Argonne Lab appointsnew Physics directorLowell M. Bollinger, internationally known physicist, hasbeen appointed director of the physics division of ArgonneNational Laboratory. He is replacing Morton Hamermesh,who was last week named an associate director of the Labora¬tory. —Bollinger, the son of mission- of new and improved techniquesarL'S. spent most of his boyhood in neutron time-of-flight measure-in India, but returned to the ments at a reactor, and he hasUnited States to go to school. He made significant contributions toreceived a BA at Oberlin in 1943, the nation’s reactor programan 1 a PhD from Cornell University through his numerous and precisein 1951. Later the same year he measurements of cross sectionsjoined the Argonne staff. and other quantities needed for theBollinger served on several com- design of reactors. Vol. 71 — No. 74 University of Chicago, Tuesday, February 26, 1963 31Rockwell speaks to 300 heretee.On leave from Argonne in 1961-62. Bollinger carried out his workin neutron resonance spectroscopyat the UK Research facility atHarwell. American Nazi Party leader Mandel, leaflets about fascism and were arrested and booked on charg-George Lincoln Rockwell tl,e da,,ger of Rockwell were es of disorderly conduct. Both menmittees of the Atomic Energy “He also has developed such spoke to some 300 students in passed out- had sP«nt Ome in Nazi concentra-(.ommission (AEC), contributing to new techniques as the three-dimen- Breasted Hall l ist niolit aftov According to Assistant Dean of Oon camps during World War II.the work of the Nuclear Cross sional analyzer system, a method ... . " , , ° __ Students James E. Newman, the The men, Ben Stelzer and Ben-Sections Advisory Group, the tri- of obtaining experimental data Tr1S,f|:>,CaC was !P.0'e . 1 °m . an c speach was moved from Mandel to Jamin Baran, were held for aboutpartite Neutron Cross Sections which has made possible types of a ecause ° m rea s- Breasted because the University an hour and released on $15 bailCommittee, and the European- investigation which previously During Rockwell s speach some had received several telephone apiece. Their trial will be on Thurs-American Nuclear Data Commit- could not be carried out. people, most of whom were stu- calls saying that a bomb had been day-“In his role as a scientific in- dents W*1Q were not allowed to en- planted in Mandel. “We decided The students in the hall werenovator, Dr. Bollinger also has ter a*ler a^ seats were that it was unwise to take any orderly during the speech. Theypioneered in the development of crowded around the doors, chances,” he said. laughed sympathetically at Rock-scintillation detection, a technique outside group was generally One non-student who had entered well’s jokes, applauded when lievital to his studies of the time-of- orderN although there was a good with identification which officers of attacked conservatives, but alsoflight of neutrons extracted from a dea* b°°in& and hissing. the University felt was forged was laughed derisively at his more ex-Commenting on the appointment, reactor, and he has demonstrated Thirty Chicago policemen tried to asked to leave and his money was treme statements. There was veryAlbert V. Crewe, Director of Ar- the use of a reactor for the meas- keep order during Rockwell’s ap- refunded upon request. little hissing or booing,gonne, said: “Bollinger has been urement of the lifetime of nuclear pearance. Although there were no Two men who stood up outside Following the speech writtenin the forefront of the development levels following neutron capture.” picketers at either Breasted or and made anti-Nazi statements questions from the audience wereread to Rockwell who answeredmost of them. When he appearedto evade a querie, there were somecalls of “answer the question.”W'hen he finished there was littleapplause.Rockwell, dressed in a suit with¬out Nazi decoration, said that hedid not intend to offend anyonebut would present the ideas andthe facts of the Nazi Party in amanner suited to a college group.Rockwell insisted that the Ameri¬can Nationalist Socialist Party isnot German, is not subversive, andis not dictatorial. “We are notFascists and we don’t believe inthe economics of a corporate state;we believe in free enterprise andprivate property. We want to main¬tain the American way,” Rockwellinsisted. “We want to do away withCommunists and people who aredisloyal.”Rockwell claimed that Commu¬nism is a Jewish movement butthat even then only 20 per cent ofThe background of the Rockwell talkCommander Rockwell was in- ously interested in hearing whatvited to campus by the members Rockwell has to say, he “wouldo! Vincent house in Burton Judson defend their right” to do so.dormitory shortely after Rockwell Beadle added that if the studentshad been prohibited from speaking hud invited Rockwell merely toat Norethwestern University. test the limits of the University’sSince the invitation was issued, liberality in allowing speakers bo to draw the line in some cases, it of economics; Robert A. Goldwin,surely is not hard to draw it in director of the Public Affairs Con-there has been much controversyon campus over whether tlie invi¬tation should have been issued andwhether or not Rockwell should1** banned from speaking here.In a statement issued last week,UC Dean of Students Warner Wick the case of Rockwell.”