peace Corps Day today Russian grad student hereTn observance of University at Pierce Tower. A Peace Corpsof Chicago Peace Corps Day movie will be shown at 8:00.tomorrow, David Fledderjohn, Fledderjohn was assistant dean A Russian graduate stu- When asked why the missiles politics, if you are logical enough,dent of politic* science has were originally installed he re- certainly leads to violence,” hei was aftftiftiaiii uean n i plied, 4<If you just follow the news- added#or national relations officer of studcnts the Graduate School ?,Cen . yAf ny, 011 c jmp,us; papers, you can see how certain Turning to the Chinese-Indian...Latin American Peace of Business before joining the Alexei Oboukhov graduated politicians were calling for an in- conflict, Oboukhov questioned the°-n Iff Will sneak to students Peace Corps- He received his last year from the University vasion of Cuba. So the sovereign accuracy of the press in its re-1 "‘!>s s ’ ’ MBA from the Graduate School of of Moscow Institute for Inter- state of Cuba had a right to ap- porting of this conflict. “But event rom 9:30 to 12.00 am, Fleddei- Business in June, 1961, with con- national Relations, and is now an peal to the Soviet Union for as- if there are border differences,John will have informal discussion centration in personnel manage- exchange student at I7C. sistance.” then I am confident they will bewith students in Swift Commons, ment and industrial relations. He explained Monday how he Khrushchev’s offer to withdraw settled peacefully.” he said.,-inrl he will address International From 1957 to 1959, Fledderjohn, views the Cuban situation. “I the missiles he explained in the The idea that there was a breakHouse residents on world-wide who is a Quaker and a conscien- think when the Kennedy govern- following terms. “I think the idea in Slno-Soviet relations seemedprojects of the Peace Corp at 2:30. tious objector, served as a volun- ment inaugurated the blockade of was that the USSR was ready to slightly ridiculous to him. “AnOther informal discussions will teer in a community service pro- Cuba, it was not really thinking help Cuba prevent aggression from identity of views were expressedlake place from 4:00 to 5:00 at ject in El Salvador, as an alter- about the threat from Soviet miss- abroad. in the resolution of the WorldNew Dorm, and from 5:30-7:30 native to military service. ile bases in Cuba,” he said. He also pointed out that Pre- Communist Party in 1957 andmiere Khrushchev’s recent actions, again in November, 1960. The sig-along with President Kennedy’s natures of the Chinese delegatesVol. 71 — No. 24 University of Chicago, Wednesday, Ocf. 31, 1962SG will consider opinion poll,SFA court, NDEA participation reciprocation, may have usheredin a new era of understandingand cooperation between the twocountries, both with regard to apeaceful settlement of the Cubancrisis, and with the general worldsituation.He completely rejected Profes¬sor Morgenthau’s interpretation ofCuba’s value, to the Soviet Unionas a base for subversion. “Wenever believe in the export of re¬volution. If you try to export re¬volution, it will never be a success.The internal conditions of a coun¬try must be ready for it.”Asked if he thought Latin Amer¬ica was ready, Oboukhov replied,“Only the Latin Americans them¬selves can decide this question.”Although he does not believe in are on these documents,” Obouk¬hov said.“When I left the Soviet Unionthe relationship between the twocountries was that of friendshipand unanimity,” he said.While at UC Oboukhov will bedoing research for a thesis on“Post-war American Diplomacy.”Because of the nature of his sub¬ject he is interested in ProfessorMorgenthau’s realist theory of in¬ternational politics. Since Morgen-thau is at UC, Oboukhov’s pro¬fessor in Moscow suggested hecome to Chicago.Oboukhov pointed out that inRussia it takes six, and not fouryears to receive a degree. Whilethere he took courses in phi¬losophy, economics and history.Student Government (SG) will meet this evening to elect student justices to the Morgenthau’s theory of power pol- Political science, he said, does not.Student-Faculty-Adminstration Court (SFAC). In addition, SG is expected to act on theElection and Rules Committee’s rei>ort on a student opinion poll and discuss a resolutionon the University’s participation in the National Defense Education AH.Bills to censure SG or its execu- , 7 7 ~~~ ~ ^• 4.. „ . bers and one representative of Assembly. Four serve two year. , ir icceii a(jministration. The court’s terms, staggered two and two, andsi.iiKs on Cuba may also be pre- povVers include issuing declara- the other two serve one yearsen ted. tory judgments regarding the in- terms. They must be selected byNovember 1. itics based on the eoneept of thebalance of power, he does agreewith some of its conclusions, forexample, violence is no longer aneffective means for solving inter¬national disputes.