\ J ■ •Faculty reactions differ on Cuban crisisUC faculty specialists in military “We should do the same with daring his class on internationalpolicy, international politics, and our bases on the periphery of the politics,oiher areas relevant to the Cuban Soviet Union,” he continued. ,, „isis reacted in a variety of ways “From my limited knowledge,” he MorBcntliau stated that theto President Kennedy’s announce- said, “although these bases, set J”reat P°sed b>’ presen”e ”, article was written in late Sep- ship between Cuba and Turkey,nient of imposition of a quarantine up in the age erf conventional air- ' m! „ 68.,n ^'ub“. dofs n”;.a<,d tember.) he agreed with Walter Lipman’son weapons bound for Cuba^^ planes, were at one time vital, * a,e mi 1 ar‘V Morton Kaplan statement that we “can’t followThe Maroon yesterday questioned in an aRe ICBM’s and atomic a a rPa -v ,)rPSPn * Professor of Political Science the Truman doctrine in Turkeya number of faculty members and submarines, they are no longer The significance of the presence Morton Kaplan saw no danger and the Monroe doctrine in Cuba.”iound that some felt Kennedy’s so vdab ( of missiles is twofold, stated Mor- arising from the quarantine in We might get rid of some of ouraction the mildest possible, where- Johnson then asked “how clear- gentium. First, It is a threat to Cuba. “Khrushchev may be a bold bases as a sort of trade, he con-as others felt Kennedy needlessly ^. is tbe elecGon related?” He Uniled States prestige. Second, it gambler, but he isn't crazy,” tinued.undertook great risks. Some hoped sa'd be was unabje *° answer this creates an effective sliowplace of stated Kaplan. If we sink a ship, There is a basic difference, how-tlu- UN would act to avert danger; Question, but said that the ad- modern weapons to show to other there isn’t anything Russia can do, ever, between the Cuban missilesand some saw no real danger pre- ™lnistration s prestige in Ihe US Latin American countries, and in he said. and our missiles in Turkey, statedfAn article by Morgenthau he continued. "I don’t see anystating what he thinks should alternative” to our reaction, hehave done will appear in the nov- added.ember issue of Commentary. The On the subject of the relation-sen led by the Kennedy move.Walter Johnson should not act as the basis lor this wav could aid in the training Kaplan stated that enacting the Pritchett. The new move bydecision on a matter so grave. 0f subversives in Latin America, quarantine “was the least Ken- Russia is a sudden change in theJohnson said that acV.on pre- Morgenthau criticized President nedy could have done ” “It the status quo. whereas our bases inWalter Johnson, Professor of Jierabl^ to Jhe Quarantine would f “ not ^havine Taken US swallovved this (Khrushchev’s Turkey have been there for someHistory, stated that although the la“ VomTmiider ac"l tS-ner. !f he -nd'ng missiles to Cuba .it would time.United States has a right to de- bo*vco,t o1 the last few had «donp somMhinp indicate to. Khrushchev that we Leonard Binderfend its national security if such w<^ks* .is threatened, he “is not con- f^reed with President Ken-vinced” the recent act by Russia nedy in his fear that too manyis a threat to our national se- na,'ons ar'e getting nuclear vvea-curity. P°ns-He said he hopes that if the Hans MorgenthauSecurity Council does not act, the Professor of political scienceGeneral Assembly should take ac- Hans Morgenthau, although nottion toward dismantling the bases available for extensive comment, there is an election coming up,in Cuba. did discuss the Cuban situation Morgenthau added.had done something less drastic ,, „ ... „*u ^ i would swallow anything. Leonard Binder nmearlier, the severe measure taken B B ... wulld,u .iuer, associate pio-Mon^ay would not have been _ k "f d i w iw ° " • t * fessor of political science statednecessary, Morgenthau stated. R?bert P?ul J?oUt\ «»» there is a difference whichprofessor of philosophy, stated must be noted, between the pres-“Kennedy’s initial mistake,” he that Khrushchev gave Kennedy ence of Russian missiles in Cubacontinued, “was playing down the little alternative. and the presence of United StatesCuban affair at the start.” “Khrushchev’s action of placing bases in Turkey (Binder’s field is“We also should not forget that m*ssiles in Cuba was “insanely the Middle-East),— . \ .. reckless,” he stated. “He must Turkey, he stated, is a strate-have felt we would do nothing gically important boundary be-about it. There wasn’t much else tween NATO areas and the SovietKennedy could have done to show sphere. Cuba, on the other hand,him otherwise,” Wolff added. “is an enclave within the heartWolff stated that the sole func- the western area,” Binder con-tion of missiles in Cuba must b® tinued. He expressed “qualifiedas first strike weapons, because approval” of Kennedy’s decisionof Cuba’s vulnerability to attack. to Place the quarantine on Cuba,They have some value as a deter- because while it is “difficult torent, “but this (sending missiles) conceive of the actions the USSRis a very dangerous and provoca- take, we may doubt that thetive way” of accomplishing this Soviet Union will take action thatend. s.ated Wolff. will result in escalation towardsVol. 