UC polling place In Monde! Hall.Ginsberg to discuss recent behavior work r\_ _ | _ _.g. _ jBenson E. Ginsberg, pro- developments which seem to in- U I I 1% $ 11 |^| | ■■ | ^ ^Benson E. Ginsberg, pro¬fessor of biology, will discuss‘‘The Biological Nature ofMan” tonight at the Univer¬sity's Downtown Center.The lecture is the second in afour-part series entitled “SeeingOurselves as Others See Us."Ginsberg plans to discuss recent developments which seem to in¬dicate that mammal behavior isdue more to biology than is cur¬rently believed. Much of the re¬search Ginsberg plans to discusswas completed at the University;some of it is the work of Gins¬berg himself.Admission to the lecture is$1.50 and $1 for students. Sidney Yates, Democraticcandidate for Illinois Sena¬tor, refused to concede to all-but-elected incumbent Ever¬ett Dirksen as the Maroon wentto press early this morning.Several other elections of na-Vol. 71 — No. 28 University of Chicago, Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1962UC high on federal funds liThe University of Chicagois among the nation’s top 25universities in funds receivedfrom the federal government.According to the Department ofHealth, Education, and Welfare’srecent summary of a survey offederal programs in higher edu¬cation, UC is in the first quartileof 100 institutions receiving fed¬eral grants for the fiscal year1960.The report was prepared by J.Kenneth Little, professor of edu¬ cational psychology at the Uni¬versity of Wisconsin and associatedirector of the Committee on In¬stitutional Cooperation of the BigTen Universities and the Univer¬sity of Chicago.The report states that federalresearch funds are concentrated inapproximately KM) universities. Ofall funds for research in the fiscalyear 1960, 68% went to 25 uni-versties, including UC, 82% wentto 50 universities, and 94% to the100.Some 186 private liberal artscolleges and 55 state collegesWednesday Night Club will meetto continue discussions of UCThe Wednesday night club,n group of students and facul¬ty members who are con¬cerned about improving com¬munications among the variousmembers of the University com¬munity, will hold its first meetingOf the year tonight.The group, which was foundedlast spring, held several discus¬sion meetings dealing with thecurriculum, atmosphere, and ac¬tivities of the University.Among ideas taken up were thepossibility of establishing individ¬ual colleges at UC, grouping grad¬uate and undergraduate studentsin the same dormitories, and im¬proving student-faculty relations.Faculty members who initiallyworked with the group are DavidBakan, professor of psychology;S. Ronald Weiner, instructor inEnglish; Harry Kalven, professorof law; James E. Newman, assist¬ant professor of his tor and assist¬ant dean of undergraduate stu¬dents; and Sol Tax, professor ofanthropology and head of the Col¬ lege Social Sciences Section. Tax,Newman, and Bakan will beamang those at tomorrow’s meet¬ing. Ed Shor, assistant professorof political science will also at¬tend.Students participating includedgraduate and undergraduate resi¬dents of the various dormitoriesand representatives of a numberof student activities.All interested members of theUniversity community may attendtomorrow evening’s meeting,which will be at 7 pm in the Jud-son Lounge. The meeting is be¬ing sponsored by the Student-Fac¬ulty Relations Committee of Stu¬dent Government. participating in the federal pro¬grams of research received 1.1%of total federal research funds.The University of Chicago, alsoaccording to the report, is one ofthe top 25 universities, receivingbetween $1,250,000 and $3,500,000in federal grants for facilities andequipment in the fiscal year 1959.In that year, states the report,100 universities and colleges re¬ceived 96% of the amount of allgrants made for facilities andequipment. Fifty of these receivedgiants totalling between $100,000and $600,000. The other 50 re¬ceived considerably more.The University of Chicago isalso a major participant, measuredby the number of persons in¬volved, in educational and culturalexchange programs in I960, ad¬ministered by the Department ofState.A total of 2,061 Americans from431 different ^institutions weresent abroad and 5,173,foreign visi¬tors were brought to the US toattend 353 different institutions. tional interest, including the PatBrown - Dick Nixon gubinatorialrace in California were still indoubt. Most, however, were allbut decided, including the elec¬tions of the President’s brotherTed Kennedy in Massachusetts,Presidential hopefuls NelsonRockefeller in New York, andGeorge Romney in Michigan, AbeRibicoff in the Connecticut sena¬torial race, and William Scrantonin Pennsylvania.O'Hara reelectedThe Illinois second congressionaldistrict reelected Barrett O’Haraby a 3 to 2 margin over Repub¬lican Bixler. Sidney Lens, run¬ning on a peace platform, polled“about 