%'"“Serf* ^ Iff.,,-ents march for pfeaceby Ron Dorfma* party, one of the leaders of TurnWASHINGTON, D.C.— Toward Peace.More than 7,000 studentsfrom across the country par- f0l'0WCd ^ QuesUonZnd^Zr demonstratorsticipated in the largest peace of A^ncans for Freej nmnctration ever held in U° ’ afnd, a fr by. al)0ut mem- that the officials had not read the neaoedemonstration ev ^ ^ bers of the American Nazi party, policy stalemenl of the march, 1,0 gratified” that at least part peFive State department officers statement for distribution to the ment. The first speaker, Emilconfronted 25 students, and each AEC staff. Mazy, executive-secretary of theounter-pickets wcie set up at 0f the five gave 20-minute talks, Bundy communicated to the United Auto Workers, appealed toa message from the the student to return to theirLlr:e.:!;,tUue.n.tS.f10ni_Pla“?fd President. Kennedy was said to campuses and “organize” forWe in the labor movementwill join with you,” he said.»«e United States here Friday The p„,,ry „>(enlent of theatul Satuiday. |M*«ce murth em|tliasi7.p<l the need students were in favorAround 200 PrtVMnlty of Ch.ea- for in|tutives toward disarmament lateral disarmament.R’> students with 100 other people by thp United S(ales. It called forfrom tl"* area ra',< e as cessation of nuclear testing, ahan-inctmi to attend the demonstra- donmpnt of the shpltor pr0KPam,t*°°., . withdrawal from military bases onThe peace march was the first s„vl,.t p<.rlmrt,r' valuableactivity of the newly formed Stu- of the policy statement of themarch was in support of some of Another speaker at the rallyhis programs, and that in any was ^an Triggs, a Negro studentcase, he was “pleased” that those at Howard university in Washing¬picketing the White House were t°n, HC. Triggs spoke of the re-Student leaders rei>orted that on the opposite side of the politi- lationship between the peacetheir most fruitful interview w'as cal spectrum from the extreme movement and the civil rightswith the Atomic Energy commis- right-wingers “who usually picket movement. The man who sailedsince they had assumed that theof uni-AEC 'best'sion tAEC). Fouronly for first-strike attack, mas- .. ... , . , , ,. . .. ... ... met wath four students, askedHive foreign aid, and other “uni¬lateral initiatives.”During the two days of demon¬strations, students visited morethan 300 Congressmen and weregranted interviews w'ith manydent Council of Turn TowardPeace, an umbrella group co¬ordinating the peace activities ofmany organizations.Picket White houseStudents started picketing theWhite House at 9 am on Saturday, government agencies. The Presi-Shortly after, it began to snow dent, although he would not him-ftnd President ^Kennedy sent^ out scjf see demonstrators, desig¬nated several of his top policyplanners to talk to the students.Leaders confer, . . Members of the steering eom-The numbers kept increasing as mit(ee of the Turn Toward PeaceStudent council spoke at lengthin the White House with McGeorgeBundy, the President’s specialassistant for national securityaffairs; Marcus Raskin, Bundy’s, . .... secretary; Jerome Wiesner,colleges and universities had regis- special Presidential scientific ad-tered at Union Methodist. Thepicket line extended from the AEC officials there.”The peace march culminatedquestions, took notes, and re- with a mass rally on the groundsquested extra copies of the policy surrounding the Washington moitu- the Golden Rule into the Pacifictesting rounds later turned up ona burning bus in Anniston, Ala-(continued on page three)three tuvedoed butlers with a"symbolic” urn of hot coffee.There were at the time approxi¬mately 400 marchers.busloads of students arrived at.Union Methodist church from Bos¬ton. New York, Chicago, Detroit,and elsewhere.By Saturday afternoon, morethan 5.000 students from over 100 Vol. 70 — No. 60 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Feb. 20, 1962 31very lm-visor; and Ted Sorenson, the.. . _ White House staff counsel. Raskinvu.ite House past the Executive commented later that the studentoffices to 17 street, and a blockdown 17. Another line completelysurrounded the park directlyacross the street from the Presi¬dential mansion.March to ArlingtonWhen the picket lines broke up posed largely of the employees ofto march to Arlington National aircraft and missile manufactur-cemetery to place a wreath on the ers, told the press that “someone”Tomb of the Unknow n Soldier, the had “filled these kidslino of march reached from the baloney.”White House to the outskirts of On the other hand, studentsthe cemetery, a distance of ap- from Heed college reported beingproximately two and one half received with “open arms’roiles. Representative