National Review editorMeyer speaks tonightFrank S. Meyer, a senior editor of National Review, for¬mer Communist, and a UC alumnus, will speak on campustonight on the subject “Freedom, the Forgotten Goal.”He will speak in Social Science122 at 8:00 p.m. There will be a25c admission charge.Meyer received his undergrad¬uate education at Princeton and Review, he is editorial advisor ofModern Age. an intellectual quar¬terly of conservative thought.He has lectured at a great num¬ber of colleges in the U.S. and Vol. 71 — No. 48 University of Chicago, Friday, January 11, 1963Otford- h, received ws graduate SO****? SSTm A ^mpetitive university in q competitive societyeducation at the University of Cambridge, and the University ofLondon and the Lniversity of ( hi- Condon. He has also spoken beforecago. While at UC he spent much the National War College in Wash-of his time engaged in under- ington.ground work for the Communist His topic, “Freedom, the For-Party. gotten Goal,” is taken in part fromIn 1945 he broke with the party his book In Defense of Freedom,and has since become a leading He has also written The Mouldingmember of the conservative and of Communists. His talk is beinganti-Communist movement. In ad- sponsored by thedition to his post on National Club. Decries educational tendencies“One of the most important Daniel Boorstin, professor in the “In England and France whentasks of a university is tohelp cure society of its evils,but this is very difficult be-Conservative cause the educational system itselfreflection of society,” said Department of History, to 130 peo- a new subject is established therepie at a meeting of the UC History up„w|th.in JeClub last night.is a traditional framework. But in theUnited States competition by in-Boorstin spoke on competition be- dividual universities leads to atween universities and the effect pluralistic conception of what con-which it was having on both Amer- stitutes knowledge.NEC proposes NS A reformsExtensive reforms to theNational Student Association(NSA) were proposed at thewinter meeting of the Na¬tional Executive Committee (NEC)which met at the University ofMinnesota over the winter interim.The NEC, which acts as a boardof directors for the association, ex¬pressed an almost unanimous de¬sire for structural and policy re¬form.A number of proposals weremade which would increase NSA’srole in education and de-emphasizeits political involvement.The controversial referral ofresolutions from the annual Na¬tional Student Congress to theNFC came under attack by liberaland conservative members. It isfelt by some that referral mightbe abolished at next summer’sCongress.The NEC’s committee on pro¬gramming recommended that “theAssociation’s first concern alwaysbe for on-campus problems.”A reorganization of the regionalstructure was discussed whichwould condense NSA’s national di¬vision into five or six areas. Underthe proposed system, each areawould have its own national vicepresident who would travel to member schools in the areaThe 16th National Student Con¬gress is tentatively set for nextAugust at the University of In¬diana.The NEC's Congress-planningcommittee recommended sharplimitations on the amount of legis¬lation which the Congressconsider. This is so that morecarefully thought-out resolutionsmight be produced. “There is an effort in Americanuniversities to make your productlook different from what other uni¬versities have.’’ He added thatsometimes the products even areOne result of competition amongeducational institutions is that itA constitutional amendment was of February 15-17 ican education and the universitiesthemselves.“The numerous institutions inthis country compete with eachdiscussed which would require that other for faculty, students andall delegates to the Congress be prestige. Whereas in France thereelected by their student bodies. At is a monolithic structure character- ~present, selection of delegates is ized not by a plurality of institu- .left to the discretion of each mem- tions but rather by a hierarchy |efa^_to_tJh5 |r!cirf_a1^"s importanceher school. within an institution,” he said.NSA, in cooperation with the Turning to the consequences ofFederal Government, will sponsor the extension of competition intoinstitutions of higher learning,Boorstin pointed out that the wayin which knowledge, or subjectmatter gets defined here differsradically from European institu¬tions.a nation-wide student conferenceon the proposed “Domestic PeaceCorps.” The conference will beheld at American University inWashington, D.C., on the weekendDespres discusses campaign issues of the administration.Boorstin alsosaid that com¬petition tends tooveremph-asize rank andstatus. In or¬der to attract orkeep faculty“you create newprofessor-ships, and uni¬versity profes- Boorstin“The need for an improvedtone in city government,better planning, and equality,are the issues in this cam¬paign,” said Fifth Ward AldermanLeon Despres last night.Speaking at a meeting sponsoredby the campus chapters of Inde¬pendent Voters of Illinois and theCongress of Racial Equality, Des¬pres discussed his campaign forreelection as independent aldermanfrom the Fifth Ward.