i m ChicagoM aroon Tht UuNntty «f Qkt0Morgenthau dfcfctt!&©>**"world responsibilitiesin age of nuclear warThe nuclear age has issued genthau added. a living societyVol. 70 — No. 96 University of Chicago, Wednesday, May 16, 1962Curriculum published^ The fiist issue of the College Curriculum Bulletin will be distributed on campus today.* The bulletin is published by the College curriculum coordinating group (CCCG) “asone means of facilitating the development and exchange of ideas about the College curri¬culum/' — — — 1The CCCG has invited each Meiklejohn’s proposal suggests aThe first issue of the bulletin facui(y member to “express his limited experiment of buildingconsists of a history ot Chicago views on an ideal conege curricu- general education around aundergraduate education to 1930 lum or Qn what lhig col)cge ought tutQrial system<by Russell Thomas professor of to become, as weH as to respond Meyer suggests a program ofhumanities, Knox Hill, associate to the views expressed in the intensive studies in the humani-pto issor o p l osopiy, an bulletin.” Mayfield said that the ties and social sciences for a smallRichard Stoir, associate professor question of student participation in l umber of entering students whoOf history. The history from 1930 th bulletin has not been di*- have outstanding ability and in¬to present will appear in the cussod but suggested that lhe terest in these areas.second issue. Maroon might serve as a better Swartz discusses the questionsAlso the issue includes propo- medium for student proposals for of when g.^cral education shouldsals and comments on general edu- curriculum changes and comments take place in a four year curricu-cation by Donald Meiklejohn, pro- on faculty proposals printed in lum and how much “integration”is possible in general education.lessor ot philosophy and head of the bulletin,the College social science section;Marc Swartz, assistant professorof anthropology; and LeonardMeyer, professor of music andchairman of the department ofmusic. in a new period of history ac¬cording to Hans J. Morgen¬thau, professor of politicalscience and history. Morgenthaugave the first in a senes of threelectures entitled “Reflections onthe nuclear age” yesterday after¬noon at the University law school.Morgenthau attacked the beliefof Dr. Herman Kahn and Profes¬sor Edward Teller that nuclearw'ar is but a quantitative stepabove conventional violence. Heexplained that contradictions andqualifications in Kahn’s and Tel¬ler’s ideas prove them wrong.He noted that both men recog¬nize the need for world govern¬ment, and added that “I am infavor of world government.” Kahnbelieves that American society'would be able to survive nuclearattack; Morgenthau explained thatKahn didn’t take account of thesimultaneous impact effects of nu¬clear attack.Both Teller and Kahn have amechanistic view of society, Mor-Eby to introduce HoffaThe College faculty establishedthe CCCG as "an expression ofthe belief that the infrequentmeetings of College faculty arefar from ideal for an open andfree exchange of views about thecurriculum and matters intimatelyrelated to it.”John Mayfield, associate pro¬fessor of biology and a memberof CCCG, ‘•■aid th-• t the frequencyof publication of the bulletin willbe determined by faculty reactionto it. He added that CCCG alreadyhas sufficient material for (liesecond issue of the hull'din, andthat it w'ill be published as soonas possible.Copies of the first issue havebeen mailed to all faculty mem¬bers and to all residence halls andfraternities. Copies will also beavailable at the administrationbuilding information desk. by Mike Kaufmanand Sue GoldbergJames Riddle Hoffa, whowill speak here Friday night,is the chief administrativeand executive officer of thiscountry’s largest and fastestgrowing union.Holfa, general president of theInternational Brotherhoodof Teamsters (IBT>, will speakon “The American labor move¬ment” at 8 pm in Mandel hall.The event is sponsored by StudentGovernment. Kermit Eby, profes¬sor of social sciences, will intro¬duce Hofta.Students and faculty planningto attend Holla's lecture are askedto purchase their tickets in Man-del corridor as soon as possible.Tickets will not be sold to thegeneral public until persons in theAsk improvement ofUC communicationsAn open meeting will beheld tonight for students andfaculty members interested indiscussing means of improv¬ing communication among allmembers of the University of Chi¬cago community of scholars.The meeting will be held at 8pm in the Judson lounge.The first in what is hoped to bea series ot such meetings was heldlast Wednesday night. Some 16 students and faculty members at¬tended.Among those present w'ere SolTax. professor of anthropology;David Bakan, professor of psychol¬ogy; Ronald Weiner, Instructor inEnglish; Harry Kalven, professorin the law school; and James E.New’man, assistant dean of stu¬dents.In addition, students connectedwith various campus organizationssuch as the Maroon, and StudentGovernment, and campus housesattended.