Edith GreenFrom Arlington the march re- Ore.),turned to the Washington monu- Student leaders who saw Statement for a rally addressed by department officials were resent-Norman Thomas of the Socialist ful of having been “lectured to.”f representatives were apressive group.”Students who spoke to Repre¬sentative Chet Holifield (D-Cal.)fared less well. Holifield, whorepresents a constituency com- nating. committee (SNCC)were arrested on charges ofSNCC workers arrested;criminal anarchy' chargedThree workers with the The charges include trespassing, Upon hearing of the arrestsStudent Non-Violent coordi- vagi'ancy, disorderly conduct, loit- SNCC got in touch with a Batoncriminal anarchy in Baton Rouge,with Louisiana last weekend.Two of those arrested includingSNCC chairman Charles McDew,by were held in lieu of $7,000 bail.(D ering. and criminal anarchy.Diamond was the first of thethree arrested. He had gone toBaton Rouge, along with twoSouthern university students, toinvestigate the situation at theuniversity. Southern w'as closedlate last year after mass demon- Rouge lawyer. It was only thenthat it was discovered that McDewand Zellner had been charged withcriminal anarchy.Criminal anarchy law's are car¬ried on the books of most states,and are tied closely to seditionregulation. The laws prohibit at¬tempts to violently overthrowXminary hearingS WWe “* f°r stra,i°"s h'-,d *roles“"S the £££.''SimfnTlna^finTXDion Diamond, a field secretary exPulslon ot scvcra' studen,s tor tana is punishable by up to 10of ihe committee, was held on five participating in sit-in demonstra- years imprisonment,charges, w-itii bail set at $13,000. tions. The school was reopened Laws unconstitutionalearly this year, but leadeis of the The Supreme court has tenta-protest were not allowed to re- tively ruled such laws unconstitu-register. tional, stating that the federalDiamond and the two Southern government has pre-empted, thisstudents were arrested and held power through the Smith act, thein the East Baton Rouge parishjail. Diamond was originallycharged only with trespassing, va law declaring membership ir. anorganization preaching the violentoverthrow of the government il-grancy and disorderly conduct. The legal. But according to Mrs. Bra¬den. the Court’s decision is veryindefinite and is much disputed.The state has not as yet filedno bill of particulars charging Mc-Devv and Zellner with any speci¬fic violation. According to Forman,the charge will probably bo con¬cerned with an attempt to getinter-racial literature to Diamond.SNCC has made contact withthe Legal defense fund in BatonRouge and has engaged lawyerJohn Jones for the preliminaryhearing today. The committee isother charges were added later, ac¬cording to James Forman SNCCexecutive secretary.Two arriveMcDew and Robert Zellner. afield worker for SNCC, arrived inBaton Rouge Saturday for the pur¬pose of visiting Diamond. Theywere told, on arriving at the jail,that prisoners could be v isited onlyon Tuesday. They planned toleave, but first asked permission tobring Diamond some fruit andbooks. This request was granted.They brought the books and also attempting to raise moneyfruit with them to the jail. As f°r bail l°r McDew, Zellner, andthey were leaving they were stop- Diamond. An appeal for this mon-ped by a parish official, who ey has been sent to northern uni-questioned them extensively. Afterbeing questioned the two were ar¬rested on charges of vagrancy.According to Ann Braden, of theSouthern Conference educational versifies, according to Forman.UC’s Student Government senttelegrams last night to HarrisWafford, president Kennedy’s spe¬cial assistant for civil rights andSome of the 7,000 Washington peace marchers picket in front of the white house. fund in Louisville, Kentucky, Me- to Burke M. Marshall, assistantDew had several hundred dollars attorney general for civil rights,in his possession at the time of asking federal intervention tohis arrest. stop Baton Rouge prosecution.Malcolm X, Abner debate integrationThe Black Muslim move-t ment is slowing down thefight for Negro freedom,charged Willoughby Abner,„ a former president of the ChicagoNAACP.v Abner, currently director ofeducation for the United AutoWorkers, debated “separation orintegration” with Malcolm X.Shabazz, spokesman for the BlackMuslims’ leader Elijah Moham-* niad, before a capacity crowd inMandel hall Friday night.The debate, spcmfi®N*d by UC<X)RE and Student government, raised over $1,000, which will besent to the Student Non-violentCoordinating committee to aidits Negro voter registration drivein the South.Both Abner and Mr. X agreedthat human dignity, freedom,justice, and equality are theNegro’s major