Simpson outlines 4 tasks of liberal educationUndergraduate programsghould embody “the timelessidea of a liberal education,”be susceptible to change,challenge the student, and avoidpressures to adopt practices whicharc “preposterous ... in the soberlight of our real business,” accord¬ing to Alan Simpson, dean of theCollege.Simpson outlined these four tasksfor “the programs we offer” in arecent address at the AmericanConference of Academic Deans.Liberal educationLiberal education, said Simpson,is a matter of intellectual tools,literary skills, some breadth ofknowledge, some grasp of stand¬ards, and some sense of style.“It is the experience which equipsa learner to read, write, think. count, judge, and act—and to do soin the light of a good general cul¬ture. It’s an education in discrimi¬nation, in creative imagination, inlogical thought, and in practicalwisdom.”Bemoaning the "erosion of theold standards,” Simpson said he“would cheerfully sacrifice anynumber of interdisciplinary coursesin the senior year for one success¬ful course—or experience—in* En¬glish composition.”He noted the need for clear ex¬pression in “the mush of educa¬tional gibberish, the mire of schol¬arly prose, the mournful thud ofbureaucratic jargon, the melan¬choly masochism of Madison Ave¬nue, and the smog which descendson organs like the New York TimesBook Review.” education at the college level,”Simpson warned of the “squeezeproduced by the college-level cour¬ses in high schools and the pre-graduate courses in college."Let them (the colleges) by allmeans build on better standardsfrom below; but let them also de¬fend their duty to civilize both theprecocious specialist and the fu¬ture citizen. And let them insistthat, in the future as in the past,it will normally take them fouryears to discharge this duty.”Change and flexibilityOn the role of change in educa¬tion, Simpson commented: "In¬struction is one domain in whichJefferson’s doctrine that no societyshould go more than ten yearswithout a revolution is a goodStressing the need for “a liberal Course content will change as aYol. 71—No. 69 University of Chicago, Friday, February 15, 1963 31Plutonium symposium at CCEThe 20th anniversary of thefirst weighing of a man-madeelement, plutonium, will becommemorated at a day-long“Sym[>osium on Plutonium Chem¬istry” at the Center for ContinuingEducation on Monday.The symposium which is beingsponsored jointly by the Universityand Argonne National Laboratory,will be attended by 150 scientists.Scheduled to speak are the twoNobel prize-winning discoverers ofplutonium, Glenn T. Seaborg. now*Chairman of the United StatesAtomic Energy Commission, andEdwin M. McMillan, currently Di¬rector of the Lawrence RadiationLaboratory of the University ofCalifornia at Berkeley.The participants in the symposi¬um will "review the accomplish¬ments of the past two decades andexamine the future of this firstman-made element,” said WarrenC. Johnson, Vice President for Sci¬entific Affairs at UC. "The peace¬time uses of plutonium are onlynow beginning to be realized,”Johnson said.Topics to be discussed at thesymposium will include the firstexperiments with pure plutoniumcompounds, the structure of plu¬tonium metal, nuclear propertiesof plutonium and the chemistry ofplutonium.At the dinner session of the sym¬posium at which UC PresidentGeorge Beadle will speak, Seaborgwill present to Professor Normanli. Nachtrieb, Chairman of theUniversity’s Department of Chem¬istry, a plaque stating plutonium—first weighing of a man-made ele¬ment occurred here September 10,1942, to be hung on the door of thehistoric laboratory where the plu¬tonium was weighed. The scientists who first weighedthe nuclear fuel, Burris B. Cun¬ningham, now Professor of Chem¬istry, University of California,Berkeley, and Louis B. Werner ofPalo Alto, California, will attendthe conference. They first per¬ceived a pure compound of thenew element on August 18. 1942.The dust-sazed speck was officiallyweighed at the University on Sep¬tember 10, 1942. The weight wasreported as 2.77 millionth of agram or nearly one ten-millionthof an ounce.In Seaborg’s words: "This isola¬tion marked the first sight of asynthetic element and the first iso¬lation of a weighable amount of anartificially produced isotope of anyelement.”Within three months of the plu¬tonium break-through, Enrico Fer¬mi and his colleagues in the Metal¬lurgical Laboratory achieved man’sfirst controlled nuclear chain reac¬tion under the West Stands of StaggField December 2, 1942.Speakers will include Paul R.Fields, Chemistry Division, Ar-gonne National Laboratory; KurtA. Kraus, Chemistry Division, OakRidge National Laboratory; andLarned B. Asprey, member of theLos Alamos Scientific Laboratorystaff.Speakers from UC will be W. H.Zachariasen, Ernest Dewitt Burton,Distinguished Service Professor,Department of Physics; James L.Cate, Professor of History, andmember of the Atomic EnergyCommission’s Historical AdvisoryCommittee; Samuel K. Allison,Frank P. Hixon, DistinguishedService Professor, Department ofPhysics and Enrico Fermi, Insti¬tute for Nuclear Studies and T. R.Rockwell date scheduledThe date for Nazi Partyleader George Lincoln Rock¬well to speak on campus hasbeen set as Tuesday, February26.Rockwell is being brought hereby residents of Vincent house inBurton Judson Dormitory. Theplace for his speaking engagementwill be decided at a house meetingon Monday. Reservations havebeen made for both Mandel halland the Judson lounge; the formerin case the house decides to holdan open meeting, the latter if theydecide to hold a closed meeting.Several residents of Vincenthouse invited Rockwell to speakhere shortly after his speakingengagement at Northwestern Uni¬versity was cancelled by the North¬western administration. In the two weeks since Rockwellagreed to speak on an indefinitedate, there has been much con¬troversy on campus over whetherhe should have been invited andwhether he should be allowed tospeak.UC President George Beadlestated Tuesday that the administra¬tion has not given any considera¬tion to banning Rockwell.The residents of Vincent house,at a meeting last Thursday, de¬cided to uphold the invitationwhich had been issued by severalpersons in the name of the house.The meeting will decide definitelywhether the residents still wantthe invitation upheld, and whereRockwell should speak. About 30 ofthe 50 residents of the house hadvoted at the meeting last Thursday. Hogness, Director of UC Labora¬tory for Applied Sciences.The dinner session will concludewith a speech by Alvin M. Wein¬berg, Director, Oak Ridge Na¬tional Laboratory, on “SomeTrends in Nuclear Energy.”"Because of its favorable breed¬ing characteristics, it is one of themost important fuels of the futureboth on earth as a source of power,and in space as an important ele¬ment in proposed propulsion sys¬tems,” said Johnson. Breeding isthe process by which nuclear fuelssuch as plutonium, while under¬going controlled fission in a re¬actor, create more fuel than thereactor consumes.Plutonium became the 94th ele¬ment. Seaborg, McMillan, ArthurC. Wahl, now at the department ofchemistry, Washington Universityof St. Louis, and the late JosephW. Kennedy had discovered Plu¬tonium-238 late in 1940 at the Uni¬versity of California at Berkeley.In the spring of 1941, Kennedy,Seaborg, Emilio Segre and Wahldiscovered Plutonium-239, the im¬portant isotope of the element witha half life of 24,000 years and theproperty of being fissionable withslow neutrons. This is the plutoni¬um of the bomb and the powerreactor.The first atomic device, builtwith a plutonium core, was deto¬nated in the Trinity tests in thedesert at Alamagordo, New Mex¬ico, July 16, 1945. The plutonium-cored bomb that fell on NagasakiAugust 9, 1945, came three yearsafter plutonium was first observedand weighed. Plutonium was firstused in actual space flight when itprovided the “atomic battery”generating electricity aboard theNavy’s navigational satellite,Transit IV-A.Anti-communist, Bogartfilm shown tomorrowTwo anticommunist filmsand a film on the Ku KluxKlan will be shown Saturdaynight at Breasted Hall.“Black Legion,” the biographyof a Klansman, stars HumphreyBogart. It will be shown at 7:30 and11 pm.“The Communist Weapon of Al¬lure” and “The Communist Planfor World Conquest” are scheduledfor 6:15 and 9:15 pm. They wereobtained from the Fifth ArmyHeadquarters.Admission to the program, spon¬sored by POLIT, is fifty cents. result of increases in knowledge;and teaching methods may changeas a result of technical advances,said Simpson. However he notedthat the College at UC has so farbeen affected “very little” by the“proliferation of tubes and tapesand teaching machines.”Education must also be con¬cerned with and aware of thelarger, more general problems ofa changing world, said Simpson.One of these problems is “thedomestication of science within thegeneral culture.” Simpson urgedthat an understanding of scienceas inquiry and of the directionsand social implications of modernscience be part of the “equipmentof an educated man.”"The social implications presentno special problem,” he said; “butto give the non-science major somefeeling beyond awe or frustratedbewilderment for the most distinc¬tive intellectual achievement ofmodern man is an altogetherharder task.”Another major issue is “educa¬tion for an emerging world com¬munity.” Here Simpson suggestedthat the systematic study of someculture other than our own (be)made a prescribed part of every¬body’s general education.”Beyond "exposure to the cul¬tures of the non-Western membersof the human family,” Simpsonlooked forward to the develop¬ment of “a year-long course inworld history which will occupythe same important place in ourprograms as the Western civiliza¬tion course.” »The creation of such a course iscontingent upon “the efforts ofscholars to produce a better inte¬grated conception of world historythan any now extant,” he said, formany members of the historicalprofession have been content tosupervise dissertations on the her¬ring industry or on the Parliamentof 1688 rather than attempt “toembrance the experience of thewhole human family.”"World history has been left toinspired journalists like H. G.Wells, or to philosophic observerslike Toynbee, or to the compilersof regional anthologies. But wecan expect better efforts soon, andour task then will be to see ifsome of the new insights can beincorporated into a college surveywithout incurring the obvious criti¬cism that such a course will betoo superficial to be instructive,”Another large issue involves theproblem of getting the humanitiesand the social sciences “into amore effective relationship withthe life around us, for the benefitof citizens as much as specialists,”said Simpson."Concentrations involving fruit¬ful combinations of disciplines, andthe deliberate cultivation of asense of social responsibilitythrough both curricular and extra¬curricular devices, are an obviousneed,” he said.Among the biggest challenges tosocial scientists are the problemsof in urbanization, said Simpson,The humanists, when confron¬ted by mass society, must bepersuaded “not only to store upknowledge but to stem the tidesof barbarism.” Humanists in amass society “are one specialism among many and the popular cul¬ture has the bit between itsteeth,” he said. Academic hu¬manists have “suffered a certaindeath of public spirit — a suffoca¬tion of sensibility by intiquarianarts,” charged Simpson.Challenging the studentSimpson's third goal, challengingthe student, must affect toeaverage as well as the superiorstudent, he said.Students must be encouraged toadvance at their own pace. The’must not be allowed to be "swal¬lowed in a vast impersonal factory— or even in a small impersonalfectory, which is what my owncollege is. more often than I careto think of,” said Simpson. "In thiscontext ... the effort to federalizeAmerican colleges is one of themost hopeful developments on ourscene,” he added.To challenge toe student, toebest teaching method, accordingto Simpson, “is the combinationof tutorials with a few good lec¬tures”; and toe best examiningmethod is “one which places aslittle dependence as possible uponobjective tests — those ignorableabridgments of academic free¬dom.”"Though we have cultivated ob¬jective tests with great per¬sistence and ingenuity, I cannotthink of any examining devicewhich is better calculated to pro¬mote the irivialization of learningor to obstruct the achievement ofliteracy,” he said.Simpson noted the merits ofEnglish examining systems "whichprevent the fragmentation of learn¬ing and which combine ampleoportunities for leisurely reflectionen route with all the rigors of asevere ordeal at the end.”Avoiding preposterous ideasSimpson’s fourth task for educa¬tion — adhering to the values ofacademic, rather than business en¬terprises—involves shunning “har¬lotry, humbug, huckstering.”"Under pressures of competitivelife, salesmanship, and endlessinnovation, ... we allow our¬selves to gaze with fuddled bene¬volence on any hatful of conjuringtricks of any bubble bath of ideas,however preposterous they are inthe sober light of our real busi¬ness,” he said.He cited advocates of under¬graduate, particularly freshman,participation in research as anexample of pressure in favor ofa ridiculous idea."What research is an under¬graduate capable of?” asked Simp¬son, comparing an undergraduate’s"research” in history to his 11year old son’s "research” — bothFIRST searches. "The proper de¬scription of my son’s activity —and that of most undergraduates—is not research but reading,” hesaid.