Barth urges 'new concept of freedom'Krti‘1 Barth challenged Am- less, like Jesus Christ himself, and Jewish and Christian theologians.” humanly speaking, God alone can emphasized: “There is not truemean theology to a new con- not infallible, like God. No wonder Considering the theological im- help it exist. And it seems that obedience when it is not free. Ourfrontatioii with contemporary that even from the viewpoint of plications of the establishment of it will do so.” inner obedience must accompanyAmerican issues last night in world views and concepts of other the State of Israel, Barth re- In answer to a Question of lts outer manifestatlon"!r. f vvonpl discussion at aees the auestion mav arise marked: ‘I consider the creation q Summing up his hopes for Amer-<» fl,la, Pan,el (t sCUSS10n at af" thC quest,on may ause of the modern state of Israel a Frank Stringfellow, New York at- ican freedom and Christianity,Rockefeller chape. w e er or no we ave pro ems new 3jgn Gf the grace and faith- torney, on the political responsi- Barth concluded: “I would look at“If I myself w'ere an American cerlain tensions, contradictions, fulness of God to that seed of biiity of the Christian, Barth the statue in the New York har-ritizen a Christian, and a theolo- an<*> “ you Prefer the term, Abraham, a very visible sign, not states: “In many Christian circles bor. That lady needs certainly a•an then I would try to elaborate errors- to be overruled. we are only spectators of the po- little, or a good bit, of demobiliza-i theology of freedom, of freedom Considering the objective exist- “After the horror of Hitler this litical life- Bue we should feel our- tion Nevertheless, perhaps shefrom any inferiority complex ence of evil, Barth stated: “It reappearance of Israel as a na- selves aske<* to do our P^rt* The may be also interpreted and under-against good old Europe. You need is a question of false thinking. tjon makes it even more evident Pr*mary political question for stood as a symbol of the trueno* have such an inferiority com- This thing (evil) is only an onto- the Jews have always owed Christians today is are we willing theology of freedom, that only realp|t>x logical mistique born in false their existence to the power of an(* able to take upon ourselves human freedom which is the gift,But T would also emphasize 'hinkin,! However sin and mil do „one and to thcir own «>r whole responsibility and not of the Son.freedom Horn a superiority cum- have a" ontological being of the.r mi(rht in history Between the <teed « to °‘hcrs- “Will such a specific AmericanSee over Asia and Africa. That own’ a veiy peculiar kind which great blocks of East and West Referring specifically to the civil theology one day arise? I hope■. a complev without reason." aan °n >,, ** described in negative tbjs sma|i community exists, and, obedience of the Christian, Barth so."is a compux ico terms. For example: sin and evilBarth clarified his view's on a are impossible possibilities, or ifnumber of basic theological prob- you prefer, unreal realities.”lems on answering questions of regard to a question bysix young American leo ogians. jajco^) PepUChowski, Hebrew UnionWith regard to mans freedom be- co]lege Qn ,hp relationship offore God, Barth state . s leie garjj,»s theology to Judism. Barthsuch a thing as ’ea 100 om or empjiasjze{j the possibilities ofdisobedience. e on ma es mutuaj understanding: “There isyou free, you aie in ee ree, no way f0r communication betweenotherwise. Disobedience is not a jews and Christian theologianskind of freedom but imprisonment. ,ike myself Hero we have a“God is not compelled by any of contact, and a very big one. Be-<mu to give freedom to us all. He cause we read the same law andis not bound to do it. But also, prophet, we are so far togetherGod's sovereignty cannot be and should be able to communi-hniited. Who believes he is saved cate.hv God’s grace cannot imagine „When we read the Ald Testa_Hut grace shou d be mcsisi e ment au together, we should befor him, but that it should be re- able tQ arrive at a common under-sistililc lor others. Let us teach Vol. 70 — No. 88 University of Chicago, Friday, April 27, 1962(he freedom of God’s grace, andthe real human freedom w'hich hegives us in his grace to obey.” winning“Since all the revelations poets Robert Lowell, Stanley were their conceptions of to middle class poets FerAddressing himself to a question through the prophets of Israel are Kunitz, and Karl Shapiro own personal audiences, or specifi- linghetti wrote a good poem aboutAuuiessing nimstn io a question restrjcted to a given period of his- . ’ . , cally, for w'hom do, they write? „ ,.i how he would justify “his ap- f d then end with that no- examined the Poet and the __ .. , ... Castro; an academic poet wouldn tpeal to Scripture as the objective end poims eas ly to a Modern Public” in a panel dis- ^ besJ write about Castro for 200 years.”1, . , ^ . ... .. , . . nod' thls ena P°,nts easily » a Moaein ruDiic in a panel ais reader within myself. This is not Olson: “But aren’t the beatsWord of God with his admission vacuum, perhaps even to a choas, cussion yesterday in the Law an arrogant assertion, because it just topical, and hence ephemer-that Scripture is sullied by errors, or !t attends to the events of the school auditorium. Elder oison, implies a sharing of experience al?”Th‘S Tjj., 1 i* ’ fT ((''h'''")11 ’ ° U i professor of English and one of rather than that horrible word Kunitz: “That’s true.The Bible has Gf both the laws and prophets of ^ ,.Chicag0 o[ criticism/. communication.”served as moderator.standing, but I shouldn’t speaktoo quickly of convincing. Poets discuss their publicPulitzer Prize Olson asked the panelists what his audience if he tells the truth.their “This is why I prefer the beatstheological as well as historical,” New Testament, to the fulfillmentBarth slated:proven itself and will continue to the same God.prove itself as the true and fit- **We should deal with the ques- served as moderator. Shapiro: “Every writer writesting instrument to point man to tion of how far the apostles of Olson sought at the outset to f°r a standard set by otherGod. the New Testament truly affirm determine what precisely is the writers But what makes a writer“The Bible, being a human in- the laws and prophets of Israel’s poet’s relation to his audience, contemporary is his ability tostrument, is bound by the tempor- history. And how far do they Shapiro suggested taht here are 8rab th^ reader by the throat. Iuse of nature, history, and ideas, or not? That w-ould be the mater- two methods by w'hich he seeks show my poems to other people,|ist so far, the Bible is not sin- ial for a discussion between an audience, exemplified by Eliot’s even my children, and only twoh insistence upon a small selected professors laughed.”audience of knowledgable readersand Whitman’s aspirations for aninfinite audience. Shapiro addedthat except for the best writers,audiences today are composed pri¬marily of specialists and expertswho exert a kind of culturalparalysis upon a poet’s creativity.Poetry can only succeed in bulid-ing a larger audience today bysmashing the scripture of theacademicians, the purveyors of“textbook poetry.”‘Size unimportant' Judges himselfLowell: “I test my poemsagainst my own judgment, torone must supply his own drive The pro¬letarian poets of the 1930’s are nolonger red or remembered now.”But to Kunitz, this does not meanthat a topical poet can’t be great.The topical poet is merely draw¬ing from one of three sourcesavailable to all poets: one, tra¬dition—which is the inherited,accumulated elements of stylewhich is all taught in academies;two, the fashionable style of themoment—as Melrose sqid, “Everypoet is born a prisoner of thestyle of his times”; three, a newto make his work interesting. It unique style neither traditionalis hard to find anyone else to nor topical, this is an artist’s or-examine critically one’s own iginal development. These latterw'orks, but it may be a profes- poets garner the largest audien-sor- The size of an audience makes ces, said Kunitz.no difference. The reason for thesmaller audiences nowr is that in'the last 15 years prose has beenmore interesting, Saul Bellow forexample. There is the danger ofPoets Robert Lowell, Stanley Kunitz, and Karl Shapirodiscuss their art with UC professor of English Elder Olson. Kunitz on the other hand em- poetry being too involved a tech-phasized that a poetic audience nique.”shouldn’t bo judged in terms of itssize. Poets never had a big audi¬ence until poetry became a lyricart instead of a dramatic art. Hestated that there is a substantialNearly all petitionersmay leave their dorms British groupstudies CollegeA British fact-finding com¬mittee on higher educationKunitz objected that while it is visiting the University ofis true that the poet has for- Chicago today. The commit-feited some of his territory to tee arrived yesterday to beginnovelists, it doesn’t have to be this (W0 dav vjsit.way. In opposition to Lowell, committee, appointed byaudience for poetry today, though Kunitz feels lhe novel is declin- Prime Minister Harold Macmillan,a dispersed one. Robert Lowellnoted that even Whitman, whosought the widest possible audi¬ence, enver achieved one, nor didany great poet. Lowell finds it“too mysterious for me to wonder ing, this because of the cheapen- js comparing the American anding effect of publication problems. British systems of education forThe poet, according to Kunitz, is students over the age of 18.not affected by the problem of Fifteen of the 18 committeebeing corrupted by his audience members will meet with leadingand can concentrate cn the excel- educators and businessmen in thelence of his form.x Chicago area for luncheon at theBut for many poets, Lowell re- Quadrangle club.The visitors have asked the. if there w’ould be better poets ifbligntly more than ninety percent of the student pe- they had a larger audience.”-itions for release from the College’s residential require- Sh . unhealthy re-ment have been granted, announced James Newman, suit of Doetic audiences beinc P1,ed. the audience will always beassistant dean of indents vesterdav , \ J P°etlc audiences being u Poets such as Hopkins and University meeting to discuss thedssistant dean 01 students, yesterday. located primarily in universities Mollai.mo „.„ifo ahnilt specific question of the influenceOf the 104 undergraduates ap- ——— — in the detached, lifeless nature of Mella,[ne "llle aDout uuense, . . hieher educationPlying for permission to live out- students applications were lexlbook , , with suggestive experiences, and their ol birsmess on highet educationtrtde Of th* Hnrmitnrv .vUnm eranted. enio.m: L Jnniit.; le work couldn t be conceived to in America.Among those invited to meet*de of the dormitory system, granted. no relation to reality. “There isninety have received this permis- Newman said that one reason so much small-life in poetry; this Jari^r audiences. there is nosion, ten have been denied it, and for the high percentage of grant- may be due to a fear of life,” he *?ante of A",iericah hterature, butseven have not as yet been con- ed petitions w-as that half of this said. Objected Kunitz, “This there are always me oi six e -lidered. year’s petitioners wereNewman said that the policy of year students,the housing department wras togiant all petitions “unless there"as some positive ground fordenial.”The 104 petitioners fall into thefollowing categories: 25 first yearnien, 27 first year women, 50second year women, and twownien transfer students.Twenty of the first year men’sPetitions were granted, tw'o weredenied, and three have not as yet!>een considered.Of the twenty-seven first year"'omen’s twrenty-two were granted.And of the fifty second year"omen’s fourty-three were grant-H three denied, and four notxitt considered. Both the trans- second smallness-of-life criticism is un¬true, Are small things less alive?” rarchs.”To Shapiro, a poet can enlargeSeveral participants in Chicago’s 'peace vigil' stand on Michigan avenue during thedemonstration some 50 people joined the vigil, which lasted until 7 am today. The vigil,sponsored by the Chicago committee for a SANE nuclear policy and by the AmericanFriends Service comittee, will continue during noon hour through May 3. with the committee are PresidentGeorge Beadle, Glenn A. Lloyd,chairman of the board of trus¬tees, and R. Wendell Harrison,vice president of the Universityand dean of faculties. Also in¬vited are business leaders fromthe Chicago area, educators fromother universities, and variousdeans and administrators of UC.The committee is scheduled tovisit other universities, colleges,and institutions of higher learn¬ing in San Francisco, Los Angeles,Boston, Washington, and NewYork. The group, which will bein the United States from April16th to May 8th, has plannedsimilar visits to several othercountries, including Russia.During its two-day stay in theChicago area, the committee willalso visit Northwestern univer¬sity, New Trier high school, andEvanston township high school.Hum committee discussed Alabama Ne9ro picketsattacked with tear gas, acidby Ronnie Rosenblatt cess depended upon getting un- had success in avoiding them. TheTen years ago the Commit- usually good students. Spring quarter grade average oftee on General Studies in the “We feared that people who all members last year was 3.04,Humanities began with ten weren’t good at anything would and Committee students practical-students. Since then, the decide they would be good at ly monopolized the June Honors ting against segregation here Wednesday while policenumber lias grown to nearly everything. We required more than Awards assembly, winning ihree stood b\ and watched. ^ arrested on charges ofTALLADEGA, Alabama, April 26, 1962.