Kerner addresses 500 ateducation conference hereOtto Kerner, governor of such as programmed materials, were representatives of the wel-Illinois, asked some 500 com- televised lessons, broader use of fare council of metropolitan Chi-lpaders to “consider motlon Pictures, and instructional „„„„ .. ~ .munity leadeis to ^consider techniques involving independent Cdg0’ the Cook county depart'and react critically to his study and discovery niethods of mcnt of Public aid- the us de¬proposals on the education of learning.” partment of labor, the Chicagogifted children yesterday The first of the Governor’s pro- Urban league, the Illinois depart¬morning at Ida Noj es hall. posals calls for state reimburse- mont of labor the Young Demo-Chicago educators, profession- ment to schoo; districts for per- cratic co]le„p clubs of Illinoisals, businessmen, labor leaders, sonnel to carry on improved pro- g _ ’and public officials came here for grams of identification of gifted 1 le c hicago Teacher’s union, thethe first of five Governor’s con- children, personnel to serve as I,*inois Committee on Employ -ferences on “Developing the tal- consultants to help teachers plan ment of Youth, Chicago Boardents of all Illinois youth.” and carry on program adaptations of Education the American Leg-In addition to Kerner, parti- for the gifted, and for books and ion (hp Chica£ro Commission ofcipants heard David M. Jackson reference materials to meet the ’ gspeak on “The proposed Illinois special needs of gifted children. Youth We,fare* (he Independentplan for program development for Another proposal provided for Voters of Illinois- the Illinois Stategifted children,” and William M. the establishment of demor.stra- Chamber of Commerce, the Illi-Kogge speak of Outcomes of tion centers in public schools to nois Committee on Employmentthe special study projects and im- nmviHf> rrwioic nf ™niiciitinns for the iirouosed in. P , mode b °f g°°d programs Gf Youth, and the Christianplications for the proposed III.- for talent development. These Science Monitorno.s plan.” Jackson is the project wouId illustrate ways of handlin„ 6 Mon,tor’chairman of the Special Study acceleration, underachievement,Project for Gifted Children and specialized talents, and otherKogge is a research consultant in specia, needs of childrenthe project.After lunch, the participants OU,er l»roPosa,s provide for con-met in small groups to discuss t'ni‘,ng f,?e,arS, ,in t,'e ^..cationproblems and issues involved in ° *' Rl ed ‘ 11 d ant for a smal*the education of talented children. s,taff *° Provide aM*»tance forThe conference ended with an ad- demonstration centers and experi-dress by J. Ned Bryan, specialist m<MI a Pr°Jerts-on the gifted and talented from Th<? other four Governor’s con-the office of education of the ferences are being held at South-United States department of ern Illinois university, the StateHealth, Education and Welfare. Capitol, Eastern Illinois university,In his opening remarks, Kerner -and Rock Island public schoolsaid, “At a time when a grow- during the next week,ing school enrollment poses se- University of Chicago person-vere problems of providing enough nel attending the conference in- -well-trained teachers, adequate elude Ernst G. Giesecke, profes-elassroom space and supporting sor and associate dean of theservices, we have become aware graduate school of education; Leoof a great educational need that Nedelsky, professor of physicalgoes far beyond mere quantity— sciences; Thomas Coolidge, pro-one that goes to the very heart fessor of biochemistry; Helenof all education—to its quality. Robinson, professor of education;“No longer can we be content Roy A. Larmee, assistant professor Benjamin Willis, superintendent of Chicago schools,addresses the governor's conference on education heldat UC yesterday. Seated (left to right) are Ida Noyeshall guard Walter Jeschke, Governor Otto Kerner, UCeducation professor David Jackson, and Chicago super¬intendent of instruction Wilkins.i m cmcaqom a r cronVol. 