10% of the vote,” accord¬ing to his campaign headquarters.Lens sent the following telegramto Congressman O’Hara:“Congratulations on your vic¬tory. We wish you well and wehope this whole community willunite to press for deescalation ofthe arms race and for winningpeace with freedom."Peace voters 10%Many complaints about elec¬tion procedures, especially in thethree Chicago districts w’herepeace candidates ran as wnite-ins, wrere reported. In some pre¬cincts election judges refused togive instructions for casting write-in votes, although required to doso. Some voting machines lackedeither paper or pencils for writingin votes. When voters complained,they were told to come ou, of thebooths to get this material andthen informed that they couldnot reenter the booths.Workers at Lens’ headquartersfelt that despite these,,obstaclestheir candidate had done “verywell, proving there- is a ‘peacevote’.’’ They stated that AlvaTompkins and Robert Cosbey. theother peace candidates in Chicago,w'ere polling from 8 to 10% ofthe vote in their districts. Therewas no word as to howr the 37other peace candidates across thenation fared. H. Stuart Hughes, peace candi¬date for Massachusetts senator,has garnered at least 15,000 votes.However, 75,000 signed his peti¬tion to enter the race as an in¬dependent.Congress: no changesThe proportion of Democraticand Republican strength in theUS Congress changed very little,if at all.In Cook County the Democrats,as expected, were running farahead. The Blue Ballot (Judicialreform amendment to the stateconstitution > seemed to be. atlast, sure of passage.An attempt by the White Citi¬zens Council of Alabama failed toget a w'hite man elected in placeof either the Negro Democrat orNegro Republican running in oneof the state assembly districtsthere. The Democrat won. and hewill be the first Negro to sit inthe Georgia legislature in almost100 years.UC districts’ resultsNathan Kinnally, the Demo¬cratic candidate for MarshallKorshak’s vacated seat in the Illi¬nois State Senate, had all but wonlast night. Only three candidates,Democrats Abner Mikva andRobert Mann and RepublicanNoble Lee, ran for the three dist¬rict 23 seats in the Illinois House,and all are therefore automatic¬ally elected.Early returns from California,“not really indicative,” predictedthe narrow defeat of Proposition24. This proposed amendment tothe state constitution is designedto curtail the activities of Com¬munists and subversives. Staffmembers of the Daily Californian,student newspaper of the Univer¬sity of California at Berkeley,informed the Maroon early thismorning that victory was predict¬ed for Brown, at least in thenorthern end of the state. (TheJohn Birch Society, solidly behindNixon, is concentrated in LosAngeles county.)Editor of Catholic Worker speaks todayDorothy Day, editor of theCatholic Worker, will speakat Calvert House today at4:30 pm.She spent September travelingin Cuba, talking with the people,listening to Castro in a “midnight address," and learning about theCuban campaign against illiteracyand pow'erty.Accompanied in Cuba by CharlesHorwitz, a UC graduate, she re¬ports that Castro is “not at alla madman ... a truly greatspeaker. His talk was all directed800 vote in first day of SG pollApproximately 800 studentsvoted yesterday on the Stu¬dent Government (SG) spon¬sored Cuba opinion poll, esti¬mated Russell Kay, Chairman of the SG Election and Rules Com¬mittee.Kay described the voting as“moderate in numbers,’’ and feltthat “it certainly should not sur¬pass the record, established lastSpring in the SG elections, ofover 2,000 students voting." that the blockade be suspended?“4. Do you endorse the UnitedStates government’s establishmentof the Cuban quarantine?Also, “What is your academicunit (e.g. College, Law, etc)?" to the youth of flic country, forwhom, he said, tlic revolution hadbeen fought.”Miss Day is known for herpacifist activities and her found¬ing of two dozen settlementhouses, the Houses of Hospitality.Feeling that air raid drills leadto accepting the inevita-bity of war and use of nuclearweapons, she has refused to takeshelter in the annual drills in NewYork City. On successive yearsshe was arrested and jailed, re¬sulting in much publicity. The an¬nual drills have since been discon¬tinued.Balloting will end today. Ballotboxes will be tn Cobb Hall, 8:30-4:80; Mandel Corridor, 8:30-5:00:the Research Institutes, 8:00-12:30; Eekhart Hall, 12:15-3:00:Social Sciences, 3:15-5:30: andInternational House, 4:45-7:00.The questions on the poll are:“1. Do you deplore actions byany nuclear power which resultin the spreading of nuclearweapons to nations where they arenot previously established? Speci¬fically, do you deplore the SovietUnions establishment of missilebases in Cuba?5th Ward polling place on 55 Street“2. Do you deplore the actionof the US in establishing a navalblockade of military weaponsshipped to Cuba, and to preventthe aggressive use of these mis¬siles against any country, do youbelieve that it is in the best in¬terests of the UE to secure theremoval of these bases throughnegotiations with Cuba and theSoviet Union?