“In science,” added Simpson,"the notion may be a little less pre¬tentious. Referring to generacist.UC alumnus James Dewey Watsonwho received the Nobel Prize atthe age of 34 for work he had doneat the age of 25, Simpson said,“even in his case, I gather thatwhat he chiefly valued at the col¬lege level was a good generaleducation and some exposure tothe science one finds in a first-class institution.”'Good News' opens tonight“Good News,” a musical comedy dating back to 1927, willbe presented at Mandel Hall tonight for 'the first of fiveshowings. The performance begins at 8:30 p.m.“Good News,” written by DeSylva, Brown, and Hender¬son in 1927, was intended to be a falls in love with. Thus toe playsatire of American college life in revolves around the questions ofthe 20’s. It was presented on Broad- whether Tom will be eligible, whomway the same year for 550 con- he will marry, whether he willsecutive performances, and has pass the exam, etc.produced some of the old standards Heading the cast will be Davein music, songs like “The Best Steinberg, Belleruth Krepon, Cyn-Things in Life are Free,” “Lucky dee Schwartz, Ron Inglehart, Herbin Love,” and "The Varsity Drag.” Jones, Jerry Loeb, Susie Workoff,The plot, generally a comic one and Janie Whitehill. The produc-throughout, centers around Tom tion is directed by Jerry Mast, andMarlowe, toe star football player the musical direction is by Kenat Tait College. He finds himself Pierce. Assistant director is Ruthin a bad position very early in the Stark.play, since he has flunked an exam Tickets for the five perform-and is in danger of being declared ances, on February 15, 16, 17, 22,ineligible for the big game. and 23, are available at toe MandelTom asks his fiance to tutor Hall ticket office or by calling ex-him, and ends up being .utored by tension 3581. Ticket prices areher cousin, whom be promptly $2.00 and $1.50.%GOLD CITY INNSpecializing in Cantonese FoodOrders to Take Out10% Discount to Students With This Ad .i 5228 Harper HY 3-2559DEARBORN AT DIVISIONone of the year's 70 best-timeKirk Douglasinlonely Are The Brave’Starts Friday Chicago's most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films.STUDENTSTaka advantage of thespecial discount avail¬able to you. 90£ any dayexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. card to the cashier.-——ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti • beef • sausage and meatballsandwiches • shrimp pizzaFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-1014,1015 1427 East 67th St.University Of Chicago TheatreA Musical Spoofof theFebruarySJ-tJLAAJ-S-S H AIIJI-C.t .C-C-t i g fi B fl S.C.8.8JLBJUI ft t8.UJUUUUUUU jFri. Sat. Sun.1522 1623mUtMMMMimWWOOMOOCMIMandel Hall$1.50 & $2.00 atMandel Hall Bex Office Letters to the editorChallenge scholar-athletebackers to 50 mile walkTO THE EDITOR:\Ve, ihe anti-athletic prigs, theeunuchs, the maggoty-mindedmonks, the maiden ladies of thisUniversity, hereby challenge thosewho extol the virtues of thescholar-athlete place their feetwhere their mouths are, and dem¬onstrate their athletic prowess byemulating the Boy Scouts and theMarines with a short 50 mile hike(say, from here to Northwesternand back).The tradition of Stagg is a nobleone, and we are sure old A.A.would be thrilled by the sight ofsuch a procession. Imagine theSoeratic Wick marching happilybehind the snappy Oxonian Simp¬son along the 50 mile course. Im¬agine early bird Beadle out in frontfollowed by chipper .Chuck O’Con¬nell. No longer would people saythat our leaders do not practicewhat they preach. What’s good forthe administration is good for thestudents — and the scholar-athletetrhimps over all.There are those who say that theadministration would follow theignoble example of Pierre Salinger,and hide behind a paper decreefrom Student Health. But we donot believe them. We know thatour administration is in fine shape,that they could easily cover theshort distance in less than thethree day limit.And maybe the whole studentbody would follow their example.We can see it now ... six thousandstudents marching along the dustyroad, marching, marching, march¬ing. It would change the image.It would change the university. Allof the students out marching.But what has happened to theUniversity? Where are all the stu¬dents? Why they’re out marching,marching, marching. . . .THE PRIGS. THE EUNUCHS,AND THE MAIDEN LADIES.All men created equal isnot self-evident peal strongly enough only twentyJive years ago to a nation powerfulenough to subjugate the Europeancontinent.It is disappointing for us to seesomeone on the left who is con¬cerned with civil liberties fail toconsider that the preservation ofcivil liberties for those we supportis dependent in a practical sense,if no other, upon its preservationfor those we feel to be the mostobnoxious. Rockwell’s appearanceon campus is in the hands of theresidents of Vincent house whohave made the decision to invitehim and to paraphrase Mr. Pear¬son the least we can do is to insurethat no attempts are made to inter¬fere by social pressure or otherwisewith Rockwell’s not so momentousexposition of his ideology.Although it seems unduly regret¬table to some, Lincoln Rockwell’sappearance on campus has becomea. matter of freedom of speech. Wedo not as individuals w’ish to sug¬gest that anything will be gainedby either attending or picketingRockwell's speech. A demonstra¬tion, in fact, would be an insult tothe University Community whichwe are confident will be able toevaluate Rockwell’s doctrine ofhatred without the aid of massrallies.Instead, we urge all who areconcerned with the real problemsof civil liberties in the academiccommunity to attend discussions ofacademic freedom sponsored byUCSCL to be held this Saturday at3 pm in Soc Sci 122 and this Sundayat 3 pm in Breasted Hall. EdwardYellin, whose National ScienceFoundation fellowship was revokedbecause he would not answer ques¬tions put to him by the HouseCommittee on Un-American Activi¬ties, will speak on Saturday, andprofessors Galanter, Weisberger,and Roche will discuss with NealJohnston, USNSA’s Academic Free¬dom Project director, problems ofacademic freedom in the Univer¬sity community on Sunday.LEONARD FREDMANMICHAEL WOLLANJOHN G. WILLIAMSTO THE EDITOR:If there is one lesson to belearned from man’s ‘‘long andbitter history of struggling and suf¬fering,” it is that the statement“all men are created equal” is farfrom being self-evident. And yetMr. Pearson, in the Maroon ofFebruary 13, argues that LincolnRockwell’s freedom of speechshould at least in part be curtailedbecause he opposes this self-evidenttruth which somehow did not ap- New Dorm cafeteriadoesn’t cater to studentsTO THE EDITOR:The bureaucracy has reached itslimit. The New Dorm Cafeteria nolonger caters to students, accord¬ing to its supervisor, Mrs. Davis.Yesterday (Thursday) for lunchthey served a dish called “meatturnover.” Not wanting a grease-burger or Denver sandwich, yetCalendar of EventsFridayHoly Coin m uii ion: Bond Chapel,7:30 am.Class: -Intermediate Hebrew, HillelFoundation, 5715 Woodlawn, 1 pm.Vespers: Followed by Koinonia, ChapelDecfilms: “Mexican Bus Ride’’ byHouse, 5:45 pm.Luis Bunuel, SocSci 122, 7.15 and9:15 pm.Sabbath Service: Hillel Foundation,5715 Woodlawn Ave., 7:45Fireside: "Present Possible Mean¬ings of Jesus Christ” by Prof. BernardLoonier, Swift Commons, 8 pm.Lecture Series: “ ‘Abundance’ inShakesperian Tragedy” by NormanMacClean, 64 East Lake Street, RoomSports: Basketball B Team vs. Kendall201, 8 pm.College, Field House, 7:30 pm.Film: “The Black Orchid”, B-JCinema, admission 50, 8 and 10 pm.Theatre: “Good News”, Mandel Hall,Friday, Saturday, Sunday, 8:30 pm.Brotherhood Services: K.A.M. Tem¬ple, 930 East 50th Street, 8:15 pm. Collegium Musicum: Madrigal Sing¬ers, Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm.Lecture: “Excavations at Sardis, theCapital of Lydia”, by George Hanf-mann, Brested Hall, 8:30 pm.SundayEpiscopal Services: Sung Eucharistand Sermon, Bond Chapel, 9:30 pm.University Religious Service: Rocke¬feller Chapel, 11 pm.United Christian Fellowship Dialogue:“Buddhism’s Challenge to ChristianFaith” by Frank Reynolds, ChapelHouse, 5810 Woodlawn Ave., 4:30 pm.Duplicate Bridge: Ida Noyes Hall,7:15 pm.POLIT Caucus: “Restructure of SG”,Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.UP and IRP joint caucus: Ida NoyesLibrary, 7:30 pm.Folk Dance: Ida Noyes Hall. 7:30 pm.Graduate Coffee Hour: “Judaism andthe Political Society” by Rabbi DavidPolish. Hillel Foundation, 5715 Wood¬lawn Ave., 8 pm.Saturday MondayFolk Dance Workshop: Ida Noyes,2 pm.Track Meet: Field House, UC vsWayne State, 2 pm.Films: “The Communist Weapon ofAllure”, “The Communist Plan forWorld Conquest”, and “The Black Le¬gion”, 50c, Brested Hall, 7:30 and11 pm. Meeting: Faculty of the College:Eckhart 133, 3:40 pm.Discussion: "Poetry of Bialik andTchernichovsky”, Hillel Foundtion, 5715Woodlawn Ave., 4:30 pm.Film: “To Parish with Love”, Intersnational House, 7 and 9 pm.Shorey Coffee Plus: “The Place ofthe Examination in the University”,Shory House. 9 pm. ClassifiedHELP WANTEDWANTED for taping: 9 Beethoven Sym¬phonies must be stereo and in excellentcondition. Will pay nominal fee. Callafter it pm. 493-3893.Sharon Goldman. BU 8-6610, 1104.DEGREE chemists or physicists orfresh grads seeking lucrative fulltime employment. Call 643-0105. Weserve over three hundred industrialand research organizations.WAITRESS for the Medici about to bereopened. NO 7-9693 or HY 3-3398.LOST AND FOUNDLOST: Gold wrist watch. Finder callMl 3-6000, room 322. REWARD.FOR SALETIRES AND BATTERIES, 10-40'i DIS¬COUNT. ALL AMERICAN BRANDSAND MICHELIN X, PIRELLI. ANDDUNLOP. CALL NO 7-6732.PERSONALSGEORGE, they’ve been selling WASHPROM tickets at Ida Noyes for twoweeks now.JANIE. Our valentine. Chicago CricketClub.IT’S tonight! The ST. VALENTINE’SDAY MASSACRE MEMORIAL PARIY.Singing, dancing, skits, HONKY TONPIANO, FREE FOOD. Write a eulogyfor the seven brave men who died inthe massacre and if it’s judged i;'best, win a prize. EAST HOUSELOUNGE. 9-1. 50c men, women free.The University of Chicago YearbookORDER YOUR UNIVERSITY YEARBOOKDURING SPRING REGISTRATION!! wanting to eat in the convenienceof my dormitory, I had one ofthese nightrrkares.After about two bites, I decidedto accept RH&C’s offer to com-plain if the food is worthy of com¬plaint. I was told that they could \not cater to the taste of students *that last year, under the cafeteriasystem student suggestions wereconsidered (remember luncheonmeat and meat salad sandwiches),but now, under the cash cafeteriasystem, it is the general publicwho is catered to.I know that I was not the onlystudent who complained.Another one was told that if .diedidn’t like the food, she could eatelsewhere. This, of course, is true.But the residents of New Dormwere under the impression thatthey were, if nothing else, part of «the general public. Alienation ofcustomers is no way to stop thefinancial losses. Consideration ofthem might actually attract more.MIKE YESNERChicago Maroon -Editor-in-chiet Laura GodofskyBusiness Manager .... Kenneth C. HeylAdvertising Manager Stephen KleinNews Editors .......... Andrew SteinRobin KaufmanCity News Editor Jobn T. WilliamsAsst. City News Editor. . .Gary FeldmanFeature Editor Ross ArdrryCulture Editor. ... . ... .Vicky ShiefmaaRewrite Editor ..Sharon GoldmanAsst. Rewrite Editor. ....... .Bob LeveyPhoto Coordinators ...... Les GourwitzStan KarterNight Editors John SmithMike SilvermanSports Editor ......... . Rich EpsteinErratum Editor Sherwin K.iplanExeeutive Secretary. ... Mary GottschalkOffice Manager Anita ManuelAdvertising Secretary Nell KnieblerEditor Emeritus Jay GreenbergStaff: Sue Goldberg, Barry Bayer. Ron l)erf-Jane Rosenberg, Lucy Reals, TomHeagy, Michael Kaufman, Jay Flocks; JimByer, Arthur Kaufman, Murray Batt. PaulGreenberg, David Aiken, llene Barmasb,Cynthia Spindel, Deidre Holloway, ArtSondler, Russ Kay, Murray Schacher,Howard Rosen, Steve Becker, Pete Rabino-.in, Robert Williams, Carol Horning,Santve Fuqua, Tom Assent, Kathy Fritz,Jon Roland, Rich Gottlieb, Barbara Caress,Dan Gross. Dave Richter, Bill Faye, DonBaer, Jim Means, Steve Sackett. Mary Car¬penter, Paula Heiser, Connie Carnes, JohnYaeger, Stephen Sharnoff, Joan Kapstein,The Maroon also subscribes to the Inter¬collegiate Press (IP) News Service.ROOMS, APTS., ETC.NICE, reasonable clean room for rentnear the University. Call MI 3-9257 be¬fore 11 am and after 5 pm.COMBO, for informal dance, March16, 10:00 - 12:00 pm. Fee discussable.EUROPE! Hurry! Students wishing toleave on SG short flight, return on longflight, contact room 3406 East, Gaiy .Landou.'Citizens for Decent Literature'Dangers of obscenity discussed New Stagg party formsBy Steve Bookshesfer decent by CDL “a symbol of theof the Roosevelt Torch tragic degredation and the moralMore than 200 Chicagoans sickness of America.” Stated Mc-lieard a “misplaced emphasis ^rrL„ Fr.ef!lo.I,T'J0lf1the,pre?s neodon civil liberties” blamed for The New Boys and Girls of the Stagg Party will hold anorganizational meeting tonigh’t beginning at 8:30. In accord¬ance with Stagg Party policy, a spokesman announced, theobscene literature at the sight ot Tol^ “ cauc»s held the eight washroomsthe name of the publisher, and no Each member will choose a stall man: , The StaSM Party believes“We speak at the drop of a pin.”The group can now recognizethe development of what onespeaker termed “the pornographicsixties” Wednesday.Meeting in the Red Laquer Roomof the Palmer House, the group,which calls itself. “Citizens forDecent Literature” (CDL), listenedto a three hour parade of speak¬ers, and viewed a film dealing withthe dangers of obscenity and por¬nography to the moral fiber of thisnation's citizenry. not be extended to freedom to _ __study porongraphy and obscenity.” longer has to look through paper- and votes will be recorded by *n direct democracy. We invite allAgain touching on the term‘contemporary community stand¬ards,” McGarr declared that thecourts judging obscenity are outof touch with contemporary com¬munity standards.