*1 Recall of 13 SG membersdemanded by petition Mon.Vol. 71 — No. 35 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Nov. 20, 1962Elections, bills climax regionalElection of officers and astrong resolution againstspeaker bans highlighted theweekend activities of the Uli-nois-Wisconsin region of the Na¬tional Student Association (NSA).Delegates at Ida Noyes Hallelected Slewart Dowty of ShinierCollege as chairman of the regionat their plenary session Saturdaynight.The University of Chicago washost school for this “fall regional,’’attended by over 20 NSA memberschools in Illinois and Wisconsin.Prior to the plenary, the stu¬dents participated in two days of seminars and discussions on topicsof student interest.At the plenary, the body alsoestablished a new office of finearts coordinator voted to enterinto a mid-west civil rights com¬mittee, and voted to co-operatewith the Chicago regional officeof the American Friends servicecommittee to plan and sponsor aMidwest Conference on the goalsand methods of education,.In a bill which passed easily, theregion declared, “Speakers of allpolitical and religious ideologiesshould be allowed to speak oncampus in accordance with therights granted in the first amend¬ment of the Constitution.” Thebill condemned all speaker bans“direct or odireet,” and suggestedthat any campus organizationshould have the right to invite anyspeaker whose views its membersmay wish to hear.Other actions Saturday includeda statement against nuclear test¬ing, “not only because of the bio¬logical danger, but also because ofthe increase in the intensity of thecold war and consequent worldtension engendered by such test¬ing.” The region also establisheda committee to disseminate educa¬tional material on disarmament tomember schools. opposing the Cuba blockade; a billurging agrarian reform measuresin Latin America; a resolutionsupporting President Kennedy onhis Cuba policy in recent weeks;and a bill urging that the nameof Illinois State Normal Univer¬sity be changed to “Illinois StateUniversity at Nonrial.”Other regional officers electedSaturday night were: MarnieSchrage (University of Wiscon¬sin), Vice Chairman; Bill Dyrness(Wheaton College), Program ViceChairman; and Curran de Bruler(Roosevelt University), AcademicFreedom Coordinator.Earlier in the year, Larry Han¬sen (University of Illinois) re¬signed as chairman of the region.IT’s Leonard Friedman resignedas acting chairman, in order torun again for his former positionof Viee Chairman. He was de¬feated by Miss Sell rage.Representing the U of C at theregional were: Terri Ray, ArthurMacEivan, Pam Procuniar, BruceRappaport, Mike Wollan, and Sal¬ly Cook. A petition to recall thir¬teen members of StudentGovernment (SG) Assemblyrepresenting the Collegewas presented to SG at its regularmeeting last night.The petition was .signed by 187students. It was circulated by the“Committee for Responsible Gov¬ernment.”The original chairman of thecommittee was Richard Lannen.However, he has disaffiliated him¬self from the committee, and thepetition was presented by DickKinny of the Law School.The purpose of the recall, asstated in the petition is that thoseassemblymen listed voted to senda second telegram to Kennedy inopposition to the blockade, despitethe fact that there was greatopposition to it. The Assembly approved thepetition by a vote*' 9 to 0 andreferred it to the Election andRules Committee for action.The names mentioned for recallare: Sally Cook, Leonard Fried¬man. Eugene Kadish, Russel Kay,Laurie Gelles, Richard Jacobson,Mike Ormond. Pam Procuniar,Peter Rabinowitz, Bruce Rappa¬port, Terry Ray, Michael Wollan,Robert Workoff.Other business at the meeting,which 27 members attended, in¬cluded the election of Mike Wolf-son as chief justice of the Court.The Assembly also approved aresolution supporting a petitionbeing circulated to abolishwomen’s horn's, and mandated theCampus Action Committee toassist with this petition.SG vice-president Mike Wollan chairs seminarNDEA forms available Tuesdaywith ^everaf herns'^on”the "agenda Application form for National Defense Education (NDEA) loans will be available nextleft unconsidered. Such items in- Tuesday, announced Director of Financial aid Charles O’Connell yesterday,eluded a resolution condemning The University recently rejoined the NDEA loan program, after the controversial ‘‘dis-■ the firing of Joseph Letson, m- c]ajmer affidavit” was removed by congressi onal action.I structor at Lincoln College, for JStudents who are currently on year after they leave school (3 f10S for members of organizationsyears military service excluded), under final court order to registerInterest, at 3% per year, starts under the McCarran act as Com-to accrue at the same time. munist who apply for the loans.Interest (3% per yean on UC Organizations currently listed asloans starts as soon as the stu- sucb are the Communist Party ofdent leaves the University. His the United States of America, thepayments on the loan commence California Emergency Committee,four months later. The full loan and the Connecticut VolunteersWi T2T1A qVc Nin tion which the reader should feel persons planning to teach in pub- must be paid back within 10 for Civil Rights, said O’Connell,lonil, commented Aliais rsin t intellectualize. lie elementary or secondary years, as with the NDEA loans. _ .* • i . i -1.- j ... . ^ Persons are only subject to theNin says experimentationin art forms is imperative*T think we are a little bit rythm pattern, mood, and texture demonstrate financial need,afraid of adventure in new b? which she creates the sensa- Special priority will begiven toUniversity loans, as well as stu¬dents who have not been on Uni¬versity loans, are eligible to apply.Applicants must be full time stu¬dents, in good academic standing(not on probation), and able toin answer to another question, S* ifTTLNDEA loa."s be reEaidlast night when she addressedapproximately 100 people at the in answer xoanumer quesuon, fieW of interest is math, science, ov;r a’period* of "l0~ years. ”stu- ^ualtles if the>’ are members of“My Life and Yours” discussion. Miss Nin denied that her form ot or modern foreign languages. derRs may borrow up to $1000 the organizations at the time theyTh_ Freneh recognize the novel- art is-a deParture from reality. These persons will be considered per year with a total maximum apply for the loans, said O'Con-• /110 *iencn tne ™ i _t_t_d it is an eseaDe first w they apply between next $5000 ,, . .. , ...St as the counterpart of the ab- Instead she stated, ,t ,s an escape ^ V, M ° \STthe proglam uc is eligi- ’ '* th’> k,,mv ,hestract painter and favor experi- from false reality, from a sem- . „ - unaer tne progiam, uu lseiigi zation is under the finaI order t*ment and research: but we, who blance of reality. What we call * year sTTar^ UC$ has bSn agister. « is up to the Universi-have the equivalent of the French reaiity is merely a surface realism; Under °f e awarded *133 000 for this vear -tv to inform the students of thisnew writers, do not recognize we are engaged in a t for the program, 10% of the loan is for- awarded $133,000 for th^s >eai ty inform the students of tins,ti^nv t ... ® given for each year the borrower in iybi-bz, uc gave moie man he continued.rue r a 1 y, teaches (elementary or secondary’ $700,000 worth of loans from itsMiss Nin concluded with a brief public school, up to a maximum of own fundsthem.Miss Nin emphasized the neces¬sity of constant experimentation. * . , . , . .. reading from her latest novel 50%. Students are required to When the affidavit was repealed,m ai ana constant nuctuat “Seduction of the Minotaur ” start rknv'incy ha^k thpir Inane r»ne a criminal clause nrnvidiner nenal-of form to prevent falling into setpatterns. The use of a rigid for¬mula by the artist results in theloss of any life-giving quality.Standardization impedes commu¬nication.The purpose of the writer, ac start paying back their loans one a criminal clause providing penal-Another postponement for Gradolph Students will still be requiredto sign an oath of affirmation,saying. “I (name) do solemnlyswear (or affirm) that I will beartrue faith and allegiance to theUnited States of America and willsupport and defend the Constitu¬tion and laws of the United Statesof America against all its ene¬mies, foreign and domestic.”The “disclaimer affidavit” w hichwas removed from the applicationrecently said “I (name) do sol¬emnly swear (or affirm that I do“It’s amazing that we’ve been able to delay the proceedings six weeks,” said GeorgePontikes, Jim Gradolph’s lawyer, when the eviction proceedings against his client werecording to Miss Nin, is to speak delayed again last Friday. Joseph Klein. has been trying to evict Giadolph, a student onfor the inarticulate, to clarify in- leave of absence from the UC psychology department; Gradolph has refused to move,tuition, to help man to express that Klein refused to re-himself. And the true aim of new hiiflease because he took in fendant does not. Pontikes claimed fused to move out, his electricity ^writing thus becomes the expres- N roommate Don Fisher, that this is a restriction of the de- was turned off.