V#'.. , % °* CwCligO Cfcnjf*SSA aids county study WeavSMeft to rightThe University of Chicago duties is valuable and cannot be The researchers will be tryingSchool of social service ad- wasted. to determine whether the presentministration (SSA) has un- ..“The Cook county department distribution of responsibilities be-(lertaken a survey to deter- Of public aid is interested In pro- tvveen supervisors and workers is “At one time I not onlycarried a Red card, I issuedthem,” said English professormine the best ways of utili- viding the most effective and effi- the most productive that can be Richard Weaver last night.<• • » I.,.-.: : 1.1 _ UI I, ■. . devispd u/hothor PQcfic eliAi il^zing scarce professionalstaffs in public assistance agencies.The four year study is beingdone in conjunction with the Cookcounty department of public aid,and is being financed by the Co¬operative Research and Demon¬stration grant program of the So¬cial Security administration of thet'S department of health, educa¬tion. and welfare.The grant program has givenis SI 15,034 for the first year, anda similar grant is expected forthe second year. Grants are alsoexpected for the third and fourthyears of the project.••\Ve want to try to find waysof making maximum use of thefew qualified social workers inpublic assistance,” stated Alton A.I.inford, professor and dean ofSSA.. .“If we can work out ways whichwill enable a social worker tomake the maximum use of histime we hope to make the jobmore attractive so that better-qua-liiied people will be attracted tothe professions,” Linford added.Only one out of every 25 employ¬ees providing service in public as¬sistance programs in the UnitedStates is a professionally quali-tied social worker. Professionalqualifications require at least twoyears of graduate study in socialwork.There is a scarcity of profes¬sional social workers not only inpublic assistance programs but inall fields of social welfare, publicand voluntary. This scarcity meansthat the time the qualified socialworker devotes to his professional devised, whether cases should beassigned geographically, as theyare now, or on some other basis,and whether tasks to be performedin the district offices can be clas¬sified and assigned in relation tothe skills and abilities of staff.The program for the Midwayoffice is being developed withthe assistance of an advisorycommittee which includes HerbertStratford, member of the visit¬ing committee of SSA; Linford;and Philip M. Hauser, chairmanof the UC department of soci¬ology, who is heading a sub¬committee whjch will providetechnical consultation on theproject.cient service possible with limitedfunds. I have confidence that in¬vestments in research in this areamay benefit not only Cook countybut public welfare generally,” saidRaymond M. Hilliard, director ofthe department of public aid.The project will be under thedirection of Edward W. Schwartz,the George Herbert Jones profes¬sor in SSA. William C. Sample,an assistant professor and researchassociate in SSA, will be assistantdirector.The area to be covered by theproject is a new district, from63 street to 47 street and fromCottage Grove avenue to the lake.The office, to be called the MidwayResearch and Training office, willbe located at 6317 Maryland Ave¬nue.Pearl Rosenzweig, a member ofthe county department, will ’-e of¬fice supervisor for the Midwaydistrict. Services will be providedand supervised by the county per¬sonnel, and SSA will be reponsi-ble for the research, with a staffof ten research workers.Sonic five thousand families re¬ceiving public assistance live inthe area to be covered. Thesefamilies receive assistance throughthe Aid to Dependent Children(ADC), Aid to the Disabled, andOld Age Assistance programs.About half of the families receiveADC.The grant money will be usedonly for the research staff at the Seven parties and an inde- alternates.Midway office. None will be used pendent registered for the PaSe)*Weaver, discussing his politicalviews with a group of students atShorey house, said that he hadbeen a local secretary of theSocialist party of America manyyears ago. Gradually, however, hecame to believe that socialismcould not lead to the sort ofworld he wanted.Weaver went on to explain whyhe is now a conservative. He ob¬jects, for one thing, to the liber¬als commitment to relativism.Relativism denies the concept oftruth, he said, and makes truth‘‘a matter of the moment at themoment.” He also objects to liberals, sup¬port of collectivism, placing thestate above the individual. "Thisis a perversion of the naturalorder of things,” he declared.What the conservative wants isa pluralistic society in whichthere are many sources of powerand authority, Weaver continued.Harmony—“the friendly co-pres¬ence of differences” — is a higherideal than unity, which impliesuniformity.He stated that it is naturalfor young people to feel like out¬siders, as others have jobs, in¬come, and reputation which theylack. “The world is not in a con¬spiracy against you young people,’he concluded,you.” “It’s waiting forYol. 