New peace group meets;changes policy statementUC’s new campus peacegroup revised its policystatement at last night’smembership meeting.1. Some wording was changed toemphasize the intention to takepart in political action projects. It,,as stated that politcal actionmight include what has beenL known as “direct action” project.2. It decided to make its mainemphasis the consideration of pro-.„,sals for preventing nuclear war.It changed the suggestedproposals so as not to criticize or•\elude present United Statesgovernment policies and pro|>osals.t. It decided that one proposal which would eliminate the prob¬lems oi nuclear war was unlikely.5. The group deleted a para¬graph which stated that there isa “virtual absence in this countryof serious thinking” on problemsof nuclear war.Last night’s meeting was heldin Reynolds club and attended byabout 33 people.The next meeting will be heldnext Thursday at 7:30. A group ofvolunteers was empowered to re¬vise the wording of the suggestedstatement as decided at lastnight’s meeting.The revised statement will be considered next Thursday.The proposed statement lastnight was changed to read asfollows:“We are not all of a mind con-eerning the issues of peace anddisarmament, but we are a groupconcerned with prevention of anuclear war and with ending thepresent arms race which may wellbe leading to such a war.“In order to accomplish ouraims we shall:1. Investigate the problems andformulate positive policy alterna¬tives; i2. Communicate the results ofthis research:3. Attempt to influence con-SG issues analyzedby Laura GodofskyWith the deadline onlythree days away for filingpetitions of candidacy for(ho Student Government as¬sembly and the National Studentassociation (NSA» delegation, fivecampus political parties have in¬dicated that they will run atleast one candidate in this spring’selections.Majority party POLIT will asirtst year, be challenged tiy two|! “campus oriented” parties: the In¬dependent Reform party (IRP)and the University party' (UP). Inaddition, the Association of Non¬tolerating Independents (ANTI)and tho Democratic Organizationto Withstand Nonsense (DOWN)will run on one-plank platforms of• bolishing Student Government. .POLIT, IRP, and UP plan torun full slates of 51 governmentj* assembly representatives, 5 NSAdelegates, and 5 NSA alternates.DOWN hopes to run about 20 orcandidates, mostly in the gra¬duate schools; and ANTI will have cretely national policy in thedirection of peace.“We will cooperate with othergroups in research, education, andonly one candidate, its president, political action protests.”K. A. Wilson.DOWN, formed about twoweeks ago by some graduate stu¬dents in social sciences, plans to‘Teplace Student Government withnothing,” according to its chair¬man. Phil Hablutzel. He saidthat there is no official DOWNreason for abolishing SG. "Every¬one in the party has his ownreason.”DOWN’S major operation Iscireulating a petition that anamendment to the SG constitu¬tion appear on the election ballot.The amendment would end SG. atmidnight of the last day of thefourth week of spring quarter.“If the amendment fails,” saidHablutzel. "we hope to get enoughpeople into office to end govern- Orthogenic school principal Bruno Bettleheimcusses discrimination charges.Vol. 70 — No. 73 University of Chicago, Friday, Mar. 30, 1962 OIrecommend children to UC’sSonia Shankman Orthogenicment for at least one year by not school because of the school’s al-UC discrimination chargedCook County’s department Orthogenic school's principal. Bra- specialize in the treatment of dis-public aid is refusing to ®o Bettleheim, professor in the turbed children.departments of education, psycho¬attending meetings.”ANTI has run only once before,last year, on a write-in basis.UP, which was formed late lastquarter, will, like IRP, be oppos¬ing POLIT.(continued on page 8) leged refusal to admit Negro stu¬dents.The department’s decision wasannounced .recently .by .AlbertNeely, director of the children’sdivision. Charges of discriminationwere immediately denied by the logy, and iw*yohiatry.The Orthogenic school, with anenrollment of 40 children betweenthe ages of six and 15, is a resi¬dential treatment center for emo¬tionally disturbed children. Theschool, located at 1365 E. 60thstreet, is also a research centerand laboratory' for the trainingof graduate students who wish toUS official asks acad emic freedomeral carelessness in the support of realize that “the strength of abasic branches of learning.” nation lies in the art and musicHe said' that “our large involve- and literature, and in its philos-ment in technological education ophical sophistication and theis understandable, but even the quality of its social sciences, justprogress of our technology is en- as much as in its physics or chem-Maroon press sen iceWASH. DC., - The U SCommission of Education haslaunched a sharp attack onthe “petty demagogues andtyrants” sniping at academic fyee-lom and trying to narrow' Ameri¬can education to technologyalone.Commissioner Sterling M. Mc-murrm called a three-day confer¬ence Of 136 educators from aroundthe country this week. One of themain purposes, lie said, was tostudy ways of overcoming resist¬ance to teaching the “facts andfallacies of communism.”Mcmurrin said that state gov¬ernments and school officials An all - campus referen-should remove the taboos from dum on the Inter-fraternityteaching about communism. , . . , ,In opening the conference Mon- C0UI1CI decision to beginday, Mcmufrin told'the educators autumn quarter rush will bedangered by our too small invest¬ment in theoretical science.”The Commissioner warned that“academic neglect of the humanestudies and the fine arts can havea seriously damaging effect uponour culture.”The American public, he said,has almost completely failed to our spiritual, artistic, moral andintellectual resources.”In essence, Mcmurrin said.America is in a “crisis in theliberal ideal out of which ourbasic values have come . . . theis try or its electrical engineering.“When we raise the question ofthe survival of our nation, it isa question in proximate range ofstatesmanship and machinery.But when w'e speak of the declineor rise of our culture ... it is aquestion of the full cultivation ot The decision to refuse recom¬mendation of the school w'as based,according to Neely, on the factthat “To our know ledge the schoolis an organization which does notaccept Negro children.”Bettleheim denied this charge,stating, “The Sonia Shankman Or¬thogenic school, like the Univer¬sity of Chicago as a whole, doesnot practice discrimination. It isa small, co-educational, residentialtreatment institution devoted tothe study and rehabilitation ofemotionally disturbed children andto the training of graduate stu¬dents and professional persons w'howish to specialize in the treatmentof such children. It has only 40students at present.“About six months ago.” Bettle¬heim continued, a “representativerecognition of the ultimate worth of the Cook County Department ofof the individual person, the valu- Public Welfare visited the school.ing of knowledge for its own sakeas well as for its uses, the faiththat human reason is the mostreliable instrument for solvinghuman problems, and the com¬mitment to the well-being of theindividual as our noblest end."Early rush plan on ballotthat “we have known for a long'ime that petty demagogues andtyrants can achieve some followr-ing in this country.” included on the ballot in thisspring's Student Government elec¬tions.Shrewdness cited“But this time,” he said, third weeks of the autumn quar¬ter.Early rush has several yearsbeen a subjet of controversy onthe UC campus. Several membersof the fraternity system claimthat early rush is necessary if thefraternity system is to survive.This year’s pledge class w as one ofthe smallest in the recent historyof the fraternity system.Before it can go into effect theThe referendum will poll cam¬pus opinion of the IFC vote lateobvious reference to right-wing J° ,Change rufshj"g Ku ».cextremists, “they are raising their ^^rfrom the btginmng of the early rush plan must be approvedheads in a shrewd and calculat- Winter quarter to the second and by dean of students Warner A-ing manner that received largenumbers of the unsuspecting andeven promises to endanger intel¬lectual freedom in the name ofnational security. Barth program set Wick, although he has announcedno official decision as .vet, sourcesclose to Wick indicate that hewill seek to find some alternatemeans of helping UC’s fraternities.It is hoped by representatives ofPOLIT. currently SG majority par¬ty and the group which had thereferendum placed in the ballot,that a display of student opposi¬tion to the early rush plan willconvince Wick to use his vetopower. POLIT officials yesterdaystated that they plan to campaignfor anti-early rush votes.The possibility of early rushcame up last year but the planwas never passed by the IFC. At He was requested to provide usw’ith the names and backgroundsof six Negro children who mightbe considered as candidates foradmission. As of today, we havereceived no response to this re¬quest.”Bettlelieim fears that if but oneor two Negro children were ad¬mitted to the school racial prob¬lems might develop. “I explainedto Neely that one Negro child ortwo would lead to violence,” hrstated. However, Bettleheim be¬lieves, if six Negro students (15%of the total population of theschool) were admitted at the sametime this problem could be avoided.There have never been morethan two Negroes sent by theCook county group at one timeand. according to Bettleheim. “Weare a research organization andthese applicants have always beenunsuitable to us.”Denies claimNeely stated that “the questionis wftether there has ever been aNegro child served by the school,"Karl Barth, the eminent Tickets for the series of lee- that time there was controversy and argued that Bettleheim’s ex-Protestant theolojrian who tures and two panel discussions over whether Student Government planation clinically does not hold°- • - - - water.” He said that there is noevidence that emotionally dis¬turbed children such as thosetreated by the Orthogenic schoolare more prone than others to ra¬cial violence.However, Neely did say that he^ute to the destruction of free- for the first time next month, n!Id<Tfor~admission ‘to'an v * po7- til the"winter quarter.'lom. whatever their purposes or will give a series of five public ti o£ the entire series * The dispute went to UC’s Stu-mtentkms, assume for themselves lectures in Rockefeller