-< ‘}'- • * 'f Xo' MXfr . ;> 1I ' v)'; , • ••j|$Y •K . • '• <L: " , / + < 'I ■„ \4 '%|£> : :: ■ ■ :v: ’ UC community have had a chanceto buy theirs. This restriction willbe lifted before the lecture, andseats w'ill no longer bo guaranteed.Hoffa was elected to the presi¬dency of the Teamsters union attheir 1957 convention after serv¬ing five years as vice presidentof the organization. The Team¬sters which waS expelled from theAmerican Federation of Labor thesame- year for alleged corruptionhas a present membership of morethan 1,700,000 in some 900 localsin the United States Canada, andPuerto Rico; it reports assets ofover a billion dollars.Hoffa’s election to the Team¬ster presidency was contested by13 rank-and-file union memberswho claimed that over half theconvention delegates had no rightbeing there. In legal action tonegate the election, Hoffa and hisopponents agreed to have a three-man board of monitors set up tosupervise Teamster reform untilanother election could be held.The officers elected at the 1957convention were to remain in of¬fice.When an election was called forby Hoffa in 1959, the board ofmonitors sought postponement ofsuch a ballot on the grounds thatthe union had not yet been“cleansed.” The circuit court ofappeals decided that the board ofmonitors could not put off theelection, and the board w'as event¬ually dissolved. The 1959 electionwas held in July and Hoffa re¬ceived an overwhelming vote.. .Hoffa, now 49. left school inDetroit at the end of his seventhgrade. He took a job at a grocery-chain warehouse and, at the age of 17, organized the workers ofthe company to strike for a raisein pay, better working conditions,and an insurance plan.Soon after. Hoffa took his ware¬house workers into a DetroitTeamsters local and by the timehe w'as 24 he became president ofDetroit Teamsters local 299, apost w'hich he still holds.In the years following Hoffaorganized the car-haulers in De¬troit and was named chairman ofthe negotiating committee of theCentral States Drivers council. Healso led organization efforts for,and was elected president of, theMichigan conference, the modelfor the many state-wide confer¬ences in the IBT.Hoffa established the CentralStates health and w'eifare fundswhicli cover 90% of over-the-roadteamster members in 23 Mid-Westand Southern states. In addition,he has negotiated a pension planunder which employers pay $6 perweek per employee to cover dri¬vers in the 23 states.Hoffa has appeared nearly 20times before the McClenan Senatesubcommittee, which investigate“improper activities in the laboror management field”. At varioustimes in the past five years thesubcommittee questioned Hoffaon misuse of funds, harboring cri¬minals in his local 239, union elec¬tions, and his association withsupposed Communists, Bridges andGoldblatt, who are officials in theInternational Longshoremen andWarehousemen's union on theWest Coast. Hoffa has nevertaken the fifth amendment but hehas claimed lack of memory inover a hundred instances. Isn’t a mechanical society. Thereare limits to the endurance of asociety. “A society has a moralbreaking point, like an individualdoes,” Morgenthau said.Nuclear technology is an intri¬cate part of modern technology;it has its roots in the technicalbreak throughs of the mid-nine¬teenth century w’hich saw the firstreal change in the speed of trans¬portation, communication, andweaponry in 3000 years. Morgen¬thau said. Nuclear weapons areonly an extension of the principledeveloped by the invention of themachine gun whereby it becamepossible for one man to kill many.Morgenthau traced the revolu¬tionary effect of nuclear weaponson diplomacy. The developmentof these weapons has caused thefirst real revolution in internation¬al relations since the beginning ofhistory, said Morgenthau. Beforetheir development violence couldbe used rationally to obtain obeje-tives. But with the invention ofnuclear weapons war lias becomeirrational, but not impossible. Asan example, Morgenthau notedthat both the United States andthe Soviet Union have threatenedto go to war over Berlin, yet sucha war w'ould destroy not only Ber¬lin, but the ITS and USSR as well.Morgenthau concluded that theUnited States and all other na¬tions behave as if w’o w'ere still liv¬ing in the pre-nuclear age. “Youget a foreign policy that has theintellectually attractive qualitiesof Alice in Wonderland, hut is verydangerous,” he explained.Any kind of violence in the nu¬clear age carries with it the dan¬ger of turning into nuclear war;the immensity of the destructivepower at the eonlrol of the twomajor powers influences both gov¬ernments not to use that pow'er,both sides are restrained by theirability to destroy, Morgenthausaid.In loday’s lecture Morgenthauwill consider the implications ofnuclear weapons on domestic poli¬tics, and will discusss its effect onour democracy. The lecture willbe given at 4 pm in the law' schoolauditorium.SC meets, invalidatespetition asking recallTeamster union president James Hoffa. Student government assemblyacted last night on the proposedpetition for recall of its membersThe Student Faculty Administra¬tion