70 — No. 74 University of Chicago, Tuesday, April 3, 1962 tssfSsSW* 31189 run in SG elections(See the chart on thisfor the operating staff. Nor willany of the funds of the countybe used for the University-directedresearch, Linford emphasized.Ask NDEA increaseMaroon press sendeeWASHINGTON, DC, March30—The US office of educationhas asked Congress for an im¬mediate increase of 16.1 mil¬lion dollars for loans to collegefreshmen this year under theNational Defense Education act(NDEA).The request was made at aclosed hearing of a House appro¬priations subcommittee by Educa¬tion Commissioner Sterling Mc-Murrin. The subcommittee madepublic his testimony Friday,March 30.McMurrin said that the 73.8million dollars appropriated lastyear for the college loan programalready has been loaned or com¬mitted to 190 thousand students in1,453 schools.Tiie additional funds being re¬quested, he said, would go forloans to the 36 thousand new stu¬dents expected to qualify for theaid when the fall term begins.Aides of McMurrin said thatabout 12 thousand former studentsnow are repaying the three percent loans they received underNDEA. They said only about twohundred graduates have been de¬linquent in their repayments.Officials said repayments werebeing made at a faster rates thanhas been expected. By last Junewhen about 300 thousand dollarswas due, students had returnednearly two million dollars.James Moore, chief of the stu¬dent loan program, estimated thatby 1968 or 1970, the governmentwould not need to add new fundstor the program. However, hesaid, the provisions for giving halfol such loans to students who be¬come teachers might keep theprogram from becoming com-pletely self-balancing.Of the twelve thousand recipi¬ents to date, Moore said, 4,100have entered the teaching profes¬sion. He said that originally half°t the students who received loanshad indicated teaching was theircareer preference.McMurrin said the student loanProgram “continues to achievewidespread acceptance as a means He said a survey two years agoshowed that nine of every tenborrowers probably would nothave been able to go to college ifthey had not received the loans.The education commissioner es¬timated that of 600 colleges notparticipating in the program,about 500 had found no particularneed for the loans. But a few, hesaid, had declined to participatebecause of the requirement thatstudents take a loyalty oath andsign an affidavit disclaiming mem¬bership in subversive organiza¬tions. Student Government electionsby yesterday’s noon deadline-.Five parties: the Associationop Non-Tolerating Independents(ANTI), the Democratic Organiza¬tion to Withstand Nonsense(DOWN), the Independent Reformparty (IRP), POLIT, and the Uni¬versity party (UP) had by theend of last week indicated theirintention of running candidates inthe election.Over the weekend t\vo newparties, the Iron Guard (IG) andthe Law School party (LSP)appeared. In addition, an indepen¬dent, Robert Axelrod, a first yearstudent, is running for election inthe College.There are now 154 candidatesrunning for the fifty seats in theSG assembly, and 35 running forthe ten positions as the NationalStudent association delegates andcritical of the church’s plans todesegregate all Catholic schoolsnext fall.Several persons have receivedletters containing so-called “pater¬nal admonition” to Catholics fromtheir Archbishop, Joseph FrancisRummel.The Reverend Elmo Romagosa,head of the Catholic informationoffice, would not say whether theletters threatened excommunica¬tion.“Due to the fact that the letterswere personal and confidential, weprefer at this time not to discloseeither the names of the persons towhom the letters were addressedof the contents of the letters un¬less these parties themselveschoose to make such a disclosure,”Fathe^* Romagosa stated.Mrs. R. J. Gaiilot, president ofthe segregationalist group, SaveOur Nation, said her letter fromArchbishop Rummel was a .