70 — No. 93 University of Chicago, Wednesday, May 9, 1962 31Goldman discusses Negroand political integration'Political integration will OC- Goldman gave the fourth lecture into machine politics and urged. , 1 ° M • in a series sponsored by the Social to vote, asserted Goldman. Neg-with traditional conventional ap- sor of education; S. Thomas CU1 0 nlY when Negioes mav gervdce administration club on roes who settled in rural areasproaches which fail to take into Cummings, associate professor of become integrated into typical “The Negro in the Twentieth cen- were discouraged from voting byaccount the knowledge that is psychiatry; and Thomas Bowman political institutions such as tury.” He spoke on "Politics of machines in their areas, he con-essential in our contemporary and James Rankin, staff associ- governing bodies, political parties, political integration” last night be- tinned. Only now that they areworld—approaches that neglect ates in the department of edu- and pressure groups, according to fore an audience of about 40 per- moving into cities are Negroeschanges in teaching methods, that cation. Ralph Goldman, visiting professor sons. beginning to vote because of ma-fail to use new tools of education, Also attending the conference in the division of Social Sciences. Negroes are considered “new chine Pressures> he added.immigrants,” according to Gold- Goldman commented upon theman, and can best be discussed “remarkable performance of poli-in relation to previous immigrants, tical machines in the naturaliza-TT ., ,, . -T , tion of immigrants and changingHe said that Negroes became , , ., ,,Joseph Chamberlin, associate director of Yerkes observatory, will leave the University naturalized into the United States °of Chicago next fall to become associate director of the space division of tlve Kitt Peak much more slowly than formernational observatory in Tucson, Arizona.Chamberlin to leave UCWhen the Negro gets a bettereducation, he will be able to get0, ,. 0 4-1 -n i 4-i .... r , . immigrants because economic and a better j0b, more money, and willStarting September 1, he will have the responsibility for “leading a major effort in educational discrimination caused become interested in his votingspace science and astronomy,” ac- Neeroes to be considered second rights, Goldman said. When thecording to N. L. Mayall, director For the International geophy- hydrogen are known to be in- cla£s citjzens non-voting ratio has changedof Kitt Peak. . sical year he directed a project voiced in the upper atmosphere’s # some, from two or three non-“We are at present recruiting a sponsored jointly bv the US air storage of radiant energy from The speed of political Integra- voting Negroes to each non-votingscientific staff for this work, and, force and the National science tho Slin during the day and radia- tlon of any subgroup depend, white lo an equal ratio of non-until they come to Tucson we National science tion bf it in lhe form of at0mie upon the members of the group voters> great progress toward poli-win not know exactly what their foundation, to determine what ele- energy at night. using their full voting rights, and tical integration will have beenChamberlin has been with UC their b^, fducate^ t0 the maxi' made, according to Goldman.specific work projects will be,” monts are mvoved in the northernlights and airglow. s;nCe 1953, when he was appointed mUm’ Goldman said’ / He spoke of integration into theprofessor in the Spectographic observations were research associate in astronomy Since the end of the Civil War, party system of politics. A minor-of astronomy and made at Yerkes observatory and at Yerkes observatory in Williams Negroes have had the right to ity will have been integrated intoBay, Wisconsin. In 1955 he was vote. This is, however, different such a system when membersmade an assistant professor, and fi'°m exercising these rights. Gold- have an equal chance for nomina-in 1959, associate professor. man asserted that almost any tion, an equal chance to be oflicers,. Negro can vote if he wants to. and are likely to pass their bai¬lie was guest lecturer in the rpbe reai prohiem lies in the Negro lots for either party. Thesedepartment ol astro-physics at who does not want to vote, he criteria, said Goldman, are gradu-tbe °Tf Colo1rada flom said. ally being met in this country.April, 19o7, to June, 1957.From 1951 to 1953, he was a Such Negroes resemble natural- Negroes have normally been in¬project scientist, aurora and air- *zed immigrants who did not vote, volved in pressure group activitiesglow, with the US Air Force stated Goldman. They are gener- which relate to race only, he said.Cambridge research center. ally young, female, live in rural Religious and fraternial groups• areas, are non-union, have a low have concerned Negroes less thanHe has been a consultant to jncome jow education, and low other immigrant groups, he added.said MayallChamberlin,departmentsgeophysical sciences, is especially at Shingleton, Michigan which isinterested in solar-terrestrial re- 275 miles due magnetic north oflationships and physics of the the observatory,aurora and airglow. At least oxygen, nitrogen, andRoman street gangsconsidered in lectureGang- violence predates the Kadish defined a gang as a unit . ,r ,, • i . .1 j of men with a relatively perma- tbe director ol the national bur-* occupati0ns, he added,invention of the switch blade nent