-He claims that the not believe in, and am not a memsion of that which cannot be ex- Thuersday night> the Chicago pendant’s constitutional right to a Kleins turned it off If this is the ber of and do not support any or.pressed in ordinary language. Commission on Human Relations trlaL , _ ... case, Pontikes thinks the action ganization that believes in orConcerning symbolism and its sa}d that in their opinion, discri- T|ie second motion argued that was illegal and may be malicious teaches, the overthrow’ of therelation to the unconscious. Miss mjnation was a definite factor in Klein had no right to demand pos- mischief” which is a criminal of- United States government byNin referred to the necessity of the case. session since he does not own the fense and could result in a year s force or violence or by any illegalsymbolism as the way in which the _ . . ,. .. . __________ building. The building is held in imprisonment. or unconstitutional methods.”unconscious expresses itself Gradolph s first appearance Fri- trust by the Exchange National Turning off the electricity may TT .hihfZvmttrn hid Aa» W“ to the “>ort laag° Bank according to the Chicago also bo grounds for » civil damage The ^''-erslty hadden ahle to phOMe WeUs’Howev®r Judge Wells Real Estate IndeXi although a suit. Gradolph claims that the from the NDEA loan program inrnnimimiMto Hi’iwtiv with the m, Was not PresM‘nt and a court ref“ Bank official Harold Z. Novak de- janitor of the apartment build- I960 in protest of the above “dis-enn^io?1 direCtly W 1 th eree was Soaring ruses. Pontikes nies that it does. ii.g has threatened him and this claimer affidavit.” The university__ . demanded a hearing before a In the third motion, Pontikes ar- may result in an assult charge, did not object to the affidavit ofThe importance of such commu- judge; so the case was temporarily that the eviction proceedings If the court rules against Gra- affirmation,nca ion is the consequence of 1 e transferred to Judge Walter Ko- should be brought against Gra- dolph today he may appeal the The university reentered the”"l r/consiousT^con T’f case on the basis of constitutional pj^unc^ntly St ZSus in tim ZS X'tSh^lf I^rry Lehman, because they are questions which have been raised, claimer affidavit was removed,"th™ conflicts ,.1,1 :C1 The first motion asked for a tenants also. Several civil right lawyers haveSKo •*ury trial without the payment of Judge Kowalski denied all three expressed interest in the case,sincer’tv a eslaDllsnes oanieis , thf) reqUjred fee 0f $100. Pontikes motions and the proceedings w-ere The UC branch of the Congressu who is handling the case for the delayed until today. Pontikes esti- of Racial Equality is supportingIn response to a question from American Civil Liberties Union ar- mates that the delays have cost Gradolph and is trying to raisethe audience concerning the read- gued that the plaintiff can bring Mr. Klein $500 in lost rent and money for court costs and appealmg of her novels, Miss Nin sug- his charges in any court in Cook lawyer's fees. “Bigotry comes fees. They have promised to dem¬isted that they be read as you County, some of which charge only high,” he said. onstrate against the Kleins and theread poetry or listen to music — $12 for a jury. Thus the plaintiff According to one source, legal Exchange National Bank whichby responding with the senses. has the freedom to choose what action against the Kleins is being holds the building in trust if Gra-She feels her writings fall into he will pay for a jury but the de- contemplated. After Gradolph re- dolph is finally evicted. Maroon meeting MondayThere will be a meetingfor students currentlyworking on and interestedin joining the Maroon staffnext Monday afternoonat 4:30 pm in the MaroonOffice.——A Big New Book by Bertha Morris Parker: '"THE GOLDEN BOOK OF FACTS AND FIGURES" \A Treasury of Information on Hundreds of Subjectswith More than 500 Pictures in Color Hugh es, Taylor tal k to SANE$5-ooAlso, ask to see her new series: The Golden Key to Science. $1.00Grades 1, 3, and 4 now ready Each IOUR BONANZA BOOK SALE CONTINUES THROUGH NOVEMBER 30The University of Chicago Bookstore5 8 0 2 ELLIS AVENUEjVITALIS® KEEPS YOUR HAIR NEAT ALL DAY WITHOUT GREASE!Greatest discovery since the comb! Vitalis with V-7®, thegreaseless grooming discovery. Keeps your hair neat all daywithout grease—and prevents dryness, too. Try Vitalis today. “I should have made muchmore of a visceral appeal,”said Harvard Professor H.Stuart Hughes before an over¬flow audience of 670 at the Chi¬cago Committee for a Sane Nu¬clear Policy’s fifth anniversarydinner last Saturday night.Hughes, Harvard historian and re¬cent independent peace candidatefor the US Senate from Massa¬chusetts and Dr. Harold Taylor,former president of Sarah Law¬rence College, were the mainspeakers of the evening.Taylor spoke after Hughes andstressed “the role of politics inadvancing the cause of demo-crataic values (survival with dig¬nity).”Hughes, in opening his speech,said it was “nice to bo amongfriends after some of the audi¬ences I’ve been confronted with.”This was in reference to his cam¬paign, which he made the chieftopic of his talk. Said Hughes,“that campaign knocked eightmonths out of my life, but it waseight months well spent and emin¬ently worthwhile.”Hughes drew several conclusionsfrom his campaign. .Most hash- wasthe need for further such can¬didacies, However, Hughes con¬tinued, “one must realize theperplexing problems faced by peacecandidates in the phenomenon ofKennedy’s popularity.” He char¬acterized Kennedy as a “quasiliberal with liberal advisers butfollowing an arms buildup andpracticing brinkmanship.” This,Hughes further stated, split thepeace candidates assunder withsome running under the Presi¬dent's aegis and others like* him¬self not. It is interesting to note that only those who ran underKennedy won, stated Hughes.Hughes also said that there was“nothing like a candidacy to ven¬tilate the issues.” All candidateswere forced to take notice erf theimportant issues of the day. Hefurther stated that “Prof. Hughestalking from Harvard could nothave this effect.” Hughes feltthat “we proved in Massachusettsthat whole oppositions can begrouped together and sectariandisputes dropped. Differences dis¬appeared overnight as w-e ralliedaround peace.”In speaking of his campaignHughes said that this wras the“first time since the McCarthy erathat bipartisan consensus wasbroken, the first time that majorassumptions of American foreignpolicy w-ere questioned.”The resulting total vote was, inthe eyes of Hughes, somewhat dis¬appointing. He polled 50,000 votes,about 2.5% of the electorate. Theexpected vote was 200,000 but theCuban crisis helped to reduce this,said Hughes!He continued that when thecrisis broke he was faced W'ith twoalternatives; silence and votes, ora clear position attacking thePresident's move. He chose thelatter. He stated that there wasone consolation for this crisis —it served to erystalize the issuesfor some. Hughes now knew ex¬actly what the vote meant. Itcould no longer be confused withan anti-Kennedy vote, or mistak¬ing Hughes for his grandfather(Charles Evans Hughes). “Thiswas a vote for human survival.”Hughes further said that “theidea of the dehates was to presshim hard enough so that I barelywon.” But he pressed too hardSchick engineering solves the two biggest problems in shaving!Tough beard?Schick designs the firstelectric shaver thatshaves really close Sensitive skm ?Schick makes a completelydifferent shaver thatends razor burn foreveig|g§ ’ v , > ' ;Only Schick makes two differentelectric shavers... pick the one tomatch vour face!Both new Super Speed shavers haveSchick’s exclusive washable head, madeof surgical stainless steel. Snap it offand wash away dirt, stubble, and germs. SCHICK(s)Cet the new Schick Easy Shine Electric Shoe Shiner for a bootblack shine in GO seconds! For tough& regular beards For sensitive skin and Lodge wouldn’t debate a thirdtime. Ted Kennedy refused to de¬bate and ran a campaign of"handshaking and avoidance ofissues.” For Hughes this effort ofKennedy’s to win on the basis ofthe unthinking vote was “a sober¬ing lesson in democracy.”Hughes said he also, in part,attempted this conventional "cir¬cus” approach to politics but feltthat it was worthless. If he hadit to do over again he could savemoney by not engaging in thepractice.Taylor also speaksTaylor, who is presently vvork-infi on a project to establish aworld university, feels that we“have diverted our eyes from thetrue human problem. Peace is notjust the absence of war, it is astale of being in which human na¬ture can be released to its fullestcapacity, an emotional climate inwhich the best of each can beengendered.” *As evidence that we have di¬verted our eyes, Taylor cited therecent project, supported by theentire American people, in whichSehira orbitted the earth. Butwhile he was orbitting "JamesMeredith sat alone in his roomsurrounded by hostility and by afaculty which said and did noth¬ing. Gov. Barnett came out witha neo-fascist statement to the ef¬fect that rioting was okay if level¬led at beating down the Negro.”Taylor said that our valuesw ere such as to be ready tospend millions on outer space butnothing to prepare the studentsfor Meredith. Taylor looks at theattempt to put a man on the moonas “a political stunt at a low levelof significance. It is the worstway lo find out anything and it isa game to grab headlines fromihe Soviet Union.” Instead, hesuggested that wc “should makeit a team and should both go to-get her.”Taylor’s own set of values saysthat we should take the $.”