UC repos job shortage990's ChicagoThe population of metropolitan Chicago will nearly double by 1990, according to astudy conducted by two University of Chicago sociologists.And, said Donald J. Bogue, professor of sociology and author of the study, this couldcreate great problems for the area’s labor force.The study was conducted by UC’s Population Research and Training center, supportedby a grant from the Rockefeller foundation. It was released at a press conference calledyesterday by Bogue, associate di- _______rector of ttie center, and by of 6,794,461 to a 1990 total of “encouraged to stay in school andPhillip Hauser, chairman of the 10,336,000, the population of Chi- prepare themselves for betterdepartment of sociology and the cago proper will rise only six types of jobs; those who leaveStudents packed tke bursar's office all this week asdeadline for tuition payment draws near. center’s director.According to the 48 page re¬port, while the metropolitan areawill grow from a 1960 population per cent, from 3,550,404 to school to enter skilled or semi-3,718,000, skilled work will find themselvesIn addition, tho report states, in,a S5>tinuou«Jy worsenine sit',, ... . , : uation.there will be almost as manyNegrpes as whites within the city Negro population should ex¬limits by 1990. Slightly under one Pan(i greatly into the suburbs, ac-third of the city’s population was cording to Bogue. The general de-Negro as of the 1960 census. centralization in Chicago s popu¬lation has already led to “a veryThese factors will turn Chicago definite suburban migration ofinto “a sea of unemployment and Negroes,’’ he said,underemployment” unless drasticsteps are taken, the report Negro power risingcharges. At yesterday’s press eomerencec. -i mi i Hauser discussed the increasingSome 1,400^000 persons w.U be |i(ical or the urba„unemployed by 1W0, almost half Ne in ,he Uml„d S,ales Nol.ol them Negro, Bogue said. In , |hat „ 1980 there wj|, ,he study he reports that, 'In Negroes as whites in sixthese days of automation and , cities throughout the na-declmmg tmportance of unsk.lled tkm h(1 stated thal .The Negramanpower it is extremely urgent increosingl> is becoming a poli-that these new workers be kept tica, The k , his’°°‘ a"d trained to hold improvement is being placed moresk.lled jobs; othertv.se, he econ- and mo|,e Ws hands ..omy of the entire metropolitan _area can literallv drown in a sea 7 DesPlte the increase m NegroChinese physicist Lee Tong accelerator division, has been re- industrial nation, including Red of unemployment and underem- P°Pulahon and political power.is lieen appointed director of sponsible for much of the design China, can build atom bombs if it ployment. Hauser does not foresee a more„T, * . . , , integrated city in the future.If employment is not forth- ~When the Negro becomes free tocoming locally, the result will be ]ive where he wishes he will 1enda huge exodus of the better edu- tocated and more talented workersto other areas where employ¬ment is available.Vol 70 — No. 71 University of Chicago, Wednesday, Mar. 28, 1962 31Teng gets Argonne posthasa $17,000,000 atom-smasher work on the ZGS* which has ***" wants to.currently under construction under construction since June,J 1959at Argonne National laboratory. ‘ •Teng, who has been an Argonne In the 11 years since he receiveds:aff member since 1955, will have his PhD degree in physics frommajor responsibility for the final the University of Chicago, Tongphases of the zero gradient synchlotion’s (ZGS) construction. “The technology of buildingthe bomb Is so well known thatany fairly industrialized countrycan build one,” lie said. “Thisfact was realized some time ago.”Teng emphasized, however, thatTlie ZGS fires protons intocopiier or beryllium targets atenergies up to 12-i billion elec¬tron volts. It will produce theworld’s most intense beam ofparticles scientists want to study.The particle accelerator is ex¬pected. to produce all 30 presentlyknown or anticipated subatomic‘ rticles in large enough quanti¬ties so their properties can bo de¬termined precisely.Teng, whose official title is di¬rector of the laboratory's particle has become internationally knownfor his accomplishments in high ,. . .... , ,energy physics research and for scien u v'olk (k,np at Argonnehis contributionstechnology.While pursuing graduate stud¬ies at the University, Teng col-lalnirated with a colleague, JamesTuck, in originating the “Teng-Tuck deflector metlmd” f»n- ex¬tracting a particle beam fromeircular accelerators. In this tech¬nique. a magnetic deflator isiivsl (o direct the beam from theaccelerator and conduct it to anto accelerator ^or Peaceful