“No one would dare to asserton Rockwell’s behalf that he isqualified to lead us in a genuinesearch for the truth about politicalmatters.”and perhaps on the educationwhich we have provided them.”Signing the letter were Prof.come to campus, they had invitedhim for the “wrong reason.”In a letter Saturday, 11 UC facul¬ty members asked UC presidentGeorge Wells Beadle to ban Rock¬well from speaking on campus.“We regretfully urge you to ex- Leo Strauss, distinguished servicestated that the UC administration ercise your authority to bar this professor of political science; Prof,will uphold the student code’s pro- despicable and dangerous man j Coert Rylaarsdam, of the Divin-vision that any student organiza- from the use of any university py School; David Grene, lecturertion may “invite and hear speakers facilities,” the letter stated. 0f the C o m m i tt e e on Socialof their, choice on subjects of their Although the foundations of gov- Thought; Herbert J. Storing, asso-choice. ’ ernment are necessarily questioned ciate professor of political science.Wick added that he felt Rockwell at the University, the letter con- Also Marvin Meyers, associate ference Center; Ralph Lerner, as¬sistant professor, college, and Bert.F. Hoselitz, professor of politicalscience.Beadle turned the faculty groupsletter over to Dean of StudentsThe letter said, “the action of Warner A. Wick, who stated, “Wea small group of students was sure- have taken our position. We are notly a reflection on their judgment going to forbid any meeting.”Wick in turn passed the protestalong to students who invited Rock¬well to speak.The Maroon editorially defendedRockwell’s rig’bt to speak on cam¬pus, but urged student to avoidadding to the publicity the appear¬ance would afford him by picketingor demonstrating.“It is quite obvious that the ideasRockwell stands for are extremelyhas “nothing to offer us but hate tinued, “when this is done they professor of history; Leonard Bindand violence.” “I believe the stu- must be discussed responsibly and er, associate professor of political repugnant to all the members of the Jews are one hundred per centdents who invited him here after in a genuine endeavor to pursue science; Arcadius Kalian, and Zvi the community; however, our oppo- loyal. Y\e are against Zionists be-the truth However hard it may be Griliches, both associate professors s»tion need not be reasserted when cause they’re loyal to Israel,” heRockwell comes here if the result stated. “Further, the Jewish peoplewill be a clear gain in publicity for are working night and day to forceRockwell. This community can best white and black people to mix al-„ . ,,, , ... , , ... „ show its objections to Rockwell by though they don’t want to.”Stephen Spender, Lngllsll e i r o wo i erar> ma0azines, aj|ow|ng j,is appearance to pass The National Socialist Partypoet and critic, will appear in a"- ^ectuier a numerous umvei‘ as uneventfully as possible,” said would be listed if it were sub-learning he had been banned else¬where are of the same opinion,”lie continued.“In these circumstances, thesignificance of Mr. Rockwell’s visitwill be chiefly symbolic, remind¬ing us that private citizens have a Spender here tonightright to hear, in peace, any opin- a “]\[y Life and Yours” pro-ions that they may wish for rea¬sons that seem sufficient bo them,so long as they observe the lawsgoverning private gatherings,”Wick stated.Two weeks ago. Beadle stated the editorial, printed February 6.Spender began to write poetry jn the three weeks following the versive Rockwell stated. Sub¬versive means wanting to over-gram tonight at 8 o’clock in while he was a student at Oxford invitation to Rockwell, the Maroon throw or illegally change the gov-Ida Noyes East Lounge.For the past thirty years,Spender has been active in Eng¬land and abroad not only as athat if a group of students is seri- poet and critic, but as an author,GNOSIS picks officersJerry Hyman, formerly of IRP, L’niversity. His Nine Experiments received some 50 letters about his ernment. We want to preserve theappeared in 1928, and Twenty appearance, most of them oppos- constitutional republic, he said.Poems in 1930. In 1935 he pub- jng Rockwell’s coming to campus. Rockwell does not support dioba-lished his first volume of mature in a gadfly printed in the Ma- torship although he feels that “Hit-verse as Poems. roon, Assistant Professor in the so- ler had to do it in Germany be-Collections that followed include cial sciences Marc Galanter stated cause of the total chaos there.”The Still Centre in 1939, Ruins and that “the tradition by which any He is also against the chauvinismVisions in 1941, Poems of Dedica- group within the University com- of Hitler “who never travelledtion in 1946, and Collected Poems rnunity may bring speakers of its further than Italy and had noin 1954. choice to campus ... is a valuable knowledge of world forces.”Spender has also written a great one. The National Socialist Party sup-was elected president over Don deal of prose on literary, political, Rockwell’s appearance, said Ga- ports “scientific racism,” Ilock-Congdon, formerly of UP. The vote and social subjects. His recent lanter, will be deeply offensive to well explained. “All animals differwas 10-7. By unanimous vote, works