chapel. dent - Faculty Administrationa« ominous responsibility. The series is entitled “Intro- Tickets may be obtained from court the responsible for re-“It is nov/ one of the great Auction to Theology.” It will be the office of the divinity school solving any such controversy, but was pleased with “Dr. Bettleheim’*lasks of those in academic life to given the week of April 23. The at 1025 E. 58th street. Call exten- the Court refused to issue an ad- public statement that there are no*t»nd firm for the preservationot intellectual freedom and todemonstrate . . . that the salva¬tion of our nation does not re-tiuire the destruction of its ownhighest values.”Mcmurrin criticized “our gen- lectures on Monday throughThursday will be at 11 am in thechapel; the Friday lecture is at2 pm,Barth, an ardent opponent ofthe Nazis, now teaches at theUniversity of Basel, Switzerland, sion 4038 for more information, visory decision on the legality of color bars at the OrthogenicBeginning Monday, April 2, tick- a Code ammendment.ets will be available in Swift 400 Balloting for the SG electionfrom 9-12 am on Mondays, 1-4 will take place fror.. April 11-13.pm on Tuesdays and Wednes- All registered students are alloweddays, 9-12 am on Thursdays, and to vote at ballot boxes located1-4 pm on Fridays. around the Quadrangles. school.” Nevertheless, he indicatedthat the public aid departmentwould not consider recommendingchildren to the school “until wesee evidence of an actual changeof policy.”Wow to keep grades upDon't worry about the draft Students protestingWASHINGTON, DC — Col¬lege students, if they keep uptheir grades and stay squarewith their draft board, neednot worry much about havingtheir education interrupted bymilitary service.There will be exceptions, ofcourse, but most students willnot have reached the critical agebefore they receive their bache¬lor’s degree. And they can gen¬erally get continued deferrmentsfor advanced studies.The age at which most men areboing drafted now is 22 \'i to 23.Very few younger men are taken,and the average, which has heldsteady for the past four or fiveyears, is not likely to change un¬less there is a military buildupmuch larger than the one for theBei lin crisis.But to stay out of the servicewhile going to school, there areroutine steps a student shouldtake. In addition to the normalroutine of keeping his draft boardnotified of his status, he shouldask the registrar of his collegeto send forms to his draft boardsetting forth his grades and otherinformation.These forms are on hand atall schools, and while it is notmandatory to use them, a studentwould be wise to have them sentin when he registers, and everysemester thereafter.In addition, the selective serv¬ice offers intelligence tests peri¬odically at many schools. Studientstaking these tests and doing wellon them can have a better casefor deferment. Selective serviceoffices near the schools have in¬formation on the tests.Grades can go a long way to¬ward making a draft board decideto defer a student. It is not man¬datory to take grades into consid¬eration, but most draft boardslook to see whether a student isattending school full time andmaking normal progress.Draft boards also take into con¬sideration national interests andneeds. Currently there is a short¬age of teachers and doctors, soeducation and medical studentswould generally have excellentchances for deferment.Students need not be concernedabout the reservoir of draft-agemen in their home towns. Eachstate counts the number of eli¬gible males it has, informs thegovernment, and then gets its quota of the monthly draft callbased on its percentage of avail¬able men.Thus, theoretically, every statewould scrape the bottom at thesame time, and students fromone part of the country shouldnot be drafted en masse soonerthan they are in another area.If you are married, it makesno differences to the draft board,except, of course, in hardshipcases. Fathers are not being draftednow. And again, unless the draftcall increases mightily, neitherfathers nor students will be ciation against the governmentdrafted. of President Miguel YdigorasAnd if a student is inducted, he Fuentes developed into a full-can still get a brief respite. Fed- scale revolt in mid-March,eral law allows a student, ordered The studenls charge that theSfSS one —defennert Zi vicovy or Ydi8o,»? administrationthe end of the current academic *n Decembers congressionalyear. election tin which it won 25 outUniversity students in Guatemala have raised oppositionwhich may topple the Guatemala government.The central American republic of Guatemala was plungedinto a protracted crises when a protest movement startedby the University Student asso- - —"My Life and Yours"Leinsdorf speaks during FOTAErich Leinsdorf, noted or¬chestra conductor, will speakon “the divorce of symphonyand opera” on Tuesday, April17. The talk, part of the “MyLife and Yours” lecture series,will be held in conjunction withthe Festival of the Arts (FOTA).Leinsdorf plans to discuss thefact that in the United States theconducting of symphony andopera is seemingly incompatible.This is totally different fromthe European system.The lecture will concern itselfwith this fact and its effect onhis life and career. He will illus¬trate some of the points in histalk by playing the piano.Leinsdorf has conducted sever¬al distinguished orchestras bothin this country and abroad, in¬cluding the Boston symphony,the Philadelphia orchestra, theChicago symphony, the LosAngeles Symphony, the Houstonsymphony. In addition he headedboth the Cleveland orchestra andthe Rochester philharmonic, aspermanent conductor.He has also conducted abroadthe London philharmonic, theLondon symphony, the BBC sym¬phony, the Concertgebouw, theVienna philharmonic, the Viennasymphony, the Berlin philharmon¬ic, the Bayreuth festival orches¬tra, Florence’s Maggo Musicaleorchestra, the Rome opera or¬chestra and the Israel philhar¬monic.Last April, he was appointedpermanent music director of theBoston symphony and the Berk¬shire music festival, starting withthe 1962-63 season. At present he is music consultant of the Metro¬politan opera of New York.His symphonic and operatic re¬cordings have made Leinsdorfone of the most often recordedconductors. His recording of Puc¬cini's opera, “Turandot,” has be¬come the highest selling operaalbum of all time and was namedthe best operatic recording of1960-61. His recording of the com¬plete “Walkuere” in 1961 was histwelfth complete opera on rec¬ords.Leinsdorf is noted for his bril¬liant renditions of works of verydifferent composers. His Bachand Beethoven have been as wide¬ly acclaimed as his Brahms, De- bussey, Tchaikowsky, Verdi orPuccini, and he has always beena champion of contemporarymusic. He conducted the Ameri¬can premieres of Sir William Wal¬ton’s “Troilus and Cressida” andFrancis Poulenc’s “Dialogues ofthe Carmelites” (both at the SanFrancisco opera), while duringhis one-year tenure as musicaldirector of the New York cityopera, he was responsible for andconducted the American premiereof Frank Maritin’s “The Tem¬pest,” Carlysle Flloyd’s prize win¬ning opera “Susannah” and CarlOrff’s “The Moon.”Leinsdorfs son, Gregor, is astudent in the College here. of the 33 contested seats) was ob¬tained by fraud.Their demand for the cancel¬lation of the election results hasthe support of opposition partiesfrom right to left and of businessand professional groups. Thegovernment has formally chargedthat the disorders, which led i«>widespread street fighting and theimposition of military rule inGuatemala City, are inspired andabetted by the Soviet and CubanCommunist regimes with the ob¬ject of bringing down the Ydigorasregime.(Radio Havana has campaignedconsistently and violently againstYdigoras as in a March 7 broad¬cast: “unspeakably committed toYankee imperialism.”)President of the University stu¬dents association, Ernesto Ramirezadmitted that Communists have"joined” the anti - governmentmovement, but asserted that ithad been initiated by students af¬filiated with the anti-communist,Catholic Christian Democratic par¬ty.Meanwhile, Guatemala City re¬mains under martial law. Thedeath toll rose to 22 when a stu¬dent w as shot by troops on March20.Calendar of EventsGOLD CITY INNSpecializing in Cantonese FoodOrders to Take Out10% Discount to Students With This Ad5228 Harper HY 3-2559 Friday, 30 MarchEpiscopal holy communion: 7:15 am.Bond chapel.Lutheran Matins: 11:30 am, Bondchapel.Reception: 4 pm. Guest: Zygmunt Sulis-trowski, filmmaker. Ida Noyes hall.Film: 7 pm. Potemkin (Young People’sSocialist league). Judd 126, 50c.Lecture: 7 :45, “The Work of the Coun¬cil of Economic Advisers," James E.Tobin, president’s council of economicadvisers (Department of Economicsand.Sparry and Hutchinson company),social science 122.Sabbath service: 7:45, Hillel foundation.Lecture: 8 pm, "The Concepts of Cul¬tural anthropology,” Sol Tax, de¬partment of anthropology (Anthro¬pology in the Modern world series),social science 122.Play: 8 pm, "Kabale und Liebe,” byFriedrich Schiller, Graduate Germanicclub, Ida Noyes theatre.Motion picture: 8 pm. "The Captain'sParadise,” Burton-Judson courts.Hillel Fireside: 8:30 pm, “Greek Ele¬ments in Modern Hebrew Poetry,”Mark Krug, assistant professor, grad¬uate school of education, Hillel foun¬dation, 5715 Woodlawn.Film: 9 pm, Eisenstein’s "Potemkin,”(USSR 1925), YPSL, Judd 126.Motion picture: 10 pm, “The Captain’sParadise,” Burton-Judson courts.Saturday, 31 MarchVarsity track meet: 1 pm. Chicago vs.Lewis college. Stand field.Play: "Kabale und Liebe,” by FriedrichSchiller (Graduate Germanics club) ;Ida Noyes theatre, 2 pm. Les Twist Parisian: 9 pm, costumeprises, refreshments, dancing; Thomp¬son house lounge. 25c.Play: 8 pm. “Kabale und Liebe,” byFriedrich Schiller (Graduate German¬ic* club), Ida Noyes theatre.Sunday, 1 AprilRoman Catholic Masses: Calvert house,5-735 University ave.. 8:30, 10. 11am. 12 noon (Daily Masses at 7:30am, 12 noon, and 5 pm.)Episcopal Communion service: Bondchapel, 9:30 am.Lutheran Communion service: GrahamTaylor chape), 10 am.University religious service: RockefellerMemorial chapel, 11 am. The Rev¬erend W. Barnett Blakemore, Dean,Disciples Divinity House and Assoc¬iate Dean, Rockefeller Memorialchapel. (April 8: The Reverend AlvinN. Rogness, President, Luther Theo¬logical Seminary, St. Paul, Minnes¬ota).Radio series: From The Midway. WFMF,100.3 me, II am. "Rescue on theNile.” John A. Wilson, Andrew Mac-Leish Distinguished Service Profes¬sor, Oriental Institute.Carillon recital: Rockefeller Memorialchapel, 4 pm. Mr. Robins.Lecture: “The fatal delusion of co¬existence,” Frank S. Meyer. Inter¬collegiate Society of Individualists,Social Science* 122. 