purposes.Alton Linford, dean ofUC's school of social ser¬vice administration. — ex|>erimenial area.Teng also devised a beam Injec-tion technique which can increasethe efficiency of circular acceler¬ators by a factor of five or more.Known as the “Teng method.” ithas been incorporated into an ac¬celerator at the Nuclear EnergyStudies centre at Saclay, Fiance,and has proved to be remarkablyeffective.The University of Chicago con¬ferred the Master of Science de¬gree on Dr. Teng in 1948 and thePhD in 1951. The Argqnne physi¬cist earned his BS degree in physicsat Fu-Jen university, Peiping, in1946.Teng, who has not returned toChina since the Communists seizedpower, estimates that CommunistChina has many competent physi¬cists trained in the Soviet Union.At a press conference followinghis appointment, lie said that any- segregate himself, just asother races did,” he said. How¬ever, Negroes will be more in¬fluential in national i>olitics,Fight drop-outs ’*"* electing more Congressmen and“In the light of this impending becoming considered more of adevelopment,” the report con- P°wer Presidential elections,tinues, “the comparatively high Also at the press conference,rates at which Negroes drop out Hauser predicted that the popu-Icng succeeds Albert V. Crew, a of school and the tendency for lation in urban areas will lead35 year old British born scientist, Negroes not to go on to college to a greater dependence on masswho is now director of the entire should be combatted with every transportation in the future, pos-Argonne laboratory means at the disposal of the com- sibly even resulting in the banish-munity.” ment of automobiles from dovvn-The building of the ZGS has But, it was noted, “The situa- town areas in some cities. “Wetion is only now beginning to are adapting,” he noted, “fromdevelop, and probably can be pre- a 19th century technology lo avented by a prompt and aggres- present-day technology based onsive program launched now, to the auto. In another 30 years, welo use large accelerators on both bave tbem stay jn school.” may be adapting again. Whatcoasts are now returning to Clu- The situation can improve, the technology will be then — mono-cago to use the ZGS. report states, if Negroes are rail or helicopter — who knows?"Beadle speaks at UCLAcreated "a little renaissance” inMidwest physics. Some nuclearphysicists who left the Mid-westUC President GeorgeBeadle spoke on “Academiesin the cause of man” to aCalifornia audience last night.Beadle was the principal speak¬er at the ninth annual CharterDay ceremonies of the Universityof California at Los Angeles.Beadle traced the history of im¬pact of the work of academics("members of institutions oflearning”) on the world at large, He stated that today “universitiesand colleges increasingly servethe nation and the world commu¬nity and decreasingly cater to theinterests and social ambitions ofindividuals.” x••Concerning the importance ofacademic freedom, Beadle said,“For one, many have regardeduniversities as havens for danger¬ous ‘advanced’ thinkers and evenwild-eyed radicals. Some still do.This is a charge that has at oneSSA receives grantThe University’s school ofsocial service administrationlias received the largest of tengrants made to educationaland nonprofit institutions by thesocial security administration ofthe Department of Health, Educa¬tion, and Welfare.The UC grant of $115,034 willcover the first year of a studyProject on “Organization andutilization of public assistancepersonnel.”Directed by Edward E. Schwartz,1 *eorge Herbert Jones professor ofsoc*al service administration, theproject will compare the tradi¬ tional way of utilizing and organ¬izing professional and nonpro¬fessional social welfare personnelw'ith experimental or team opera¬tion, which relies upon specializa¬tion.“We are seeing,” said Schwartz,“if we can develop a way oforganizing and using scarce man¬power in meeting the public assis¬tance needs and programs in thiscommunity.” The office for theproject, located at 63 and Mary¬land, is already open.The grants were announced byWilliam L. Mitchell, social securi¬ty commissioner. They wereawarded in support of research(continued on page four) UC officials appearon television showSeven members of the University of Chicago administra¬tion are scheduled to participate in a two-hour televisiondiscussion of the process of change in higher education inthe United States.They will appear on Norman —— ——Ross’ “Off the cuff” program dle College.' and Thomas E. I>on-sometime in May. Their discussion neley. professor of history',w'ill be videotaped next Tuesday. John Simpson, professor in theAccording to John Buckstaff, department