Dormitory food poll may lead to changesStudents living in food- ing sympathy for it. We would The administration, which cur- only a 2-5% price increase, but dents are invited to these meet-serving dormitories will be 13X6 P}R R specifically up to rently subsidizes RH&C for 8.6% this, too, was impossible to ings.polled Tuesday on the pre- dorm residents, however, since Of its operating costs, would then Brown. The results of the polls willsent food-service system and iey anticipate other arrange- be responsible for making up any All polling will take place in simultaneously go to the adminis-ments now. —proposed alternative to it. "vTv\ • of SAGA’s losses. the evening on Tuesday, and poll- tration through Brown, FYC,“If there is an overwhelming e administration literally has . ... ing will take place in New dorm, CHFIC, and will be made publicresponse from the students that ™ Pref(6r6"ce on alternative sys- SAGA, which is not unionized, Burton Judson and PierCe on immediately.indicates a better way of provi- cm.s'K, f .we want *s lbe 15681 woud have to pay higher than Tuesday evening, and ballots will Brown emphasized that if anyding food service . . . the Univer- poss!. ,e °?d service and the best usual wages to UC s unionized be tabulated on Wednesday. one dorm votes overwhelminglypossible pt'lCe to students.** Claff Thic cold PAcon UTAnldl V-ioim _ _ .sity would not only consider it,but make the necessary adjust¬ments,” said Ray Brown, vicepresident for administration.Next week’s poll will present staff. This, said Rosen, would have Immediately before pollings, for a particular alternative, thatquality relate directly to cost,'said Brown. “If the quality is tobe improved, costs would have to„ .. „ . , ffo up. All we can do it get afive new alternatives. Each stn- happy me(lium of qualitv, quan.dent will be asked to answer utv, andwhether or not he feels each pro- “We are not aware that thereposal would be an improvement ;s a food problem beyond thatto tlie present system, and to rate which would normally exist whenthe alternatives (and the present groups of individuals taking boardsystem) in order of preference. contracts” are involved, he said.Three of the proposals pertain FYC originally discussed possi-to breakfast. One would complete- ble “financial” alternatives to thely abolish breakfasts in the dormi- meal contracts system, said Stevetories, one would give students the Rosen, FYC president. It did notchoice of having a meal contract work on food quantity or qualitywith or without breakfasts, and problems until Dave Tillotson,one would place breakfasts on a chairman of CHFIC, united theday-to-day cash basis. efforts of his group and theAnother proposal is that stu- council,dents be entitled to unliimted Tillotson had worked with theseconds, boi this they would have possibility of having dorm foodtO pa> an additional $20 per nrpnarpH hv a nafirmu/irlo fr.rwl Hic_quarter. Whatever defects there are in led to difficulties with other there win be meetings in house alternative system may be instischools at which SAGA works. units run by FYC and CHFIC tuted in that one dorm, and onlySAGA offered another alterna- members at which the alternatives in that dorm,tive of managing RH&C instead will be discussed and questions Rosen and Tillotson urge sup-of Lylas Kay, current director, at will be answered. Only dorm resi- port of the cafeteria system.a j ChicagoM araonYol. 70 — No. 93 University of Chicago, Thursday, May 10, 1962 31Per prepared by a nationwide food dis¬tribution company, SAGA.The final proposal is the com- SAGA offers unlimited secondsplete abolishment of all meal eon- on all foods, a choice of steak or CORE blasts violationBernard Sanders, chairman One dinner discussion meeting that the University was not hold-tracts. and institution of a cafe- lobster on Saturday nights, orange of the University of Chicago ^as beld> on Feb6uar>r 2?• °n ing the dinner discussion as a«-ri. th„. placing juice for breakfast, among other chapter of the'Congress of fuCrtinktaherSersT,av%‘Smat KS'. ^meals on a day-to-day cash basis, improvement, for about $50 to $80 Da„;„i F n n n 1 it v (CORF) ‘ g , University s man ministration sponsoied some soIf such a plan were to be adopted, extra a year. Racial equality (CULL) aged integration policy. The re- 0f discussion.cash stipends would be available , . ,, . . charged yesterday that the admin- port also stated that UC does «<A£ ^be end ^be jwo bour dis-for scholarship students. sJm u r Pay abi°Ut istration has gone back not and wiU not discriminate in cussion period of the dinner,“We said we would like any ,n- SS .n”th/un^rsi,? ££ PS Sf? ^ “ " feUle, &ly.