IheUi of Cbkago LibraiMcGill and Boorstin speak in Rosen waters honorThe values created by the The, values thus generated sion without violence, and why. The history of American "Europe was cluttered with [>ur-Kosenwald funa have Played Brow and ""creased in strength.” when defiance did appear, there philanthropy exhibits the poseless governmental machinery— and still play —a major °"e of projects launched defeat distinctive American concept ^iIe in America, machine camea - 4-ivrv crtllfu by Rosenwald was a fellowship ing 10 comDac inat nelP Cieteat it . . ^ later, the people invented it."role in the emerging South, j-und for Negroes t0 further their • • • The Rosenwald Fund helped community, Daniel Boor- —stated Ralph McGill, publisher of education In addjt;on to this he blueprint change and the direction stin, UC professor of Americanof it,” he said. history said yesterday.Rosenwald, concerned with pub- honor of the 100th anniver-the Atlanta Constitution. McGill f .. , . . , ,Tne dinner Set Up a fel,owshlP fund f°r whitewas the main speaker at a dinner u(he hoping theK+ honoring Julius Rosenwald last . ,tC honoring Juliusnight.The dinner at the QuadrangleCluh climaxed yesterday’s cele¬bration of the 100th aniversaryof Kosenwald’s birth. During theafternoon, Professor of HistoryDaniel Boorstin spoke. An ex- Boorstin told.Americans are anxious to havecommunity share their daily life.This creates virtues as well asthe vices of the familiar organiza-aries in the public schools. Today’s Boorstin cited the generous UC tion man Boorstin related.last w.* recip¬ients would help solve racial prob- he health, started dental infirm- sarV °t Julius Rosenwald’s birth,lems in the Sou'lh.McGill had received one of thesefellowships.In 1919, Rosenwald’s fundhelped establish the Commission’on Interracial Cooperation. This massive public dental programsgrew out of this.Lessing Rosenwald discussed thefellowship programs started byhis father. Among recipients ofthe Negro fellowships were UC, » 7 V group, for the first time, “brought , * „ , \ 17bihit illustrating Rosenwald s in- leadors of ^ races togothe, professors Allison Davis and Ab-terests is currently on display in ..Qne of our problems in 1962 Harris.Har,M*r Memorial Library. is that in many communities the Rosenwald also established a benefactor as an example of pecu¬liarly American traits.In France, institutions fall intotwo definite classes: those sup¬ported, created and governed bythe state, or by individuals. Incontrast, the United States doesnot abide by such specific cate¬gories. American monuments areof. for, and by the community,Also speaking at last night's white people still don’t know bosPltal,,a|ning program lor Ne- such ag the independent Univer-dinner were UC president George what the Negro community wants, gr , , ,J;rVYers!ty ol Chicago sity of Chicago with endowments- ■ - *vorked with him in establishing . . „ ‘‘Yet we still expect people toact as if they all thought the sameway,” he admitted.This accounts for the proverbialAmerican lack of privacy and whymen in the public view are ex¬pected to disclose their privatelives.Citizens of the United Statesindulge in a fantastic pride intheir community which BoorstinBeadle and Lessing Rosenwald, thinks, or feels. One can imagine worked W'th h,rn in establishing from a variety of piaces Boorstin ca,ls the "booster spirit.”son of Julius Rosenwald. what it W'as in 1919,” McGill said. ™V1 on ospital tor tiaining in emphasized. Such distribution point cities as.. -. T , . . 11 *s my studied judgement . . . 'cago. in defining the idea of an Chicago grew quickly and people* p that the human and spiritual val- He also established an insur- American community Boorstin attached themselves eageriv touniversity from i»i~ until his Ues created by the. Rosenwald ance plan to help people obtain made three points. In the United their new community. The com-Fund have been among the major proper medical treatment. In ad- States, the communities existed munity spirit was both noisy andreasons why so much of the South dition, he established the hospital before the government, such as easily transferable,managed to begin acceptance of administration course in cooper- the Mayflower community which Boorstin accounts for the joinerSupreme ation with UC. ^ot up a government with the(tenth in 19S2. During his life¬time. he gave more than $60,-000.000 to philanthropic couses.Of this, about $20,000,000 wentto aiding the Negro - in his healtheducation, and general welfare.Rosenwald believed that “hismoney should be a stimulus -that philanthropy should raise thelevels of the people helped .rattier than being a merely pal¬liative measure providing tem¬porary relief,” stated McGill.