objectives. Where¬as Abner feels integration is thebest means to achieve them, Mr.X rejects integration “on thegrounds that it will never givethe Negro human dignity.” TheBlack Muslims, instead, favorseparation, and hope to establishan autonomous black nation.Separation Is the only way to achieve any kind of equality, ac¬cording to Mr. X. It means thatit is “impossible for the two ofus to live side by side and havepeace.” There is peace now onlyif the black is subsurvient, liesaid.By instituting the self-suffic¬iency taught by “the honorableElijah Mohammed,” the Muslimsseek to “let the black man showhe is equal,” explained Mr. X.Criticizing Negroes for theirinactivity, he said that they havenot yet channelled their wealth.“They don’t set up farms orfactories; instead they wait for the w'hites to do it and wait forthe w'hites to give them job op¬portunities. When not gettingthem, they call the whites dis¬criminatory.”The white man is not wrongwhen he doesn’t hire a black man.for it is his own factory, saidMr. X; however, “integrationistsdon’t teach Negroes to help them¬selves. Those of us who follow'Elijah Mohammed feel that in¬tegrationists are teaching Negroesonly to be beggars.”“So-called Negroes misled byintegrationists trying to integratebus terminals and restaurants spent $90,000.” They could haveused this money to create job op¬portunities, building their ownbus terminals and restaurants, heclaimed.“Not all blacks want integra¬tion,” tie emphasized. “White so-called liberals who want integra¬tion are in the minority, as blackswho want integration are also inthe minority,” he said.Abner, on the other hand,claimed that integration inAmerica is “the natural bypro¬duct of the Negro’s search fordignity.”iTal Joey* reviewStill has 'the old bazoom' Pearce raps University4i ‘T’were well it weredone quickly” is applicableto musical comedy as wellas to the murder of kings.And, except for occasional strag¬glers in the orchestra, UniversityTheatre’s “Pal Joey’’ moves alongbriskly.If some numbers such as “PlantYou Now, Dig You Later” or“Happy Hunting Horn” seem alittle dull, it is perhaps becauseRodgers’ music and Hart’s lyricsare less distinguished than O’¬Hara’s book. Only the adventi¬tious excellence of a superlativeprofessional cast could keep theshow from letting down, butwherever zest, ingenuity, andintelligence can supplant a largeproduction budget, this perfor¬mance is raffishly amusing. into their routines with the in¬variable fundamental enthusiasmof respectable girls given a chanceat moderate indecency. Theraucous flower number is a creditto their field work in burlesqueand to their “unofficial” Bumpsand Grinds Coaches (RichardMandel and Ken Pierce, who alsoconducts). As the proprietor ofall this shady splendour, JeromeLoeb seems quite believably har-hassed. and bewildered” when her topnotes fail. In fact, only MissKiblinger has enough voice topenetrate consistently to the backof the International house theatre.Her Linda is such a nice kid thatthe audience is delighted whengirl loses boy.Henry Lynn’s Joey is full of“smarmy” charm and weak vic¬iousness. Unlike Damon Runyon,O’Hara did not sentimentalizehis guys and dolls, and GeraldMast’s direction maintains thisdetachment very successfully.Susie Workoff, for instance, is abrassily vulgar Gladys, but neversuccumbs to the temptation ofsuggesting that under that brassbeats the traditional heart of gold.Her partner in blackmail, FelixShuman, delivers lines as if hewere a villainous Durante; indeed,all of the cabaret characters areappropriately frowzy. The wittiest performance, how¬ever, was Peggy Cauders’ perod-istic striptease, irrelevant to theaction but indispensible ascomedy.The "outsiders” entering O’¬Hara’s cafe world are RuthNetherton (Vera), as decadent asJoey and his pals, but richer; andKatherine Kiblinger (Linda), thepuppy-loving innocent who in¬spires Joey to a few faintly de¬cent seconds. Mrs. Nethertonsins better than she sings, as¬suming a dissolute attractivenessthat carries “Bewitched, bothered, The obvious physical limita¬tions of International house’sstage are overcome to a remark¬able extent by Robert Benedetti’slighting and James Bradley’s sets,especially his Florsheim-flavoredbackdrop for Chicago by night.Altogether, “Pal Joey’s” draw¬backs are those imposed by thecircumstances of an amateurproduction and a no longer dis¬tinctive score; its virtues aredash and a consistent and effec¬tive sense of tone (if not of pitch).The University theatre has givenit “the old bazoom.”Jane W. Stedmanassociate professorof EnglishRoosevelt university The University’s recentfailure to renew the one-yearcontract of Robin Pearce ashead of the fine arts programof the