“There is a powerful oppositionto satisfying these needs. Manyopponents are in the reactionarydemocratic forces fighting my re-election,” Despres said."Metamorphosis of the Owls," a ballet written byUC graduate student Dan Jordan, will be performed atMandel Hall by the Illinois Ballet Company tonight. Jordan,who is studying with the Committee on Human Develop¬ment, wrote the ballet as part of a project testing Jung'spsychological theories. The ballet was originally performedin Mandel last October. Tickets are already sold out fortonight's performance, but tickets to a repeat performanceat Mandel on Sunday, January 20 at 7:30 pm, can be ob¬tained by calling the Illinois Ballet company at WAbash2-1693. Despres said the opposition back¬ing the democratic candidate foralderman, Chauncey Eskridge, isheaded by Alderman ThomasKeane, of the 31st Ward.“Keane is building a personalpolitical empire to supplant Daley.Keane is politically to the right ofSpender speaksat Moody lectureStephen Spender, notedEnglish poet, critic, and edi¬tor, will be on campus Mondayevening, January 21. Spenderwill offer readings of his poems,with commentaries, at Mandel hall,beginning at 8:30 pm. His lecturewill be the 224th William VaughMoody Lecture, and the second inthe series this year.A member of the so-called “newgeneration” of English poets,Spender has been a leading literaryfigure for over thirty years. Hebegan to write poetry while still astudent at University College, Ox¬ford University, publishing NineExperiments in 1928 and Twenty ■Poems in 1930. Five years later,his first “mature works,” Poems,appeared. Since then he has beenin print regularly, publishing eighttimes, one of these being a poeticplay entitled Trial of a Judge,which appeared in 1937.Spender has not confined himselfcompletely to poetry. He has pub¬lished the following works of prose:The Destructive Element, 1935;The Burning Cactus, 1936: Forwardfrom Liberalism, 1937; Life and thePoet, 1942; Citizens in War andAfter, 1945; European Witness,1946; an autobiography entitledWorld Within World in 1951; TheCreative Element, 1953; LearningLaughter, 1952; The Life in Litera¬ture, 1958; and Engaged in Writ¬ing, 1959. Spender has also trans¬lated poems from German andSpanish. He was one of the found¬ing editors of Horizon, a monthlyjournal, as well as Encounter, aLondon monthly. He still edits thelatter.He has held visiting professor¬ships at the University of Cincin¬nati in 1953 and at the Universityof California in 1959. This winterhe has an identical position atNorthwestern University.Spertder is an avid and frequenttraveler. He has spent a great dealof time in the countries of Europe—Germany, Austria, France, andItaly. Learning Laughter is basedon his travels in Israel.Admission to the lecture is freeof charge. Senator Goldwater,” Despres con¬tinued.Commenting on Eskridge’s claimthat a regular democratic aider-man will improve conditions, Des¬pres said, “My opponent uses anold argument—elect an old-timecorrupt, machine politician andthen things will grow better.”“An independent can’t fix things,but he can see that city servicescome to the ward. A politician whogets people patronist jobs in citydepartments can’t complain aboutthese departments. If he does,these jobs are jeopardized.”Orientation Boardsets training sessionsThe first training session for allpersons interested in joining Orien¬tation Board will be held this Sun¬day at 3:30 pm in Ida Noyes Hall.The meeting will feature a dis¬cussion of the structure of collegecourses by members of the faculty.Speakers will include John Hul>-by, assistant professor of biology;Karl J. Weintrauh, assistant pro¬fessor of history and chairman ofthe history of western civilization•course; Leo Nedelsky, professor ofphysical sciences in the College;Herman Sinaiko, assistant profes¬sor of humanities and chairman ofthe humanities III course; andGerhard Meyer, assistant professorof economics, member of the socialsciences I staff.The second training session nextSunday will feature discussion ofthe aims of education. The third,on January 27, will center aroundOrientation Week.The training sessions are opento all interested students, whetheror not they have submitted an ap¬plication to the Board. Applicationswill be available at the meeting.O-Board’s major activity eachyear is to help introduce enteringstudents to the University and thecommunity during OrientationWeek. O-Board conducts tours, dis¬cussions, and other activities.Last spring O-Board sponsoreda lecture and discussion series on“The Limits of a Liberal Educa¬tion.” Among the educators takingpart in the three-day long serieswere Paul Goodman, John Noonan,Seymour