rf (Hofo Ur.,PRO plans to dissolve WilsonPsfaffes^kin tosave Egyptian templeThe Piactical Refoim organization (PRO), UC’s year-old ‘conservative’ campus politi¬cal party, last night announced plans to dissolve.The announcement was made by first year student Bill Klecka, president of the organi¬zation. Ihe decision was made at an executive board meeting last night.PRO had been experiencing membership difficulties in the past months. At the group’slast meeting, held February 12, only three persons attended.Announcing the dicision, Kleckablasted POLIT, the majority par- Klecka stated that nobody inty student Government. Said he, his party planned to affiliate“POLIT has been suppressing either with POLIT or with theus. . . there is no use fighting any Independent Reform party (IRP), Friedman stated that he wouldlike to see a third opposition par¬ty on campus. Said he, “It is myI would like to see a party the other remaining campus politi- feeling that there should be onmore.that could get POLIT out of thegovernment, but we are not it.PRO as a party just cannot func¬tion any more.” r*PRO had 19 representatives inStudent Go^mment after lastspring’s SG^Hections. At lijft* pre¬sent only Hhree member^ remainin the Assembly. yKlcka blamed PQElT for thedrop in PRO membership, saying,“Our people rarely received noticesof the meetings and, when theymissed two meetings in a quarter,they were expelled. Some peopledropped out for other reasons,PRO resignations were never re¬placed by PRO candidates, and sowe were left with the small mem¬bership we now have.”Leonard Friedman, POLITmember and president of StudentGovernment, denied that his partyhad made any attempt to easePRO out of Government. Fried¬man stated, “ther has been no dis¬crimination on the part of anyonein government against any of therights that members of PROhave.” such as receiving notices ofGovernment meetings.“It is true, of course,” “Fried¬man continued, "that the POLIT cal party. Klecka also denied that campus a political party of a dom-there would be any attempt to inantly moderate or conservativeform another conservative party philosophy to oppose POLIT’s pro¬as a successor to PRO. gressive liberal orientation.” An estimated 78 milliondollars will be needed to savethe temple of Ramses II inNubia, Egypt, according toJohn A. Wilson, Andrew MacLeishDistinguished Professor of Egyp¬tology.In a lecture at North house Mon¬day night entitled "Saving theMonuments,” Wilson outlined theemergency situation."Usually archaeology is a slowand sleepy game in which oneVol. 70 — No. 61 University of Chicago, Wednesday, Feb. 21, 1962 £53*- 31 must plan ahead,” he began. "Noone is set up for an emergency.”But in March 1960 archaeologistsfrom all over the w’orld were calledupon to save the monuments inthe 300 mile Egyptian area whichwill be flooded by the Aswan damscheduled for completion in 1965."While 39 of the 40 monumentscan be saved, that fortieth one isthe biggest and most splendid ofthem all,” Wilson emphasized.He described the temple built in1300 BC in honor of the sun godby Ramses II, ruler of Egypt. Itwas cut out of a solid cliff withfour huge statues of Ramsesguarding the outside and a figureof the sun god over the entrance.The temple was placed at an anglewhich allows the spring and au¬tumn sun to run through the 181foot passageway and illuminatethe innermost room which con¬tains four more statues.The temple is flanked by asmaller Queen’s temple which ishidden from the sun and has sta¬tues kept in niches in contrast tothe protruding ones of the maintemple.US scholarship aid possibleMAROON press serviceWashington, DC—There isa fair chance that some formof scholarship provision willbe written into the final col¬lege aid bill approved bymajority in Government has not Congress this year.But it will be a far cry fromelected PRO members to leader¬ship positions within the Govern¬ment, but to do so would obviouslyhave boon against the wishes ofthe students on campus who elect¬ed the POLIT majority. As far asexpulsion from the Governmentare concerned, the large numberof PRO members who were ex¬pelled at the last meeting ofStudent Government at the endof the autumn quarter, had notbetween them attended a singlegovernment meeting that quarter.” the $924 million, four-year schol¬arship program for 122,500 stu¬dents contained in the Senatemeasure passed on February 6.A House-passed bill made no pro¬vision for scholarships.The issue will be decided by aSenate-House conference commit¬tee, but it could be another monthor two before the final bill takesshape.The conference committee has not met yet because the Houserules committee has not yet ap¬proved for appointment the Houseconferees. But this delay is onlytemporary.The fate of the scholarshipsdepends on how hard the Senateconferees fight for them. Con¬gressional sources said the Housedefinitely won’t accept the Senateprovision, but it might settle fora compromise.The Senate bill is what Presi¬dent Kennedy requested in hisaid-to-education program and theAdministration might be expectedto exert pressure on House mem¬bers to agree to some scholarshipplan.What the final outcome will beis anybody’s