llarOOH diSCUSSIOIIViews on press d.,, Allen quits law schoolITT a Francis Allen, professor in the law school, has re-■ ■ ■ ■ • i i •Sharply differing views of register as a subversive organ- stated, "who do not like our free-rt freedom and responsi- Nation under the McCarran act. doms.” He pointed to the Mc-h lltv Of the contemporary Secondly, they are attempting to Carthy erapun.'___ jail our editor, James Jackson, when a lotAmerican P ” and to intimidate the other mem-esnled last night in a UC discus- ber§ of our ataff*sion ot Press re ®m* (Jackson was recently sentencedParticipating in the discussion tQ gjx mont^ in jail for refusingwere Irving Ddhard, former «ii- t<) tell a federal grand jUry abouttonal editor of the St. Lonis Post- apege(j “subversive” activi- _ - _ .Dispatch, Sam Kushner, editor of ties He ig currentjy free on bail were considered to be “goodof the early 1950’s,a lot of newspapers wereslow* to catch on to ‘‘the threatto our freedom.” Early in thisperiod, he noted, ‘‘most of ournewspapers treated McCarthynicely,” refusing to print unfavor¬able articles and playing up whatthe Midwest edition of The pen(jing appeal).Worker, and Howard Ziff, reix>rter «In Th<, Worker case» Kushnerfor the Chicago Daily News. n0|erj ‘-(be usually sensitive pressModerating was UC professor of jn jbis country was silent. Whenlaw Malcolm Sharp. a grand jury stayed fhe executionWhile Kushner attacked news- of Jackson’s sentence, only onepapers today as "a pale replica of newspaper (the Washington Post)the fighting press,” News reporter came to his defense.”Ziff defended what he consideredthe ‘‘fine record” of both his ownpaper and the other Chicagodailies.Press muck criticizedZilf opened the discussion, stat¬ing that ‘‘Criticism of the presstoday is a big thing,” and thatthe deficiencies of_ newspapers points.” signed his position to join the University of Michiganfaculty.Allen, a specialist in criminal and constitutional law,will leave the University at the —— *end of the current academic year.He will assume the title of pro¬fessor of law at Michigan.Before his appointment to UCin 1956, Allen served as a profes¬sor in the Harvard law school. Agraduate of Cornell college in Mt.Vernon, Iowa, he also attended pointed to Harvard.Northwestern university and waslater law’ clerk to Chief JusticeFrederic M. Vinson of the Sup¬reme Court.After that Allen served on thefaculty’ of Northwestern from1948 until 1953, when he was ap-British papers betterIn Great Britain, Kushner said,“the most respected papers in thecountry have come to the defenseof The Worker. They are speakingwith a kind of voice which wehave not heard in our country,even from the Washington Post.The foi-oea 41—.* e<M»t »i<«- ex¬press in this country’ are encour¬aged by the inaction of those whobelieve in freedom but who donot fight for it.”Contemporary newspapers, Kush-“are not fulfilling theour nation’s communi- Vol. 70 — No. 83 University of Chicago, Thursday. April If, If62 .SSw 31ISI sponsors KendallPolitical“Barry Goldwater is a.yceu mown out ot proportion. He noted that despite“undeclared control” of newscoverage by the governmentthrough postal regulations and insome cases by advertisers, there ner added“has been a great liberalization needs ofof these insidious restrictions re- ties.” For example, he stated that ‘conservative’, Hubert Hum<en,|y ” in Chicago “there are four news- phrey a ‘liberal’. NationalZiff attacked what he called papers, two publishers, and one Review is‘conservative’ New"newspaper complicity in govern- policy inflicted on the people of Republic is ‘liberal’. Current’usagemental secrecy,” stating that in the city. It is hard to find a majorsome cases the papers have agreed question on which all four news-lo keep certain information con- papers do not speak with one divisions sharpfidential until the government de¬sired to release it.Advertiser control of the dailieshas diminished a great deal oflate, Ziff said. He stated that“Attempts at control have beenrebuffed; advertisers realized thata newspaper which expresses itselffreely will be respected, and theywant the readers to respect andbelieve the papers.”The main problem in fi«B*i»son tite press, Ziff said,is lo realize where the restrictionsWorker editor Kushner disa¬greed sharply stating that “De¬fense of the freedom of the pressin the United States today is un-loi Innately noticeable by its ab¬sence.”Worker as exampleHe offered as an examplethe case of The Worker, which isexpected to be indicted soon underthe McCarran act (that act wouldforce ihe paper to state on itsmailing wrappers that it is Com¬munist propaganda).