-, fo a *eSSTZ TJe°£ h0Brown1„S':r,iga,ed the possibil- S"'0" *“ UC’ ^ >° CORE’S request for Rapp^rC reiterated thewe are'gtad t £ V" , S,a“ c—"" d^uilon Wick re-operate with it however said c^ h,f 6ampus sltuatlon> made to him in a letter from centiy answered that there is no cussjon on the problem,” reportsnm ’ ’ SAGA offeied two alternatives Dean of Students Warner Wick, longer a question to be discussed ‘ .. wblch- said Rosen- were unacceP- CORE, according to Sanders, by the University, CORE, and the that he would like toThe poll is sponsored by the table to the University. ended its sit-ins on the basis of communitv He stated thatFirst Year council (FYC) and the SAGA offered, first, to provide UC President George Beadle’s .... , „ , , ft th see the community 1SCUChamberlin House food improve- all dorm food service at an 11% agreement to hold community dis- , g f f riLrii^irms aller 1be 3-man acu y Iments committee (CHFIC). price increase, but only with a cussions on “how to end discrim- erout we si puWh#M?’ and,SUgge+S.tf **Action could be taken in the contract not requiring financial ination in University-owned real . -• the'general repoit be„use as 10 ,itumn “if there is overwhelm- resnonsihilitv estate” n° reafn l° f thef.gene™ discussion,” continued Sandersissue of managed integration. We goon alter tbe rep0rt was maderesponsibility.American Academy of Arts and SciencesChoose four UC professors are quite decided on that,” he public CORE wrote four letters tosaid-. the administration, in order to“If CORE can suggest any topic djscuss bnai arrangements for set-which it would be profitable to ting up the comnlUnity discussions,have various neighborhood agen- Late 5n April Wick replied tocies with us, we should be glad to CORE on bebaif 0f Beadle. Heentertain their proposals.” stated that the “immediate diffi-Acording to Sanders, Wick, as cuU „ jn making arrangements isBeadle’s agent, has made discus- that „We do not see what ques-Four University of Chicago faculty members were among 110 new fellows electedto the American Academy of Arts and Sciences last night.David Easton, Friedrich Hayek, Henry Steinbach, and Edward Levi were elected s|on contingent on specific ques- tion or questions it would beat the academy’s 182nd annual meeting in Boston, Massachusetts. tions. The original CORE-Bea e profitable to discuss on a com-Leo Szilard, UC professor at the — agreement guaranteed iscussion munity.wjde t^sis at the presentEnrico Fermi institute, deli- r-v and ,eEal philosophy of the so- chairman of the division of biolo- on the general topic how to end t-me. * Housjng policies in Hydevered the primary communica- cial sciences research council since gy and agriculture of the National discrimination in University-owned Park'.Kenwood is not a question,tion at the meeting, speaking on 1954- Research council since 1958. Stein- real estate, Sanders claimed. but a topic.”“Can wc get off the road to war.” Hayek, professor in the commit- bach has bcen President of both Sanders replied that as CORE ..If; however, you can formulateThe Academy, chartered by the tee on social thought is an eminent *be American Society of Zoolo- is against managed integration, a question which would be worthcommonwealth of Massachusetts economic theorist and author of Sists (1957-8) and the Society of the group is interested in furthei djscussing we should be glad toduring the American revolution. The Road to Serfdom and The General Physiologists (1954-55). discussion and definition of tie consider the possibility. I must sayhas as its members some 1800 Constitution of Liberty. He has described his scientific University’s policy. CORE there- that the continuing allegations ofnational and international leaders _ interest as “the nature of animal fore feels that, the University has bad faitb tbat come fIOm COREin the sciences and the arts. This ^fe bas become internationally electricity and the distribution of backed down on its agreement, ^ # > do not aUgur well for profit-includes the fine arts as well as famous as the defender of the in- sabs between living and non-liv- Sanders said. able discussion.”the practical arts of engineerinf. dividualistic free enterprise the- jng matter. Wick, on the other hand, said \yick said that the meeting heldmedicine, business, and govern- or-v of economics and the opponent Levi, appointed the first Pro- that because of wide support ot Qn February 22 “was of the sortment. °f the advocates of collectivist Vost in the University’s 72-year the policy by groups including the ^ba^ Ajr Beadle said he wouldEaston is Ford foundation re- economic theories. In 1950 he was history on April 12, 1962, has faculty committee which piepaied be wdjjng jo attend. It was not,search professor in governmental appointed professor of social and been dean of the law school since the housing report, the committee course ^be onjy meeting whichaffairs here. He is the author of moral sciences in the committee 1950. After July 1, 1963, he will of the council, and the council of might satisfy that description."The Political System, among other on social thought. become dean of the faculties here, the University Senate, the Univer- «<In sum tbe University hasworks. Steinbach, professor and chair- Levi is an authority in the fields sity will not be moved on i * adopted the faculty committee re-Easton has been a member of man of the department of zoo- of philsophy