include The Creative Ele- the many members of the Univer- in breed and all breeds differ inOt a new party which was Congdon was named vice-president ment in 1953, The Life in Litera- sity community. “In s>pite of my quality. This is the natural order,formed by merging the old Uni- and Bev Splane was elected sec- ture in 1958, and translations of deep sympathy and my desire to and it follows that all men are notretary. the works of Rilke and Lorca. see them spared this needless af- equal. The Jews are a breed,” heThe party will be called GNOSIS Currently a visiting professor at front, I cannot agree that offensive- added,which, according to Hyman, means Northwestern University, Spender ness to some supplies sufficient Rockwell agrees with the separa-“positive knowledge especially of recently read and discussed his ground for the university to inter¬spiritual truth.” “This is a new poems at a William Vaughan vene and ban a speaker.”party and will have new and dif- Moody lecture. “But it is a factor which theferent ideas; we encourage all ‘‘My Life and Yours” is a series inviters might, out of sensitivitythose not previously politically as- of meetings between outstanding and fellow-feeling, weigh against stature of Malcolm X, who is not asociated to join us in a new and personalities and students, de- the supposed benefits of Rockwell’s hypocrite.”cided to return to the Univer- valiant effort,” Hyman continued, signed to give students the maxi- visit,” he said. (At the time he Rockwell c a 11 e d conservatives" cjii vcjjp ancj ipp feit that the differ- mum opportunity for informal wrote the gadfly, there was some too cowardly to fight. Liberals heence between their respective par- discussion. Interested students chance that Vincent house with- declared will not face facts. “Theyty platforms was not sufficient to. should sign up in Gates Blake 132. draw the invitation.) (Continued on page 4)warrant two separate parties, ac-Officers were elected andby-laws established Sundaynight at the first open caucusversity Party (UP) and the Inde¬pendent Reform Party (IRP) re¬cently.Picheny to returnto U. of LeningradJoel Jacob Picheny has de-sity of Leningrad in spite ofan attack against him in thestudent newspaper. tionai policy of the Black Muslimswhich would relocate the Negroesin Africa. He added, “I wish thewhite people had a leader of bhePicheny was accused of speculat¬ing in old clothes and cigarettes, cording to Hyman.While the party platform is notand distributing anti-Soviet propa- completed, H y man said thatganda. He was called to the Ameri- GNOSIS will differ from POLIT incan Embassy in Moscow for con- two major respects. First, the new.sultation, and decided to return to party will offer an amendment toLeningrad. the SG constitution which will pno-. vide for SG representation by resi-According to the Associated dence urdL The other difference isPress, no action was taken by the that “we feel that SG ought notSoviet Government as was er- to take stands on issues which doroneously reported in Fridays ^ directly affect students as stu-mdr0<m’ dents, e.g. the Berlin Wall, Tran-Pioheny received hiis BA from sylvania and Cuba,” according tothe University of Chicago in 1961, Hyman.and is currently studying at the GNOSIS hopes to attract manyUniversity of Leningrad under a students who are not presently af-National Student Association ex- filiated with any political party,change program. Hyman concluded. Left, third year student Pam Smith, nominee of the Russian Choir, is crowned MissUniversity of Chicago 1963. Right, Walter "George" Jeschke, lord of Ida Noyes Hall,at the 1963 Washington Promenade which was attended by more than 400 people.fit EDITORIALChoice in aldermanic raceis easy one: Leon DespresThe fifth ward aldermanic election has attracted muchcity-wide attention in the past several weeks. Two powerfulelements in the Democratic party are coming' to grips here.Some observers contend that this race, more than any other,will shape the future of the Democratic party.But, while the city-wide ramifications of this race maybe great, we would hope that voters base their decision pri¬marily on the candidates themselves—their ideas and ex¬perience. (Of course, if anyone were to make a thoroughstudy of the extra-ward factors, he would no doubt wind upopposing backers of the man who is the least qualified andcapable.)Chauncey Eskridge claims the right to aldermanic officeon the grounds that he, unlike the opponent Leon M. Despres,will represent the people of the ward. He says that Despreshas neglected the predominantly Negro portion of the fifthward south of the Midway. Eskridge proposes to “work outa plan for progress” for the fifth ward based on cooperationwith the present city administration. He charges that Des¬pres has been ineffectual because he has not cooperated withthe administration. This is patent nonsense.When Eskridge attempts to present a more specific pro¬gram, as he done in press conferences and speeches, his basicignorance of the problems of the community becomes clear.His plan for progress is nothing more than mere compliancewith Chicago’s imperfect city government.In addition, Eskridge has no real political experience.