“The attack on The Worker istwofold,” Kushner said. “First,they are trying to force us to implies a line between conserva¬tism and liberalism; yet, nobodyseems to know where the line isor what it means.”Willmore Kendall, an editor ofNational Review, and a politicalscience professor at Georgetownuniversity, Washington, came togrips with the question “what isconservatism?” last night in alecture sponsored by the Inter-col¬legiate Society of Individualists.“Gettysburg’s most distinguishedUC accepts 900 of 1650voice.When “corporate interests” areinvolved in any issue, Kushnersaid, newspapers do not handle theissue fairly or completely. “Thereis a lot of hot news copy floatingaround that just isn’t beinghandled.” he said.'Press not forthright'Final speaker on the Maroon-sponsored ponpl was Irving Dil¬liard- Although basically defend¬ing much of the current presscoverage of major events Dilliarddid say that “The press is notdealing forthrightly with thethreats of our basic freedoms thatexist on all sides today. Theseare major threats, threats thateffect all aspects of our lives.”A leading defender of civil lib¬erties and author of a soon to bepublished book on Supreme Courtjustice Hugo Black, Dilliard add¬ed that “Those who. do not prac¬tice the freedom of the press donot deserve it. If we prove not todeserve it, it will not bebefore we do not have it.”There are a number of people 200 more applications than werein the United States, Dilliard received in 1960. gentleman farmer” says that thereis no line, others have given theline a religious character, and stillothers have drawn the line oneconomic issues or on the questionof effective opposition to commu¬nism. Kendall said.These views are whatwould call “vulgarism,” he added.But, “like Plato,” he used them asa jumping-off point for his ownformulation of the issue.The line is a “line of battle,” hesaid, “which stretches throughevery issue of American politics,from top to bottom.”The battle started in the 1860’sSome 900 acceptanceswere mailed out last weekto applicants for admissionto next year’s entering- class,announced Charles D. O'Connell,director of admissions.In addition, 130 students wereoffered places on the waiting list.O’Connell estimates that about80 or 90 of these students willeventually be admitted.There were 1650 applications inlong, all, a decline of more than 200from last year. This is still aboutWage adjustment criticized O’Connell said he anticipates anentering class of about 550 stu¬dents. About 575 students enteredlast fall, and 608 the autumn be¬fore.When asked about the decreasein applications, O'Connell citedseveral factors, which, combined,offer at least a partial explana¬tion, he said.He mentioned the $300 tuitionincrease of the past year. In ad¬dition, the College required for thefirst time the College EntranceExamination board writing sample.He said that this year’s appli¬cation deadline was one monthearlier than last year’s. UC cata¬logues were not distributed untilNovember.Albert Rees, chairman ofih o economics department,yesterday criticized the man¬ner in which wage adjust¬ments are made. He also dis¬cussed last week’s steel price.settlement.Wages should not be tied to iheproductivity of the industry in¬volved or to the national wagekvel, Rees told the executive pro¬gram club of the graduate schoolof business.Talking about last week’s steelpi ice increase, Rees noted thatthe elimination of the increasehas been improperly reported.More emphasis should be given toHie role of some members of the•dod industry in keeping down theprice level after US steel raisedthe price by $6 per ton last week,he said. as a “war of aggression” by theliberals, he