“strong threat of excommunica¬tion.”State representative RodneyBuras, who urged Catholics toboycott the church financially,said he also received a letter.A third letter was supposedlyrefused by Emile A. Wagner, at-attorney and staunch segregation-°f helping collegq students meet alist who op{>osed integration ofcosts of higher education.” public schools in 1960.Segregationists mayface excommunicationThe Catholic Archdiocese of “I have heard it contained suchNew Orleans has taken action a threat (of excommunication),”against members of segrega- said Mr. Wagner. “I wouldn’t betionalist groups publicallv surprised if the letter were athreat of moral bludgeon to pre¬vent anyone from taking a positionon what is being done here.”Mrs. Gaiilot, who says she isa descendant of seven generationsof Louisiana Catholics, has askedfor an interview with ArchbishopRummel. She is also picketing hishome, carrying a sign, “Highpriests made same mistake. Theyrepented. Will you. ” No parly is running a full slateof sixty candidates. POLIT, with52 candidates, has the largestnumber running. UP has fiftycandidates, IRP has 33, IG has 23,ANTI is running 18, DOWN nine,and LSP, which is running candi¬dates only for the law schoolseats, has three.IG, one of the two newestparties, is running on a platformof student body-administration co¬operation. “Only a student organ¬ization that is completely in sym¬pathy with the administration,"their platform states, “can effec¬tively counter balance the perni¬cious influence that StudentGovernment has exerted.“The Iron Guard is the partyof wealth and privilege, not mere¬ly old line privilege, but newlyestablished privilege as well . . .It is the party of the arrivedminority group member whowishes to pull up the ladder onwhich he ascended ... It is theparty of respectable people, richpeople, people you wouldn’t mindrubbing shoulders with at afaculty reception.“Only a party that will standproudly by the slogan ‘A PureUniversity in a Pure Society'stands any change of effecting thenecessary union of purpose of ad¬ministration and student body.That party is the Iron Guard.”The other new party, LSP, is“uncommitted to any party.” Itseeks to do “what will most bene¬fit Student Government, makingit more than a forum of opinion.”The candidates “despite theirdifferences” agree on two points which comprise their program.“First, that Student Government,if it is to serve any valid function,must be an interest group of thestudents and a service organiza¬tion for the students and the Uni¬versity.“Second, the candidates of theLSP believe it unjust that all ofthe fees assessed from each lawstudent for Student Governmenthave been allocated only to thecentral SG and none of the lawstudent’s fees to their local stu¬dent government—the Law Schoolassociation.Axelrod, running as an indepen¬dent against the seven parties,states that “I am running forCollege representative to StudentGovernment as an independent be¬cause I believe that an indepen¬dent has the best opportunity ofexercising his own judgement freeof constraining commitments.“I believe the role of StudentGovernment is to act as a bodyrepresenting the consensus ofthe entire student body ... Aspecific proposal which would helpto insure responsible StudentGovernment is that of residencerepresentation.“Residence representation forthe College is not the ideal sys¬tem, but with it the studentswould be better able to select arepresentative who they know andrespect and who would serve intheir behalf.”Although the deadline for filingis past, write-in candidates areallowable under Student Govern¬ment rules. Several of the partieshave indicated that they will seeksuch candidates for seats they havenot yet filed for.Can< Jid<ANTI 5tesDOWN foiIG rIRP SCLSP electionPOLIT UP ' Ind.College (19) 17 i 18 19 0 19 19 1Bi scl (2) 0 i 0 0 0 2 1 0Hum (3) 0 i 0 1 0 3 3 0Phy sei (4) 1 0 0 1 0 2 3 0Soc scl (8) 0 5 0 0 0 8 7 0Business (3) 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 0CTS (2 > 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0Education (1) 0 0 0 0 o . 1 1 0GLS (1) 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0Law (3) 0 0 0 0 3 3 0 0Medicine (2) 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0SSANS A (2) 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 0delegationNS A (5) 0 0 5 5 0 5 5 0alternates (5) 0 0 0 5 0 5 5 0The numbers in inirentheses are the number of seats allotted to each division.I;■ ti’fe•i•>u SPU may cooperatewith gradualist groupThe Student Peace union (SPU) will decide tonightwhether to work with Columbia university’s Emitai Etzioni’sGradualist Approach to Peace movement.Etzioni has asked the SPU nationally and locally Chicago-style debateShelters — wombs, meccaswhether it is willing to cooperatewith the Gradualist Approach tod^eace. “If a number of studentswould like to work with theGradualist program, we are will¬ing to sponsor it, said Dave Kelly,new chairman of the local group.