of physics and the En-assistant director of the Univer- nc° i’ermi Institute for Nuclearsity’s radio and television office, the stL es> Albert V. Crowe, directoradministrators will relate the na- of Argonne national laboratory andtional process of change to the associate professor in the depart-University of Chicago and its fu* ment of physics; and Philip Hau-ture plans for growth, emphasis, ser, professor and chairman of theand development. , department of sociology and direct-President George Beadle will be or of the Population Researchmaking his first Chicago television Training center will also partici-appearance aside from news broad- pate.casts in the program. W. Aiian Wallis, professor andOthers who will be on the pro- dean of the graduate school ofgram are Lowell T. Coggeshall, business and professor in the de¬vice president of .the University; partments of economics' and statist-Frederick H. Rawson, professor ics, will represent the professionalof medicine; Alan Simplon, dean of school in the program. time or a nol her been leveled atall great universities — Padua,Paris, Oxford, Cambridge. Har¬vard, Chicago, and the Universityof California.“I do not propose here to de¬fend academic freedom and theresponsibility to keep an openmind except to say that if weare to avoid some of the pitfallsof authoritarian and totalitarianregimes, they must be defended.”Refering to academics’ attemptsto find a “tenable and acceptablesolution to the control of war,”Beadle said. “In this connection Iwant to call your attention to anunorthodox and much misunder¬stood group of private citizens ofseveral nations, including manyacademics, who have been andstill are searching for ways tobreak the deadlock. I refer to thePugwash conferences. At first thisgroup, which included a numberof top Russian academics, waslooked upon with deep suspicion.New', after several years, it hascome to be used by governments—cm's, that of the USSR, andothers as an unofficial avenue ofcommunication on arms controland other ways of reducing theprobability of an all-out war. Itserves this purpose well and in away not yet achieved by any otherdevice. The work of the Pugwashconference has been reported inthe Bulletin of the AtomicScientists a unique and mostuseful publication housed on thecampus of the University of Chi¬cago, managed and largely writtenby academics.”Editorial Friars cast chosenPostal bill is ‘pernicious’When it was originally crops up in discussions of censor- political beliefs of whom arepassed by the House of Rep- ship of obscenity, whether the known to no one?resentatives some weeks ago P°st office has the legal right to in short, even if we were towith but two dissenting votes, decide whether or not to deliver subscribe to the ridiculous notion The Blackfriars board hasannounced the cast for theirproduction of “Sing Out SweetRock,” an original musicalcomedy to presented on April 27,28, and 29 in Mandel hall as onethe now famous Cuningham am-mendment to the Postal rate in¬crease bill was almost universallyattacked by everyone outside theHouse,The ammendment contains twosections. The first bans the deli¬very through the mails of propa¬ganda from Iron Curtain coun¬tries; the second outlaws the ship¬ping of propaganda by “subver¬sive” groups in the United States.After its approval by the House,President Kennedy stated his be¬lief that the bill was unconstitu¬tional. Several other leaders notedthat it would certainly be killedwhen it came up for considera¬tion by the Senate.Now, however, officials arechanging their tune. Justice de¬partment leaders have said re¬cently that they are not so sureabout the bill’s constitutionality.While it is their guess that thesecond provision is unconstitu¬tional, they are in doubt aboutthe first. At the same time, spe¬culation about the bill’s fate whenit comes before the Senate is lessrare than it had originally been.It has long been a point of con¬troversy, a point which usually a piece of mail. It is pointed outthat the functions of that office,at least nominally, is to providefor the delivery of mail, with novalue judgements involved.There have been severalcourt cases in recent months aboutPost Office decisions not to deli¬ver foreign mail. One of the mostnotable, and the most lenthy, in¬volved Mrs. Helen Hughes, wifeof former UC professor of socio¬logy, Everett Hughes. After se¬veral years in the courts it wasruled that Mrs. Hughes had theright to receive the Iron Curtainliterature she had ordered. Thisdecision would seem to say some¬thing about the real responsibilityof the Post Office in this area.More absurd than the ban onforeign Communist literature isthe prohibition