—Tear gasand acid were thrown at a gpup of Negroes demonstra-'60, and is limited only because average ability, since our students national Woodrow Wilson fellow-of an agreement made some years had to be good in several fields. ship and several other awatds, in-ago between students and faculty. “Anvthine called 'General Stu- -cludmg a D1anlo’’!h and GormanOne of the first of its kind in dies' always anfacS a irUin Exchange fellows,,,p.the country, the Committee origin- number of academic moths who This year Committee studentsally, like most Unixersity depart- have flitted from one place to an- won two more Wilsons and a thirdments in 1952, gave only a three- other. ‘General Studies’ sounds to consecutive German Exchange fel-year MA, 1 nlike most others, how- them as if everything is very lowship. In tact, at least oneever, it was and is concerned with vague, and vagueness is what they Wilson fellowship has been award-continuing, on an advanced level are looking for and they are what ed the Committee every year sincewe are trying to avoid.” it began awarding the BA degree.Evidently, the Committee has (continued on page 8) coivspiracy.” "We don’t know Px.actly what that means,” stateda faculty member who has beenand in just the humanities field,the general education begun bythe College in all the main fieldsof knowledge.There are two programs in theCommittee, each planned to pro¬vide the student with the opportu¬nity to obtain a familiarity withthree or four of six major humani¬ties contributions: art, history,language, literature, music, andphilosophy Blackfriars to open tonight“It all started with a dare,” said student author Bob Reiser yesterday, refer¬ring to Blackfriars’ fifty - fourth, sixth annual production “Sing Out Sweet Rock” whichwill open tonight in Mandel hall at 8:30 pm.Last fall, explained Reiser, an administrative official and friend of BlackfriarsThe Commit lee was officially said the idea for “Sing Out Sweet Rock” would never work. Reiser reports, however,Wednesday's attacks took placeoutside a drugstore, where about20 students from nearby Tall¬adega college, a Negro institution, worj<jng closely with the Studeniwere picketing the stores segre- Action committee (SAC) coordin-ating the protests. ‘‘All we knowis what we hear on the radio,They (the police) haven't toldour lawyer anything yet.” vIn the past few weeks, appro*,iniately 40 persons have been ar-rested for anti-segregation art-ivities here, including one nhitlprofessor and a local chaplain.Eighteen persons convicted o£disorderly conduct and trespass-ing have been sentenced to sev*eral months in jail, and fined $300.-SAC plans to appeal the decis¬ions. ‘‘We will take it to iheSupreme Court, if necessary,”stated a representative.Three other persons were a**gation policies.Two students were hospitalizedas a result of the acid throwing.All the students acted in a non¬violent manner when attacked,accoiding to reports.Today, as the demonstrationscontinued, twelve students wereauthorized in November of 1951,largely through the efforts of Na¬pier Wilt, dean of the Division ofthe Humanities, who is looked onby the Committee as its “god¬father.”As in any new7 venture, therewere at first serious problems. Ac¬cording to Norman Maclean, pro¬fessor of English and chairmanand main force behind the Com¬mittee, “it was recognized earlythat the Committee’s ultimate suc- that he was undaunted and went on to wn’ite the script. “Using the musical comedy rested last Sunday at the Wesleyform, I tried to tell story — asatric and not always very prettystory. I’ve tried to w7rite a playthat is musical, rather than justa musical comedy.”Before any of the fifteen musi¬cal numbers in the show jwerewritten. Reiser discussed he dra¬matic content of the play ana thepersonality of the character withBob Applehaum, a third year stu¬dent in the college who has com¬■f, \te;.'- V li posed most of the music lor theproduction.Applobaum emphasized that hehas tried to write music which isan integral part of the play ratherthan just an appendage. “We usedthe Edgar Allen Poe approach,”commented Reiser. “That is to saythat we started with the final ef¬fect and subordinated all else toit.”James O’Reilly, a frequent di¬rector in ihe University’s CourtTheatre, took over the directionof Reiser’s script. “We are work¬ing with a play,” said Reiser,“therefore we wanted a real thea¬tre director to work the scriptinto the best play possible."The studeni author feels thatO’Reilly has done that. “He haspulled a great deal of talent from1he latent potential of our studentaelors, and has vitalized both di¬alog and song.”Applebalim had equal praise fopChris Moore, director of the Chil¬ dren’s Choir at the Hyde ParkUnitarian Church, who has han¬dled the musical direction lor theshow. “He has not only developeda tone in the chorus that is wor¬thy of a church choir but alsohas coached many individuals inthe art of singing; and it hasbrought excellent results.”The student author and com¬poser were not without praise foreach other. “Applchaum's musicdraws on all the potentialities oftlie words,” said Reiser. “He hasmade the lyrics and the melodyone integral entity.” Applehaumprotested that this was nothingnew. It is what all music shoulddo. Methodist church for staging a“kneel-in.” They are now out on$500 bail each, awaiting trial oncharges of trespass.SAC also plans future demon¬strations, although they refrainedfrom discussing plans on thephone. “Our wires have beentapped for the past severalweeks,” they stated.Applehaum parried with praisefor Reiser’s lyrics. “Bob’s lyricsare extremely musically adaptable.Hardly any of them have had tohe changed from their originalform.” Reiser protested that thiswas nothing new. “That’s how7 alllyrics should be.”nGRAND OPENING ON MAYKOGA GIFT SHOPFeaturing Gifts From The Orient 1 St European FlightA charter flight toEurope for the month ofSeptember is being offeredto all UC students, fac¬ulty, and stall and their rela-1 ives.The flight will leave Chicagofor Paris on August 29. Thoreturn trip will leave Paris onSeptember 29. The cost will beapproximately $285-All those interested in theflight are requested to con¬tact Florence Schale at NO7-8643. She may also be reach¬ed at the Student Governmentoffice in Ida Noyes hall be¬tween 10:30 and 12:30 everymorning.GRASS MATS, SANDALS. KIMONOS& PAPER LATTERNSFORMERLY AT 1203 E. 55th STREET foreign car salesNOW AT 1462 E. 53rd ST. see page 8...thiscalls forBudweiser.Enjoy• the king\ °f hews 1 wherethere's life.**there's Bud# ‘•i«JK« ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. . ST. LOUIS • NEWARK . 10S ANGELES .TAMPA Your pilot is Captain Smith -I’m your stewardess, Miss Kong.” wflli »u (KINGIGAPyETTESur.filtf t MV#AS TORACCO CO ^'TiTn'ii**21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!AGED MILD. BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD-THEY SATISFY2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 27. 1962rBarth: theology should criticize, investigate•w r 1 II/\*\/vaH rU a t’nc* ♦ e> 4 3 __ • a *. , .—. . _Karl Barth challenged the- resents this secondary witness. “‘Proper’ does not here meanery Christian as such is called toologV to take up its task of The society of men called and pious, edifying, not something that be a theologian.< • • i • O r*r\ l lend t n f ■ 4 U r.»d ^ 4 1 l J i • r <1 . . , _criticism and serious investi- aroused to faith and at the very could satisfy the categories of rea- „ _ wo-ition vestei’dav morning in t0 test,m.ony 10 1he f°n in its society. What is at stake nomenon when leading churchmen this were a hobbyf • f nrth lecture at Rocke- Wo' d 0t thc world’ 18 the com* is thc question of truth. along with certain evangelists, ally interested andhis lout mumty. “The quest for truth is noJ im_ preachers, well-meaning warrior als.Iiifeller chapel.* In introducing his lecture en- “Theology is no undertaking thatcould ever be blithely handed over“It is always a suspicious phe- to any others whatever, as thoughof some especi-gifted indivldu-However, theology also has its posed on the community by the ol this or that practical Christian “Theology would be just another‘special function within the com outside world, which is to a large cause are used to refer cheerfully failure if it placed itself in en¬titled ‘‘The Community,” Barth munity: The community does not extent the case in the modern and Perhaps a little distainfully: gant imminence where its onlystaled: “When theology confronts speak with words alone. It speaks world. Instead it comes from with- T 0111 not a theologian, I am an concern was God, man, and otherflic Word of God and its witnesses, by the very fact of its existence in in or more precisely from above, adrr>inistrator.’il has its place very concretely in the world, likewise by its charac- from the Word of God that founds ,,rru"* ":nthe community, not somew'here in teristic attitude to w'orld problems,emtpy space.” and also especially by its silentWith regard to the traditional service to all the handicapped,conception of the “church,” Barth weak, and needy in the world.”emphasized: “The best theological The community fulfills all thesej>oint of view is to avoid the w'ord tasks by Its very nature as, “the“church,” to a great extent if not gathering of the faithful, the eon-altogether. For “church” should be gregation of witnesses that mustconsistently be interpreted by speak because they believe. It does“community.” Christianity, as Lu- all this because it is summoned forthei stressed, should be understood this purpose by the W’ord of God,as nation rather than as system of because it cannot neglect doingbeliefs. such thing since it believes.“The Word cries out for belief, “However, between the commu-for acceptance. Since faith is not nit;>’s faith and its speech a prob-arises: the community and its faith.“The question of truth is, there¬fore, not stated in the usual terms:‘Is it then true that there is aGod?’ Is Israel really his chosenpeople?’ ‘Is Jesus Christ actuallyour Lord?’ This is the way foolsask, admittedly such fools as weall are, for it is a habit of being.”In theology the question, oftruth is stated on another level:“Does the community understandthe Word properly as the truth?Does the community thinkah end in itself, this cry of the lem arises: the problem of the through the Word painstakinglyWord means that its demands are proper understanding of the Word an .(S|^a °i„,t.,l.n.C <;ai conccPts°td be proclaimed to the world that founds faith, of properfrom its outset. thought about this Word, and of“It is the community that rep- the proper w'ay to speak of it. interests, concerning perhaps soulsThat will not do at all. The of certain historical interest.Christian w itness must always be “In order to serve the communityforged anew. It must always issue of today, it must first remind itsanew out of the fire of the ques- members of the seriousness oftion of truth in order to be a wit- their situation and task, and in thisness that is trustworthy and liv- very way to further them along toing ”, freedom and joy in their service.”Kwo gives art lectureDavid Kwo, Chinese artist, will give a lecture-demonstra¬tion of Chinese traditional painting at 3:30 this afternoon inIda Noyes hall.His lecture is under the auspices of the committee onFar Eastern civilizations and theDownbeat editors visitDon Demicheal and Pete Welding, the editor and assis¬tant editor of Downbeat magazine were guests of ThompsonHouse Wednesday night. They participated in an informaldiscussion of jazz and other contemporary music.It was pointed out that jazz “is becoming more intellectual andis vastly different from what itwas in the 30’s. At that timeNegroes were the major devoteesof blues. Now' the audience haslargely shifted to white listeners.Contrary to claims that modernjazz and classical music are at astandstill, Demichael protests thatthis is not true of jazz. He men¬tioned Ornette Coleman w'ho, heclaims, is freeing people’s think- not care for him himself.He gave a speculative definitionof ‘swing’ as minute variation oftime within time and minutevariation of accent- This is moresubtle than syncopation and , ,. ,, .“above notation.” Demichael ?ry daythat ^is may not happenclaimed that jazz is taking onmore and more classical tech- .... , . ,niques. On the other hand, he work 18 thcolog.cal work, and msosaid, “I think Gershw'in had a Is it in a position to render itssecondary testimony with respon¬sibility and a good conscience?“A positive answer to this ques¬tion of truth posed for the com¬munity, a question that is reallyburning only for the people of God,can never and nowhere be takenfor granted.”But Barth emphasized that, “Thecommunity in its proclamation ofthe Word of God, in its interpre¬tation of the Biblical testimonyand also in its own faith can goastray and can then be obstruc¬tive instead of helpful to God'scause in the world.