Vof. 71 — No. 18 University of Chicago, Friday, Oct. 19, 1962 UC scientists pgerm warfare rby Ross Ardrey was necessaUniversity of Chicago sci- and defensiveentists are engaged in basic want to know what is going toresearch which may be used be used against you, and how tofor biological warfare. detect it, and how to cope withThe university has four pro- it." He added that so far as heject contracts with the Army’s knew America had never used.I/*• 5 Nobel Prize to WatsonJames Dewey Watson, an alumnus of UC, has been presented with the Nobel Prizein medicine for 1902.Watson, presently a professor of biology at Harvard, won the award for discoveriesconcerning the molecular structure of nucleic acids and its significance for informationtransfer in living material. —Role of Ribosomes in Protein division of the Biological SciencesWatson will shate the awaul Synthesis. He will also speak the described Watson’s achievementswith two British scientists, following day. -in ^ terms.Francis Crick and Maurice Wil- Professor Lloyd Kozloff, in thekins. Watson and Crick shared department of biochemistry, will ‘‘-Professor Watson’s extraordin-the John Collins Warren prize of £ive a Part>' at his homt duri»S ary fruitful achievement lies inMassachusetts General Hospital in m h°n°r the formu,atlon of a model for theGi tli6 I w inner. dosowriboriurlpio c i H (DNA i1959. The three men were jointly _ f. . . Wo. aesoxyrmonucieic acid IdjnaiK-OZlOl I. R 111621(1 Of Watson rnolocillo This mArJpl jc nttpofawarded the Albert Lasker since 1948, calls him “a man of “ ' Th,s mod*V“* of greataward in the United States in great insight and keen analytical im|*01 ance’ siafe A **1960 ability. Watson’s work is' the molecular constituent which de-. scientific achievement of this cen- t€:rmines *he hereditary characer-Watson is the seventh former tUry. We will not know the full “tics or living cells.UC student to receive the prize, consequences of his work for “jn the DNA molecule are en-' lint on J. Davisson received the another 50 j>r 100 years." coded the basic instructions and1937 prize; Ernest O. Lawrence Charles E. Olmsted, professor programs which a cell followswon thp 1939 award' Chen Nine- and chairman of the UC botany throughout its life. Dr. Watson’s7, nJT.,, n. , department, said of Watson: “I model has proven to be essentialtiiu.' a ng a ,eo won renienij}er pe seeme(j very young, to understanding the function ofin 1957, and Owen Chamberlain but ke had much self-confidence, the molecule, its coding principles,in 1959. All of these prizes were I remember that it W'as a delight its stability, its method of re¬in physics. Edward L. Tatum to have him on field trips. He duplication in exact copy, andShared the award in medicine with seemed so keenly interested in mechanisms whereby it can, inUC president George W. Beadle everything going on around him." exceptional cases, undergo ain 1958. Albert Abraham Michel- Watson himself remembers UC change in structure and transmitson won the 1907 physics award as having a “healthy atmosphere.” these changes exactly to descen-w'hile he was a professor here. He came to UC for this reason dent molecules, thus providing aMichelson was the first American ar>d because his parents lived molecular basis for genetic mu-to receive the Nobel prize in here. His mother worked in the tation. Such molecular permuta-physics. admissions office for twelve years, tions provide the mechanism for, , Dean H. Stanley Bennett of the biological evolution.”Watson, who is now 34. entered Chemical Corps Biological War- either biological or chemical war¬fare Laboratories. The total valueof these contracts is $421,000. ^are 'n an^ war-About thirty people are employed' Hiroshi Sugiyama. associatein these projects, and are conduct¬ing reasearch in Ricketts Labora¬tories and in the Institute forthe Study of Metals.Most of the work done on cam¬pus is concerned with infectiousdiseases and food poisoning.James Moulder, chairman of themici’obiology department, holds oneof the army contracts and is work¬ing on infectious diseases. He saidthat none of the UC contractsare for the actual development ofthe means of biological warfare.Our real function is rather thefundamental research into diseasesw'hich might be of potential useto the military, he explained.“Nobody on this campus isworking directly on biologicalwarfare.We have never worked on bio¬logical warfare and never will,"Moulder said.The Army sponsors a broad pro¬gram on all infectious diseases.A great many of these researchesare allocated to the universities,for they" are best qualified tohelp by doing fundamental re¬search into the basic propertiesof infectious diseases,” he said.“For example, wre are stuyingthe psittacosis group. They areinteresting in themselves, alongwith being of possible use to themilitary,” he said.Moulder said that his research professor of microgiology, is con¬cerned with food poisoning, spe¬cifically with a type prevalent inthe United States. “This is not alethal agent, but if you are in¬terested in incapacitating a groupof people for a short time, thenI suppose it will do.” Symptoms;nausea and diarrhea.Although Sugiyama is workingon the detection of this agentMerlin Bergdoll associate profes¬sor of the Food Research insti¬tute is working on the purifica¬tion of its enterotoxin and thedetermination of its properties.He has been working here since1956.Eergdoll pointed out that muchof their knowledge of this diseasecomes from the actual cases offood poisoning which have oc¬curred in this country, and whiletheir research is of value to tnemilitary, its is also of interest tothe Public Health Service whichcovers a great deal of their ex¬penses.Bergdoll has successfully puri¬fied the enterotoxin which causesone type of food poisoning. Heproduced a small tube filled withless than a thumbfull of theclear substance. It would make2000 monkeys sick. Unfortunatelyhe didn't know what effect this'would have on people; he onlyexperiments with animals.UC as an early entrant when hewas 15 years old. He earned thedegree of bachelor of philosophyand bachelor of science. He waselected a member of Phi BetaKappa. He did graduate work atthe University of Indiana. Copen¬hagen University and CambridgeUniversity.Watson is a close friend ofBeadle and received an honorarydoctor of science degree whenBeadle was inaugurated as aca¬demic head of the University inMay, 1961. His citation read:“Creator of our understanding ofl he molecular basis for heredityand evolution, welder of discip¬lines, prophet of the day whenbiology will be explained in thelanguage of quantum mechanics."Watson’s teaching career beganat the California Institute ofTechnology. Later he received hispresent position at Harvard.Watson will be on campus nextmonth to deliver two lectures, oneto the biochemistry class 306 onthe 9th. His topic will be “The Colorado U. editor gets firedUniversity of Colorado(UC) President Quigg New¬ton Wednesday fired GaryAlthen from his position aseditor of the Colorado Daily.This was less than two weeksafter Newton answered SenatorBarry Gol cl water’s demand- thatAlthen be removed by saying.“Senator, I shall not silencehim.”To many observers, it appearedthat the editor's dismissal was theresult of high-level political pres¬sure.Althen was called out of classWednesday afternoon and told toreport to the President’s office. When he arrived, he w-as handed aone-paragraph statement tellinghim that he was fired.Althen stated that “He (Presi¬dent Newton) seemed to think Iwas irresponsible. I happen todisagree with him."Last night, when interviewed athis home by the Maroon, Newtonsaid, “I have nothing to say onthe matter.”He declined to comment onwhether his action in firing Althenwas approved by either the uni¬versity’s Board of Regents or bythe Publications Board, to whichhe was recently given the powerto appoint three members.His only comment was, “Why don’t you call up the public rela¬tions office tomorrow morning andget it all from them? I won’t sayanything on the matter." New¬ton’s home was being picketed by500 protesters.At the same time, the ColoradoPublications Board w>as meetingto consider the situation.The events leading up to AH hen’sfiring began when a letter by CarlMitcham, the same writer thatii'ked Goldwater, printed in theOctober 3 Daily which calledGeneral Dwight D. Eisenhoweran “old futzer" was reprinted sixdays later in the Rocky MountainNews, a Denver Scripps-Howardnewspaper. This caused a good deal of commotion and a numberof letters were wn-itten to theNews about it.Last Friday, Newton asked theUniversity Publications Board toremove Althen. The body refusedhis request.New-ton next asked the ColoradoBoard of Regents to turn overthe newspaper to the journalismschool, which wrould in effectcause Althen’s removal. Beforethe Board met to discuss the mat¬ter, the Student Senate, meetingat Estes Park, Colo., passed aresolution upholding the Publi¬cation Board’s support of'Althen.When the Board of Regents metthis Sunday, they refused to dis¬cuss Newton’s request. They did,however, given New ton power toappoint three additional membersto the Publications Board. Thiswould sway the majority to New¬ton’s position.Members of Hie "Freedom Chorus" (shown above) will sing at concert at International House this evening. Theywill also be part of the "Gospel for Freedom" program Sunday afternoon at McCormick Place. Tickets far both con¬certs will be m safe all day today in Monde! Hall and will also be on sale at the door. Early this week, the FacultySenate, at a secret meeting at¬tended by 400 people, refused torequest the Board of Regents re¬move Althen. There were 20 dis¬senting votes.Disregai’ding all this, Newtonon Wednesday fired Althen. It iswithin his power as president todo so, a Colorado spokesmanstated.An executive editor of the news¬paper has been appointed to i'e-place Althen as editor, and thougha number of staff members haveresigned, the Daily is still pub¬lishing.Mack Acuff, director of theCollegiate Press Service (CPS),has been notified of the firing byAlthen, and will investigate thesituation. CPS is an agency of theUnited States Student Press Asso¬ciation, to which the Maroon andsome 50 other college and univer¬sity newspapers ‘belong.For more details, see earlierstory on page 5.Today is the last daystudents may drop or addcourses to their programsor change sections.JFK okays new NDEAPresident Kennedy approved Congress’ recent changesin the National Science Foundation and National DefenseEducation Act (NDEA) Wednesday.He signed a bill eliminating the requirement that stu¬dents seeking federal loans andgrants sign a disclaimer affidavit ‘‘hiiiner affidavit a bridle uponwhich stated: freedom of thought.