CORE pickets Kennedy; here to aid YatesStudents For Yates will make its way through the Loop financed by federally insuredgreet President Kennedy to the Biackstone Hotel on Michi- loans.when he arrives in Chicago Kan Avenues* There> at 4:45> the The Woodlawn Organizationstudent group will greet him. and the Northern Christian lead- bers were arrested in the Los In its last session, UC StudentAngeles demonstration. Government urged the PresidentIn a poll of the members of the “to immediately sign the execu-National Association of Home tive order banning discrimination„ Builders (NAHB), 40.7% of those in federally assisted housing.” Theennedy will Ik* picketed there ership conference will join in the who answered said that their SG has ordered the National Stu-by the UC chapter of the Con- picket. These sources will provide building plans would be adversely dent Association (NSA) Commit-to “stump” for DemocraticSenatorial candidate Sidney Yatestomorrow afternoon.Kennedy will speak at a $100a plate dinner at Ihe McCormick order ending discriminationPlace tomorrow night. Yates is federally assisted housing,running against Republican Ever- The Executive order wouldett M. Dirksen, who is seeking his make unlawful discrimination in COREgress on Racial Equality (CORE)to urge him to sign an executiveinthird term in the Senate. an estimated one hunderd people.UC students who are to picketwill meet at New Dorms at 3 pmFriday.Los Angeles and St. Louishave picketed Kennedy affected by such an order.The National AssociationAgainst Discrimination in Housing(NCDH) has urged the presidentto recognize the survey as “mis¬leading in its statements and un¬founded in its conclusions” be-public housing, housing for the when he appeared in those cities. cause 62% of the NAHB membersThe presidential motorcade will elderly, urban renewal, and homes According to CORE, three mem- did not answer the poll and be¬cause many of the answers werefrom areas covered by local anti¬bias legislation.According to an NCDH report,local anti-discrimination laws have executive order.tee to aid UC and Chicago COREin the picket demonstration.NSA, the United Steelworkersof American, the National Associ¬ation for the Advancement ofColored People, the NationalUrban League, the B’nai BrithAnti-Defamation League, theNational Committee Against Dis¬crimination in Housing, theAmericans for Democratic Action,the Independent Voters of Illinois,and other organizations haveasked the President to issue theVol. 71 — No. 17 University of Chicago, Thursday, Oct. 18, 1962 At UC CORE’S meeting lastnight officers for the coming yearwere elected. Bruce Rappaportwas elected President.Bob McNamara was chosenVice President in charge of socialaction; Wallet Rogers, vice-presi¬dent in charge of public relations.Amy Gettinger will head theemployment committee, whichwill try to get the University tosign non-discriminatory pledgeswith firms with which the Univer¬sity deals.Alan Freister heads the griev¬ance committee which will investi¬gate charges of discriminationweekend “retreats’'’ today to discuss plans tor next year. They will convene at a motel •wtastk the„HUZ?fJ3’’ J?'1!near Aurora, west of Chicago. .. J ^ A . “J1”* that / h* dld not- committee. Jane Coleman wasThe first weekend will be devoted to purely academic matters; the second, October a Democratic adminstration29-31, to a comprehensive dis- ——— — *Top UC men plan for '63 resulted in little change in rateof construction, rent levels, pro-perty values, or availability ofmortgage funds.CORE reports that the latestdraft of the order would not beretroactive and would not affecthousing already completed or un¬der construction. “Not only hasthe President failed to act, butthe latest order prepared at thedirection of the White House isof no value for existing federallyassisted housing.”_ In the 1960 campaign, Mr. Ken-The "University’s academic deans and top administrators will begin the first of two a"d J^er^mm^urgSacussion of the University as awhole, including such non-acad¬emic concerns as housing, urbanrenewal, and student services.The academic deans include theheads of the College, the fourdivisions, and the seven profes¬sional schools. The administratorsinclude President Beadle and hisstuff, and various officers involvedin the preparation of the Univer¬sity’s budget.The academic deans will attendthe first weekend discussion only.They will be represented by Pro¬vost Ed Levi at the second week¬end.The chief activity of the nextthree days will be the presenta¬tion by each academic dean ofplans for his division or school.This will he done so that all thoseattending the conference will heable to get some idea of how theirhopes for the coming year relateto each other.At the second weekend, theacademic concerns will be consid¬ered against a background of allthe University’s programs and in¬terests. The administrators willtry to put together a general pic¬ture of the. coming year’s work.In past years, the administrator*and deans met for only one week¬end to discuss the University’sfuture. They convened at the LakeMichigan home of Harold H.Swift, who died this summer.The weekend meetings are anInformal first step in making upthe University’s 1963-64 budget,They are not decision-makingmeetings. The deans and admin¬istrations will spend their timeexchanging and collecting back¬ground information, which willeventually be incorporated by thePresident in to his presentation to the Board of Trustees of thebudget.The various schools and depart¬ments are generally told by theadministration later in the aut¬umn quarter approximately howmuch money will be allocated tothem for the coming year.In March, the Board of Trusteeswill make the final decision onhow murli money will be avail¬able to be parceled out to thevarious parts of the Universityfor 1963-64.The list of administrators in¬vited to participate in the twoweekend retreats includes GeorgeBeadle, President of UC; LowellCogeshall, vice president of UC; ,Ray Brown, vice president for ad-tration; and Ed Levi, provost.Others included in the adminis¬trative group are Warren John¬son, vice president for specialscientific programs; Albert Crewe,director of Argonne National Lab-oratoi'y; Leonard Olsen, academicbudget officer; Carl Larson, di¬rector of public relations, J. Park saying that if“a Democraticwould.”In the U. S. Commission onCivil Rights, President Kennedyis quoted as saying, “Federalmoney should not be spent in any committee. Janeselected secretary.the division of the humanities;Alan Simpson, dean of the Col¬lege;Joseph J. Ceithaml, dean of the way which encourages discrimina-Medical School; tionGeorge Schultz, dean of the The Commission further urged Chicago History Club tonightGraduate School of Business; that the Federal Government on the question: “Is theDali in H Oaks acting dean of fh°uld “reqUir® .a11 financial 1”stl* United States still a revolutionaryuainn n. oans, acung aean oi tutions engaged in a mortgage loan Morgenthau to speakto UC club tonightHans J. Morgenthau willaddress the University ofthe Law School;Alton H. Linford, dean of theSchool of Social Service Adminis¬tration;Herman Fussier, acting dean ofthe Graduate Library School;Gerald C. Brauer, dean of theDivinity School;Francis Chase, dean of theGraduate School of Education, business that are supervised by a nation?’Morgenthau, UC professor offederal agency to conduct such poiitcal science, is widely knownbusiness on a non-discriminatorybasis.”In its 1961 Civil Rights resolu¬tion the AFL-CIO urged that “allhousing built with the aid offederal funds or credit . . . be as a critic of United States foreignpolicy and is the author of manybooks on international relations.Margenthau will speak at 8:15in Ida Noyes Hall. The HistoryClub has issued a general invita-made available to minority fami- tion to the campus and has a li¬lies on an equal basis with all nounced that it will serev refresh-other families.” ments.SNCC leaders in ChorusAmong the students sing- is the head of the youth division and bloodshed in the pasting in the “Freedom Chorus” of the Mississippi NAACP.in International House Friday e. w. Davis, of Holly Springser Hall, treasurer; and Donald nig'ht are some of the leaders Miss., has also been active in theCartland, comptroller. - of the fight for integration in theAlso on the list of participants South,is Julieii Levi, chairman of the They began singing together inSouth East Chicago Commission, the jails of Mississippi andof which the University is a mem- Georgia, and in the churchesher. Levi has often served as a where they organized one of theliaison for UC and other univer- most significant social movementssities to their local, state, and in American history. ’national governments.The following academic repre¬sentatives will participate in thisweekend’s discussions:JFK to be picketedby Women for Peace Ruth Harris, for instance, is ayoung lady who has been in jail“more times than I care to re¬member.” A native of Albany,A. Adrian Albert, dean of the Georgia, she was instrumental in Nashville sit-ins.division of physical sciences; the organiaztion of the AlbanyH. Stanley Bennett, dean of the Movement which last winter sawdivision of biological sciences; some 700 Negro citizens of thatD. Gale Johnson, dean of the city incarcerated in the prisons ofdivision of social sciences; Albany and nearby Georgia tow'ns.Robert Streeter, acting dean of Cordell Reagon is a field secre¬tary for the Student Non-violentCoordinating Committee (SNCC).He is a native of Nashville, Tenn.,and has been working for the lasttwo years in Terrell County, Ga.—“Terrible Terrell,” as localNegroes refer to it—in directaction and voter registration pro¬ voter registration project in theDelta.Charles McDewr is the chairmanof SNCC, and is fast approachinghis twentieth arrest. He boastsbail bonds outstanding of morethan $75,000, andjs currently un- national House auditorium. Singleder indictment for “criminal admission is $1.00. fewmonths.The Friday night program willfeature the premiere of a songwhich Pete Seeger wrote for thegroup. entitled “One Man’sHands.”Tickets to the show; which be-gins at 8 pm, are available in Man-del Hall Corridor and will be avail¬able at the door of the Inter¬anarchy” in the state of Louisiana.Bernard Lafayette is the SNCCfield secretary in Nashville. Tenn.,and was a prominent figure in theThe southern students will hejoined Friday night by a groupfrom Cairo, Illinois, where civilrights activity has led to ai'rests The Freedom Chorus is in Chi¬cago to participate in the “Gospelfor Freedom” program Sundayafternoon in McCormick Place.SNCC has set up a Chicagooffice to both raise funds for theorganiztaion’s activities in theSouth and to organize civil rightsaction in the North.Protesting continued arm- weapons, (2) effective negotiationament, nuclear testing, and for UN - controlled disarmament jects.