RMHby Joy GreenbergAn overflow crowd packedVC’s 2,000-seat Rockefellerchapel last night to hear for¬mer chancellor Robert Mayn¬ard Hutchins warn against uni¬versities which defer to the in¬terests of the public in planningtheir programs.The audience gave Hutchins astanding ovation when he walkedon stage to deliver the final lec¬ture in this week’s series on “thelimits of liberal education.’’Hiitrhins told the crowd, whichincluded UC president GeorgeIt(>adle. that “In education youmust never do anything becausesomeone will pay for it. It willalways wind up costing you morein money and confusion than itwas worth in the first place.There is a boomerang concealedin every public relations dodge.”Tracing the history of his UCadministration, Hutchins said,‘ Wo came out of the DepressionCol 1929) a better University thanwe went in, because we learnedthat we couldn’t get all.the moneywe had previously been getting.Now that there is a great dealof money to be had 75r/o of theprofessors in the United States arethinking of sales gimmicks forthe Ford foundation or the USgovernment.”Depressions valuableHutchins, now director of thecenter for the study of Demo¬cratic Institutions, suggested that“Perhaps we might declare a de¬pression every four or five yearsnot a real one that would hurtanybody just enough to force theuniversities to evaluate what theyare spending their money on andhow important it is.”The Depression, Hiitehlns stated,“forced UC to examine its purposea-, an institution, to ask ourselveswhat was important.” The stan¬dards of the academic warld, hesaid, were unsatisfactory because"they were hard to discover andstill harder to agree with.” Nor,In* noted, were “the standards of< hiengo and of its press satis¬factory.”John D. Rockefeller, UC’sfounder, had a clear view of thepurpose of the university whichhe was endowing. “Rockefellergave the Baptists money,” Hutch¬ins said, “to stem the tide ofMethodism in the United States.”Rockefeller’s concept, however,conflicted with that of the manto whom he gave his money,William Rainey Harper. Harper,UC’s first president, wanted “tofound a great university—this wasa great university on the day itopened.”Revolutionizes midwestHutchins stated that the impor¬tance of Harper’s original planJay in changing the midwesternconcept of a university. Most ofthe universities in this area in thelate 19th centuries, he noted, were‘ nothing but colleges with a fewprofessional schools attached.”But Harper’s plan to establisha great university based on theGerman university plan in Chica¬go failed. The fault, Hutchinsnoted, was not Harper’s.“German universities,” hestated, “rested on the humanisticgymnasia (secondary schools). TheUniv ersity of Chicago was founded"lien the high schools in thiscountry were beginning to disinte¬grate, a process which is now com¬plete. Harper had a German uni¬versity resting on absolutely noth¬ing.”By 1929 when he became pre¬sident, Hutchins saw UC as “nolonger a great university in Har¬per's sense. Vocationalism andspecialization had taken over.”Hutchins said it was his idea,to establish UC as “a center ofindependent thought. Members ofl he community here should havemore in common than a commonpresident and a common heatingplant.”The whole of an academic com¬munity, the former chancellornoted, “Is more than the sum ofits parts. The republic of learn¬ing, the paradigm of a great so¬ciety, needs vitality, a vitalitywhich comes from more than theisolated labors of learned individ¬uals,” blasts US eThe problem which he facedin 1929 was one of basic educa¬tion, Hutchins said. His reorgan¬ization of the University into thedivisions and the professionalschools was aimed at breakingdown the walls which had separ¬ated the followers of the individ¬ual academic disciplines. “But itis no good to break down thewalls if you find you have noth¬ing to say to the man on theother side.”Need basic educationIt is to further this communi¬cation that a broad, basic under¬graduate curriculum becomesnecessary. Hutchins pointed to hisexperience in attempting to estab¬lish UC’s basic course in thephysical sciences. “The chairmanof the department of chemistrycame to me,” he said, “and toldme that the establishment of sucha course was impossible, becausethere w%s nobody in the divisionwho could teach it. I suggestedthat this w'as tfie best reason forintroducing the course.”Bui, Hutchins suggested, thehistory of education since 3929 hasnet shown improvement in inter¬disciplinary communication. “Edu¬cation since then has steadily de¬teriorated in the United States.’Citing examples showing thetrend in American universities to¬ward vocationalism and the “ser¬vice station” concept of higherlearning, Hutchins stated that“We no longer have the three It’sin this country. Instead we havethe six It’s—remedial reading,remedial * ’riting, and remedial’rithmetic. Basie education is lack¬ entire four years. At St. John’s,Hutchins said, “Kids out of theback woods of Maryland have beengiven courses in the greatbooks, and have responded to themvery well.”One result of universities’ fail¬ure to create intellectual com¬munities, the former chancellornoted, Is that they “ire iu> longerfunctioning as centers of critic¬ism, but are engaged in theflattery of the spirit of the age.”There has been no attempt, hecharged, to communicate serious¬ly with the general public. “Theonly communication with thepublic now,” Hutchins declared,“is through intercollegiate foot¬ball. Serious communication hasnever been tried — and it is use¬less to claim that it would fail.”The desire to flatter “the spiritof the age,” Hutchins claims, haslead to the predominance oftechnology in today’s universities.