of law and the law position. port as the basig for its poiicy> anthe Board of Editors of Behavioral logy was assistant director of the of competition and monopoly. He There is no need to discuss “how essential element of which is *theScience since 1956 an a member National Science foundation in is the author of An Introduction to end discrimination in Univer- pr|ncipie Qf managed integration,of the committee on political theo- 1953 and 1954. He has served as to Legal Reasoning. sity-owned real estate, said Wick, Tbe ubimate responsibility for de-^ ■ because UC has issued a policy cjsions must rest in the Univer-rlvAi M4*% agtM mWY\r\W 1C saying that it does not discrimin- gity administration.tJIi TOriTI6a C W1M M U S ate. Also, “UC will not end its “it is my impression that COREdiscrimination, if managed in e- may oppQsed in principle toA group of student and cipate in discussion, provided that ven stated that although it must gration, which it has agieed on, managed integration. If so, I seefaculty met last night at someone would take the initiative necessarily be the faculty which is to be considered as discnmina- nQ point -n further discussion ofJudson lounge to discuss 5n overcoming initial shyness. makes the final decision on such tion.” tbat qUestion. It would be quiteK " David Bakan, professor of psy- things as curriculum changes, stu- On February 22 a dinner dis- fruitless. In the second place itindicated that students dent opinion should be taken into cussion was held at the Quadtan- js c]ear tbat the University mustconsideration. gle club, and attended by some 30 make its own decisions on specificways and means wherebymore communication among all bad a characteristic overestima-cago might be enhanced ° 1 tion of faculty m6mbers and ibai The meeting ended with agree- people, 15 of whom were “sugges- cases and cannot be accountableMembers o[ the faculty indivi- il would perbap.s ^.therapeutic if ment that such discussions them- ted” by Beadle, said Sunders. to any external body. I wonderdual students and representatives students could imagine the teach- selves would be partly a solution With “almost twice the proposed then what sort of question itof various siudent organizations ers as be,ag the contemporary to the problem under discussion, number present,” continued Saun- would be profitable to discuss withparticipated version of the ancient slave-tutor. James Newman, assistant dean of ders, “CORE was very concerned representatives of various com-It was agreed that there was He aIs° ind,cated that the cona* students agreed to be temporary abo“t the possibility of a meaning- munity organizations.”insuffrclnt c8llnicltion and op! njunication^problem^a^not^only chairman of the group, and Miss ful^ discussion^^g^duetedportunity for communication, es-pecially between students and fac- probtem“£',thriorid''ariar^rulty. Sol Tax, professor of anthro¬pology, said that artificial status ,considerations prevented students Fngbsh, expressed Sharpless electedcharacteristic of the University Saxe agreed to be its temporary under these circumstances,of Chicago, but also a major secrefary At a meeting with student repre-- 'oblem in the world at large. sentatives held on February 18 to BlackfrioT abbeSSRonald Weiner, instructor of A meeting was ^scheduled for discuss CORE maud's, “ Dean , ....English, expressed the be- ^ Wednesday at 8 pm m the wick stated that President Beadle Dorothy Sharp ess third-and facultv from anterina inlo a that emphasis on intellectual Judson to contmue the d,s- did „ol in,end the djnner discus- year student in the Collegereal •comLiipTof scholars’ conlent could open the way to cuss'°n’ a,nd Pursue further what sion ^ the .real. community was unanimously elected Al>-Miss Jane Saxe, representing greater general community. Mu- ’ 'Usrussion, but only a preliminary bess. the female counterpartStudent government, indicated that tuality of learn,ng was stressed, scholars .deal,the harriore ..r^r. imnainrwi in which one learned from who- munity of scholars iaeai. get-together which would involve of Abbot, of Black friars last right,the barriers were more imagined ln wmcn one iearnea 110,11 w«|»- AH students and faculty in- community and city people inter- She is the second woman to holdthan real in that both students ever had anything to trade terested in participating in the ested in the problem facing Hyde the chief executive position, sinceand faculty characteristically res- Harry Kalven, professor in the discussion are invited to Wednes- Park-Kenwood.” said Sanders. the organizationponded well to invitations to psiett- law school, was ,also present. Kal- day's meeting. Wick explained that this meant women in 1956. first adm'ti-iCORE asks students Hall audience shockingOUR MOST ACCURATE CLOCK ISTHE ATOM •... we can measure timeby the motion of particles inside itOur "atomic clock” will vary only 1second in 3000 years.A KINGDOM (Plus a Queen) FORA WATCH!...it actually happened.During the war, an American G.l.traded his gold watch for an entireSouth Sea island. (To sweeten thedeal, the tribal chief offered to in¬clude his daughter.)AN ELECTRIC WATCH FOR MEN, theHamilton 505, requires only ten bil¬lionths (.00000001) of a horsepower!Its tiny energy cell (pictured above)lasts as long as two years withoutreplacement.Looking for a really impressive watch?The Hamilton 505 Electric for men isthe most advanced in the world. AndHamiltons for ladies are truly lovelythings that can be worn on aH occa¬sions. The Hamilton Watch Company,Lancaster. Pa.