‘‘He strongly believed that pri¬vate philanthropy should be boldenough to finance experimentswhich rightly were a part of pub¬lic responsibility.”‘‘If the experiments could beproved workable, then the publicwould be willing to support them.”The funds established by Ro¬senwald “offered leadership andresources" for the improvementof race relations, said McGill.His funds were used for con- the United StatesCourts’ school desegregation deci- signing of a pact. spirit of Americans with thisthesis.The old European divisions ofindividualism versus collectivismcannot apply in the Americanfluid society.Rosenwald’s purposes of charitybear out Boorstin’s thesis.Rosenwald’s central ideas ofcommunity enrichment, adapta¬tion to the community, and a thinline between public and and pri¬vate institutions reflect theAmerican society of which he wasso much a part.Vol. 71 — No. 15 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Oct. 16, 1962SG holds first meeting tonightThe Student Government All UC students, graduate and campaign for Rep. Sidney Yates.(SG) Assembly will hold its undergraduate are represented in At the caucus. POLIT also de-. r , * the Assembly. Representation is cided upon its nominations to fillstruct ing classrooms ami Negro first meeting: Ol the year to- hv a(>ademi0 Hnit in proportion vacancies in the Assembly and onYMC’A’s, educating teachers, aid¬ing colleges and universities, es¬tablishing health services, and es¬tablishing fellowships.The Rosenwald Fund offeredmoney on a cooperative basis. Itsfunds had to be matched by local by , .night. It is expected to act the enrollment of each unit.upon the University’s participa¬tion in the NDEA, recent eventsin Mississippi, President Ken¬nedy’s failure to issue an execu¬tive order prohibiting discrimina-_ tion in federal housing, and ^ ^groups. “Thus was local pride and vacancies in SG committees and eIectIOns.moral conscience aroused.’’ in the assembly. Each unit has at least one repre¬sentative.1SG delegates are aligned inpolitical parties. Candidates fromsix parties and one independentwere elected to SG in last spring’sMcDew explains roletimes. Among the7t v 1 1- charges against him has beenof the Student Non-Violent <,riminaJ anarchv iCommitteeCharles McDew, chairman rested 27chargtcriminal anarchy in Louisiana.Coordinating POLIT, liberal action party,controls the assembly with 82 ofSG’s 50 seats; 17 in the Collegeand 15 in the divisions andschoolsThe more campus-orien(ed In¬dependent Reform Party andUniversity Party have three andHe called the Baton Rouge jail, eight seats respectively. The Law'School Party has its school’s(SNCC), explained his organ- vvhere he w’as placed, “the worst” j^re^-ea^ts*^ization’s role in the Southern in- he had ever been in. There, he Two partjoSf with p|atfornis oftegration movement last night. w'as placed in solitary confine- abolishing student government.Speaking at a meeting in Rey- ment, and not even permitted to the Association of Non-ToleratingDespite the outside SG’s Executive Council. TheExecutive Council consists of theofficers of the Assembly and thechairmen of all SG standing com¬mittees.Peter Rarrish, a law student,spoke at the caucus in supportof Yates. POLIT then discussedwhether to endorse candidates,and decided not to commit itselfto campaign work, and that mereverbal support would serve nopurpose.Projects for the coming yearwere also discussed at the cau¬cus. One prospective project is anSG newsletter; another is a dis¬cussion series involving UC pro¬fessors and various students. Thai dancerSaturday. Mandel(ANTI) and the Arendt ends seminar, , «... rw.r eicoctod the speak to the jailers who broughtnolds Club, McDew sties*, til t _ , Democratic Organization to With-voter registration drive which bim iood. stand Nonsense (DOWN) haveSNCC has been conducting in the temperatures of over 85 degrees, total of three graduate seats.the heat within his cell was kept Because of its large numberon at all times. ' of seats and P°wer to bind its- / members to vote for its positions,South and the difficulties involvedin getting Negroes to vote. He by Mike Conroy-Political scientist HannahArendt concluded her two-week seminar “On Revolu¬tion” Friday with advicepointed out that two SNCC field The lights in his cell w'ere left POLIT is able to effectively con- taken from Oedipus at Colonnus.trol SG. Measures agreed on atPOLIT caucuses, therefore, cangenerally be expected to beSNCC w'as formed by students guards were conducting tours of passed at SG meetings.workers were shot in US Sena- on for three days and then shuttor James Eastland’s home town, off for three days. When hisbecause they felt they could best the