Cash cafeteria staysThe Pierce lower cafeteriau ill remain open next quarteron a cash basis, announcedDean of Students WarnerArms Wick yesterday. The an¬nouncement came as a surprise tomost students, who had expectedthe cafeteria to close next quarter.The administration had recentlytold Pierce residents that, due tofinancial difficulties in operatingthe cafeteria on a cash basis, thecafeteria would have to eitherclose or go on a contract basis forthe Spring quarter. The cafeteriawill go on a contract system nextfall.The Pierce residents voted lastweek that they would prefer tohave the cafeteria closed than berequired to buy the meal con¬tracts. At the time, Assistant Deanof Students James E. Newmansaid that this meant the cafeteriawould probably close, since thefeelings of the students seemedclear.Wick stated yesterday that uponexamining various factors whichwould be involved in closing thecafeteria for the spring quarterand reopening it in the fall, it wasdecided that it was better to keepthe cafeteria open.As one major factor in the de¬cision he cited the difficulty ofdismissing employees who wouldbo needed in the fall.Further, it was found that thedifference between keeping thecafeteria open and closing it wasless than $7,000.It was decided that the advan¬tages to members of the dorm were certainly great enough tooverbalance the difference in cost,said Wick. He, U C PresidentGeorge Beadle, and Vice Presidentfor administration Ray B rownwere involved in the decision.Burt Eichelman, President of theCouncil, said that this was “thebest of the three alternative solu¬tions to the problem.”In the vole taken last week,almost 55% of those voting saidthey preferred to have the cafe¬teria closed rather than have itput on a ten-meal per week con¬tract system. 260 out of the 290residents voted.In an earlier poll taken the be¬ginning of February, 89 of the 200residents who answered said theywould most prefer to see the cafe¬teria closed, choosing that fromamong several alternatives. Fifteenlisted it as their second choice. 29ranked the ten-meal contract first,45 ranked it second.The price of the ten-meal con¬tract was undetermined at thattime, but on the latest poll it wasset at $125.50 per quarter. It wouldhave included lunch and dinner onweekdays only, with some secondsoffered.Breakfast service was discon¬tinued at the end of last quarter.There was not enough business, itwas explained, and the TowerSnack Bar could easily handlebreakfast patrons. The cafeteriahad served cold or “Continental”breakfasts, while the Snack Barnow offers pancakes, bacon andeggs, etc. Vol. 71 — No. 78 University of Chicago, Tuesday, March 5, 1963 31Justice Harlan speaks tonightJohn Marshall H a r 1 a n,Associate Justice of the USSupreme Court, will speaktonight at 8 pm in the lawschool auditorium. He will offer“A Glimpse of the Supreme Courtat Work.” There is no admissioncharge.Harlan, a Republican, was ap¬pointed to the Supreme Court byPresident Dwight D. Eisenhowerin March, 1955. Before his appoint¬ment, he had been a member ofthe law firm of Root. Clark, Buck¬ner, and Howland since 1923, andhad also held various other posi¬tions, such as a seat as a judge inthe US Court of Appeals and ChiefCounsel to the New York StateCrime Commission. During WorldWar If, he served as a colonel inthe US Army Air Force.A graduate of Princeton Univer¬sity, Harlan attended Balliol Col¬lege of Oxford University on aRhodes Scholarship following hisgraduation. He received his lawdegree from the New York Law School. In addition, he holdshonorary LI.D.'s from Brandeis,Evansville, New York Law School,Princeton, Columbia, Oberlin, andMichigan.Among the things that Harlanhas done while occuping a SupremeCourt seat was his famous rever¬sal, in 1957, of the conviction bythe Smith Act of five CaliforniaCommunists. Harlan, voicing themajority opinion, ordered a re¬trial. In 1958. he rejected a $100,-000 contempt fine imposed on theNational Association fo rthe Ad¬vancement of Colored People(NAACP) by the state of Alabama, when the NAACP refused to dis¬close their membership opinionsand procedures. Finally, in 1959,stating the majority opinion onceagain, Harlan upheld the right ofCongress to investigate subversion.Harlan has also been activeJustice Felix Frankfurter, and thetwo have issued many joint state¬ments since Harlan joined theCourt. In December 1959, Harlandelivered a supplementary opinionin conjunction with Frankfurter onthe steel strike.Harlan’s lecture will be the sev¬enth Ernst Freund lecture spon¬sored