adult education depart¬ment has resulted in sharp at¬tacks by Pearce.The former lecturer for theNational and Tate galleries ofLondon claims that the Universitydismissed him because he lacksa PhD degree — a degree thatis not granted in England in thefine arts.John T. Wilson, director ofadult education, maintains thatthe entire division is undergoinga change which will attempt toplace persons with faculty statuson the Quadrangles in positionsheading programs.Pearce feels that his lack of aPhD prevents him from attainingfaculty status: “When a fewyears ago I expressed interest injoining the humanities staff, Iwas told, informally, that it wouldnot be possible without a PhD.”Wilson denies that this is thecause of Pearce's dismissal, andstressed the University’s inten¬ tions to run the program fromthe South Side campus, by mem.bers of the faculty.Pearce comments: “In view *ofthe service done, the Universitycould remedy the situation bygiving me an honorary PhD.”Charter NY busStudent Government (SG) an¬nounced yesterday that it is spon¬soring a round trip bus ride toNew York during spring interim.The bus will leave campus Fri¬day evening, March 16, and arrivein New York the following morn¬ing. The returning trip will departlate in the afternoon on Sunday,March 25, and arrive on campusearly Monday morning.The round trip price will be$26.25.A ten dollar deposit is requitedand should be brought to SueGoldberg in the SG oflice, IdaNoyes hall, between 3 and 5 pmon Monday-, or between 3 and 2:30pm on Tuesday and Thursday. Theremaining $16.25 must be paid byMarch 5.Africa law conference terminatesThe chorus line, from JaneWhitehill on, throw themselves99c SPECIALSWITH THIS ADBrake Adjustment99cONLYFlat Tire RepairsTube Type 99°OnlyRotation of 5 Wheels99cONLYWheel Balancingp,us QQcWeights 33tow I°rAl Sqfe W“yIiOB070 Many Africans are awareo' the danger of substitut¬ing their own tyrannies forthose exercised by colonialpowders, it was brought out at arecent w’eek-long symposium atthe law school.While there is a deep respectamong Africans for human rights,the leaders of new African na¬tions are under heavy pressureto produce economic improve¬ments, w’hich could lead to tyran¬nous national authority.The symposium, w'hich endedSaturday, studied the forces shap¬ing the governmental and legalsystems of new nations, espec¬ially Africa. Some 60 scholarsand political figures, 20 of themfrom Africa, participated.Dennis Cowen, former dean ofthe faculty of law at the Uni¬versity of Cape Towm, SouthAfrica, and now professor of lawat the University of Chicago, con¬ceived and organized the meeting.Cowen is also director of the center for legal research (newnations) of the UC law school,which sponsored the meeting.A fifth generation SouthAfrican, Cowen wrote the presentconstitution of Basuto land atthe invitation of the Basutopeople and is now engaged in anattempt to provide a non-racialconstitution for Swaziland.Commenting on the week,Cowen said there were “factorspointing both ways” determiningwhether democracy will be thepredominant form of governmentin Africa."Throughout the African con¬tinent, there are factors favoringconstitutional government . . .and there is a genuine respect forthe human personality and humandecency.”The symposium also made thepoint, Cowen said, that the cent¬ralization of power was “anoverriding trend all over theworld,” not just in Africa, be¬cause mammoth undertakingssuch as armaments and space ex-Study inGuadalajara, MexicoThe Guadalajara Summer School, afully accredited University of Arizonaprogram, conducted in cooperationwith professors from Stanford Uni¬versity, University of California, andGuadalajara, yill offer July 2 toAugust 10„ art, folklore, geogra¬phy, history, language and literaturecourses. Tuition, board and room is$245.Write Prof. Juan B. Reel,P.O. Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. $50 rewardbrand new Russian typewriter.Royal, elite type, Futura 800 wasrecently stolen from CROSS-WORLDBooks and Periodicals (A Russianbookstore). We of fed $50 reward lead¬ing to the recovery of the type¬writer.No questions ashed and no prose¬cution.Phone or see G. B. LotsmanCROSS-WORLD BOOKS ANDPERIODICALS, INC.333 S. Wacker DriveChicago 6, IllinoisHA 7-1042SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORM — THE UNIQUE STORAGE UNITS1542 EAST 57th STREETOpen Daily 12 noon to 8 p.m.Plus to*-duwic tiffstlcally ^50ya* dr&s-thoroSgh*.