Fac Cou ncil okays re-eThe Council of the Univer¬sity Senate, academic govern¬ing body of the University,yesterday endorsed a recom¬mendation by UC PresidentGeorge Beadle that the Universityre-enter the National DefenseEducation Act (NDEA > loan pro¬gram.The Council endorsed the recom¬mendation by voice vote, with nodissents. An estimated minimumof 41 of its 51 members attendedthe meeting, according to RobertStreeter, acting dean of the hu¬ manities division and spokesmanfor the Council.The Council’s endorsement was“the major business” at yester¬day’s meeting, said Streeter. Theresolution was passed after “briefdiscussion,” he added.Beadle’s recommendation andthe endorsement of the Councilwill he sent to the Board of Trus¬tees, which will decide whetherthe University will resume par¬ticipation in the NDEA program.The University withdrew7 fromthe program in 1960 in protest ofa disclaimer affidavit all studentsSG commends Kennedyintervention in Mississippi seeking loans had to sign .Theaffidavit stated in part: “I dosolemnly swear that I do not be¬lieve in, and am not a member of. . . any organization that believesin or teaches the overthrow ofthe US government . . . by illegalor unconstitutional methods.”Congress recently repealed theaffidavit, substituting for it acriminal penalty measure, whichw7ould apply to any person apply¬ing for funds under the NDEAprogram who “is knowingly amember of any organization de¬fined by the Subversive ActivitiesControl Act of 1950 as Commun¬ist or a member of any organiza¬tion who has received a finalnotice from the Subversive Activi¬ties Control Board to register asa Communist.”Student Government (SG)last night commended JamesMeredith “for his courageousaction at the University ofMississippi” and President Ken¬nedy “for his efforts wdiich madeit possible for Mr. Meredith tofinally enroll at the Universityof Mississippi.” Executive Council are ArthurMacEwan, president of SG; MikeWollan, vice-president of SG;Peter Hahinowitz., treasure of SG;and Terry Ray, chairman of theNSA Committee. All are mem¬bers of POIJT.The bill on Mississippi states See an analysis of how7 edu¬cation lobbyists fought for re¬moval of the NDEA disclaimeraffidavit on page 2.Beadle’s recommendation hing¬ed on the removal of the affidavitas a statement of belief.“The net effect of this change ntry inis to prohibit certain acts (atpresent membership in the Com¬munist Party) and, in the case offellowships only, to require infor¬mation as to certain past criminalconvictions (a matter of publicrecord, disclosure of which is re¬quired by all federal employees)hut not to require any statementof belief,” stated Beadle’s recom¬mendation.“The change is of the greatestbasic significance, for the newprovisions permit complete free¬dom of thought and belief where¬as the former ones did not,” itcontinued.“Many will believe that thepresent provisions are unneces¬sary, objectionable, or both — andthis is their right. It is generallyrequired that citizens obey lawsbut not that they believe in them.The distinction is of the most pro¬found significance.“It is hoped that the Councilwill support a recommendationfrom the Administration that theBoard of Trustees authorize ac¬ceptance and administration ofNDEA loan funds under the NDEAmodification provisions,” concludedthe statement which the Cdfencilendorsed.The Council consists of 51faculty members, elected for threeyear terms, by and from theUniversity Senate, to which allfaculty members with the rank ofassistant professor or above be¬long. The Senate, which is nota lawmaking body, annually electsone third of the Council from itsmembers to serve three yearterms.The Senate’s legislative powersare vested in the Council.. Eachautumn, howrever, the Senatemeets to hear a report by thePresident on the state of theUniversity.Seven members elected by andfrom the Council comprise theCommittee of the Council, whichprepares legislation for the Coun¬cil. The committee, which meetsin betw'een the meetings of theCouncil, has initial discussion ofissues and then presents them tothe full Council.The Committee met last w'eekand endorsed Beadle’s recommen¬dation.With barely half its memberspresent, SG also elected six newmembers to its Executive Councilto replace officers and committeechairmen who have recently re¬signed their positions.Before a bill on the NationalDefense Education Act (NDEA)'•ould be discussed, the meetingadjourned because a quorum waslacking.The National Student Associa¬tion Committee of SG, how'ever,will draw7 up and circulate a pe¬tition urging the University toremain out of the NDEA loan pro¬gram. The petition also will askthe University, if it does re¬enter the program, to provide loanfunds on the same basis as NDEAfunds to any student who doesnot wish to participate in theNDEA.In addition the petition will askthe Trustees of the Universityto attempt to persuade Congressto revoke all legislation in whichfederal aid to higher educationis based on political criteria andto pass further legislation pro¬viding financial aid for highereducation without reference topolitical opinions or associationof the recipients.The new Executive Committeemembers are as follows:Secretary of Student Govern¬ment—Sally Cook (POLIT).Chairman of the Committee onRecognized Student Organiza¬tions—Steve Boyan (POLIT).Chairman of the Election andRules Committee—Russell Kay(POLIT).Chairman of the Student-Faculty Relations Committee —Pamella Procuniar (POLIT).Chairman of the Campus ActionCommittee—Dick Jacobsen (In¬dependent).Chairman of the CommunityRelations Committee—Ruth Rap-pa(>ort (POLIT).The other members of the that “All those who believe inracial equality are grateful” toMeredith “for furthering thestruggle for racial integration inthe United States.”Kennedy’s “firm stand uphold¬ing both the letter and the spiritof our Constitution and our lawsrepresents the type of action thechief executive must continue totake to help put an end to racialdiscrimination,” stated the bill.A proposal by Bruce Rappa-port attempting to w'eaken theportion of the bill commendingKennedy’s action was defeated.Rappaport contended that Ken¬nedy did not act as bravely oras quickly as he could have atMississippi.Frank Richards (UniversityParty) expressed his opposition tothe bill on the grounds that Stu¬dent Government should not legis¬late on “|>olitics in general” as itcould not possibly represent theopinions of the entire studentbody. Instead, he suggested thatSG take “constructive” actionsuch as bringing Southern Neg¬roes up North on exchange pro¬grams.Also at the meeting, it was an¬nounced that charter * flightleaders will be chosen by the endof this week, and that the UCbranch of the International Stu¬dent Cooperative Union has beenoperating successfully this quar¬ter.A brief report on this summer’sNSA Congress, mentioning theUC delegation's role in legisla¬tion, was given by Miss Raye. Yol. 71 — No. 16 University of Chicago, Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1962TKO plans downtown protestApproximately 12 tenants of the 5342-44 Kimbark building picketed the Guar¬anty National Bank Saturday from 11 am until noon, protesting the eviction of theNathan Kantrowitzes.The Kantrowitzes, both of whom are PhD candidates at UC. were refusedrenewal of their lease when they ■acted as spokesmen for the other Money is being collected to pay 54. Admission is $1 for adults,tenants ot their building in an for jegai expenses. There will 50c for children. This will be aattempt to have numerous build- be a pot-luck supper Sunday, Oct- fund-raising event as well as aing code violations corrected. ober 21, from 5-7 at the August- pre-court rally. Students are *in-“Although the officers of the ana Lutheran Church 1307 E. vited.bank persisted they were merely No more college camp?innocent bystanders, the bank, at69 and Stony Island, owns the ti¬tle to the building and is theplaintiff in the case against the Entering students may no College Camp was a two dayan opportunity to meet their fel¬low classmates, partake in variedrecreational activities, and listento speakers on the aims of theCollege.According to some students. Col-Meticulous ?Neat or sloppy, you’ll enjoyworking on the productionstaff of a great metropolitannewspaper. Come up to theMaroon office, Ida Noyes 303,between 4:30 and 6 pm todayor tomorrow to find out how. Kantrowitzes, who haye refused longer take 3. trip to “College While there, students hailto vacate their apartment. Camp” as a part of their ori-The purpose of the picket was entation program, announcedto make the protest public, not f ®, ,1 • , , ^ Dean of the College Alan Simp-to keep customers away from ® F, , v -r. , , . 