() mil¬lion used in this space projectand use it to "equip and staff auniversity for everyone of thenations that have joined the UNsince it began.”Taylor then went on to speakof the young people of today.They have a “deep seated need toestablish a meaningful relation¬ship with their own society. But,Taylor continued, this was impos¬sible "because of the cold warestablished by the military-indus¬trial complex which uses educationto adopt the young to their com¬plex.”The pressures of society, statedTaylor, arc forcing the youth to¬wards an education for the pur¬pose of seeking a higher positionon the dollar scale.Taylor said that in the slums ofNew York City there are 125,000young people who dropped out ofschool and are unemployed. Theyhave been rejected by the middleclass but tend to form their ownsociety. Taylor went on to saythat this is all “part of the syn¬drome from which wrar comes —when we look away from humanproblems wc tend to use force tosolve problems.”There is correspondingly a re¬jection of much of middle classsociety by this new generationand out of this rejection arises thetendency to form their own lib¬eral society. They reject the ster¬ility of the academic community— they go into the slums andteach—they enter the peace corps- they go down south and par¬ticipate in the sit-ins and thevoter registration drives.They are going in a new direc¬tion. According to Taylor theeducators “should lend themsel¬ves to the young, the function ofthe intellectual is to put ideas intoaction — though tied to action —unless we act well we are notthinking wrell.”Taylor concluded his speech bytelling us the message of a younghoy who knew that he was goingto die and who adapted himselfto this certainty. "To make avaluable contribution with life isthe only way to ensure myselfthat I have Value.” .*5 *-1 '2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20, 1962Discuss performing arts at UC“The Place of the Per¬forming Arts at UC” was thetopic of a discussion heldamong Grosvenor Cooper,professor of music, Stuart Tave,professor of English, and HaroldHaydon, associate professor ofart and director of the MidwayStudios, last night at ShoreyHouse in Pierce Towers.The consensus was that mostuniversities have no place for thecreative artist. Tave suggestedthat the true artist generally findsthe regimentation of a universitysuffocating.The potential writer who is in¬tensely interested in creativework is forced to take courseswhich barely interest him, withthe result that he generally failsto gain a degree. Even within his field, the maverick often fails tocomply with academic procedure.S. Ronald Weiner, instructor inEnglish and moderator of the dis¬cussion, suggested that most crea¬tive artists have had academicbackground, generally at univer¬sities whose requirements arefew. The direction of the artist’screativity often determines hisacademic success. Poets such asT. S. Eliot have succeeded aca¬demically, while others, such asShelley, have found that theircreative impulses cpnflict withan academic regimen.The university, nevertheless,offers the artist considerable ad¬vantages, said Tave. He sug¬gested that the ideal universityis a median between regimen¬tation and freedom.No such attitude toward theS. America not as US thinks“Latin Americans have a different psychology fromthat which we in the United States suppose them to have,”said Raymond Joseph. Joseph is a citizen of Haiti andspoke on Sunday at Channing-Murray.Latin Americans, he said. res¬pect strength. “They will not ad¬mire a nation which fails to standup for what it believes, but theywill admire one which takes strongstands,” he explained. *Joseph went on to say that thisexplains why they supported theAmerican position on Cuba, “andthis is why we will engender fur¬ther support from them if we con¬tinue to turn the screw a littlemore to force Castro’s hand.”Communism, in the Carribbean,he said, is not a direct appeal tothe peasants as American have somistakenly assumed.“Rather, it is an appeal to theintellectual groups, students andthe like, who seek reform fortheir countries,” he said. The lead-Today's Events |Lecture, "Art and Morality.” EdwardRosenheim, professor of English, Ro¬sen wald 2. 10:30 am.Lutheran Communion, Bond Chanel.1 I :30 am.Luncheon Meeting, Federation of Sci¬entists, ‘‘History of Disarmament andthe Test Ban,” Paula Foz/.y. FAS Serre-tary. Commons private dining room,1 2 noon.Elementary Hebrew Class. Hillei Foun¬dation. 3:30 pm.Seminar, “Consistency. Identifiability,Maximum Likelihood -Some Rough Ed¬ges.’’ H. S. Konijn, professor of Statis¬tics. University of Minnesota, Eekhart202. 1 pm.FOTA Organization Meeting, Cold)107, 4 pm.Seminar, “Pathways in ProtestantThought.” Chapel House. 4:30 pm.Intermediate Hebrew Class: HilleiFoundation, 4:30 pm.Hug Ivri: Hebrew Conversation Group,Hillei Foundation. 6:30 pm.Meeting: CORE Grievance Committee,Ida Noyes, 7:3 0 pm.Meeting: CORE Projects Committee,Ida Noyes, 7:80 pm.Folk Dancing: International Houseassembly hall. 8 pm.Israeli Folk Dancing. Hillei, 8 pm.Yavneh: Dedicated to Orthodox Juda-f* m. Hillei. 8 pm.Meeting: Russian Choir. Ida Noyes.8 pm.Lecture: “The Montessorl Approachto Mathematics for the Younger Child.”Miss Ia*na Wikramaratne. principal ofCeylonese Montessori Training Center.Breasted Hall, 8 pm.Open House: the Reverend MalcolmBoyd. Chnnlain at University of Cali¬fornia at Berkeley, Brent House. 8 pm.Meeting: CORE Open Occupancy Com¬mittee, Ida Noyes, 9:30 pm.“Mf.non 13 A principal symbol of anarrow, anti-Western, misanthropicneutralist defeatism. To give aid toIndia —which we should do — it Intome measure to rescue both Men on*nd Nehru from the consequence* ollacing up to their mischievous mie-calculations—i.e., ear* them Irompersonally well-deserved military hu¬miliations at the m r . ,“ For. the current hsu«hands of their be¬loved friends, theRed Chinese.”• TYPINGMIMEOGRAPHINGConscientious WorkReasonableR. J. WOOD1173 E. 55th ST.BU 8-0945 ers, Joseph pointed out, thendraw along with the peasants whohave the same idealistic concep¬tions in mind.They have been working in theintellectual centers and on thepeople who will have positions ofinfluence in the future, Josephsaid.Joseph suggested the UnitedStates should attempt to gain theideological offensive. “We mightbring to the US on scholarshiplarge groups of intellectual pea¬sant youth, thus helping to createan intellectual movement on ourside.” he concluded.of NATIONAL REVIEWI writ# for fre» copy,150 E. 35 St., N*wYork 15, N.Y, teacher-tjomposer exists. Coopersaid. The student who desires toperform professionally, however,is faced with the prejudice thatthe required discipline leaves notime for work in other fields.Because the majority of stu¬dents are not potentially greatartists, Tave said, UC can onlyoffer as much freedom as possibleto the creative artist throughextra-curricular activity and non¬credit teaching.The professor can also see thatthe individualistic student has asmuch freedom as possible withinthe academic framework.Intramural scoreboardDowning Psi Upsilon 12-6 in ahard fought battle that saw bothteams penalized more than 50yds., the Res Ipsas captured theAll-American touchfootball champ¬ionship last night.Psi U lost the first touchdownof the game when the play wascalled back because of an illegalblock. The Res Ipsas capitalizedon the break and scored a fewplays later.Their zeal renewed, Psi U cameback the second half with an earlytouchdown. With five minutes re¬maining in the game, the lawschool squad broke into the endzone to gain the winning margin.Psi U couldn’t come back.It was different Saturday after¬noon when Psi U trailed