Court which had been askedto determine the constitutionalityof the petition, refused to decidethe question, stating that it couldnot make declaratory judgements.After more than an hour’s deli¬beration the assembly invalidatedt-he petition on the grounds that1) it did not designate specificmembers be recalled; 2) it wascirculated before the representa¬tives took office. Thus it asked for recall of non-existent members;31 because the petition wras sentbefore members took office thepossibility of any proper causeof recall was negated.The assembly also discussed thequestion of organization scholar¬ships for members of student gov¬ernment. Whether these scholar¬ships should be limited to mem¬bers of the Executive council ormade available to all SG repre¬sentatives and whether financialneed should be considered wereamong the points raised. UC professor of politi¬cal science Hans Morgen¬thau speaks on 'Reflectionon the Nuclear age' in theSchool auditorium.Morgenthau criticized theviews of pro-nuclear testscientists Herman Kahn andEdward Teller in his lecture.Aims of education'Superior to previous issue'The theme, with variations, of the new Phoenix is peace and disarmament or, asthe title page has it, “At the End of War.” Although the splendidly colored plumageof the first issue of the bird has been toned down to black and white, the quality ofthe contributions in this, its second issue, is superior, in my opinion, to the high levelof excellence of the previous is- Wick discusses roleof UC dean of studentsFor one thing, editors Lamb andEdelstein have become masters ofthe reviewing technique, practisedin both issues. In their interviewwith the author of “The Man withthe Golden Arm,” Nelson Algrencomes forth alive and eloquent.Here you have a speaking and liv¬ing personality that is, you dohave him, if, for some inexplicablereason, you want to have him atall. xThe song of the bird is bothinformative and thematic. Profes¬sor Helen Boyden, an authority onsuch matters, discusses “Neutra¬lism” from the point of view ofthe neutrals. This procedure is, ofcourse, the reasonable way to dis¬cuss neutralism, but we in theUSA do not see the matter fromquite that perspective. Hencemany of our woes!From here on the story tellers,poets, photographers, and eritiestake over. George Diekerson, inhis .story .“Chico.” . interstinglysuits his language to his subjectand we have a moving story of aninsane soldier in an army “psycho”ward. The poets, William Velton,Gruby’s Rambler Inc.THE LOWEST PRICEIN CHICAGOLAND1962 RAMBLERS455 S. COTTAGE IO 8-1111 Harvey Plotnick and David Kahnare unusually inspired by the mu¬sic.In one poem, even the old beaf-eater, Samuel Johnson, Becomes asubject for poetic musing. “Andlike a tightrope walker who main¬tains his balance on the wire witha pole.” Sam Johnson walking atightrope is, indeed, an image toconjure with.But what of the fine shots thatDanny Lyons has taken of theWashington project? They are fineindeed. And fine, too, is CharlesGilman’s analysis of Ionesco’s"The Killers.” In fact, after onereads this review it is no longernecessary to see or read the play. once said to Socrates, “He wouldtransfix me, and I should growold sitting at his feet.” But thenthe analogy is a poor one since Iam not at all an Alcibiades, al¬though there is more than a touchof Socrates in McKeon.The Phoenix ends her song withtwo fine articles by David Leveyand Peter Jacobson on disarma¬ment, one from the economic, iheother, from the political, point ofview. U C may well be proud oftwo such students who can writeso learnedly and wisely on suchintricate themes.I have one more point to makebefore I, too, end I suggest that adisarmament agreement be signedAnd that is a great saving of time wjth the printer of tii^magazine.He was warred reletlessly andsavagely against spelling, sensiblepunctuation, and correct copy. Mc-Keon’s article, especially, has suf¬fered from his ravages. Perhaps, infuture issues, he may be disaarmedor placated and thus, correctnessof copy may triumph.Associate professor ofhumanitiesMeyer Isenbergand money for all.Of course, the piece de resis¬tance is Richard McKeon’s "ThePhilosophic Problems of Peace”which is just as fresh and timelynow' as when it was first written.But this is easily understandable.McKeon writes sub specie aeter-nitatis.His article, like all his writings,has the qualities of monumentali-ty and ageless wisdom. If men areto communicate and understandone another on an international, Boeschensteil! IS namedor rather, supra national, level,here is the way it should and can v|S,*,n9 professor^ done Hermann Boeschenstem,I confess that McKeon, both in bead of the department ofhis writings and his talk, always German at University Collegerecalls me to my better self. I in the University of Toronto,has been named visiting professorbpreitirtaliv* No widow has evercomplained that herhusband had too muchlife insurance.Ralph J. Wood, Jr., *48IN LoSALLE CHICAGO. ILLFR. 