*•I do solemnly swear that I do The University of Chicago vvith-not believe in and am not a mem- (ll^w from participation in Iheher of . . . any organization that 1oan program in 1960. to protestbelieves in or teaches the over- the affidavit. More than 30throw of the US government . . . other colleges and universities alsoby illegal or unconstitutional withdrew' from the program inmethods.” protest, and about 100 others re-Congress, in repealing the atti- niained in the program, but ob-davit, substituted for it a criminal j°c1ed lormally to the affidavit,penalty measure, which would ap- The ITO Board of Trustees isply to any person attempting to expected to rule shortly on wlie-use NDEA funds and who “is ther UC will re-enter the program,knowingly a member of any or- The administration of the TTniver-ganization defined by the Subver- sity and the Council of the I>ni-sive Activities Control Act of 1950 versity Senate have recommendedas Communist or a member of any that CC return to the program,organization which has received a The Maroon has urged it stayfinal notice from the Subversive out of the program, and the NSAActivities Control Board to regis- committee on Student Governmentter as Communist." will circulate a petition also urg-Kennedy commented in a state- ing the University to remain outment that he was glad to approve of the program,the legislation. jf Both student groups have re-“It is highly unlikely that the quested the University to set upaffidavit requirement kept any an alternate loan fund program,Communist out of the programs,” if it does re-enter the NDEA, forhe said. “It did, however keep students who object to participa-out those who considered the dis- lion in the NDEA. Morgenthau: revolutionaryspirit in US still existsHans Morgenthau, pro¬fessor of history. “The US revolution may bediminished, but it still existsaccording' to Hans Morgen¬thau, professor of politicalscience. “The most important con¬tribution has been lack of socialclasses."Morgenthau made this'•state¬ment to an overflow crowd at ameeting of the history club lastnight. His topic was "Is the USStill a Revolutionary Nation."The theme of his speech wasthat a spirit of revolution stillexists in the US but that wemust w'ork to export it to therest of the world. Expanding onthis, he stated that if we can tinued to support the powers thatbe in Latin America we makeleftist revolutions certain.In response to a question atthe end of his« speech, Morgen¬thau said that we must sgive 4Russia some indication that we \will not' allow our interests lo besubverted in Cuba without re¬sponding. We must show theSoviets exactly how far they cango or we will risk aggressionthere and possibly elsewhere, ac¬cording to Morgenthau.When asked for an opinion onthe value of the demilitarizedzone in Europe, Morgenthaustated that because of intercon¬tinental missiles, disengagementis irrelevant.Should doctors strike?Wendell Phillips, Cal.teacher to speak Sat.Wendell Phillips, who was relieved of his teachingduties in the Fullerton, California, Junior College systembecause of his admitted previous membership in theCommunist Party, will speak Saturday afternoon at 4 pmin Ida Noyes Hall.. r , . fom 40 colleges and universitiesph, bps was relieved of his hav„ bccomc sponsors of the We„-teaching duties for refusing to Academic Freedomcomply in full with California s _ ...Dilworth Act. In accordance with uommi . ee.the act. Phillips as a state employ- . Phillips has been an active par-ee had filed a record of his pasl ticipant in the labor and socialistpolitical activities with the state, movement his entire adult life,at wffiich time he admitted past At 19, he*became a union organizermembership in the Communist *.n Denver, Colorado.Party. . While working for Columbia Re-However, when called before an coiding Corporation in Hollywoodnvestigating committee, Phillips he became the first business agentrefused to testify about his former of the Los Angeles local of the^associates in the Party and their Un it e d Electrical, Radio, andt activities.-y * Machine Workers and eventuallyJ; Phillips acknowledged member- gional Director of the CIO Food,* ship in the Party until 1951. He served as Pacific Norlhwest. Re¬admitted that he sought readmis- Tobacco and Agricultural Workerssion in 1957 for the purpose of Union.attempting to change its political Later he returned to college, took-t- program The party denied him a degree in welding, and workedreadmission, charging that he was in that trade until he becamea TYotskyite. welding instructor at FullertonThe issues involved in this case Junior College,have gained national attention and The lecture is sponsored by UCover a hundred academic figures Students for Civil Liberties.|„ ff1'"r;; | IM'■* ' 4JWe all make mistakes...ERASE WITHOUT A TRACEON EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTouch-type, hunt-and-peck, type with one hand tiedbehind your hack—it’s easy to turn out perfect paperson Corrasable. Because you can erase without a trace.Typing errors disappear like magic with just the flick ofan ordinary pencil eraser.There’s never a telltale erasuremark on Corrasahle’s special surface., Corrasable is available in light,medium, heavy weights and OnionSkin. In convenient 100-sheetpackets and 500-sheet reamboxes. Only Eaton makesCorrasable.A Berkshire Typewriter PaperEATON PAPER CORPORATION : E : PITTSFIELD, MASS**»••'* “Doctors and the Rig’llt toStrike” was the topic of a dis¬cussion last night at the Octo¬ber meeting of the JacksonPark Branch of the ChicagoMedical Society at Billings Hos¬pital.The first speaker of the panelwas Dr. Herman Finer, profes¬sor of political science. Fineropened the discussion by refer¬ring to the right to strike, sayingthat doctors “do not have it. Ideplore it. I hope they neverclaim it against me. I wouldnever refuse my services to astudent."Dr. Fine?1 went on to say thatthere are legal and moral issuesinvolved. In many other count¬ries the right to strike is limited.In our own country the Taft-■ Hartley Act gives government theright to try to avoid strikes.He further said that the safetyand welfare of an industrializedsociety such as ours depends onthe united performance of eachsegment of our complex economy.He gave the example of the re¬cent Chicago-Northwestern Rail¬way strike which ’effected theentire Midwest.On the moral issue, he pointedout that striking would lowerdoctors to the level of those whohave an ethical level lower thanthemselves, i.c., those who are onlyin their jobs to make money.Some MDs in Saskatchewanclaimed that they were “refugees"from socialism, referring lo then-migration from the English Na¬tional Health Service. Dr. Finerpointed out that someone has saidthat they are in fact "deserters”of their health service.Dr. Finer went on to say thatthe way to attack pending legis¬lature is through the AmericanMedical Association (AMA) andsimilar lobbying groups. He said, however, “Socialized medicine isnot as bad as all that.”AL SAX TIRE CO.6052 S. Cottage GroveAve. — DO 3-5555Discounts to Studentsand Faculty He concluded by criticizing thepresent president of AMA forstating that doctors have theright to treat whom Ihey wantin the circumstances they wish.They must, Finer said, serve ac¬cording to need and never ac¬cording to the fee they may earn.The second speaker was Prof.Bernard D. Meltzer of the lawschool. Meltzer said that a strikesuch as that in Saskatchewan isactually a boycott, although anyindividual doctor has the right toquit medicine and become a"piccolo player or a lotus eater.”Doctors may not conspire towithhold their services or elsethey may be treated as business¬men under antitrust legislation,notwithstanding the sacred in¬vocations of medical ethics. Prof.Meltzer cited a District of Colum¬bia case in which the local medi¬cal society threatened to ostra¬cize doctors participating in agroup health plan. They weresubsequently sued under antitrustlegislation. He pointed out thesimilarities of the concerted boy¬cott in the Saskatchewan caseas not unlike the action of gov¬ernor Ross Barnett in Mississippi.“Co-operation of minorities inaccepting distasteful legislation isthe basis of democratic society,”said Meltzer. He concluded bywarning the audience that strik¬ing doctors would make them¬selves vulnerable to legal action.■ The third speaker was Rev. CarlWennerstrom, chaplain of the UCclinics and hospitals and divinityschool instructor, rThe Rev. Mr. Wennerstromopened by stating that he did notbelieve doctors had the right tostrike. He pointed out that theymust "maintain an alert posturetoward the unique and the novel."To move in the direction of gen¬eralization or of organization ofcollectivism, as it were, makes aman no longer a professional per¬son. Thus from a philosophicalstandpoint a doctor cannot claimthe right to strike.The final speaker was Dr. H.Close Hesseltine, Mary Campau Ryerson professor of obstetricsand gynecology.Hesseltine opened by maintain¬ing that the question before thepanel was academic. Further¬more he stated that there are!many conflicting stories comingout of Saskatchewan and the truestory is not known. He said thathe did not know how he wouldact in a similar situation butthat he certainly did not envision;doctors in the US striking.Hesseltine claimed, however, ‘that he didn’t think Congress,!would be foolish enough to everpass such a law. He urged theaudience not to forget the Vol¬stead Act (prohibition), which,failed as a social experiment. J§"Strike is a dirty word,” saidHesseltine. He went on to refute.Dr. Finer’s criticism of the presi¬dent of AMA, saying that he, thepresident, was actually a fine man,and that what he was saying wasthat lawyers and universities have|the right to choose their clientsand students, why not doctors?.i#Yates to speakSidney Yates will delivera major political address atMandel Hall, Tuesday eve¬ning at 7 :00 pm.Yates, Democratic candidate;for Senator running against Kyg|rett Dirksen, will be the main r*speaker at the meeting sponsored;by Students for Yates and the*Young Democrats. ‘Guest speakers Phillip Kurlandjprofessor in UC’s Law school andDonald Meiklejohn, professor otPhilosophy will also be heard. 1Entertainment will be provided'by folksingers.STRAUS, BL0SSER & McDOWELL1530 E. 55th STREETHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERTel. NO 7-0777PresentsYOUR SHARE IN TOMORROWSponsored byTHE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGETime : 8:00 P.M.Place: HYDE PARK CO-OP1526 E. 55th. ST.(Downstairs)Date: WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1962Question and Answer Session Will Follow the Mo vieAdmission Free Is sex passe? JM(CPS) — Sex lost an elec¬tion at San Francisco Statelast week.A combination of apatli.Y,on the part of the college’s 11.-,000 students and misinformationdefeated birth control championJohn Jefferson Poland at the pollsThursday.Poland was running for the stu§;-dent council on a program advo-.cal ing the sale of contraceptive^at a discount price in the studentbookstore.He also wanted the student,health service to distribute infor¬mation and advice on sexual mat¬ters to the college’s students. j|But he lost. -3#He received 178 of the 497;votes cast for president..In Poland’s campaign, he statedthat he had experience in the.Southern civil rights movementHe had participated in three sit-ins resulting in two arrests.He also boasted of being ex- _pelled from a college, the AFL-’CIO, peace activities and the stu-,dent; senate at Florida State Uni¬versityLess than a week later, Jeff;,Poland had something new To'boast about. He was placed in aSan Francisco jail, booked on sus¬picion of sexual and narcotic vio¬lations. 