TuftsNorth 12-7 in the final minutesof play. The fraternity men inter¬cepted a pass and a few downslater completed one to the endzone, winning the college title13-12.Friday, Tufts gained the col¬lege house honors with a 6-0victory over Chamberlin. New method for teachingmath topic of talk tonight“The Montessori Approach to Mathematics for theYounger Child” will be discussed tonight at 8:00 in BreastedHall by Miss Lena Wikramaratne, principal of the CeyloneseMontessori Training Center, and director of teacher trainingAmerican Montessorifor the American Montessori So¬ciety.According to Miss Wikramarat¬ne, children in a Montessori schoolbegin working with numbers andarithmetic concepts when threeyears old or younger. Within afew years, they can be foundspending a whole day doing aproblem in long division by break¬ing it down into elementary parts.However, development of arith¬metic skills is only incidental tothe learning process in a schoolpracticing the methods developed by Dp. Maria Montessori. Theaim of the school is rather, to de¬velop in the child a reliance onhis own curiosity and abilities,which he can put to profitable usein any learning experience.M I TZIE 1 SFLOWER SHOPS1225 E. 63rd St.HY 3-53531340 E. 55th St.Ml 3-4020THE SAFE WAY to stay alertwithout harmful stimulantsNever take chances withdangerous “pep pills.” Instead,take proven safe NoDoz®.,Keeps you mentally alert withthe same safe refresher foundin coffee.Yet NoDoz is faster,handier, more reliable. Abso¬ lutely not habit-forming. Nexttime monotony makes you feeldrowsy while driving, workingor studying, do as millions do. .. perk up with safe, effectiveNoDoz. Another fine productof Grove Laboratories,Flavor! Full flavor in a filter cigarette.That’s why Winston is America’s best-sellingfilter cigarette! Next time, smoke Winston*pure white, :MODERN FILTER !plus : FILTER'BLEND UP FRONT01962 R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. Winston Salem. N. C. 4Nov. 20, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON * 3Rev. Boyd, 'espresso priest\ speaks tonightOpen house for the Reverend try, was recently selected by LifeMalcolm Boyd, chaplain of WayneState University in Detroit, willbe held tonight at Brent Housefrom 8:00 to 10:00.Reverend Boyd, sometimes de¬scribed as the “espresso priest"because of his avant garde minis- Magazine as one of the hundredmost promising young leaders invarious fields.Author of Crisis in Communica¬tion, Reverend Boyd recently par¬ticipated in the Episcopal PrayerPilgrimage at Jackson, Missis¬sippi. Panel discusses student rightsStudent rights are basicallythe same as those of anyother citizen, but they mustresult from agreement be¬tween students and administrationrather than come through the le¬gal framework, agreed a panel on“the legal rights of students at Friday’s session of the Illinois-Wisconsin regional meeting Na¬tional Student Association.The panel was composed ofGeorge Pont ikes, a representativeof the American Civil LibertiesUnion, Mark Haller, assistant pro¬fessor of history, a member of theDisciplinary Committee at UC;“SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT'PHILLIPS JEWELRY CO.DIAMONDS • WATCHES • JEWELRY • RINGS • SILVERWARELayaway PEARLS • RELIGIOUS GOODS • APPLIANCES LayawayD,«rnW SERV|NG COLLEGE STUDENTS AT WHOLESALE Dia™r"dXmas Vow PRICES FOR THE PAST 20 YEARS Xmas Now=“50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDS"ENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS“"CHRISTMAS SALE"WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING67 E. MADISON ROOM 1101CHICAGO DE 2-6508ON CAMPUS — INFORMATIONKENNETH C. HEYL CAMPUS EXT. 3265 If 11!Visitors to UC look at the IBM 7090 computer duringo tour through the computer institute Soturday. UC washost to high school students and teachers from the Chicagoarea at its Annual Science Open House. UC PresidentGeorge Wells Beadle gave the welcoming address, fol¬lowed by a speech by professor of chemistry Stuart Rice.Get LuckyPlay "Crazy Questions”(Bosed on the hilarious boot "The Question Mon.'')50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE’S HOW:First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up witha nutty, surprising question for it, and you’ve done a"Crazy Question.” It’s the easy new way for students tomake loot. Study the examples below, then do your own.Send them, with your name, address, college and class,to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y. Winningentries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries sub¬mitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a$25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now! RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries on the basis ofhumor (up to H), clarity and freshness (up to Vs) and appropriateness (upto lA), and their decisions will be final. Duplicate prizes will be awardedin the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the entrants andmust be submitted in the entrant’s own name. There will be 50 awardsevery month. October through April. Entries received during each monthwill be considered for that month’s awards. Any entry received after April30, 1963, will not be eligible, and all become the property of The AmericanTobacco Company. Any college student may enter the contest, except em¬ployees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising agencies andReuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees. Winners will benotified by mail. Contest subject to all federal, state, and local regulations., THE ANSWER: l THE ANSWER: 1 THE ANSWER: jj CHINESE} j feecfc | THE LAST Of ii CHECKERS imams’* t&Wtji i THE MOHICaWS j| ijsyjjeujjadns 3uo>jf Suoh b ui puij oi padxa noA p|no/Aj SMJ3P jo adXi ieqM :N0LLS3n& 3H1 | isaqoaads s.jesaeQ sni|nf j| io isoui aiojfA omm ^NOHSBflQ 3H1 1| _ | isuiSBDOoiu aanpojd J•sseui oi sueipui ueouaiuv Xjjeg paiqe J-ua uo.iiuaAui }eqM •N0llS3nQ 3H1 Jj THE ANSWER: i THE ANSWER: i THE ANSWER: }38-22-32 ! Minute !j Men - j1 1 SEVEN LEAGUE!Minis1 isjaqiiea idsid1 aajqi auieu noA ueo :NOiiS3flQ 3H1 i 11 11 isuei;ndi|in aietu aquas ., -ap no/< pinoM mo'h :NOIJLS3n& 3H1 j UUUlu.tjaiund e joj aSejaae snopuaoi |•ajl e aq pinoM leqM :N0llS3nQ 3H1 1THE ANSWER IS:Get Luckythe taste to start with... the taste to stay withTHE QUESTION IS: WHAT DO YOU GET WHEN YOU REQUEST A PACK OF THEMOST POPULAR REGULAR-SIZE CIGARETTE AMONG COLLEGE STUDENTS?Right! You get Lucky; you get the fine-tobacco taste of Lucky Strike. This greattaste is the best reason to start with Luckies.. .the big reason why Lucky smokersstay Lucky smokers. So get with it. Get Lucky today! and Neal Johnston, a UC graduatestudent, chairman of the NS AAcademic Freedom Project.According to Pontikes, a studenthas the legal right to pass outliterature promoting any social,political, or economic theoriesthat he wishes to provided he doesnot.violate any laws in the proc¬ess. However, the University hrattends has the legal right todiscipline such students if ilwishes.The basis of the University’sright is the contract which it haswith its students. In all eases,the contracts contain a clausethat gi\es the University the rightto expel or suspend the student,in many cases without cause.Haller presented the positionthat the amount of control a col¬lege or university legitimately ex¬erts over its students depends en¬tirely on the educational objec¬tives of that particular institu¬tion.West Point can legitimately ve¬nture its students to march toclass because this helps to achievethe kind of education it is tryingto impart to its students.Compulsory marching is legiti¬mate within the framework ofWest Point's educational objec¬tives: while it would not be legiti¬mate for UC because it would nothelp to achieve the kind of educa¬tion which UC exists to dissemi¬nate. Every college has the rightto determine its own educationalphilosophy, said Haller.Johnston stated that until re¬cently the courls did not recognizestudent righls within a college.However, a few years ago a legalprecedent was established to theeffect that public institutions ofhigher learning could hot susoendor expel a student without dueprocess and just cause. It is like¬ly that in respect to due processthis will eventually spread to in¬clude private institutions also.According to Johnston, the onljvalid purpose of a University iseducation. Any restrictions onstudents which do not have edu¬cational aims are not legitimate.The best method for studentsto insure their rights is to workfor a codification of those rightsand the restrictions which the col¬lege places on ihem, he said.ClassifiedAjuirtnurtf fn«r? Need playroom forchildren ? Six room house for sale oncampus adjoining law school. Fencedyard, ray room in English basement,newly ilccontird, available now. Only$17,750. Cali PL 2-4875.HOUSINGShorcland apts. 5)85 S. Kenwood offers1 to 3lv efficiency units, attractivelyappointed, month to month occupancy.