12 SG members recalledTwelve of the thirteen SG rep¬resentatives who supported a reso¬lution condemning the Cuba block¬ade last October were recalled lastnight. Pain Procuniar was not re¬called.In most instances, slightly morethan half of the 1,100 undergradu¬ates voting favored the recall.Constitutionally the ExecutiveCouncil of SG is empowered to ap¬point replacements for the 11POLIT members and one independ¬ ent who were recalled. The Execu¬tive Council consists of the fourSG officers and six committeechairmen. The fouV persons re¬maining on the Council after recallare all POLIT members.According to POLIT officers, aPOLIT caucus Sunday night willdetermine how the vacated govern¬ment seats will be filledDick Jacobson, independent, wholost by 20 votes, has filed a petitionfor recount. All the members of the Execu¬tive Committee are members ofPOLIT.MacEwan invited all students in¬terested in the filling of the twelveseats to attend the POLIT caucustomorrow night, at which the meth¬od of filling the seats will be dis¬cussed.The caucus will be in Ida NoyesHall at 7:30 pm. Arthur MacEwan called the vote that I have been associated witha victory for POLIT relative to thevote he had expected.MacEwan said “normal pro¬cedures” would be used to fill POLIT notably by the UniversityParty, which put me in orbit.“As to the general trend, it isa shame that most people voted... ., , not on the general positions takenThe constitution provides for by the „*,**,« candidates. bu,the Executive Committee of Stu- bow they personally felt about thevacancies.dent Government to fill the emptyseats. It will do so before the nextassembly meeting.”The members of the Executive Cuban question. I did not seeanyone paying attention to theMaroon statements.Vol. 71 — No. 57 University of Chicago, Saturday, January 26, 1963Seventy-five per cent of the 1,062undergraduates expressing opinionson the question in the Stagg Schol¬arship referendum, stated thatneed should be a condition for re¬ceiving the scholarship.In addition, 43% favored award¬ing the scholarships after at leasta year of residence in the College;and 54% felt that the Universityshould increase the number ofStagg Scholars to eight.While 64% of the undergraduateswere of the opinion that the Uni¬versity should have accepted theStagg scholarships funds, 69'^ feltthat the University should alter theprovisions of the scholarship.58% of the students felt that theUniversity should in the futureavoid accepting endowed scholar¬ship funds carrying fixed stipendswithout regard to need. Warner Wick, dean of students,thought results showed “quite de¬cisively that the students approveof taking the money, and also quitedecisively that they would like tochange the scholarship as regardsthe terms of need.“How important this expressionof sentiment will be in our decid¬ing to make changes” is very un¬certain, he continued. “I don’tknow just what will be done. Wemust think of it lany changesl inconnection with the Stagg Scholar¬ship Committee.”He added that he personally isnot sure what the significance ofthe vote would be, although he feltthe sentiment expressed was quiteclear.“There is no massive grass rootsopposition to the Stagg program.Only one third felt strongly enoughto vote against it,” said CharlesScholarship poll questionsStudents will be asked to answer yes, -no, or no opinion to the follow¬ing questions in the Sjtagg scholarship referendum:1. The University has received many of its scholarship funds fromdonors with special interests. In order to be eligible for them,students must meet various conditions that are not obviously ordirectly related to academic objections, as well as meeting theusual scholarship standards. Should the University in youropinion continue to accept scholarship funds restricted to suchgroups as:A. graduates of a particular school?B. members of a particular racial or religious minority ?C. descendents of war veterans?D. students participating in certain extracurricular activities?2. The University has a number of endowed scholarships whichcarry a fixed stipend without regard to need. As a matter ofgeneral policy, do you think the University should attempt toavoid gifts with such conditions?3. The Stagg Scholarship Fund has been established for men ofhigh academic promise who are outstanding athletes. A mini¬mum of full tuition is to be given regardless of need; theaward will be greater if need exceeds tuition. Participation ina sport will normally be expected of Stagg Scholars; and thiswill be an important consideration, but not a necessary condi¬tion, for renewal.Do you think the UniversityA. should have accepted this fund?B. should continue to administer it in its present form?C. should alter its provisions in some way?4. Regardless of your answers to the above, please answer thefollowing:A. Do you think it would be better to make need a conditionfor being awarded a Stagg Scholarship?B. The fund is now about sufficient to support three StaggScholars in the College at one time, and a total of eighthas been discussed as the goal. Do you think it would bebetter to drop efforts to increase the number of StaggScholars to eight? •C. Do you think it would be better to award Stagg Scholarshipsonly to students who have been in the College for at leasta year so as to reduce their influence over prospectivestudents?Undergraduates Graduates1. Yes No No Opinion 1. Yes No No OpinionA. 796 272 76 A. 147 34 14B. 756 329 57 B. 132 58 14C. 759 303 95 C. 137 52 16D. 694 395 71 D. 135 49 122 Yes No No Opinion 2, Yes No No Opinion649 467 53 77 104 13*> Yes No No Opinion 3. Yes No No OpinionA. 728 409 33 A. 130 53 6B. 389 692 69 B. 107 74 11C. 714 319 100 C. 75 94 274. Yes No No Opinion' 4. Yes No No OpinionA. 799 263 62 A. 103 76 114B. 467 559 139 B. 55 124 17C. 445 586 143 C, 57 123 15 „ .. . “As to the future, I don’t thinkCouncil at the moment are Mac- j received a crushi,ng defeat. LastEwan, Pam Procuniar, chairmanof the Student Faculty RelationsCommittee; Jay Flocks, chairmanof Elections and Rules Committee;and Steve Boyan, chairman of thecommittee on Recognized StudentOrganizations (CORSO).“I can simply say that withoutthe aid of many of the people re¬ year. when I was running for IRPI only received 160 votes. In thisrecall I received 360 more. I willcontinue to work in the lectureseries the fight to save HutchinsonCommons, and in any way that Ican serve government.”Terri Ray, chairman of the NSAcommittee of SG, and one of thecalled, regardless of whether they ricalled assembly members, statedare reappointed, Student Govern- Iast night that she would continuement cannot continue to function, to work in student Government,said MacEwan. she also stated that POLIT got“The idea that we would appoint a higher percentage of the vote inpeople from other parties who the recall than in the last election,have shown no active interest in when it was elected.Student opinion /Desire needy scholar — athletes government, is absolutely ridicul¬ous.”A1 Levey, floor leader of theIndependent Reform Party (IRP), When asked if she would run forthe assembly again, she said itdepended on the circumstances.Bruce Rappaport, Chairman ofO’Connel, Director of Admissionsand Aid.