Fourth ward candidateBlack discusses his campaign Int. House $1 meal stopped;New Dorm starts buffetAldermanic candidate Tim-uel D. Black will speak inSocSci 202 tonight on the is¬sues in this campaign. Blackis challenging incumbent ClaudeHolman in the 4th Ward, just northof the 5th Ward in which the Uni¬versity is located.The meeting is sponsored by theUniversity of Chicago IndependentVoters of Illinois (IVI) and will beheld at 7:15 in Ida Noyes.Black is being supported by the1th Ward Independent Democratsfor Tim Black and has been en¬dorsed by the I.V.I. The 4th Wardorganization is co-chaired by OscarBrown, Jr. and George H. Watson.The main planks of Black’s plat¬form arc better housing, open oc¬cupancy, better schools with inte¬gration. equal job opportunities forall. belter public aid. and reformsin city government. Black stated,“l want to represent the people ofthe 4th Ward, to answer their ques¬tions and solve their problems.Some aldermen belong to the boss¬es—not the people of the Ward.”Black is chairman of the 4thWard IVI. Vice President of theDuSable High School Alumni Coun¬cil. and an active participant inCORE, the Urban League. NAACP,the Citizens Housing Committee,Chicago Teachers’ Union, Teachersfor Integrated Schools. He is alsoPresident of the Illinois NALC.NALC is a national organization ofUC President George WellsBeadle will participate in a dis¬cussion of “Science in the Amer¬ican Democracy” on a CBS Tele¬vision program Sunday.The program is the second showin a series of five discussions en¬titled “The Great Challenge,”moderated By Eric Savereid of theCBS news bureau. The discussionwill be televised at 3 pm. on chan¬nel tW'O. Negro trade unionists headed byA. Philip Randolph. It works with¬in other trade unions for equal jobopportunity for Negroes and an endto discrimination in the trade unionmovement.Born in Alabama, Black receivedhis BA from Roosevelt Universityand his MA from UC. He is mar¬ried and has two children.Black has long been active in thefight for civil rights. In 1960 heled the march on the RepublicanConvention calling for a strong civilrights plank in their platform. In1961 he led the wade-ins at Rain¬bow Beach at 76th street which re¬sulted in integration there lastsummer.Black is a member of the Citi¬zens Housing Committee and anavid proponent of open occupancyin Chicago.As a high school teacher Blackreceived an award by an indepen¬dent citizens committee as one ofthe twelve “most dedicated teach¬ers” in Chicago. He has testifiedbefore the Board of Education onthe need for better vocational andskilled-trade training for Negrostudents. He has also protestedovercrowding, inadequate schoolfacilities and the lack of integra¬tion in Chicago schools.Black has two opponents in thealdermanic campaign. IncumbentClaude Holman, a regular demo¬crat, is opposing Black. The othercandidate, Armstrong, is an inde-Also participating in this Sun¬day's discussion will be JeromeWeisner, science adviser to Pre¬sident Kennedy; Detlev Bronk, ofthe Rockefeller Institute; andGerard Piel, publisher of the Sci¬entific American.The next two discussions in theseries will be “Government andthe Economy in the AmericanDemocracy” on February 17 and“The Arts in the American Demo¬cracy ” on February 24. pendent running on a civil rightsplatform without any organizationalaffiliation. This is his third orfourth campaign.The real election will occur dur¬ing the primaries to be held onFebruary 26. If one of the candi¬dates gets a majority then, heneed not run again in the regularelection.Black’s campaign headquartersare located at 827 (Cottage Grove)E. 47th Street, phone OA 4-0159.Black welcomes student workersfor office work, precinct work andmany other jobs.There will be a meeting to¬morrow night, at 7:30 p.m. inIda Noyes Hall, of a new lib¬eral party on campus, tempo¬rarily entitled the Liberal Party.Platforms of the party will be dis¬cussed at the meeting, and in¬terested persons will be instructedon how they can help build theparty.Robert Axelrod and Michael Fur-stenberg, co-founders of the party,explained in an interview yesterdaythat the party was not created inan attempt to strike a compromisebetween POLIT and UniversityParty.Their aim is, rather, to provide Tonight’s experimental “all youcan eat for a dollar” dinner whichwas offered for two consecutiveWednesday Nights at the Interna¬tional House has been cancelled.Jack Kerridge, director of theInternational House was unavail¬able for comment. Mr. Pee, mana¬ger of the International House cafe¬teria, refused to explain the cancel¬lation over the telephone.According to the cafeteria cash¬ier, last week’s dinner, for whichthere were waiting lines of over 40people at all times, attracted morea liberal party for the universitycommunity which would really rep¬resent the student body, they said.POUT had failed to both consultand represent the university, theyadded.“We feel that there has beenlittle rapport between the StudentGovernment under POLIT and thestudent body,” stated Furstenberg.Axelrod described the LiberalParty’s proposed method for bring-party would make use of what becalled “residence representation.’