4 pm.Lecture: “Franny. Zooey, and God —Christian theology in literary guise,"Dr. Robert H. Hamill, the Methodistfoundation, 5:30 pm, Swift Hall com¬mons.Polit: Slating caucus. 7:30 pm, TdaNoyes hall east lounge.Within the cultural and sophisticated -atmosphere ofHYDE PARKThis elegant two-apartment brick building, 6 rooms each, 1 \'iceramic baths. Spacious rooms designed for gracious living.Replacement value: $50,000. Full price, $26,500. Call RE 1-8444 Hillel: United Jewish Student appeal.Solicitors supper meeting. 6 pm, ,715Woodlawn.Bridge club: fractional master pointgame. 7:15 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Episcopal evening prayer: 5540 Wood¬lawn ave., 8 pm.Folk dancing: (Folklore society), Idi>Noyes hall, 8 pm.Radio series: The Reviewing Stand,WGN, 8:35 pm. "The CommonMarket Threat or Promise?" Dis¬cussion by Milton Friedman, Professor,Department of Economics; KenyonPpole, Professor of Economies, North¬western University; and moderator,James H. McBurney, Dean, School ofSpeech. Northwestern University.Radio series: The Sacred Note, WBBM.10:30 pm. A program of sacredchoral music by the Rockefeller(Impel choir, Richard Vlkstrom. Di¬rector of Chapel music, conducting.Monday, 2 AprilLecture: 3:30 pm, “Oiterational limita¬tions on research at sea," Di JohnM. Zeigler, marine geologist. WoodsHole Oceanographic institute, Ro-en-wald hall, room 26.Lecture: 4 pm, “Why Cuba Was Com-munized." Jorge Castellanos, infor¬mation director. The Truth \ljoutCuba Committee, Ida Noyes library,I SI.Elementary Hebrew: 4:30 pm, Hillelfoundal ion.Lecture: 4:30 pm, “Boswell as a bio¬grapher," John Butt, Regius profes¬sor of English literature ut th< Uni¬versity of Edinburgh, social science122; free and without ticket.English class: 6:30-8:30, Internationalhouse. Room B.Movie: 8 pm. “Carry on Admiral,”(Great Britain), Assembly hall.Coffee plus: 9 pm, Shorey house,pierce tower.Week-End Special!All ImportedWINESWITHTHIS AD10% OFFFree Customer Parking Rear in City LotHARPER liquor1514 E. 53rd Street NEW APOLLO PAPERBACKS IN STOCK!Pauling: No More War, 1962 revised edition . ... (a $1.75Cook: Electrons Go To Work ... (a), $1.55Reid: Introduction to Higher Mathematics ... ... (i% $1.50Higbee: The Squeeze: Citie* Without Space . ... @ $1.85UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE• STRAUS, BLOSSER& mcdowellMembersNew York Stock ExchangeMidwest Stock ExchangeDetroit Stock ExchangeAmerican Sttfck ExchnngeHyde ParkShopping Center55th and LAKE PARKCHICAGO 37Phone NOrmal 7-07774 PIZZASFoe The Price OfICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780 foreign or hospital & dm*dealers In:• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambretta5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob lestermg psychiatrist2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Mar. 30, 1962Southern group plans Janowitz berates TVvoter registration studyATLANTA, GA., March 29 — A new project to studythe problems of voter registration in the South was an-nouced this week by the Southern Regional council (SRC).The council, which has already received grants fromprivate organizations totalling —$325,000, plans to study the rea- cerned primarily with the problemsons for low registration and the of low registration among Negroes,problems encountered by groups But, “he continued,’’ “we are alsoworking to increase voter registra- concerned with a more widespreadtion in the south. lack of interest in voting andAs a part of its program, the government affairs, even whereSRC will distribute funds, upon there are no legal hinderances torequest, to groups working on registration.”voter registration drives, so the A spokesman for the Studentindividual groups can expand their Non-violent Coordinating commit-projects. tee said the new council mightGroups which will be working help to expand SNCC’s voter re-closely with SRC are the National gistration drive. “We currentlyAssociation for the Advancement have several pilot projects in ruralof Colored People, (NAACP) the Mississippi towns and in southernCongress of Racial Equality, the Georgia. With increased funds, weStudent Non-violent Coordinating could move into other areas.”committee, (SNCC) the Southern QwrP . ..., , , . , SNCC works by setting up or-Christian Leadership conference, , , ,, ... .. ti gamzations in individual towns toandlhe National Urban league work on cducati Negroes toAt the end o( the two year study their ri hts „.hen not alfowod toSR( plans to pub],sh a report ot regist and familiarizi lh(,mits findings. According to Wiley .Branton, head of the SRC's voter °f questions theyeducation program, “we are con- might face on voting tests.A debate between members of POUT and the Practi*cal Reform party held before last year's Student Govern¬ment elections. See story on upcoming elections and cam¬paign on page eight.Archeologist speaksL. S. B. Leakey, the arch- was believed to be the Pekingman, whose age was estimated at600,000 years.The East African man’s skulleologist who recently dis¬covered the remains of acreature that proves man’sevolution began at least 14 mil- , , ,lion years ago, spoke here yes- was ^oun^ in a habitation site interday. Olduvai two Current educational tele¬vision practices may carry thebuilt-in danger of increasinguniformity in social behavior,according to Morris Janowitz,professor of sociology.Janowitz made his commentsin a paper entitled, “SocialTheory and the New Media,”presented at a recent New MediaTheory conference at the Kelloggcenter for continuing educationat Michigan State university,East Lansing, Michigan.“As television becomes de¬veloped,” Janowitz stated, “thecontent of mass education is de¬termined more and more by pro¬fessionals who are concerned withthe techniques of mass dissem¬ination of messages rather thanby specialists concerned witheducation content.Succeed with information“In the absence of specific ad¬ministrative policies and pro¬grams, the new media are mostlikely to succeed in their infor¬mation tasks and least likely tosucceed in their socialization andmobilization functions, which re¬quire that the new media em¬phasize not only national sym¬bolism, but also that they buildin particular social, cultural, andlocal needs and aspirations.“The educational system is alsoEuropean study programapplications ready Mon.Applications for a year ofEuropean study will beavailable Monday.The Institute for EuropeanStudies has announced 1962-63undergraduate study programs atthe Universities of Vienna, Paris,and Freiburg, W. Germany.The Vienna “European Year”includes courses in German andEnglish and study trips to ninecountries. The University ofParis offers an “honors program”with a qualification of an abilityin French. German fluency isrequired for study at Freiburg.The last two offer pre-semester“brush-up” sessions in language.Applicants will be selected forenrollment on the basis of theiracademic achievement, intellec¬tual and emotional maturity, andrecommendations by faculty mem¬bers of the American college oruniversity.Vienna and Paris are opento sophomores and juniors. TheU. of Freiburg is for juniors.The cost — round-trip, tuition,room-board, and study trips —is estimated at $2000-$2500.Applications (which are avail¬able until June 15) and additionalinformation can be obtained fromthe Institute of European Studies, a school .for citizenship, andnot only in the sense that thestudent increase his intellectualpowers. It is a school for citizen¬ship in the direct sense that in¬terpersonal relations and author¬ity patterns in the school con¬dition a student’s attitude towardthe larger society and the politicalprocess.”Janowitz explained that trainingto take part in the democraticprocess begins in the school. Ifthe student recognizes and feelsthat his teachers have effectivecompetence and authority, if herecognizes and feels that theequality of opportunity is an es¬sential principle, then he is get¬ting appropriate citizenship train¬ing for a democracy.TV teaching shows trends“Certain trends already areapparent in the implementationof the teaching processes intelevision,” he suggested. “One type of approach is toreject the mass character of thenew media and, instead, to in¬sist on employment technologicaldevices appiopriate to the taskto be done.“There is a striking parallelbetween the problems of incorpo¬rating the new media into masseducational systems and the prob¬lems of using research findings.In both cases, it is necessary toovercome the built-in danger thatthe results will increase unifor¬mity in social behavior.“Likewise,” Janowitz concluded,“just as the new media must beorganized to increase the com¬petence and flexibility of theteacher, research results must beseen as the basis tor personalinitiative and creative problem¬solving — not merely as a newbasis of rigid operating proced¬ures.”SNCC worker facesvagrancy trial soonATLANTA, Ga., March29 — Charges of “criminalanarchy” against DionDiamond, Student Nonvio¬lent Coordinating Committee(SNCC) field secretary have beendi'opped. Diamond still faces trialin Baton Rouge Louisiana oncharges of vangrancy, two countsof disturbing the peace, trespas¬sing, and unlawful assembly.Had Diamond been convicted oncharges of criminal anarchy hecould have received a maximumsentence of ten years in prison.Diamond was arrested on Feb¬ruary 1 just before he was to speak to students of Southern Uni¬versity in Baton Rouge.He is now out on bail which wasreduced from $13,500 to $4,200.Trial has been set for April 10.Two other SNCC workers,Charles McDew and Robert Zel-lner, who were arrested when theytried to visit Diamond are alsoout on bail now. They had beencharged with being “members ofthe Student Nonviolent Coordina¬ting committee, an organizationwhich is known to advocate, teachand practice opposition to thegovernment of the State of Louis¬iana by unlawful means.”Illinois.Gorge, in Kenya,His lecture on “New discover- years ago. The evidence suggestsies in East Africa bearing on the that the East African man used 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago 1,evolution of man and human be- exude tools and weapons,havior” was sponsored by the de¬partment of anthropology.Leakey is famous as the dis¬coverer of Zinjanthropus, or EastAfrican man, whose age recentlyhas been dated as 1,750,000 years,thereby making him the oldesthuman forebear.Previously, the oldest humanforeign car hospitaltee page 2 Appointment only Ml 3-8032FLORENCE RESNIKOFFCUSTOM JEWELRY DESIGNPrecious Stones Matched Wedding SetsThe only Chicago designer to be included in “Design Quar¬terly's" survey of contemporary jewelry craftsmen.enitiOr. Kurt RosenbaumOptomotriot1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372ot University Ave. Jimmy’sand the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti • beef • sausage and meatballsandwichesFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 1015 1427 East 67th St. THE STORE FOR MENatth (tfampuain the Hew Hyde Park Shopping Centerin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100Mar. 30. 