71 — No. 20 University of Chicago, Wednesday, Oct. 24, 1962 Wolff placed the blame for the thermo-nuclear war.”current situation on Khrushchev, Binder stated two factors hebut said that Kennedy should now saw as justifying President Ken¬do his best “to give Khrushchev a nedy s action.graceful out.’Robert Sullivan The first was that if there arenuclear missies in Cuba, the Unit-SG calls emergency meetingExec sends telegram to JFKThe executive committee of Stu- We feel that we cannot in good er of our deterrent to answer any *** « nedy>s actjon stated Binder, isdent Governmen_ (SG) voted last conscience remain silent w hile the future instances oi Cuban aggres- T10''* tbe ccmc_ern ov(er the fact that Cuba, if it has nu-night to send a telegram to Presi- actions of the US government sion, President Kennedy, in esta- [,uba' ® a , . .ant' , clear missies at its own disposal.Visiting Associate Professor of ed States becomes more vulner-Political science Robert Sullivan able to nuclear attack, “in view'who specializes in Soviet Affairs, the widespread assumption thatdid not think the quarantine poses *be USSR does nol yet have oper-any great danger. He said he did ICBM’s. He raised a dis-ix)t think the USSR would push tinction between experimentalthe issue. missies and operational missies.A second justification for Ken-dent Kennedy protesting the threaten to provoke the nuclear blishing a naval blockade, has emblockade of Cuba. The executive war that will be the extinction of barked upon a course of pre-em-committee also passed a motion civilization.calling an emergency meeting of To argue that the military cf countries which have\ notthe entire SG assembly tomorrow blockade of Cuba is a “preven- caused any harm to the Unitedevening. five” action is to argue that the states. The blockade constitutesTh«» executive Is made up of Soviet Union or the United States the first aggressive action in whatSL President Arthur MaeEwan, is justified in attacking the other cou|(j become a series of recipro- !!, *" noTthe"TTSSflT'wants ToVice-President Mike Wollan, because “the enemy" has the cap- ca] actions leading to nuclear war ' .. ... ictherefore help limit any furtherdevelopments to w'hich the US ob-ptive action that violats the rights Jepl_s> ie con^nupd-K However, the blockade also pro¬vides an excellent argument for might use these missies againstthe US without the consent ofRussia.In addition to individual state-.. , . . r, ments on the issue, a letter is be-the USSR to act in Beilin, for . . , , , ’the USSR could say "the US di,l mg equ ated among faculty mem-it first," Sullivant staled. "Whe- be,s calbnS '»>' act'<>n ®» "'isissue.Also, Americans for DemocraticAction will issue a statement onthe subject toady.use it this way is another ques¬tion,” he added.C. Herman Pritchett— leadingTreasurer Peter Rabinowitz, See- ability to attack first. The mili- between the great powersrotary Sally Cook, and SG com- tary buildup in Cuba, whatever its w militarytwitter chairmen Pam Proeuniar, nature, has not and cannot by itself * ..Bruce Rappaport, Steve Bovan. constitute an injury to the United of -uba and anV other actions by c Herman Pritichett, Professor efij/JpntCRichard Jacobsen, Terri Ray, and States or to any other nation in the the government of the United and Chairman of the Department w 11 ,W1 *■ UUCI,,aRuss Kav. Western hemisphere. The w'hole States that would interfere with of Political Science, said that theThe vote on sending the tele- rationale of armaments in the Cuba’s domestic affairs. In to- US reaction was “relatively mild”gram was seven in favor two op- modern world is that they ai-e a day’s world finding peaceful solu- in the face of recent events,posed and one abstension. The temporary necessity providing a tions to political differences is no “When we fight, they stop;vote on calling the emergency deterrent to the aggressive designs longer an alternative course of when we don’t, they keep push¬meeting was seven in favor, three of other nations. Cuba has not action, it is the only rational ing,” continued Pritchett hit Cuba actionopposed. committed any aggressive action, course of action. We hope that He stated that we must act on College and university studentsacross the nation were upset orscared by Kennedy’s impositionof a “quarantine” on ships headedtowards Cuba.. ,, .. , . . , . At Wayne State University inrange missiles, w'ould necessarily his action and will adopt as the good reason to make a move so Detroit tvvo groups one opposentail its own extinction from the first principles of American for- "likely to upset the delicate bal- ■ Keiinedv’. action,'and one sup-retaliatory powder of the United eign policy that we