“But the conception of power jxist as a category in Russia. Itis considered as history.He also had live years of Eng¬lish and several courses in thehumanities, although these weremore in the line of general edu¬cation.Several student groups, Inclii- trepretation of the SG Constituding academic units and dormi- tion, Student Bill of Rights, orlories, have passed resolutions student code upon petition of the ,7 V' ^7*7^ ^condemning the actions of SG and SG Assembly; and reviewingit The faculty members are selec-er-sity Senate, which consists of all„ .. . „ . , . , „„ faculty members with the rank ofI resident Kennedy telegrams op- the Student Bill of Rights, SG • ^ . f .posing the US action in Cuba. Constitution, and student code. • P •The SFAC consists of six stu- The student justices must beExecutive Council in sending actions said to bo in conflct with UC conservatives told USneeds friendly Caribbean“If the United States doesn’t have a friendly CaribbeanIn addition, the Dean• of Stu- it will be very much in danger,” said Raymond Josephdent members, two faculty mem- elected by a two-thirds vote of the dents office selects one member of ]ast night at the weekly meeting of the UC Conservativethe administration to sei’ve on the /~m t ‘ .court. ‘ As to popular support of Castro,„ Joseph, a graduate student in the activity of the strong guerrillaThe Elections and Rules Com- „ * . ,, / ... . . . ,,anthrojiology at UC, then pro- movements that do exist wouldmittee of SG met this weekend to ceeded to ‘ analyze Communistconsider a petition presented to modes of operation as he sawSG Thursday evening, asking for them in Haiti.a poll of student opinion on the Tn Haiti the usual CommunistSix Michigan State Univer- group councils. It is chaired by blockade of Cuba. taclic of promising the peasantssity (MSU) student organiza- the Dean of Men- Various students 1 ,tion heads were placed on Howard said that he refused to members of New Voice and the already have land. So they eon- ,n a much more extenidve propa-strict probation yesterday for sit 0,1 the committee because he University Party, have accused SG Centrate on the students,their defiance of the university’s “‘’oyWn’t agree with the commit- Gf delaying the referendum until The communists firstMSU student body presidentremoved from office by dean be impossible if the people sup¬ported him.In order to remove the threatof Communism from Latin Amer¬ica, the US must first removeincluding land will not work’ because most Castro H,,d then begim to engagespeaker policy.Students on strict probationmay not participate in any stu¬dent organizations. This means tee’s purpose.’ campus enthusiasm over the issue them they are the ofAs the SNCC speakers were kad died down. SG tules, how- country, then that the wayinvited before the establishment ever» dictate that the Assembly .^0 save- it is through socialismof the committee, the student approve any action taken by its and finally that the socialisticthat the six students who include organizations sponsoring the ap- committees. approach * is Communism.I'll",,," students, wno include ance.did not bring the invita- At its first meeting two weeksent Body President Bo ^on to tbo committee tor its ago, SG adjourned for lack of a According to Joseph,Howard, can no longer serve asheads of their respective organiza¬tions. ganda program. The US shouldnot be afraid to invade Cuba. Thepeople of Latin America believein action, and would approve.According to the president ofthe Conservative Club, Jim Powell,the Club will sponsor a speech on“Management Should Have a HandCuba in Management,” by John Bartonapproval. quorum before it could consider threatens Latin America not only of United States Steel, Thursday,... a resolution on the NDEA. POLIT through subversion but also by November 8. On Tuesday Novem-'Had they brought the invitation .g -n favor of a resolution oppos- direct invasion. Since Castro came her 13, the Conservative Club willDean of Students John Fuzak. before the committee, is was telt jng the University’s re-entry into to power Cuba has launched un- show Revolt in Hungary. Bothwho placed the students on proba- that they might be relusert. die program; University Party is successful invasions against Pana- meetings will be held in Ida Noyestion, also reprimanded the organi- Last spring there was a furor in favor of supporting the Uni- ma, Honduras, the Dominican Re- at 7:30 pm, and are open to thezations involved, warning them on the MSU campus when the versity’s re-entry. public and Haiti. public,that they were in danger of losing university board of trustees re-their university charters. fused to let Robert Thompson, a gF* rv n ^ JL*The six Students were placed membe'el the American Com- ^.OlYIVYlIttCO StUOlGS VTIOt I VO t lOflSon probation for inviting three munlst speak on campus*members of the Student Non¬violent Coordinating Committee(SNCC) to speak on campuswithout receiving the approval otMSU’s newly-formed