1 i * son this week,the bank. Truck drivers who hesi¬tated about making deliveries to College Camp, a two-day tripthe bank were assured that the to Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, has lege Camp did not provide the op-picketers did not mind. been a part of the orientation portunity for students to relax,A letter will be written to the Pr°grarn f°r first year students in for social tensions at camp thisbank, apologizing for any possible the College since 1960. year were quite great,misunderstanding, and indicating Simpson stated that “we have Some students have said theythe tenants’ willingness to confer had much mileage from camp . . . think camp is being discontinuedon the matter. If no reply is re- but we think it might he better because of “too much drinking andceived, the bank will be picketed to try something fresh,again next Saturday.Petitions are being circulatedby the Tenants on Kimbark Or¬ganization (TKO i urging MayorDaley to “dissuade the owner,Mrs. Irene Whitehouse, and her sex for administration tastes."Two women's clubs go Beadle speaks atDowntown CenterUC president GeorgeW. Beadle will speak on “OurRushing for the Universityof Chicago’s women’s clubsbegan Sunday afternoon withonly two of last year’s clubsparticipating. Delta Sigma andEsoteric have announced plans todisband.About thirty new students at¬tended the “rush tea” sponsoredby the women’s clubs Sundayafternoon. The women's clubshave a combined membership ofabout 40 persons. They are pri¬marily social organizations.There are currently only twoactive members of Delta Sigma.Esoteric has an active member¬ship of about 16, but has decidednot to pledge because there willprobably be only three formermembers returning next year.“We wouldn’t like to bring inpledges with no leadership,” stat¬ed Dotty Sharpless, Esoteric rush¬ing chairman. Because most of theclub members are now fourth year students, she explained, the clubwill probably disband when theygraduate at the end of this year.The women’s clubs at UC pro¬vide an opportunity for closefriendship and cooperation in afairly small group of w'omen,” ac¬cording to the announcement ofthe tea.In addition to social activities,club members do volunteer workat Billings Hospital, and conductteas and special meetings w'ithfacluty members.The two clubs which are holdingrush activities are Quadranglersand Mortar Board. They have ac¬tive membership of about 10 and16. respectively.Rushing activities will continueuntil October 31. The Quadrang¬lers w'ill hold their first party onOctober 17, at 7:30 pm at theAlpha Delta Phi house. The Mor¬tar Boards will hold theirs at 8pm October 22 at the Phi KappaPsi house. The program is now7 up for re-evaluation, Simpson continued.Members of the administrationhave discussed the advantages anddisadvantages of camp, and feel itwould be better to try comethingagent. M. Lustbader and Co., from new7, according to Simpson. The . .their vengeful action” and to ideas of Orientation Board and Genetic Heritage” tonight at“enact into law a provision to other students are now being 8 pm at the Downtown Cen-protect tenants from eviction for sounded out, he added. ter of the University, 64 Eastreporting Building Code Viola- The a<jminjstration has suggest- Gake Street,tions. ’ ed that the trip to Wisconsin could The Nobel prize-winning geneti-Signatures are being solicited be replaced by “an imaginative cist will deliver the first lecture inat the Co-Op Shopping Center, orientation to Hyde Park, the a four-part series entitled “Seeingand by individual volunteers. Ap- neighborhood, and the resources of Ourselves as Science Sees Us.”proximately 1,000 signatures have the city.’already been collected.The 15 rent-strikers protestingthe Kantrowitzes’ eviction havenot yet received court summons.In the event that court actionaccurs. it cannot be taken be- The series is designed for an audi¬ence with a noil-scientific back¬ground.Series admission to the lecturesis $5; single admission, $1.50; stu¬dent admission, $1.The remaining lecture topicsOrientation Board, a studentgroup which plays a major partin conducting the activities of Ori¬entation week, would still he ac¬tive in this program, said Simpson.Orientation week is a two weekfore Nov. 1, and the tenants w'ill program in September for all new will be as follows:have withheld rent for tw7o months, students in the College. The first “The Biological Nature of Man,”The Kantrow'itzes have been week is spent taking placement Benson E. Ginsburg, professor ofsummoned to appear in court on tests. During the latter part of the biology, November 7.Monday, October 22. TKO would second week the students discuss “Man and His Psychologicallike to jam the court room with their test results, plan their pro- Functions.” Ward C. Halstead,their supporters in older to publi- grams, and register. professor of psychology and medi-cize their cause. Between the tests and the dis- cine, November 28.Supporters are requested to cussion of results, students previ- “The Emergence of Human So-meet in Municipal Court, City Hall ously went to “Camp.” This time ciety and Culture.” Robert McCor-at 9 am on Oct. 22. Car pools will would still be free, for this is w7hen mick Adams, associate professorbe set up. TKO will try to have tests are being graded. Plans for of anthropology and director ofnewspaper, radio and television using this time are under discus- the Oriental Institute, Decembercovering the hearing. sion. 5.Pre-wor Poland not fascistTO THE EDITOR:In my letter of Oct. 10 deplor¬ing that the Polish consul “couldget away with” statements hemade before the Tufts House for¬um I should have added the word“unchallenged,” for I did not meanthat he or any other represen¬tative of a Communist governmentshould be denied freedom of speechon the University of Chicago cam¬pus. I wholly agree with the let¬ter of the Tufts House Counciland would only add that theyought to make greater effort tohave in the audience people well-enough informed to expose Com¬munist propaganda statements.In the other Oct. 12 letter re¬plying to me Theodore Pearsonmakes even more fantastic state¬ments than were made by theconsul. For example, he accusesthe pre-war Polish government ofbo’li appeasing Ihe Nazis and be¬ing “completely dominated” byBritish imperialism!But even if he means “by turns,”he is wrong, as a perusal of Wil¬liam L. Shirer’s “The Rise andFall of the Third Reich” willreadily show.As “proof of Polish appeasementto the Nazis, Pearson says thatIhe Polish government “expressedits willingness to negotiate both Letterthe status of Danzig and the vitalCorridor to the Sea.”On pages 612-626 Shirer de¬tails the story of Hitler's demandin 1938 that Danzig be returnedto Germany and that Poland al¬low the building of an all-Germanrail and superhighway “corridor”across Polish territory to linkFast Prussia and Danzig with therest of Germany. The Polish re¬ply, as reported by Shirer, wasan emphatic refusal.Infuriated at this rejection ofwhat he called “the greatest ima¬ginable concession in the interestof European peace,” Hitler, in aReichstag speech on April 28,1939, declared he “regretted thisincomprehensible attitutde of thePolish government.”The only other example of Pol¬ish “appeasement” Pearson cancite are the government's “leaningover backwards” to ignore theGerman "occupation” of Danzigand atrocities committed on Polishsoil by Germans. But the Nazifi-cation of Danzig - 90 per centGerman in population at that limehad begun in 1933 and the infil¬tration of quasi-military Germanarmy units in 1938-39 could onlyhave been smashed by a militaryact that would have laid the blameon Poland for starting the war(and the political tension overDanzig at the time was far moreelectric than it is in Berlin to¬day). Would Pearson also have hadPoland go to war over the atro¬cities? Sad to relate, these werepaid off later in kind once theGerman invasion began.