“The SPU,” he said, “tries toprovide a wide variety of activi¬ties for the many diverse interestsof students . . . .”The main stages of the Gradu¬alist approach, as outlined inEtzioni’s new' book, The HardWay to Peace, are as follows :“First the United S.tates uni¬laterally takes some symbolicsteps to reduce international ten¬sions.“After a number of these, itmakes some concessions expectingthe Russians to reciprocate. Theseconcessions are of some, thoughrather limited, political and mili¬tary value. A second round ofconcessions is not initiated untilthe first round have been recipro¬cated. But no negotiations areheld to assure reciprocation or todetermine its scope.“Finally, when unilateral sym¬bolic moves and reciprocated con¬cessions have markedly reducedinternational tension, the UnitedStates suggests multilateral nego¬tiations. Only at this stage, whenthe other side's willingness to en¬ gage in simultaneous and balancedconcessions is established, canone expect significant arms re¬duction to take place and impor¬tant political questions to besettled. The third phase is likelyto be long and to require the de¬velopment of nonviolent means ofinternational competition and, evenmore, of viable internationalinstitutions.”About 30 SPU members debatedwhether the US would be willingto accept the proposal or whetherEtzioni had oversimplified theCold War as merely a matter of“international tensions.” A debate on fallout sheltersnearly collapsed last night un¬der constant heckling fromthe audience.Remarks from the audience, per-missable under the rules of a‘Chicago-style’ debate, interruptedthe arguments of both the Uni¬versity of Chicago team and theiropponents from Union college inSchenectady, New York on “re¬solved: A nationwide falloutshelter program is desirable andnecessary.”Gary Greenberg, fourth yearstudent in the College, began thedebate, attended by nearly 50vocal students, by announcing thatfallout shelters were “pricelessmeccas of comforting security.”Fallout shelters are a defer¬ent to war, stated Greenberg, because “they deter an aggressorwho knows he can’t possibly wipeout our entire population. Andthe enormously reliable and everefficient CIA reports that Russia,too, has fallout shelters.”Citing another authority, Green¬berg claimed that “Ann Landerssays that shelters increase com¬munity and family cohesiveness.”He also asserts that constructionof fallout shelters would help theunemployment situation. “Theybuilt libraries and post offices inthe ’30s, it can be shelters in the’60s”.Fallout shelters can be used foranything from spare rooms tolocations for twist parties, Green¬berg said, and the installation ofmachine guns to keep out theneighbors would help the muni¬tions industry.The first speaker for UnionSpeaker criticizes CastroThe Cuban people enjoyedsition of equality with the most ad-, • , , i , r i • • vanced countries of the world,” hea higher standard of living . . .99c SPECIALSWITH THIS ADBrake AdjustmentONLY 99°Flat Tire RepairsTube Type QQqOnly J JRotation of 5 WheelsONLY 99°Wheel BalancingPlus QQcWeights JJU S. *0yAl Sofe wfe'w°y than Russia and almost all therest of Latin America beforethe Castro take oxer Jorge Castel¬lanos, a former member of theCuban Communist party, saidyesterday.In a talk sponsored by the Inter¬collegiate Society of Individualists,he cited statistics from theOrganization of American States,the food and agricultural organiz¬ation of the UN, the US depart¬ment of commerce and othersources to detail the advances declared.The speaker went on to explainthat the reasons for Castro’ssuccessful seizure of power weremainly political rather than econ¬omic. The vast majority of theCuban people were opposed toBatista, and Castro was the sym¬bol of opposition to the Batistaregime, he said.The bearded revolut ionarypromised the revolution deeplywanted by the Cuban people, in¬cluding democratic institutions,and honesty in the administrationmade by the Cuban nation since of public funds; and repeated that..he was not Communist and wouldprotect private property.He quoted as follows from atelevision speech made by Castrolast December 1:“I beliexe absolutely in Marx-evening at 8 by the art depart¬ment in soc sci 122 as part of theirthe 1933 revolution.