2-2390 FA 4-4800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA in the department of Germaniclanguages and literatures for the1963.He will replace O. J. MatthijaJolles, who has recently joined thefaculty of Cornell university inIthaca, New York.Boeschenstein will teach bothgraduate and undergraduate cours¬es, concentrating on Goethe andthe literature of the 19th century.His books have covered a widerange of topics in German litera¬ture and have dealt with Goethe,with the Swiss authors GottfriedKeller and Jeremias Gotthelf,A man with Alopecia Universalis*doesn’t need this deodorantHe could use a woman's roll on with impunity. Mennen Spray wasmade for the man who wants a deodorant he knows will get throughto the skin .. . where perspiration starts.Mennen Spray Deodorant does just that. It gets through to theskin. And it works. All day. More men use Mennen Spray than anyother deodorant. Have you tried it yet? 644 and $1.00 plus tax‘Complete lack ol body hair, including that ot the scalp, legs, armpits, face, etca by Warner A. Wick,dean of students“Excellence” is the wordthese days. Tt is so stylishand so much in the air whenpeople talk of education that,as with most catch-words, itis fast losing whatever preci¬sion of meaning it might have had.Everybody is for excellence, justas he is for motherhood, thoughhe usually has a clearer idea ofthe latter.In contrast, “virtue” is a wordthat is almost never used, noteven for what a woman used tobe said to lose. The ancient ques¬tion, Can virtue be taught? isnever heard outside the classroom;while in class it is seldom takenseriously as a question, but istreated as one of the stock gam¬bits that Socrates used in playingthe game of dialectical one-up¬manship.Virtue, however, just means ex¬cellence, and excellence is thecurrent word for virtue. So boththe recent soul-searching aboutexcellence and the dialecticalexercises of the classroom take ona fresh significance when werealize that our big question aboutengendering excellence is simplythe old one about whether, and inwhat sense, virtue can be taught.The question can be made speci¬fic if we remember that virtue, orhuman excellence, has tradition¬ally been recognized in two mainforms, called intellectual andmoral — that is, excellence inthought and judgment and excel¬lence in character and action. Thetest of both is performance, andeach depends partly on the other.Let us assume, then, that theaim of liberal education fasopposed to training in some tech¬nical skill) is excellence, com¬prising the virtues of thought andcharacter as expressed in what aperson does with his time andwith his life. The principal busi¬ness of a liberal college or univer¬sity would then be the cultivationof the intellectual virtues, as Mr.Hutchins used to say in his de¬liberately old-fashioned language.This is the kind of job that suchan institution can do best, and itis one that no other kind of insti¬tution can do as well. Character¬building on the other hand, seemsto be the business of everybodyin general and of nobody in partic¬ular. Colleges have no patent onthe process for a person’s charac¬ter is being formed all the time,whether he is in college or not.But because everything we dowith any regularity affects ourcharacters, the fifth of his lifethat a fresh young graduate hasspent in college will inevitablyhave had a profound effect on him.“Yale, mother of men,” is per¬haps a sentimental exageration,but it has some point. We wouldhave to agree that there is some¬thing about, a Chicago graduatethat is distinctive without beingtraceable directly to the examin¬able content of his courses.This long preamble has been anintroduction to what I want tosay about the contribution of adean of students to the aims ofeducation. In our Universityorganization, the faculties pre¬scribe the academic conditions andmany of the objects of a student’sintellectual exercise and develop¬ment. The business people providethe material equipment for livingand learning. All the other “stu¬dent services,” a good deal of the“climate” of the institution, andmany of the ways it expresses itsspirit through the relations be¬tween <he junior and the seniormembers of the University, aresupposed : j fall within the respon¬sibility of the dean of students.He is thus a sort of Pooh-Bah, orLord High Everything Else.The educational scope of“everything else” is broad, havingto do with factors of characterand morale as well as with theUniversity’s primary intellectualpurpose. How does this work ?The principle that applies here iis simple but its ramifications arecomplex: since it is what we dothat gives our lives their specialquality and flavor, and since wecome to act in our characteristicways by doing things of thoseparticular sorts, the key to charac¬ter and performance is gettingaccustomed to living according toa certain pattern and style. If youact like a bum or an educatedman long enough, the chances arethat you will have become a bumor ->n educated man and be sluckwith one role or the other. (Shortexploratory forays into LowerSlobbovia or Highbrow Heightsare quite a different thing.) Andsince most of the time a studentspends in the