John For-walter, Medici. 1450 E. 57 street, forthe month of February.Varsity fencing meet: UC vs Universityof Detroit. university of NotreDame, Bartlett gym. 1 :30 p.m.Varsity track meet: UC vs. North¬western university. Field house. 2 pm.Varsity wrestling meet: UC vs. Augus-tana college. Bartlett gym. 5 pm.Basketball game: UC freshmen vs.Glenview naval air station, Fieldhouse, 6 pm.Film: “The heart sings,*’ Russian artsclub. 2952 W. North avenue, 8 pm.Film: "North Star,” sponsored by Polit,Judd 126, 8 and 10 pm, 50c. One- half proceeds to Washington project.Dance: Informal Valentine’s Day dance.International house. 8 pm. men 25c.Play: “Timon of Athens,” by Shakes¬peare. University theatre, Mandelhall, 8:30 pm.Sunday, 11 February .Radio series: “Faith of our fathers.”Reverend W. Barnett Blakemore,WGN, 720 kc, 8:30 am.Roman Catholic Masses: Calvert house.8:30, 10, 11 and 12 am.Episcopal communion service: Bondchapel. 9:30 am.Lutheran communion service: GrahamTaylor chapel, 10 am.Radio series: From the midway. “Crimeand punishment in retrospect.” Her¬man Finer, WFMF, 100.3 kc, 11 am.University religious service: Rockefellermemorial chapel, 11 am.Record concert: Alpha Delta Phi house,2 pm.Lecture: “Trade unionism in Japan.”Bernard Karsh, Ida Noyes hall, 3pm, 35c.Lecture series: United Christian fellow¬ship. “Personal faith and religioustradition,” 5810 Woodlawn avenue,4 :30 pm.Vesper service: Methodist and Porterfoundations, Thorndike Hilton chapel,6:30 pm. Discussion: "The ministry.” Ecumeni¬cal conversarions, Brent house, 6:3®pm.Bridge games: Ida Noyes lounge, 7pm, free.Caucus: “Should students be membersof the disciplinary committee?”sponsored by Polit, Ida Noyes hall,7 :30 pm.Episcopal evening prayer: 5540 Wood-lawn avenue, 8 pm.Folk dancing: Folklore society, IdaNoyes hall, 8 pm.Lecture series: Graduate faculty group,“Why we remain Jews,” Hillel, 8pm.The collegium musicum: Instrumentaland vocal music, Law school auditor¬ium, 8:30 pm.Play: “Timon of Athens.” by Shakes¬peare. University theatre, Mandelhall, 8:30 pm.Monday, 12 FebruaryFilm: “Interlude.” (USA), Internationalhouse, 7 and 9 pm.Seminar: “Hyde Park-Kenwood poli¬tics,” Nobel Lee, Abner Mikva. LeonDel pres, YMCA. 1400 E. 53 street,8 pm.Coffee plus: Shorey house, 9 pm.foreign car salessee pa9e 2 Notice to SENIOR and GRADUATE MEN StudentsIf you urgently require funds to complete your education, andwho will complete their education and commence work this year,are unable to secure the money elsewhere,Apply to STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION INC.A Non-Profit Educational Corporation610-612 END1COTT BUILDING ST. PAUL 1, MfNN.STUDENT GOVERNMENTi COOPERATIVE BOOKSTORE iCampus Agent - — International StudentCooperative UnionSAVE 10% on TEXT BOOKS NOW SAVE 25% OFF LIST :25% on TRADE BOOKS CAMERAS TAPE RECORDERS ;: OVER 250 TITLES IN STOCK Minolta Apolec ;$1 Perpeeual Membership Fee Wollensack Mohawk !Miranda Fujiya: BASEMENT REYNOLDS CLUB Ricoh WollensackOpen Monday through Friday Honeywell-Pentav ConcordFILM and FILM Magnetic Tape11:30 — 5:00 PROCESSING Triton and ScotchUniv. Ext. 3568 Toshiba Transistor Radios JUST ARRIVED:Another Shipment OfSLAT BENCHESThese sturdy walnut benches serve very wellas attractive cocktail tables. There are twosizes, the five-foot bench at $19.95 and thethree-foot bench at $14.95. These importedbenches are only available at . . .SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS"HOME OF MULTIFORM"1542 East 57th Street NO 7-4040Open Tuesday through Saturday, 1 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.WE ARE NOW SELLING ALLMULTIFORM WALL UNITS AT25% OFF---V- ^ — *' - ■ -*Sw»«-.\Neal JohnstonAcademic freedom violated in Kansas college“What this college needs,”said one athletic faculty mem¬ber of College of Emporia,“is a faculty and student bodywith blind and absolute obe¬dience to the board of trus¬tees.”Perhaps. But this unbalancedobserver, dusting himself off afterthe knockout punch describedabove, was inclined to think that abit more than this was needed.The College of Emporia has hadsome six presidents in the pasteighteen months. It’s a bit difficultkeeping track of whom you’rebeing obedient to at this rate ofchange, especially when you’reblind.The C of E, as it is known tothe neo-Calvinist Kansans whosurround this dim jewel, and whonever cofuse it with the Churchof England, has been doing awhopping business of late sellingblinders.Early this fall the student oodypresindent of this small neitheroverly nor overtly liberal artscollege held a beer party in hisapartment. Such an act wasagainst the rules, but generallywinked upon.One imbiber, however, upon re¬turning to his dorm, was found tobe drunk and obstreperous. Thenext morning the Dean of Stu¬dents called upon the beer-toffinghost and asked him what had hap¬pened at the party.The boy told him. The Deanexpressed his thanks, and askedif the student body presidentwould be willing to give this same information to the disciplinarycommittee when it met to considerthe drunkards case. The boy, ap¬parently enthused by the idea ofstudent-administration cooperat¬ion, agreed and did testify.The day after the hearing hewas informed by the Dean thatthe committee had also consider¬ed his own case, and had decidedthat he was going to resign as stu¬dent body president. Always co¬operative the fellow promtly re¬signed.At this point one faculty mem¬ber, an ordained Presbyterian mi¬nister who, horror of Kansan hor-ros, wore a beard every day andBermudas occasionally, wrote aletter to the editor of the schoolpaper wondering if studentsweren’t a bit too readily aquiesc-ent to administrative dicta.He ended by asking the purelyrhetorical question, ‘‘Is this astudent body of sheep?” It was abland sort of letter, the kind whichgets daily tossed into the Ma¬roon’s far out basket. Not so at theC of E.The letter was intercepted bythe faculty advisor to the news¬paper who promptly showed it toher husband, who just happenedto be the dean of students, who,in his turn, showed it to the assist¬ant to the president, who took itstraight to the chairman of theboard of trustees who, jumpingdown a notch or two, showed itto the president of the college,saying: fire this man.At this point the tail of Americ¬an education, the one that Rais-man describes so well, startedwagging vigorously. The president, who was some¬thing of an obstructionist through¬out his entire four-month tenure,demured a bit. Instead of dismis¬sing the disobediant and by nowwide-eyed professor, he decided tosubmit his own resignation to theboard of trustees.The chairman of the board, onhis own authority, accepted the re¬signation on the spot and then,after appointing the assistant pre¬sident (remember him?) actingpresident, fired the poor prof. Ofcourse, no reasons or statementof cause appeared.Just about this time, the busi¬ness manager of the college sentaround a faculty memo explainingthat because of all the bad publi¬city the college had had becauseof this dismissal, the facultywouldn’t be receiving their month¬ly pay-checks.This annoucement was followed(blind obedience principle?) by aspontaneous faculty petition ex¬pressing their utter confidence andapproval of the board of trustees.Within days they were paid.The students made no signific¬ant protest. They explained thatbecause the administration hadnever explained exactly why the professor was fired, they couldn’ttell whether or not there weregood reasons for dismissing theman, and so they couldn’t protest.(Hear the tall thumping?)As to tenure policy, the samefellow who articulated the blind¬ness principle explained that theCollege certainly did have such a policy. Only he didn’t quite knowwhat it was, since in the ten yearshe had been there nobody hadbeen awarded any.Perhaps Chicago should esta¬blish a new junior-year-abroadprogram and start sending stu-fdents down to Kansas for twelve¬months.Concert here SundayThe Collegium Musicum ofthe University of Chicago willperfonn works of Montever¬di, Purcell, and their contem¬poraries Sunday evening.The concert will be at 8:30 inthe lawr school auditorium. will be heard on the viola da'gamba; H. Colin Slim, Conductor-Directed by Howard Brown, anassistant professor in the musicdepartment, the Collegium Music¬um will feature sopranos MarilynFillis and Patricia Peterson.Katherine Bowers will play therecorder while Yolanda Davis of the University orchestra, willbe at the harpsichord. >In addition to songs and son-1'atas by Purcell and Monteverdi^Sthe program will include works|by Jean-Marie Leclair, and Sam-K-i.uel Scheidt. Sections of Sunday! 