speakerscommittee.The committee was establishedby the President of the University,Joseph Hannah, on September 26.All speakers appearing on campusmust first receive the committee’sapproval.Tho committee is set up so as toinclude five faculty members andI be heads of the five main studentgoverning bodies: the StudentGovernment and the four livingNew Voice to meetThursday in EckhartA New Voice organizationalmeeting will be held tomorrow at7:30 pm in Eckhart 133. All stu¬dents are invited to attend.New Voice is the campusorganization founded last Wed¬nesday “to give an accurate andfair representation of campusopinion. Howard said that they plan to“appeal the decision to whateversources we can.” This includes thePresident of the university andthe board of trustees. He said,though, that he did not expectthe decision to be overruled.Howard was particularly con¬cerned because he would not be-able to speak as student bodypresident against a referendumwhich will be brought up thismonth which calls for MSU’swithdrawal from the NationalStudent Association. The Committee on HumanDevelopment will work to de¬termine to how great anextent the limited variety andmotivation found in the culturally-deprived home affects the intellec¬tual growth of the child.Communication between themother and child in low socio¬economic environments and prep¬aration of the child for school arethe focal points of this study.“The significance of the pro¬ject lies in the attempt to assessThomas to speak on CubaNorman Thomas, notedsocialist and frequent candi¬date for president, will speakon campus today. Thomas willappear in Mandel Hall at 3:30 todiscuss the Cuban situation. Themeeting is being sponsored by theStudent Peace Union and will cost25c for students.Thomas ran for president sixtimes on the Socialist ticket from1928 to 1948. He also ran formayor of New York City twice. He is active with peace organi¬zations and is on the nationalboard of SANE. Earlier this yearhe spoke at the final rally, inWashington, DC, of the Turn To¬ward Peace project, and he ispresently active in the New Yorkhospital workers’ strike.Besides being active politically,Thomas is the author of severalpamphlets and books. Among Ihelatter are War—No Profit, NoGlory, No Need, and A Socialist’sFaith. and measure ways in which ideas,concepts, and other modes ofthought may be transmitted tochildren during the preschoolyears, and the ways such earlytraining affects the mental pro¬cesses of the child,” explainedRobert Hess, associate professorand chairman of the Comittee onHuman Development and directorof the project.It is generally admitted thatchildren from low socioeconomicgroups, the culturally-deprivedchildren, form a majority of theslow learners when they beginschool and school failures anddrop-outs in later years, Hess said.“It seems likely,” he added,“that a child from a culturally-deprived home may learn mentalbehavior from his parents whichinhibit or even impair some kindsof mental growth and learningability at a later age.”Under a three-year grant of$75,000 from the Children’sBureau, the committee will studymother-child communication inthree groups of parents in theChicago area. One group will befamilies in a- public housing or slum area, another from semi¬skilled and skilled occupationallevels, and the third from upper-middle class families.Members of the committee willstudy the interaction of themother and child lioth in the officeand in the home situation. Assess¬ments of the child’s contact withliterature and his typical dailyactivities will be made.Also to be considered are thomother’s attitude toward school,how this lias changed sinceher own school days, and heroecupational aspirations for thechild. The mother’s considerationof the child’s problems and herpreparation of the child for schoolare factors affecting the educabil¬ity of the child from a lower-classhome.The project may develop infofurther linguistic analysis. Thisstems from the differences inlanguage modes used by theteacher in the classroom and themother and child in the home. Atransition from the home to theclassroom is often inhibited by thedifferences in phraseology used hithe two situations.mm*»M4t* si .'V M* fv.i■' U Ji•V Letters to the editor of the MaroonIndependent memberbacks POLIT standTO THE EDITOR:These comments are not meantto constitute a partisan defenseof POLIT, but are rather intend¬ed to place in perspective certainattitudes, charges and actions re¬vealed, made, and advocated byopponents of SG and POLIT.It is a matter of fact that thePOLIT platform received a clearendorsement in the last election.This platform advocated certainpositions on extra-campus mat¬ters. It seems to be clear thatmore students consider the takingof a position “proper” rather than"improper.”Whether or not the majority ofstudents agree with the substanceof SG’s position on the Cubancrisis remains to be seen. How¬ever, members of the assemblycertainly have as much right