7;He faces charges of contribu¬ting to the deliquency of minorsand possessing illegal drugs and ahypodermic needle.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 19, 1962Newsbits ^***^*\***%*%*%v^\*****%*v%'%*'6000 doctors meet here today> More than 6,000 physiciansand surgeons, including over750 from the Chicago area,have been invited to attend aone-day lecture program at Bill¬ings today. All the doctors aremedical alumni or former staffmembers of either Rush MedicalCollege or UC,They will listen to reports onI ho treatment and study of can¬cer. diabetes, and other majorhealth problems.Eight professors of medical sci¬ence at UC will offer lectures onthe latest developments and ex¬periments in a wide variety ofvital medical research.Dr. M. Edward Davis, Presidentof the Medical Alumni Associationand professor and chairman of theDepartment of Obstetrics and Gy¬necology at UC, indicated that therefresher program is the first ofits kind in UC history.The lectures will take place inIhe first floor lecture hall, P-117,at Billings, 950 East 59th StreetThe morning session, chaired byDr. F. Howell Wright, Professorof Pediatrics, will begin at 10 am;the luncheon will be directed byDr. Wright Adams, associate deanof the division of the biologicalsciences; and the afternoon ses¬sion, chaired by D<\ Allan R. Ke-nuon, professor of medicine, willbegin at 2 pm.Indian will lectureH. C. Heda, former secre¬tary of the Indian CongressParty, will speak Monday on“The Future of Parliament¬ary Institutions in India.”Heda is presently a member of theIndian Parliament and has heldliis membership since 1949.During his long association withIndian politics, he has writtenanalyses of Ghandism vs. Marx¬ism, the Electoral System, andthe functioning of the Congressparty.Heda will speak at 4 pm inCobb 104.The lecture is one in t he seriessponsored by the Committee onSouthern Asian Studies.Frat rush startsEight of the nine Univer¬sity of Chicago fraternitieswill hold rush smokers nextweek. Rush smokers are openhouses to which all male studentsexcept first year College studentsare invited. Rush for first yearstudents will take place next quar¬ter.Phi Kappa Psi will not hold asmoker this quarter. A spokesmanfor the fraternity stated that itwill rush informally.Contrary to the announcementson posters posted on campus, Al¬pha Delta Phi will hold its smokeron Wednesday night, October 24.The change from Tuesday nightwas made to avoid conflict withthe political rally for SidneyYates.All of the smokers begin at 7:15pm. The schedule follows:Monday, October 22Zeta Beta Tau, 5554 WoodlawnINi Upsilon, 5639 UniversityTuesday, October 23Phi Sigma Delta. 5625 Wood-lawnWednesday, October 24l'hi (lamina Delta, 5615 Univer¬sityAlpha Delta Phi, 5747 Univer¬sityThursday, October 25Delta Upsilon, 5714 WoodlawnBeta Theta Pi, 5737 UniversityFriday, Octoger 26Phi Delta Theta, 5625 UniversitySummer grades lateGrade reports for summerquarter will be released earlynext week, stated registrarWilliam Van Cleve yesterday. Summer quarter ended in Aug¬ust.Most individual courses have al¬ready sent out grades. The onlystudents who have not yet re¬ceived grades were students whotook the Social Science 111-2-3exam without having registeredfor the course.Grades were held up becauseno one was available to read theessays at an earlier date.Students who had registered forthe courses corresponding to theexams they took all received theirindividual course grades by the be¬ginning of this week.Early decision madeThe office of UniversityAdmissions has announced re¬cently that seventy studentshave been accepted for ad¬mission to the college next fallunder the Early Decision program.According to Charles O’Connell,director of admissions, this year’sEarly Decision candidates are thebest the University has had sincethe program began. As juniors inhigh school, the 103 applicantsaveraged higher on the collegeboard examinations than most ofthe nation’s high school seniors.A candidate for Early decisionapplies for admission to the Uni¬versity at the end of his junioryear of higli school. If he is ac¬cepted, the University informshim of his acceptance for bothadmission and financial aid dur¬ing the early part of his senioryear. In return for early accep¬tance .the student agrees not toapply to other schools. However,he may refuse early acceptanceand apply as a high school seniorto Chicago and to other schoolsas well.O’Connell felt sure that betterthan 90% of the candidates ac¬cepted for admission would de¬cide before the Nov. 1 deadlineto matriculate at the University.Tax conference comingThe Law School’s 15th annualFederal Tax Conference will meetnext week to discuss tax legisla¬tion recently enacted by Congress.This legislation is considered themost important change in incometax in more than a decade.The three-day conference, whichopens next Wednesday, is aimedat providing the tax specialist-lav;yer, accountant and corpora¬tion official with an analysis ofcurrent lax matters.Among the more than 300 per¬sons expected to attend are threeof the nation’s leading tax offi¬cials. They are Louis F. Oberdor-fer, Assistant Attorney General,Tax division of the U.S. Depart¬ment of Justice; Mortimer M.Caplin, U.S. Commissioner of In¬ternal Revenue and Crane ElHauser, Chief Counsel, U.S. In¬ternal Revenue service. Activities calendar setThe Office of Student Ac¬tivities has a mimeographedlist of scheduled student acti¬vities available to the headsof student organizations. It ishoped that these lists will enablestudent groups to avoid many con¬flicts in the scheduling of events.Lists giving the names of stu¬dents who expressed interest inspecific activities at registrationare also available. Although thesecannot be taken from the office,heads of student groups may copythem.The office of Student Activitiesis in the sqfond floor of Ida NoyesHall. Students should see Mrs.Vaile DeNeveu.Koch appeal in Chgo.An appeal by former Uni¬versity of Illinois (UI) Pro¬fessor Leo Koch will beargued in the first districtappellate court in Chicago nextweek.The appeal will probably beheard Tuesday according to . UIlegal counsel James Costello.Koch was fired from the UIfaculty after writing a letter tothe Daily Illini condemning pre¬marital sexual relationships be¬tween mature individuals.The suit, which seeks $5,900from the university for allegedbreach of contract, was dismissedlast June by a circuit court judge.The appeal to the state supremecourt was transferred to the ap¬pellate court by the supremecourt on a motion filed by the uni¬versity Board of Trustees con¬tending that no constitutionalissue is involved.Koch is lining represented byAmerican Civil Liberties Unionlawyer Donald Page Moore, whosuccessfully represented PaulCrump this summer. New Mexico studentswon t urge integrationWOODLAWNMethodist Church64th ST. at WOODLAWN AVE.Welcomes the UniversityCommunityWoodlawn Methodist is in manyways a "now'’ church in a "new”neighborhood. Once a prosperous“white” church in a white neitthbor-ood. Woodlawn church today, withinterracial pastorate and congrega¬tion, is finding the key to itsrenewal through a ministry ofservice. Morning worship 11 a.m.Charles W. Jordan, PastorWilliam E. Cameron, Associate PastorThis Sunday. Oct. 21: GuestSpeaker, Alderman Leon Despres:"The Political Responsibilities ofChurch Laymen.”DEARBORN AT DIVISION“IT |C A FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT'STEASING... SfMOTiTHElAMUSING PIFILM!" 1 h— Crowiher.N. Chicago’s most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films.STUDENTSTake advantage of thespecial discount avail¬able to you. 90£ any dayexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. card to the cashier.PIZZASFor The Price OfNICKY’S1235 i. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780 By a vote of seven to five,the University of New Mexico(UNM) Student Council re¬fused earlier this week to in¬vestigate a proposal which wouldrequire all persons listing rentalhousing with the UNM housingoffice to agree that they wouldnot discriminate against Negroesor foreign students.The measure was intended tohelp alleviate the problems facedby UNM Negro students for manyyears when seeking decent hous¬ing both in the vicinity of thecampus and in the city in general.More recently, students fromAfrica and Asia who have soughtoff-campus housing have had tosettle for substandard housing inrun dow/i, predominantly Negroareas more than a mile from thecampus.The UNM housing office cur¬rently maintains a list of houseand apartment rentals availableto university students. The list¬ings are kept as a service to bothstudents and landlords. The hous¬ing office does not now have pro¬visions for screening listed houses,eithe*’ for quality or availabilityto all races.The resolution would have in¬vestigated setting up meanswhereby each property owner whowished to have his rental listedwith the University would firsthave to agree that he would notrefuse to rent upon racial grounds.Councilman Chuck Welborn op¬posed the measure on groundsthat it was not yet necessary. “Leave it alone until it isforced upon us,” Welborn coun¬selled.Councilman Almira Whitesidedisagreed. She told the council,“You are afraid to investigate be¬cause of what the Council’s standmay be. If we leave it as it is,we’re no better than the peopleof Mississippi.”Student body president DennisReady commented after the meet¬ing that he was “extremely dis¬appointed thal the measure didnot pass. This ' one issue wherewe could and sr.ould have takena firm stand,’’ Ready said.Freedom upheldfor UWM teacherA faculty member of the Uni¬versity of Wisconsin at Milwau¬kee (UWM) has been accused oftrying to “brainwash” his stu¬dents for circulating a petitionon the Medicare issue during oneof his classes.He was defended, however, bythe assistant provost of UWM,Joseph Baier, who said that theadministration would not take ac¬tion against him.“Faculty members still havetheir academic freedom in teach¬ing classes,” he said.D. Schoeller, the faculty mem¬ber, was charged with brainwash¬ing by Nile Solk, a Republican as¬semblyman, and by George Dene-mark, dean of the WisconsinSchool of. Education.at GRUBYS RAMBLERThe curtain's going up oh theNEW'6BLECome see these all-new beauties with newcurved glass side windows—new bucket seats withconsole (optional)—-new Twin-Stick Floor Shift(optional)—-new lifetime lubrication of transmissionand rear axle -new, more-thorough rustproofmg—new Ceramic-Armored exhaust system and many,many more new Rambler-quality features!See them now atGRUBY S RAMBLER4555 S. COTTAGE GROVEBO 8-1111Oct. 19, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3H IfII?? >1, ,|®|.iii.j iw s -MJJ:n$!4 « i m EDITORIAL I• d., ; ,,r>;V '?