said. Until about thirtyyears ago, it was fought as aseries of skirmishes on both sides.In the last ten to thirty years,however, the Liberal forces haveunited under a “unified generalPlato staff.” with a “single line of sup¬ply” and “clearly crystallizedaims.”Until very recently, the conser¬vatives have been scattered, fight¬ing local battles, with no concep¬tion of the whole line, he said.The fundamental question in hismind is the “destiny of America;"whether we will follow the ideasof the “liberal revolution” or theideas of our “founding fathers.”The liberals support new moodsand orders, while the conserva¬tives resist them, he said. For themost part, the conservatives havebeen successful in Americanpolitics, Kendall believes.As an example of the “success¬ful resistance to the liberal rev¬olution,” he cited the New Repub¬lic's lamenting of the fact that.Congress had failed to close in¬come tax loopholes which “al¬lowed the rich to get away withpaying only 40 per cenl of theirincome in taxes.”“Socialism, for which everyLiberal yearns in his secret heart,is dead.” he claimed.The liberals seek an “egalitar¬ian” society, not one based on theequality principle of the Declara¬tion of Independence, he said-Egalitarianism goes beyond theidea that all men are createdequal, with equal rights underErratumi he picture appearing on thehont page of yesterday’sMaroon was not that ' of SolTMx, professor of anthropology,as "’as stated. It was a picture°f Carl Braden, one of the de¬fendants in the recent contempt1 Of Congress case (the Housei c°rnrnittee on un-Americanactivties) before the SupremeI Court Too much attention, on the otherhand, has been given to the federalgovernment’s role in keeping downprices, Rees added.Perhaps the best way of hand¬ling long-term conflict betweenUS Steel and the federal govern¬ment, he suggested, is to break upUS Steel into three or four sepa¬rate companies.US Steel now produces about30% of the nation’s steel. Break¬ing it up would free the companyfrom being a lightning rod forthe wrath of the federal govern¬ment, Rees explained. US Steelisn’t likely to agree to break upvoluntarily, however, he added.In discussing the genei-al role oflarge unions Rees explained thathe doesn’t regard breaking up theUnited Steel Workers union orothers as a good idea. The resultwould be an alienation of the unionmembers.As long as the unions are largeand powerful, ho said, the unionmembers will have a part in theAmerican political and economicprocess. If they lost this feelingof participation in the nation’s af¬fairs they might stop supportingthe American economic system,Rees explained. This has happenedin Europe, he added.Government intervention in thesteel wage settlement earlier inthe month was praised by Rees.It was “a notable achievement, one that Secretary (of Labor) Gold¬berg and President Kennedy canbe proud of,” he said.He noted, however, that the rel¬atively small increase in steelwages must be viewed in the per¬spective of several years of wageincreases in the industry whichhave not been met by propor¬tionate increases in the price ofsteel.It is easy for the federal govern¬ment to bring pressure to bearon the steel industry because it iscentralized, Rees said. But if thegovernment tried to apply thesame method to other industrieswhich are more spread out great¬er difficulty would be experienced.Roes predicted that those in¬dustries w'hich can be controlledfrom Washington wall be. The re¬sult will be an inequitable w’agestructure nationally, he added.In discussing wage increaseswhich are tied to rising nationalaverage w'ages, Rees noted thatif this method is used to evaluateincreases, necessary mobility with¬in the economy will be hampered.Some industries are more valuableto the country than others andmust pay wages above the averageto attract workers and to serve thethe nation best. The reverse istrue of other industries, he added.Local and specific conditionsmust be taken into account inwage adjustments Roes empha¬sized. By May 1, the candidates’ reply law, and “seeks to force equalitydate, all acceptances should have in every area bv government ac-been acknow ledged, said O’Connell, tion.”Two purveyors of mirth and song sell tickets to theforthcoming Blackfriars' production, "Sing Out SweetRock," to be presented in Mandel hall on April 27, 28. and29. The above shot was taken outside the Eric Leinsdorflecture on Tuesday night; Blackfriars are everywhere.men recommendNeal JohnstonFraternities: tapioca dessert in college mealA recent editorial in thisjournal suggested that all stu¬dents should refrain fromjoining one of the Chicagofraternities, because they allrest “on a basic and perniciousdichotomy. Every person in theworld is either a member of theold frat or not.”