by the law school.In spring a young man’s fancy turns to ♦ ♦.New psych course on loveby Peggy LougeeA brief glance at Bart- , , ..lett’s Familiar Quotations Pla"ne? /or tha subject should beFromm, and Denis de Rougeinont.The comprehensive explorationinforms us that love is a evident from the following courseoutline: the image of love (an in¬Effects of decisions analyzedQuestions of educationalorganization and functionhave been answered not byspecific decisions but by theinterplay of social forces, accord¬ing to W. H. Cowley, professor ofhigher education at Stanford Uni¬versity.Cowley discussed important de¬cisions in American higher educa¬tion yesterday morning at the 18thNational Conference on HigherEducation sponsored by the Associ¬ation for Higher Education. In¬cluded in his address were severaljabs at the views of former UCChancellor Robert MaynardHutchins.Cowley traced the dichotomy be¬tween public and private educationin the US to the Dartmouth CollegeCase of 1819, in which efforts tomake Dartmouth a state collegewere resisted. It was not until the20th century, however, that “statesupport with continuing annualfund distribution” became wide¬spread, he said.Attacking those who advocatevast and immediate federal aid toeducation programs, he added, “Isee Mr. Hutchins says the soonerwe get federal support the better.Mr. Hutchins knows a great dealof ancient and medieval historyhut very little modern. I have toldMr. Hutchins that I think he knowsno history since the 13th century.”A general disregard for scientificstudy wdiich spread widely in the19th and 20th centuries was theresult of a decision by the Yalefaculty in 1828 that mathematics.Latin, and Greek were the onlythree subjects W’orthy of studying,the only subjects that could offertrue intellectual disciplining, saidCowley. As many graduates ofYale assumed presidencies of col¬leges throughout the country, thisattitude spread.Another major decision was theLand Grant College Act of 1862,which included the phrase “with¬out the exclusion of other classicaland scientific studies” in its stipu¬lations for study of agriculture andthe mechanical arts.This phrase, according to Cow¬ley. led to the development of “themost important institution in thenation: the comprehensive univer¬ sity,” which “many people, in¬cluding Mr. Hutchins, do notlike. . . .” This type of universitynot only offers the older disciplinesin the liberal arts, hut also “pre¬pares students for the newer pro¬fessions and continues to openAmerican higher education to newfields,” he explained.Johns Hopkins, opened in 1876,was the “first university worthyof the name . . . because it sup¬plied continuing endorsement andsupport of research by facultymembers.”An institution cannot be a trueuniversity without research, statedCowley. Widespread support offaculty research did not spread,however, until World War I.Cowley also cited “some inter¬esting decisions about four yearcolleges,” made in 1921, 1942, and1890.“In 1921, the Association ofJunior Colleges was formed, re¬flecting the resolution of an earlierconflict between protectors of thefour-year college and advocates ofthe six-year high school modeledon the German schools.“In 1942,” said Cowley, “Mr.Hutchins did away with the four-year college at the University ofChicago and created the two-yearBastard (sic) of Arts degree. As Ithen predicted, the plan failed, in1955.”Cowley went on to discuss somecurrent problems of four-year col¬leges.They are increasingly becomingprep schools for professional andgraduate schools, he charged.Undergraduate student bodiesare under the control of arts and sciences deans and faculties, men“interested primarily in researchrather than in general education.”Cowley attributed the current“destructive conflict between theeducational and research functionsof higher education” to a “reor¬ganization at Harvard in 1890which has spread to almost everycampus since then.Cowley concluded his talk bydiscussing methods of decisionmaking, tracing organized facultyparticipation in decision making toHarvard in 1725.