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • lPlans forWoodlawn redevelopment proceedingby Faye Wells lawn. Training programs, classes, untouched by community groups, to make its plans part of an urban TWO’s action prevented the cityclinics, health centers and other Coordination of welfare, social, renewal project making the city council from passing south campusThe approval 01 the com- servic^s will bc established. and police activities in Woodlawn eligible for federal urban renewal last year without a plan includingprehensive urban renewal pro- long range program recom- should mean counselling for worn- credits under section 112 of the all of Woodlawn. This year it hasgram for the Woodlawn com- mends developing .six .neighbor- pn receiving Aid to dependent 1959 Omnibus housing act.mUIlitV represents a marked hoods, each centering around an Children according to one ob- 1 nder this act the federalchange in urban renewal plan- elementary school, nil nerved by server. With 141.00 °r nearly a. 8 a central grade center and a com- fourth of Woodlawn’s population®in£-V1 munity area. Improvements of the receiving Aid to De,icndent Chil-The idea that social problems oommerciaI area is p,anil<Mi with <*ren funds, this guidance becomesare as much a part of neigborhood ^ ma|n blislness areas centered an important part of communitydeterioration as housing problems aro||nd 63 and Woodiawn and 63 planning in Woodlawn.is now fully recognized in a plan .u)(] Cottagp Grove> C||lbs formdesigned to deal with bo h ypes Another p]an ig a system Qf There have been previous at-ot problems. walkways tying together neighbor- tempts to provide social agencies won a deferral of the decision byThe program provides not only boods schopls, and shopping areas, m Woodlawn. A formal committee the department of city planning sponsored a voteifor clearance and rehabilitation of and diverting the heavy flow of has been established of represent- and consideration of enlarging the campaign involvingdeteriorated housing, but also in- tra^c boiTjer thorough fares. atives of agencies and institutions then proposed urban renewal people; it has campaigned againstdudes a social action program to Many observers have noted the *n Woodlawn—Boys club, family study area to include more than unfair practices of 63 street busi-deal with the many persons on bjgbjy transient nature of Wood- services division of United Chari- the 60-61 street block. nessment, landlords, and has «>n-welfare aid, the high crime rate, lawn,g IK>pulationi and the physi_ ties, Department of Public Aid, Several Woodlawn community ln, fOUrt l,roceedinK* r.„illiteracy, widespread communic- Cftl and social reflections ot lhis Parkway community house, South leaders pursued the issue and, with U1*treftted U‘nants*able disease and other social trajt Side community committee, com- rhe financial and organizationalproblems. The beabb board of Chicago, mission on human relations, backing of the Industrial Areasgovernment may give a citythree times the amount ofmoney a university spends forredevelopment of land for edu¬cational use, If the university re¬development is associated witha city redevelopment project.Protesting Woodlawn residents opposed any plan resulting in achange of Woodlawn’s populationand has made the cornerstone ofits policy that of “self-determina¬tion” for Woodlawn.It claims to represent adequate¬ly all the residents of Woodlawn,which city oflicials have founddiflicult to accept.TWO has provided leadership inseveral areas: the organizationvoter registrationnearly ] ,o<H»The city has suggested sevenphysical changes to be effectedimmediately.Sectors listedThere are two areas of clear- for example, has maintained pro¬grams of immunization and con¬trol of communicable diseases buthas found the transient nature ofthe population inimical to itsance: from 61 to 63 streets from success.Drexel to the west side of Cottage The numerous multiple dwell-Grove avenue; and from 61 to 64 ;ngS and rooming houses are anstreets between the Illinois Cent- attraction to individual and tran-ral tracks and Kenwood avenue, sient citizens, but not to familiesBoth will be rebuilt with new wishing to settle in a community.residential facilities. The conversion of these build-From 600 to 1,000 moderate and ings and the building of newerlow income housing units are family units should eliminate oneplanned for the first area, to ac- main attraction of the transients,commodate those displaced by and attract people wishing to set-clearance in the second area, and tie permanently in the community.construction of an apartment for Crime rampantthe elderly is recommended. Woodlawn now has a high rateThe 40 per cent of the 60 to 61 0f unemployment. Many personsstreet block not now owned by are untrained for industrial work,the University wall be set aside and in families instability is oftenfor further UC expansion. caused by a man’s inability, andThe plan suggests a new school a wife’s ability to get a job. ...■ear 65 street connecting with the Training programs and ex- YWCA, Illinois state employmentWadsworth elementary school on panded education facilities plus ’ and chUrchesUniversity near 64, and enlarge- the new decision bv the Cook. * Ultr Mew u vc is ion Dy me toox This committee was to providement of the Carnegie, Wadsworth county welfare department that training nroerams for youngS,h°°l r"7i ‘® pr“v“® ,hose reviving welfare aid must adults and teenagers, a private.gained reereatlon.1 spare for attend school as long as they re- employment agency in the com-ir»si * •» • _ ceive money should help Hlle\i3te niunitv ficiv rarp for children ofThe good housing along 67 unemployment munity, aa> eaie lor emmren oiKnfumnn on^ Cot unemployment. working mothers. Summer activi-street bet een Y\ oodlaw n and Cot- Woodlawn is less than a fourth of ties have been organized for chil-tage Grove will be conserved. Ac- Jbe seventh nolice district but \ ° g . , .cv.rHincr sevenm ponce aisinci, dui dren and teenagers using churchcording to the studies this is the over half of the reported offenses and other community facilitiesonly area where the cost of re- of that district take place in and °,her community 1 acuities,hahiiiiatirtn ;c ai district rane piace in The committee has been success-habilitation is not prohibitive. Woodlawn, particularly along 63 fui bui nrimarilv where singleThe city suggested an improved street Alanv offenders of narco- r ' v i-P & ,u- he e sin£lemnno„tinn t sireei- Many onenaers ot naico- families live in their own homes,connection between Lake Shore tics and prostitution restrictions said a eommunitv leader In alland Stony Island to decrease work in tbis area but liw ollt ™ a commumty lead«r- ln a11heavy through traffic on Stony side it L Programs’ he sa,d- only aIsland " , . . beginmng has been made. Per-Socially the plan calls for a Clearance and rebuilding of haps with the help of the city,y’ me pian cans tor a many commercial taverns, bars more far reaching goals can liecommittee comprised of heads of and rooming houses along more reaching foundation <IAF>, formed theTemporary Woodlawn organiza¬tion (TWO) for community plan¬ning and rehabilitation in earlyJanuary 1961. The purpose of thecommunity was to “make surethat it (the community) is re¬habilitated in the way thal wewant and which suits us best.”After repeated meetings withleaders of TWO, the city planningcommission began a study of thearea known as Woodlawn andcovering the area from 60 to 67streets between Cottage Groveand Stony Island avenues. Groups silentBut TWO has made no effortsto reduce building deteriorationand overcrowding. The IAF andTWO did not advance any com¬prehensive proposals for redevelop¬ment in Woodlawn. Neither hasany Woodlawn newspaper ororganization expressed approv al orsatisfaction of the plan offered bythe city.TWO did prevent the Universityfrom annexing part of Woodlawnto the detriment of the com¬munity. This resulted in a"package” including a plan forsouth campus and for the Wood¬lawn area.A Woodlawn building —soon to be no more.more far reaching goals can bes)n accomplished.agencies to coordinate social wel- St *1P” *• WOUjd eUminate a ™am The approval of the plan alsog. es to cooiamate social, wel attraction lor narcotics peddlers represents the culmination of afare, and police activity in Wood- ami c^iai represents ine culmination of aan^i °^er anelements. long political battle between TheThe emphasis in the social plan- Woodlawn organization (TWO)ning program on institutions and the University. It was in Julyaffecting young people is impor- i960 that the University first an-tant according to one Wood- nounced its intentions to expandlawn minister. He said that the the campus south to include 60community organiaztions had only to 61 street block from Cottage“scratched the surface” compared Grove to Stony Island avenues._____ to the number of youths who were The University asked the city Job OpportunitiesRepresentatives of the following organizations will conduct re¬cruiting interviews at the office of vocational guidance and place¬ment next week. Unless specifically indicated, these interviews areopen to students who will be available to accept full-time employ¬ment between now and September 1962. Information describingthese organizations, and the positions for which they are recruiting,is available for review in the Placement office. Interview appoint¬ments may be arranged through Lowell Calvin, Reynolds club200, extension 3284.April 3 - US Weather bureau, Washington DC, will interview metor-ologists and physicists at all degree levels and SB and SM candi¬dates in mathematics and statistics. Schedule permitting will alsointerview students in above disciplines for summer employment.April 6 - US State Department, Agency for International Develop¬ment, Washington