“We do not do what is good forus, but what we are good at,” hestated. “Invention has becomethe mother of necessity.” Recent studies, Hutchins noted,have shown that every man, wom¬an, and child in the United Stateshas the equivalent of 85 pre-Civilwar slaves at his command. Theproblem for society then becomes“will our slaves (the products oftwentieth century technology) des¬troy us as they destroyed theTurks and the American South?”Education the solutionEducation, Hutchins believes, Isthe solution to this problem.“Blit,” he adds, “the edueation weare seeking must not be vocationalor specialized; it must be an edu¬eation which draws out the ele¬ments of our common humanity.This edueation must aid us inmastering technology or we willfind ourselves in ‘1984’ or in ‘BraveNew’ World’.”Hutchins cited the statementthat “We can broadcast tneAeschylean trilogy; but the Greekscould write it,” asking whether“the fact that we can broadcastit means that we can’t write :t.”Of course, he added, “we can’t broadcast it because we can’t geta sponsor.”The type of education which canhelp us master technology Hut¬chins belives to be “liberal educa¬tion.” This involves instruction in“the leading ideas of mankind andin the techniques necessary to un¬derstand these ideas. The end re¬sult of liberal education is Intel¬lectual power.”But, Hutchins believes, the pur¬pose of modern universities ren¬ders them unfit to give a liberaleducation. “The purpose of theaverage university,” he said, “isto meet the apparent needs of thecommunity. This has lately beenthe production of more technolo¬gists.“The purpose of great univer¬sities has been to get on withtheir research. The faculty mem¬bers of great universities are notindifferent to education — theyare hostile to it. Since they arcinterested primarily in their re¬search, education is to them an(continued on page four)Vol. 70 — No. 79 University of Chicago, Thursday, April 12, 1962ing; specialization is dominant;the intellectual community isabsent.”Content de-emphosizedThis fact, he pointed out, is duein part to the fact that “althoughwe are committed to education forall, we don’t believe that all canbe educated. What we do, then, isto put everybody in school andhope for the best.”But, Hutchins noted, “I am notcritical of mass education; I amcritical of mass deception. Whatwe are giving is not education atall.”The de-emphasis of content inthis country, Hutchins stated, isdue in large measure to "thesteady lowering of our expecta¬tions.” Pointing to the fact thatmuch more was expected, and got¬ten, from students in Americanuniversities in the 18th century,he said that “American studeniswill respond to whatever is offeredto them.”The elective system, in whichstudents are allowed to choose thecourses which he will take, isthe natural result of our loweredexpectations. Hutchins stated thatthe system, introduced in the 19thcentury by Harvard presidentCharles Eliot, “deprived studentsof any chance for an intellectualcommunity.”The antithesis of this trend isexemplified today at St. John’suniversity of Annapolis. Maryland,where all students are required tofollow identical programs for their Letter charges UC biasA letter written by Mrs.Walter Long to PresidentGeorge Beadle early this weekalleging University housingdiscrimination has touched off aseries of charges by the UC chap¬ter of the Congress of RacialEquality (CORE) and denials byUniversity officials.Explanations of the incidentgiven by Ray E. Brown, vice presi¬dent of the University; WarnerWick, dean of students; E. Larschof University Realty corporation;and CORE itself all differ fromMi's. Long’s account.According to Mrs. Long, at theUniversity housing office she fill¬ed out an information card, andrequested an apartment for her¬self, her husband, and her threechildren, near the University clin¬ics where she is a secretary.Not servicing persons who areneither students nor faculty, thehousing offiee referred her toLarsch at University Realty, whichrents to people not affiliated withthe University.Mrs. Long was shown a Uni¬versity owned apartment byLarsch, which she describes asbeing “in an ideal location,” andwas told she need only come in andsign a lease, and it would be hers.It was at the meeting withLarsch, she asserts, that the diffi-Former UC chancellorgreeted at a reception in hisGeorge Beadle. Robert Hutchins (left) ishonor by president and Mrs. culty started. During this inter¬view, Mrs. Long “happened tomention that” her husband is aNegro.Larsch sat silent for a moment,she recalls, then stated he was“unaware of this fact.” He thenasked her