(3) emergence of an economic Mattie Bevins, of Holly Springs,program of decreased spending and Miss., has been active in the(4) fortification of the UN and voter registration project in thatthe United States Control and city. She was one of the “stars”Disarmament Agency. of the recent CBS television docu-The Women for Peace will ga- mentary featuring the “registerther at 23 Street and South Park- and vote” program in Mississippiradiation danger, ChicagoWomen for Peace willdemonsti'ate Friday when Presi¬dent Kennedy arrives at McCor¬mick Place for a $100-a-plate Dem¬ocratic dinner.The Women for Peace fear that way at 6:3o pm to carry posters Sam Block, of Greenville, Miss.,increasing radiation levels willharm either their children or fu¬ture generations. They are alarmedby the possibility of a nuclear war and distribute copies of the open is another SNCC field secretary,letter. who was recently arrested for dis-The group charges that Ameri- tributing notices of a voter edu-can leaders are failing to deal cation class. With Willy Peacock,resulting from the escalation of realistically or intelligently with also a field secretary in the Mis-the arms race. nuclear age problems. On this ac- sissippi delta, he narrowly escapedThrough an open letter to the count its members threaten to a lynch mob by jumping from thePresident, the women will petition withhold their votes from candi- second floor wundow of his homefor (l) termination of the distri- dates who refuse to speak out in Greenville. 'button and testing of nuclear for peace. Colia Liddell, of Jackson, Miss.,*♦* **• *5* *1* *J» *J» *J« «{♦ *j* ♦*♦ »*« ♦*« *j* *j« *J» *j* Campus news in brief >*********************<Rosenheim discusses SalingerEdward W. Rosenheim Jr., The open party will be held inassociate professor of humani- Ida Noyes Hall.ties, described J. D. Salinger’s .Jhe stude*'lt u",on ,ls a camPus-™, , , . ., „ wide cultural and social orgamza-The Catcher in the Rye as a yon which was recently revita-Yninor contemporary classic’ to an ijze<jaudience of 70 students at theThompson House coffee hour lastnight.Rosenheim attributed the book’sappeal to its subtle use of “classicdevices,” and to the ease withwhich Holden Caulfield communi¬cates with the reader. However,as we grow up, he feels we willcease to identify strongly with thematerial in the story, and henceit will lose its impact.Throughout his talk, Rosenheimpraised the skill with whichSalinger painted a contemporaryimage on an ancient time-provencanvas.Club auctions books O-Board lecture aired Blue and red meet;football starts laterIt was college bouse nighton the Midway last night asthe teams in the Blue Divi¬sion played their initial games UM gets general educationin newly created collegeGeneral education is coming back into favor.At the University of Minnesota, the undergraduateCollege of Science, Letters, and Arts will disappear, to bereplaced by a College of Liberal Studies.An All-University council, head¬ed by a new assistant vice-presi- Donald £mith, chairman of theThe lecture series on "The "embers ot ,hc Rod Division tent wniset.up basic courses in ^“'"nd ^^dTthfsub.'com!imits of a Liberal Ed,.ca. for the second time th« week, degrees in .11 "ittee which made final recom.mendations on the general educa¬tion plan, stated that “the built-vvas in concept of this reorganizationLimits of a Liberal Educa- _ , . . .. nwi; „ , , ,, . The only close game in the Bluetion, sponsored by the Orien- Division was Dodd.s 2_0 victory colleges of the University,tation Board last spring is over Thompson North. High scores The reorganization plancurrently being broadcast over were the rule in the other contests recommended by the faculty senFM station WFMT (98.7 me). as Henderson North wallopedThe last two lectures in the Shorey North 24-0, Tufts' Northseries, given by sociologist Paul smashed Mead 27-0 and SalisburyGoodman (author of Communities, creamed East I 28-0.Crowing Up Absurd, Empire City) In the Red Division it was Tufts is to group faculty members intoand Robert M. Hutchins, formerChancellor of the University, willbe broadcast on ‘this and nextSunday at 1 pm.The lectures were presented as ate after two years of study and departments according to func-discussion. tions as well as budgetary divi-Plans for the new College of sions.”Liberal Studies began when the Smith added that the plan isfaculty started worrying about the particularly timely now because“scattering” of liberal arts course- the need for administrative chang¬es. The main issue was whether es grows more urgent as enroll*all students working toward the ment increases,bachelor’s degree should take com- “The principle of general cdu*South 0, 5400 Greenwood 6;Thompson South 10, Shorey South0; East II 6, East III 25; and Vin¬cent 0, Henderson South 21.It was announced last, night by mon courses so that they would cation is perhaps even more im-in- have the “stamp of the Univer- portant today than in 1947 whenIn an autcion last niffht at part an ‘Aims Education’ Chet McGraw, director ofTj XT tt ,, ,, * , , week sponsored by the Orienta- iramural sports, that beginning sity” when they were graduated, our program began,” stated Deanl(ta Noyes Hail, tne Aienae- tion Board with the aid of a Ford Monday, all intramural football The College of Liberal Studies Franklin L. Ford of Harvard,ology Club ot ul collected Foundation grant. The O-Board games will start at 4:15 instead of will have five divisions: Humani- “The modern world demands liigh-is currently attempting to ar- 4 o’clock. This decision was made ties, Behavioral ^Sciences, Biologi- ly^ specializ.ed talent, but respon-range another series for next to ease class conflict, of playersSpring. and officials.nearly $50. Old books donatedto the Club were sold.The Archaeology Club is a uni¬versity-wide organization whichhas members in different fieldson both undergraduate and gradu¬ate levels. The club’s activties con¬sist of holding discussions, hearinglectures, and showing films. Computer ready for useNational Opinion Research Center.Also, a Royal McBee LG P-30 isin the Administration building.in some UC excavations in thenear east will speak.SU plans election partyThe Student Union will hold anelection night party on November6. A blackboard will keep peopleinformed of the up to the minuteresults of the election. One of the largest and fastest computer systems madeis now ready for use at UC. The IBM 7090 and 1101 dataNext week the 34 member Club processing system is available 24 hours a day, 7 days awill hear a lecture by John a. week at the Institute for Computer Research (ICR), 5640Wilson, UC Egyptologist, who EJlis Avenue.will speak on “James^ Henry The new machine handles prob-Breasted: Reminiscences. lems for the department of phy-The following week, Father sjcs and biology, and carries outLouis Zabkan, who participated many functions previously per¬formed by Univac. Rental, opera¬tional, and maintenance costs areexpected to exceed $400,000 ayear, despite a 60% discount toUC as an educational institution.Application forms for use ofthe equipment and informationregarding charges will be sent onrequest. Requests may be made bywriting the Computation Center,ICR, Room CB-8, or by phoningextension 4086. A manuel of opera¬tions and procedures of the Cen¬ter will be ready in the near fu¬ture.The Computer Laboratory isadministered by a faculty policycommittee, with representativesfrom the divisions of physical, bio¬logical, and social sciences, aswell as the Graduate BusinessSchool CBS). It is directed byClemens Roothaan, professor ofphysics.Other computers already oncampus are adminstered by theICR and the operations analysislab of the GBS. Maniac III, whichis being built and designed atICR, is used as a teaching facilityas well as for research on new9omputer construction techniques.UC has two IBM 1620 computers,one at the ICR and one at the cal Sciences, Mathematics andStatistics, and Physical Sciences.Departments of journalism, so¬cial work, and library, now in theCollege of Science, Letters, andArts, will decide which of the thesible specialists must seeworld in its full complexity. . . .We count on general educationto insure breadth in our unde*-graduate curriculum.”Harvard is presently trying tofive divisions they will come urfder strengthen its general educationin the College of Liberal Studies, program in order to “fit it stillThe Department of Economics more securely into the collegewill h£ve to decide cither to re- pattern.”main in the School of Business Ad- a top-flight committee has beenministration, where it is now appointed by Dean Ford to re¬placed. or to come into the College view Harvard’s general educationof Liberal Studies.EVERYCOLLEGESTUDENTCAN BENEFIT- byreadingthisbookAn understanding of the truthcontained in Science andHealth with Key to the Scrip¬tures by Mary Baker Eddy canremove the pressure which con¬cerns today’s college studentupon whom increasing de¬mands are being made foracademic excellence.Free to You for 30 DaysScience and Health may heread, borrowed, or purchasedfor $3 at any Christian ScienceReading Room. On recpiest acopy will be mailed to you post¬paid. After 30 days you maykeep the book by remitting thecost or return it to the ReadingRoom in the mailing cartonprovided.Information about Scienceand Health may also be ob¬tained on campus through theChristian ScienceOrganizationThe Universityof ChicagoMeeting timeTuesdays at 7:15 pmMeeting PlaceThorndike Hilton Chapel1150 East 58th Street The George Woshington elm behind Ida Noyes Hall,donated to UC by the DAR. (First in a series of little-known campus scenes.) courses and the investment of tal¬ent in the teaching of non-special¬ists and future specialists.Presently, the Program giveseach student a choice among anumber of specially preparedcourses in each of the great areasof learning—Humanities, SocialScience, and Biological and Physi¬cal Sciences. No single course orof courses is required.Usually a student takes onecourse in each area during hisfirst two years, and an advancedcourse in each area dining hisfinal two years of college.The courses, directed to the non-spocialist, are prepared and taughtby regular members of the Fac¬ulty, and not by a separate staff.The ov er-all approach aims a I cul¬tivating a sense of values, de¬veloping awareness and appreci¬ation of the several areas of know¬ledge. and giving an understand¬ing of the physical and socialworld in which we live.Chicago MaroonEditor in chief Laura- GodofskjrBusiness Manager .... Kenneth C. HeylIssued free of charge on the Quad¬rangles every Tuesday through Fridayduring (he academic year by studentsof the University of Chicago. Addresscorrespondence to: Chicago Marooa,1212 E. 69 Street, Chicago 37. Illinois.Telephones: MI 3-0800. exts. 3205. 