toattempt to influence constituentopinion through assembly debateand action, as do those who now-seek such influence by their noisyproclamations that SG does notrepresent student opinion.Constituent “opinion” is nevera static entity, it is formulatedand reformulated; and the rep¬resentative always plays a part inthis process.Certain elements would nowsubstitute government by continu¬ing referenda and recall for gov¬ernment by representative assemb¬ly. By its very nature, such ac¬tion exceeds in irresponsibility anyalleged irresponsibile action of aparticular government, in that itdestroys confidence in the systemand intent of representative gov¬ernment.The same charge holds true re¬garding the secession advocatedby law school students, and thedisclaiming of “support and re¬sponsibility” on the part of themedical school students. For oneto pick up one’s marbles and goto one’s home when one does notget one’s way does not reflect anattitude of responsibility andgraduate student maturity.Finally, and in regard 1o thenot unexpected intrusion ofMachiavelli into the controversy:Is it possible that, whereas, cer-train elements were not success¬ful in their attempt to gain con¬trol of SG in the last election,they now- hope to do so behinda smoke-screen of "legalistic andMachiavellian plots”?ROBERT G. SCHWARTZ.Member of StudentGovernment• Independent, DivinitySchool).Mistake to revoltagainst elected SGTO THE EDITOR:I would like to point up an as¬pect of politics, and particularlyUC politics, that the currentTelegram-To-Kennedy furor bringsto light.Elected governments everywhereare in theory representative of thepeople governed. In fact, however,nothing is farther from the truth.The present President of theUnited States w-as elected byslightly over 29% of the Ameri¬can people. He certainly will bere-elected if that 29% of thepeople are satisfied with his per¬formance.The group of representativesthat, took the disputed position onthe President’s action was electedby 12% of the student body. Theycertainly will be re-elected if that32% remains satisfied w-ith theirpei-formance.The fact that the majority of thestudent body is close to rejectingthis posilion is irrelevant. Theentire student body acted respon¬sibly in voting (or not voting)the present student governmentinto office, and they must takewhat they decided by their action,©r inaction, last spring.They knew full well, as readersof the Maroon, wdiat. to expectfrom a liberal coalition, and theygot it.To organize a revolt in favorof a more conservataive SG is, Ithink, a mistake. They should take up the SG seats vacated bythe conservatives out of apathyand work towards a more active,and, I might add, loyal opposition.If indeed the students on thiscampus are conservative in themain, then they should representthemselves not with angry words,but with representation inside thepresent structure.ROBERT McNAMARAExplains grad studentwithdrawal from SGTO THE EDITOR:I would like to expand on mystatement as to w-hy I and manyother law students and other stu¬dents in graduate schools shoulddisassociate from student govern¬ment.The great majority of studentson this campus are graduate stu¬dents. Yet in student governmentthese students have little or novoice.Two reasons for this are thatmost graduate students don’t liveon campus and that they haveheavier work loads than under¬graduates.Because of this they can notbe as tightly organized and aspolitically active as the under¬graduates.Consequently the voice of stu¬dent government is essentially thevoice of the undergraduate partyin control—Polit. In student gov¬ernment if Polit does not pass anissue, the issue does not pass.Polit has a platform to speakloudly in national affairs and thevoice of this group is representedas the voice of the students ofthe University of Chicago—butthis is not so.Law students and other stu¬dents are sick and tired of readingwhat their opinions are supposed to be as given through this socalled student government. Theyhave seeen the attempt to recallSG fail because SG decreed itvoid.They are not content to havethe voice of SG speak for themuntil the spring election at whichtime everyone will be so resignedto the fact that nothing can bedone about SG that they won’tgive a darn and those who carewill split into so many factionsas to be ineffective against Polit.We are not content to see fundsfrom our student fees supportsuch an organization as SG. Wewant a voice now, a voice thatcan be heard, a voice that willact as a countervailing poweragainst SG.I extend a plea to other gradu¬ate schools to join ranks and forma graduate council—a council inwhich your views will be effective¬ly voiced and will not be strangledby red tape or by a loud con¬trolling minority.We will have a voice and wewill maintain the right as studentsto vote with everyone in all cam¬pus elections on issues affectingthe whole student body. We haverights.We are not puppets moved bystrings. We want to