“This quarter century marked apeaceful revolution which re-moxed Cuba from the category ofan underdeveloped nation to a po-1962 ART TOURRadcliffe Scholarship FundFour Private CollectionsOne StudioSaturday, April 28, 1 to 5 p.m.For Information Call BU 8-5788 ism. I am a Marxist-Leninist, andwill be one until the day I die.“At the beginning of Die fightagainst Batista, our ideas had tobe concealed; otherw ise we shouldhave alienated the support of thebourgeois and other forces whichwe knew' we would later haxe tofight.”When the people realized whatwas going on, Castclanos said, itwas too late. A reign of terrorwas instituted, and all communi¬cations media were seized.He pointed out that the Com¬munists had been actixe in Cubafor many years prior to this, in¬filtrating all areas of Cuban lifewith the aim of subverting demo¬cratic institutions. For example,the required course in politicaleconomy taught in all high schoolswas a disguised version of theCommunist party’s economic plat¬form. college, Paul Boltay, charged thatthe affirmative definition of fall¬out shelters was “nothing but aback to the womb movement.”He accused the pro shelterspeakers of “likening shelters tohideouts, where people can go asan ostrich sticks his head in thesand. And what more invitingtarget for an enemy than thepart thats sticking out?”Boitray also called the shelterprogram unfeasible on the groundsthat people emerging from theirshelters would have nothing toeat. At this point a member ofthe audience suggested that theycould eat people emerging fromother fallout shelters.The second affirmative speaker,Bob Woodford, coach of the VCdebate team (the scheduled stu¬dent debater, Ann Itillyer, was un¬able to attend) said that “ the op¬position has said that this is aback to the womb movement. I’mnot going to defend motherhoodthis exening, and I don’t knoxvwhy it was attacked. The Anti-Sex league at Union must Ik*stronger than the peace groups atChicago.”The last speaker, Steve Wolfeof Union pointed out that falloutshelters would effect advertising—“get the shelter with the micronitefilter,” theatre—“Bomb-a-lot,” andmany other aspects of the Ameri¬can scene. “But the only thing thefallout shelter program is reallygood for,” he asserted, “is in build¬ing an underground movement.”Boltay, giving the negative re¬buttal, blasted the shelter programas “an underhanded Communisticplot to turn us allso into paranoicschizophrenics,” but closed byasking for "a chicken in every potand a Playboy Bunnny in everyfallout shelter.”THE JUSTlies Julies)a drama by ALBERT CAMUSin a new translaton by Jeanne Cagneypresented by COMPANY OF THEFOURAPRIL 4-7. 11-14John Woolman Hall1174 East 57th Street8:00 p.m. - Wr-d. - Frl.6:00 & 9:30 p.m. - Saturdays$230 students $1.75Reservation: OA 4-8228, FA 4-4100 Art films shown“The Drawings of Leonardoda Vinci” and “PrehistoricImages” will be presented thiscurrent film series.Narrated by Lawrence Olivier,the first deals primarily with theartist’s drawings now in the royalcollection at Windsor.“Prehistoric Images” shows thebeginnings of art in prehistoricFrance and Spain.foreign car hospitalsee page 2US. Royal SAFE-WAY TiresDiscounts to UC students& FacultyAL SAX TIRE GO.6052 Cottage GroveDOrchester 3-5554 Some 35 applicants attended the first of a series ofOrientation board training sessions on Sunday afternoon.They heard a discussion of the general education of theCollege and the recent College curriculum changes. Par¬ticipants from the College faculty and administrationwere: Dean of the College Alan Simpson; John Cawelti,associate professor of humanities and chairman humani¬ties 111-112-113; Leo Nedelsky, professor of physicalsciences in the College; and Marvin Meyers, associateprofessor of social science in the College and departmentof history.