organization existing for eau standards in Boulder, Colknife by nearly two thousand criminal purposes over a period of orado, since 1957. Even associations suen as theOther immigrants voted much Black Muslims, according to Gold-. t f ii - earlier than Negroes mainly be- man, will help to create theyears, according to the theory a loas a leu momns' Chamberlin is a member of the cause they lived in urban areas Negro morale necessary to the in-of an historian of the Roman Re- Ulodius Pulcher, who became American association for the ad- where they were quickly drawn tegration process.public. the lca<1;r ot lhe ,imP°r.t,a"t vancoment ot science, the Ameri- _ _ A . . , .gang in Rome, was protected by E C fa ■ M w 1, ««** 10m c*Gerald Kadish, a graduate stu- Julius Caesar. He had committed can Geophysical union, the Inter- J J I IT yCUl 5 ClUdbdent in history, spoke Friday sacrilege by entering a religious national Astronomical society, theevening before a meeting of the service at Caesar’s house which American Astronomical society, NpyI vpav’s #»n ferine* class O’Connell also stated that he didArchaeological society. He said was reserved for women, and. .. . . which not even Caesar was allow-that mob violence, which included d a(jendmurder, arson, rioting, stone¬throwing, and breaking up ofelections, began to appear in Romeabout 133 BC.The basis for this activity wasthe existence of an unemployed clodiuF status so that he couldand restless urban population, and nm for ofUce>When he was caught Caesar re¬fused to testify at his trial.Later, Caesar as pontifex maxi-the large numbers of municipalslaves.In 66 BC two men, Publius Sulla Clodius, fought him by hiringand Autronius, were convicted of Mil0i who recruited aether gangbribery. “Autronius is known to „,,jiotnrchave planned to hire slaves to from amon2 gr ators*break up his trial,” Kadish com- The onset of civil war shortlymonted, “and this may mark the after Caesar’s assassination dis-ficst appearance of a gang.” rupted the activities of the gangs. Next year’s entering classand the American Physical so- will have about 550-570 stu- not yet know how many early en-ciety. He is a foreign fellow of dents, said Director of Admis- trants will enter next year, for thethe Royal Astronomical society, sions Charles D. O’Connell same reason. “I hope there willTr . , . „ . . in,0 , ,. yesterday. This year’s entering be more than this year,” he added.He got his BA in 1948 and his , . ° .M\ in 1949 fmm the ITnivprsitv c ass bad J<3 students. This year, there were lo early. * AJn 1949’ f‘°,m tbe Umversity O’Connell said that 540 students pn. .mus and Pompey as augur abused o Missouri Columb,a. Missouri. have already sent in their deposits en,lan,s-their power or offleo to change He received his MS in 1951 and ' , in ncx( year's- ■ ■ ” his PhD in 19o2 from the Uni- cjag\eisitv of Michigan, at Ann Ai sons> SOme students will still be said “we were able to accept such1, i ic ugan. accepted from the waiting list. a large proportion of the appli-His writing on emission spectra O’Connell was not able to give cants because the quality of mostof twilight night sky and aurorae any breakdown of the class by sex, of the applicants was quite high.”has appeared in “The Earth as a states, or any other criteria. He Only about 100 of the applicantsPlanet,” edited by G. P. Kuiper; stated that these factors are not could easily be ruled out as un-and his theories of the aurora, considered when admitting stu- acceptable, he continued. The rest,in “Advances in Geophysics,” dents, and therefore such statis- he said, were basically qualifiededited by H. E. Landeberg. tics have not yet been compiled, for admission.UC had accepted 900 of thisIn addition to these per- year’s 1650 applicants. O’ConnellCicero, who was opposed toOsgood keynotes confabAbout 70 students from some 20 mid-west colleges and high schools attendedthe Student Peace union’s regional conference on “Geneva in the context of the coldWar” at the University of Chicago last weekend. . TT •The conference featured Charles Osgo d, professor of communications at the Uni¬versity of Illinois, who spoke Friday evening on “Unilateral initiatives to end thecold war.”Osgood, said to be the first for-jnulator of unilateral initiativesfor the U S, outlined his programfor graduated reduction in in¬ternational tension (GRIT).The U S, he said, shoula take aSeries of unilateral steps whichwould convince the Soviet Union©f Its sincerity in wanting disarm¬ament and would open the doorfor more fruitful negotiations.