jail, they displayed him as onecarry out the w'ork necessary to of the nation s leading Commun-break through • racial barriersthroughout the South.The voter registration drivewas started in Macomb, Missis¬sippi, 90 miles south of Jackson,where there is a large Negro pop¬ulation and no Negro voters.The drive w'as started in Mis¬sissippi, said McDew, becauseareas with the least political par- Whon asked whal people at UCcould do to help SNCC, McDew'said that SNCC’s most seriousneed is money. In addition, hesaid thaLa strong organizationmight successfully undertake tosolve some of the racial problemsin Chicago. -In response to a question aboutticipation in government are last year’s CORE sit-ins, McDewcharacterized by a maximum of said that the University’s policyexploitation of the Negro and the “should be challenged again.worst conditions.McDew cited the Albany move¬ment as a large scale, successfulSNCC drive. SNCC workers hadbeen in Albany for more than ayear before new's of their workwas made public.Discussing Cairo, Illinois, hesaid, “The people down there arejust as vicious as any we have Following his talk members of At POLIT’s first caucus of thequarter Sunday night, it discussedplans for tonight’s meeting.POIJT will introduce a motiontonight that Stl sponsor a peti¬tion urging the University to re¬main out of the National DefenseEducation Act (NDE<\) loan pro¬gram.The petition will also ask theUniversity , if it does reenter theprogram, to provide loan fundson the same basis as NDEA fundsfor any sludent who does notwant to participate iti the NDEA.POLIT is also expected to intro¬duce a resolution condemningevents at the University of Missis- It is the “task of Athens tomake life more splendid.” wasSophocles’ reply to a youngAthenian who sought reason forbearing life’s burden.The citation from Sophoclesaptly summarized the four lec¬tures of the series.Miss Arendt had spoken of thecauses of and the influences uponhistorical revolutionary begin¬nings. She had considered the “civil rights means the right tobe a participant in civil govern¬ment or it means nothing.” Inthat concern, Miss Arendt pointedout, all modern revolutions haveat one time or another tried togive men, all men, voice in gov¬ernment through a council system.The French Revolution hodfailed partly because the revolu¬tion had failed to produce a lastinginstitution. This institution, MissArendt went on to explain, pre¬sented the leaders with the quan¬dary: “Should freedom ... be theprice to pay for foundation?”She continued that Jeffersonexpected a revolution everyprincipal men of revolutions, their tw'enty five years. He was out-intentions, their fears, their suc¬cesses and failures. Mixing his¬torical observation and analysiswith comment on contemporaryinternational politics, she hadstressed the importance of revolu¬tion to the modern world. raged at the thought that only hisgeneration w'ould have the oppor¬tunity to start anew'. The wisdomof the political science employedby the Founding Fathers. MissArendt explained, provided us withthe system which protected usthe Freedom Chorus performed sippi in recent weeks:songs of southern SNCC workers.The Freedom Chorus will give aconcert Friday night at 8 pm atInternational House* Admission is$1.They will also appear at - theGospel for Freedom program Sun¬day at McCormick Place. Tickets Then in the final lecture, she from the oppression which couklconcerned herself with the dis- have resulted from our delega-In an action supporting CORE,POLIT voted to send a telegramto President Kennedy on Fridaywhen he arrives in Chicago. Thetelegram will protest Kennedy’srefusal to sign and failure to signan executive order to end dis¬ sipation of revolutionary spirit,particularly as manifest in thefrequently recurring but sadly un¬successful “council system” ofgovernment.The Final LectureMiss Arendt spoke Friday ofthat dissipation of revolutionary tion of our freedom and whichwould have required anotherrevolution.The spirit of revolution, MissArendt suggested, has been lostthrough lack of public spates(freely elective offices) for (liepublic elite to gather. In 1he“nightmare” of mass society.crimination in federal housing.Members of CORE plan to spirit in America into the balancefound ' m ->- • • ai H are $2- $3- 55, and $25. Tickets picket Kennedy at his hotel to of power found in the American lethargy, apathy, and inattentionGeo- .ln,, ^ississippi, Alabama, or for concerts will be on sale protest the lack of an executive governmental system and the to public business, “the spirit of'l°'this week at the Mandel Hall cor- order. party system of selection. revolution has not found its prop-•eorgia.’1McDew himself has been ar- ridor. Kennedy