*The idea would be that a certainnumber of representatives, repre¬ than 400 customers. She estimatedthat about 300 people normally eatdinner at Int House.The New Dorm Cafeteria openeda buffet lunch counter Mondaywhere for $1.15 students or facultycan eat as much as they please.The short order service and thefeatured lunch program will alsobe continued.Miss Davis, food superviser forResidence Halls and Commons,said that the new buffet counterwas both to RH&C’s advantage andto the students’.senting specific dormitories, wouldbe elected to the 19 seats in the SG.The number would vary with thenumber of students in each dormi¬tory. In addition, there would berepresentatives for students livingoff campus.Both Axelrod and Furstenbergagreed that the student body at UCis genuinely liberal. However, theyadded that a liberal group shouldnot be obliged to fight the studentmuch more than POLIT has, es¬pecially concerning their Cubanresolution.Beadle on TV Sunday Vol. 71—No. 63 University of Chicago. Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1963 31Will discuss plans tomorrowNew liberal party formsing Student Government back tothe students. He stated that the ^y- and that they would involvethe student body in campus issuesNew college embodies Goodman s ideasby Vicky Shiefman“The more one examines thecolleges from the president him¬self down through the deans andadmissions officers-4he clearer itmust become that modern admi¬nistration is the peculiar collegedisease;- and it is spreading,”writes Paul Goodman in the Nov¬ember issue of Harper’s maga¬zine.The article contains the samethe thesis Goodman employs inhis new book Community of Schol¬ars. Goodman claims that the ad¬ministration disease incapacitatesboth the faculty and the student.He envisions the ideal univer¬sity as a peculiar place which Isa “small, face-to-face communityof scholars.”In the medieval community,Teaching and Learning w-as a per¬sonal relation necessary for boththe teacher and the student.”Most important in this medievalconcept, the teacher was also aHess, Fiske getpsychology postsEckhard H. Hess, professorof psychology, has been ap¬pointed chairman of the de¬partment of psychology, andDonald W. Fiske, professor of psy¬chology, has been .made associatechairman.Hess is director of the AnimalBehavior Lab, and is am authorityin animal psychology. He was bornin Germany in 1916, but is now aUS citizen. He received his PhDfrom Johns Hopkins University in1948, and became a psychology in¬structor at UC the same year. Hewas appointed professor in 1959.Fiske, the new associate chair¬man, is an authority on the meas¬urement of personality. He came toUC the same year as Hess, 1948,after receiving his PhD from theUniversity of Michigan. He becamea professor in 1961. veteran in his field. The law pro¬fessor alternated between practic¬ing law and teaching so that hebrought a vitality to the classroomand acquired a combined sense ofthe practical and the theoretical.At present, the only way to es¬tablish such an university wouldbe for professors and students tosecede from their schools andset up their own association,Goodman decides. This associationwould in turn be attached to adegree granting institution. Good¬man estimates the tuition for sucha school to be $693.Goodman feels that this seces¬sion would counteract the fact that“Many of our most sensitive young¬sters simply throw up their hands.They turn their back on the wholeprocess . . . increasingly, the ablestudents are among those wholeave before graduation,” whichProfessor Oscar Handlin of Har¬vard described in Harper’s lastMay.Goodman suggested the sameideas at UC last spring w'hen hespoke during the Aims of Educa¬tion week sponsored by o-Board.A group of informed professorsand students are trying to putGoodmans’ ideas into practice.This fall, New Experimental Col¬lege in Denmark, Copenhagen,where a student may enroll forone to three semesters work whichhe may incorporate into his owngraduate or undergraduate pro¬gram.Student body and faculty willbe drawn from all over the world.UC students Ruth Bilger and TomBailey are now participating in theprogram. The student-faculty ra¬tio was one-to-one last semester.The College is governed by ajoint student-faculty board in co¬operation with international ad¬visory council. The English lan¬ guage is used in instruction andcolloquia.At present, three core eotirsesand a variety of additional regu¬lar courses are offered. A course increativity is given by Mogens Vin¬cent*, manufacturer and prolificinventor. In applied liberal arts,Aage Rosendal Nielsen seeks toorganize and unite the theory andpractice of economics, poetry, andeducation. Walace MacDonalcd’scourses in a new world renaissanceis designed to promote the stu¬dent’s awareness of a modern-dayrenaissance as a potential force.Classes are also held in theareas of abnormal psychology, rel¬ativity, literature, Danish, Russian,and film-making. Guest lecturersin cybernetics, geography, and dia¬lectical materialism are also sche¬duled.The New Experimental collegebelieves that the “compartmentali-zation of our knowledge has forcedus towards a fragmentation of thehuman personality with a concur¬rent loss of individual vitality, cre¬ativity and meaning,” thus the“Alienation of man from natureand from himself” becomes “Acultural and academic threat.”The College will experiment withall aspects of higher education in¬cluding entrance requirements. ItsHarmon speakson TWO godsRichard Harmon, a