cut anystrings. We want to stand up andbe heard.Paul Hoffer of the MedicalSchool indicated the MedicalSchool would join us. Why don’tyou also join in this effort?RICHARD KATESAll political advertisement* in theMaroon must carry the statement:"This is a paid political announce¬ment.” If this is not provided inthe body of the ad by the advertiser,then the Maroon will, itself, insertsuch a line. Student opinion pollshould be this weekTO THE EDITOR:There is no good reason whythe student opinion poll on theCuban situation should not beheld this week. The Student Gov¬ernment is stalling until studententhusiasm over the Cuban issue,and student anger with their ac¬tions, have subsided. It is stallinguntil student body opinion on thisissue is no longer relevant totheir action two wrecks previous.The rewording of the questionstated in the petition is no morethan a bid for time, and an effortto change the question so thatits results can be misconstrued.The singular problem presented bythe questionnaire as it was en¬dorsed by more than 1100 studentsis its unquestionable clarity. TheYes-No reply to this query couldnot be misrepresented.Of course we realize that theStudent Government constitutiondoes not provide for polls of stu¬dent opinion, and that ordinarilythey would simply ignore the pe¬tition of 1100 students. We wouldlike to express our gratitude tothe members of the Student Gov¬ernment, who are acting out ofthe goodness of their hearts infinding out what the studentsthink, alter they have stated whatthe students think.We would like 1o ask our dis¬tinguished Mr. MacEwan to re¬frain from comparing the SGAssembly to a meeting of theCongress of the United States.Anyone who would like to maketheir own comparisons can obtaina tape recording of last Thurs¬day’s SG meeling through us at1223 or 1221 West. If, however. Mr. MacEwan^estimation of his organization, orhimself, permits such a compari¬son. we would like to make a.further comparison. When thepeople elect a man to the Congressor Senate, he is elected as theirrepresentative, and is obliged toact accordingly.Democratic election to office isa delegation of responsibility bythe people, not a free lease toact as one pleases in the people’sname.PATRICIA RORKEPAMELA ZUMWALTProfessors commentTO THE EDITOR:The undersigned members of thefaculty wish to correct the mis¬leading manner in which theMaroon announced their participa¬tion at the student meeting inMandel Hall last Thursday at12:30 p.m. The meeting was-char¬acterized as designed to “protestthe quarantine on all offensivemilitary equipment bound forCuba,” whereas we w'ere askedto speak on the Cuban crisis andhad in no way fixed our position.Without previous consultationamong us, it was the common de¬nominator of our speeches — andthis is our time position — thatin the nuclear age negotiationmust lake the place of war.LEOPOLD H. HAIMSONBERT F. HOSELITZEDWARD E. LOWINSKYOpinions his ownTO THE EDITOR:The ojanions expressed in myletter of October 30 were not in¬tended to represent those of “NewVoice.”RONALD TAUSSbecausethetobaccosareORDINARY CIGARETTESCHESTERFIELD KING21 Great Tobaccos make 20 Wonderful Smokes!CHESTERFIELD KING tastes great, smokes mild. You get21 vintage tobaccos grown mild, aged mild and blended mild,and made to taste even milder through its longer length.CHESTERFIELD KINGTobaccos too mild to filter, pleasure too food to miss! fclili U > A KINGALETTES Longer length means milder tastei The smoke of a Chesterfield King|! mellows and softens as it flowsthrough longer length.,. becomessmooth and gentle to your taste.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Ocf. 31, 1962Ginther announces results • This week at the movies •of medical teaching researchJohn Ginther, associate pro¬cessor of education at UC,last Monday described the re¬sults of an experiment in new*vays of teaching a medical course10 the 73rd Annual Meeting of theAssociation of American MedicalColleges, gathered in Los Angeles.The experiment dealt with themethods of teaching hematology—the study of the blood and it*-disorders. The traditional ap¬proach is theoretical, based prim¬arily on classroom lectures. Butfour major United States' medicalschools last year omitted lecturesand tried teaching hematology inl. rnis of actual patient problems.A total of 686 students were, ' Rested in the comparison study.m All of them had been given essen¬tially the same information tolearn. Factual tests showed theyhad all learned what they neededlo know.But in tests on the use of in¬formation, not one of the conven--“l .lional groups got a score higherNelson qets Taft qrantPaul Nelson, a graduate ofthe University of Chicago, re¬ceived a Taft Institute Fel¬lowship in the amount of:AS|,(>00 for one year for study in'the field of public affairs.Nelson announced his intentionto use the fellowship to write adoctoral dissertation on the rootsof U.S. farm policy in Thomas Jef-!orson’s political philosophy.’v►ErrataPOLIT’s