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTLET VITALISE KEEP YOUR HAIR NEAT ALL DAY WITHOUT GREASE!Keep the oil in the can. In your hair, use Vitalis with V 7®, thegreaseless grooming discovery. Fights embarrassing dandruff,prevents dryness-keeps your hair neat all day without grease. WANTEDSTUDENTS OF THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBoth Men and WomenFOR PART-TIME WORKIn and Around Chicago — Earnings Above Average(interviews: Room 200, Reynolds ClubWednesday, April 4th — 10:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M.NO DOOR-TO-DOOR SELLINGAsk for Mr. O'Donnell - Stanley Home ProductsCHICAGO MAROONUT presents Murder' FOTA announces contestsUniversity theatre will present T. S. Eliot’s “Murder inthe Cathedral” in the University’s Bond chapel this FridaySaturday and Sunday at 8:30 pm with a matinee perform¬ance at 2:15 pm on Saturday. The Festival of the Artscommittee has announcedplans for student contests inpoetry, painting, ceramics,The verse drama, which was pter and Williah DeTraci, Herbertadapted for the stage by director Jones as the Third Tempter and sculpture, and photography asRobert Benedetti, will feature Hugh DeMorville, and Dennis Eu- part of the all-campus Festivalguest artist Val Bettin as arch- banks as the Fourth Tempter and of the Arts (FOTA) which willbishop Thomas Beckett. Bettin Richard Brite. take place April 13 through Mayeducated at the Academy of 5.Dramatic Art in London and at the „ 1 zf .se^n as :J)e _ , ,University of London, and has First Priest, Henry Dziezic as the Two poetry contests will beL^n seen in local dramatic pro- SecondFnest and Herman Cole part of the 22-day festival. En¬actions including the title role Jr/*? the. Pr‘fst TheHwaM tries for the American Academyin the Company or the Four’s Wl11 bc P1^ Norman Kanter. of Poets prize of $100 were duepresentation of "Macbeth” last A Chorus of 13 women will por- to ^ registered in the Englishspring. tray the Women of Canterbury, office yesterday. RegistrationThe remainder of the cast will including Janet Bolland, Susan f°r Florence Adams Poetryinclude George House as the First Borker, Cornelia Callahan, Mary Reading contest has been set forTempter and Reginald Fitz-Urse, Delue, Ilse Gruczek, Suzanne April 17. The prizes for thisArthur Geffen as the Second Tern- Marsh, Anne Orwin, Prudence event are $125, $100, and $50;Posner, Debby Shiling, Madalyn further information is availableShoorr, Carol Silver, Hene Ta- at the English office, Wieboltmarkin, and Donna Wilson. President’s prize of $50 for graph¬ics showing student life.In addition there will be a non¬competitive exhibit in Lexingtonhall for ceramics. For furtherinformation on the various artcontests, call April Schwarz inNew Dorm. Miss Reeder has an¬nounced also that the Lexingtonstudios at 5825 University ave¬nue will be open during the weekfrom 9 am to 5 pm and on Sat¬urday from 10 am to 4 pm; free art materials and instruction willbe available at these times.Prizes of $25 and $10 will beawarded in the field of photo¬graphy, both black and white andcolor. Christopher Peebles inInternational house can be con¬tacted for additional information.The entry blank printed in con¬junction with this story is to besubmitted in duplicate with eachentry in any of the above artcontests.Today's EventsBond Tickets for the Friday and Sun¬day performances are studentpriced at $1 and $1.50 for the twol.utheran Communion service:chapel, 11:30 am.Colloquium, “The structure of pluton¬ium metal.” William Zachariasen, pro¬fessor, department of physic*, re¬search institutes 211, 4:15 pm.Lecture teriea: “Perspectives on thegenetic effect* of ionising radiation,”Dr. James V. Neel, chairman, de¬partment of human genetics, medicalschool. University of Michigan.Baptist sermon vespers: Bond chai>«l,5:05 pm.Hebrew conversation (roup: ITup Tvri.Hillel foundation, 5715 Woodlawn,0 pm.Christian science testimony meeting:Thorndike Hilton chapel, 7:15 pm.Films on art: “Drawings of Leonardodacolo..International folk dancing: International sity in Russia.I’oiise. 8 pm.SPU meeting: to decide whether to workwith the gradualist approach topeace, Ida Noyes hall, 8 pm.Lenten organ concert series: Rockefeller letters. This Will be followed by the tWO Schools,Memorial chapel, 8:30 pm, Robert 205.The Student Art contest wel¬comes entries and offers prizesof $25 and $10 in the categoriesSaturday performances. Tickets of oils, watercolors, graphics, andare on sale at the Reynolds club sculpture. Roberta Reeder,.chair-desk. man of FOTA, has announced aSC sets cultural exchange planStudent Government will exchanging art and photographyinitiate a cultural exchange ^^program will be allowedbetween the University of to develop in any way that is feltVinci- * nd -Prehistoric i™***-" Chicago and Kharkov univer- to be. ™?st b^neflc‘a,\ Jt.*’.111r. soemi sciences 122. 