“I think these are tremendouslyimportant figures. I would judgefrom them that about half of thecollege voted. I don’t know whatthe 800 or 900 others think. Itwould appear that at least a thirdof the college thinks that the termsshould be changed, and about athird are glad that we acceptedthe money.” —“The poll was to give us some¬thing to think about. You can besure that I am not going to fightany plan that would make need acondition for the scholarship.”“Let’s wait and see what theStagg scholars look like, and findout if we should concern ourselveswith need.” O’Connel added thathe ‘‘would suspect that when thescholarship is actually awarded, itwould be to someone whose needwould be within a couple of hun¬dred dollars of the $1,485 full tui¬tion figure.According to O’Connel, the MA¬ROON has been saying that thereis a strong grass roots oppositionto the Stagg Scholarships. “I hada strong feeling that when thiselection was over that the StaggScholarship would be opposed 5-1.The vote doesn't show that.”Towards the end of Autumnquarter, the University announceda dinner to explain new scholarshipawards “to two scholar athletes.”The awards were originally an¬nounced last spring.Student Government announcedthat it would picket the dinnergiven for high school principalsand coaches, at which the applica¬tion procedures were formally an¬nounced.The SG demonstration was calledoff when Dean of Students WarnerWick, Student Government Presi¬dent Arthur MacEwan and SGVice-President Michael W o 11 a nagreed to submit the concept of ascholarship for “scholar-athlete” toa campus-wide referendum.At the time, Wick stated thatUniversity policy “could be signi¬ficantly influenced by an obviouslystrong opposition to the scholar¬ships.”The questions agreed upon bySG representatives and Wick askedfor opinions on University policyon provisions of the Stagg scholar¬ships and on other restrictedscholarship funds.The Stagg Scholarships weremade possible by funds fromalumni who wanted to honor AmosAlonzo Stagg, longtime UC footballcoach. The scholarships provide aminimum of full tuition for“scholar-athletes.” The scholar¬ships will provide more than fulltuition if the applicant needs it.Tlje scholarships will be given toentering students. agreed with MacEwan that the ap- the Community Relations Commit-pointment of people who have tee, and majority leader of Studentshown no active interest in govern- Government, said last night thatment would not be realistic. he would continue to work on gov-The University Party executive ernment projects. He also statedcommittee adopted the followingstatement following the recall.“The results of the referendum that he would run again in thespring.“I am pleased with the largeand recall show that UP is sub- number of people who had the in-stantially in tune with studentopinion. POLIT has been repudi¬ated.“Of all campus parties, only UPrecommended the recall of thePOLIT people, and only UP took tegrity to appose this misuse ofthe recall, even if it wasn’t a ma¬jority,’’ he said.Levy said, “We consider it inpoor taste to recall people, espec¬ially if they don’t deserve it. Ex-a firm stand on the Stagg Scholar- cept for certain personal animosityship issue, a stand which hasproven itself substantially repre¬sentative of student opinion.“University Party is the onlyopposition party. It has held fre¬quent caucuses, help man com¬mittees, and taken a firm stand onStudent' Government issues. UPwill submit to the SG executivecouncil a list of candidates for op-pointment to the vacancies. TheUniversity Party is able andwilling to assume the task ofleadership in Student Govern¬ment.”Of the 36 members remaining inthe SG Assembly, 16 belong toPOLIT.According to the recalled mem¬bers, most of the SG projects willcontinue to operate. “The Co-opbookstore will continue to functionbut whether it will be run by Gov- against one of the individuals re¬called I do not think that any ofthese people should have been re¬called.“Indeed, this is one of the worstthings that has happened to StudentGovernment in my memory,” headded.UC President Beadle could notbe reached for comment. He de¬livered a lecture last night at theUniversity of Michigan.Neither Alan Simpson nod War¬ner Wick think' that the results ofthe recall show any shift in thenature of student opinion and con¬cern on major issues.“I don’t think that the recall canbe taken as showing any kind of ageneral sentiment about a shift incampus opinion to either the leftor right or any other direction,”ernment or not is still open to ques- commented Warner Wick.lion,” said Len Friedman, a co¬manager of the co-op. “But if you look at it from thepoint of view of responsible govern-Sally Cook, secretary of SG, said ment there are clearly two thingsthat she will not leave any un- that are very important. On onefinished business. She will con- had, you can slap people who youtinue to work on the NSA commit- don’t think have been responsible,tee and would consider running in But then the problem is to getthe spring “if POLIT considers to some people to replace them whomslate me,” she stated. She urged yOU think will be responsible,” hestudents to attend the POLIT sajd.caucus Sunday night. Wick added that he thought theMike Wollan. who served as vice- students should do some thinkingpresident of SG, said he was not about the best method of represen-surprised by the results. “This tation. “I don’t have any specificmeans the POLIT caucus Sunday jdea of what ought to be done, butnight might be quite interesting,” ciearly if the system isn’t working,Wollan commented. “I should think it ought to be fixed.”it would be of inteerst to many Simpson said <‘i think POLITstudents to attend. ran a rjsky courSe. It made a guessRuss Kay wiU m* stop working which turned Qut to ^ wrong. Thewith SG and will also run in the kind q{ apprehension which theyspring if asked to do so.Pam Procuniar, the inly student felt about the Cuba speech was avery intelligible one, but it just sowho was not recalled, stated: “To happened that Kennedy guesseda certain extent the campus wasvery aware that I have been very c^.s>active in Government and non-Government functions. Over all thevote was very close. The reasonI was slightly ahead was thatenough people feel I did a goodjob in a tutoring project and lec¬ture series.