4evening’s concert, w'hich is freeand open to the public, will be- |presented by the campus musical *group at the Music Teachers Na-be held next month in Madison, fWisconsin. 1LetterO'Hara approvesYates’ candidacyJimmy’sand the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Are. To the editor:I am happy that the Democraticparty has sponsored the candid¬acy for the United States Senateof my colleague the HonorableSidney R. Yates.Congressman Yates has won therespect of his colleagues as wellas his constituents as a legislatorof intelligence and integrity.He is an indefatigable worker,a cogent speaker. He can bedepended upon to support thelegislative program of PresidentKennedy. He deserves your sup¬port.Borratf O'Hara Congressman2nd District, Illinois,V V vWe all make mistakes.. *ERASE WITHOUT A TRACEON EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDDon’t meet your Waterloo at the typewriter—perfectlytyped papers begin with Corrasable! You can rub outtyping errors with just an ordinary pencil eraser. It’sthat simple to erase without a trace on Corrasable. Save#time, temper, and money!Your choice of Corrasable inlight, medium, heavy weights andOnion Skin in handy 100-sheet packets and 500-sheetboxes. Only Eaton makesCorrasable.A Berkshire Typewriter PaperEATON PAPER CORPORATION :*Ey PITTSFIELD, MASS. Editor-in-chiefJay GreenbergBusiness manager Advertising managerKenneth C. Heyl William BasileManaging Editors iAvima Ruder Gene ViaogradoffEditor emeritus Ken PierceCampus news editor Laura Godofsky' *National news editor Michael Shakman ?; ?City news editor Faye Wells'Issued every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday throughout tho /C«University of Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer monthsby students of the University of Chicago. Address ail correspondence to: 5Chicago 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 and <advertising 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. fpV-vJUnsigned editorials on this page represent the opinion of the MAROONeditorial board. Signed material represents the opinion of the individual author. ^UPS is the University Press service, opr rated by the National Studentassociation. CUP is the Canad'an University press, operated by the National J VjFederation of Canadian University Students. ^ ■-tii; ;;iITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti • beef • sausage and meatballsandwichesFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014,1015 1427 East 67th Si *ycoff hectored the college presidents of theAssociation of American Colleges fornot demanding more spoils from thefederal treasury. If’ell, now a goodmany of them hare gone ocer to the highend noble policy of Gimme. But anyonewho has read Newmans Idea of aL’niversity ought to write this day to hiscongressman, asking that our House ofRepresentalices re¬frain from killingcolleges with kind¬ness." g tlI miillnFrom the current inu# .of NATIONAL MVItW. :Writ# for fro* copy, ^150E.35St,NswYoik -16.N.Y. Willlllflllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll' foreign car hospital^;jj= "Get your $50 reward at... '■-S'-.see page 2j|TAVERNCrLIQUORS E55th and EllisMl 3-0524■n RECORDSAll Labels; ListedOthers AvailableService Center,Reynolds Club$2.50li;JOIN HANDSwith more than 200,000 fellowNON-DRINKERS25% DISCOUNT10% Compact Car Discount *25% Second Car Discount(Total Discounts can be 49% off our Low Base Rates!)NOW! "CANCEL-PROTECTION5-year written assurance of continued protectionEmmanuel FlaxChicago 1, Illinois ES 5-4616 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 TOURS255 - C Sequoia - Pasedena, Cal.STRAUS, BLOSSER& McDowellMembersNew York Stock ExchangeMidwest Stock ExchangeDetroit Stock ExchangeAmerican Stock ExchangeHyde ParkShopping Center55th end LAKE PARKCHICAGO 37Phone NOrmal 7-0777CAGO MAROON • Feb. 9, 1962 J»Faculty members discuss civil libertiesEditors note: The MAROON to-day begins a weekly series of fivediscussions on civil lights and civ¬il liberties. Participants are pro¬fessor of law Harry Kalven, pro¬fessor of philosophy DonaldMeiklejohn who is head of thesocial science division of the Col¬lege, Professor of political science,n„l chairman of the departmentof political science C. HermanFntehett, and Professor of lawMidcomb Shaip. Sheldon Nahmudund Michael Shakman moderatedfor the MAROON.(The fifth and final article inthis series will be written by Pro¬fessor Friedrich Hayek of the com¬mittee on social thought. ProfessorUayck will sum up and comment.)(Next week the participants willdiscuss censorship and pornogra¬phy.)Mike: Mr.- Kalven, how doyou distinguish between civilrights and civil liberties?Kalven: Well,, it’s possibleto make a very crude distinc¬tion, which I think is the onewe all have in mind — that civilrights has beeome conventionallyassociated with questions of ra¬cial discrimination, with the normsabout racial equality.Civil liberties appear to bemost closely associated with thefreedoms connected with the firstamendment: the freedoms ofspeech, press, association, andbelief. It’s not a very happy usage,but it does separate out, I think,two opponents of a total libertypicture that are somewhat dif¬ferent.Meiklejohn: References to civilrights often circle around refer¬ences to equality. Harry, is equal¬ity properly to be excluded fromthe civil liberties discussion? Idon’t mean to be muddying thequestion up, but very often theexcitement about equality isn’tpermitted to apply to the civilliberties question when, in fact,it may be one of the interestingdimensions of the matter. Meiklejohn: Exactly. I think a democratic than an elitist so-very good argument can be made ciety of the sort you’ve been de-for showing or contending that scribing, still it isn’t true thatthe only important equality is the in our society everybody knowskind that you discover by free everything or has access to every-expression and free discussion; thing. You can’t live that way.that this sort of meeting of people In other words, you make a re-on equal terms is what you really quirement of, as you will, eithermean by equality in any import¬ant political sense.Sharp: And you find that equalopportunity is an opportunity tobecome unequal in one very fami¬liar sense of the word, and weall value it more than we do deadequality.Kalven: I think it’s interesting,if we go back to the classic de¬fenses, that Milton certainlystrikes a note of elegant in¬equality at the time he was de¬fending free .speech in “Areopagi-tica” saying that this is really afreedom for the elite with a verysnobbish disregard for the massesof mankind where it can benefitone hand or the other — it can’tbe hurt and it can’t be helped,and the kind of people he’s con¬cerned about are Milton's. In asense he’s arguing mostly froman insult to him self as a kindof superior being in having somehack public official tell him whathe’s permitted to say and whathe’s not permitted to say. It hasa strong tone of people in thecommunity in a defense which isreally for the elite, I think. full freedom of expression or equalsharing of information on, andhere is the great question, on acertain set of topics or proposi¬tions.Mike: This is from the meta¬physics of the law of obscenitycited in the Supreme court reviewof 1961.Mike: Starting with Kalven wefind this . . . “Not all communi¬cations are relevant to the poli¬tical process. The people do notneed novels or dramas or paint¬ings or poems because they willbe called upon to vote. Art andbelles lettres do not deal in suchideas, at least not good art andgood belles lettres.