“Hoke Norris scarcely impliesthe thinking of the average com¬munity.” said McGarr. Norris isthe noted literary critic and au¬thor on the staff of the ChicagoSun-Times. Stated McGarr, “The backs and magazines to see if revolutionary applause meter. who find POLIT obnoxiousthey are obscene. Said one blond When votes on controversial issues and UP ridiculous to join in an el-young woman, a member of CDL,“We are not going to give up, andwe know that we are going towin.” Promised Rekruciak, if thefight is kept up, “someday we willmeet again in heaven.”‘‘We want to make the public courts are listening to the wrongaware of the problem .... the segments of the community.”nature and scope of R, so that Following a brief intermission,they will take action to keep this the group viewed a film on porno-nation from being corrupted,” de- graphy. Various samples of ob-clared CDL chairman Edward Re- scene and pornographic literaturekruciak. “We insist that the laws were shown,on obscenity be enforced.”Rekruciak noted that legal de- persons single and under 21 werecisions in obscenity cases are asked to leave during the viewingbased on “contemporary commu- of the film. About six youths leftnitv standards” and stated, “We the Red Laquer Room at that Student prayer day Sun.The 65th Universal Day of wuah, a graduate student in busi-Prayer for Students will be ness fr°m Ghana,held at Rockefeller Chapelthis Sunday. The day ofprayer, which traditionally has af¬forded students the opportunity to The day of prayer is sponsoredby the World Christian Federation.Days of prayer on the UC campusare coordinated by Inter-ChurchHigh school students and those CaSe .^lr situations through pray- Committee for International Stu-er, will begin at 11 am.are trying to raise thosemunity standards.”He declaimed “groups for un¬licensed and unbridied and un-tramelled freedom” as hinderingdie work of CDL. noting that “theirvoice is being heard.” Rekruciaksaid that CDL is “not a censor¬ship group” but is only interestedin law enforcement.In a panel discussion following CDL viewpointRekrueiak’s remarks, one CDLmember noted that ‘‘a tremendousamount of it was printed here inChicago.” He listed the firm in¬volved in this action as W. F. Hailcom- time.Following the film, two morepanels viewed the achievements ofthe group in the past year. Listedamong these were 52 arrests, let¬ters written to Chicago’s metro¬politan dailies that were often notpublished, the closing down ofseveral news stands, and morethan 100 public presentations of theNoted Rekruciak,UP, IRP to holdjoint caucus SundayA joint caucus, involvingPrinting Co. Hall is one of the na- University P^rty (UP) andtion’s largest printers of paper¬back books.“Tropic of Cancer,” the panelmember said. “Now we have allthe literary bigwigs telling us thatits literature.” He mentioned onebook found to be very objection¬able as ‘‘Bobby Sox Sinners,” andstated that “a young girl goingto Norh western was found to bethe editor of this. She was ar¬rested.It was brought out tha! thereore twenty national distributors ofobscene and pornographic litera¬ture to newsstands and otherstores.Following the panel, the groupheard from Chicago lawyer FrankJ. McGarr. Damning both “Tropicof Cancer” and “Ulysses,” McGarrsaid. “I view all these cases asa social tragedy an in¬ability to distinguish between free¬dom and license.”He called wide-spread distribu- roontion of literature seen to be in Theodore A. Gill, president of theSan Francisco Theological Semi¬nary, will be the speaker. Gill, acelebrated preacher and journalist,will speak on “The Piety of theWhole Person.” Assisting in theservice will be W. B. Blakemore,associate dean of Rockefeller. MissAdeline Jiwanmall, a graduate stu¬dent in social service administra¬tion from India, and K. A. Akwa-JOB OPPORTUNITIESRepresentatives of the following or¬ganisations will conduct recruiting in¬terviews at the Office of Career Coun¬seling and Placement during the weekof February 18. Information describingthese organizations and the positionsfor which they are recruiting is avail¬able for revie win the Placement Office.Interview appointments may be ar¬ranged through Mr. Calvin, room 200,Reynolds Club, extension 3284., , , » , Feb. 18, Zurich Insurance Company,the Independent Kelomi party Chicago, Illinois—male graduates of,,nm u_ l, j oV any department for positions in clamis,(llvl ), Will De field OUIlCiay <tl sales, underwriting, and administration.7:30 pm in the Ida Noyes library. Feb. 19 Research Analysis Corpora-1- - tion, Bethesda Maryland—Ph.D candi¬dates in chemistry (analytical, inor¬ganic), mathematics, physics, or statis¬tics for positions in operations research.Feb. 20, Connecticut General I.ife In¬surance Company, Hartford Connecticut—male graduates of any Departmentfor positions as actuaries, administra-Election issues in light of thereceot recall will be the primaryissue discussed at the caucus.Jerry McBeaith, chairman of UP.declined to comment on the possi¬bility that UP and IRP are con- tive 'assistants, staff assistants, undersidering a merger. Jerry Heyman. wy.teebrs’2?ndA‘^^r Research Founda-of IRP, stated that the two parties tion of Illinois Institute of Technology,are just getting together and that Chicago. Illinois—positions for chemists, r “ ... .f (f , (inorganic, physical) at all degree lev-nothing definite has been men- els. and for s M and Ph D candidatestioned about a merger. in mathematics and physics Schedule. , . , „,„i permitting will interview graduate stu-All interested persons are,-wet dents jn above disciplines for summercome at the caucus. employment.Fifteen volunteer bloodFifteen donors have volun¬teered to contribute blood forClvde Kennard as a result of attend state universities in Missi-sippi.Kennard, released from prisonearlier this month in order to getthe appeal in yesterday’s Ma- neede(V. Ii;, ' ^Despres. Eskridge hereLeon Despres and Chaunce.vEskridge, candidates in theforthcoming 5th Ward Alder-manic elections, will be on cam¬pus next week to discuss theirprograms and the issues of theircampaign. Eskridge will be inIda Noyes library on Tuesdayat 4 pm and Despres will behherc on Thursday ait 4 pm. according to a spokesmanfor the UC Hospital blood bankThe former UC student was sen¬tenced to seven years in prison foran alleged theft of $25 worth ofchicken feed. His conviction wasreportedly to prevent him frommaking further attempts to enterthe University of Southern Missi-sippi near his home. Persons withcriminal records are not allowed to year, doctors removed a malignantgrowth from Kennard’s intestineand gave him a 20% chance to livefive years.TIKI TOPICSHave you heard! (!IRALS,HOUSE OF TIKI is servinglunch! Stopped in with friendsfor luneh the other day, andw-liat a pleasant surprise. Oneof the Daily Lunch Specialswas Fried Chicken SandwichPlate for 90c. The Special ofthe Day “Beef Stew" wasdelicious for only $1.00. Cock¬tails are available. Kitchen isopen from 11:00 A.M. to3:00 A.M.CIR ALS, HOUSE OF TIKI1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-758551 st and Lake Park GINGESS BROS.Will Measure forTuxedo RentalIda Noyes, East LoungeMonday, Feb. 18, Between 3 & 6 An Everlasting RemembranceCALLIGRAPHYENGRAVINGIn Enalish — HEBREW — YidishOn Gold - Silver - Trophies, Etc.METAL - PARCHMENT PLAOUES,HAND MADEbv M. KUPFERSTOK5 S. Wabash - Chicago - CE 6-0039You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711 1 foreign w hospital & clinicdealers in:• mg• morris• austin• triumph5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71 stini 3-3113bob testermg psychiatristCROWDS AND POWERby Elios CanettiBased on first hand observation and 25 years of research onhistorical crowds in various civilizations, this is a study of theincreasing interplay between crowds and power. $6.95The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE. are to be taken, each New Boy fart 10 instiute sane, responsibleand Girl will flush his toilet and student government. }make as much noise as possible. “At our caucus we intend to dis-Communication between floors will cuss the nature of student repre¬take place through the air shaft, sentation and see whether anyAccording to the party spokes- strong claims can be made for thecontinuation of the present organi¬zation of student government. Ifour investigation warrants it, wewil seek suitable alternatives.“We intend to use modern so¬ciological methods such as pollsand questionnaires along with time-honored Machiavellion tech¬niques.”Students attending the caucus areasked to fill the stalls on the lowerfloors first. There will be a specialdents. Special efforts are being electronic hookup with the women'smade by both organizations to pro- room in the basement of Piercevide as many services as possible Tower so that females may attendto foreign students. the meeting.Frank talk about your hair: Vitalis with V-7keeps your hair neat all day without grease.Naturally.V-7 is the greaseless grooming disco very .Vitalis®with V-7® fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dry¬ness, keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Try it!University Theatrereadingcoffeediscussion hourIONESCOS'The Lesson'■■■ iiREYNOLD'S CLUB LOUNGEThursday February 197:30 P.M. 1316 t. 53 « ST4II AM TO tO PMMIS-34-07Vy**" W£ D&IIVEJL-Student Government CharterFLIGHTS TOEUROPE$265 Round TripJune 17 — Sept. 13 orJuly 18 — Aug. 23for information call Ml 3-0800ext. 3272, 3:30 - 5:00 weekdaysFeb. 15. 1953 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3An impolite interview with Paul Krassnerby Avima Ruder(Paul Krassner is the editor of theREALIST, “a magazine of freethought,criticism, and satire, and is a contri¬buting editor of PLAYBOY magazine.The following article consists of editedparaphrased excerpts from a taped in¬terview conducted by members of theMAROON staff. The entire interviewwill be printed in a forthcoming issueof the REALIST).Q. What sort of people subscribeto the Realist?A. They come from all walksof life, literally . . . What readershave in common is an awarenessof the absurdities and the injus¬tices that go on every day.Q. You say you started with GOOissues, and now you’re up to 20,000.Why has the Realist's circulationincreased so much?A. I think it’s because what goesin the Realist is stuff that comesto me or out of me that I want toshare with other people. And thevery reason I want to share it withother people is why they want toshare it with still more people—so it’s built up mainly by word ofmouth. It’s “hey, look at this, isn’tthis wild, isn’t this interesting, didyou know this, isn’t this funny.”I’m gregarious to that extent,that I want to share a goddie. Thereaders want to share the goodiestoo.Q. Is it true that Edward Daylets the Realist through the mailsonly to use it as an example of hisliberality when banning everythingelse?A. Well, I don’t know that it getsup as high as J. Edward Day. Oneof the reasons it gets through isbecause it doesn’t violate the ob¬scenity statutes.The use of four letter words, inand of itself, doesn’t constitute ob¬scenity. The Supreme Court Rulingon obscenity was that it has toarouse the purient interests of theaverage parson . . .Now, I’m against that definitiontoo. I believe that people should beallowed to have their purient inter¬ests afoused. As a matter of factif censors really wanted to be con¬sistent they could ban some adsfor tomato juice where they havea sexy dame saying “it tasteslike tomato juice to me.” It arousesme, so I think the V-8 ad is ob¬scene. I think the ad “does she ordoesn’t she” is obscene. Whatreally makes them obscene is that. . . it’s quite deliberate.The Realist does not choose ma¬terial with the express purpose ofoffending the reader. It's one ofthe things that happens, and Iwould be naive if I didn’t say Iknow this is going to offend somereaders. But I get no kicks out ofoffending people. I get amused andsaddened both that they get offend¬ed by the wrong things. That they’llget offended by . . . words insteadof deeds.And also, one other thing . . .maybe there shouldn’t be this di¬chotomy between what ... is inter¬esting and