-H /1^/z.roAfCreator ot the World's First Electric Watch$47.95Dorothy and his overdue library books!”21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!AGED MILD. BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD-THEY SATISFYfor ‘new, fresh ideas’To the editor:To some people who do notknow and understand that Ad¬ministrative workings of our“great liberal institution,” itmight be thought that the letter,which I received from dean ofstudents Wick (see page one),indicates a double cross by theUniversity; an act of extreme dis¬honesty in the breaking of anagreement reached with a largepercentage of the student bodyand with the Hyde Park-Kemvoodcommunity.To some people, it might ap¬pear that the University was at¬tempting to go back on its word.At the present moment, how¬ever (final exams are three weeksoff and there are certain veryserious limitations to what UCCORE can now do), we in COREdo not publicly hold thesethoughts. We maintain our beliefin President Beadle’s “sincerity,”in Dean Wick’s “good faith,” andin Ray Brown’s "liberalism.”Therefore, we are asking thestudent body of the Universityof Chicago (as we have alreadyasked the interested community organizations), to help supply theAdministration with questions fordiscussion. We are sure that DeanWick w'iil be happy to receivesuggestions from the studentbody as to possible questions thatstudent and community represen¬tatives can discuss.In order to expedite the mat¬ter, and to help Dean Wick gatherin the questions, UC CORE willmaintain “question” tables inCobb hall and in the Mandel hallcorridor both today and tomor¬row. Copies of the faculty report,UC CORE’S reply to the facultyreport (on sale for a 5 cent dona¬tion), pencils, and paper, and abox in which the questions canbe deposited, will be available toall students who would like tomake suggestions to the Univer¬sity.It is our hope that the studentbody will help Dean Wick out,and will present many new andfresh ideas so that the Adminis¬tration will know why it is profit¬able to participate in the discus¬sions which they agreed to.Bernard SandersChairman, UC COREWithin the cultural arid sophisticated atmosphere ofHYDE PARKThis elegant two-apartment brick building, 6 rooms each, 1ceramic baths. Spacious rooms designed for gracious living.Replacement value: $50,000. Full price, $26,500. Call RE 1-8444the fourth dimension: TIME...still a mysterious concept to science. Time is only an idea,an abstraction...an area of shadow, speculation—and surprise. To the editor:I am amazed after having at¬tended both Gus Hall’s lecture-discussion at Mandel hall on Sun¬day evening and a private partygiven afterward at which he wasa guest. With Hall himself I wasdisappointed enough; not only washis speech devoid of any new orrevolutionary ideas, but he oftenseemed at a loss for the factsand information with which a manin his position must be armed.But I was shocked at the audi¬ence who it seems to me, com¬pletely abdicated their responsi¬bility to Hall and to themselves.Ostensibly, the whole purpose ofbringing him to campus, not tomention the sole reason for havingacademic freedom, is to comenearer to the truth in our think¬ing. And clearly the only way todo this is to confront the propo¬nent of one side of an issue witha proponent of the other in thepublic arena and allow these intel¬ligent and well-informed contest¬ants to thrash out the truth; thisshould be clear even to non-readersof Mill. Isn’t the entire value ofhaving Hall on campus so that hemay be confronted in this manner,so that he is obliged to defend andrationalize his ideas, as we defendand rationalize ours? We did notbring him to lead a pep sessionagainst Birch, Welch or Schwarz; and merely letting him speak,making some polite inquiries aboutfurther information, serving himsome beer and sending him on hisway is hardly worth his own time.Yet this is a most indulgentdescription of what happened.First the organizers of the dis¬cussion tried to find a facultymember to take over the respon¬sibility of debating Hall. Whennone saw fit to take it on, the stu¬dent body, rather than shoulderingthe task with vigor and imagina¬tion, spoke darkly through theMaroon about, faculty attitudes.As a result. Professor Sharp whohad originally agreed to moderatea debate was prevailed upon toappear alone with Hall in someva"ue capacity.Their discussion together wasfruitful so far as the McCarranact was concerned. But for thetremendous number of other is¬sues between Communists andnon-Communists, thre was hardlya word. The questions asked