will never ance of power. Russia was eitherstrike the first blow in a con- waiting for us to react, or RussiaThe text of the telegram For it to do so, even with long President Kennedy will reconsider the assumption taht Russia had afollows:The Executive Council of theStudent Government of the Unienough to run the risks involved,Yates for blockade — students picket him porting it, picketed the NationalAuto Show. They chose the Auioshow “to attract the most atten¬tion.”At the University of Californiaat Berkeley, over 600 students at¬tended a three hour spontaneousrally. The speakers, sponsored byApproximately 100 peace sym- Sidney R. Yates defended Presi- “Those who 'wish to retreat all the Young Socialist Alliance andnai tininatpd last nicht in dent Kennedy’s action in Cuba the way rather than go to war Berkeley’s liberal party SLATE,- „— ‘ * -I last night in Mandel Hall at a say ‘History repairs all dictator- protested Kennedy’s action. Mem-as an emergency resolution of the a °* Mandel Hal, wieie meeyng gponsored by Students for ships and tyrannies.’ I do not be- bers of the crowd at the rally.Executive Council of the directly Democratic senatorial candidate Yates and Young Democrats. lieve this.” however, w’ere antagonistic tow-elected Student Assembly of the Sidney Yates was speaking. The Speaking to about 500 people, Twq professors served as ards the speakers, and there wasUniversity of Chicago, ponding „icket was sponsored bv the local the Democratic candidate running s( speakers Donald Meinle- a “crossfire of questions," reports1h!nSf,tL°n.nf th;? subioct “n chapter of the Student Peace »or Senator against Everett Dirk- john professor’of philosophy, gave a Berkeley student.' t.ui sday by the entire Assembly. __ H sen said, “Only the President has a s|lorl spoecb in which he de- A demonstration againstopposhtorf to'*tho^stabhshment of rather than trust in nag- flict that could escalate into a wanted something else badlya military blockade of Cuba. Wc otiations or in the ultimate pow- nuclear holucaust.feel that the blockade is a steptoward nuclear conflict. Further,we feel that the blockade heigh¬tens world tension and constitutesa substantial threat to the estab¬lishment of peace with freedom.We send this statement to youWe urge that you halt the Union (SPU). theblockade and initiate peaceful•'•elif.n as a solution to the conflict.Executive Council of all the facts on the matter.” scribed Yates as being “in the blockade is set for 11 am thiscago. The picketers carried signs say- Yates compared the Cuban situ- tradition of Franklin Delano mornin8 in San Francisco,ing “All Hands Off Cuba.” “No ation to Korea. Koiea demon- Poosevc]t and Adlai Stevenson.” There will be a demonstrationstrated that the non-communist als(( asserted that the United tornoi’row al 4 Pm at the Uni-States must be strong “in the ver‘?U>' of Michigan, in w'hich thesense of taking care of all of its var*°us peace groups on campuswall take part.Student Government of Blockade, No I oi eign Bases - rjd woldd resist Communist enthe University of Chi- East or West and Yates and croachmcnt.O’Hara — Oppose the Blockade.’n , ,. * * . . , . He said some matters should be , ,», Some of the protestors passed out TTM hl1f w lin People,llu telegram was accompanied Hterature opposing Uniled States referred to the UN, but it is up Philliltl T11ftr'°theS,Udent action in Cuba,which follows:Tt is the responsibility of citi- The protestors picketed in Man-acting individually and in del corridor and outside the build- position.”voluntary association to express ing before the rally began. During Yates compared Kennedy’sthoir view’s on issues facing so- the speeches, the peace sympa- policy to FDR’s “Quarantine theClply as a whole. To refrain from Gazers s.tood in back of the audi- Aggressors” policy. . . „ . „commenting on (the actions of a torium despite requests by several Yates said to those who say re- appeared at the meeting but did ou^ Gf Boston and New Yorkgovernment which threatens the speakers for them to sit down, treat, that the Soviets are pressure not speak. concerning the actions of studentsexistence of world civilization is The “stand-in” wras a silent pro- politicians. “I cannot see w'hy they The scheduled question and an- there, and there has been no pro-*o assent to whatever action that test against the US “quarantine” want to retreat rather than face swer period following the speeches test report from the Universitygovernment takes. of Cuba. the challenge. was cancelled. of Illinois,Demonstrations are scheduledto armed alliances to resist aggres- Phill.n Kurland, professor of for weej<end jn Washingtonsion. “The. President lias taken sal<‘ ha\ he C|,0IC0 betwfen and Baltimore. These will Ik-this last road and I support his Yates and Dirksen wras one be¬tween an “intellectual” and a“frustrated vaudevillian.” sponsored by the Washington Stu¬dent Peace Union and the Balti¬more Students for a DemocraticCongressman Barratt O'Hara of Society,the second congressional district Conflicting reports are comingU. •* » (■* Vi .