“If the U S were to withdrawits tanks several miles from theBerlin wall, do you suppose theSoviet Union would reciprocateand withdraw its tanks an equiva¬lent distance?” he asked. “Well itdid happen last summer during theheight of the Berlin crisis,” hesaid.Although every new hostilitygot three inch headlines in thenewspapers, he continued, this was©nly briefly mentioned in a smallartiqje on the 17th page of theJiew York Times. The problems of the Cold War more specifics about various prob-are not easy to solve, Osgoodconcluded. What we still need isthe willingness of our officials toface the problems and the “grit”to perservere.The conference continued witha seminar on Russian foreignPolicy given by Saul Mendelson,lectui'er in history at Rooseveltuniversity.Mendelson suggested that Rus¬sia’s desire to maintain her in¬ternal political and social statusquo until she could raise her eco¬nomic standards was one of themain factors preventing imme¬diate disarmament.“Russia still has not solved herbasic agricultural problem, andher labor productivity is only halfthat of the United States. Shecannot yet provide a living stan¬dard as high as that of the Westfor her people.”A series of six workshops gavestudents an opportunity to learnm O Should we maintain our partin the nuclear arms race?□ Yes0 How do you feelabout fraternities? 0 What would convinceyou to switch to adifferent cigarette?□ Like ’em □ Don’t like ’em□ Can take ’em or leave ’em □ Friends smoke it □ Adveftisemjnts□ Contests sponsored by it.?. v ... : . ■■ iL&M gives youMORE BODYin the blend,MORE FLAYORin the smoke,MORE TASTEthrough the filter.Itrs the rich-flavorleaf that does it! HERE’S HOW MENAND WOMEN AT56 COLLEGES VOTED:%Sr"%9I sjsaiuoo%0Z""%LZ spv 0%S9""%8S spuauj%LZ""%LZ U19, 9AB9|JO uia, 9^ei a%Sr”%ZI wa, aw i.uoq 19%8F*“%I9 W9- a>tn%81""%£I °N A%Z2""%LS sax**N3W0M N3W Aims of educationO’Connell discusses roleof director of admissionslems and to raise their own ques¬tions about the arms race and thecold war. The workshops were theGeneva proposals, Russian foreignpolicy, US foreign policy, the Uni¬ted Nations as an instrument ofthe Cold War, unilateral initia¬tives, and pentagon thought.The United Nations workshopwas led by Stan Cohen, a UC lawstudent. Cohen raised questionsabout the past functioning of theUN and whether it could evermeaningfully decide questions ofinternational tensions.He suggested various institutionsthe peace movement should workfor as a means of pressuring bothEast and West into positivs stepsfor peace. Among these were aWorld Court with some effectivepower, and a volunteer U N policeforce which would be loyal to theU N rather than to the respectivecountries of the soldiers.; .-•/♦....•••vL&M’s the filter cigarette for pe©pie who really like to smoke. The at tide below is the fourth ina Maroon series discussing theaims of education.It is almost a truism thatthe character of an educa¬tional institution is deter¬mined less,by its location,plant, or even its curriculumthan by its two “humancomponents,” the faculty and thestudent body. If so, it goes with¬out saying that the principles bywhich students are selected willdirectly affect the degree of suc¬cess with which an institutionmeets its particular “aims of edu¬cation.”But, as John Noonan pointedout in his recent appearance at theUniversity, although the collegewould seem to have the determin¬ing role in this process, it has itonly in an illusory fashion. It canaccept students only from amongthose who apply. The student bodycurrently in residence is perhapsthe single most important sourceof the institution’s "spirit” whichin turn is what attracts other,similar students to it.Thus, on the simple principlethat “like attracts like,” the stu¬dent body of an institution and theinsitution’s spirit, fostered prin¬cipally by that student body, bothbecome virtually self-perpetuat¬ing.At Chicago, fortunately, acade¬mic excellence hu always beenaccepted a* the ultimate criterionin the selection of both its stu¬dents and its faculty. The resulthas been a national image of aca¬demic excellence.Even in the difficult days ofthe early ’fifties, when there wereall too few candidates for admis¬sion to Chicago, the more remark¬able phenomenon was not thesmall number of applicants buttheir consistently high quality.The phenomenon has been the ob¬ject of comment by more thanone admission officer at morethan one institution whose classesslipped in quality as they de¬creased in number.But academic excellence, if itis the sine qua non of a success¬ful candidate for admission toChicago, is not, it seems to me,the only criterion for admission.Much has been written about theadvantages and disadvantages ofa college’s deliberate choosing toeducate only students from “thetop one per cent” of the country’syouth.The major flaw’ in what on thesurface seems a perfectly defen¬sible and even laudatory aim isthat, despite