will be in Chicago to Thomas Jefferson had said that or institution.ciples in Michael Harrington will the field of civil liberties,(Maroon, criticize the^ideas of Hannah 4aRainff. J!16 ^UAG iLfl,,n, .. . , < , *;,* Operation Abolition," and-“has'' Arendt m <\ lectuio today. william Hm-klev ami i-,'’O’'Id be He will speak on- heyolu-J*ton Lewis m Cn more than forty\ heiv one lion and Hannah^ Arendt." Miss ^campuses. -fit — ~ , ^>tt vto a Arendt has-jusL; finished a two- ^Harrington was one of the;oi i^-Iv Rcces-* ^ eek ^sominai' on *re\olution heie m<i] members of the Fund I oi^theoWjt' Harrington;? one,, of^the’; leading j Republic’s Labor Research . &&jor'Nany intellectuals on the$American|left, *,jcet?i While-working on' thatjpi,o-uldl'.not W1|| stai t^ with^Ai endt’s^" majors jectche^ co-edited with PaiiljUac-7NDEA'’.” cworkv^Thet.'Origins of:Totalitarian-^0hs' the ^symposium,* ilabor^i^fe'-in' to. the ism arid?ci itici/c'hoth hei theones' Kree Society. His study on penci¬ls stiong, on totalitai lanism ’"and her. ideas ty-*4 in ’’America’s affluent /societylough to 'fj|out re\olutionar\ "change,'with-,f v;ts.published b> Macmillan Pi essn NDEA in "a totalitai lap tsocietypin'pai ti- this year under' 1he,;,htle|ot Thet should oular he w ill speak aboub<'re\iolu-' other*America.ublejjfal- 4ion w it hi n 4th e^So\*ct ^countries Harrington's lecture), sponsoied^standing since Asia 11 n' s’- d e a (Jr ; - ’ . .hv^t he-Young Peoples’-!) Socialistmeaning- - In -addition? to. doings extensive/, Reague, will begin 'at -8 pm in^vwoik on^totahtai ian societies Har- .Social ;Sciences.l22. vAdnnssion, istN,OR^IS ^ingJtonfiSaMla^JeadingAfigure in,725c* tor HJC students.«ff<%*&i§fc. . B BB -i———Maroon c»ufht ’>^&^^‘ngSa" o.with pant.unto the' bieach, * But howdear "'friends." ' !f|| "standing on||Mh\addition to 6167 students .who ci>uj^ ! as _rwill not ^blindly,, accept tyour judge- ’ ‘,4'ments.?; ofJXncighborhoixi ,restau'-V well-pu jIici/giants and optometiists,vyou/JoyaFsible alternat’leadership includesba few facility/student'whomembers /who wony, occasionally "accept monejabout^your “cavalier disregaidof g jf. a studer^tHe'dictionary.'Would yoiwcare toJciimmal pena/||esei ibe;) mi/hs little detail as enoUgp ancj, necessary, the image you had ,>»V>£ause him t‘jTiind^last Thursday w hen you're- 'joan then 't|erred'/vtw ice, to “t he | breech*, of 'expect no “tJ/et hies” you did not intend; in pubv- §*J nate p)an. hshingfNour^’free plugs.” Tuining^ on" pi ineipler the) other chepk is without, doubt- jess jrt»stuioan impoi t.ant pi inciple - in ethics;) *%,Bui-.*’ifnless.;ybur"command of Joy- .'lean ’dmgurftics" b’sVgi eaterllthan') ‘f* . - ! IQ ; Jjjja' hoi lion mot/'l w ill . !!;-1-..!;>Bolshse\ iks to do bait le ,von neut i a Li be happy to rlobale "one <>t my iA stlldei.gioun’d '•(Magg 'Field) at a lime delk cogy, dictionaries to, the Ma- sr. Jjjjplo.lbe miltuall\/agiVed^ upon,-‘but rbon ^office, il you| Ihmk theie’s , • ,ibeid! e^Nm t mbeil5 l%i » 'some ihance ’ot mK beuig used"GENF, M vf.INflWsKI •CSpl.nif ,, ‘ AilMPl |Alternative “too easy’Kb 4'<l4Jbljl.. ' i ( 1 ! \1.«Challenges Bolsheviks " /•Having noticed last-year**? tri-{T^kamphs^ of -the" Flying .^Bolsheviks f to "the editorl hu e more©ver 'underdeveloped groups ,i.e., •^“^5- small\children and semi-beaidless*■ ■ , : ,\,< ' ■ f ■ ; 1 1 ’ 1 t 1 • i ! ; ■’feel ’.that'.our tvidSextrerne' s\stern'sv’'%=•) '.should do bat tie*'on the, gridiron.’*» Having purged ourselves -of anQ ine>oiable tendency . to " mn up ,'#V’ i< elojted,tMj ^njCi aLui ight-w ing?.^f)la\s; 1) the ‘b. llu ksen defense Tcy mat ion 2) 1he„, ’-Buckley, shift and. 3 • the Walker''* 'chatge Beliex mg stiongly in indiryifi | vidualism’, wg).ha\^^e\en huddles]and|ifa complex;{; cpmniunleal ion"’I sv^sjem "designed^to allow' eomplc te’SSilm h'ereiby.'.eba 1 le5ngebhi1 FJCing’''. 1}.. 1UV. \ 11.- /v .In S'j.t 1 to on ,noll1 1i* Vfc .T.'- .£9 . ' JlJ Y, V- A A AO IItfjliCiitk>rS n^Cfonr»'m union: AB on <1 ‘|fC) i. '{KMrrlinir, ,'iyCF, 1«1*> Now-, ,pm/'Spnm i ’> - • ■ i>i, i■ 11 '• I. 'I i •" nIn < l , s'y] i n:L'^;,|!i 111 s(ii * vly;? 1iV':..;t h o.wHi <. !_< >v' ir;i::l»|r:Si'.i:-. . vii1' ' ' T„1 ■M i if|i. ? •’ • . •#6ho;vni't ^Miottsoro'a-yy.'y^.tvm.'-ffl.tm!V( li -1 ms) It llow uln i , -y hni * l£fHo ,;f$|Meri\nqy. 1 ( <>n-i \ ..Iis of 3-*,’,'"Mr<tin^ ’ \. tin --« 01111 nn\ ;til:i Sto\.'«,t im|; Folk Dancing-' ^trit'tinnl 01ml 'Hwnifv 1DR. A. 2IMBLER, Optometrist’ '/V''-.NEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER ^151O E. 55fK St. DO 3r7644^ ~ EYE f^A^FJONS ! ^ ,£fv " ^PRESCRIPTIONS TILLED j' ^'CONTACT LENSES■■ ■■ ■ ■ ■ "" ■,NEWEST STYblNG- IN FRAMES I '<• -li ? ¥|ri , T«;v.STUDENT DISCOUNT t i ' (la^iHed* 'J’e-'f-V1, ”rY ~ ifvvw'?