position on the pro¬posed social science library at58 Slrcet and University Ave¬nue was erroneously reportedin yesterday’s Maroon. POLITdoes not oppose the buildingthe library where the tenniscourts are now, as reported inthe Maroon, but rather wouldlike to discuss with the admi¬nistration the possibilities ofbuilding clay tennis courts else¬where.The date of the W9YWQmeeting as reported in yester¬day’s Maroon was incorrect.The meeting will be held to¬night at 7:30 pm in Room 302of the Reynolds Club. than the lowest score achieved bythe experimental classes., In these tests, Ginther said,"The experimental students showa significantly greater ability touse the information they havelearned than do students in thecontrol groups.”Hematology is normally taughtin the second year of medicalschool, when students are taughtonly in the classroom and the lab¬oratory. To find out if test resultsare borne out in the performanceof the students when they begin tosee patients in the third year ofmedical school, the comparisonstudy will be continued this year,Ginther said.Bert Hoselitz to speakBert Hoselitz, professor of socialsciences, will speak informally to¬night on the 1962-63 collegiatedebate topic: “'Resolved: That:the Non-Communist Nations ofthe World Should Establish anEconomic Community.”Hoselitz, who is specially inter¬ested in the problems facing thenations of the world in regard totheir economic development, willanswer questions from the floorafter his speech.The meeting will be held in theEast lounge of Ida Noyes Hall at7:30 pm, and is open to all inter¬ested students. The Big Four in Japanese cin¬ema are on view at the Hyde Parkthis week. Ka-shomon and Gate ofHell started things off; Ugetsuand Seven Samurai round out theweek. It seems unfortunately thatthese are virtually the only Japan¬ese which enjoy any critical repu¬tation hereabouts, and we find ittiresome to have them continuallyrevived when there are other,equally outstanding, motion pic¬tures from Japan which have yetto be seen in Chicago.The only one of these which en¬tirely deserves inclusion in thisrevival is Ugtsu. A classic, acknow¬ledged as much in a recent Sightand Sound poll of film critics,Ugetsu is however often ignoredbeside the “cleverness” of Rash-omon, the ersatz "beauty” of Gateof Hell, and the "action of SevenSamurai. Perhaps it is just be¬cause the film is a subtle pro¬duction, made without the pyro¬technics of Kurasawa, that peopleoverlook its intense power and itsamazing crescendo of development.Suspicion, a much-seen Hitch¬cock thriller, is the B-J Cinema of¬fering for this Friday. You can’tEUROPEBefore you go discover thislow-cost unregimented tour.Unless a conventional localtour is a “must,” write to:EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255-K Sequoia, Pasadena, Cal. fault le grand on this one - awonderful blend of undercurrentand obvious, with an ending thatexplains everything and nothing.If you haven’t seen it, do. Andlook carefully at the way Hitch¬cock sets up his shots, and watchwhen he cuts. This film is the.epitome of motion picture enter¬tainment. (N.B. You can makeboth B-J and Docfilms by the sim¬ple process of going to Docfilms’first show).The International VoluntaryService shows Member of theWedding in Soc Sci 122 thsi Sat¬urday. We must confess ignorancehere. Brandon DeWilde repeats hisextraordinary Broadway perfor¬mance—but we fear Hollywood’strcachy hand. The question is: what can they do to spoil suchfine material as Carson McCullerssupplied, such a fine cast as De-Wilde, Ethel Waters, and JulieHarris, and such a director as FredZinncman? Not much, we’d say.Docfilms has G. W. Pabst’s TheLoves of Jeanne Ney this Friday-and the fourth chapter of theircurren serial, The Lost Planet,called "The Mind Control Mach¬ine.” All in Soc. 122 at 7:15 and9:15 pm.Finally, a special note: keepSunday, November 11, open. TheClark will have Grand Illusion andthe only American Pacifist film,Paths of Glory on that date. Whatwith Night and Fog on campusthat Saturday, It looks like a goodanti-war weekend in films.William RouttPUBLIC CONCERTS of Hie STUDEBAKER THEATREpresented by CHICAGO MUSICAL COLLEGEof ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITYThe GREGG SMITH SINGERSGREGG SMITH. Director‘‘The Most Distinguished New Choral Ensemble?’Sat., Nov. 10, 8:30 pm. Tickets $4, $3.50, $2.50, $2JEAN RITCHIE“America’s Best Known Traditional Singe)'”Sat., Nov. 17, 8:30 Pm. Tickets $3.50, $3, $2.50, $2Phone or mail orders to:ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY PUBLIC CONCERTSRoom 928 — 430 South Michigan Ave., Chicago 6, Ill - WA 2-3585 ext. 5t59Calendar of EventsVarsity Soccer Game: Chicago vs Whea¬ton College, Slagg Field, 3 l>m.Lecture: ‘‘Cuba!’’ Norman Thomas,Matidel Hall, 3:30 |>m.Lecture Series: Gynetics and Develop¬ment. “Differentiation by Differentialfell Division." Dr. Hans J. Becker,Zoology 29. 