“The community must pray ev- far eastern association in connec¬tion with the Festival of the Arts.Kwo will discuss the basic tech-but it must also do its own sharein earnest work to this end. Thisgreat influence on Ravel.” He re¬ferred to Gunther Schuller w'ho far as he is responsible in this wit¬ness for the question of truth, ev- niques of brushwork and explainhis own philosophies as reflectedin his paintings.At the demonstration Kwo,whose work represents a newT dis¬cipline of the classical style ofChinese painting, will complete awatercolor painting, discussinghis work and answering ques¬tions about it.Kwo, w'ho was born in Peiping,has studied both in China and theUnited States. He has touredand held lecture-demonstrationsthroughout the country.Formal exhibits of his workhave appeared at the Art insti¬tute of Chicago, the Imperial in¬stitute of London and museumsthroughout Europe and America.Larry Kessler, president of thefar eastern association, calls Kwo“one of the most promising youngChinese painters working withina tradition that is noted for itsrichness and beauty.ing about music, although he does cojned the term .<third stream”to denote a form of music hav¬ing elements of both classical andjazz.He stated that many jazzmusicians are torn between a de¬sire for artistic development andthe economic necessity of com¬mercialization. Many w'ouldrather seek out new paths if notfaced with the problem of havingto make a living.Law alumni meetThe University of ChicagoLaw School Alumni associationwill hold its annual meeting inthe Ambassador West hotel, at5:30 pm this Monday.The meeting will be in conjunc¬tion with Law' day, Tuesday,May 1.Nicholas Katzenbach, DeputyAttorney General of the UnitedStates and former professor of’law' at the University, will attendas a guest of thc association.Sheldon Teflt, James ParkerHall, professor of law at the Uni¬versity, will be the principal speak¬er He will discuss “The law schoolat the University of Chicago.”Tefft is the senior member of thelaw school faculty. He has beenteaching at UC for 31 years.foreign cor hospitaltee page 8 EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetof University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscountJimmy'sand the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Are.ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti • beef • sausage and meatballsandwiches * shrimp pizzaFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-1014,1015 1427 East 67th SL An Original MusicalMandel Hall Students $2.00, $1.50April 27, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • $EditorialLeniency on petitions isno excuse for dorm ruleWhen UC’s new residence requirementwas introduced almost two year’s ago, theadministrators responsible promised that therule would be fairly applied.We see now that this promise has been totallyfulfilled.The rule requires male students to live indormitories during their first year and either inthe dorms or in the fraternities for the second year.Female students are forced to stay in the dormsduring all four years.Fortunately, a petition procedure was insti¬tuted for students presenting valid reasons forleaving the residence halls. When the rule was in¬troduced. the dean of students office said that peti¬tions would be liberally administered, that almostall students wanting to live in apartments wouldbe given permission.Now, with the rule in effect for more than ayear, the petition procedure can be evaluated. Outof 104 petitioners, only ten were denied permissionto leave the dorms, and seven more have not hadtheir petition considered as yet.If its practical application was the only aspectof the residence requirement worthy of considera¬tion, we would now be forced to reverse the nega¬tive evaluation with which we greeted its announce¬ment. But there is more.Despite the liberal exercise of its power, theUniversity administration continues, through theresidence rule, to assert the right to regulatetotally non-academic parts of a student's life. Thisis a self-originating power, one arising from a dis¬torted concept of the nature of the contract exist¬ing between student and university.We have frequently argued in this column thata university has one responsibility—to offer thestudent an education. Moral and social guidanceof the student is the proper function of the homeand, if the individual so desires, of his church. TheUniversity which tries to be a moral guide isattempting to do something which it cannot do andwhich it has no right to do. Universities producescholars, they do not produce saints.It has frequently been argued that the resi¬dence requirement is important in UC’s academiclife, since students living in apartments tend todrop out more frequently than students living inthe residence halls. This assertion can be objectedto on two grounds.First, the now famous “drop-out" study con¬ducted by an assistant dean of undergraduate stu¬dents. The study, according to the National Opinion Research center- a group specializing insociological studies and staffed by UC professors—has little validity. The center, in its own study,concluded that academic success depends on intelli¬gence and on little else.But even if it were academically valuable,would the residence requirement be any more valid?We think not. If the student is to be regarded asa demi-member of the academic community, theonly position in which the student can be successfulin fulfilling his responsibilities, he must not besubjected to pressure “from above.”Coercion, as Dean of Students Warner Wickonce remarked, is out of context in the Universitycommunity. The scholar cannot properly functionwhen external pressures force him to live or towork in a manner unacceptable to him. This goesfor the student as well as for the faculty member.When John Netherton was dean of studentshe promised that after a year of operation the resi¬dence requirement would be reviewed. The timehas come; the review has not.Let us evaluate one year of operation of therequirement. Fewer than twenty students havebeen denied permission to leave ihe dormitories.And yet the rule hangs like a pall over the campus;obvious restrictions of freedom can always be felt.It can abd perhaps will be argued by UCadministrators that any controversy over the re¬quirement is but a tempest in a teapot; after all,what is the harm in keeping only twenty studentsfrom moving out of the dorms, perhaps only ona temporary basis ?Just the opposite is the case. Is keeping thesetwenty in the dormitory system wrorth stating aprinciple totally inimical to the proper concept ofa University ? Certainly we have gotten the worseof this trade, even if we have given up only free¬dom, w’hich is, after all, an intangible concept.Maybe few of these tw’enty students are in schooltoday w'ho w’ould not otherwise have been (thetruth of this will never be known), but what hasbeen given up in return ? We feel it has been agreat deal.Time has dulled the impact of the residencerule; there has been no protest forthcoming thisyear. While last year every major UC representa¬tive body expressed opposition to the requirement,this year the campus has been silent.Time affects emotions, but time does not affectjustice. The pernicious requirement is no lesspernicious today than it was at its introduction,despite the liberal administration. Change isneeded; and if change is to come protest is needed.The time for that protest is now.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THE 0NEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55Hi St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNT JOSEPH H. AARONAll Forms of InsuranceSUITE 82S135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060THE HYDE PARK ART CENTER, 5236 S. Blcckstonepresents the first program in a Comedy Film SeriesThis Sunday, April 29, at 4 and 7 p.m., with shorts by Chaplin, Keaton, Lahr, Turpin, Lanqdon and others.Future programs will feature Laurel and Hardy, Benchley, and the Marx Bros. Series (3 programs), $2.25;Single. $1.00; Children $.50.TREMENDOUS PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE25% to 50% off BOOKS IN ALL CATEGORIESA GREAT SAVINGSThese are among the titles availableIn Anthropology: Brown: THE ANDAMAN $Q gQISLANDERS was $4.75, now wIn Business: HUNT: BASIC BUSINESSFINANCE was $5.95, nowIn Music: Lytle: THEORY & PRACTICE OF CSTRICT COUNTERFEIT, was $1.75, now $0.89.79In Literature: Oxford Edn. WORDSWORTHS $j.75$1.98In Psychology: Mowrer: PSYCHOTHERAPY $*1.98THEORY & RESEARCH, was $10.00, now **In Fiction: Fitzgerald: THIS SIDE OFPARADISE (cloth) was $3.95, now In Italian: Marraro: ITALIAN WRITERS $4.79OF TODAY was $3.00. now ■In Nursing: Brown: NURSING FOR THE $FUTURE was $2.00, nowIn Law: Davis: ADMINISTRATIVE LAWwas $10.00, now .98$g.50In Social Work: Tappan: CONTEMPORARY $0.50CORRECTION was $7.00, now WIn Religion: Burtt: MAN SEEKS THE $9.39DIVINE was $4.75. now tIn Drama: Freedley: HISTORY OF THE $0 75THEATRE was $7.50, now WAlso books in French, Spanish, Business, Economics, Art, and many others.All sales final. No refunds or returns on sale books.The University of Chicago Bookstore - 5802 Eflis Ave. Dean Johnson explainsaims of grad schoolWith the article printed below,we begin a series on “The Aims ofEducation.'’ For the next severalmint by any interested individualpects of this question will be dis¬cussed by UC faculty members andadministrators. In addition, com¬ment by any intrested individualwill be welcomed and consideredfor our “Letters to the edito)'>>column.by D. Gale JohnsonDean, division of socialscience“The Division of the so¬cial sciences is the part ofthe University especiallyconcerned with the natureof man, ideas and institu¬tions that he has built andthat in turn have helped to shapehis nature, the relation betweenhim and his fellows, and the inter¬action between man and the worldin which he lives.“The division welcomes as stu¬dents potential researchers andscholars, as well as those who wishto equip themselves in the socialsciences for careers of public serv¬ice in teaching, administration,diplomacy, or other professions.It also welcomes those who seekin the social sciences the enrich¬ment of their culture preparationfor the appreciation of life.”The quotation is, in my opinion,a quite accurate statement of thebroad aims of the educationalprograms of the various depart¬ments and committee of the divi¬sion of the social sciences. Thefew sentences provide in a broadsweep a description of the partof knowledge that is the respon¬sibility of the division. They alsogive an approximate ordering ofthe priorities of the majority ofthe faculty with respect to themotivation of students and thecontribution that the students maymake in their careers. Educationfor research and scholarship — theprocess by which knowledge isadvanced — has the highest priori¬ty. Not only is research and scho¬larship the most valued ultimateend, but is a major transcendentalend and accepted as a necessarycondition for substantial contribu¬tions in teaching and administra¬tion.The above statement of aims,which conies from the Announce¬ments of the University of Chica¬go, applies most directly to gra¬duate education but is not with¬out implication to the undergra¬duate teaching of the faculty ofthe division. A large fraction ofthe recipients of the bachelor’sdegree in social sciences at thisUniversity undertake graduatestudy - there is some evidence thatthe fraction is greater than onehalf. The emphasis upon advancedstudy is probably a joint conse¬quence of the objectives of thestudents who enter the Collegeand the effects of being in a set¬ting where research and scholar¬ship is given such great weight.In my opinion one of the greatcontributions of the University ofChicago is that during recent de¬cades it has been the baccalaure¬ate origin of a larger number ofdoctorates in the social sciencesthan any other educational insti¬tution in the United States, eventhough many other institutionsgrant far more bachelor’s degrees.It should come as no surprisethat the most important educa¬tional objective of the division ofthe social sciences is research andscholarship. The division is prima¬rily a graduate division. The sel¬ ection and promotion of faculty jsstrongly biassed in favor of re¬search and scholarly achievement.Since its beginning, the Universityof Chicago has attempted to pro-vide its faculty with the opportu¬nity to engage in research. Per¬haps more than anything else, itwas the emphasis upon researchthat made possible Ihe creationof an outstanding faculty in soshort a period of time. The op.portunity for research consistedlargely of light teaching loads andemphasis upon graduate education.When opportunity was coupledwith reward, the emphasis u]K>n1research was assured.The emphasis upon educationfor research and the actual re¬search requirements for the Ph. D.degree have been criticized insome quarters. One criticism isthat many who receive the Ph. D.do not engage in research, butenter into teaching and olhercareers where there is little or noemphasis upon research. This