M. Lipset, and RobertMaynard Hutchins. Plans are nowbeing made for a similar seriesthis year. sorships, and roving professor¬ships. This is not the kind ofthing professors should be concern¬ed with,” he said.Boorstin thinks, however, thatcompetition, by breaking down therigorous separation between sub¬ject matters leads to a flexibilityin America which the Europeanuniversities lack.1st Year womenget hours revisedStarting1 tonight, all firstyear women in residence willfiave the same hours privi¬leges. Previously, differentcurfews applied to women eighteenand over and to women undereighteen.The new hours policy gives sec¬ond and third quarter first yearwomen the hours currently desig¬nated for women eighteen andover. All first-year women in theautumn quarter, regardless of age,will follow the more limited hourswhich previously applied to womenunder eighteen.In a memo to first year womenin residence, James E. Newman,assistant dean of students, ex¬plained that “it seems appropriateand just for all first-year womento follow the more limited hoursduring the first quarter, in whichthey are being oriented to theUniversity, and then all go on tothe freer hours, without a distinc¬tion based on age differential.”All women under twenty-one areallowed to stay out four hours eachweek past their basic curfew. Thiscurfew has been 11 p.m. for womenunder eighteen, and midnight forwomen eighteen and over. Womentwenty-one and over have no en¬forced curfew.Last quarter, the first year coun¬cil asked for a review of the cur¬rent policy which makes a dis¬tinction in hours for women underand over eighteen. The changesare a result of this review.Attention all owners of funnycars, motorcycles and otheramusing vehicles! Doc Filmsrequests your cooperation inhelping them shoot a sequencefor a film they’re making onUC. Report at 2:30 pm todayon the Circle of the main Quad. Attention allphotographersAll students who are in¬terested in doing photo¬graphy work for the Ma¬roon are invited to a meet¬ing at 4:30 this afternoonin the Maroon office, thirdfloor of Ida Noyes Hall.Students unable to attendthe meeting should call LesGourwitz at 3421 EastHouse.—■1fr EDITORIALSMiss, version of justice still puzzlingWhen one thinks—if one thinks—'of political prisons and politicalprisoners, the standard liberalimages come to mind: Lubyanka,the imprisoned partisans of Span¬ish freedom, the Texas compoundsawaiting the Great Roundup. In¬carceration for one’s beliefs issomehow noble; one becomes amartyr in the liberal hagiary.But what sort of hero is he whoIs thrown in the pokey for stealingfive sacks of chicken feed? Whatmartyr gets busted for traffickingin narcotics? The former, as ithappens, is an ex-University ofChicago student; the latter, stu¬dents of the Michigan State Univer¬sity. What is unique about them isthat they are Negroes, and were supplies, on which some 40,000sharecroppers and tenant farmerswere almost entirely dependentStudents of Detroit-area schools or¬ganized a Christmas food-collect iondrive which netted more than ahalf ton of edibles and articles ofclothing.Donaldson and Taylor volun¬teered to drive the goods to Missis¬sippi in a small truck lent for theoccasion by a University of Michi¬gan professor. On their way backfrom Clarksdale, they stopped inLouisville, Ky., where local civilrights groups loaded their truckagain with food, clothing and medi¬cal supplies donated by Louis¬ville doctors. Once back in Clarks¬dale, they were arrested for stay¬ ing out after the midnight curfew(they had just arrived in town).When police discovered the drugs—including oral insulin, digitalis, andfirst aid equipment—they bookedthem on charges of carrying nar¬cotics. The Louisville doctors whodonated the drugs say they canprove there w'ere no narcotics inthe packages they made up.Bail for Donaldson and Taylorwas first set at $15,000 each; ithas since been reduced to $1,500each.It does no good to throw up one’shands at the mention of Missis¬sippi. Hyde Park did rather well byFayette County, Tenn., in similarcircumstances. Is there a truckdriver in the house? Gadfly: Faculty, not student leadersshould help gather student opinionExtend idea of new rulearrested in Mississippi.Clyde Kennard was a student atDC for three years, 1952-1955, and,according to the New Republic, re- The new women’s hours regula- philosophy that is guiding theirturned home to support his mother tions merely substitute uniformity academic endeavors, which areand disabled father on their small for arbitrary discrimination. really much more important thanfarm, a 15-minute drive from the Hours for first year women will their social habits. Instead, theUniversity of Southern Mississippi, no longer be based on age; instead university demonstrates its eon-Kennard hoped to continue his edu- they will be based on tihe amount cern for new students by develop-cation there. of time the students have spent ing a practice