3:30 i>m.Lecture-Discussion: “Great Ages of theJewish People from the Maccabeesto Mohammed.” Hillel Foundation,4:30 pm.C trillion Recital: Daniel Robbins. Kocke.feller Chapel, 5 pm.English Class: Room B, InternationalHouse, 6:30 pm.S*ody Group: Studies in the Ethics ofMaimonides. Hillel Foundation. 7 pm.D'scussion: “Nuclear Weapons — TheirEffects and Civil Defense,'* SocialSciences 107. 305. 7:30 pm.Country Dancers: Ida Noyes Hall. 8pm.Discussion: “SG's Action Regarding theCuban Situation,” Ron Dorfrnan, man¬aging editor of New UniversityThought. Thompson Lounge. 8 pm.I ClassifiedI’rivate room, and bath. T.V., boat'din exchange for babysitting. PL 2-o»80.'1 large rooms and private bath, ext.phone, walk in closet. $70 per month<!!• will exchange part rent for baby-itting. MU 4-5076. Assignment: buildthermae gun"into our cats■• c-,N:V7 room apartment available: sublet:1st floor, university area; $140 permonth. Contact K. Honeycutt, GreenNo. 58, or I). Klirmnn, 324-7 838.Slum lane apts. 5133 S. Kenwood offersI to 3 Vi rm. efficiency units, attractivelyappointed, month to morjth occupancy,8 so and up. Elevator, fireproof build¬ing. manager on premises.RUSSIANBy highly qualified experienced nativet "Helier. Accelerated method, conversa¬tion emphasized. Complementary trial—-no obligation. Call Mr. Gregory fromII to 5 pm, 236-1423: after 7 call 684-8114.French- private instructor, all levels—reading exam. BU 8-72S4.VVUCB needs engineers. Anyone inter¬ested eome to the Mitchell Tower studioWednesday any time from 7:00 to mid¬night.Wanted: Brave, patient student to helpbring the Maroon files up to date. 2-5hours a week. Pay, Call ext. 3265I"day. -S- We went to the mountain tomake 1963 Ford-built carsgo 30,000 to 100,000miles between majorchassis lubricationsQuite a task faced Ford Motor Companyengineers when they set out to eliminate thetraditional trip to the grease rack every1,000 miles.Like Mohammed, they went to the mountain-Bartlett Mountain on the Continental Divide inColorado. More molybdenite is mined therethan in the rest of the world combined. Andfrom molybdenite ore comes the amazing“moly” grease that helps extend the chassislubrication intervals for Ford-built cars. Thisgrease sticks tenaciously to metal, stands upunder extreme pressures and resists moisture,pounding and squeezing. It is slicker thanskates on ice!New, improved seals were developed. Bushings,bearings and washers of many materials wereinvestigated. Slippery synthetics, like nylonand teflon, were used a number of new ways.The search for means to extend chassis lubri¬cation also led to New Orleans-whereexperimental suspension ball joints tested intaxicabs in regular service went two yearswithout relubrication.It took time. And ingenuity. But the effort paidoff when Ford-built cars were the first to buildin chassis lubrication good for 30,000 miles ortwo years—whichever came first.Another assignment completed—another“Ford First’' and another example of how FordMotor Company provides engineering leader¬ship for the American Road.MOTOR COMPANYThe American Road, Dearborn, MichiganPRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAO * THE HOMETHE FARM • INDUSTRY • AND THt AGE OF SPACF. I IiOct, 31, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Students picket for, against Cuban blockaded I‘ * (CPS)1 An estimated 1,000 a gioup of Cuban refugees ap-r not here to apologize for Soviet den, * ’ 1 KjW) et„Hpnt<? rireled flip Pearod across the street, urging .missiles and threats of war. bu1 ;witl*> lri'u . fTT q j. . Kennedy to even stlonger action, rather to protest against what; we emit^ 11- House s linrtatsome pjnaj]y ,flve young marchers with take to be wholly misguided and >eel*j;|demonstrating .against*/ „the swastika arm bands idenotmg reckless response to the threat on tearjfersV hluckadeA^ofjg*1 Cuba* . some membership ol the American Nazi the part of our counti>. The onlv Hir,Wid'e’monst rating 'against-i t h<yV anti.-a*Party,' filled - in the little space answer lies in an at titude of con- , ^H’k ide; demonstr;ttors i... >4 alloted to demonstrators.. by the ciliation and honest bargaining.:’ wor> hej*pickets and counter- police ' , A pre-demonstration letter sent p,acffl^i'^kot s»-seem*'d On greed' that the 3 Police "reported no violence out by SPUoflicers warned mem- gr?lwpioposedSf-trade'^of'Cuban missiles vdunng the demonstrations.' One bers to be wary ot efforts by Com. p-0),gShi>Vj;t lu* ■ dismantling of -PS base's.* gentleman,: clad in red and gold munist groups to exploit peace> i l\ il, to in ,'I’mkov ■'was.Oiobes with-a sliver skull cap and groups for propaganda pur poses ,|ieIp Igoo< i -V solution V am that * w eai mg a sign calling Kennedy a'^ The s, aeross th,. street rmhex « oul.P think of‘ Rut u h«vi t. a.tor w m bust led ' away** h> born<, bV yAF marH,ers s;«d x ari- FK1. v nnedx announced - that' - the police until he produced ,a le- .ou(ily "Appeasement is tor stucet^otU, would be*, turned pimoeative sign Cowards- “Damn the Missiles, huggiWu ,the pickets!resumed The si I demonstrators. who Fu„ s Ahwid« 0ne siR„ ^ goV(1 11,*; |.i,*keting^uasf initk.ll>came from all over the East coast, “Invade!" The YAF conn- warW^ponsor.ed■: bv^thejStndent - IVae e re* joined by members of the |op.leaf|et »The pool,|(. who T!