“Perhaps I have been harsh onthe Polish government,” saysPearson in conclusion. The unkind-est cut was to imply that thePilsudski regime was a prototypefor the fascist dictatorship of Italyand Germany because, he says, it“preceeded.”This is not true. The “semi¬fascist” Pilsudski regime dated■from the Polish marshall’s coupd'etat in 1926. Mussolini marchedon Rome with his Black Shirtsin 1922.Pilsudski had been Chief ofState from 1919 until shortly af¬ter he defeated the first Sovietinvasion of Poland in 1920. Then-like DeGaulle - he retired frompolitics. But the inability of theparliamentary system to functionproperly and the scandalous vena¬lity of government ministers de¬termined him to seize power andform a “strong Government.”Yet under this “semi-fascist”government elections continued tobe held and opposition party can¬didates were elected to seats inthe Seym (diet). And a labormovement continued to functionwith at least far more freedomthan is today allowed to the work¬ing class by Gomulka, Tito, andCastro.John SwitalskiMONSTERCONTEST sponsored by themm pen ptop30 -tr TWENTY 4- 20monster raky kits.j \GIVEN AWAY1/ 3 3TO COLLEGE GROUPSFraternities, Sororities, Chowder & Marching Societies, etcJUST FOR COLLECTING SIGNATURES >(see below forcomplete rules)EACH KIT CONTAINS: : C)Q COM G)Q. . throws the soundof your leader'svoice a country mile60 ■Cic]ca<i-c]c3cc]c]c3<ic3<icaca<c3c3<icac3... for keeping order amongst the rank and fileNOISEMAKERSfrom Las Vegas. . . for keeping disorderamongst the rank and file Do-it-g yourself r2 Effigy Jtmm... a bald-headed ftmm store dummy fwho can looklike almostanybody i,YARDS OF BUNTING... the good, colorful kind 300 BLANKBUTTONSfin id your own cause4H HERE'S ALL YOU DO TO WIN A MONSTER-RALLY KIT FOR YOUR GROUP:~t Pass the hat and buy one ParkerArrow pen or borrow one-the newclean-filling, smooth-writing cartridgepen. It only costs $3.95.3 Mail your list to: Monster Con¬test, P.O. Box 5049, St. Paul, Minn.We'll mail kits to winning groups,within 30 days. Sorry, but only one kitto a coilege or university and only 20kits nationwide. Be sure to appoint agroup leader and include his or hername and address with your entry.4= PARKER 2 Use this pen to acquire at least 200 (two hundred) signa¬tures of fellow students. They need not be perfectly legi¬ble and we'll even accept artful aliases. Neatness does notcount, but length does (the 20 longest lists of names win).Duplicate prizes in case of ties.yi Consolation piizes will be awarded to each group sub-mitting 50 signatures or more. You'll receive one FREEParker Quink cartridge for each name (we're no dopes, they'llall have to buy Parker Arrow pens to pul 'em in).Decisions of judges final. All entries become the prop-erty of Parker. Contest void in Nebraska, W'isconsin, andanywhere else prohibited by law. All entries must be post¬marked on or before midnight, Nov. 9, 1962, and received onor before Nov. 16, 1962.-Maker of the world’s most wanted pens©19(2 c£> THE Mmu reN COMPANY. JANESVILLE, WISCONSIN Education lobbyists foughtfor NDEA amendmentEducation lobbyists inWashington played a veryimportant role in the passageof the recent amendment tothe National Defense Educa¬tion Act (NDEA) loan pro¬gram. One of the most active ofthese lobbyists was Julian Levi,representing the University of Chi¬cago.Levi is the executive director ofthe South East Chicago Commis¬sion, of which the University isa member.The NDEA Amendment elimi¬nated the controversial diselaimeraffidavit, replacing it with a pro¬vision allowing for criminal prose¬cution if a member of a Comu-nist organization applies for aloan.Changes in the NDEA pro¬gram were included in an amend¬ment of the National ScienceFoundation Act.The University of Chicago hadbeen one of 22 schools which re¬fused to participate in the programbecause of the affidavit which re¬quired the applicant to state thathe does not support any subver¬sive organizations.Educational lobbyists had beenworking quite some time to havethe disclaimer removed, accordingto American Council on Education(ACEI spokesman Charles Dob¬bins:“The ACE’s commission on fede¬ral relations was one of the firstgroups to come out against thedisclaimer provision. The effortsto remove it this year were car¬ried out quietly, althouglvwe didn’tsneak it through as the ChicagoTribune recently charged.”Dobbins said that the ACE eom-mission noted last May that theScience Foundation Bill providedfor replacing the disclaimer inthat program with a criminal pen¬alty and it was decided that thesame approach should be used onthe NDEA bill.“The ACE and the AmericanAssociation of University Profes¬sors were most active in the ef-loits to get the disclaimer re¬pealed,” he said. “And JulianLevi of Chicago played a very im¬ portant role in getting the jobdone.”Dobbins said that Levi consult¬ed Albert E. Jenner, Jr. a notedChicago lawyer, to write a legalopinion on the constitutionalityof the disclaimer requirement.This opinion, which later was in¬corporated in the Senate’s reportor. the NDEA bill, held that thedisclaims provision was “uncon¬stitutionally vague” and that “iffaced with the issue, a majorityof the Supreme Court, as pre¬sently constituted, would so hold.”Informed sources said that Leviwas able to present this opinionto .Senate Republican .leaderEverette M. Dirksen, Senator Bar¬ry Goldwater and other influen¬tial leaders. The legislative as-isilant to one of these Senatorsstated:“The senator was very impressedwith the legal arguments presentedby th opinion. Recent decisions ofthe Supreme Court had put theconstitutionality of the disclaimerprovision in doubt.“We feel that the final legisla¬tion is a happy solution for every¬one. The criminal penalty now inthe bill should be even more effect¬ive than the affidavit require¬ment. in keeping subversives outof the program, and colleges won tbe required to inquire into any¬one’s affiliations.”Undoubtedly, the boycott of theaid program by the 22 schoolsbrought some pressure on Con¬gress to change the law. However,with some 400,000 scholarships in¬volved, these institutions by them¬selves couldn’t swing the battle.“We were very unhappy to seethese colleges oul of the program.”cue congressional source said.“But it was a matter of finding asolution to a vexing problem andto keep out subversives. The cri¬minal penalty is the answer.’1Repeal of the disclaimer require¬ment is regarded in Washingtonas a tribute to Ihe efficiency ofthe education lobbyists. While theydon’t have the money or power ofsuch groups as organized labor,the business lobbyists and someother special interest organiza¬tions, the education lobby hasworked quietly and effectively.Discuss Arendt theories“Is it possible for a revolu¬tion from below to changeconditions, to build a societyfor the needs of those makingit?”Michael Harrington, Socialisteditor and author, posed thisquestion as the central theme ofhis talk on “Hannah Arendt andRevolution,” delivered last nightbefore a meeting sponsored by theYoung People’s Socialist League.Harrington began by describ¬ing Arendt’s thesis as an “end ofideology.” This description, takenfrom Daniel Bell, is used to de¬scribe Ihe feeling that “peoplecannot deal with their own fu¬ture,” the editor of New Americasaid.It is a rejection of Utopia,brought about because of the «lis-illusionments of Western intel¬lectual life from the perversion ofthe Russian revolution.In Origins of Totalitarianism,written in 1950, Arendt laid downthe thesis that revolution was im¬possible in a totalitarian society.Her analysis, Harrington ex¬plained, was that under totali¬tarianism social classes were re¬placed by the masses which, hav¬ing no arena for political develop¬ment, could therefore never revoltagainst oppression.The impact of these conclu¬sions, he continued led Arendt