“3. Do you strongly urge theUS government, in its own in¬terests and in the interests ofworld peace, to accept the timelyoffer of Mr. Thant to act as medi¬ator in negotiations between theUS and the Soviet Union to settlethe current crisis, and do youurge that the US express itswillingness to negotiate by com- Iplying with Mr. Thant's request [Indian asks aid inanti-China causeVO THE EDITOR:Will you please allow me to useyour columns to appeal to myIndian friends at the University©f Chicago for a noble cause?Being in the US (a dollarCountry) we are in a privilegedposition to help our motherlandagainst the Chinese aggression onOur northern frontiers. Besidesdonating liberally to the NationalDefence Fund, Reserve Bank ofIndia, in precious dollars, we canhelp India pay for her US mili¬tary aid by purchasing theIndian rupee.I suggest a minimum of $5 or2% of the monthly income,whichever is greater, as donation;and 10% of the monthly earningsto be sent back home (purchaseof rupees) ....Other students and citizensmay also join hands in this noblecause.Khazan Chaud AgsawalInternational HouseNV decries formof poll questionSTO THE EDITOR:New Voice urges every studentto vote in the Student Govern¬ment opinion poll. This is the onlyway in which the voice of thestudent will be heard.We would like to point out,however, that the first three ques¬tions of the poll are misleading,and the results of the poll maybe misconstrued. We urge thestudents to answer these ques¬tions carefully, and not to answerthem at all if they feel theiropinions will be misrepresented.The fourth question is nearestto that asked for by more than1,000 students on the original peti¬tion for the referendum. The re¬sults of this question only willreflect the true image of studentopinion.We deem it unfortunate thatthe Student Government hasproven its indifference to a true representation of student opinionin an obvious attempt to cloudthe issues involved and miscon¬strue the opinions of the students.Their excuse for the ambiguouswording of the questionnaire wasthat in a sincere effort to deter¬mine student opinion on theiractions, the questions were takendirectly from the context of theirtelegram to the President. It isclear that SG was afraid to asksimply for approval or disappro¬val of their action and will nowdefend that action by any deviousmeans necessary.New VoiceBroader perspectiveis needed for CubaTO THE EDITOR:Because I am a foreign studentin the United States, 1 have nevermade any attempt to have myvoice on any political issues heard.However, the recent dispute be¬tween SG and its opponents makesme feel that I am dodging a re¬sponsibility if I do not express myviews.In general, I believe that tocondemn any anti-colonialisticmovement on the part of thepeople of underdeveloped count¬ries . . . (as) . . . "Communism’'is just a distortion of- truth and asmoke-screen to win the supportof naive people. What people ofunderdeveloped areas are fight¬ing to win is their political andeconomic independence as themost important move toward solu¬tion of their acute problems ofhunger, disease, misery, and ignor¬ance which is never fully under¬stood by people who have neverlived that kind of life, or at least,have not observed it with sym¬pathy.Whoever helps the majority ofthe people of the world, living inunderdeveloped areas, to solve theproblems of hunger, disease, mis¬ery, superstition, corx-uption ,andso forth, is welcome by the people(distinguished from their corruptgovernments) regardless of thecations of the support. “Democ-cataions of the support. “Dfmoc-C0^«IG»T (£) 1961 THt COCA COL* COMPANV COCA COL* AND C0»C ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKSBETWEEN FRIENDS.There’s nothing like a Coke!IA ' * 'lfillI 1Get that refreshing new feeling with Coke! racy,” “freedom,” or “internation¬al balance of power” have hardlyany meaning to a hungry peasantin Asia or Latin America.Specifically speaking ... a judg¬ment on Cuba simply in terms ofSoviet missiles in Cuba and theUS blockade is entirely out ofcontext and irrelevant. A sophis¬ticated, honest, and fair judgmenton the Cuban issue must take intoaccount all factors involved, someof which follow: US-Cuban rela¬tions before and during the Ba¬tista period and during the earlyyears of the Castro government;the US policy of containment,economic pressure on Cuba; theBay of Pigs fiasco; NATO, CEN¬TO, SEATO; US missile bases inBritain, Italy, and Turkey; USmilitary bases in Iran, Pakistan(borders of Russia), and Cuba;Warsaw Pact; President Dortico’sspeech in the UN; and above all,sentiments