cri¬ticism, in my opinion, is a state¬ment that we have failed inachieving our objective ratherthat the objective is inappropriate.There are, no doubt, some out¬standing teachers at the college oruniversity level who have done noresearch beyond their doctoralthesis; but such individuals aredefinitely in the minority.Another criticism, which I be¬lieve has merit, is that the em¬phasis upon research as the ma jorobjective of graduate educationhas resulted in a failure to achievea satisfactory master’s program.All too often, the master’s decreeIs treated either as a step on theway to the Ph. D. or a consolationprize for those who cannot meetthe standards set for the I’li. I>.The master’s degree program doesnot have a reasonably clear setof objectives as a terminal degree.Such a degree ordinarily cannot'be a research degree in the sensethat the individual who receivesit is able to undertake indepen¬dent research. Yet there is a sub¬stantia! demand for persons withone or two years of graduate edu¬cation for careers in teaching, inresearch organizations (govern-*mental and private) and in admi¬nistration.One of the difficulties in cre¬ating a master's program that is tdistinct from the first phases ofthe doctorate is that many ofthose enlering graduate study donot know whether they have theability or the inclination to conti¬nue for the Ph. D., though a largemajority have such an aspiration.For those students w’ho have rea¬sonably definite objectives, itshould be possible to devise anhonest and worthwhile master’sprogram. I believe that the Mas¬ter of Arts in Teaching, adminis¬tered by the Graduate School ofEducation in cooperation with the.four divisions, is such a program.At least two departments in thedivision of the social scienceshave formulated programs ihatgive promise of success for t hose *students whose immediate objec¬tive is the master’s degree.In this brief note I have em¬phasized training for undertaking -research hopefully research thatwill add significantly to our know¬ledge, as the major aim of edu¬cation in the division of the socialsciences. The emphasis upon this’aim is based, in part, upon theassumption that at the graduatelevel the outstanding researchworker is also the outstandingteacher.Issued every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday throughout theUniversity of Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer monthby students of the University of Chicago. Address a/1 correspondence to.Chicago MAROON, Ida Noyes hall. 1212 E. 59 street, Chicago 37, Illinois.Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions 3265 and 3266. Deadline for all calendarcopy is 4 pm of the day before publication. Deadline for all editorial anadvertising copy is 4 pm of the day two days before publication. Subscript’®by mail is $4 per year. The MAROON is distributed free at various Polnaround the Chicago campus.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 27, 1962MacEwan discusses recall petition Set basketball slateThere being some controversyover the “re<?&H” petition present¬ed to Student Government atTuesday’s meeting, I feel that itis necessary for me to make a fewcomments on this mattei.The petition presented to theassembly does not really seem tobo a recall petition. As a minorpoint, to recall members of theassembly it is necessary to pre¬sent a petition for each assemblymember the recall of whom isdesired. This was not done.The more important point, how¬ever, is that the petition presentedto the government is directed notsomuch against the outcome ofthe recent elections, but againstthe whole method by which weelect our SG. The petition is fora recall of the entire College slate.The only reason given in the peti¬tion is:Since 90% of the seats of theCollege delegation to StudentGovernment are held by a partythat received only 33% of theCollege vote, the delegation doesnot represent the College.I might note that the reasonsgiven by Bob Unferth, the appa¬rent originator of the petition, ina letter to the Maroon are notihe reasons stated in the petition;I would conclude that his perso¬nal reasons do not necessarilyrepresent the sentiment of all thepetitioners.)Let me deal with the one rea¬son given in the petition. Thoughcandidates run for election in SGon the basis of party affiliation,votes are cast for individuals. Thenineteen individuals in the Collegereceiving the highest vote areelected. We have no system of pro¬portional representation, and it isproportional representation whichthe petitioners seem to desire. Theonly way to solve this grievancewould be to change the electionprocedure so that a party wouldget the same proportion or seatsas votes it received. If a recall,and then a reelection were held without changing the election pro¬cedure, the same situation wouldlikely arise.I do not wish at this time todiscuss the merits of changing thesystem of our election. I wish sim¬ply to suggest that if those personspetitioning for recall on the basisof this grievance do desire to havethe situation changed, they at¬tempt to do so by constitutionalamendment.Student Government has notasked the Student Faculty Admi¬nistration court tSFAC) to rulethe petition invalid. However, forthe following reasons the assemblydecided to take the petition tothe SFAC and request judgmenton whether or not the recall shouldbe held and if so by what pro-Newsbits ccdure: 1) No specific assemblyrepresentatives were listed in thepetition as the constitution saysthey must be; 2) there is somequestion as to whether the peti¬tion actually constitutes a recallrequest rather than an attempt toamend the constitution; 3) theconstitution in the by-laws doesnot state the procedure by which arecall vote should be held, andthe assembly did not feel that itwas the proper body to determinethis procedure.Until these points are clearedup by the court we feel unable toact.Arthur MacEwanStudent GovernmentPresidentChoose Cap & Gown editorEve Bell, a third year stu¬dent in the College, has beenchosen the editor-in-chief ofthe 1962-63 Cap and Gown.The selection was announced byGene Kadish, this year’s yearbookeditor, who also announced thatthe photography editorship wouldbe assumed by Daniel Lyon.Lyon, who contributed manyphotographs to the current editionof the yearbook, won first prizefor black and white photographyin this year’s (Festival of theArts) photography contest.The new associate editor will beHarvey Golomb, a first year col¬lege student.The publication date for thisyear’s book has been set for May15. According to Kadish the bookswill be distributed in Mandel hallcorridor as soon as they are re¬ceived from the printer,Said Kadish, “Everything is go¬ing on schedule. The publicationdate will certainly be met if wedon’t lose the book again.”Blasts petition letterTo the editor:Mr. Unferth’s accusationmade in a letter to the edi¬tor in yesterday’s Maroonnecessitate defining POLIT’sresponsibilty in the Student Gov¬ernment. Our most important res¬ponsibility is to carry out the plat¬form we ran on in the recentelection.We cannot represent, people whodo not agree with our platformany more than we can representthose who voted for abolition ofStudent Government. But, on theother hand, we are not unrespon¬sive to the needs and desires ofany group on campus..If the students who are repre¬sented by Mr. Unferth sincerelydesires to be more fully repre¬sented in the Student Governmentthis is only an assumption —their needs an ddesires may beaired at any POLIT caucus-Our caucuses have always re¬mained free and open, and all per¬sons who are seriously interested can come, speak, gain voting priv¬ileges,In addition, three SG commit¬tees are open to non-assemblymembers. We sincerely hope thatstudents dissatisfied with their re¬presentation will take advantageof the many opportunities to im¬prove it, rather than destroy it.Gene KadishPOLIT party chairmanHARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEm A - - — 1233FA a—1318" ^ —7699CANOE TRIPS9UET1CO • SUPERIOR WILDERNESSCamp, swim, fish, cruise and explore in the world’s greatestCanoe Country! For men or women. A few hours from home.Only $6.25 per person per day for Grumman canoe, allnecessary camping equipment, and choice food. Write forfree colored folder, food list and map: BILL ROM CANOECOUNTRY OUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota.You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.101 . East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711 SEWING MACHINESERVICERepairs on Americanand ForeignRentals: $6 a monthSpecial Rates for Facultyand StudentsBilly Williams6141 S. GreenwoodBU 8-2083 Slate WSF grantsThe center for undergrad¬uate research in the behav¬ioral sciences will offer fiveNational Science foundation(NSF) stipends this summer toundergraduates doing research inthe behavioral sciences.The stipends will provide $60 aweek for eight weeks.They will be awarded by a com¬mittee of faculty members in thebehavioral sciences on the basisof the merit of the proposed re¬search projects.All proposals must be submittedby May 4 to psychology 204. Ap¬plication forms may be obtainedfrom the psychology office. Theawards will be announced on May15.The center was created earlierthis year by a grant awarded bythe NSF to enable science majorsto gain experience in researchbefore entering graduate school.Blackwood to lectureEasly Blackwood, composerand instructor in the musicdepartment will discuss “Acontemporary composer’sproblems- artistic and practical”in the Channing Murray club’ssecond spring lecture on the artsSunday evening-The lecture will be given at7:30 pm in the parlor of the FirstUnitarian church at 1174 East57 street.foreign car hospitalsee page 8STRAUS. BLOSSER& McDowellMembersNew York Stock* ExchangeMidwest Stock ExchangeDetroit Stock ExchangeAmerican Stock ExchangeHyde ParkShopping Center55th and LAKE PARKCHICAGO 37Phone NOrmal 7-0777%{Jear (Contact eJten6eibyDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St.at University Avo. HV 3-8372 Highlighted by road tripsto Detroit and Drake and aChicago Stadium date againstBrandeis, and sprinkled with16 other games against good smallcollege teams, next year’s Chi¬cago Maroons basketball sched¬ule is the toughest in years. Thethree big games and the generalhigh caliber of the opposition willbe a maximum challenge for thetalents of the 1962 tlam, accord¬ing to Coach Joe Stampf, who an¬nounced the schedule Wednes¬day.The game with Brandeis willmark the lirst time in nearly 20years that the Maroons will haveappeared in ^ the 20,000 seatOctopus palace of Madison street,one of the nation’s biggest in¬door arenas and better knownas the rowdy home of the Black-hawks. But collegiate basketballis also a Stadium feature, andthe night of February 2 will pitMaroons against Judges in thecompany of such erstwhile powersas Iowa and Loyola. This willmark the first “big” game theMaroons have played in theirhome city since the school drop¬ped big time athletics altogetherafter the war. Brandeis was notyet in existence the last time UCplayed the Stadium.As will the Brandeis game,the Drake contest will be the firstever played between the schools.It is scheduled for Feb. 16 at theBulldogs’ Des Moines lair, wherethis year’s Drake team accomp¬lished the feat of nearly beatingnational champion Cincinnati,only to lose by a point in thefinal seconds.Third of the three key gamespits the Maroons against the Uni¬versity of Detroit at the MotorCity, which was the site of Chi¬cago’s first Renaissance plungeinto big time basketball in 1961.The result of that game was 59-39 Titans, and there was no dis¬grace on the UC side against aclub that then was built ‘roundthree-time All-America Dave De-Busschere. The Double D is nowcollecting a salary check forpitching with the White Sox, andthe odds may be more even thenext time the two clubs meet—GoBEAUTY SALONJ ExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302Dons lesmoments critiques...... la Sun Life AssuranceCompany of Canada pentproteger votre famille. Unfonds peut etre cree pourcouvrir les frais de la der-niere maladie et un revenupeut etre constitue pour as¬surer la securite financierede votre famille. Permettez-moi de vous montrer, sansobligation de votre part, com¬ment la Sun Life peut venirau secours de votre familledans les moments critiques.Ne tardez pas—soyez prets! .SUN LIFE DU CANADARALPH J.WOOD, JR.'48In La SalleFR 2-2290Chicago, Ill.FA 4-6800 which will be in the final gameof the year, March 2.Barring a tournament, that willalso be the last game for the BigThree starters who have made theMaroons go for the last two years—Joel Zemans, Gene Ericksen,and Larry Liss.As to the rest of the schedule,it features 11 field house games,3 more than last year. CentralIowa, which will be the guest atthe opener Dee. 1, Albion, andWisconsin State at Oshkosh (bygosh) will be making their firstappearances against the Maroons,and among the familiar names re¬turning are Wayne State, Beloit,Knox, and MacMurray. The an¬nual Christmas Holiday tourna¬ment is set for Grinnell, Iowa,with the Maroons again playingColorado college in first roundaction.The entire schedule is as fol¬lows:DEC 1—Centra] Iowa8—Lake Forest15—Albion28-29—Christmas tournamentat GrinnellJAN 2—Pier Illini5—Beloit8—At Illinois Tech12—At Knox19—At Denison26—Wayne State29—KnoxFEB 1—Wisconsin State(Oshkosh)2—Brandeis at Chicagostadium9—Illinois Tech16—At Drake19—St. Procopius23—MacMurrayMAR 2—At Detroit U.You are invitedto hearan explanationofChristianScienceBy attending aFree LectureentitledCHRISTIANSCIENCE:The Way toUnderstanding,Happinessfand HealingbyRALPH W. CESSNA,Cn Si Biof Chicago, III.Member of the Board of Lecture¬ship of The Mother Church, TheFirst Church of Christ, Scientist,in Boston, MassachusettsinThe OrientalInstituteLecture Hall1155 East 58th StreetFRIDAY. APRIL 27at 4:15 p.m.Under the auspices ofChristian Science Organizationat The University of ChicagoAll Are WelcomeApril 27, 1962 4 • CHICAGO MAROON •PtIVERPOli PlNe 'tTE»Calendar of Eventsof man,” 7 pm. chapel house.Duplicate bridge, informal game, 7:15Ida Noyes.Episcopal evening prayer, 8 pm, 5540Woodlawn Avenue.Festival of nations: International house,8 pm, (exhibits, movies, and foodbazaar from 3 pm to 6 pm).Folk dancing: 8 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Midwest Film Festival, final showing ofbest judged films, comments by judgesand festival officials, announcementof awards, 8 pm. law school audit¬orium.Blackfriars: “Sing Out. Sweet Rock,”8:30 pm, Mandel hall.Monday, April 30Lecture series: “Persia and the West inthe 19th century." 