•» *■ Vi■ :-tJU' i$wmm - .UWf&i it sf l| %<?•? g^; Article on University discriminationmakes very irresponsible accusationsAn article in the currentissue of New Horizons ForYouth, entitled "Chicago:The Sit-ins Have ComeNorth,’' attempts to analyze,among other things, the sit-insinitiated by UC students lastJanuary in protest of the Univer¬sity’s policies of racial discrimi¬nation in its neighborhood privatehousing.After noting the sit-ins them¬selves, the author proceeds totrace the University’s relationshipwith the community since 1961.This history presents nothingnew; it's merely a distorted ver¬sion of the same story that hasso often been related. The factualerrors presented here are notcrucial.The author next discusses UC’s"strategy for discrimination,”which requires “the removal ofhousing units available to themajority of Negro families andthe replacement of these unitswith high cost housing and Uni¬versity buildings.” UC’s policy,according to the article, has bene¬fit! od only large real estate in¬terests and suggests an attemptto curry favor with these inter¬ests.One of the most important con¬clusions the author reaches isthat the University can controlthe housing pattern of the com¬munity. The University, more thanany other institution or group, isresponsible for the present con¬dition of Hyde Park. This we be¬lieve to be true.The article had quite a bit tosay about the Board of Trustees."Those who support the Univer¬sity are interested in sped-upunion busting (and the) cold warmore than In the education of in¬dividuals. The Board of Trusteesreads like air interlocking direc¬torate with the First NationalBank of Chicago, center of a 22-billion dollar financial-industrialcomplex including Sears Roebuck,International Harvester, Texaco,and reaching into Standard Oil ofIndiana.”The faculty was also attacked."From behind the facade ofliberalism, undermining the intel¬lectually honest efforts of themajority of the faculty, comes aflood of material prostituted forthese Trustees.”The author concludes that thesit-ins were directed “at an armof the forces (the Trustees)profiling most from segrega¬tion, , . . ”We do not believe that this un¬favorable view of our trustees andfaculty is accurate. The ideas pre¬sented, however, are certainly notto be ignored.What should concern studentsmost, however, is what Ihe articlehas to say about the proposed South Campus plan and the resi¬dential college. The author statesthat the South Campus plan,which would clear 26.5 acres ofland for University expansion, ispart of UC’s “pattern of segrega¬tion.”The residential college, accord¬ing to the author, was institutedprimarily as a rationale for theSouth Campus plan, and conse¬quently for segregation. “TheUniversity made the students thepawns in its strategy of segrega¬tion in complete disdain for theirability to receive an education.”In our opinion, these chargesare even more serious than thosewhich led to the January sit-ins.It is one thing for a “liberal”educational institution to practiceracial segregation in its invest¬ment property; it is quite anotherfor an institution to use a regula¬tion affecting student life as ameans of furthering neighborhooddiscrimination.We have repeatedly opposed theUniversity’s discriminatory poli¬cies off campus in the past andwe continue to do so. In the fewinstances where these practiceshave carried over into the educa¬tional activities of the University,we have also spoken out. Ifwe believed, for one minute, thecharges made by the article inquestion, our protests would be farmore rigorous than any in thepast.There are numerous reasons,however, why we cannot acceptthese charges. UC’s segregationpolicies have existed since atleast before the second world war.These policies, dictated ultimatelyby the Trustees, are currentlycarried out by high administratorswhose sole job is to manage thebusiness activities of the Univer¬sity. The University has alwaysassumed that it could not existin a Negro community and thathousing segregation is the onlymeans of preventing a given com¬munity from becoming all Negro.The South Campus plan would,In effect, segregate several square"blocks. The area which would heacquired is predominantly occu¬pied by Negroes. Bui the Univer¬sity did not really need the resi¬dence requirement as a rationalefor South Campus, Expansion ofpurely academic facilities alonewould justify more space for UC.The residence requirement isconsistent with the many changesin the College over the pastdecade when we have been movingaway from the Hutchins College.Student freedom, which reachedits zenith under Hutchins, hasgradually been dimished.The residence rule, which tellsstudents whore to live and theslow death of the comp system,which has the effect of regulatingstudents’ studying, are hut two ex¬amples of this general trend.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. . DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNT The residential requirement it¬self was largely the rseult of theefforts of Alan Simpson, Dean ofthe College, and.John Netherton,then dean of students. The deci¬sion was made, Wf believe, purelyin terms of the students’ interests.Although vve disagree with them,Simpson and Netherton obviouslyand sincerely believed that sucha rule would benefit the entires'udent body of the College.Just as Simpson and Nethertonshouldn’t be concerned with thereal estate interests of the Uni¬versity, so the business adminis-t factors of the University shouldnot initiate residence require¬ments The activities of these twogroups of men should be mutuallyexclusive. We believe that theyhave been, at least on the whole.The magazine article, in conclu¬sion, is a prime example of irre¬sponsible journalism. From a verycarefully selected set of facts,the author proceedes to manu¬facture an indefensible correla¬tion between certain academic andnon-academic functions of the Uni¬versity.With so many of the Universi¬ty’s activities subject to validcriticism, vve wonder why anyonewould try to find fault wherethere is none. We hope that allfuture criticism of the Universitywill he made only after objectiveexamination of a complete set offacts and that the University’scritics will not merely twistcertain facts to fit a predeter¬mined theory.Chicago MaroonEditor in chief ...... Laura GodofskyBusiness Manager .... Kenneth C, Hey!Advertising Mgr. , , Lawrence 0. KaplanNews Editors Andrew StainRobin KaufmanCity News Editor ,, John T. WilliamsAsst. City News Editor , , Gary FeldmanCulture-Feature Ed. .. Ron a RosenblattRewrite editor Xviaion GoldmanPhoto coordinator ........ Bob KassSports Editor Rich EpsteinNight Editors ........ Mike SilvermanJohn Smith”*■* .Maryan ne TaranowskiGail RubinEducation Editor , , . , , Vicky ShiefmanEratum Editor Sh> rwin KaplanOffice Manager Jean Macb anBookkeeper ', . Anita ManuelAdvtg. Secy. Ann StudleyCirculuton Mgr. R. A. WilsonEditor Emeritus . Jay GreenbergStaffs Avima Ruder, Joe Kelly, FranAidman, Ron Pell, Al Housfuther, PeteRabinowitz, Barry Bayer, M. Stevens.Sue Goldberg, Murray Schacber,George Rowell, Noel Criscoula, RonPorfman, Les Gourwitz, Mary Deal.Marianne Geisel. Jane Rosenberg,Bill Boggs, Tom Hoagy, CarolEnglander, Lucy Reals, Ross A i drey,Bob Levey, Ste\e Ford, Lynn Tilford,'Steve Heffner, Irv Levinstein, MikeConroy, Martha Grosblati, NancyOlin, Mike Rind, Sharon Murphy,Eleanor Perlmutter. Nancy Shea, GeoffHeron, Glenn Loafman, John Page, JudyRace, Rich Hasher, Bert Rubenstein,Stan Karter, Bill Fay, Michelle Surveyer,Leslie Kondor, Sandy Roos, EleanorKneiber, Marty Rabinowitz, JoanLevenson, Mynia Bull, Gail Rubin, AlKelson, Harris Jaffe, Joanne Urban,Issued free of charge on the Qund-ran#rt«s every Tuesday through Fridayduring the academic year by studentsof the University of Chicago, Addresscorrespondence • Lot Chicago Maroon,1212 19 Street, Chicago if?, Illinois.'Telephones: MI a-ASOft. exts. 8265. 3266.Sabseriptloa by mail is $4 per year.Printed at West Side Press, Chicago,CPS is the Collegia to .prase 'Service,an agency of the United States StudentPress Association, OMW is the Chicago-lllinois-Michigan -\V ay tie. News Alliance. Students unculturedto the editors VIt is indeed unfortunate thatUC is fortunate enough to haveGum her Schuller come this, week¬end to conduct the opening con¬cert of the annual UC ChamberMusic Series.Last year, when a pitifully smallaudience showed up for the Gr¬ebes t ra San Pietro of Naples,there was always the excuse, “UCstudents just aren’t interested* inthe ordinary, humdrum, everydaybaroque and classical music,”When the same pilifully smallaudeince showed up to hear Wil¬liam Masselos, the act ions of theunpresent could bo defended, and,indeed, praised. “UC liberal stu¬dents are just too sophisticated tolisten to the music of Schumann,Copland, and (oog) Liszt.”Similar excuses abounded forknow, the Claremont Quartet justisn’t Ihe Budapest” and "Well,the cello is really only an imita¬tion viola da gamha tor is it oboed’amoref).”Aha. now conn's the slum down.- , , the end of the Bn# , *-. thecheckmate. T.o., it’s the ■ last ofthe ninth. Schuller is conductingboth proromantic and contempor¬ary i frightening word, huh?)music. His reputation as a com¬poser, conductor, and performerin the fields of jazz, classical, andthird stream music is, to min aphrase, 'internationally acclaimed.’When the same small hut?de¬voted audience turns out. the UCexcusemakers will, as traditionhinds I aye, even compels), beat it again. There are 1 wo pos¬sibilities for this one. Either "UCprogressive students are petrifiedtor oven mollified) hv originality”or “UC students are too damnlazy to walk from New Dorms toMandel for anything.” -Choieewisc, take yours.PETE SICADOGOLD CITYIiYiYj: Exquisitei; Cantonese 10% Discount ToStudents WithThis Ad5228 HARPER ST.HY 3-25597y444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444?Jr.i - y. One of Hyde Paris's FinestARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRSPECIALIZING IN:Heels ChangedHeels RepairedToes Cut OptVamps LoweredOrthopedic WorkZipper RepairsProfessional Oyeinyand Nefinishiny ofShoes and llandhaysColors MatvhedFAirfox 4-96221749 E. 55th St. Delta Sg survivesTO THE EDITOR tContrary to the story which ap¬peared in the October 17 issue ofthe Maroon, Delta Sigma is notdisbanding. At a joint meeting ofDelta Sigma actives and alumnae,plans for rushing were made. Ourfirst parly will be Tuesday, Octo¬ber 23, at 7:30 at Phi Delta Theta,3625 University.JEANNE CAHILL,PRESIDENT,DELTA SIGMADefends “Judgment”TO THE EDITOR;The review of “Judgement atNuremburg,” which appeared inthe October 18, edition of the Ma¬roon, condemns the film on twogrounds; the technical aspect ofthe film, such as circular trolleysand 360 degree pans, and t he sub¬stantive aspects of the film.One of first question, that oftechnique, the reviewer may beCorrect and indeed probably is.But that does not concern mehere. However, when the