“If he is a member,” the edi¬torial continued, “regardless ofall his other qualities, he is ‘in’—otherwise he is out.”By similar illogic, the Chicagocampus itself rests upon a per¬nicious dichotomy. Either a per¬son believes what he reads inthe Maroon’s editorials or hedoesn’t.In this case, if he believed whatthe paper had to say about thefraternities he is out (of theGreek syndrome); if he didn’t be¬lieve it, he is, in all probability,still out.This observation stems fromthe objective fact that only ahandful of Chicago men are mem¬bers of any of the nine or tennational fraternities on campus.Only a handful of this bandmanages to maintain membershipwith the supposedly requisitestraight face, sound heart andsober mind.The Chicago system is small,and while it will hopefully growup and grow better, unlike Topsy,it is not going to grow much big¬ger.In the light of this, it quiteescapes me why anyone wouldget so excited.On this campus the gaudyworld of the. Greeks is about assignificant as a dish of wateredtapioca, and just about as danger¬ous. (And, I might add, just aboutas pleasant for those who enjoythe flavor.)Far from being a wormy in¬ternal force of evil, the fraterni¬ties suffer, if anything, the bland innocence of flaccid impotence.Intrepid first year studentswho braved the wrath of theirfolk-singing fellows and attendedsome of the winter rush smokers,approaching the lucky initiatedbrothers with a mixed modicumof terror and awe can only havebeen struck by the fact that thefraters were equally terrified bythe rushees.No Chicago student, fraternityman or not, can endure the awk¬ward inevitability of the openinggambit, “Would you like to seethe house?” without suffering anear mortal internal blush.True, the fellow who goes onLetter to pledge will encounter an oc¬casionally active member who stillbelieves that pledges should lighthis cigarettes, but one or twowell-placed withering glancesshould suffice to dampen thissmoker’s interior flame.True, too, that the houses arestill hemmed in by the neo-mythicneolithic mental meanderings oftheir founders; the secret hand¬shake, the secret ritual, and allthe other flotsom and jetsamwhich drifted in from the lastcentury to clutter up the pledgemanual still remain. But they re¬main irrelevant.Show me a frat man who’sCORE raps coverage ever employed his secret hand¬clasp and I’ll show you a Big Tentransfer..It must be admitted that thesystem does provide a haven fora few jejune juveniles who clingtenaciously to some privatevision, half Arthurian and halfde Dadian. But these peoplewould be equally pathetic in anyother context and not nearly asinsignificant.The fraternity system, as awhole, nationally and locally, hasyet to adequately meet and solvea good many of its problems,such as local autonomy, discrim¬inatory clauses and practices, in¬tellectual orientation, etc.Bui, the Chicago system re¬mains at once one of the rncTstadvanced in the country and oneof the most harmless. A Chicago fraternity house re¬mains a pleasant place to live forpeople who find it pleasant tolive there, an irrelevancy for p<>0.pie who don’t. To return to thenow gritty tapioca metaphor,some people find their fraternitya pleasant dessert, a fitting topto the more serious business ofbeing a student.Others find it more of a barrendesert. Everyone finds there somesort of just dessert.Fortunately, people at this in¬stitution are free to pick then-preference. There is no socialcompulsion or necessity to join.But, to return to the originalpoint, there really was no neces¬sity to engage