s>taff mem¬ber of The Woodlawn Organization(TWO) and alumnus of the DivinitySchool, will speak at a luncheonsponsored by the Divinity Schooltoday in Swift Commons at 12:30.Harmon will discuss the goals ofTWO and some of its theologicalimplications.Today's luncheon-discussion isone of a series sponsored by theDivinity School dealing with thecommunity. This series is concern¬ed with the sociological and the¬ological definitions of community. information leaflet explains,“Countless .significant .contribu¬tions to world civilization havebeen made by men and women whowere unwilling or unable to yieldto the social and academic statusquo.Thus, the leaders of the newcollege will explore the potentialof the genuine original or the un¬successful individual, offering himthe opportunity for realizations.”The school is located in Copen¬hagen a cosmopolitan center whichwill provide additional resourcesfor academic and social life. Ar¬rangements will be made for stu¬dents w’ho wish to learn a Scandi¬navian language.The fees including room, board,and tuition are $735 a semester.Scholarships are offered whennecessary.Interested persons may obtainmore information from the NewExperimental College, Office ofAdmissions, Slotsherrensvej, Co¬penhagen.Yearbook pictures notrequired for graduationGraduating students arenot required to have their pic¬tures taken for the yearbook.Cap and Gown, as was statedin a letter to graduating students.In a letter sent out by Bloomphotographers, the students weretold they were required to be pres¬ent to have their pictures taken forthe graduating section of the year¬book. According to Eve Bell, editorof tlie yearbook, the letter was sentout by the photographer withouthaving been seen or approved bymembers of the Cap and Gownstaff.Graduating students are all re¬quested to have their picturestaken, but it is certainly not a re¬quirement for graduation, statedMiss Bell. The Liberal Party would also nothesitate to run candidates in thenext election, nor would it fail toprotest against any administrationaction which they feel would beunjustified or unfair.In the immediate future, the par¬ty would like to support Leon De-spres in his campaign for re-elec¬tion to the aldermanic seat in thefifth ward, and would actively sup¬port The Woodlawn Organization(TWO) and its programs.Both Axelrod and Furstenbergurged all interested people to cometo the meeting tomorrow.Pianist Jacobs <to perform herePaul Jacobs, a young Amer¬ican pianist famous for hisinterpretations of contempor¬ary music, will give a recitalin Mandel Hall on Saturday eve¬ning at 8:30.Jacobs, who is the pianist of theNew York Philharmonic, will per¬form music by four twentieth cen¬tury composers: the second bookof Etudes by Claude Debussy, theSecond Sonata of Roger Sessions,three of Karlheinz Stockhausen’sKlavierstuecke, and a group ofworks by Igor Stravinsky.The concert is part of the UC’sChamber Music Series, and ticketscan be obtained from the MusicDepartment. The price is $1.50 forUC students. $3.00 for non-students.ERRATAClyde Kennard, who is currentlyin Billings Hospital, was not par¬doned by Mississippi GovernorRoss Barnet, as reported in yes¬terday’s Maroon. His sentencewas suspended so that he couldreceive medical attention.“Wildstrawberries” and “TheMagician” will be shown Fridaynight not Saturday as reported inyesterday’s Maroon.“V*.I » EditorialDon't give Rockwellmuch sought attentionGeorge Lincoln Rockwell,“commander” of the Ameri¬can Nazi Party, has been in¬vited to speak on campus. InaH probability he will accept, andthe University of Chicago will beplaced in the unenviable position ofHaying host to one of the mostdespicable characters on the Ame¬rican scene today.There is no reason to assumethat the University community willbe enhanced in any manner what¬soever by Rockwell appearance:nor is there any reason to feelthat those who attend his lecturewill find that the experience hasbrought them any closer to truth,beauty, or justice. On the otherhand, it seems that a rather largenumber of students will be suf¬ficiently curious about the twistedmentality that is embodied inRockwell to attend his lecture andobserve first hand the phenomenona man who preaches hate. Ifstudents choose to invite such aman to campus, even if only tosatisfy their curiosity, the conceptof a university as an institutionwhere all ideas may be freely en¬countered and explored must pre¬vail; and Rockwell must be ac¬commodated. by the prospect of Rockwell’s ap¬pearance, we strongly adviseagainst staging a public protestdemonstration. Rockwell, by com¬ing to a college campus, is quiteclearly more likely to gain publi¬city than converts for his “cause.”Unfortunately, he has been abettedalways, it seems, some groups whoalways, it sems, some groups whoare willing to facilitate the spreadof his notoriety by creating un¬pleasant or violent incidents to ac¬company his speeches.At the same time, to the manywho are revulsed, and rightly, soSUPER SMOOTHSHAVENew"wetter-than-water"action melts beard's tough,ness-in seconds. Remarkable new “wetter-than-water”action gives Old Spice Super Smooth Shave its scientificapproximation to the feather-touch feel and the efficiency ofbarber shop shaves. Melts your beard’s toughness like hottowels and massage—in seconds.Shaves that are so comfortable