3:30 pm. socialscience 122, AKS I.ambton. school ofOriental and African studies, Uni¬versity of London.Films on the building of the Indiannation: “Democracy in Action: (!reatExperiment: Six Years of Freedom:India and the UN; 7 pm, Rosenwald2.Eighth annual Vivekananda Memoriallecture: “The Impact of Hindu societyon Indian Muslims.” 8 pm, April 30.Rosenwald 2. -Khwaja Ahmad Faruqi.professor of Urdu. University ofDelhi, visiting professor of Indianliterature. University of Wisconsin.Coffe plus: 9 pm, Shorey house, Piercetower.Set TB cStudent Health service(SHS) will give tuberculosisrecheck examinations to some1200 students on Tuesdayfrom 8 am (o 12 noon and from1 to 4:30 pm.The tests are required by theTuberculosis Control program ofall students not screened in thepast three years.The procedure consists of atuberculin skin test and a chestmicrofilm examination. All thosereceiving skin tests must returnto Student Health next Thursday,between 8 am and 3 pm to re- For Rent and For SaleHouse for Sale South ShoreSpacious, attractive, convenient. Fourbedrooms. 2 baths, garage and car port,full basement, remodeled kitchen. 3blocks to excellent public elementary andhigh schools. Pleasant family neigh¬borhood. SVii'r interest 22 year loan.5 modern appliances 3 air conditionersincluded in price. Mid 20’s. Ml3-8032.Sublease deluxe furnished 4 room apart¬ment. Elevated building. 50th st. andLake. Adults. DO 3-3695.BECKER “Grand Prix" AM-FM-SWautomobile radio. Transistorized, auto¬matic tuning. FANTASTIC performance.Brand new from factory in Germany.Cost *300, sell *150. DO 3-4300. ext.410, leave message.6945 Crandon—3'_. rooms. *105: 4rooms, *125. Available now. DO 3-5364.WantedMODELS. female. part time. Ages:21-30. Apply after 2 pm. 6 E. Monroe,Room 1304.heckupsceive final clearance.Students not screened in thepast three years have also beenrequested to make appointmentsfor health re-evaluations. SHSurges all who anticipate the needof health transcripts within thenext year to take this opportunityto bring their medical records upto date.Students notified to appear fortuberculosis tests who fail to doso will be referred to the Deanof Students who will, accordingto Willard de Young, acting di¬rector of SHS, “flag” their reg¬istration records. Girl needed to share luxurious nearnorth apt. for summer, maybe longer.Your share of 8*5 glorious rooms, patio,plus 1 1 bath, approx. $60 mo. CallCE 6-5947, 9 to 5.Wanted to buy used motor scooter,D'Anjou. FR 2-7700. ext, 358.Experienced Research Assisilantto director of social study organization.DO 3-7873.Two UC Alumni seek third mail tx»share 6 room lakeview apartment.Monthly cost including utilities andmaid service. *80. HY 3-3898. evenings.ServicesKenwood Radio and T.V. Service Werepair T.V.'s, radios, hi-fis, tape re¬corders and all work guaranteed.6508 S. KimharkNO 7-0830PersonalsDear OHM: Bogdan and Jimmy willdebate Peace in Breasted hall. 3 pmthis Sunday.Rummage sale books St. AmbroseSchool Hall, 1014 E. 47 st.: Fri. April27. 9 am-9 pm: Sat.. April 28. 9 am -6 pm; Sponsor: St. George School PTA,St. Ambrose parish.Dear M os srs. Aronson and Denitch:show up V arty Sunday. 3 pm. , BreastedHall to hi •ar yourselves talk peace.Little Bov : I'm petting a ra bbit.Little Girl : Why are yo u !>♦■ It ing thatr abbit ?Tattle Boy : Because I pet eren tie things.Cop: I’m a cop. why is that boy pet-t ing a rabbit?Little Girl : Because the r ahltit is gentle.Little Boy : Watch this sp ace 1 for furthergentle things.Creative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.Christian Science ideasgiven in lecture todayA lecture on the principles ofChristian science will he giventhis afternoon at 4:13 in theOriental institute.Friday, April 27Episcopal holy communion, 7:1" am,Bond chapel.Lutheran matins, 1 1 :30 am. Bond chapel.Lecture series: Introduction to theology,Karl Barth. 2 pm. Rockefeller Mem¬orial chapel.Florence James Adams Poetry Readingcontest. final competition, 3 pm.Swift commons.Illustrated lecture: “Chinese painting.”3:30. Ida Noyes library. David Kwo.Lecture series: "Persia and the Westin the Nineteenth century.” 3:30 pm,Social science 122. Miss Lambton.Oceanography lecture: “The Sea shoreproblem,” a discussion of ecologicalzonation, 3:30 pm. Rosenwald 26.Meet ing. Particle: A quarterly by andfor science students. 3:30 pm, IdaNoyes 308, spring issue.Lecture: “Christian Science the wavto understanding. happiness. andhealing." 4:15 pm. Oriental insti¬tute. Ralph Cessna, board of lecture¬ship. First Church of Christ, scien¬tist, Boston.Student awards ceremony: 4:30 pm.Bond chapel.Midwest film festival: “Spectre of therose,” by Ben Hecht. with JudithAnderson. 7 pm and 9 pm. Judd 126.Sabbath service: 7:45. Hillel foundation.Motion picture: “North by Northwest,”8 pm and 10 pm, Burton-Juilsoncourts.Blackfriars show: “Sing Out. SweetRock," 8:30 pm. Mandel hall.Saturday, April 28Judo AAU championships, 10 am to 10pm. Fieldhouse.Varsity baseball game, 1 pm. Staggfield. Chicago vs. Wabash college.Midwest film festival, 2 pm. law schoolauditorium. "Pan American Games,”“Revisitation.” “Maby Dick.” “Isle ofthe Native,” “Wheel of Fortune,”“Urban Safari,” “Watch out." “Howto make a ewe turn,” “Maiz,” and “Lightning and Arm Pits.”Television series: Vistas, WBBM TV.2 pm, “The Place of Art in the His¬tory of the American Negro.”Samuel Stratton, instructor, Univer¬sity college.Midwest film festival. 8 pm, law schoolauditorium. “Kali Nihta, Socrates.”“The Barrio.” “On Sundays." “Travel¬ogue.” “Commute.” "Round andSquare,” “Within m.v Heart,” and“Art, Artists, and Beatnicks.”Sunday, April 29Roman Catholic Masses: Calvert house.8:30. 1ft, 11 am, 12 noon.Episcopal communion service: Bondchapel, 9:30 am.Lutheran communion service, 10 am,Graham Taylor chapel.Judo championships, completion, 10 am,fieldhouse.Radio discussion: “What Makes a GoodNewspaper." WFMF, 1 1 am. HermanFiner, professor, department of poli¬tical science: Milburn Akers, editor.Chicago Sun-Times; Philip Ennis,assistant professor, graduate libraryschool: moderator. John JustinSmith, columnist. Chicago Daily News.University Religious service, 11 am.Rockefeller memorial chapel. theReverend Elbert C. Cole. Indianapolis.Midwest film festival: 2 pm. law schoolauditorium, “The Bulb Changer.”“Hercules.” “Music of Williamsburg.”“Assembly line.” “To LA with Lust.”“40 causes of acute abdominal pain.”“Venezia,” and “Nocturne.”Track meet: 3 pm, Stagg field, UCtrack club development meet.Debate: “The US and USSR chancesfor peace." 3 pm. Breasted hall.James Aronson, editor of the NationalGuardian and Bogdan Denitch. leaderof the socialist party of Californiaand California trade unionist.United Vesper service: 6:30 pm, Thorn-dike-Hilton chattel.Lecture series: The arts. 7 pm. 1174E 57 Street. “A Contemporary Com¬poser's Problems Artistic and Pract¬ical.” Easley R. Blackwood, assistantprofessor of music.Seminar: “Freud and a Christian viewforeign car hospital“ME, A LOVEBOMB""Seems I can’t evenwalk down the streetin my new slacks with¬out being followedby women. I wishthey’d show moreself-control. Not thatI blame ’em. Taperslacks are hard toresist"TAPERS4.95 to 6.95R. J. Reynolds Tobacco C«., Winston-Salem. N. C.At your favorite campus shopTHE ST one FOK MCA*©dttttt attfc fiampua fciiajtIn the New Hyde ParkShopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St.Phone 752-8100 Its whats up front that countsWINSTON TASTES GOOD //te a cigarette stiou/d!I FILTER-BLEND I is yours in Winston and only Winston.Up front you get rich golden tobaccos specially selectedand specially processed for filter smoking. Smoke Winston.8I kS4L Culture VultureOn campusTheatreTonight, tonight, is not just anynight, lor “Sing Out Sweet Rock”(Black I liars’ choice for their musi¬cal comedy, according to latestreports) opens in Mandel hall.This year’s show is about the riseof a rock ’n roll singer. Ticketsfor tonight’s performance at 8:30,or Saturday’s or Sunday’s at thesame time, are $2.50 and $2. Stu¬dent prices are $2 and $1.50, andall tickets may be purchased atthe Mandel box office.Actor’s company will present aprogram over WUCB next Thurs¬day at 8:30 pm. You can see the‘•live” show in the Reynold’s clublounge for a quarter.Films“Spectre of the Rose,” a 1947production described as “one ofthe wierdest pictures to come outof post war Hollywood,” is to¬night’s “Film for the DisgruntledConnoisseur,” presented- by Docu¬mentary films. You’ll be admittedto Judd 126 at either 7:15 or 9:15for fifty cents, or for nothing ifyou hold a ticket to the MidwestFilm festival series. At Judd to¬night, Doc films also will be sell¬ing single admission tickets forthe Saturday afternoon and even¬ing, and Sunday afternoon andevening shows ' in their MidwestFilm festival. Noyes . , . awarding of studentart, photography, and literaryprizes at 4:30 today in Bondchapel . . . the Int house Festivalof the Nations program Sunday,starting at 3 pm ... a May danceTuesday ats 12:30 in the mainquadrangle ... a slide lecture onMarc Chagall’s Jerusalem win¬dows at 8 pm Tuesday at Hillelhouse, given by Harold Haydon.A discussion of poetry at 3 pmWednesday in Breasted hall . . .four poets reading their works at8 pm Wednesday in Breasted . . .and a lecture by Santha RamaRau in the law school auditoriumat 3:30 pm Thursday. Further de¬tails about any of these are avail¬able at the Mandel hall box office,where you can also purchasetickets to those events having ad¬mission charges. IndiansThe ninth annual AmericanIndian exposition is being heldthis weekend in the little theatreof McCormick place. The exposi¬tion includes a gallery of Ameri¬can Indian paintings, ceremonial open 1o the public, will be con¬ducted by Dieter Kober.Baritone Robert Merrill will givea concert Sunday night at 8:30 atChicago Sinai Congregation, 5350South Shore Drive. Tickets, whichcost from $2.50 to $7.50, may bereserved by calling BU 8-1600. The Fine Arts quartet will holdits last Studebaker theatre con¬cert of the year^Wedrfesday even¬ing at 8:15. Students may pur¬chase unsold tickets for 75 centsby presenting ID cards at the boxoffice one hour before curtaintime.tribal dances by Indians, andIndian arts and crafts “from thegreat plains to the Everglades;from the woodlands to the desertcountry.”The exhibits are open from 6to 11:30 tonight; from 1 to 11:30pm tomorrow; and from 1 to 6 Student group formsto aid slum childrenA group of College students in the Chicago area havepm on Sunday. Dance perform- organized a volunteer program to provide slum youngstersances are at 8 tonight, tomorrow who drop out of school with basic vocational skills. Univer-afternoon 8 Pm’ and at 3 Sunday sity of Chicago students are being sought to participate inthe program.Music nr ih* ovo interested in working on the pro-“Most of the drop-outs areHandel s “Israel in Egypt” ora- Negroes from low socio-economic ject to contact her by Sunday,An Alfred Hitchcock thriller,“North by Northwest,” is Burton-Judson cinema’s selection for theevening. The film, which starsCary Grant and Eva Marie Saint,will be shown at 8 and 10 in theJudson dining hall. Admission isfifty cents."The Captain’s Table,” an im¬port from Great Britain about theproblems of a tramp steamer cap¬tain, will be showed by Inter¬national house movies Mondayevening at 8 in the Int house as¬sembly hall. Admission is fiftycents. Off campusTheatre“Krapp’s Last Tape.” by SamuelBeckett, joins Edward Albee’s’The Zoo Story” at Playw’rightsat Second City next Tuesday.Servern Darden fa UC graduate)will switch from satire at SecondCity to the dramatic role ofKrapp. Playwrights is at 1842North Wells, and AN 3-5150 is thenumber to call for reservationsand ticket information. torio will be presented this after- backgrounds; some have spentnoon at 2 by the Chicago Sym- years in grammar school, await-phony orchestra and chorus. This ing their 16th birthday so thatis the first performance of the they can legally leave school,”work in the orchestra's history, said Lois