on domestic “pro¬paganda.” It is unclear from thewording of the ammendment justwhat is considered "communist.”Is the decision to be based onthe Attorney General’s list? Is itto follow the ludicrous definitionof the McCarren act? Or is thefinal decision to be left to lowerechelon Post Office censors, the of censorship as an abstract prin¬ciple, the Cunningham ammend¬ment itself remains pernicous. Itstotal lack of clarity grants a fartoo great freedom to individualcensors. Nobody knows just wherewe will go from here.Fortunately, this is one issueon which public opinion can in¬fluence votes. There are, accordingto informed sources, few Senatorswho fail to see the foolishness ofthe bill. And yet, although thesituation was similar in the House,there were only two dissentingvotes.The explanation Is simple—rep¬resentatives were afraid in thiselection year. It is in the natureof the case that the organizedright wing is able to mount, with¬out too much difficulty, intensivepro-ammendment letter writingcampaigns. Only an equally loudprotest from thinking Americacan save us from this ammend¬ment.We trust that within a fewweeks such a protest will deve¬lop. It could start in no better aplace than UC. of the final events of the Festivalof the Arts.Rock Monas, “the ruthless rock¬ing and rolling all American hero,”will be played by Jerry LaPointe.LaPointe has had theatrical train¬ing in New York and is currentlyemployed by the intelligence officeat the Fifth Army headquarters.This is the first time Blackfriarshas chosen an off-campus personto play a leading role in one oftheir annual shows. Abbott KenDavidson explained that the movewas discussed by the student boardand director James O’Reilly andwas adopted in the interest ofmaking this year’s cast and finalproduction as strong as possible.“O’Reilly felt that Jerry was thestrongest ‘Rock’ who tried out,and that is why we cast him inthe part.”Phil, the sociologist who is mak¬ing a study of Rock and his “peergroup,” will be played by LewGoldwyn, first year student in theCollege. The roles of Mr. Boltonand Mr. Holloway, the harrassedheads of the Lolita Record com¬pany, are being filled by graduatestudent Ron Inglehart and first-year student Jim Murphy.Within the cultural and sophisticated atmosphere ofHYDE PARKThis elegant two-apartment brick building, 6 rooms each, 1 Isceramic baths. Spacious rooms designed for gracious living.Replacement value: $50,000. Full price, $26,500. Call RE 1-8444 BOB NELSON MOTORSIMPORT SERVICESPECIALISTSHAS“DAVE" MURRAYSERVICE Judy Graubart will play therole of Vicki, the “sweet youngIhing” who is pursued by Philbut loves instead the "ruthless allAmerican hero.” Miss Finkle, thehard-headed “idea woman” of Ix>-lita records and another of Rock’sCareer Cues:“The broader your knowledge,the greater your chanceEdwin J. Ducayet, PresidentBell Helicopter Company*As I look back, graduating from college in the depth ofthe depression was a blessing in disguise. It was difficultto get a job, and even more difficult to hold it. It provedto me early in life that to succeed in business requiresconstant struggle.“I found that the truly successful individual never stopslearning, that a formal college education is the foundationon which we continue to build the knowledge and experi¬ence required to get ahead.of success! i“Even in today’s age of specialization, a man eventuallyreaches a point where breadth of knowledge is necessary.The engineer must understand accounting and marketing.The marketing man must know his product. The financialman must be sympathetic to engineering developmentand sales programs. Management must have a workingknowledge of all phases of the complex and highly com¬petitive business world.“Therefore, even though specializing, a student shouldmake his college curriculum as broad as possible, anddiversify his outside activities. Authoritative surveys haveshown that only a small percentage of individuals end upin the field in which they specialized in college.