“ At the riskof mispronouncing that “belleslettres” I’ll continue: “Mr. Meikle¬john, Mr. Alexander Meiklejohn,takes issue with this almost atonce. He says: ‘I’ve never beenable to share the Miltonian faiththat a fair fight between truthand error ered your comments last year onthe obscenity cases indicated thatyou found there was a gap herein the thinking about the basisfor free speach — that Holmes,when he talked about the freeplay of ideas in the market placeto win men’s minds and so on,was laying a foundation for thiskind of public discussion whichAlexander Meiklejohn is talkingabout here, and you said, “Well,now this doesn’t seem to lay anybasis for the imaginative arts, theasthetic arts, the areas whereyou’re simply interested in con¬veying feelings that have no rela¬tionship to public policy of anykind. Now I understand that Alex¬ander Meiklejohn is really chal¬lenging you on this point,Kalven: I was particularly join¬ing issue with him because you’retelling me that one way of read¬ing him is to link the free speechargument very closely to the self-government argument.The voters must be kept in¬formed on public issue . . . andit also concepts up with this pub¬lic-private distinction. It’s in thearea of public issue that the rulersmust — as any rulers Malcolmwas saying, — must be informedabout their business. In a demo-. cracy it’s everybody’s businessMoreover, against Professor bw:ause theJ,rc all c0.rulers. AndKalven’s interpretation, I believeas a teacher that the poeple doneed novels and dramas and paint-Sheldon Nahmud, Harry Kalven, Malcolm Sharp. Don-aid Mieklejohn and C. Herman Pritchett ( I to r ) discusscivil liberties at Maroon - sponsored forum. it seems to me that that’s an at¬tractive point and makes a power¬ful defense for the open discussionof public issues.This seems to me to leave aparadox about the protection ofnovels and paintings and so forth,and I think I particularly feel thatway because I’ve always had apersonal bias toward aesthetic^matter against the kind of novelthat made a good political point.It alwrays seemed to me it wasa lousy novel or a lousy play ifit had too much of a message init. And therefore the paradoxseems to me pretty good becausethe things we admire, I think, arethe ones with the least obviousmoral or political messages inthem, the least information in aliteral sense.Sheldon: Your quote mentionedart without ideas. Is that w'hatyou mean?Kalven: That sounds dangerous.Kalven: If I were using civilliberty as a term, I would in¬clude the procedural safeguardsin the criminal area, which hasbeen another very major concernof the court and a very activearea of constitutional litigation.And if I’m permitted to includethat, then I can say that quality,at least in the sense of the equalapplication of law7, is a cardinalcharacteristic of that area, thatis that all citizens be equallytreated before the law.Sharp: We all have in mind theold tension that deToquevillespoke of between equality andliberty.Does this concern either of yougentlemen or is this an outmodedway of thinking about things?Meiklejohn: What I was think¬ing of, Malcolm, was simply thatvery often in the civil libertiesargument it seems to me the de¬fender of liberties especially forthe deviant and unusual viewslose the advantage they couldhave if they made the simplepoint of discrimination; that isthat Communists or extremistson other fronts are not given thesame liberty you’d give to themore normal people.Sharp: Well you could haveeveryone denied the right of freespeech; then you’d treat them allequally, wouldn’t you, but obvi-ously equality would completelyterminate the freedom that we’respeaking of there.Meiklejohn: Of course, It seemsh> me that if one gets Into it,equality is a most difficult con-eeptlon to clarify for political pur¬poses, isn’t it? This is the mostfamiliar of experiences we all have:is teachers, that whereas all menare obviously equal they are ob¬viously not equal ...Sharp: Or some are more equalthan others. But I think another way of put¬ting this American credo aboutspeech is to say that in any so¬ciety, no matter how totalitarian,some group of elite must haveaccess to everything. This is truefor Russia, it’s true for the Ca¬tholic church.Somebody, and usually morethan one person would be allowedto have full access to everything,and it’s the general mass of thepopulation that’s being cut offby the censorship. It suggeststherefore that for every elitethere’s a total freedom of speechand that the democratic point isthat everybody’s in the elite. Thatis another way of coming back toequality.There is no group in our so¬ciety, so to speak, that’s cut offfrom having mature elite accessto information; we treat every¬body as belonging to the samegroup. And while we’re free as¬sociating about this, it’s true thatthe famous essay ‘‘On Liberty”makes the point that only for amature people is this kind of freespeech appropriate. You see Millrecognizes some group who wouldbe unequal as the threat of thismuch of freedom of speech. Inanother sense there seems to besome connection with equalityagain. You must assume somedegree of equal competence andmaturity on the part of the popu¬lation before you are this liberalwith . . . it’s again the point aboutchildren and obscenity ... so thatthere must be equal maturity orsomething like that behind thefree speech assumptions.Meiklejohn: But it does seemto me that what you’re reallyleading up to is a kind of cri¬terion of what the range of ideas,of topics, of conceptions is goingto be, to which, in the democraticsociety, there is fallen an equalsharing; because while we are,no doubt, more equalilarian or ings and poems because they willbe called upon to vote.” And hegoes on to say: “The primary so¬cial fact which blocks and hindersthe experiment in self govern¬ment is that our citizens are noteducated for self government. Weare terrified by ideas rather thanchallenged and stimulated bythem. Our dominant mood is notthe courage of people who dareto think. It is the timidity ofthose who fear and hate wheneverconventions are questioned.”Now I wonder . . .Mr. Sharp,how do you look at this distinctionbetween literature for its own sakeand literature as a concomitantin governing. Do the people, needthe people be able to read every¬thing or not?Sharp: Well, I like to think thatthe great dramatists who wrotetheir dramas in the intervals ofcampaigning -and serving officeorders were not yet off as intel¬lectuals in some special intellec¬tual community. I think theywould have regarded the ques¬tion as meaningless. Life is unit,there’s interaction, ends are meansand means are ends. This is be¬fore Plato, before things weretreated a little differently, thisis in the age of Pericles and thegreat democratic age of Athens.I would not myself think this wasa proper way to go at it. But Ishould say if one were to go atit this way, one would have tosay that it means that all treat¬ments of human subjects relateto the conduct of the community’saffairs. It might be interest in loveand the family . . .Kal: Now wouldn’t this argu¬ment be just as good whether ornot you have a democratic formof government in the sense ofhaving voter participation andcontrolling it?Pritchett: Harry, let me see ifI understand the discussion, theargument that’s going on. I gath¬ Sheldon: Well, that’s your quote.Meiklejohn: You mean thatstudy in black and white that wasprinted on the front page of theSun-Times this morning and givena $1500 prize?Pritchett: I didn’t see that, I’msorry.Meiklejohn: Well, it’s . . . that’sit. Just black and white.Kalven: I’m against having any¬one censor a work like Hamlet,for instance, but it seems to methe problem is whether there’sanything in our so-called fissionof rationale for the free - speechcommittment that very plausablyconnects up with the defense ofthe play. Now, for the sake ofargument for the moment, sayI don’t think so.Meiklejohn: Well, is this because,Harry, you are saying within thisframework of public - privatespeech arrangements the drama¬tic writing like Hamlet clearlyfalls in the private?Kalven: Well, it would seem to.I mean, if the distinction wouldhold, this seems to be a privatematter, unless everything is