significant and funny inprivate and what you should com¬municate about that in public.Q. How do you get people to do“impolite interviews?”A. Mostly, they’re sympatheticto the Realist. This isn’t alwaysthe case. George Lincoln Rock¬well isn’t sympathetic to the Real¬ist, but he’s hungry for publicity.. I ask them, really . . . whenthey see that I will print whateverthey say, they often welcome theopportunity.Q. Who’s coming up?A. Norman Mailer, the publisherof two nudist magazines, Alex¬ander King, Paul Goodman, MortSahl.Q. Did you ever consider havingRobert Hutchins?A. I don’t think Hutchins wouldcome up with too many surprises.He’s a professional liberal. I wouldask questions and it would be likehitting him an inch below the knee;he would give the proper reflexaction.Q. What is the greatest serviceof the Realist?A. I think its own existence isthe greatest service, because it’sa kind of civil liberties in action. . . proving that freedom of thepress can exist in this countrywithout any censorship, withoutany problems. . .Also, readers who are scatteredabout feel very gratified to know that they’re not alone, that they’renot the only ones who have thisoutlook on life, that they’re notnuts, that maybe society is sickand they're not. after all. So may¬be one of the services is just re¬assuring people.Q. Your first issue started offwith the headline “An AngryYoung Magazine.” You are nolonger young, relatively, and youdon’t even seem to be as angryin the same way you were before.What changes have come aboutsince you’ve started?A. One change was the “People”program, a sort of disorganizedsocial work program that theRealist is sponsoring. By disorgan¬ized, I mean it helps people withoutthe interference of bureaucracy,and more directly.This actually is quite related toanger because if grows out of an¬ger at the bureaucracy; so it’sreally just a kind of logical growth.It's not a change, it’s a growth.And the anger is not to be con¬fused with hostility; it is angerabout injustice.If you just yell and screamabout injustice it becomes a kindof negativism, and “People” isjust a kind of natural positive re¬action to the answer.We’re trying to do those taskswhich the official social work or¬ganizations have left undone, or¬ganizations like CARE, which hasdone wonders for the people inother countries, while nothing isdone about the starving—literallystarving — children of migrantworkers here, in the South, in thiscountry . . .The day before I came to Chi¬cago I got a call from a house¬wife. And she said, why can’t weteach these Puerto Rican motherssomething about shopping. Thewife of an accountant is willing toteach them bookkeeping. Littlethings like this.Q: What happened to the Neigh¬borhood Pilot Project, which wastrying to interest slum children inlearning?A: The bureaucracy there wasincredible. The building depart¬ment closed the building down be¬cause they wrere holding dancesthere on Saturday nights and thebuilding permit wasn't applied foras a dance hall, but as an educa¬tional thing.But part of the problem of get¬ting these kids interested in edu¬cation is to get them there in thefirst place. And if you have to at¬tract them by holding a dance,and then let them learn that theycan learn to read there, fine. Soit moved to another store andthey’re still functioning. And theygot several volunteer teachers whooffered to help, as well as contri¬butions, through the Realist article.We just opened another storefront and we’ve got a guy who’sa Black Belt who is going to teachthe kids judo. A lot of reaction is:oh, oh, now they’ll fight, theywon't need their zip gqns to gorumbling. But he's going to teachit to them with the whole philo¬sophy of judo which really in¬volves gentleness. It's really a wayof teaching them gentleness andgetting rid of their excess energy.Also two strange kids, kids noone had ever met before, came inand asked if they could help andthey helped paint the store . . .Q: Is it better to contribute toNew York People or to start yourown, as the UC students involvedin the Woodlawn tutoring projectare doing in a way?A: To start your own would bebeautiful. You can get all the in¬formation you need from Von Hil-sheimer (who is running the pro¬ject).He was a field representative forthe American Humanist Associa¬tion and kept being told it wasn’tin their charter to help people butonly to talk about how its theirphilosophy to help people.His satisfaction is helping peo¬ple . . . and all his life he’s beenhampered in helping people bybureaucratic crap. Here’s a guywho’s helping people. The hell withtheory; he’s doing it. And he’sdoing it for the right reasons, he’snot doing it out of sublimation, as some social workers do — theMary Worth syndrome . . .Another group, the AmericanFriends Service Committee, hasthese projects where they’re direct¬ly helping people. So I don’t careif they have a mystical approachto life with moments of medita¬tion where they think about QuakerOats. There’s sort of a paradoxthat Quakers are pacifists butQuaker Oats are shot fromguns . . .I think there is a kind of emo¬tional version of the Chinese watertorture. Instead of drip-drip-dripof water on one’s forehead, there’sawareness of an injustice—aware¬ness of another injustice—aware¬ness of another injustice. And youhave to kind of seal yourself offfrom it if you can't do anythingabout it.I have immediate unquestionedsympathy for (people gettingkicked around), but all I can dois to mark it down, make anothertally mark under sympathy, andlet it go at that. If they don’t getmuch publicity, I can give thempublicity in the Realist, perhaps.You know, the slogan for thismonth was "The Fire Hydrant ofthe Underdog.”Q: Well, do you think you cando anything about, lets say, Berlinor Cuba, and if not, are you justi¬fied in sealing yourself off fromit?A: When I say seal myself off,I just mean I don't think it’s neces¬sarily a virtue to be well informed.Seal myself off means not ex¬pending emotional energy use¬lessly. Its useless to go aroundmoaning. You either do some tilingabout it or not, but I don’t thinkthere’s any point in raving andranting. You have only so muchemotional energy that you can ex¬pend.You have to limit yourself to thecauses that concern you mostdirectly and that you can do some¬thing about. When I say sealingoff I mean in effect not cryingover spilt milk unless you cansomehow lap it up.Q: AH the problems and all thethings like People are very goodand very fine. On the other hand,the thing which may hinder People,or prevent it from happening, theBomb, is a great big issue whichyou can't do a damn thing about.And if you seal yourself off fromit, what are you doing aboutreality? Wliat are you doing in theface of the great problems, theones that you can’t help?A: I’m not putting you downlor the question. I’ll give you theway out; you were being a devil’sadvocate.This is what many pacifists andmany, many people who are in¬volved in the great causes, aboutwhich they can do nothing, useas their excuse for nihilism.They’ll say, “Well, nothing mat¬ters, those poor starving kids don’tmatter if the Bomb is going tocome and wipe them out of exist¬ence anyway.” So they’re goingaround and carrying picket signsand signing petitions and going tomeetings—especially if they cancut classes — protesting civil de¬fense drills but leaving earlycause they don’t want to miss theirROTC class.All these means of ineffectualprotest—ineffectual because theydon't change a ramned thing—canbe an excuse for not helping peopledirectly that you can help.Q: Why don’t you vote?A: I believe if I’m standing inCity Hall park when they’re havingthe civil defense drill and I refuseto take shelter, that is definitelypolitical action, and it’s more im¬portant to me than voting, becauseit’s having it’s effect—it’s havingmore of an effect than when I vote.And I think that’s the reason whyI don't vote—because I just don’tbelieve that I'm having ar effect.Q: What do you think of thePeace Corps and the concept ofhaving a foreign Peace Corps be¬fore we have a domestic one?A: I like Kennedy for the PeaceCorps idea, but I dislike it becausethe respectability angle comes in.They have a screening process,with the whole loyalty tiling, andthey investigate you before theylet you in the Corps. The irony is that people who have protested inany way which makes them un¬desirable are perhaps the bestpeople for the Peace Corps.(About the domestic Corps), Ithink the problem is really goingto start occuring when somebodyfrom Winnetka, Illinois, sends backa postcard from the lower EastSide of New York, telling whatconditions are really like. Then thewhole domestic Peace Corps plan'sgoing to be shattered.Q: What about the Catholic Work¬er movement.A: I admire them greatly, butthere again, they're worried aboutrespectability. There's a mimeo¬graphed magazine in New Yorkcalled Fuck You, A Magazine ofthe Arts. And many of the peoplewho put it out were with the Catho¬lic Worker movement until theygot kicked out. Plus the fact thatCatholic anarchism seems to melike a contradiction in terms. AndDorothy Day has admitted that ifthe hierarchy told her to stop pub¬lishing, she would.Q: What do you think about theconservative revival on campuses?A: I think it’s a secret projectby the manufacturers of vests’. Iwonder, I really don’t know, wheth¬er the people join it because theyknow in future years if employerslook at college records of extra¬curricular activities, they wouldrather see somebody being a mem¬ber of the Young Americans forFreedom than the Marxist discus¬sion club. If that isn’t part of themotivation;- without real convic¬tions, maybe there’s just a certainhipness in joining it in those circles.And maybe next year it’ll be hip tohave convictions.Q: What did you think of theHouse Un-American Activities Com¬mittee and their attempted smearof Women’s Strike for Peace?A: Til at may surprise you, butthat’s another loaded question.Sure, when you say smear, its aloaded word.Q: Sorry. Attempt to point outCommunists.A: No, it’s an attempt to smearthem. I think that the Women'sStrike for Peace should have madethe most of it by letting peopleknow what their program is.They’ve never gotten so much pub¬licity in their lives. And my firstreaction was: gee, that’s too bad.Now this group is ruined; it’ssmeared. But upon hearing some¬one interviewed on an FM stationin New York, it was very gratifying—extremely gratifying — to learnthat the reaction was the otherway. All the time all these littleodd-ball groups that have alwaysformed have always been peoplewho were habitual joiners.The Women’s Strike for Peaceapparently are just women strikingfor peace who are not necessarilyhabitual joiners but who all of asudden . . . this thing became sogreat, that they’re doing the equiv¬alent of Lysistrata. . . .I think it’s done HUAC moreharm than good, because peoplesee they’re picking on obviouslyinnocent people who have goodmotivations. In a way, I’m glad ithappened, the way I*’m glad whena good book is banned, because itpoints out how ludicrous the situ¬ation is.Q: Do you think there is anyhope for the peace movement nowthat weapons are mechanized?A: I think my real hope is thatKennedy and Khrushchev some¬how deep inside of them will knowthat it’s their kids and their grand¬children too. And 1 think that thismay well have been, consciously,Khrushchev’s motivation when heagreed to follow the principles setupon him by Kennedy in the Cubancrisis. I don’t really know.This relates to the Women’sStrike For Peace. This woman onthe stand when she was asked ifshe would purge Communists outof the organization said no. Theyasked her then if she would wantfascists to be in it. I wish then shehad said, “Yes, why don’t youjoin?” The point there is that, sup¬pose everybody joins except theleaders who press the buttons. SoI think that in the last analysis,the hope lies in the realization onthe part of the leaders that theywould be insane to press the but¬ton.Q: Wliat did you think of the reports in the press that Cuba wasgoing to use missiles against citiesin the United States?A: Having been in Cuba and hav¬ing seen the way reporters operatethere—they consciously and sub¬consciously want to please theireditors; nobody has to tell themwhat slant to take—I would be atleast suspicious of the reports.I was in Cuba while they weresetting up anti-aircraft weapons onthe roof of the hotel I was stayingat. 