if the woman she hadseen at the housing office knewof this. She replied that shehadn’t mentioned it, because shedidn’t feel it made (or ought tomake) any difference.Sent backLarscli, she said, sent her hackto the housing office for the expresspurpose of stating that her hus¬band is a Negro. Upon being in¬formed of the fact, the housingoffiee representative gave Mrs.Long no answer, saying she hadto discuss it with others.Later that day, Mr. Longvisited the housing office, wherehe received no satisfactory ans¬wer. He later phoned Larsch and,his wife reports, w’as told for thefirst time of a ruling which“Larsch had just discovered,” say¬ing he could not rent so small anapartment (4 rooms) to a familyof five.Mrs. Long said that the rulingwas used “only because her hus¬band was known to be a Negroby University City Realty cor¬poration, and by the University.”But members of the Universityof Chicago administration insistthat the issue revolves around thenumber of people who were torent the Long apartment.While Mrs. Long claims shesupplied the pertinent informa¬tion on the University’s informa¬tion card, Larsch said he was un¬aware of the fact that she hadthree children until the clay heactually showed her the apart¬ment.Brown described the apartmentas having only one bedroom anda 10’ by 10’ porch. The five-person Long family in such anapartment would be “violatingacceptable standards in the num¬ber of people living in partic¬ular housing,” said Brown. Wickadded that to rent this apartmentto Mrs. Long would simply belowering standards (by oxer¬crowding apartments) where theUniversity’s aim was to raisethem.Brown also said that part of theproblem resulted from contusionabout Mrs. Long’s husband’s pres¬ence in the apartment. He willbegin interning in Detroit thissummer, and would not regularly be in the apartment, thus limit¬ing the people in it to four. WhileMrs. Long claims to have madethis fact clear on her informa¬tion card, Brown denies Larschknew of it.Wick states that in the lease¬signing interview, a number offacts were told to Larsch for thefirst time, among them that Mrs.Long’s husband would be morefrequently in the apartment thanhe had been led to believe, andtherefore he for the first timel'efused to rent on the groundsof overerow’ding. Wick added thatMrs. Long’s return to the housingoffice in the administration build¬ing was at her own suggestion andnot that of Larsch.Brown said that Mrs. Long men¬tioned that her husband was aNegro not at the lease-signing in-tei’view’, but at the time Larshshowed her the apartment, and af¬ter he had already expressed hisdoubt at renting it to five people.CORE respondsAn open letter to Beadle, pub¬licized in the form of posters atvarious places on compus, re¬quested that the university in¬vestigate the incident which pointsout that UC “is still conductinga policy of discrimination.”CORE’S explanation of the se¬quence of events is as follows:“Last week, a Mrs. Walter Longvisited the Office of Housing inthe Administration Building to re¬quest an apartment for herself,her husband and her three chil¬dren. She inquired as to wnethera certain location which she fav¬ored was available to a familywith children. She was given anenthusiastic “yes” and referred tothe office of the University CityRealty Corporation.“Shortly afterwards, Mrs. Longwent to the said office, inquiredabout the apartment (again in¬quiring as to whether childrenwould be permitted and again re¬ceiving an affirmative answer), andeverything seemed ‘set’ until Mrs.Long mentioned that she had aNegro husband.“All of a sudden the situationchanged. She was referred im¬mediately back to the office ofHousing in *he Administra’ionBuilding, where she was now toldthat this apartment suddenly wasnot available to a family with chil¬dren.“When Dr. Long, himself, in¬quired of Mr. Larsch of UniversityCity Realty Corporation as to(continued on page four)IIVi ^ EditorialStagg gift established“Announcement was madeSunday (by the Universityof Chicago) of the establish¬ment of the Amos AlonzoStagg scholarship in hishonor.“Proceeds will be used tofinance a full-tuition, fullroom-and-board scholarship for a male member of Chi¬cago senior class. The awardwill be based on scholarshipstanding, leadership quali¬ties, character, and physicalfitness.”from the Sun-TimesTennis, anyone?Classified Ads Sociology of a jury-tableJury foremen are “most frequently selected from one of the two persons seated at theends of the table,” and “proprietor and manager class persons took seats at the end posi¬tions about 15 per cent more frequently than would be expected under random distribu¬tion,” according to a University of Chicago professor.The above facts are from a re¬port by Fred L. Strodtbeck, asso¬ciate professor in the departmentsof sociology and of psychology,entitled “The social dimensions ofa twelve-man jury table.”The data for the report camefrom a study of 69 experimentaljury deliberations carried out un¬der standardized conditions. Theobservations, though, could apply of acts originated by position(based on 29 juries).