“The way to make decisions isby participation of all interestedgroups, both on and off campus:the president, the faculty, the stu¬dents, and the general public asrepresented by the trustees. Themore enlightened institutions in¬clude students in decision making.Computers may help, but they can¬not replace good will and intelli¬gence as different groups worktogether.” flame, a mood, a sickness, troduction); the root of love in thelife cycle (cross-cultural survey ofpersonality development); the roleof love in sexuality: aspects andtransformations of love (the phe¬nomenology and nature of love asa factor in personal and social re¬lationships); romance as a psycho-cultural complex (the developmentof the love and romance theme inWestern culture).Orlinsky hopes that the spirit ofthe class will be one of inquiryand appreciation; that the discus¬sions will not tend toward super¬ficiality on the one hand, or grouptherapy on the other.He admitted that the subject isdifficult to approach intellectually—an experience of an essentiallymystic nature faces the danger ofbeing talked out of existence. Butat least, he said, we have theassurance that no one can possiblyenter the course entirely unpre¬pared. Chaucer, who has some ofthe nicest words to say on thesubject, agrees:For evere it was, and evere itshal byfalle.That Love is he that alle thingmay bynd,For may no man fordon thela we of kynde.bitter, blind, God’s essence, im¬mortal. and. finally and most pro¬found, that love is love. Should theserious student find these common¬places troubling, he may clarifythem during the Spring quarter inDavid Orlinsky’s course, The Psy¬chology of Love.“It happens,” says Orlinsky,“that courses are very often onlytangential to the things people arereally interested in.” Such is notapt to be the case with The Psy¬chology of Love. Conceived as anamusing “wrhat-if” situation a yearago, the course will now be avail¬able primarily to third and fourthyear students “of some ability andmaturity,” by permission of theinstructor. Essentially involvingreading and discussion, it will belimited to a maximum of 20-25students.The scone and coverage of thecourse. Orlinsky said, will focus onnormal experience in human rela¬tions, and will also touch onaspects of philosophy, theology,sociology, and anthropology. Be¬ginning with the Song of Solomon,the readings will include selectionsfrom Plato, Benedict, Mead,Freud, Tillich, Ortega y Gasset,University is not a democracy“We cannot, 1 think, claimthat a democratic system forthe faculty and staff of acollege or university is amatter of inherent right, as it isfor citizens in political govern¬ment,” Ralph F. Fuchs, professorof law at Indiana University statedyesterday.Fuchs spoke at a seminar on“Decision-making through Alloca¬tion of Responsibility” at the Na¬tional Conference on Higher Edu¬cation.”Lloyd to head lab schoolsTomorrow's Maroon willbe the last issue of the"winter quarter. An¬nouncements of events forthe remainder of the quar¬ter should be brought tothe Maroon office in IdaNoyes hall by 4 pm. Francis V. Lloyd, superin¬tendent of schools in Clay¬ton, Missouri, has been ap¬pointed director of theUniversity Laboratory Schools. Thepost has been vacant for two years.UC’s “prc-collegiate” systemwhich Lloyd will head, includes anursery school, elementary school,and high school, with a total en¬rollment of 1600. Lloyd’s appoint¬ment was announced as part of apattern to revive experimental atti¬tudes toward organization andteaching methods.In announcing the appointment.Dean of the Graduate School ofEducation Francis S. Chase saidthat under Lloyd’s leadership, theschools should be able to “increasesignificantly the quality of educa¬tion offered within the University community and to make importantcontributions to the improvementof school organization, curriculum,and instructions.He added that the lab schoolsare “moving ... to revive theexperimental attitudes, to stimu¬late increased creativity onthe part of the faculties, and tofocus efforts on ways of breakingthrough the artificial ceilings im¬posed on learning by cultural con¬ditions and the ways in whichschools are organized and taught.”Lloyd’s appointment is part ofthis pattern of change.Lloyd came to the Clayton sys¬tem in 1957. While there, he insti¬tuted a foreign language programin the elementary school, strength¬ened the high school curriculum,and set up a junior high school. Since the state is an institutionto which all belong and from whichfew can escape, it is thereforerational to conclude that each per¬son has a right to participate inits affairs, he said.“By contrast,” continued Fuchs,“those who enter into higher edu¬cation do so from choice and canleave if they are dissatisfied. Theyare basically entitled, therefore, tosuch participation in the conductof their institutions as they arequalified to carry out with benefitto the common enterprise, and nomore.