1 kept going around saying: doyou really think we’re going toattack you. And they’d say: re¬member Guatamala, remember theMaine. I'd feel very historicallynaive. Then I got back and thought:Gee, those poor deluded people.That comic opera. And all of asudden there was the Bay ot Pigs.Q: How do you describe yourpolitics?A: As based on instinctive moral¬ity rather than partisan positions.If I'm a liberal, the morality super¬sedes the position.Q: Were you satisfied with HughHefner’s explanation of why onlyCaucasians can be Playmates?A: He said . . . they wanted toget the image of the girl next door.Now the implication of this is thatNegro girls don’t live next door.I wasn’t too disturbed by that be¬cause they have other things. Theyhad an article by Nat Hen-toffcalled “Through the Racial Look¬ing Glass,” which said a lot aboutthe racial problem. More than that,I know they've contributed to theUrban League, which doesn’t proveanything.I don't think it would necessarilybe a sign of progress in race rela¬tions if there’s a Negro Playmateof the Month. See, the problem is,if they were to get a Negro Play¬mate of the Month, she wouldprobably be a Negro with Cauca¬sian features. And this m'ght berelented by Negroes. It migat not,because if you look at some ol theNegro magazines like Ebony, yousee their cover girls have Cauca¬sian features. And I think the im¬portant thing is . . . and I'm notjust defending Playboy for the sakeof defending it ... I don't thinkyou can separate Playboy Com thewhole culture.On Father Knows Best with allthe problems they’ve had, they’venever worried about the daughter.. . . She always had all these prob¬lems, but there was never anyproblem about bringing home acolored boy. ... If they were tohave that, if you extend the wholeformat of the program, RobertYoung would give a little lectureto her on why it’s okay to haveNegroes date you . . .And so what I’m saying is thefact that there isn’t any NegroPlaymate is just one aspect of thegenerally cultural Gentlemen’sAgreement that the peer group i-Caucasian.Q: What do you think of theGreat books?A: Which Great books?Q: The Great books of the west¬ern world, with an index.A: I'm sure there are more stu¬dents at the University of Chicagowho' were influenced more byCatcher in the Rye than Plato andI'm sure that they don’t includeSalinger in the Great Books. So Ithink it’s a pretty arbitrary choice.Q: Was Christ a Good guy or abad guy?A: I think many good things havebeen accomplished through sub¬limation. So to be pragmatic aboutit, I would go by, well ... I findall sorts of inconsistencies.If Christ was so forgiving, thenwhy did he chase out the money¬lenders from the temples?I think Christian principles aregood, but I’m sure people wereChrist-like before Christ was everborn. People didn’t all of the sud¬den become “Christian” as theresult of his having ... we reassuming that this is not a myth.I'm willingly suspending my dis¬belief in order to answer the ques¬tion. As for whether he was a goodor a bad guy, I don’t want to eastthe first stone.Q: What is your favorite Christ¬mas Carol?A: 1 think it is Silent Night, HolyNight because I see all these sweetlittle kids singing Virgin Motherwithout knowing what it’s about.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 15, 1963matistmw? unnHBfw? iI,i!!t,;i',!’iV>>!HTiiiiH!HWBoiBnuuiHliaHiWiHUWH«iHiimiiniiHuiniMuinHmiiimBi!«H!i'iiHmMiimutii!m!mMn«mmiiiiiiiHt!ii;iimHi •; w ' i; :' ;, !!! .riiiimnmimiitiimi;- GADFLY !,; .. :(!!! i: • •! >>l!llin!!IIIHIIHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIII»:itt:ililllllHllllllil!llllllllllllllilllllii W: ::: itlllllllHIHHIIIlWHIHDHIIIIIHIIIIIIIIHIIIilllHimillllillllliii . ’ IIIIIIIIIIIIHILet Rockwell speak—but why here?I have read with great interestand concern the correspondence in theletters to the editor column concern¬ing the possible appearance on cam¬pus of Nazi leader George Rockwell. Theinvitation to Rockwell presents our Univer¬sity community, which prides itself on theexercise of its own liberties and its devotionto the liberty of others, with the necessityof examining and* clarifying our own com¬mitment to free speech. It requires that weapply our notions about free speech to atangled issue which does not admit of anyobviously right answers. The following per¬sonal statement attempts to build upon thepreceding discussion. Let me say that it isnot meant to question the good faith or de¬votion to liberty of those who have ex¬pressed other viewrs of the matter.Rockwell’s right to speakIt is important to distinguish Rockwell’sright to speak generally from the desirabili¬ty of inviting him to speak here. Althoughhe has nothing of merit to add to any dis¬cussion of public issues, I acknowledge hisright to express his views to those that enjoyhearing them. But I would emphaticallyreject the notion of Mr. Stephen Rosen(Letters, Feb. 6)) that Rockwell should beheard because be ‘may be right.’ Theremight be a certain grisly fascination inhearing Mr. Rosen explain in what senseit might be ‘right’ to murder millions ofJews. This notion of Rockwell’s sadistic pro¬gram contending in some ‘marketplace ofideas’ strikes me as a profound misconcep¬tion of the nature of the ‘truths’ involved inpolitical discussion. The rightness or wrong¬ness of murdering millions of people is notsome ‘correct’ piece of information placidlywaiting to be ascertained by rational in¬quiry and impartial debate. Whether sucha notion is ‘right’ is not some ‘truth’ in therealm of ideas; whether it will be ‘right’depends on the outcome of a political strug¬gle between contending views, a struggle inwhich the winner will make its views ‘right’—at least temporarily. The issue is whetherRockwell’s side ought to enjoy an oppor¬tunity to compete in that struggle.If his were the only unpopular viewswith which we had to deal or if the circum¬stances were changed, 1 would not hesitate—at least not out of principle.— to deny himthat opportunity. But under the present cir¬cumstances, I believe he should be allowedio speak. I have sufficient faith in the mor¬ality and general good sense of the over¬whelming majority of my fellow citizens tofeel confident that they will ignore his ap¬peals to butchery. Needless to say, it doesnot follow that they will be edified or en¬lightened by hearing him.My unwillingness to see Rockwell sup¬pressed stems not from any supposed bene¬fit which will ensue upon his speaking, butfrom the dangerous precedent that suchsuppression would establish. It is extremelydifficult to devise and apply legal testswhich would distinguish between critics andeccentrics on the one hand and charlatansand demagogues on the other. I would pre¬fer to put up with a few Rockwells ratherthan provide a precedent for jailing south¬ern integrationists as ‘racial agitators.’That it would be undesirable to preventhim from speaking does not imply that itis therefore desirable to encourage him tospeak—a distinction that seems to 'escapesome enthusiastic libertarians. Mr. Rosenc0BEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd Sr. HY 3-8302 asserts that since we do “not know the ulti¬mate truth of any political issue,” thereforeRockwell’s ideas ought be listened to by allof us. This rather distasteful conclusionseems to rest on the hidden but fallaciousinference that since the best way to conductpublic business is by allowing everyone tohave his say, it follows that everyone whohas something to say has something worth¬while to say. But it does not follow that ifdiscussion is a good thing, each contribu¬tion to it has a positive value and is deserv¬ing of encouragement. On the contrary,some views may detract from the rationaii-ty and decency of the discussion. Fortunate¬ly for Rockwell, his claim to free speechneed not rest upon the merits of his ideas,but is vindicated by the social cost anddanger of separating out his kind of speechfrom that which has merit.Desirability af inviting himOpposition to silencing Rockwell does notimply any obligation to provide him with aforum. Let us look at some of the reasonsthat have been suggested for having himhere on campus. It is suggested that thiswill demonstrate our devotion to free speechand ‘encourage an aura of freedom . . .’ Atthis, one can only wonder what other plansare in store to ornament our freedom by Im¬porting incompetents, monsters and char¬latans. Surely there are better ways to util¬ize one’s freedom than to turn the universityinto a showplace for psychotics!There is good reason to think that Rock-w’ell is incapable (and probably unwillingas well) to contribute anything to the kindof serious discussion or dialogue that takesplace at this University. Indeed, one gathersthat he is being invited as a specimen orcuriosity rather than as a party to anygenuine debate on public issues. It should bepointed out that Chicago is a large citywhich provides a variety of places in whichto attend entertainments, including politicalones.But we are told that, unlike the run ofcharlatans, Rockwell is too important be¬cause his movement is ‘potent.’ Its potencyand importance, if any, are — happily —potential rather than actual. It can onlyescape its present insignificance by gainingincreased access to the mass media. I agreethat its ugly potentialities should not be ig¬nored. But the methods of satisfying one'scuriosity about it should be chosen with aview to avoid magnifying it.It has been suggested that, having per¬mitted Gus Hall, Jimmy Hofia and MalcolmX to appear on campus, consistency requiresthe same forbearance toward Rockwell. 1w’ould agree that consistency requires thatRockwell be given an equal right lo speakif invited. That does not imply that he isequally deserving of an invitation. Withoutgoing into the merits of inviting these otherspeakers, I might say that the comparisonwith Hall, Hoffa and X is decidedly unfair—at least to the last two, both of whom areRockwell's intellectual betters and neitherof whom is associated with a murderoustyranny. (It is, to the best of my knowledge,not true that as Mr. Powell says (Letters,Feb. 7) Malcolm X advocates a policy ofracial hatred as intense as Rockwell’s;whatever Jimmy Hoffa’s sins, they are farshort of systematic mass murder). ButRockwell not only acknowledges, but em¬braces the most destructive and horribleside of Naziism.*Many social and religious movementshave advocated—and even more have prac¬ticed-coercion and even murder to achieve certain objectives. Without ignoring all ofthe enormities which have resulted fromsuch views, I am convinced that there ismoral distinction between such views andthe belief in coercion and murder as endsin themselves. It can at least be said forall the other speakers mentioned that theyhad the good sense, good taste or hypocrisyto dissociate themselves from the excesseswhich have been (or might be) perpetratedin the name of the ideas tor w hich theycontend. But in Rockwell's case it is theexcesses and enormities themselves that arebeing recommended as desirable.Should the University forbid hisappearance?It has been suggested that the adminis¬tration intervene to forbid Rockwell’s ap¬pearance here. I suggest that the traditionby which any group within the Universitycommunity may bring speakers of its choiceto campus without approval by the corpor¬ate wisdom of. the administration is avaluable one. The administration is no morequalified (and has only rarely pretended tobe) to decide what are valuable and worth¬while opinions than are the other membersof the university community. It would beunfair to the administration as well as irk¬some to the rest of us to burden them withthis task. It should of course be understoodthqt the appearance of a speaker does notconfer on him the imprimatur of approvalby the University, an invitation does notnecessarily even express the approval ofthe group that invites him—but only theirjudgment that he has something worthhearing. Rockwell’s appearance will un¬doubtedly be deeply offensive to the manymembers of the University communitywhose families were murdered or w ho them¬selves suffered torture, imprisonment anddegradation at the hands of the Nazis. Inspite of my deep sympathy and my desireto see them spared this needless affront, Icannot agree that offensiveness to somesupplies a sufficient ground for the univer¬sity to intervene and ban a speaker. But itis a factor which the inviters might, out ofsensitivity and fellow-feeling, weigh againstthe supposed benefits of Rockwell's visit.One letter-writer, comparing Rockwell toa tuberculosis carrier, has suggested that hebe banned from campus “because some ofus might become infected.” Although theanalogy is apt in its reference to Rockwell’svirulence, I believe that it overrates hiscommunicability. The University communi¬ty ought to be confident of its powers ofresistance to these spiritual poisons. Thedanger that Rockwell will make any con¬verts here is negligible. We should havesufficient mutual trust to allow him to ap¬pear if some of us really want to hear him.A policy of ’containmefit*Rockwell’s potential recruits are not hereon campus but among the frustrated, mal¬formed and spiritually impoverished whowill find in his message of hate somethingthat corresponds to their own inner torment.Whatever importance Rockwell's Nazi move¬ment may acquire depends upon his successin reaching the gullible and susceptible.Those who invite him here need not suspendtheir judgment of the moral value and pro¬bable effect of his doctrines; they may ar¬range his appearance to confine it to thepurpose of hearing his ideas without pro¬viding him with the publicity he so avidlydesires.I suggest that to the fullest extent possible same privacy and obscurity that enhancesthe freedom of classroom discussions. Inorder to ensure this. I would urge those whoplan to invite him to issue their invitationupon conditions such as the following:1) that the meeting be closed rather thanpublic, with attendance confined to theinviting group and their guests.2) that the number of Rockwell’s personalguests be limited to a small entourage.3) that no uniforms to be worn, nor swas¬tikas or placards displayed. Let themsell literature.4) that the press and other mass mediashould be excluded. I would not includethe Maroon under this ban.As a guest of a university group, it is per¬fectly proper to ask that he agree to suchstipulations. 