which will doAfter several years, the State at UC. In their first quarter, all nothing to contribute to their in-had run out of excuses for denying entering women will be subject to tellectual development.Kennard admission to the univer- very restricted hours; later on,sity. There was one catch, how- they will be subject to less re-ever. No one convicted of a felony strictive rules.might enroll in any state institu- This change from a system intion. So Mississippi convicted Clyde which hours were relaxed when-Kennard, in 1960. of being an ac- ever a girl reached her 18th birth- ld sueaCst that the universitycessory to the theft of five sacks of day, is compatible with the first- th88 thirdchicken feed, worth five dollars quarter experience of “being ori-apiece. Seven years, said the judge, ented to the University,” we areJvanhoe Donaldson and Benjamin told. At this point, however, theTaylor were But since a system of regulatinghours on the basis of attendanceat the University is preferablesomewhat to a system based on theattainment of an arbitrary age, wewould suggest that the universityextend this new system to thirdand fourth year women. It wouldseem that after two years of thearrested during new system is THE first quarter guidance of the housing of-Christmas week last in Clarksdale, experience of orientation. There ^.upperclassmen might bo g.v-a small town in the Mississippi are no discussions for new students, f,n . ie ie-sb°nsI >] ■ y ° retu ** inkDelta region. County officials, in once the quarter has begun about £e,r h?.u's’ Tw° >'earsreprisal against the efforts of that the purposes and background of , *S ? 'f, uence ° esovereign state's Negro sub-citizens the institution they have just en- ousmg o ice s outo register to vote, had cut off dis- tered; nor are there any attempts PJereQ^11^1 ®tribution of Federal surplus food made to explain the educational a e,as 1C °l,s'nS ° lce» anr reaching the age of 21.Needless to say this proposal formodifying the hours system isonly made as a practical first stepin the total abolition of hours, forthe goal of education — develop¬ing human beings who can thinkand act independently — is incom¬patible with an environment inwhich the student is regarded asan irresponsible child.seem a bettersocial freedom,Open Only To Students On This CampusFIRST OF FOUR CONTESTS12 WINNERS IN EACH CONTESTViceroyBasketball Contest #1(Closes Jan.16th)%First Prize...$1005®Second Prize.. .$2555Ten 3rd Prizes...$10™c//12 WINNERS ON THIS CAMPUS IN EACH CONTEST.Four contests in all. . . New contest every twoweeks . . . exclusively for the students on thiscampus! You’ll find complete rules printed onOfficial Basketball Contest Entry Blanks.Ballot Boxes and Entry Blanks are located at:ENTER NOWAND WIN!Not too Strong...Not too Light...Viceroysgot the Tastethat’s right!01063, BROWN A WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CORP. During the past severalyears at the University ofChicago brief, usually mean¬ingless encounters betweenone or more undergraduate groupsand one or more members of theadministration have taken place atboringly predictable intervals. Thecourse taken by these encountersis always the same: a charge bythe student group, a denial by theadministration, a picket threat bythe students, and a statement fromthe administration chiding the stu¬dents for forgetting that a univer¬sity is a center for the Great Dis¬cussion.The incident concludes w’ith astatement from the administrationthat the situation will be investi¬gated and a report submitted tosome group representing the un¬dergraduate body. During thecourse of the administration’s in¬vestigation, which never lakesplace, the student committee,which has disbanded, forgets allabout the original bone of con¬tention.While this playful pastime iswithout doubt a more wholesomediversion for undergraduates thanfootball, after three years of activeparticipation and a half year of in¬terested observation of the battlebetween students and administra¬tors, one tends to become fairlybored with the entire goings on.As in those strange flashes every¬one has, one seems to say “I’vebeen here before,” except now heis right. The most intriguing ofphrases, when used often enoughand inappropriately enough, canbe rendered eternally meaningless.A fine example can be drawnfrom a situation of last year, wellknown to all. During the sit-indemonstrations protesting allegedUC discrimination in its off-campusproperties we were treated to afine collection of every stockphrase in the voluminous collec¬tions of the administration. Stu¬dent Government. UC CORE, andthe Maroon, of which I was editor.But Ihe reason for the invocation,Alsoavailablein new“Slide-Top”Case AL SAX SAYS —Bring Your Car to Our PadFor Student Discounts On:Tires - Batteries - MufflersThousands ofExtra Trouble-freeMilesU.S.ROYALSafety-800J withTHIS WEEK ONLYWheel AlignmentSpecial:• Balance 2 Fr. Wheels• Inspect