“Nevertheless, given our particu¬lar culture, the presumption is infavor of participation in decision¬making by those who will be af¬fected by the decisions to bemade.”He said that subject to severelimitations on their competence,students, in the same respect asfaculty, should be allowed to par¬ticipate in decision-making.It is easier for people in societyto accept decisions if they eitherparticipate in their making or havesome control over them, consistentwith the competence they possess,he continued.“When it comes to such decisionsas are required in framing detailedregulations to govern student con¬duct or extracurricular activities,the facts that the faculty may becompetent and that the nature ofregulations may affect the aca¬demic program do not swing the balance in favor of having thefaculty frame them.“Rather, at least in a large insti¬tution, the job should be done hystaff specialists, with student par¬ticipation and occasional referenceof disputed policy points to thefaculty and higher administrativeofficers.”Fuchs felt that the rules govern¬ing the appearance of outsidespeakers on a campus should, onthe other hand, be determined onlyby the faculty as such decisionsare of such obvious importance tothe education program.“My plea.” Fuchs concluded,“would be that the trustees oradministrators never decide mat¬ters of major importance to theeducational purposes of an institu¬tion . . . without full faculty par¬ticipation.”He stated that since the com¬plete legal power of an institutionresides completely in the govern¬ing board, the authority for de¬cision-making within the institutionmust be delegated by the boardeither expressly or tacitly.Fuchs also pointed out that uni¬versity administrators, whether ornot drawn from faculty ranks, ob¬viously should possess genuineawareness of educational purposes,methods, and ways of life. Hesaid, however, that it is necessaryto guard against the undue intru¬sion of administrative duties hit©faculty time.Colleges must prepare Lawyers urged to help civil rightsfor returning volunteersPadn'ac M. Kennedy, chiefof the division of volunteerliaison of the Peace Corps,discussed steps presently be¬ing taken for the return of thefirst Peace Corps volunteers andraised some questions about theCorps’ future in a speech lastnight.Speaking at an information ses¬sion at the National Conferenceon Higher Education. Kennedypointed out that in three monthsthe first Peace Corps volunteerswill be returning from overseas.By the end of the year, 728 volun¬teers will have returned.Twenty-five hundred volunteerswill be returning in 1964 and nearly5,000 a year will be completingservice in the Corps for the re¬mainder of the decade.“Nearly 70 per cent of all volun¬teer serving overseas want to con¬tinue their education,” Kennedycommented. A majority of theeorpsmen have said that followingsuch additional training they wishto return either to teaching careersin the United States or careers inAmerican public service abroad.Kennedy asked what colleges anduniversities will do to fill the needsof the returning volunteers, “Willthey develop special interdisci¬plinary courses which would buildon the volunteer's unique ex¬perience? Will fellowships andscholarships be established for thereturning eorpsmen of whom overone-third will need such grants tocontinue their education?”A number of schools, includingBook SaleLibrary Duplicate and Dis¬card Sale continues throughThursday, March 7.Many titles still availableat 10c & up.New titles added dallyThe University of ChicagoBookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.DO YOURECOGNIZETHIS MAN?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLU1 N. LoSALLEChicago, IllinoisPR 2-2290 FA 4-6800He is an active member ofyour community ami lie rep¬resents the Sun Life Assur¬ance Company of Canada.With the harking of thisinternational organization —one of the world’s great lifeinsurance companies — he iswell qualified to advise youon all life insurance matters.He is a valuable man toknow. May he call upon youat your convenience?SUN LIFEASSURANCE COMPANYOF CANADA the University of Chicago, alreadyhave established special fellowshipsin an effort to attract and assistreturning volunteers. Some institu¬tions which have trained volunteershave even awarded academiccredit for Peace Corps work.Kennedy further commented that“several school systems have al¬ready taken steps to attract thereturning volunteers, because theybelieve it is of utmost importanceto American schools and their pu¬pils that the volunteers not be dis¬couraged from careers in teach¬ing. ...”Home corps explainedAt another information session,Richard Boone, consultant to thestudy group on national voluntaryservices, discussed the proposedNational Service Corps.