guess. Some sourcesUC, Uganda African collegeexchange political scientistsAn exchange program inpolitical science began thisyear between the Universityof Chicago and Makerere col¬lege in Uganda, Africa.This program is financedby the United States departmentof state as an extension of the ex¬change program authorized by theSmith-Mundt act. The program hasbeen projected for a five-yearperiod during which its details willvary somewhat.Makerere college lias been untilrecently the only university collegein Fast Africa (which consists ofTanganyika, Kenya, and Uganda).It ranks as one of the most dis¬tinguished educational institutionsin Africa.Nine hundred students attendMakerere. They come mainly fromthe three East African countriesas well as from other parts ofAfi 'ica, Asia, and Europe. De^grees awarded are equivalent tothe British BA and are grantedby the University of London.Under present plans Makererewill become one of three units ofthe University of East Africa withother units in Nairobi, Kenya andDar Es Salaam in Tanganyika.Bellow speaksSaul Bellow’, author of The Ad-venures of Augie March, andHenderson the Rain King, willlecture on "The novelist as moral¬ist,” tonight-at 8 pm in Breastedhall of the Oriental institute.The lecture will be the secondpublic lecture by Bellow, who isa visiting professor of English inthe College. The first lecture, heldon February 2, was "the nextnecessary thing.” In the first year of the program,a department of political scienceand public administration was es¬tablished.Since Uganda is scheduled to be¬come independent from GreatBritain next October, the Britishand Uganda governments felt thata department of public adminis¬tration, which would train civilservants to fill higher administra¬tive positions, would be beneficial.A series of short courses in ad¬ministration began in September.Although these are the undertak¬ings of Makerere college itself, itis unlikely that they would havebeen possible without assistancefrom the program.Tills year, Alan Altschuler ofthe UC department of politicalscience, and Victor Thompson,Cliairnian of the department ofpolitical science at the Illinois In¬stitute of Technology, are atMakerere.Plans for next year include twoUC professors who will teach anddo research for the full year andone UC professor who will lecturefor two or three months atMakerere, and an East African stu¬dent who will attend graduateschool here. During the period of transitionto independence and as expatriatecivil servants leave Uganda, thetraining program in public admin¬istration will probably be reduced.Later, a longer term training pro¬gram for civil servants will beestablished."Although the Chicago-Makerereprogram is modest in scale, it mayhave greater importance than itssize suggests,” says Grant Mc¬Connell, associate professor of po¬litical science, who spent the aca¬demic year of 1959-60 at Makerere.“It can assist in achieving suchgoals which are important to avigorous and vital University,” hecontinues. “It can provide person¬nel of the highest quality possibleto the government of a new na¬tion. Merely by existing as a freeinstitution, it can serve as an in¬herent check upon arbitrary or ill-considered governmental action.“It will be a strong bond betw eenthe East African territories nowrgroping for means of federationand unity among themselves. Last¬ly, it can provide facilities for cre¬ative research and remain an im¬portant link with the commonworld of western culture.” seemed to think there is a possi¬bility the conference committeemight accept some form of a $300million dollar program of two-yearcollege scholarships. Such ameasure was approved last yearby the House eduction commit¬tee but killed by the House rulescommittee.While that bill cannot be re¬vived. the fact that it won ap¬proval last year from the educa¬tion committee indicates the ideahas strong support. And it is themembers of the Education com¬mittee w’ho will be the House con¬ferees.Another possibility, with moreappeal to Republicans, is that thelegislators might adopt some for¬mula to increase the studentloan fund in the National DefenseEducation act (NDEA) to pro¬vide for scholarships.Under this proposal, the col¬leges — who allocate the NDEAmoney — would be permitted touse 15/0 of the fund for scholar¬ship giants to exceptionally needystudents, and to cancel or “for¬give” loans made to students whoget the top marks.The opposition to outright fed¬eral scholarship grants- has cross¬ed party lines. Many Democratsas well as Republicans feel thatfederal grants would undermine the present scholarship programsand that the funds should be madeavailable in the form of repayableloans to students.Other features of the Senatecollege aid bill stand a betterchance in the conference commit¬tee than the scholarship provi¬sion.Likely to be approved in theSenate’s request for 300 milliondollars annually for five years inconstruction loans to all colleges—whether publicly or privatelyfinanced — plus $250 million overthe five years in constructiongiants for public junior and com¬munity colleges.The House version would setup a five-year, $1.5 billion pro¬gram of grants and