you barely feel theblade. A unique combination of anti-evaporation agentsmakes Super Smooth Shave stay moist and firm. Nore-lathering, no dry spots. Richer and creamier...gives youthe most satisfying shave... fastest, cleanest — and mostcomfortable. Regular or mentholated, 1.00.!ice Letters to theExplains his invitationto G. Lincoln RockwellTO THE EDITOR:In response to yesterday’s let¬ters concerning the invitation ofG. L. Rockwell to speak on thiscampus:As Mr. Dorfman would preferto see the invitation to Rockwellrevoked, his assertion that he willbe the first to defend his freedomof speech seems to me unfathom-ably masochistic. For he has pro¬posed that we defend free speech,certainly an onerous responsibility,while implicitly denying the rea¬sons for its institution.No doubt, we can perpetuatethis trend by assembling one ofthe longest picket lines ever seenon this campus; but it wild notbe worth the trouble, for such ademonstration will inevitably bene¬fit Rockwell far more than it willbenefit the causes of brotherhoodand humanity.It is quite obvious that the ideasRockwell stands for are extremelyrepugnant to all the members ofthis community; however, our op¬position need not be reassertedwhen Rockwell comes here if theresult will be a clear gain in pub¬licity for Rockwell. This commu¬nity can best show its objections toRockwell by allowing his appear¬ance to pass an uneventfully aspossible. We are sure that his dis¬appointment will justify our “si¬lence.”Compares French andUS motives in Europe ership over the other nations in¬cluded.From this community would beexcluded the Eastern Europeannations, due to the US. paranoia inregards to the complex commu¬nism, which would not only makeEurope more permanently andclearly divided, but also draw itto a larger extent into the existing2-sided power struggle. affairs, but such views should beexpressed outside of SG. I wouldhope that in the rash of new par¬ties that will form between nowand the third week in April, theiowill be one such party. If not. iam sure that the theme of the newAssembly will have the same slo- Igan of the old one. “A mediocreuniversity in a mediocre soeien ’JAMES ROSENHOLTZFurthermore, the US. hopes toinclude the neutrals in such a com¬munity; this then would pull themout of their neutrality, make themjoin a ‘Western Camp’ and helpthe US. satisfy its paranoiac tend¬encies.What does prompt society togrant its irritants free speech?Certainly not sheer benevolence.Rather, the society that institutesfree speech assumes that it doesnot know the ultimate truth ofany political issue, and thereforeconcludes that it pays for all ofits members ideas to be heard.Men like Rockwell should be heardfor eminently practical considera¬tions: (1) they may be right, (2)if wrong, the way to fight them,is not through ignoring them withan embarrassed shrug, in the man¬ner of pre-war Germany. To pro¬claim free speech but to prefernot to hear one’s enemies, is thusto proclaim an utterly empty doc¬trine.I can think of several benefitsUniversity students will gain fromhearing Rockwell, in addition tofamiliarization with his beliefs.For one. Rockwell is a very in¬teresting sociological and psycho¬logical phenomenon, an unavoid¬able product of our times, a typethat has rightly attracted muchrecent scholarly interest (i. e. Hof-fer’s The True Reliever.) But eventhe students who do not hearRockwell will benefit from hisappearance, if he is allowed to ap¬pear. For again the University ofChicago will demonstrate that itencourages an aura of freedom onthe campus that by reputation at¬tracts a certain kind of applicant,and encourages him to think cre¬atively upon his arrival. Rock¬well’s appearance w ill have a sym¬bolic value, in a manner similar toour lacking a football team.It is certainly unfortunate thatsensibilities will be wounded ifRockwell speaks here, but somesensibilities were also wounded bythe appearance of Gus Hall, whichwas universally hailed as an exam¬ple of our fine academic freedom.Hungarian refugees choose to dem¬onstrate regularly at the appear¬ance of Communist officials, andthe same option is open here tothe victims of Nazi oppression.In determining what speakersto invite to the campus, we mustdistinguish between the trivial andthe significant: thus I would nothave invited the man who proposesto clothe all animals. But Fascism,Ihough unpopular, is not yet atrivial cause, as has indeed beendemonstrated by the emotional re-spoftses to Rockwell’s invitation.The students who accepted the ap¬pearances of Hall, Malcolm X. andJames Hoffa should also acceptRockwell who is, like them, aspeaker for an unpopular, but un¬fortunately potent cause.I do not intend to withdraw myinvitation.STEVEN ROSEN.VINCENT HOUSE Assuming that some Europeansdo not favor this course of af¬fairs, but prefer a united Europe(A third Force in Morgenthau’sterms), then naturally the US. in¬fluence has to be diminished (onestep of which is the exclusion ofEngland until it has become so¬cialized or Europeanized). Franceis about the only nation that couldengage in such a move; most otherEuropean nations are too smalland still un-united; Germany andEngland are under strong US. in¬fluence: Italy looks back upon ahistory of opportunism ratherthan of leadership - so left isFrance.To look upon Do Gaulle’s