“It is fairly apparent that thesame twelve that were recalledcould have won in an election. Idon’t think the campus understoodthe recall. I am rather sad at whatthey did to government. I intendto devote a great deal of time togovernment and to POLIT, ofwhich I have been an officer forthe last two years.”Dick Jacobson the independentrecalled, stated: “I think it is sig¬nificant that I lost by 20 votes right. Nothing succeeds like suc-James D. Neuman, assistantdean of students in charge of stu¬dent activities, stated that “the big(Continued on page 4)Yes NoSalty Cook 555 506Leonard Friedman 579 487Laurie Gettes 559 493Dick Jacobson 534 514Gene Kadish 569 497Kay Russell 569 491Mike Ormond 556 487Pam Procuniar 523 554Peter Rabinowitz 557 503Bruce Rappaport 557 505Terri Ray 578 490Mike Wollan 561 499Robbie Workoff 576 466mm "s ■■ " T- - • ■IKwif^*«pfer•v;%'<tiim of Marshall Korshiakof Marsall KorsakAs an alumna of the LawSchool of the University of Chi¬cago, having served for manyyears on the Board of the 5thWard IVI, having also served asa Board Member of the AmericanCivil Liberties Union Illinois Divi¬sion, I should like to reply to thescurrilous, unsigned and indecentremarks of your recent issue withregard to Mr. Marshall Korshak.The readers of the MAROONmay be too young to recall theMcCarthy era, but let me reportto you that during this episode theforces of intellectual repressionwere powerful in Illinois. Therewas no more stalwart protector ofour liberties in the Illinois Legis¬lature than Mr. Korshak, thenState Senator.In more recent times, the strug¬gle for progress was epitomizedwith the enactment of a Fair Em¬ployment Practices Act. Mr. Kor¬shak led this very difficult strug¬gle.Mr. Korshak was in fact thespokesman in the State Legisla¬ture for liberal legislation. Forthese reasons, he was honored bythe 1VI Best Legislator Award,time after time.As 5th Ward Democratic Com¬mitteeman, he has endorsed Aider- man Despres for re-election, there¬by incurring the wrath of theDawson-Campbell crew who desireto render this Ward and its in¬habitants a political backwash. Thewriter of this letter has an ad¬mitted point of view.—to keep thisWard vibrant and free.(Mrs. Pearl Baer Potter JD ’50In a signed article Wednesday, tbeMaroon quoted ttie statements of amember of the IVI about Marshall Kor-shak’s endorsement of Leon Despresand about Korshak’s relations with tbeChicago Democratic machine.We really tried, but still cannot findany scurrilous or indecent remarks inthe article. Korshak was referred toas “powerful” and “shrewd”; butsurely a UC law alumna would realizethat these are not scurrilous or inde¬cent references to a man who is apolitician. The manner in which theIVI originally opposed, and later hon¬ored and supported Korshak, was alsoexplained.We do not feel we have committedthe journalistic sins that Mrs. Pottersees in our presentation of the back¬ground on the key figures in the localaldermanic campaign. We too appre¬ciate the vibrant and free characterof the 5th ward, including the presenceof men like Marshall Korshak and LeonDespres, and would hope that we arecontributing to rather than detractingfrom it. —EditorLetters policyTh* MAROON will consider forpublication letters of interest to tbeUniversity community.All letters must be signed, butnames will be withheld upon request.We reserve the right to edit allletters, and suggest a maximumlength of 300 words. We do notguarantee tbe publication of all let¬ters received.Deadline for letters is 4 pm.Don't you wish there were on easy way to let your friendsand relatives know what's going on around campus? Afterall, letters are a nuisance. They come so irregularly, too.And they are always too short.GIVE GIFT SUBSCRIPTIONSTO THE MAROON;; Only $1 a quarter — Special: 4 years for $15J» To order, call ext. 3265 or 3266 or write to 1212 E. 59th St. X:: *RANDELL - HARPER SQUAREBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALONS700 HARPER AVENUEMrs. Billie Tregonia, Prop. PA 4 2007DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSES, NEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES** STUDENT DISCOUNTBIGBAGEL with L0X andCREAM CHEESE-COFFEE TOO! j60* jThis Weekend, 7 a.m. - Midnight I§PIERCE I AI Weinstein denouncesdeadbeat S. Eisensteinand thief Al EinsteinMy name is Albert Weinstein.After a lifetime of frustration andinjustice, I wish to state my rightsjust once. It was I who directedBezhin Meadow, the General Line,Ivan IV parts one and two, etc.,etc., not my deadbeat Litvakcousin in law Sergei Eisenstein.He merely got the credit becauseof his cringing before the Bol¬shevik bosses and the Third In¬ternationale, while I, Albert Wein¬stein, labored in musty garret inVplotsk. turning out miles of scriptand cutting versts of film.In my youth, certain mathema¬tical discoveries of mine, left in¬cautiously in written form by mysickbed, were nefariously purloinedby my second nephew once re¬moved (by marriage) Albert Ein¬stein. Rushing to the Universitywhile I still lay in a coma, he sub¬mitted the discoveries in partialfulfillment of the masters degreerequirements—and attained eternalfame. I was so despondant afterthis dastardly act that (after twounsuccessful suicide attempts) Ifled to the USSR to begin lifeanew.Never once have I been reward¬ed, either by Dame Fortune orher Sister Fame. If I had justice,the name ALBERT WEINSTEINwould be as revered in the SovietUnion as it would be in the UnitedStates. I demand that the Maroonprint a full account of this matter.Albert WeinsteinChicago MaroonEditor-in-chief Laura GodofskyBusiness Manager .... Kenneth C. HeylAdvertising Mgr. . . Lawrence D. KaplanSews Editors Andrew SteinRobin KaufmanCity Sews Editor John T. WilliamsAsst. City Sews Editor. . .Gary FeldmanFeature Editor Ross ArdreyCulture Editor Vicky ShiefmanRewrite Editor Sharon GoldmanAsst. Rewrite Editor Bob LeveyPhoto Coordinators Les GourwitzStan KarterSight Editors John SmithMike SilvermanSports Editor Rich EpsteinErratum Editor Sherwin KaplanOffice Manager ........ Anita ManuelBilling Secretary .... Mary GottschalkEditor Emeritus Jay GreenbergStaff: Pete Rabinowitz, Barry BayerM. Stevens, Sue Goldberg, Ron Dorfman,Jane Rosenberg, Lucy Reals, Tom Heagy,Russ Kay, Stephen Sharnoff, Harris Jaffe,Sammy Fuqua, Howard Rosen, MichaelKaufman, Jim Byer, Gail Ruben, JayFlocks, Arthur Kaufman, Sue Guggen¬heim, Kathy Fritz. Nancy Erickson, JoeCalkowski, Jon Roland, Tom Assens, GuyOakes, Martha Grossblatt, Glen Miller,Rich Gottieb, Dan Gross, Murray Batt,Myrna Bell, Paul Greenberg, Mary Car¬penter, Connie Carnes, Paula Houser,David Aiken, Ilene Barmash, Sherry Bas-baskus, Cynthia Spindell, Deidre Holloway.Carol Horning, Art Sondler, Don Baer,Joe Kousser, Jim Means, Irv Levenstein,Paula Fozzy, Barbara Corress, StevenBecker, Stan Karter, John Yaeger, JoeKousser, Steve Sacket, Murray Schacher.Issued free of charge on the Quad¬rangles every Tuesday through Fridayduring the academic year by studentsof the University of Chicago. Addresscorrespondence to: Chicago Maroon,1212 E. 59 Street, Chicago 37, Illinois.Telephones: MI 3-0800. exts. 3265. 