8 pm., ® _ . completely under the initiative of.ilnnsl fnllt iianrin • • I nt pm ut mnnl cittr in P nocifi ,the two schools. The primaryIt is expected that the project hope of the project is the event-will begin with an exchange of ual exchange of students between EXHIBITORS:Fill out two entry blanks in full and brine with works to the Festivalof the Arts table at Lexington hall, 5825 University Avenue, April 2-13,from 12 to 5 pm. Present one blank when you claim your works at Lexingtonon May 5 from 12 to 5 pm.ENTRY BLANK — 1962 Festival of the ArtsNAME THONEADDRESSTitle of Work Medium* Value For Sale?yes noReceived by Date.*—Works will be classified by medium as indicated on this record and onthe back of the work.I/odine, organist, choirmaster, earil-konneur, St. Chrysostom’s Church,Chicago. Works by Messiaen, Vierne,Alain, and Franck.tedfi or hospital t dWcdeolers in:• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambretta5340 s. loke parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob testermg psychiatristNOW!SUN LIFE'S SECURITYFUND ENDOWMENTPROVIDESLIFE INSURANCEPROTECTION TO AGE 65AND RETURNSALL BASIC ANNUALPREMIUMS PAIDPLUS ACCUMULATED- DIVIDENDSIF THE ASSUREDLIVES TO 65.At 65, the funds can bet• taken in cash• used to purchase a paid-uppolicy for the original sumassured and the balancetaken in cash or as aguaranteed income.• used to provide an annuity.• left on deposit at aguaranteed rate of interest.Inquire about this remarkableinsurance planby telephoning or writing to:Ralph J. Wood. Jr.1 N. La Sail*Chicago, III.FR 2-2390SUN LIFEASSURANCE COMPANYOF CANADA NApril 3. 1962 • CHICAGO MAROONOpinion on White appointment variesOpinion on the appointmentof Bryon (Whizzer) White tothe Supreme Court variedamong faculty members. Al¬though there seems to be agree¬ment that he is well qualified forthe position, opinion varied as tohow he would vote in the court—with the so-called "Warren block”or the Frankfurter group.The retirement of Justice Whi¬taker may leave the bench divided4-4 on many issues of governmentpower and civil liberties. Therehas been much speculation as towhich way White will use hisweight. Most newspapers thinkhe will vote with the Warrengroup.Professor Francis Allen of thelaw school, who has known Whitesince they both served as lawclerks to Justice Vinson afterWorld War II, said he was notsure about statements that WhiteClassified 1House for Sale—South ShoreSpacious, attractive, convenient. Fourbedrooms. - baths. Karate and car port,full basement, remodeled kitchen. 3blocks to excellent public elementaryand high schools. Pleasant family neigh¬borhood. 5'( interest—2 2 year loan.5 modern appliances — 3 air conditionersincluded in price. Mid 20's. MI 3-3032. would vote with the “liberal"block.“Although he will probably votewith the liberals in such areasas segregation, I’m not sure hewill follow the set liberal line inother areas,” said Allen. “He islikely to support strong govern¬ment authority, in criminal casesand cases of subversion as well asin integration proceedings,” Allencontinued.Although White has had no ex¬perience on the bench, Allen didnot believe this was important.“The history of the Court doesn'tindicate that previous judicial ex¬perience is necessary,” Allenadded.According to C. Herman Pritch¬ett, chairman of the departmentof political science, White will beon the liberal side of the court.“He is not an extremist in anysense,” said Pritchett. Pritchettalso confirmed that lack of judi¬cial experience isn’t relevant tosuccess on the bench. He notedthat many members of the presentcourt had no judicial experiencebefore they sat on the High Court.Pritchett believes that Whitew’as appointed in part because ofhis home state—Colorado. Beforehis appointment there were noiust ices from the area between Law school professor Harry Kal-ven said he thought that White isprobably quite well qualified. Hesounded pleased with White’s age(44), stating “everyone is mildly In favor of younger men in court.Whitaker’s resignation shows whata taxing job being a SupremeCourt justice is.”Kalven concluded that White’sUC track team winsThe University of Chicagovarsity track team won itsopening meet 106 - 24 overLewis college from Lockport,Illinois, Saturday at Stagg field.Ed Wooley, John Musgrave, andCharles Swann, with a combinedtotal of 51 points, led the Maroonsin their victory. Wooley with 25points himself outscored the wholeLewis team.The Maroons performed fairlywell for the beginning of the sea¬son, but the team is not as goodas the score might indicate. Wool¬ey displayed his versatility withfirst places in hurdles, the highjump and the broad jump and sec¬ond place in the pole vault andthe javelin. Swann and Musgravealso turned in good performancesin the dashes and the field events. Volley ball