in a fearful open-mouth froth at the spectralimage. The shadow is cast in thelight you choose to look at it.To the editor:It is unfox-tunate that it wouldbe easy to gather, from theMaroon’s coverage of the allegeddiscrimination against the Longfamily by the University, that theUniversity has satisfactorily ex¬plained away the whole problem.Admittedly, they have presentedsome wild, rather distorted, ration¬alizations, but these are not ac¬ceptable to either the Long familyor UC CORE and neither shouldthey be to those concerned withthe evils of racial discrimination.Below is a letter, written toPresident Beadle by Mrs. Long,which I would like to bring toyour attention to illustrate ourcontentions.Respectfully.Bruce RoopaDortUC COREDear President Beadle:This letter is to rectify state¬ments as published in the ChicagoMaroon, dated April 12, 1962. Thearticle as published misrepresents the true facts which I now re¬capitulate. Mr. Larsch and Mrs.Tileston were both aware of thenumber in my family. During thetime Mr. Larsch was showing methe apartment, we discussed thechildren, in fact, Mr. Larsrh of¬fered suggestions on how I couldarrange the apartment for sleep¬ing convenience. We also discussedat this time my husband’s intern¬ship, where he was going. whenhe would be leaving, how long hewould be gone.Mr. Larsch exnressed no douhtsat this time about my leasing theapartment. He suggested T si^n thelease as soon as possible. Therewas no lease s!nrnine interview.He changed his attitude after dis¬covering my huriv>nd’s race. Hereferred me to Mrs. Tileston tomake her aware of this fact. Tcalled her at his request and notvoluntarily as the article ex¬pressed.If I was really denied the anart-ment because of the size of mvfamily, why was Ihe apartmentshown to me?If Mr. Larsch had expresseddoubts at the time he was show¬ing me the anartment this letterwould not have heen necessary.Sincerelv yours,Mrs. Walter L. LoraREMEMBFS:for service,foreign carhospital 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 Andy SteinEditorial staff: Hayden Boyd, Ronnie Brenner, Clarence Bryant, HowardCarter, Nancy Dier, Marianne Giesel, Sharon Goldman, Richard Got¬tlieb, Harriet Gorov, Sue Guggei.Woim. Bruce Jacobs, Joe Kasper,Robin Kaufman, Joe Kelly, Jerry Kodish, Dennis Mr.™Ken Meyer, Dick Montague, Bob Kass, Rona Rubin, Murray Schacher,Vicky Sheifman, Judy Shell, Maryann Taranowski, Lorraine Thomas,Doug Thornton, Gene Vinogradoff, John Williams Donna Wilson.Production staff: Steve Becker, Elaine Gilbert, Joan Levinson, Gail Rubin,Mike Silverman, John H. Smith.Sports staff: Dan Baer, Mike Canes, Rich Epstein, Steve Jubyna, SamSchnall.Business staff: William Basil Basile, Marie Gottschalk, Jeanette Sharpe,R. A. Wilson.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 a/I correspondence to:Chicago MAROON, Ida Noyes hall. 1212 E. 59 street, Chicago 37, Illinois.Telephones: Ml 3-0800, extensions 3265 and 3266. Deadline for all calendarcopy is 4 pm of the day before publication. Deadline for all editorial andadvertising copy is 4 pm of the day two days before pob/ication. Subscriptionby mail is $4 per year. The MAROON is distributed free at various point-around the Chicago campus.to other men@Id$pice AFTER SHAVE, LOTIONCool, cleon Old Spice After Shave lotion alwaysgets you off to a fast, smooth start. Feels just asgood between shaves os it does offer shaving.Rates A-OK with dates. 1.00 ond 1.75 plus tax.S M U l- T O NNEW INDIVIDUALISTREVIEWAnd TheINTERCOLLEGIATE SOCIETYOF INDIVIDUALISTSPresent A Seminar On"Economic Planningin the U. S.Promise vs. PerformanceDR. MILTON FRIEDMANUC ECONOMICS DEP'T.DR. DON PAARLBERGPURDUE ECONOMICS DEP'T.DEAN W. ALLEN WALLISUC BUSINESS SCHOOLDR. GEORGE STIGLERUC ECONOMICS DEP'T.DR. AARON DIRECTORUC LAW SCHOOLSAT., APRIL 21. SOC. SCI. 1229:00 A.M. to 5:45 P.M.