$80 and up. Elevator, fireproof build¬ing, manager on premises.House fo- sale: charming stone andbrick English style home with match¬ing 2 car garage in wooded NorthBeverly area. Eight rooms include 'threebedrooms. Full attic, basement, and 1bathrooms. Many conveniences, close toschools and transportation. Excellentconditions. Easily reached via StateSt. speedway. Contact L. D. MarineUithrough Faculty X.HELP WANTEDWanted: Experienced, capable youngsecreary fo” permanent position in brandnew Hyde Park office. IBM exec, type¬writer A other deluxe equipment. Mostunusual facilities. Excellent salary andhours. ' IX) 3-4300, ext. 410. Leavename and number.£ A . T. CC. ' Product oj rJo&ixcG~£cny><iruf— is our middle name FOK SALENew books in econ. pol. set. hist, sociol.etc. at 50% off and better. Browsingencouraged. Journal of Polit. Econ. SocSci 40ID.___Macintosh amp. pre -a mp GarrardRC88/4. Perfect. $60. NO 7-3464.Automatic-Rolleiflex. f/3.5-C. 1952. Per¬fect. $50. NO 7-3464.MISCELLANEOUSCREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP.(PL 2-6377)Typist. Thesis & Gen. HY 3-2438PERSONALSNow, having followed stage one.You’ll find the fight’s just begun:So your strength renew, for here'sstage two.Men (or is it boys?) of Pierce: haveyou been "regurgitating in the corri¬dors and rooms as a result of over-indulgence of alcohol ?Whoever accidentally traded coats withme at Psi Upsilon party, Nov. 10th,please return to exchange. Light coloredmens, alligator brand overcoat. Call363-6413,S.G. Charter Flights to Europe. July26 — Sept. 1 or June 17 •— Sept. 13,1963. For information call ext. 3272,3:30 - 5 r-ni.4 • CHICAGO MAROON Nav. 20, 1962Kahan discusses problem of Jew in USSR"We are our brothers’keepers” was the secret ofman’s survival through theages, and in order for the■lew to survive in the Soviet Un¬ion today we must again affirm41 his attitude, according to Arca-•lius Kahan, associate professor ofeconomics.Kahan, who spoke at the weeklyFireside piogram at the HillelFoundation Friday night, analyzedihe problem of the Jew in theSoviety Union by dividing his talk^into five approaches:)) The Soviet policy toward theJews against the background ofI he general policy toward nationalminorities: The Soviet regime haspermitted to function only thosetspects of minority groups whichare ‘‘socialist in content and na¬tional in form." thus deemphasiz¬ing cultural differences within thecountry.The consequence is a kind ofnifting away of those cultural as¬pects associated with non-social¬ist ideological influences. Theprocess was meant to strengthencentral control over the empire.A cultural outgrowth of this is thedeclining variation in artistic pro¬duction among the various nation¬alities.Though the process of rewritingand interpreting the history of thevarious nationalities was under¬taken in the Soviet Union, that ofthe Jewish community was deletedbecause "according to the prin¬ciples of Soviet nationality policythe Jews are not recognized as anationality."Historically this premise is bas¬ed on Leninist-Staiinist views stillprevalent and “until an officialSoviet interpretation of Jewish history appears, we will be de¬prived of any signal that achange is taking place or willemerge with regard to the basictenets and foundations upon whichthe present policy toward theJews rests.”Equality for the Jew in theSoviet Union is meaningless, saidKahan. Since 1930 the Jews havehad no say in their own destiny.Special attention to the Jewishcommunity by the regime is not aresponse to the needs of the Jewsbut to those of the regime. “TheSoviet government ranks the re¬actions of the Jews abroad not interms of their absolute or rela¬tive reasonableness, but solely to(heir likely impact upon Sovietforeign policy objectives."2) Discrimination against Jewsin relation to the Soviet power ap¬paratus: Anti-Semitism becamepolitically valuable for the regimein toning down resentment againstit by non-Jewish groups of theSoviet population.A striking fact is that thewaves of anti-Semitism generallycoincide with the changes in theeconomic condition and internalcon flicl s within the Soviet societyand system.'I'lie regime always had theability to try to counterbalancethese waves, but did not alwayschoose to for they represented asafety valve.Thus the historical, popularanti-Semitism was convenientlyfused with official anti-Semitism.This form of situational expedienthas replaced the old absolute ide¬ology with a general political ide¬ology of relativism which nowsanctions what used to be pro¬claimed evil; namely anti-Semit¬ism. Even during the period of theTsars “the government did not in¬fringe upon the internal auton¬omy of the Jews and left intactmost of their existing institutions.But under today’s totalitarian re¬gime there is a demand for socialconsensus, with the Jew beinggiven the choice of ‘consent or out¬right annihilation’,” Kahan re¬ported.3) The nature and expressionsof anti-Semitism in the SovietUnion: Anti-Semitism has beenused as an excuse for certain in¬ternational activities such as therelationship between the CrimeanAffair in which Jews were accusedof secretly plotting to help theAmerican armies invade, and thebeginning of the cold war policy.Another example is the fear ofdecentralizing tendencies in theSatellites caused by the Yugoslavexample. Here the charge was aninternational Jewish conspiracywithin the Satellites in coordina¬tion with an American Jewishgroup. Khrushchev, seeing the value ofthe policy, carried it out.4) Features of the Jewishcommunity in the Soviet Union:The term ‘Jewish community’ im¬plies both a common heritage andalso a community of common in¬terests and similarity in majoropinion reactions, said Kahan. Thesize of the Jewish family hastended to grow smaller in ratioto other nationalities.Another area of activity isamong the highest echelons of theSoviet bureaucracy attainable onlyby appointment or consent fromthe top. The control over thiselite group, called •nomenklatura’means enormous power.In the early ’50s Stalin plannedto remove thousands of Jews fromtheir administrative posts, the re¬moval of which entailed no risksfor himself while increasing theloyalty of their replacements tohimself. After Stalin’s death There has been a general re¬distribution of Jewish populationmostly from towns and farms tothe eities. There has also been agreat acceleration of language as¬similation away from the mothertongue (Yiddish) due to dispersionaway from traditional areas ofhigh Jewish population concentra¬tion.As a group there is a very highpercentage of members with sec¬ondary and higher education. Butthis higher education has broughtproblems. Jews were qualified formanagerial positions but being ex¬cluded from the administrationafter the death of Stalin, theywere deprived of these positions.This managerial exclusion mightexplain the increase of Jews inthe fields of science and researchwhich were less conspicuous, non¬political fields of work.5) Alternatives for national sur¬vival and continuity of Jews Inthe Soviet Union: "It would be amistake to consider the SovietJews as an exclusively passive ob¬ject of Soviet policies," saidKahan. The religious Jews in particularrefused to compromise with theregime because the Jewish set ofvalues did not coincide at all withthose of the regime.The resistance of the Jews to¬ward Soviet policy was probablystronger than that of other minor¬ity groups within the Soviet Union.His acts of protest .often take theform of Yiddish literary gather¬ings or semi-clandestine baking ofmatzoh.The creation of the State ofIsrael gave the Jews in the SovietUnion a feeling of continuity out¬side the Soviet borders. The smallcongregation is also in existenceand was tolerated by the regimeas ‘harmless’ since it was only re¬ligious, not political, yet to theJewish community religious ritualhas a deeply symbolic, nourishingquality about it.The power of this has probablybeen noted by the regime and ex¬plains why there has been recentpersecutions of Jewish religiouscongregations, said Kahan.In the future, the Soviet Jewmight be treated as political host¬ages in the world-wide powerstruggle. The will of survival andnational continuity among theJews should be strengthened inthe Soviet Union. Groups suchas the American Jewish commun¬ity might, with skill, politicallyintervene in support of the free¬dom of Soviet Jews, reaffirmingfaith and hope in their future."We are our brothers’ keepers.”Arthur KoufmanNow-give yourself"Professional"shaveswith...AMES RESEARCH CENTERNATIONAL AERONAUTICS ANDSPACE ADMINISTRATIONOFFERS CAREER OPPORTUNITIESIN AERO-SPACE TECHNOLOGY FORELECTRICAL ENGINEERSELECTRONIC ENGINEERS AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERSPHYSICISTSMECHANICAL ENGINEERS PHYSICAL CHEMISTSSUPER SMOOTHSHAVE For detailed informotion reod our brochure in your Plocemenloffice-then sign up for on interview with:New "wetter-than-water"action melts beard's tough,ness—in seconds. Remarkable new “wetter-than-water”action gives Old Spice Super Smooth Shave its scientificapproximation to the feather-touch feel and the efficiency ofbarber shop shaves. 