inthe hall were for the most parttrivial, or just innocuosly worth¬less (example: “Is Hall an Ameri¬can citizen?”). And if it be saidthat the group was too large, thesubsequent reception was surelynot; yet at the gathering, I couldcount on one hand the questionsthat raised issues where real andimportant differences exist andcry for elaboration. Only once wasCorrects Maroon storyTo the editor:Both the Archaeology societyand I would like to express ourappreciation for the coveragegiven to our meeting last Friday.I would, however, like to makethree comments on the articleappearing in yesterday’s issue:1. The occurrence of gang vio¬lence two thousand years ago is fact, not theoi-y, and the notionis not at all original with me.2. It was Pompev, not Cicero,who hired Milo to oppose Clodius.3. The effective end of thegangs came when Caesar gainedcontrol of Rome and passed thenecessary legislation which hewas able to back up with hislegions.Gerald E. KadishVEDIC WRITESPHOTOGRAPHED FOR THE FIRST TIMEDR. J. B. van BUITENENPRESENTS HIS FILMTHE SOMA SACRIFICESPONSORED BYTHE HISTORY OF RELIGION CLUBROSENWALD 2 Friday, May 11th8:00 p. m. there anything like a contradic¬tion when Len Friedman pointedout an error in one of Hall’s ar¬guments, which Hall glossed overwithout further inquiry from anystudent present.What then has happened to theclear thinking UC students whoworked up such a verbal stormover Hall’s appearance, amplycongratulating themselves on hav¬ing him speak? Once here he wastreated to a gathering so outra¬geously insipid, so totally blase,so willing, seemingly, to bury themost palpable points of discussion,as to completely and totally dis¬pel their own image, if it everexisted, of alert, committed, know¬ledgeable and dynamic liberals.The nauseating laziness, the mag¬nificent irony, the sloppy thinkingthat is inherent in such a displayof the poverty of the intellectualclimate at this University, a cli¬mate where there seems to be nostudent capable of drumming up awarm lively discussion with a con-fimed Communist, makes one fearthat if Stalin came to dinner, hecould get away merely by keepingup an uninterrupted flow of cornstories and farmer’s proverbs fromthe Ukraine.Such things grieve me, for Inotice them elsewhere on campus.If we as students wish the respect;of other thinking people and theconfidence of our own esteem,we must pay the price of hardwork, individual thinking, and asmall amount of couraee; few' inthis vicinity seem ready or willingto do so.R. A. RattierYale may admit womenWomen may soon beadmitted as undergraduatesto Yale university.The Yale corporation, theunivei'sity’s governing board oftrustees, is considering a facultycommittee report which recom¬mended the eventual admission ofwomen undergraduates as a “sub¬stantial proportion of each class”The report stated that “Yalehas a national duty, as well as aduty to itself, to provide the rig¬orous training for women that wenow' supply for men.”Gruby's Rambler Inc.THE LOWEST PRICEIN CHlCA&OLAND1962 RAMBLERS455 5. COTTAGE BO 8-11112 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 10. 1962•iiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmummiinmun }vjewsk|fs iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii)Drama critic Bentley to speak FridayNoted drama critic Eric dorm cafeteria, which will Actors company setsBentley will speak Friday operate on a cash basis. company sotson “Brecht and the Politics Lylas Kay, director of residenceof the Modern 1 heatre”. halls and commons, announced the prize for medical research, by the ability to absorb iron inInstitute of Medicine of Chicago, presence of certain diseases.The prize, which carries a $500 Dr. Mendel completedstipend, is awarded for the most internship at the University ttiehisofcosts for one-actersThe cast for Actors compaBentley, who has had a long change. “Cafeteria service at the nys “Tonight at 8:30” pro- meritorious investigation in medi- Chicago hospitals and clinics inpersonal and professional asso- New dorm,” she stated, “will be SYJim, which is to be presented cine or in the specialties of medi- 1955 and served in the US Airciation with the playwright is more convenient for those who May 17-20 in the Reynolds c*ne- L ( Force from 1955 to 1957. His re¬considered an expert on Brecht, will be housed there during sum- club theatre, will include 16 young Mendel’s research was de- search work was done at theHe has been the dramatist's liter- mer conference, and the cafeteria actors. scribed in a paper entitled “Studies Argonne Cancer Research hospital,Martin Rabinowitz, director of the regulation of iron absorp- operated by UC for the US Atomicary executor, translator, producer will also be able to handle theand editor. needs of summer students.”As Matthews professor of dra- There will be no meal contractsmatic literature at Columbia uni- available at the New dorm, whichversity, Bentley recently published will open its cafeteria to summerIhe Seven Plays of Bertolt Breclit residents early in July, according(Grove Press) and is now