University commun¬ity is not passed in classes andlabs, “everything else” can bevery important indeed.Important, but not subject todirect control. It is a plain fact oflife that a preconceived patterncan not be simply imposed upona sociely. People have their ownideas. Institutions are not madeaccording to a blue-print, butrather grow by their own vitalityin directions that are more orless influenced by external con¬ditions. This is especially true ofthe free institutions in which ex¬cellence flourishes best. Or, to putit as it applies to individuals, itis what we <lo rather than whatis done to us that makes theessential difference; and of coursewhat we do is considerablyaffecled by the opportunities andobstacles that we encounter.This holds for all aspects ofhigher education. The develop¬ment of intellectual excellence isnot achieved by pumping studentsfull of "knowledge” but by pro¬viding them with equipment andopportunities for using their in¬telligence to solve intellectualproblems; and the development ofcharacter is not achieved by pre¬scribing in detail what is to bedone but by providing limits with¬in which to make one’s owndecisions.The Pooh-Bah’s job, Ihen, ismainly with the various externalconditions within which studentscan educate themselves. And byfar the most important of these -the intellectual community offaculty and students—is somelhingover which he has, and shouldhave, little influence. But he mustunderstand it thoroughly. Tihs iswhy I take a dim view of thosewho think of “student personneladministration” as a distinct non-academic profession. The veryname is an offense. Much betteris our tradition that expects thoseresponsible for “student affaiisto be men of experience in theacademic world.Of course there are some neces-saiy services that are quite mun¬dane. Students have to be reason¬ably healthy if they are to takeadvantage of their intellectualopportunities. We all know peop ewho are too sick in body andspirit to use their intelligence forany good purpose. So, althoughan educational institution is notto be confused with a hospital orwith an institute for appliedpsychiatry (and there are educa¬tors who tend toward theseerrors) we need health seivieesto cope with both large and smallemergencies, and to advise uswhen a student’s health problemis so serious that he ought towithdraw for more extended treat¬ment than we can or should givehim.Then there are the circumstancesin which students live. In one othis most famous speeches, WinstonChurchill noted that “we shapeour houses, and our houses m turnshape us ” A fakir can overcomethe limitations of his pad by yearsof self-discipline, but it is truon the whole that plumbing andcheap soap have done a lot foculture. So does the presence oa common room, a library, ana pleasant dining room wheilike-mindt'd people can be fauna.(continued on pa9e ^’*,ree,Z • CHICAGO MAROON • Moy 16,19621ges pre-registration Suggests housing quotastrar William Van Cleve 22 of the spring Time Schedule, ..TU ,„n . , „ ^ ■lav urged students plan- Van Cleve noted that pre-registra- . . Afle,°”ly wa/ to h,ave a,n 5?v*r'e"d Leslle Pennington of the tendency toward a concentration'tions can not be accented after integrated society IS through first Unitarian church and Mrs. of housing projects in one area isnuota 15ertna Swindall, assistant pro- . , , TT ,quota , . .. . . - - p u harmful. However, he continuned,, return as undergrade M *ccep,ed af,er a well-administered quota Bertha;xt autumn to preregis- system ” A Slaughter a re- fessor in the school of social ser- „. .hey have not already done Students who do return in the ‘ - ’ ’ ® T.’- . vice administration. The discussion thls does not mean that a11 publicfall and who have not preregis- porter for the Daiiy Defender, waJ modera(cd by Fif(h housing is bad. He proposed thatIhe four-week pre-regis- ered must register during the late s ■ g ■ . . . alderman, Leon Despres. in the Hyde Park-Kenwood comperiod more than half Period when section choice will be Slaughter spoke in the final p Jn ine rarK Kenwood eom-trhtlv more than a third of extremely limited, he said. program in a series on the Negro Slaughter cited the Prairie ™unity there should be publicergraduates who indicated All students in residence this the twentieth century, entitled Shores and Lake Meadow develop- housing in scattered locations.