Brakes• 5 Wheel Rotation $0.95 cvcFROM •*1T95■ m 4 00-1*I# Black wadPlus Tax and Traadabl* HitAvailable in“HARRO-WHITE" STYLJN6AL SAX TIRE CO.6052 S. COTTAGE GROVEJust South of the CampusCall: DO 3-5555 by all parties involved, of theirown sacred cows is, on reflection,totally incomprehensible.Why, fior example, an admini¬stration which for years had re¬fused to talk about the subject atall should all of a sudden appealto the concept of the “Great Dis¬cussion” as a means of solving thediscrimination controversy hasnever been explained. And why“Academic Freedom” should beused as a reason for demandingthat a group of students should bepermitted to clutter up Ihe Chan¬cellor’s reception room for severalweeks is equally unclear.One of the favorite phrases ofboth sides in any controversy has,through the years, been “student-faculty-administration communica¬tion.” The phrase has, in fact, beenso frequently used that it is arch-t.vpal of the sterilized phrasesmentioned above.However, cutting away all of thenonsense surrounding its use, itcan be seen that on the UC campusthere is a serious communicationproblem. There can be no doubtthat there are worthwhile ideaswithin the student body; there canbe no doubt that these ideas arenot reaching the administration.The reason for the existence ofthis problem is, I believe, quitesimple. The student voice whichhas been heard on this campusduring the past several years isneither the most articulate nor themost considered available withinthe undergraduate community.And, more importantly, the emer¬gence of any new voice would re¬quire a realignment of the conceptpresent ingrown leadership cliqueof student leadership which thewould never allow.The reason that this group isinadequate is not really the faultof the individuals who compriseit. It is the result of many yearsin which the pressures of traditionand a basic, all-pervading dogmahave combined to render almostimpossible any independent thoughtwhen a new issue presents itself.Views on the new issue must befitted into the framework. Con¬sistency replaces logic as a crite¬rion for action.But how does all this relate tothe problem of communication?The answer is simple — all at¬tempts at “communicating” havein the past oriented proposals to¬ward the leadership group. Theyhave, consequently, failed. TheChancellor’s cabinet, proposedseveral years ago, failed to mate¬rialize because the typical rivalryamong student organizations leadto irreconcilable squabbles aboutwho would sit on the cabinet. Andthe Student Consultant Boards,formed through Student Govern¬ment, are dying (or have died, Icannot know •for sure) becauseonce they were formed it wasfound that there was not sufficientinterest to keep them staffed.Fortunately, the present dean ofstudents, Warner A. Wick, has ex¬pressed a genuine interest both ingathering student opinion and ininforming students of administra¬tion thinking on important issues.It is to be hoped that this mostcommendable attitude of deanWick’s will not go for naught, thatthis newest attempt at establishinga viable channel for student-facul-ty-ad ministration communicationwill not be destined to fail as itspredecessors have failed.Of course, it is impossible for theadministration to “communicate”face to face with the entire studentbody. Any “mass meeting” typeof discussion is bound to workpoorly. It is for this reason that inthe past the student leadershipgroup has been selected to repre¬sent the student body in conversa¬tion with administrators. It is forthis reason that these conversa¬tions have in the past producednothing worthwhile.Choose overage studentsMost of the pitfalls of previousmethods can, I believe, be avoidedif dean Wick chooses a new meansof selecting those students who willhave the opportunity of meetingwith administrators. It has takenbut a half year of removal from(continued on next pace)CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 11. 1963 « 9Croup would solve problem(continued from page 2)student politics to see that theperspective of the average studentdiffers greatly from that of the“student leader.” It has been arevelation during the past sixmonths to see how trivial many•great” student political issuesseem to be. And, moreover, in ad¬dition to the difference of perspec-jjtc. 1 have found that the UC stu¬dent body contains many mode out-standing, articulate individualsthan the student leader ever hasa chance to meet.It is these individuals, the clhss-“oers who, despite their unfilrhili-ariiy with Ida Noyes Hall, do haveand can express important ideas,who should be representing the stu¬dent body in discussions with theadministration. The only problemthat remains, then, is how thesestudents can best be found.Let Faculty Choose Group1 believe that the best means ofchoosing this group would bethrough the College faculty with afaculty member chosing no morethan one member of the group.While the