reviewervirtually pans the film because ofthe treatment given to the sub¬stantive questions, as he puts it—the simple moral questions re¬quiring simple yes and no an¬swers, it is time to take excep¬tion. ' ■■This film does not just playaround with simple moral ques¬tions as the reviewer would naveus believe. It in fact raises issuesconnected with an actual histori¬cal event not so distant as to besaid that the issues raised nolonger concern us. The apparentsimplicity of some of the moralquestions does not detract fromtheir profundity and their impli¬cations. “Who is responsible?Everyone? ’Yes’ says Schell, Chur¬chill and .American industrialistsincluded , . The past and pre¬sent ramifications of this are notsimple, 'Mr. Tenia ner condemns thev arious “politicos" for reading intothe film questions and tor an-mu'iv such as lekrtod to loreign policy and to the cold war, Thevery fact is that these issues andothers Dial are raised are pro-hah! \ • - nn-; m port ant aspectof the film. And they are notsimple. The attitudes of Variouspersons and the situations of cold Vwar pressure are portrayed exact¬ly as they took place in Nuiem-burg in 1947-48.As for the use of the filmmedia — We are not dealing witha simple lines, curves, shapes andcolor relationships as in a paint¬ing, but with a very powerfulmeans of communication which inthis case, has rather Importantideas and definite opinions torelate. .. ••••If an\one doubts that political“morality” was the intent ot thefilm, remember the closing scenewhich flashes across the screen,words which in effect say that ofthe 99 criminals convicted at theAmerican tribunals, not one isstill in jail. >(Please see ‘“Judgement atNuremburg”).MICHAEL KAUFMANAdvice to CORETO THE EDITOR:Most of the Informationabout the CORE picket ofpresident Kennedy states thatthe purpose of the picket isto ** . . . urge him to sign an exe¬cutive Older ending discriminationin federally assisted housing.” Inaddition. CORE demands that aretroactive clause he included inthis executive order, and in thisrespect its position differs fromthat of other organizations whichhave urged the issuance ot theexecutive order.The retroactive clause wouldforce many builders who orir uafiyreceive Federal funds without anystipulations to obey the new stipu¬lations alter the money had al¬ready been spent. Such an irres¬ponsible action on the part of thegovernment would lend support tothe cause of people who opposefederal aid program, .It was amist a he on t be part of the gm c ru¬men t to supply funds which wereused lor discriminatory purposes,hut to apply the retroactive clausethat ('ORE proposes would onlycompound the mistake.3 believe that a partially retro¬active clause should be included inthe executive order. By this 1mean that buildings which at e al¬ready built or which are underconstruction should not be includ¬ed in the clause, but money thatlias been allocated and is merelywaiting to be spent should he in¬cluded. In this way federal aidcan lie refused if so wished.DANIEL FIELD LROOM • Oct. 19. 1942 sy@iiy•-j. '« 't ,_ Guide is praisedTO THE EDITOR:1 have watched with grow¬ing dismay the reaction ofvarious individuals t o w a r dthe publication of the article(written primarily for enteringgraduate students), “A Guide toLiving in the UC Neighborhood."published in the October 3thMaroon.As an entering grad student. 1can honestly say that I found thearticle witty, informative, andgenerally quite helpful. Construedas “one man’s opinion,” .as' 1 be¬lieve the article was presented,complaints - of - outraged - citizensconcerning “free plugs” for phy si¬cians and morticians would clearlybe thrown out of court, so tospeak.Most graduate students are or¬nery and opinionated enough toreach t heir own conclusions aboutwhom to patronize, but a straightand honest piece of advice fromone w ho knows the neighborhoodfrom the point of view of a fellowstudcni and who knows it Well,goes far in acquainting, if not aid¬ing the newcomer in his accli¬mation to a new environment.I congratulate and thank RonDorfman and the Maroon for auseful, community - serving ven¬ture. -ADRIAN B. DI UYANsto 7: ' $ *>. ' 1 &Frank' Wilkinson will u,l,,rllty °*talk at anti-HUAC meet Fur°r from "old futzer f tSeveral persons who have*been active in civil libertiesmovements will speak at ameeting calling for the aboli¬tion of the House Committee onUn-American Activities (HUAC)this Sunday.New York Assemblyman Markbane, Frank Wilkinson and Har¬ry Bernard will speak at 32 WestRandolph at 7 pm Sunday.Wilkinson spent time in jail fortight of students in New York’sCity College to hear speakers ofiheir choice at the time of thespeaker ban last year.Wilkenson spent time in jail fori efusing to answer questions forUUAC several years ago. He iscurrently executive director of theNational Committee to AbolishHUAC.Harry Barnard, who will chair11ie meeting, is Midwest RegionalChairman of 1he same committee.The meeting is being sponsoredby the Chicago Committee to de-Tnd the Bill of Rights. Admissionis 50c for students, and SI forall others.Wayne speechends long fightby Michael Gordon Dworkin,Managing Editor,The Daily CollegianDETROIT, (CPS) — CarlBraden and Frank Wilkin¬son, opponents of the HouseUn-American Activities Com¬mittee (HUAC), spoke be¬fore members of the WayneState University (WSU) “com¬munity” last week.Their talks culminated nearly ayear of controversy over theirappearance. They were originallyscheduled to speak before the Civ¬il Liberties Club in May. At thatlime they had received permissionfrom the University Student For¬um Committee which must approveihe appearance of outside speakersat open meetings of political andsocial action groups on campus.Less than 12 hours before theirappearance, however, WSU Pre¬sident Clarence Hilberry, can¬celled the permit on the groundsihat “there was insufficient evi¬dence of their competency to con¬tribute to the University’s pro¬grams or to scholarly inquiry.”The two men accepted an invi-1 at ion to speak at St. Andrew’sEpiscopal Chapel, located on thecampus, and about 100 students,faculty, Birchers, Civil libertariansand sightseers attended.The squabble over the appear¬ance of communist, or otherwisecontroversial personalitiesat WSU began in 1960 when theBoard of Governors recinded aban on communist speakers in ef¬fect since 1950.Several ultra-rightists circulat-ed a petition and prompted StateSenator Elmer R. Porter (R-Bliss-lield), chairman of the financecommittee, to write a letter toihe University which threatenedJoss of “further tax dollars forits support as long as the Boardof Governors permit communistspeakers to appear on the cam¬pus.”Since then, Professor Oleg Reu¬tov, a Soviet chemist, and Her-bert Apthekar, a member of theJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutuolLife InsuranceProtection135 $. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 HA 6-1060 American Communist Party anda noted historian on Negro lifein American, have lectured ontopics relevant to their fields ofstudy.Ultra-rightists in Detroit andMichigan have been harassing theUniversity continuously. It wasbrought to a head in May witha special resolution, passed byunanamous consent in both housesof the Michigan Legislature, whichstated that the appearance ofcommunists at state supportedschools is “conti'ary to the publicpolicy of the State of Michigan.”The resolution further orderedthe schools to "report their com¬pliance with this l’esolution to theLegislature.” Of the “Big Thi’ee,”Wayne, the University of Michiganand Michigan State, only WSUmust comply with Ihe order sinceU. of M. and MSU have constitu¬tional status.As a result, WSU President an¬nounced an interim speaker policyat the beginning of the fall quar-ter. It will be in effect pending auniform policy to be issued by thePublic Higher Education Coordi¬nating Council.The new policy pertains to openstudent meetings only. The stu¬dent Forum Committee will stillpass on all l-equests, but theirdecision will be based on whetherthere is proof that the proposedspeaker is a communist, or if hisappearance would “evidently con¬flict’ with the Concurrent Resolu¬tion.Braden and Wilkinson appearedagain under the auspices of theCivil Liberties Club. Slightly over100 persons attended. Universitysecurity officers, however, wereinstructed not to allow personsinto the room unless they werefrom the University “community”or unless special permission hadbeer? granted.Rraden started the program byclaiming that the national presswas not giving enough coverageto the “beatings and jailings ofintergrationists, both Negro andwhite,” which have ocurred in theSouth.He claimed that the HUAC washampering the work of intergra¬tionists by providing an unwhole¬some atmosphere. He furtherclaimed that the HUAC was sup¬plying infoi'mation being used bysegi’egationists to discredit thesupporters of freedom in theSouth.“If you’re an integi’ationist inihe Soulh, then you are a com¬munist,” he said.Frank Wilkinson spoke briefly,having arrived late from the air¬port. He thanked Pi’esident Hil¬berry “for upholding Carl Braden’sand my right to speak and yourright to hear.”He said that “Wherever therehave been those working for so¬cial l’eform, in areas in which theyare opposed by members of theHUAC, they are effectivelystopped.”In an editorial, the Daily Col¬legian noted that the talks wererather boring since the two “re¬peated the same tired phrases wehave heal’d so often in the past.”It further urged that such pro¬grams “continue and stand or fallon their own merits.”You won’t have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711 An article in the University of Colorado (UC) stu¬dent newspaper calling Sen¬ator Barry Goldwater “afool” created a major furor in thestate.The story, also criticizing severalother politicians including Presi¬dent Kennedy, Prompted Gold-water to demand an apology fi’omall concerned on the campus.Quigg Newton, president of theschool, and Gary Althen, editorof the papei’, apologized.Goldwater still miffedGoldwater and his supportei’S,however, were not satisfied andthey demanded that Mitcham beexpelled.This infuriated Newton who ina letter to the Arizona Republicansaid, “We have a genuine democ¬racy of ideas on our campus. Wehave fought long and hai’d toachieve it, and the fight has beenagainst those who like yourself,believe the function of a univer¬sity is to indoctrinate, not edu¬cate.“The ci'y you l’aise has a veryfamiliar ring to us: ‘You mustsilenoe those who do not agreewith me!’ Senator, I shall notsilence them.”Something for everybodyThe stoi'y written by Carl Mi¬tcham, has been injected intoColorado politics, since the uni-vei'sity is governed by a board ofregents elected by popular refer¬endum. Dale Atkins, RepublicanX’egent candidate, promised to ini¬tiate an investigation of the news¬paper and other “subversive” in¬ fluences at the school.Mitcham said the article was aphilosophical essay on politics,not intended 1o cause any contro¬versy. It had strongly criticizedSenator Goldwater as “a fool, amountebank, a mui’dei’ed, no bet¬ter than a common criminal.”Mitcham stated that, “My ar¬ticle was an attack on all politi¬cians, not solely against SenatorBari*y Goldwater.” He also stated,“I think I was right in the ar¬ticle.”Was if really B.G.?Mitcham was cleai'ed of allcharges by a UC disciplinary com¬mittee. The committee reaffirmedthe pi’inciple of free expression ofideas and noted that Mitcham’sarticle, “was not, in context, apei'sonal attack upon SenatorGoldwater.” ;According to the Colorado Daily,the committee’s statement main¬tained that the ai’ticle constitutedan attack on Goldwater’s philos¬ophical position, not Goldwater theman.Mitcham strikes back!Mitcham again brought contro¬versy back to the Colorado campuswhen a letter of his to the editorof the Colorado Daily referx’od toGeneral Dwight D. Eisenhower asan “old futzer,” and a “lap dogfor president—nice to have aroundthe house as a pet, but you’dnever think of sending him to akennel show.”Mitcham’s comments appearedin a letter explaining his attackson Goldwater.The Dictionary of American Slang defines “to futz” as “tofuss, to grumble, to complain, orto have sexual intei’course.”In his explanatory letter, Mit¬cham extended his attack to theDemocratic Party saying thePx-esident John F. Kennedy “canread x’apidly through a set offigures and then throw them backat you.”Last spring, Goldwater appearedon the UC campus. He latercharged that he had been insultedby socialists and “other un-Amer¬ican elements” on the campus.As a l’esult of all the tr’oublestirx’ed up by Goldwater the Col¬orado Student Senate politelyasked Senator Goldwater to “stopmeddling in the administration ofthe University.”In the wake of the controversy,though, UC President Newton an¬nounced last week th naming ofa committee of university offi¬cials, professoi’s, and students toundertake a “thorough and com¬prehensive study” of student pub¬lications.Sit-in cases heading fora Supreme Court showdown / [Car (Contact oltenArAbyDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372ot University Ave.(CPS) — The Justice De¬partment has filed a brief inthe US Supreme Court up¬holding the students involvedin five key cases arising fromsit-ins.The essence of the Department’sbrief is that the Constitution li¬mits the powers of the states toenforce segregation at privately-owned lunch counter's. The caseis legally significant because ithas traditionally been held thatthe constitution only prohibitsgovernment-imposed segregat ion.The Justice Department con¬tends that the existence of statelaws upholding segregation sup¬ports the continued pi’actice ofsegregation. The Department ar¬gues that the sit-in cases in¬volved considerable governmentinterference: enough, in fact, toinvoke the Constitution. In four of the cases beforethe court, the students were ar¬rested and con'victed on trespasslaws, in another instance, twomen were convinced of incitingstudents to carry out sit-ins.CoyBEAUTY SALONExpert-Permanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 TAUSAM-A&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing i«CANTONESE A\IIAMERICAN BUSHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 10:20 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. »U 8-90)8EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetof University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount I BAHA U LLAHI FOUNDER of theI BAHA I FAITHproclaimed: Is,“All things, in their inmostreality, testify to the revela¬tion of the names and attri¬butes of God within them.So potent and universal isthis revelation, that it hathencompassed all things visi¬ble and invisible.” » 1% *v:IV?/UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingFour barbers workingLadies' haircuttingShoe shiningFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor Guy Murchia, author of best-sellers “Song of the Shy” cmd “Musicof the Spheres,” and a former war correspondent far the ChicagoTribune, has written this tribute:“The Baha[i World Faith is the only new force on Earthtoday that is bigger, deeper and more potential than science.The mark of its greatness is that science harmonizes logicallywith it into a beautiful whole so tremendous that it is theonly known fulfillment and integrator of' all the greatreligions of the past.”You are invited to hearWINSTON G. EVANS, author and lecturer, ofNashville, Tennessee, who will speak in theBaha’i House of Worship, Sunday, October 21,at 8 P.M. on “Baha’u’llah and the Christians.”ADMISSION FREE ADMISSION FREEX\\X\V\V\VOct. 19, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Book Review Operettas at MandelTwo (lilbcrt and Sullivan oporattas will be prostuiU-din. Mandel Hall early next month.“Trial by Jury,” November 9. and “HMS Pinafore,”perty. They would, however, ar- Freedom is a very interesting andspaghetti • beef • sausage and meatballsandwiches • shrimp pizxaFree Delivery Over $2.00Tale good care of your eWM in wy.homy.' HY 3-7443. .. :. : ' : g;■Capitalism and Freedom(University of Chicago Press,202 pp. $3.95).Milton Friedman, by popu¬lar connotation, is a conser¬vative ; however, he considershimself a liberal. In the his¬torical and technical sense of theword, he i$ probably correct. Inno way could he be consideredbeing in favor of the status quo¬in his new book, Capitalism andFreedom, Friedman expounds afamiliar theme: that governmentshould do nothing that privateindividuals or groups can possiblydo on their own. However, heapproaches it with a consistencyand intellectual vigor so lackingin most who call themselves "con¬servatives.”Friedman is concerned withthree basic questions: Is capit¬alism compatible with non-econ¬omic freedoms? Is economicalfreedom (assumed to mean cap¬italism i a legitimate freedom?and can capitalism be practicedwithout destroying other free¬doms, including material rights?Does capitalism, as frequentlycharged, make freedom of speechand press an unfulfilled ideal ? Toanswer this question Friedmancompares the relative positions ofa Socialist society. In the UnitedStates today a socialist workingto promote his views hits a severedisadvantage in that few of thosewith the money to be able to helphim are willing to help fight thesystem that gave them theirwealth. But there are so manymen of wealth in America thatthere are always a few who willsupport almost any given view¬point, e.g., Cyrus Eaton.„ A capitalist in a Socialist so¬ciety tl can’t use an examplehere because there are none twould have an entirely differentproblem. There would be no in¬dividuals able to support him asno one would have a great dealof money. His only possible sourcewould be the government. Thusunless there was a bureau of sub¬sidized subversive activities itwould be almost impossible forhim to disseminate his views. Evenif the government did subdisizesubversive activities it would stillhave absolute control over whichviews the public would be allowedto hear.Capitalism according to Fried¬man. is not just important becauseit is a prerequisite to other free¬doms. It is desirable for its ownsake in that it is equivalent toeconomic freedom. Most liber¬tarians who opjKJSe Friedman'sviews would probably agree thatideally an indiv idual should havethe right to own and control pro- gue that the consequences ot scholarly book. It presents con- No\ ember 1<>. w ill be performed l>v the Chicago Cilbertcapitalism are such that more im- distantly strong arguments for a an(j Sullivan Company under aportant rights of more people change in cur present domestic neW pcrformmg arls'projoct, “Ad- number is "declared at "the timeare lost than are gamed. polices, and m many of its areas ven(uros in the Arts ” of original purchase. Single admis-ln answer to them, Friedman of discussion equally strong argu-4 ..... . sion to the production is *22*spends the bulk of his book at- meats for a policy of almost com- The project was established by S1°" ™ thf J™™***\ ,s; ^tempting to show the failure of Plele laissez-failure. Many of his the Governing Board of the Par- « ®a^ ISlv Sit S fgovernmental control to alleviate ideas on applying capitalism are ents Association, “for the purpose ^wftSd fnrvarious economic and social prob- new and imaginative. For any- of intlentifying consistently high, ",l1 °c sold tQ1 each performancelems and then to argue that un- onc interested in the problems of quality family entertainment with us guaranteeing a firstd™ a ^,li"v of pure or ataMt the interactions of economic po- the name of the fnocrsiu of oh.ss seat for every ticket hold-pure capitalism the situation hey and individual rights this is Chicago Laboratory School and its er'would be better. In the course a must. community.”of the book he applies this anal-lysis to monetary policy, interna¬tional finance, trade, education,discrimination, monopolies, occu¬pational licensure, income distri¬bution, welfare, and the problemof poverty.In almost every case Friedmaneffectively shows that present student in the College,/.Tom Heagy The Gilbert and Sullivan com-(Mr. Heagy is a first-year pahy to perform in Mandel Hallwas engaged by the Parents’ As¬sociation in keeping with this aim*The Association, through an Ad¬visory Committee chaired by Mrs.William Barnett Blakemore andincluding Harry Kalven, UC law' Further information is avail¬able from Mrs. Blakemore, atFA 4-0193.U W studentsare reinstated Pregnancy paysin Canada plan(CPS-CUPl —--.The Universitygumentsways logical and systematic. How¬ever, there are three basic* flawsthat appear frequently throughthe bookROTC trains for guerrilla wars„„ w Fifteen University Of Wisconsin professor, is also responsible for of has a uniquepolicy of modified capitalism has students have 'i^,, reinstated Promoting the project and for re- 'vaJ. °[ t,,udi’n,s "do itsfailed, and his arguments are al- '. .. ‘‘ t. viewing the quality of the pro- ni‘'dical plan. Information releasedfollowing their suspension over.the V €n ng une quauty me pro ^ ^ year.s plan offers ..specialweekend for demonstrations and auction eaen year. provision to married students, al-Other disturbances. The suspen- A special family admission of lowing maternity benefits payablesions were lifted by the Faculty $6.25 is being offered for the per- up to nine months after the policyFi rs t: He tends to ignore C°mmittee on Students Appeals formance. The family rate will in- runs out as long as conceptionor gloss over important and following a recommendation by dude admission tickets for all takes place while the plan is inrelevant facts. An example of Ike Student Coutt. members of the family, if the force. .