tosupport the United States in amilitary struggle against Commu-Chicago MaroonEditor in chiel Laura Godof&kyBusiness Manager .... Kenneth C. HeylIssued free of charge on the Quad¬rangles every Tuesday through Vridayduring the arademic year by studentsof the University of Chicago. Addresscorrespondence to: Chicago Maroon,1212 E. 59 Street. Chicago 37, Illinois.Telephones: Ml 3-08A0. exts. 3265, 3266.Subscription by mail is $4 per year.Printed at West Side Press, Chicago, nism. and if carried to extremes,could have led her to the furtherconclusion that all political actionfrom below is irrevalent.This theory was, however, de¬cisively refuted in East Germanyin 1953 and later in Hungary andPoland. Further, the establishmentof worker's councils in Hungaryshows that classes did indeed existunder totalitarian rule.Thus refuted, Arendt revisedher theory. She claimed that theEast European revolutions hadbeen non - ideological, sponta¬neous uprisings. The establishmentof worker’s councils occurred onlybecause these are the “instinctiveinstitution of popular revolt.”In essence, Harrington said, sheread Marx as not seeing a revo¬lution from below. She contendedthat Marx was interested in alabor-based society out, raise thequestion of the possibility of realrevolution.The prospectus for revolution isconfused, Harrington stated. So¬ciety has not polarized into war¬ring factions as.Marx foresaw.However, class change is stillvery possible, “even in the UnitedStates” Citing automation as anexample of a major problem, hepointed out that even the solu¬tion of such a quandary by abenevolent elite would requitesomething of a revolution.“The revolution is not in thebag. A revolution is in the bag.It is wrong to w-rite off change,”the speaker ended, “this is theonly way man can survive.”Unitarianism explainedThe current position andhistory of Unitarianism willbe explained tonight at 8 pmat William Fenn House, 5638Woodlawn Avenue.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 17, 1962McGill and Boorstin speak in Rosen wald's honorThe values created by theRosenwald fund have played— and still play — a majorrole in the emerging South,stated Ralph McGill, publisher ofthe Atlanta Constitution. McGillwas the main speaker at a dinnerhonoring Julius Rosenwald lastnight.The dinner at the Quadrangleriuh climaxed yesterday’* cele¬bration of the 100th aniversa rjrof Rosenwald’s birth. During theafternoon, Professor of HistoryDaniel Boorstin spoke. An ex¬hibit illustrating Kosenwald’s in¬terests is currently on display inHarper Memorial Library.Also speaking at last night’sdinner were UC president GeorgeBeadle and Lessing Rosenwald,son of Julius Rosenwald.Rosenwald was a Trustee of theUniversity from 1912 until hisdeath in 1982. 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 . . .rather 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 ot 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¬structing classrooms and NegroVMCA'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 localgroups. ‘‘Thus was local pride andmoral conscience aroused.” “The values thus generatedgrew and increased in strength.”One of the projects launchedby Rosenwald w'as a fellowshipfund for Negroes to further theireducation. In addition to this heset up a fellowship fund for whitesoutherners, hoping the recip¬ients would help solve racial prob¬lems in the South.McGill had received one of thesefellowships.In 1919, Rosenwald's fundhelped establish the Commissionon Interracial Cooperation. Thisgroup, for the first time, “broughtleaders of both races together.“One of our problems in 1962is that in many communities thew'hite people still don’t knowwhat the Negro community wants,thinks, or feels. One can imaginewhat it was in 1919,” McGill said.“It is my studied judgement . . .that the human and spiritual val¬ues created by the RosenwaldFund have been among the majorreasons why so much of the Southmanaged “to begin acceptance ofthe United States SupremeCourts’ school desegregation deci¬ sion without violence, and why,when defiance did appear, therewere Southerners ready and will¬ing to combat that help defeat it. . . The Rosenwald Fund helpedblueprint change and the directionof it,”- he said.Rosenwald. concerned with pub¬lic health, started dental infirm¬aries in the public schools. Today’smassive public dental programsgrew out of this.Lessing Rosenwald discussed thefellowship programs started byhis father. Among recipients ofthe Negro fellowships were UCprofessors Allison Davis and Ab¬ram Harris.Rosenw?ald also established ahospital training program for Ne¬groes. The University of Chicagoworked with him in establishingProvident Hospital lor training inChicago.He also established an insur¬ance plan to help people obtainproper medical treatment. In ad¬dition. he established the hospitaladministration course in cooper¬ation with UC. The history of Americanphilanthropy exhibits thedistinctive American conceptof community, Daniel Boor¬stin, UC professor of Americanhistory said yesterday.In honor of the 100th anniver¬sary of Julius Rosenwald’s birth,Boorstin cited the generous UCbenefactor 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,such as the independent Univer¬sity of Chicago w'ith endowmentsfrom a variety of places, Boorstinemphasized.In defining the idea of anAmerican community> Boorstinmade three points. In the UnitedStates, the communities existedbefore the government, such asthe Mayflower community whichset up a government with thesigning of a pact.i j chicaqoA/I a r cron “Europe was cluttered with pur¬poseless governmental machinerywhile in America, machine camelater, the .people invented it,”Boorstin told.Americans are anxious to havecommunity share their daily life.This creates virtues as well asthe vices of the familiar organiza¬tion man, Boorstin related.“Yet we still expect people toact as if they all thought the sameway,” he admitted.This accounts for the proverbialAmerican lack of privacy and w'hymen in the public view are ex¬pected to disclose their privatelives.Citizens of the United Statesindulge in a fantastic pride intheir community which Boorstincalls the “booster spirit.”Such distribution point cities asChicago grew quickly and peopleattached themselves eagerly totheir new' community. The com¬munity spirit was bo1h noisy andeasily transferrable.Boorstin accounts for the joinerspirit 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 w’hich he wasso much a part.Vol. 71 — No. 15 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Ocf. 16, 1962 c •' v . >iSC holds first meeting tonightThe Student Government(SG) Assembly will hold itsfirst meeting of the year to¬night. It is expected to actupon 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, andvacancies in SG committees andin the assembly.McDew explains roleCharles McDew, chairmanof the Student Non-ViolentCoordinating Committee(SNCC),Nexplained his organ¬ization’s role in the Southern in¬tegration movement last night.Speaking at a meeting in' Rey¬nolds Club, McDew stressed thevoter registration drive whichSNCC has been conducting in theSouth and the difficulties involvedin gelling .Negroes to vote. Hepointed out that two SNCC fieldworkers were shot in US Sena¬tor James Eastland's home town.SNCC was formed by studentsbecause they felt they could bestcarry out the w'ork necessary tobreak 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 was started in Mis¬sissippi, said McDew', becauseareas w'ith the least political par¬ticipation in government arecharacterized by a maximum ofexploitation of the Negro and theworst conditions.McDew cited the Albany move¬ment as a large scale, successfulSNCC drive. SNCC workers hadbeen in Albany for more than ayear before news of their workwas made public.Discussing Cairo, Illinois, hesaid, “The people down there arejust as vicious as any we havefound in Mississippi, Alabama, orGeorgia.”McDew himself has been ar¬ rested 27 times. Among thecharges against him has beencriminal anarchy in Louisiana.He called the Baton Rouge jail,w'here he was placed, “the worst”he had ever been in. There, hewas placed in solitary confine¬ment, and