326#.'Subscription by mail is $4 per yeat.Printed at West Side Press, Chicago,POWER-KNITFrank talk about your hair: Vitalis with V-7Steeps your hair neat all day without grease.Naturally.V-7 isthe greaseless grooming discovery .Vitalis®with V-7® fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dry-iiess^keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Try it! Only Jockey T-shirts arePower-Knit to keep their fitThe Jockey Power-Knit T-shirt is man -tailored . .. from theexclusive nylon reinforced Seamfree^ collar that stays snugand smooth ... to the extra-long tail that stays tucked in. It’sPower-Knit with extra top-grade combed cot¬ton yarn to take the roughest kind of wear aman can give it . . . and still not bag. sag orstretch out of shape. It’s a Jockey ...the man's T-shirt... Power-Knit to * | t)Ukeep its fit. A-t Jockeun e «hm " POWER-KNITT-SHIRTSevert*-*, i«co«roR*TEO, kenosm*. wise.UW students suspended Communism at UNC7The University of Wiscon¬sin has suspended twenty stu¬dents arrested in connectionwith demonstrations Fridayand Saturday night in the Madisonbusiness district.Their status in the UniversityFreedom pilgrimmageto Cairo plannedA “Freedom Pilgrimage” toprotest racial segregation anddiscrimination is scheduled toreach Cairo, Illinois, on Octo¬ber 27 and 28.Plans will be co-ordinated andfinalized at a noon meeting todayat the Washington Park YMCA,50 Street and Indiana Avenue.Leaders of the pilgrimage do notexpect participants to he arrestedbecause "arrest would do much toembarrass the power structure ofCairo."The Student Non-violent Co-or¬dinating Committee, the CairoNon-violent Freedom Committee,the Cairo Branch of the NAACP,and the Cairo Ministerial Allianceha\o invited participation fromthe Chicago area. will depend on disposition of theircases by the Student Court. Stu¬dents may appeal any decision tothe Faculty Committee on Stu¬dent Conduct and Appeals.Wisconsin Dean of Students Le-Roy Luberg said in a preparedstatement Sunday that Universityand City officials will work to¬gether to develop a new and effec¬tive approach 1o control "Stu¬dents and others” w ho congregateon State and Langdon Streets onweekends.”Luberg attributed new pi-oblemsin student control in the State-Langdon area to new dorms whichhave added 700 living spaces tothe area.One of the suspended studentscomplained that the students wrereunfairly suspended without a hear¬ing. Many of the students arrest¬ed were only 18 years old anddidn’t know any better, he claimed."How long will they keep upthis farce of stopping riots by sus¬pending students?” he asked. Thisstudent wished to remain anony¬mous.These demonstrations were in¬spired by no higher cause thanthe Wisconsin-Notre Dame game.Thousands of students and visi¬tors poured out of State Streetbars and into the street in frontBowl segregation opposedThe Student Council of Xa¬vier University, Cincinnati,Ohio, has protested theschool’s participation in theSugar Bowl Classic because ofsegregated seating.The Council passed a three partresolution which read:"1» That the Student Councilprotest to the University the par¬ticipation in the Sugar Bowl Class¬ic in so far as the tournamentfosters segregation practices."21 That the $*udent Councilurge the University to respectfullyrequest the seating arrangementsbe integrated; and, if denied thisrequest, to consider requesting arelease from the terms ot the con¬tract."31 That the Student Councilurge t he University, at any case,to make a public statement declar¬ing its positive position on inte¬gration."The Council had earlier rejectedthe report of the Council's SugarBowl investigation committee in the last ten minutes of a morningsession, October 3. Council presi¬dent, Joe Meissner, called anemergency session for that after¬noon, when the three clauses ofthe resolution were passed almostunanimously. of a . woman’s residence hall.The men below set up a chantof "We want pants!” An impromp¬tu pep rally was then begun, last¬ing un'il nearly 1 am. The riotersstormed the door of anotherwomen’s residence and dispersedonly after police came w'ith firehoses.Saturday night there wrere manystudents on the streets, but police¬men would not allow them to con¬gregate. By midnight, 20 uni¬formed policemen were on thestreets, breaking up groups assoon as they formed.Tulane students supportJames Meredith at Miss.A poll taken at Tulane University in New Orleans liasdisclosed student support for James Meredith and the roleof the federal government in Mississippi.In answer to the question, “Do you believe Ross Bar¬nett was correct in opposing thebers can take it upon themselvesto flagrantly oppose its laws,” to"Indiviuals’ rights are far moreimportant than states’ rights.”But there were also those whosupported Barnett. "Barnett wenttoo far in some respects, but I(felt he was acting for the views ofa great majority of the people ofthe state of Mississippi ... Asgovernor of the state,” Barnettwas required by the responsibilityof his office to oppose a decreethat was not acceptable fto thepeople whom he represents.”decision of the federal courts?,68 per cent believed Barnett wrongin his opposition while 29 per centsupported his action.As to whether federal inter¬vention was necessary, 76 percentagreed that it was unavoidable.22 per cent said that it was un¬necessary.Comments against Barnett’s op¬position to the federal governmentran from, “no one, no matterhow important, has the right tooppose the federal government,”and "No federal union has achance of surviving when its mom- (CINW) — Post Number Six of the American Legionin Chapel Hill, North Carolina, has called for an investiga¬tion of alleged Communist activities at the Universitv ofNorth Carolina ^UNC). ‘The post passed this resolution .loft;st> groups here recently. Weat its meeting last week. It cites . „ . . _ • jx, , x. , ... assume the Legion has in mindthe formation of leftist orientedclubs at UNC as a cause for con- the Progressive Labor Club,cern. "But this is a very lame, veryJames Clotfelter, co-editor of puny reason for an ‘investigation*the Tar Heel, has lashed out at since the labor group is compara-the resolution editorially. "The Le- tivelv very tame and very puny,gion’s Americanism committee ap- "We hope the university will ig-parently convinced the local post nore this irresponsible demand, asto recommend an investigation of it has others in the past, and de-Communism at the University,” he vote its full attention to the busi-said. ness of education.”"The excuse for such a recom- The resolution was introduced bymendation is the emergency of Col Henry Royall, a retired Armyofficer. Members of his post pre¬dicted that the resolution will getstate-wide Legion approval. Theyfeel an investigation into Commu¬nist activities will not be harmfulto the university’s reputation* TheLegionaires stress that an inves¬tigation in itself does not meanthere are extensive Communist ac¬tivities on the campus.Clotfelter, in his editorial, calledRoyall the "most intemperate ofChapel Hill Redhunters,” and theAmerican Legion the "brave de¬fender of civil liberties-for-every-body-who-agrees-with-us.”Clotfelter also condemned theDurham Sun for printing an edi¬torial which claimed that the Com-^munist Party was running a tele¬phone'campaign. attempting to re¬cruit students on the North Caro¬lina campus."We assumed, parhaps presump¬tuously, that such an editorialwould have some facts to back itup. Apparently our assumption wasfalse.” Clotfelter wrote.SINAIFORUMMONDAYOctober 22, 8:15 p.m.Lawrence E. SpivakProducer and Panelist"Meet the Press"with IIrv Kupcinetand PanelIncludingHAL BRUNOStaff Member—NewsweekMagazineEDWARD EULENBERGStaff Member—ChicagoDaily NewsOSCAR MILLERProfessor of EconomicsUniversity of IllinoisROBERT NICHOLSONProfessor of HistoryUniversity of Illinoisin a"MEET THE PRESS"PROGRAM "Tareyton’s Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!”says Gaius (Shoeless Joe) Flavius, top discus slinger. “I’m a pack per diem man,” says Shoeless Joe, “andI can tell you every Tareyton gives me bonus flavor-de gustibus you never thought you'd get from any filtercigarette. Take a couple of pax vobiscum next time youcome to the Coliseum. Better still, buy ’em by the carton.”Dual Filler make» the differenceDUALfndvei of L*/mhk filterI uveytonM our mid Jit name" t* pc*-Students and their government must interact■ ■ M"m:.v/-ipc1.5!'Y'W$SS&t I; • Student fmvernmont is polonti-\ <1■ *f ", ■ ' ■ • Y Y- ■ • 'e 1’ / V g ■ •• • ’■■■( 1 c ,tlWith. There1' is no student it couldifdt engage in at least one wpilh-while program or project. ►However, judging liom recentSG tustotv and Tuesday's M»nieeting, we cannot help butant leipatr one.more y ear m w InchSri exhibit's nwiv potential thaw-progress.An orgam/at ion wivit h. t in orot t-cally at least,- draw s members-from every part of the campuscould and should make its infljkence felt bn every part of thecampus, Ii should sen e as aresponsible Ira son between" stu¬dents and taeulty. students andadminisf ra t ion.But SG has never established;meantnglul relations vvith the stu¬dents, fad! 1 i y, or • at 1 mi Mis t ral i o n,.:afl0 herein bes its greatest weak¬ness. ' 'SC.'s program is unique amongstudent gov ei nment-s on UntiedStates oarMpvises. It deals withissues of cenfeorri to Students qigiaTsftidenis djfWj students Qua Citi¬zens. It is eomposod of representa¬tives'' of both t'he graduate and•Undergraduate schools of UC. Itis controlled by one Of severalcampus political part ies, each ofWhich contains groups of studentsppogt%.hg bisttnct, or su^j-aaifatl’ydistinct, views on campus andnational affairs. And it does notWaste effofct Oh such activities; as,arranging homeoimings. choosing ” chcerleadei*stioP sponsoring; dances.Bather,-much ot its time and- ■ ’ - i ,i id ■ m i.