• •this is his treatment of the 1929 John Stevens, chief justice ofdepression. Friedman says that the student court, said that thew r; ****** ***** ^ ,the C.ity Because of the increasing ment and its allies against guoni-a combination of the bank’s that vould ho helpful in handling th,eat ®f *“*• R0TC units t?, _ ,, ,closing and governmental money the cases when thev come before across *,ie country are pre- ■~,s- V®tei 1a‘ e,_ ‘'"d Jt) '!1 w*policies. He completely ignores the student court. sently being trained in coun- ‘,L. j n *mb'. J ) °n‘c^s’the terrific effect the stock mar- The 15 were charged with terguemlla warfare, according to ittU It«s“ket crash had in causing the clos- drunkenness and unlawful assem- ‘‘The Springhillian.” the newspa- n:n« tn „mntA.. S in" ^ffn.ing of the banks. blage following a Wisconsin- per of Spring Hill College. hiSecond; He consislantly places Nolre Dame football game on The Army defines counterguer- as well as bofsiVrinTo*7mfoS tonre aM cSht S % « ".hose, active" and in general.intelligence amt capabilities ot the, , passive measures taken by the Training at this point is involv-fsTn^heThapter onTc?upa°Uo^al Novy representative here armed forces and non-military ing physical conditioning, 'bul spe-licensure whire he assunSs that Representatives of the US ***** * m eS,ab"shed *overn- ciflc ,raining soon,everyone is able to determine Navy will be available in Man-whether a given doctor lawyer. de) Go,.ridor fvom 10;00 anior barber is capable, and to deter- , 0 AA ,mine it without having to do to 3:00 pm on October 26 toit the "hard way” (In the case discuss the Navy s officer candi-of the doctor, this might be hard date programs. Students inter-indeed). ested in scheduling a personal in-Third: He does not always terview with Lieutenant R. A.show that his solution would ne- Gerth to be held in room 200,cessarily solve the problem. An Reynolds Club may do so by tele-example of this is his chapter on phoning Mr. L. S. Calvin, exten-monopoly which although effec- s'on 3284.tively showing the faults of gov¬ernment regulat ion, does not prov ehis contentions that the numberof monolopies would not be greatif the controls were removed andthat their influence on theeconomy would be slight.As a whole Capitalism and MEClassifieddra.Utate woman wants to share apart-ment. Ml 3-1972.19.j 9 Foret or Trlamph 19. Bark seats* <*:<i .town, as in station wa«on, ST3-9243. -FOB rents sublease. 2 bedroom, air-e*nd(ti<med apt. SBth and Hytle Park8lvd. *135. PI. 2-3457.1951 Ford* E & B, new clutch andtransmission* good motor, body matured,$35. HU 8-4067.FOB sale: i2 bar autohar ha in. $35.37 1-2 4*32.For rent (option to buy). Small com¬pletely modern year round house partlyfurnished, one block from Indiana Statej>Srk, 45 minutes from UC campus.% mite from only free, public beachbetween Oary and Michigan City. Rent:$79 per month til 5/39/63, Safe M.999.Immediate possession, WB 4-2779,For rent (option to bay). 2 bedroom,furnished modernized, year found farmhouse, center of J5 wooded acres. One HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported ond domesticwines, liquors ond beer ot lowestprices.FRF I*] DELIVERYPHONE■■ ▲ jm —k A £L— lsis■ 769f> Triangle Prod. FRANK FRIED presentsFRI., OCTOBER 26, 8:30Orchestra Hall • One Nite OnlyMIRIAMMAKEBAand Her Famous GroupMAIL $3.30, $3.30. $2.SO, $2TRIANGLE PRODUCTIONSORDERS 156 R. Superior St.Ticketi alio at Discount Records. 201N. La Salle; Hyde Park Co-Op CreditUnion, 55th a Lake Park; Baca Radio,1741 Sherman, Evanston; Kenmac Rec¬ords. 2457 W. Devon. PH.: SU 7-7585mile from Tremont (JndanState Bark). 45 minute*trami>us. Bant $30 until 5/SO*22.999. PossesKioii ll/t/l4-2779, a Uunesfrom UC/62. Safe12. WlfShoreland ants. 5135 S. Kenwooil offers1 to 3% roam eftkkney unit*- At*tract!vely appmnted, month to monthoccupancy. $80 and up. Elevator, fire¬proof building, manager on premises.HU.' RUMMAGE SALE, Mon.,Sat.. Oct. 27. 1328 E. 65th Oet. 22 -St.Expert typist, reasonable r,2-4555. ntes. 1’LFrench -private instruction- reading exams. BU 8-7881 u 11 to vet#kSINGF.RS WANTKD. VolunUer Epis¬copal charch chafe. 667-2739 evenings. SYRACUSE UNIVERSITYACADEMIC PROGRAMS ABROADSUMMER IN SWEDEN—co-sponsored by the Experiment inInternational Living. Home Economics—-0 credits.SUMMER IN FRANCE—with cooperation of Office du TourismeUniversitaire. French Language and Literature—6 credits.SUMMER IN ENGLAND—co-sponsored by the Experiment inIntei-national Living. The Performing Arts-—3 credits.For application and more information: SUMMER ABROADUNIVERSITY COLLEGE 610 East Fayette StreetSyracuse 3, New York Here’s deodorantYOU CAN TRUSTOld Spice Stick Deodorant.. . fastest, neatest way to all•day, every day protection f It’s 'the active deodorant foractive men... absolutely dependable. Glides on smoothly,speedily...dries in record time. Old Spice Stick Deodorant—most convenient, most economical deodorant money canbuy. 1.00 plus tax.STICKDEODORANTDrama Revieww Clouds": Very funny ... dirty ... lively nA very funny, VCiy ? a ° an<* ^*‘IU,phon. I <lo not The high point of the play is most praised for translating a 51 Street (Hyde Park Boulevard),and very lively pioductioil now whether it is intended to a debate between Just Reason and (jreek play so it is funny, and en- locate the corner north-east of theof Aristophanes’ “ 1 he s^ow why Soorat«s made people Unjust Reason, which is too up- tirely understandable, with mod- Picadilly, go up the stairway be-ern terms which strangely aren’t tween th National and the Pizzaanachronisms. He should do an- House (1506 is the number), andClouds” opened last week at *nSry or why he was so unjustly roarlously obscene to be repeatedThe Last Stage on 51 Street. It judged. It does neither very well. here.will be shown this weekend and ^ _s sk'*lful, interesting, and sad. The leading roles are taken by other.next, and there arc student prices. ®ddie Goldberg plays Socrates as Felix Shuman, Jerry LaPointe,sort A11C Ollll .V,,. 1*1 LMrUrt Pnl ' n T 3 walk in. There probably will stillThe whole production has realstyle—vigorous, blunt and mascu¬line. Earlier plays at The LastStage were developing this style,but here it is full-blown. Praythey hang onto it. It’s what makestheatre art.Director William Bezdek, trans¬lator James Dedficld, and designerStanley Kazdailis have produced a blundering Athenian, the hero, hasserious and impressive, more likea prophet than a gadfly. Thescene makes the point, which Isan important one, that “TheClouds” cannot he considered agood play because it is not true.So it isn’t good, it’s just a riot.The evening really gets rollingwith Aristophanes proper. A Eddie Goldberg, Tom Jordan,Marshall Richey, James Redfield,and Durward McDonald, a com¬pany professional in skill even ifunpaid. Mr. Redfield is the onlyrelative newcomer to the localstage and he holds his own, per¬haps because he believes his lines.But Mr. Redfield is here to be They are coy cupie-dolls, waddlingthrough a bubble dance, fascinat¬ing to the point of distraction. Awarning: the play ends threetimes and only the last timecounts.whole work where blocking, lan¬guage and set belong together.The actors keep up an athleticpace. Every speech has beenstripped of obscurity. Even theset acts (it rains).The production docs get oft' to aslow start with a curtain raiserbased on the Soeratic dialogues a bratty son who plays Ihe horsesand loses. To settle his family’sill-gotten debts without actuallypaying them; the Athenian signsup for a course in Unjust Reasonat Socrates’ Thinkery. Socratesis played as a cigar-smoking roguewho specializes inyouth. Neighborhood arts centerlaunches "Arts-Alive" seriesThe most beautiful things in the J* ™ siP visibl? from ** street*show are the clouds themselves. but don * miss ,he show-Carol HorningPhoenix mapsissue on moviesThe staff of the Phoenix,To find the theatre, which is on UC’s literary magazine, hasannounced that their first is¬sue of the year will deal withthe political, economic, and lite¬rary effects of the modern filmon society.The political implications ofCaroll Russell collaborated with sucb mm‘es,as. Judgment at Nu-On Sunday, the Hyde Park — D-mbur, and The Defiant One,corrupting Art Center Will present the Ix>uis Horst on Modern Dance wiH be analyzed in relation to thefirst of five programs in its Forms, published in 1961. Shirley cases of the famous “HollywoodCalendar of EventsFriday, October 19Lutheran Scxt: Bond Chapel, 11 am.Varsity Soccer game: Slagg Field, 3l»n. Chicago vs. Roosevelt.Meeting: staff work session. Particle,Ida Noyes 309, 3-6. 7-10; under¬graduates interested in joining staffare welcome.Seminar: Research Institutes. “Rela¬tionships between RNA and Proteinin Some Plant Viruses,” Dr. RobertSymons, room 211. 4 pm.Koinonia: Lutheran Student Fellowship,Chapel House, 6 pm.Lecture: “The P< rrrn ability of HeartMuscle Ions and Uncharged Mole¬cules." l)r. Ernest Page, HarvardMedical School, 5 pm. Room P-117,Billings.Motion Picture series: Masterpieces ofthe Cinema II, Doc. Film group. SocSci 122, 7:15 and 9:15 pm. M.Sabbath services: Hillel, 5715 Wood-lawn, 7:45 pm.Lecture series: Works of the Mind.Downtown Center, 64 E. Lake. Xoom201, 8 pm. “Themes and Variationsin Greek Tragedy.” David Green.Assoc, professor, Committee on SocialThought.Motion picture: “On the Waterfront,”R-J, 8 and 10 pm.Freedom Chorus: veterans of freedomrides, sit-ins. etc., singing songs offreedom, Int. House. 8 pm. $1.00.Hillel Fireside: the Sukkoth Festivalan early chapter, J. Coert Rylaarsflam,Hillel, 8:30 pm.Chamber Music series: Gunther Schul¬ler conducting a program of simul¬taneous music, Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.Saturday, October 20Simchat Torah celebration: Hillel, 5715Woodlawn, 7:45 pm.Hootenanny: Thompson house. 8 pm,free.Concert: Folklore Society. Ida NoyesHall, Cloister Club, 8:30 pm. RoscoeHolcomb.Sunday, October 21POUT Breakfast Party: 1207 60 St.,from 10 am. 60c waffles, coffee.Luncheon-lecture series: MethodistFoundation, Swift commons, 12:30pm. The Reverend Carl Michalson,professor of systematic theology.Drew University.Varsity soccer game: Stagg Field. 1pm, Chicago vs. Washington Univer¬sity (St. Louis).Gospel for Freedom: McCormick Place,2:30 pm. Tickets from $2.Lecture: “How Necessary is the UN tothe US 7” Andrew Cordier, dean,School of International Relations,Columbia University, formerly Execu¬tive Assistant to the Secretary Gen¬eral of the UN, Int. House. 3:30 pm.Carillon Recital: Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 4 pm, Daniel Robins.Dialogue: United Christian Fellowship. -Chapel House. 4:30 pm, “Doubts andAffirmations about God.”Buffet Supper: United Christian Fellow¬ship, Chapel House, 50c, 5:4 5 t>m.Methodist graduate discussion seminar:Existential anxiety and ChristianFaith, Chapel House. 7:15 pm.Discussion: Chapel House, 7:15 pm,“Schweitzer’s View of Jesus and Dis-cipleship,” Porter Foundation gradu¬ate fellowship. Chapel House, coffee.Third annual open pair club cham¬pionship, UC bridge club, Ida NoyesHall, 7:15 pm.Folk Dancing: Folklore society, IdaNoyes Hall, -8 pm.Monday, October 22Class: Poetry of Bialik and Tchernie-houslay, Hillel. 