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 19, 1962HOOIIVW09VDIHD•Z961'61l!jdV •ojoqjjnj^stR»poitioif)opainBiaBuiyowsJ9])Jq *Bui)sn)dapaqvpuyjtuoanolittnpfijnj)noli;/a;aaipun ‘sjayrnuojoq)joj\[aqjjossauisnqaq\si‘lid/aod;ou‘q)tuj[ *** ttBiuimisXBIV2961® •podspoodvfoyaaynpununoumyjnadBnso.naypig ‘poysuaaqaanyp/Buuay‘sjoagpfopoo;) :qdiqidap;).iounuisiq; pasoduroaxaq;a3o;uaq;pm?;ojnpoixaAdyaiigpm:uoxAg •;xnaquaqoxqnjopaipput? ouioguipautTHu.j.1s;naxiog‘jojunoaai[^jodo;aq;joaounqaas ^upjnooaaqjodiqsiuvojsaq;;nqaapoq;;nq;|p:msossbmoq ;nq‘00;o3o;pau;ajnaji'punpingo;oiuoqoSnssndpoqoocj /qa;Bipaimu;Aaq;poxnasos;o3uoxAgpunXajpqg‘;dixasnunai oq;Suipnaxuodg'ut^suayundgo;ojaipusuiooxxaq;ouno;ui ;uavvaqsqtrt[>ua;;iq3uiaqjopaxi;os;o3AjinugAayaqgAxnjy •apqvaayaaiBpundayssiypundayBuypuy *9fidcnpunsnssiiuay/y)wiaiuoyBopojaaoj/ :uiaodsnournj siqa;o.mpun‘AxnjyajiMsiqq;iMauioqpa.Cn;s‘odA;oqsatuop ©joinv.‘Aa||oqg•AoiqBQ’aiuuypun‘uoSnxyjoauixai(;BQ‘ni3xog cizaxanqq;i.ndnqoo;‘unui^saipnjaq;xaxa‘uoxAguaqp'payo; 00;siqx’luiqqa;ax;so;aiuoyo;paqstix‘;xnaqaq;o;paqario; ‘uoxAgpuuA’aqaqg‘spuaixjsig'mox3;oupipsp:oAjqnjj •afiasjuoydapunuiyoo;pm/flopauiog lyBiypafa.iiffipiournjybnoypy :ouA[jnj;siMsiqxaquiamax;ousaop 0,IAV°3Ax;o')auiogo;;uoms;«a;\;oiiqwunajy•punjSug; OrAo||aqgpunA|u;jutsu.w‘Ansj‘uoxAg•ssa.iSipj<ptg (•uu3nqajo cutanasiqjgo(jnaaquugaipSutAnaipioqn^asdnossn.\i oq—jjand^josuqons‘xoqdop-dipwqons‘xa^jqjnjxapqnqans ‘xoAuyjnjxoAnynqansqpwpnqAaq^‘asxnoajo‘sn—auma ►a<jAfjpinbsa^axuSiQoxocpxnjyssaaans^nax3n^nq.v\pauxnaj q3oj)uu\uaqqpMoojpioqxo.wpmpipgqsrpinunaiunaaq put:AunduioQaq;tuoxjpauSisaxajj-piindo;a3xnajqpstsaxxt ‘snotx.qsAiun;pjaq‘q3oQut:^aumaaqaqaauopiq‘sajns 30xopaxipqanfxaqanxanuaaqpnqaq‘oquu;yupqdsyqjnsax snoixnaxoq;nxv.pt:qstqx’oqun/Y;uaaui\-xj\j‘sajngjoxcqaaxiQ Oq;o;;ioai3o;pappapAynugpun;j;ndo;aanjdautosioj paqoojAatfi,-Axcqanjaq;punoxn8uiAf<(q3;,nq;i,Auiaq;;jaj ‘asxnoajo‘siijjl\,q8„]nuqaq;yopaddojAjxaAapAaq;A;inua3 -uiat;sua;ouxnqaq;i,\\*a3nqandaq;nopxoMaxt;uaaq;;’a3o; ojqnxinaxaA\sxaqntuaq;;nq‘sa;;axt:3iQoxoqjxn^’joSuqjadsp:u -i3ixooq;sumqSnoxoqjxnjA;nq;8utssndu;a;ouo;Sut;saxa;uisi ;j)•qSnoxoqjxnj^;oaqnQaq;o;;aod;xhoaaiunaaqaqaxai^ *puu|3ugutpauiuuiaxAaqaqg‘aaaaxQut;q2nojuoxAgayqAY 'yaayaojyaayadupuopsoyanuisnfp>y%xtioCua).uopjpitf lyaadDay)dofjydif6)si)}pipuaplscnojj :uiaodjn;xoiuiuisiq; AqpaauaptAOsn‘puiutsiqmoxjxujxaAauaxaMuaiuoM;nq‘jpM punApAuxq;q3nojajj*aauapuadapuijoxuaiqaaxQaq;ut;q3q o;puujSujj;jajuodnaxaq;ogqpMqutunutsjnqitids,;;axxt:g q;aqnzqg3uiddipxojpxojxQutoxjpayadxasum‘satpnjaq;q;iM |iAapn‘uoxAg‘saAqp:uosxadjtaq;;aapauAaq;pipxojsj’ •Ax;ao<i Ot;untuoxjo;uaxxo;ajqn;ixaAn;ttop,auxn;axn;nxa;qjosun;i; eaxq;asaq;‘ssapq;auo]vj‘xiuqumoxSuiunpnqAayaqg'auinj bum‘ajdumxaxoj‘uoxAg-3ui;noxauxoxj;si;xnonx;aq;daaq jaAausutajqoxdjnaisAqd;nq;Moqso;Ajuo;anjsiq;uoi;uauij jjpq;aajOAgAjuosnMaq;nq;xapisuoanoAua’qMaiqnqxnmaj oxoui-aq;qnsiqaiqM—aun;ajqsiquisiuaod000‘0^-taq;1! 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Try it! GREAT BETWEEN COURSES!Get that refreshing new feeling with CokeIBottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company byFESTIVAL OF THE ARTS PRESENTSTHE CHICAGO STRINGS)URTEEN MEMBERS OF THE CHICAGO SYTHIS FRIDAY at MANDEL HALLFOURTEEN MEMBERS OF THE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRASTUDENT TICKETS$1.00Three peace walks setThree peace walks culminating in a rally at Orchestra hall will take place inChicago this weekend as part of the annual Easter Week for World Peace. Thepeace week is currently being observed all over the United States and in several foreigncountries.The purpose of this observance, according to its organizers, is to involve Ameri¬cans and other peoples in active expression of their concern for world peace.The marchers believe thatAmerican initiatives are necessaryas an initial step to help over¬come the problems which havedestroyed the Geneva negotiations.Several hundred people will be- Book ReviewLamm: Hegel volumeis intelligent, variedwhere they will attend a rally. US or the USSR; and a US pledgeThe main speakers at the rally not to give atomic weapons towill be Clarence Pickett, secretary any other country.emeritus of the American Friends 2) A nonviolent solution of the anthology is by A. C. Brad- ,l‘ally that of conscience againstHeg«i’s Theory ofIlcgei on Tragedy — edited by rales his conception of tragedyAnne and Henry Paolucci — as such: “Two ethical principlesAnchor Books, 1962. fall into conflict, each goes toOne of the