Johnson considers Cuba NSA regional“What has happened inCuba is going to happen inaH of Latin America. Sociala!lfl Economic Progress iscoming”, said Walter Johnson ata meeting of the History club inIda Noyes last night. His lectureuas titled, “Castro as a symbol inLatin America.”Johnson stressed that the es¬sential need that exists in LatinAmerican countries are rapid so¬cial and economic change of a“radical nature.” Tihs will involvecontrol of foreign capitol as wellas expropriation of foreign invest¬ment where necessary.He traced the history of theonly three major revolutions inLatin America, which took placein Mexico, Bolivia, and Cuba. Allinvolved major land reform, con¬fiscation of property, and govern¬ment planning over the economy.He continued by explaining thatUnited States policy in the fifteenyears following the second worldwar contributed to the problemsthat exist in Latin America to¬day. The basic aims of Americanpolicy were to have political sta¬bility in the area and to obtainLatin American support for the UN policies of the US government.In order to maintain political sta¬bility, the US supported conser¬vative oligarchial groups, as wellas the military. This policy ofmaintaining stability did not takeinto account the moving forcesof rising wants.The Cuban revolution, Johnsonindicated caused a change inAmerican .policy .toward .LatinAmerica. A sign of that changeis the Alliance for Progress pro¬posal by President Kennedy. Thisproposal Is an attempt to recog¬nize that social and economicchange is a necessity, and it isan attempt to have that changecome about through a minimum ofrevolution activity.The Cuban revolution furtherserved to increase the demand inLatin America for land reform,industrialization, and confiscationof US property if it interfereswith necessary progress. The Cu¬ban revolution stands as a symbol,as does the Mexican revolutionof the 1920’s as a break “withthe bonds of the past”.The success of the Alliance forProgress. Johnson continued, willdepend to a great extent on Pre¬ sident Kennedy’s ability to con¬trol the domestic pressures whichwill arise from the revolutionarychanges that must be initiated inLatin America. If these pressuresblock change, the Latin Americanleaders will have to look to theSoviet camp for aid. A third al¬ternative will be for the countries“to come into the 20th centuryalone.”Johnson stated that the leadersof the Latin American “revolu¬tion” are “not going to be toppledbecause of dictates of the Catholicchurch. Economic and socialchanges has a higher scale ofvalue in Latin America todaythan the traditional respect forthe Catholic church.”Johnson, professor of history,46, is the author of several booksineluding “How We Drafted AdlaiStevenson (1955)” and “1600Pennsylvania Avenue.”Johnson has recently beennamed by President Kennedy tothe US advisory commission oninternational educational and cul¬tural affairs. The spring regional of Illi¬nois-Wisconsin region of theNational Student association(NSA) will be held at theUniversity of Illinois at Urbanaon May 11 and 12. This is thesecond regional meeting of theacademic year and the last beforethe 15th National Student congressto be held in August.Plans drawn up by the regionalexecutive committee in March forthe spring regional included a key¬note address and panel discussionFriday evening May 11 on thetopic of “The role of the studentin society.” The regional chau'-man’s report will also be g’venFriday evening.Legislative committees will meet-on Saturday, May 12. The commit¬tees will be on topics of inter¬national student relations, studentnational programming, inter¬government and the academiccommunity, human relations andcivil liberties, and financing ofhigher education. Saturday even¬ing the legislative plenary will be held andelected.Each school is allowed to sendone more delegate and one morealternate to the regional thanthey are allotted for the NationalStudent congress in the summer.The University of Chicago dele¬gation is made up of six delegatesand six alternates. According tothe Student overnment by-laws,those delegates and alternateselected in the spring of 1961 willbe going to this regional.Representing UC will beLeonard Friedman, John Kim,Arthur MacEwan, Terri Ray,Murray Schacher, and Jim Thom¬ason.The UC delegation is consider¬ing bringing up the issues of dis¬crimination in campus housing, theMcCarran act, and the oook drivefor the Student Non-violent Co¬ordinating committee.The only person from JC com¬peting for a regional office will beLeonard Friedman, who is running for the position of vice-chair¬man.Southeast paper censoredby Fred MuskolSpecial from the Roosevelt TorchChicago’s own SoutheastJunior College has joined thegrowing list of colleges anduniversities which have re¬cently been afflicted with censor¬ship of the student press.Southeast’s problem occurredwhen an editorial written by MikeHillbiuner, former editor of theSentinel, was “retouched” byDean Grede before it was printedm the March issue. Grede feltthat Hillbruner’s editorial subjectwas not a proper one. so he editedand rewrote it to remove the ob¬jectionable material. Rather than(Minting the new editorial, Hill-bruner let the paper go to presswith a blank space in place of aneditorial and submitted his resig¬nation.Hillbruner’s editorial dealt withi he coming adoption of the tri¬mester system at Southeast. In itlu listed the advantages claimed■ or the trimester system and then(xiscd seven questions about itspotential weaknesses. Hillbruner’shod only that these questions liei icfully considered.Further on. he objected to thelad that the decision to adopt thetrimester system was made arbi¬trarily; the faculty was not con¬sul ted at all. In the conclusion tothe editorial, he stated there wasreal faculty opposition to the tri¬mester system when it wasadopted at Chicago Teachers Col¬lege North. Then he ended with ananti-trimester statement.Dean Grede’s position is that theeditorial topic was too “touchy”tor a student publication. He alsosaid that the Sentinel “is notexclusively a vehicle for studentexpression and learning experi¬ence.” Grede went on to say that thereare certain limits to freedom ofthe press (though he did not men¬tion themi, and that he, in thiscase, is the person who is respon¬sible for drawing the line.The anti-censorship statementrun in the next issue of theSentinel attacked several ofGrede’s points.The Sentinel devoted its edi¬torial column in the subsequentissue to three viewpoints: “Pro,”“Con,” and “Dean’s statement.”To Grede's argument that theSentinel is not to be used as alearning experience, the anti¬censorship editorial replied: ”...then why does the college call thenewspaper course News Reportingand Writing 151, and give a stu¬dent three hours credit?” Vol. 70 — No. 92 University of Chicago, Friday, May 4, 1962 31Sharp, Hall in discussionMalcolm Sharp, professor oflaw, has agreed to “enter intoa discussion” with Communistparty leader Gus Hall Sundaynight, at 8:30 in Mandel hall. Ad¬mission is 50c for students andfaculty, $1 for all others.Sharp had originally been ap¬ proached to moderate a debatebetween Hall and an economist onour faculty on the subject ofeconomic systems. However, nofaculty member was found whowas willing to debate Hall.Shai'p was then asked to debateHall. Sharp stated that he will bewilling to discuss not debate withHall, “although I am sure we willdisagree on many points,” Sharpstated.Hall indictedHall, one of the three mainleaders of the Communist party ofthe United States, is presentlyunder indictment for refusing toregister under the McCarran act.He has been banned from givingspeeches on several other collegecampuses. Sharp stated that he felt thatthe faculty members who declinedto debate Hall had not declined“out of any timidity.” He con¬tinued that he agreed to partici¬pate in Sunday’s program because“I have long felt that it wouldbe a good thing to have the Com¬munist or Russian point of viewpresented by its proponents.’Sharp stated. "In past years Ihave always joined in with dis¬cussions with persons said to theleft.” For example, in the late ’40sand early ’50s, Sharp was adviserto the Labor Youth league, aleftist group. “I often became anadviser to groups I disagreed withbecause I believe strongly in theright of dissent.”Eleanor club plan failsSome forty undergraduateclub and after we went over a, number of different problems thatwomen will live in Beechei WOuld come up in our using a parihall next year because the of the building, there remainedUniversity's plans to take s0,me„f u " ? a. m,e.n 1 a 1 diff,cu"ie?1^ which at this time we are notover a floor of the Eleanor club a^i0 (Q soive,” explained Newman.have not materialized, announced The Eleanor club, located nearJanies E. Newman, assistant dean international house, is currently aof students. residence lor working women of“We carried on long conversa- Chicago.tions with directors of the Eleanor Beecher now graduateAsian literature movement explainedAuthor Sant ha Rama Raudiscussed her views on in¬creased understanding be¬tween peoples through theenjoyment of each other’s artin a lecture sponsored by theEmily Talbot fund yesterday Inthe Law school auditorium.Speaking before an audience ofapproximately 125 people, MissRau explained her own “do ityourself method” of “How to suc¬ceed in understanding withoutreally trying.”ff you had asked an Asian 15years ago to show you his art,*>he said, he would have beenable to produce only the pagodas,temples and dances of anothera?e. There was no concept of amodern Asian art as such. It wasonly after the Asian nationsgained their independence thatthe creative force that had beenlocked up for so long was ableto assert itself.Miss Rau stated that prior toindependence ail the really crea¬ tive minds were busy workingfor freedom and spending a 11their time writing subversivepamphlets or sitting in jail be¬cause of their acts of civil diso¬bedience. They could not displaytheir talents creatively until afterthe war.But the great upsurge and re¬awakening of interests in the artsafter the period of strife she de¬scribes