“Position For Cent ofTotal ActsEnd 10.0End 10.0Corner 7.5Flank 7.8Middle 8.4”Further evidence of the impor¬tance of the end and middle posi¬tions are seen in the following: “Half of Ihe jurors in each juryresponded to the question, whichfour of your fellow jurors reallyhelped the group arrive at its de¬cision?’ and the remaining halfresponded: ‘Which four of yourfellow-jurors w'ould you best liketo have serving if you were ontrial?’The combined results were asfollows: End, 300; corner, 241;flank, 248; and middle, 274.IGARETTESr«S TOBACCOU* <KING“He has your ears, Bernie.”21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!AGED MILD. BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD -THEY SATISFYTeaching Opportunitiesin East AfricaTeachers College, ColumbiaUniversity, is recruiting '62college graduates for second¬ary school teaching in Tan¬ganyika, Kenya, Uganda,and Zanzibar.They will join 150 Americans alreadyserving in East Africa.Openings exist in Physics, Chemistry,Biology, Mathematics, English, His¬tory, and Geography. Upon com¬pletion of training, candidates willreceive 2-year appointments as sala¬ried education officers.For further information, write:TEACHERS FOR EAST AFRICAP.O. Box 850, Teachers College, Columbia Univ.New York 27, New YorkFor RentSleeping rooms available. Reasonablerent. Convenient to campus. Kitchenprivileges. Must be used to childrenand pets. DO 3-1941.Rooms For Rent: 54th and Dorchester.FA 4-0213. Kitch. priv., privacy. $14a week.5 room home in Mich, dunes. Privatebeach. June 15 to July 14. Call OR5-6868.Wanted and ServicesPART TIME HELP WANTED. Work 3evenings a week and Saturdays. Carnecessary. $2 an hour. Opportunity for full time summer work. Phone OL6-3517 after 6 pm.Typing: reasonable, rapid. accurate.Special RUSH service. Call Rona Rosen¬blatt or Karen Borchers. NO 7-3609.Ride wanted in June to Alaska. CallMU 4-22 72 between 11 pm and 8:30am any time.Graduate student wanted to assist per¬son with statistical work involved in athesis. Call VI 1-0295.PersonalsTake an Aardvark home to lunch.Available at the Book Nook, Book¬store, and Woodworth’s.Dear God, life is Hell!VITALIS® KEEPS YOUR HAIR NEAT ALL DAY WITHOUT GREASE!Greatest discovery since the comb! Vitalis with V-7®, thegreaseless grooming discovery. Keeps your hair neat all daywithout grease-and prevents dryness, too. Try Vitalis today. to social situations other than(hose of jury deliberations, suchas a dinner party or a boardmeeting. .Strodtbeck felt that the ten¬dency to appoint one of the endjurors as foreman “is a clear indi¬cation that the jurors felt thatthere was some intrinsic ‘proper¬ty’ about the foreman being at theend of the table. . . .“It is even possible that a moveto select someone other than aperson at the end of the tablewould be perceived as a rejectionof the person at the end. . . .”Although proprietors were onlyslightly over represented in theend positions, “ . . . they werestrongly over represented amongIhose chosen as foreman. The in¬dex relating to frequency of choiceby occupation follows: proprietor,1.95; clerical, 0.81; skilled, 0.92;and labor, 0.63.’’It was also noted that "... theend position is significantly differ¬entiated from the other three interms of the average percentageforeign car hospital UC scientist receivesatomic energy awardAnthony L. Turkevich, professor in the departmentof chemistry, has been chosen as one of the five US scien¬tists to receive the Ernest Orlando Lawrence Memorialaward for 1962. .—7 ~~„ . ... ington, D C, is as follows:tt ^W,ard* 41S .gUTfn by the “For significant contributions toUnited States Atomic Energy com- radiochemistry in activation ana-mission. It is presented in the lysis (Q analysis of intranuclearspring of each year to citizens of cascadcS( and lo utilization of ra¬the United States who have made dio choniica, techniques through-recent, especially meritorious con- Qut aloniic energy”tribution to the development, use, Turkevich, 45. came first to theor control of atomic energy. University in 1943 as a researchThe commision is making the chemist. Recause of his excellentaward upon the recommendation background in physics, he occa-of its general advisory committee sionally served as a phvsieist inand with the approval of the the Manhattan project duringPresident. Each recipient will re- world war II.eeive a citation, a medal, and He is a member of the American$.),000. Physical society and the ChemicalThe commission established the society. He has made outstandingaward in December, 1959 to per- contributions in the fields of elecpotuate the memory of the late Iron diffraction of gas molecules,Ernest O. Lawrence, inventor of dielectric properties of organic sol-the cyclotron and director of the ids, and ultraviolet spectroscopyradiation laboratories in Berkeley and radio chemistry,and Livermore which bear hissee page 4 name.Turkcvich’s citation, which willbe presented on April 23, in Wash-The new outrage by the IN and OUT boysthe WORRY BOOKby Robert Benton and Harvey SchmidtAn invaluable guide to the correct'way toworry, with special attention to which wor¬ries are BASIC and which are BAROQUE.With basic illustrations, ONLY $1.95VIKING At bookstores, probably | Today's EventsLecture: humanities 126. "The Poeticsin the Renaissance,” Mr. Weinbe: g,10:30 am. Mandel hall.Episcopal holy communion: Bond chapel,12:00 noon.Lecture series: Some Aspects of Growthin Insects. “Arrested Growth,” V. B.Wigglesworth, F.R.S., professor, de¬partment of zoology, University ofCambridge, England, 4:30 pm, Zoo¬logy 14.Lutheran vespers: Bond chat>e1. 