>y plan to return have pre- spring who fail to pre-register by "The Negro in the community, ments as examples of places where When asked to explain the cur¬ed. May 25 will automatically be as- Other participants in the program a quota system has been veryring to the directions for sessed a late registration fee in sponsored by the school of social eflective.stration appearing on page the autumn, added Van Cleve. service administration were the He criticized the current publicf ■ • ) I. • f - | housing projects, stating that thel^n C rnlc* in HKHK^inn nOTPn concentration of one group of>QI I O I V/I III VI I I 1%^ I V* Vi people in an area prevents these are often afraid to break the pat-ynd when we think of them, ques- question of “academic freedom” if people from integrating fully into tern of segregation in their com¬mons of policy become very im- that term has any useful signifi- society. Too often, he stated, the munities and therefore will notportant and difficult. Decisions cance. children growing up in such a accept projects in their areas. Theabout them cannot be dodged, be- a similar confusion has grown housing project never meet out- Negro aldermen, he charged, don’trent failure of the city to buildpublic housing projects in suchscattered locations, Despresstated that the white aldermentinued from page 2)>ortunitiy to live with oneShapro’s pictures alsoa difference. Moreover,students live, things are cause not having a declared policy up of late about the pronounce- siders-to happen. Anyone who about a subject is also a question ment that “discussion is incompat- Pennington agreed that thise in the early days of the P°bcy. Not to decide is often ible with coercion.” The two are —_irm cannot fail to have a very effective way of deciding indeed incomoatible in the respecta remarkable transforma- a Question, so that the University that one cannot discuss a questionis in many ways a lovely cannot avoid responsibility for —that is, engage in mutual in-ut from the first it seemed what its students do by letting quiry into the truth- if someone Episcopal holy communion: 7:15 am,1 for living in-rather lhey }'k,e'.. is in a position to coerce assent OcJnograpTy-internaland full of echoes. It still With “this in mind, let me end to a predetermined conclusion,o be made more livable, by tr> *ng to clear up what seems But if an institution uses itsall that, it has taken on *° me t° be a confusion about power to “coerce" students to-tive life of its own thanks what is called “academic free- attend a discussion of, say, the Lecture: Tanganyika i960 and ideas of>eople in it. Think of such dom-” Jt is not opposed to regula- principles of economics, it is non- {^professor TvlntWsltly lively Activities as the ^ ^ such. Tne essentiAl lice* sense to SAy thAt freedom of dis*day night parties, the doms the academy are, of cussion has been interfered withhours, and the Monday course, intellectual. There must be in any relevant way. And so, toculty discussions that have freedom ol thought, of inquiry, he blunt about it, to require stu-up “nalurally” (but not °t °P*n*on and expression. But it dents to live in dormitories doeshard work). Its house is not a violation of academic not limit their intellectual free-tions and activities are freedom to require a student to dom. It may or may not be wise,the strongest on campus. do some work, or to prove it by but it can also be argued 4hatle I don’t say we have Passing a quarterly examination Iroedom of the mind is encouragederything right, it should before he *s allowed to continue by limiting the other decisions a?nt enough that in pro press the necessity for disper¬sion of housing projects enough.Calendar of Eventswave*in the ocean.” Rosenwald 26, 3:30pm. Bernard Haurwitz, department ofastro-geophysics. University of Color¬ado.Makere university college, Kam-palia, Uganda.Lecture series: Reflections on theNuclear Age. 4 pm, Law school audit¬orium, ‘‘Politics in the nuclear age,’’Hans Morgenthau, professor of poli¬tical science and of history.Episcopal evensong, 5:05 pm, Bond chapel.Israel folk dancing, 7:30 pm, Hille]foundation.Seminar: Pugwash conferences, areas ofagreement and disagreement, 8 pm,soc sci 108. Morton Grodzins, pro¬fessor of political science (readings:Eugene Rabinowich: ‘‘A review onthe Pugwash conference's.” "Thestatements that followed the meet¬ings at Stowe, Vermont,” and "TheVienna Declaration.”Open meeting: Neiw Group (studentsand faculty) to discuss better ways ofcommunication among all membersof UC’s community of scholars, 8pm, Judson lounge.Film: "Jewish dance,” 10 pm, Hillelfoundation.such places to live, weofound effects on the sub-as well as on the exter-student life.y, I should mention “stu-ivities,” from the athleticwith its huge intramuralions to the literallys things that two or three, when gathered together,about to organize and try.se, the role of the Pooh-i his agents is to keepwhat is going on and tomuch as they can withoutjssy. Our principle hasallow all the freedom thatFic will bear, and I think>ay that no University en-re ot it. As I said, stu-lp to educate each other,’onnell admits people ofnd they use it by singingigal groups, writing andl plays, and engaging inof politics. I think it is ato our student activities,s to our students, that ourls are famous not only asand scientists, but also5 and writers What theytudents has helped themle the sort of people that■ommunity depends on a>f rules and expectations; with the second quarter of a person has to make, since onecourse. It may or may not be can t think aboul everything atdesirable or wdse, but it is not a once.BLACKFRIARS announces*50 PRIZEfor the script used in the 1963 productionmeeting for detailsTONIGHT between 7 and 8IDA NOYES - EAST LOUNGE NEW PAPERBACKS IN WORLD AFFAIRS!Lefever: ARMS AND ARMAMENT CONTROL @ SI.95Maki: GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS IN JAPAN @ SI.95Boyd and Resnburg: AN ATLAS OF AFRICAN AFFAIRS <g> SI .75Boyd: COMMUNIST CHINA S FOREIGN POLICY @ SI.75Watch for announcement of Library Duplicafe andDiscard Sale.