DC, will speak with AM and PhD candidates ineconomics, international relations, and political science for positionsboth in Washington and overseas.April 6 - Captain Coffey of the Women’s Army corps will be avail¬able in Mandel corridor from 11:00 am to 1:30 pm to discuss thecorp’s direct commission program for prospective graduates, andthe college junior program for girls completing their third yearof academic work. No interview appointments are necessary.city departments and welfareforeign cor solesi*t page 2>THE INTER-COLLEGIATE SOCIETYOF INDIVIDUALISTSpresents two public lectures:“The Fatal Delusion of Co-existence”FRANK S. MEYERAssociate Editor of National ReviewSunday, April 1 4 p.m. Social Science 122“Why Cuba Was Communized”JORGE CASTELLANOSInformation Director of The Truth About Cuba CommitteeFormer Cuban CommunistMonday, April 2 4 p.m. Ida Noyes Library Editor-in-chiefJay GreenbergBusiness manager Advertising managerKenneth C. Heyl Roger M. LevinManaging editorAvima RuderEditor emeritus Ken PierceNews editor Laura GodofskyNational news editor Michael ShakmanCity news editor Faye WellsAssistant news editor Gary FeldmanBook review editor Ronnie RosenblattCopy editor Suzy GoldbergCulture editor Dorothy SharplessPhoto coordinators Dan Auerbach, A1 BergerSports editor Chuck BernsteinBusiness office manager Jean MacleanProduction manager u Andy SteinEditorial staff: Hayden Boyd, Ronnie Brenner, Clawnce Bryant, HowardCarter, Nancy Dier, Marianne Giesel, Elaine Gilbert, Sharon Gold¬man, Harriet Gorov, Sue Guggenheim, Joe Kasper, Robin Kaufman,Joe Kelly, Jerry Kodish, Dennis Larson, John Marx, Ken Meyer, DickMontague, Bob Kass, Gail Rubin, Rona Rubin, Murray Schacher,Vick. Sheifman, Judy Shell, Mike Silverman, Maryann Tarnowski,Lorraine Thomas, Doug Thornton, Gene Vinogradoff, John Williams,Donna Wilson.Sports staff: Dan Baer, Mike Canes, Rich Epstein, Steve Jubyna, SamSchnall.Business staff: William Basil Basile, Marie Gottschalk, Jeanette Sharpe,R. A. Wilson.UPS is the University Press service, operated by the National Studentassociation. CUP is the Canadian University press, operated by the NationalFederation of Canadian University Students.Issued every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday throughout theUniversity of Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer monthsby students of the University of Chicago. Address ail correspondence to:Chicago MAROON, Ida Noyes hall. 1212 E. 59 street, Chicago 37, Illinois.Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions 3265 and 3266. Deadline for all calendarcopy is 4 pm of the day before publication. Deadline for ail editorial andadvertising copy is 4 pm of the day two days before publication. Subscriptionby mail is $4 per year. The MAROON is distributed free at various pointsaround the Chicago campus.Unsigned editorials on this page represent the opinion of the MAROONeditorial board. Signed material represents the opinion of the individual author.« • CHICAGO MAROON • Mar. 30. 1962Meal JohnstonPermissive' deans havewrong kind of attitude• Permissiveness” is a keyword in deanish circles these1 days. It’s a concept often usedby ‘liberal’ deans to measureand evaluate the liberality offellow deans; beyond question,in advanced areas Permissivenessis an attribute of goodness.The permissive dean is one whoallows his students to produce anuncensored newspaper, to invitethe speakers they wish to hear,circulate denunciatory petitions,and engage fitfully in all sorts ofadditional charming activity.Now, while some deans merely, rest content permitting themselvesto talk a liberal line and are there¬fore easily dismissed at their two-faced value, a good many otherstake the noble notion quite seri¬ously.This very seriousness pointsconclusively to a major thingthat’s wrong with d* ; today.So intent are they at playing atliermitting that they quite forgetthat the very word ‘permissive-m-ss’ reeks of rank patroniza-tion, condcsension and a glibelitism fully foreign to anymeaningful contemporary con¬cept of higher education.Students should produce theirown newspapers; they should nothe permitted to do so. They shouldinvite whomever they damn wellplease to speak on their campuswithout thinking of asking any¬one’s permission.Any national president whoblandly talked of his benign per¬missiveness in allowing freespeech in the country would quick¬ly be branded for what he was.Any dean who would speak ofpermissiveness as a good thingclearly does not understand whateducation should be.The rub of the problem, the rubfrom which the friction issues, isthat all too many student person¬nel workers think of themselves aseducators and not as the admini¬strators which they are. Viewingthe institution in the glow they feelradiating from themselves, theysee the whole campus as theirclass-room.As teachers to the whole man inthe whole student body then, theyhave the choice of pedeologicalmethodology. They can permit, or they can not permit, they can man¬ipulate or watch, merely masticat¬ing their educational cud.It seems to occur to relativelyfew that the whole field is basical¬ly none of their business, that theconcept of permissiveness containsa corollary assumption of tie factoretention of a coercive power tocontrol, a power they have no legit¬imate reason for possessing in thefirst place.There is ntueh that a cleverand creative administrator can«lo to facilitate the real work ofthe institution. The extensive ex¬perience, over-view and budget hesliotild bring to his job can beused to great advantage in prod¬ding, cajoling, assisting ami evenprotecting the students withwhom he is to work.But, to contend that he has a realchoice in, say, permitting or deny¬ing stud expression in an auto¬nomous student press is to violatethe basic validity of his proper ad¬ministrative function, „Indeed, a paternalistic and pat¬ronizing permissiveness can grip acampus with the chilling cold ofabject apathy even more than out¬right hostility. In defense of deans it must beacknowledged that at many insti¬tutions they are forced into thistheoretical framework in order toplacate mentally impoverishedpresidents who employ studentpersonnel workers for the singleand simple purposes of keepingstudents quiet.But, such presidents and such in¬stitutions cannot be taken veryseriously, nor can the complyingdeans be regarded as remarkablycourageous or honorable.Perhaps my naivete slipsthrough again, but I do think thatif deans confined themselves to art¬fully placing the administrativelubricants necessary to keep the in¬stitutional machine efficient andleft to the faculty the problem ofsupplying the educ: Lional thrust,students would be quite capable ofconstructing their own extra-aca¬demic community, a communitywherein no one wrould need worryabout permissiveness.In closing I should remark thatthe infrequency with which thisword is encountered on the Chi¬cago campus is a very healthysign.Corps classified matterskept minimal—ShriverConfidential and classified Peace Corps material will bekept to a minimum, promised R. Sargent Shriver, directorof the corps.Shriver was explaining the recent allotment to thePoaec Corps of permission to clas- sified whe„ transferal to anothersity material ‘‘secret’ and top department.secret,” in a letter to John Moss The Peace itself Shriver(D, Calif.), chairman of a House sajd> jn dealing with other count-subcommittee on go\ eminent in- j-jgg occasionally encounters deli-lormation. cately balanced political situa-Moss, w ho released the letter, tions so that “premature disclos-had asked the Peace Corps direc- ure these discussions couldlor on what basis the corps was serve the purposes of a hostile op-allowed to classify information as position and make it impossible to“secret” and “top secret.” conclude appropriate arrange-Shriver told Moss the Peace ments.”Corps, as part of the State De- gut Shriver said that "not apartment, constantly deals with singie message has been ‘topmaterial that has been classified secret’ and only four have beenby the State Department or by ‘secret.’”the Agency lor International Shriver said he is the only oneDevelopment. jn the Peace Corps who hasUnder government rules, clas- authority to use a “top secret”sified material must remain clas- label.Cancer theory advancedAt least two cancer causing processes can be traced to a case of mistaken identityamong three molecules in the living cell.The hypotheses, suggested by University of Chicago scientist Nien-Chu Yang, associ¬ate professor of chemistry, offers the idea that a cancer begins when a foreign moleculeof the same size and shape as an indigenous component is able to intrude in the workingsof the cell. base units (the core) of thenucleic acid.As a result, the genetic code ismixed up, which leads to muta¬tion of “bad” cells associated withcancer.Muriel Beadle awardedprize for bookMuriel Beadle, wife ofthere is an ever present potentialYang, speaking at Phoenix Ari- for mistaken identity among thezona before an American C’aneer three.society seminar for science writ- The result, Yang suggested, is•*ds, said the look-alike idea ac- that the cancer - causing hydro¬counts, in theory, both for ran- carbons, similar or identical ineers that are hormone dejiendent,” their kidney - shaped molecularsuch as those of the breast and .. et to bona fide consti_Uie prostate gland, and for those , „ , ,due to “error” in the hereditary tuents of the cell, are able toapparatus which controls the man- take up residence there and be- *JC S ^ recJn^y re_..laotur, * new cell,. come biologically active. Felvled a $100 award for her„ , , , , book, These Rums Are In-What Yang has observed that Once incorporated in this fash- habited.makes the look-alike hypothesis ion in the cellular processes, the Mrs Beadje was honored duringattractive is a explanation of these foreign matter may be responsible prjends Qf American Writerstwo cancer-causing processes, he for promoting the growth of a annual meeting to award prizessaid, is ‘the striking structural cancer or for inducing a mutation tQ b natives or residentsJesemblnnop in a eell that will perpetrate the of the Midwest< or books aboUtgenetic “errors” associated with the Midvvest Her award wascancer, according to Yang.among:(1) polynuclear aromatic hydi-o-carbons - the organic moleculescontaining atoms of hydrogenand carbon which are found in‘•oal tar and cigarette smokeand are known to cause cancerin laboratory animals.<2) steroid hormones - thegrowth regulators in the cell.