5:05 pm.Hebrew class: Hillel 3:30 and 4:3(1,Rabbi Winograd.United Jewish Student appeal: Alloca¬tors meeting, Hillel house, 5715 S.Woodlawn, 6:30 pm.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship pro¬gram: “Practical Christianity: thoushaft love thy neighbor,” JamesMurk. 7 pm, Ida Noyes Lounge.Seminar: “Modern Arabic politicalthought.” Albert Hourani, St. An¬tony's College, Oxford, 8-10 pm,Cobb 10 2.SIC FLICS 'tt>2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 12, 19621500 students protesting- rrn mrAQAWT Mirdl ” fin/1 slntoj *1. i._ ■ aJIT. PLEASANT, Mich. — orderly,”, and stated that he hopes 6. Most impcSome 1,500 Central Michigan that "a reasonable solution to stu- make the univu.. cfii/tontc dent demands can be reached.” inp’ one’ important—how can we. . . , university an outstand-nniversity students are dem- ?fnt demands can be reached.” ing one?, .1 • i Ho did state that “students willonstrating here this week in haVe to define the|r demands more Maienknecht says that the stu-demands for academic fieedom riearjy before definite action can den**s are being taken seriously,and ‘intellectual stimulation.”The students marched on the be taken.’non if *Foust with a petition signed bybaif the school’s 5,200 studentsasking a student-faculty-adminis¬tration convocation togrievances. discuss although he blames the demons-0. . . ... tration in part on “a little bit ofhome of CMU president Judson ^.* P°ints we^ C1 od by the spring.”Home A petition signers. These include:1. Is there freedom of speech The demonstration has beenon campus? What is the real brewing for some time, accordingpolicy of the administration to- *° university officials. There haveward student publications? been, within the past severafStudent protest is centering ,2\ "’hft is «* definition of ad- -”»»«». *•«?«• <*-•« protesting, demands for increased min>Stration policy toward student the shortening of library hoursaround_ 1 ‘ social probation? and letters blasting administrativeiroedom o 0^,’0Ssl')” a 3. How much control should the Poliey appearing in local news-campus newspaper, CMU Life and universit exert papers.ihe literary magazine, Tempo. In , , 7, , , ^ . ..addition demonstrators complained f,?0'1"™1 f5'0""1 of.,hc slu- .Tw0 'ncld™,s immediately pre-about recent action by the school's .77 *5 the. s T-'l"? I. , d™’°n?'rati“ns’onmm;|tp„ lesponsibility for instilling a which have been dubbed freedomSeveral faculty members have ™ra' ,in 'hc sludents?f ™rches” b/ Moun\ ^casant resUjoinod the student protest accord- . 4' ^hat “ lfh® natareA of dcnt ™e first involved the exciti¬ng to local observers. Although roam/nt of studciats? ,hoy SIon of two artl<;les f™m the 1,tcr;those contacted refused to state troalcd a? ,mmatur? adolescents ary magazine, the other concernedthe exact percent of CMU’s 320 orrasM™ ure individuals? the permanent expulsion of twofaculty members who have joined J' What *£11d?!,e !?. mak<? male and wo, lemale .stude"^with the students, the number was ^ university fu fill its obligation caught by local police in what■ said to be “considerable ” “We are for thc students intellectual dc- were called ‘compromising posi-.. . , velopment? tions” in a local motel,expecting several resignations andforced resignations if this thingcontinues,” according to a MountPleasant newspaperman.Student demonstrations will con¬tinue until a definite date for ameeting with President Foust issot, according to observers. Amotorcade to Michigan’s capital,Lansing, is planned for Saturday,unless definite action is set. Conference to be heldon urban lower classA conference on “The urban lower class” will be heldthis Saturday under the sponsorship of UC’s Committee onAccording to Gilbert Maicn- Human Development,knecht, director of public inform- The morning session will begin at 10 am and will includeation for CMU, Foust is willing to talks on “The culture of poverty.”.Ittlk to students in the immediate The first lecture will be given by lectures will be given atfuture. However, prior commit- All,son Davts, professor m the de- afternoon scssi whicl, willments in Lansing have kept him partment of education at UC. ^ . at 2 nmfrom meeting with students at thc Oscar Lewis, professor of anth- *moment. ropology from the University of Robert J. Havighurst, profes-Maienkneoht said that the dem- Illinois, will give the second sor in P C’s department of educa-onstrations have been “completely lecture. ti°n and in the committee onhuman development will lecture onSee dropped charges* erty” will be the topic of I. Z.BATON ROUGE, La., April Diamond who was then in jail on Freedman, foundations fund re-1 [ T}ie attorney for three the criminal anarchy charges, search professor in the Univer-* civil rights field workers who Diamond was arrested on Feb- sity’s department of psychiatry,are under indictment here said ruary 1 Just before he was to djre^ta0Crraof ThT^Chicagotoday that he expects to be able f£ja£ °Rou"^ He community trust will speak on’i;afns\\tmmdropSi0US C Investigating charges ' that .