(Eight years ago he sought aldermanic office in anotherward). Apparently he has not been following local politics andlegislative activities either. He did not even know th:„ a planfor the University’s South Campus had been formulated.It is surprising that such a totally unqualified manshould tiy to unseat an alderman of Despres’ caliber. Despreshas admirably represented this ward for the past eight years.He has often been the sole city council proponent of sorelyneeded legislation in the areas of civil rights, civil libertiesand urban renewal. These are areas too controversial for apowerful, broadly based local political machine.If it is true that Despres has been ineffectual (and wethink not) then it is due to the fact that his proposals havebeen too far advanced for the great bulk of the city councilwhich is either ignorant or too committed to act on them.One of the most impressive things about Despres, wefeel, is that he does not hesitate to criticize the existingorder. He speaks out against wasteful spending and disregardfor basic human rights. He, unlike the other members of thecity council, has been a consistent champion of universalhuman rights.Considered from any perspective, the choice between thetwo candidates is an extraordinarily easy one. This is a con¬test between experience and inexperience, between sincerityand insincerity, between knowledge and ignorance — someeven claim it is between good and evil. There can be no doubtthat the most worthy candidate is Despres. Letters to theeditorPOLIT character betterthan mud-slinging Liberal’sEver since the foundation of theLiberal Party, I have been tryingto discern the difference betweenthat party and POLIT, as thereseems to be no substantive dif¬ference between them (one won¬ders why the Liberal Party wasformed at all.). I believe I havefinally found the distinction, and itlies in a very significant area. Itlies in the area of integrity andin the caliber of the party mem¬bers and leaders. The caliber ofthe POLIT individual now appearsto be quite superior to the mud-slinging character of the LiberalParty and its publicity committee.Last week, the party newspapercriticized certain groups for not“informing the student about this(Guide to Subversive Organiza¬tions and Publications) danger tohis civil liberties.” The paper ac¬cused the list and the FederalGovernment of practicing “guiltby association.” It was promptlyand coa-rectly pointed out by Mr.Dorfman, that not only was theLiberal Party in error with regardto its attack against POLIT, butthat it didn’t even bother to gel itsfacts straight concerning the list.Clearly, his was both immatureand irresponsible.This week, the Liberal Party hasincluded another addition in itsjournalistic endeavors; this week,it attacks GNOSIS as a “right-wing front” organization. Andwhat is its evidence? On what isits claim based? Just as last week,there is no reason; there are nofacts; there is no evidence.I have always considered myselfa liberal, and have fought, bothon and off this campus, againstsuch organizations as the Un-American Activities Committee.This committee has accused andcondemned, slandered and ma¬ligned, and it has done so, in mostcases, without information andwithout proof. Liberals throughoutthe country have attacked thecommittee on just these grounds.The Liberal Newspaper has fol¬lowed suit in its first issue.But now, just one week later, ithas chosen the very same tacticsof slander and mud-slinging. Theparallel between the AttorneyGeneral’s “Communist Front Or¬ganizations” and the LiberalParty’s “right-wing front” are tooobvious to be ignored. If this isnot a perfect example of “guilt byassociation,” of guilt by publicopinion, which the Liberal PartyFZbkMCH GAftCiALOf*CASilHlIiwBLOOD itWEDDINOV\// Y \ i ,1 VMARCH 1. 2, & 3//!/v> ';-Yvthe university ^of chicago theatre Directed byJAMES O'REILLYLIVE FLAMENCO MUSICby Stanley Slater and Peter GrantPerformed in theLAW SCHOOL THEATREDesigned by Eero SaarinenSTUDENT PRICES: £.*So"-Tickets at Mandel Hall Box Officeand Reynolds Club Desk attacked just seven days ago. thenwe have never seen such tactics inthe halls of Congress either. Arethese the tactics of a liberal party?This is a new organization com¬posed, if i'ts last caucus is repre¬sentative, of first and second yearstudents. Perhaps they don't yetrealize that this is the Universityof Chicago and not the BlackboardJungle. They seem enamored ofhistory and bemoan the passing ofa great tradition in Student Gov¬ernment elections. But perhapsthe greatest tradition, althoughthey are perhaps too new to haveyet realized it, is that of anhonest, forthright campaign inwhich the issues and not the nameshave been the basis of voting anddiscussion.It seems fallacious to me to tryto prove your ability at running aStudent Government by printing anewsletter once a week; the logicalrelation escapes me completely.But if there were a connection, itwould be a sad government, in¬deed, which the Liberal Partywould seem to be running judgingby the caliber of their paper.Political parties have attackedone another, it is true, but theyhave done so in a manner befittinguniversity students and in a tradi¬tion of intellectual disagreement.They have not lowered themselvesto the degradation of the veryorganizations which they oppose;they have kept the elections abovethe level of the mud in which theLiberal Party appears to be wal¬lowing. It