« ' iPaction projects, such as protestingracial discrimination or tutoring7th'■and 8th gtadets in WoodlavvnYand into dealing with the nationaland internalional student eonimu-SG also works: dilligenlly toi ult ill aims stati'd m . it< const ltu-lion: fut thering The interest and- <1 ’ ' the,: welfare <>i all"■■■>: ■ - ■ . . ■■ ■ - - - • . • u::cooperating w ith l- nivet sit v auth-orities in handling such pioblemsas may a Meet a large number ofstudents, fostering a University(‘omniumlv : and repn sen, ing theentire student Ixktv / -It is "over tliis /last functionthat much .of■■the eon, ro.v ei sv: sur-tomrdmg se. .has a en. ■: '. docsnot represent the student bo<lyol UQ we. are told., * a *At the moment this max hetrue but if So. it .is the fault <>ithe studtnl bodv and not of SG.SG has always been a free andonen forum. Assembly and com-,mil tee meetings are open to anyst udent who vv ishes'to express hisopinion or just akserve. Arty Tenstudents may start” a new eatftpuspdl-itical party to enact theiropinions.But rattier t hat* take ste^S foguarantee that their interests arefurthered, the IV sludent bodyhas consistentlv refrained fromfrom participation and involve¬ment in- SG. . ,VLess than 14 of the studentbody .voted in last spring’s •glgc- lions.* Yqtcr'iymdilTerenceg 'how¬ever- ic no new phenomenon, and. 11 ■ .ind11It ir.ci’ arc- p cvalent oncampus,SG representatives themsdv es- ■ ' -...yd ... ’ . 'day night's met vv s di- olvedbecause of a lack ot. a quorumbefore SG cbuld Set oh its most■important business taking a- stand, t - ,the Xa.ti.QM hi Hefci-s. Ait loanprogiam | gWe could excuse this iifcidenlif it were not so tv.picai. All dm -' I ' yrY; ' ■ Y;' ■ .- .. .;. -•mot-e than tvv.o-jlunisol S(. s t ep-l-csetitativ cs at anv -one meetingIt is even rarer to see a monthelapse w iihoui t lit ■sev eral repi esoi - M ofllie, representatives win) do otattend meetings, aiid 'a good mini-ber o'" those who do, aic la-civlound w oi kin ■ on S(< omnGradiiale* students, vvhcb stand - toben/'f’i as ■ m-mil as imdei gi aduatesfrom SG’s service projectsleast arc - ines|>on-sible in this respect It is a con¬tinual sourCc of wondeimCiif. tous that SG can aceomphsh^ any¬thing at all in the I tee ot sucheliVonic ’apa t-hv.Ai-lhvir MacKwan. president of'SG. said in an interview Mondaythat he hopes to see SG continueall of its tortner la-c andtake on s» \. i al in w projects, allol w Inch would he valuable addi¬ tion to ,campus’and student life.,j SG sponsors many services for'.ill students* it runs a co-op book-•■ : , '.‘-"'G - o'. ' -o■l-.urope each summi r .. at ranges:‘discount interim bus and . planel ravel to New York administersi ■ -"nr ; • '•!>■ .it '«- vic< and -sells,used l ks Kv< u those studentswho voted lastv spnng to ,abolishSG benefit from t In se srt v ices.I t xi i SG sponsor<*d severalI - ’' '. I I . ■ . 1 vv hiei)< lus Hall.. Jimniv .1 lot fa and Mal¬colm 'X sjioke This year hew lec-i - : . ' ■ ■ . .h.-■ ■ ’• -: ;^ ’ VAnd n.i i ional ptobl< ms w ould bediscussed. s* ,I also , hop* s to I.. > hi p i o-. -lents - -liv ing . I < .t ional! louse into g< neral . arhpus life AsnvembiM ship . : the >< , -. a>-otnhlv‘s not ,1 prei (<pii-it( lo> pm I iripa-■Y- ■ ■■ ■ '■ - -■ ■: >"t tudentVw ho can participate-an th» sc , |nn-gtams'wtll help otgam/e themAllen defines Lens*0 t»R BTitTOR: There was no response’ t6 the" of nucleim weapons .to otherAt the IVI rally Sunday night, telegiam ot to .i lettm sent alter- countries.Barrett O’Hara referred at length wards by Lens offering to with- However, he has m xor opposedto the Volet’s for Peace campaign draw if OTIaia would aeec'pt the the Administration or the ldemo-/for. Sidney Lens. The Maroon two points era tic Party Leadership “on ‘anyquoted him in part as saving. In the follow mg tew dav s He m*y bill which they were actively“people were going from door to Wmcbeig chairman of Voters tor pressing lot He stated m Ivs in¬door saving ‘Beat O’Hara. He’s a. Peace. George Watson, Chairman tervieu with Voteis h,r Pcaie thatIvar-monger.’Voters for Peace does not con¬sider Mr. O’llara a “wapvmonggr.”W:e have recognized throughoutthis campaign the many goodthings wMeh tyflaffa ftMl dbn.e. ; of the Chicago section of Inde- he would not take positions oppos-pendent Voters of Illinois Prof, ing the administration for feai ofHubert. Hav ighursT from the U- “losing influence.”of C., and Sidney7 Lens, all caWed Hev has voted for all major mrli-®ir. 0*flAra in Washington. tary hills including ex tension olHe refused to make any com- t|10 ^raft, civil defense'aopiopi la-mitlmenl. stating first that h© tions military foreign aid ' includ-Hovvev’er, we feel that the arms had not time to consider i1. then jng amendment to increase therace itself i&.-the over-riding and, lhat he had lost the letter, and (.ulT(.nt mditai\ allotment bximmediate issue. Mr. O'Hara does so on. 200,000,000), and all of the basicappose .the arms race (in tad Kmullv Oll.ira stated that he defense tippropriation hillshe jusl voted for the most recent could not add these points to his ^ Qn 0lj10r issues, he has sup-mt lit ary budget meirase) and we platform a- he did not have a |)(>rted private ownerslnn of rom-;Ml. after much eonsidnation. platform but was iwnnmg on his inm,i,-itions -ateiites aiid recently,that we mu-st op]H)se him. - " past record and t hat he w ould ;i cpr-Cch oh the -'flov7! ofWe did not make this decision not give anv luithei iv.ictions Gongu ss coe< i i’ ul.it mg CI( nt i al-hastily. many people mho are now other than what he had said in his .ls!mi, Pmneiseo Franco on reach-supporting Lens have been close original inti rv iew with Votmior illL, h>s 2."ih v e-n- in eo- 11 ol otsupporters of O’Hara's for many Ponce. Spain., say ing that Francois inter¬years and ii is Jjy no trivyans a He Infer turned down two de- ;i;u] t|,e interests ,,l the l’S.simple choice lor them to now bales on the issAie. saving that wore- the: .same.:for Lens. uai-d committee meetings etc 7n L s < . , , , i Confess ••Before considering an ind< |ten- w-ould .yarke im his lime h(‘t\\een . .u.ihtch he sends to many of hisdent e-mdidaev Voters for Peace 11,0 adiournmenl ol Congte-s and constitm nts Ik included a stale-^•viiwed Mt'h O’Htna and Bix- ]- . . . - ' men, by Congressman M-*bon. as() Hara s roco'^d fe| i ail pjwplanatioiV why, he vototiclear He has, -taken several t the. latest: defensi' a)>propria-stands which, from the peace tion which reitresented an iivreasemovements txtints of view are Horn 2 veats ago ol ovei ST bil-“'uxxl ” or al lea=1 migh1\be con- lion. It <‘\plaincd tint the io-■ dered diet ter t han most ot her u as to lx- used for "Elimin-: ' ‘ ' ' ' ' C. 1 ' ' 1 ■ ( ;.([>", . Vmembt i o the House Tssentinllv the statemeilt sup-. grams' -w-ilk help orgai■ 'A ; .students on i'ni- ,n-n will be¬stir themselves to the point of .taking an aetiv,o mteres"t >inA*1he-many. Issues ill around themfrom the debate eii-ii >!!\ underx, as,-. - v>; , T v }'way about tho dinyljbnv 1 hoYFoiL-lege currieulum is going to take tothe injustice ;oi' racial ‘discrimina¬tion in Ilvde Paik as well as inMi-ssissippi, . . " -< >,n campus, w c hi}«' the stu¬dent body w ill .help SG becomethe student voice- which has yetto be heard We h< h. v e studentsshould be i .'-I,-1 • d on allt aeult y a nd. .i< I: i a ■ is -1., c com¬mit tops that dealiw ith student af-,fairs from housing io I'iiYineiaTaid. to i in a i. alum r. • o ni (inly:t hrough an organi/a, ion such asSG and its vat ions committees.will- the Students h< alile toachieve 1 his long-due ncognition:< inly- through, as vv.ide’x - basi-il aa-amptis organi/atior SC. will ■students be able to pioiesi, witli any chance at all for success, such'University policies as its supportof the revisions in the XI d 'crimination in neighbi "hood hous¬ing,"* unnecessary restrictions,<qnwomen's';■ hours, and unduly’Yhigh])t ices oir ti xt and trade book-, iMi. ■ <v (S to tie successful., t ■i/cd vc, - pus aetion, it must < on-vthrough ,SGWe urge'every UC stud-nt t*i r-.i Mm. t,. i is11 , he -si , ., . ,attend . ir- >- . tin et mg; i< - . ....SG commit it e We urge - ' >stmien, to inv estigato the eampieand n; > ional' issues S< <h al -ato at ti nd a nice, ing ol i1 - 'lion ,1. suidi in Association'-, i tow hiclv:,r v i > y t (' st ud< n, 1- •w liet hetv^he* know s fit^or no,) a,' ■- - 1 .s.c Xi •• 1 ■ ■ - ■ 1 ■ ' . "\\ e also in Vi M . to m.ikt a- von.cetle’d etfordGlo get ,the| studentbody ■ t * *t d m its \x,■! 1 • The: ’ " 1 " ’. ■ 1 ■ - 1 ■ ■ . t • • ."commm a . t a >n xx 11 h. the ( misTlu* s« . ’ ,- ■ ■ - >> ■ i..rea'li/t d goal, muslYbe*vdxsui d 'itg-ularh"' and >ot t. n S.G i-repi t - • g,I- -■■■■■•■ c a .| ■ Y - ''•-> 'In irgconst, im li¬nes about S,G piojeets and a< moiisSG ol I ra I s should \ isit ii-: h '■'! nd< 1'< 1 ■; 'i- Y; 1 ; ■ 11 ,. x it mg >(■'. ir-ni;eseh,a»ivtes. to address Mremt la n s(, i, p i s, nt at iv es shi *u'tl 11-quest p* lanissii.n to speak at m-’ ga i In I iiws like " r<uiSjjgh<at Till is i h. New I *< i • , let'’t(ure,fseriesY f■_ .W'-e.'v V.| V; ■-■' ' I" , l.:l !• ; . i..:Y ': ■-. : : ■} g.a'lt i-n ■- • ' . Yi V -i nil . If ; - 'been a 11 so i ni t he lack- o' von1aet w it b SG i at In -r than tin enuseof it And we sincerely In 'me'• 1 , 'A. IV-'can citna to-n tlier this yi ..* allthe sdoi niani,|>oJ-< ntialities in i G'sminim sy siem ok student goy-ernmi n, w ill b* 11 aii/«>d and , l . on-pus and the eommumtv vv ill 'neat¬ly profit. - • w 'r - , i t . Y kSymphony tickets areout of students ’ reachlet?. Iris Republican opponent. Nei¬ther candidate indieahed agreesmen, with any of the basic pointson Ihe VFP platform.' -allhoughMi: Bixlcr did indicate that liemight oppose the. adminisi; a' -(’ix.il 1 Viet ■ bill t ln<•that it was wasteful.The Second District Votoi s- forPeace group then begin to dis-.cuss<>wto liberals in thp area and is acapable w l iter and shaker and'■therefore was -chosen as the beslcandidate available. -However, the quest ion-of oppos¬ing Mr, O’Hara . <vas . st ill ■' un¬decided. A meeting was held at Foieign A (Tail's Cokimit tee. he has poits thet development* of pa ra¬in en \ i ■ \ stfone m ot)tH>s.ng mtli- militarv fm e< s to In-Id "M-xoftsll" moop nun >tan, aid - to Africa which mieht and subv ei sion against est aide h.d■s i hi mng a < UK c ,.te ot .t an , tnhroil it m the cold war i.Vfii- cov i-rnmeni s ’ as v.cll. ,is , i;i i lx"■ S" n,'> L?ns ls "oU-known (,in C()UlMrins are no, ,-eouesting missile developnyent.mater ntidit.tpy 'foreign aid) With Air O’Hara tunning onAlso, as a: member of that crmv- this reebrd Voters "for Peace fel,nrttee lie re.ported reernt ly that tlial i, m.iet run ils ow n eandi-he got several word changes in date if i, was to be able to .sup*the resolution reaffirming Ihe port any sort of pea.ee program inMiiniiH' Doctrine "to make if this election.clear that our }x>si.,ioii was one • .Voters for Peace hones to buildthe borne of Kale W glliams, ex- pf defense of our security and not up a group of voters in thi- -: •••■ecu,,iye seereta.iy ol the American ,,i aggression.” riet whose vote is available onlyF i lends Service Committee, with He went on to say. however to -undid,tl<s who will -uppo* t at.leaders Horn Independenl -Voters "ii L impel a, :\e that a reso- least via it ol a p<>ae(v platform. 