“The National Service Corps isconceived as part of an effort tostrengthen volunteer support forpublic and private agencies dealingwith human problems,” be explain¬ed.Projects to which the eorpsmenwould be assigned would be locallyinitiated, designed, and supervised.Plans for specific projects wouldbe submitted to the Corps with arequest for eorpsmen.According to Boone, “An import¬ant part of the design would be theultimate planned ‘phasing out’ ofeorpsmen who would be replacedby local volunteers or professionalworkers. It is anticipated that mostprojects would reach this point inabout two years.”Two types of training for corps-men are contemplated. First, pre-serviee training for about fourweeks to prepare eorpsmen for thespecific course of the project. Sec¬ond, in-service training during thecourse o<f the project. “Trainingwould be provided jointly by thecorps and the sponsoring localagencies,” Boone stated.STUDENT GROUPST0Bu^A Wide Variety of Tours:MUSIC and DRAMAART and ARCHITECTURECOLLEGE CREDITMICROBUS ... ISRAELDRIVE YOURSELFand low-price "ECONOMY’' Toursor Form Your Own GroupAsk for Plans and profitableOrganizer ArrangementsSpecialists inStudent Travel Since 1926l\}TRAyfor folders and detailsSee your local travel agent or write usUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mass. By Ron DorfmanLaw students and practic¬ing attorneys were encour¬aged Saturday to assist inSouthern civil rights litiga¬tion under a program sponsoredby the National Lawyers Guild.The encouragement came fromWilliam B. Higgs, of Jackson,Mississippi, speaking at a confer¬ence on “Southern Civil RightsLitigation and the NorthernLawyer.” The conference, held atthe Pick-Congress hotel, was spon¬sored jointly by the Guild and theCook County Bar Association.Higgs proposed that each majorlaw school “adopt” a Southernstate. Members of the Bar wereasked to make available their of¬fices and services to law studentswho wish to do research and otherwork for Southern lawyers.The purpose of the program isto help make up a deficiency inthe number of lawyers willing tohandle civil rights cases in theSouth and to enable those lawyerswilling to do so to take on morecivil rights cases without havingto abandon their bread-and-butternegligence, tax, and other prac¬tices.Higgs, a 1958 graduate of Har¬vard Law School, was recentlytried and convicted in absentia of“contributing to the delinquencyof a minor.” He fled Mississippibefore the trial, but according toJohn Callaw'ay of CBS News, whowas in Jackson during the trial,the state’s case consisted of thefacts that Higgs had befriended a15 year old boy who had run awayfrom home in New York, and thathe had not given the boy moneyto return.The tall, blond Mississippi sayshe will not return to the state“until the political climate haschanged.” His flight leaves Mis¬sissippi with only three lawyerswilling to handle civil rights cases.All three are Negro, and only onehas completed formal law schooltraining.As one of the attorneys on JamesMeredith’s successful suit to gainentrance to the University ofMississippi, Higgs was given the1963 Lasker award of the New York chapter of the American press coverage of civil right*Civil Liberties Union. cases, which he said dated fromHiggs has earned the enmity of the $500,000 lawsuit filed againstMississippi politicians by bringing the New York Times several yearssuit to enjoin the State from con- ago.tributing public money to the Charles Leighton, a partner inWhite Citizens Councils. Leighton and Ming, Chicago, roseThe Southerner looks to passage ancf promised the assistance ofof the Poll Tax amendment and his office ^ southern lawverto Negro voter registration to requesting it. “We will help‘bvbreak up the power of the South- telephone and, if necessary, we willern congressmen. “Northerners go down there to help you „must take an interest in Southern T . ,T ...congressional politics because these on’ a e”^°’ spo c ol ’'smen—through the seniority system era. ye^rs. <>n. , the Goldsby case, m which he was—control our national life. , , „ „opposed by Ross Barnett, now gov-AHacks ABA ernor of Mississippi. “We got onHiggs attacked the "failure of a first name basis,” he said. ‘‘Hethe American Bar Association to called me George and I called himdefend civil rights and civil liber- Mister Ross.”ties in the South. “I am proud,” hesaid, “to be speaking before theNational Lawyers Guild