“Widen your world. Broaden your interests right now.Since graduation from college I’ve discovered that thosewho are really succeeding today are the ones who do moreand keep on learning from what they do. The broaderyour college interests are now — the steadier your ladderof success tomorrow!”Edwin J. Ducayet is president ofone of the world’s largest heli¬copter manufacturing firms. Hiscompany’s products are used in52 countries for a multitude ofmilitary and commercial ap¬plications. A resident of FortWorth, Texas, Ed has been aCamel smoker since his under¬graduate days at M.I.T.Smoking more now but enjoying it less?...change to Camel!Have a real cigarette-CdmelTHE BEST TOBACCO MAKES THE BEST SMOKE H. J. Reynold*Tobacco CompanyWinaion-tsaieaNorth Carolina female admirers, will be played byMaggie Stinson.The original musical comedywhich was written by Bob Reiserand Marty Rabinowitz with musicby Bob Applebaum, Ken Pierceand Mel Rosen includes a groupof militant aesthetics who callthemselves the Back to Bach so¬ciety. Their leader, Quint, will boplayed by Pat Cain who graduatedfrom UC several years ago. The';aesthete Ron will be portrayed byPeter May, the pugnacious Jo by 'Belleruth Krepon, and TootsSweet by Jane Whitehill.The 24 supporting character,roles including special singers and idancers will be filled by Judy..Green, Carole Hughes, Linda Han-dleman, Mary DeLue, MarthaLeurmann, Sandra Roos, Peggy/Gibbons. Felicity O’Meara, Anno .Orwin, Fred Franklin, Ed Blum,Vincent Kruskal, Michael Shuto, 'Don Sullivan, Wally Skurda, and -’ JNate Swift.WUCB expands,gets UPI tickerWUCB, the University’s stu- 1dent radio station, will soonbegin to broadcast news wit lb ithe aid of a newly installed; .United Press International (UPI)ticker.The ticker w ill be donatedthe College Radio corporation, $n||ad agency which handles accouttfagSIfor commercials broadcast out¬college radio stations.In exchange for use of tjggpfticker, WUCB will issue free com0 Jmereials for the Ford Motor com-pany and the Dupont corporation."WUCB currently has no pro¬gramming of news. After installajtion of the UPI ticker, the cam-,pus station will schedule daily,broadcasts of international,-;national, local, and campus ne\vsi|| ,The news programs will be hearclf|at 8 and 11 pm each evening. AlThe ticker will be installed in ,the next week, and news broad- /casts will start immediately aft errinstallation.| Today's EventsWednesday, 28 MarchEpiscopal Holy communion: Bonij|chapel, 7:15 am. S,Carillon recital: Rockefeller Memorialchapel, 5 pm. .:38sEpiscopal Evensong: Bond chftpel, 5 ' ijUg /pm.Polit Platform causus: Ida Noyes SunParlor, 7:30 pm. .MSDiscussion series: “A Liberal FrontierReligion." William Wallace F» mi* 'house, 5628 Woodlawn, 8 pm. ItalicT Pennington speaking' on “Cod, ’prayer, sin. and redemption."Science Fiction club: ‘‘The theory aml.<- 'practice of snark hunting: a stmly .of Lewis Carroll," Ida Noyes hall;:8 pm. ' :|BiFolk dancing: the Country Dancers,Noyes hall, 8 pm.Lecture: ‘‘Smyrna and Early TonJohn M. Cook, professor of anciihistory and classical archaeology atBristol university, Breasted hall,I'm. tMODEL CAMERAWe have one of the finest |selections of photographicequipment on the south side.1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259SOUTHSIDE HEBREWCONGREGATIONMEN'S CLUBpresents in o concertTHEODORE BIKELfinger, actor, and guitaristSAT. EVE., APRIL 14. 1962McCORMICK PLACEDonations: $3.7S, $5.00, $6.50 and$7.50.7401 S. Chappel Ave. HY 3-4010;Mail Orders Invited ;.:i"JACK, Bobby, Pat, Sargent, Ethel,Jackie, Caroline and now Teddy, Mr, Ed¬ward M. Kennedy it a candidate for theUnited Statet Senate from Massachusetts.He is 30 yean old, has a yeas’t experiencein a minor position in the state govern¬ment, spent some time last summer travel¬ing through Latin America at a ton ofunofficial Something or Other. He it abrother of the Presi- | From th, corrgn, f„u«dent. He it a bro¬ther of the President.He is a brother.,,', of NATIONAL REVI EYf -Write for free cop/,i50E.35$f.,Nswr#fli16, N.Y* : /2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Mor. 28. 1962Eby Condition improved Bomb survivors to talkI- THREE -Jewish Cultural Programs fro American College StudentsOFFERED BY JEWISH ZIONIST ORGANIZATION1MAWSPI" American Wark Study ProgramIn IsraelLIVE - WORK - STUDYON A KIBBUTZFOR 6 MONTHS OR LONGER DEPARTURE SEPT. 3, 1962• TOTAL COST: $795.00 •2"ISr Israel Summer Inst.7 WEEKS OFTOURS-SEMINARSKIBBUTZ LIFEJUNE 27 thru AUGUST 14. 1962TOTAL COST: $850.00 3j(t The College Accredited"Ulpan" Hebrew Inst.SPEAK HEBREWIN 1 SUMMERJULY 14 thru AUGUST 19, 1962TOTAL COST: $295.00-'Clip and Mail To: -> Youth Dept.. American Zionist Council, 515 Park Ave., N.Y. 22. N.Y. J■Yes! I am interested in: 1 □ AWSPI; 2 □ ISI; 3 □ ULPAN!I name, address THE SOCK THAT STAYS UP AS LATE AS YOU DOADLER Introduces the good-tempered cotton sock. Nothing ever gets it down.With stripes at the top and reinforced with nylon, it’s a white sock thatsticks to you the way your little brother used to. Pictured, the Alpine withthe new Shape-Up leg. $1.00. the aourcompany,cincinnatim.ohioADLER'S good-tempered Alpine available atLYTTONSKermit Eby, professor ofsocial sciences at UC, hasmade a “miraculous recovery,”and is expected to leave Bil¬lings hospital soon.According to his doctor, AlvinTarlov, Eby “is doing beautifully.He is a man of unusual strengthand will.”Eby, hospitalized in February,was treated for a tumor condition.A new anti-tumor medicationwas used to effect his recovery.He will return home shortly, and.resume his work in a few weeks.Hby, who joined the UC facultyin 1948 as one of the last instruc¬tors to be appointed professor insocial sciences, has been teachingfor more than 40 years.Teaches at 18In 1921, at the age of 18, heln'gan his career, teaching alleight grades of the Olive Centerschool, St. Joseph County, Indi¬ana.After receiving his Bachelor’sdegree from Manchester college,Kby laught in Indiana and Michi¬gan high schools. At Ann Arborin 1934, he organized the firstteachers’ union; from 1937-42 hewas executive secretary of theChicago Teachers’ union, which herepresented at the Illinois legisla¬ture.The following year Eby was in¬strumental in the organization of the Auto worker* of the then un¬born Congress of Industrial Or¬ganizations (CIO). In 1945 he be¬came director of education andresearch for the entire CIO, hav¬ing served as assistant director forthe two previous years.Visits campsOften world delegate for theChurch of the Brethren, Eby in1942 visited Japanese-Americanrelocation camps. Three yearslater he was a member of theMacArthur commission — one ofmany federal committees on whichhe served—to reorganize the edu¬cational system in Japan.Having served with the NationalUnited Nations Educational, Sci¬entific, and Cultural Organizationcommission, Eby, from 1946 to1948, was a member of the federaladvisory committee for the USoffice of education. In 1947 hewas a delegate to the White Houseconference on rural education.In 1953 Eby was investigatedby the Jenner committee, an in¬ternal affairs sub-committee, forhis alleged “leftist” affiliations.His reactions appeared in an arti¬cle for the October 1953 issue ofthe Alumni magazine, entitled“Ho\v to Get a Federal Subpoe¬na.”Eby is the author of severalarticles and four books: The GodIn You (1954), Paradoxes of De¬mocracy (1956), For Brethren Only (1958), and Protests of anEx-Organization Man (1961).During the 1960 presidentialcampaign, articles by Eby ap¬peared in several publications. In“The Concerned Student” in Octo¬ber 1959, Eby stressed the pres¬ent-day “lack of any place in ourpolitical life for the otherwise-minded.” He stated that therewas “no party of reform, no partyof dissent, no means throughwhich those of opposing politicalbeliefs can work for that in whichthey believe.”Asks discussionHe stated that too few issueswere dealt with by politiciansseeking office—and proposed ascause the fact that “so many ofthe real issues are too explosiveto be discussed.” The issues hecited were foreign policy, militari¬zation, integration, inflation, andunemployment—“the most impor¬tant issues of all to the Americanpeople and the ones on which wehave been most defeated.”. w T- | I|I9D 'SAgot!.' Two survivors of the 1945Hiroshima bombing will relatetheir 1945 experiences tonightat International house.This discussion is part of thefour day Chicago stopover ofparticipants in a Hiroshima toGeneva Peace pilgrimage. Thepeace pilgrims will visit eightUnited States cities, the UnitedNations, and Europe before at¬tending the Geneva Disarmamentconference.Hiromasa Hanabusa, age 18,and Miyoko Matsubara, 29,chosen by the people of Hiroshimato make the pilgrimage, will behere tonight.Hanabusa was orphaned by thebomb at the age of two years.Miss Matsubara was 13 years oldat the time of the bomb. She wasone of fifty survivors in a class of350 girls.They will be joined by BarbaraReynolds, the wife of anthropolo¬gist Earle Reynolds. Reynolds isskipper of the yacht Phoenixwhich sailed into the nuclear testzone in the central Pacific in 1958 in protest of nuclear weaponstesting.The Pilgrims are bringing withthem documentary films andrecorded tape messages of theA-bomb victims.They will carry the Hiroshimaappeal and thousands of signa¬tures asking for an agreement ona nuclear test ban, an end to thearms race, and positive action to¬wards peace.Mrs. Reynolds explained thepurpose of the pilgrimage: “Fromthe viewpoint of the survivors inHiroshima ... the pilgrimage canmean that people in the UnitedStates are truly human beingswith a great heart and that theywill open their hearts and theirarms to those wrho are suffering—even if that suffering has beencaused by their own actions ratherthan through some natural disas¬ter such as famine, fire, or flood.”The discussion at 8 pm is spon¬sored by the Women for Peace.Dr. Richard Preston, chairmanof Chicago Federation of Ameri¬can Scientists, and physicist atArgonne National laboratories,will preside.THE SAFE WAYto stay alertwithout harmful stimulantsNever take chances withdangerous “pep pills.” Instead,take proven safe NoDoz©.,Keeps you mentally alert withthe same safe refresher foundin coffee. Yet NoDoz is faster,handier, more reliable. Abso¬ lutely not habit-forming. Nexttime monotony makes you feeldrowsy while driving, workingor studying, do as millions do... perk up with safe, effectiveNoDoz. Another fine productof Grove Laboratories.Theatre First, Inc. presentsEugene O'Neill's fascinating drama“THE GREAT GOD BR0WH”March 30. 