and needs of Cubansfrom their own viewpoints.You may reach various conclu¬sions depending on your premisesand viewpoints, but please takeinto consideration all factors in¬volved in the Cuban situation.A. FATTAHIPOURConfused by SG pollTO THE EDITOR:With diligence. I prepared inadvance my answers to the Stu¬dent Government’s petition onCuba as follows: 1) yes, 2) no,3) yes, 4) yes. But hardly had mypen rested from this civic laborwhen the disquieting voice of aradical acquaintance broke mycomposure:“Is it consistent to ‘deplore theSoviet Union’s establishment ofmissile bases in Cuba,’ and yetfail to censure similar past andfuture actions by our own gov¬ernment? A vote of ‘yes’ inquestion 1) is possibly a strongercondemnation of past UnitedStates’ foreign policy than of thepresent policy of the SovietUnion.”Retreating hastily from thisscandalous implication, I made thealternation: 1)?, 2) no, 3) yes, 4)yes.“As to question 2), some say itis one question and some say itis two. I say it is no question,for the simple reason that theanswerer must first accept iheprior assumptions that: a) Cuba(et al.) intended ‘the aggressiveuse of these missiles against anycountry’, and b) the United Staleswas then capable of securing ‘theremoval of these bases throughnegotiations with Cuba and' theSoviet Union’.”Being incapable of following thisargument, I decided: 1) ?, 2) ?,3) yes, 4) yes.“The third question so clearlyconsists of two questions, permit¬ting different answers, that 1 dis¬miss it outright.”1) ?, 2) ?, 3) ?. 4) yes.“We now come to 1 lie last ques¬tion, which was of course the or¬iginal intention of this poll. Withadmirable hindsight you now en¬dorse a policy which resulted in apreeminent success for the UnitedStates—a success due, in no smallmeasure, to the surprising modera¬tion of Khrushchev. If you possessthe smallest trace of honesty, youwill answer this question as youwould have answered it on Ihemorning of October 24 when Sovietships, as yet unchallenged, were sailing towai'd Cuba.”With sure knowledge of mymoral character^ I hold firm; 1)?, 2) ?, 3) ?, 4) yes. But mayI humbly suggest to the StudentGovernment that the question “4)Do you endorse ...” be read“4) Did you endorse . . .”Your obedient servants,JACK HARDY,JAN HOWARD FINDER(SG representative)Former IIT editorlists Maroon errorsTO THE EDITOR:Come now, Maroon. In regardto the Technology News editorialof November 2 and your com¬ment of November 6:1. Free press and “championing. . . free expression” does notmean complete agreement withthe Chicago Maroon or the Uni¬versity of Chicago StudentGovernment.2. “Guilt” by association withBarry Goldwater and publicwhimpering earn you little re¬spect.3. Failure to publish each issuein the Maroon a masthead listingthe editor’s name indicates either(a) Lack of space (unlikely ina subsidized publication;even more unlikely in acommercial publication) orib) a desire for anonymity.4. Editorial ]K>licy of the Chi¬cago Maroon (slanted newsstories, allocation of coverage,uninteresting makeup) is not theultimate in newspapering.Ease down from your HobbyHorse just a little and you’ll seethat nobody lakes you seriously. . . nor any student newspaper.Lawrence G. Smith, gradu¬ate student, Dept. ofEconomics, former editor.Technology News.'Question form haslogical basis'TO THE EDITOR:Perhaps it does not interest themembers of New Voice to |>ointout, when they criticize the formof the SG opinion poll, that thestatements with which the cam¬pus is being asked to agree ordisagree are phrased as they arebecause that is the way the SGresolution was phrased. The sim-ide question, “Do you endorse IhePresident’s quarantine of weaponsshipments to Cuba?” allows nQroom for shadings of opinion andis in fact meaningless.I should like to point out alsothat, when I went to the MandelCorridor polling booth yesterday,(lie young man sitting behind thetable suggested to me that “It'stime to start a write-in cam¬paign.” “For whom,” I asked.“Against Student Government”was the reply. While I appreciateihe advice, 1 thing perhaps thatthere are more appropriate placesto give it than at the polls.I reiterate here what I said inThompson House last week, andin the Maroon yesterday: that theGovernment should not stand orfall on this one issue. The per¬formance of POLIT should bemeasured on its total program ofstudent welfare, civil rights, etc.The electorate, before making adecision on the larger question ofthe total value of the POLIT SG,To contribute toward assuring the right of minorities to a JBottled under authority ofDie Coca-Cola Company by COCA • COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO * public forum, and help defeat the unconstitutional McCarranAct, the Chicago Hall-Davis Defense Committee is presentinga celebration of the 72ml birthday ofELIZABETH GURLEY FLYNNnational chairman of the Hall-Davis Defense Committee.