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T O NNov. 20, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON •Interviews On CampusScience and EngineeringProgramming*Rbom for advancement at IBM.At, ib'm your range beyond, aca¬demic specialties into excitingnew fields, ibm programs includecompany training Courses, tui¬tion-refund courses at nearbyuniversities and .schools, andcompany-paid competitivescholarships for full-time studyat a university of your choice.ibm is an Equal OpportunityEmployer. Our representativeswill be on your campus soon, todiscuss typical careers, varioustraining programs, the ad¬vanced education' program,financial rewards, and companybenefits. Make an appointmentthrough your placement officer.He can also give youxadditionaliriformation on the career ofyour choice at ibm. \'World of opportunity at- IBM.ibm develops, manufactures,and marketsa wideratige'ot dataprocessing systems and equip¬ment that is performing an in¬creasingly vital role in business,industry, science, and govern¬ment. Across-the-country op¬erations offer a choice oflaboratory and manufacturinglocations in: ■Endieott, Kingston, Owego,Poughkeepsie, Yorktown.N.Y.Burlington, VermontLexington, KentuckySan Jose, CaliforniaBethesda, MarylandRochester, Minnesota. <More than 190 ibm sales andservice offices, are located inmajor cities throughout the U.S..Careers with a future at IBM;Advances ip data processing atIBM are creating new areas forprofessional growth for career-winded men and women. Op¬portunities are in:; *Research < • ...Development EngineeringManufacturing EngineeringProgrammingMarketingSystems EngineeringCustomer EngineeringQualifications: Bachelor’s or ad¬vanced degree in. Electrical,*Mechanical, or Industrial Engi¬neering; Mathematics, Physics,or other Sciences; Economics,Business Administration, Ac¬counting, or Liberal Arts. Ourbrochures provide the full story.If you cannot attend the Interview, write or call: P. J. Kofmehl, Br. IMgr., IBM Corp., 9415 S. Western Ave., Chicago 20, ill. PR 9-8000. |DR. A. Z1MBLER, Optometrist»N THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNT Strang’s ‘Night Flight’set for this weekendThe premiere performanceof “Night Flight,” an original Culture CalendarCabaret Art objects from Near Eastern Cn.,„tries to the fifth century BC at u'The Fickle Pickle, 1137 North State, Oriental Institute, 1165 E. 68. Tuesda"**is now managed by Hex Benson, local Sunday, 10-5, free., , .... . , comic, who has instituted some changes. Exhibition honoring mnn. •play by UC artist-in-residence 'Current show is held over until De- of Juliu^ Rownwaldf UC trustneVV*rtarycembfr 2: folk Ueorjre McKolvy, \ vRobert Strang, Will be pre- Joel Cory. and Terry Cullier. Early library. Department' of Social (JllKShow, policy. 8 pm, throughout tions. On disolav III PPnf l<&] ann.!.1 . ,A typical street in beautiful MARYNOOK, a suburb within a cityMany residents have come from Hyde Park-Kenwood areato Marynook and find that living in Marynook has manyadvantages.Transportation—fast, frequent I.C. service; driving only15 minutes from the Midway.Park-like area, so spacious you are not aware of living inthe city.No through traffic; curving streets, spacious lots, closeto Lake Michigan, and delightfully clean and well-keptneighborhood.Complete shopping within area.Drive out and inspect Marynook, 83rd to 87th Streetbetween Dorchester and University2, 3 and 4 bedroom residencesPrice Range — $18,000 to $30,000A few units available for rentalFor additional information call . . .JOSEPH BARON RE 1-2429NAOMI BRODKEY RE 1-3543J. ALTEN LAUREN ES 5-6912 sented this w eekend by UniversityTheatre in Mandel Hall. JohnMortimer's “I Spy” will completethe double bill of one-act plays,featuring guest artist, Val Bet tin.Strang’s “Night Flight” is basedon the novel by Antoine de St.Exupery. Andre Gide and othershave recently praised this book asa forerunner of today’s existcn- r w'x.’TT; K i « ,r tions‘ On display in central corridor ofh/ twckcud shows aUo at 9.15. Harper Memorial Library and S»ec°l<>..)<), and j .39. ( tosed Mon- Collections Reading Room ffitk n 'days. Call WHreservations. ollections Reading Room (6 th floorwest tower), Monday TFridav. 9.5urday, 9-1.DanceIsraeli dancing, tonight, 8-10 pm.Hillel. 6715 Woodlawn.Folk dancing, tonight.. 8-10 pm. Inter¬national House assembly hall. 50c.Folk dancing, Sunday, Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E. 59. 8 pm.Country dancers, oldest dance groupon campus, Wednesday, 8 pm, IdaNoyes hall.Balasaraswati, India's leading classicaldancer, in a Bharata Natyam recital andtialist novels. "Night Flight” will domonstrtion. part of Asian Arts series,. Saturday. 3 pm. University Hijrh Littlebe directed by Robert Benedetti. Theatre, 6825 S. Kenwood.Mortimer, an English author, is Discussions-Readingswinning wide acclaim in this Shorey House Coffee Plus, “The Place. „ , . . , , of Religion in the University,” Mon-country, especially for his tele- day. 9 ,,m. Shorey House.. . ... TT. ... . . f . . brew Pearson, personal observationsVision writing. Highlights of last and anecdotPS. “Two Days of Conver-tolmricinn Micnn wore his sations with Nikita Khrushchev.” Sinaiyears television season weie ms Tem|)le Forum r>350 s. Shore Drive,Play of the Week teleplays, “The Monday, 8:i > pm.Dock Brief,” and “What shall We ExhibitsTell Caroline?” Mortimer’s “ISpy” will be directed by JamesO’Reilly.Guest artist Bel tin will starin both plays. The two sharplycontrasting roles will be a “tourde force” for this actor, w'homChicago audiences know well forhis “WGN-TV Storyteller” series,the “CBS-TV Repertoire Theatre”series, and his theatre wTork atOak Park Village Classics andelsewhere.Evening performances at 8:30pm will be given Friday, Satur¬day, and Sunday, and a Sundaymatinee at 2:15 pm. Tickets are$1.50 ($2 on Saturday evening),and may be reserved by telephon¬ing MI 3-0800, extension 3581. FOTA meetingFestival of the Arts (FOTA),will hold a meeting this after¬noon at 4 pm in room 107Cobb. The purpose of the meet¬ing will be to determine ifenough interest exists for FOTAto continue to exist this year.All interested members of theuniversity community are in¬vited to attend. Those who can¬not attend this afternoon shouldleave their names in the Stu¬dent Activities office, Ida NoyesHall floor 2. Ait of Benin, five centuries of artfrom the historic African kingdom opensFriday. The 329 pieces — includin''portrait heads, weapons, ceremonialboxes, ornaments, household furnish¬ings, etc. — represent the largest exhi¬bition of Benin art ever assembled inthe US. Chicago Natural History Mu¬seum. Lake Shore drive at Rooseveltroad, Sunday - Saturday, 9-5, 50c.Paintings of Jerry Pinsler, StudioGallery. 5835 S. University, throughNovember 23.Midwest Printmakers, exhibition ofetchings, engravings, woodcuts, litho¬graphs. etc. Court Gallery of MidwayStudios. IIberca)’>iencliedin;>_4fird\sortemcevpslotbohiraf, Li hepla>ervFilmTreasures of Versailles, 184 paintings,sculpture, furnishings, and works of arton loan from the French government,at the Art Institute. Michigan andAdams, through December 2. All About Eve, B-J, Friday,10 pm, 50c.Miracle in Milan (Italian, 1952), Vil 'torio de Sica’s neo-realist film. Do PaulU. film forum, next Monday. DePaulCenter Theatre, 25 E. Jackson, 7 pm,free.Stormy Weather. Internationa! HoumMonday. 8 pm, 50c.Your Past is Showing. Peter Sellers,and Studs Lonigan, through Wednesdaythe the Hyde Park. Starting Thurs-day. Peter Sellers in Waltz of the Tor¬eadors, also l am a Camera. Student,discount.MusicMusic at Hillel, the hi-fi systemavailable for use Monday through Fri¬day. 9:80-5.Zvi Zeitlin. violinist. and NetaniaDavrath, soprano. Israeli artists, to¬night. Orchestra Hall, tickets $2-$IO.Lyric Opera: Rigoletto (Verdi 1. W - ,1nesday. Friday. Monday : Orfeo Ed 'Euridice (Gluck). Saturday.American Folk Singers, Lester Flattand Earl Scruggs with Jack Elliott, intwo Thanksgiving Eve concerts. W'cdn.day 7:30 and 10 pm. Prudential Ruild-ing Theatre.Dizzy Gillespie and bis Quintet.Thursday. 7:30 and 10:30, Friday andSaturday, 8 and 10 pin, at the Cine-stage.Chicago Symphony, Thursday.. 8:15.JFriday, 2 pm. program: Rrahms' Sym¬phony No. 3. F major. Opus 90 andStravinsky, !>■ Sac re du Printemps(“The Rite of Spring”).Third popular concert. Saturday:Beethoven. Overture to “Fidello." Opus72: Dvorak. Four Slavonic Dam •Rimsky-Korsakov, Suite from “LeCoq d’Or.”Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians.Saturday. Arie Crown Theatre. Mc¬Cormick Place, tickets 82.50 to $ ■ ?> 'I'warheof tdebnotdoucur-dutove1874C#theYtionwenwellfticipostcmTheatreThe Wall, directed by Willard T.am-pell, adapted from the Johii Hersevnovel, presented by the Ijast Stage in abenefit for the South Side School ofJewish Studies. At the Eleventh StreetTheatre, 72 East 11th St.. Saturdayand Sunday. Tickets $2-$3.50, phoneES 5-2507.Two modern one-act plays; NightFlight, from St. Bxnpery’a novel, by ^play wright-in-1‘esidence Robert Strain’. ~jand I Spy by John Mortimer, presentedby the University of Chicago’s Univer¬sity Theatre group at Mandel Hall.Frost reads own poetryin anniversary feteRobert Frost, in his read¬ing Friday night, identifiedthe motivation for writingpoetry with this passage in“The Tuft of Flowers”:“The mower in the dew had lovedthem thus.Leaving them to flourish, not forus,Nor yet to draw one though! ofours to himBut from sheer morning gladnessat the brim.”He prosed the passage by say¬ing, “Simply for the fun of writingthem.”The reading was given for thebenefit of Poetry Magazine, incelebration of its 50th anniver¬sary at the Studebaker Theater.Although the 88-year old man’svoice was faltering and his stepswere hesitant, his wit and charmU'ere impressive. He is. as Poetr>Magazine editor Henry Rage said.“the very presence of poetry.”Frost is the essence of the rurallife as well. He remarked, “Ilove an axe and a big scythe.These are the two things Inipretty good at. Never mind tlie.^)pen.”Frost took several opportuni¬ties to laugh at those who searchfor symbolism and allegory i<poetry. “People are always look¬ing for ulteriority. They can tollwhat you mean, but they wantto know what’s eating you.”The substance of his spirit wascontained in the remark, “I al¬ways go out expecting to secsomething I didn’t expect to sec, ohiland*> 1) h;list)andsiteSiheat tpletlentsorrplurmermatTlSlicetheandgoo<inovsati;restdifflculazionypieiToaelsev<derrsatithepos<♦pro:con-conaidreaicon6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20. 1962Seefried recital 'enchanting' Radio play tryouts todayIf the essential element in cham- ways in complete rapport with of Mm<_ S(.efri<i<1,s artMrvHer '»'sic * intimacy; °°rUt *> effect » thl, eammnni- visualI effect, ascation between artist and aud- ratlon tbat ||l(, , „ bl well as vocal ones. Her face al¬ienee, then Irmgard Seefried s would bave understandable ways mirrored the emotion of thelieder recital on Saturday evemns „ithout the texts. None the less. "ork ske "as l'‘'rform.nB, ami at. e r T 11 C vs ‘ TltVIAC! Cnn II /i4 rt/l All4- flan nrvatsvain Mandel Hall was an unqua 1- mus|(, department is to beVaried sucess. thanked for providing transla¬ting Seefried’s concert spon- tioas or summaries for all thesord a wide range of moods and works on the program.and child, she looked up whensinging as the child and downemotions. Yet whether she was The near enchantment of the the Mousso*'esk.v, for example, isexpressing the simple stately evening was so great that there a <0nversat,on between motherstory of the King of Thule (Schu- was the temptation (to whichberth the dark brooding of a many no doubt succumbed) to .... „ . .tragic life (Wolf’s Mignon Songs), simply close one’s eyes and be- ™ singing as the mother,uhp delights of a young child at come enveloped in -the world of Technically, the concert wasplay iMoussorgsky’s In the Nurs- fantasy which was being pro- eclually sucessful. A perfectionist,-r>) or the grief of the parting of jected. might complain of a little train-young girl and her lover Unfortunately, closing one’s eyes inS for some high notes at thetimes she even acted out the song:nothing elaborate or overdone, ofcourse, hut rather a simple addi¬tion to her splendid singing. DuringBrahms), Mme Seefried was al- resulted in missing a great deal beginning of Hindemith’s DasMarienleben, but for the rest ofQuartet sets high standards> The captious critic should be- the same If he missed the first of Tahe, ?"!y element. wh,ch Pre*ware the word “perfection,” lest them, he can find these perforni. vented this from being a perfecthe be accused of softening. And. ances of the c Minor and c# evening was walking out of theof course, the concert at the Stu- Minor quartets on Concert-Disc mfg,aland 'varrnth of Mandel Hallrecords into co d damP wintry worldof reality.Harvey Waterman Pete Rabinowitzdebaker Theater last week wasnot perfect: mistakes, false pitch,doubtful tempi, and worse oc-eurred at one poirft or another.during the performance of Beeth¬oven’s Quartets in C Minor, op.18, No. 4 (No. 4); in E Flat, op.74 (No. 10, “The Harp”); and inC# Minor, Op. 131 (No. 14), byiho Fine Arts Quartet.Yet. there is a feeling of perfec¬tion in the Fine Arts Quartet’s• rendition of music that they knowwell. The fine ensemble playing,facile bowing and clear, vivid ex¬position — always present in theircerebral approach to the classics— combines at times with the lesseasily described qualities of breadthand (breath), emotional depth andwhatever it is that makes thelistener lean hack, close his eyesand say “.Minimum.” The exqui¬site, perhaps.So it was with their playing ofHie first and last of the quartetsat this, the first program of a com¬plete Beethoven cycle. It seemed» to this listener that all the po¬tential of the brilliant and awe¬some C# Minor quartet wasplumbed by men completely im¬mersed in ihe music they weremaking.The E Flat quartet was lesssuccessful. The listener felt thatthe artists had not conquered itand so could not submit to it.^3Tlius, the performance, after agood start in the beautiful firstmovement, seemed forced anil un¬satisfying in comparison with therest of the program. Perhaps thedifficulties of this work, in parti¬cular of the. Allegretto eon Varia-/ione, explain its all too infre¬quent appearance.The quartets chosen, one fromeach chronological group of theseventeen quartets, were a finedemonstration, not only the ver¬satility of the performers, but ofihe astonishing scope of the com¬posers accomplishments. We have^promoted Beethoven to “greatestcomposer” for the duration of theconcert series. If the same stand¬ard is kept in the future, thereaders is challenged to attend aconceit or two and resist doingCOLOR DEVELOPINGPREPAID MAILERS8 mm Roll, 3 mm 20 exp. .... $1.2935 mm, 36 exp $1.98MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTSThe FICKLE PICKLE1137 N. STATEChicago's Only Non-AlcoholicNight Club, Presents . . .A GREAT SHOW !George McKelveyJoel CoryFolk-Singing, Comedy TeamTerry CollierExciting Folk-SingerThru Dec. 2 Only— Flu* —REX BENSONMaster of CeremonySHOW TIMES:8:00-9:15-10:30-12:15-1:30For reservations phone WH 4-1037 DIZZY'S COMING TO THE LOOPFOR THANKSGIVINGON STAGEAT THECINESTAGE GllliSPltTHANKSGIVINGWEEKENDNOV. 22-23-24TWICE NIGHTLY and his Quintet featuringJAMES MOODYplus Singing StarJOE WILLIAMSThun., Nov. 22, «» 7:30 S 10:30, $3.80, 2.80.Fri. & Sat., Nov. 23, 24, at 8 S II. $4.50, 3.50.HAL HOLBROOK in “MARK TWAIN TONIGHT”NOV. 30 ot 8:30, DEC. 1st at 2 & 8:30. DEC. 2 at 3:00;Eves., $4.50. 3.50; Mats., $3.80, 2.80TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT CINESTAGE BOX OFFICE,180 N. Dearborn St. or at MET MUSIC, 328 E. 58th St.The University of Chicago Theatretwo mod ernone-act nl a yNIGHTFLIGHTFrom St. Exit{tery"s novel byROBERT STRANGPlaywright-in-residenceDirected byROBERT BENEDETTII SPYA New Comedy byJOHN MORTIMERAuthor of THE DOCK BRIEFDirected byJAMES O’REILLYfeaturing guest artistVAL BETTINNovember 23, 24, 25 at 8:30and November 24 at 2:15Friday, Saturday, Sunday: $1.50Saturday Eve.: $2.00 Tryouts for a radio adaptation ofThomas Wolfe’s Look HomewardAngel will be held this afternoonbetween 3:30 and 5 pm in theReynolds Club theatre.Wolfe’s novel was adapted forradio by Elizabeth Lomax, wifeof folk music specialist AllenLomax. The production of heradaptation, entitled, “Farewell toAltamont,” marks the first radioplay to be produced by Universi¬ty Theatre this season.The director is Ken Pierce, afourth-year student in the College.Pierce said, “This radio play has a rather large cast — nine menand five women — and we hope asufficient number of people showup for tryouts.”According to Pierce, the Uni¬versity Theatre’s tape recording ofthe radio play “might be sold” toa syndicate of FM radio stations.Pierce said that after two orthree rehearsals, the radio playwill he performed and recordedat Northwestern University’s ra¬dio studio, since “UC’s campusradio station has nice facilities,but there just aren’t enough ofthem.”STUDENT DISCOUNT 50cTickets on Sale at Reynold's Club Desk On Campus withM&Shulman(Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf”, “The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.)HAPPY