3266.Printed at West Side Press, Chicago,Subscription by mail is $4 per year.The Maroon is a charter member ofthe United States Student Press Asso¬ciation, and subscribes to its newsservice, the Collegiate Press Service(CPS).The C1MW is a news alliance, con¬sisting of the Maroon, the MichiganDaily, the Wayne State Collegian, andthe Daily Ulini.TAPE SPECIAL1800’ Mylar 3.49Acetate 600’ 98cAcetate 1200’ 1.79MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259SSA DISCOUSTSi^tn IB AllA New Campus Institution" 9*7*79 *rp tm t?'G..CAL \ /Cub. cowotTtontOCUlUfrSt I. 01SU&5/ 1^6 t. 53 w ST.y II AM TO lO PMMia-34 07A3 ^ WE DtUVEJL HU AC praises NSA(CPS)—The United States National Student Associa¬tion (USNSA), which last year urged the abolition of theHouse Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAQwas praised recently by HUAC.The 1961 14th National Student — • -C o n g r e s s , USNSA’s legislative In the years since tha. time,body, passed, after a heated, tele- USNSA has played a key role invised debate, a resolution calling convincing European nationalfor the abolition of HUAC. That unions of students to work withresolution has been a source of the many new unions of newlyattacks on USNSA by right wing independent, underdeveloped na-organizations and has stirred much tions. The ISC now has more thandebate on American campuses. 70 members.Columbia changesCiv course againNEW YORK, N.Y.—(IP)—The pioneer of all the un¬dergraduate General Educa¬tion courses, ContemporaryCivilization ,has been edited againto fit the needs of today’s fresh¬man. Columbia College’s Class of1966 will be introduced to a newversion of Volume Two of Chap¬ters in Western Civilization, ac¬cording to a recent announcementby John Alexander, acting dean.From its inception, Contem¬porary Civilization has been basedlargely on materials written oredited especially for the course.Its staff has always acted in thebelief that such a carefully con¬structed educational ventureneeded specially designed instru¬ments. in order to function withoptimum effectiveness. Recogniz¬ing the validity of this conception,numerous institutions have availedthemselves of the materials pit-pared ait Columbia, which arecurrently in use at more than 200colleges and universities in thiscountry and abroad.At first, members of the facultywrote books prepared at leastpartly through the stimulation ofthe course’s needs. Subsequentlya noteworthy change was made inthe course content. -The mainreliance was shifted from readingwhat modern historians and philo¬sophers had written about the pastto reading extensive extracts fromhistorical documents and fromthe writings of the great philoso¬phers, theologians, political theo¬rists, and social critics of WesternCivilization.In the present revision of Chap¬ters in Western Civilization, thestaff departed radically from theearlier practice and commissionedchapters specifically written lorthe Contemporary Civilizationcourse by leading scholars in thiscountry and Europe. Commentingon the new volumes, Robert K.Webb, chairman of the Contempo¬rary Civilization Program, said:“These essays are designed notonly to give background for thesource readings, but to indicatethe problems and solutions thatare occupying scholars at work onthe frontiers of knowledge.“Just as the adoption of sourcereadings in 1941 reflected a newconfidence in the intellectual ca¬pacities and self-reliance of collegefreshmen, so the new set of essayspresupposes a still higher degreeof sophistication in today’s fresh¬men.”The Contemporary Civilizationcourse runs for two years. Thefirst year is a historical introduc¬tion to the forms and problemsof Western Civilization; the secondemphasizes contemporary issues.From its inception to the fall of1961, the second-year offering wasa single course required of allstudents.The source readings for thiscourse, dealing with recent poli¬tical, economic and social thought,also appears in revised form thisfall. The experience of the singlecourse proved it inadequate, how-ever, to treat the great complexi¬ties of modern society.Consequently, in the fall of 1961,the program was altered to pro¬vide students with the option oftaking in the second year either(a) the formerly required inter¬departmental course on “Man inContemporary Society”; th) aspecially designed basic course ina particular area of the socialsciences — sociology, economics,philosophy, political science, an¬thropology or history, or (c) acourse in Oriental Civilization.The Student Senate of PhillipsUniversity in Enid, Oklahoma,wrote to HUAC for information onUSNSA, and received the follow¬ing statement:“The United States National Stu¬dent Association is not now, nordoes it appear to be in dangerof becoming communist—or leftist—dominated. On tbe contrary:NSA has spearheaded and led themobilization of the unions of stu¬dents of the free world in com¬batting the propaganda and dis¬tortion of truth fostered by thecommunist International Union ofStudents.”"NSA, more than any otherstudent group, symbolizes theyouth of the free world to thestudents of those critical areaswhere the battle of ideas has notyet be on solved. NSA has demon¬strated that it never fails to de¬feat subversion by sticking faith¬fully to democratic methods andprinciples.”The HUAC statement referredprimarily to the role USNSAplayed in leading national unionsout of the International Union ofStudents (IUS) in the early fiftiesand the position of leadership thatUSNSA has taken in the forma¬tion and continued operation ofthe democratic International Stu¬dent Conference (ISC).USNSA sent observers to theIUS after World War II, USNSAhaving been founded at that timefor the purpose of providing repre¬sentation for American studentsin the fast growing and complexfield in international student rela¬tions. USNSA’s Bill Ellis was atone time the American secretaryof the IUS. He resigned in protestafter the reprisals against Czechstudents during the Communisttake-over in that country, whenthe IUS secretariat refused to con¬demn the repression of the stu¬dents.USNSA then worked to foundthe International Student Confer¬ence to provide a democraticforum for the exchange of studentopinion. USNSA was one of theoriginal members of the ISC,which at that time was composedalmost totally of European andCommonwealth nations.WUS projects setPHILADELPHIA (CPS) — Theinitials IPA are probably onlyknown to a few American students—but in many parts of the world,these three letters are deeplymeaningful.In a country like Basutoland,IPA can mean the construction ofa library building, the completionof student dormitories, healthservices, and a bookstore. InJapan, IPA can mean the provi¬sion of funds to combat tubercu¬losis among students.IPA is the International Programof Action of the World UniversityService, devoted to aiding the stu¬dents of underdeveloped areas. Itis financed largely by the contribu¬tions of students and faculty in theUnited States and Canada.The WUS General Assembly,held last year in Japan, set tar¬gets for more than 200 projectscosting more than $1 million.Algeria will receive funds for thereconstruction of the University ofAlgiers, destroyed by terrorists inthe long war for independence. InChile, plans are underway for con¬struction of a student center atSantiago and for development ofstudent eating facilities at Val¬paraiso. Nicaraguan students willbe assisted in raising funds forstudent dormitories, books and labequipment.