as comparable to theRenissance of the Middle Ages.Until this time the only con¬tact Western minds had had withAsian life was through the worksof such writers as Rudyard Kip¬ling or Pearl Buck. The picturesthey painted, she emphasized,were devoid of depth. The readercould “not climb into the headof the character” and establish anempathy with him.This gap — this lack of humor,of any description of politicallife or life in the great cities — is difficult to explain unless youattribute it to a lack of under¬standing, both on the part of theauthor and the reader to whomhe is communicating this lack.After independence the nativewriters began to do somethingabout this gap. Since then thenovelists have acted as “acci¬dental anthropologists,” supply¬ing the background and depth ofcharacter which the leader can¬not do on his own.These novelists have created avery painless kind of understand¬ing in which the conditions andreasons and behavior of peoplecomes across. And this move¬ment is increasing not only inIndia but all across Asia.She discussed the post-war “indepth” movement i n Japan.There the writers are trying tofind out what was good in theirpast civilization and see what itcan do for the present one.In response to a question fromthe audience on whether art is being used to unite India acrossits own language barriers, MissRau answered in the affirmative,explaining that the English lan¬guage which the occupation leftbehind has proved to be an in¬valuable basis for uniting the in¬tellectuals in the various partsof India.Miss Rama Rau, the daughterof the former Indian diplomat SirBenegal Rama Rau, is a graduateof Wellesley college. After thewar she taught English in Japanat the famous Freedom school.Miss Rama Rau is living inWest house during her stay here,under a grant made availablefrom the Emily Talbot fund.She is the author of six books,including Home to India, MyRussian Journey, This is India,and View to the Southeast. Herrecent dramatization of E. M.Forster’s novel A Passage toIndia was a success in Englandand is currently finishing its runon Broadway. Beecher, a unit of C-group, iscurrently an all-graduate women’sdormitory. An apartment dormi¬tory at 5518 Ellis avenue exclu¬sively for graduate women hasbeen procured for next year.Newman said that Beecher wasbeing made into an undergraduatedormitory because the graduatewomen will be able to live at 5518South Ellis, and the undergradu¬ates still have no place to live.Fifteen rooms at Internationalhouse have also been reserved forgraduate women next year.Newman holds meetingAt a meeting Wednesday night,Newman informed the graduateresidents of Beecher of the changein the housing plans for next year.“We are extremely impressedwith the facilities at the Eleanorclub,” commented Newman, “andhope that at some future time wemay reopen conversations at apoint when the chances for anagreement are more possible.”He added, "In the meantime, wowould certainly recommend theEleanor club to any indix idual stu¬dents who want a quiet, pleasantplace to live.”Mortier discusses Diderot Tuskegee students aslopen admittance policby Isabelle NoiretRoland Mortier discussed the personality of Diderot and his goal of the search for themeaning of the human being on Wednesday night in a lecture in French.Mortier, professor of French literature at the University of Brussels and now teaching ^ group of students at The letter continued, “As stiin Toronto, began his lecture on “Diderot, homme de dialogue,” by asking what the funda- Tuskegee institute, a Negro dents. especially as colored st- -1-resolve their dis- college in Alabama, recently den1s-we wlsh not to exclude ,inlesonc meir aus J one on account of race who \vish<. ... guested that the board of to profit rrom what our jnsThe dialogue is solely an intel- !<„n .. - 1,1mental unity of Diderot’s charac¬ter is.Diderot’s originality is less inhis ideas themselves, whieh belongto the eighteenth century, than inthe means whieh he employs.Diderot brings a new form to. theworld of literature, “the dialogue.”For what reason does he choosethe dialogue as a means of ex¬pression? That choice correspondsexactly to the characteristics ofhis personality. Diderot is one ofthe most interesting figures of hiscentury because he abandons thekinds of doctrinal methods em¬ployed by Rousseau and lets him¬self be carried away by his en¬thusiasm.Diderot is, lirst of all, a “manwho seeks to know himself;” hisdialogue is, therefore, alwayssearching. He insists on the ideaof the multiplicity of the humanbeing, which makes it necessaryto rediscover the spirit constantlyin order to define oneself.During the course of twenty “discovery.” In 1749 appeared La acters do notLettre sur les Aveugles, a work agreements,still somewhat clumsy, but con¬taining the “conversational style”which was to become “the dial¬ogue.” In 1751 La Lettre sur lesSourds et Muets, in 1760 La Re-ligieuse, and in 1762 appeared hismasterpiece, Le Neveu de Rameau.In 1762 at the age of fifty, hehad achieved perfect control oxerhis art. In Le Neveu de Rameauhe splits his personality into twoaspects, “him and me.”The interest of this work is inthe confrontation of these two lectual stimulation; for Diderot itis far more important to seek thanto find. He proceeds by hypotheses,paradoxes, and the use of dreamsto present his ideas. This pro¬cedure is employed as well in LesSalons, Le Reve de d’Alembert,L’Entretien d'un Pere avec sesEnfants, and in his correspondencewith Sophie Volland. trustees consider admitting “all qon has to offer.”eligible applicants regardless ofrace, color, or creed.” that the restrictionThe request was made in a letter an educational institution to anaddressed to the chairman of (he one racial group for any pmposTuskegee board of trustees. It *s incompatible with Americaasked him and “those in positionconsider a modification in our• Tuskogee’s) charter which wouldallow admittance” of all qualifiedapplicants. democratic ideals which we |QVand respect,” stated the letter.Students aid rural areas “The letter is being spearheadcby the race relations committ,of the YM-YWCA,” stated ih,Tuskegee student newspaper.characters who are in opposition.“Him” is an eccentric; he is“crazy” for music and is withoutany place in society. “Me” isrational and virtuous.The two characters discuss,present their ideas, and occasion¬ally observe the lucidity of theirpropositions. Didei’ot is both “him”and “me”; two expressions of hisself. The superiority of this dial-years he perfected his dialogue of ogue is in the fact that the char-BLAZERSStern' Authentic natural shoulder sfyling, melat-cfesled bulfons,patch pockets ,,. that's expected in o blazer.Cur blazer gives you all that and more ... finestwool fabric, meticulous tailoring and young-in-buildStyling by respected designers. Ours is the blazer withthe look you like. • * look it over, soon.THE STORE FOR MENaJarntt anh (Hampua ^Ijopin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 Hundreds of Philippine college students are now spend¬ing a month of their summer vacation in “barrios,” orremote villages all over the country putting into practice theknowledge they havb acquired in class.Their aim is to gain experience —— ——while helping the “barrio” folk to community development and todo better what they have to do cocourage college students to em-anyway, planting vegetables or bark on a career which will take The chairman of the comm it toslated, “The committee is not cpecting aclion by the present .idministration, but is anticipating jmore favorable administration »the future.”She also stated that any changin the charter would require thiapproval of Alabama govern®fruit trees, building houses, nurs- ,,iem away from the overcrowded John Patterson and the state lcgi*ing the sick, fishing, or teaching Cltles-in the village school.This scheme of mutual aid wasstarted nearly ten years ago bythe Young Men’s Christian as¬sociation (YMCA) in the Philip¬pines, and enrollment in Ihe workcamps has increased every sum¬mer.The work camp program hast\\ro main aims — to promote lature.SPU conference opensCharles E. Osgood willopen a three day conferenceon “Geneva in the contextof the cold war” tonightwilh a discussion of unilateral ini¬tiatives.UC CORE meets withlocal representatives The conference, sponsored b\the Studenl Peace union, (SPUwill begin at 7 pm in Eckai t h;iUOsgood is a professor of psy<chology at the University ol Jllinois and has played a large panin Ihe development of the theimof unilateral initiatives.Representatives Of Univer- CORE can no longer profitablysity of Chicago Congress of discuss the situation since thereRacial Equality (CORE) metwith members of the HydePark community on Tuesday nightto discuss how the communitycan help end UC’s alleged hous¬ing discrimination.Bernard Sanders, CORE chair¬man, reported on the meeting lastnight at a UC CORE meeting inIda Noyes hall. Sanders said thathe felt that the meeting wasprofitable in involving members ofthe community.CORE hopes they will now dis¬cuss the situation and submitquestions and possible solutionsabout it to the University.Such questions are necessary,according to Sanders, because hehas received a letter from War¬ner A. Wick, dean of students,stating that Ihe University and seems to be no common groundof agreement on the problem.When CORE and the commun¬ity can present questions that arebases for discussion, Wick says,meetings will again be called.Mrs. Alan Dobrey, of Indepen¬dent Voters of Illinois and HydePark-Kenwood Community con¬ference, spoke to CORE lastnight, saying that residents ofHyde Park want to remain in thisarea, and that the nature of thecommunity makes ending discrim¬ination easier. Saul Mendelson, lecturer atRoosevelt university, will speak al10 am tomorrow on Soviet fo-i-iispolicy; and Paul Johnson. a!s<from Roosevelt, will speak on USforeign policy at 1:30 Sundax afternoon.The conference will consist oiworkshops on lopies such as ihiGeneva proposals, the UN. unitateral initiatives, etc. Studenlwho wish to attend the workshop!should register at the SPU office,6029 University