Begun, a third yearlomorrow night at 8:30 Walter student in the College.Hendl will conduct the orchestra a friend of Miss Begun atin music by Berlioz, Beethoven, Northwestern university has gath-and Rachmaninoff. Orchestra hall, ered a group of about 35 students Englewood YMCA which is nearwhere both concerts will take who are working with the Lawn- DC, has asked for volunteers whodale YMCA to train drop-outs.The Lawndale program is prov¬ing successful, and superintendentof schools Benjamin Willis hasplaced the facilities of the Chi- April 29. She can be reached be¬tween 3 and 7 pm Saturday andSunday at extension 168-If interested students can befound, a group will be organizedat the University of Chicago. Theplace, is at 220 South Michigan.If you can't hear the orcehstrathis afternoon, you can listen tofive of its members who comprisethe Chicago Orchestra ensemble,tonight at 8. They are playing a ca&° Board of Education at stuFilmsThe Spring Film series of theHyde Park Art center starts Sun¬day with a “Comic Short Pot¬pourri” of Chaplin, Keaton, Lahr,and Sennet tt. Showings are at 4and 7 pm at the center, 5236 SouthBJackstone. Call DO 3-9565 be¬tween 1 and 4 pm on weekdaysand from 9 am to 4 pm on Satur¬days. benefit concert of Haydn, Debussy,Rust, and Glazounow at the FirstUnitarian church, 1174 East 57,for the benefit of the Unitarianservice committee. Tickets maybe reserved by calling FA 4-4100Admission is $2; $1 for students.The last of the “Music fromDenmark” concerts by the Chica¬go Chamber orchestra is Sundayafternoon at 3:30 in Simpsontheatre of the Chicago NaturalHistory museum. The concert, dents’ disposal. Plans for organ¬izing similar programs in otherneighborhoods are being consid¬ered, Miss Begun said.She has asked people who are W’ould be willing to work duringthe month of May. If the Mayprogram is successful, a regularorganization would probably beset up at the beginning of theAutumn quarter, according toMiss Begun.foreign car sales MODEL CAMERALeica, Bolex, Nikon,Ilasselblad Dealer1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTsee page 8Festival of the ArtsHere, briefly, are next week’sFOTA’s events. The finals of theFlorence Adams poetry readingcontest today at 3 in Bond chapel... a “Lecture Demonstration ofChinese traditional painting” byDavid Kwo at 3:30 today in Ida RECORDSAll Labels; ListedOthers AvailableService Center,Reynolds Club$2.50 fflapiciSUNDAY DINNERS 4 to 9 P.M.Shrimp Creole, Welsh RarebitImperial King Crab and Curried ShrimpResv. NO 7-9693 1450 East 57th St. THE FRET SHOP1-3, 5-10 p.m. Weekdays10-5 Saturday & SundayInstruments, New, Used, AntiqueGuitars, Banjos, Mandolins, etc.Supplies — RepairsPhone NO 7-10601551 East 57th St.TAhSAM-Y&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESK ANDAM Eli If AN IH SUESOrEN DA1T.Y11 A.M. to 10:30 T.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 PIZZASFor The Price OfNICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780 GOLD CITY INNSpecializing in Cantonese FoodOrders to Take Out10% Discount to Students With This Ad5228 Harper HY 3-2559dark theatredark & niodisonfr 2-284550*r#^ w timesfar college studentsA open 7:30 a m.late show 3 a m.★ different double feature dally★ Sunday Film Guild★ write in for free program guideA little gal-lery for gals onlyA every friday is ladies dayall gals admitted for only 25cA Clark parking - 1 door south4 hours 95c after 5 p.m.PROGRAM FOR THEWEEKENDfri., 27th - “midnight lace'and “let’s makelove”sat., 28th • “george raft sto¬ry’’ and “pocket¬ful or ■miracles’’29th « “sons and lovers”and “elmer gan¬try” DEARBORN AT DIVISIONWas there evera strangerfriend? A moredesigning,insolent lover?A story morediabolique? ReneClement’sSec Chicogo Dally Papers for Correcf FeafureTImes Chicago's most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign, anddoyteslic films.STUDENTSTake advantage of thespecial discount avail¬able to you. 90?! any dayexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. card to the cashier. PARK 9 0 7 1LAKE //PARK A T S5 R D ; N O 7 9 O 7 Ithe (A-yde park theatreSINAI TEMPLEpresentsROBERT MERRILLIN CONCERTSUNDAY, APRIL 29, 8:30 p.m.All Seats ReservedTICKETS ON SALE 1720 E. 54 ST.BU 8-1600MAIN FLOOR — $7.50 & 5.00BALCONY — $5.00, 3.50 & $2.50SINAI TEMPLE5350 S. SHORE DR. STARTS FRIDAY, APRIL 27Winner of 27 World-Wide Film AwardsLUCHINO VISCONTI SROCCO and HIS BROTHERSAlain Delon - Annie Girardot - Claudia CardinaleAcademy Award Winning Short SubjectThe BATTLE of GETTYSBURGFriday and Weekdays Short 6 and 9 Feature 6:30 and 9:30Saturday only Short 6:30 and 9:30 Feature 7 and 10Sunday onyl Short 2:30, 5:30, 8:40 Feature 3, 6:05, 9:10NEXTA SUMMER TO REMEMBERandTHE KITCHENFree Weekend Patron Parking at 5230 South Lake Park Ave.Special Student Rates WITH Student I.D. CardsApril 27, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Committee on General Studies explained(continued from page two)‘ But for several years in theearly fifties, while Committeemembership remained below 15,the program was looked upon withsuspicion.Members of thi Committee atthe time were James Cate, Gros-venor Cooper, Robert Strozier,Joshua Taylor, Warner Wick, andMaclean. All except Strozier, whohas died, and Cate, are still asso¬ciated with it. In addition, today’smembership includes Mark Ashin,John Cawclti, Alan Gewirth, Willi¬am McNeill, Richard Stern, AlanSimpson, David Williams, and thenewest member, Edw'ard Rosen¬heim.All are scholarsAll of them noted scholars intheir own fields, the original facul¬ty took on the additional burdensof Committee work. Simpson, deanof the College, who has been amember of the Committee since1954, attributes a large amount ofthe success of the program to thew’illingness of its members, locatedelsewhere in the humanities, tooffer introductory courses in theirfields for Committee students.These introductory courses now-number six—one in each of themajor humanistic fields. The bach¬elor’s candidate takes four ofthese. They are planned “to intro¬duce the student to problems thatW'ill confront him in his advancedstudy and to important methods ofinvestigating them.” .Under the four field program,the one stressed by the program,the student concentrates on oneof the six fields, and extends hisinterest in three of the remainingfields.He takes five courses that willfamiliarize him with the main' figures, periods, and branches ofhis field of concentration. He alsochooses five courses in his otherthree fields — including a yearsequence in a course in one of thefields.Admitted in 3rd yearStudents are admitted to theprogram in their third or fourthyear—by w'hich time they havepresumably satisfied the GeneralEducation requirements. It is notunusual for them to maintain afour course schedule throughoutthe program.Maclean points out that this isa heavy load—especially in addi¬tion to the writing of a paper re¬quired for both the bachelor andmaster degrees.“We wanted both breadth andspecialization,” Maclean explains.“It would take more effort to getboth, and we knew it.”In fact, the Committee w'as thefirst department to ask its stu¬dents to take four courses, instead, of the usual three. This involvedagreements with the Bursar’s office that the taking of fourcourses, at a time when all otherstudents took three, would not re¬sult in additional tuition chargesto ihe Committee student. Aneven more serious problem wasconvincing people that a fourcourse load w’ould not prove detri¬mental to grade averages. Thisthe Committee conclusively proved.Simpson, who taught the intro¬ductory history course with JamesCate, describes the GeneralStudies program figuratively as atriangle (and adds parenthetic¬ally, “I'd like to think that thesocial sciences might plan some¬thing like it.”)uThe courses intro¬ducing the humanistic disciplinesare the tranglc’s base; the tw'odisciplines the student specializesin are the sides. Finally, thestudent brings his program to apeak, in writing his final paper.The paper, which is required ofall degree candidates, is on a prob¬lem uniting the student’s twofields of concentration. It is theresponsibility of Richard Stern,secretary of the Committee andassociate professor of English, toinstruct in the writing of thesepapers.Stern commentsStern teaches Humanities 280, acourse in the writing of Commit¬tee papers, in the winter quarter.However, the course does not meetirregularly and Stern himself saysabout the writing of the papers,“I do almost nothing—I act as akind of stone wall and sometimesas a filter.”He describes his role as “veryenriching . . . You see a studentmature intellectually, see a personbecome a scholar befofe youreyes.”One of the major aims of thepaper is the production of a clear,tough expository prose. “Studentsought.” Maclean believes, “tolearn how to write for publication.That’s why we hired Dick Stern,a professional writer.”Stern, author of two recentnovels, has just been appointedFulbright lecturer in Americanliterature for next year at theUniversity of Venice and Rome.During his absence, Edward W.Rosenheim, previously chairman ofthe humanities staff in the Col¬lege, will conduct the Committee’swriting program.Several of the papers, which arepreferably short as a further em¬phasis on making every wordcount, have, in fact, been pub¬lished. All offer examination, an¬alysis, criticism, or research intointeresting subjects. Some of thetitles have included: “Art andconsciousness in the asthetics ofJohn Dewey and R. G. Colling-wood,” “A study of witchcraft in 17th century England,” “Italiantheatre design,” and “The clownin Picasso, Ruarke, and Rimbaud.”Stern and Maclean, along withMark Ashin, associate professor ofEnglish and senior adviser in theCollege, are the Committee’soperating officers. The entirefaculty sets policy; these threemen handle its daily affairs, eachhaving a separate and specialfunction.Ashin advisesAshin is adviser to students inthe Committee. By 1957, when hejoined the Committee he had longbeen an adviser in the College,dealing with students in all de¬partments. But at that time thepressures of the increased mem¬bership in the Committee causedhirr. to concentrate only on theCommittee students. He was moti¬vated by his regard for the pro¬gram and his feeling that it wasimportant for students to havethe same adviser throughout theirundergraduate careers.Part of his function is to giveaccurate information about theprogram to first and second yearstudents who might become mem¬bers of the Committee. He alsoplays an important role in decidingon the admission of qualified stu¬dents at the end of their secondyear. He stresses that it is “nevergrade average alone which admitsstudents to the Committee. TheCommittee thus differs from thekind of honors Committee manyschools have.”Ashin probably knows howquickly membership in the Com¬mittee has grown in the last fewyears, better than any one else —except perhaps Maclean who fitsall of them into his home at Com¬mittee parties.Membership lowFor several years after its in¬ception, the Committee maintainedmembership at the astonishinglylow figure of 12 students. Then,suddenly, it began to snowball,and the problem became just theopposite: howr to limit member¬ship.Oddly, and significantly, theproblem was solved by the stu¬dents themselves, when the num¬ber reached about 60. They recom¬mended that a number be set atabout 50 to 55 (“the largest num¬ber of students w'hich could becomfortably fitted into Maclean’sliving room”). Maclean is proudtha‘ this request has been honoredever since. He adds that 55 seemsto be just the right number toachieve the unique esprit de corpswhich prevails among Committeemembers.At first, the Committee restric¬ted itself to College graduates, notadmitting students from other uni¬ versities. Eventually, as the fameof the College itself spread, gradu¬ate students began choosing UC.They came admiring the College,and stayed to participate in theCommittee. “We provided,” Mac-lean says, “what they wanted intheir own colleges and couldn’tget.”Now', over a dozen students ayear enter the Committee fromother universities. MA candidatesnumber about 15 to 20 at present.The other 35 are third and fourthyear undergraduates.Maclean relates w'hat, to him,was an interesting phenomenon.“We had thought that most stu¬dents entering the Committeewould terminate their formal edu¬cation w’ith a general degree.Perspective broad“Now they come to the Com¬mittee on the BA level believingthat it’s the proper way tospecialize, and that when they dospecialize, they’ll have broaderperspective. They don’t stop withour degree—even the majority ofour MA’s go on to their PhD’s.”Shirley Hopps, now instructorin the department of art and ofhumanities in the College, is acase in point. She was one of thefirst students in the program, re¬ceiving her three-year MA in1955. A student at Stockton inCalifornia for two years, whatshe heard “about Hutchins and theUniversity’s reputation in humani¬ties” prompted her to transfer toUC to study history. Once here,Mrs. Hopp’s interest in art ledher into the Committee’s uniqueprogram.