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.Has PowerTop.Will Travel(costs less than manual top jobs!)Name: Rambler American “400” Convertible.Power-operated top. Price: Lowest of any U. S.convertible. Travel restrictions: None (has 125-HP overhead-valve engine plus five transmis¬sion choices. Bucket seats, optional). Honors:Economics (has won both major 1962 economyruns—beating all other compacts entered). In¬terviews: At your Rambler dealer’s.RAMBLERAmerican Motors Means More for Americans ife*Mifrom our University ShopCOOL, COLORFUL SPORTWEARfor the younger man, in sizes 35 to 42(shown) Odd Jacket of Dacron“3 polyesterand cotton hi muted plaids, $35Odd Jackets in Dacron®-and-flax, $37.50;in oxford weave A met® triacetate andcottony $30; in striped cotton seer suckery $25;in lightweight Dacron®-and-zvorsted, $45;in hand-woven cotton India Madras plaids, $35Odd Trousers in Dacron®-and-zvorstedtropical, $20; in Dacron*'-and-cottonpopHn, $12.50; in khaki or white chino, $ 10Bermuda Length Shorts in cotton India %Madras plaids, $12.50; hi Dacron^-and-cottonpoplin, $11.50ESTABLISHED 1B1BCCfcLormWogOB$ttvs furnishings, Pals (rf hoes74 t. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE, CHICAGO i, ILL.NF.W YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • SAN FRANCISCO • LOS ANCKLESMay 16. 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3— SHgKSNMl?IfWift • v - '< • , r'l'V',V:' iri- | ' * i* ‘;7 $50 for Blackfriars scriptThe newly elected Blackfriars board has announced that \An exhibition of the works Ingleside site. Haydon describes turo, studio, and the old sculp- $50 prize will be awarded next year for the script that feof I aredo Taft founder of the the plan 88 one of usinK a maxi' ture studio was converted into picfced for their 1963 production. This will be the first tim*UC art exhibition openspicked for their 1963 production. This will be the first timemum sense of style on a mini- Max Kahn s graphics room. that such an award has been offered since the organizationmum budget. a summer lecture series, en- was founded in 1904. ____ 'Present changes in the studios titled “Around Beethoven's Head ’ A mceting will be held from 7 Scribe Sue Kelley, expressed^were based on the feeling that —referring to the bust of the t0 8 pm tonight in the East lounge hope that the $50 award willthe building “was a prize if it musician-is planned for the gar- of Ida Noyes hal| for all prospec. courage talented dramatic writ!!could be fixed up . . . It s a build- den behind the studios. tive scrjpt writers. Details will who might not otherwise wish uing built by artists for artists. Taft chose his students primarily be given at that time. Bob Reiser spend time writing a play.As a result, not too much of the on his lecture tours - where he and Bob Applebaum, author and “Now that B1 a ck f r i a rs lmold architecture has been altered, “scanned the faces” of those who composer of this year’s show, will proved itself capable of produeinrBut numerous and sweeping chan- applied to him “for character.” be present to answer questions and musicals of high quality, we wantges have taken place inside. Pri- One of Taft’s proteges was Free- offer advice. to do everything within our powermarily, the changes were moti- man Schoolcraft, now lecturer in The Blackfriars board. Abbess to provide ourselves with first ratevated by the sudden need to make art and director of the Campus Dotty Sharpless. Prior Ron Ingle- material to work from,” said Missroom for enlarged classes, especial- studio gallery of the University, hart, Hospitaler Rod Phillips, and Sharpless.Iy of graduate students.One of the first things to go inthe renovation were cabinets fullof anthropology department rem¬nants which were stored for yearsin the studios. Haydon stated thatthe art department just ignoredthe cabinets for a long while, u-sing the “big storerooms” for artMidway studios, and bis asso¬ciates began yesterday in thenewly renovated studios at 6016Ingleside.The exhibition, presented by theUniversity’s department of art,which uses the studios for itsclasses, is in conjuction with theHyde Park - Kenwood centennial.Organized by Harold Haydon. as¬sociate professor of art and direc¬tor of the studios it is entitled“Moment of creation.”A graduate student exhibit willbe on display along with Taft’sworks. Both exhibits will run un¬til June 9 and can be viewed from10 am to 5 pm. Monday thioughSaturday.The exhibit features numeroussmall clay studies which were thefirst expression of ideas for Taft’s .wifi. lar sing the “big storerooms’ for art Beautiful 5V_> rm. apt., available Junemajor woiks, together with lai , „ . . • 1. Student subsidy. 