avenue between4 and 6 this afternoon.She added that it is hard tofind people to acl in this area,because in Hyde Park, the prob¬lem of most residents is not “notwanting to live next door to aNegro.” It is the possibility offinancial loss in property. Educational TVgets $32 million .The United States government recently appropriateJimmy’sand the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave. 32 million dollars to expanceducational television facilities throughout the country.The money will be distributed t(educational institutions and otheinon-profit groups which agree 1(match federal funds with Himoum.Life insurance is sure protectionagainst uncertainty, because itprovides for your family if youshould die, or for your old ageif you should live. Make sureyou have enough life iitsurance.Call:Ralph J. Wood, JrM 48IN LaSALLE CHICAGO. ILL.FR. 2-2390 FA 4-6800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA When signing the bill Pros!dent Kennedy stated that tinact will “provide vitally neodrtifederal support in the construc¬tion of educational television sta¬tions, while assuring at the saint1time stale and local cooperaliorf.”At present, there are 62 edu¬cational television stations in theUS.Flights to EuropeStudent Government hasscheduled two flights to Europe.Vacancies are available on bothflights. *I. New York to London, June19; London to New York,September 17. Price $289.New York to London. Ju*jt24; Paris to New York,September 1. Price $265.IIITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti • beef • sausage and meatballsandwiches * shrimp pizzaFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-1014,1015 1427 East 67th SL FLAMINGOON - THE - LAKEIdeal 1 to S rm. apts.HEATED SWIMMING POOLELEGANT GROUNDSPL 2-3800 5500 South Shore Dr/foreign car soldsee po9*• CHICAGO MAROON • May 4, 1H2isklicy'As st\j,’Od sty.ide any.a wishesinst iiu.ctiun ofto anypurposenioiicapwo lovelet 1 or.irheadodmniittoetod i hepor.mmiiteenot c.visent ad-paling aation in/ changeuire thegovernorUe legis-nsoiod by, (SPU);art haU.of psy*jr ol llli-rgo parte theoryurcrspeak att foreignon. alsok on USnday at)nsist ofh as iheJN, uni-St udentorkshopU office,betweenVon .governpriatedexpandi faeili-try.ibuted tond otheragree toit h thejfi11 PresHthat thej neededconst ruC'sion sla'he same,eral ioif62 eduis in the>pent hasEurope.)n both Simpson talks to alumni Law students competeAlan Simpson, dean of the to the position of provost. community with more persuasive-(Rollege told 165 University Robert Greenebaum, president of ness why money is needed here,• otomni Mondav how UC stu- the Inland Steel Container com- according to Florence Medow, as-alumni Monday now ut 8tu pany, presided at the meeting. He sistant director of the alumnidents have been educating' an(j q e_ MeKittrick, assistant to foundation.• each other. die publisher of the Chicago The WOrkers were told that comDetition among- law sehnnl stiiHontcSimpson and UC President Tribune, and rational chairman of much of the money donated is Pt„SS« pThS qc c -u • P1 , „.George Beadle were guests of the alumni fund drive, reported used to supplement tuition because, Justice I otter Stewart Will judge along with Roger J.honor at a reception for Chicago on the drive’s progress. said Miss Medow, “tuition doesn’t Traynor of the Supreme courtarea alumni fund workers, held at The alumni fund campaign, cover the cost of the education of of California, Henry J. Friendly students will areue thethe Mid-American club. The recep- which runs during the University’s the student.” * ~ — - - B• tion was part of the annual alum- **cal year, July 1 to June 30, is Chicago area is (he most*; ,lind drive currently trying to top last year’s . lhe. . . Ini nmu uxive. . ”„ „ .. .. . important in UC fund raising, saidSimpson cited the current Festi- ’ of *this -imonnt the Miss Medow- Last year> for ex'• val of the Arts, last month’s aims UniVgr ’ received $1 222 74’5 ln ample, people in the Chicago area-' "rftrr"m ,Mt ’ ’ ’ contributed $561,060,97 in gifts, inaddition to bequests. in moot court debateA US Supreme Court judge will be one of five judgesselecting the winners of today’s annual Hinton moot courtcase ofand Starry R Waterman of the Hearst Conso,ida(ed publicationsUS Court of appeals for the _second circuit in New York, and veisus Frederick H. Hope. TheFrank R. Kenison. chief justice finalists, Harold Russell, Daleof the Supreme court of New’ Schlafer, Axel Kleiboemer, andof education program, and lastquarter's sit-ins in the administra¬tion building as examples of stti¬de nt-to-student education. gifts and the rest in bequests. An¬other $432,000 is needed to sur¬pass last year’s record.. In this year’s campaign. UC, Despite the unattractive ap- a]umni have so far contributedproach used by CORE, said Simp- $791^32.58 in gifts and $606,015.32■son, CORE was responsible for jn bequests, which is a total ofCausing “heart searching” analyses 17 397 647.90.of a problem. CORE also led to Qn Monday, the third in a series3 systematic review of University 0f solicitation letters will bePolic>’- mailed to all alumni who have not Hampshire.In the competition, four UCSC requests longerHarper library hoursStudent Government has re- Monday through Thursday even-Simpson had great praise for a yet contributed. These letters minted that the social science inSs and at 5 Pm Saturdays,"by-product” of the CORE sit-ins, will be followed up by a personal ^imr "oom hours he ev! Choldin su^ested that socialthe Woodlawn tutoring project solicitation campaign throughout , , . , science building 108 be opened..11.. a • u-. At? * 1 . ^ . rpnripn arm that a r.Amnnrarv e— Frank Schneider, represent thewinners of several previousrounds in which 60 3rd and 4thyear law students participated.The winning team will receivea cash prize of $200 and the los¬ing team $100.The competition, named in honorof the late Edward H. Hilton, aformer professor at the law school,will climax a day of activities for^ ^ ^ 0 . the visiting committee of the lawcurrently engaged in by some 45 the country, in Canada, and in tended, and that a temporary for smokers’ use after 5 pm. The school. Earlier in the day the■ students. Mexico. smoking room be opened in Har- old smoking room has been closed committee will attend classes andThe project, in which UC stu- Two hundred and eighty five library. for library alterations discuss various areas of legal re¬douts are helping 7th and 8th committees in 48 of the 50 states 'Earl Choldin, chairman of SG’s ^^eouests bTwed" search with members of the lawgraders with reading and arith- Washington DC. Canada, and campus action committee, has answei 10 tne icquest. dj weatnetic, is the result of a suggestion Mexico are working on this cam- asked Stanley Gwinn, assistant nesday* sc 00 acu y-’ made by David Bakan of the de- paign. director for reader’s services ofpartment of psychology that UC The University is asking primar- Harper library, that the readingroom be left open experimentallyuntil midnight. Mondays throughThursdays; until 10 pm Satur-days; and be opened at 1 in- socjati0,i (NSA) committeestead of 2 on Sunday afternoons. £ 0, , .The room currently closes at 11 of Student Government iscontinuing its drive for booksto be sent to the Student Non-violenl Coordinating committee(SNCC).All kinds of books are accept¬able: paperbacks, text-books, gen¬eral reading. A collection stationwill be in Mandel corridor today“The Kennedy foreign policy” will be the topic for a from 8:30 to 5:00. People whodebate between Bogdan Denitch and Robert E. Mann. The wish to donate more than tendebate, sponsored by the Young People s Socialist league, will addresses there and the booksstudents turn to constructive local My tor unrestricted funds so thatpeace corps-like activity. Beadle will be able to use it as• Speaking of FOTA, Simpson needed in the University,said “it is a tribute to our student Monday’s reception for Chicagobody that they can put on shows workers was held so that theylike this.” He spoke highly of the can go tell fellow alumni and themany activities in various fieldsthat the FOTA committee has pre¬sented.ffrudle discussed his hopes for, the future development of theUniversity, emphasizing’ his expee-tatious in faculty development be¬cause of the appointment of Ed-' ward Levi, dean of the law school, YPSL sponsors adebate on Kennedy Book drive continuesThe National Student as- Birmingham. Alabama, whereMills college was closed half a yearago because its students were in¬volved in integration activity.To get the institution accredited,SNCC needs 15,000 books. TheBirmingham city police have re¬fused permission for SNCC toconduct a book - drive there;SNCC is having to rely on bookssent in from outside Birmingham.be held on Sunday at 3 pm in Breasted hall.Denitch, a West Coast trade fifth district, willunionist who has spoken on cam- President’s record.