not even permitted tospeak to the jailers who broughthim food. Despite the outsidetemperatures of over 85 degrees,the heat within his cell was kepton at all times.The lights in his cell w'ere lefton for three days and then shutoff for three days. When hisguards were conducting tours ofthe jail, they displayed him as one'foT the nation’s leading Commun¬ists.When asked what people at UCcould do to help SNCC, McDewsaid that SNCC’s most seriousneed is money. In addition, hesaid that a strong organizationmight successfully undertake tosolve some of the racial problemsin Chicago.In res[>onse to a question aboutlast year’s CORE sit-ins, McDewsaid that the University’s policy“should be challenged again.”Following his talk members ofthe Freedom Chorus performedsongs of southern SNCC workers.The Freedom Chorus will give aconcert Friday night at 8 pm at.International House. Admission is$1.They will also appear at theGosi»el for Freedom program Sun¬day at McCormick Place. Ticketsare $2, $3, $5, and $25. Ticketsfor both concerts will be on salethis week at the Mandel Hall cor¬ridor. All UC students, graduate andundergraduate are represented inthe Assembly. Representation isby academic unit, in proportionto the enrollment of eacly unit.Each unit has at least one' repre¬sentative.SG delegates are aligned inpolitical parties. Candidates fromsix parties and one independentwere elected to SG in last spring’selections.POI.IT, liberal action party,controls the assembly with 32 ofSti’s 50 seats; 17 in the Collegeand 15 in the divisions andschoolsThe more campus-oriented In¬dependent Reform Party andUniversity Party have three andeight seats respectively. The Law'School Party has its school’sthree seats.Two parties, w'ith platforms ofabolishing student government,tty* Association of Non-ToleratingIndividuals (ANTI) and theDemocratic Organization to With¬stand Nonsense (DOWN) have atotal of three graduate seats.Because'of its large numberof seats and power to bind itsmembers to vote for its positions,POI.IT is able to effectively con¬trol SG. Measures agreed on atPOI.IT caucuses, therefore, cangenerally be expected to bepassed at SG meetings.At POLIT's first caucus of thequarter Sunday night, it discussedplans for tonight's meeting.POI.IT will Introduce a motiontonight that S(J sponsor a peti¬tion urging the University to re¬main out of the National DefenseEducation Act (NDEA) loan pro¬gram.The petition will also ask theUniversity , if it does reenter theprogram, to provide loan fluidson the same basis as NDEA fundsfor any student who does notwant to participate in the NDEA.POLIT is also expected to intro¬duce a resolution condemningevents at the University of Missis¬sippi in recent weeks.In an action supporting ( ORE,POI.IT 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¬crimination in federal housing.Members of CORE plan topicket Kennedy at his hotel toprotest the lack of an executiveorder.Kennedy will be in Chicago to campaign for Rep. Sidney Yates.At the caucus, POLIT also de¬cided upon its nominations to fillvacancies in the Assembly and onSG’s Executive Council. TheExecutive Council consists of theofficers of the Assembly and thechairmen of all SG standing com¬mittees.Peter Barrish, a law student,spoke at the caucus in supportof Yates. POLIT then discussedwhether to endorse candidates,and decided not to commit itseltto 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 dancer in MandelSaturday. tArendt ends seminarby Mike ConroyPolitical scientist HannahArendt concluded her two-week seminar “On , Revolu¬tion” Friday with advicetaken from Oedipus at Colonnus.It is the “task of Athens tomake life more splendid.” wasSophocles’ reply to a young'Athenian w'ho 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 esnsidered theprincipal men of revolutions, theirintentions, 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.Then in the final lecture, sheconcerned herself with the dis¬sipation of revolutionary spirit,particularly as manifest in thefrequent ly recurring but sadly un¬successful “council system” ofgovernment.The Final LectureMiss Arendt spoke Friday ofthat dissipation of revolutionaryspirit in America into the balanceof pow'er found in the Americangovernmental system and theparty system of selection.Thomas Jefferson had said that “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 hidfailed partly because the revolu¬tion had failed to produce a lastinginstitution. This institution, MissArendt went on tQ explain, pre¬sented the leaders with the quan¬dary: “Should freedom ... be theprice to pay for foundation?"She continued that Jeffersonexpected a revolution everytwenty five years. He was out¬raged at the thought that only hisgeneration would have the oppor¬tunity to start anew. The wisdomof the political science emplovedby the Founding Fathers, MissArendt explained, prov ided us wiihthe system which protected usfrom the oppression which couldhave resulted from our delega¬tion of our freedom and w'hiehwould have required anotherrevolution.The spirit of revolution, MissArendt suggested, has been lostthrough lack of public spaces(freely elective offices) for thepublic elite to gather. In ihe“nightmare” of mass society,lethargy, apathy, and inattentionto public business, “the spirit ofrevolution has not found its prop¬er institution.”» 1.11 *% '•/»Z 4,■ • ** '*f-, *4 LetterPre-war Poland not fascistTO THE EDITOR:In my letter of Oet. 10 deplor¬ing that the Polish consul “couldget away with” statements hemade before the Tufts House for¬um I should have added the word“unchallenged,” for I did not meanthat he or any other represen¬tative of a Communist governmentshould be denied freedom of speechon the University of Chicago cam¬pus. I wholly agree with the let¬ter of the Tufts House Counciland would only add that theyought to make greater effort tohave in the audience people well-enough informed to expose Com¬munist propaganda statements.In the other Oct. 12 letter re¬plying to me Theodore Pearsonmakes even more fantastic state¬ments than were made by theconsul. For example, he accusesthe pre-war Polish government ofbo’h appeasing the Nazis and be¬ing “completely dominated” byBritish imperialism!But even if he means “by turns,”he is wrong, as a perusal of Wil¬liam L. Shirer’s “The Rise andFall of the Third Reich” willreadily show.As "proof of Polish appeasementto the Nazis, Pearson says thatthe Polish government “expressedits willingness to negotiate both the status of Danzig and the vitalCorridor to the Sea.”On pages 612-626 Shirer de¬tails the story of Hitler's demandin 1938 that Danzig be returnedto Germany and that Poland al¬low the building of an all-Germanrail and superhighway “corridor”across Polish territory to linkEast Prussia and Danzig with therest of Germany. The Polish re¬ply, as reported by Shirer, wasan emphatic refusal.Infuriated at this rejection ofwhat he called “the greatest ima¬ginable concession in the interestof European peace,” Hitler, in aReichstag speech on April 28,1939, declared he “regretted thisincomprehensible attitutde of thePolish government.”The only other example of Pol¬ish “appeasement” Pearson cancite are the government’s “leaningover backwards” to ignore theGerman “occupation” of Danzigand etiocities committed on Polishsoil by Germans. But the Nazifi-cation of Danzig - 90 per centGerman in population at that timehad begun in 1933 and the infil¬tration of quasi-military Germanarmy units in 1938-39 could onlyhave been smashed by a militaryact that would have laid the blameon Poland for starting the war(and the political tension overDanzig at the time was far moreelectric than it is in Berlin to¬day). Would Pearson also have hadPoland go to war over the atro¬cities? Sad to relate, these werepaid off later in kind once theGerman invasion began.