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 26, 1963BOOK PAGEof Fools 1962 bestKatherine Anne Porter: SHIP OF FOOLS. Little, Brown and Company, 1962. 497 pp. $6.50.By nominating novels for the title, “Bes t Work of Fiction” to have come out in a singleyear, reviewers usually find themselves in an embarrassing situation. Out of the year’s x .. __ „mediocre offerings, they are forced to pick the least bad of the works and crown it with Debs: Socialist for President. Syra- study of Debs, published as one ofMorgan's study of Debspresents little that is newH. Wayne Morgan, Eugene V. analysis and discussion for histhe laurel. That their choices are the best of what is almost invariaoly a bat lot, I do notbut few of their choicesV doubt,are even memorable novels—as alook at the record will quicklyshow. This year, the reviewer’stask was lightened by the happysituation that, far and away, thebest book of fiction to have comeout in the English language in1%2 was Katherine Anne Porter’slong-awaited first novel, Ship ofFools.The title is a literal translationof the fifteenth century satire andmoral allegory Stultifera Navis, bySebastian Brant. In this work, theprogress of a Ship of Fools sail¬ing to the Land of Fools repre¬sents what Miss Porter calls the"simple, almost universal imageof the ship of the world on itsvoyage to eternity.” Miss Porter’snovel adopts the form that Brantused in at least the first part ofStultifera Navis: rapid shifts inviewpoint in which each passengertakes up the narrative for a space.Thus the forty-odd passengersand officers of the German shipVera, on its twenty-one day cruisein the last days of summer in1931, between Veracruz, Mexico,and Bremerhaven. Germany, takeup in their turns the point of view.Miss Porter retains an objectivity,through all this, by reason ofwhich we seem to be looking withthe characters’ eyes, rather thanmerely over their shoulders.The huge cast of characters (alist has been provided by the au¬thor, to which I had to make fre¬quent reference during the firstpages) includes Herr SiegfriedRieber, a sensualistic and selfishAnti-Semite; Herr Lowenthal, hisJewish roommate, spiteful to allhis shipmates, and to the Chris¬tian world in general; FrauleinLizzi Spockenkieker, a skittish,rambunctious wench, pursued byHerr Rieber; Frauv Rittersdorf; awoman who keeps a notebook inwhich she denigrates the otherpassengers; Herr Wilibald Graf, adying faith healer, and his nephewand nurse Johann, who stays onbecause the old man has left himhis fortune; Herr Wilhelm Frey-tag, who fs snubbed and evictedfrom the captain’s table when it islearned that he has married aJewess.There is William Denny, a coarseand foul-minded Texan; Mrs.Treadwell, a middle-aged divorcee;Jenny Brown (Jenny angel) and David Scott (David darling) whosetiresome ins and outs make up agood deal of the incident. Thereis the Swiss family Lutz, bour¬geois to their boots, and theirdaughter Elsa, who dreams oflove. There is a noisy group ofsix Cuban medical students, anda stranded zarzuela company fromSpain, the four women all beingwhat Miss Porter delicately calls"ladies of trade,” the four menbeing their pimps. Two childrenbelonging to the troupe have beentrained to steal jewelry, and theentire crew of them is not aboveshoplifting and picking pockets.There are also eight hundredseventy-six Spaniards being de¬ported to the Canary Islands inthe steerage, of whom the first-class passengers are faintly con¬temptuous. These provide what hasbeen called a mute chorus to theevents on the Vera.The interactions among the char¬acters, most, but not all of whichcome off as more than simplearchtypes of the Student, or theDrunkard, or the Bourgeois, andso forth, provide the action, butthere is no plot as such. And thisis as it should be, for Miss Porter’sintention seems to have been aportrait gallery of the world, ratherthan a straight account of lifeaboard an ocean-going vessel.More over, the particular method of telling the story, with its fre¬quent shifts in viewpoint, is com¬plemented by just such a frag¬mented story line.Miss Porter’s style is lucid with¬out being blunt, and ornamentedwithout being garish.The author, in her oblique al¬legory, presents a pessimistic viewof man, most pessimistic indeed.Her message, like SebastianBrant’s, is that all men are fools:fools and egoists and blackguards.The only altruistic action in thenovel, when a Basque from thesteerage rescues a dog belongingto some first-class passengers afterthe dog had been mischievouslythrown overboard—and drowns forhis trouble—this absurdly heroicdeed is quickly forgotten even bythe owners of the dog, and theBasque’s sea burial is used as anexcuse for a brawl over politics.The very opening pages fore¬shadow the allegory of the boat¬load of fools en route to eternity,partly by showing that, to the Vera-cruzanos, the embarking passen¬gers are not people, but a nameless—and hence generalized—bunch ofidiots to be swindled. This confirmsthe analogy between the Vera andthe world: that the generalizedgroup of voyagers are ourselves,that tiie Ship of Fools and knavesis our ship, with room, in steer¬age or upper decks, for us all. -Dove Richter cuse, N. Y.: Syracuse LTniversityPress, 1962. 257pp. Notes. Index.Despite the decline of thesocialist movement as an or¬ganized political force in thiscountry, recent years havewitnessed a resurgence of interestin the history and philosophy ofthat movement, and in the per¬sonality of its most prominentspokesman, Eugene V. Debs. Oneneed only recall the massive work,Socialism and American Life, ofthe Princeton University groupheaded by Egbert and Persons, andparticularly the incisive essay byDaniel Bell on "The Backgroundand Development of MarxianSocialism in the United States”;the able volume by Howard Quint,The Forging of American So¬cialism; the two volumes on So¬cialist Party history, one by IraKipnis covering the period from1897 to 1912, and the more objec¬tive one by David A. Shannon, sur¬veying the party’s entire career;and the excellent biography ofDebs by Ray Ginger, The BendingCross, following the earlier bio¬graphy written by McAllister Cole¬man.Given this wealth of materialmade available in the past decadeand a half, the author of thisvolume, a historian on the facultyof the University of Texas, musthave been hard-pressed to find newmaterial or new focal points ofSalinger criticism stresses dramaThe Fiction of J. D. Salinger,by Fredrick L. Gwynn & JosephL. Blotner, Univ. of PittsburghPress, $1.50.This criticism’s main value isthat it gives