loans for alltypes of colleges to provide forconstruction of classrooms andother facilities. The funds wouldbe split 60-40 In favor of loansover grants.Congressional sources don’t be¬lieve these differences will be amajor stumbling block to agree¬ment on the final bill, but it isa different story on scholarships.One Congressman said he wouldgive scholarships about a 50-50chance of winding up in the bill.But he emphasized that hewouldn’t be willing to make astronger prediction.NSA leader visitsMexican studentsThere are many “interesting and hopeful developments’’in the student movements of Mexico and Honduras, reporteda National Student association (NSA) representative whorecently returned from a visit to those countries.Robert Aragon special assistant — - ; - ~to the NSA international affairs wou <^ not otherwise see dramaticvice-president, made the trip to presentations,see what kind of programs are most important topic ofbeing undertaken and how’ NSA conversation in both countnescontinues to be the Cuban revolu¬tion. Aragon could not examinecan help.of the student group.The program includes makingHousing report delayedThe report of the Facultycommittee chosen to examinethe University’s housing poli¬cies, both on and off campus,will be delayed at least a few moredays, according to Allison Dun¬ham, chairman of the committee.The three-man committee wasappointed by President GeorgeBeadle last month before the sit-ins protesting segregation in Uni¬versity housing began outside hisoffice.Members of the committee are Philip Hauser, professor and chair¬man in the department of sociologyand director of the population re¬search center; George Shultz, pro¬fessor in the graduate school ofbusiness; and Allison Dunham,professor in the law school.The committee was due to sub¬mit their report to UC presidentGeorge Beadle on Monday. Butaccording to Dunham, the reportwill be delayed because it is “hardto make” and there is the "me¬chanical problem of typing.” In Honduras. Aragon met with range‘of opinions completely,the president ot the Federal,on ( jd h heard oplnions ..rang.de Estud,antes de Honduras. He from varying degrees of en.was impressed with the program ,husjasm complcle disillusion-ment.”In general, the NSA representa-improvements upon student facili- tive found “great curiosity aboutties, setting up a student health j^e activities of American stu-insurance plan, embarking on a dents.” He said the students heblood drive, a campaign to buy me^ were especially interested inshoos for young children, and a ro]e students play in desegre-literacy seminar for workers in gation activity, and there “is muchHonduras capital. talk of the sentados (sit-ins).”In Mexico, the NSA representa- Students are also eager to discusstive met with officers of the Con- the Alliance for Progress, butfederacion Nacional de Estudian- Aragon said "there seems to be ates. From them, he learned of universal wait-and-see attitude, toa literacy project in cooperation see if deeds match the fine words.”with the United Nations Educa- Aragon went on the trip as parttional, Scientific, and Cultural or- of continuing efforts by the inter-ganization (UNESCO) and the national commission of NSA toCoordinating Secretariat of Na- keep informed about student ac¬tional Unions of Students. tivity in foreign countries and toAlso planned in Mexico is a cul- maintain contacts between NSAtural program to bring theater and the national unions of stu-groups to areas where the people dents in other lands.FacultyTwo faculty reports, evalu¬ating and recommendingchanges in the College cur¬riculum, were introduced atthis Monday’s meeting of the col¬lege faculty. Despite the objec¬tions of several leading facultymembers, the group decided notto release the reports until fur¬ther discussion could be heard.According to a spokesman forthe College faculty, the reportswere not released because, “Thefaculty judged that in view of thefact that the issues had not yetbeen sufficiently clarified it wouldbe premature to release the re¬ports; it would only be confus¬ing.” This reasoning led to the de¬cision that the reports will not bereleased until next Monday’s fac¬ulty meeting.Thinking of this type epitomizesthe kind of attitude to which theMaroon has long been vigorouslyopposed. The only possible justifi¬cation for such a decision rests inthe belief that student discussionof curriculum changes, if thatdiscussion takes place before a secrecyfinal decision on the changes isreached, is somehow a harmfulthing.The only way in which discus¬sion can be harmful is if it changesminds in such a way that the finaldecision is worse than that firstreached. While we are flattered bythe faculty’s implicit admissionthat student rhetoric is powerfulenough to bring about such achange in the minds of professors,we have enough respect for the in¬tellectual stability of UC facultymembers to believe that this pre¬mise is nonsensical.Or perhaps the faculty is afraidthat the student body might comeup with some good ideas, a pos¬sible source of embarassment. Itis unnecessary to point out thatsuch a fear is totally inconsistentwith the idea of a community ofscholars.The