“Perhaps I have been harsh onthe Polish government,” saysPearson in conclusion. The unkind-est cut was to imply that theFilsudski regime was a prototypefor the fascist-dietatorshp of Italyand Germany because, he says, it“preceeded.”This is not true. The “semi-fascist” Pilsudski regime datedfrom the Polish marshall's coupd'etat in 1926. Mussolini marchedor: Rome with his Black Shirtsin 1922.Pilsudski had been Chief ofState from 1919 until shortly af¬ter he defeated the first Sovietinvasion of Poland in 1920. Then-like DeGaulle - he retired frompolitics. But the inability of theparliamentary system to functionproperly and the scandalous vena¬lity of government ministers de¬termined him to seize power andform a “strong Government.”Yet under this “semi-fascist”government elections continued tobe held and opposition party can¬didates were elected to seats inthe Seym (diet). And a labormovement continued to functionwith at least far more freedomthan is today allowed to the work¬ing class by Gomulka, Tito, andCastro.John SwitalskiMONSTERCONTEST sponsored by thePMEft PEN PEOPLE20 -ft T'WEIISrTY 20MONSTER RALLY KlTSGIVEN AWAY IS{ TO COLLEGE GROUPSFraternities, Sororities, Chowder & Marching Societies, etc.JUST FOR COLLECTING SIGNATURESEACH HIT CONTAINS:BULL HORN. . . throws the soundof your leader'svoice a country mile60 20 T 20 MEGAPHONES!!c3c]c3e3!=]iCJ<C]e3c3c3c3^<3e3e]<]c3c3c3c3... for keeping order amongst the rank and fileNOISEMAKERSfrom Las Vegas. . . for keeping disorderamongst the rank and file PI llo-il-5 yourself rg Effigy imm... a bald-headed Ifzz store dummy twho can looklike almostanybody t ,YARDS OF BUNTING... the good, colorful kind 300 BLANK, fill ia your own cause+ HERE'S All YOU 00 TO WINPass the hat and buy one Parker (-*• Arrow pen or borrow one-the newclean-filling, smooth-writing cartridgepen. It only costs $3.95.3 Mail your list to: Monster Con¬test, P.O. Box 5049, St. Paul, Minn.We ll mail kits to winning groups,within 30 days. Sorry, but only one kitto a college or university and only 20kits nationwide. Be sure to appoint agroup leader and include his or hername and address with your entry. A MONSTER-RALLY KIT FOR YOUR GROUP:2 Use this pen to acquire at least 200 (two hundred) signa¬tures of fellow students. They need not be perfectly legi¬ble and we ll even accept artful aliases. Neatness does notcount, but length does (the 20 longest lists of names win).Duplicate prizes in case of ties.4 Consolation prizes will be awarded to each group sub¬mitting 50 signatures or more. You‘ll receive one FRHEParker Quink cartridge for each name (we're no dopes, they'llall have to buy Parker Arrow pens to put 'em in).5 Decisions of judges final. All entries become the prop¬erty of Parker. Contest void in Nebraska, Wisconsin, andanywhere else prohibited by law. All entries must be post¬marked on or before midnight, Nov. 9, 1962, and received onor before Nov. 16, 1962. +<f> PARKER — Mjker of the world's most wanted pens©19*2 <£* TNC RCN COMPANY, JANESVILLE, WISCONSINCH I C A G O MAROON • Oet. 17, 1M2 Education lobbyists foughtfor NDEA amendmentEducation lobbyists inWashington played a veryimportant role in the passageof the recent amendment tothe National Defense Educa¬tion Act (NDEA) loan pro¬gram. One of the most active of1hese lobbyists was Julian I.e\i,representing the University of Chi¬cago.Levi is the executive director ofthe South East Chicago Commis¬sion. of which the University isa member.The NDEA Amendment elimi¬nated the controversial disclaimeraffidavit, replacing it with a pro¬vision allowing for criminal prose¬cution if a member of a Comu-nist organization applies for aloan.Changes in the NDEA pro¬gram were included in an amend¬ment of the National ScienceFoundation Act.The University of Chicago hadbeen one of 22 schools which re¬fused to participate in the programbecause of the affidavit which re¬quired the applicant to state thathe does not support any subver¬sive organizations.Educational lobbyists had beenworking quite some time to havethe disclaimer removed, accordingto American Council on Education(ACE i spokesman Charles Dob¬bins:"The ACE’s commission on fede¬ral relations was one of the firstgroups to come out against Ihedisclaimer provision. The effortsto remove it this year were car¬ried out quietly, although we didn’tsneak it through as the ChicagoTribune recently charged.”Dobbins said that the ACE com¬mission noted last May that theSeienee Foundation Bill providedfor replacing the diselaimer inthat program with a criminal pen¬alty and it was decided that thesame approach should be used onthe NDEA bill."The ACE and the AmericanAssociation of University Profes¬sors were most active in the ef-fmts to get the disclaimer re¬pealed,” he said. “And JulianLevi of Chicago played a very.im¬ port ant role in getting the jobdone.”Dobbins said that Levi consult¬ed Albert E. Jenner, Jr. a notedChicago lawyer, to write a legalopinion on the constitutionalityof the disclaimer requirement.This opinion, which later was in¬corporated in the Senate’s reportor. the NDEA bill, held that thedisclaimei provision was “uncon¬stitutionally vague” and that “iffaced with the issue, a majorityof the Supreme Court, as pre¬sently constituted, would so hold.”Informed sources said that Leviwas able to present this opinionto .Senate . Republican .leaderEverette M. Dirksen, Senator Bar¬ry (loldwater and other influen¬tial leaders. The legislative as-sitant to one of these Senatorsst a ted:“The senator was very impressedwith the legal arguments presentedby th opinion. Recent decisions ofthe Supreme Court had put theconstitutionality of the disclaimerprovision in doubt.“We feel that the final legisla¬tion is a happy solution for every¬one. The criminal penalty now inthe bill should be even more effect¬ive than the affidavit require¬ment in keeping subversives outof the program, and colleges won’tbe required to inquire into any¬one's affiliations.”Undoubtedly, the boycott of theaid program by the 22 schoolsbrought some pressure on Con¬gress to change the law. However,with some 400,000 scholarships in¬volved, these institutions by them¬selves couldn't swing the battle.“We were very unhappy to seethese colleges out of the program,”one congressional source said.“But it was a matter of finding asolution to a vexing problem andto keep out subversives. The cri¬minal penalty is the answer.”Repeal of ihe disclaimer require¬ment is regarded in Washingtonas a tribute to the efficiency ofthe education lobbyists. While theydon't have Ihe money or power ofsuch groups as organized labor,the business lobbyists and someother special interest organiza¬tions, the education lobby hasworked quietly and effectively.Discuss Arendt theories“Is it possible for a revolu¬tion from below to changeconditions, to build a societyfor the needs of those makingit?”Michael Harrington, Socialisteditor and author, posed thisquestion as the central theme ofhis talk on “Hannah Arendt andRevolution,” delivered last nightbefore a meeting sponsored by the'Young People’s Socialist League.Harrington began by describ¬ing Arendt’s thesis as an “end ofideology.” This description, takenfrom Daniel Bell, is used to de¬scribe t he feeling that “peoplecannot deal with their own fu¬ture,” the editor of New Americasaid.It is a rejection of Utopia,brought about because of the dis¬illusionment* of Western intel¬lectual life from the perversion ofthe Russian revolution.In Origins of Totalitarianism,written in 1950, Arendt laid downthe thesis that revolution was im¬possible in a totalitarian society.Her analysis, Harrington ex¬plained, was that under totali¬tarianism social classes were re¬placed by the masses which, hav¬ing no arena for political develop¬ment. could therefore never revoltagainst oppression.The impact of these conclu¬sions, he continued led Arendt tosupport the United Stales in amilitary struggle against Commu-Chicago MaroonEditor in chief Laura GodofskyBusiness Manager .... Kenneth C. HeylIssued free of charge on the Quad¬rangles every Tuesday through Friday•luring the academic year by studentsof the University of Chicago. Addresscorrespondence to: Chicago Maroon,1212 E. 59 Street, Chicago 37, Illinois.Telephones: MI .1-0800. e.xts. 3265, 3266.Subscription by mail is $4 per year.Printed at West Side Press, Chicago, nism, and if carried to extremes,could have led her to the furtherconclusion that all political actionfrom below is irrevalent.This theory was, however, de¬risively refuted in Fast Germanyin 1953 and later in Hungary andPoland. Further, the establishmentof worker's couneils in Hungaryshows that classes did indeed existunder totalitarian rule.Thus refuted, Arendt revisedher theory. She claimed that theEast European revolutions hadbeen non - ideological, sponta¬neous uprisings. The establishmentof worker’s councils occurred onlybecause these are the “instinctiveinstitution of popular revolt.”In essence, Harrington said, sheread Marx as not seeing a revo¬lution from below. She contendedthat Marx was interested in alabor-based society out, raise thequestion of the possibility of realrevolution.The prospectus for revolution isconfused, Harrington stated. So¬ciety has not polarized into war¬ring factions as Marx foresaw.However, class change is stillvery possible, “even in the UnitedStates” Citing automation as anexample of a major problem, hepointed out that even the solu¬tion of such a quandary by abenevolent elite would requiresomething of a revolution.