a good interpretationof the Nine Stories, emphasizing inparticular the dramatic quality inFor Esme—with Love and Squalor.Here, and with other stories, theauthors point out the symbols in aconflict fundamental in Salinger’swork. But they approach most oftheir other criticisms in terms ofdramatic quality alone, at the ex¬pense of neglecting other qualities.The plot in "Esme” is, out of thenine stories, one of the moredramatic, as far as plots them¬selves go; but the important pointabout Salinger’s juxtaposition of"love” and "squalor” situations ishis ability to handle them inseveral forms. The authors couldhave observed this in De Daumier—Smith’s Blue Period, which re¬cords the narrator’s experience atBreathing spaceReturn to Solace(A quiet evening visit to Frank L. IT right’s Robey House)Sit beside the Robey-Wright,And ponder deep and lonely thoughts,While restful shadows in silence stillDo wonders for the Soul.Sit beneath her heavy eaves,And weigh the grief our torn world showsIn frivolous form and gaudy clothes,And feel the restful Peace found here.Sit within her shell'ring arms,And touch the heart of genius here,Within this soulful memory-stone,That proved all greatness, truth and form,Rut shed a tear for blindness passing.Sit and think on Robey-Wright,Rut waste no hours as critic here,For she rests alone and desolate now,With gaping lips and gazing eyes, ^A noble sphinx aicaiting the return ofThe Golden Age and Eternal Man.Phillip E. Saunders an art school in Canada. Here therole of the characters in the con¬flict is well described, but the pre¬occupation is with regarding thestory as a treatment of “the classicOedipal situation.” The troublewith categorizing literature, ofcourse, is the danger of becomingobsessed with the category, andthe extensive hunting for Freudianreferences in this case helps littlein understanding the story.In “Raise High the Roofbeam”,the account of Seymour’s weddingday, the same juxtaposition of"love” and "squalor” appears,here in the form of human judg¬ment; primarily, in the gradualrealization that, while the bride’smother is busy "plotting forMuriel’s health and prosperity” bytrying to get Seymour to “relate”to people more, it is Seymour’s lovefor Muriel that is singly detachedand unquestionable. In this criti¬cism, though, the focus is on Sey¬mour’s assumed "neuroticism”, anassumption borrowed from thestory featuring his suicide.Throughout this book, superfluous had to speak at the anniversary ofthe event, he should simply havecome forward and shaken his fistat the audience and walked off.”Kevin MahoneyCalendar of Events |Saturday, January 26the Pit, IdaBond Chapel,inSymposium: HopeNoyes Hall, 9 am.Lutheran, Eucharist,11:30 am.Varsity Fencing Meet, Chicago vs.Indiana Tech, Bartlett Gymnasium,1:30 pm.Varsity Swimming Meet, Chicago vs.Wisconsin State College, BartlettGymnasium, 1:30 pm.Varsity Track Meet, Chicago vs. North¬western University, Fieldhouse, 2 pm.Varsity Wrestling Meet, Chicago vs.Milikin University, Bartlett Gymnasi¬um, 3:30 pm.Basketball Games, Chicago “B” teamvs. Joliet Junior College: ChicagoVarsity vs. Wayne State University,Fieldhouse, 6 and 8 pm.Collegium Musicum, Madrigal Singers,Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm.Sunday, January 27Roman Catholic, Mass. 8:30, 10, 11 and12 am. Cavert House.Radio Series: Faith of Our Fathers,WGN, 8:30 am.Lutheran, Communion Service, Grahampoints are taken up, and the main Rafji‘0 series: From the Midway,points of the material bypassed. wfmf, h am.University Religious Service. Rockefel¬ler Memorial Chapel. 11 am.Carillon -Recital, Mr. Robins, Rockefel¬ler Chapel 4 pm.Seminar: Church-State Issues, BaptistGraduate Student Center, 5:30 pm.United Vesper Service, Graham TaylorChapel, 6:30 pm.Lecture: “Man as a Social Being,”Brent House, 7 pm.Seminar: Historical Determinism andChristian Hope, Chapel House, 7:15pm.Folk Dancing, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.Polit: Open Caucus, Ida Noyes Hall,7:30 pm.Third Annual Open Team of FourBridge Club Championship, Ida NoyesHall, 7:15 pm.Monday, January 28Lecture: History and Eternal Destiny,Paul Tillich, Law School Auditorium,11:30 am.Poetry of Bialik and Tehernichovsky,_ Hillel Foundation, 4:30 pm.more current work, in Salinger’s Particle: Staff meeting, Ida Noyes Hall,early stand against sentimentality, lecture5: “Phytochrome — the Pigmentas well as the idea that wars are Controlling Photoresponsive Develop-.. .. f ment and Biosynthesis in Higheriought for a high moral puipo..e. Plants.” H. W. Siegelman, BotanyBabe Gladwaller states that "It’s 106, 4:30 pm.in ,7Q;n” Motion Picture: “Lust for Life,” In¬time we let the dead die in \ ain , ternational House, 7 and 9 pm.a conviction given recent variation Gleeful Club, Ida Noyes Theatre, 7 pm.u„ dovmrwnr fllnoc- “T said that Lecture-Discussion, “The Tradition ofby Seymour UlasS. i said mat Political philosophy,” Leo Strauss,Unimportant details are noted,such as the identity of a movieHolden Caulfield goes to, while im¬portant details are neglected—forexample, Salinger’s ear for im¬promptu coinages (“cocktaily”,"test tubey”, “syntaxy”, "hairshirty”, "perspiry”), or for chil¬dren’s speech ("This is a yellow”;"The one where the Indians”;"With string you hold”.) All thesedetails help to convey dramaticaction, the standard generally em¬ployed by the authors of the criti¬cism here.The authors provide summariesof all the early stories, and couldhave brought out resemblances to51,112 menGettysburg, were casualties atand that if someone Hillel Foundation, 8 pm.Coffee Plus: String Quartet, H. ColinSlim, Shorey House, 9 pm. the "Men and Movements” seriesissued by the Syracuse UniversityPress. Whether for this reason ornot, he has chosen to organize hisvolume primarily by presidentialcampaigns. He tells in detail thestory of each of the five campaignsin which Debs was socialist candi¬date for President, adding consider¬able material on factional andother developments in the socialistmovement. He collected his in¬formation careluliy and diligently,utilizing the socialist and non-so¬cialist press of the period, such rec¬ords of the party as have survived,and the collections of papers ofleading figures of the period, inand out of the socialist movement,that are available and that throwlight on Debs’ role or personality.The story that emerges is that ofan idealist and an evangelist, aunion leader turned to politicalaction to protest against injusticeand to offer a democratic socialistsolution for the evils of low wages,trusts, depressions, and war. Tiiemovement that Debs symbolized,yet failed to lead in either an in¬tellectual or administrative sense,was torn throughout its most im¬portant years by faotional conflictbetween a left w ing that leaned tosyndicalism and advocacy of vio¬lence and a right wing concernedwith social reform measures andelectoral success. Debs leaned farmore to the left than to the right,agreeing