all our progress inscience and in the social sciences,there is as yet no foolproof devicefor indentifying that “top oneper cent.” Often it means onlythe “top one per cent” as mea¬sured by skill in taking examina¬tions and finding solutions toproblems devised by professionaltest-designers. This skill is notunrelated to success in a varietyof fields; it deserves and needsencouragement.But if Chicago or any otherUniversity adopts it as the solecriterion of excellence, it willsurely exclude many studentsW'hose excellence, though less eas¬ily measurable and less readilyreduced to three-digit scores, isjust as real and just as able toprofit from our faculty and curri¬culum. These students are also justas likely to contribute signifi¬cantly to the society of which theywill someday be a part. DavidRiesman has spoken of the dan¬gers of “a single standard of suc¬cess” in our society, a standardthat will tend to “homogenizeour cultural value system.”There is no plaee more than incollege admissions that such adangerous perversion of the ideaof excellenee is likely to takeplace today. There are varietiesof excellence to be sought, overand above but always assumingthe basic academic ability to pro¬fit from a Chicago education. It is the responsibilty of the admissionofficer, in my opinion, to search ^out and bring to Chicago as manyvarieties of excellence as he can.We can afford to be intolerant to-£ward none of them.We undoubtedly need a greatdeal of study in measuring these #various kinds of excellence. Weneed to be better able to evaluatein the admissions decision a stu¬dent’s curiosity, his real drive andrpersistence, and his ability to sur¬vive personally and psychological¬ly in the new’ and unknown en-kviioment of the University.We must keep in mind that acandidate is a complex human »being, not a bundle of disparatemathematical and verbal apti-ludes, grades, and test scores. Hismental, physical, and psycholo¬gical elements are so closely inter¬related that we can not rightlyconsider one without considering.*the others. His home, his family,his values — all will have a greatrole in his development, in hischoice of career, and in his suo->cess at Chicago.But meanwhile, because we la<-kaccurate, .mathematically .con¬vincing methods of assessing thisrole and reducing it to a “cor¬relative eoeffloent” that will fitneatly into our “predictive for¬mulas,” we are foolish if we ig¬nore the self-evident impact these ffactors have on eollege successand ultimately on the aims ofeducation. ^There are other dangers that,,if unchecked, will keep the admis¬sions officer from playing his pro¬per role in fulfilling his institu¬tion’s educational aims. The ad¬mission officer obviously must»possess certain technical and pro¬fessional skills if he is to do hisjob reasonably well. Sometimes,however, he tends to surround ad- Imissions with such a mystiquethat he manages to convey theimpression that he is the high-priest of some arcane rite, intelli¬gible only to other specialists likovhimself. This may be only a de¬fense mechanism against the fac¬ulty member, student editor, orlayman who thinks admission issomething anyone with a grain of ••horse sense can easily handle.But to the degree that he be¬comes too involved with meansand methods, the admissions of¬ficer runs the grave risk of cut¬ting himself off from the educa¬tional mainstream of his institu¬tion, of forgetting the ends hismoans must always serve. Too of- ,ten the college admission officerknows all the external “facts’’about his institution and is an ex¬cellent salesman; but he knowsonly the surface of his product and *very little of its substantive cha¬racter.One of the primary responsibi¬lities .of .the .admission .officer, jtherefore, must be to know hiscollege’s educational goals, its phi¬losophy, its curricular content andits curricular practices. He mustremain involved with his collegein a meaningful way, talk to fac¬ulty, and — above all — listen tofaculty opinion.This works a special responsi- .bility on the Chicago admissionofficer — to bring into the Uni¬versity each year students bet¬ter prepared than the last group to 1meet the constantly evolving cur¬ricular demands. The Chicago ad¬mission officer’s interest in the ,student must go beyond the certi-*ficate of admission; he muststay involved in the substance of jeducation and not become pre¬occupied with its trappings.The more closely an admissionofficer is connected with the edu¬cational mainstream of his insti¬tution, the more effectively hefuctions as an admission officer.Only then can the admissions ope¬ration itself affect and he affectedby the aims of education in asalutary fashion. 