\ Mrs. Flynn, the "Rebel Girl" of Joe Hill's famous laborJ song, the light of the IWW in it's heyday, will speak.\ YOUR ATTENDANCE WILL HELP TO HAKE THIS THE| LARGE DEMONSTRATION OF OPPOSITION TO THE' MeCARRAN ACT THAT IT MUST REi il Hamilton Hotel Ballroom 20 S. Dearborn ?% 5\ Friday, November 9, 8 pm Admission: Si.00 fy ?iy****+4**nr4*++******+**44te«***********+9m4***4tm4mm4j. should investigate the opinionsof the leaders of New Voice andthe other dissident groups onthese matters.Ron DorfmanPoll watchercites "ambiguity"TO THE EDITOR:Student Government has doneit again! The telegram, at least,could be chalked up to rashness,over-zealousness, or irresponsibili¬ty. But fi'om the look of things,the current referendum is pre»meditated, cold-blooded suppres¬sion of the truth. The whole pur-jx>se of having a referendum onthe Cuban issue was to gauge stu¬dent opinion accurately. What hasresulted is a morass of ambigu¬ity.As a volunteer pollster, I havebeen party to this skillful per¬version of the democratic process.I don’t know whose skill was re-sixmsible, but one student seemedon the right track when heasked, “W’ho wrote this thing?Perry Mason?” While watchingthe looks of disbelief blossom onballoters’ faces, I was treated tosome revealing comments: “Whata masterpiece of doublctalk!"“Why don’t they ask one questionat a time?” "This second questionis asinine!” Even an ardent sup-l>orter of SG’s actions from thestart felt compelled to admit,“Three of the questions arerigged; only one is legitimate."If New Voice sanctions thismuddled questionnaire, it hasfailed in its mission to restoretruly representative governmentto this University.It is clear from my experiencetending poll'- that many, manyballots will be submitted emptyor partially answered. More willbear both affirmative and nega-to has the accepting the inevita-tive responses for the ambivalentquestions. Others will be checkedwith "No Opinion” all over thepaper. Dozens will offer extem¬poraneous criticism of the farcicalcharacter of the referendum. Willthese questionnaires be voided be¬cause they conscientiously pro¬test the devious wording of thequestions?Altogether, it is just as if wehad never had a referendum,Apparently some aspiring punditin SG is either hopelessly ineptor a dirty rat. Yet, it was greatbeing a volunteer poll watcherfor Student Government.Joel ShapiroToday’s Events |Exhibit: Jerry Pinsler, paintings xv i 11 bein Lexington studios galleries throughNovember 23, 9-5.Lecture: "Growth and Development inthe Oil Industry,” George V. Meyers,VP Standard Oil, Business East 103,1 :30 pm.Study Group: Great Ages of the JewishPeople from the Maccabees to Mo¬hammed, Hillel, 4:30 pm.Carillon Concert: Rockefeller, DanielRobins, earillonneur, 5 pm.English Class: International House. 0:30-8 :30 pm.Episcopal services: Bond Chapel, even¬song, 5:05 pm; Holy Communion,7:30 pm.Wednesday Night Club: Students andfaculty to discuss the University, allwelcome, Judson Lounge, 7 pm.Lecture-discussion: "The Moral Life:Studies in the Ethics of Maimonides,"Hillel, 7 pm.Forensic Association: Ida Noyes, 7:30pm.Lutheran Confession: Chapel house,5810 Woodlawn, 7:30 pm.CORE meeting: Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.Division into committees.Discussion: Robert Benedetti, directorof UT, will talk on theatre at UC,Thompson House Lounge, 7:30 pm.Dames Club meeting: Ida Noyes, 8 pm.Collegium Musicum: Ida Noyes, 8 pm.Country Dancers: Ida Noyes, 8 pm.Lecture Series: “The Biological Natureof Man,” Benson E. Ginsburg, Headof College Biology Section, Down¬town Center (64 E. Lake), 8:30 pm.FOR ONE WEEK ONLYSTARTING FRIDAY NOVEMBER 9Another Library Duplicateand Discard SaleHundreds to select 9 ant*from ot I Wld upThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUECHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 6, 1962iNfinCollect $100 in tax drive I classified I’r m * ■ w ?htoe,3"* *^8'Ifficienc KunnTt°80datiracg ^°°tbaJ1 Sames was played on theMorG than on6 hundred dol~ oiganizations working to aid voter with voter registration problems tiveiy appointed, month to month occu- Midway last night. In the frater-Jars was collected yesterday' registration drives in the South.in vnlnntarv noil taxec- hv .ihe drive was Part of a cation-in voluntary poii taxes oy widc fund raising project( de.members of six campus signed to acquaint Northerners-Praises Rosbaucfs concert1 When a near,y fu" °rch- “"d ““ moaning* of the siudent ^vemmentT"'^'^'drive' ™M mac^having ubt curbed Beifs trounced PhiGaSestra Hall cheers Mozart on low bra*s to interject the Chirpings which asked voters for voluntary for his debts. Delta, 38-9, and Phi Delta Theta'a Friday afternoon, it is of th« clarinet. It Is hard to re- contributions of one dollar poll : «hcn> and Holmes forfeited to Phi Sigma Delta.