<3) the core of the deoxyribo¬nucleic acid (DNA) molecule,where all the hereditary infor¬mation in the cell is cai'ried.All three look alike, but arevastly different chemically. Thus Yang’s reasoning is that:First, a cancer - causing aro¬matic hydrocarbon, mistaken bythe cell for a hormone of similardimension, could mix up the nor¬mal logically at the same siteas the hormone and thus pro¬mote the growth of cancer.Second, the aromatic hydrocar¬bons, due to their similarity insize and shape to the instruction¬carrying core of the DNA mole¬cule, are able to slip in between given by the Waukegan Woman’sclub.Six other prizes and honorablementions wrere presented, includ¬ing a $100 award to Poetry mag¬azine.foreign cor hospitalsee page 4 withOn Campus(Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf”,“The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.)CRAM COURSE NO. 1?MODERN EUROPEAN HISTORYThe school year draws rapidly to a close, and it’s been a funyear, what with learning the twist, attending public executions,and walking our cheetahs—but are we ready for final exams?Some of us, I fear, are not. Therefore, in these few remainingcolumns, I propose to forego levity and instead offer a series©f cram courses so that we may all be prepared at exam time.We will start with Modem European History. Strictly de¬fined, Modern Eurojiean History covers the history of Euro;>efrom January 1, 1962, to the present. However, in order toprovide employment for more teachers, the course has beenmoved back to the Age of Pericles, or the Renaissance, as it isjocularly called.The single most important fact to remember alx>ut ModemEuropean History is the emergence of Prussia. As we all know,Prussia was originally called Russia. The “P” was purchasedfrom Persia in 1874 for $24 and Manhattan Island. This laterbecame known as Guy Fawkes Day.» Persia, without a “P” was, of course, called Ersia. This soembarrassed the natives that they changed the name of thecountry to Iran. This led to a rash of name changing. Mesopo¬tamia became Iraq, Schleswig-Holstein became Saxe-Coburg,Bosnia-Herzegovina became Cleveland. There was even talk instable old England about changing the name of the country,but it was forgotten when the little princes escaped from theTower and set fire to Pitt, the Elder.Meanwhile Johannes Gutenberg was quietly inventing theprinting press, for which we may all lie grateful, lielieve youme! Why grateful? I’ll tell you why grateful. Because withoutGutenberg’s invention, there would be no printing on cigarettepacks. You would not know when you bought cigarettes whetheryou were getting good Marlboros or some horrid imitation. Youcould never be sure that you were buying a full-flavored smokewith a pure white filter, a cigarette that lets you settle hackand get comfortable—in short, a Marlboro. It is a prospect tochill the bones and turn the blood to sorghum—so if you areever in Frank-furt am Main, drop in and say thanks to Mr.Gutenlierg. He is elderly—408 years old last birthday—butstill quite active in his laboratory. In fact, only last Tuesday hoinvented the German short-haired pointer.But I digress. Back to Modern European History. Let usturn now to that ever popular favorite, France.France, as we all know, is divided into several departments.There is the Police Department, the Fire Department, theGas and Water Department, and the Bureau of Weights andMeasures. There is also Madame Pompadour, but that neednot concern us because it is a dirty story and is only taught tograduate students.Finally, let us take up Italy—the newest European nation.Italy did not become a unified state until 1848 when Garibaldi,Cavour, and Victor Emmanuel threw three coins in the TreviFountain. This lovely gesture so enchanted all of Europe thatWilliam of Orange married Mary Stuart and caused a potatofamine in Ireland. This, in turn, resulted in Pitt, the Younger.All of this may seem a bit complicated, but lie of good cheer.Everything was happily resolved at the Congress of Viennawhere Metternich traded Parma to Talleyrand for Mad Ludwigof Bavaria. Then everyliody waltzed till dawn and then, tiredbut content, they started the Thirty Years’ War. © m2 mu sbuimanToday you can buy Marlboros all over Europe, hut you mighthave to pay a premium. In all 50 of these Lnited States,however, you get that fine Marlboro flavor, that excellentMarlboro filter, in Hip-top box or soft pack at regulationpopular prices.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristfN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTRANDELL-IIARPERSQUAREBeauty and Cosmetic Salon570C HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Mrs. Billie Treganxa, Prop.Mar. 30, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • iiaBook review Hours rules may goHours regulations at Rad- stressed the "importance of givingcliffe college may be dropped, people full responsibility to edu-if a recommendation of the cate themselves socially as well astie tug Kea tscnoomouse i:;uuppj 01 Demg wrmen uy an aumur urns cnoice may ncmanu a com- A , academically. The proeess of edu-Fred M. Hechinger— New York: ^tter informed and less simple- pensory toll in the other sorts rules committee 0t the Kafl- cathm ,;arili to make d 'Doubleday and Co., Inc., 1962. minded than many of its prede. of cost. cliffe Government association is -ong»Paperback reprint. 1 a —d n...L.i apprmed. ^ The pres[dent of Briggs hall.The committee passed a resolu- the Radcliffe house that opposedeveryone, as one observer put educational systems It suffers fessor °f education, has taught at !lon- despite strong opposition the measure, denied that studentsit went into orbit and started > L * suiters U(J 25 He from representatives of one of the are mature enough to regulate jit, went into omit ana siauea the inevitable consequences of not ce[ved his /B aud phD in Greek Radcliffe houses, asking that any themselves in the absence of re-beeping about American edu- being able to offer neatly pack- here_ on April 3, his book on the student past her freshman year strictions. She criticized the rules ,cation. If we were behind in the aged comparisons and quick, easy teaching of French in elementary ^ allowed to sign out until any committee loi failing to realizerace into space, the American remedies. If Hechinger’s book shool will be published. Dunkel *M>ur* that greater freedom would meanschool was seen as a likely cause does not furnish simple solutions ls author of several books and “We want the freedom to be grater emotional pressures andof our defeat. it does give a good view of thehistorical development and conSurvey American educationTH\e Big Red Schoolhouse (200pp) of being written by an author this choice may demand a corn-better informed and less simple-minded than many of its prede¬cessors which compared and con- Harold B. DunkelWhen Sputnik was launched, trasted the Russian and American The reviewer: Harold Dunkel, pro-John Dewey, public school ad¬ it does give a good view of'the artjCleS 0,1 the philosophy of edu- adult.” said one of the studentscation. supporting the measure. Sheof education were duly roundedup and scourged into the wilder- Ancient miracle drugdescribed by Veithatemporary status of the two pro-ministrators, and the professors gramsDifficulties in comparing Rus¬sian and American education doness with the sins of our missiles not arise merely from the diver-on their backs. Despite the sorry gencies within the two systems,state of science among us, how- though these are many and areever, scapegoating was eventually often extreme. Stillrecognized as a ritual rather than portant, each is embedded in a users uerfect trtmouilitvan effective technical means, very different social and political voufl and beautv andThen the best course of action context. One begins by compar- ’ Deauty — anaseined to be to copy exactly that ing two educational systems but " alan ee agams ai Ult 111 1 e-very Russian system of education one must end by comparing tw'o k was an Indian herbal juice(including curricula and syllabi) ways of life. To take only a few’ calle(i Soma and its propertieswhich had produced the miracle- examples, the intensive, recurrent w°nld have put any modern mir-workers. But a little less panic selection of students employed in ac^e drug to shame,and a little more information and the Russians program, the totali- Its marvelous effects are de¬reflection suggested that monkey- tarian manpower controls exer- scribed in India’s most ancientsee, monkey-do was not a highly vised over students, teachers, and scripture, the Rig Veda,intelligent procedure either. Upon all occupations, and the strongcloser inspection, much of what incentives of lnitli the stick andthe Russians were doing in edu- carrot varieties applied to all eon-cation did not seem so shaggy, cerned are not easily envisagedand even the possibility — much in an American milieu,less the desirability — of trans- TT , . , . . .planting or grafting Russian edu- Hechinger properly points outcational Dora into our educationalplant appeared nuioli more dubi- to . we^nesse? in .ous education. But as he makes clear,the remedies will not consist ofThe present book, a paperback copying Russian procedures. Ifreprint of a 1959 original by the we are to have a better educa- bedrooms, z baths. Garage andeducation editor ot The New tion, American students, parents, PL*xork limes, has the advantage and the public will have to be and high schools. Pleasant familywilling to pay the price in effort, |^h^0r500^,^disappointments, and tax dollars, conditioners included in price. Mid 20’»Thus far all these groups have M1 3-8032. problems.Urging the retention of the per¬mission system, whereby studentsmust obtain permission from acollege official before signing out,she stated that “it makes youthink twice” and “it’s almost ourlast contact with an older personwho can advise us.”Committee members replied thatwould stopMankind may once have had ancient Sanskirt texts in researchmore im- a potion that could give its on Indias early medical history. more jenient ruiesSoma, "the lord of herbal current infractions of the rules, asmedicines.” was also described by girls would sign out to their reala great Indian physician, Sush- destinations and not lie aboutruta, in the classic volume Sdsh- them.ruta Samhita, written sometime The Briggs president contendedbetween 600 BC and 600 AD. that false sign-outs would con-Sushruta claimed that Soma tinue and possibly increase if thecould remove “mental and phy- rules are changed. “Is someonesical distress” and arrest “innate planning oil a night in a motelmortific (fatal► tendencies and with her boy friend going to saydecay.” More than that, he wrote, so?” she challenged. “The rulesIlza Veith, associate professor it could give its users strength committee talks about safety —of medical history at the Univer- beauty, and youth that would last isn’t it safer inside the dorm thansity of Chicago, reported on the “ten thousand summers.” outside?”that these facts should not blindto weaknesses in American CLASSIFIED ADSFor Rent and For Sale FA 4-3535 before 9 am.