{S**»frirfc|B5!S!S V mU.S. Royal SAFE-WAY TiresDiscounts to UC students& FacultyAL SAX TIRE CO.6052 Cottage GroveDOrchester 3-5554 DON'T MISS!UNIVERSITY THEATREpresentsfftHOETMusic by Richard RogersLyrics by Lorenz HartBook by John O'HaraDirected by Jerry MastINTERNATIONAL HOUSE1414 E. 59th Street9:30 PM Tickets: $2.25, $1.75, $1.50Reservations: Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3280or come in person to Mandel Hall Box OfficeLAST WEEK ! PERFORMANCES THURS., FRI., SAT.. SUN_ ploralion can only be carried outby national governments.Cowen described the evolutionof new nations following the re¬treat of colonialism. Some of thenew nations of Africa, he pointedout, are experimenting alongclassical, federal, or confederallines, but others are striking outalong entirely new lines.“Novel developments, especiallyin economics, diplomatic, and mili¬tary association, are taking place— from Senegal in the West tothe Malagasy republic in theIndian Ocean,” he continued. Cowen felt that scholars fami¬liar with established federalismsystems can learn much fromtheir African colleagues as wellas the Africans learning from thescholars.“Far more important lhan thequestion whether Africa is goingto develop a British, American,or French type of democracy isthe question whether she willdevelop her own pattern of demo¬cratic government under the ruleof law.”“African leaders recognize thatthe problems which face themmay well call for novel solutions,both in political theory and prac¬tice,” he related.In discussing the value of thesymposium, Cowen said that Af¬rican participants had indicatedthey desire equal exchanges ontheir legal problems with West¬ern specialists, not pat prescrip¬tions. | Today's Events |Tuesday, 20 FebruaryThe Africans also want West¬erners to be frank enough in dis¬cussing their own legal historyto mention mistakes, Cowennoted.' foreign car hospital & clinicdeolers in:• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambretta5340 s. lake porkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-31 13bob lest-ermg psychiatrist Exhibition: Kinetic sculpture. L«.vinylongallery, through March 1.Lutheran communion service: Bondchapel, 1 1 :30 am.Seminar: "The American Jewi-h com¬munity,” Hillef foundation, 12:30am.Lecture: ‘‘Overcoming sin — the nega¬tive,” Paul Fromer, Swift hall, 12:30-1:20 pm.Meeting: Council of the university sen¬ate, Buxines# East 106, 3:4(1 pm.Motion pictures: ''Rubens,'* "Fiddle-de-dee,” (department of art). Socialsciences 122. 4 pm.Varsity wrestling meet: TJC vs. Illinoisinstitute of technology. Bartlett gym¬nasium. 4 pm.Colloquium: "Current research in liquidhelium 3.” J. G. Daunt (Institute forthe study of metals). Research in¬stitutes 211. 4:15 pm.Basketball game: UC freshmen vs.Wright junior college, Fieldhouse, (pm.Rifle club: Fieldhouse. 7-10 pm.Meeting: Christian science testimony,Thorndike Hilton chapel. '7:15 pm.Films: “NY. NY.” and “Suburban liv¬ing: six solutions.” films on thecity. Judd 126. 7:30 pm.International folk dancing: Internationalhouse. 8 pm.Varsity basketball game: UC vs. SaintProcopius college, Fieldhouse, 8 pm.Lecture: “Faust’s damnation: The moral-i»v of knowledge,” Erich Heller(Committee on social thought),Social sciences 122, 8:15 pm.THE GALLERY• Prints• RestorationPaintingsFraming1168 E. 55th St.288 - 5645DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTSPECIAL TYPEWRITER OFFERSTARTING TODAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1962For two weeks only — One free typewriter table with eachOlympia SM-7 or Smith Corona portable electric typewriter youpurchase during this period.Bring this ad with youUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE. CHICAGO 37. ILL■2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 20. 1962Students, faculty discuss disarmamentby Michael ShakmanSWARTHMORE, Pa. Feb.. While several thou¬sand students picketed theWhite House and the Sovietembassy to express their desirefor peace, over 300 others from100 campuses met here to learnabout the complexities of the armsrace and to examine alternativesto it.The students were attending theFirst Intercollegiate Conference ondisarmament and Arms control.During the three-day conference,students met in small seminarswith leading authorities on armscontrol and disarmament.The conference began Fridaynight with a keynote address byUS Senator Joseph Clark (Dem-Pa). Clark emphasised the needfor disarmament, not just armscontrol.Among Clark’s premises were:all-out nuclear war is obsolete asan instrument of national policy;more and better armaments willnot bring security; the US mustbe armed in order to negotiate; and, unilateral disarmament is im¬possible, the goal must be dis¬armament with controls.Because very few people takeseriously the possibility of dis¬armament, the President and Con¬gress are hampered in workingtoward an agreement, Clark ex¬plained. Major issues are cloudedby disputes over a nuclear testban and