^hallucination or a miracle, number any other time when all tax. took place in most precincts Si, Ir “oV^d W^lfw”.''ri Bolsheviks won their thkdgamein the South and to solicit their “** l«>eue Coders Psi U,won their sixth straight game,PP°r ’ Sublet avail, now till Jan. 3rd, furn; defeating ZBT 35-21. The twenty-Organized locally by the UC ?afterm6 pm.) C°°P’ $80' MU 4'8558 one points represented the bestchapter of the Congress on Racial — effort against Psi U this yea?#__ 3 room apartment. 6757 Jeffery, $102.50 tvTT ni: r>„: O-f,Equality and the National Stu- includes parkins? in rear and s?as. Good e<iged Phi Kappa Psi, 21 20,...... ... , neighborhood. 288-6757 or hy 3-5303. despite a second half rally by Fnident Association eomnuttee of Psi in which they scored all th«SrLast Friday the first week in‘Hlns Rosbaud’s six week engage¬ment as guest conductor of theChicago Symphony, was (I hope)the latter.The first half of tht concertwas devoted to two of the master’screations: the Magic Flute Over¬ture and the “Posthorn” Sere-| nalle. It is a rare Mozart perfor-'mance which is neither effemi¬nate nor overdramatized, neither audience laughed at anything (ex¬cept Webern).Rosbawd will continue (o con¬duct the orchestra until the mid- of thewards. fourth, fifth, and sixth contact j«-ff Cransler, 493-5882. in four starts since entering theJX)iwr>: Monday, textbook lost at 56th league by topping Phi Kappa PS,St. IC station. Call MI 3-3092, after 13-2Local organizations helping with In another oxcit;ng game, Phidie of December. If last week’s the project were SG, the regional Brown wallet stolen Thursday night at Sigma Delta “B” beat Dodd 6-0concert was any indication, any- organization of NSA, the Northern formation^delr SSe Mechel Rt in overtime play, scoring a touch-one Wanting to hear the Chica- c;(udon< Movement Americans for 11 down the first'time they had thego Symphony during Autumn ’ French — private instruction — »>i ball. Coulter House defeatedQuarter can be sure of hearing I^oooratic Action, Young People s levels — reading exam, bu 8-7284. Chamberlin on a first half safety,a concert far above the ordinary Socialist League, and the Student Hapry_didn,t Vnow you c'ared that 2-0. Tufts North downed Salis-Orchestra Hall standard. Nonviolent Coordinating Commit- much about the great eb. bury i3_o- and Psi U “B” wo» onPete Rabmowitz tee. man. a forfeit over East IV.striving toward the grandeur of /v\**%\\VVVSV****%%V^^****V**VS***%V%VX*\\\V%**%*Reethoven nor sinking into emo¬tionless boredom. Ilosbaud notonly avoided these faults, but al¬so condueted with elarlty and, ifoTTe may forgive the expression,love. SHARE-A-RIDE CENTRALOffers A Unique New Service To Our Mobile SocietyNow You Can Find Share Expense Rides orRiders to Any City Nationwide.The results were of the high¬est order and will be a long timeunequaled in Oi'chestra Hall (un¬less Rosbaud plans to perform moreMozart during his stay).*- ^-^After intermission, Byron Janisioined the orchestra in a excellent\heading of Prokofieff’s Third Pia¬no Concerto. It was not the “pia¬no-oriented” interpretation whichso many contemporary pianistsseem to prefer. Instead it wasplayed as a true concerto forpkino and orchestra. Yet despiteJanis’ masterful playing and Ros¬baud’s precise conducting, the per¬formance seemed to lack some¬thing. One could admire it, butit did not arouse enthusiasm.Strauss* “Till Eulenspicgel’sMerry Franks” was the highlightoTthe program. Here was the idealperformance of Till: light, magi¬cal, even “merry.” Rosbaud is oneof the few conductors who can tella joke — his conducting was soeffective that the audience actual¬ly laughed during the executionscene, where Strauss interruptsthe ominous roaring of the drums Subscribe NOW! For Your Trip Home on Thanksgivingor Christmas. — For Complete InformationTELEPHONE FI 6-7263 BRITISH SCIENTISTSRepresentatives of Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd. will bevisiting the campus on Monday, November 12th, to meet andexchange information with post-graduate or post-doctoral 4scientists from Britain or the British Commonwealth whowould like to consider careers with I.C.I. in the UnitedKingdom.ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW WITHYOUR PLACEMENT OFFICERToday’sWise1961 CORVAIR MONZA - FULLSPEED TRANS. WHITE WALLSRADIO. HEATER $ 1 GQCFULL PRICE * ■No Money DownNo Payments This YearBring in Ad for This PriceGruby’s Rambler4555 S. CottageBO 8-1111 Assignment: find a fiver paper thatworks harder the dirthr it getsv ■ : '*i • a.. * • • • ,In chain-drag test, truck raisesheavy dust clouds to check air filter efficiency.EXTRACURRICULARENTERTAINMENT mThe Unique NewNationalCollege MagazineAt Nearby Newsstands' • ^ Results: Up to 30,000 miles between filter changes in Ford-built cars for ’631The 1963 Ford-built cars you see on the road these days caneat dust and keep coming back for more, thanks to improvedcarburetor air filters.In our continuing quest to build total quality and service¬saving features into Ford-built cars, our engineering researchstaff explored the entire feld of physical chemistry for newair-purifying properties, in materials.The result: a filtering material made of chemically treatedwood pulp and paper that permits Ford-built cars undernormal operation to go from 24,000 to 30,000 miles beforecarburetor air filter replacement is required.The new, tougher filter paper is accordion folded to increasesurface area four-fold, permitting higher filtration in a smallerpackage. The more matter it accumulates, the better it filtersright up to its full rated service life. It saves owners time andmoney. It keeps Ford-built engines livelier longer.Another assignment completed—and another example of howFord Motor Company provides engineering leadership for theAmerican Road. MOTOR COMPANY _The American Road, Dearborn, MichiganPRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICA W ROAD • THE HOMETHE FARM » INDUSTRY * AND THE AGE OP SPACE«•ECTLY DATED Nov. 6, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Debater presents affirmative common market case(Editors note: Gerald MeBeath,president of the Forensic Associ¬ation and tournament chairmanfor this i/ear's National-Infercol-legtofe Debate to be held thisweekend at UC, has agreed toprseent Maroon readers unth abrief of the affirmative case fortht$ year's national debate topic:Revolved: That the non-Com-mimist rations of the world shouldestablish an economic community.Because of space limitations, sup¬porting evidence has been Om¬ni itted. MeBeath has also pre¬pared a brief of the negative jx>-sifion. which the Maroon vHH pre¬sent later this week.)The competition betweenC ofhmunist and non-Commu-ni$t nations has now shiftedto an economic basis for thewcS’ld dominance of a politicalphilosophy. Premier Khrushchevslated this in 1958: “We declarewa? upon you in the peacefulfield of trade .... The threatto the United States is not inth« ICBM. but in the field ofpeaceful production. We are re¬lentless in this, and it will provethe superiority of our system.”C opsidering this and the impactof the European Economic Com¬munity, an overwhelming majorityof rollege debate coaches selectedthe above resolved for the nation¬al Collegiate debate topic.broad objectives of Ameri¬can foreign policy in reference tothis Communist threat are 1) topromote the strength of the Unit¬ed States, 2) to promote thestrength of the rest of the freeworld, and 3) to build and main¬tain cohesion in the free world.The realization of these objectivesdepends on a complete utilizationof economic resources, fostered byfree competition. It is the conten¬tion of an affirmative team thatthese objectives are being ob¬scured by temporary, short-termmeasures; that industrialized na¬tions are inadequately assistingthe less-developed nations; andthat free trade is ruptured byregionally isolated areas.To facilitate discussion of thisproposal, a number of terms mustbe defined. “Non-Communist” na¬tions are those which do not haveCommunist governments, thus ex¬cluding Soviet Russia. CommunistChina and its satellites, and Cuba.The modal “should.” present inmost debate propositions, impliesduty or obligation in the sense of“ought” but does not express cer¬tainly as “will” sometimes does!“Economic community" ordinar¬ily means a society joined togetherfor common production, distrib¬ution, and consumption of com¬modities. It differs from an eco¬nomic union in that it uses nocommon currency and allows moreinterna] autonomy in economicmatters. But it is stronger thana free trade area. There is afree movement of labor withinthe area, considerable capital in¬vestment; and there are subsidiesfor the infant industries of under¬developed nations.The burden of proof of the af¬firmative is to demonstrate theinherent defiieiencies of the statusquo and to show that these canbe best alleviated by an economiccommunity of non-Communist na¬tions. The affirmative ease maythus be divided into need con¬tentions and a plan.The status quo can bo indictedin several respects. First, restric¬tive trade policies are preventingmaximum competition. They pro¬tect weak industries and allowan increase of prices above theProjectionists neededAny students interested in help¬ing show films at the Wood lawnBoys Club should contact GordonQuinn, BU 8-3627.3 students reinstatedat St. John's UniversityNEW YORK (CPS)--The NewYork Court of Appeals has beenasked to order the reinstatementof three students at the RomanCatholic St. John’s University.The court was asked to rule thatthe school had acted arbitrarilyin dismission two students forgetting married in a civil cere¬mony and a third for acting aswitness at the wedding. normal market level. This