pub¬lic.Meiklejohn: One reason I’m in¬terested in pursuing this a littleis that I’m curious about whetherMalcolm Sharp is willing to saythe same thing. He has, I suspect,of the four of us, the strongestpassion for the private, maybenot, but it’s been my impressionover the years. Is that true ofyou, Mai . . .Sharp: I think so . . . for legalpurposes, there are a whole lotof things that need to be con¬sidered private as your fatherpoints out. Private gossip — gossipis private, for some, in one signi¬ficant sense of the word, not thesense in which I was using theword private a minute ago. Butfor legal purpose, gossip, slander,businessmen talking to one an¬other about prices, businessmenmaking fraudelent statements to customers' these are matterswhich were all recognized as sub¬ject to a kind of control, andeverybody’s got used, I think, toAlexander Meiklejohn’s distinctionbetwen private and public in thisrespect. But when you deal withw'hat is science, what is Freud,what is Darwin, what was Galileo,you produce revolutions in ourways of thinking about mankind,his place in the universe, and re¬volutions with respect to autho¬rity. The church authority wasprobably being undermined byother factors, but anything thathas this kind of impact on society,Greek tragedies for instance, aremuch more related to contem¬porary events that we sometimesthink. Hamlet, though, is a goodillustration. The problems of thefamily which the Freudians haveexplored, for example in the essayon Hamlet by the English Freu¬dian, Mr. Jones, remind you ofhow much depth there is. Oneview of society is that there rela¬tionships color everything thathappens: government, relations togovernment, war and peace. Idon’t see how anybody can putthem off in a separate category.Kalven: Let me come in on adifferent tangent, that Hermanwas suggesting before. Another. . . going back to Holmes, theconventional way of putting thefree speech case in terms of thechance of truth triumphing in themarket place of ideas and so forth.There is at least some connectionwith a kind of bet that the truthwill come out better. We maxi¬mize the community hold on truthby permitting ideas to be free asopposed to having the state tryingto intercept some. Now, does thatmake much sense in connectionwith art? It seems to me itdoesn’t. Part of the free speechgame is that there can always bea counter argument against theposition advanced, and thereforein the exchange and challenge andresponse of ideas the truth willcome out. The people don’t writecounterplays to counteract the . . ,Sharp: Oh, I think they do. Thewhole reaction to Freud was areaction, among other things, toFreud’s interpretation of Oedipus,of Hamlet, which has an Oedipustheme in it, as well as otherthings. A lot of people say peopledon’t act this way. People who arein good standing academically —I can think of some of them —were shocked by Freud. It’s hardperhaps for you to realize, butI’m quite a greybeard, and therewas a time w'hen people wereshocked by Fi'eud.Kalven: Was that point handledby writing a counter play, I meanan anti-Hamlet play, or is it hand¬led by WTiting a critical essay ofthe kind . . .Shaip: There w7ere a lot of anti-Hamlet plays.Kalven; What’s an anti-Hamletplay?Sharp: Plays which said every¬thing that was printed. They w7ereno doubt a parody of the Victo¬rians, because they had muchmore sense than we often think,but there is a kind of Victoriannovel that didn’t — I don’t thinkany of the great ones — theyhaven’t had great success — butthere were an awful lot of them.They say this isn’t the way lifeis at all. Life is smooth, simple,no conflict to speak of, everythinggoes on forth and so forth.Meiklejohn: Well, it’s on thegeneral line of the material ofours we w7ere quoting a minute agoIf we approach directly the ques¬tion of the identifying of obsce¬nity, suppose, Harry, that onecould at least conceive of Ham¬let, or plays of this calibre, asconveying ideas and so as, Mal¬colm Sharp is saying, having pub¬lic significance, Are you willingto acknowledge the indentificationof some so called literary or art¬istic productions which are ob¬scene, because if you are I’m go¬ing to propose those as candi¬dates for private speech, you see,in contrast with the others, but Ifind the courts, sometimes speak¬ing of hai-d core pornography,other times simply using the tern^obscenity with one or another ofthe recent criteria.Feb. 9, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5'Roth analynes Timon' Book reviewEditor's note: The followingarticle is an analysis of “Timonof Athens” which will open to¬night in Mandel hall and runthrough Sunday evening under theauspices of University Theatre.Martin Roth ts the director of theShakespeare drama and is an in¬structor of English at the IllinoisInstitute of Technology. "Troilus and Cressida,” “Coriol-anus,” and “Timon;” among itssuccesses “King Lear” and “An¬thony and Cleopatra.” This seriesof plays has been the subject ofmuch recent theatrical activitiy. Kissinger presents soundgovernment policy standThe extreme dramatic simplic¬ity of "Timon of Athens” hascaused this play to be largelycondemned either as a formlessdrama — a charge equivalent topointing out that some of its partsare missing — or as an unsuccess¬ful attempt to stretch the Chau¬cerian formula for tragedy:Tragedie is to seyn a certeynstoric.As olde bookes maken usmemorie,Of hym that stood in greatprosperitee.And is fallen out of heighdegreeInto myserie, and endethwrecohedly.Either charge refers to a senseof dramatic form which hasdominated the English theaterfrom the period of Shakespeare’spredecessors to that of Rattiganand Fry. However, at least aslate as 1606 (one date assignedfor the composition of “Timon ofAthens”), Shakespeare seems tohave been trying to destroy thatsense of form and replace it withanother more powerful. The re¬cord of this attempt is a series ofplays — among its failures are Not all by Shakespeare“Timon,” as one knows fromeven the most cursory reading inShakespearian criticism, is the-play - that - is . not - all - by -Shakespeare - and - has - no -ending; but the ending of “Lear”is also thematically flat, while, atthe end of “Troilus and Cres¬sida,” Troilus’ maledictory retreatfrom “that notorious bully”Achilles is counterpointed with arecipe for venereal disease, set tomusic by Tyrone Guthrie as “thePandarus blue s.” Moreover,“Lear.” like “Timon,” has aviolently sustained middle sec¬tion. although the pitch is dif¬ferent in both these plays; andboth “Lear” and “Troilus” ex¬hibit the scenic fragmentationwdiich Francis Ferguson claims tofind in Hamlet. (Editor's note: the following re¬view appeared in the April 17,1961, issue of the Nciv leader.)Necessity for Choice (370 pp.) -1961. $5:50).Only apology for 'Timon'This, as far as I am concerned,is the only apology “Timon"deserves, to be located in thecontext of one of the most theat¬rical experiments of the post-wartwentieth century.Timon of Athens is not a noblyinnocent lord whose prodigalityturns to misanthropy when hediscovers man’s corrupt nature.His eyes are never opened duringthe play, except for two briefmoments at the end. His pro¬digality is as monstrous as liismisanthropy; it is a defense Henry Kissinger is withoutquestion the most brilliantAmerican polemicist in thegeneral area of foreign andnational policy. He t>ossessesan unusual ability to seizeparticular positions and publicizethem in a compelling and convinc¬ing manner. His is not dispas¬sionate analysis; on the contrary,he deliberately phrases his argu¬ments to carry conviction ratherthan to explore alternatives. WhenKissinger sometimes adopts view¬points opposed to his own pastideas, or developed by others, hepresents them with great bril¬liance and eclat.(continued on page 7) In this book his positions areextremely sound and their ex¬pression represents his deepestbeliefs. The great perennial issuesthemselves are not debated, butthe issues that may decide theperennial debate are here dis¬cussed with unsurpassed skill.To a considerable extent, Kis¬singer’s book is a sustainedpolemic against the defense polic¬ies of the Eisenhower administra¬tion. His discussion of the missilegap should be required readingfor everyone who essays to debatethe issue.