civil defense, he added.Senator Clark raised severalquestions about American policy.He referred to rumors that theUnited States was considering de¬velopment of a first strike capa¬bility—a capability that wouldhave to be used to begin a nuclearwar, not retaliate against an at¬tack. He noted that such a deci¬sion, which might increase coldwar tension, should be carefullyconsidered.China neededClark noted that Red Chinamust be in on disarmament nego¬tiations, and that the longer suchnegotiations are postponed themore likely it is that the Chinesewill develop their own weapons.In closing, Clark made several suggestions including one that apermanent intercollegiate group beestablished to discuss the issues.Clark was followed by BernardBechhoefer, former State depart¬ment official and adviser at dis¬armament negotiations. He notedthat the Soviets are sincerelyseeking an alternative to an un¬restricted arms race. The US hasnot, at times, really been com¬mitted to disarmament, but hasdeliberately offered proposalswhich would be unacceptable forthe Soviets or which could notpossibly be implemented ifaccepted, he added.The hard work of the confer¬ence began Saturday morning witha speech by Professor ThomasSchelling of Harvard. Schellinglold the students that they couldexpect no simple answers in thearms race, and warned againstseeking them.“We shouldn’t panic in gropingfor revolutionary solutions whichhaven’t been examined,” he said.Steps should be judged not bywhether they aim at disarmament,but by whether they increase theMarchers hear Thomas(continued from page one)bama,” he said. “The reason isthat we have enemies in com¬mon.”He advised sludenls leavingWashington via Route 40 (towardBaltimore) to test the segregatedrestaurants along the way. Route40 restaurants have been the ob¬ject of tests by the Congress ofRacial Equality for severalmonths.The final speaker, NormanThomas, six times Socialist candi¬date for President, obviouslyelated by the size of the crowd,went to the microphone to receivea standing ovation, lie gesturedtoward the towering obelisk be¬hind the demonstrators and spokeof the ideals of the AmericanRevolution. Referring to the trekto Arlington, he said, “There mustbe no more Unknown Soldiers.”He blasted Representative Holi-fieids’ remarks about the students.“I am sure,” he jibed, “thatbaloney is more nourishing thanthe stuff they’re dishing out . . .It is a futile thing to think thatwe will have the Declaration ofIndependence and the Bill ofRights fulfilled while we are in a Cold War. You cannot have libertyin the garrison state.”He spoke sarcastically of thegreat God, Military Security, whosays ‘For the Lord thy God is ajealous god; thou shalt not takethe name of the Lord thy God invain, for the House and Senatecommittees shall not hold guiltlessthose who take the name of theLord in vain. Thou shalt not kill—retail; thou shalt not neglect tokill upon my order . . . .’“What twisted realism,” heasked, “can make your HermanKahn?” He told the students that they, and not the senators andgenerals, had a “realistic” view ofthe world. “We are creating agroup ready to support any manin high office who will stand upfor peace and freedom . . . Thereis now a necessity for a consciousTurn Toward Peace.”We must abandon the weaponsof destruction, Thomas said, andask ourselves “What can be donein peace to conquer hunger,poverty, and disease? We mustwork with cooperation and visionfor a Turn Tow ard Peace.” chances of staying alive longenough to effect other changes,he added.Moreover, Schelling said, dis¬armament will not end war. Ina disarmed world people might bepersuaded that w7ar was not tooterrible, or a nation or group ofnations might be tempted to re¬arm secretly, since a few nuclearweapons in a totally disarmedw'orld would be of decisive advan¬tage. Schelling later suggestedthat a certain level of armamentwas necessary for maximumstability.After Schelling’s speech studentsattended over five hours of inten¬sive seminar discussions with theexperts, drawm from Harvard,Columbia, the University of Penn¬sylvania, West Point, and the In¬stitute for Defense Analysis.Taylor speaksIn the evening, the studentswere addressed by Harold Taylor,former president of Sarah Law-rance College. Taylor suggestedthat the universities must providethe base for further advances inw'orld civilization, and offered anine point program for mobilizingstudents to work for peace. Theyincluded:1)Establish graduate and un¬dergraduate seminars, both insideand outside the curriculum, tostudy the issues of peace and dis¬armament with the help of facultymembers already in the field, andproduce reports on every aspectof the problem from nuclear