■ if• ;f. ,44(| I'iiV\*' I? ,< '•& bm Ik Editorials * iUS takes needless risks Letters to the MaroonAsks for booksStarting at 10 am today, the United States will require any ship bound for Cuba to halt and besearched for arms. Any ship refusing to stop wi 11 first receive a warning shot, and then if necessary,be fired upon.We feel that President Ken *hip in such territory? Further, We oppose the spread of nuclearnedy in effecting this policy is ,suf an ac* ‘s oflen ™ns“?re1k“ "eaJ°n.a Realise each new memberneedlessly risking nuclear war. declaration of war. Is this the of the "atomic club increases theRussian missiles in Cuba cer- United States’ intention? chances of atomic war. Butthinly do not add to present mili- And is the US within bounds in Kennedy’s move is aggressive andtary threats — the Soviet Union expecting the Soviet Union to make creates a greater danger than doesalready has w eapons capable of concessions it would not be w illing presence of nuclear weapons inreaching the US. The Kennedy to make? The United States has Cuba.action, therefore, was not neces- many bases overseas, on the peri- Since a continuation of currentsary to protect our national se- phery of the Soviet Union. What policies could easily lead to nu-curity in the face of immediate would be our reaction if the USSR clear war, positive action must beattack.. suddenly told us to stop sending taken to reverse US policies andWe are led to wonder why arms or they would fire on us? prevent the current situation fromMr. Kennedy chose to make such Cextainly the fact that we have getting worse,a move. If it was to show the been there for years is no justifica- We urge every member of theworld that the US is capable of tion. Nor is the argument that our University community to makestanding up for something strong, bases are for defensive purposes known their opposition to Ken-we wonder if he was not risking and theirs are for offensive pur- nedy’s recent actions. Public opin-too much in order to make this P^ses, for who are we to judge? ion telegrams cost only 75c. TO THE EDITOR:I am a Peace Corps Volunteerand a teacher at the Bornu Pro¬vincial Secondary School. I joinedthe Peace Corps last June, trainedat UCLA during the summer,and came to Nigeria this Sep¬tember. In the morning and earlyafternoon I teach 25 hours ofEnglish a week to 112 first and-second form boys. In the late af¬ternoon we play soccer, volleyball or field hockey. In the even¬ing the boys do their “prep.” ing entirely of compositions byM. Martinon would more closelyapproximate what the author hadin mind.To assert that the Symphonyshould plan programs for collegestudents is as silly as suggestingthat they do so for Jewish WarVeterans.Whatever the specials and spec¬taculars offered by the Boston.Philadelphia and New York or¬chestras may he, the ChicagoSymphony need not imitate suchpeculiarities.point - - - for if Russia choosesto “run” our blockade, and wefire upon her ships, the resultscould be disastrous. Exec acted prematurely The principal has asked me tohelp run the school library. ThisI am gladly doing as organizinga library is one of my favoritepastimes. At present our libraryis rather heavily weighted withDickons and other English clas¬sics. We need the kind of booksthat boys enjoy reading. Our stu¬dent’s reading levels extend fromthe sixth grade on tip. They arelively and eager to learn. Dr. Reiner’s business is music,and even if the altered arrange¬ments you have suggested mightenhance the financial con¬dition of the orchestra (whichthey would not), it seems prob¬able that the quality of its per¬formances would be endangered.In addition to questioning thenecessity for such a grave move,we also question the right of theUnited States to take such action.Do we have the right to deny shipsthe right to pass through inter¬national waters? Would we not bean aggressor if we fired upon a The Executive Council o£ Stu¬dent Government <SG) last nighttook two steps on the Cubancrisis. First, it called an emer¬gency meeting of SG, to be heldtomorrow evening, at which Cubawill be discussed; and second, itsent a telegram to President Ken-■i actor's company presents."’wp'W >■• • • • •Wm. Shakespeare's rollicking slapstick comedyTHE MERRY WIVESWINDSORMondel Hall. 8:30, Nov. 1st, 2nd, 3rdTickets $1.50 - Students $1 • On Sale Reynold's Club Desk nedy protesting the blockade ofCuba.The Exec was not abusing itspowers in taking such measures.The SG constitution and formerSG legislation sanction the dis¬patch of the telegram and thecalling of the meeting.However, we feel that the Execshould have confined itself to cal¬ling the emergency meeting. Send¬ing the telegram will accomplishnothing positive in the nationalpicture, and could potentially re¬sulting a great deal of pegativereaction on campus.In the light of the difficultiesSG has encountered in recentyears in