dangers of this schemeare manifest (the same method ofselection is used for that abomi¬nation. Maroon Key) my acquaint¬ance with dean Wick and with thefaculty leads me to believe themworthy of the responsibility of se¬lecting an intelligent, articulategroup representing no monolithicviewpoint.Students for this group would bechosen by those professors mostinterested in the problems of stu¬dent - faculty - administration rela¬tions. The group doing the selec¬tion should itself be representative.While this as any campus has its share of faculty members who, forthe sake of advancement are will¬ing to mimick anything the ad¬ministration says or does, thereare many professors who, true tothe spirit of their profession, keepopen and critical minds about allintra-university events of import¬ance. It is these who should dothe selecting of students.A viable gro'up of the kind I pro¬pose would consist of no more thanfifteen members. It would considerall important developments oncampus, from the problems of cur¬riculum (currently the most con¬troversial campus issue) to dormi¬tory policy, to intercollegiatesports. The group should meet atregular intervals (at least threetimes every two months) with thedean of students and, from timeto time, various other administra¬tors. I believe that, in addition tothe fifteen students selected byfaculty members, the editor of theMaroon and the president of Stu¬dent Government, as interestedand informed individuals, shouldbe included ex officio.The formation of such a groupwould, I believe, go a long waytoward alleviating this campus’current communication problem.With administrators coming intocontact with ‘‘new blood” and newideas, it is inevitable that theywould develop more respect for thestudent views.If students want to be heard onthis campus something must bedone. It is my sincere belief thatonly a radical departure from cur¬rent thinking can succeed.Jay Greenberg,Editor emeritusChicago Maroon ClPERSONAL,No Bubble Blowing in the Central UnitLOSTSpiral notebook in front of east Harperelevator. Owner would like pages withnotes. Please leave them on a backtable of Reserve room or call DO3-4344. Co-ed preferably arts major, to cookand perform light housekeeping choresfor two male students in nice apart¬ment near University area. Excellentsource material for_ a bourgeoningnovelist. SLype 2-0774".ROOMS, APTS., ETC.Female wanted to share roomy, par¬tially furnished apartment near Uni¬versity. $14 per week. BeginningFebruary 1. BU 8-0426, 7-9 p.m.7137 CONSTANCE AVE. Owner willfinance 5 rm. brk. bung, with low dn.paymt., tile bath, gas ht., many extras,shown by app't only. Days PL 2-5998;eves. HY 3-0357.Girl wanted. Free room and board,in exchange for baby sitting and lighthousehold duties. DO 3-2656.Recent Art Institute graduate wantsgirl to share 2 bedroom apt. in Old-towir. Please call MO 4-0250 after 10p.m.Suche Wohnung u. Kost bei einerdeutschen Familie, um u.A. meineSprachkentnisse zu erweitern.C. Dickinson, FA 4-8991HELP WANTEDStudents who are concerned about thedeclining state of the English languageto copyread for the Maroon 5-6 p.m.one afternoon a week. Call 3265, 3266. FOR SALE—Thoroughbred dachshund puppies,home-raised $60-$75, 363-7545.11x15 oriental rug, good condition,cleaned: also spinet piano, good condi¬tion, BU 8-6711. Peterson Moving &Storage.Low cost auto and mal-practice in¬surance for medical externs, interns,and residents, call Sam Michael, 322-1588.Triumph 10—1959 4 door sedan, goodmileage, back seat folds dow'n. ST8-9243.Navajo Rugs, Wool, hand woven. BU8-9424 or NO 7-6732.MISCELLANEOUSRUSSIANBy highly qualified experienced nativeteacher. Accelerated method, conver-s a t i o n emphasized complimentarytrial—no obligation. Call Mr. Gregoryfrom 9 to 5 p.m., 236-1423; after 7 call684-8114.Some fraternities are just too trusting—and VERY DEAF.-Want to tantalize someone, or get aroommate. Call the classified editor,MI 3-0800, ext. 3265. Speaker bans calledunconstitutionalSpeaker bans at state-supporteduniversities and colleges are un¬constitutional, according to Wil¬liam Van Alstyne, Ohio State Uni¬versity law professor.Van Alstyne made the charge inthe January issue of the Universityof Pennsylvania’s ‘‘Law Review.”He maintains that the FourteenthAmendment, which provides thatno state can prohibit freedom ofspeech, applies to state univer¬sities because they are a part ofthe state.He said that the prevailing phil¬osophy in universities today is oneof ‘‘Platonism”—that administra¬tors have the power to distinguishtruth from falsehood, and the dulyto protect students from error.According to Van Alstyne, aspeaker can be constitutionallybarred from a university campusif the time or place of his speechwould disrupt previously scheduleduniversity programs, or if thespeaking area had been previouslyreserved.So long as a speaker presents noclear danger and advocates onlylawful action, said Van Alstyne,he