test¬ing to the status of Red China,especially for the use of Congress¬men. 2) Establish peace fellowshipsby which students could concen¬trate on areas of peace investiga¬tion as part of their graduatew'ork in the social sciences orhumanities.3) Organize letter-writing cam¬paigns after study and discussionto key people in the departmentsof State and Defense, and circu¬late newsletters such as the onescirculated by the Committee ofCorrespondence in Cambridge,Massachusetts.4) Prepare articles for studentnewspapers and magazines.5) Organize a speakers’ bureauof students who are well-informedand capable of soaking not onlyon campus but in the generalcommunity.6) Investigate the possibilitiesof such actions as development ofa United Nations university, addi¬tional peace corps projects andfellowships for foreign students,including the Russians, on sub¬jects relating to peace.After Taylor’s speech, the stu¬dents met in seminars without ex¬pert panel members to try tow’ork out ways of establishinggroups to work on peace issuesand ways of educating themselvesand the general public about theissues.Sunday morning, the conferencewas brought to a close with apanel of experts discussing andarguing among themselves variouspossibilities for averting nuclearholocaust and achieving a truepeace.Lectures on socialism2 room furni*h»‘d apartment. $87 mo.57 and Dorchester. FA 4-5933.Typing, neat, accurate, reliable. Call752-2064.2 family dwelling, near 97th and Vin¬cennes. 6 rooms up and 6 rooms down;mod. kitchens and bath; large improvedyard and 2 car garage; rent from up¬stairs apt. will pay mortgage; idealfor married stud, or instr. with family;close to commuter lines and shopping;$21,500. Call PR 9-3368, after 6 pm.Wanted: Part-time day help for prepar¬ing simple tax returns. Universityvicinity. BE 3-0453, ST 3-6681. Callevenings only. For Sale—Maroon classified advertisingspace. Good for selling, renting, ex¬pressing wants and jibing. Studentrates. THIS ADVERTISING IS VERYCHEAP. Call MI 3-0800, ext. 3265 or3266, for service. The problems involved in aplanned socialist economywere discussed here last nightby Oscar Lange, professor ofeconomies at the University ofWarsaw in Poland.Lange, who taught at theUniversity of Chicago from 1938-1945, returned to Poland afterthe war to help his country at¬tain a high economic level. Speaking of his stay at UC^Lange stated that at that timeall economists were forced to con¬front their theories with history,"History,” he jibed, “faced theconfrontation quite well.”He went on to say that theneed for economic planning hasoccurred in countries w'here theautomatic development that clas¬sical economists predicted incapitalist order did not occur.Copyright (£) io«t, the coca cola comranv coca.cola ano coke are registered trademark*foreign ear hospitalsee page 2Grand Opening ofHARPER LIQUORSNew Store at1514 E. 53rd STREETWE STILL have the same full lineof imported and domesticwines, liquors and beerat LOWEST PRICES!WE STILL have FREE DELIVERYFA 1233-1313-7699 Bottled under authority of THE COCA-COLA BOTTLINGThe Coca-Cola Company byi COMPANY OF CHICAGOFeb. 20, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Cagers lose to Bradley though ahead at halfby Chuck BernsteinPEORIA. Ill. Saturday It basket¬ball games were' twenty minuteslong, the Chicago Maroons wouldhave perpetrated the biggest up¬set in hoop history tonight. Theyled the mighty Bradley Braves 20-16 at halltime, but the nation’sfifth ranked team coupled a vic¬ious pressing defense with devast¬ating shooting in the final tenminutes to trounce UC 69-39.Since Bradley put up a tight,well-positioned defense, the fired-up Maroons played very conserva¬tively, protecting the ball as if itwere a newborn babe, almost fourminutes before Gene Ericksen’shook shot sent them ahead 2-1 . .UC never again trailed in the open¬ing stanza, in which they tookcomplete control.Rich Williams finally got Brad¬ley’s first basket at 13:17 to knotthe score at 5-5, but a hook shotby Jerry Tomasovic and two rap¬id fire jumpers by Larry Liss bal¬looned the Maroons’ margin to15-9. astonishing the 6,400 Bradleyrooters and sending the hard coreof 75 staunch Maroons fans intoa frenzy.All-American Chet Walker,tightly guarded hy Tomasovic, finally hit h»» only two basketsof the half in the final two min¬utes before the intermission.The Maroons, holding the Bravesto five baskets, outshot them .47$to .288, and dominated the board17 to 12, as Ericksen snared sev¬en rebounds and Joel (Big Z) Ze-ntans, who played his best game ofthe year, grabbed six, and contri¬buted six points on three fantas¬tic driving lay-up shots.There is a happy ending forany UC fan who stops here, but,alas, basketball