* Kissinger provides a brilliantanalysis of the strategic situationthat will exist w’hen both Russiaand the US have invulnerable deterrent systems. He discussesthe problem of limited war inEurope, rejecting the alternativesof both tactical nuclear war(which he had previously es¬poused) and massive retaliation.He also dismisses the feasibilityof limited retaliation, becausethe bargaining situation wouldchange as Russian armies sweepacross Europe. He admits that anylimited war in Europe will occurunder a nuclear umbrella andthat only our willingness to usenuclear weapons can deter Russiafrom strategic choices that wouldhelp the Soviets win.Limited retaliation soundThe author also aiiudos to theuse of nuclear w-eapons underother conditions. Since he con¬clusively argues against massiveretaliation, he must be suggestingsome form of limited nuclearretaliation. If his arguments aremuted for fear of public reaction,his political judgment may wellbe sound. Yet without an an¬nounced policy, it would be mostdifficult to resort to limitednuclear retaliation before the con¬ventional holding line began tocollapse. In such an event, thebargaining situation would under¬go change and the effectivenessof limited retaliation may bedoubtful.In trying to devise a publiclyacceptable policy, therefore, Kis¬singer has resorted to one thatmay involve greater strategicdangers. His concluding call forstronger convent ional forces,raised primarily in Europe, maywell be heeded, in part at least, by the Kennedy administration,to the relief of i>o!icy specialists!Recognizes NATO'S fearsKissinger has retreated from hispreviously held idea of indepen¬dent nuclear forces for the NorthAtlantic Treaty organization(NATO) nations. He now' recog.nizes that they might be subjectto greater blackmail with indepen¬dent nuclear systems than it theylacked such weapons. He recog¬nizes the natural fears ol theNATO countries about America’swillingness to defend them andaccepts a joint NATO system asthe preferable alternative.Many of Kissinger’s argumentswere used by the present revieweragainst his original position. Al¬though I agree with his goal ofpolitical federation in NATO, Iu'ould be more inclined to goslowly until the proper politicalprerequisites can be forged. In¬deed, economic integration — asin the Euro|>ean common market— may provide a-more feasiblemeans for political federation.Clearly, treating NATO as amerely military alliance can haveonly undesirable consequences.l-harperSQUAREBeauty and Cosmetic Salon5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Mrs. kiltie Treqanxa, Prop.1st TIME IN AMERICAItaly's foremost madrigal singersIn an evening of Renaissance MusicESTETTO ITALIANO • LUCA MERENZIOdirected by PIERO CAVALLISTUDEBAKER THEATRESaturday, February 17, 19628:00 P.M. TICKETS: $3.00, $2.00for tickets or info, write or phone CMC Public Concerts430 S. MICHIGAN. CHICAGO 5 WA 2-3585 - EX. 224%ow 1A, JthsL timsL bo d&cidfLto CDMA- toWashingtonPromSaturday, February 24, 1962Ida Noyes Hail7:30 pm — $3.50 per coupleTickets on Sale at:Reynolds Club deskida Noyes deskOffice of student activitiesBusiness club officeLaw Students Association officeand from100 students in all dormitories,fraternities and apartment buildings Find effective policiesKissinger offers an extensiveand brilliant discussion on bargain¬ing with the Russians. He pointsout that we should be concernedmore with finding effective polic¬ies and less with speculating onunlikely changes in Russianleadership or society. His treat¬ment ot the Russiap tactic oltransforming all bargaining intoa unilateral process of Westernconcessions is worthy of extendeddiscussion and analysis.The book also contains a pro¬found discussion of the importanceof the new nations in world af¬fairs. Kissinger maintains that iiis wishful thinking to believe thatthey will eventually develop demo¬cratic systems patterned afterours, and advocates that the USencourage developments in newlyindependent countries consonantwith American values, withoutnecessarily tying aid to militaryconsiderations. He also has muchto say about the role of the in¬tellectual in politics, and the de¬bilitating effects of committeesand conformism.The present book may not ha\ethe sale of Kissinger’s previouswork. Nuclear Weapons andForeign policy. Nevertheless, itis by far the better book; in¬deed it is the best wide-rangingwork on foreign policy written inthe postwar decade. -Morton KaplanThe reviewer: Morton Kaplan,assistant professor of politicalscience, is chairman of the C/Ccommittee on international rela¬tions, and the author of nume¬rous works on international poli¬tics and military affairs.see poqe 2~3 XiJear (Contact oteft-ieibpDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372at University Ave.foreign car hospital• CHICAGO MAROON Feb. 9, 1962 JCulture Vultureery* w«_ could just barely see the Ladies, plump and prosperous in blue suits and velvet hats; we woreblack tights and know we d applaud much longer and more enthusiastically than they, and never, mistakenly, betweenmovements. Also, we had climbed lord-knows-how-many-stairs, and we were ready to vote for Fritz Reiner as the Great-x ii Lm?? American. But, even so, secretly, we were hoping that this afternoon, just for us. the Ladies, en masse, wouldfollow the music with one enormous collective score. Perhaps they were hoping we would, too.TheaterUniversity Theatre is giving“Timon of Athens” in Mandelhall tonight, tomorrow, and Sun¬day, at 8:30 pm. It’s all about thisreal sweet kid who grows up andthinks everybody’s going to bereal sweet back to him, but no¬body is, so he gets real bittterabout the whole thing. Shake¬speare wrote the play; MartinRoth directs it; and Tom Arthurwill be Timon. If you go by theReynolds club desk, you can havea student discount on the tickets.MusicOn February 18, the Rocke¬feller chapel choir and membersof the Chicago Symphony orches¬tra will perform Mozart’s C min¬or Mass and Faure’s Requium.('all MI 30800 and ask for thechapel office and they’ll tell youall about tickets.The Collegium Musicum of theUniversity of Chicago will giveits winter concert this Sundaynight at 8:30 in the Law Schoolauditorium. The group, directedby Howard Brown, is composedof Marilyn Fillis, soprano; Pa¬tricia Peterson, soprano; Kath¬erine Bowers, recorder; HowardBrown, recorder; Yolanda Davis,viola da gamba; and H. ColinSlim, harpsichord. And theirprogram will be Daniel Purcell’sSonata in F major; Henry Pur¬cell’s Songs and Duets; Leclair’sSonata in F major; Monteverdi’sMentre Vaga Angioletta andDuets; and Scheidt’s Four Sin-fonie. And their whole concertis free.Flicks: hither“Gigi” is at BJ at 8 and 10 to¬night. Sweet and winsome and allthat pretty music. Goodnessknows, it’s a far cry from “Fire¬works.”A far cry from “Lost Bound-lies” too, which is about Negroesbecause it’s in the Doc Filmseries. The movie, of post-warvintage, is apparently one ofthe first film attempts to deal;tl all realistically with the prob¬lems of being a Negro in Ameri¬can society. But it couldn’t havebeen too realistic — it had MelFerrer and Beatrice Pearson —no Sidney Poitier then. In trueDoc Films fashion, there will betwo showings tonight in Judd126; at 7:15 and 9:15. Off campusTheaterThe Company of the Four hasa brand new original play byGrandin Conover, who went toSwarthmore, and won the Com¬pany of the Four brand-new-orig¬inal-playwriting contest. It’s called“As the Hawk Sees it,” but itwon’t open till February 17.They’ll tell you how much ticketscost and what a good play it isif you call MI 3-4170.MusicAll the music at Orchestra hallthis afternoon is by Strauss; thetone poem, “Thus Spake Zara-thustra,” “Dreaming by theFireside,” from “Intermezzo;”Salome’s Dance from “Salome;”and the Final Scene from “Sa¬lome.” Fritz Reiner conducts andLisa Della Casa is the sopranosoloist. The concert begins at 2pm, but if you get downtown by1, you can get a student dis¬count ticket for $1.00.Next Thursday night at 8:15,Carlo Maria Guilini will conductthe Chicago Symphony