essays con- pieces through the other. Thetained in this paper-back conflict of Socrates was essen-start on a 25-mile hike into theLoop, distributing leaflets andtalking to people in the townsthrough which they pass. Theywill spend the night in Evanston. „,1V • c , o . , . national supervision of Berlin and Tragedy. Bradley is better knownI > us department at Haverford a demilitarized, nuclear free today, however, .for his Shakes¬pearian Tragedy. Between thetime at which Bradley wroteand applied the Hegelian con¬ception of tragedy as a conflictService committee (AFSC), Wil- German question based on inter- ley ongin the observance at 9:30 am to- ,iam D»vidon, chairman of the national snnorvisinn nf Rfn-lin anH 'T.,morrow- by holding a three-hour _vigil in front of the Glenview pollc>re; and Elise Boulding, editor Germany.Naval Air station. °f the Women’s Peace MovementAfter the vigil the group will 3> Involvement of China in dis-The leaflets and literature of ^tiations *rvd mem-the Week for World Peace are bership in the Un,ted NatK)ns’asking for: 4) A national program for the1) American initiatives to break economic adjustment to disarma-the arms race such as: immediate ment and an international pro-Another group will start at 9:30 stop to all nuclear testing and Sram for world economic develop-Saturday morning from 57 street vigorous efforts for a permanent mentand Ellis avenue. A third will ■ international ban on testing; con- 5)A strengthened UN for non-leave 2307 W. Laramie at 9 am version of chemical-biological- violent settlement of disputesSaturday. radiological research centers into among nations. law, and of the inner right of theindividual against the outer rightof the state. Both sides have theirjustification. Yet both also gmp.pie and ‘perish together.’”Hegel shows that the greatAthenian tragic dramas, partic-of moral forces, and today, there u*a|^y **le Antigone of Sophocles,is a noticeable difference. spring from such a collision. BuiFor Hegel, aesthetics was a *s..a a dialecticalscience founded on a dialectical ‘ . i!”’ MI'Pass<'d by comedyidea which, in its artistic embodi- n ‘V e ,iaoc ,ca ldoa’ s'noement. was a stage surpassed by thov. K.”-2“!royed*the philosophical idea. In hisaccount of the trial and death o!Socrates, which he calls “Thep , , ,'l00 groups -U meet at world health centers; conversion Among the groups sponsoring Tragedy of Athens." typical andRandolph street and Michigan of the DEW line into a reciprocal the walks are Turn Toward Peace, prophetic of the tragic "outcome”a\enue at 1:30 pm. From there two-way guard against accidental the Student Peace union. SANE, of the entire Greek world, Hegelthev w.ll w*ll, *a rw,..*.... u„n or deliberate attack by either th0 AFSC and Women for peace -they will walk to Orchestra hall derives from tne iaic »c they are replaced by others.Today, Bradley’s conception ortragedy is one of several com-peting theories, tested for its em¬pirical research and for its faith¬fulness to the next. And theHegfclian dialect which underlieslll« U, V I—A*. I . ., K*»r*l* u-ltllseven seals.The present volume gives us anintelligently chosen variety fromHegel's lectures on the "Philos¬ophy ot Art” and from hisJapanese potter discusses his art, lifeby Ronnie Rosenblatt Kyoto. accidental aspect, beyond Western grew out of man's practical need“I feel that it is necessary Knowing virtually no English, scientific analysis, and it lives still of making tools for a living and Systematic Writings." And itfor me to know and under- Morino Mrived at O’Hare airport in many Japanese potters of tradi- out of his instinct to sculpture. should be evident from it that instand the work in eon t pm no- *as* ^,ar<dl ^ garbed in his native tional skill. It excites man’s nos- “It is thus closely connected with bis Iheory °1 tragedy, Hegelr ,, , . , T . Japanese costume robes. One of talgia for primitive innocence and man’s practical life and his artistic shows an analytic power whichrarv pottery outside Japan in liis first acts was to visit the Art naivete, contrasted With modern instinct to express himself.” is unquestionable, even it \\<-Ol’der to understand