* pus several times during the pastweek, is also active in Turn To¬wards Peace, the Congress of defend the will be picked up.In addition, campaigns are beingconducted in the dormitories bythe following people: Earl Choldin(Snell-Hitchcock), Sally Cook(New Dorm), Dick Jacobson(B-J), Pete Rabinow'itz (PierceExpected to be topics of thediscussion are such controversial„ . . „ ... . .. e . issues as Cuba, the Alliance for ,Rami Equality, and the Socialist Progress Vietnam, civil defense Tower'-and atomic testing. The books are being collected toAdmission will be 50c for stu- send to SNCC, which is attempt-dents, 75c for all others. ing to set up college classes inparty.He will question whether Ken¬nedy’s so-called “peace race” isleading towards the goal of peace¬ful solution of the problem ofthermonuclear war.Mann, Democratic candidatefor state representative from theBook Coop to meetUC’s chapter of the Inter¬national student cooperativeunion (ISCU) will hold itsnext general membership*■ meeting this Tuesday at 4 pm inRosenwald 2.Richard Ratner, a member of>be executive board, said this will" be the most important meetingto date “because a constitutionlor the local chapter will be con¬sidered and new board memberswill be elected.”In addition, a complete finan¬cial summary of the organiza-. tion will be presented, and mem¬bers of the executive board willanswer questions members have• regarding the ISCU.Ratner added that all membersare invited and should plan tot attend.The executive board has alsoannounced that their store in theReynolds club basement will actRECORDSAll Labels; ListedOthers AvailableService Center,Reynolds Club.50 as a collection agency for theannual Hyde Park Co-op booksale.The sale, which invites local resi¬dents to contribute unwantedbooks and magazines for publicresale, will be held on May 5, 12,and 19, and the proceeds of thesale will be used for communityaid projects in underdeveloped Asian study grantsThe office of vocational guidance and placement announcestudy scholarships for American students who wish to pursueAsian studies.The East-West center, University of Hawaii, will provide fullscholarship, transportation, and living expenses, plus a trip toAsia for any student who qualifies.Interested students should write to the center for furtherinformation. Debators go to NYUFour members of the Universityof Chicago Forensic associationtraveled to New York last week¬end for a debate. Those who wentto New York university for thetournament were Richard Cook,Steve Klein, Jerry Macbeath, andMike Silverman.Other tournaments the Foren¬sic association has participated induring the year include debatesat Harvard, the University ofFlorida, the University of Pitts¬burgh, as well as Chicago’s ownfirst annual tournament. Theseand others have been planned foenext season.The association reelected itspresident Jerry McBeath recently.Students interested in receivingnotice of next year’s debate topicduring the summer should con¬tact McBeath at Internationalhouse or Eugene Groves, Thomp¬son house.Limelight Theatre1544 E. 54th St.Shows 10, 11, and 12 p.m.Friday Night BluesWalter Vincent, guitaristSaturday NightFolk MusicBoris Weintraub, folk singerNorman Mark, comedian % BEAUX-ARTS BALLFREESATURDAY(see page 7)^ l.'ijear Contact oteendedbyOr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372ot University Ave. TON ITE !! !DAVID ROSSDirectorLECTURE: Ibsen and ContemporaryTheatreBREASTED HALL58 & UNIVERSITYAdmission $1.00 8:00 p.m,$2.foreign cor hospital9— page t HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwinee, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEpa m —1*15FA Sa 1318■ ^ ^—7«n STRAUS, BLOSSER& McDowellMembersNew York Stock ExchangeMidwest Stock ExchangoDetroit Stock ExchangeAmerican Stock ExchangeHyde ParkShopping CenterKffe snd LAYS FARRCHICAGO 37Phone NOrmai 7-0777 CELEBRATE CHICAGO’S 76th MAY DAYSpeakers:Herbert Aptheker, Editor, Political Affairs“The McCarran Act and American Democracy”Sam Kushner, Editor Midwest Worker“The Steel Situation and Labor’s Perspectives”FRIDAY, MAY 4 - 8 p.m.... Curtis Hall. 410 S; MichiganAuspices: Chicago 7742 May Day CommitteeADMISSION SI — STUDENTS SO Caa+fMay 4, 1M2 • CHICAGO MAROON •X-Reviewm m m£Censorship of the student press at Chicagojunior colleges is not new. The case at South¬east junior college is the first time withinrecent memory, however, that students havechallenged this censorship. * .The students’ action is commendable. Restraintqn freedom of the press is intolerable anywhere,but it is especially reprehensible in a college; thereis something unholy about it. If there is anyplace where freedom is criticized and challengeis necessary it is in college. It strikes us as strangethat a Chicago junior college — a public schoolwhich enjoys ail the freedom from outside in¬fluence which the olympian certainty of BenjaminWillis provides — should find it necessary to re¬write an article discussing the trimester systemin a student paper.The rewriting was done by Dean Grede atSoutheast. Grede has not even the shakiest justi¬fication for his action. He has said that the edi¬torial topic was too “touchy" for tin- student news¬paper; and that there are certain limits to free¬dom of the press <** limits which he claims to de¬fine. . m; ' ~,t"This is pure nonsense.Who are colleges run for, the administration ... : -d -M.or the students? It is ir.eonceivOable that the stu¬dents should not have a voice in deckling whatkind of cirieulum they study. - • ,It is equally inconceivable that the Dean shouldhave the power to censor the student press in¬discriminately. No one would tolerate attemptsto censor the Sun-Times or the Daily News. Whatis the significant difference between the publicpress and the student press that justifies censor¬ship in one case and not in the other?The answer is that somehow students aren’tquite the equivalent of "people.” (We see this at¬titude reflected in the residence requirements ofthe University of. ■ ChiCdgd.) . ■ % . • -', X-’. * ;; ‘ •;The most disturbing thing about the censorshipat Southeast is the attitude it reflects; the atti¬tude is widespread and particularly unhealthy forAmerican education. The attitude goes undervarious names, paternalism, for example.To understand how wide spread and deep rootedthis attitude of student .submission is, it is onlynecessary to recall the amused laughter whichgreeted descriptions of the early days of medievaluniversities at a recent "aims of education” lee-tuie. The laughter W$^&Mdcst wln-n the speakersaid that students hired, fired, and sometimespunished their professors, ' , Laud Actors companyTn the informal atmosphere Child’s Mother Goose,” to t>, jj,Reynolds club north Laurence's "Christ in Tyrol,*.loune-e last niffht the Actors the audience was led from laugh-lounge last: mg i, i t V,, ter to reflection. The highlightcompany, in cooperation with the reading was Harriet iWUCB and the Festival of the stein’s rendition of a passage fromArts nrosented an evenine of Tnmoc lmWc --itix cb^i.»» >Calendar of Events The one jarring note of the pro-M.™ *•-.law jmms "'as a large slice of nmlo."Antigone,” adapted and direc-, drama by- Wilbur Daniel Steeleted by Ron Inglehart, was a fine entitled How beautiful with'choice, lor radio reading. The shoes.” ’’ :classic stoiy is well known so tlrat .The evening was'Ta Study In.attention is focused oil the dia- voice tone and those tones \wrelogue, on a Anouilh’s interpre- most ambitiously applied iatat ions and mod-i m/;, t :■ -n. Brecht’s 'Trial <>f i-ucullu*/’ di.The play is a st-ranue mixture teeted tn Maggie Stinson, Aof the classic t,ale and a modern chorus plays a large pan m thesetting and both its* classicism play and choruses have difficultyand its modernity had strength sounding dpw without extensiveand Dower with Anne Orwin as rehearsal. White the ehoiu- .aspotty, however, the swift-movingdialogue was handled competentlyby the cast of 11.I^adio reading is a theatricalFriday, May 4Episcopal Holy Communion: Bondchapel, 7:15 am.Eleventh Annual Business EconomistsConference, graduate school of bus¬iness, law school, 9:15 am.Lutheran matins: Bond chapel, 11:30, am.Lecture series: Oceanography (depart¬ment of geophysical sciences).Rosenwatd 2-6, 2:30 pm, "Analysis ofZooplankton distributions in theNorthern Pacific ocean,” E. W. Patter,chairman, department of oceano¬graphy, University of California (SanDiego).Seminar (committee of biophysics), re¬search institutes 480, 4 pm, "Some. Experimental Approaches to problemsof ameoboid movement," Robert D.Allen, professor, department of biol¬ogy, Princeton university,lecture: "Fat and coronary artery dis¬ease,” 5 pm, Billings hospital, Rag-nar Nicolaysen, director of nutri¬tional research, University of Oslo,Norway.Motion picture series: Films for theDisgruntled Connoisseur. (Documen¬tary Film Croup), Judd 126. 7:15 and9*15 pm. "Stimulation for the Avant-• • Carde.” Sfte.Sabbath service: Hiliel foundation, 7:45pm.Conversation with Russel Barta, direc¬tor Adult Education center, andFelipe Jocano (Philippines). “Socio¬logical Implications of adult educa¬tion," 8 pm. Crossroads Student cen¬ter, 5621 S. Blaekstone.Lecture: "Street Gangs of the late Roman Republic," 8 pm. Ida Noyeslibrary, UC Archaeological society,Gerald Radish, new members in¬vited.Motion picture: Burton-Judson courts,$ and 10 pm, "Rebel without acause,’’ 50 c,Lecture: "Ibsen and the contemporarytheater,” 8:30 pm, Breasted hall,David Ross, director.Saturdays May 5Beaux-Arts ball: theme: "authors andtheir novels,” 8:30 pm, midwaystudio. Festival of the Arts, freelimousine service from New Dormsto midway studio from 8:45 to 9:45pm, prizes will be awarded for cos¬tumes, ■ • ■ , ...Radio series: ‘‘The World of the Paper'back.” WBBM, 780 kc., 10:45 pm.Lester Asheim, director, internationalrelations office. American Library as¬sociation. host for the series is LeOn-ard S. Stein, director, Home-Studydepartment.Sunday, May 6Service: sung Eucharist and sermonstudent choir. 9:3G am. Bond chapel.Roman Catholic Masses: Calvert house,5735 University avenue. 8:30. Ml.and 11 am, and 12 noon: daily sat 7:30 am and 12 noon.Lutheran Communion service; 10 am,Graham Taylor chapel.Radio series: from the midway, WFMF,100.3 me. 11 am, "The limits of %.general ■ education.” Robert MaynardHutchins, president, Fund for theRepublic.University religious service: 11 am,% BEAUX-ARTS BALLFREESATURDAYI s ee page 71Within the cultural and sophisticated atmosphere ofHYDE PARKThis elegant two-apartment brick building, 6 rooms each, 1%ceramic baths. Spacious rooms designed for gracious living.Replacement value: $50,000. Full price, $26,500. Call RE 1-8444 Rockcfcllrr Memorial chapel, W. Bar¬rett Blakemorr, (ban. Disciples Divin¬ity house, and associate dean. Rocke¬feller M.monni r h t p. I.Television series: Off the Cuff. WBKB,channel 7, 12 noon, "A great univer-w sity looks to the future.” a discus¬sion by George W. Beattie,' President., and other members of L'C administra¬tion and fa'Cufty. ^Debate: "Kennedy's Foreign Policy.” 3pm. Breasted hall, sponsored by YoungPeople’s Socialist league, Robert E.Mann vs. Bogdan Denitch, 75c,Art exhibit: 3-5 pm, tea and galleryt-our of works by Shalom of Galilet,Ray&pnd jpOTbUi hnw. •. 