'Fiveof Illinois, .siyvei al unions, wane, hi,ion declaring Congressional ap- group feels 1hat .no major partyV,’omen’s International League, tor (>r< >v;, | ,,| our lorcnrn policy in a candidates will begin to incorpor-Peaee and Fieedoirt, Women lor critical -area should be .tdonted bv ate the pioblem of ending IheHr, ice Si Mdcr.i Hi-ace l- imhi. and moils \ ole or. rod ea.ii iii bo, h arm-- Vuce in Id Ids j.!. < t form, untilTWR. Tow ard/Pmiee This gioup | ious« md Sen ill thus showing i peace const it hoik v demandsdecided unanimously to,send Rep- national mvn ” n at the ballot boxresontative D’Uara a telegiam rn 1‘ttvl to; Hu onlx v - v i: ol Ids \s long as the peace movementa.sk’ing hini to-eome out in-su))|)oi, . f,U'e'l.v e in Congress : he voted sn|>|K)i-b-i.s are willing do ' o», loiof txxo tioinis in the V.Ft* plat-, against appropriations to llie eai.'didates w in. do not 'P al p ithopposition lo ti sling and a House Un-Ameiiean Activities this piohb m then' >s no • <<.nphfisod tedm lion of the arms Committee Hi , Pi, -'ippn'inl the lor the eandidati o , | utnian.budget . p, , ce Corps and vybrked aeti.ye-1 t e\ or eh a e. y' ' ' iOn ibis basis4Iptefs foi Peace for-', the Aim*? Conliol and His? , Pi TE Al 1 I, Nxxo'uld have i ndorsed and w.or-kcd imiami ill \**• i > mil in the G.\ P P ' ni Roast ■ ■ i.nnosi-u (listi ibulion. FOR SI-1) I.FNS, We would like to mark therecent ‘beginning1 of the ('lli-engo SNinpImtix season bjf<)iiesl ion ing* t It e < hvhe.st ralAssociat ion’s polit i< s coticci n-ing-so-called st’wdent rates.\ It hough the association has,span d . cl V eXpclo, 11V its Uni-\ (>i sity public;i v «.imp.ugns. son,resiudi nts havi disco c ( d th ii they, an obtain gnlltiv scats Fndayafternoon concerts lot Ihe nomi-I lee of SI. This sounds quitei .'ason.ihle unt il one < onsidcis howl«‘vv students are lr<e eaily Ft i-,if 1 c i noon and how few stu-dt nts know any Hung about 1h<*Associat ion's magnai mity. In ad-dilion lo take advantage ot theassociation's :,spce'aciilur oflct',s,ud( nts must pm i h si ih< ii 1 :< k-ets at l( IS, o' V. non1 I" lore theperformance "begins.The offer pales even motequickly when Mir- < ( " S.vtn-.phony’s eiflei i- compared withpractice s ol s\ innlionii - m ot Hercities.^In; lVo.ston. siudi nts ..can attend/open r,e-hearsa is on hi idav al,ei>... '"/■ ■: .. ■ /;■' - <P/':i'i" xare allowed le, -H anywhere1, inthe house. Reheats,ah in Chipagohave traditionally - been e-losi et i asar# recording sesdonst.'The; New Yen k . Sy mphony ol-I e*1 s sonic duo ticket s e ach w e ekto stude nts in the N- w York CityIn add.it ton, i, giv es a set iesot. special concerts to. junior and'senior high school students eachseason. This horns; to lY- a betterw ay to firing. good naisie to thesi udeirl .t han .a.liuit t ing luin onlyon I- 1 iday a: u i noonsThe. Phjlad* Iphia Symphony ;ip-proaehes'’ the mtViesjTd ' studentin anothvr way It p escnis a spe-- /. ■ ■ • - / ]' . a a" dio alt i,at the e-olle g'-lcvel stu¬dent. The Pniladejplna \0i ehestraAsmk iaiion. ako. -pi - nts a Pen-Sioti d 'oiieert svi ivs ,:'|,<n:. xx hiell sill's. ele l'i S iiiide'i 21 y ears of age niavpurchase a-jiaii of tickets lop »he. si -in 'v ;,n y.'). l tie.se - ate r i vseats; how o\ ei 1 n aeidit t«ui wvi’-Tal huneli e «l si ats ate offer* d ->t apo |h r i in ep-vomit .to..si- '-attending ilk d 'ntversity'ol R> mi-- i min , .r;' - ’ ■ -l"; I " 1 > 'III St'l(eial ton’s' -student rate plan ■! > • -from those menytioned alnyve inseveral imjteu'iant ways. • "; Firs' tr. nil" i each* t e h-ev*:])l-mne'd! pi ©grams * aimed a, tl,**.students. All these oi/ehcs,-rasate *-one* t neef about 'Cultivating1 hi si ud. nt \ in,.a es, in in - •"at l< is! IV Iniddltl" lutu . . poi fCl'S.Seeonel s,het> oilier qrohe'li »«a< i n i Iv piibln i/e their si nd, ntprograms. They '-se . m an' inii- '«■i siiid' nts coni.'I hire! the n p .hcivs ;uv n-.' i ' ■s,i icie'd to onjc-day-a-weck aiue-1 iooi' i Oin < 1'Frank)' it is d if in jit "de i -stand w) v rhV ( hie ..v. sv i>" donv„ has , show n -.no" more, tha'n th»sI"di11 si voncc! n . for cur . "in.'the la' ge sltldi i I ma i i • !•'‘ ' 1 -,■ \\ > tlllld I II' ( » chest I . \ si,,i''Hon sp,,ole) lake: two sieU'- •Fits, H should irisl-BaPe ahreade i pi ogtam of sf udi r’ *1 m-Counts a net concerts: reduc d m-rie; 1 ie-.kots’’should not be confinnl *<»the Fi iday. afternoon set ies’ >Vesuspect that financial loss v ouldhe Oil -si I le J In new suppoi i1 i'the S\ ii,phonv u ould gain:And second, with,a new con¬ductor some'jn vest igat ion into the■possibilities eif opening n ■•'■is,»land i o d rig s, vvioi, , .1 in-should h> underlaken., We’hope sjudenls,saD-md: 0,1 her coP.'ges n tl<l; UnixT'l S ' < s u,the C . , ii ea feel st-onglvenough ;-.b<iii, t he- Orchesl i ,/s pol¬icies ,0 v , i»e to Hie O , ■ iAssociation and urge it tq eon-sider implementing our m r< *t ior is * 'I4 * CHICAGO MAR O ON • Oct. 18. 1962 4•But sir, this js Skin Bracer. They'vejust changedthe bottle.Shall I open it now. sir?”Mro * * r* *skin bracer,**, «*» A >« «.V «fr‘I’ve told you that Skin Bracercools rather than burns.Because it's made with Menthol-Ice."Quite, sir. And this..."'Besides, that crisp, long-lasting Braceraroma has a fantastic effect on girls."There are three majorfunctions of the UC MusicDepartment, according toLeonard B Meyer, depart¬ment chairman. The first of these;s to provide classroom trainingfor those taking courses in musicthe second is to foster creativescholar-ly work among studentsand faculty. The third is to pro¬vide musical activity for the en¬tire student body.The second function is per¬formed partly through the Collegi¬um Musicum, the University Sym¬phony, and the Musical Society,all of which provide an opportuni¬ty for students to perform, aswell as listen, to music. This pro¬gram is augmented by the depart¬ment-sponsored Chamber MusicSeries.The Chamber Music Series liasbeen arranged, according to Me¬yer, with the TIC student body inmind. As a result, the programs,which were chosen jointly by thedepartment and the participatingartists, stress music of the twen¬tieth century. This Is, Meyer con¬tends, the ‘‘students* music”: mu-vie of their generation.Tn effect, Meyer sees t ho seriesas a challenge to UC students. Ifthey are sincere in their vigorousdeclarations of their membershipin tiie present century fas wit¬ness, for example, the “contem¬ porary” manner of dress whichdominates the campus), theyshould be more than willing tosupport the Chamber Music Ser¬ies.It must be borne in mind thatthe concerts are not a money mak¬ing venture. If Mandel Hall werecorfsistently filled, 75 per cent ofthe audience being students, theseries would just about breakeven. Last year, says Meyer, theseries lost money, due to a rathersmall turnout.The Chamber Music Series fea¬tures such noted performers asGunther Schuller, Irmgard See-fried, and Paul Jacobs, as well asprograms which augment, ratherthan duplicate, those presented bythe other musical groups, both oncampus and in the Loop. Later inthe year, for example, there willhe an additional concert, not partof the series, which will be co¬sponsored by the ContemporaryConcerts. This will feature, amongother works, the Chicago premierof Pierre Boulez’ ‘‘Le Marteausans Maitre,” which Meyer com¬pares to the Chicago premiere ofStravinsky’s “Le Sucre du 1’rin-temps.” -Meyer firmly believes that ifthese concerts fail to attract theUC sludenl body, there can onlyhe grave doubt as to the depthof students’ "progressive” nature.PETER RABINOWITZMusic EditorFellowships awardedTwo UC faculty membershave been given fellowshipsto work at the Center for Ad¬vanced Study in the Be¬havioral Science at Stanford, Cali¬fornia, this year.They arc Peter M. Blau, Asso-riate Professor in the Departmentof Sociology and Education, andPhillip W. Jackson, Associate Pro-lessor in the Department of Edu¬cation.The Director of the Center,I’.alph W. Tyler, said The purposeof the Center is “to help univer¬sities strengthen their human re¬sources for advanced research andtraining in the behavior scienceI ields.”Prior to his appointment as Di¬rector in 1953 at the Center'sfounding, Tyler was Dean of theDivision of (lie Social Science atCalendar of Events UC. Fifty scholars from the lead¬ing universities of the world are%meeting at the Center to studysuch things as: the relationshipbetween the behavior patterns ofsub-human primates and man;how body structure is related tobehavior in the group; and howbehavior is related to evolutionarydevelopment.| ClassifiedGrad, woman wants to share ant. CallMI 3-1972.1939 Ford or Triumph 10. Back seatsfold down in station wagon. STanley 8-9243.For rent: sublease 2 bedroom air con¬ditioned apt. 55 and Hyde Park Blvd.1135. PL 2-3457.1954 Ford r&h. new clutch & transmis¬sion. good motor, body matured. $85.BU 8-4067.SINGERS WANTED .volunteer Episcopalchurch choir. 667-27 39 evenings.For sale: 12 bar autoharp. $35. 374-2432conference, Ednarounds, northCynr Pathology1 oisant Hall, 12:00.dical house staffIcisement 29-A, 12:80.momentary Yiddish class, Hillel Foun¬dation, 4:00.Ghstetrics and Gynecology clinical'inference, Dora DoLoe Hall. 4:30.Lecture: ‘‘Chemical Reactions PoringV us Invasion.” L. M. Kozloff, Vrofes-nr. department of biochemistry, Zoo¬logy 14, 4:30.Medical-surgical-pediatric eardiac con¬ference, north basement 29-A, 5:00.Lutheran Vespers, Bond Chapel. 5:05.Inter-varsity*^ Christian Fellowshipmeetings, Billy Graham reerodmg, IdaNoyes, 7:00.Meeting: Actors Company, Ida Noyes.7 :30,Hindu - Christian Discussion Series:What is Man?”, Room B. InternationalHouse, 7:30.Meeting:s :00. History Club, Ida Noyes, Take good care of your child in myhome. HY 3-7443.For rent (option to buy). Small com¬pletely modern year round house part¬ly furnished. One block from IndianaDunes State Park. 45 minutes fromUC campus, mile from only free,public beach between Gary and Michi¬gan City. Rent: $7 0 per month til5/30/63. Sale $6000. Immediate pos¬session. WH 4-2779.For rent (option to buy) 2 bedroom,furnished, modernized, year round farmhouse. Center of 15 wooded acres. Onemile from Tremont (Indiana DunesState Park) 45 minutes from UC campusRent $80 until 5/30/63. Sale $22,000.Possession 11/1/62. WTH 4-2779..Shorelane apts. 5133 S. Kenwood, offersl to 3'2 efficiency units. Attractivelyappointed, month to month occupancy.