31; April 1. 6. 7, 8SPECIAL RATE TO STUDENTS (WITH ID) $1.00General Admission $1.50General Kates Quoted On RequestShow Times: Fri. & Sat. 8:30 pm; Sun 7:30 pmLocated at: The Athenaeum, 2936 N. SouthportFor Ressrv.: Call LA 5-9761 or Writs f, O.Box 3545, Chicago 64Mar. 28, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3■u\City considers renewal planThus, the answer to the ques¬tion at the beginning of thisarticle is that, if the city council Students demonstratefor, against PresidentCampus plan as part of its ownplan for Woodlawn, and2» The federal government will #approves the University's plan have to be satisfied that the city tors greeted resident John F.for a new campus, the city of plan for Woodlawn satisfies all Kennedy as he spoke at the(Editor's note: this is the secondin a scries of articles on the Wood-taten community.)by Ken PierceChVaffo hoDefulVhaUtsDlans Chicago wiH gct over 20 million lhe requirements of the housing Charter Dav ceremonies atL n\agO noperui mat its plans dollars jn federal money, for re- act of 1961. .. r>f California atlot a squate mile of new cam- development use anywhere in the (A future article will deal withpus will be approved by theChicago city council?The answer to this questionrequires an understanding of theFederal Housing act of 1961. It isan important answer, involvingmillions of dollars, thousands ofpeople, hundreds of cities andscores of the nation’s universi¬ties.Many universities throughoutthe nation are located in cities —for example, Columbia and NewYork, located in New York; Uni¬versity of Pittsburgh, located inPittsburgh; and the Universityof Chicago.It has been obvious for morethan a decade to the administra¬tions of these urban universitiesthat there is very little room leftfor university expansion. It hasalso been obvious that the uni¬versities need to expand.Many urban universities andhospitals are also confronted byanother problem — not only arethey living in erow'ded surround¬ings, but in many cases, theneighborhoods surrounding theseinstitutions are rapidly deterior¬ating. When these facts were rea¬lized, university officials beganto think that urban renewalmight be the solution to their ex¬pansion problems, as well as ameans for improving the condi¬tion of their neighborhoods—re¬ducing area crime and health haz¬ards, and providing housing forfaculty members.So it was that in 1959 universi¬ties (and hospitals) throughoutthe nation supported an amend¬ment to the Federal Housing act.Designated “Section lt2,” theamendment was passed, and wassubsequently included in theHousing act of 1961.Under section 112, the f<*deralgovernment can give a city threetimes the amount of money a uni¬versity spends for redevelopmentof land for education use. All thecity has to do to get the moneyis to certify that the University’sredevelopment is part of a cityrenewal project.ClassifiedFor Rent and For SaleHouse for Sale — South ShoreSpacious, attractive, convenient, fourbedrooms, 2 baths, garage and carport,full basement, remodeled kitchen. 3blocks to excellent public elementaryand high schools. Pleasant family neigh¬borhood. 5% interest — 22 year loan.f> modern appliances. 3 air conditionersincluded in price. Mid 20's. MI 3-8032.Bury riook-Carmel, by owner. 4 bed¬rooms. I V» bath and Cyprus rec. room.Many extras — priced to sell. ES5-8328.Desirable 1 room nicely furnished,tile bath and shower. $72.50. 5143Kenwood. Call SO 8-0439.Apt. to share w. grad, student, male,for Si>rg. Qtr. only. For particulars,please phone MI 3-2276 after 5 pm.Attractive 31/*. room modern apartment.5-127 Dorchester. PL 2-0026.Wanted and ServicesBabysitter wanted weekday mornings,approx. 