‘The urban lower class ^ - itsThe three field workers are with students at Southern had been ex- imPac1 on socldl vve are‘the Student Nonviolent Coordina- Pclled for participating in sit-m Chairman of the morning ses-cting committee; (SNCC) two are demonstrations last fall. sion is Robert D. Hess, chairmancharged with “criminal anarchy” As things now stand Diamond of the committee on human dc-against the state of Louisiana, the still faces charges of disturbing velopment and associate profes-third is charged with six mis- the peace, unlawful assembly, va- sor in the department of educa-demeanors. Conviction on the char- graney, and trespassing. Charges tion; Alton A. Linford, dean ofgos of criminal anarchy carry ten of vagrancy were set against Me- the school of social service ad-year prison sentences. Dew and Zellner along with the ministration of UC will be chair-Charges of criminal anarchy anarchy charges. man of the afternoon session.secretary'*'for'sNCo'were drop£dsat the end of March. But Diamondstill Faces trial on May 8, onlesser charges. Jones expects sim¬ilar charges against Charles Mc-Dew and Robert Zellner will bedropped by the Louisiana districtcourt or the Louisiana Supremecourt.Jones explained that “the statesupreme court is changing itsview” on the legality of “criminalanarchy” charges. Jones con.ends'hat the federal government has“pre-empted” the field of law onanarchy charges. The state courtshave no grounds to try anyone onsuch charges.Jones feels his legal groundsare sound. “I am more comfort¬able (of getting the anarchy char-* Kps dropped) now than I havebeen” he explained. Jones addedthat he is sure he can appealstate court action to the federalcourts if it is unfavorable.On April 18 the attorney will'ile a motion with the Louisianadistrict court to drop the narchycharges against McDew and Zell¬ner. If unsuccessful he will appeal10 'he state supreme court.At present both McDew is outon bail of $4,200. His bail was* reduced when the criminal anarchycharges were dropped. Previouslybail was $12,000.McDew and Zeller were arrestedon February 17 when they visited Pre-Inventory Sale Continues *Typewriters - Tape RecordersPhotographic ItemsSee the fine values which still remainUniversity of Chicago Bookstore z5802 Ellis Avenue Zforeign car salessee page 4 r 11 it i: iJewish Cultural Programs for American College StudentsOFFERED BY JEWISH ZIONIST ORGANIZATION"AWSPI" American Work Study ProgramIn IsraelLIVE - WORK - STUDYON A KIBBUTZFOR 6 MONTHS OR LONGER DEPARTURE SEPT. 3. 1962• TOTAL COST: $795.00 •12"ISr Israel Summer Inst.7 WEEKS OFTOURS-SEMINARSKIBBUTZ LIFEJUNE 27 thru AUGUST 14. 1962TOTAL COST: $850.00■ Clip and Mail To:I Youth Dept., American Zionist Council, 515 Park Ave., N.Y. 22, N.Y.■ Yes! I am interested in: 1 □ AWSPI; 2 □ ISI; 3 □ ULPAN3 At The College Accredited"Ulpan" Hebrew Inst.SPEAK HEBREWIN 1 SUMMERJULY 4, thru AUGUST 19, 1962At .The South Branch HotelSouth Branch, N. J.TOTAL COST: $295.00| NAMEi ADDRESS immOr Campus withMaxShulman(Author of “J Was a Teen-age Dwarf, “The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.)EDUCATIONAL TV: ITS CAUSEAND CUREA great deal of nonsense has been written about educationaltelevision. Following is my contribution:It has lieen said that television allots no desirable viewinghours to educational and intellectual programs. This is simplynot so. For instance, you can see “The Kant and Hegel Hour”every day at 4 a.m. This excellent show is followed at 5 a.m.by “Kierkegaard Can Be Fun.” For such lazy scamps as lieabed beyond that hour, there is a splendid program on Sundaymornings at 7:15 called “Birds of Minnesota, Except Duluth.”So much for the myth that TV gives no prime time to educa¬tional programs. Now let us deflate another canard: that TVis not eager to inject intellectual content in all its programs.If you have sat, as I have sat, with a television planningboard, you would know that the opposite is true. I was priv¬ileged recently, to witness a meeting of two of TV’s topmostprogram developers—both named Binkie Tattersall.“Binkie,” said Binkie to Binkie, “if there is one thing Iam bound and determined, it’s that we’re going to have intel¬lectual content in next season’s programs.”“Right!” replied Binkie. “So let us put on our thinkingcaps and go to work.”“I forgot my thinking cap in Westport,” said Binkie, “butI have a better notion: let us light a Marlboro.”“But of course!” cried Binkie. “Because the best way tothink is to settle hack and get comfortable, and what is thecigarette that lets you settle back and get comfortable?”“I said Marlboro,” answered Binkie. “Weren’tyou listening?’;“A full-flavored smoke is Marlboro,” declared Binkie.“Rich tobacco, pure white filter, a choice of pack or Ixix.What is bettor than a Marlboro?”