could not be barred from speak¬ing. •Multiform — the favorite of professional people.Multiform — the freestanding wall units. Inter¬changeable bookcases, bars, desks, chests withdrawers, endless combinations for a complete wall.Or.start with a bookcase unit for as little as $24.00,and add to it later on.SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSNO 7-40401542 East 57th StreetOpen Tuesday through Saturday, 1 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Our Semi - Annual Sale Now In ProgressDon't Miss It.Hundreds of Suits, Jackets, Sportscoats, Trousers,Topcoats and Overcoats Greatly ReducedSPECIAL: Orion Pile Zip Lined RaincoatsRegular $29.95, now $23.88SPECIAL: White Jayson Dress Shirts — regular $5.00Now $3.88 - 3 for $11.00 I limited quatitieslSPECIAL: — Men's Socks — regular $1.00-3 prs. for $2.00(limited quantities)SPECIAL SALE TABLE—Ass't Famous Make Regular & IvySport Shirts — Formerly $5.00 to $7.95 — Now $3.88—3 for $1120% OFF ON ALL SWEATERS, SPORT SHIRTS & NECKWEARTHE STORE FOR MEN(Wnt» Stem.-*atth Gtampu* $i)opin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St Phone 752-8100The University of Chicago YearbookThe 1963 Edition of the CAP & GOWN with a handsomeAsimulated leather binding is a serious photographic and journal¬istic work capturing the spirit of the University of Chicago’s wayof life. The editor of the yearbook is Eve Bell with Dan Lyonserving as photographic editor. One of Mr. Lyon’s recent photo¬graphs is on the record cover of Joan Baez’s latest record album.The yearbook, already half subscribed, will go on sale May 15,1963, for $5.00. However, it can be ordered for only $4.00 byfilling out the PRE-PUBLICATION ORDER BLANK includedin the packet at . . .SPRING REGISTRATIONJon. W, 1963 C H I C A G O MAROONf MHnKHRMM mm*Calendar of Events Varslty swimmers lose firs# meet iB v*"**I Tears mixed with bhe tepid water Basketball scores 23: Phi Delta ThetiFriday, January 11Episcopal Holy Communion: BondChapel, 7:30 am.Lecture Series: History and EternalDestiny, Paul Tillich. John Nuveen,Law School Auditorium, 11:30 am.Meeting: Student Zionist Organization,Hillel House, 3 pm.Seminar: “Chemical Composition andLife Cycle of the Pleuropneumonia¬like Organisms.” Harold J. Moro-wrtz. 5640 S. Ellis Ave., Room 480,4 pm.Meeting: Maroon Photo Staff, 4:30pm. Maroon Office.Lecture Series: New Studies in Cancer,“Control of Differentiation in TissueCulture,” Dr. Clifford Grobstein,Billings P 117, 5 pm.“B” Basketball Game: Fieldhouse,Chicago vs. Thornton Junior College,6 pm.Sabbath Service: Hillel Foundation,7:45 pm.Lecture: “Freedom, the ForgottenGoal.” Frank S. Meyer, SocialScience 122. 8 pm.Track Meet: Chicago vs. McMasterCollege. Fieldhouse, 8 pm. United Christian Fellowship Dialogue:“Jewish-Christian Dialogue.” RabbiRichard Winograd, Rev. J. PrestonCole, Chapel House, 4:30 pm.Seminar: Church-State Issues, BaptistGraduate Student Center, 4001 S.Ellis, 5:30 pm.United Vesper Service: Graham Tay¬lor Chapel, 6:30 pm.Sunday Evening at Brent House: “Manas a Moral Being,” The Bishop ofExeter, 5540 Woodlawn, 7 pm.Seminar: Historical Determinism andChristian Hope, Methodist Founda¬tion Chapel House. 7:15 pm.Study-Discussion: Porter FoundationGraduate Fellowship, "Faith as aForm of Physical Energy,” ChapelHouse, 7:15 pm.Discussion: Stagg Scholarships andother admissions policies. WarnerWick. Charles O'Connell, Ida NoyesLibrary, 7:30 p.m.Sunday Evening Coffee Hour: “Kafka’sHero as Jewish Archetype.” MarvinMirsky, Hillel Foundation. 8 pm.Radio Series: The World of the Paper¬back, WBBM, 10 pm. Tears mixed with bhe tepid waterof Bartlett Gymn pool as UC'sSwimmers lost their first meet in Intramural basketball be-two years to the university of Illi¬nois (Navy Pier), by a score of54 to 41. The 400 Yard Relay, free¬style, last event on the day’s pro¬gram being bhe deciding factor.Had UC won this event it wouldhave squeeked by with the marginof 1 point.Actually the Maroons, coachedby William J. Moyle, lost the meetin the distance events, largely dueto the absence of two performers,who might well have won theirevents, if they swam. These swim¬mers are Mike Gay, scholasticallyineligible, and Chuck Evans, whohas burned hands. gan this week with nearly 400men participating on 56 teamsin eight leagues. Scores weregenerally low, since nearly every¬one was recovering from theChristmas layoff.One exception was HendersonSouth’s Fred Kluessner, whoscored 26 points Wednesday nightas his team trounced East III 48-25.Saturday, January 12Great Lakes Wrestling Tournament:Fieldhouse. 10 am.Varsity Gymnastics Meet: Chicago vs.University of Wisconsin and BallState Teachers College, BartlettGymnasium. 1 pm.Track Meet: Fieldhouse. 7 pm.Chamber Music Series: AEolianChamber Players. Mandel Hall, 8:30pm.Radio Series: The Sacred Note, WBBM,10:45 pm.Sunday, January 13Radio Series: Faith of Our Fathers,WGN, 8:30 am.Roman Catholic Mass: Calvert House,8.30, 10, 11 and 12 noon.Episcopal Sung Eucharist with Ser¬mon, 9:30 am. Bond Chapel.Radio Series: From the Midway.WFMF, 11 am.University Religious Chapel: Rockefel¬ler Memorial Chapel. 