arguments above for freediscussion prove, in the final analy¬sis, to be redundant. One hundredyears ago John Stuart Mill arguedfor the same cause in a mannerfar more effective than that whichReorganization ofThe most importantchanges in the organizationof the Chicago police depart¬ment have been in the areasof communications and techniquesof patrol, said Herman Goldstein,executive assistant to Chicago’spolice superintendent, Orlando W.Wilson.One of the first innovations ofWilson, he said, was the organi¬zational chart reflecting the func¬tioning of the department. He con¬tinued that the best measure ofa department’s functioning is itsresponsiveness to the citizens -“people can figure out where togo and whom to see for theirparticular needs,” he said.An important problem, he con¬tinued, was assigning the propermanpower to the districts. For¬merly, he explained, the numberof officers per district was deter¬mined by tradition, i. e., the num¬ber the district had always had; or,by “legitimate or illegitimate pres¬sure groups within the communi¬ty. Thus,” he said, “the number of officers fluctuated not neces¬sarily in accordance with theneeds.”The department, he said, is try¬ing to distribute men equallythroughout the city and to bestutilize its manpower.In the Hyde Park district as inall districts, he explained, there isa district commander, a new office.Each commander has two cap¬tains who work two 8 hour watch¬es at the district station.Field lieutenants are assigned toareas; while one is at the station,the others are in the field super¬vising the sergeants, Goldsteinsaid. The lieutenants see that callsare properly answered; that newmen are adequately supervised.In addition to the 20 sergeants,Hyde Park has 8 vice-officers whowork in plain clothes rather thanuniforms and see to narcotic, pros¬titution, and alcoholic codes en¬forcement.The police department uses thebeat system with an additional“umbrella car” plan which allowsfor extra patrols along streetsSUMMER JOBS>n EUROPEWRITE TO: AMERICAN STUDENT INFORMATIONSERVICE, 22 AVE. DE LA LIBERTEGRAND DUCHY OF LUXEMBOURGit . :3BE 3QE =3BE iHi.j,"iS=inr=T-.ua mSecurity FirstNational BankservingSouthern Californiawill have a representative on CampusFebruary 23to discuss:• Accelerated Management Training• Immediate Responsibility• Outstanding Promotional Possibilities• Ideal Living Conditions in aStimulating EnvironmentHe would like to interview M.B.A. candidates, as wellas candidates for the M.A. degree in Economics.Alumni possessing work experience in banking or arelated field are also invited to discuss opportunities.Please make necessary arrangementsat your Placement Office.3BiSggBBEg>0C decried Bemesderfer explainsworking of O-boardKarl Bemesderfer, chair- board members live in the dormi-we can hope to attain. All that wecan hope to add . to Mill is ourshock and indignation that thiskind of breach of the right of freediscussion should occur in a man 0f the Orientation board, tor‘es 550 that they may be mostcaT^'to the"unfetteretf’pursuiof recently outlined the purpose a“essib,e '° fn‘erins *'“dems-and workings of the board. Tha7 aMend aU 0 week actlv't’«iBemesderfer said, fman>' of which are urukT. sponsorship), lead tours, and con-Orientation board is a group of,.,. . ,, , . duct discussions. O-board membersfeel obliged to protest Monday’s cession . ,decision: it is one which ran do °'h<'r Programs throughoutonly a disservice to the University -oar’community. the“During Orientation week O-truth.We wish that the space whichwe have given to this editorial wecould have devoted to a discussion , , , . .... .and evaluation of the latest s,udents workmg with the dean of ^ „ availaUe to answ„changes in UCs undergraduate students’ office in acquainting sttl- ,iom of al, , especiallycurriculum. While we suppose in dents, and particularly entering ,ourselves no wisdom which we students, to the ideological and those Wlttl the eduea-find lacking in the College faculty, physical background of the Uni- tional aspects of the University,our different perspective on cur- versify Specifically the Board is «Since tho question they willriculum content could perhaps, responsible for planning and exe- answer and the problems that willhave helped us in arriving at a cuting the fall O-week m conjunc- arise during q week require spe-constructive suggestion. tion with the dean of students cialized information as well asNow, under the ruling of the ° lc<\: n a dl lo^ lo this’ t ie general knowledge about Univer-faculty, any comments we have Boaid ias altempted to increase Sjfy 0f Chicago, the Board devotesmust be reserved until after a su on, UI^ oistanc ing of the t ni- jts meetjngS throughout the yearfinal decision has been reached, versi Js 0 uca lonal o jectives and to discussions with members ofand their value is consequently Procedures and the issues that arise both facult and administrationgreatly diminished. We therefore from these objectives, through dis- Thp Board *makes itse]f a ^— meetings, lectures, and of discussion of major educationalissues and the problems which thoybring to the University community.