10 hrs. week. Call 363-6076.Typing: reasonable, accurate, reliable.Special RUSH service. Call Ron a Rosen¬blatt or Karen Borchers, NO 7-3609.PersonalsSpring is when (sic) afancy turns. young man'st'-Shop gripe 1- - - - on me.if it continues. Don’t pull thatIt will lead to kind ofviolenceBeware the Aardvarks of March.REMEMBER:for sales,foreign carsales city, and with only a few stringsattached.The University of Chicagoplans to spend about 6.5 milliondollars on its new campus locatedacross the Midway in Woodlawn— between 60 and 61 streetsCottage Grove to Stony Island.UC has also spent approximate¬ly 2.5 million dollars for otherland redevelopment in HydePark. Since the University is al¬ready located within a city re¬development project, the HydePark-Kenvvood renewal project,the total 9 million spent in thearea (6.5 plus 2.5) will generateapproximately 27 million dollarsof federal funds for use by thecity of Chicago, since Section 112 some of the obstacles the Uni¬versity and the city governmenthave encountered as they planfor the future of Woodlawn andthe University.) Three groups of demonstra- husband who is serving a 30-yearprison term.Sobell was convicted in 1951 j„the Rosen bo rg-Sobell conspiracyto commit espionage case. MrsSobell maintains that her husbandwas “completely innocent” of Uiecharges made against him.Others awardedfederal grants(continued from page one)and demonstration piojects in thefield of social security.rJ7ie ten awards were made fromabout 50 abdications fix>m allsections of the nation. Mitchellsaid the social security adminis¬tration based its selection on theadvice of an outstanding group ofprovides that three dollars of fed- experts.eral money become available forevery dollar of University moneyspent on redevelopment.After the city returns UC’s 6.5million investment, Chicago isleft with some 21.5 million dollars,to spend anywhere in the city. Other grants were made to theCommunity Service society of NewYork; Cornell university; Colum¬bia university; Trinity universityat San Antonio, Texas; GoodrichSocial settlement of Cleveland; Berkeley on March 23.Over 300 students participatedin a picket protesting the Presi¬dent’s policies.The anti-Kennedy Ad Hoe com¬mittee protested against policiesof the Kennedy administration in¬cluding intensifying the armsrace, invading Cuba, supportingdictatorships, and failing to sup¬port full Negro citizenship.The Charter Day Support com¬mittee, a group which backs Ken¬nedy on his decision to resumenuclear testing, staged a demon¬stration supporting Kennedy.In addition, more than 7,500students signed a petition wel¬coming Kennedy. Welcome ban¬ners were also hung around thecampus.A third picket was led by Mrs.Morton Sobell. who is attemptingto convince Kennedy to free her California Attorney GeneralStanley Mosk requested that stu¬dents planning to picket thePresident's appearance to recon¬sider and “join all their fellow-Californians in paying tribute U>the head of the greatest nation onearth."Ignoring Mosk’s request. AdHoc’s chairman Frank Bardackestated that they would go aheadas planned because picketing wasthe only way his group couldeffectively make their opinionsknown to the President.Mosk had asked the demonstra¬tors not to confuse the ollice ofthe Presidency with the man whoholds the office, hut, Bardackesaid, “It’s impossible to separatethe office of the Presidency fromthe man.”Thus, before the city gets any Universit of Michif!a„: Universitymoney, two things have to hap-pen:1) The city council will haveto adopt the Universitv’s South of North Carolina; University ofNotre Dame; and Syracuse uni¬versity. JUST PUBLISHEDKATHERINE ANNE PORTER S LONG AWAITED NOVELSHIP OF FOOLS @ $6.50The Hrtt full length navel by ane al the most distinguished u/ritera in thaworld today.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE S8B2 ELLIS AVENUELUCKY STRIKEpresents:lUCKYJUFFFRS st SPRING MADNESS“O.K., girls. When theyreach the third floor, welet go with the fire hose.’“When / was a freshman, the seniors won.When / was a sophomore, the seniors won.When / was a junior, the seniors won.Now this.”Sports Car Enthusiasts - RallyistsAttentionIvy League International Motoring As¬sociation —- The Motoring Club builtfor fun is beginning its Spring programfor those who like to drive. Meetingsare held in River Park Field House,5106 N. Francisco, every 1st and 3rdWeds, of the month. For info., callMI 3-3116. ask for Bob. GO NEAR THE WATER. Spring is the time when students start thinking aboutwater fun. We say: Splash up a storm. Have a lark. But please be careful. Eachyear, a few careless students get water on their Luckies. Imagine their remorse!Imagine yours if you were to spoil a Lucky—that great cigarette that collegestudents smoke more of than any other regular. So have a swell time at yourfavorite watering hole this spring. And keep your Luckies dry.is/+tx*CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change!4. r. C<N Product of c/Xe i.^/meiCeccn (JcXcuceo~£cr*yiany — <JvXixceo- is our middle name4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Mar. 28, 1962