“There were very few of us,”she recalls, “and almost all of uswere College graduates.”Her specialty is fifteenth cen¬tury Netherlandish painting. Shepoints out that this illustrates theimportance of a broad backgroundin any special field. “Fifteenthcentury art is an area that com¬bines a great deal of culturalknowledge along with ideologicalform of art . . . Art history is adiscipline which is dependent onother disciplines.”As a Committee student, Mrs.Hopps studied art under JoshuaTaylor, now professor of ait inthe College and in the department,and a member of the originalCommittee faculty.In addition to teaching severalart courses and the humanities111-113 sequence, Taylor directsall the research in his departmentin modern art, his speciality. Heis a prolific writer, having pro¬duced two books last year, onepublished in Italy; three morebooks are scheduled for publica¬tion this year.He sees his students- both Col¬lege and departmental frequently if not regularly, and has an activelecture schedule at both UC andelsewhere. He does a good dealof work for art publications andattends frequent conferences. Inaddition to all of this, he adviseson several Committee papers eachyear.Working w'ith Committee stu¬dents delights Taylor, who wisheshe had more time to spend withthem. He is especially excited bythe papers.“The student W’ho knows thesubject,” he says, “is anxious totalk about it. My real function isin the initial discussion—to makesure students are steered in thelight direction. To anyone writinga paper, there is a tremendous ad¬vantage in having a kind orsounding board. The proper func¬tion of a professor is to serveexactly as that.”Working with both Committeestudents and art majors has givenTaylor a unique perspective fromwhich to view the results of theCommittee’s broad education. Hesays that these students “dealwith provocative subjects and canbring to them backgrounds ourdepartmental students cannot . . .There is clear proof that there isa need for a kind of general edu¬cation by good students.”Maclean praisedThe Committee attempts to pro¬vide this. In Simpson’s words, itis “an excellent program, uniquehfortunate in having a man likeMaclean, and other good membersof the faculty.”Simpson’s remark is representa¬tive of the entire Committeefaculty. There is no one whowould assert that the programwould have been ossible withoutMaclean’s “dedication,” “sacrifice,”and “personal interest in stu¬dents.”“Maclean does a perfectlysplendid job,” says Simpson, echo¬ing students as well as faculty inthe Committee. “He is one of thefinest teachers on campus, andtakes the closest possible interestin the welfare of his students.”' foreign car hospital & clinicdealers in:• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambretta5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob testermg psychiatristCfeo FESTIVAL of the ARTS EVENTS jfec j* 1 NEXT WEE K!! *NEW GEfJOHN LOGAN ItKAI m rutibF.W. GILLMAN DAVID ROSS,DIRECTORPAUL CARROLLCOMBINE! POET RALPH MILLSRY READING Lecture: Ibsen andcontemporary TheatreTicket are $1.00WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, at 8:00 P. M.Tickets are $1.00 FRIDAY, MAY 4at 8:00 p.m.BREA tSTED HALL — 58th and UNIVERSITYJ 1CHICAGO MAROON • April 27. 1962»Anti-HUAC rally and lecture setCampus rally today Wilkinson to speak Sweet Rocksings outA rally protesting the activities of the House commit¬tee on un-American activities (HUAC) and calling for itsabolition will be held at 3 this afternoon in Hutchinsoncourt. In case of rain, the rally will be in the Reynolds,'Rlh. . - ■ — —The rally, held in conjunction Committee hearings in LosAith others across the country, is Angeles ended last Friday with ansponsored by the University of investigation of the Fair Play forChicago Students for Civil Liber- Cuba committee (FPFC), while alies, the Student Peace union new group of pro-HUAC picketers,(SPU), the campus chapter of the members of the American NaziIndependent Voters of Illinois party dressed in khaki and swas-(1VI), and the Young People’s tikas, appeared in the streets out-Socialist league. side.Speaking today will be Bogdan Police estimated that on FridayDen itch, a California trade union- there were 175 people protestingisl and socialist who participated the hearings, 30 friendly to thein the 1060 anti-HUAC demonstra- committee, and 425 “just looking.”tions in San Francisco; David Steve Roberts, West coastKelly, chairman of campus SPU; organizer for FPFC, told news-Pavid Wolf, vice-chairman of cam- men that he had invoked the fifthpus IVI; and Burton White, a amendment when questioned byCalifornia student active in the the committee. “The committee isanti-HUAC fight. trying to errorize citizens by pub-The recent closed hearing of the names of witnesses afterHUAC subcommittee is Los the eharmg is over, Roberts said.Angeles provided the impetus for "» ** <>" a fehmg expedition tothe demonstration, according to find out what kind of organizationthe sponsors. “Our organizations |he ^air fo1 ,a committeeare agreed in viewing the very w*existence of HUAC as an abridge- “It is a matter of public know-ment of the civil liberties guaran- ledge it (FPFC) is made up ofteed under the Constitution of the Americans of all types of politicalUnited States,” a statement issued shades ” ^by the groups explains. “The The House group has said itactivities of HUAC only serve to will not identify any of the wit-create an atmosphere of fear and- nesses until its investigation issuspicion.” complete. Frank Wilkinson, who served a contempt of Congresssentence for refusing to answer the questions of the Housecommittee on un-American activities (HUAC), will givean eyewitness report of the recent committee hearings inLos Angeles next Monday at 7:30 ’pm in Breasted hall. Wilkinson declined to use theWilkinson’s talk on “How can fifth amendment and refused tothe House un-American activities answer on the grounds that thecommittee be abolished is spon- committee existed in violation ofsored by the University of Chicago assembly orovi-Students for Civil Liberties. lree speech ancl aSbCmDly PrmiThe speaker has for many years sions of the first amendment. Hebeen active in movements to draw was convicted of contempt andsupport for the abolition of HUAC, tns conviction was upheld by aprincipally the Emergency Civil 5-4 division of the Supreme courtLiberties committee (ECLC) and (Warren, Black, Douglas, andthe National committee to Abolish Brennan dissenting).HUAC, of which he is executive *director. P" * *Wilkinson was in Atlanta during Jthe 1958 HUAC hearings there. It ^ ^was part of his job as field secre- Four professors and a re-tary of the ECLC to follow the search assistant from thecommittee’s itinerary, anticipating University of Chicago havethem by a few days to help , ^ ** , .develop local opposition and to ^een awarded Guggenheimgive any aid needed by subpoenaed fellowships for next year,witnesses.” They are among 270 nationalWhen the committee became winners of the grant, which isaware that he was in Atlanta, awarded to allow recipients tothey subpoenaed him and asked carry on studies which theyhim a series of questions relating have proposed. The following fiveto his allegedly Communist- have received awards:directed activities in connection George Haley, assistant profes-with the campaign to abolish the gQj. Spanish, will continue acommittee. A citation for con- sau(jy of Spanish poetry of thetempt was returned on the basis ic.i, j,nri 17*1,of his refusal to answer the ques- Anne Draftkom Kilmer, ra¬tion, “Are you now or were you search assistant in the Orientalever a member of the Communist institute, will work on studies ofParty • ’ the lexical texts of ancient Meso¬potamia.Vol. 70 — No. 89 University of Chicago, Tuesday, May 1,1962 31 Professor of English MortonDauwen Zabel will work on bio¬graphical and critical studies ofJoseph Conrad and Henrik Ibsen.Barth ends lecture seriesKarl Barth delivered hisfinal lecture at UC and re¬ceived an honorary Doctor ofDivinity degree at a Univer¬sity convocation called especiallyfor him Friday at Rockefellerchapel.Jerald Brauer, Dean of UC’sDivinity school, in presentingBarth for the degree, appraisedhis contribution to the modernworld: “Profound scholar, church-ly dogmaticism, fearless fighteragainst totalitarianism, KarlBarth inaugurated a new epochin Christian theology. His bril¬liant and creative interpretationof the Epistle to tlie Romans,1919, marked the beginnings of amodern Copernician theologicalrevolution.God is central“Harth’s concern was to reas¬sert the centrality of God overagainst the centrality of man inthe method and message of the¬ology. He has devoted a lifetimeof research, writing, and teachinglo this concern.”Barth, in his final lecture en¬titled, “The Spirit,” summed upthe points made in his previouslectures: “Obviously all thesesentences were ventured purelyfor the description of the placeof Evangelical theology. Theyobviously had a strictly theologi¬cal content. They could be onlytheologically guaranteed, onlytheologically intended and under¬stood.Defines Theology“What is theology? It is sciencethe knowledge of that w'ordof God spoken in God’s work,science in the school of HolyScripture witnessing to thatWorld of God, science laboringwith the question of truth whichis inescapably posed for the com¬munity that is called by thatWorld of God.”Emphasizing that the legiti¬macy and power of theology is derived from God alone, Barthstated: “Theology cannot lift it¬self, as it were by the bootstraps,to reach the level of God. It canpresuppose no help or buttressfrom the outside and just as littlefrom within.”“Precisely in this way, theologywould sell its birthright for a messof pottage, for its work can bewell done only when all presup¬positions are renounced, fromwithout and from within.Hits presuppositions“In one way or another thevery thing theology seeks wouldbe lost whenever theology reliesrelies on presuppositions. Wetherefore have to speak about atheology that is hidden in thesestatements. This is the powerpresent and active in the historyof salvation, in the history of theBiblical witness, in the world oftheology when it witnesses tothese things.”Addressing himself specificallyto the “power” which is present intheology, Barth stated: “Thispower is not some philosophicalassumption which, like a magician,the theologian c >uld employ ornot employ as he needed.Power superior“This power is totally super¬ior to theology. It is such thatthe theologian does not have itin his control. Well for him if he,brooding over his work, hears itsrushing and finds his sentencesdetermined, ruled, and controlledby it. But he does not know‘whence it comes or whither itgoes.’ He can only wish to fol¬low its work, not to precede it.He can only let his thought andspeech be controlled by it andnot it controlled by them.”Speaking about this power as“the spirit of the Lord,” Barthsaid: “This Spirit is HimselfGod, the same one God who isalso the Father and the Son, who acts as Creator, yet also as theReconciler, as the Lord of thecovenant*“This Spirit in the factor whoseexistence and action make pos¬sible and real the existence bothof Christianity in the world andalso of every single Christian, asa believing, loving, hoping wit¬ness to the word of God.“With relation to Evangelicaltheology, it can only be a spirit¬ual theology. -Only under thepower of the Spirit can theologybe the real, happy science of theGospel. How does theology be¬come theology? It does not ‘be¬come’ this at all. But it may findthat the Spirit comes near, andmay without resisting rejoice andobey the Spirit.”Issues warningBarth, in warning about thedangers of pursuing an ‘unspirit-ual’ theology, stated: “Unspirit¬ual theology, whether it w’orks inthe pulpit, printed page, or in’dis¬cussions between young or oldtheologians would be so bad thatit could not compare wdth theworst editorials of the politicaljournalists.“As a foolist church presup¬poses the presence of the Spiritin its existence and action, so afoolish theology presupposes Himas the premise of its own sen¬tences.Both need God“Both remain utterly in need ofHim. Only the Spirit can help thetheology that lias become unspirit¬ual, become aw are of the misery ofthe arbitrary tricks of control¬ling Him. ‘Come thou spirit oflife,’ even the best theology canbe nothing better, than this pe¬tition.”In finally stating the positionof Evangelical theology, Barthconcluded: “Theology can ulti¬mately only take the position of one of those children who haveneither bread nor fish, but doubt¬less a father w'ho has both andwill give them these when theyask him for them."In this, its total poverty,Evangelical theology is rish,steadily borne and upheld, writh itstotal lack of presuppositions sinceit lays hold on the promise ac¬cording to which ‘the Spiritsearches all things, even the deepthings of God.‘ ” Jerry Lapointe as RockMonas emotes during ascene from last weekend'sBlackfriors' production ofUC student Bob Reiser's'Sing Out Sweet Rock.' Theshow, which ran for threedays in Mandel hall, will bereveiwed in tomorrow'sMaroon.Tax presents planto educate votersThe problems of a massivevoter education program onforeign affairs were discussedat a meeting last night heldby professor Sol Tax. The meet¬ing w'as a part of a Chicago dist¬rict project designed to developfull communication within thesecond congressional district.At last night’s meeting, Taxexpressed an aim of the programas the creation of a totally in¬formed electorate. Such an elec¬torate could let the governmentknow what the people wall toler¬ate.Tax continued that it is espec¬ially important in a voter educa¬tion program like this to overcomethe incompetency which mostpeople feel in the field of foreignaffairs.