“All undergraduates are eligible■ 0 | « | for membership on the Board. AI ■ ■ ■ gm gm training program of discussionn IIC CI I5CU 55 Cl about ,he Col,e£e' led by facultyw and administration officials, isidentified as the scene of large patrols to the scene of the trounumbers of arrests and street vio- ble.”lations. Instead, by calling POlite *n£ program serves to provideAnother innovation of Wilson’s, 5-1313,” an officer at the other end numbers and applicants with valu-said Goldstein, is the tactical unit, receives the call and dispatches a*^o information about some of theAn undercover section of this unit assistance,” he said. “We know at ma.i°r aspects of their College,consisting of 2 women and 10 men every moment where officers are as the current educationalpolice streets considered unsafe and who can answer calls. All philosophy, the advisory system,for women in particular. All 12 calls are recorded so that in case bousing, student activities, the dis-officers know ju-jitsu and are of violators escaping the scene a cusslon method, and other topicsequipped with a small radio, follow-up investigation of the aIT)10Pna,f> to an orientation pro-Women walk streets dangerous crime is made,” he further ex- f.iarn‘ financial restrictions limitfor women, “in order to convey plained. the membership of the board andthe idea that every woman who A new record system of crimes, u°cessi ate a selection from amongwalks the streets of Chicago is a more rigid screening of personel app ican s after the completionpotential policewoman,” said Gold- and coodinalion with other city p 1P laming program, i.e., bp-stein. agencies are among the other the end of th® quar-Communications liave been een- changes Wilson has made in thetralized under a new system. "You police department,cannot get assistance from the Goldstein spoke Monday atlocal station,” said Goldstein, the Hyde Park YMCA, 1400 E.“They do not now and never have 53rd street, in honor of the Hydehad the facilities for dispatching Park centennial. held in the Spring quarter for allapplicants and members. The train-School closing is overruled | Today's EventsMeeting: Faculty of the divinity school.Swift common*. 3 pm.Illustrated lecture series: The imperialtreasure* of Chinn. "From the b*-irinninKS of the Mongols.” ReverendHarrie A. Vanderstappen, Socialscience* 122. 4 pm.Discussion - study group: "Jeremiah andJewish faith." Hillel. 4:30 pm.Episcopal evensong: Bond chapel, 5:05pm.The Supreme Court ruled Mon- of a lower state court. The lawday that a Louisiana law permit- held invalid was enacted a yearting the Closing Of all public ago, and Stated that Voters COUld Lecture: "The decline of organisedschools, to avoid desegration is decide by referendum whether t ‘1^1 gSUei'.™sociU°»c?enc e»° 20 i"unconstitutional. they prefer no schools at all to t:3<iThe decision upheld the decision integrated schools. danci"*^ ,d* N<?.y** k"11’ 8 , m- „* Lecture: l he novelist as moiHiiHn,‘ Saul Bellow, Brested hall, 8 pm.Meeting: Outing- club. Ida Noyes hall,anyone interested in ski trip invited,8_ pm.Israel folk dance: Hillel, 8 pm.SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORM — THE UNIQUE STORAGE UNITS1542 EAST 57th STREETOpen Daily 12 noon to 8 p.m.THE IMAGEOR WHAT HAPPENED TO THE AMERICAN DREAMby Daniel J. Boorstin a $5.00Have -we, through the powers of American literacy, wealth andprogress, substituted shadow for substance in our real values? Havewe given up ideals for images, to live, not by the American dream; butby American illusions? Mr. Boostin deserjbes the shadows, and suggestshow we may clear away the illusions and dispel the ghosts with whichwe haunt our social and intellectual life.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE. CHICAGO 37, ILLHours: Mon. thru Fri. 8-5 — Sat. 8-12 Miss UC votingVoting for Miss UC Washprom queen, will begin today.Ballet boxes are in Mandel cor¬ridor and Cobb hall.MORTON'SBEAUTY SALON5100 S. CORNELLFAirfox 4-5565Ask About our University Special*DON'T MISS!UNIVERSITY THEATREpresentsmmMusic by Richard RogersLyrics by Lorenz HartBook by John O'HaraDirected by Jerry MastINTERNATIONAL HOUSE1414 E. 59th Streett:30 FM Tickets: $2.25. $1.75, $1.50Reservations: Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3280or come in person to Mandel Hall lex OfficeLAST WEEK ! FEKFORMANCES THURS., ERI., SAT.. SUM Excellentopportunities forClub LeadersCamp Counselorsand FieldworkersWork near your hemeCALL OR WRITECHICAGO YOUNG JUDAEA72 E. 11th St.Chic.*. 5, III. WE MIM$50 rewardbrand *ev Russian typewriter.Royal, elite type. Future 800 wasrecently stolen from CROSS-WORLDBooks and Periodicals (A Russianbookstore). We offed $50 reward lead¬ing te the recovery of the type¬writer.A# questions naked end no preae-cutfei,.Phone or see C. B. LotsmanCROSS-WORLD BOOKS ANDPERIODICALS, INC.333 S. Wacker DriveCkicagn 6, IllinoisHA 7-10422 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 21, 1962they've, got another live oneCool, cleon Old Spice After Shove lotion otwoysgets you off to o fast, smooth start. Feels just osgood between shoves os it does oher shoving.Rotes A-OK with dates. 