>yW- -»rrl\3 5fS.i,K<n!«:<m«l^r>sO>p<r,! J:i I’J'5)| in*;/i ffI< i,'tu-y>Jiiiiit" /VlOjNi-111 \ Dll mill upv< KI«-\ BIO' fii'inmf'gaji|eh;ffim.ifl',i'nlirltetiiyh'i?IRSBKStB2i>i:>i- • te • ^ ~;' " ’■ "■ ' ) :i-'>"ii’;<'i\a*'-;.’av';,,‘rami*;y’U-"v> oomv Hint soIhi ii)tl 11.1 ornl 1 iyV-W .><l< rV;,fj.nt’i»li',4', U« i * ".'AU’IwiS'lKf*"*! uV^akiijImtihoi11 •1 n KSSHARE-A-RIDE CENTRAL; . < REA m K W RiriNt.’ttiVlJ&Jt;oom£iii fiFrt nifiitfav.H''VVs4;StlftTfrlfi f niJwr »rsKMg 'iS®HoBT>£uS-f^t • rjmfimi&omOffers .A il?ni<|ue ’NeV Servj'ce’^V'Our Mobile.-Sbeietyf|JUlKIAl H.HTI*»L| /SPECIAL^STUDENT DISCOUNT'PHILLIPS JEWELRY COp^ DIAMONDS •- WATCHES'! • JEWELRY • RINGS'* S)|j*V E R RE -lay»u>fy PEARLS • RELIGIOUS GOODS • A^a^Nclip 1 ul.llinvo-omohd SERVING collegeJsjudents At .Wholesale *Drx™i".\ ■ '' ' ' ' 1 • * ! ■ ’"50' o OFF ON ALL DIAMONDS"ENGAGEMENT Gr WEDDING RINGS"CHRISTMAS SALE"■). ■ WATCH A! ) < r 1 N / i IN > .67 E. MADISON ROOM 110.1CHICAGO DE 2 6508ON G/6 MRUS INrOIMAllCMKENfilETH Cv HEYL CAMPUS EXT 3265Riders to Any|G{fy Nationwide^[» i - £ ' i ->'V ) , L; |f| , **,^Subsci ibe ,NO.WJr‘Fqr, Ypur^Ti ^p^H^me on ThanksgivingfeMSTUtK" .5 r-1 ..Lv' S n ' i' i J r i-k tin as.1— Fdr^f-onijde'te Infoimation PERSONALS \ - 'i'u;TELEPHONE FI 6-7263,%3^VV'VX%'VVVVVIV^XVVVV>V%%VVV^\%VVXVV%«««\VVYXVV%| i 961 !/.h e'V o c»’r o i.» r o M P * NY Vc r‘r »’cp\A and co»r>*sr req st’ebed trade HAyKS-,1|ce;^yniGHT^n a ui ,lr^!^Co)dhl| ^ K-V%Busi'rffsjk%ifyjan'aKennrt-h.^'G^l^l»;pj '«* r^l> n *jt*‘!t^ -'f., ' 1 ‘ : • f;' . “N«I«1/ •Mm il’tiruvt ti \ h i c a5S o|feM«iroo n,J 'rV *V t■ -. M 1 ' ■. * . ' 1!* m.'I ’• i .nnp|l y i»i .1 ^m »* * • * d - a L •: \V’*' i, <i. J,'r»Vs,''r/-*Chi't}»>'«'|l|^^ - 11||No dripping, no sOld Spice Pro-E/e,skin areas from, razyour beard for the’ ‘. >,V.'v4\Vs H (_,P'1;-i£ "s"-\ #.*'■ •' * iBETWEEN HALVES...get that refreshing new feelingwith Coke!2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 16. 1962Conservative Club to meet CULTURE CALENDARThe UC Conservative Club,a recently formed campus or¬ganization, will hold its firstmeeting this evening at 7:30on the third floor of Ida Noyes.The meeting will feature a re¬corded address by Dr. FredSchwartz of the Christian Anti-' Communist Crusade on “Commun¬ist Philosophy — Dialectical Ma¬terialism.” The speech was deli¬vered to the Greater New YorkSchool of Anti-Communism lastAugust in Carnegie Hall.The aim of the club, as stated by its chairman, Jim Powell, afirst-year student in the College,is “to further the ideals of individ¬ual liberty, limited government,and free enterprise by developingintelligent, articulate, and dedi¬cated members who can effective¬ly transmit their ideas to otherpeople.”The club intends to stock litera¬ture and tapes and to obtain out¬side speakers and films to realizeits purpose.The group's advisor is Professorof English Richard Weaver.Yates attacks DirksenSidney Yates charged that Everett Dirksen “votedagainst every bill to profit the American family” at Inter¬national House Sunday night.Yates and Barrett O’Hara discussed their campaignsat a rally of candidates endorsed *—were going from door to doorsaying Beat O’Hara. He’s a war¬monger’.”Violinist neededViolinists are still neededp'lasized Dirksen’s opposition to for the University of ChicagoS<- ial security, medicare, and pub- symphony orchestra, accord-1:- housing bills. ing to Director H. Colin Slim.lie said, Dirksen vacillates. He .... ~ , . , , ,i . the Orchestra has had two re¬ins been on all sides of every , , . ...._ n,„ i j hearsals and as auditions arebv the Independent Voters of Illi¬nois.Yates, Democratic candidate fory nator running against EverettDirksen, compared his voting rec¬ord with his opponent’s. He em-vuestion. It’s hard to believe oner an could vote so wrong so of-1 en.”Yates said that Dirksen was de-j ving the voters of their right,to appraise candidates by refusing1o debate him. He recalled an nearing completion, interestedmusicians are urged to contactSlim sometime today at ext. 3885.Slim reported that all positionsfor winds are filled and there is“unusually strong representationc-’i ly contest in Dirksen’s political jn double basscs> cel,os* and vio‘career in which his opponent in- \1 ,eumbent Senator Scott Lucas Orchestra rehearsals are sched-would not debate. At that lime ,or tomorrow, at 7 pm inD rksen called Lukas “a moral Handel Hall, for winds. Practicecoward and a political laker to *or strings only will be Irom 10-12re!use to debate.” am Saturday and 7:30 pm to-O’Hara, who has had 50 years morrow,of public service, is the Democra¬tic candidate running for re-elee-lion in the Congressional districtwhich