non-acceptance of England merely aspersonal ‘grandeur’ wishes is tooverlook the underlying issue ofa divided Europe under US. dom¬inance vs. a united Europe. Nowonder that the US. irritation isand must be rather intense at theprospect of not being able to in¬crease its power, and even losesome foothold in the increasinglyimportant and prosperous Europe.Should Europe choose a unitedEurope, then one of the implica¬tions is the dissolution of theNATO and the Warschau agree¬ment.HARALD MAYAR.SWITZERLANDAsks for new SG partyS H U t-T O N TO THE EDl'IOR:I enjoyed Hans Morgenlhau’sviews on De Gaulle’s CommonMarket stand in Thursday’s Ma¬roon; let me add a few comments:What is rarely stated explicitly,is the fact that the US. does notwant a unified Europe.What the US. wants is an ‘At¬lantic Community’, composed pri¬marily of the Allied Powers, acommunity in which the US. hopesto excercise its hegemony or lead- TO THE EDITOR:Last year, forty per cent of thestudents voting in the SG elec-lions, voted to abolish StudentGovernment. This year the figuresmay be higher because of the dis¬trust and dissatisfaction with SG.POLIT has earned this distrustby its utter disregard for the stu¬dent body. One week after thespring elections the POI.IT-con-trolied Assembly named RobbieWorkoff, Election and Rules Com¬mittee chairman. Robbie Work-off was the only person in thehistory of SG elections to be con¬victed of an election rules vio¬lation. In the POLIT caucus thatvirtually decided who would re¬place the vacancies in SG causedby the recall, at least six of thetwelve people named publicly sup¬ported the SG Cuba resolution.These six are Richard Schmitt,Joan Mahoney, Ron Dorfman, Har¬ris Jaffe, Mike Kaufman, and Car¬ol Vogel. In these ways POLIThas repeatedly spit in the face ofan ignored student body. It istrue that POLIT has worked hardfor campus services. The studentbody, however, does not have totake the abuse of POLIT as pay¬ment for its campus services.UP believes that a student poli¬tical party should only be con¬cerned with campus affairs. Thisaltitude misses the point. It isperfectly all right for a party toexpress its opinion about nationaland international affairs, but notthrough the mechanism of SG.Moreover, the enlire UP platformis based on the policy of “fernothin’ and aein’ everythin’,”reminiscent of Col. McCormick’sTribune.A political party is needed oncampus that will strive for newcampus services and the activemaintenance of present ones. Sucha party should not abstain fromexpressing views on extra-campus Six easy stepsfor stopping immoralityTO THE EDITOR:A proposal of the placing of afemale University of Chicago stu¬dent on probation for violating hercurfew, I would recommend thatthe following proposal bo placedbefore the Board of Trustees ofthe University at its next meet¬ing.In order to preserve the goodname of ihe University of Chicagoand to stem the rising tide ofimmorality at the University whichis the basis of “in loco parentis”it is necessary to recommend fur¬ther steps to see to it that thisobjective be achieved.1. that no female University ofChicago student be permitted tolive off-campus under any circum¬stances.2. that no female University ofChicago student be permitted inthe conipany'of a male without thepresence of an aunt or house¬mother.3. that no unmarried female Uni¬versity of Chicago student under50 years of age be permitted toown or oporale a motor vehicleduring sessions of school.4. that student health service in¬stitute a program of monthlycheck-ups of all unmarried fe¬male University of Chicago stu¬dents and recommend expulsion ofall those found not to be virtuous.5. to amend the student code tomake any questioning of the dor-trine of eternal damnation a causefor probation.6. Finally, in view of the ultimatedepravity of ihe male character,that all male students, faculty, andadministration, married or unmar¬ried, with the exception of truebelieve’^ of in loco parentis uponaffiliation with the University, becastrated..With apologies to Bertrand Rus¬sell.Name withheld.Children wll be childrenLetters policyThe MAROON will consider U'publication letters of interest to tMUniversity community.All letters must be signed, tutHomes will be withheld upon request.We reserve the right to edit ellletters, ond suggest a moximumlength of 300 words. We do eetguarantee the publication of oil let¬ters received.Deadline for letters !s 4 pm.Chamber Music SeriesPAUL JACOBS, pianistSaturday, February 9, 8:30 P-M.Man del Hall UC Student ST.5CTickets at Music Dept.5802 Weodlawn or Box OfficeSaturday eveningTO THE EDITOR:The eternal cry of youth hasbeen, “Leave me alone, I want todo as I please, I’m not a baby.”And no matter how many big wordsGail Altman and others string to¬gether to damn the administration,parents, or anyone else in order tojustify their demands for FREE¬DOM for license), the basicthought cannot be disguised. Achild stamping its feet is a childstamping its feet.Everyone everywhere lives ac¬cording to rules. And there aremany kinds. Some are imposed bypeople: some by nature. A sign ofmaturity is to abide by the ruleseven while trying to change themor to seek an environment wheiethe rules are acceptable. If theonly recourse is revolt, then theconsequences should be acceptedwithout whimpering.TECLA D. MUNDTMONTAGE STARTS THIS SUNDAYMERCE CUNNINGHAM DANCE COMPANY WITH JOHN CAGE!