1 suggest that any communica¬tion of ideas that might take place wouldbe better accomplished under such circum¬stances than amid would-be storm-troopers,popping flashbulbs and general uproar. Thiswill provide Rockwell with the opportunityto speak and the curious with the opportuni¬ty to hear what, he has to say. But it willnot provide him with the opportunity tocreate a disturbance — or to benefit ifsomeone else creates one. Whatever legiti¬mate purposes were to be served would beserved without lending the university inad¬vertantly to publicizing this monster.Finally, a suggestion about demonstra¬tions. I am. somewhat regretfully, inclinedto agree with the Maroon that picket linesor other mass demonstrations would onlygive Rockwell the publicity his ideas can’tget on their merits. I doubt that, as onewriter says, "it is important to publicize theanti-fascist feelings of the University com¬munity.” These are sufficiently well-knownand it would be foolish lo assert them in away that w'ould rescue Rockwell from hiswell-deserved obscurity. I would urge thosewho are anxious to demonstrate their ab¬horrence to consult in advance and devisea form of protest that would not lend itselfto presentation in the mass media.In conclusion, let me say that this invita¬tion should lead to a recognition that thequestion of who should speak at this Uni¬versity ought not to be settled by single-minded dedication to ‘free speech’ as anabstract principle. The presumption in favorof hearing a speaker should be seasoned byconsideration of his merits, of the context inwhich he is to be heard and of the possibilityof hearing him elsewhere. Needless to say,these considerations apply not only to Rock¬well and his ilk. but also to hacks and igno¬ramuses who represent more popularcauses.* It should be clear that this in no wayendorses the insinuation of Mr. TheodorePearson (Letters. Feb. 13) that communists,unlike fascists, are acceptable because theyare one "type of liberal” and “sincerelybelieve ... in freedom.” The creditableconcern of some Marxist parties with racialequality does not make them “liberals,”nor should it obscure the fact that com¬munists in power have not shrunk from thedestruction of entire ethnic groups. I shouldadd that I can conceive of the appropriate¬ness of inviting a thoughtful and intelligentfascist, if such there be, to speak oncampus.MARC GALANTER(Mr. Galanter is Assistant Professor inthe Social Sciences in the College, not inPolitical Science as was wrongly reportedon page 3 of yesterday’s Maroon.)' Hank’s Restaurantand Bar-B-Cue"the best bar-b-eue on earth”HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported end domesticwines, liquors ond beer ot lowestprices.* FREE DELIVERYPHONEMB a jm 1233FA 4-;»“ Features: Complete Dinners from $1.25Businessmen’s Lunches from 95cSpecialty: Hickory Smoked Bar-b-cuedRibs and ChickenWe have a private dining room for businessmeetings, cfubs, and private affairsOpen 7 a.m. to 1 a.m.7101 STONY ISLAND AVENUE643-1131 his appearance here be surrounded with theSHARE-A-RIDE CENTRAL \Offers A Unique New Service To Our Mobile Society jjNow You Can Find Share Expense Rides orRiders to Any City Nationwide.Subscribe NOW! For Your Trip Horne For Spring Interim.For Complete Informotio*x TELEPHONE FI 8-7263PIZZASFoe The Price OfNICKY’S55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780Feb. 15. m3 • CHICAGO MAROON 5—hkwwh WIIHBWWIMIWilW'HIWIIITniff11 in.*! 1 Ml H'H WU WWH» IIUUUUWWBHead of mines s strike to speak Need help in food driveTonight the leader of 1500striking Kentucky coal minerswill discuss the plight of hisgroup of unorganized labor¬ers, who have been abused by theiremployers and shunned bv theirunion.Rader Smith, an ex-miner who‘‘leads the picket line,” will showslides of conditions in Perry Coun¬ty, Kentucky, where men earnfrom SI.50 to $6 a day for spending8 to 14 hours in a three or fourfoot high shaft loading by handapproximately 20 tons of coal.He will speak at 8 pm in the IdaNoyes East Lounge.In an interview yesterday. Smithexplained the workers’ problemswith the mine operators and theUnited Mine Workers union.In Perry County, where therewere ten years ago twenty unionmines, there is now only one, saidSmith. Union miners earn about$25 for an eight hour day. morethan four times as much as their“scab” counterparts.In 1952 mine operators engagedin cutthroat competition beganlowering wages and cutting outfringe benefits. In April ol thisyear the four union hospitals in thearea will be closed because theoperators have discontinued a 40ca ton royalty to pay for the Ik>s-pitals. The operators pocketed uniondues causing men to be droppedfrom the union roles. They alsopocketed unemployment paymentsand social security funds.In 1959 the men went on strike.Much violence ensued and theunion promised the men redressand ordered them back to work.The men went back but no redresswas forthcoming. About fourmonths ago they went out on strikeagain.Almost all ofthe 10,000 men onjstrike today as]well as those]working in the]non - union minesBESOINS DE BASE —InstructionVous vous 6tes peut-^tre renducompte que l'expressiou "unhonnne parti de rieii" n’est plu»courunte aujourd'hui. Uu telatiiibut disparattra enticementsous peu. Gr&ce aux octrois *<-cordls aux v£t£rans, giJke auxecoles du soir, gr&ce k une plusgnirrcuse repartition des Iwurses d eludes et grftce k la sagessedes peres de famille qui prepa-rent I'avenir de leurs enfant*,un pourcentage asset £lev£ denot re jeune people pent »e per¬illed ic un plus haut niveau d‘in*-truction. L’assurance-instroctionest un des plus important* ser¬vices qu’offrcnt les compagniesd'asstirance-vie. Elle garautitquaucune restriction ne fereobstacle aux ambition* d unjeune homme, sauf ses pioprescapacity* naturelles. Peuset queses enfant* auront tonics leschances possibles ii i'avenir, parsuite de sa pr^voyance it leurprocurer une police qui paieraa loutes les ^ventualites, constituc une source de fierte pour lepere de famille d’aujourd'hui.Permettez-moi de causer avecvotes de vos besoins d'assurancede liase. Je suis assocte k la SunLife Assurance Company ofC anada, la compaguie qui possede la police repondant k vo#exigences! Tikphonet molaujoutdtiuini£tue! II n'yaura aucuneobligationde votie part.RALPH J. WOOD, Jr , ‘481 N. LA SALEE, CHICAGO, IU.FR 2-2390 FA 4-4000SUN UFI DU CANADArAhSAM-V&NCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inrA\T«.\ESi: am#a >I I IS ICAN DISH KSOPEN DATI.Y11 A.M. to 10:30 PM.OliDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 were union mem-,bers in the past'and want to benow. The UMW jwill have nothing]to do with them.The Union claims R. Smiththat lawsuits resulting from vio¬lence in the past have causedthem more trouble than the areais worth.When the mine operators cut offthe workers’ union dues, the unionlost interest in the plight of themen, said Smith. The unions arebasically interested in having lesstrouble with operators in the areathan in organizing the men there,he said.The attitude of the union is thatif they're not going to be able tocollect dues from the men, theylose interest in helping the men,he continued.Although the miners have the im¬pression that the union leadersdon’t know about them, “they doknow,” said Smith, “especially be¬cause of the hospital closings.”Despite the union's apparent lackof concern for the miners, the bestthe miners can do is get backinto the union ,and get their hospi¬talization back, said Smith. If themen were back in the union, theycould receive the $25 union dailywage.Smith hit the union for failing tonegotiate with the mine operatorsand securing a contract with them.The union, which could get theminers and the operators togetheron some means of getting peopleback to work, instead is havingCOMINGfor ONE NIGHT ONLYMONDAY FEB. 25CONCERT & DANCE WITHmanand His QuartetDancing to DON CARON••4 the• PEPSI COLA" OrchestraMAIL ORDERS NOW$2 00 per person in advance($2.50 at the door that evening) ^NO RESERVED SEATING(■WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL BALLROOM.. |[i! RAGONl BALLROOM ► Ph lO -1-83231 1 106 W LAWRENCE AVEJ Wear Contact jCeenJedbyDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3 8372at University Ave. nothing to do with the workers, hesaid.The governor of Kentucky, whopromised to help the 1500 strikingminers, instead sent 21 carloads ofstate police to guard the minewhere 1000 other men are stillworking, said Smith. The Hazardsheriff owns four mines himself.The men who have kept to then*jobs although making only threeand four dollars a day have doneso because they saw no other wayto eat or live, said Smith.The owner of a local supermarkethas been selling the striking minersfood at cost. This man is also apastor at a church in Hazard,which was blown up because ofhis sympathy for the strikers.The miners are living on “whatthey can beg,” in general, saidSmith. Those with pensions havecontributed some funds, too. Thegovernment has refused to give thestrikers any surplus commodities,said Smith.The UC chapter of the YoungPeoples’ Socialist League, which issponsoring Smith's appearance to¬night, has raised about $850 for theminers. The Student Non - Violent Coordinating- Committee(SNCC). continuing its food drive for Negroes in Mississippi,is asking for volunteers to aid with food pickup and packingin and around Chicago tomorrow.Men are needed from 10 am onto help pick up food at collectionplaces throughout the city. Boththose with cars and those withoutare needed. Volunteers are askedto report to the office of New Uni¬versity Thought, 5478 South Wood-lawn. The telephone number thereis NO 7-4222/Later on in the day. both menand women are needed at theWorkers Union Hall, 4859 SouthWabash, for packing duties. Menwill do loading and women pack¬ing. These duties will take placefrom 6 to 8 pm.The food is being collected forthe Negroes in Mississippi whowere forced off their land becausethey tried to vote, and consequentlylost their means of supportingthemselves.According to McClair McComb,a SNCC representative who hasjust returned from Clarksdalewive re the food is being sent, thesituation is really desperate andSNCC worker offereddeal by prosecutorAn assistant circuit solicitorin Montgomery, Alabama,stated during a hearing onfalse pretenses charges againstStudent Nonviolent CoordinatingCommittee field secretary BobZellner that he had offered todrop that charge if Zellner wouldplead guilty to the charge of Va¬grancy. Zellner would not agreeto do so.The false pretense charge isbased on the fact that Zellnerwrote a check for $85 on the dayof his vagrancy arrest thinkingthat there was money in his ac-Basketball contestwinner announcedRoger B. Cooley lias beennamed first prize winner of$100 in 'the second Viceroybasketball contest lor Univer¬sity of Chicago students. Secondprize of $25 has been won by JamesDrew.Dan R. Aronson. Larry Bloom,Alan Exelrod, George Fross. RogerFross, Ira Katz, Judith Latsch,Antigone Lefteris, Bruce McKel-lips, Mary Stallings, and StevenWindell have each won $10 as run¬ners-up.Prizes will be awarded in theMaroon office, Ida Noyes tihirdfloor, on Friday between 11 am rand2 pm.Entry blanks for the final bas¬ketball contest are available inReynolds club and other cigaretteoutlets on campus. count to cover it.Through a clerical slip, moneywas not in his account when hewrote the check, but was depos¬ited three hours later. The checkwould have cleared during ordin¬ary course of business.State authorities plan to pressthe false pretenses charge — afelony in Alabama with a 1-10year sentence — to the GrandJury. pitiful. People are on the vergeof starving, he said. 1.000 turnedout the first morning for food, and1,000 more were turned away. Thusfar, 22,000 people have receivedfood.Beside the Chicago drive, similardrives are being conducted in AnnArbor, Michigan; New York; andBerkeley, California. A total of50,000 pounds dT food has been de¬livered, 14,000 of which was per¬sonally delivered by comedian DickGregory. The drive, according to aspokesman, wiir continue indefi¬nitely.Anyone interested in working forSNCC tomorrow may obtain furtherinformation by calling BO 8-5077.Checks for the “Food for FreedomProgram of SNCC” may be madeout to Chicago Friends of SNCC,and mailed to 1316 East MadisonPark.Academic freedomprogram presentedThis weekend the Universi¬ty of Chicago Students forCivil Liberties will present anAcademic Freedom program.On Saturday at 3 pm in SocialScience 122 Edward Yellin, Univer¬sity of Illinois student and firstamendment case now on appeal inthe Supreme Court, will discuss hiscase.On Sunday at 3 pm in BreastedHall there will be an open-end dis¬cussion on academic freedom. Theparticipants will be professorsMarc Galanter, Bernard Weisberger and John Roche. Also participat¬ing will be Neal Johnston.Sit-ins begin in Pine BluffJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife InsuranceProtection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 