and theNational Bar Association (the CookCounty Bar Association is an af¬filiate of the NBA) which have Leighton said that, instead ofpressing for more civil rights legislation, lawyers should think ofmore imaginative ways in whichto use legislation already on the. , books. He encouraged complaintstaken a forthright stand on these ^fore federal administrative andmatters.” regulatory agencies, which couldCOLOR DEVELOPINGPREPAID MAILERS8 mm Roll. 3 mm 20 exp SI .2935 mm, 36 exp SI .98MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55Hi HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTSNEW ANN ARBORPAPERBACKS!Greene - Jean-Paul Sartre:THE EXISTENTIALISTETHIC $1.75Borkenau: THE SPANISHCOCKPIT $2.25Hook: FROM HEGEL TOMARX $2.25Wecter: THE HERO INAMERICA $2.95THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE.EXCELLENT CAREERDEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITIESfor Engineers and Physical ScientistsThe Naval Ordnance Laboratory (NOL) located in a desirablesuburb of Washington, D. C.—now one of the nation’s lead¬ing research areas—offers seniors in Engineering and thePhysical Sciences unique career development opportunitiesin: Missile Guidance and Weapons Systems . . . Space andRe-Entry Components, Underseas Weapons, Fire Control,Sonar, Fuzes, and Influence Detectors . . . MeteorologicalRockets, Aerodynamics, Hydrodynamics, Explosives, Pro-f ellants, Acoustics and Pressure Fields . . . Infrared, Nuclear‘hysics, Solid State and Mathematics.You will benefit from a year-long, on-the-job rotationaltraining program. You are encouraged—and helped finan¬cially—to work out an advanced degree program with localuniversities. All positions enjoy the added benefits ofCareer Civil Service.On-Compu* Inlirvitwi will b* h*MMarch 7•r writ* t* W. I. Wilkinson, Employment Officer (CN)U.S. Naval Ordnance LaboratoryWhlta Oak • Silver Spring, Maryland (Last October during the Ole tak<? execut4ve action without go-Miss crisis. Attorney General ^ through (he courts.Robert Kennedy told a San Fran- Ernest Goodman, a Detroit law-cisco audience he was disap- who is co-chairman of thepointed by the absence of any Qudd’s Committee to Assist South-expression of support frorn^ the epn La^.erSf spoke of t;he nec-many distinguished lawyers of essity for cjvil rights action inMississippi and noted that there Js^oi'th. “The fight for integra-have been no pronouncements in going to have to be won inthis matter by the American Bar Uie North;- he said. “To the exAssoeiation. ’ Sylvester C. Smith, ^at eliminate segregationpresident of the ABA. replied^ that in the Norlh ue wiu have greatlyit would have been “unethical” for ajded the cause of integration inthe ABA to comment on a casestill pending in federal court. At Goodman mentioned the factthe same time. Lawyers Guild that the American Bar Associationpresident Benjamin Dreyfus des- js a Rponj,or Df an internationalignated two members of the Guild ,ega, conference, to be held nextto file amicus curiae briefs suport- month j„ Athens, on “peaceing Meredith’s application.) through law. It would be nice,” heHiggs criticized the President suggest<.di “if the ABA were asked,and his brother for appointing before the bar associations of theracist judges in Mississippi, Ix»u- world %vhat ,hev are doing to pro-isiana, and Georgia, and for pre- mote p^ace through law in Mis-venting the Civil Rights Commis- sissjppj/»sion from holding public hearings The ]awyer hns recentlyin Mississippi. returned from a tour of EuropeOn the other hand, H'ggs praised gnd Africa< w'nere he observed thethe vigor of the Civil Rights Divi- operation 0f iegai systems differ-sion of the Justice Department in jng greatly from our own. “Eachpressing lawsuits. “But when you of you »• ke said, “should go downappoint judges who will just throw ^ aml see how the legal sys-them out of court, what have you ^em u.orks there.”accomplished?” he asked. Al thjs point Victor Rabinowitz,Praises SNCC a prominent New York civil liber-“Although many civil rights or- ties faWyer, rose and suggestedganizations are doing wonderful that the conferees, instead of go-jobs,” he said, “none is doing bet- jng to lawyers’ offices and court-ter work than the Student Non- rooms, should take a guided tourviolent Coordinating Committee wjth a SNCC worker through ihe(SNCC). SNCC gives you more backwoods and see what things arefreedom for your civil rights dol- really like. “Sleep on the people'slar, if you’re thinking of contrib- floors,” he said, “and eat theuting. It is the student movement ‘stuff—I can't think of a morewhich has spearheaded the drive discriptive word—that they eat.for civil rights in this country. Then you'll see what kind ol aSNCC is a magni'iieent organiza- problem we're up against.”lion. They risk their lives every Chicago attorneys attending theday—just yesterday one of them meeting included Pearl Hart.