engagedin new work on Brecht’s poemsand songs.Bentley’s publications as an edi¬tor and translator include the sixvolume anthology on The ModernTheatre and a two volume antho-log of Classic Theatre, amongothers.The talk is sponsored by theYoung People’s Socialist leagueand will be given at 7:30 pm inMandel hall. Admission is 50emits for students, 75 cents forothers.Commons closes in July;NWD to have cafeteriaHutchinson commons serv¬ice this summer will be re¬placed by that of the New to Miss Kay.Students qet awards Edward Albee’s “The Sandbox,”has an all-Brackfriars group:Maggie Stinson, Pat Cain, EdBlum and Janie Whitehill. Ken¬neth Northcott, director of “TheDumbwaiter,” by Harold Pinter,has chosen a fellow Englishman, tion.” It concerns the body’s Energy commission.Develop new mutanttwo puzzled killers in the cast,Two graduate students at while he himself will play thethe University of Chicago other. The third actor, a dumb- A promising new tool for research into the mechanismof heredity was reported by a University of ChicagoRod Phillips, to play one of the investigator yesterday.It is a mutant of a common intestinal micro-organismhave been awarded cashscholarships by the Broad¬cast Advertising club (BAC) ofChicago.Awards to eight students, in¬cluding UC students William B.Mason and Neil P. Narter, wereannounced by William R. Wyatt,president of BAC.The BAC scholarship programwas established by the club in1959 to provide financial aid toqualified college students studyingadvertising and marketing, andwho intend to enter the broadcastadvertising field upon graduation.CLASSIFIED ADSFor RentSummer sub-let, June 11 to August 31,:t1 o rooms, furnished. 5400 t.reenwood.$85. BU 8-6506.June 1, 3 *4 rooms.667-2369. $115. 7th and Dorchester. Auto Salesmen, weekend, vacation work.Drexel Chevrolet. 4615 Cottage Drove,phone KE 8-4600.Three students seek a cheap, habit¬able apartment near campus. Can moveany time. Call l'A 4-1 548, evenings.1061 red VVV convertible, white wallthis, radio, and heater; and 1959 blackVolkswagen; Merritt Chevrolet. Inc., Pierce Tower, FA 4-9500, room 1922.7158 S. Stony Island. MU 4-0400.Danish modern walnut sofa. 6 monthsold. $275 new. Other furniture alsoavailable. Call Dr. Oortell, MU 4-6100,• xt. 7.1 modern bedroom apartment, com¬pletely furnished, available June 16 toSept. 16. Call 493-3585.WantedCamp counselors (men) for privateMichigan summer camp. Experiencepreferred. Write or phone Mr. Seeger,'ll 3 - 6 HD 0, 8741 S. Cregier Ave.,< hicago.Full time IBM operator. Expandinginstallation engaged in social research.Applicant must have one year's ex¬perience. Must he intelligent, orderly,maginative, responsible. Knowledge andaptitude for wiring required. Manynon-standard applications (402, 519,"7 7. 101, 1620 computer). Fringe bene¬fits. Applicants interviewed Tuesday.Wednesday 2-6 pm. Mr. Levy. NationalOpinion Research Center, 5720 S.Woodlawn.Secretary - Executive: Peace-concerned.For 2-person office of n« w political or¬ganization, Voters for Peace. Typing,shorthand, reception, mimro, mailing;st. work with volunteers. Call MorrisShanfield, FI 6-2444 ; weekend, SH5-4834. PersonalsSid's the fink, not Si!NEW LOST CITY RAMBLERS #4JUST ARRIVEDALL FOLKWAYS $3.95THE FRET SHOP1551 E. 57th ST.THE GUIDE YOU CARRY WITH YOUPOCKET GUIDE TO EUROPEBy Captain Michael FieldingThis new 1962 Rand McNally guideto 23 countries now includes theSoviet Union and Finland. In handypurse or pocket size, here is all theinformation you need about sight¬seeing and transportation, hotels,restaurants, and food specialties etc.Included are translations of often-used phrases. Guide maps supple¬ment the text. WtlV*”. $3.50RAND MCNALLY l COMPANYP. 0. Box 7600, Chicago 80, Illinois ONE OF THE WORLD SFINE RIPETOBACCOSMakes yourripe Dreams come true.Try the blend that discerningsmokers in all 50 states and 23foreign countries prefer andorder regularly. Private Stockis a 70-year old family formulaof flue cured Virginia Brightand mild-as-milkwhite Burley*delicately"spiced" withLatakia, Periqueand our ownlight uromatic.Sold only byPREPAIDMAILPacked irf4 sizes:1 Vi oz. • 3 OZ.8 oz. • 16 oz.ORDER TODAY!Satisfaction guorontoed, . . if you don’t agree, Miat Private Stock it su-*#rb, turn the unusedportion and we'll refundyour holf o buck. Fairenough?Write STRAUS BROS., m,412 Walnut St , Cincinnati 2, Ohio waiter, is being constructed byPaul Gottschalk, Maggie Stinson,and John Kidd.Moliere’s “The Doctor in Spiteof Himself” has an all-clown castaccording to director Bob Reiser:Harriet Rosenstein. Ron Inglehart,Leonard Krug, Janie Whitehill,Carol Hughes, Anna Berndtson,Jerry Lapointe, David Schoen-wetter, and Alex Holm.Tickets are now on sale (for$1.25) at the Reynolds club deskfor the program of three one-actplays.Mendel receives prizeDr. Gerald A. Mendel, in¬structor in the departmentof medicine at the Universi¬ty of Chicago, was recentlyawarded the Joseph A. Capps with a chromosome pattern nottoo different from paired chromo¬somes in man.In man and other complex formsof life hereditary