1 . v\ <><><(-lawn. ‘ ■ -"'■>4 ,Carillon recital: 4 pm, RockefellerMemorial chain I, Mr. Robins.Supper and Discussion: "Faith, culture,and liturgical music,” 5:30 supper.6:30 distussion, 8'pm-evening prayer,Brent ho use.POL1T: open caucus, discussion of nextyear's activities. t:,(n pm. Ida Kfaje®§;hath D r ‘United Vesper service: AThorn¬dike Hilton chapel. ’ ■■■Seminar: '•'!•>.<• nd a-n-d a ( hriytimi vi.c.wof man," 7 pm. chapel house. Metho¬dist Grsiduate fellow-hip sponsoring.Lecture series: "Communication throughart: res|>onsib.ilities of th< artist andthe people,” 7 pm, Charming-M^rrayclub, 1174 E. 57 street, Harold Hay-don, associate professor, departmentof art. ■Bridge club: club master point game,7:15 pm. Ida Now- hallEpiscopal evening prayer: 8 pm, 57)40Woodlavx n.Folk dancing: 8 pm, Ida Noyes hall,isTi.cSc'ty* *' -xDiscussion: 8:3u pm, Mnndel hall. GusHall and Malcolm . Sharp, StudentGovernment, 50c students and faculty,$1,00. for others. tj ,Radio series: "The Sacred- fNote,”WBBM. 7St) kc. lu :3II pm. R.orke-feller chap* I < hoir, Richard Vikstoiti,director of. chapel music cnoducting.Monday, May 7Film: "Village of Hope: partners forPlenty,” film' on agriculture in India,7 pm, Rosenwald 2, Indian Civ course,admission free. „ jfFilm: "Man in the Raincoat,” Frenchfilm, Int. house.Coffee plus: 9 to 11 pm, Shorey house.MODEL CAMERALeiea, Bolex, Nikon,Hasselblad Dealer tiifNl _power with Anne Drain asAntigone, Leonard Krug <.stjapgOfl, Alex Holm .is jefjmSQkkDavid Schoenw uetter a> theguard, and David Nielit.Kon as theomniscient and ironic chorus,■rile Htup-e <•! Being.” ar¬ranged and directed In NaomiWoronov, was an interesting ef¬fort at organizing a wide rangeof poetry and literature into anorganic whole. From a "A form not oti. n h. ,ud in Hyde Parkand the Actors company shouldbo coinn.onded for the programand encouraged to present fur*ther programs. ,.Dorothy SharplessMaroon (culture editorAAUP raps 2 schoolsTwo state colleges were prevent attach pn faculty mem*censured recently by the bers-American Association ofUniversity Professors(AAUP) for violating AAUPstandards by firing professors un-warrantedly.The schools invoked were, A1a- an ar7iele in the Bulletin of thebmm state college and South aAI’P stated that th«FD fe con-ftA college. The cen- C(xrn on the part of main • 1 *suring of Alabama cam. in pail la(.uit> ahoul the state otas a result of the firing of a mi(. lir(.dom and teiStjte© at theirprofessor who had allegedly par- institution.1 ieipated in the slud.mt sit-in | gg Jgjju £ g Hear that a‘•There is also a long-rim effect,”continued Peek, “Since such 3censure discourages many youngeducators from applying for posi¬tions at these mstinitio®#,” .Re¬ferring to last week’s Censures,,movement. . ” ’The censuring of South Dakotacame as a result of the firing ofa professor because of personalityclashes With* various college ad-According to a statement bv eess.’-j"Professor George Peek, president ' When 5aof the ..Michigan chapter of the has demostiAAUP, “it is hoped that this pub- all it can t.lie statement (of.v censure) will dom. the AAl'P wilhold administrators in check and censure.y"- -c >faculty memberwork for haiwiocomes 'eontrovedischarge with no' ihearing, or rega 0accepted principle^ Hoes- twtwjho Ik1-.SUbjei't toanc<' of aera 11% tordue pio*in.ist rationt has doneisfe/hd the*CANOE TRIPS9UETICO - SUPERIOR WILDERNESSCamp, swim, fish, cruise anil 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.ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL59th and Woodlawn AvenueHaydnCREATIONSunday, May 13 — 3:30 p.m.Richard Vikstrom, conductingThe Rockefeller Chapel Choirand members ofThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra• Teresa Orantes, soprano• Roger Fillet, tenor•Edward Warner, bass<5en. Adm. $4.00; Student and U of C Faculty, $2.00ON SALE: University Bookstore, Woodworth's Bookstore andC/iopel Office - 1342 E. 55th HY 3-NSA DISCOUNTforeign car salessee page 8Artists toExhibitinArt Colony FestivalMay 11-20For Ten Days Or Less$f Registration FeeSEWING MACHINESERVICERepairs on American<. and Foreign ~Rentals: $6 a monthSpeciol Rotes for Faculty~ Students Editor-in-chiefJay GreenbergBusiness manager : AdveKenneth C. Ileyl lingerManaging editorAvinm liuderBdEtor emeritus «... ISbU' PktrceNews editor Laura iyfadofskyNational news editor Michael ShakmanCity news editor ....Fay© Wells-*Assistant news editor Gary .FeldmanCopy editor StteY "Ck»ldp®r9Production editor AndrewCulture editor D~rcthy Shaq\Book review editor R—.i fysaiiblatt•Photo coordinators Dan Auerbach, A1 BergerSports editor. Chuck Bern.tein.Business office manager Jean MagleanCirculation Manager .... .C„ ..bC.R. A WilsonEditorial staff: Hayden Boyd, Ronnie Brenner, '©larenc^-, Bryant, HowardCarter, JJancy D e- Mananre Gie'el, Sharon Goldman, RicJMttd G&* ttlieb. Sue Guggenheim, Prnce Jacobs, Joe Kasper, Bob Kass,Robin Kaufman Joe Kelly, Jerry Kodish, Dennis Larson, John Marx,Isabel Noiret, Rona Rubin, Murray Schacher, Vicky Sheifman, JudyShell, Maryann Taranowski, Lorraine Thomas, Doug Thorton, uermVinogradoff, John Williams, Donna Wilson.Production staff: Steve Becker, Elaine Gilbert, Joan Levenson, Gail Ru»Jn,C;l„^. T „1— u nv.Epstein, Steve Jubyna, SawBusiness staff: William Basil BaDle, Marie Gottschalk, Anita Manual)-- F r i d.,y throughout th.University of Chicago ‘school year and intermittently' during the summer month*by students , of the University of Chicago. Address all correspondence I®?Chicago MAROON. Ida' Noyes, hall. 1212 E. 597 street, Chicago 37, lll.no.*.Telephones: Ml 3-0800. extensions 3265 and 326C. Deadline for all calendar3E..S4 ‘JtLTSrtti f»WS.5!L’SS2S^.V.uS",b‘.' AAfg" ”:rP„.Tb* MARC0N '• •*’°mUPS is the University Press service, operated by the National Studentassociation. CUP is. the Canadian Univers.ty press, operated •-« *»•- Nat,on-i** Canadian University Students.V ^^editorials on this pa^e represent the opinion of the■ - - • -- ^ ^ th# Opinion of fh« .Individual author.lettersWhy no one will debate HallHall ‘unqualified debater’To the editor:It is good to know that GusHall is to be allowed to speak atUC; this sensible attitude is inhappy contrast with the silly hem¬ming and hawing which passesfor “policy statements" at mostof our so-called universities.I cannot agree with the mainpoint of your editorial (“FacultyRefuses Hall Debates”) however.You seem to feel that if professorsrefuse to debate economic policywith a man who can be describedby the most charitable standardsas a cheap and ignorant politi¬cian, they are somehow betrayingthat nebulous something which alldedicated young intellectuals aresupposed to be so terribly con¬cerned about: academic freedom.If you think about this problem alittle more, I believe you mayagree that just the opposite istrue.Allowing a man like Gus Hall to1alk to whoever wants to hearhim is one thing; engaging inscholarly debate with him is ano¬ther. I am sure that Milton Fried¬man, for instance, would not hesi¬tate to debate a Marxist econo¬mist, since he has done so in thepast; I am also sure that one ofour anthropology professors couldbe found to debate another anthro¬pologist who believes that the Ne¬gro race is inferior to the white.I doubt very much, however, ifany UC anthropologist would dis¬cuss this issue before a universityaudience with the head of theMississippi Ku Klux Klan. Norcan I imagine a professor of Jew¬ish history and a leading Germanhistorian sharing a seminar panelwith, say, George Lincoln Rock¬well . . . even if he left his uni¬form and jackboots home.No doubt Gus Hall has ideas.So does Rockwell and Billy JamesHargis and Robert Welch. So, forthat matter does any imbecile.As any Maroon editor can deter¬mine simply by applying for aposition on the faculty, however,“having ideas” is not in itself asufficient qualification to fill therole of a scholar. The first thinga would-be scholar must learn isthat the academy exists for studyand thought; it was not meant toprovide side-shows for the curiousor distraction for the restless.Robert SchuettingerCommitte on Social Thought ‘Great debate’ stilledTo the editor:The unanimous decision by the15 faculty members who wereasked to participate in a debatewith Gus Hall, not to do so clearlyindicates that the “great dialogue”espoused by this “community ofscholars” exists but, only in theirimaginations. This is just anotherindication of the moral cowardice,the propensity to withdraw, andthe lack of concern for the freeinterplay of diverse opinion, thatexists among much of the faculty.Harold S. JacobsYPSL challenges HallTo the editor:We are pleased to read youreditorial (Maroon, May 3) ques¬tioning the failure of any one of anumber of articulate and disting¬uished members of the faculty todebate Gus Hall Sunday evening.We wish to note that on severaloccasions we of the YPSL haveapproached those who are runningthe Hall meeting. We have pro¬posed that Bogdan Denitch, aCalifornian trade unionist andspokesman of the Socialist party, who is currently in Chicago, be al¬lowed to debate Hall. We haveproposed a flexible range of top¬ics ; anything from a counterposi¬tion of point of view on Russia,to a discussion of the road to so¬cialism in America, or of the Ame¬rican liberal and progressive move¬ment. We are amenable to a dis¬cussion on civil liberties, whichwould include an appraisal of thegovernmental witchhunts to whichHall and his co-thinkers havefallen victim. We are open to anyother reasonable topic for a de¬bate. We do not seek a debate onesoterics, but rather a basis andclear exchange of views.Several leaders of Student Gov¬ernment have indicated agreementwith the idea of a Denitch-Halldebate, or a three way debatewith a conservative. We take thisopportunity to renew the chal¬lenge for a stimulating eveningof open debate on the issues whichconcern us all. It is our hope thatthe sponsors of the meeting willreview their decision and endorseour proposal. Michael ShuteYoung People'sSocialist league Lloyd discusses roleof University trusteesUC should discriminateagainst local ‘bigots’To the editor:Today as I read of PresidentBeadle’s statement on UC policybeing opposed to UC COREwishes, I felt that if the Univer¬sity must discriminate, manage,etc.