being accepted as the stu¬dent voice, w>e think SG shouldbe a bit more cautious and openabout the stands it take§. Thurs¬day evening, after the entire cam¬pus has been potified that SG willand can take action on the Cubancrisis, would be a more appropri¬ate time to issue a formal state¬ment on Cuba.We would hope that a substan¬tial number of students, to saynothing of SG representatives, willbe on hand tomonw evening, toparticipate in the formatioin of astatement on • behalf of the stu¬dent body of the the Universityof Chicago.The members of the Exec, likemany other individuals on cam¬pus, have already sent personaltelegrams 1o President Kennedyexpressing their own views. Al¬though we agree with the senti¬ments they expressed in their jointtelegram last night, we would havehave much preferred to see allcollective action defrayed until to¬morrow, when the entire campuscould be involved.Again, w’e are not questioningthe Exec’s right to send the tele¬gram, nor are we opposing thecontents of the telegram. We aremerely suggesting that last nightwas not the appropriate time forany formal action by SG or itsexecutive body. If you could collect appropriatebooks and send them to us theywould be of great use. Surfacefreight is not expensive. PerhapsHouse Councils, U. High students,faculty wives or Student Govern¬ment would be interesied in help¬ing us. I know that at Chicago itis easy to organize an ad hoccommittee to help a good cause.If you could collect books andsend them to our library you willbe making a real contribution tohuman understanding. A less exacting conductor thanDr. Reiner might not mind theinterference and distraction of anaudience during rehearsals; DrReiner, it is reported, frequentlyobjects even to the presence ofsome of his musicians.In Northern Nigeria we areteaching virtually the first genera¬tion to receive a western educa¬tion. Within ten years of theirgraduation some of these studentsw ill become leaders of their coun¬try. Many of thorn would liketo have pen pals in America. Oneof the older boys has* been cor¬responding with a girl at Brook¬lyn College. You can guess wherehe has decided to go to college.If you would like to write tosomeone let me know. I wouldn’tmind getting some letters myselfand would be happy to answeryou.Sincerely yours,Henry Etzkowitz Classifieds3 room apt. 6<.>7 J^ftrey. in¬cludes parkin# in rear, and Kas* Phon#288-67 67.Attacks EditorialTO THE EDITOR:Your editorial concerning theChicago,Symphony was ridiculous.What sort of program, we won¬der, was contemplated by the au¬thor of this article for "concertsplanned to attract ihe college-level student?”The first movement for Haydn’s“Surprise” Symphony, Peter andthe Wolf (narrated by, say, SidMcCoy), and a medley of Big Tenmarching songs arranged by Sto¬kowski ?Or perhaps a program consist-$12951959OLDSMOBILELIKE NEWFULLY EQUIPPEDFULL POWERI ring in Ad for This PriceGruby s Rambler4555 S. CottageBO 8-1111nothing rasher fbr your hair than grease. Let Vitaliswith V-7 keep your Hair neat all day without grease.Naturally. V-7 is the greaseless grooming discovery. Vitalis*- withV-7® fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dryness, keeps yourHair neat all day without grease. Try Vitalis, to^jL.Yoy’1) like it! F L MITZIE'SOWER SHOP1225 E. 63rd St.HT 3-53531340 E. 55th St.Ml 3 4020 DOING IT THE HARD WAY(GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!)easier 3-minute way for men: FITCHMen, get rid of embarrassing dandruff easy as 1-2-3 withFITCH! In just 3 minutes (one rubbing, one lathering, onerinsing), every trace of dandruff, grime, gummy old hairtonic goes right down the drain! Your hair looks hand¬le somcr, healthier. Your scalptingles, feels so refreshed. UseFITCH Dandruff RemoverSHAMPOO every week forLEADING MAN’S positive dandruff control.Keep your hair and scalpreally clean, dandruff-free!FITCHSHAMPOOCHICtSO MAIOON • Oct. 24. 1942 IIIt is a bit pretentious to askthe Chicago Symphony to patron¬ize college students. To hear aconcert conducted by Fritz Reineris a privilege; to be permitted toattend his concert for one dollarunder any circumstances—hap¬pens to be the biggest bargainin music.Sincerely yours,Stephen WestheimerAndrew KleinFor rent (option to buy) small com¬pletely modern year round bouse, partlyfurnished. one bloek from IndianaDunes State Park. 45 minutes fromUC campus. \ mile from only free,public b< ach between Gary and Michi¬gan City. R«-nt: $70 per month til5/30/68. Sale: $6.oOQ. Imjiv diate pos¬session. WH 4-2779.For rent (option t>o buy) 2 bedroomfurnished modernized year round farmhouse, renter of 14 wooded acres. Onemile from Tremonft— (Indiana DunesState Park). 45 minutes from DC cam¬pus. Rent: $80 until 5/30/63. Sale:*22,000. Possession 11/1/62.Shorelane apts., 5135 S. Kenwood, offers1 to 31 — rm. efficiency units. Attrac¬tively appointed, month to month oc¬cupancy. SSI) and up.