1Charles O'ConnellDirector of admissions2 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 9, 1962Physical scientists join staff UT s Caine Mutiny'opens Friday nightFour physical scientists will join the University of Chicago faculty in the next fewmonths. They include David Douglass, physics and the institute of metals; Israel Ber¬stein, mathematics; and Edgar Garbish and Phillip Eaton, chemistry.Douglass received his BS from the University of Maine in 1955 and a PhD from theMassachusetts Institute of Technology four years later. He was a research physicist atMIT from 1959 to 1961, and since then has been an instructor in physics there. He willbecome an assistant professor ofphysics in the institute for thestudy of metals and the depart¬ment of physics as of this July.Douglass is widely known forhis study of the magnetic fielddependence of the energy gap insuperconductors, an important testof the theory of these materials.He plans to continue work onsuperconductivity and other phen¬omena at very low temperatures.Herstein, who will assume aposition as professor of mathema¬tics next October, spent the last year in Rome on a Guggenheimfellowship. He received his BSfrom the University of Manitobain 1945, an MA from Toronto in1946, and a doctors degree fromIndiana university in 1948. He haspreviously taught at Cornell uni¬versity and at UC, and has pub¬lished over forty papers in thefield of algebra. 'vGarbish will join the depart¬ment of chemistry as an assistantprofessor of organic chemistry thisJuly. He received his BS fromthe University of North CarolinaCLASSIFIED ADSFor Rent and For SaleJune 1. 3 '/j rooms, 57th and Dorchester.(67-2369. $115.2-S rm. furnished andapartments available now$-2525. unfurnished$85-90. HY*56 Chevrolet 4 door. $100.1961 VW convertible, white wall tires,radio and heater: and 1959 blackVolkswagen, sunroof: Merrit Chevrolet,Inc., 7158 S. Stony island, MU 4-0400.NO14. imaginative, responsible. Knowledge andaptitude for wiring required. Manynon-standard applications (402, 519,677, 101, 1620 computer). Fringebenefits. Applicants interviewed Tues¬day. Wednesday 2-6 pm. Mr. Levy,National Opinion Kesearch Center, 5720South Woodlawn.Single woman to share apt. with same. in 1955; his PhD from North¬western university in 1961. He hasbeen an assistant professor at theUniversity of Minnesota since get¬ting his doctors degree.Eaton comes from tne Univer¬sity of California at Berkeleywhere he taught organic chemis¬try. In 1957 he received an ABfrom Princeton university. He gota masters degree from Harvarduniversity in 1960 and a PhD fromthat school a year later. Heassumes an appointment of assis¬tant professor this September.Eaton’s special interests includethe mechanism of Diels Alder re¬actions, the synthetic applicationof photochemistry and the re¬actions of simple pyridines. “The Caine Mutiny Court Martial,” University theatre’sfourth production of the year, will open this Friday nightin the law school’s Weymouth-Kirkland courtroom and willrun for four performances over the week-end, includinga matinee on Saturday.The play was taken from Her¬man WouVs "The Caine Mutiny”and adapted for the stage by theauthor. The production will bedirected by Robert Strang, associ¬ate director of UT.The cast is headed by DavidSteinberg as the defense attorneyGreenwald, Jerry Mast as theprosecuting attorney Challee, GeneRadish as Maryk, the defendant,and Bill Bauer as Captain Queeg,who was unofficially relieved ofhis duty of command by MutinyCourt Martial.Heery Lynn will play the partof Keith, the only officer on theS.S. Caine who sticks with Marykat the trial, and Nate Swift willtake the role of Lieutenant Thom-Despres to speak tonight as Keefer. Norm Kantor andKeith Anderson will portray Dr.Lundeen and Dr. Bird respective¬ly, Herb Jones is signalman thirdclass Junius Urban, the "comicrelief” part, and Dave Johnsonplays Captain Southard.The court, includes four judgesheaded by Judge Blakely who isplayed by Wally Skurda. Thethree additional judges are HarryHenderson, Roger Fink, and RogerZoss. Pat Cain will play the partof the court stenographer.Performances will be Friday,Saturday, and Sunday at 8:30 pmwith a matinee performance at2:30 pm on Saturday. Seating inthe court-room is limited, and ac¬cording to director Strang the Sat¬urday night performance is closeto selling out. Tickets are availa-Sept. E»w. flite; $280 r'd trip.7-7853 or 11-1, ext. 3274 by MaySpecial Summer Rate*tf you are planninr to be ia residenceduring- aummer term, you are invitedto inepeet some very deeirable one andtwo room furnished apis, in a clean,•emfortable and congenial buildingOttering to University students.