“A Marlboro and a match,” replied Binkie. “Got one?”Binkie had, and so they lit their good Marlboros and settledback and got comfortable and proceeded to cerebrate.“First of all,” said Binkie, “we are going to avoid all the oldcliches. We w ill have no domestic comedies, no westerns, noprivate eyes, no deep sea divers, no doctors, and no lawyers.’’“Right!” said Binkie. “Something offbeat.”“That’s the word—offbeat,” said Binkie.They smoked and cerebrated.“You know,” said Binkie, “there has never been a seriesabout the Coast and Geodetic Survey.”“Or about glass blowers,” said Binkie.They fell into a long, torpid silence.PYou know,” said Binkie, “there’s really nothing wTrong with!y.r> ^d aJeepa cliche situation—provided, of course, it’s offbeat.”“Right!” said Binkie. “So let’s say we do a series about aguy who’s a family man with a whole bunch of lovable kidsw ho play-merry pranks on him.”“Yeah, and he’s also a cowboy,” said Binkie.“And a deep sea diver,” said Binkie.■ ‘With a law degree,” said Binkie.“Plus an M.D.,” said Binkie.‘‘And he runs a detective agency,” said Binkie.“Binkie,” said Binkie to Binkie, “we’ve done it again!” \They shook hands silently, not trusting themselves to sjieak, :and lit Marlboros and settled back to relax, for Marlboro is a jcigarette not only for cerebration, but for settling back with¬in fact, for all occasions and conditions, all times and climes,all seasons and reasons, all men and women. ® ms Max simiman jThis column is sponsored—sometimes nervously—by themakers of Marlboro, who invite you to try their fine filtercigarettes, available in king-size pack or Hip-top box attobacco counters in all 50 stales.Within the cultural and sophisticated atmosphere ofHYDE PARKThis elegant two-apartment brick building, 6 rooms each, 1ceramic baths. Spacious rooms designed for gracious living.Replacement value: $50,000. Full price, $2(3,500. Call RE 1-8444SUMMER JOBSin EUROPETHE ‘new’ WAY TOSEE & ‘live’ EUROPEFOR SUMMER JOBS OR TOURS WRITE. AMERICAN STUDENTINFORMATION SERVICE, 22 Avenue de la Liberre, Luxembourg City,Grand Duchy of LuxembourgApril 12, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Tareytondeliversthe flavor. "tonytonDVAL FILTER DOES IT!ACTIVATED CHARCOALINNER FILTERPURE WHITEOUTER FILTERApril 12. 1962IMPFRFFPT Idealers In:• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambretta'}-S ** ‘5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 •. 71 st* ' mi 3-3113bob lestermg psychiatristDorm food investigated Hutchins speaks at UCAn investigation has been undertaken in order to as¬certain whether mishandling of the food at New dormscaused an attack of stomach ailment last week.The investigation was initiated after a New dormsresident reported to Billings lastWednesday with what was diag- the same evening but none re¬nosed as an acute case of gas- ported to the hospital.troenteritis, a disease which Miss Lylas Kay, director ofcauses high fever and mild ab- (RH&C) which is in charge ofdominal pain. the food, asked that as a generalThe 15th lecture honoringAccording to Dr. Willard De policy she be notified if thereYoung, chief of the medical staff are any cases of stomach ailment,of the Student Health service, thecause of the disease has not beenfound.He stated that there were noindications of food poisoning.Thus far, there have been notraces of disease-carrying bacter- an atomic scientist who sacri-m lound ln <*ny of the lood cul* ficed his own life in a radia-tures taken, he reported. ,. ,It is expected that the investi- accident to save sevengation will be complete by this colleagues is scheduled to beevening. In addition to testing given today in Eckhart 133.food cultures, all handlers of food The lecture, to be given byat the New dorms cafeteria are University of Connecticut physicsbeing checked to see if Ihey are professor Edgar Everhart, maycarriers of bacteria which might be the last in a series honoringhave caused the disease. Louis A. Slotin, who perished fol-Five other residents of New lowing a laboratory accident atdorm reportedly suffered some- Los Alamos, New Mexico,what milder stomach pains on Slotin exposed himself to a (continued from page 1)interruption and an embarrass¬ment. And when they do takean interest in education it is totrain individuals in their subject— this is the cult of specialism.”It is for this reason that UCcould make no progress in itsundergraduate program until theCollege was made autonomous(set up with an independent fac¬ ulty and allowed to award de¬grees).“Only when you have a facultythat cares about education shouldthe university take up the taskof liberal education,” he said.