the posi- Institute of Chicago where he machine civilization. "The history of Japanese pottery leave out of account his dialecticstioil of myself and my country v'**wed in the Institute’s perma- “I am told that Japanese pottery at once her life history. It has a"dhjs idealism. But without thein this rapidly internationalizing ,,ent collection of contemporary is now known, loved, and studied become the symbol of life, of philo- underbmKart world.” pottery, the work of Condo Uzo, by the American people. It is my SOphy of the ideal spiritual life. tragcdy asHiroaki Morino expressed this one of hls instructors, and presi- sincere desire to study new e\|*eri- We are taught always to live haS 1,600010Zint IT a?n4-A aaII A • A « At • aa a " 4 I Alt II I I Itin close touch with nature, to assi-‘everyart is inevitably regulated by longtradition.” and that “it tells usAmerican what we have been and shall be,”he warns against blind conformityto tradition. idea, to speak ofa conflict of forcesan uncritical assump¬tion with merely convenience asits justification. Like the Aris¬totelian catharsis, it has become“classical,” i.e., a thesis acceptedor rejected merely as an articleof faith.Herbert LammThe reviewer: Herbert Lamm is“For some time now' I have at- associate professor of philosophysentiment in a letter to the chair- dent of Kyoto college. ments with art (especially pot¬man of UC’s art department. Mo- His class, given twice weekly at tery) in the US, which leads the rnilate ourselves to it.”rino is a famed and respected Midway studios, stresses the tra- modern world civilization, and, if Rut while claiming thatJapanese potter, winner of a mul- ditional technique and method of possible, to ofTer my skill as atitude of awards including the two Japanese pottery making. He tells Japanese potter and exchangemost sought pottery prizes for an interesting story of how the opinions with young1961. studio’s pottery wheel, which re- artists.”He is taking the opportunity to volves clockwise in the usual Morino is indeed recognized asleai'n US pottery this year while American manner, had to be a skilled potter. Since 1957, eventeaching ceramic sculpture to art changed to a counter-clockwise before his graduation from Kyoto, tempted ceramic sculpture to seek in the College and the sec re hintdepartment students at UC. motion, the traditional Japanese he has been winning at least four for another aspect of myself dis- o/ committee an Analysis otMorino comes from long line of method, to enable him to use it. top awrards in Japanese competi- tinct from that of a tool maker or Ideas and Study u/noted Japanese potters. His grand- Morino will spend a year at the tion per year. In 1960, he took Gf a preacher of philosophical doc- Among his publications is an arfi-father worked in ceramics, as did University. He may then decide the grand prize in the Kyoto city trine. I hope it will prove to be a cle on the “Philosophy of Marshis father. to teach and study at the school exhibition and held a one-man genuine art of fire, clay, and glaze, and Hegel" which appeared i theBorn in 1934, he spent his life of the Art institute, the only other show in the Fujikawa gallery in when completed.” International Philosophic Review.in Kyoto, the center of Japanese institution to which he wrote for Osaka. Last year he won nineart, where are now located some the opportunity to learn of US awards.400 practicing potters. Morino pottery while teaching Japanese. Morino’s paper deals mainlygraduated from the Kyoto Fine With a paper he submitted to with the history of Japanese pot-Arts college in 1958 and received the University faculty, Morino tery and is colored throughout by& diploma for a two-year grad- made the following statement: his statements illustrating the stilluate course in 1960. He is now a "The East has a long history basically ingenuous life of Japan,part-time instructor in pottery at of pottery, with its mysterious and Japanese pottery, he says, is anart of fire clay, and glaze, which PRE INVENTORY CLEARANCEPHOTO AND TYPEWRITER DEPARTMENTS — CHECK OUR PRICESThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 19, 1962