with the left in its mil¬itancy, its revolutionary zeal fora socialist common wealth, and itsadvocacy of industrial unionism;yet he never lost faith in the edu¬cability of people, in the essentialgoodness of human nature, or inthe democratic process. The denialof human rights and the use ofterror as an instrument of a rulein Russia, following the seizure ofpower by the Bolsheviks, foundDebs as opposed as he was to in¬justice here, despite his initialsympathy for the Bolshevik revolu¬tion.Had political, economic, and so¬cial conditions in this country ledto the formation, as in so manyEuropean countries, of a masspolitical party based on the labormovement and committed to asocialist idealogy, Debs, with hiseloquence, his humanitarianism,his courage, and his popular ap¬peal, might well have been a majorfigure in our history. As Morganpoints out, the vitality of Americancapitalism and the middle-classpsychology of American workerswere among the basic causes thatprevented the triumph of socialismhere, though the movement wassuccessful enough to force the olderparties to sponsor reforms thatsocialists advocated and helpedpopularize.Those who have as yet read littlein the literature of American so¬cialism will find Morgan’s book agood irttroduction. It cannot com¬pare, however, with the bettervolumes that have already beenpublished. Ginger’s biography ofDebs is far superior, as Shannon’shistory of the party is more inclu¬sive. The w:ork of Quint, togetherwith the earlier history of thesocialist movement by Morris Hill-quit, provide good reviews of theformative years of the movement.Easily the best work, emphasizingideological as well as organiza¬tional developments, and coveringthe movement’s history from theprecursors of the Socialist LaborParty to the days of communistfront organizations and splintergroups, is the essay by Bell. Tothis array of works Morgan hasmade only a modest contribution,useful as an introduction to thefield but adding relatively little toour knowledge of this importantmovement of political protest.Joel SeidmanProfessor of IndustrialRelationsJan. 26, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3fflmms ■&s-7Z3e&ssis%m■mfiI .11 SSA symposium todayProblems of mental healthand programs to deal withthem will be the subjects ofan all-day symposium spon¬sored by graduate students at theSchool of Social Service Admini¬stration today.The symposium, to which thepublic is invited, will be held atIda Noyes from 9 am to 4:30 pm.Speakers will outlin. some of themajor problems and inadequaciesin our existing mental health pro¬grams and present possible solu- Colleges must defendacademic freedomMONMOUTH, Ill.—(IP)— “Academic freedom hasthe same function in collegesand universities as civiltive Director, Mental Health So- the efforts of the personnel to pro-ciety of Greater Chicago; Dr. vide the best service possible toRalph H. Archer, Director, Psychi- the patients despite over-crowdedatric Hospital Services of Wiscon- conditions and the insufficientsin; and Glenn Allison, Assistant number of psychiatrists and other fights has in the community atDirector, Psychiatric Social Serv- workers. They also learned of com- large,” Guerdon D. Nichols, deances of Illinois. munity reluctance to co-operate of the College of Arts and SciencesAlvin E. Green, student chair- with the hospitals, which severely at the University of Arkansas, toldman of the symposium committee, impeded the patients’ opportunity a recent Monmouth College facultyto return to normal life. conference.“In short,” said Green, “they The winner of the 1960 Meikle-learned that these inadequacies john award for promotion of aca-prolonged . . . mental illness.” demic freedom from the American Association of University Profes¬sors, Nichols declared that ‘‘thecornerstone of a free democracyis not majority rule, but minorityrights.” He urged that faculty-members insure academic freedomfor the student: “freedom to ex¬press and defend his views withoutscholastic penalty.”said that interest in mental healthfacilities was stirred when stu¬dents recently visited mental insti¬tutions. They were impressed byCourt considers Yellin case^*°ns‘ WASHINGTON (CPS)—The U.S. declined to answer questions putThe program will feature Leon- Supreme Court has currently under to him by the House Commitbeeard Borman, chief of the Applied consideration m amicus curiae on Un-American Activities, ongrounds that hxs rights under theAnthropology Service, Downey Vet- brte the American Civil Amendment were beingerans Hospital; Mrs. L. T. Stein- ttle/eversal vMaled.of the 1960 contempt of Congress The ACLU asked the court tobrecher, Executive Secretary of conviction of Edward Yellin, grad- reverse its famous position ofthe Board of Mental Health Com- ua*e University of Colorado “balancing the competing privateand Illinois Graduate student.missioners; Clyde Murray, Execu- Yellin was convicted after heAdministrators dislikeloco parentis'in and public interests at stake” incases involving the First Amend¬ment. At the same time, the highcourt was asked to establish a newrule of “cogency” in determiningwhether Congressional investigat¬ing committees can require wit¬nesses to disclose information con¬cerning their political affiliations.The ‘balance’ doctrine assertsALBUQUERQUE. N.M.— Smith pointed out that there are(LP.) The doctrine of pa- problems inherent in moving away that an individual’s rights underternalism is one which col- ^rom the paternalistic university, the First Amendment not to ans-leev and univorsitv admin! Among these: “The problem is wer questions about his personalstrators seldom'adopt co^ciousl v" ^ ™ °f fitment from the political associations must beThey more often find it thrust Journalistic climate ot the home weighed against the interests ofupon them, according to University aofi..th* sfCODdfpy scho^ Lto the the national security. The ACLUof New Mexico Dean of Students relatively free climate of the uni- asks the court to reverse thatSherman E. Smith. versity. Occasionally, a few stu- doctrine, on the grounds that poli-dents confuse liberty with license tical freedom and freedom ofAs well, I think, for good and respect for their autonomy thought must be protected againstreasons of educational theory, and with administrative indifference all government agents, includingon the score of convenience, ad- to their behavior.” the Congress. Asking for theminis trators would like to move m 11 I * I * IRecall history explained(Continued from page 1) same time asking for a referen-question now is how the vacancies dum on the Cuba issue. This peti-will be filled. It is very important ti°n, with more than 1M0 signa-that Government should continue to tures, was presented to the SGfunction until the Spring election,”he added.away from ‘in loco parentis’ asrapidly as they can.”Administrators like to movetoward greater student autonomy,“because abandonment of the par¬ental position is theoretically soundon grounds that students must betreated as responsible adults ifthey are to become responsibleadults,” said Smith.