1.00 ond 1.75 plus tax.S M U L. T O M @/dSpice AFTER SHAVELOTION Three thousand UCLA students cheered, stomped,whistled and yelled in delight at one of the KingstonTrio’s greatest live concerts. Here are the reasonswhy: “Little Light... Coplas Revisited ... ChillyWinds ... Oh, Miss Mary... Laredo... O Ken Kar-anga... Roddy McCorley... M.T. A.... 500 Miles...The Shape of Things... Where Have All The FlowersGone?... Goin’ Away For To Leave You!’ Some arethe Kingston's tremendous hits. Some are great newnumbers, never before recorded. All are the songsthat made a concert you’d want to attend. You can.Capitol recorded it.FREE BOOK COVERS ... featuring full-color photos of theKingston Trio and other great Capitol stars. Look for themat your favorite record store. You'll have the best-dressedbooks in school... and for free.•Hie Kennedy administra¬tion’s proposed group fall-outshelter program will get itsfirst hearing in Congress thisweek before the House govern¬ment operations subcommittee.The Committee will try to deter¬mine whether or not the proposedshelter program will be adequatefor the present. “In my view,”stated Chet Holifield, chairman ofthe committee, “the administra¬tion’s is much too cautious.” Hewould prefer a five year 20 billiondollar program that would give"not only fall-out protection but asubstantial degree of blast andthermal protection.”Only government witnesses willbe heard, according to Holifield.The hearings are not “intended tobe a forum for arguments for and against civil defense,” said Holi¬field. Opponents of a shelter pro¬gram will not be heard.The current shelter program, ineffect since last summer, allows316 million dollars for turning ex¬isting buildings into shelters for50 million Americans by 1963.The administration wants tosupplement this with a 693 milliondollars overall program for the1963 fiscal year. Over half thisamount would be used to provide“incentives” to local authorities,schools and other non-profit or¬ganizations, to build communityshelters. The government wouldcontribute $25 per person shel¬tered. The average shelter costsapproximately $40 per personsheltered. Such shelters mightserve as libraries or recreationcenters during peacetime.Classified AdsFor Rent and For SalePersonalsThe Ivy I>»»(mere have arrived. Watch67 Tnd ,d!SfW?PFAm%»3»!7 m°' lh'* ,0r furth*r developments by Chuck BernsteinThe Maroon cagers jumpedto a quick 6-1 lead andcoasted to a 51-45 victoryover Saint Procotius at theFieldhouse last night in a lacka¬daisical performance.The Maroons played without6’8” center Gene Ericksen, who isill with the flu.Each Maroon starter hit abasket in the first eight minutesagainst the Cardinal 2-2-1 zoneWanted- part time help for preparing2 family dwelling, near 97th and Vin- simple tax returns. University vicinity,eennes. 6 rooms up and 6 rooms down: BE 3-0453, ST 3-66S1. Evenings onlymod. kitchens and bath; large improvedyard and 2 car garage: rent from up¬stairs apt. will pay mortgage: idealfor married stud, or instr. with family;rloee to commuter lines and shopping;321,500. Call PH 9-3368, after ( pm.Modern 1 Vs room kitchenette apart- •_ . ...ment. Nicely furnished, tile bath and * ersonal appeal >* what you will get ifshower. J72.50 a month including *ou "uy * classified ad. Appeal to theislilities. £143 S. Kenwood. SO 8-0439. buy?r- the seller, the employer, theemployee, the friend, the enemy. AllFile cabinet (steel), Venetian blinds, rlassified ads get personal attention,4 drawer chest, trunk, dishes, lamp, *r® personally read. by personableetc. Cheap. RE 4-3539, evenings. people. AND THEY ARE VERY CHEAP. UT tryoutsUniversity theatre has an¬nounced a casting call for T. S.Eliot’s “Murder in the Cathe¬dral” which will be performedin Bond chapel on April 6, 7,and 8 with a matinee perform-anct on April 7.Tryouts are tonight from 7 to9 and again on Saturday, Feb¬ruary 24 and Sunday, February25 from 2 to 5 pm in the the¬atre on the third floor of theReynolds club. Robert Bene-detti, acting director of Univer¬sity theatre, will direct.The verse drama, accordingto Benedetti, requires a femalechorus and includes “severalexcellent men’s parts.” Re¬hearsals will begin on Wednes¬day evening, February 28, atwhich time a rehearsal sched¬ule convenient to all will bedrawn up. defense which nullified the UCdriving game all night.Only the outside shooting ofTerry Hooten and Jack Krueger,plus numerous Maroon errors,kept the Cards within range.When UC appeared to have thegame sewred up with a 46-36 lead,Krueger and his brother Tom leda drive to close the gap to 46-42with 1:52 remaining. Larry Costinresponded with 2 free throws,however, to get Chicago out ofdanger.Playing his last home game,Jerry Tomasovic had his firstdouble figure night of the year.Leading the Maroons with 11points along with Joel (Big Z)Zemans, Larry Liss added 10 andSteve Ullman who also had hisfieldhouse curtain call scored 9. BOX SCORECHICAGO 51; ST. PROCOTIUS 4SCHICAGOZemansTomasovicCostin . .. ,LissUllmann .Winter .. .Lubitz ...Brier F5-73-94-42-23-42-20-00-0Totals 19-28 20ST. PROCOTIUSB F PHooten 2 0-0 1Adams 1-2 1Chorwat 2-4 3Jurewiaez 0-0 3Duray i l-l 5J. Krueger . . . . 5-6 5Fopielewski 0-0 iMajer 2-3 2Ruby 0-0 0T. Krueger . . . . 