Thirteen members of thePine Bluff, Arkansas, StudentMovement staged the city’sfirst sit-ins on February 1,exactly three years after the sit-in movement began in Greens¬boro, North Carolina. There werePlace of examinationsanalyzed at Sciences PlusThe place of examinationsin the university will be thetopic of discussion at ShoreyCoffee Plus Monday night.Participants will be David Wil¬liams, college examiner; James E.Farnell. examiner in Social Sci¬ences I; William J. Farrell, exami¬ner in humanities; and JaniceSpofford, biology examiner. JohnG. Cawelti, chairman of Hum I,will moderate.The discussion will cover UC’spresent system, the reasons for it,and possible changes. An informalquestion period will follow.The program will be at ShoreyHouse, ninth floor Pierce, at 9 pmMonday.COLOR DEVELOPINGPREPAID MAILERS8 mm Roll, 3 mm 20 exp $1.2935 mm, 36 exp $1.98MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTSJimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave. no arrests or incidents.Students sat at Woolworth'slunch counters for three hours.The counter closed immediately,and the students sat studying andreading until the store closed.They returned the following dayfor 21* hours.William Hansen, a field workerfor the Student Nonviolent Co¬ordinating Committee, who hadbeen arrested in Pine Bluff onJanuary 10 on a charge of vagran¬cy, reported that Pine Bluff Po¬lice Chief Norman Young told thesitters-in, “You’ll beg for mercybefore this is over.”Prof. Binder discussesMiddle East violence“The Management of Vio¬lence in the Middle East” willbe discussed by Leonard Bin¬der, associate professor ofpolitical science, at the Hillel Fire¬side Friday,Binder is a leading autnority onpolitical events in the Middle East.He has visited Israel several times,and has dime field research inPakistan, Iran, and Egypt. He re¬ceived his doctorate in MiddleEastern studies from Harvard afterstudy at Princeton and Oxford, andis the author ol two books on thearea.The program will be at 8:30 pmat Hillel Foundation, 5715 Wood-lawn Ave.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESN5WEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNT One of Ififrfe Park's FinestARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRSPECIALIZING IN:Heels ChangedHeels RepairedToe* Cut OutVamps LoweredOrthopedic WorkZipper RepairsProfeniaiuil Dyeingand He finishing afShoes and HandbagsColors MatchedFAirfax 4-96221749 E. 55th St.8 CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 15, 1963South Asia studies program Set Liberal Party has meetingThe University of Chicagowill be the site of an inter¬university program in SouthAsian studies this summer.The program is being held in co¬operation with the University ofCalifornia at Berkeley and the Uni¬versity of Wisconsin, in associationwith the Universities of Minnesotaand Michigan.The program, which will be con¬ducted under the auspices of theCommittee on Southern Asian Stu¬dies and the South Asia Languageand Area Center of the University,will offer credit courses on theintroductory and intermediate lev¬els in five modem Indian lan¬guages: Hindi, Bengali, Tamil,Telegu, and Kannada.There also will be a wide offer¬ing of related area courses, withattention specially directed to the“Introduction to the Civilization ofIndia.’’ Courses will include “San¬skrit as a Culture,” “India since1500,” “Indian politics and ideolo¬gy,” a survey of Indian philoso¬phies, and a seminar on specificissues in the principal system ofIndian philosophy.Students and faculty from all fiveschools will participate. In addi¬tion, there will be faculty membersfrom several other universities,including several persons from In¬dia.Fellowships will be available fewundergraduates, graduate students,and faculty members interested inattending the summer program.Interested persons should contact the office of associate professor ofSanskrit and Indie studies J. A. B.van Buitenen, Foster 204. VanBuitenen is directing the program.An inter-university program setup by several of the same schoolswas held at the University of Wis¬consin last summer. Next year theprogram will be held at the Uni¬versity of California in Berkeley.The program was set up so thatthe universities could pool theirresources in specialized areas.The program is being supportedby the participating schools. TheFord Foundation has given a grantfor fellowships for faculty mem¬bers to participate. Money for theWill students won'tdiscuss birth controlMacomb, 111.—Western Illi¬nois University students saythey avoid discussing birthcontrol.The students, the United PressInternational reported, were askedin a survey to list three subjectsthey would not want to talk aboutin public.Birth control topped the list, fol¬lowed by religion, politics, preju¬dice and sex. Also mentioned werepre marital sex, marriage prob¬lems, social disease, governmentcorruption, evolution, and crime.“We college students play itcod,” said Roy Boyer, a seniorfrom McLeansboro. “Why raise afuss?”— CHICAGO DAILY NEWS other fellowshipsris coming fromNational Defense Education Actfellowships for graduate studentsto study languages and relatedstudies of “critical importance tothe United States;” the NationalDefense Modem Foreign LanguageAwards for undergraduates; andUC’s Committee on Southern AsianStudies special awards, for personsin all three categories.The application deadline for theCommittee on South Asian Studiesfellowships is February 20; theother deadlines have passed. Twenty members of theLiberal Party met last nightto discuss residential repre¬sentation and the role of therepresentative in Student Govern¬ment. The group agreed upon aplan which would restructure SGaccording to student residence.The new arrangements woulddivide undergraduate students intolive representational units. Threeof the units should be Pierce,Burton-Judson and New Dorms; afourth unit would encompass thefraternities; the fifth would containThompson, Psi U triumphFreud has been acclaimedBY -THE NEW YORK CRITICS AS"ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!"FKeud IS A "TAUT, INTELLECTUALTHRILLER .. .VASTLY EXCITING l”TIME MAGAZINEFftEUD IS "A BOLD, DRAMATIC,MOMENTOUS, TASTEFUL, DARING ANDFASCINATING FILM THAT EVERYONEWILL ENJOYI" CROWTHER, N. Y. TIMESFfcEUD •-BORN INTO A RESPECTABLEWORLD-TORE AWAY ITS MASK OFSEXUAL INNOCENCE. NEVER AGAINWOULD THE WORLD PRETENDTHAT SEX DID NOT EXIST."N. Y. HERALD TRIBUNE Henderson led the firs’c lapof the 880 Yard Relay in theannual intramural indoortrack meet last night, but inthe stretch. Thompson South andChamberlin took the lead and camedown to the wire side by side. Theyfinished in the same time, 1:50.6,but Thompson was first.The twelve points gave them 28for the meet and first place amongCollege houses. Chamberlin wassecond with 24.Psi Upsilon won the FraternityLeague with 49 points, to secondplace Phi Sigma Delta’s 40V2.Academic advisoryboard formed at TemplePhiladelphia, Pa. - (IP) — Tem¬ple University’s Student Council isin the process of forming an Aca¬demic Advisory Board, which willadvise the administration about,admission and academic standai'ds,and curriculum and faculty evalu¬ations.The board will work direcllywith Paul R. Anderson, vice-pres¬ident lor academic affairs, whostressed the need for better com¬munication between students andthe administration.“The administration will makethe final decisions, but consulta¬tion will bring out issues whichotherwise would not be discussed.The faculty must have all the evi¬dence in ihaking decisions, andpart of the evidence is what thestudents think,” he said. Four records fell. Cook of TuftsSouth knocked 1.6 seconds off therecord in the 880 Yard Dash with2:07.6. In the High Jump Jacobsof East II jumped some 5'8V4" totop the old mark by. a quarter ofan inch.Pearson of Psi U broke his ownrecord in the 70 Yard Low Hurdleswith 9.0. Berger of Phi SigmaDelta also broke his own recordwith 6.6 in the Sixty Yard Dash.The first places: Broad Jump, 19feet, Pearson, Psi U; 17 feet 8inches, Fluegge, Henderson South;High Jump, 5 feet 4 inches, New¬ton, Phi Kappa Sa; Shot Put, 41feet 5 inches, Carlson, Phi KappaPsi; 37 feet 5 inches, Jacobs ofEast II.440 Yard Dash, 56.9, Bisk of ZetaBeta Tau; 58.3, Cook of TuftsSouth; 60 Yard Dash, 6.8, Mathias,Thompson South; 70 Yard LowHurdle, 10.6, Kindred, HendersonSouth; 220 Yard Dash, 26.9, Frac-casini, Tufts North; 25.3, BergerPhi Sig; 880 Yard Dash, 2:19.8,Sten of Psi U; 880 Yard Relay, PsiUpsilon, 1:47.5 (ties old record). the apartment dweller commuters,and the members of small dormi¬tories.The number of representativesfrom each unit would be propor¬tional to unit’s population, theparty voted. It was decided that aperson running as a representativeof a specific housing unit shouldbe a member of that unit duringthe quarter of the SG election.“We feel that this would be Ihebest way to be more responsive tothe needs and wishes of the studentbody,” said Steve Ulberg, a spokes¬man for the party.The Liberal Party also proposedan SG newsletter, to increase com¬munication with the student body.The new letter should be posted onall bulletin boards on campus, andshould include such items as com¬mittee progress reports, assemblyresolutions, roll-call votes, andCO-OP reports.The Liberal Party will demon¬strate its ability to carry out itsproject by the successful publica¬tion of the Liberal Party news¬letter. it was announced.The party suggested in a pre¬liminary platform, statement sev¬eral programs which SG shouldundertake. “SG should sponsor aseries of seminars and lectureseach dealing with problems of cur¬rent interest, such as US economicpolicy, the role of the university inthe American community, aid tounder-developed nations, ihe con¬cept of in loco parentis, and theplace of athletics at UC.“Both students and faculty wouldbe invited to participate. Also, aconference on disarmament andarms control should be arrangedby SG. Experts would be invitedfrom a variety of fields, includinginternational law, anthropologymilitary science, psychology andpolitical science.”Argonne lab appointsnew associate directorJOHNHUSTONSmoo mgno* orFreudMONTGOMERY CLIFTSUSANNAH YORK-LARRY PARKSSUSAN KOHNER* EILEEN HERLIESPECIAL REDUCED ADMISSIONSFOR STUDENTS & FACULTY!GOOD ONLY WHEN PRESENTEDAT BOXOFFICE WITH COUPON-I r dark theatredark A madisonfr 2-284550 atalltimesfor college studentsit open 7:30 a.m.late show 3 a.m.if different double feature dailyif Sunday Film Guildif write in for free program guideit little gal-lery for gals onlyif every friday is ladies dayall gals admitted for only 25cit Clark parking - 1 door south4 hours 95c after 5 p.m.; WEEKEND PROGRAM; fri. 15th - :own without pity 1sapphire 1| sat. 16th - rear window jbouse of bamboo i[ sun. 17th . world of comedy ]operation snatch i"E COUPONFOR REDUCEDSTUDENT & FACULTYADMISSION"FREUD"90c INSTEAD OF 1.25TO 12 NOON1.25 INSTEAD OF T.5012 TO 5:00 P.M.1.50 INSTEAD OF 2.005:00 TO 10:00 P.M.LOOP THEATRE I il ii II Ii ii Ii ii ii i• a.1 L. Si; couponFOR REDUCEDSTUDENT & FACULTYADMISSION"FREUD"90c INSTEAD OF 1.25TO 12 NOON1.25 INSTEAD OF 1.5012 TO 5:00 P.M.1.50 INSTEAD OF 2.005:00 TO 10:00 P.M.LOOP THEATREMIDWEST PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT!STARTS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15iss I OOP theatre ,°tsRANDOLPH 'CHICAGO CONTINUOUS!OPEN9AMCONTINUOUS! LIMELITETHEATRE1544 EAST 57thBIG JOEWILLIAMS!Friday! Saturday!Sunday!BLUESfrom 9:30 - 12:30 Morton Hamermesh has been ap¬pointed associate director of theArgonne National Laboratory, Dr.Albert V. Crewe, announced yester¬day.Hamermesh, who joined the lab¬oratory staff in 1948, had beendirector of Argonne’s physics divi¬sion. He will devote special atten¬tion to long-range development ofbasic research activities in all ofArgonne’s divisions, Crewe said.“Not only will he suggest thedirection which various researchefforts should take, but he also willbe concerned with the problem ofproviding scientific personnel forthe research projects which are tobe carried out,” Dr. Crewe added.Hamermesh had been director ofthe physics division since 1959.He is credited with being the firstOn the playingfields of ChicagoSeventy enthusiasts, five ofwhom claim familiarity withthe game, have banded ’to¬gether “to play.” On January24, 1963, the University of Chicagobecame the proud possessor of itsfirst Cricket Club.The Student Service Center isstanding by between 11:30 and 1:00daily to handle the expected rashinquiries, according to one of itsfounders. •>> to show how reflection of a neutronbeam by a magnetized cobalt mir¬ror could be used to obtain com¬pletely polarized neutrons from areact or.This method of “filtering” a neu¬tron beam eliminates neutronswhose spins point the wrong way.A translator of Russian, Dr.Hamermash served on the com¬mittee that initiated the practiceof translating Russian papers torpublications issued by the Ameri¬can Institute of Physics.Hamermesh, who is to assumehis new duties Friday, lives in VillaPark with his wife and three chil¬dren.Colorado U. shelters'absolutely worthless'Fallout shelters at ColoradoState University, because they arenot stocked with food and becausethey have a capacity of only 40apiece, have been deemed “abso¬lutely worthless” by Virgil Mager-fleisch, Fort Collins architect. W.J. McConnel, professor of ROTCat the school, said the shelterswould be stocked within 90 days.Also, sororitk at Syracuse Uni¬versity are planning to build shelt¬ers in the basements of their livingquarters. Charles H. Morgan,campus director of safety, saidthe proposed shelters would doublethe existing facilities. He addedthat fraternities have not takensimilar action as yet.Quad Club presentsThe Revels of 1963^Impatience or True to Type 'A musical about the latlifs of a steno¬graphic pool ami the gentlemen ofthe faculty.Mandel HallFri. & Sat.