would be advisable, Ithink, for the Liberal Party eitherto mature to the level of intellectu¬al criticism or to stop crowing atall.JERRY HYMANTwo letters from thecontroversial Miss HorningA. An open letter to Gerry Must:When you have a minute betweenreviewing your reviewer and circu¬lating more imaginative attacks be¬hind her back, could you sparesome energy for healthy pursuitslake these:defending your ideas and intentsre the use of parodic device,defending your show's stylisticirrelevancies and non sequiturs (ifyou think they are at issue), and defending your set design.And for that matter you mg'ht trydefending your remarkable thesisthat I was telling readers GOODNEWS was bad news.Statements about my “feud” withUniversity Theatre are a little silly.Mr. Alton left many moons ago,and my present temper toward UTseems a good deal more friendlythan Miss Sharpless’ toward thenew Maroon editors. I stoutlyurged my beloved Actors Companyto return again into the UT foldthis September. Some of my bestfriends are UT members. And, Jorthat matter, so am I.I agree with you that my reviewof your show was impressionistic,“subjective,” and personal, but itwas written on the basis of theproduction’s merits and demeritsas I saw them. Keep in mind thatyou advertised on WFMT, rentedMandel Hall for two whole week¬ends and charged a healthy admis¬sion price. Surely in this Atheniancommunity you are not subscrib¬ing to the sad, general Americanassumption that musical comedy isa genre immune to criticism (assome people believe cute childrenmust not be spanked).Thine anyway,the bright MedusaB. An open letter to the benightedreader of my reviews:Any dear ticket buyer who thinksmy reviews are all wet is morethan welcome to ply me with hisopinions provided he also is willingto ply me with frail ale.I’ve tried to tell you what sw-ingsand what just hangs there in localtheater. I have, in addition—withtimid yearnings — tried to prodtheatrical acquaintances into morethoughtful self-appraisal. I've feltfree to discourage what strikes meas overworn, imitative, vulgar, pre¬tentious or sloppy; have been pret¬ty tolerant of the amateur; havemeant to laud the original, thetheatrical, the structured — havemeant to reverence the True andBeautiful even as the Old Collegetaught us all to do. I have triedin addition to write in a lively kindof way. Considering the enormityof a Maroon reviewer’s position. Iam not appalled to be consideredfallible. Chacun a son gout.Yours truly,CAROL HORNINGNow AvailableAtCohn and SternTUXEDO RENTALComplete outfitting, shirts, cummerbunds,studs etc.Fraternity Group DiscountsTHE STORE FOR MENStour©mutt atth ©ampua ^opIn the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100SHARE-A-RIDE CENTRAL \Offers A Unique New Service To Our Mobile Society \Now You Can Find Share Expense Rides orRiders to Any City Nationwide.Subscribe NOW! For Your Trip Home For Spring Interim.For Complete InformationTELEPHONE FI 6-7263 shore drive motel■FACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chicago Rates. Beautiful Rooms,Free TV, Parking, Courtesy Coffee.Closest Motel to Univ. of Chicago and Museum of Science & Industry.IFOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTEL56th St. & So. Shore Dr. • Chicago 37, Illinois »m nr* ^ JTiUUOX AL \ Ain. totJornoNtoCoisuwy E. S3” ST.feiSSr II AM TO 10 PMM13-3AOTDEUVEtt.CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 26, 1963>>01 Rockefeller dCOUSticS mar concert Cagers top Mac MurrayI' What was lacking in Sun-jay afternoon’s RockefellerChapel concert? It offered oneof the better small choruses;md members of the finest orehes-lra in the United States, broughttogether under the reliable leader¬ship of Richard Vikstrom. Further¬more it provided an opportunity tohear the final Haydn mass, theRobL Merriam speakson the presidencyRobert E. Merriam, former al¬derman of the Fifth ward and onetime Deputy Assistant to formerPresident Eisenhower, will speaktomorrow at 4 pm in SocialSciences 122 on “The Presidency:An Inside View.”Merriam received his MA inPolitical Science from the Uni¬versity in 1940. He served twoterms in the city council from 1947until 1955, when he made an un¬successful bid for the office ofmayor of Chicago. He served asDeputy Director of the US Bureauof the Budget from 1955 to 1958and Deputy Assistant to the Presi¬dent until 1961.In his talk, Merriam will explainhow the President uses his staff,his role in decision making, andhis relations with his cabinet.Justice John Marshall Harlanwill speak in the Law School au¬ditorium at 8 o'clock next Tues¬day evening.Harlan, who has been a memberof the US Supreme Court since1955, will deliver the seventh ErnstFreund lecture of the Law Schoolon "A Glimpse of the SupremeCourt at Work.” Mass in B-flat Major (Harmoniemesse), a work not likely to beencountered at normal symphonyconcerts. Yet the afternoon, whilenot a failure, was certainly a dis¬appointment.The culprit was the acousticalcharacter of Rockefeller Chapel.When the music was relativelysimple, with few instruments play¬ing (especially in the passages forsolo voice), it was a sheer joy tolisten: unfamiliar yet first-rateHaydn performed with all the nec¬essary clarity, sharpness, spirit,and sensitivity to the subtleties ofthe score. Vikstrom kept the musicmoving, yet never