6-8 3Totals 14 17-24 24Halftime—Chicago 24; St. Procotius 27.Shooting—Chicago 16-51; St. Procotius14-45.Rebounds—St. Procotius 43; Chicago 39.Alpha dub' organizesThe Alpha club, a campussocial club, will meet tonightin room 3212 East house.Male undergraduate studentsinterested in joining are invitedor may call Mike Yesner, theclub’s president, 3212 East house.The club, whose membership hasgrown to 22, is trying to start a chapter of Alpha Epsilon Pi, anational fraternity, here on cam¬pus.The members of the Alpha clubare dissatisfied with the frater¬nities presently on campus, andthey stressed that Alpha EpsilonPi has no restrictive clauses in itsnational charter.Services and WantedTyping, neat, accurate, reliable. Call752-2064.ft* REMEMBER:for sales,foreign carsalesSTERN’SCampus Drugsnow servesAll "fops inquality" meatsWe invite comparison withanyone in Woedlawn8:00 am to 11:00 pm61st and Ellis I GOING TO EUROPE?i SELECT A CAR HERE ... TO ENJOY THERE . . ./ AND BRING BACK. SAVE IN MANY CASES COST; OF ROUND TRIP FARE TO EUROPE ....BUY at FACTORY PRICES FROMTOURIST INTERNATIONAL Inc.505 5th Avenue, New York 17, N.Y.Alfa RomeoAustin HealeyBritish FordHillman JaguarLanciaMaseratiMercedes MGOpelPeugeotPorsche RenaultSunbeamVolkswagonVolvoYour Campus Representative:MICHAEL FREED5730 BLACK5TONE Telephone: MUseum 4-4508— Ask About Our Duty Free Merchandise —'MUiS%\\S9SS^%XSiXXXXS9iSX%»X9iXSSX%%%SXXXX%S\%X>• CAfITOt ACCORDS. INCeUC gets $50,000 US official blasts ChicagoBasis explainedThe course in composition isbased, it could be said, upon theprinciple that the laws of rhe¬toric, like the laws of logic, werenot instituted by man, but can bediscovered by him and imparted.Accordingly, both English 101-2-3and 105-6 (the two-quarter ver¬sion for the better prepared stu¬dents) follow a carefully plannedsequence. Study begins with therelation between style and pur¬pose. Examples are used to demon¬strate that every competent pieceof writing must be interpreted inthe light of a purpose, and thatthis purpose may explain virtual¬ly all the elements of style, frommajor features of organization tothe smallest matters of groupingwithin the sentence and choices ofdiction. In this phase of the pro¬gram systematic attention is giv¬en to the rhetorical qualities ofwords and of various sentence pat¬terns. The student learns to dis¬criminate levels of abstraction indiction, to become aware of con¬notation, and to judge the useful¬ness of figures of speech. He learnsalso the importance of variety,subordination, parallelism, andposition in constructing effectivesentences.Exposition requiredWith this introduction to theelements of style as background,the student passes to expositorywriting. Here attention is focusedupon the most effective types oforganization for communicatingfacts, for informing, and for ex¬plaining. Successive papers areassigned which involve definition,REMEMBER:r ^ * for service,~ foreign corhospital DUAL FILTERTareytonfiroiuct af it"Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!''says veteran coach Romulus (Uncle) Remus. “We have asaying over at the Coliseum—Tareyton separates the gladia¬tors from the gladioli’. It’s a real magnus smoke. Take itfrom me, Tareyton delivers de gustibus—and the Dual Filterdoes it I”Sears Roebuck and compa¬ny has given a $50,000 schol¬arship fund to the Universityof Chicago, Charles H. Kell-stadt, chairman of the Searsboard, announced today. The giftwas made in memory of FowlerB. McConnell, former chairman ofthe Sears board. Undergraduates who are de¬pendent in whole or in part ontheir own efforts in meeting col¬lege costs, are eligible. The schol¬arship will be administered by theUniversity.The fund was presented to Pres¬ident Beadle today in the execu¬tive offices of the company. Mrs.Marilyn Black, McConnell’s daugh¬ter, also attended the ceremony. An official in the federalurban renewal departmentsaid that “not enoughstrength is put behind open¬ing the housing supply in Chicagoto Negroes.”The official, who preferred notto be identified, said further thatsuch a step would help the Hyde Park problem. Although the Uni¬versity works hand in hand withthe renewal people, he explained,this is still inadequate.Discussing what he thought tobe the main problem in urbanrenewal he said, “in a metropoli¬tan center with migration fromthe rural south, with a ghetto,redevelopment must disperse the population. The Housing act of1949 recognized this.