pro¬tectionism discourages an effectiveutilization of our industrial ca¬pacity; inefficient firms are keptin operation to satiate temporarygoals forced by powerful lobby¬ists and interest groups, whilethe American consumer is affectedthrough higher commodity prices.Trade restrictions limit speciali¬zation of industry. Current recip¬rocity in setting high tariff levelsand import restrictions (exg. quo¬tas) reduces the total volume ofexports and imports, indirectly af¬fecting our gross national product.All the free world nations areaffected by restrictive tradeagreements. However, the under¬developed nations, with their non-industrialized, one-product econo¬mies are especially injured. Thegeneral high tariffs on agriculturalproducts and some raw materialsexclude the exports of these na¬tions from foreign markets. It isnot feasible for them to tradewith their neighbors, for theyhave identical economies.These nations, located in SouthAmerica, Africa, the Middle East,and Asia, have remained under¬developed largely through the in¬action of the more developed freeworld nations. United States for¬eign aid, though large in com¬parison to that of the rest of theworld, is of a short-term duration,often requiring political ties orallegiances. European aid is pri¬marily given to former colonies.And the United Nations programsunder FUND, BANK. IFF. IMF, and IDA offer inadequate funds,although the aid is administeredmulti-laterally.The conjunction of lit fie aidand insufficient trade compel un¬der-developed nations to seek oth¬er assistance. Communist aggres¬sion is primarily military and pol¬itical, but it has been quite effec¬tive in convincing under-developedcountries through the appeal ofa planned economy, land reform,and a directed foreign aid pro¬gram. Communist economic offen¬sives in South Asia and Africahave been markedly effective.To fight Communism on theeconomic level, the entire freeworld must be able to trade freely.Free trade pre-supposes stableeconomies and a division of labor.Current trade policies and region¬al economic communities disallow’economic unity. Instead of thedevelopment of free trade, thereis an antithetical movement to¬ward regionalism—strong grouptrading centers, like the EuropeanEconomic Community, w’hich be¬come isolated through externaltariff walls.These separatist plans allow theCommunist world to practice themaxim, “divide and conquer.”Consequently, the development offree world trade is curtailed byshort-term obstructions. Throughneed of expanded markets, therate of growth of the UnitedStates economy is decreasing. Weare finding it more diflicule totrade with the EEC because of its prohibitive restrictions. Eventhe most recent legislation, theTrade Expansion Act of 1962, al¬lows the President to raise aswell as low’er tariffs on frequentlytraded merchandise.The affirmative consensus isthat restrictive trade agreements,inadequate concern for underde-veloued nations, and isolated re¬gionalism have weakened theUnited States and the nations ofthe free world. A plan to amelio¬rate this need would comprise 1)a free movement of labor andproduce from one country to an¬other within the community, 2)erection of a comon tariff barrierto the Communist nations, 3) leg¬islative structure similar to thatof the EEC (an assembly of allmember states, an impartial Coun¬cil of Ministers devoid of alleg¬iance to a nation-state, and aCourt of Justice), 4) maintenanceof political sovereignty.To administer this plan, there must be gradual implementation—with an application of initialrelief to some countries; re-adap.tion of some industries to dif¬ferent productions; joint respon.sibility of all nations for foreignaid and investment capital to,under-developed nations; and ai-^lowances for adjustment and as-sistance. The advantages thatwould accrue from a non-Commu-nist economic community rue: ahigh employment level, expansionof markets, greater utilization ofresources, and free world solidaryity.Because the policies which com¬prise the status quo are demon¬strably inadequate to pursue themajor objectives of the UnitedStates and the free world againsteconomic offensives of the Com¬munist nations, it is essential thaLthe non-Communist nations of the*,world establish an economic com¬munity.Theatre First Inc.presentsElmer Rice's"The Adding Machine"November 9, 10, 11, 16, 17, 18, 23,24 and 25Special Rates Te Students With 10 SI. 10General Admission $1.75Group Ratet Quoted On ReguestShow Timos: Fri. & Sat. 8:30 P.M. . Sun. 7:Sr< PM,Located at: The Athenaeum, 2934 N. SouthportFor Reservations: Calt LA 5-9761 or write P. O.Box 3545, Chicago 54. IllinoisGet LuckyPlay "Crazy Questions"(Based on the hiloriout book "The Question Man. |50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE'S HOW:First, think of an answer. 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