includes Hyde Park.Referring to Sidney Lens, hisexponent endorsed by Voters forPeace, O'Hara said that while hewas in Washington fighting forthe U. N. Bond issue, “people DanceFolk dancing, tonight 8-10pm, International Houseassembly hall.Folk dancing, Sunday, IdaNoyes Hall, 1212 E. 59, 8 pm.Lyric Opera Ballet Gahi, RudolfNureyev, formerly of Russia’s Ki¬rov Ballet and Sonia Arova. Sun¬day evening, Civic Opera, tickets$2.50 - $6.50.CabaretFickle Pickle, Chicago’s only un-der-21 night club, open Tuesday -Sunday. Tonight and tomorrownight twist nights, with threepiece combo, from 8 pm. TerryCallier, Folk Singers George Mc-Kelvey and Joe Cory. 1137 NorthState.ExhibitsTreasures of Versailles, 184paintings, sculpture, furnishings,and works of art on loan fromthe French government, at theArt Institute, Michigan andAdams, through December 2.Art objects from Near EasternCountries to the fifth century b.c.,at the Oriental Institute, 1155 E.58, Tuesday - Sunday, 10 - 5, free.Exhibition honoring 100th anni-versary of Julius Rosenwald, UCtrustee: Letters, documents, etc.,sponsored by UC library, Depart¬ment of Special Collections. Ondisplay in central corridor of Har¬per Memorial Library and SpecialCollections Reading Room (6thfloor west tower), Monday - Fri¬day, 9-5, Saturday, 9-1.Art of Benin, five centuries ofart from the historic Africankingdom, opens Friday. The 329pieces -— including portrait heads,weapons, ceremonial boxes, orna¬ments of ivory, coral, agate, mu¬sical instruments, household furn¬ishings, etc. — represents theooe. largest exhibition of Benin artever assembled in the US. Chi¬cago Natural History Museum,Lake Shore drive at Rooseveltroad, Sunday - Saturday, 9-5, 50c.FilmsM. Fit* Lang’s German film,reflects the "political and psycho¬logical breakdown of the- Germanmind before the war.” Presehtedby Doc Films, Friday, 7:15 and9:15, Soc Sci 122, 60c.Raisin in the Sun, next Monday,International House, 8 pm, 50c.Only Two Can Play and I LikeMoney, both with Peter Sellers,at the Hyde Park through Thurs¬day. Starting Friday, Luis Bunu-ei’s Viridiana.MusicMusic at Hillel, the hi-fi sys¬tem available for use Sundaythrough Thursday afternoons andevennigs, Friday afternoon. Clas¬sical and Hebraic recordings. Hil¬lel, 5715 Woodlawn.UC Chamber Music Series pre¬sents Gunther Schuller conductinga program of “Simultaneous Mu¬sic,” featuring Mozart, StageMusic from Don Giovanni, (ActII) for Three Orchestras; Ives,Orchestral Set; Gabrieli, Canzonain Echo; Stravinsky, Ragtime for11 Instruments; and Schuller,group of short works Friday, 8:30pm, Mandcl Hall, tickets $3.Lyric Opera has two programsthis weekend. Friday and Sun¬day, La Boheme, Saturday, PrinceIgor. Evenings, 8 pm.UC Folklore Society presentsRoscoe Holcomb in his first Chi¬cago concei t since Ihe 1961 UCFolk Festival. Also Mike Michaelsand Elvin and Moses. Saturday,8:30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall, tickets$1.L’Orehewtre National Francais,internationally recognized leading symphonic organization, on worldtour, Sunday afternoon, OrchestraHall.Roberta. Peters, MetropolitanOpera Star, opens 1962-63 seasonof “Great Music” on WGN-TV(Channel 9), Sunday, 7:30 pm.Songs of Freedom program inMcCormick place, SNCC fund¬raising event. Appearjng withSNCC members are gospel groupsincluding the Caravans, Taber¬nacle Choir, James Cleveland, theFlorida Robins, the HarmonizingFour, Hyway Q C’s, James Lowe,and the Helen Robinson YouthChoir. Sunday, 2:30 pm.Chicago Symphony, Saturday,evening, plays its all-French pro¬gram in Orchestra Hall. Program:Honegger’s Symphony No. 2 forStrings; Saint-Saen’sf Piano Con¬certo No. 4; Ravel's Piano Con¬certo for the lefthand; and De¬bussy’s “La Mer.”Panhcllion Folk Festival, music,dance, and song from Greece, Sat-uday evening, Medinah Temple,tickets $2 - $10.Royal Scots Greys and Argylland Sutherland Highlanders, fromEdinburgh Festival, in Arie CrownTheatre at McCormick Place, Sat¬urday evening, tickets $2.50 - $5.50TheatreThe Clouds, Aristophanes com¬edy, at The Last Stage, produc¬ing company of the 51st StreetCenter for the Performing Arts,1506 Hyde Park Blvd, Friday,Saturday evenings. Call OA 4-4200. Translation used is byJames Redfield, assistant profes¬sor of social thought at UC.Beadle to speakNobel prizewinning UC Presi¬dent George W. Beadle will talkon “Our Genetic Heritage” tomor¬row evening at 8 pm at the Down¬town Center. XMODEL CAMERALeiea, Bolex, Nikon,Hasselblad Dealer1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNT• TYPING* MIMEOGRAPHINGConscientious WorkReasonableR. J. WOODWoodlawn Currency1173 E. 55th ST.BU 8-0945BRUSH STROKE PRINTSALE. FRIDAY. OCT. 19All Prints $1.98Landscapes, Still Lifes, Abstracts.Masterpieces by Picasso, Rem-brondt, Renoir, Utrillo, Van Gogh,Degos, Rouault.See our big ad on FridayUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueHours: Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-12“The modern-picaresquejournal of a young NewYorker with a marked re¬semblance to a grown-upHolden Caulfield. Oddlycaptivating . . . astrin¬gent, able writing.”