—why should they not dis¬criminate against the bigots in ourcommunity who would “rathernot,” who would flee if there wasa University policy of open occu¬pancy?The Negroes in Chicago areplaced in a situation where "notall the people are reasonable” i.e.prejudiced, and they are thepeople who suffer with high rentsin poor housing. Why should notthe unreasonable suffer instead?Let’s discriminate against the un¬reasonable, the prejudiced, thebigots. How? Let them leaveHyde Park.But that is the problem! Peoplewill leave. “Many faculty mem¬ bers would leave the community.”But are the faculty the peoplewho’d rather not live in an openoccupancy community? No. Theproblem in Hyde Park has andalways will be the type and con¬dition of housing. If the housingis sound, clean, and large enough,almost all faculty members andother people now in Hyde Parkwill live there whether or not thepeople down the hall or next doorare of their race. This is substan¬tiated in Rossi and Dentler, andI recommend the volume to Presi¬dent Beadle.And I suggest that the Univer¬sity then begin to discriminate,manage the bigots who havecaused this whole problem insteadof the Negroes who can pay forHyde Park housing and are try¬ing to escape and break ourinfamous ghetto.Mike McReynoldsGruby's Rambler Inc.THE LOWEST PRICEIN CHICA&OLAND1962 RAMBLERS455 S. COTTAGE BO 8-1111 DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THE !NEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTMORE GOOD LITERATURE IN PAPER!THE ROMANCE OF THE ROSE by Guillaume de Lorris andJean de Meun @ $2.75The first complete Enlish translation of this MedievalMasterpiece.TO CLOTHE THE NAKED, and two other plays, byPirandello @ $1.75PROSPERO'S CELL AND REFLECTIONS ON A MARINEVENUS by Lawrence Furred @ $1.75THE POETRY OF LAWRENCE DURRELL @ $1.45Last Day of Pre-Inventory SaleMany good titles still remain at reduced prices.The University of Chicago BookstoresWe'll be closed for inventory on Mon., May 7 & Tues., May 8Seniors - Graduates - JuniorsInvest - ProtectYour EducationGet a Better JobPermanent - SummerCirculate Your AvailabilityWrite for Brochure S-6£jnploipmnL fowunloJiiu, jhie.33 West 42 St., New York 36, NY This is the third in a series ofdiscussions on “The aims of edu-cation.”by Jay Greenbergbased on an interview withGlen A. Lloyd chairman, UCBoard of TrusteesTrustees exist because, ac¬cording to the law, somebodymust own universities.Members of the faculty orthe University administratorscould be legal owners, accord¬ing to Glen Lloyd, but severalconsiderations make it desirablethat the Board be made up ofwell known area business menand civic leaders.“We don’t want to divert thefaculty members from theirproper job, which is teachingand research,” Lloyd says. “Andin addition, many of the con¬tacts brought to their positionby the trustees are extremelyvaluable for the University,Also, we must ask whether thefaculty should both be doingand directing their work—thusmaking them their own bosses.”Actually, Lloyd believes thatthe trustees are not the “bosses”of the faculty, and that the fac¬ulty properly has no “bosses.”The academic deans, he believes,are more properly suited to thisfunction than any other group ofindividuals.But what is the function of thetrustee in relation to the academ¬ic work of the University? GlenLloyd believes that it is up to theBoard to determine “the generalkind of university that we want.”Leaders of universitiesAt UC Lloyd wants “A lead¬er of universities and not justa leading university. One thatengages in basic research, andis a leader in innovation in allfields. We must never compro¬mise as to the quality of anyof our programs.”But, according to Lloyd, allfields in which universities com¬monly work are not suited to the“general kind of university” thathe would like to see here. The de¬cision as to what fields of studyshould be undertaken here Lloydbelieves to be “the joint decisionof the faculty, the administration,and the Board of Trustees, all ofwhom bring some special know¬ledge to the task.”Trustees acquire their “specialknowledge” through maintainingmore contact with “society” thanLloyd believes the faculty canmanage. Says he, “Civic mindedpeople deeply involved in societyalthough not professional edu¬cators have a judgment as to thepublic service operations of auniversity. This is an importantelement in deciding what kind ofa university we are going tohave.”Can perform serviceThe University can perform adefinite service to society, Lloydbelieves. “General education isone of the most important ingred¬ients in the University’s servingof society,” he says. “Universi¬ties which are sensitive to human¬ities and the social sciences canand do have an important effecton the people it trains and whogo, for example, into the businessworld.“The universities also havean important role in some ofthe things that are central tothe development of society ata given moment,” Lloyd con¬tinued. “For example, the Uni¬versity of Chicago is at themoment helping in the devel¬opment of the space., age,through its role in the instru¬mentation of the government’sTyros satellite.”Lloyd believes that scholarshipis important in an era of rapidlyadvancing knowledge. The uni¬versity thus becomes importantas a training ground for scholars.“We need the competence to workeffectively on the outer fringeof advancing knowledge. These in¬dividuals must pull together andcentralize what we are findingout, for this is the only way in which we can develop a meaning*ful body of knowledge.”But while the Board of Trus¬tees is concerned with the gen¬eral institutional aims of theuniversity which it serves,Lloyd would leave questions ofwhat he calls “educational se¬lectivity” to the professionaleducators. He thus feels thatthe Board should allow the uni¬versity’s faculty and administra¬tion latitude in which to decidespecific problems of what areasthe university should and shouldnot be concerned with.Articulated set of criteriaDespite a generally “laissezfaire” attitude on specific ques¬tions, Lloyd does bring an articu¬lated set of general criteria con¬cerning what is important to hisfrequent conferences with UCpresident George Beadle. For ex¬ample, he says that “There arelots of things that other peoplecan do as well or better than theUniversity can, with these fieldswe should not be concerned. Ifwe are concerned only with themore scholarly fields we will beable to make the best possibleuse both of our faculty and ofour physical resources.”Lloyd feels that the properfunction of the University lies inthe direction of pure research.“Why is this a research institu¬tion,” he asks, “partly because ofthe way the University got start¬ed (as a full blown universityand research institution ratherthan as a college) and partly be¬cause of the competence whichour faculty has developed. All so¬ciety rests on the truth, and webelieve that those who are seek¬ing the truth make an importantcontribution if they are doing soin a competent way.”Whenever there are disagree¬ments between two ruling bod¬ies of the University, for ex¬ample between the autonomousCollege faculty and the Councilof the University Senate, high¬est faculty group on campus,the Board of Trustees is legal¬ly responsible for making a fi¬nal decision.Power never usedThis power has never been usedby the Board. The only time itcame close to application occurredin 1947, when the decision of theCollege faculty, supported by thenchancellor Robert Maynard Hut¬chins, to discontinue granting ofthe PhB award was overruled bythe Council of the Senate. Acompromise was worked out and,to the great relief of all involved,the Board was never consulted.Lloyd believes that this is aproper function for the Trustees,although he says that only spatt¬ing use of it should be made. j“The trustee should act asa judge. He should hear the var¬ious arguments and come to adecision. In the case of a dif¬ference of educational policiesthe decision must rest with theBoard or with a committee ofthe board. These decisions, how¬ever, should involve educationalmethods on a broad level andnot in a very specialized sense,“The board should rule onlywhen the educators can’t agree—when there are highly competentpeople on both sides of the ques¬tion. While the necessity of such'action should be kept to a mini¬mum, the Board can play a valu¬able role in settling such dis¬putes.”This philosophy of educationLloyd brings to his job. The mat¬ters discussed with the Universitypresident include: appointmentsto high academic and administra¬tive positions, the University bud¬get, the physical plant, the neigh¬borhood, the relations with thefederal government, and the ad¬dition of University departments.Throughout its history, UC hashad an active, interested, butquite undomineering board. Lloydhopes that the situation will re¬main unchanged. |May 4. 