$80 and up. Elevator, fireproof building,manager on premises.lecture Series: ‘‘Nuclear Science andAgriculture,” Sir William Kershaw Sla-f,r, U.N. Department of Scientific andindustrial Research, Law School Audi¬torium, 8:00.Meeting: Married Students Assoria-1 lon, Ida Noyes, 8:00.Discussion: ‘‘It the U.S. Still a Rovo-dionary Country?”, Hans J. Morgen-tliau, professor, department of politicalscience and history, Ida Noyes, 8:15.COLOR DEVELOPINGPREPAID MAILERS8 mm Roil, 3 mm 20 *xp S1.2935 mm. 36 exp $1.98MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTS CAN YOU TYPE AT LEAST75 WPM WITH UNUSUALACCURACY ?A publisher ol programmed textsis looking for a typist to makeplates on our IBM executivetypewriter, on piecework. A fasttypist should make between 52.50and $4.00 an hour, anytimeduring business hours.For appointment call:TYLER THOMPSONat AN 3-1270. ext, 49Accelerated InstructionMethods Corporation179 N. MICHIGANCHRISTMAS FOLDERSFOR YOUR OWN BLACK AND WHITE PRINTS.Also Arrange for Color Prints forChristmas Folders Now.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEHours: Monday-Friday 8 - 5; Saturday 8 - 12 If I were an artist, I wouldwrite novels to refute the newstyle in literature, the anti-hero and its absurdum, theimages of Ayn Rand. These vari¬ous and stylish insights appeal toan honest and admirable consci¬ousness we flatter ourselves to callmodern.It is the knowledge that mancan be and often is a parasite;and moreover a weak parasite;and moreover a snivelling one.And his snivellings are those ofhis fears, calling out for twowomb-like images, one terrestrialand one wav bevond, in the dark¬ness beyond the stars’ knownlight.Two wombs: the first a windlesscave in which “man serves man”means men serve me and Ireci-procale with mimimally necessarywork — this me lying on a auiltedcouch, and though he doesn’t workmuch, retaining physical youthand beauty, thankful for such (forit is fitting that it all should behis;) and the second womb is thecircle of darkness he cannot know,but to which he can give histhanks—thanks for the fact, of hisown holiness that makes this idyl¬lic life seemly, thanks for its bene¬ficence (which, smiling upon hismaintenance, surely will pre¬serve), and thanks for its being(that is, relieves his questioningthat it is.)Conscious that this parasite,snivelling, fearful man reversthese wombs merely because hewants them, and holds them to be holy for all men merely becausehe is weak—conscious of this, thenew hero condemns these imagesof Utopia and God.My answer to him would be this.If Utopia and God are not legiti¬mately sacred (and they are not,)I embrace his condemnation ofthem. And I commend those im¬pulses within him to answer thesniveller that, he must face hisown nature and weakness honest¬ly.If we call the man who followshis own nature, rather than anydream-invented “good,” selfish,then I raise my little voice withthe angry crowd that man, if heis honest, must recognize his sel¬fishness. But I would say one thing t©the crowd; that it is in man’s sel¬fish nature to fulfill certain func¬tions which ’have “got a badname” because the snivellers, tojustify their own weakness, haveincorporated them into their rhe¬toric; these functions are kind¬ness, productiveness, compassion,altruism ... all united into a wordthat some of the most flagrantsnivellers or all time have used.That word is, of course, love.Because, as a selfish man, I holdman’s selfishness to be scared, Ihold love to be sacred.Were I an artist, I would hopeto see my books competing withAyn Rand’s at the grocery store.—Dennis OliverMothers' Aid fetes leadersMothers’ Aid, which hasraised over a million dollarsfor the Chicago Lying-In Hos¬pital, honored past leaders ata tea yesterday in Ida Noyes Hall.Ten past presidents and onecharter member of the Mothers’Aid were presented certificates ofmerit by Charles L. Goulet, super¬intendent of the University ofChicago hospitals and clinics.The auxiliary, founded as a sew¬ing group in 1904, has grown toover 1700 members. Though Moth¬ers’ Aid still provides the hospitalwith more than 3000 articles eachyear, the sewing committee playsonly a small part in the group’sactivities.Among its major benefactionsWBBM to air UC seriesThe World of the Paper-*back, a radio series producedby the University of Chicago,has announced its programsfor the coming two weeks. Theseries is heard Sundays -at 10 pmon WBBM radio, 780 kc., Chicago.This Sunday night visiting pro¬fessor of political science JohnRoche will talk with DonaldMeiklejohn, professor of philos¬ophy. They will discuss Amitai Etzioni’s The Hard Way to Peace:A New Strategy.Perrin Lowrey, head of the hu¬manities section, and Merlin Bow¬en, associate professor of human¬ities will be featured on October28.Bowen, author of The Long En¬counter, an interpretation of Her¬man Melville’s works, will discussMelville’s books available in paper¬back editions. has been its gift for the Mothers’Aid Pavilion, which was used asan isolation building for mater¬nity cases with communicablediseases. When medical progressmade such a unit unnecessary,Mothers’ Aid made possible theremodeling of the pavilion intoresearch laboratories and an out¬patient clinic.Or. Spock to speakin behalf ef CosbeyDr. Benjamin Spock, in¬creasingly concerned aboutthe harmful effects of fallout,is coming to Chicago to speakon behalf of Professor Robert C.Cosbey, a peace candidate run¬ning in the 13th district.Spock, author of best sellingbooks on child care, believes thearms race to be a blind fromwhich no one will escape. Hisdistress at the callousness towardshuman safety being shown byboth sides has been expressed bythe full page ads that he has pur¬chased in newspapers throughout,the country.The meeting at which he willappear, will be held on October30 at McCormick Place. NormanThomas, socialist leader, will alsoappear on the program.‘DOUR AFTER-SHADE LOTIOHSIR”#ACTUAUY, YOU OON T E0 A VALET TO APPRECIATE M*NNEN SKIN BRACCR. ALL YOU NEtP IS A fACtlOct. 18, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON 5A t “WESKINS” SUCKSHe-man Western stylingcombined with sophisticatedcontinental trimness. Twofront half-moon pockets andrear patch pockets. Meat,cuff less bottoms tapered toa mere 13". Heavy dutycotton twill in faded bluedenim, sand, pewter, black.495SEPTEMBER ONLYSPECIAL DISCOUNT10% Off on $5 or morewith student identification,OPEi SUNOAYS 8:ALTCSTt§11 Wfeis You WasASH • CRCOIT -more bodyin the blendmore flavorin the smokedCD more tastethrough the filter FILTERSuoarrr t myths tobacco co. $IrERS•i rent TOBACCO COIt s the ricli-flavor leaf that does ill Among L&M‘s choice tobaccos there's moreof this longer-aged, extra-cured leaf than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. Andwith L&M’s modern filter—the Miracle Tip—only pure white touches your lips.Get lots more from L&M—the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke.No one. since Louis RMayer and Dore Schary, hasdone more for Hollywood thanStanley Kramer. In the daysof Mayer, Hollywood was lit¬tle more than a sausage fac¬tory, bringing the gap betweenaudience and studio with links andlinks of Kitschwurst. In thoseprosperous days of the GreatStudios, everyone from grinder tofaster had it easy. Even beforethe grinding, the Head Grinder,or Producer, disposed of allGrade-H ingredients — politicsand poverty, seduction and rape,whatever resisted grinding.Then, with a few easy turns ofthe handle, the Grade-A gotground. Out came the good cow¬boy whose six-shooter, because itwas deserving, shot seven times; the bad girl who not only gotwhat was coming to her. but. onsome principle of moral economy,got the bullet meant for the goodguy; and then the bad guy whosimply got what was coming tohim, The ingredients were easilyground, and the taster had nodifficulty in separating this saus¬age from the few good Hollywoodfilms around.But the fat days came to ailend. Schary ousted Mayer: ser¬ious art ousted sentimentality.And. in this time of the famine,Schary eliminated the disposalstage. Controversial Grade-B in¬gredients began to go into theGrinder. Everything, according tothe Schary principle, is grindable.Reality has no gristle too toughfor a good Grinder.As a result of this contribution to Hollywood, we can now seefilms like All Fall Down, in whichDaddy's just an old Socialist, orBachelor Party, in which it is ad¬mitted that single men have somedoubts about marriage. (The word"abortion” occurs in this last).Nothing has changed — no realissues, the world divided intoGood and Evil *— except thatstronger arms are needed for theGrinder; and more delicate pal¬ates to taste the difference.Kramer’s Judgment At Nurem¬berg is Schary Kitschwurst, butof so special a brand that Kramerdeserves to be ranked as "oneof your Hollywood greats.” Takethe Schary. its casting —• thetechnique — is a debasement ofthe innovations of real film¬makers. Circular trolleys. 300 de¬gree pans, constant rooming (which must have cut down pop¬corn consumption), documentaryblack and white, back screen pro¬jection of footage of Berlin inthe 1940's — all pointless andflashy.Sample the linkage: a cut fromsomeone ending a sentence withthe word "nothing” to a radioannouncement beginning with thesame word; a cut from Germanbeer steins thumping to SpencerTracy’s gavel pounding.Like the Mayerwurst, sex is thespice, but in the form of warcrimes. (Like if tfye FCC saysthere is too much violence on theTV screen, show- the same bloodand gore with Ren Gasev offi¬ciating.) The tested Hollywoodtrope, diverting from the issue, ishere. too. Did the butler reallyknow about the concentrationcamps? Was Clift realiv mentalJvdeficient? Before or after steril¬ization? Did Judy Garland havesexual relations with a Jewishman? This is inexcusable in afilm containing the Dachau andBel sen footage.But what is Kramer’s newbrand? Both Mayer’s — "Noth¬ing hut the best goes in” —- anilSehary’s —• “Nothing hut the bestcomes out” — never differentiatedfrom link to link.Kramer advertises. "A link for-everyone.” Instead of grinding hisingredients into one simple typical Hollywood moral framework, hehas ground them into a numberof simple typical Hollywood moralframeworks. Each link is a ques¬tion. not an issue, along with ;isimple ‘Yes’ and a simple ‘No’answer.Who is responsible? Everyone?Yes, says Schell. Churchill andAmerican industrialists included.Not everyone? The Germanpeople? Yes, says Widmark. th •>knew about the concent ra I !