- Elevator. fir<-proof buildinft, manager oil premises.Now available to faculty. Spacious,newly decorated 7 rm. apt.: 2 baths,plenty of closets, at 5533 Blackstone.Also. 2 rm. and 5 rm. apts. at tin) IInglesid*. Call C. B. Ross, campus phom:’,<>66.Affiliate, industrious, travel-mind* d stu¬dent uanted as study tour organizer.Lucrative commission and free trip.Write Maroon, Box A.FOUND: seal point Siamese car. Vic¬inity 56 and Everett. MU 2-2984,after ’6.French — private instruction ■— alllevels — reading exam. BU 8-7284. -\get Lots More from &more bodyin the blendmore flavorin the smokeQiCD more tastethrough the filterAnd I£M’s filter is the modem filter— all white,inside and outside—so only pure white touches your lips.ERSFILTERS riM TOftACCe (C.LI60ITT t MYIU TOCAC«i) COuSPU launches protest againstThe Student Peace union rous fraud, for the truth is that Britain, Italy and Turkey like the all < jri\ vuThe Student Peace union(SPU) yesterday launched amassive campaign of distribu¬ting leaflets and armbands inprotest against President’s Ken¬nedy’s ‘quarantine’ of Cuba.‘■The extremeness of this movewas forced by the forthcomingelections. We hope to prevent theDemocrats from* gaining votes byKennedy’s action, according topete Allen, national field secre¬tary of SPU.The UC chapter of SPU is con¬cent rating its efforts in Hyde ParkOther peace groups are workingin other parts of the city. Thesecond congressional district chap¬ter of Voters for Peace is coope¬rating with SPU in Hyde Park.On Ihe north side, the ninthj district branch of Voters for Peaceand Women for Peace arc passingout literature. Other participat¬ing grouns on a city-wide basisare the Fellowship of Keeoncillia-tion, the American Friends Serv¬ice committee, and the Committeefor a Sane Nuclear Policy.All of these groups advocatecessation of the Kennedy quaran¬tine and settlement of the Cubancontroversy through the UnitedNations.SPU issued a public statementyesterday asserting that the Ken¬nedy action can only lead “towardthe brink of nuclear war.” SPUcalled the ‘quarantine’ a “dange-Calendar of EventsTax conference: 9 aqj. Prudential Bldtr.today through Friday.l.ecture: ‘'Legislating vs. Administrat¬ing." Harvey Semrow, postmaster,City of Chicago. Business East 103,1 :30 pm.Dermatology Clinical Conference, Gold-blatt Hospital, G-216, 2 pin.l.ecture aerie*: “Genetics and Develop¬ment, Systems for InvestigatingDifferentiation,” Hans J. Becker,Dozent Zoologisehes Tnstitut derPhilipps Universitat, Mnrburg, Ger¬many. Zool. 29. 3:30 pm.Study Group: Great Ages of the JewishPeople from the Maccabees to Mo¬hammed. Hillel foundation. 4:30 .pm.Carillos recital: Daniel Robbins, Univer¬sity Carillonneur, Rockefeller Chapel,5 pm.Evensong: Bond Chapel. 5:03 pm.English Class, Room B. InternationalHouse, 6:30-8 pm.Lecture-discussion: “The Moral Life •—studies on Ethics of Mnimonides,”Hillel foundation. 7 pm.Hush smoker: Phi Gamma Delta. Allsecond year and transfer students in¬vited. 5615 University. 7:30 pm.Meeting: The Archeology society. 7:30pm, Ida Noyes Hall.University Symphony Rehearsal: MandelHall, 7:30 pm.Discussion: The peace movement behindthe iron curtain, Harriet Lefley, 8pm, Soc Sci 122.Collegium Musicum: 8 pm, Ida NoyesHall.Country Dancers: 8 pm.” Ida Noyes Hall.Lecture: Description of Navy MedicalReserve Corps, Billings Audit 8 om.Meeting: Lutheran Wives, 5617 Dor¬chester, 8 pm. rous fraud, for the truth is that Britain, Italy and Turkey like themilitary action offers no way out Soviet installations in Cuba areof the Cuban dilemma.” “reckless and provocative threatsThe group asserts that Ameri- to world peace.” SPU called oncan military bases in Greece, the Kennedy administration and23 in Europe for AIESECTwenty-three students from the University of Chicagospent this past summer working in Europe for sucb wellknown firms as Phillips, Swissair and the Union Bank ofSwitzerland.These jobs were made availablethrough AIESEC, pronounced“eye-sec,” (“Association Interna¬tionale des Etudiants en SciencesEconomiques et Commerciales”)an international organization ofstudents in business and econom¬ics who are interested in gaininginternational business experience.Each summer AIESEC effectsthe exchange of jobs between par¬ticipating AIESEC committees.The countries that participate arethose which have AIESEC com¬mittees in one of more of theiruniversities.AIESEC committees in univer¬sities all over the world solicitjobs in their respective countries.They then irade those jobs forjobs that committees in othercountries have obtained.AIESEC started in 1943 whenthe economic students of univer¬sities in 8 European countries de¬cided that international businessexperience would bo a valuableasset to their business education.That year AIESEC traded 89“traineeships.”This past summer universitiesin 38 countries and 5 continentseffected some 3500 exchangeswhich makes AIESEC the largestinternational exchange programin the world.The United Stales has AIESECcommittees in 45 universitiesaround the country and togetherthey sent 350 of their