“On practical grounds, greater Neuman also said that he wasdisappointed that so few people.took advantage of their franchise, crisis was held shortly thereafter.Art MacEwan, president of SG, In the poll, nearly four-fifths of thestudent self-regulation means ad- stated that the response to question students voting endorsed the block-ministration becomes simpler and 4 a definitely indicates that stu- ade of Cuba.more effective as students assume dents want to change the Stagg Gn November 20, a petition wasresponsibility for their own Scholarship to one involving need.affairs.”NSM plansSummer tutoringThe Northern Student Movement,New England civil rights coordinat- “If the University wants to takestudent opinion into account a needclause should be inserted immedi¬ately.”However, MacEwan continued,“the University is only obligated toreview and reconsider the needing group, has announced plans to Provision. Dean Wick never prom¬ised anything more than to take theresults of the referendum into ac-seek foundation grants for sum¬mer tutorial projects in at least15 cities this year, the NSM news1 0% i reported.8 NSM plans to place three or fourcollege students living in the se¬lected areas in volunteer tutorialwork. NSM works primarily withunderprivileged high school stu¬dents in blighted urban areas. count.”The resolution passed by stu- ,. ,, ,dent government on October 25. y°,ed, f hold the recall andUnder consideration for projectsare Buffalo, Syracuse, Albany,Newark, Trenton. Bridgeport, Bal¬timore, Washington. Wilmington,Pittsburgh, Cleveland. Cincinnatti,and Detroit, as well as cities cur- “deplored” the naval blockadeimposed by President Kennedy onCuba when it was announced thatRussia was sending missiles toCuba.It also condemned Russia’s es¬tablishment of missile bases inCuba, and urged acceptance ofU Thant’s offer of United Nationsmediation.Two days before the assembly ernment will not take stands onacted on the resolution, the Stu- future issues of such a controver-rentlv with projects, such as Bos- dent Government executive com- sial-political nature as the Cuban- _ t. 1 L i. _ 1 _ AntaKak 1 (ltJO lltllACr mV ■ cton. Hartford, New York, and Phi¬ladelphia.A volunteer from the NSM iscurrently at UC working with theSG tutoring project.Int. house ball tonight ion on the campus, and expressing problems of segregation, of viola-international house will hold its support for President Keneddy on tions of academic freedom and ofthe blockade issue. oppression of the rights of studentsA petition was circulated at the abroad ...”“Crystal Ball” tonight from 9 to12 pm.The Phil Walsh Orchestra willprovide the music for the semi-formal dance. Admission is $1 perperson. Refreshments will be pro¬vided.International house is located at1414 East 59. I SHARE-A-RIDE CENTRALM I TZIE • SFLOWER SHOPS1225 E. 63rd SLHY 3-53531340 E. 55th St.Ml 3-4020 Offers A Unique New Service To Our Mobile Society/Now You Can Find Share Expense Rides orRiders to Any City Nationwide.Subscribe NOW! For Your Trip Home For Spring Interim.For Complete InformationTELEPHONE FI 6-7263CHICAGO MAROON Jan. 26. 1963 “cogent” ruling, thie ACLU main¬tains that in Yellim’s case, theCongressional committee had noth¬ing to learn from the student, andthe hearings served no purposeother than public relations.At the time of the hearing, Yellinwas a senior in engineering at theUniversity of Colorado. He laterreceived a fellowsliip grant to theUniversity of Illinois. In March,1961, he received a loan-grant fromthe Ford Foundation and a grantfrom the National Science Founda¬tion. Alter speeches in Congress bymembers of the Committee on Un-American Affairs, the NSF grantwas revoked.EVERYONEREADSCLASSIFIEDSBUY ONE!CALL Ext. 3265 Nichols said the nation’s collegesand universities “not yet free fromthe ill effects of the McCarthyera,” when they “were chargedwith being hotbeds of commun¬ism.” Many more teachers wereintimidated by the “psychotic syn¬drome” of McCarthyism, he said,than were arraigned for question¬ing. Because colleges, in theirquest for truth, must necessarilyfoster free exchange:, of cont.ro-$versial views, “they should beprepared for criticism from theiralumni and the community.”Nichols led the group of Uni¬versity of Arkansas faculty-mem¬bers which instituted a legal battleover the state legislature’s Act 10,which required all state-employedteachers to list all political, social,religious and professional societiesto which they had belonged orcontributed for the past five years.The three-year court struggleagainst the act was eventuallysuccessful when the U.S. Supreme^Court, by a 5 to 4 decision, de-**dared the act unconstitutionalbecause it was too broad in scope.To aid in the fight for academicfreedom, Nichols urged that thepublic be educated to the truemeaning o4 a college or univer¬sity, that faculty-members workmore closely with the governingbody of their institution and thata strong organization be set upto defend academic freedom.assembly at the start of the meet¬ing during which the Cuba resolu¬tion was passed.The referendum on the Cubasubmitted to Student Governmentasking that the 13 SG representa¬tives from the College who hadvoted for the Cuba resolution berecalled. The petition called theSG act “irresponsible” and statedthat the representatives voted forthe resolution “despite their knowl¬edge of a substantial opposition inthe student body to the views ex¬pressed in the first telegram.”The student government assem- Open Only To Students OfUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOViceroyBasketball Contest * 2(Closes Jan. 30th)set the date as the start of theWinter quarter. It would be hardto hold the recall vote during theAutumn quarter because it was toonear exams to be able to set thingsup, said SG representatives at thetime.Early this quarter, POUTadopted a statement that “APOIJT majority in student gev-mittee had sent • a telegram to crisis of October 1962, unless it isPresident. Kennedy urging him to possible beforehand to ascertainhalt the blockade. After the tele- what student opinion on the issuegram was sent, two student groups is.”circulated petitions stating that the The statement continued thatExecutive committee’s telegram POLIT will still “run on platformswas not indicative of student opin- which commit itself to action on First Prize...*1009°Second Prize.. .*2599Ten 3rd Prizes...*1099 w12 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:Ida Noyes DeskUniversity BookstoreReynold’s Club Barber ShopInternational House Gift ShoppeENTER NOWAND WIN!Not too Strong... Not too Light.... _ Alsoavailablegot the Taste / '"smT-Top'that’s right! \^*T’** M CaseO '963. BROWN & WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CORP.- Viceroy's YicBgot the Taste / n..J.IJ. 4