in a pro¬gram of Brahms’ Symphony No.1 in C minor, Op. 68 and Verdi’sFour Sacred Pieces.The Chicago Chamber orches¬tra will give a concert this Sun¬day evening at 7:30, in the LittleMadrigal singers, Sestetto Itali-ano Luca Marenzio, will give aprogram of Renaissance music in the Studebaker theatre February17. They’ll tell you all about it atWA 2-5585.The Fine Arts quartet plays inlive stereo tonight on WFMT. So,just think: in the comfort andquiet of your own little BJ room,you can sit and listen and ponder.But you’d do better to listen;they’re playing Haydn’s Quartetin D, Op. 20, no. 4 (“Sun”);Turina’s “Prayer of the Torea¬dor;” and Julian Orbon’s Quar¬tet No. 1. The concert starts at 8.ArtMatisse bubbles at the Art In¬stitute through this Sunday, anda beautiful bubble he makes.Their next special exhibit opensFebruary 16: Chinese Art Treas¬ures. What it is is prints andscrolls and (of course) lots ofpretty lacquered pats that theChinese Nationalists spirited toTaiwan and then to the UnitedStates.. The exhibit has been seenin New York and other easterncities but this is its first stop inthe middle west. And even ifyou’re not middle westernly pa¬triotic, you might see it becauseafter all, it’s Chinese.Paul Klee is at the Arts Clubof Chicago. Well, Paul Klee isn’tbut these pink and yellow cutup people of his are. And theArts Club is at 109 East Ontario,with SU 7-3997 for a phone num¬ber.And three of the Lexington group are at the Medici — andthey might really be there; alsotheir paintings and sculpture.They are Emily Chandler, JulieRogers, and John Forwalter, alleither current or previous stu¬dents at UC. The Medici is wherethe Green Door bookstore is andthat’s near all those realty com¬panies, and everyone knowswhere they are. FunsA new review is opening atSecond City next Tuesday. It’scalled “A Knocking Within.”which could mean anything andprobably does. Performances willbe nightly except Monday at 9and 11, with an extra 1 am showSaturdays. Call DE 7-3992 for res¬ervations.COMPANY OF THE FOURPresentsTHE PREMIERE OFAS THE HAWKSEES ITA New Play By Grandin ConoverFEB. 14-17, 21-248:00 p.m. - Wed., Fri.6:00 & 9:30 - SaturdaysJohn Woolman Hall1174 E. 57th St.Reservations:MI 3-4170, FA 4-4100 Jaconetti enterprisesPresents In PersonONE NITE ONLYFRANKIELAINESAT, FEB. 17 - 8:30 PM.MEDINAH TEMPLE600 NORTH WABASH AVE.ALSO . . .The New Singing SensationTONY CALSARETTALORRI LONDON LONDONAIRESDON JERIS and his OrchestraJOHNNY MATSONMaster of CeremoniesADVANCE TICKETS:PRICES: $2.50. $3.50, $4.50, $5.50 $,6.50JACONETTI ENTERPRISES42 E Superior - WH 3-8113or Loop Seno and Sons - 185 N. Stateor AT THE DOOR.LAKEthe /7par k at S5rd{Ayde park : N O 7 9 O 7 1theatredark theatredark & madisonfr 2-284550*r#^ time*far college student*A open 7:30 *.m.late show 3 a.m.★ different double feat ire dallyA Sunday Film Guild★ write in for free program guide★ little gal-lery for gals only★ every friday in ladles dayall gal* admitted for only 25c★ Clark parking - 1 dour south4 hours 95c after 5 p.m.FILM GUILD CLASSICSfri. - 9thsat. - 10th -11th "ballad of asoldier” and"hoodlum priest”"the hustler”and “Saturdaynight and sun-day morning”"facts of life"and "a taisin inthe sun” FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 9. 1962JEAN ("The River") RENOIR'S"PICNIC ONTHE GRASS'PAUL MEURISSE ★ CATHERINE ROUVEL"A STAGGERING FILM WHICH BREAKS EVERY RULE. It returnsart to the fertility rite from which it sprang, and divides its audiencesinto joyful accomplices and embarrassed prigs.”-—Films and Filming, London“A triumphant vindication of the artist as improvisor.” The NEW YORKERand By Repeated Patron Request—RICHIE ANDRUSCO init LITTLE FUGITIVE“One ol the funniest!” -—TIMEFree Weekend Patron Parking etc.Special Student Rates etc. It Timon — irony of life(continued from page 6) “Timon of Athens” is not aagainst his essential misanthropy, tragedy; it has the objectivity ofwhich, when it finally explodes, sal ire — not humorous satire,paralyzes him and is directed but the irony of the counterpointagainst an object which is really of existence.no object, all mankind.As pure id, he tries to identifyhimself with animal nature. Atthe point when he and the falsemisanthrope, Apemantus, areabout to set upon one anotherwith rocks and nails, he partiallyrecovers, draws back, and pre¬pares for his suicide. Martin Rothforeign car salessee page 2NOW PLAYINGTHE MARK''STARRINGStewart Whitman - Maria ShellRod SteignerDearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763Special Student Rate on Mondays and FridaysJuMt Show Cashier Your I.D. CardI He. 'flhrAtic. sff iBM310EV'Directed by JERRY MASTInternationalHouse Theatre1414 E. 59th Street8:30 P.M.TICKETS: $2.25, $1.75, $1.50 — STUDENT DISCOUNTSRESERVATIONS: Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3280EIGHT PERFORMANCES ONLYFEBRUARY 15-18, 22-25kVV\V**.*%****V*,%**3*%^V*%\VV*V*^%Vv*.*.W*\V*\.V1lFeb. 9, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7*»BOOK CLEARANCE SALE!< INSTARTS TODAY At 8 A.M. Brand new editions from leading publishers at tremendous saving — up to 80%! Comein early for full selection — only limited and unreplacable quantities in most cases.1. James Thurber — THE YEARS WITHROSS. Turbulent and affectionate account ofHarold W. Ross, the “irascible genius” whofounded the “New Yorker”.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $12. THE WORLD OF LIGHT, by JohnStewart Collis. A luminous study of the scienceand lore of light that doe>« for its subject whatRachel Carson did for hers in "The Sea AroundUs." Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1.493. Julian Huxley—HEREDITY EAST ANDWEST. Lively, clear-cut discussion of theLysenko-Mendel controversy on genetics.Pub. at $3.00. Sale $14. ARCHITECTURE. NATURE A MAGIC,by W. R. Lethaby. A profound work by thegreat English architect and designer whichasserts that ideas and motives condition theshape and appearance of buildings. Illustratedwith 15 full-page plates and 6:2 figures.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1.985. THE GONCOURT BROTHERS, by AndreBilly. The definitive biography of the mostremarkable pair of literary collaborators in^istory. Records in fascinating detail the«•.?!“ *e of Jules and Edmond on realisticfiction, the whole 10th century French literaryscene, their friendships with Flaubert, Daudetand Gautier, and their differences with Zola.Pub. at $6.50. Sale $2.986. 5AINTE-BEUVE. by Harold Nicholson.One of the most eminent of modern criticswrites an engagii g and authoritative biographyof the greatest literary critic of France’s nine¬teenth century. Ulus. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.987. COOPERATION AMONG ANIMALS: WithHuman Implications, by W. C. Allee. A re¬vised edition of Prof. Alice’s famous “SocialLife of Animals,” which discusses in enlargeddetail the unnderlying biological relationshipsinvolved in social relations, pence and war.Over 50 plates and figures.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1.988. ADVENTURES (N BIOGRAPHY. byWillard Connely. The renowned biographer ofWycherley, Steele, tie»s Brummell and LouisSullivan describes his rewarding adventuresin tracking down his subjects. Illus.Pub. $4.00. Sale $1.989. THE VICTORI AN CONSCIENCE, by C. R.Decker. Illustrated with contemporary carica¬tures. Pub. at $3.00. Sale $1.4910. THE BOOK OF SPORTS CARS, by C. L.Markmann & M. Sherwin. Authoritative illus-trated history of the past sixty years of dualpurpose sports motoring. Over 700 excitingphotographs tell the story of the developmentof 160 makes from a dozen countries. Hand¬some 8^x11" gift volume.Pub. at $15.00. Sale $5.8811. FOUNDERS OF AMERICAN ECONOMICTHOUGHT AND POLICY, by V. C. Wilhite.A superlative review of economic ideas nndpublic policy, told in terms of the philosophiesof early American statesmen.