students toEurope.The University of, ChicagoAIESEC committee, which is lo¬cated in the Business School, isplanning its drive for job solici¬tation. The number of studentsfrom the University who will goto Europe next summer is, ofcourse, contingent on Ihe numberof jobs it can obtain for foreignstudents here.Students who are interested andqualified are urged to join now.Students who are eligible to joinAIESEC are students in the Grad¬uate School of Business, Law stu¬dents who are orienting them¬selves towards a business career,graduate Economies students, and undergraduates majoring in Eco¬nomies and all other undergradu¬ates who will have completed atleast 2 full credit economic cours¬es by the end of the presentacademic year.An orientation meeting for allinterested students will be heldon Thursday, at 5 pm downstairsin Business East, room 9. Meet¬ings will be held each followingWednesday at 12:30 in BusinessEast 9. all candidates for national officein this election to “disclaim mili¬tary action against Cuba and otherLatin American peoples.”Such a policy would include;1. Declaration that we have noplans for any military action to¬ward Cuba, and ending of the‘quarantine’2. Unilateral abandonment ofGuantanamo while calling on theRussians to. stop military build-upin Cuba.3. Pursuing a policy with theclearly stated goal of withdrawalof foreign military bases by allcountries. The first step could bedisengaging some of our foreign military bases closest to Russia asa sincere attempt to effect thepeaceful removal of missies fromCuba.4. Support to democratic move¬ments and governments in the un¬derdeveloped countries with mas¬sive economic and technical aid.5. Initiatives toward disarma¬ment such as ending unclear test¬ing.”Allen asserts that response toleafleting so tar has been sym-phathetic. “People are anxious tofind an alternative, they do notall agree with ours, but very feware really happy with Kennedy’ssupposed solution.BAHA’U LAHFounders Of TheBaha'i FaithProclaims:“All things in theirinmost reality, testifyto the revelation of thenames and attributes ofGod with in-them ... So potent and universal is thisrevelation, that it hath encompassed all things visibleand invisible.”“The Baha’i World Faith is the only new force onEarth today that is bigger, deeper and more potentialthan science. The mark of its greatness is that scienceharmonizes logically with it into a beautiful wholeso tremendous that it is the only known fulfillmentand integrator of all the great religions of the past.”Guy Murchie, author ofbest - sellers, “Song of the Sky” and “Music of theSpheres”You are invited to hearWINSTON G. EVANS, author and lecturer of Nashville,Tennessee, who will speak in the Baha’i House of Worship,Sunday, October 28, at 8 pm, on “Lord of the New Age.”Admission FreeFor free literature, write Baha’i National Office M, 112 LindenAvenue, Wilmette, Ill. NEW BOOKS BY CAMPUS AUTHORSEXISTENTIALISM AND RELIGIOUS LIBERALISMby John Hayward @ $3.95BEYOND RELIGION by Daniel Jenkins @ $1.75THE REALITIES OF FAITH by Bernard Meland @ $4.50THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE.Enter the IiM GRAND PRIX 50For college students only! 50 Pontiac Tempest^FREE!•'Ain’t that Love.,,! Oon'tWanna Leave You Now...IBelieve In You...See SeeRider...Tell All The WorldAbout You...I’ve Got TheWorld On A String.. .Big BadBill...When The Sun ComesOut .'..The Sweetest Sounds...Embrasse Moi,..The BestIs Yet To Come...and TeachWe Tonight." ^%iconsft CAP1IOU RLSOA0S IfiCeSugar ’N Splct (S)T177*"Tareyton’s Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!”says Titus (The Chisel) Aurelius, Ars ’63 B.C. “‘O tempoi'a! O mores!’, I used to wail,” says The Chisel,“where today can you get a filter cigarette with some flavor? Then I discovered Tareyton — the magnum opus incigarettes. Put a pack in your toga and enjoy de gustibusyou never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette.”i Dual Filter makes the differenceDUALiYodnct of t/4e . FILTEFtTClTBytOTlan Cony*any — Jvrfaceo o out mtddlc name i ' aBefore radiation, the new¬est method of food preserva¬tion, can be considered on alarge scale, many obstaclesmust be overcome, according toSir William "Kershaw Slater, amember of the Department of Sci¬entific and Industrial Research ofthe United Nations.Slater made the comment in hislecture last night on “Food andFood Processing.” This was thesecond in a series on "NuclearScience and Agriculture.” spon¬sored by the department of phar¬macology.the division of social sci¬ences, the division of the biological sciences and the University exten¬sion.He discussed uses of gammarays in killing grain weavils andflour moths, and in preventingsprouting of stored potatoes. How¬ever, he noted several drawbackswhich must be overcome beforeradiation can be used on a largescale.Radiation danger for workersmust be eliminated, efficient hand¬ling of the product past the highenergy source must be providedfor, the high cost of