(040-42 S. Ingleeide Ave.Resident Mgr—Mrs. Tapia—BU 8-27(7Summer sublet, June 11 to Auguet II,IV* rooms, furnished. (440 Greenwood,$86. BU 8-(50(. ble at the Reynolds club desk or„ Alderman Leon Despres of national students, will start at by mail Older to 5706 S. Universityhy 3-2981. 54th and Woodlawn. mi 3-1226. $55 mo. Chicago's fifth ward will dis- at chapel house, 5810 South Avenue. General admission pricescuss the role of the citizen in Woodlawn- Reservations are not are $1 50 for Friday and Sundaylocal politics tonight with for¬eign students attending the Uni¬versity.Hie discussion, sponsored by theinterchurch committee for inter-Fem&le i.o share apartment with same,own room. Ml 3-1226, after 1 pm.All students over 21 years of age whodesire transportation west during themonths of May-September, call 233-1691.Personals Woodlawn. Reservations are notneeded for the talk, but those whowish to come to the buffet supperbeing served at 6:15, at a cost of75 cents per person, should callchapel house at University exten¬sion 3391 by noon today. are $1.50 for Friday andand $2 for Saturday. Studentprices are $1 and $1.50.Si Wurzburg is a fink.WantedThree students seek a cheap, habitableapartment near campus. Can move any¬time. Gall FA 4-1548, evenings.Fun time IBM operator. Expandinginstallation engaged in social reeearcft.Applicant must have one year’s exper¬ience. Must be intelligent, orderly, SG OO-OP has Ashton-Industrial Revo¬lution. Also Eng 103-106 books."Whoops’' we'll say as the Eeso's failin:The Mortar Boards will chortle andgrin.The ghost of Agnee Spafford Cook willriseAnd the Mortar Board shall show itssize.Summer Maroons mailed to any addrees.50 cents.BLACKFRIARS. Election meeting to¬night at 7:30 in Ida Noyes hall, thirdfloor theatre. Slides will be shown.Come.Only 4 more days to Mothers’ day. 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In 'white, natural, pewter or navy.Windworthy jacket of 100% cotton gib$7.95. Hawaiian length Lastex cord trunksof acetate, cotton and rubber $6.95.'featured color.Catalina, Inc., Los Angeles. Calif., Another Fine 1# Kayser Roth Product.Moy 9. 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3FOR THE BEST DEAL IN TOWNJOIN THE TRADE PARADETOGRUBY'S RAMBLER4555 S. Cottage Grove Ave.BO 8-nil@I!IUUI!l!IilUil!lllEVERYCOLLEGESTUDENTCAN BENEFITAn understanding of the truthcontained in Science andHealth with Key to the Scrip¬tures by Mary Baker Eddy canremove the pressure which con¬cerns today’s college studentupon whom increasing de¬mands are being made foracademic excellence.OrganizationThe Universityof ChicagoSet Saturday showing of Goldwater sees US disarming'Hiroshima Mon Amour'Student Government willsponsor two showings of thefilm “Hiroshima Mon Amour”this Saturday night in Mandelhall, at 7:30 and 10:30. Betweenthe showings there will be a criti¬cal discussion of the film by Har¬old Haydon, associate professor inthe art department, John Cawelti,assistant professor fo humanities,and Gerald Temaner, film editorfor the magazine. New UniversityThought.The film, made in 1959. was pro¬duced and directed by Alain Res¬nais. a French director of the“nouvelle vague” school who wonan Academy award in 1949 for hisdirection of “Van Gogh.” His other| Calendar of events |Episcopal holy communion, 7:13 am.Bond chapel.Lecture series (graduate school of bus¬iness). 1:80 pm, business east 103.‘'Meeting Competition from Abroad,"Harry Aronson, president, WalthamWatch company.Lecture series: oceanography (depart¬ment of geophysical sciences). 3:30pm, Rosenvcald 26, "The MarineZooplankton,” John A. McGowan,marine biologist, Seripps Institute ofOceanography.Episcopal evensong, 5:03 pm. Bondchapel.FOTA meeting: for all those interestedin forming the executive board ofnext year's Festival of the Arts, 7pm. social science 201.Text study: Martin Buber’s “I-Thou.'*7 pm. Hillel foundation. Rabbi Ray¬mond Weiss.Student union: organizational meeting,7 pm. Ida Noyes lounge.Discussion, Leon Despres. 7:15 pm.Chapel house. Interchurch committeefor international students.Folk dancing: 8 pm, Hillel house.Science fiction club: "The CommunistUtopia in Russian science fiction:Andromeda, by Ivan Yefremov,” 6pm. Ida Noyes hall. films include “Guernica,” “Nightand Fog.” and “Gaughin.” “Hiro¬shima Mon Amour” was his firstfeature length film.The film’s story is of a shortand hopeless love affair betweena Japanese architect and a Frenchactress on location in Hiroshima.The film has been described as “avivid metaphor of love and death”and uses actual movies of war-ravaged Hiroshima and heratomic-bombed people, and exten¬sive flashbacks to reinforce itstheme. Time magazine called it”an atomic horror movie, a paci¬fist tract, a Proustian exercise inrecollection, a radioactive “Romeoand Juliet.”General admission to the filmand discussion