<ncamps. No. say the servants. t<"little people don’t know whattheir government does.Then only those in power? No,says Dietrich in a Jean Louisgown, after singing a few bars ofLili Marlene, my husband wasmerely a military man. Yes, sa;dthe court which sentenced him todeath. Then only those in powerwho were in a position to know,who sent people to the camps?No, says Schell, these judges weremerely applying the law of theland. Yes. says Tracy, when hesentences them. Or isn’t know -ledge of the camps the only Issue?Tracy cuts Lancaster dead withthat.Should the I’.S. judge? Yes.says Tracy, by judging. No, saysSchell, not after Hiroshima andNagasaki. No. for another reason,says the general, and Widmark(by not delivering his summing-up), we need the support of theGermans in the Cold War.The questions and answersnever cease until we are certainof only two statements: "TheNazis were beasts,” and, as thecaptain proclaimed at the begin¬ning of each session. “God blessthe United States and this tri¬bunal.”The Grinder has done an ex¬cellent job; the tasters have not.They think the film is good be¬cause they agree with one of tin-questions and/or answers. (Sch-lesinger. in Show, picked the ColdWar; other politicos find the filma cynical commentary on US for¬eign policy). Kitsch never doesmore than reinforce audience at¬titudes, hut Kramer’s brand hasan attitude for everyone.Is it better to raise these mat¬ters in any form than not toraise them at all? T don’t knowBut this looks like the Show Biz"I don’t care what they say aboutme as long as they spell my nameright.” And here even the nameis spelled wrong.(Please see Resnais* Night andFog).TemanerWFMT will recordRockefeller carillonThis Sunday, radio stationWFMT will begin a seriesof stereo recordings of theRockefeller Chapel Carillon.The series will feature the Bachsolo violin Partitas and Sonatasas interpreted by RockefellerChapel Carilloneur Daniel Robins.The three hour recording ses¬sions will be held once each monthuntil the winter.They will be clearly audible inNew’ Dorms.Wise*3951958PLYMOUTH ..Automatic TransmissionRadio, HeaterA Real BuyBring in Ad for This PriceGruby’s Rambler4555 S. CottageBO 8-1111• HCal students file suitFour students at the University of California's Riverside campus have asked for awrit of mandamus against the Regents of the University, President Clark Kerr andRiverside Chancellor Herman T. Speith.The suit arose out of Speith’s refusal to allow Dorothy Healy, a member of theSouthern California Communiststudents) of their freedom ofLess than six per centcast vote at RooseveltLess than six per cent of_ . ftn lh„ sP^h and assemb,y as guaran- stated, in announcing plans for theParty, to speak on the Riveiside teed by the first and fourteenth appeal to the Fourth Districtcampus. amendments and Article 1, sec- Court.estate Snnreme Court ruled tions 9 and 10, of the California T , , ,The t»tate supreme <~ourt ruiea stitutinn’* Last May. a motion was intro-that it would not take cases in- tonswuuon. duced in the University Studentvolving freedom of speech on di- Thomas J. Cunningham, vice- Government to file an “amicusrect appead from a Superior court, president and general counsel for curiae” brief on behalf of theIn May, the Riverside Superior the University, argued that the Riverside students. Any interest-Court had denied the suit, thus Regents’ decision to ban Commu- ed party may file such a brief,upholding the speaker ban. nist speakers is a policy decision although the Court need not ac-Thc students, members of De- .does no< concern constitution- cept it.clare, a liberal organization at a ng s‘ . However, when the brief wasRiverside, have now appealed to He claimed that the Univer- prepared and presented to thethe California Fourth District sity is a private corporation char- government’s Executive Commit-Court. tered under state law. “Rights of tee, it was defeated amid rumorsThey attacked the ban on the speak and assemble on of administrative pressure againstgrounds .hat It “constitutes a do- **™veh™'ca™pps It.„ial of petitioners (the Riverside of prohib^ting Communist * spokesman (or the Universityers -> said that the district court's de-’_, cision on the appeal will not be, ‘ ’ n m general counsel for made for more than eight months,the Southern California Civil Lib- Time had beon allotted for botherties Union and attorney for the parties lo file briefs.students, directed the appeal. The UniVersity.s brief has not“The decision of the Superior yet been prepared, nor have thethe Roosevelt University stu- ^our^ < denying the original peti- Riverside students filed their ar¬dent body voted in last week's Uon) was not uncxPected,” he guments.Integration dispute at Dukeimputation of approximately 5600. . ^ TT .T.ast spring. 2063 students of TTM D.Uke University the policy for seven members of theabout 6000 voted in UC’s Student University of California foot-" Cal team-Government elections. In 1961, ball team found itself tangled The Holiday Inn has been the1183 students out of a tolal Quad- in an integration dispute. site of periodic sit-ins by the Con-rangles enrollment of 5360 cast Local Negroes picketed the Kress on Racial Equality (CORE),votes in the SG elections. Last Holiday Inn, where the Cal team The sit-ins were stopped this sum-year’s vote was an all-time high, was staying, because of the motel mer> however, because managerKnovval Harding promised to in¬tegrate the hotel. Gorden Carey,program director of CORE, saidthat. Harding had rescinded hispromise to open the motel to allNegroes. Harding says that henever made such a promise. “AtAt the University of New Mexico, the Student Council no time did 1 promise total inte-recently defeated a proposal which would ban discrimina- Kratlon” he said-tion by landlords listed with the University Student Hous- The pickets said that they con¬ing Office. sidered the motel’s decision to ac-firm stand.” cept the California Negroes a“If we leave it as is, we’re no “ridicule of the North CarolinaAnti-discrimination bidfails at New MexicoBy a seven lo five vote, theCouncil defeated a resolution todiseHmina<tiOTCaaga?nstel"NemUs slppi” OTmmenled Almira White- integration. “I bet Ihey wouldand (oreign students. The Univer- sido- Council member - let Ralph Bunche stay here - but, suspended its normal segregation not us, one picket said,sity currently maintains listings of ^ & b ’ 1rentals available to students, butdoes not screen such housing fornon- discrimination.At present, many Negro andforeign students must settle forsub-standard rentals, usually inthe Negro ghetto of Albuquerque. . , , ,The proposal measure would The loyalty oath controversy will again come to.a headhave insured that each landlord on October 22, when h, University of Washington case willwho wished to be listed by the be heard in the U. S. District Court in Seattle.Si udent Housing Office wouldhave to agree that he would notrefuse to rent on racial grounds.Councilman Chuck Wellborn op¬posed the resolution, staling thatit was not yet necessary. “Leaveit alone until it is forced uponus.” he advised. better than the people of M.ssis- Negro,” rather than a victory forU of Wash loyalty oathcase heard in US courtAt this time the court will possibly rule as to theconstitutionality of the oath,which has been a subject of con- ington professors with tenure filedtroversy and court action in a claim similar to the one whichWashington for the last seven will be considered. The DistrictCourt then judged that the oathwas unconstitutional, and the U.S.Supreme Court refused to hear theyears. (The direct defendants of theStudent body president Dennis suit are President Odengard of casoReady said that he was . . the University of Washington, theextremely disappointed the meas- Board of Regents of the school,and the attorney general of theure did not pass. This is one issueon which we should have taken aBrown Frats orderedto realign activitiesBrown University's 17 so¬cial fraternities have been or¬dered by the University cor- In Jarkiary of this year theSupreme Court unheld its refusal,...... , ., by declaring that the Universitysigh- o( WashmgtomThejmt was of Washingt* n facultJI lenure cod(,provides for a hearing before thefiled in June, after Odengard sentvolved do not have tenure. There¬fore, the Supreme Court mightmore readily consider the case.to be in office by 1972George Lincoln Rockwell,speaking at Carleton College,predicted that members of bisa letter to all faculty membeis djsrnjssaj Qf (enured professors,end employees of the university , , . ...telling them that they had Id* In suit however,sign the oath by the end of Sept- ■”“?,»> tte, P^ssors >n-ember.The oath the faculty was askedto sign is divided into two parts.poration to expand, improve, in the first, which most of the Rockwell predicts Nazisand align themselves with the faculty members did not object to,“central purposes”/ of the univer- the professor simply declares hissity community. allegiance to the United StatesThe order, with a threat of the and the state of Washington,loss of fraternity houses, was is- In lhe second section, how-sued by the corporation in an ac- e he is asked to swear that . , .... . , , ,lion approving the report of a he is not a “subversive person” Nazi Pai‘ty Will be elected tojoint, corporation - faculty com- as defined by the state of Wash- hiSh public office by 1972.mil tee s year-long study of all as- jngton an(j that he is not and After a speech on the faults ofpec s of undergraduate life. bas n0(_ ever knowingly been a communism, Russia, democracyEach fraternity wishing to re- member Gf the Communist party a n d Americans, Rockwell ex-less of fraternity houses, was is- or any other ''subversive'’ orga- claimed, “I believe in race. Thelam its present living and dming nization.- white race has built Western Civi-quarters at Brown was ordered .. .. , ai.