50th and Wood-ger sketches in clav and models classes, quietly, without making ]awn Cali ke 8-3627.demands.” Seven Rooms: ~1 ~5744 S. Kenwood, will dee. complete —new stove, refritr. Call Draper andKramer. SA 1-87 6 2.— CLASSIFIED ADSFor Rent and For Sale Wanted5*4 loom well-furnished bachelorapartment. Has room for one more forsummer. FA 4-1 846. $20 reward for Rova! portable type,writer taken from Harper eirculatioiroom May 14. No questions asked. CViHCamp counselors (men) for private FA 4-0184.Mich itran summer camp. Experiencepreferred. Write or phone Mr. Seeder, ————Ml 3-6800, 87 11 S. Cregier Ave., Chi. Personalsin plaster. One of the studies pre¬sented is for the 108 foot long“Fountain of Time”, for whichTaft used his three daughters asmodels for the three goddesses.It is less than six inches long and The court, once dominated bythe original plaster model of “TheFountain of the Great Lakes,”and the “Gates of Paradise” liasbeen made into a student-faculty Sec the land of the Midnight Sun thinsummer, before civilization corrupts it.MU 4-2272.2-3 rm. furnished and unfurnishedapartments available now. *3.">-$90.Near 57th and Dorchester. HY 3-2525. Lostbarely one inch high. The sculp- exhibition gallery. The work and coniiliol™ sumiTies".ture was completed in 1922 and storage room has become a sculp- c*n mo 6-9117, after 6:30 pm.stands at the west end of theMidway plaisance.Other studies include those forthe “Black Hawk” monument, a50 foot tall figure overlookingthe Chicago river and represent¬ing to Taft “what the Indiansmust have felt,” and for the“Fountain of Creation” plannedfor the east end of the plaisance,but never completed.The works, which were removedfrom the Midway studios whereTaft worked remained unopenedin their crates until this week.They have been loaned by theKrannert Art museum of theUniversity of Illinois. Urbana,which purchased the entire con¬tents of the studio after Taft’sdeath in 1938.The University of Illinois, atthe urging of Rexford New'combe,then dean of its college of fineand applied arts paid some $10,000for the sculpture, W'hich includethe “Gates of Paradise” by Ghi¬berti.“In addition to the creation ofmuch-loved works of sculpture forChicago and elsewhere. LaredoTaft made a great contributionto public education in art through¬out the nation by his thousandsof lectures for schools and clubs,”Edward A. Maser, professor andchairman of the department ofart. said.Maser, who has introduced manyinnovations into the art depart¬ment, is largely responsible forthe remodeling of Midvyay stu¬dios.Although Midway studios haspreviously been relocated and al¬tered. its most recent change wasin 1929. In 1906. Taft moved fromthe Loop to “a large desertedbarn” on the University propertyon the Midway, thus founding theMidway studios.He added additional buildings asdormitories and studios for asso¬ciated sculptors and assistants, un¬til more than 20 were housed in13 studios. Taft explained that he“built like the chambered nautilus,cell by cell.” with private studiosopening into a large roofed courtW'here the artists dined surroundedby full-size plaster models of clas¬sic sculpture.In 1929 the studios were rebuilta block west, using the samebricks, and other building materialswere transported to the 60 and Ix>»t. whito oat with caramel patches,vicinity Ellis and 55th. Phone ext.3879 between 9 and 5 i>m; reward. Summer Maroon mailed anywhere. ('.»Hext. 3265 or write 1212 E. 59th »c,Take good care of your children inmy house. HY 3-744 3.Play Boy Party, May Eighteenth, BetaHouse.Don't watch while driving)®B0 Q©a A few"doifts/rNow that we have learned the how of girl watching, let’sconsider a few safety-precautions. They are presented,not as strict rules (since some experts with highly de*veloped eyeball control enjoy watching while runningthe high hurdles, for example), but merely as friendlysuggestions. 1. Don’t watch while driving. 2. Don’t watchforeign hospital & clinicdealers in:• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambrefta3340 s. take parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob lestermg psychiatrist Cfpart all three! Smokt “trmltf” thravgh fist tobacco tastes list.See the difference! With Pall Mall, you get that famous lengthof the finest tobaccos money can buy. Pall Mall’s famous lengthtravels and gentles the smoke naturally... over, under, aroundand through Pall Mall’s fine, mellow tobaccos. Makes it mild... but does not filter out that satisfying flavor! while drilling teeth (dental students only). 3. Don’t watchwhile removing tonsils (medical students only). 4. Don’twatch while mixing chemicals in the lab. 5. Don’t watchgirls who are engaged to the captain of the football team.Our final suggestion is a do, not a don’t. Taste Pall Mall—so smooth, so satisfying, so downright smokeable!Pall Mall’snatural mildnessis so goodto your taste!So smooth, so satisfying,so downright smokeable!it mi miUtt mm*This ad based on the book, "Th* Girl Watcher’s Guido.” Text; Copyright by Oonald J. Siufd. Orating*Copyright by Eldon Dodint. Reprinted bp potmigiot «f Harpor 4 Brother*CHICAGO MAROON • May U, 1962