%! n,Vn‘* (sl*l *• ‘. national * pe-we^AA omen's strike for Peacc.^f*The ;^ ^ ^ us io lay ^can./a .on w.11. some 2,>0 .chap- Theme of the demonstrat.on was M|m down ar„ the Commun- uni,is'vs|'l ha,l. b> tar the largest expressed h> s.g..s a xnr.ety of Ftfth Colunin. Thev are cistl **i :,t in "■•shmBton. * hnt hand-le tiered > express,e.ns., s».eh 1q our €.ounl- alM, should fewsSNooir-foumPitself '.opposed bx mem- * as/ End this/'Madness, re ae e* Si, . , . „ _$ hers "l, ,1 etiing Americans for/Stick ;No. "We Must >\ot Invade* ;; .I re i eliiin Al ) .^ a«.^,right-wing .Ciiha,” hind. ••Disarin 1 rider AA.orld,: *. S.vmpathy demonst i at ions w ei c Ir§ m , held by peace groups on campuses dm, 1 ehloumg, the Jal of SPl & A leaflet^ dist i ibuted b> SPK> many parts of the country, in- C utHKMc^t^andjfeYAF^countei -pickets^membeLsaL.expI«xined^that ‘ We aie^ eluding New Yoi k, Chicago, San•. *f' Francisco, Austin , Dot toil ■ and f.Vx,r . . c u i rtxu , ;ph,i^iPh,a )...OL Lab;;ij.chQol^:tijt.Dtfegra.cie' - a broi‘c.ou'in t<>™-i.r* - (y ; r . ' " ^ ; >:vtojas;;:Canadian students: onvboth\'/'«V i +■ r'M I n/J . L_ I I v* sides of the .issue clashed alt he*Visits, I ndiana PUDIIC ;SCmOOI . American consulate. Canadian stu- /.?*“, « v' i ’ ■ - * 1 i ' ‘ Hentc were verwiriorl Ah'l tilv «i,lit l ^Wm$i j. fifth giade^tl is- u;he du Nmimhu 1 i ten i tin (e d n ... e e icported shair ly spit y,^«- • ‘ * , on the issue, while most Americanof Che , 1 -tudents, supiio.ted Kenned.x I ;1, '^ _ "!r ( ip'oppo filth giade : though some expre*sse*el relue tance // ’ ■ - n te,K he*i staie'd th.1t the* e xl.ei le nu* and \xorr> o\ei the ramifications lIII ,P«ovide both classes with an of the actiem.-V ; /*.■P®Hbu&1,®chool as P^^Moppoitumtx to obscjxi ditteunces _ Xhe National 1 Vderation, «d ( i- VP< ^^^“^iid^simihiMti! - iii rural end ui Canadian Cniversity Slndents has / *not .taken a public position on the)4U|m^^nei^sta^’iiT|l'the^issue, while the t'S National Stu-, -*v' :r'' - . tntranri uro I scoreboa rdt psiloil guincil -sole* bested Phi Sig 13-0. Coulter V ,9' P , - , first place in topped East IV 13-8. and Salis- f, v- ■ miiWVeWeiMn ^ l,v bcat Chamberlin In jienetra-.,%:;■'ml u 1," tipn in the “B” League 5n.‘ Preliminaries leu the annual t, , intramural swim m,*e t u HI be held 5^^Sch>‘ool»iii\<olving^fhe'^dmis.sieue--e>:^••••'.'a' rJ;tou<'football action, -T ursday, November l. at 3.30 n-Klam,’- I irinh t., i he rniversit^ ^^Reta TautreniiW Delta Up- Pm in Bartlett pool! Qualifying g. M.ss.ss,Ppi\ia,,ed-s. i.eient W-Ion 41-7. Ph, Kappa Psi downed ^unds will be held in every event,no, finak't^^d^:The1rid^^o7* ,‘al’field; tBp t^^if f eiynI fcbmmu n if^iy'suitfegpx ill;comeho the^ab Sehoor|'I'ues^fw hi| GOLD CITY INNp/iei Specializing in Cantonese;Food ^|-jOrders to Take Outf ’ I ■ • i10% Discount to Students With This Ad 4*SHARE-A-RIDE CENTRALOffers A I’niquo New Service To Our Mobile Society \Now You Can Find Share Expense Rides or . \; Riders to Any City Nationwide. ....jSubscribe NOW! For Your: Trip Home on Thanksgiving „ jj* or Christmas. —- For Complete Information ^4\ TELEPHONE FI 6-7263 ;^wvnxxxwwwwvxxxx'actor's company presents- J*r OpensTomorrow!NEW BOOKS FROM CAMPUS AUTHORS >■I K I kl I\1 A N : , ;i |.] | ;ili>nr. ;i ml , I i <li.m ■ «4.*v f ■■ ■ . . ..•••• >' |V 1 ■- • .h' ' in 'li’j’J i.h n'snn I.-i tulmarks«i Pnlii i< « l,<> kroiumiy tkt.l • I- Ikl.l. Humaii'.Nni m . .Ii h*. *VSi-‘ia\V;;,f Soe-i.'t •.'%:S'AS IItESENI;n-:|MV,.f|m' i... ah ■'< ■ •. ••.*•' 'v ■’r *.. -A '■ • %UNIVERSITY OF CHICAt&O BOOKSTORE :' 5802 ELLIS AVENUE > *Founder of theproclaimsu*^i\v,*li‘(IfeffB lit vfd’f^Wa liliii^ui is%dayCtS; to^atta in * th attun i <i tli, I l(u), I 01 gi.ui which God poureth forth,I/‘t hoik*’, tlu i c foi i - considei the’largenessoi smallti(“ss''of4he, receptabU'-. * The portion' of'somemight lie in tliOi palm of a man’s hand, the portio'n;! <»1 others might fill a tup and of. others even a gal-lon-measure.”; ■ A. . a. ;■ ' • : ' ■ ' ' "“K\ er\ mail' hath been, and will continue to be. able^jpf ftimself to appreciate the Beauty of God, the Glo-. ritied. Had he not been endowed, with,such a capa-\itv- how could ho bo called to* account for his-fail-^u1^?^^^^'iie^aitkibf|ft^iaike'h't^Cbi^kj6ihditi'bh'oirl:<lj\i;^aiy<m|im^x-.c,e:ptrh mrs.e I SIIAKKSPEARES ROLLICKING COMEDYTHE MERRY WIVESOF.':V,'A«¥V r ANS author and. lecturer, of Noo'i.. House of Worship in Wilmelon Victorious Livinq Mandel Hall 8:30,-Nov. 1st, 2nd, 3rdTickets $1.50 - Students $1 - On Sale Reynold's Club Deskrrp 11 torn 111 ^eft'll ilmrnr. ‘-(M'hi IVltf-V ■ J:?$%i’-ii " m^ ^ - * ;■ •; . - r ■■■ ;C H I C A G O MAROON