- i au¬to increase the academic average Objectors to the loyalty oath Ration and ^e„ thlnk *hls raceof its members to a point which claim the definitions of “subver- should dominate,does not in any four consecutive sive person” and “subversive or- Rockwell was speaking in thesemesters fall more than two- ganization” are too hazy, but that chapel of Carleton College 1o atenths of a point below the all- strict interpretation of the defini- group of students. The studentscollege average. They were also tions could lead to persecution and had been told that he would notordered to “maintain a general infrigement upon both personal appear if rallies or other distur-program of activities consonant and academic freedoms of the bances -occurred. They remainedwith the central purposes of the signers. silent, except for a few hisses,university.” In 1955, two University of Wash- throughout his speech. HAPPINESS CAN’T BUY MONEYCan education bring happiness?This is a question that in recent years has caused muchlively debate and several hundred stabbings among Americai*college professors. Some contend that if a student's intellectis sufficiently aroused, happiness will automatically followOthers say that to concentrate on the intellect and ignore therest of the personality can only lead to misery.I myself favor the second view, and I offer in evidence thewell-known case of Agathe Fusco.Agathe, a forestry major, never got anything less than astraight “A”, was awarded her B.T. (Bachelor of Trees) inonly two years, her M.S.B. (Master of Sap and Bark) in onlythree, and her D.B.C, (Doctor of Blight and Cutworms) inonly four.Academic glory was hers. Her intellect was the envy ofevery intellect fan on campus. But was she happy? Theanswer, alas, wras no. Agathe—she knew not why—was miser¬able, so miserable, in fact, that one day while walking acrosscampus, she was suddenly so overcome with melancholy thatshe flang herself, weeping, upon the statue of the Founder.By and by a liberal arts major named R. Twinkle Plenty cameby with his yoyo. He noted Agathe’s condition, “How comeyou’re so unhappy, hey?” said R. Twinkle.“(Suppose you tell me, you dumb old liberal arts major,”“All right, I will,” said R. Twinkle. “You are unhappy foetwo reasons. First, because you have been so busy stuffingyour intellect that you have gone and starved your psyche. I’vegot nothing against learning, mind you, hut a ^person oughtn’tto neglect the pleasant, gentle amenities of life—the funthings. Have you, for instance, ever been to a dance?”Agathe shook her head.“Have you ever watched a sunset? Written a poem? Smokeda Marlboro Cigarette?”Agathe shook her head.“Well,we’ll fix that right now!”said R.Twinkle and gave hera Marlboro and struck a match.She puffed, and then for the first time in twelve or fifteenyears, she smiled. “Wow!” she cried. “Marlboros are a fun thing!What flavor! What filter! What pack or box! What a lot tolike! From now on I will smoke Marlboros, and never haveanother unhappy day!”“Hold!” said R. Twinkle. “Marlboros alone will not solveyour problem—only half of it. Rememlter I said there weretwo things making you unhappy?”“Oh, yeah,” said Agathe. “What’s the other one?”“How long have you had that l>ear trap on your foot?”said R. Twinkle.“I stepjied on it during a field trip in my freshman year,”said Agathe. “I keep meaning to have it taken off.”“Allow me,” said R. Twinkle and removed it.“Land sakes, what a relief!” said Agathe, now totally happy,and took R. Twinkle’s hand and led him to a Marlboro vendor'sand then to a justice of the peace.Today Agathe is a perfectly fulfilled woman, both intellect-wise and jiersonalitvwise. She lives in a darling split-levelhouse with R. Twinkle and their 17 children, and she still keepsbusy in the forestry game. Only last month, in fact, she becameConsultant on Sawdust to the American Butchers Guild, shewas named an Honorary Sequoia by the park commissioner ofLis Vegas, and she published a best-selling book called I wona Slippery Elm for the FBI. © ***2 Sliul"'*“* * *The makers of Marlboro are pleased that Agathe is Rnallyout of the woods—and so will you be If your goal is smokingpleasure. Just try a Marlboro.THE SAFE WAYto stay alertwithout harmful stimulantsNoDoz keeps you mentally Next time monotony makesalert with the same safe re- you feel drowsy while driving,fresher found in coffee and working or studying, do astea. Yet NoDoz is faster, millions do ... perk up withhandier, more reliable. Abso- safe, effective NoDoz tablets,lutely not habit-forming. Analhci lint product ol Grove taboratonn.Oct. 18. 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Credit union holds partyin order to raise funds *Sat urday night at 7' pm at together and make low-cost loanthe 11' do Park Neighborhood mn earnhigs are returned to me,Club. ,">180 S. Kenwood. a. bers in the Torm-of dividends.celebration' will be belli, to Fieidi irli Wilhelm Rai(Teis,«f,raise funds for the World Ex-. mayor of Flammerfeld and r> ■■IriM-ni Dop.u i mm I of I he Ciedil •««*»»*'■ 1,1 'ho idea, believed thatUnion National \ • lion Dane- menthols, must ha\e a copirnonin*;. mo\ ios. and rel reshments are *>ond holding them togetherplanned ",v onoh member a slum, ''<>n-e responsihiln v to tiThe party is Imiic: sponsored t,ri)ll),.1)\' the ! loir U 1; ( 'o' op. la; g. si " . . ' : ‘ : ' ai ' /credit union in tlu* .area, with ..AN tl.ie. eealuri's of Raffeisdt Son members. '[ !ve" Umveisilv miginal plan .11 e . mrpi (mi alouStaff Credit Union is also selling •«» 1 *><t« R 11 k-Kenuo<xi s eie,f.. uh,m" ,h,,mova belong Ihovf a-l-(' 25.550 credit union0,"X'e :y-lu¬mbers' five ^r^d‘'1hU>nvhout -the world:,Th,' st'arted '1o''rm1,t TT,lion Nat ional < 4Associaib r ; / '■; .which u ill, receive-proceeds'frontypAy’; MS r *fs*uvxD::%^ y ;dvy. y':Uy:'T:'sit.\ * ir,,M unions in ' other ' countries.' TinVv' KiSp s! ■;p";y;y nsigtaEu(' uy•;Vyymy:un |•lldth anm- Africa (Tmganvika) was partially°\r^ financed through the efforts of in-ammerfield, dividual eredil’’ unions-in Saskat-chew an, Canada, ytley on the ‘The*'Credit union philosophy N'h°u|d help not jpredieaIed on.eeonpmies alone:Iheii- say- (.rodit unions are somewhat outm .to each 0fs tlio realm of-other financial in• ' ’ ' '• • “ ‘ • ete cms in the pi'essions ’ of the slogan for In>ne among lernational 'Credit Union.Day .(to¬il dei nI 1 y^ lg|p / ysyyrn:ar ( enter, 'mg Piktple y . ,‘fTo Economic'Pro-Lers. Osteo- gre’syThe American Civil Liberties Union. (A CLU) has renewed its at tack in the validityof -tiie. Mc.Carra-n."International Seeuntv Act of tObP in a brief .submitted to tire United.states Court of Appeals for tire District of Columbia.ACLU, v hkit has argued repeatedly that the statute is unconstitutional, tiled a briefcentering its fire on provisions re¬lating to Communist-.front orga¬nizations. •....yc.-■They claim that section's defin¬ing them are “so. vague find un¬certain” that they violate the dueprocess clause of the fifth amend¬ment. They claim also that re¬quiring Communist front groupsto register infringes On rightsguaranteed by the First Amend¬ment.The civM liberties organizationsubmitted its brief in the case offive petitioners appealing from anorder of the Subversive Activities,Control Board instructing them toregiste- as Communist-fronts.They are the Veterans of theAbraham Lincoln Brigade, ihe Na¬tional Council of American-SovietFriendship, Inc. the AmericanCommittee for Protection of For*eig-n Born, Louis Weinstoek, forthe United May Dav Committee,and the Jefferson School of So¬cial Science.The U.S. Supreme Court, -in June1960 upheld the costitutionality Holcomb, who sings and plays, ent tunings"; wvhen he plays thejgf'. tie provision In 4Sl$ V&B6 hits HKpiKiU' y 01 D:a m:u Cv ;CT.yy.y 1 w hie,inn. bitingroqnii hig ('nuH"U.'.is:- 1. 1 on Ptga- s"i". , K I • i- .n a \ • * 1 . •;*. P > ■ . ■> SBinisennlnr/at ions so .1 i ‘ by Ihe sonali/vd 1 ner. Ii\ n t part ,,t ih |„() ,, , ,.SAC B to legist, 1 w'th ihe go\ ei n- Of ^^^Utttcgy gte^p \ nnthis piogramment, ying-g g,;:. ■-ri-vy , Mf' 11:. fv:'prfvv RitlSi€i8US Jponi 1 hrThai ease eon,.:ivi ACyai :y ftUyyp-p! -arr's And him- ; m%(MN1I> ,u, Kl\ in Bishop. J.intmlst .,1’arty wbich hatf A:- caml)s D Mosby md Mike Michaels rhetleted to resist et follow - • the 1!.- .-m ' • ;SAClVs finding. Tin* h, court feeling >1 the area 1: ; ■ < ' .v .!<decision thd not dc ,1 with other lives as his ringing is high ind begin at 8:30: prh 1’ickets availparts of the law such as the lonesome, and his playing fast and .able at the Mandel Half box officeregistration of Commimist-front wild.'He plays the banjo in the and at the door, are $1,00. Corganizations and penalties im- t , M, , , m,poseti on both Comm.uirst-aci ion C Land C-virenuiMst-ir.iut- g.'-ouos. ^ v. >Nl ' 'y < £ ?*|A, I: no\v i,'i l"i n,< I i: 11. 1• Suprcn’re ^ ", v. ^1 '"in i ;■ Ir'hold , ,o|) of ! ii. Hg|L ' ^ ^ ^^ Ais.’oioo Siviinw A.-: •; ACLU ^ ^ f ^ w< - A ivpoll'.. oointo.i 0 ,1 i' I ill', polinopp o - i o, n.trrowlv " f ydrawn o hold . .>isst>iuti.»vd on'\ *the iwoiK -a, ;m • Commit- vA /Tfv .n.i't • o or.- be:-. i- an- pj| 1 Jph“d 'ho Uomorpai-l P.-cty ofthe U-'ed St.alos."Tia I MU'. ,> P. .-o,i ; : -;s ^> on l">r|,ms ,1, 0 !in. na. lv was ifjjfflll ' '/ ,"dnoo'o and d.-euiv ’ n \ oK od wdh » I M if* P M yylf^’w ha 1 Uoiumvss loond l a ho a for- muXn-«HiMjLmiJL'■1 - < Pinuitoo . ,.,0:0 )stf y111" "Nisi.-t;, 111 o unit.miSi at' - 1 "M'liimriii > noo no >u<-h: ''la -h ha-, h. •, a d" m, >ns 1 ! I ,-d ■ 1 I |\lM mBKv.,.. ^.'1fl n|dmn|nnjHlimp a Mi - lim ui>xiVn.' * n, ,,!u;;a: 0- , on. j g TLS ^ ‘"i ui oust ,1" o 1 "C'"! moss in; radii. ; ion to t!,« r-'\‘ ■Po'^ offered 1 ||j]1'' ' IT will openitouso breakfast i his Sunday Bu y ;tZrV ||l|l ,ttiormii" at the ot iis chair- lr« ■ flK«Mman i o o Kadma >7 i a OPStreet.Pancakes or am io .,1 a cost I ^of Air per ,-rmiii;, Aid ho olTolcd ^The break I asl will begin at 10.30 Sand will last in' * ihe early altei -noon. H I, ■iiirnfrnTiimtmiltloO meaMne concedes that Coin- Science fictSOH clubmunist-fiont organizations “liavemembers and, supporters who in HaS TITSt fSS.©6f,lfig“ d?. t 111,1 Com.”..- M,.mlx,re 0( ,he Sci<„ ■mst objectives of forcible over- ythrow and establishment.- of a- Club watched slides, ot the dothCommunist totalitarian dictator- World Science Fiction Conventionship , subservient to the Soviet last night. ; ’“h.A sf .:r rrdfi;w'y:: ; r; f .:, , ,,, ...s.-i-II fol th t o brand an or-, . eoiuentioi n- o.,.,,.,:ShA-r *rr»«rr ■ , m ia*o recratly >nd .ttended bj parit .Myrp . . ... »'"’>• ■ ■ . . ■‘■ o ( • imui M'" - U>oi l tl ! i\ : .yh/f, ao'rdd;rh 'S'yyyytwice because a Communist-front en’t at the plub’s firs) meejing. At -creased‘group is “at least one'dimension tlte next meeting a translation of years aaway” from' a Communist-action a paper entitled “A Russian View more tassociation. of Science Fiction” will tie read. 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