$1.50, 2.00, 2.50. Student discount of 50c at Mandel Hall Box Office2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 6, 1963114 rNSA regional plans set Weiner analyzes Frost s r Aof the Association proposed at the Winter m onsin Region of the National Student Associa-The Spring meeting of the Illinois-Wise the Association and a discussion of reformslion (NSA) will center on a reappraisal ofeeting of the National Executive Committee(NEC). Plans for the regional, to be held on May 3-4 at the University of Wisconsin, weremade at Roosevelt University last bers have to work on regionalprograms. concepts of nature, traditionweekend at a meeting of the Re¬gional Executive Committee< REC).The reforms proposed at theNEC meeting will be outlined Fri¬day night by a speaker from theAssociation's national office.Croups will meet to discuss thereforms Saturday afternoon.At its meeting at the University«»f Minnesota in December, theNEC changed the Congress ruleslimiting the number of resolutionsthat could come from four of thelive committees. This would insurefewer, they feel, letter writtenresolutions and would result infewer resolutions, not consideredby the Congress, being referred tothe NEC.There will also be discussion onlimiting the number of resolutionswhich can be referred to the NEC.At last summer’s Congress a mo¬tion to make referral illegal wasvoted down.The abolition of regions will bethe main reform to be discussed atboth the regional and this sum¬mer's Congress at the University«>f Indiana.A proposal discussed at the NECmeeting calls for the abandonmentof the regional system as it is nowand the substitution of four or fivebig areas, each with its own full¬time national officer.Much dissatisfaction has been ex¬pressed with the present system of22 regions. Many of the regionshave been inactive in regional pro¬gramming, though the Ill.-Wise, re¬gion is an exception. In addition,the NEC has not been able to de¬vote the time it should to deter¬mining national policy, as its mem-Calendar of EventsCALENDAR OF EVENTS I.iltoEpiscopal Holy Communion: BondChapel, 7:45 a.m.Roman Catholic Mass: CalvertHouse, 7:30 a.m.Lutheran Communion: Bond Chapel,7.45 a.m.Divinity School Luncheon: RichardHarmon, TWO staff member, SwiftCommons; 12:30 p.m.Far Eastern Association: E. E.McClellan, asst, professor of Japanese,on “Hakai” Ida Noyes Theater, 4 p.m.IVI Rally: Tim Black, aldermaniccandidate. Ida Noyes Library. 7:15 p.m.Midwest Film Festival CommitteeMeeting: Goodspeed 1, 5 p.m.Lecture: Some Problems in theTranslation of Sur Das” Foster 102,7:30 p.m. A further reform to be discussedwill be the possibility of requiringthat NSA delegates be chosen bycampus-wide elections. At presentmany delegates are chosen by stu¬dent governments or other studentcommittees.It is felt that campus-wide elec¬tions are needed if NSA is to be atruly democratically-based organi¬zation. The argument against suchelections is that most campusesknow little about NSA and wouldnot be able to effectively choosethe best delegates.Friday evening’s program willinclude, besides the speaker, astate of the Region report fromStu Dowty of Shimer College, chair¬man of the Region. Proposedamendments to the Regional con¬stitution will also be read to dele¬gates at that time.Saturday morning and afternoonthere will be workshops on fine artsprogramming in the region, foreign| Classifieds jROOMS, APTS, ETC.Grad, student wants room and boardw/German family to improve Germanconversation. C. Dickinson. FA 4-8991.FOR SALETIRES AND BATTERIES, 10-30 per¬cent DISCOUNT, all American brandant) Michelin X, Pirelli, and Dunlop.Call NO 7-6732. anytime.1959 Opel sta. wgn., PL 2 2190, $650.HELP WANTEDStudent with one hour to spare onThursdays (anytime before 6 p.m.) todo about three pages of typing. Callextension 3265, 3266, (MI 3-0800).Male student to work any 3 hours dailyfor Registrar. Must type. Pay open.Call 3401 or Adm. 103.PERSONALSWomen of UC!!! Wash your facesbrush your teeth, comb your hair, it stime to be asked to the Wash Prom.LOST: 14 burned out bulbs.In the garden path of a great tradi¬tion white sweatshirts emblazonedwith "The Scarlet Letter” A. m Gothicscript. Our price, $3.50 cheap, or theequivalent in Pine Tre» Mjdhngs. Ragsto Witches. Write Maroon Bex A.Tost- Lady’s green cardigan sweaterat Folk Festival party Saturday mght.Please call TA 9-0732, nights.FOUND: 6 replacements.WANTED: One unsolved murder.ACCOUNTING and ADMINISTRATIVEGRADUATESSandia Corporation will in¬terview accounting graduatesat all degree levels.We will also interview appli¬cants at the MS level andabove with majors in LiberalArts and Business Admini¬stration.While your specific assign¬ment would be non-technicalin nature, you would be work¬ing with top-flight scientificand engineering personnel ina research and developmentorganization. At Sandia, youwould receive liberal benefits,which in addition to insur¬ance, retirement and vacationinclude an opportunity for continuing your graduatestudies.You would be employed insunny Albuquerque, a south¬western cultural center ofover 250,000.Sandia Corporation recruit¬ers will be on your campus onthe date printed below.