meet startsThe all-University volleyballtournament gets under way thisweek with an all-time high of 60teams entered. This will be a con¬solation-type tournament, with allfirst-round losers entering the con¬solation bracket. Other sports be¬ginning in the near future arehorseshoes (April 11), tennis(April 17), and softball (April 23).The faculty, who made a strongshowing in softball last year, willagain be led by Mark Ashin intheir bid for a divisional leaguechampionship.In the competition for the all-year championship, in the collegehouse division, Dodd holds a 167-point lead over Tufts North, whilein the fraternity division, Psi Up-silon leads Phi Sigma Delta by142 points. prominence as football player andthe political backing of Kennedymay well have influenced the ap.pointment. But he added that therewere so many equally qualified“candidates” , that factors otherthan ability necessarily entered in-ot the decision.Malcolm Sharp, another profes.sor in the law school, said hewas “waiting with interest to seehow White will vote.” He addedthat he has a "mildly hopeful at¬titude towards him. In his postwith the justice department, hehad a good record on civil rights.”Sharp also stated that a greatdeal of judicial experience is notnecessary for one to be a goodjustice.Edward Levi, dean of the lawschool, agreed with Sharp's lastpoint, adding that White seems“exceptionally well qualified.”Allison Dunham, another pro¬fessor of law', felt White is agood appointment. An acquain¬tance of White, Dunham wouldnot give any opinion as to howWhite might vote on the bench,stating “many judges change whenin the Supreme Court.”Post March 9: lady's sold wrist watch:initials KEZ; reward. Phone PL 2-0133.Two nurses and luxurious 8 rm. furn.South Shore apt. want one roommate.Call BU 8-5663, after 4 pm.Typing: reasonable. rapid. accurate.Special RUSH service. Call Rona Rosen¬blatt or Karen Borchers. NO 7-3609.For SaleA sinK'le bed; bed spread: 9x12 chen¬ille rut;; 2 pair drapes: small table.All in good condition. Reasonableprices. Call DO 3-3179.WantedStudents interested in earning extramoney. You may work as many hoursa week as you wish, and may pickyour own hours. Job easy to learn.Call business office of Maroon in theafternoon, ext. 32 65.Personals"sprint; is sprung, the grass is riz:i wonder where the Daisies is?”Remember Frank Seno!foreign car salessee page 2InternationalDanceINTERNATIONAL HOUSEApril 7, 9 - 12 P.M.DON CARON'S5 Piece BandSemi-Formal$1.50 Couples$1.00 Stag Ohio and California.Another factor in his appoint¬ment, Pritchett said, was White’srelation to the President. He hasworked for him for a long timeand is highly regarded by thePresident and his brother. Attor¬ney General Robert Kennedy.White was assistant atorney gen¬eral and the second in commandat the Justice department.He wfill have no trouble gainingthe needed Senatorial approval ofhis nomination, Pritchett added,because of the w'ork he has donewith the Senate Judiciary com¬mittee on the appointment of fed¬eral judges.TRAINEEPOSITIONSNow Available at TheChicago Public LibraryGRADUATING STUDENTSinterested in a program ofcareer development offering:* on-the-job LIBRARY EXPE¬RIENCE in conjunction withprofessional education inlibraryianship and*preparation for a well-paidand personally rewardingprofessional career.may qualify for these attractivepositions on the staff of theCHICAGO PUBLIC LIBRARYFOR INFORMATION PLEASECONTACT:Mrs. Charlotte ShabinoPersonnel OfficeTHE CHICAGOPUBLIC LIBRARYChicago 2, IllinoisTheatre 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 $1.50Ceneral Rates Quoted On RequestShow Times: Fri. & Sat. 8:30 pm; Sun 7:30 pmLocated at: The Athenaeum, 2936 N. SouthportFor Resero.: Call LA 5-9761 or Write P. O.Box 3545, Chicago 54STOCK UP ON FILMSpringtime is a wonderful time for takingpictures. Check with us for your photographicneeds. We have a good supply of black andwhite or color film.University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE □ an even colder war□ a hot war□ an industrialand trade contest□ take one?□ pull out one of your own?L&M gives youMORE BODYin the blend,MORE FLAVORin the smoke,MORE TASTEthrough the filter.It’s the rich-flavorleaf that does it! HERE’S HOW MENAND WOMEN AT56 COLLEGES VOTED.%ZS‘*,‘%8S**—UMQjnoX ~%W"%zr— $,puaiJj"%9S””%2S ON a%W"’%W"' S3A ^%zr"%w""“' 1S31U00%LZ"“%Ll JBMJOII0%ie"“.%S2"“ jeMjapiooN3H0M Nantp *AV” *tWsthe filter cigarette for people whoisaHyBkfto smoke.^ J4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 3, 1962