—March 8 & 98:30 P.M.Feb. 15, 1963 » CHICAGO MAROON • 2-The student as the center of education(The following essay was writtenin 1956 for the Student GovernmentBulletin by Harold J. Taylor whenhe was President of Sarah Lawr¬ence College.)The student is the center ofeducation. Schools and colleg¬es exist for the increase of hismoral and intellectual powers.This means that whateveris done in the colleges orwhatever anyone proposes to do,must take into account the effectit will have on the student. Will itdeepen his interest in idea? Will itgive him something to think about?Will it help him to understand him¬self and his society? Will it freehis imagination? Develop his initia¬tive? Give him a sense of purpose?Broaden his knowledge?But most of all. will it make hima free man—free of the cliches andprejudices of his society, free toexpress himself, to act independ¬ently. spontaneously, wisely andjustly?These are the real questions tobe asked about education. They arenot often asked, and the answersare seldom given. Colleges aremore often spoken of as commu¬nities of scholars joined togetherfor the purpose of finding truth.They are, in fact, just that, butthey are a great deal more. Ifthey are simply communities ofscholars, they may not necessarilybe communities of teachers," andsome of the things done in thesame of scholarship may be dam¬aging to the growth of the students.Students respond to the atmos¬phere in which they find them¬selves. If they are taught by menand women who begrudge the timespent with students as a distrac¬tion from their true mission ofscholarship, the students then be¬grudge the time spent with theteachers as a distraction fromtheir own interests outside fromtheir own interests outside the cur¬riculum.If they are taught by men andwomen who have been intimidatedby Congressional committees or byauthoritarian governing boards, orby ignorant bigots in their com¬munity, students learn to be timidabout their own convictions andideals. Or worse still, they give upall convictions and play the gameaccording to the prevailing rules.For it is true that the deeperlevels of learning are those which\may not be consciously taught. Atthese levels, the student may notbe conscious of what he learns butthe learning itself may be deeperthan anything else taught in col¬lege. This has to do with the stu¬dent’s attitude. The attitude whichthe teacher takes to his work, tohimself, to his students, to his col¬lege, will color the attitude whichthe students take to their owneducation, and to themselves.If the teacher shows by his atti¬tude that he expects little fromhis students, he will get little inreturn. If the members of thefaculty show by their attitudes tothe student that they expect themto" become involved in politicalaction, educational policy making,student affairs and public issues,they will be likely to do so. If not,students learn to adopt themselvesto the attitudes they find existingin their colleges.It is important to rememberthat in the long run, the values ofthe community or the college or theuniversity are sustained by thefaculty members and the adminis¬tration. The teachers and educatorsmake the continuity and characterof a college environment, and thethings which they believe in arethe things which eventually pre¬vail. Students may react againstthem, may produce changes. Butthey are changes made against abase line of the dominant beliefdrawn by the policies and practicesof the college community.This is the forgotten fact ofcontemporary education. A greatdeal of the time the student is theforgotten man of education. WhenMcCarthy, Jenner and Velde begantheir attacks on the political free¬dom of college teachers there weretoo few who rose to the defense ofthe victims.There were fewer still who roseto the defense of the students, whowere therefore deprived of an at¬mosphere in which free exchange of political opinion is possible.The damage and destructioncaused by the Loyalty Oath con¬troversy at the University of Cali¬fornia was frightening in its effecton faculty morale. It was evenmore in its lasting effects on thequality of education available tothe students.What student would feel free insuch a situation to join with othersin forming political opinions or intaking political action? When facul¬ty members could be dismissed forholding principles guaranteed bythe American Constitution, whatlesson would students learn abouthow bo act as citizens of a democ¬racy?For this reason it seems to methat when we talk about academicfreedom was should talk about free,domitself, and about what its con¬tent really is. Academic freedom isthe name we give to the right ofthe scholar to pursue his own learn¬ing. Freedom in its fullest dimen¬sion is personal freedom. It is acondition of one’s own life, tl is amatter of the inner state of thehuman being, a matter of how hefeels about himself and his world.The danger today is that the stu¬dent. not knowing what it is like tofeel the passion of full conviction,will not notice that anything ismissing, and the young will lose thenatural instinct for spontaneousexpression and spontaneous dissentthe things they do not believe. hTisis the real heart of freedom—thenatural habit of saying. “No, Idont’ believe you” when the truthis being tampered with; the naturalimpulse to say, “Yes. this is whatI truly believe and what I standfor.”hTe American student has morefreedom than the student in nearlyevery other country. In 1956 stu¬dents in Spain are in danger ofbeing jailed by their governmentfor the simple demand they makefor a chance to express their opin¬ions.After bhe death of Ortega y Gas¬set, a thousand students at theUniversity of Madrid marched tohis grave where one of their num¬ber read a tribute to his memory.“It is the homage,” said thestudent, “of a university youthwithout a university which is com¬pelled to seek knowledge outside ofclasses, from books which are nottextbooks, and in languages whichare not Spanish.“We are disciples without teach¬ers. Every day we face the reali¬zation that we need someone toteach us as we should be taught.eW study, but we are not taught.We feel the University is not serv¬ing its purpose, and that manychanges are needed. But no onetells us how to achieve this. oNone will admit that we studentsare the real foundation of the Uni¬versity.”For organizing this kind of meet¬ing and ofr expressing these senti¬ments, six students were arrested,and for allowing this form of stu¬dent expression, the rector of theUniversity of aMdrid and the Mini¬ster of Education are in danger ofdismissal. But the students aresaying what they think, and theyare saying what is true of studentsin many other universities—that“no one will admit that . . . stu¬dents are the real foundation of theUniversity.”In China, t—he Soviet Union, theEuropean universities, in the FarEast, the students are under thedomination of their governmentsand of their university authorities.In the United States students havetheir own rights and privileges, in¬cluding the right to criticize thepolicies of their universities andtheir government. But these arerights and privileges which areonly valuable if they are cherishedand used. Students may not under¬stand that the rights they hold aretheirs only because the rights havebeen fought for by other studentslong ago, by teachers, by citzens,by dedicated people who sufferedfor their convictions.It is the task of the colleges anduniversities to teach this meaningof freedom. Perhaps we havebeen too defensive about the rightsof students and teachers. We havehad to spend so much time in re¬plying to charges of subversion ineducation that we have forgottenthe excitement of positive state¬ ment of our own ideas. None of there is no opportunity for mu¬tual exchange of opinion or expres¬sion of principle. It is in this mat¬ter that students need a sense ofunity among themseleves, a senseof indentity with their own gen¬eration.us thrives in the presence of hos¬tility, no good thing comes fromfear and distrust. These negativeattitudes shrivel the creative spiritand shrink the dimension of humanfaith.The task of students in Ameri¬ca is to find in their work togeth¬er on the campuses of the countrythe satisfaction which comes fromcontributing to the heritage ofAmerican freedom by breakingnew ground in thought and action.As long as a single Negro studentis deprived of the opjx>rtunity togain the education to which histalents entitle him, there is workto be done by all American stu¬dents. As long as there are forcesat large which deprive the studentsof full opportunity for learning tofind and express his political opin¬ions, there is work to be done bystudents, teachers and educators.What happens on the campusof the University of Alabama mat¬ters to the students on every com-pus. It seems to me that studentshave a responsibility, as students,to become informed about theproblems of other colleges and theway student affairs are beinghandled. I do not advocate inter¬ference in the internal affairs ofone college by another. The sit¬uation is exactly like that of therelation of one country with an¬other. If one is not informed asto what is happening elsewhere, This is particularly true of issuesinvolving student freedom. Manystudents do not realize the mean¬ing of their own freedom becausethey have not been through thebaittle to get it. The Negro studentsin the State of Alabama are notfree, and as long as it is not pos¬sible for Negro students in thatstate, or in any other, to receivethe education in a non-segregatedcollege community to which theirtalents entitle them, they will con¬tinue to be less than free men.I would therefore define academ¬ic freedom in larger terms thanit is usually defined. Certainlythe scholar, the teacher and thestudent must unite in establish¬ing and defending freedom to thinkand act as intellectual independ¬ents. They must be free to expressdissident views on political, re¬ligious and social questions. Butthey must first hare some thingto express and must feel the urgeto express it. Academic freedomis only part of the total freedomwhich must be fought for and re¬tained by all students—the per¬sonal freedom to live and workin a democratic community wherethere are no restrictions on the individual because of his religionhis politics, his race or his eoonomic status.There is one other point aboutour slogan—Man’s right to knowledge—on which we have beenchallenged, and which I dunkoriginally minimized a phase ofwhat goes into our knowledge herein the Western World. There is acertain secularism about the wholeapproach to this topic. I doubt thatI could carry even my colleaguesin the university all the way withme in what I am going to savnow. But I am going to say it because I believe it firmly.I believe the thing that is miss¬ing is man’s constant groping afteran awareness of those things thatare beyond his mere sensory per¬ception, that cannot be set down inthe laboratory, that cannot be puteven within the pages of a book,the kind of thing that is represent¬ed by his desire to understandhis relation to the spirit that pre¬sides over supersensual space. Wehare various creeds that try totranslate it into terms that menand women will understand. If wemean by knowledge only thosethings that are secular in their im¬portance then we certainly areshutting the door on one area thathas been, since man first recordedhis feelings, a most importantfactor in his attempt to understandthe world in which he found himself.ung eisewnere, mere are no restrictions on the self.Four different ways to make goingmore fun than getting thereYou can see why one of America’sfavorite outdoor sports is drivingChevrolets, with four entirely differentkinds of cars to choose from. There’sthe Jet-smooth Chevrolet, about as luxu¬rious as you can go without going over¬board in price; the low-costChevy II, a good-looking carthat would send any familypacking; another familyfavorite, the sporty Corvair, v * , _whose rear-engine traction n$6pS Going GtOStlwill make you think that ice and snoware kid stuff; and for pure adventure,America’s only sports car, Corvette—now in two all-new versions with looksthat can stop traffic like a rush-hourblizzard. Picked your favorite already?The next thing is to takethe wheel at your Chevroletdealer’s. If that doesn’t haveyou thinking of places togo, maybe you'd rather justhave a ball around town!JET-SMOOTH CHEVROLET IMPAU SPORT COUPECHEVY II NOVA 400 SPORT COUPECORVAIR MONZA CLUB COUPECHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 15, 1963 CORYETTE STING RAY SPORT COUPE\Now—Bonanza Buys on four entirely different kinds of cars at your Chevrolet deakflL