1962 » CHICAGO MAROON • 5May 4, 1942 as skillful..... , •* .m -An. •. .. . ..A ■ A ,„5. *iA. n rtrtMf fKn It I C’f/\V>! *-TAe Reviewer: Charles M. Grayreceived his undergraduate andgraduate degrees at Harvard uni¬versity and has been assistantprofessor in the department ofhistory at VC for two years. Hewrote HUGH LATTIMER INTHE 16th CENTURY and anotherbook, IN LAW AND EQUITY,will be published shortly.The Wealth of the Gentry,1540-1660: East AnglianStudies — Alan Simpson —University of Chicago press;Cambridge university press,1961.The stream of historical dia¬logue into which Dean Simpson’sWealth of the Gentry fits hasbeen muddied bv the failure ofsome of the participants to thinkas self-critically as they ought.The distinguishing virtue of DeanSimpson’s book is an exactinghonest, a self-limiting clarity.The author has accepted thelimits that must be set upon theClaims to general significance aCareful economic historian canmake. Moreover, in articulatingthe ways in which his detailedStudies are suggestive of general-* izations, he has depressed thehope that economic history mightreveal patterns of dramatic ten¬sion which could convincinglyServe as the substructure of anunquestionably dramatic schemeof political, religious, and cul¬tural conflict in Tudor and StuartEngland.Discussion of the economic condition of the gentry in the1.6th and 17 centuries has beenbold. Mutually opposed historianshave projected from the littlethey knew to general economictendencies capable of serving asgears fo larger revolutions. Theircommon determination has beento see the great 16th century in¬flation as a crisis for landownerswhich necessarily divided the rul¬ing class against itself, separatingthe fit from the unfit.Difference has largely arisenover the nature of fitness. Wasit a “capitalistic” orientation, bywhich a large group of gentle¬men freed themselves from theinhibitions and inertia of a tra¬ditional rentier class and rose byforce of their economic and psy¬chological success to politicalpower? Or was it the fortuneand ability of some men to evadeeconomic crisis by tapping thecorrupt spring of political wealththat ran so freely under the oldregime, leaving a residue of theunlucky hankering for venge¬ance?On the one hand. Dean Simp¬son is very cautious about dis¬puting rival projections in termsmore general than his concreteevidence permits. On the otherhand, the suggestion in his conCrete evidence is that the infla¬tion did not force a criticalchoice between ruin and eitherradically new economic habits ora flight from economic adjust¬ment to political hedging. Thesuggestion is that rentier land lords as a class took their tradi¬tional cut of the nation’s wealthby calmly joining merchant, cour¬tier, and sheepgrazer on the up¬ward spiral.It must be emphasized, how¬ever. that these suggestions arenever represented as more thansuggestions. It is important notto violate the spirit of such booksas this by too eagerly discardingthe partial truth of alternativeprojections.The final truth may be that theinflation was a true crisis forsome, for others only a routineoccasion for adjustment of eco¬nomic values within an ancientscheme of equities; that someacquired new economic habits orjoined the rush for office in re¬sponse to financial problems,others in response to culturalcallings of a different order. Alarge component of the finaltruth is likely to be a renewedawareness that economic historycan only do a small part of his¬tory’s job, that the increasinglycomplex sketch economic his¬torians are drawing will furnisha detail to the canvas of histori¬cal sociology.Dean Simpson’s opening chap¬ter, “Encounters with Accounts,”is a lucid genera! guide to themethods of discovering how richa man in Tudor England was andan acute definition of the pitfallsin the way of discovery. Thebulk of the book is concernedwith minute analysis of tin* fi¬nances of three families centered in the important region of EastAnglia.The families are of three majortypes: the Bacons (whose papersin the University of Chicago li¬brary provide the principal sourcefor their economic history) stemfrom Sir Nicholas. Elizabeth’sLord Keeper, and hence from afountainhead of legal and politi¬cal enrichment; Sir Thomas Cul-Jum was a London merchant;Sir Thomas Cornwallis rode the‘wheel of fortune’ into office andout again. A final chapter ap¬proaches the problem of the via¬bility of “mere” landlordship inmore general terms, using someadditional East Anglian material.The study of the three familyfortunes does not open the doorto confident statements about thewealth or the economic problemsand techniques of whole classes,much less the further door tosome vision of the fortunes ofthe nation borne on the rise andfall of classes. But to read thisbook is not merely to see a pains¬taking picture of three families.Nor is it merely to take a lewsteps on a miles-long journeythrough countless similar studiesleading at last to sound general¬izations. (That journey is theo¬retically desirable and practicallyformidable, both because of thescarcity of information and be¬cause the requisite legions ofhistorians are unlikely to ap¬pear. ) The first value of the bookis rather as an acclimatizing agent for the historical imagina¬tion. By enabling one to see par¬ticular men, in the vital, privateaspect of their financial affairswith exceptional clarity andtruth, it communicates a valuablekind of intimacy with the past.A “projection” is permittednot to the typicalities of classes,nor to the dynamic of general history, but to the sense that onehas “been there” and is less astranger when one returns. Allimmediate experience is after allexperience of particulars.We are often ignorant or mistaken about what is typical with¬in our own historical range; weare always baffled by the dvnamie that subsumes ourselves.But within our own historicalrange we are at home. Ignorantof what is typical, we still havea sense that the actors we im¬mediately know behave from dis¬cernible motives or from compre¬hensible reasons. The experienceof past particulars may likewiselead to a sure — unverifiable —instinct for the variety and limitsof the possible in strange en¬vironments, and a conviction thatthe dead have acted intelligiblywithin the conventions of a for¬eign theatre.There are a few — very few—other studies which provide com¬parable precise experience of theei-onomir lives of Tudor - Stuartgentlemen. By his skill as a writ¬er, however, Dean Simpson hastranscended the common weak¬nesses of bis genre. His style isconsistently alive. The bearingsof Ids detailed studies with re¬spect to Hie waning images ofgeneral truth are always keptbefore us. The word of explana¬tion and guidance is always readyto help us through an obscureand complex world of affairs.There are moments of relief fromfigures anil adumbrations of noneconomic meanings in such pass¬ages as an excellent picture ofSir Nicholas Bacon’s stately fu¬neral. Dean Simpson has avoidedthe fallacy of letting the factsspeak too nakedly for themselves.One does not lose sight of Bu¬st udent expositor through whoma refractory species of fact as¬sumes utility.Charles M. GrayNew book humorous IMe and the Liberal Arts — Dave ’I *Morrah — Doubleday, 1961. IAn uneducated, not-so- Iignorant - as - it - turns - outbackwoodsman decides to Ibecome a college man so he Ican “get back to saying hello to . ■Millie with the light turn! off.” IIn dialect. INaivete is a good humor device, Iand you get plenty of it here, as 1when the narrator has been 'Wrtricked into selling answers toan algebra exam: “Professor Lit-man said there weren’t nothing todo but make up another set, and <1I told them I sure couldn’t blamethem none, after the way thatfirst batch sold. They both look¬ed at me real funny, like theythought different.”The book would be funnier ifthe plot were not contrived andif the characters and situationweren’t stereotyped. But once ina while it’s a good thing to lookat a college education with asense of humor.K. M.foreign car salessee page SKing-size, packor Flip-top bo*. Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife insuranceProtection135 S. LaSalle SiMl 3-5984 HA 4-1060Marlborothe filter cigarette with theunfiltered taste. You get a lot to like.Culture VultureOn campusFilmsDocumentary films continues its“Films for the Disgruntled Con¬noisseur" tonight with ten moviesin a program titled “Stimulationtor the avant-garde." These in¬clude two films by Stan Brakhageon the birth on his children whichare “very frank and not recom¬mended for children or younggirls; “Rhythmus 21" by HansRichter and “Anaemic Cinema" byMarcel DuChamp, two of the earl¬iest avant-garde films; “N U” byMichaelangelo Antonioni; and a “twist" film, “Cosmic RayCharles." The program lasts abouttwo hours, and will be shown at7:15 and 9:15 in Judd 126. Admis¬sion is fifty cents.“Rebel Without a Cause" isBurton-Judson cinema’s selectionlor tonight. The film, starring thelate James Dean, is scheduled for8 and 10 in the Judson dining hall,and admission is fifty cents.A Fernandel movie, “Man in theRaincoat," will be shown by Inter¬national house movies Mondaynight at 8 in the Int. house assem¬bly hall. It costs fifty cents to see this French import with Englishsubtitles.MusicA free Musical sociely concertis scheduled for this Sunday eve¬ning at 8:30 pm. The program,which will include French andGerman art songs, beethoven’s“Duo no. 1 for clarinet and bas¬soon", and Vaughn Williams “Folksongs for clarinet and piano,” willtake place in the Ida Noyes libra¬ry. Off campusMusicA variety show starring comedi¬an Dick Gregory as emcee will bepresented at Ray school, 5631South Kimbark, this Sunday at3 pm. Tickets are $2 and $3, andmay be purchased at the HydePark Neighborhood club (HPNC),the Coop Credit union, Accent,and the Medici coffee house. Theshow is a benefit for the campscholarship fund of the HPNC.Performers include Amanda Am-CLASSIFIED ADSFor Rent and For Sale Personals Morgenthau to talkon the nuclear ageNicely furnished 312 room apartment,1 ile bath and shower, clean. SI 15 iwmonth — including utilities. 5143 S.Kenwood. Call SO 8-0439.r. 'i rm. luxurious bachelor's apt. fornimmer. Has room for 2. $30 permonth. Call FA 4-1846.3 room apartment available June 1st.Kent $90 month. 5532 S. Everett. FA4-1400.1055 Chevrolet 4 dr., $100. HY 3-2981. K.