- Desirable 1 rm.House for Sale - South Shore bath anil shower.Spacious, attractive, convenient. Four wood. Gall SO 8-0439. Young, energetic, experienced year ky-_ out editor needs to complete yearbooknicely furnished, tile of well-known university. Must have$72.50, 5143 Ken- completed by May. 1982. Contact stu¬dent Activities office, Ida Noyes Hali.Personals5]a% interest 22 year Two nurses and luxurious 8 rm. furrt.modern appliances. 3 air south shore apartment, warn one room.— ‘e. Call BU 8-5668, after 4 pm.REMEMBER:for sales,foreign carsales hoped to keep education painless Murynook-Carmel, by owner. 4 bed-in all these respects. We will cer- ',?omK' 1% haths and Cyprus roc. room., . , , , V,,. . Many extras. Priced to sell. ES 5-8328.tainly not be willing to pay someof the price in that loss of free- Furnished room with garden and kitcheni . , ii privileges in private home, male only,dom which the Russians pay, but *50.00 a month. i«29 e. 74th »t. Cali Wanted and ServicesKenwood Radio and TV Service- werepair TV’s, radios, hi-fi. tape recordersand all work guaranteed.5508 S. KimbarkNO 7-0830 April Fool I ThereSigmas at Chicago!jezBarciRS for every family, every budget, every tasteChevrolet Want to pull outall stops—except price? The Jet-smooth. Chevrolet serves up spacious,gracious interiors, Body by Fishercraftsmanship, Jet-smooth ride, newV8 vinegar or 6 savings—and more.On the ferry: an Impala Sport Sedan. Chevy II Hungering for a carthat’s lovely, lively, easy to parkand pay for? Chevy II is all that, allright—and also winner of Car Lifemagazine’s award for EngineeringExcellence! Parallel to the shore:a Nova J+00 I;-Door Station Wagon. Corvair If you spark to sportythings this one ought to fire you upbut good. With the engine weightastern, the steering’s as responsiveas a bicycle’s and the traction'sferocious. As for the scat—wow! Atthe ramp: the Monza Club Coupe. RECORDSAll Labels; ListedOthers AvailableService Center,Reynolds Club$2.50M. KupferstokFine Hand EngravingIn Knglish, Hebrew. Yiddish. t*le. OnJewelry, Religious Articles. Trophies,Hand Lettered Bar Mitzvnh. Wedding,Hebrew Invitations. Diplomas. Books.Addressing Envelopes, MaxinarianStyle5 S. WABASH DE 2-3679THE FRET SHOP1-3, 5-10 p.m. Weekdays10-5 Saturday & SundayInstruments, New, Used, AntiqueGuitars, Banjos, Mandolins, etc.Supplies — RepairsPhone NO 7-10601551 East 57th St.JOSEPH H. AARONAll Forms of InsoranceSUITE 825135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060.See the new Chevrolet, new Chevy II and new Corvair at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's CoBEAUTY SALONJ ExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302The Aardvarek is coming Saturday atFret Shop, UC Bookstore and Wood¬worth’s.Creative Workshop — PL 2-8177.Lost: 180 Lay-out pages. 9x12. Iffound, contact the Cap and Gown of¬fice. Ida Noyes Hall. —-C.K.Lost: March 9. Ladies gold wristwatch:initials KEZ; reward. Phone PL 2-013'.Mrs. Glaser, 1353 K. 55th place, Chicago37, Illinois.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Mar. 30, 1962Culture VultureStudents at the University of Chicago are not all serious and bespectacled. Some are light-hearted and wear contactlenses. It was one of the later who, in consultation with colleagues and friends, produced the following ode. probaby aclassic of its kind. In view of the wide interest in the activities of the committee on grass and campus beautification, wepresent it for the edification and pleasure of our readers. The poem, as yet untitled, goes: Spring has sprung, the grassBeethoven* W°nder wherc the tu,l*s is' ,f cou,d- Perhaps, like Schiller’s "Ode to Joy," be set to music by a contemporaryTheatreT. S. Eliot’s "Murder in theCathedral,” will be performed nextweek by University theatre, in the'’appropriately gothic setting ofBond chapel. It’s to be directed byRobert Benedetti, acting directorof UT (who also adapted it). April6, 7, and 8 are the dates - 8:30/performances all three nights anda matinee at 215 on the 7th.Tickets are $1.50 for Friday andSunday shows, two dollars for theSaturday performance. Call exten¬sion 3297 for reservations, and'hurry, Bond chapel doesn’t havemuch seating space.German philosophy and Germandrama are all mixed up in Schil¬ler’s “Kabale und Liebe,” a bour-,geos tragedy being presented, inGerman, by the graduate Ger¬manics club. English synopsis ofthe play are available at the door.'.Student tickets for the perfor¬mance tonight and tomorrow areone dollar; the performances arein the Ida Noyes theatre, 8 bothnights.Actor's company is looking forscripts and directors for it’s "To¬night at 8:30’’ program May 18,* 19, and 20. Original scripts willhe given special consideration. Stu¬dents who want to direct plays, ito be performed in the Reynoldsclub theatre) should leave theirnames and the scripts they wantto stage with Carol Horning inA classics 13. People who want todirect, but don't know what theywant to direct should avail them¬selves of Actor’s company’s filesof one act plays suitable for pro-* duction.Directors and scripts for a radioprogram to be presented May 3during the Festival of the Arts, are also needed by the group.Again contact Miss Horning.FilmsTonight, the Young Peoples So¬cialist league presents "Potemkin"foreign car hospital at 7 and 9 in Judd 126. It willcost you 50 cents to see this Rus¬sian magnus opus.Next Monday the Internationalhouse association is screening one Theatreof that "Carry on ” series.This one, to be shown at 8 pm inthe Int house assembly hall is“Carry on Admiral.” Harvard was founded) to the pre¬sent. Tickets are $1.50 and avail¬able at the door.ArtHalfway between "Films" and"Art" are some films on art, partof an art department series. NextTuesday at 8 pm in social sciences122 color films of “Drawings ofLeonardo De Vinci" and "Pre¬historic Images" will be shown.Later this quarter the art depart¬ment has scheduled some morecolor films on art and artists.An exhibit of some of the Sha¬piro collection "Art to Live With"etching, lithographs, woodcuts,water colors and oils opens nextMonday on Goodspced hall gal¬leries. It is a representative sel¬ection, made by the Renaissancesociety, which sponsors the ex¬hibit, of over 50 works from thecollection, which now has morethan 1000 paintings and such avail¬able for student loan. Galleryhours are 10 am to 5 pm, Mondaythrough Friday and 1-5 pm onSaturdays.MusicThe 104 year old Harvard Gleeclub will be at Rockefeller chapelnext Thursday singing away from8:30 pm on. Their program in¬cludes works dating from the six¬teenth century (just a while before "The Just,” Albert Camus’ dra¬ma of Russian revolutionaries, willbe performed next week, Wednes¬day through Saturday, and theweek after that, also, by the Com¬pany of the Four. All the per¬formances will be in John Wool-man hall at 1174 E. 57, and youcan get information about ticketprices, times, and such by callingMI 3-4170."As You Like It," Shakespeare’sromantic and idyllic comedy, willstart a seventeen performance runat the Goodman theatre tonight.Friday and Saturday performancesare at 8:30 pm, while these onTuesday, Wednesday, Thursdayand Sunday are at 7:30 pm. Tick¬ets may be reserved by calling CE-6-2337, or by mail order, or maybe purchased at the box office.There are discounts for students.On 51 street a new theatregroup, The Last Stage, is present¬ing a bill of Shaw’s “FarfetchedFables” and five of Franz Kafka’sparables. This will be performedthis weekend and the two follow¬ing, with 8:30 pm curtains allthree nights. Tickets are $2; $1.50with a student ID. For reserva¬tions call OA 4-4200. The theatreitself located at 1506 East 51.The Old Vic company comes toChicago 1 his week with Shakes¬peare’s "Romeo and Juliet" onApril 2 and 3. Shaw’s "Saint Joan” on Api’il 4 and 5, and Shake¬speare’s “Macbeth” on April 6 and7. Performances are nightly at 8,with a matinee Saturday, April 7at; 2:30. Tickets are $2 to $5 ex¬cept for Friday and Saturday eve¬nings, when they’re $2.50 to $6.Performances will take place atthe Opera House, 20 North Wackerdrive, and FR 2-0566 is the numberto call for reservations.ArtThe Gallery, at 1168 E. 55, hasa show of original prints now ondisplay in its graphic arts de¬partment.There are three exhibits at theArt institute: Chinese Art Trea¬sures (through April 1), Drawingsby Gievanni Tiepole, an 18th cen¬tury artist (through April 15), andthe Works of three 19th centuryFrench artists - Odilon Rodon,Gustave Moreau, and RodolpheResdin (through April 15).MusicRhonda Fleming, Earl Wright-son, Skitch Henderson and his or¬chestra, the Ray Charles singersand Saverie Saridis, the New Yorkpoliceman who became a singer,are all featured in "A Night withGershwin,” now at McCormickplace’s theatre. Performances to-ight, tomorrow, and Sunday areat 8:30, and there is also a Sun¬ day matinee at 3. Tickets are $2to $4.Erich Leinsdorf is guest con¬ductor of the Chicago symphonyorchestra this week. Today at 2he and the orchestra will performa Beethoven ballet suite, and Sho¬stakovich’s "Symphony no. 10."Saturday night at 8:30 they’ll re¬peat the symphony and add Dvo¬rak’s "Symphony no. 2.” Both per¬formances are at Orchestra hall220 South Michigan.This Sunday at 3:30 in SimpsonHistory museum the ChicagoChamber orchestra will give thesecond in a series of five concertsof music from Denmark, with Die¬ter Kober conducting. Admissionis free.On Tuesday there will be ano¬ther free concert at 8:15 pm inSimpson theatre, this one featuringbass George London. Free ticketsare available in advance in per¬son or by writing the museum(Roosevelt and Lake Shore Drive)enclosing a self addressed, stampedenvelope.75 cent tickets for the April 4concert in the Fine Arts Quartetseries may be available. You canapply for them before curtain time(8:15 pm) if you show a currentID card, the concerts are held atthe Studebaker theatre, 418 SouthMichigan.sec page 2EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetof University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount NOW PLAYINGDOCTOR IN LOVE'The Latest and Newest in the Doctor SeriesIn Stethoscope and Glorious ColorWeekdays: 6:00, 8:00, 10:00Sunday: 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00DearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763SPECIAL STUDENT RATE — 90c Sunday thru FridayJust Show Cashier Your l.D. CardThe Methodist FoundationpresentsDR. ROBERT H. HAM ILLSPEAKING ON THE SUBJECTFranny, Zooey, and God :SUNDAY, APRIL 1, 1%2, AT 5:30 P M. .AT SWIFT HALL COMMONSA light luncheon will be served ut a cost of seventy-five cents.Reservations not required Theatre First, Inc. presentsEugene O'Neill's fascinating drama“THE GREAT GOD BROWN”March 30. 