“The program would be not justto educate to outside facts, butto wrhat we citizens think, w'ant,and will tolerate,” said Tax. radio, and newspapers could allbe employed in the voter educa¬tion project.Tax then stated that intensiveoutside publication of the projectwould be useful, for it would givethe participants the feeling thatwhat they are doing is important,that they are being watched.He then said that this projectis a “w'eather vane,” testing com¬munity reaction and effectivenessof such a project.Last night’s meeting was at¬tended by about 30 persons, in¬vited because they had shownsome interest in foreign affairs.The group included students,lawyers, advertisers, several pro¬fessors, and persons from com¬munity organizations.Another meeting will be heldnext Monday to discuss how’ tofurther voter interest and dis¬cussion on foreign affairs. All ' -terested persons will be welcome.Tax proposed that study groups, Next week’s meeting will be atParent Teacher associations, com- 8 pm at the YMCA at 1833 Lastmunity organizations, television, 71 street.Assistant professor of chemis¬try Kenneth David Koppel hasproposed study in the synthesisof peptides for use in investiga¬tions of chemical phenomena ofbiological importance.James Charles Phillips, assis¬tant professor of physics, wallstudy the electronic structure ofmetals and semiconductors.(photos by Bergrer).'• te ; V. V..V w,-/- t y-vte, :• v-, ••- • •- .; v* '•*» •/., ' ",i; v.w • s;-v ' .’•••;• ' V.4 • ' , •MM CV; B■fe;’.. g (continued from page two) office that the taking of four in 17th century England." “ItalianCourses, at a tithe when all other theatre design, and "Tire clownin Picasso, ’Rug-rite, and Rimbaud.”Stern and Maclean, along withMark Ashift, associate professor ofEnglish and senior adviser liv theCollege, are the Comm ittee’soperating officers. The entirefaculty sets policy; these threemen handle its daily affairs, eachhaving a separate and specialfunction.if? ,. Bui for several years in the ... . . , ... ,..,Aearly fifties, while Committee students took three, would not re-membership remained below 15. sult in additional tuition charges■ the program was looked upon with* suspicion*Members of th< Committee at course load would not prove detri-to »he Committee student. Aneven more serious problem wasconvincing people that a fourthe time were James Gate, Gros-venor Cooper, Robert Strozier, mental to grade averages. Thisthe Committee eoncltSsively fffbvid.Simpson, who taught the iritfo-. ; • ;•>glfe'> .HHk-mHk* ■jfy?4t- Joshua Taylor, Warner Wick, andMaclean. AU except Strdzler, vvltohas died, and Cate, are still asso- ductory history course with Jameselated with it. In addition, today’s Cate, describes the Generalmembership includes Mark Ashin, Studies program figuratively as aJohn Cavielii, Alan Cewirth, Willi- triangle land todek parefithetic-ant McNeill, Richard Stern, Aten ally, ‘Td like tt> think that theSimpson. David Williams, and the social sciences might plan sofiie-newest member, Edward Rosen- thing like it,”) v The eburses intro-heim. ducing the humanistic disciplinesAll are scholars are the trangle's base; the twoAll of them noted scholars in disciplines the student specialisestheir own fields, the original facto}- in are the sides. Finally, thety took on the additional burdens Student brings his program to aof Committee work. Simpson, dean peak, in writing his final paper,of the College, who has feeeit^a The paper, wffieh is Jen wired ofmember of the Committee skua* all degree candklates, is tats prob-1954, attributes a large amount oftjbe specess of the program to the lem uniting the student’s twofields of concentration. It is thewpirjnesf of its members, located responsibility of Richard Stern,* ’ * * ' * x“ secretary of the Committee andassociate professor of English, toinstruct in the writing of theseelsewhere in the humanities, tooffer introductory courses in theirfields for Committee students.These introductory courses nownumber six—one in each of themayor humahistie fields. The bach¬elor’s candidate takes four ofthese. They are planned ” to •intro- papers.Stern commentsStern teaches Humanities 280, acourse in the writing of Commit-dace the student to problems that ^ pajx>rs. in the winter quarter.Vidfl confront him in Mis advanced However, the course does not meetstudy and to important methods ofinvestigating them.” ,Under' the four1 field program,the one stressed by the program,the student concentrates on oneof the sht- fields, and extends hisinterest in. three of the remainingfields. irregularly and Stern himself saysabout the writing of the papers.“I do almost nothing—I act as akind of stone wall and sometimesas a filter.”He describes his role as “veryenriching ... You see a studentmature intellectually, see a personbecome a scholar betefie yoqreyes.”One of the major a inis of thepaper is the product ion of a clear,tough expository prose. “Studentsfamiliarize him with the mainfigures, periods, and branches ofhk field of concentration. He alsochooses Itte courses in his otherthree fields — including a yearsequence in a course in opeof the ought.” Maclean behaves, “tofields.Admitted i» -.ii-slyY#*!*•',Students are admitted- to theprogram, in their third oc fourthyear by which time they have learn how to write for publication.That’s why we hired Dick Stern,a professional writer,”Stern, author of two recentnovels, has just been appointedFulbright lecturer in AmericanpresunwWy sMteftri thf Genera Wel.alure for mxl year a, thcEducajmn reiuiremenls. It .s not UnKmU of Verne*. and Rom<,unusual for them to maintain a Durto hU abso„co; Ed;,.ard wfour course schedule throughout Ros„nhein, pwfousfj. chairman ofthe program. the humanities staff in the Col-Maclean points out that thk Is lege, will conduct the Committee’sa heavy load—especially in addi- writing program,lion to the writing of a paper re¬quired for both the bachelor andmaster degrees. Several of the papers, which arepreferably short as a further cm*“We wanted both breadth and Phasis on making every wordspecialization,” Maclean explains.“It would take more effort to getboth, and we knew it.”In fact, the Committee was thefirst department to ask its stu- count, have, in fact, been pub¬lished. All offer examination, an¬alysis, criticism, or research intointeresting subjects. Some of thetitles have Included: “Art anddents to take four courses,, instead consciousness in the atohetics; ofof the usual three. This involved John Dewey and R, G. Colling-agreements with the Bursar's wood,” “A study of witchcraft Ashin advisesAshin is adviser to students inthe Committee. By 1957. when hejoined the Committee he had longbegn an adyiser in the College,dealing with students in all de¬partments. But at that.ttmedfiitpressures df the increased mem¬bership in the Committee causedhim to concentrate only on. theCommittee students. He was moti¬vated by his. regard for the- pro¬gram and .his feeling that it magimportant for students to havethe same adviser throughout theirundergraduate careers. vPart of his function Is th giveaccurate information about theprogram to first and second yearstudents Who might heeomo mem¬bers of the Commit lee. He alsoplays an important role In decidingon the admission of qualified stu¬dents at the end of their secondyear. He stresses that 1 is “nevergrade average alone which admitsStudents to the Committee. TheCommittee thus dilffers from thekind of honors Committee manyschools have.”Ashin probably knows howquickly-membership in the Com¬mit tee has grown to the tost lewyears, better than any one else -except perhaps Maclean who fitsall of them into hi- home at Com-"'WffCFparires. • . ’Membership low' For ne\eral yeat^ -after. Itk in¬cept ion , the Corn m i t tee ma i wta toedmembership at the asfonisHingf'ylow figure of .12 stUfk'nte, Then,-auddCnly, it began ,,to snowball,and the problem became just theopposite: how to limit, member¬ship.Oddly, and significantly, theproblem wa-s solved by the stu¬dents themselves, when t he mim-her reached about 60. They recom¬mended that a number be set -atabout 5# to 55 (“the.''Jacgest note*her of students which could ^becomfortahly fitted into Maclean'sliving room”). Maclean is,,.proudthat Rite request has- been• tginov- •(iever-Mncc. lie adds that 55 seems.:to be just the right number toaCteCve the unique esprit ,de corp>»>which prevails among Committeemembers.At first, the Committee restric¬ted itself to College graduates, notadmit t ing students ftean other uu'i- ate students began choosing UC.They came admiring the College,and stayed to participate in theCommittee. “We provided,” Mac-lean says; “what they wanted intheir own coHeges and couldn'tget-”Now, over a dozen students ayear enter the Committee fromother universities: MA candidatesnumber about 15 to 20 at present.The other 35 are third add fourthy&k undergraduates^.^- Mactegn rela t es wha t ,to hi m,was an interesting phenomenon“We had thought that most stu¬dents epteriog the Committeewould terminate their forma): edu-cation with q geheral degree -Petspectiye -1“Now t|iey come to the Corn-mitt ee on the BA level believingthat it’s . the proper way tospecialize, and fhffitehen' they dospecialize, they’ll . hdve broadrrpetepeetive. They don’t stop |rffhoiir degree even the majority ofour MA's go on to tlieir RirpN ’’Shirtev 1 lopps now test rhetorin the d< pai i in. nt ol at t and ofhumapitifS; to the College, is '%case i» point. 'She•was owe of thefirst students In the program,Ceiving her three-year MA in1935. A: student- tot '"^tockh^a.- ,;hl ■California for 'two- yearsE, yyha)she heal'd "about. Hatehtos and theUnivorsi t y’s repu tat ion in humani¬ties” prompted her to transfer toUC to study feisltey, Once.- here,Mrs. Item’s mferesh.in' acl flewher into ,the. ■■'CommtttecW-rttoiq'ti#prograpi,'‘There were very few of us.”she recalls, “and atmosi all t>t u>,:■*-were College grudwatos 5 'THer specialty is fifiteentli een-tvu*g- Netliei landish painting Shepoints out that tills ill'usttales theimportarua ol a hmn| hukeioundin any special field "Fittoentheentuiv afi, is an aiea that tom-biltos A deal o! ciiltui.ilknowledge along with ideological^form of art ... Ait hi.storv is adkcipfiTe winch is (1* |K ikh nt ,on.toher'dfsciplines.,!*'•As a Commit l < e S t reh-.niV MisHopps si udied art under JoshuaTaylor, now, professor of ait in,the (Plfegi’ aiid in the departnient!and a menihei’ Of tee ipriginaltPoCttfilil lee laeifity. , 'd, 'La addition to teaching SOS. I il.tort courses and the humanities111-113 sequeneo. Tavloi dneitsall the research in his depai tment .in modern art. his s|X‘eiahi v. Heis a prolific writer, having pio-duced Two, books test y©gte''toite:pi ihi lsjied, * in itelys teote,books are scheduled ter pubhea-jfidt^.fi^-'yete. . t. y - :.vy ■; his Stiidenis hol h feol-lege and deparlmenial frequent ly il not regulai ly, and has an activelecture schedule at both t’C and• •'see fete. He does a good dealof wotk for ai t public.itions andattends frequent conferences, inaddition to all ol this, he adviseson several Commit tec papers eachyear.Working with Committee stirdents delights Taylor, who wisheshe had more time to spend' fifththem He is especially excited Inthe papers. : y“The student who knows thesubjecthe says, "is anxious t.»talk a km! it. My Teal function ,,to. the initial discussion to makesure studimts are steered in theright direction. To anyone writinga pafier; there is a tremendous ad¬vantage in having a kind olsounding hoard. The proper func¬tion ol a ptolessor is to sr-l \eexact Iy u- i' it 'Working with both Commit Icestudents and art -majors hns yivTbytef » unique -pei speefn e fromwhich to. view the results of -the('omnuttcc'-. broad cdticat ion 11says, that terse., students, "dealwill) [MOV or It IV r siilii, Cfs Hld"C«n.-bring to them backgrounds mudepai 1 mental si udem - < mnot .I hole is cleai proof that I lien r..a need for a kind of general ode-tstofciowtey; gjsndtol'Udtofil^' • to'.■ Macleah f».raiseclTlie Commit tec atn mpts to prothis.. In. Simpson - words, itis “ap excellent piogiam uniquetvIqrtunate in having n man lflkeMaclean, and'ollie; ;..mi inembersof the faculty ” u \Nimpsou’s rem.uk is icprcseflta-live ol the (Millie C’omnutleelaiulf-v The111 is no one w .would ass, i t that tlu prociamwould have been ossible withoutMai li uis dedication ” "saci dir.and • pei -mii.iI intei. sf in smill ills-"; / • 'V -■ y •;•;•: • • •••"Macdcan does a perfectlysplendid job s ,v s nipson ech >mg students as well as f icullv mthe Commit I* e "1 le is one ol iIibest tcachet s on campus andtefeteifei.closest possible interest111 the well in ol Ins studente.”■%:mdiolcrl in?• "*9• morris. .• austin•• «v • rilcyservice clinic: 2IOC e. 71strj\3]]bob testermg psyclvato ,t .■**>. *.-—-• my — - rrrrrrJOHN LOGANPAUL CARROLL F. W. GILLMANRALPHCOMBINED POEtRY READINGWEDNESDAY, MAY 2. at 8:00 P. M.Tickets are $1.00 I , , * sj V _ _ Jj _ _1“ * . V',’vi niDEzi'Lecture: Ibse^andcontemporary Theatre- •Ticket are SI.00