“The revolution is not in Thebag. A revolution is in the bag.It is w'rong to write off change,”the speaker ended, “this is theonly way man can survive.”Unitarianism explainedThe current position andhistory of Unitarianism willbe explained tonight at 8 pmat William Fenn House, 5638Woodlawn Avenue.Doc films slates talksThe University of Chicago Documentary Film Group(DFG) is presenting a series of discussions entitled “TheArt of the Film” in conjunction with its regular series offilm presentations. Picket Daley in Ul protestMayor Daley again found ished to provide space for thecampus.Exerpts from DFG’s Fridaynight movies will be shown eachThursday evening at 9:00 pm inthe Thompson House lounge. Anassociate of DFG will explainthe techniques and concepts ofthe artist responsible for the film.Speakers will include GeraldTemaner, Instructor in Cinema inthe College and past president ofDFG, Robert Williams, past pres¬ident of the group, and WilliamRoutt, current chairman of DocFilms.Portions of “M” will be shownthis Thursday and Williams willlead the discussion of the “Artof Fritz Lang.” Other artists tobe considered this quarter includeOrsen Welles and Frederico Fel¬lini.Sidney Huttner, speaking forDFG, said “This is the sort ofthing we’ve always done among ourselves and something we’vehoped to extend in some formalway. Besides being an excellentintroduction to the first Univer¬sity course in the film to be of¬fered ... it will be a self-containedintroduction to the techniques andhistory of film.”Twenty-eight people lastnight attended the first openmeeting of the UC Conserva¬tive Club.The program consisted of anaddress by the founder, JimPowell, on the purposes of theclub, and a taped speech by Dr.Fred Schwarz.According to Powell, the pur¬pose of the club is to develop an members of the Harrison-Hal-sted Group, Inc. camped infront of his office Tuesday.The group has been staging pro¬tests against plans to locate thenew Chicago branch of the Uni¬versity of Illinois in their com¬munity.Many residential and commer¬cial structures would be demol-informed and articulate group ofstudents to pi-omote conservatism.He stated that a new club wasneeded because of the two otherconservative clubs, one is entirelyeducational and philosophical,while the other is mostly political.The Conservative Club will be in¬volved in both.The recorded speech by Schwarzwas on dialectic materialism. Hebegan by giving the Communistdefinition of dialectic materialismand continued by expanding thatinto the general aims and philoso¬phies of Communism. He thenused this to explain the methodsused by Communists.The next meeting of the Con¬servative Club will be on Tues¬day, October 23, in the theatre ofIda Noyes Hall.The program will consist of aspeech on the economic cold warby Bernard Delgiorno. The group also sent a telegramto President Kennedy yesterday,asking that he support them intheir demands.Friday, Daley told the groupthere would be no more condem¬nations or evictions outside thepriority area bounded by Roose¬velt, Morgan, and Blue Island Sts.This area will be the site of thecampus power plant. However,Mrs. Florence Scala, co-chairmanof the group, stated, “We recog¬nize no priority here.”She told Daley that some of therelocated families have beenforced to use less desirable hous¬ing. Daley has repeatedly statedthat 95 per cent of the relocatedpersons have received better hous¬ing. Of the 125 families in thepriority area, 28 have been re¬located.One of the condemnation caseshas been continued until Novem¬ber 8. Five women whose caseswere scheduled for Monday werepersonally promised by Daley thatthe cases would be continued.The requests for continuanceare based on the group’s hope that the two court suits they havebrought will be deeided in theirfavor. These suits should be ruledupon within the next 60 days.They claim the city’s condemna¬tion of land originally designatedfor residential re-use is uncon¬stitutional.In all probability the Harrison-Halsted protestors will continuetheir demonstrations until somelegal ruling takes place.Last week many University ofIllinois students urged Daley tospeed up construction of the Con¬gress Campus. They charged thatthe present campus site, the NavyPier, is being overrun with un¬desirable forms of animal life“such as wasps and bats,” and is“intolerably noisy.”Young Republicans meetThe UC Young Republican Clubwill hold a meeting tonight inRoom 103 of Business East at 8:00pm. Canvassing and poll-watchingwill be the main topics of themeeting. Members and those in¬terested in the club are invited.Intramural football season opensIntramural football started to Delta Theta slipped by Phi Kapparoll last night as more than 150 Psi 12-6, and Phi Gamma Deltamen participated in the openinggames of the Fraternity and “B”leagues. Action was fastest in theFraternity league which playsflag football as opposed to thetouch played in the other leagues.Phi Sigma Delta led the scoringwith 19 points to Zeta Beta Tau’s7. In other fraternity games Beta forfeited to Psi Upsilon.Psi Upsilon’s “B” team whippedSalisbury 19-6. Chamberlin "B”bested Dodd “B” 10-6 in a gamethat saw three safeties scored.Tufts North edged East IV, PhiSig fell before Phi Psi 7-0, andEast III forfeited to Coulter inother “B” League action. FREE TYPING TABLEwith each Olympia Model SM7 Portable Typewriter purchased untiliurther notice. Type changes for all typewrites at normal prices.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE*Hours: Monday-Friday 8-5, Saturday 8-12UC conservatives form clubiL ' 4It's now a fact: every Ford-built car in f63 has self-adjusting brakes“Give us a brake,” Ford Motor Company engineers were told, “thatwill automatically compensate for lining wear whenever an adjustmentis needed—and make it work for the entire life of the lining."Tough assignment—but not insurmountable. Today, not only doesevery Ford-built car boast self-adjusting brakes, but the design is soexcellent that adjustments can be made more precisely than by hand.This Ford-pioneered concept is not complex. Key to it is a simplemechanism which automatically maintains proper clearance betweenbrake drum and lining.Self-adjustment takes place when the brakes are applied while backingup. This adjustment normally occurs but once in several hundredmiles of driving. The brake pedal stays up, providing full pedalreserve for braking.Another assignment completed—and another example of how FordMotor Company provides engineering leadership for the American Road. MOTOR COMPANYThe American Road, Dearborn, MichiganPRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD • THE HOMSTHE FARM • INDUSTRY • AND THE AGE OF SPACE You ore invitedto attend aFREE LECTUREonCHRISTIANSCIENCEentitled:“Successful LivingFound ThroughChristian Science”. i*HERBERT E. RIEKE, C. S. B.of Indionapofis, Ind.Member of the Board of Lecture¬ship of the Mother Church, TheFirst Church of Christ, Scieetist,!r Boston, MassachusettsAmong the topics to bediscussed are:• “Christian Science ondthe Natural Sciences”• “How Christian Science) .Helps in AcademicStudies"• “The Simplicity of Chris¬tian Science"inTheOriental InstituteLecture Hall1155 E. 58th StTODAY (WEDNESDAY)OCTOBER 17of 4:30 pmALL ARE WELCOMEOct. 