31; April 1, 6, 7, 8SPECIAL RATE TO STUDENTS (WITH ID) $1.00General Admission SI .50General Rates Quoted On RequestShow Times: Fri. & Sat. 8:30 pm; Sun 7:30 pmLocated at: The Athenaeum, 2936 N. SouthportFor Reserv.: Call LA 5-9761 or Write P. O.Box 3545, Chicago 54LAKEthe 9 0 7 1PARK AT S3 R D : N07 9071yde park theatredark theatreclork & modisonfr 2-284550 rimestor college student?A open 7:30 am.late show 3 a.m.★ different double feature dally★ Sunday Film Guild★ write in for free program guide★ little gal-lery for gals only★ every friday is ladies day*11 gals admitted for only 25c★ Clark parking . 1 doer south4 hours 95c after 5 p.m.PROGRAM FOR THEWEEKENDfri., 30th—“the misfits"and "sanctuary"sat., 31st-sun., 1st - -"they dive bynight” and “keylargo”-"i’m all right,jack" and "expressbongo” ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL59th and Woodlawn AvenueThursday, April 5 - 8:30 pan.THE HARVARDGLEE CLUBIn ConcertElliot Forbes, conductingDennis J. Duff ala, organistTICKETS $ 1.50^,On Sale: University Bookstore, Woodworth's Bookstoreand Rockefeller Chapel Office Starting Friday, March 30 —GERARD PHILIPEl In one of the Last Films of his Life Iand LILLI PALMER in“MODIGLIANI OF MONTPARNASSE”— AND —PETER USTINOV — PABLITO CALVOin Ladislao Vajda's delightful Spanish Comedy"THE MAN WHO WAGGEDHIS TAIL"Fri. & Sat.Sunday OnlyWeekdays "Modigliani""Man Who""Modigliani""Man Who""Modigliani""Man Who" 6:30 & 108:20 only4:25 & 82:45-6:20-108:15 only6:30-10:10Next — "THE MARK"Special Student Rates WITH Student l.D. CardsFree Weekend Patron Parking at 5230 South Lake Park Ave.Mar. 30, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 73Tareytondelivers /©»¥the flavor !~'y •DVAL FILTER DOES IT!activateo charcoalINNER FILTERPURE WHITEOUTER FILTERFive parties compete for campus votes(continued from page 1)POLIT was born in January,1961, as the result of a realignmentof the political forces within Stu¬dent government. At the start ofthat winter quarter, the activistelements of the Independent Stu¬dent league (ISL> which was themajority party at the time, brokefrom their party, taking withthem the majoi*ity of the leader¬ship of the Government.This discontented element of ISLjoined with the now* defunct Stu¬dent Representative party (SRP)to form a liberal coalition, subse¬quently named POLIT.The formation of POLIT ledto corresponding activity to forman opposition party, the PracticalReform Organization (PRO),which was headed by WillardAyres, then chairman of theYoung Republicans.In last spring's governmentelections, POLIT seeured a one-vote majority over the combinedvotes of PRO and IRP.In the past year. IRP has elungto Its five seats: whereas manyof PRO’S members have resignedto be replaced by SG’s executivecommittee with POUT mem¬bers. POLIT now has a largegovernment majority.IRP is oldest partyThe oldest existing party, IRP,which has supported residentialrepresentation, humor in govern¬ment, and sex in Russia, gives thefollowing account of its history:“Many years ago. before therewas a POLIT or a PRO, or evena UP, a bunch of characters inDodd House decided to form acampus humor party called IRP(the Imperial Revolutionary Party). Like the NAZIs, (Na¬tional Association of Zealous Im¬perialists), these men thoughtstudent government was so muchfun that they’d like to play thegame too. For the first few yearsof its existence, IRP was justthat, the happiest party-party oncampus.“But we finally got a seat inSG and realized that this was nolaughing matter.It was an awful, sobering exper¬ience to sit through a typicalmeeting in those days, unable toaffect the group, and frustratedby the group’s ineffectiveness.“Now things are better. Wechanged our name to the Indepen¬dent Reform party, set up a good,solid platform, and won ourselvesfive seats.”Ask new representationWith its five seats, IRP hasbeen calling for “reforms.” Ithis criticized the amount of SG’soff-campus actions, and govern¬ment’s representation by academ¬ic units as a whole, urging in¬stead. representation by residentialunit.UP, too, is calling for represen¬tation by residential rather thanacademic unit. UP has initiated apetition, currently being circu¬lated. to have a referendum onthe question of residence repres¬entation placed on the ballot.Members of POLIT and IRP arehelping circulate this petition tobring the issue to a vote, al¬though POLIT is urging a negativevote on the proposal.POLIT counters UP and IRP’sargument that residential repres¬entation will provide greater con¬tact between representatives and voter by giving the representativea particular constituency to whichhe is specifically resixmsible withits belief that such arbitrarily de¬termined constituencies will hin¬der the election of the mostqualified people to SG.Differ on SG rolePOLIT’s major difference withthe other two parties, however,is over SG’s sphere of activity.NSA and SG’s concern with city,national, and international af¬fairs in addition to campus, prob¬lems, has led UP to state that:"Objective observers generallyagree that the University of Chi¬cago Student Government doesnot yet run the world and thatit is unlikely that it ever will.Accordingly, the University Partyfavors a somewhat more real¬istic jurisdiction for SG, viz. theUniversity vicinity.”UP has proposed that SG limitits participation to sponsoring“outstanding speakers and for¬ums” on campus to present var¬ious perspectives on national andinternational matters and expand¬ing its travel services.UP wants ‘improved’ NSAUP is also urging an " im¬provement” of NSA by cutting outits activities relating to politicalissues like civil rights and reem¬phasizing “academic values.”IRP would also have SG paymore attention to campus prob¬lems by making NSA “more in¬dependent, more apart from SG,”so as not to distract from “SG’sreal job - our own campus.”POLIT has answered these sug¬gestions with the claim that it isdoing more than these “campusoriented” parties could if they channeled all their energies intocampus activities.“Such success is a direct resultof POLIT’s firm conviction thatstudents must act - both to affecttheir society and to provide them¬selves with necessary reductions inthe cost of educational and sup¬plementary expenses.”UP in asking for “a spirit ofcooperation in a “Community otScholars’” stated that "studentsstand to gain more by workingwith the University than againstit.” UP is campaigning for “a moredispassionate manner of dealingwith the University Instead of theprevalent hostile attitude of stu¬dent leader.”Students must actPOLIT’s platform counters that“the philosophy of “campus ori¬ented parties has not led to actionbut to endless negotiations withthe administration about producingstudent services . . . when it isobvious that the nature of theUniversity beaurocracy leaves noalternative but for student to actfor themselves.”POUT’s platform, ratified hythe party Wednesday night, statesPOUT’S belief that “politicalunderstanding and action are nec¬essary parts of tin* education ofstudents. C ampus student govern¬ments and NSA should provideinformation on issues effectingstudents and, equally Important,provide students with a means ofeffeetive action.‘‘Campus action such as supportfor the O-Board and protestsagainst University housing dis¬crimination and national actionsuch as the establishment of theInternational Student Coopera¬ tive union tISCU) and continuedefforts of the Student Non-violentCoordinating committee must besupported by representative stu¬dent organizations.”POLIT’s promises for campusaction in the next year includeimprovements in its travel pro¬gram. continuation of SG’s func¬tion as the campus agent forISCU, expansion of student ser¬vice center facilities, particularlyticket service lor downtown per¬formances; supporting student ef¬forts to organize cooperative livinggroups to be incorporated intothe University housing system;and gaining support for a studentfaculty center for the University.In addition, it hopes to continuepressing for liberal action in NSAon such things as civil liberties,the peace corps, peace, endingtravel bans, and cultural ex¬changes between the USA and th.*USSR.POLIT has campus planIt also hopes to continue workon increasing library hours, pro¬testing the residence requirement,abolishing women’s hours, suppor¬ting peace activities, and pressthe University to support for openoccupancy, and end the impositionof academic penalties for non-academic offenses.UP has proposed increased hoursat the Bartlett swimming pool,evening hours for the Bartlettswimming pool, evening hours forthe Harper periodical room, andimproved campus bus service, agreater control over student activi¬ties fees, a well-run and expand¬ed student bookstore, and thestudy of educational aims, curric¬ulum and orientation program.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-5711CHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE AMIAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M, to 0:80 P.M.OUD.ERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 43H St. IU 3-9018(foreign car salessee page 2MODEL CAMERAWe have one of the finestselections of photographicequipment on the south side.1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259SEWING MACHINESERVICERepairs on Americanandl ForeignRentals: $6 a monthSpecial Rotes for Facultyand StudentsBilly Williams6141 S. GreenwoodBU 8-2083You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you cal! us today.•Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!*says Ursus (Bear Foot) Sulla, popular Coliseum bear fighter.“We animal wrestlers fight tooth and Claudius to get tothat first post-fight Tareyton,” says Bear Foot. “De hocsmoke, Tareyton’s one filter cigarette that really delivers degustibus!”DUAL FILTERTareytont//t* jfmiuian. do&ta&u Our miiilt ntmt © *■r