equipmentmust be reduced, and palatabilitymust be assured.Though Slater believes the nextCitizens' Board introducesnew members at luncheonThe Citizen’s Board of the Sun-Times; John D. DeButts, pre-University of Chicago intro- ^ident- Illinois Bell Telephone-duced 13 new members ves-terday at a luncheon at theSheraton-Blackstone Hotel.Albert Rees, professor andchairman of the department ofeconomics, addressed the group of425 business, civic, and industrialleaders on “Unemployment and ItsPolicy Implications.”The Citizen’s Board was formedto 1941 to endorse UC as a civicenterprise, to acquaint itself withthe work of the faculty, and topromote more useful UC activities.The newr members are GregsonL. Barker, president. UARCO Inc.,Barrington, Illinois; Theron T.Chapman, president, Scott, Fores-man and Company; Emmett Ded-mon, executive editor. Chicago Company; Carl Devoe, president,Executive House Hotels, lawyer,208 South LaSalle Street.Others are Robert L. Gibson.Jr., president, Libby. McNeill andLibby; Robert J. Greenebaum,president. Inland Steel ContainerCompany; George L. Irvine, re¬gional vice president, General El¬ectric Company; Joseph B. Lan-,terman, president. Amsted Indus¬tries Incorporated.The rest are Franck C. Scholl.Jr., vice president. Quaker OatsCompany, Barrington. Illinois;Lyle M. Spencer, president, Sci¬ence Research Associates, Inc.;Herman O. Walt her, H. O. Wal-ther Company: Howard L. Willett,cViaifman. the Willett Compam.. advance in canning may be theuse of gamma rays to sterilizecooked meats in sealed containers,he found several particular draw¬backs to the plan, including thatof providing a large enough sourceto destroy the micro-organismspresent and to inactivate the en¬zymes.“To no group of scientists doesman owe a greater debt than tothose who have devised means forstoring and preserving food,” Sla¬ter said. “Without their eftqrts itis impossible to imagine how lifein our great modern cities couldexist.“Fpr the" future, the.food scien¬tist should keep in mind that onlygood food will be good when ithas been preserved — he cannotmake a silk purse out of a sow’sear — and that he should neverlaunch a new product on a scepti¬cal world until he is doubly sureof its safety, its nutritive valueand its palatability.”The remaining lectures in theseries by Slater will begin at 8:00pm in the auditorium of the LawSchool. 1121 East t>0 Street. Thetopic on Thursday, will be “TheDeveloping Countries.” and onMonday. “Fallout and FoodChange.” Three top federal tax officials will be among the speak¬ers in the Law School’s 15th annual tax conference, whichstarts at 9 am this morning.The conference, which continues until Friday, will beheld in the auditorium of the Pru¬dential Building in the Loop.Discussions will center aroundtax legislation recently passed byCongress.The purpose of the conference isto enlighten the tax specialist —lawyer, accountant, and corpora¬tion official — by an analysis oftax matters.The three officials participatingwill be Louis F. Oberdorfer. As¬sistant Attorney General, TaxDivision of the US Departmentof Justice; Mortimer M. Caplin,US Commissioner of InternalRevenue; and Crane E. Hauser,Chief Counsel of the UC Inter¬nal Revenue Service.At 9 am today, Oberdorfer willspeak on “Tax Litigation in theFederal Courts.” Tomorrow, Cap¬lin will discuss "The Responsibili¬ties of the Tax Advisor.” Friday,Hauser will participate in a paneldiscussion on the topic "The Re-sjx)nsibilities of the Tax Advisor.”All three of these events”will startat 9 am.The tax legislation to be dis¬cussed was recently passed byCongress. It is considered themost important change in taxlaw in almost a decade. The con¬Psi U and Phi Siq are undefeatedPsi Upsilon and Phi SigmaDelta remain undefeated in theintramural football FraternityLeague. Last night Psi U demol¬ished Delta Upsilon 4-0. Phi Sigstopped Phi Kappa Psi 14-6. Itwas the third win for both.In other fraternity contests. Phi Delta Theta beat Phi GammaDelta 19-12 and Zeta Beta Tausurprised Beta Theta Pi 26-14.“B” League scores were: Coul¬ter 20. Salisbury 0; Psi U 12, Dodd0; Chamberlin 2, Phi Sig 0; PhiPsi 25, Tufts North 0; East IV 2,Flying Bolsheviks 0. ference will mark the first timesince its enactment that the actwill be discussed by specialists ata tax conference.Topics relating to the act to bediscussed are: “Tax Policy in Re¬lation to Fowign Business In¬come,” “The Impact of the Rev¬enue Act of 1962 on Travel andEntertainment Expense Deduc¬tions,” “The Investment Credit.”“Gains and Lasses on Disposition.”“Executive Compensation andFringe Benefits,” and “The Far-Reaching Change in DepreciationGuidelines of the Internal Rev¬enue Service.”Charles W. Davis, member ofthe law firm Hopkins, Sutter,Owen, Mulroy, and Wentz, ischairman of the planning commit¬tee for the conference.• TYPING* MIMEOGRAPHINGConscientious WorkReasonableR. J. WOODWoodlawn Currency1173 E. 55th ST.BU 8-09454 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 24, 1962