rushed. Herewere certainly some of the finermoments of the concert series thusfar this year.Yet when the music reached itsfervent climaxes, the sound lostits clarity and brilliance, degener¬ating into a muddle of noise; allthe excitement and brightness (forthis is one of the less sombermasses in the literature) was lost.In some parts of the Chapel, therewas no definition of sound at all,the instrumental and choral sec¬tions all blending into one ratherun-Haydnesque unity. In other places, the higher registers re¬mained firm and clear, but wereall but drowned out by the extraor¬dinarily muffled bass.Fortunately, those sections ofthe Mass which were not ham¬pered by the acoustics were of ahigh enough quality to justify thespending of an hour and a half atthe concert; yet this made it allthe more frustrating when onemissed most of the music in themore forceful sections.The same cannot be said of theopening work, the Bach ThirdSuite in D. Major. It boasted abeautifully conceived rendition ofthe Air, but the rest of the workwas heavy, mercilessly muffled,and generally plagued by way¬ward trumpet playing.Perhaps the concert would havebeen more successful if the mu¬sicians had performed from theback of the hall rather than fromthe front. The acoustics seem tobe better from the rear and be¬sides, one is not subjected to thebored look on the faces of most ofthe orchestral players, which hasthe tendency to spread to theaudience.PETE RABINOWITZ The University of Chicago var¬sity basketball team triumphedover MacMurray 50-49 in a closebut poorly played game at theFieldhouse Saturday night.The Maroons, usually a muchbetter team than MacMurray,played a sloppy game. Their pass¬ing and shooting was far inferiorto previous performances. Onlythe defense, whose 49.1 aveage isstill number three among smallcolleges, was able to remind fansof the capabilities of the team.High point man for the Maroonswas Joel Zemans with 17. MikeWinters, a stalwart on defense, contributed 10 rebounds.The Maroons, now with a 14-4record, meet Detroit next Satur¬day night in their last scheduledgame. Ira Fistell and Chuck Bern¬stein will broadcast the contest onWUCB.• * *The Chicago varsity fencingteam split a dual meet Saturdayat Ohio State in Columbus Ohio,by beating Iowa 14-13 and losingto Ohio State 15-12.Leading performers for the Ma¬roons were Ron Kaye, MashallWeis and Mace Gazda, who to¬gether accounted for 17 match vic¬tories.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTSTUDENTTRAVEL...STUDENTS' CANAFFORD!TRAVEL-STUDYPROGRAMS•work camp & hostelingprograms also available40-70 days from $600. 40 ITINERARIESfeaturing:Western & Eastern EuropeScandinavia • AfricaSouth America • Japanround-the-world54-80 days from $600SPRING VACATIONTRIPSBermuda • Puerto RicoHawaiifrom $195STUDENT TRAVEL PUBLICATIONSInternational Student ID Card $1.00Hostels & Restaurants Handbook 1.00Work, Study, Travel Abroad 1-00U. S. NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION j _Educational Travel, Inc., Dept, cn20 West 38th Street, New York 18, New YorkOXford 5-5070" VS NS A is a non-profit organization serving the American student community'’63 DAYS IN EUROPE5th Annual EuropeanInheritance ToursEUROPEAN ART and AR CHITECTURE. TOUR(Including Greece)MEDIEVAL CIVILIZATION(English — European History)TWENTIETH CENTURY EUROPE(Political Science - Economics - Sociology - Design)Study-Tours combining 3 weeks at OxfordUniversity and 6 Weeks of travel in Englandand on the Continent — 6 hours academiccredit available.CONTACT: Dean of the CollegeRipon CollegeRipon, Wisconsin On Campus withMaxShuIman(Author of “7 Was a Teen-aae Dwarf", “The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.)GLAD RAGSThe hounds of spring are on winter’s traces. Soon buds thecrocus, soon trills the giant condor, soon come the new springfashions to adorn our lissome limbs.And what will the American college student wear this spring?Gather round, you rascals, and light a Marlboro Cigarette andenjoy that fine mellow tobacco, that pure white filter, andpossess your souls in sweet content, and listen.As everyone knows, campus fashions have always been casual.This spring, however, they have gone beyond being merelycasual: they have become makeshift.The object is to look madly improvised, gaily spur-of-the-moment! For example, why don’t you girls try wearing apeasant skirt with a dinner jacket? <*)r matador pants with abridal veil? Or Bermuda shorts with bronze breastplates? Berakish! Be impromptu! Be devil-take-the-hindmost!And, men, you be the same. Try an ojiera cape with sweatfants. Or a letter-sweater with kilts. Or a strait, jacket withip boots. Be bold! Be daring 1 Be a tourist attraction!But all is not innovation in college fashions this spring. Infact, one of the highlights of the season turns time backward inits flight. I refer, of course, to the comeback of the powderedwig.This charming accoutrement, too long neglected, has alreadycaught on with in undergrads everywhere. On hundreds ofcampuses the bossa nova is giving way to the minuet, andpatriotic undergraduates are dumping British tea into thenearest harbor. This, as you may imagine, does not sit well withKing George III who, according to reliable reports, has beenstamping his foot and uttering curses not fit to reproduce inthis family