-nwood Radio and TV Service Werepair TV's, radios, hi-fis, tai>e record¬ers and all work guaranteed.5508 S. KimbarkNO 7-0830Wantedthree desperate students seek cheap,habitable apartment, near campus. Chiimove anytime. Call FA 4-1 548 evenings.I'wo UC alumni seek third man to share> 100m lakeview apartment. Monthly•ost including utilities and maid serv-ce, $80. HY 3-3398 evenings.Intelligent young woman for executiveraining program offered by national■ rvice firm: must be personable, inter--teil in public eo; tHot responsibilities,•areer-minded. $425-1450 start. Con-act Miss Dougherty at STate 2-9765.Star National, Inc., 116 S. Mich. ave. Creative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.May Eighteenth is a gentle date. Thebunnies are in season.Listen Baby: Instead of sublimatingyour way. get the kick by hearingDenitch skin Kennedy, 3 pm, Sunday,Breasted hall.Norma: Kddir won't you come withme to hear Denitch debate RobertMann on Kennedy's Foreign Policy 7Kddie: This Sunday 3 pm at BreastedNorma: Smoke Fools.foreign car hospital Ilans Mo’genthaa, profes¬sor in the departments ofpolitical science and history,is scheduled to give a seriesof three lectures entitled “Re¬flections on the nuclear age."The series, sponsored by thedepartments of history and politi¬cal science, will be presented onMay 15, 16, and 17. The three lectures are individ¬ually titled: “The distinctivenature of the nuclear age,” “Poli¬tics in the nuclear age," and“Nuclear power and human ex¬istence.”All of the lectures will be givenin the new law auditorium at 4pm, without charge, and the pub¬lic is invited.see page 8 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. LAKEthe brose, Jean Curtis, the Company ofthe Four, David Green, Billy Wal¬lace, UC Professor of Music Gros-venor Cooper, and R. VanjahRichards and his dance troup.This Sunday evening at 7:30 pmthe Chicago Chamber orchestra,conducted by Dieter Kober, willpresent a “Musical salute fromthe city of Chicago to the city ofCopenhagen.” The program, pre¬sented in McCormick place, willbe broadcast over the “Voice ofAmerica." The show, which costs$2 and $1 for students, is the cul¬mination of the chamber orches¬tra’s spring series of “Music fromDenmark."Films"A Slimmer to Remember,”is at the Hyde Park theatrethis week. The Russian film,made by the same peoplewho produced “The Ballad of aSoldier," stars Borya Bark¬hatov and Sergei Bondarchuk.With it at the Hyde Park is“The Kitchen,” a comedy directedby Academy award winner JamesHill, and starring Carl Mohnerand Mary Yeomans.NO 7 9071PARK AT SJRD : NO 7 9 0 7 1yde park theatreTAhSAM-SfcNCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialixing int A.MOM^K AMIAMEIKII AN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 AM. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 43rd St. BU 8-9018 aietDiaiSUNDAY DINNERS 4 to 9 P.M.Shrimp Creole, Welsh RarebitImperial King Crab and Curried ShrimpResv. NO 7-9693 1450 East 57th St.r~DtARBQRNWas there evera strangerfriend? A moredesigning,insolent lover?A story morediabolique? AT DIVISIOHReneClement’sMr1 /rumSee Ch'cogo Dolly Ropers forCorrect Feature Times Chicago’s most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films.STUDENTSTake advantage of thespecial discount avail¬able to you. 90< any doyexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. card to the cashier. STARTS FRIDAY, MAY 4From the Makers of "Ballad of a Soldier"“A SUMMER TO REMEMBER”BORYA BARKHATON — SERGEI BONDARCHUK“ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST”N.Y. Times, N.Y. Post, Neu)s Dayand Arnold Wesker’s /“THE KITCHEN”CARL MOHNER — MARY YEOMANSFri. and Sat.—"Kitchen" 4:30-9:10; "Summer" 7:45-10:30Sunday Only—"Summer" 2, 4:40, 7:25, 10:10; "Kitchen" 3:20, 4. 8:45Mon. thru Thurs.—“Kitchen” 4:15, 8:55; "Summer" 7:30, 10:15NEXT" VICTIM "ANDMAKE MINE A DOUBLE"Free Weekend Patron Parking at 5230 South Lake Park Ave.Special Student Rates WITH Student I.D. CardsNINE TO TWELVE P.M. TOMORROW!!BOBAPPLEBAUMand his band FREE Entertainment byBLACK-FRIARS* ATI MIDWAY ART STUDIOS60th & INGLESIDEGo By Free Cadillac Limousine from New Dorm —8:45 to 9:45 *m.Costume Judging by Profs. Haydon, Newman, Simpson I Theme: Writers and their novelsFREE !! FOOD !! FUN !! FREE ! ENTERTAINMENT !! FREE !! COME ON ALREADY !!!May 4, 1942 * CHICAGO MAROON, • 7mitiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiimimimimiiiMMiimi NewsbitsBeadle and professors in TV discussion, „ Geoige Beadle of Psi Upsilon. Second place in this Tuesday at 8 pm in social dius a position of power,and rive faculty members of *lc College house league went to science 108, is under the auspices Kadish did his undergraduatethe University of Chicago will Friedman of Tufts North, of the Society for Social Re- work at Hunter college and ex-discuss the challenge of what * !/ ^avik of the law school search. Davis will also talk about pects to receive an MA from UCtook second in the divisional graduate work in sociology. this quarter. He is working undermakes a university great on Norman Ross’s “Off the Cuff" pro¬gram Sunday. May 6. on WBKB-TV, channel 7.Participating in the explorationof the theme. “A great universitylooks to the future,” will be AlanSimpson, dean of the college, andThomas E. Donnelley, professor ofhistory; Albert V. Crewe, directorof the Argonne National labora- The convention defines discrim¬ination as including any distinc-league. The program is the result of in- Professor Oost of the history do- tion "based on race, colour sox.. . terest in careers in sociology partment. language, religion, political orThe all University golf tourna- J*rest ini ca - heair. The meeting will be held in Ida other opinion, national or socialment was won by John Moses of , iDSO( of the de. Noyes library at 8 pm. origin, economic condition orTufts South, who shot a 75. The mg Seymour upset ot tne oe birth.”team championship was won by ^"of cS^ a talk Polish WOfks d.SCUSSed The term ‘'education” refers toEast IV, with 272. af sior« hote last month. The Polish American Aca. types and levels ol education"*Me.L IKcaii Davis is the director of NORC’s demic association Will pre- and includes “access to education,D fvid Po!s Who is leSDOn- study of career choice among col- sent an “Author’s evening the standard and quality of odu-David Ross, who is lespon legeystudents one of the ]argest for Maria Kuncewicz, emi- cation, and the conditions underSlble for reviving Chekhov sucjj studies in the country, nent Polish novelist and visiting which it is given,tory which UC operates for the and Ibseil in off Broadway The study is also sponsored by professor of Polish literature at The convention, which will enterAtomic Energy commission; W. theatres, will speak on “Ibsen the United States Office of Edu- the University, tomorrow at 8 pm, into force on May 22, has alreadyAllen Wallis, dean of the gradu- and the contemporary theatre” cation, the National Institute of in Wells high school auditorium, been ratified or accepted by theate school of business and pro- at 8:30 this evening in Breasted Health and the National Science Augusta and Ashland. Central African Republic, France,hall.fessor of economics and statistics.The panel will also include Tickets are $1 and can he pur-Julian Goldsmith, acting dean of chased at the Mandel hall boxthe division of physical sciences office,and professor of geophysical foundation. The program will include read- and Israel,ings in Polish and English, criti¬cal appraisals of Mrs. Kuncewicz* Billings cafe ’automated'writings by Polish critics and writ- Unemployment forsciences; and Philip M. Hauser,professor and chairman of the de¬partment of sociology. Davis talks on sociologyWFMF to broadcastRMH speech SundayWFMF (100.3 me FM) willbroadcast ex-chancellor Robert M. James Davis, associate pro- CUSsed by Gerald Kadishfessor in the department of tonight at the University ofsociology and senior study Chicago Archaelogical societydirector of the National meeting.Opinion Research center (NORC), Kadish states that there is nowill discuss some of the work question in his mind but that Jul-being done currently by sociolo- ius Caesar was connected withHistorian discusses gangsof Roman republic j ^ D _ -“Street gangs of the late ehaiman'or ihe cl'in<'s is °n «>* Retoman republic will be dis- department of Slavic ta„KUages placing the night service ama-departmentand literatures.be broadcast in its entirety butthere is not enough time to includethe question and answer periodwhich followed. work done at Chicago.His talk, which will be held itthe Billings Cafeteria aretwo shiny vending machines ina room in the south east ol diecafeteria.Featured in the machines arethe traditional robot delicacies:pickled pimento sandwiches andDoctors:least for the year 58 BC. and cation adopted in December, you can be replaced by a pick • Iabused his consulship to get Clo- 11)60, by the 11th United Nations pimento’.United Kingdom ratifiesUNESCO conventionThe United Kingdom hasjust ratified the conventionwin* - ^ItlUCV ^UIKTIIIU aclliuHutchins’ speech a, las, April’s “TspScaliy cTodiT7‘prZnen,"gangster, at “gainst discrimination in edu- urna-noodle cassarole“Aims of education” lecture this ’Sunday at 11 am. The speech willIndian traveloquepresented at Int houseThe last in a series of In¬ternational house “Armchairtravelogues” will be presentedtonight at 8:15 in the Int.house auditorium.“Jai Hind," which was producedand photographed by RichardChesrow, is a film describing lifein India. Chesrow made three ex¬tended visits to India in order tounderstand and represent thatcountry as truthfully as possible.The admission charge is 50cfor students. 75c for members ofthe International house associa¬tion (IHA), and $1.00 for allothers. The showing will benefitthe IHA scholarship fund andPrime Minister Nerhu’s emer¬gency fund. IF LESSTHAlfX^EAGWallen wins tennis title;Moses gets golf laurelsThe all - University tabletennis championship was wonTuesday by Stan Wallen ofInternational house. Runner-up was Dick Jacobson, Collegehouse champion. The Fraternitytitle was won by Rob Kirby ofPsi Upsilon, while the Fraternityrunner-up was Troy Armstrong WrfflTS THEfti <?HmseeToMMft?*9 ' foreign tor hospital & clinic South of the Midway lies SouthEAST National and nobody lieswhen he tells you it’s a most pleasantplace to bank. Much of the Univer¬sity community banks with us. Wegive families and small business thekind of service the loop banks TALKabout. And we’d like to provideyour family some of the same. Comeon across to the left bank. Park in•our lot and walk directly into bank. ZEE BkSHTBANfc.MXWM, \§ZEE BANK. ON ZEELEFT BAN ft*dealers in:• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambretta5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob testermg psychiatristEYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetof University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSITmUjWNQE CORPORATION2 S CHICAGO MAROON • M«r 4, 1»2 Education, Scientific, and Cultur¬al organization (UNESCO) gen¬eral conference.bjteV\|niBi)thfofr<m<Hr