* Forappointment for interview,see your College PlacementOfficer now lEqual Opportunity EmployerSANDIACORPORATIONALBUQUERQUE. NEW MEXICOLIVERMORE. CALIFORNIA*Tbe Sandia representative will be on campus Feb. 13,14. students programming and aca¬demic freedom problems on cam¬puses. There will be a single legi¬slative committee slated to run allday.Saturday afternoon there will al¬so be a workshop concentrating onpreparing delegates who plan toattend this summer’s Congress.A set of round-table discussionsof NSA reforms is scheduled tobegin at 3:15 and run until 5.Election of officers for the 1963-64 school year will be held at theSaturday evening plennary sessionscheduled to begin at 6:30. Pro¬posed constitutional amendmentsand bills from the legislative com¬mittee will also be discussed andvoted upon.The single legislative committeewill be limited to no more thanhalf of the voting members of eachdelegation, according to a decisionreached by the Council. “Robert Frost is one of themost sophisticated, complex,and ironic poets in English,”stated Ron Weiner, instructorof English, at the Shorey HouseCoffee Plus Monday night.According to Weiner, the con¬ventional image of Frost is of apoet obsessed with nature in thetradition of the 39th century ro¬mantics. There is a closeness be¬tween the poet and nature, and thepoet is able to read and transmif’the message of nature. Weiner in¬sists that, although Frost shows acloseness and familiarity wdth na¬ture, a sense of estrangement fromit is nevertheless found in hispoetry.Frost's attitude toward nature Ischaracteristically American, h econtinued. The relation of theAmerican to nature is that of in¬credible proximity and yet incred¬ible distance.Weiner called the source of thisrelation the heritage of puritanism. The puritans believed that the realworld was related in a special wayto the ultimate. The manifestationof nature was on the one hand anindication of the will of providenceand on the other hand the order ofthings. As to the will of providence,they could only feel humility andawe before nature. As to the orderof things, they could feel a close¬ness to it.Frost uses covention to destroyconvention, said Weiner. He adoptstradition, uses it, and reverseshimself in relation to the tradition.He involves this in a lie to show usthe truth, for the poet’s ultimate al¬legiance is to reality.Call Ext. 3265To BuyA Classifiedmget Lots More frommore bodyin the blendmore flavorin the smokecasco mom tastethrough the filterIt’s tlie ricli-flavor leaf that does itt Among L&M’s choice tobaccos there’s more©f this longer-aged, extra-cured leaf than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. Andwith L&M’s modem filter— the Miracle Tip — only pure white touches your lips.Get lots more from L&M — the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke.Feb. 6, 1963 • CHICAGO M A R O O NOxford student describes Dciiicg group begins MontageUC prof's lecture thereby Simon JenkinsMr. Jenkins, a at Saint Jokas College ot OnferJ University,contribute* occasional articles to tbe MarooaThe Examination Schools were cold, gaunt and unwel¬coming. Lectures for the day had long since ceased, and theknights in armour looked down from their massive portraitsin frozen silence. It was five o’clock in the afternoon. A soli¬tary special lecture was announcedon the board.Room 6, however, had beenbrightened up. and the electric firefought bravely but vainly with thearctic temperature from its Pre-Raphaelite depths in the wall. Inthe front row two white haireddivines discussed Florentine dia¬lects in loud whispers. A fine arrayof Oxford's theological elite werescattered round the room withcollars and gowns. A few Americanstudents came in and sat down.The lecturer rose and faced hisaudience grimly. “I am an Ameri¬can.” he began. We would neverhave guessed it. He wore no gown,but an immaculate overcoat. Helooked like a General Motors exec¬utive in comparison with Oxford’sancient academics.“Therefore,” lie went on, “I askyou to excuse me for keeping mycoat on—I am not used to thiscold.” St. Ignatius of Antioch andthe Corruption of Christianity. Pro¬fessor Robert Grant of the Univer¬sity of Chicago Divinity School.As one learned work after an¬other fell to his methodical axe, orperhaps we should say razor, thebright young Americans took notesmore furiously and the elders sankdeeper into their clerical collars.Job Opportunities |Representatives of the following or¬ganizations will conduct recruiting in¬terviews at the Office of Career Coun¬seling and Placement during the weekof February 11. Information describingthese organizations and the positionsfor which they are recruiting is avail¬able for review in the Placement Of¬fice. Interview appointments may bearranged through Mr. Calvin, room200, Reynolds Club, extension 3284.February 12. Underwood Corporation.New York. N.Y.. primarily interestedin men for sales, leading to sales man¬agement, in any of the 110 branchesthroughout the U.S.February 12. U.S. Bureau of the Cen¬sus. Washington D.C.. Mathematiciansand Statisticians at all degree levels.Social Scientists at all degree levelswho have completed at least onecourse in Mathematics and one in Sta¬tistics Interviewer will also recruitstudents with the same Qualificationsfor the U.S. Public Health Service.February 14. National Security Agency,Fort Georee G. Meade. Md., researchpositions for Mathematicians. Physi¬cists. an-t Statisticians at all degreelevels. Will also interview students inother disciolines who na.