11 am.Carillon Recital: Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 4 pm, Mr. Robins.1958 RAMBLERHeater, Radio,Automatic "WW9No Money DownNo Payments This YearBring in Ad for This PriceGruby’s Rambler4555 S. CottageBO 8-1111PHISIGRUSH SMOKER7:30 p.m.Chapter House5625 S. WoodlawnMondayJan. 14thTIKI TOPICSHAPPY NEW YEARLadies and Gentlemenfrom House of Tiki!Thank you for a goodyear. We are happy ourdelicious food was pleas¬ing. Hearty greetings toour old friends and to allnewcomers, fromCIRALS,HOUSE OF TIKI“Bottoms Up” is a gooddrinking toast.CIRALSHOUSE OF TIKI51st and LAKE PARKU. 8 -7585Stop in ami try our lunch specials. Monday, January 14Lecture Series: History and EternalDestiny. Paul Tillich. John Nuveen,Law School Auditorium, 11:30 am.Poetry of Bialik and Tchernichovsky:Hillel Foundation, 4:30 pm.Lecture: “The Mechanism of Photo¬synthesis: A Discussion of the Ex¬periments of Otto Warburg.” BirgitVennesland, Botany Building. Room106. 4:30 pm.Motion Picture: “The Little Hut,”International House, 7 and 9 pm.Motion Pictures: “French TapestriesVisit America” and “The Age ofRococo.” Social Science 122. 8 pm.Coffee Plus: “What We Have Learnedfrom Meteorites.” Prof. EdwardAnders, Shorey House. 9 pm. Of the total of% 11 events, the UCwon only 5;To sum it all up, the Maroons areweak in the distance events, diving,and need to practice more to makeup for the lack of it, during bheHolidays.Plaitt, Calef, Krissoff, and Ander¬son were outstanding for the UC,while Shriner and Capt. Galisshone brightly for Navy Pier. The week’s scores — Tuesday:College House Blue League —Thompson North 35, East II 32;Tufts North 31, East I 10; Dodd20, Henderson North 19; Mead 28,Shorey North 26.Fraternity League — Beta ThetaPi 28, Zeta Beta Tau 22; Psi Up-silon 41, Phi Sigma Delta 17; PhiKappa Psi 28, Phi Gamma Delta 23; Phi Delta Theta 2, Delta Upsl-km 0.Wednesday: College House RedLeague — Salisbury 33, ShoreySouth 19; Chamberlin 29, Vincent23; Thompson South 63, Tufts South7; Henderson South 48, East IH 25,Divisional Blue League—Outlaws58, Calvert Club 28; Robber Ba¬rons 29, Hitchcock 16; CTS Proph¬ets 42, Flying Bolsheviks 21; Dr.Kildaire’s 24, Geography 5.Blue “B” League — HendersonNorth 21, Tufts North 18; Salisbury33, Henderson South 26; Chamber¬lin 2, East II 0.Thursday Red B League: Phi DeltaTheta 17, Psi Upsilon 16; Phi KappaPsi 31. Phi Sigma Delta 15; Coulter35, Calvert Club 25.Fraternity League: Phi Kappa Psi 23Phi Delta Theta 18: Phi GammaDelta 2. Delta Upsilon 0 (forfeit);Phi Sigma Delta 65. Alpha DeltaPhi 4: Psi Upsilon 43. Beta ThetaPhi 28. Two leagues fail to report.Coarse changePolitical Science 399. Ghandi’sSocial and Political Thought taughtby Raghavan Iyer, will meet onMondays and Wednesdays from3:30 to 5 in Soc Sci 106. rather thanas previously announced. Chamber Music SeriesAEOLIAN CHAMBERPLAYERSSaturday, January 12. 8:30 P.M.Mandel HallAdm. $3.00 - UC Stud. $1.50Tickets at Music Dept.,5802 Woodlawn or Box OfficeSaturday evening Have You Seen These New Paperbacks?$1.65Lunt: THE ROAD TO THE LAW ■$1.95Rostow: THE PROCESS OF ECONOMIC GROWTH .. I$1 45Spender: THE MAKING OF A POEM ■ *$1.50Hepner: THE BEST OF “EMPHASIS” ■The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEHears: Men. - Fri. 8 - 5. Sat. • - 12Open all day Sat. Jan. 12A midwestern college audience recently heard this answer ina talk by A.T.& T. Board Chairman, Frederick R. Kappel“To us this is an important question because we hirenearly 3000 college graduates yearly. To get an answerwe went to our own files and examined the records ofnearly 17,000 people. We checked each man’s compara¬tive success against what he achieved in college. who practice ‘diplomaship’—the belief that a diplomaautomatically leads to job success. Such thinking willnot make telephone service what we know it can be.“As a group, the scholars won handily. Of the menwho stood among the top third in salary for their levelof experience more than half were also in the top third oftheir college class. Only a quarter were in the bottom third. “The men we want are men with intelligence plusthose other attributes that give you the feel, the sensethat they will make things move and move well—men whowant to excel and are determined to work at it.“And contrary to age-old beliefs, extracurricular activi¬ties proved a lesser indicator unless the individual had anoutstanding achievement. Mere 'joining’ was not enough. “Nothing short of excellence will do.”Frederick R. Kappel, Chairman of the BoardAmerican Telephone and Telegraph Company“The study indicates, at least as far as the Bell Systemgoes, that there’s little opportunity for college students BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES w ithtoVisif!eltaarTig«