characteristicsare transmitted by paired chromo¬somes.The mutant micro-organism wasdiscovered by Roy Curtis III. aU. S. Public health service pre-doctoral fello^ in the departmentof microbiology ot the university.The new mutant consists of asingle chromosome accompaniedby a part of a second chromosome.The new strain is a mutant ofthe bacillus Escherichia coli K 12.Because the normal circularchromosome of the strain is miss¬ing the bacteria are resistant tothree strains of viruses which at¬tack bacteria. The mutant is alsounable to make one of the 20Quiet sleeping room wanted by stu¬dent, 1962-1963. Can pay up to $40mon, or in chores and sitting. CallAll students over 21 years of age whodesire transportation west during monthMay-Sept., call 233-1691.PART TIME HELP WANTED. Work 3evenings a week and Saturday. $2 anhour. Car necessary. Opportunity forfull time summer work. Phone OL6-3517, after 6 pm. TYPEWRITER OFFER CONTINUESWith each new Olympia S. M. 7 or Smith CoronaGalaxie portable typewriter purchase—one free type¬writer table.See our stock without obligation and inquire abouttype changes you may require.University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.May eighteenth is a date for bunnies,Bunnies are gentle, the eighteenth is. agentle date.Lost: 2 rings, 1st fir., s.s., lavatory.Reward. Ext. 3471.Buy your Mother's day card today. the university of Chicagotheatre presentsHerman Wouk'sCAINE MUTINYCOURT MARTIALIn the Law School's Weymouth - Kirkland Courtroomat 8:30 on May 11, 12 & 13 and at 2:15 on May 12.DIRECTED by ROBERT STRANGfriday and Sunday: $1.50 - Saturday: $2.00call midway 3-0800, ext. 3297 for reservationsif 50c STUDENT DISCOUNT AT THE REYNOLDS CLUB DESK ★Don’t be a meat-head! Get Vitalis with V-7. Itkeeps your hair neat all day without grease.Naturally. V-7® is the greaseless grooming discovery.Vitalis® with V-7 fights embarrassing dandruff, preventsdryness. Keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Try it! amino acids normally produced bythe bacteria.Because chromosomes are theelements which transmit heredi¬tary characteristics, the absenceof part of the mutant may helpscientists discover what the mis¬sing part does in a normal chro¬mosome. In this way more canbe learned about the process ofhereditary transmission of char¬acteristics.Curtis announced his discoveryyesterday at the annual meetingof the American Society for Mi¬crobiology in Kansas City, Mo.EARLY BIRDSPECIALSFRONT ENDALIGNMENT $9.95BRAKE SPECIALMOST CARSALIGN FRONT ENDBALANCE FRONT WHEELSCHECK BRAKESPACK BEARINGSTAILPIPES $5.95Most CarsSHOCK $ABSORBERS(Front) 15-95Most CarsSEATBELTS .95Reg. $10.95 — InstalledSTUDENT SPECIALUS* ROYAL SaftOHr PRQPiic*„ T,*ts| *«><**»[229 sI Jfto-'n..Plus felNow U S .danger «>•this•Hfnew "Low'S™*!®"-*‘/e No otlw ♦sign kivpI ,.r t,r* de-thorough*-^ Such&iUr* •Jd ! S*9db,OWOutt. n<*U.S. Royal SAFE-WAY Tire.DISCOUNTS TOUC STUDENTSAND FACULTYAL SAX TIRE GO.6052 Cottage GroveDOrchester 3-5554May 10. 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3PresentAlabamaTALLADEGA — SheriffLuke Brewer of Talladega ar¬rested a field secretary fromthe Student Nonviolent Coor¬dinating committee (SNCC) onApril 28 on charges of “conspi¬racy to violate state anti-tress¬pass laws”. He was held on $2500bond.John Robert Zellner, a SNCCfield secretary who has been inTalladega for several weeks, wasaccused of having instructed stu¬dents at Talladega college in waysof demonstrating against segrega¬tion.Members of the school’s socialaction committee have been dem¬onstrating for several weeks, at¬tempting to integrate the city’sdrug store lunch counters, chur¬ches, and public library.On April 30, SNCC, the stu¬dent body, faculty, and presidentof Talladega college, and severalindividuals were ordered by theState of Alabama to halt all anti¬segregation demonstrations.In a temporary injunction ob¬tained by Alabama Attorney Ge¬neral MacDonald Gallion, SNCCand the social action committee ofthe college were prohibited fromconducting kneel-ins, mass demon¬strations, boycotts, picketing, andother expressions against segre-tion.On April 26, armed state troop¬ers beat 200 students two blockshrough the city after they refusedto halt a march protesting thebeating and tear gassing of a stu¬dent-manned picket line the daybefore. The marching studentswere met by state and city police¬men. armed with fire hoses, clubs,and tear gas. When the studentsrefused to turn around and beganto sing freedom songs and theNational Anthem, the policemenbeat and shoved them tw'o blocksto the campus. One girl, who hadbeen hospitalized by tear gas theday before, was struck by a troop¬er so hard on her head she felloff the street.foreign ** hospital & dimedealers in:• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambretl5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 7mi 3-3113bob testermg psychiatristPOWER YOUR PLAY roundup of civil rights activitiesMississippi Maryland Georgia ChicagoJACKSON, — A field secretarynow five months pregnant andon maternity leave from the anti¬segregation organization is inthe Hinds County Jail facing twoyears behind bars.Mrs. Diane Nash Bevel, wifeof the Reverend James Bevel ofCleveland, Mississippi, was arrest¬ed on contempt of court chargesas she sat in the “White" sectionof the Hinds county courthouse.She was in court lo surrenderherself to serve a two-year sen¬tence imposed last summer oncharges of “contributing to thedelinquency of minors’’ after sheconducted nonviolent workshopsin Jackson preparing Mississippiyouths to go on freedom rides.