4:30 pm.Tutoring project reading workshop:Ida Noyes Hall. 7 pm.Film: “Vedic sacrifice” - The Vajapeya Vajna. Mr. van Buitenen, 7 pm. Ros-enwald 2, admission free. Sponsoredby Indian Civilization course.Movie: International House, “Raisin inthe Sun,” 8 pm, admission 50e.Coffee Plus Discussion: Ronald Weiner.Instructor in the College will readfrom his own poetry and discusspoetry in general. Shorey House, 9-11I>m. “Arts-Alive” series --a dial¬ogue on the modern dance con¬ceived and illustrated by CarrollRussell and Shirley Genther.The program will examine con¬temporary movements in threemajor area of the art world:dance, music and painting. In¬terrelation of the different styles Genther, teacher and composer of Ten.” The social and psychologicalmusic for dance, was formerly studies of character in a numberassociated with the University of of foreign films such as The Bi¬cycle Thief and A Taste of Honeywill also be analyzed. In additionWisconsin dance department.The remaining four programswill be on film, jazz, architectureand censorship in the arts.Sunday’s program will begin at8:30 pm. in the Hyde Park Artand movements will be demon- Center> 5236 s. Blackstone Avestrated and discussed. Admission is $1.50 for members and Wednesday$1.75 for non-members. Hall.to these articles will also be wood-cuts, poems, and short stories.All those interested in writing,editing, or reading manuscriptsmay contact Robert Lamb, BU8-6067 or attend the meeting.t 4:00 in Ida NoyesLAKE /par k at S3rd(Vyde park NO 7 9071the (Vyde park theatre' STARTS FRIDAY, OCT. 19Cannes Prix Winner —r Luis Bunuel’s"VIRIDI AN A"SILVIA PINAL A FRANCISCO RABAL ★ FERNANDO REYShort — "A SKY* FULL OF PEOPLE"Daily — Co«ipl»t« Shows of 4-8-10. Sunday 2-4-6-8-10NEXT4 at Japan's International Award Winning FilmsFri., Sot., Sun., Mon.: "Rashomou" & "Gate of Hell"Tues., Wed., Thurs.: "The 7-Samurai" & "Ugetsu"Coming — VLADIMIR NABOKOV S "LOLITA^FREE weekend patron parking at 5230 So. Lake Park Ave.Special student rate with I.D, cardsFOLKSONGS for PEACESponsored byProfessor Robert Cosbeyfor Congress Committee13th DISTRICT8:00 P.M.Unitarian ChurchTickets: $2.50 donation Oct. 20th( 1962EvanstonCALL 475-7146for ReservationsArtists: Win StrackeGeorge A GerryArmstrongTicket Available At The Co-Op Credit UnionBrother John SellersNew Wine Singers SPOTLIGHT ONNORWAYA Norwegian Viking ship sailed to Chicago's WorldFair in 1893 — a Norwegian sailing vessel to theFair in 1932 —and now Norwegian steamers bring Norwegianimports to Chicago. Only Scandinavian Imports hasdirect import prices on desks, chairs, sofas—in teakand rosewood. See this furniture in our displayrooms at 57th and Stony Island, or in the EdgewaterBeach Hotel.Hank’s Restaurantand Bar-B-Cue'the best bar-b-eue on earth' liptadp tar hospital t din*dealers in:• mg• morris• austin• triumph5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2308 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob lestermg psychiatrist Features: Complete Dinners from $1. 25Buisnessmen’s Lunches from 95cSpecialty: Hickory Smoked Bar-b-cuedRibs and ChickenWe have a private dining room for businessmeetings, clubs, and private affairs \Open 7 a.m. to 1 a.m.7101 STONY ISLAND AVENUE 1643-1131 ' Multiform — the favorite of professional people.Multiform — the freestanding wall units. Inter¬changeable bookcases, bars, desks, chests withdrawers, endless combinations for a complete wall.Or start with a bookcase unit for as little as $24.00,and add to it later on.SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSNO 7-40401542 East 57th StreetOpen Tuesday through Saturday, I p.m, to 7:30 p.m.wet. 19, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON » 7t ft’* ».*»«M%■ *• f-4S Mich college imitates UCby Vicky ShiefmonWayne State University has established an experimental school, Monteith College,patterned after the University of Chicago’s undergraduate College.In a recent interview, Clarence Hilberry, president of Wayne State, discussedMonteith’s programs and some of the current trends in education across the country.He explained that Monteith is —trying to imitate the Chicago pro¬gram in providing its studentswith a background in various fieldswhile majoring in one area.Comparable aimsIn some ways, Monteith is verymuch like Chicago and in other,very different, Hilberry continued.While the aims are comparable,there are two significant differ¬ences. Wayne is a state-supportedinstitutions which must accept stu¬dents according to the laws of theState of Michigan. It is only oneundergraduate college withinWayne’s framework which in¬cludes also an undergraduateschool of liberal arts and educa¬tion school. ing institutions should and coulddo this separately.”Hilberry believs that the uni¬versity can be a good climate forcreative artist as well as physi¬cal and social scientists.“Not only are artists often in¬terested in teaching, I can’t seehow an artist in a big city such as Chicago, would be cut off fromthe mainstream of life which hefind necessary to draw upon for hismaterial,” he told.Hilberry, a UC alumnus, con¬cluded that education was ex¬tremely difficult to define for itis as “subtle, various and complexas society itself.” Expert: Food industrymust use nuclear power“Spectacular improvements” in food production willend unless there is a breakthrough in the application ofnuclear energy to agricultural problems, according to anofficial of the United Nations Food and Agriculture organ¬ization. —IM-Frat games are shutoutsHome soccer season beginsStructure differsStructurally the Shutouts were the order ofthe night in yesterday’s in¬tramural football games. InMonteith divisional play it was: Lawpattern differs from the Chicago Babies 18. Outlaws 0; 5400 Green-program. Each year the student wood 13, Hitchcock 0; Fine Artstakes half of his courses in the Quintet 12, Witnesses 0; Capital-Monteith program and half in the ists 12, Winsochi U 0; Res Ipsasliberal arts college. The courses in 7, CTS 0.the Monteith program consist of The Res Ipsas-CTS game wasthree units each taken for a year- one of the roughest battles so farand-a-quarter in this order: social in the season. Two CTS playersscience, natural science, and hu¬manities. The courses which theMonteith student selects from theliberal arts school should lead toa major and minor with whichto graduate.Separate collegeThe creation of a separate gen¬eral education college withinWayne coincides with Holberry’sbelief in flexibility in education.As our society becomes increas¬ingly industrial, there will be noroom for unskilled workers, hepredicted. Those people will needpost-high school training relatedto their interest or ability.“But,” Hilberry emphasized.” Idon’t think that universitiesshould become more and more en¬compassing. Other kinds of train- suffered slight injuries.Fraternity action brought somepretty lopsided scores. Phi Sigma Delta demolished Phi Gamma Del¬ta 39-0. Psi Upsilon ran overBeta Theta Pi 32-0. Phi Kappa Psiconquered Zeta Beta Tau 24-6.In the closest game of the nightDelta Upsilon edged Phi DeltaTheta 7-6.The soccer team will playfirst two home games this week¬end at Stagg Field.The team . will play RooseveltUniversity this afternoon at 3 pm,and Washington University ofSaint Louis on Sunday afternoonat 1 pm. Speaking last night at UC, SirWilliam Kershaw Slater, an ex-pei*t on the effects of radio activi¬ty in food, said “The last greatleap forward in productivity basedon the scientific advances of thefirst half Of the century has nowreached a plateau beyond whichthe best farmers can go little fur¬ther.“Before it can become moreproductive, agriculture must awaitthe application of the findings ofa new field of science (nuclearenergy), which will open up en¬tirely new approaches to the oldproblems which have so farproved unsolvable.”Slater’s lecture was the first ina series entitled “Nuclear Scienceand Agriculture.” The series issponsored by the Department ofPharmacology, the Division of theits Social Sciences, the BiologicalSciences Division, and the Univer¬sity Extension Division.Slater, who is associated withthe Department of Scientific andIndustrial Research for the UN, Physical Biology at Cornell Uni-stated, “Nuclear physics and its versity, on “Fallout and the Foodmany applications in chemistry Change,” Monday, October 29...and biology provides the neededopening for agriculture.“This has been grasped by re¬search workers with great en¬thusiasm and radioactive elementshave found a place in everybranch of agricultural research.It is too early yet to do morethan speculate on the ultimate ef¬fect on food production of the in¬vestigations in which radioactivesubstances are employed.”The next three lectures In theseries will be held in UC’s lawsehool auditorium. All lecturesbegin at 8 pm. Moderators in¬clude:Emil Mrak, chancellor of theUniversity of California on “Foodand Food Processing,” next Tues¬day.D. Gale Johnson, dean of UC’sDivision of Social Sciences, on“ The Developing Countries,”Thursday, October 25.Cyril Comar, professor andchairman of the Department ofReflections of Telstar .v**~•OP '1ifr fe. dark theatredark & madisonfr 2-284550c» ^ timesfor college student*★ open 7:30 a.m.late show 3 a.m.★ different double feature dailyif Sunday Film Guild★ write in for free program guide★ little gal-lery for gals only★ every friday is ladies dayall gals admitted for only 25cHr Clark parking . 1 door south4 hours 95c after 5 p.m.WEEKEND PROGRAM“spirit of st.louis” and"prince and theshowgirl.”sat. - 20th “spiral road”and “two weeksin another town”21st - “whistle downthe wind” and“auestion 7”AdvertisementTIKI TOPICSAloha Nui (Hearty Greetings)Show her you love her.Treat her to a wonderful eveningof theatre, dinner and cocktails.A mouthwatering complete dinnerof French Fried Shrimp.Golden Fried Chicken or Beef,and all at theenticing price of SI.95.AND THEN right upstairs to ahilarious evening at the“Last Stage"’, a comedy thathas everyone talking. Real livelegitimate theatre right here inHyde Park. How about that ? ?And afterwards hack toCIRALS, HOUSE OF TIKI1510 Hyde Park Blvd.for the grand climax,with the perfect drink.RememberCIRALS. HOUSE OF TIKI andTHE LAST STAGE1510 Hyde Park Blvd.Kitchen open 11:00 A.M. to 3:00 A.M.No Food Wednesday• CHICAGO MAROON Remember the picture above? It flashed across yourtelevision screen on a hot night last July. Perhapsyou remember that it originated from France. Andthat it reached the U. S. via Telstar, the world’s firstprivate enterprise communications satellite.Since that summer night, the Bell System's Telstarhas relayed electronic signals of many types-tele¬vision broadcasts, telephone calls, news photographs,and others.But there’s one Telstar reflection you might havemissed. Look into the faces of the Bell System peoplebelow and you’ll see it. It is the reflection of Telstar’s success that glowed brightly on the faces of all whoshared in the project.Their engineering, administrative and operationsskills created Telstar and are bringing its benefitsdown out of the clouds to your living room.These Bell System people, through their talented,dedicated efforts, make your phone service still better,more economical, and more useful.The reflections of Telstar are many.Bell Telephone Companies• Oct. 19. 1962