(James Travis) was shot in the “perennial” chairman of the Chi-neck in Mississippi.” cago chapter of the Guild (oldRequests legal aid women lawyers never die. sheCharles Conley, a Negro lawyer says, they just lose their appeal):from Montgomery, Alabama, is- Chauncey Eskridge, Hyde Park at-sued an appeal for assistance from tomey who was one of the con-Northern lawyers. He cited the ference coordinators for the Cookvolume of research necessary for County Bar Association, andsuccessful prosecution of civil Charles Jones, a young Negrorights cases and the small number graduate of the UC Law school,of lawyers able or willing to do who is counsel for the Chicagoihe work. He also referred to poor Area Friends of SNCC.| Hank’s Restaurant \I and Bar-B-Cue 4; "the best bar-b-cue on earth" ;> 5> Features: Complete Dinners from $1.25 $> Businessmen’s Lunches from 95c |f Specialty: Hickory Smoked Bar-b-cuedi Ribs and Chicken* We have a private dining room for businessj meetings, clubs, and private affairsOpen 7 a.m. to 1 a.m.7101 STONY ISLAND AVENUE643-11312 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 5, 1963Blood Wedding' casttalented but not aptLast Saturday night 1 sat men and women cast as friendsthrough two hours of Garcia ancl neighbors were inclined to foul UC musician perform with spiritThe University Symphony between this version and the ar- the eventual doom of the heroOrchestra, under the direc- rangement by Humperdink lies in Siegfried (not to mention every-Lorca’s tragedy Blood Wedding; 1 don’t see why. 1 leftthe play without a glimmer of anotion of what the play had as itspoint, and when I understood, later,that the'4‘moral” was: ‘‘while thereare men and women there will beblood,” my only reaction was: sowhat?That the play is effectively point¬less is Lorca’s fault, but it is notmy intention to hack at his bones.There is much excellent music inBlood Wedding, and the play mightbe put on for its poetry alone. Butnot by the University Theatre, forthis cast was for the most partunable to cope with the effectivereading of the lines. The credit,then, for the unfortunate perform¬ance of Blood Wedding ultimatelyrests with whoever chose the playin the first place. An Enemy of thePeople, perhaps, or The CherryOrchard suitably cut—some other,prosier play—would have been asambitious a project, yet a morerealistic, and more easily realiz¬able one.O’Reilly’s stage managementmade hash of the play: the idea ofcontinuity seems foreign to him.The frequent shifts of scene withlittle or nothing to indicate time orplace confused me, made me un¬certain just where the action stood.Perhaps this is a mere peccadillo,but trying to figure out where Iwas distracted me. Part of thetrouble was not the director's fault:there was no true stage, and scen¬ery was impossible. But if the In¬ternational House Theatre couldhave been used, the play wouldhave gained in coherence.Some of the cast managed to dis¬tinguish themselves in spite of thepoor stage direction. Anita Leavy,Jo Anne Shapiro, and especiallyMarty Reisberg as the lover, werequite effective at projecting the fire up their choral readings, and theirprothalamnic stichomythia cameout a sing-song rhyme. Peggy Gib¬bons tended to swallow her fewlines, few of which could be heardat all.Paul Margulies is meant to be anaive Bridegroom, callow and coy;he comes out merely cloddish.His lines were rather childishly tion of H. Colin Slim, pre¬sented its winter concert onSaturday evening in Mandel Hall.The power of these students liesnot in their technique (which fewwould try to defend), but rather intheir ability to overcome lack oftechnical precision with spirit,imagination, and, most of all, in¬terest in what they play. Take for the ending. Humperdink’s ending(which is unfortunately universallyemployed except when the musicis played as part of the entireopera) is a furious din of trium¬phant brass; Wagner’s endingsinks quietly into a distant gloom.The original ending, while cer¬tainly less spectacular, is the moresatisfying for two reasons. First,it seems a more logical outgrowthread—as though he did not know examUe lively performance of 0f the music preceding it, a gradwhat