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $1.9812. MOLIERE: THE COMIC MASK. byD. B. W. Lewis. A sparkling biography ofone of France’s greatest playwrights, full offascinating accounts of the court life andintrigue in the time of Louis XIV.Pub. at $4.00, Sale $1,0013. THE SHORTER NOVELS OF STENDHAL.In the famous Scott-Moncrieff translation.Armance, The Abbess of Castro, Vanina Vaniniand three other novels of adventure, intrigueand passion by the author of The Red and theBlack. Two vols. in one. Pub. at $3.95.Sale $1.9814. INVENTORS PROGRESS, by J. G. Leit-hauser. An authoritative and highly readableaccount of today’s revolution in technologyand how it came about. Ulus. Pub. at $4.50.Sale $115. SAVONAROLA — A CROWN OF FIRE.Pierre Van Passen’s exciting recreation of thefiery monk’s life and times, from his call toRenaissance Florence by Lorenzo the Magni¬ficent to his trial, torture, and burning atthe stake. Pub. at $4.95. Sale $t16. THE PLANTATION SOUTH, ed. by K.M. Jones. What life was really like on theSouthern plantation before Civil War, des¬cribed by almost fifty commentators. Illu¬strated portfolio of plantation views andscenes. Pub. at $5.b<*. Sale $1.9817. BETWEEN PAST AND PRESENT, byNathan Rotenstreich. Fwd. by Martin Buber.The distinguished professor of philosophy atThe Hebrew University in Jerusalem analyzesthe views of historians from Vico and Kierke¬gaard to Russell and Toynbee. Pub. at $5.00.Sale $1.9818. THE REDISCOVERY OF MAN, by WaldoFrank. Pub. at $6.95. Sale $l.19. A HISTORY OF MILITARISM, by AlfredVagts. Important, definitive work on theorganization and maintenance of military estab¬lishments for power and conquest, from feudaltimes to the hot and cold wars of the^present.Illus, Over 500 pages, bibiiog. and index.Pub. at $7.50. Sale $2.9820. HARLAN FISKE STONE. PILLAR OFTHE LAW, by Alpheu* T. Mason. Illus. Pub.at $8 75. Sale $3.9821. John Dewey: DICTIONARY OF EDUCA¬TION. The basic thoughts of the great Ameri¬can philosopher and educator, arranged forready reference. Pul*, at $3.75. Sale $122. DREAM OF THE RED CHAMBER, by TsaoHsueh Chin. Preface by Mark Van Doren.57 4 i>p. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.98 23.BEHAVIOR THEORY AND SOCIAL SCI¬ENCE, by F. A. Logan, at al. A description ofClark L. Hull's behavior theary in relation todesponse definition, ii.JFraction, thinking, etc.Pub. at $3,110. Sale $1.9824. THE WORKS OF GEOFFREY CHAUCER.AFacsimile of the William Morris KelmscottChaucer. The complete original text and theoriginal 87 illustrations by .Edward Burne-Jones. 12&*x8Pub. at $17.50. Sale $9.9525. GOODBYE TO UNCLE TOM. by J. C.Furnas. Finally and comprehensively demolish¬es the myths pertaining to the American Negro,from their origins to the misconceptions oftoday. Pub. at $7.50. / Sale $1.9826. PICASSO: THE EARLY YEARS. Pre¬face by Jean Cocteau. Intro, by J. Padrta.Reproductions of 37 early works by theworld’s greatest living painter, 39 of themin full color, highlighting his developmentbetween 1905 and 1922. Nowhere has thebirth and growth of Cubism been moreprecisely illustrated than in this book, andthe collection upon which it is based hasnever been published before. 9.\19,s”, cloth.Pub. at $7.95. Sale $3.9827. TWENTIETH CENTURY PAINTERS:The Paris School, by F. Dvorak. 90 repro¬ductions. 32 of them in color. Picasso, Modi¬gliani. Chagall, Braque, Gauguin, et al. Su¬perb accompanying analytical text.Special $6.9528. VESALIUS — THE ANATOMY ILLU¬STRATED. Et. by J. B. Saunders and CharlesB. O’Malley. A beautiful modern edition ofone of the most remarkable works in thewhole history of science, art and printingIncluded are 96 full-page facsimiles ofVesalius' powerful and dramatic woodcutsof the human figure and organs, with an-natations, a discussion of the plates anda biographical sketch of the great 16thcentury physician-artist. "A great classic,a scholarly work and a beautiful one”.N.Y. Times. Pub. at $10.90. Sale $5.9529. The Life and Art of MARCEL DUCHAMP,by Robert Lebel. Superb volume on the painterof the famed Nude Descending A Staircasewhich was the sensation of the New York“Armory” Show of 1913, and his legendarycareer here and abroad since then. 129 plat*s,6 in color, frintispiece involving 21 applicationsof color ^by hand. An outstandig example Offine book production. lavishly printed inFrance frm Duchamp’s own design. 91 x 12".Pub. at $15,00. Sale $5.8830. MIRO’, by Walter Erben. This beautifulbook is the result of the several months theeminent German art critic spent as the houseguest of the great modern Catalan artist.Illustrated with 69 photographs of Miro atwork in his Majorca studio, representativeworks of all periods, plus eight color platesincluding a double spread of the famed UNES¬CO murals.. Pub, at $8.50. Sale $4.9831 TW1ENTIETH CENTURY ECONOMIC HI¬STORY OF EUROPE. by Prof. Paul Alpert.N.Y.U. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $1.98.32. RED CHINA —- THE YELLOW WIND.by William Stevenson. A Canadian foreigncorrespondent detailed account of his manyyears-behind the Bamboo Curtain. Seeing thepeople and their leaders close-up, his candidobservations of the aims, methods and achieve¬ments of Mao-Tse-tung make this one of themost important books in recent years. 25 pho¬tos by the author. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $1.9833. THEOPHILE CAUT1ER, by ,T. Ruchard-son. Highly readable “life and times” of theRomantic genius—painter, poet, critic, ec¬centric. Illus. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $1.9834. Cloak-and-Dagger—THE BOMB OF OR-SINI. by Mieheal St. John Packe. For sheerexcitement this true, scholarly tale of thechief conspirator of the Italian Risorgimentotops any espionage thriller of fiction. Large-scale portrayals of Mnzzini, Pope "Pio Nono,”Louis Napolen, Garibaldi fill the cast of thisabsorbing drama. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.0035. THE PROFESSOR AND THE COMMIS¬SIONS, by Bernard Schwartz. The shocking in¬side story of corruption and influence-peddlingin the federal regulatory agencies, told by thecrusading law professor who uncovered theMiami Channel 10 and Adams-Goldfine cases.Pub. at $4.00. Sale $136. HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHICAL SYSTEMSed. by Vergiliun Ferm. Informative and tubu¬lating summaries and schools of thought,classic and modern, by 41 eminent authorities.662 pp. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.9837. LYTTON STRACHEY, by C. R. Sanders.A revealing study of the famous English bio¬grapher of the Victorian era, author of “Em¬inent Victorians” and “Queen Victoria”. Illus.PCib. at $6.00. , Sale $1.0038. The First Romantic—SCHUBERT THE¬MATIC CATALOGUE, ed. by O. E. Deutseh.Complete chronological description of over2200 themes every work he ever wrote. Illu¬strated on single-staff system, 566 pp. Pul>.at $8.50. Sale $1.9839. TWO PLAYS OF MENANDER: “TheRape of the Locks” and “The Arbitration”translated and reconstructed by Gilbert Mur¬ray. Pub. at $3.00. Sale $140. SOCIALISM AND THE INDIVIDUAL, byW. A. Sinclair. Fascinating testimony ol asoldier-philosopher-politician who left the Bri¬tish Conservatives for the Labour partv. Pub.at 52.50. Sale $1 41. DICTIONARY OF MYSTICISM, ed. by F.Gaynor. The essential terms of spiritualism,occultism, mysticism, etc. Pub. at $5.00.Sale $1.4942. Maxim Gorky—FOMA GORDEYEV. Mag¬nificent story of the fight of a man againstthe hard-drinking, loose-living, unscrupulousmercantile society of the Volga at the turn ofthe century. Pub. at $3.00 Sale $143. THE WORDS OF JUSTICE BRANDEIS,i ed. by S. Goldman. Fwd. by Justice Wm. O.Douglas. Pub. at $3.00. Sale $1.0044. THE SYNAGOGUE AND ITS PEOPLE.by D. Hollstec. With over 200 magnificentphotographs taken especially for this hook.Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1.9845. Anthony Eden: FULL CIRCLE. Thememoirs of the British Prime Minister andForeign Secretary from 1951 to 1957.Pub. at $6.95. Sale $1.9846. THF. SAGE OF SEX: Havelock Ellis, byA. Calder-Marshall. A definite biography ofthe legendary man who most influenced 20thcentury sexual attitudes. A superb study en¬hanced by hereto unpublished journals andletters. Photos,Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.9848.RUSSIA AND AMERICA — CZARS ANDPRF.S1DENTS, by Alexandre Tarsaidze. Thewhole fascinating story of the “forgottenfriendship” between America and Russia thatlasted almost 150 years from the AmericanRevolution to the fall of the Czarist regime.Over 100 illustrations.Pub. at $6.95 Sale $1.0049. STORY OF THE YEAR: 1848. by Ray¬mond Postgate. Solid, lively history of thatworld-shaking year — republican barricadesin Paris, the “Communist Manifesto.” theemerge of the German state, the first na¬tional uprising in Italy, the Gold Rush toCalifornia, etc. With eontemixwary cartoonsand illustrations.Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1.0050. A GRAMMAR OF ASSENT, by JohnHenry Newman.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1.4951. T. H. HUXLEY’ Scientist, Humanist andEducator, by Cyril Bibby. Fwds. by Julianand Aldous Huxley, 21 illus. and u trulyfascinating conspectus o>f Huxleys’s life andtimes. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.9852. WYNDHAM LEWIS — Portrait of theArtist as the Enemy, by Geoffrey Wagner.An objective study of the accomplished artist,author and imlitical critic.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.0053. Literary Symbolism — PERSEPHONE,by D. Streat.field. A fascinating explorationinto the universal mind of the creative artist,thies book traces the symbolic themes whichhave recurred again and again throughouthistory. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $1.9854. Philosophy — TOWARD A CRITICALNATURALISM, by Patrick Rotnanell. Reflec¬tions on contemporary American philosophy,proposing a naturalistic view of ethics.Pub. at $8.50. Sale $1.0055. QUEEN ELIZABETH IN DRAMA andrelated Studies, by F. S. Boas. Superb schol¬arly essays in the literature of Tudor amiearly Stuart times. Pub. at $3.rto. Sale $1-9856. KENNETH GRAHAME: The Author of“The Wind in the Willows.” By Peter Green.Dramatic, human story of the fascinatingand complex man who wrote the famouschildren’s books which appeal to adults aswell. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $t.9857. Greenwich Village in Its Heyday THEIMPROPER BOHEMIANS, by Allen Churchill.Vivid re-creation of America's Left Bank inthe great years of Eugene O’Neill. Edna St.-Vincent Millay, John Reed and MaxwellBodenheim. Illus. Pub. at $5.00, Sale $1.4958. QUESTIONS IN THE HOUSE, by PatrickHorwath. Detailed history of the British insti¬tution of question time in Parliament onwhich We are more dependent for our liber,ties than most people realize.Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1.0059. Lucian’s TRUE HISTORY and LUCIUSOR THE ASS. Outrageous tall tales fromancient Greece. Illus.Pub. at $3.00. „ $1.0060. THE MIND AND ART OF HENRYADAMS, hy J. C. Levenson.Illus. Pub. at 36.00 Sale $2.9861. Masterworks of TURGENEV. Two com¬plete novels. Fahters and Sons and Smoke, anilnine of the best short stories of this greatwriter, one of the three giants of Russianliterature. .502 pages Special $162. W. B. YEATS AND TRADITION, by V.A. C. Wilson. A detailed Analysis of the poet’slast plays iri relation to Platonism, The Kab-bala, Buddhism and Celtic folklore.Pub. at $5.00 Sale, $1.9863. Father of Zionism—THEODOR HERZL,ed. with an intro, by Ludwig Lewisohn, pref.by David Ben-Gurion.Pub. at $4.0(i Sale $1.0064. HEINRICH HEINE, by E. M. Butler. Anauthoraritative and highly readable biographyof the great German t*oet.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.9865. VOLTAIRE IN LOVE, by Nancy Mitford.“Witty,. vivacious, informative and a delightto read. Harold Nicolson, The Observer.Pub. at $5.(>0 Sale $1.98 66. HOLLY WOO.' RAJAH — The Life andTimes of Louis B. Mayer, by Bosley Crowther.The revealing, “now it can be told” story ofthe Mogul of M-G-M,Illus. Pub. at '$5.00 Sale $1.4967. LINCOLN AND THE PARTY DIVIDFHby W. F. Zornow. Bibiiog., index.Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.9868. Robert Payne—THE CANAL BUILDERS.Turbulent, fascinating history of the greatcanals and the men behind them, from theamazing engineering marvels of the ancientand medieval worlds to the mighty dramas ofPanama and Suez, Soviet achievements, andthe new St. Lawrence Seaway.Illus. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9869.THE SOVIET SYSTEM OF GOVERN¬MENT, by John N. Hazard.Pub. at $1.00 Sale $1.4970.EDWARD PALMER—Plant Explorer ofthe American West, by Rogers McVaugh, Thefascinating stovy of the most peripatetic andproductive botanist of the last century, col¬lector of countless thousands of plant speci¬mens and as many in the fields of archaeo¬logy and zoology, Mai*s, photos, many indices.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.4971.VOODOO, by Alfred MctraUX. The Ir¬resistible lure of black magic, sorcerers andevil spirits permeates htis remarkable studyof Voodoo in today’s Haiti.Pub, at $6.50 Sale $2.9872.WILLIAM BOLLAERT’S TEXAS: 1842-1 844. ed. by W. K. Hollan St R. L. Butler.Here is lusty, brawling Texas during htoseexciting years preceding its annexation, seenthrough the witty, perceptive eyes of an En¬glish adventurer.Illus. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9873.The Great Newspapers—PARK ROW. hyAllen Churchill. Stirring re-creation of thedays of the newspaper tycoons, the men whomade papers htat made the news—Hearst,Pulitzer, Bennett. Richard Harding Davis,other famous editors, rei*orters, cartoonists.Pub. at $4.95 Sale $1.9874. NAPOLEON IN LOVE, by R. F. Ilelder-field. Illus. Pub, at $5.00 Sale $1.0075. SEEDS OF TIME: The Background ofSouthern Thinking, by Henry Savage. Jr.Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.9876. THREE SAINTS AND A SINNER, byLouis* Hall Tharp. The story of the dynamicJulia Ward Howe, who wrote "The BattleHymn of the Republic.” her sisters Louisa andAnnie and their fabulous brother Sam. Con¬federate sympathizer and “King of the Lobby¬ists.” ll!us. Pub. at 85.00 Sale $1.9877. THE DARK SUN: A Study of D. H.Lawrence, by Graham Hough.Pub. at $4.60 Sale $1.9878. MASSACRE; The Tragedy at WhiteRiver, hy Marshall Sprague. The dramaticstory of the terrible days in Colorado, in1879. when trouble between red men andwhite erupted in sudden violence murder, pil¬lage, rape, and the "Ute War.”Illus. Pub, at $5.00 Sale $1.9879. Peary vs. Cook—RACE FOR THE POLE.by John Edward Weems. Fwd. by VilhjnlmurStefanssoii. Based on diaries, contemiK>raryaccounts and interviews with survivors, hereis tin drama, the heartbreak, and the humorof the battle of Commander Peary and Dr.Cook over which had won the race for theNorth Pule.Iluls, Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.9880. Mistress or Wife?—MRS. F1TZHERBERT.by Anita Leslie. Was t he lovely lady themistress of the Prince of Wales — or wasshe in faet his wife?Illus. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9881. BOTTICELLI, by Bernard Gay. Twelvemasterpieces in full color. "The Adorationof the Magi.” “Spring.” "The Birth of Venus.’’“The My stir Nativity,” etc. Reproductions aretipped on individual pages suitable for fram¬ing. 11”xl5”, printed in Italy.Special Import $1.9882. RAPHAEL, by Edward Lucle-Smith.Twelve masterpieces in full color, includingthe Doni portraits, “The Veiled Lady," “TheMadonna with the Goldfinch” and “The Mar.riage of the Virgin.” Reproductions are tippedon individual pages suitable for framing.Il”xl5“, printed in Italy.Special Import $1.9883. RAVENNA MOSAICS, by Bernard Myers.Twelve beautiful color plates of Byzantine mo¬saics that are among the world's greatest arttreasures. Il”xl5”, printed in Italy.Special Import $1.9884. POMPEIAN FRESCOES, by T. Copple-stone. Twelve magnificent full-color plate?depicting the rich, lush life of the. Pompeian*and their deities, H”xl5”, printed in Italy.Special Import $1.9885. “Those Scribbling Women”—ALL THEHAPPY ENDINGS, by H. W. Papashvily.Witty study of the sentimental domestic nov¬els of I9vh century America, the women whowrote them and read them, and hte man-hating attitudes they endorsed.Pub. at $3.50 Sale $10086. GOD’S IMAGE AND MAN'S IMAGINA¬TION, by Krdmun Harris. An intelligent, wit¬ty and reverent survey of the various andcurious ways man has imagined God, fromYahweh to the “Man Upstairs.”Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1.49THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEHours: Mon. thru Fri. —- 8 A.M.—5 F.M. Sat. 8 A.M. — 12 Noon