newspaper. For that matter, a lot of our own peopleare steamed up too, and there has even been some talk about theAmerican colonies declaring their independence of England.But I hardly think it will come to that. I mean, how can webreak with the mother country when we are dependent on herfor so many things—linsey-woolsey, Mini6 balls, taper snuffers,and like that? She, on the other hand, relies on us for turkeys,Marlboro Cigarettes, and Route 66. So I say, if Molly Pitcherand those other Radeliffe hotheads will calm down, and ifgentlemen will cry “Peace! Peace!” we may yet find anamicable solution to our differences. But let not our Britishcousins mistake this willingness to negotiate for weakness. Iffight we must, then fight we will! Paul Revere is saddled up,the rude bridge arches the flood, and the ROTC is armed!But I digress. We were smoking Marlboro Cigarettes—O,splendid cigarette! O, good golden tobaccos! O, pristine purewhite filter! O, fresh! O, tasty! O, soft pack! 0, flip top box!O, get some!—we were, I say, smoking Marlboros and talkingabout spring fashions.Let us turn now to the season’s most striking new feature—pneumatic underdrawers. These inflatable garments make everychair an easy elixir. Think how welcome they will be when yousit through a long lecture! They are not, however, withoutcertain dangers. Last week, for example, Rimbaud Sigafoos, asophomore at the University of Pittsburgh, fell out of a 96thstory window in the Tower of Learning. Thanks to his pneu¬matic underdrawers, he suffered no injury when he struck thesidewalk, but the poor fellow is still bouncing—his seventhconsecutive day—and it is feared that he will starve to death,<£) 1963 Max ShulmMI* * *Fashions come, fastiions go, but year after year MarlboroCigarettes, sponsors of this column, bring you the tastiesttobaccos and a pure white filter too. Try Marlboro soon.Feb. 26, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jm Rockwell speaks to 300 here Aldermanic elections todayROOMS, APT., ETC.APARTMENT to share. 7250 SouthShore Drive. New apartment—new fur¬niture. $110 each per month. Telephoneafter 6 pm, 374-1761.I.OST AND FOUNDTHREE items lost—1 black pulloverknit sweater, 1 book, Zweig Schnovelle,1 German French spiral notebook. Lostin the vicinity of Mandel Hall, Pleasecontact Courtner King, East House,Room 3107x.BE A BUNNY PART TIMEAdd appreciably to your income bybeing a Playboy Club Bunny just a fewnights a week, or on week-ends. Ifyou're pretty and personable, between18 and 24, married or single, you prob¬ably qualify. No experience necessary.Apply in person, Monday through Sat¬urday, 3 to 6 pm at the playboy Club,112 E. Walton, or call for an appoint¬ment. Applications also being taken forvacation work.CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOPPL 2-8377Reserve a scat on the S.G NY flight;round-trip, one-way, today, 3-5 pm, SGoffice.; i(Continued from page 1)want everyone to win.”Rockwell told the audience thathe had been a liberal as a studentat Brown University. ‘‘I left in myJunior year to fight Hitler,” herelated. Later he lost all hismoney ‘‘trying to be a conserva¬tive.” Five years ago he turnedradical and now he says ‘‘whatmost conservatives whisper. UsingMadison Avenue techniques I havereached the world.”Most people questioned after thespeech thought that Rockwell’sappearance was worth the commo¬ tion it caused.Dan Jordan, head of VincentHouse, and Newman, both of whompersonally opposed the invitation,said they thought it was worth up¬holding the University’s traditionto invite Rockwell. Newman, how¬ever, added that the tradition isso firm now that perhaps it didnot have to be reaffirmed in thismanner.Warner Wick, dean of students,who did not attend Rockwell’sspeech, said that although Rockwellhad the right to speak here, theTwo classes of TV viewersThe American televisionaudience can be divided intotwo major segments — themass and the class audiences,according to Gary Steiner, associ¬ate professor in the business school.In his book, The People Look atTelevision: a Study of AudienceAttitudes, published yesterday byRandom House, Steiner investi¬gated the attitudes toward tele¬vision held by 2,498 Americans, be¬tween the ages of 18 and 70.According to Steiner, the massaudience is ‘‘more likely to thankTV for keeping the family together,physically,” but the class audienceis “more apt to blame TV forkeeping them apart socially.”If television were to be improved,most of the people interviewedwould prefer to have all programsimproved by 10%, rather than hav¬ing two or three excellent onesadded during the season.Some of the field work for Stein¬er's study was conducted by UC’sNational Opinion Research Center.The study was financed by a grantfrom the Columbia BroadcastingSystem.Viewers, Steiner found, look totelevision for entertainment, andnoi necessarily for informationwhich, instead, is obtained fromnewspapers and magazines.The study showed that someviewers, especially those with acollege background, often feel thatthey are wasting their time watch¬ing television. “Television, unlike many other pastimes, does notcome with a ready-made set of jus¬tifications. Golf is healthful; read¬ing, admirable; sleep, restorative.Even liquor helps to combat thesedangerous daily tensions.”However, Steiner pointed out thatwatching