“Some people have asked mehow I can do this when I amexpeeting my first child in Sept¬ember”, Mrs. Bevel said. “Sincemy child will be a black child,born in Mississippi, whether I amin jail or not, he will be born inprison.”Mrs. Bevel is a native of Chi¬cago. While a student at Fiskuniversity in Nashville, Tennessee,she was a leader in the studentsit-in movement there. In Feb¬ruary, 1960. she was arrested inNashville on charge of “disorder¬ly conduct and conspiring to dis¬rupt trade and commerce,” andin February 1961, she served 30days in a Rock Hill, South. Caro¬lina jail for “breach of the peace”after lunch counter sit-in arrest.She was arrested in Nashvilleagain in June, 1961, for disorderlyconduct.She was active in SNCC’s pro¬ject last summer when field secre¬taries entered Mississippi to en¬courage Negroes to vote. BALTIMORE. — A conferenceof sit-ins, freedom riders, andspokesmen from national civilrights organizations will gather inBaltimore May 11 - 13 for threedays of workshop, discussion ses¬sions, and anti-segregation dem¬onstrations.Charles McDew, chariman ofthe (SNCC), James Farmer, headof the Congress of Racial Equali¬ty (CORE), Dion Diamond, SNCCfield secretary, and CORE’S JamesPeck have been invited to addressthe conference.SNCC chairman McDew has arecord of 26 arrests because ofhis civil rights activity. Farmerwas active in last summer’s Free¬dom Rides, both as a planner andparticipant, as was Peck. Dia¬mond recently spent 59 days ina Baton Rouge, Louisiana jail af¬ter he was arrested on “criminalanarchy charges” because of hisparticipation in anti-segregationdemonstrations on the campus ofSouthern university.The theme of the conferencesponsored by the Baltimore CivicInterest Group (CIG), CORE, andthe Washington Non-vio¬lent Action group, will be “Per¬spective” civil rights!”CIG leader Clarence Logan hassaid that wade-ins, sit-ins, andfreedom rides are bing plannedfor Ocean City, Maryland, forJune 2, 1962 Logan said that al¬though federal money w;as usedto rebuild much of Ocean Cityafter a recent storm, much of it isstill segregated. ATLANTA, — Over 250 personsfrom 22 states attended the thirdSNCC conference in Atlanta lastmonth.The interracial conference,called by SNCC to inform studentsit-in leaders of new methods andtechnique to use in fighting se¬gregation, w'as held on the cam¬pus of the InterdenominationalTheological center. It attractedcollege students from each of theSouthern states and from as faraway as New' York. All of themajor civil rights and human re¬lations organizations were repre¬sented at the gathering, as werestudent protest centers through¬out the South.The three-day meeting cen¬tered around sessions designed togive Southern student leaderstraining in several aspects of thedirect action protest against se-pregation. Many of the studentsattending the conference havebeen deeply involved in the South¬ern protest movement. Severalhave dropped out of school to de¬vote more time to the fightagainst segregation, and most hadbeen jailed at least once becauseof their participation in the civilrights fight. A commitle has been formedto take busloads of foreign stu¬dents to Monroe, North Carolina |on May 12 to see the trial ofthree civil rights workers chargedwith kidnaping.Queens NAACP plansaffiliation with COREThe Queens college (QC)kchapter of the National Asso¬ciation for the Advancementof Colored People (NAACP)recently voted to sever its affilia¬tion with the NAACP and join theCongress of Racial Equality *(CORE).The group feels that studentscan work more effectively withCORE, w'hich advocates a non¬violent, direct action approach todiscrimination and segregation,reports the QC Phoenix.The University of Chicago chap¬ter of the NAACP made a similarchange last autumn.New Mexico studentsoppose NDEA clauseBy unanimous vote, the Student,Council of the University of NewMexico has endorsed the faculty drequest for repeal of the NationalDefense Education Act DisclaimerAffidavit.Appointment only Ml 3-8032FLORENCE RESNIKOFFCUSTOM JEWELRY DESIGNPrecious Stones Matched Wedding SetsTfce only Chicago designer fa be included in “Design Quar¬terly's" survey at contemporary jewelry craftsmen.Its whats up front that countsiFILTER-BLENDl is yours in Winston and only Winston.Up front you get rich golden tobaccos specially selectedand specially processed for filter smoking. Smoke Winston.R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.. Winston-Sale*. N C.WINSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should! tt4 • CHICAGO MAROON <* May 10. 1942