“But the families who get dig.persed happen to be colored; andit is difficult to find places wherethey will be accepted.”Weaver discusses English course(Editor's note: With changes inUC's undergraduate curriculumimminent, the Maroon begins to¬day a series discussing the presentorganization of College generaleducation courses. Articles in thissenes U'ill run to the end of thisquarter. All articles are written bythe course chairman, or membersof the course teaching staff. classification, comparison and con¬trast, organization by cause andeffect, and combinations of theseforms. Throughout the study ofexposition, stress is laid upon thelogic and clarity of the control¬ling plan of the essay. the class. In this paper he hasan opportunity to bring into playall that he has learned about ex¬position, argument, and persuasion. ual potentiality; the trivial typeof theme topic is discouraged.The first article of the series, adiscussion of the College Englishcourse, appears today. It is writ¬ten by course chairman RichardWeaver, a lemg time UC facultymember and professor of Englishin the College).English composition in theCollege is a course in writingand rhetoric, designed to in¬crease the student’s proficien¬cy in the use of his language.There is no medium which hewill be called upon to use morefrequently than language, yet theaverage student begins collegewith only a rudimentary commandof the subtle and powerful re¬sources of English. This can be agrave handicap to his educationin general and also to his per¬sonal development, for languagehas been rightly called “the su¬preme organ of the mind's self¬ordering growth.” In his practiceof composition, the student ac¬quires more than a simple skill;because of the close relationshipbetween language and thought,he must constantly be exercisinghis power to conceptualize and asconstantly testing his sense ofrelevance, while at the same timehe is increasing the range andaccuracy of his vocabulary. Exposition is followed by argu¬mentation, which is regularly giv¬en a full quarter’s time. Here thestudent learns something of theprinciples and techniques of in¬duction, deduction and analogy. Helearns the methods of stating andsupporting propositions and isshown some of the principal falla¬cies to be avoided in the interpre¬tation of evidence. At the end of theperiod devoted to argumentation,some study is given to the rheto¬rical “topics” - the sources fromwhich proofs can be drawn - asa means of finding persuasivecontent for argumentative papersand of adapting an argument toa given audience. Work in the classroom followsa pattern of discussion, writing,and criticism. The English syllabicontain a wide variety of readings,most of which are models, or atleast useful examples, of exposi¬tion and argument.Essay requiredIn English 103. and in 106 atthe discretion of the instructor, thestudent writes at the close of thecourse a long essay based onan outside reading precribed for Purpose determinedAfter a reading has been as¬signed, the instructor asks theclass to determine the purpose ofthe writing and to identify thetechniques used by the author. Asanalysis proceeds, he invites theclass to point out sources ofstrength or weakness in the orga¬nization, the use of evidence, andthe various features of style andtone. In the writing assignmentwhich follows, the student will berequired to prepare a paper inwhich he demonstrates his ownunderstanding of the expositorymodes or argumentative tech¬niques he has been studying in theexample. It is the conviction ofthe staff that all topics for writ¬ing should have serious intellect- Papers are not only marked forerrors, but also are criticized forcontent, organization, and style.Papers which can serve well toillustrate special points are some¬times dittoed so that the entireclass can engage in constructivecriticism. The instructor alwaysholds up positive improvement asthe goal; the censure of mistakesis incidental to the larger end ofachieving clear and cogent ex¬pression.More thou trainingThe writing course in the Col¬lege thus offers substantially morethan a training in routine rules;it is directed toward an expansionof the student’s powers throughanalysis, criticism, and that esti¬mate of rhetorical situations whichis the inescapable duty of any ar¬ticulate member of a community.And because its central concern iswith the effective use of language,it provides not so much a tool for,as a key to all humanistic studies,which are traditionally the teach¬ers of wisdom.Rickard Weaver In order to develop new livingspace, the official continued, theCleveland Development founda¬tion, "a group of commercial andindustrial leaders, in 60 daysraised two million dollars for re¬location to oil renewal machinery.“Such a foundation,” he contin¬ued, “could break the site barrier,and overcome neighborhood oppo¬sition. It could be successful inChicago, given some aid from Mar¬shall Field and Bell and Howell <and other leaders. They couldpick sites to loosen up the ghetto."He explained that in Chicagothe mayor’s commission on humanrelations “docs a good job of put¬ting out fires, but that is notsocial engineering.”In Philadelphia, the official said,the human relations commissionhas an orderly program to effectneighborhood change by preparingcommunities in advance. “Theyestablish neighborhood units towork for change, they cooperatewith the police, and pick selectfamilies.”“Chicago is tougher situation.”he explained, “because there arelarger groups of insecure nation¬alities; people who compete withNegroes for housing.”"Another problem is that bigmansions and multi-family struc¬tures are the kinds of housing inthe path of “Negro expansion, andthese lend themselves to misuse.’’The ward system, he said, in¬cluding the Negro politician, “iswilling to go along with this situ¬ation.”4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 21. m2