is 51; for studentsand faculty 75c.NYU reviews new feeafter 450 sit-in at dormNew' York universityauthorities have agreed to re¬view the reasons for a $50dormitory rate increase aftera day-long protest sit-in by some450 students. Senator Barry Goldwater(It, Ariz.) last night chargedthat the United States is now“engaged in a program of uni¬lateral disarmament and the Am¬erican people haven’t been toldabout it.” Goldwater spoke before2400 persons at the National Asso¬ciation of Purchasing agents con¬vention in Chicago.Drawing attention to the latestthree stage US proposal at Ge¬neva, the first stage of which callsfor reduction of nuclear deliveryvehicles, he stated that “we arealready engaged in cutting downour strategic power” in this way.Goldwater stated that the devel¬opment of weapons with greaterpowers of destriietlon is not thecause'of the eurrent crisis in worldaffairs. “It is caused by the riseof a Godless ideology which isdetermined to bury us and enslavethe entire world,” he declared.“The realities of the situationare plain enough today,” he stated.“The Communists are arming tothe teeth while using disarma¬ment as a primary propagandadevice.“They have dragged us throughnearly 100 international disarma¬ment conferences and meetingssince the end of world war II. They have shown absolutely nodisposition to negotiate in goodfaith and they have shown everytendency toward duplicity, dishon¬esty and contentiousness.“They have kept the show going,I suggest, in the hope of ultimatelytrapping the United States in anuntenable position which will givethe Communist world the final vic¬tory in a global situation whereonly strength is counted.”He further criticized the admin¬istration for abandoning our previ¬ous position of insistence of rigidinspection and control as a condi¬tion of disarmament. “I suggestthat to propose a disarmamentprogram and say that we are will¬ing to start by agreeing to acceptRussia’s word on the amount oftroops and arms she has in beingis such a groat concession thatit borders on international insani¬ty.” he said.“Our experience with the nucleartest ban agreement which Russiabroke so casually certainly under¬scored the fact that disarmamentin today’s world is a subject theITS cannot afford to consider seri¬ously.” stated the Senator.“In the light of our experience,in the light of Russia’s callousbreaking of the nuclear test ban,in the light of all the agreements and treaties the Communists havebroken, who in his right mindwould take the Russians’ word foranything pertaining to the ColdWar, much less something as vital¬ly important to the balance ofpower as the amount of arms andtroops?” he asked.In a press conference precedingthe speech, Goldwater said “weshould definitely try to keep RedChina out of the United Natiooa.If she should be admitted, theewe should get out.”He went on to urge the rewrit¬ing of the United Nations groundrules to keep nations from havinga veto. At present, he claimed,“Russia, Outer Mongolia, and soonRed China will have this power.That’s at least three, plus theneutrals who will tend to go withthe power bloc.”/ When questioned on the recentadministration’s action against USSteel, Goldwater claimed that Ken¬nedy had “no right to use thepowers he did to adjust prices.”He pointed out that the adminis¬tration’s action has had more thana temporary effect on the busi¬ness cycle and that there has beentremendous damage evidenced inthe stock market, the decline ofnew construction, and a genei'aldownhill trend in business.BgUi lloPstGtter.Ohio State’64Free to You for 30 DaysScience and Health may beread, borrowed, or purchasedfor $3 at any Christian ScienceReading Room. On request acopy will be mailed to you post¬paid. After 30 days you maykeep the book by remitting thecost or return it to the ReadingRoom in the mailing cartonprovided.Information about Scienceand Health may also be ob¬tained on campus through theChristian Science lives it cp with tills lively One fi o\t foi l)‘62the lively New Thcnderbird Sports RoadsterLively Beth Hofstetter enjoys steak, ice cream, and therousing Thunderbird Sports Roadster. This upholsteredbullet features slip-stream headrests, wire wheels, per¬sonal console, and coTitour-carved bucket seats. Youalso get intercontinental ballistic muscle from an extra 40 hp of Thunderbird thunder packed into the newSports V-8 engine . . . it’s a stirring propulsion unit!See the impressive Sports Roadster, and all aproouctofthe Lively Ones at your Ford Dealer’s ... theliveliest place in town! WMOTOR COMPANYMeeting timeTuesdays at 7:15 pmMeeting PlaceThorndike Hilton Chapel1150 East 58th Streetill i!J HJ iHl Hi Hi i it' SS534 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 9. m2Lfl