TALKAs we all know, conversation is terribly important on a date.When lulls in the conversation run longer than an hour or two,one’s partner is inclined to grow logy—even sullen. But oc¬casionally one finds it difficult to keep the talk going, especiallywhen one is having a first date with one. What, then, does one do?If one is wise, one follows the brilliant example of HarlowThurlow.Harlow Thurlow prepares. That is his simple secret. WhenHarlow is going to take out a new girl, he makes sure in advancethat the conversation will not languish. Before the date, hegoes to the library and reads all 24 volumes of the encyclopediaand transcribes their contents on his cuffs. Thus he makes surethat no matter what his date’s interests are, he will have amplematerial to keep the conversation alive.Take, for example, Harlow’s first date with Priscilla deGasser, a fine, strapping, blue-eyed broth of a girl, lavishlyconstructed and rosy as the dawn.Harlow was, as always, prepared when he called for Priscilla,and, as always, he did not start to converse immediately. Firsthe took her to dinner because, as everyone knows, it is uselessto try to make conversation with an unfed coed. Her attentionspan is negligible. Also, her stomach rumbles so loud it is diffi¬cult to make yourself heard.■■■%' JW Wt CaffsJfid Ir Wfad/*So lie took her to a fine steak house where he stoked her withgobbets of Black Angus and mounds of French fries and thick¬ets of escarole and battalions of petit fours. Then, at last,dinner was over and the waiter brought two finger bowls.“I liojic you enjoyed your.dinner, my dear,” said Harlow,dipping into his finger bowl.“Oh, it was grandy-dandy!” said Priscilla. “Now let’s gosomeplace for ribs.”“Later, perhaps,” said Harlow. “But light now, I thoughtwe might have a conversation.“Oh, goody, goody, two-shoes!1’ cried Priscilla. “I beenlooking everywhere for a boy who can carry on a intelligentconversation.”“Your search is ended, madam,” said Harlow, and pulledback his sleeves and looked at his cuffs to pick a likely topic tostart the conversation.Oh, woe! Oh, lackaday! Those cuffs on which Harlow hadpainstakingly transcribed so many facts—those cuffs on whichhe had noted such diverse and fascinating information—thosecuffs, I say, were nothing now but a big, blue blur! For Harlow— poor Harlow!—splashing around in the finger bowl, had gottenhis cuffs wet and the ink had run and not one word was legible!And Harlow—poor Harlow!—looked upon his cuffs and brokeout in a night sweat and fell dumb.“I must say,” said Priscilla after several silent hours, “thatyou are a very dull fellow. I’m leaving.”With that she flounced away and poor Harlow was toocrushed to protest. Sadly lie sat and sadly lit a cigarette.All of a sudden Priscilla came rushing back. “Was that,” sheasked, “a Marlboro you just lit?”“Yes,” said Harlow.“Then you are not a dull fellow,” she cried, and sprang intohis lap. “You are bright! Anybody is bright to smoke such aperfect joy of a cigarette as Marlboro which is just chock fullof yummy flavor, which lias a Selectrate filter which comes in asoft pack that is really soft, and a Flip-Top Box that really flips,and which can be bought wherever cigarettes are sold in all fiftystates and Duluth . . . Harlow, tiger, wash your cuffs andbe my love.”L’Okny,” said Harlow, and did, and was. © i»62 M«i8huim«oThe makers of Marlboro cigarettes, who print this columnat hideous expense throughout the school year, arc veryhappy for Harlow—and for all the rest of you who have dis¬covered the pleasures of Marlboro.Nov. 20. 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7_READMORE,RETAINAfrican beer oriented grouptopic of grad student paperA UC graduate studentpresented a paper on a beeroriented society to the Ameri¬can Anthropological Associa¬tion's Annual Conference on Sun¬day. Robert Netting’s paper wasentitled, “A West African BeerComplex.”Netting claims that the Kofyarsociety of Northern Nigeria iscentered around the drinking,talking and thinking about beer.Beer is given as a reward to awarrior who kills an enemy orbrings back dangerous game froma hunt. It is also exchanged pub-lically by lovers in a sanctionedextra-marital relationship.The tribe “make, drink, talk,and think about beer," Nettingsaid. He added that “beer is acenter of cultural interests andactivities. It is a cultural focus.”In the society, he said, beer isnot only given to those who per¬form important social functions,but is also withheld as punishmentfrom those who break the tribe’scustoms.“The most severe punishmentmeted out to a man by his com¬munity is exclusion from all oc¬casions for beer drinking. It isthe equivalent of social ostracism,”he said.But Netting said “they drinkbeer not to get drunk — in factI never saw anyone really drunkin the 18 months I lived withthem — but rather the beer isused as a food as well as a med¬ium for expressing social rela¬tions.”Netting also found out that beerdetermines the calendar system.He said, “the only words in Kof¬yar language for short periodsof time are based on the brewingcycle. A week of six days is call¬ed ‘shimwos’ (the time necessaryfor brewing the been. Each ofthe six days is named ... in termsof the days of the beer bi'ewingperiod.”Beer has also become a part ofthe community’s mythology.“Whereas the European folktaleputs gold at the end of the rain¬bow — and Ali Baba finds jewelsin a cave, the Kofyar story tellsof a crownbird opening a magicancestral stone and iiuditig a jarof beer inside,” Netting said.Netting lived among the Kof-yars in 1961 and 1962, obtainingmaterial for his doctorate degree.The information on the beer as¬pect of the Kofyar society wasincedental to the major part ofhis research, for he was primarily concerned with relationship be¬tween the national environmentand the economy of a social group.Several other papers were alsopresented to the conference bymembers of the tTC faculty, in¬cluding one by Harrison White,assistant professor of sociology,on marriages involving sister ex¬changes.James Brown, lecturer at theSchool of Social Service Adminis¬tration and Leslie Freedman pre¬sented a paper on "A Uni vac An¬alysis of Sherd Frequencies Froma Southwestern Site.” The paperwas concerned with errors madein statistical sampling.Everett Olson, professor in thegeophysical sciences, produced apaper on the evolutionary effectwhich Central America had onspecies which had previously beenseparated. He pointed out thatmany species began to follow con¬vergent evolutionary courses afterthe two continents merged.McKim Marriot, associate pro¬fessor of anthropology, submitteda paper on intercast relationsand transactions in a Hindu vil¬lage.Ward lecture scheduledProfessor Benjamin Ward ofthe University of California atBerkeley, whose address on “TheCommand System: Attitudes andEconomic Organization in Russia,”was cancelled, will speak tonightHis address which is part of theregular faculty-student seminarof the economics department willbe delivered at 7:45 in businesseast 106.All UC students and facultymay attend.MOREGET Learn to read 3jto 10 times fast¬er — with under¬standing and en-ftFTTFD j°*vment im"OLll£iI\ possible inr*D ATO7C convention-VmAl/EiiJ al readingmethods. This new wayto read will help you do bet¬ter on exams, cut your hoursof study to give you moretime. for extracurricularactivities. Taught with per¬sonal attention by skilledteachers. Evening classes be¬gin January 17, 1963. Seea demonstration of this revo¬lutionary reading method onThursday, November 29 atThe Hyde Park YMCA,1400 E. 53rd Street in theSchloerd Room - 7 :30 P.M.Call for FREE brochure-EVELYN WOpDReading Dynamics Instituteof Chicago, Inc.180 West Adams St„ Suite 300Chicago 6, IllinoisSTate 2-7014CEntral 6-8600 Two approaches to the“man’s deodorant” problem"Tareyton’s Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!”says Gaius (Shoeless Joe) Flavius, top discus slinger. *Tm a pack per diem man,” says Shoeless Joe, “anI can tell you every Tareyton gives me bonus flavor-de gustibus you never thought you'd get from any filttcigarette. Take a couple of pax vobiscum next time youcome to the Coliseum. Better still, buy ’em by the carton.”Dual Filter makes the differencetie inferenceDUAL FILTER 1QT6V10TIProduct of Mutuum Jc&jcco-CenyMy — tZ^ateo i> our middle name'1 C < rn.If a man doesn't mind shaving under his arms, he will probablyfind a woman's roll on satisfactory. Most men, however, find itsimpler and surer to use Mennen Spray Deodorant. Mennen Spraywas made to get through to the skin, where perspiration starts.And made to work all day. More men use Mennen Spray than anyother deodorant. How about you? 64< and $1.00 plus tax- *8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20, 1962