games are fortyminutes long.Joe Stampf’s poised and busi¬nesslike Maroons went right tothe ball control “T” formation of¬fense when the second half started,pulling Ericksen outside. But forthe first time in two years, the“T” did not work.After Mickey Tiemann canned ajump shot, he stole a bad pass andscored to tie the score at 18:07.Walker's free throw at 17:10 putthe Braves ahead to stay, andsent the Maroons on the down¬hill road because Tomasovic, whohad slymied the 27 point pergame star, fouled out.Chicago stayed in the game for another six minutes before run¬ning out of gas. Steve UUmann,who played another steady gameat guard, remarked afterwards,“Five men just can’t play againstten.” Eight Braves played con¬siderable chunks of the game,while the Maroons, lacking thatkind of depth, had to go withfour starters the whole way.The Braves led S6-*J9 with 11:05left, but their lead zoomed to 54-$0 five minutes later because ofthe eyepopping jumpshooting ofWilliams and the tigerlike full-court press spearheaded by Cav¬ern Tart and Tietmann. Thoselast eleven minutes, in which Brad¬ley outseored UC 33-10, were thedifference.Walker retired with 8:30 to playwith one consolation for the Mar¬oons. His 14 points was his lowesttotal of the year.Williams topped the Braves with18 points, 16 in the second half.Tiemann hit seven baskets in sev¬en shots in the final period for14 as Bradley shot a blistering.575 and outrebounded Chicago 22to 8 in the last half. The gallantMaroons mustered only four field¬ers in the second stanza. Ericksen finished with 10 forUC and Liss, while scoring onlynine, dribbled beautifully alongwith Ullmann and Zemans to getby the press.UC, now 11-5 but still hopingfor an NCAA tournament bid,w'inds up its home schedule to¬night against St. Procopius at 8pm. In the preliminary game, theUC freshmen, 7-4, play Wright jcat 6 pm. The box score:Zemans CHICAGO 39FG FT3-5 1-4 PF2 RB8Tomasovic 1-8 0-0 5 2Ericksen 3-10 4-4 4 9I.iss 2-7 5-6 2 0Ullmann 2-5 1-2 5 4Cost in 2-3 2-2 4 1Winter 0-0 0-0 0 0Iathti 0-0 0-0 0 0fatbits 0-0 0-0 0 1Brier 0-0 0-0 0 9.Totals 1*3-38 13-15 "*22 ~25Walker BRADLEY 69FG FT5-13 4-10 PF0 RB8Edwards 0-1 0-0 2 3Petersen 1-3 5-6 1 6Williams 7-16 4-4 1 5Tart 2-7 3-7 0 4Pay 1-1 0-0 0 1Wodka 2-5 2-4 2 5Tiemann 7-9 0-0 3 2Suarlin 0-3 1-2 1 0Sanders 0-0 0-0 1 0Totals 25-58 19-33 Ti ~.uHall t ime Chicago 20, Bradley 16. Wrestlers t«lce fourthThe Maroon wrestling teamfinished fourth in the ten teamMillikin tournament Saturday atDecatur, Ill.In team competition, Wabash*Millikin and Indiana Central top¬ped the UCers. Maroons scoringpoints were Cliff Cox, who wonthe 137 pound class, Fred Hoyt,who took a third at 123 pounds,and Jim Baillie and Bob Gustaf¬son, who took fourths in theirweight classes.East IV wins in trackThe annual intramural trackmeet was held at the Field houseThursday night. In the Collegehouse division, East IV won theteam championship, while Doddcame in second.The top individual performanceof the night was turned in byWill Provine of Dodd, who wonthe 60 yard dash and the 220yard dash, placed second in thehigh jump, and anchored Dodd'swinning relay team. Jim Eamonof East IV also turned in an out¬standing performance by winningboth Ihe broad jump and the 70yard low hurdles.foreign car solessee page 2"Desmond Blue." The hauntingSaxophone of Paul Desmond, win¬ner of the “PLAYBOY 1961 Alto SaxJazz Award,” is newly and neatly setdmidst strings, woodwinds, harp andrhythm. Inspired solo improvisa¬tions. Includes title theme, 8 more.\most trusted name in sound J Girl Witcher’s GuidePresented by Pall Mall Famous Cigarettes©a Becoming a specialistExperienced girl watchers, for whom routine watchinghas lost some of its excitement, often become specialists.(This is definitely not recommended for beginners. How¬ever, it may be practiced as a change-of-pace by moreadvanced students.) They may spend an entire field tripconcentrating on one pari of a girl. This .tends to step up activity, since it does not require that the whole girl bobeautiful. For example, if you decide to specialize ic»knees, you watch only beautiful knees. (The doormanabove appears to be an ankle specialist.) Whatever yourwatching specialty, make sure your smoking specialty isPall Mall’s natural mildness-it’s so good to your taste.e»»o> WHY 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 to discreet, 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 EldoaDedini. Reprinted by permission of Harper & Brothers.AWtrf •/ 3At — 3u&uOCtr it our mi Jilt **mi Pall Mali’snatural mildnessis so goodto your taste!✓So smooth, so satisfying,so downright smokeable!4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 20, 1962