*=“d the NSAexaminations given in October andDecember 1962.February 15, U.S. Public Health Serv¬ice. large metropolitan areas through¬out the U S.. men receiving degreesfrom any department to be trained forpositions in venereal disease control.WHAT’SNEWIN THE FEBRUARYATLANTIC?“How Not to Teach Teacher*": Thetraining of American teachers is "un¬wieldy. slow-witted, bureaucratic . . .a failure,” says James D. Koerner inthis incisive, critical analysis.ALSO ■*** -vJ. 8. Priestly: Reminiscences aboutthe author's service in World War 1“Lampedusa in Sicily" : An AtlanticExtra by Archibald ColquhounArchibald MacLeish : On hatred exhib¬ited in racial conflictsW. D. Snodgrass: A new poem“The Indiana Dunes andPressure Politics":William PeeplesThe pursuit of excel¬lence is the everydayjob of the Atlantic'seditors be it in fic¬tion or fact, poetryor prose. In ever-increasing numbers,those In pursuit ofacademic excellencefind in the Atlantic achallenging, enter¬taining and enlight¬ening companion.Get your copy today. “An Italian revue of ChristianArchaeology . . . writer finds cleartraces of 4th Maccabees on Ig¬natius’ style and thought.”It was over. Chicago had madeits contribution to Oxford. Wecame out of the cold, desertedExamination Schools into the freez¬ing evening. It was 15J below. Ifacademic Oxford had been takenby storm then academic Oxfordwas too numb to feel it.Discount TicketsDiscount coupons to several playsand revues in the downtown areaare available at the Student Activ¬ities office in Ida Noyes.Included in the selection fromthe Educator's Theatre Committeeare weekday discount coupons for“Carnival,” now playing at theShubert Theatre, Friday and Sun¬day coupons for “Put It in Writ¬ing,” at the Happy Medium Thea¬tre, and coupons for all perform¬ances of “Mary, Mary,” at theBlacks tone Theatre. The M e r c e CunninghamDance Company, one of thenation’s leading experimentaldance troups, will begin Uni¬versity Theatre’s month long festi¬val of the theatre arts this Sunday,at 8:30 pm in Mandel hall.Cunningham's group is known forits “fluid movement with excep¬tional control and elevation.”Another event in UT's monthLong series will be the production ofGood News, a rollicking campusmusical which delights in spoofingthe roaring 20's. Performances willbe Friday. Saturday, and Sunday,February 15. 16. 17, and Friday andSaturday, February 22 and 23. at8:30 pm in Mandel hall.Drama highlights the last week,with performances of -FedericoGarcia Lorca's modern classic,Blood Wedding. This moving versedrama probes deepest emotions inbeautiful poetry. Blood Weddingwill be performed in the LawSchool Auditorium on the weekendof March 1, 2. and 3 at 8:30 pm.A combined ticket plan offersseats for all three events at $4.00or $5.50. with individual admissionsfrom $1.00 to $2.50. Call extension3581, or write 5706 S. University,Chicago 37. Ill.Cunningham studied with MarthaGraham, one of the pioneers ofmodern dance, and as a soloistcreated roles in “AppalachianSpring” and “Letter to the World.”In 1959, he formed his own group based on the theory that movementis expressive in itself and thatemotionally motivated continuity isunnecessary.To insure the lack of subjectiveorganization, he selected move¬ments for choreography by meansof a kind of grab-bag arrangement,so that order was achieved bychance. This technique is compar¬able to unbound novels which allowthe reader to arrange the materialfor himself.Among Cunningham’s works inA member of the Cunning¬ham dance company this form are “Suite by Chance”and “The Season.**Cunningham has taught at theUniversity of Southern Californiaand other schools.Musical Director since the com¬pany formed, John Cage is espe¬cially interested in the field ofpercussion. Since 1935, he has pre¬sented percussion concerts whichhe has organized and directed.In percussion work, Cage deviseda “prepared” piano, applying vari¬ous materials to the strings toproduce unusual sounds.Cage's main works are for thepiano although he has written anorchestral piece entitled “The CityWears a Slouch Hat.”His interest in mechanical musicled Cage to organize a group ofmusicians and engineers to makemusic directly on magnetic tape.He composed the score for “TheSeasons” by Cunningham and haswritten music for other moderndancers.Cage studied with Arnold Schoen¬berg and taught at The School ofDesign in Chicago and the NewSchool for Social Research in NewYork.JUST PUBLISHED!MUSIC IN THE FRENCH SECULAR THEATRE. 1400-1550by Howard Mayer trowa $10.00A unique shady—ao oae before bos tried h deterariae the exteat oad characterof the popular chaasoa't influence oa polyphonic settings.The University of Chicago Bookstore5902 Ellis Ave. SHARE-A-RIDE CENTRALOffers A Unique New Service To Our Mobile Society;How You Can Find Share Expense Rides orRiders to Any City Nationwide.Subscribe NOW! For Your Trip Home For Spring Interim.For Complete loformotiooTELEPHONE FI 6-7263wl JFlavor! Full flavor in a filter cigarette.That’s why Winston is America’s best-sellingfilter cigarette! Next time, smoke Winston.PURE WHITE, !MODERN FILTER Iplus i FILTER ~ BLEND up frontb>\ 01962 B. J. Reynold* Tobacco Company, Wtnaton Salma, N. 0.4 • CHICAGO MAROON * Feb. 6, 1963