television is not, “likeoutdoor advertising, imposed or in¬terposed between the viewer andbetter things by an industry. It is,after all, an activity initiated bythose who have the final option inthe matter. If the set intrudes, itis by invitation.” price the University paid may havebeen a bit high.Wick said that he had receivedmany calls from people who threat¬ened to stop giving the Universitymoney.It is hard to tell how much effectthis will have, since many of thesemay have been people who don’tgive much money anyway, saidWick. ‘‘But this will undoubtedlyaffect donations for a while,” hesaid.At the Hyde Park Police Station,the two men who were arrestedtalked of their experiences underthe Nazis. Stelzer said he went toBreasted because he “wanted tosee his (Rockwell’s) face person¬ally. ... I wanted to ask him somequestions. ... I then lost my tem¬per and asked the crowd if it wasright to invite Rockwell to speak oncampus.” He talked about his ex¬periences in Nazi Germany, sayinghis whole family had been killed inconcentration camps.According to the constitution,continued Stelzer, “I have the rightto speak and open tihe eyes of theAmerican people. I wish tihe stu¬dents would invite me to speakhere. I have pictures. I will showthem what happened under theNazis.” Fifty aldermen and the Republican and Democratic nomi¬nees for mayor will be selected in city-wide elections today.The aldermanic election is officially non-partisan; there willbe no party labels after the candidates’ names on the ballot.To win, a candidate must receive taken stands in aldermanic ra.esa majority of all votes cast. If no even though elections are officiallycandidate receives a majority to- non-partisan,day, in any ward, the two candi-dates with bite highest vote total _ _ # _in that ward will have a runoff J_ OQCIY S EVOIltSelection in April. _Voters today will have to givetheir party preference in order tonominate either a Republican or aDemocratic candidate for Mayor.The candidates with the highestvote total in each of these partisanraces will face each other in theApril mayoral election.The incumbent Mayor, RichardJ. Daley, is expected to be re¬nominated by the Democratic par¬ty and Benjamin Adamowski isexpected to win the Republicanrace.In the fifth ward, voters willchoose between the incumbentLeon M. Despres and Hyde Parkattorney Chauncey Eskridge. TheFifth Ward Regular Democraticand Republican organizations aswell as the Independent Voters ofIllinois have endorsed Despres.Political parties have traditionally Lecture, Humanities 202, “Brownings‘Childe Roland,'” John Willoughby, in¬structor in English in the CollegeRosenwald 2, 10:30 am.Varsity wrestling meet, Chicago vsUniversity of Illinois at Chicago, Bartlett gymnasium, 3:30 pm.Lecture, "Political Dialogue in IndiaToday: Three Concepts of Liberty."Raghaven Iyer, fellow and lecturer inpolitics, St. Antony’s College, OxfordUniversity: visiting associate professorof political science. Breasted Hall, 4 pmElementary Hebrew class, HdlelFoundation, 4:30 pm.United Christian Fellowship seminar,“God and Man in the Old Testament,"Chapel House, 4:30 pm.Baptist Sermon Vespers, BondChapel. 5:05 pm.Israeli fotk-danring, Hillel Founda¬tion. 7:30 pm.“My Life and Yours," Stephen Spend¬er. poet, visiting professor. Northwest¬ern University, Eda Noyes EastLounge, 8 pm.Student Peace Union coffee hour,“The Meaning of Peace,” Jay Miller,Illinois-Wisconsin secretary, AmericanFriends Service Committee, StudentPeace Union House, 6020 University,9 pm.ClassifiedJunior YearinNew YorkAn unusual one-yearcollege program0Wrife lorbrochure JY-2♦junior Year ProgramWashington SquareCollegeNew York UniversityNew York 3, N.Y.I- NEW SETTING!Shearing swings through his explo-ration of the jazz mainstream in asimple, soulful setting staged by thelate bassist Israel Crosby andVernal Fournier on drums. With aresult excitingly reminiscent of anearlier Shearing, these three estab-lish incredible rapport while dig¬ging in every inch of the way from"Makin' Whoopee" through tenothers to "It Could Happen toYou." (S) T 1827. NEW SINGER!Who says he can sing? Peggy Lee!And Jimmie Rowles proves herright, while remaining tasty as everon piano. His winning way withwords is both intimate and swing¬ing on a dozen hand-picked tuneslike "Sugar," "Maybe You’ll BeThere," "I Can’t Resist You" and •"How Can We Be Wrong." Rhyth¬mic pulse for the date: NickMartinis on drums; Max Bennett,bass; and Howard Roberts, guitar.(S) T 1831. — NEW SWINGER!Joe Buccl proves he’s "Wild AboutBasie" with shouting, big-bandorgan romps through the Count'sbiggest hits dating from the *30’stil today. Backed by drummer JoeRiddick, Bucci moves his hard-driving Hammond through rockingreprises of "920 Special,""Splanky," "Kansas City Shout,’*"Taps Miller" and eight others—furnishing ample proof of why he’sone of Basie's own personal favor¬ites! (S) T 1840.TYPEWRITERSThe sale on Hermes 3000 & Olympia SM - 7 portables with a typewritertable for $1.00 more continues through March 31.Two free type changes on each portable also.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELUS AVE. RANDELL - HARPER SQUAREBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON57S3 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Mrs. Billie Tregonia, Prop.4 • CHICAGO MAROON Feb. 26, 1963