“At the University of Chicago thiscondition was met, and it should,although it never will, be met atall universities. And we can neverhave an Intellectual community inthis country until we have trueprograms of liberal education.”Memorial lecture set for todaylethal dose of atomic rediation in1946 by taking apart a run-awayassembly of critical material withhis own hands in order to savethe lives of seven colleagues.In the nine days following theaccident he was visited by doctorsand scientists from all over thecountry, who examined liim to de¬termine the then largely unknowneffects of atomic radiation and totry to save his life.Following his death, his col¬leagues at Los Alamos and theUniversity of Chicago initiated theUpset, Goodman hit UC policyPaul Goodman and Seymour wanted to retain those people whoLipset Tuesdav night criti- wou,d 1,11 participated in a masscized the University’s means “^odus” if Negroes were to moveof attaining a stable integratedcommunity. Goodman then briefly gave theFollowing his lecture on “The floor to Lipset, who commentedacademic community,” Goodman, that UC has ignored the problemin response to an audience ques- for a long time although it wastion criticized the University’s pointed out many times.“deliberate slowness ol the last Insead of adopting long-term26 years” as false and unnecessary. pIans he said. the Universilv has(loodman said -t hat neighborhoodneighborhoorace problems were called to UC’sattention when in1 taught nero\ ear-' ago.“All those years,” lie said, “theUniversity should have been chal¬lenging the community.” He com¬mented that he would not' have tried to maintain a “garrison”around itself.The garrison will not last andLipset, as education and institu¬tion cannot “separate values andsolve basic prpblems of society.”The garrison cannot last andNegroes will move into the area."My suspicion is,” he said, “thatby 1990 this will be the leadingNegro university in the world. ’ Slotin Memorial fund, to bringdistinguished scientists to thecampus to lecture. Past lecturei-shave included four Nobel prizewinners.Tomorrow's lecture will be en¬titled “Violent collisions betweenions and atoms.”Frat and dorm ballchampionship wonThe finals in the four divisionsof the intramural volleyball tour¬nament were played at Bartlettgym Tuesday night. Psi Upsilonbeat Phi Sigma Delta for the Fra¬ternity championship, while TuftsNorth took the College house ti¬tle by defeating East IV. In the‘B’ League, Phi Sigma Delta ‘B’beat Psi Upsilon ‘B’, while Inter¬national house beat Laughlin forthe divisional championship.Tonight at 8 o’clock in Bartlettgym. Psi Upsilon will face TuftsNorth, while Phi Sigma Delta ’B'meets International house. Thewinners of those two matches willplay at 9 pm for the all-Universi-ty title. Hutchins concluded his speechby saying that “If educational'leadership can come from sonu*.where - perhaps from this uni vet-sity - America may yet ho'corri*the school of the world, as Athenswas the school of Hellas.”In a question and answer p,riod following his lecture, Hutchinssaid that although he sees somrencouraging signs in Americanhigher education, “it is too earl\to say if they are symptomatic ofany important change.”One of these signs, he pointedout is the abolition of thp rony-ial reading course at the Uni\er-sity of Illinois. This move, he-be¬lieves, will put the toaciiiireading hack to the elemental.)schools, where it rightly belongs;Despite developments such asthis, Hutchins noted that “Thquality of education in this count-ry can rise up only If the peoplewant it to get there. You c.mpoint, of course, to our educa¬tional humiliation after Sputnikhut that lasted for only aboutsix months.”To another question Hutininreplied that “Adult educationthe greatest educational opp =;nnity of the next 26 years - gi. tpioneeering leadership in thi- l'lis required.”846 students voteEight hundred and forty six.students voted today in this >car.’student government electionsis somewhat more than one hallof the total voters in last yearelection. Balloting will CO!for two more da vs.Charge den(continued from page 1)whether there might bo suitableapartments fot him to rent, hewas answered with the fantastic;statement that the Company didn’town or manage any suitable familyapartments.”Brown ■ 1 out tint'CORE’S statements “are innacuratevin the sense that they do not saywhat happened.He points out that upon inquiry,the Longs were told not that “thecompany didn i own or manageany suitable family apartments,”hut were on the contrary offeredanother, larger apartment at 6619Drexel - in a building with sixflats, five of which arc white.Mrs. Long corroborated this hutstated that she was offered theapartment which rents for $120' only because the persons concernedwere aware of her need to keepher rent below $100. She addedthat she did not feel she neededa six room apartment.Upon her rejection ol- thioilerwhich both Broun and Wide as¬sert still stands, should she wishto take advantage of it - Mrs.Long was referred to Wol in - Lev¬in real estate corporation.She stated, however, that shedoes not intend to go to anotherreal estate office. “I have beenmade aware that if you are whiteyou look at one list, and if youare colored you look at another.”DUAL FILTERSJoProduct of <j£ . '/mtxiean tji &ceo-^cnyiany — tju&ue£<r is our middle name Q * T.C+ ^Mareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!*says Virgilius (Vinegar Virgil) Cassius, noble Praetorianguardsman, as he prepares for another glorious parade.“Don’t run around in Circus looking for a good smoke,” saysVinegar Virgil. “Tareyton’s one filter cigarette that reallydelivers de gustibus. Be one of the cohorts and carpe diemwith Tareyton."v v.