17, 1962 • CHICAGO MAR OO N 3» * Iiff*/ Ifi»■ <M» mi»,a |I j:tJ!& r> \i Music reviewI Solisti ensemble gives dynamic recitalThis week provided a re¬freshing contrast to lastweek’s syrupy playing byLeopold Stokowski and theChicago Symphony. On Sundayafternoon the Yugoslavian stringensemble, I Solisti di Zabreb, gavea recital in Studebaker Hall.The group is an ensemble Inthe true sense of the word.Whether their leader, AntonioJanigro, is conducting or playinga solo part on the cello (as hedid with magnificent technicalease and tonal warmth in aBoccherini Cello Concerto andthe Funeral Music of PaulHindemith), the group has a re¬mark:* hie cohesiveness which cre¬ ates the illusion of a single in¬strument rather than a collectionof individuals.The only complaint one mighthave against their precise andoften dynamic playing is that,when performing music of the18th century (Vivaldi, Boccherini.Pergolesi, and Tartini), they hada slight tendency to be over-in¬tellectual: not free or relaxedenough.Even this minor criticism, how¬ever, is inapplicable to those con¬temporary works which completedthe concert. They achieved asoftly mournful atmosphere inthe Hindemith, while Webern’sFive Pieces for Strings was pre¬ sented with a sharpness, vigor,and clarity seldom encounteredin ensembles of this size. As theirfinal work, they performed aScherzo (from Opus 11) by Dmi¬tri Shotakovitch, which definitelyconfirmed their ability to playcompletely non-intellectual musicin a carefree manner.Under the direction of PaulKletzki, the Chicago Symphonyearlier brought a new dynamicvitality to the finale of BrahmsFirst Symphony. The disap¬pointment in their rendition ofthe “Prelude and I.lehestod” fromWagner’s Tristan, which lackedsome of its essential sexual ten¬ sion and drive, was more thancompensated for by the perfor¬mance of Schubert’s B MinorSymphony which opened the pro¬gram.The big musical event thisweekend is, of course, the concerton Friday evening in Mandel Hallby Gunther Schuller. It featuresmusic in which several ensemblesplay different music at the sametime. These persons brave enoughto try two concerts in one daymight want to hear the ChicagoSymphony on Friday afternoon,too. Kletzki is again conducting,this time music by Honegger andSibelius, with Wanda Wilkom- irska performing the Mendels-sohn Violin Concerto. Saturdaynight features pianist Robert (’a.sadesus in the Saint -S sensFourth Concerto and the RavelsLeft Hand Concerto; Kletzki wiH>also conduct Honegger and De¬bussy.On Sunday afternoon, Lori®Maazel will lead the OrchestraNational Francais in a concei tmusic by Mendelssohn, St ravin-sky, Debussy, and . . . you guessed*!it: Ravel's Daphnis and ChloeSuite No. 2. The Schuller concertlooks like the best of them.Pete Rabinowihmusic editorCalendar of EventsChristian Leadership Conference: forco-ordination of efforts for "FreedomPilgrimage’' to Cairo. III.: WashingtonPark YMCA, 50th and Indiana: 12 noon.Lecture: “Genrtics and Development"*aeries: Dr. Hans J. Becker. PhilippsUniversity of Marburg, Germany:Zoology 29: 3:30 pm.Ear, Nose and Throat Seminar:Billings North Basement 29-A; 4:00 pm.Lecture: ' How Students Find Success¬ful Living Through Christian Scienee’’;sponsored by Christian Science Organiz¬ation of the University of Chicago:Breasted Hall; 4:30 pm.Study Group: “Great Ages of theJewish People: From the Maccabees toMohammed’’: Hillel House. 5715 Wood-lawn; 4:30 pm.Carillon Recital: Daniel Robins:Rockefeller Chapel; 5:00 pm.Clinical Conference: Billings P-117;RmO pm.Lecture-Discussion: "The Moral Life:Studies in the Ethics of Maimonides";Hillel House; 7:00 pm.Radiology Students Seminar: BillingsP-117: 7:0o pm.CORE meeting: Ida Noyes Hall: 7:30pm.Illustrated Lecture: "Art and theArtist in Asmat Society”; Adrian A.Gu-brands. Associate Director. NationalMuseum of Ethnology. Leiden. theNetherlands: Social Scienee 122; 3:00pm.Lecture: "Our Genetic Heritage”:George VV. Beadle: Downtown Center,0 4 E. Lake Street; 8:00 pm.Young Republican Club Meeting:Business East 103. 8:00 pm.ClassifiedGrad woman wants to share apt.Ml 3-1972.7 room apartment available; sublet: 1stfloor, university area. SI 40/mo. Con¬tact K. Honeycutt. Green #58, or D.Kl'-man. 324-7838.ir. flirn -hed apartmc nts for rent: Sout hSh • re 6806 Clyde Vve., modern 4 and5 :> Hi’e room and st darium. Deco rating.M clest rentals. Gara ges available Goodtr » ns»»o tat ion and shopping. - - CullI V 4-0 498 after 4 pm.s* >relM ne apts. 5135 S. Kenwood offersi 4b 3 1 - rm. efficiency units. Attrac-tv •'Pointed, month to month occu-p i’ rv. $80 and up. Elevator, fit eproofBn I.Fni. . Manager on premises.F-f n<*H - private inst •action all levels—r» • ding exam. BU 8-728 4.St sGEF IS WANTED. Volunteer Ep scopalchi l re h choir. 667-27 39 evenings.Tu :e R ood care of vour child in m vh -me. Cal! HY 3-7 44 3.F« sa !o: 12 bar autoharp. $ r,3 7 -21:CAN YOU TYPE AT LEAST75 WPM WITH UNUSUALACCURACY ?A publisher of programmed textsis looking for a typist to makeplates on our IBM executivetypewriter, on piecework. A fasttypist should make between $2.50and $4.00 an hour, anytimeduring business hours.For appointment call:TYLER THOMPSONat AN 3-1270, ext. 4?Accelerated InstructionMethods Corporation179 N. MICHIGAN1962 RAMBLER $41TQCCLASSIC +Radio, Heater.Automatic TransmissionBriny fa Ad far Thit PriceGruby’s Rambler4555 S. CottageBO 8-1111 Attention, all witty, urbane college students:Get Luckv!would yous to try for•50?ENTER LUCKY STRIKES’ ZANY NEWCrazy Questions” ContestSO CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE’S HOW:First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up witha nutty, surprising question for it, and you’ve done a“Crazy Question.” It’s the easy new way for students tomake loot. Study the examples below, then do your own.Send them, with your name, address, college and class,to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y. Winningentries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries sub¬mitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a$25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now! RULES: Th« Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries on the basis ofhumor (up to Vi), clarity and freshness (up to Vi) and appropriatanass (upto Vi), and thair dacisions will ba final. Duplicata prizas will ba awardedin the event of ties. Entries must ba the original works of tha antrants andmust ba submitted in tha entrant’s own name. Thara will ba SO awardsevery month, October through April. Entries received during each monthwill be considered for that month's awards. Any antry racaivad after April30. 1963, will not be eligible, and all become the property of The AmericanTobacco Company. Any collage student may enter the contest, except em¬ployees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising agencies andReuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees. Winners wili benotified by mail. Contest subject to all federal, state, and local regulations.rTHE ANSWER: I THE ANSWER:mmwEGYBT1ARMUMMIES£uajp|iip ueqdASgjuapue pastel oq/w :NO!iS3nd 3H1THE ANSWER:TWAINivpe/vqe uo sunM *eqM WOliSSfld 3Hi w&mi©ML I THE ANSWER:IArt Appreciation^saieqM A^eajo 3uqeD•uqn| jo* poo3 s.ieqM :NOIiS3fld 3Hi I ipaiiea aq cq aipi uoqenajddyinqwv saop *eqM :NOIlS3n0 3HiTHE ANSWER: | THE ANSWER:JamesJoyce lIIIIII Across the riverand into the treesiiiiSiauai aAt) 3utAeq pue f qpMSuipeis qioq auieu sjjiS e pue auieus/oq e aA|3 noA ueo :NOIiS3nd 3H1 *asnoq s.euipueJ9o» ia3 noA op moh :N0liS3nd 3Hi |The answer is:Get Luckythe taste to start with.. .me taste to stay withThe question is: WHAT IS THE SLOGAN OF THE FAVORITE REGULAR CIGA-RETTE OF TODAY’S COLLEGE STUDENTS? If you missed that one, go to therear of the class. Everyone should know that fine-tobacco taste is the bestreason to start with Luckies, and that taste is the big reason Lucky smokersstay Lucky smokers. Prove it to yourself. Get Lucky today.• a. r. Co. Product of J&njAi&an — So&uaco- is our middle nameCHICAGO MAROON Oct. 17, 1962