—Publishers' WeeklyDIMY OF ISIMPLE KUNA novel by Peter Cohen$3.50 cloth,$1.50 paper toHill&WangN.Y. 10, N.Y, Start with a carton and you’ll end up knowing why Winston is America’snumber one filter cigarette...first in sales because it’s first in flavor.The next time you buy cigarettes, buy pleasure by the carton...Winston!pure white, :MODERN FILTER ! ' ;~ars Jplus : FILTER-BLEND UP FRONT©1962 R. 3. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. 0. !ijpOct. 16, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3IjK .| f Ballet forA ballet which will be\ ’ | ! used to test Carl Jung’s psy- ;j V it J chology theories was pre- |,/i '*i i\1 i miered at Mandel Hall this jI weekend.1 4t. 4I •<;j.1 4« **. K; r I".f. f»Hr :m mieres at MaAn overflow crowd of some 1350persons saw the Illinois Balletperform ‘.'Metamorphosis of theOwls,” composed by Daniel Jor¬dan, a fhD candidate in the com¬mittee on human development.Before and after seeing ‘‘Meta¬morphosis of the Owls,” membersof the audience took a test de¬vised to determine whether theyhad responded to the Jungian sym¬bols contained in the ballet.The ballet will be filmed shortly,and Jordan will then show thefilms to groups of people aroundthe country. Their patterns ofresponse to the ballet will thenbe analyzed, and hopefully leadto the development of a new dia¬gnostic psychological technique.Jordan was testing primarilyfor reaction to the symbolic re¬presentation of what Jung callsthe unity archtype, a componentof the ‘‘collective unconcious”mind of mankind.The unity archtype was discov¬ered by Jung in his analysis ofdiearns ot patients who were un¬dergoing a reorganization of theirpersonalities, explained Jordan.Jung found that their dreams co¬incided in content to elementslound in all kinds of folklore andreligion.Jung accounted for the similar¬ity ot the dreams and the themesin folklore and art all over theworld by constructing a “collect¬ive unconcious,” which containscertain universally recurring ele¬ments. One of these elements isthe unity archtype. On a personality level, the uni¬ty archtype expresses the full,integrated human personality,said Jordan. On a social level, itexpresses a world which functionsas a country.Unity has symbolJordan chose to investigate theunity archtype, rather than otherelements of the collective uncons¬cious, because it has a symboliccounterpart, the mandala, w'hichfrequently appears in religion, art,and dreams. The mandala, whichis represented as a circle contain¬ing a symmetrical design, was con¬sidered by Jung to be the graphicrepresentation of the process thepersonality undergoes when itnears or is on the brink of inte¬grating itself at a higher level.This process and the archtvpeof unit} were embodied in Jordan’^5ballet, which will Idso be vised totest Jung’s notion that art whichcontains archtypal themes ex¬pressed ir. an aesthetic or convinc¬ing manner will endure for cen¬turies, rather than for decades.This endurance would be due tothe archtypes’ being universalcharacteristics of man’s primordialexperiences, said Jordan,Ballet shows unity“Metamorphosis of the Owls”incorporated the four componentsof the archtype of unity: the mani¬festation of a god-hero figure,sacrifice, rebirth and a w'omb-like locality of rebirth.The ballet’s action involves the nightingale of paradise, the god-hero figure. A group of untrans¬formed beings, the ow'ls, when con¬fronted by the god-hero, respondwith fright and fear, and there¬fore kill the nightingale, showingthe sacrifice component of theunity archtype.One of the ow'ls, however be¬comes enchanted because she be¬gins to comprehend the meaningor beauty of the nightingale, andso she sacrifices herself to thememory or the meaning of thenightingale. Her sacrifice thenbrings about the resurrection ofthe nightingale.Nightingale, owl rebornWhen he is resurrected, thenightingale bestows rebirth uponthe enchanted owl, and she turnsinto a bird of paradise.The cave, in which the actiontakes place, represents the womb¬like location of the rebirth.“What the ballet represents onthe personality level,” said Jordan,is the necessity of the humanpersonality to give up its old selfbefore it can be born to a higher,more inegrated organization.”Score adds to actionThe score of the ballet, saidJordan, was “composed specifical¬ly to enhance the motional ef¬fect of the action.” They “com¬pounded the emotional experienceby adding audio bases.”Certain climatic pitches, dis-sonaces. and amplitudes, whichhave been shown to have a stimu¬ lating effect, came at a time inthe score when they would sup¬port the dramatic component con¬taining Mandalic symbols.The tests given to members ofthe audience were to determinewhether they would be more apttb react to mandalic symbols af¬ter the performance than theywere before seeing the ballet.Jordan, who is hypothesizing ashift in audience response afterexposure to the ballet, will per¬fect his test and administer itto other groups exposed to hisballet in order to test Jung’s the¬ories. His work with the perfectedtest will be a part of his PhDthesis.Several similar exercises wereadministered before and after theperformance of Jordan's ballet.These were all to detect audiencesensitivity to mandalic symbols.Audience chooses symbolsOne part contained groups ofdesigns, one of which was to bechosen. Mandalic symbols werecontained in the groups.A second part asked those tak¬ing the test to choose one adject¬ive from each of a number ofgroups. As in the designs, Jordanis expecting the audience to haveshifted to words more represen¬tative of the unity archtype af¬ter the ballet. These words willalso indicate whether the personbeing tested is on the verge of integrating or disintergrating, hesaid.Numbers ond nonsenseAs controls, the test containedgroups of numbers and nonsensesyllables, from which Jordan isexpecting to find a continuing ran¬dom selection so that he mayshow the difference between theseand symbols of the archtype.Members of the audience werealso given the Sampson & Smithsocial attitudes test, which showsthe difference bteween internat¬ionally and world minded people,in order to see if there is a cor¬relation between social attitudesand responses to Jordan’s test.An internationally minded person,explained Jordan, is aware of cur¬rent events, as opposed to a worldminded person, who merely hassentiments on the oneness of man¬kind.Jordan studied musicJordan, whose background is inmusic, hold as bachelor of musicdegree from the University ofWyoming, ahd BA and MA degreesin music from Oxford University,where he studied for three yearsor. a Rhodes scholarship. He alsohas an MA in human developmentfrom UC.The other works on the programincluded ballets based on musicby Donnanyi, Tchaikovsky, andProkofieff: Con Gioco, The BlueBird and Princess Florisse, andThis Persistent Image.IM football startsPlagued with players’ conflict¬ing lecture schedules and a short¬age of referees, the intramuralfootball program got off to aslow start yesterday. ThompsonSouth forfeited to East II and theWitnesses forfeited to Res Ipsasbecause most ot their teams' mem¬bers had classes at game time.In the hardest fought battl^ ofthe afternoon, Vincent and Cham¬berlin lought to a scoreless tie.Chamberlin won by penetrationin overtime. The other CollegeHouse League games saw East IIIdefeat Tufts South 7-0 and Hen¬derson South smash Shorey 20-0.Tightest game in the DivisionalLeague was the Outlaws’ 7-6 edgeover Winsochi U. The Law' Babiesbeat CTS 33-7. the Robber Baronsromped over the Capitalists 25-0and the Fine Arts Quintet cooledHitchcock 13-0 in the other divi¬sional contests.Soccer team losesThe University of Chicago soc¬cer team opened its season inau-spiciously with two straight los¬ses; one to Lake Forest 9-1 andthe other to University of Illinoisat Urbana 11-2.Jeff Stark, a first year student,scored the lone tally at Lake For¬est and both goals at Illinois.One heartening note for thesoccer team wras the improvedplay in the Illinois game after thedismal performance at LakeForest. Dave BrubeckI'm in a Dancing MoodRay ConniffThe Way Tou Look TonightMiles DavisIf I Were a BellThe Brothers FourMarianneAndre PrevinUhe LoreDuke EllingtonPerdtdoCarmen McRaeParadiddle JoeRoy HamiltonAngel LyesGerry MulliganWhat Is There To SayThe Hilo's!Everything'S Conning Up RosesLambert, Hendri]CloudburstBuddy GrecoThe Lady Is a TrampToday’sWise1953BUICKFully EquippedBuy of WeekBring in Ad for This PriceGruby’s Rambler4555 S. CollageBO 8-1111 Great new record offer ($3.98 value)...just $1.00when you buy Sheaffer’s back-to-school special!Now when you buy your Sheaffer Cartridge Pen forschool, you get 98/ worth of Skrip cartridges FREE...a$3.93 value for just $2.95. Look for Sheaffer’s back-to-school special now at stores everywhere. On the back ofthe package, there’s a bonus for you ... a coupon goodfor a $3.98 value Columbia limited-edition record. It’s“Swingin’ Sound”, twelve top artists playing top hits forthe first time on a 12* L.P. 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