he was saying, and while he Bach’s Suite No. 2 in B Minor for ...warmed to his part by the thirdact, by then I was so used to con¬sidering him a dolt that his right¬eous wrath at having his wife runoff on his wedding night cannot betaken seriously. Eric Gangloff wasmerely wooden as the Father ofthe Bride. The rest of the cast wasat least competent, more than justfair. The flamenco guitar playersoften drowned the voices of theactors, but the music can be con¬sidered an asset to the perform¬ance.The unfortunate situation wasthat a cast of rather better thanaverage actors was wasted on aplay for which they were unsuited.The actors have, most of them,coffee-table voices, not oratoricalones, and to expect them to do wellin a play which requires the lattertype of voice is unfair. In anotherplay, in other circumstances, thiscompany might produce an enjoy¬able and artistic experience. As itwas, Blood Wedding can only becalled a wasteful debacle.Dove Richter flute, strings, and harpsichord:rather than drag through themusic, as so many orchestras tendto do, they danced through it witha lightness which resulted in afar more enjoyable performancethan the rendition of the ThirdSuite given by the Chicago Sym¬phony in Rockefeller Chapel theprevious Sunday.One suspects that the majorreason for presenting this particu¬lar work was to provide an oppor¬tunity for Thomas Rosenwein toperform the flute solo. Therecouldn’t be a better reason. Heweaved his way effortlesslythrough the swirls of the music,never straining or faltering; hiswork was highlighted by a stun¬ning presentation of the “Double”.The next work on the concertwas no less remarkable: a fullscale performance of the originalversion of Siegfried’s Rhine Jour¬ney, from Richard Wagner’s mara¬thon Die Goetterdaemmerung.The most significant difference ual recession into a quiet, yetominous, darkness. Secondly, it ismore fitting pragmatically, sincethe music is intended to prophesy one else in the opera, as w7ell as afew characters left over from prev¬ious Wagner operas).The orchestra was successful inportraying the gradual transitionfrom depression to ecstasy andback again: the mysterious open¬ing “Dawn” section was particu¬larly effective. Despite the largeforce of instrumentalists employed,the music was always under con¬trol, never degenerating into noise.The program concluded with aperformance of the Second Sym¬phony by Beethoven.Pete RabinowitzMaroons have 14-5 seasonIn a valiant attempt to defeat sium today. The matmen willa big time team, the University of wrestle against North Central team.Chicago hoopsters were defeated58-50 by the University of DetroitSaturday night at Detroit. The Maroons placed second inChicago's Intercollegiate swim-The game, closely contested mjjjg meet well behind the powerSwimmers place secondand pungency of the poetry. Hene throughout, saw the Maroons blow kaeke(] Loyola team. UC’s swim-Tamarkin was also quite good, al¬though in a smaller role. EllenMosen seemed to refuse to takesides between her bridegroom andher lover even after the play dic¬tated her choice: only in the lastscene does she affirm in her actingthis choice already made.In smaller roles the acting be¬came poor indeed. Mary Gottschalksomehow threw a note of the far¬cical into what might have beentouching scenes. The six youngReturn picturesAll pictures borrowedthis quarter from the Shap¬iro collection should be re¬turned to the Student Acti¬vities Office in Ida Noyeshall on or before Thursday.Office hours are from 8:30am to 5 pm. a four-point margin in the closing merS) however, defeated the Uni¬minutes after leading for most ot versity of minoiSi Chicago, andthe second half. were well ahead of George Wil-After being down 31-27 at half- liams College. The iinal pointstime, the Maroons battled to a scores were: Loyola, 110; UC, 55;35-34 lead. With victory in sight University of Illinois at Chicago,the team settled down to steady 51; George Williams College, 24;play employing their widely known and IIT, 4. In the past Loyola hasT-formation, a slow-down offense dominated the meet, held eachwith an emphasis on working for year in Bartlett Pool,good shots.With seven minutes of play re¬maining Joel Zemans fouled outand the Maroons who had beenplagued by bad passes and con¬troversial technical fouls, and whohad missed free throws, lost theirlead and the game. MITZIE'SFLOWER SHOPS1225 E. 63rd Sf.HY 3-53531340 E. 55th St.Ml 2-4020Wrestling ends todayThe wrestling team willparticipate in its last dualmeet of the season at 4 pmtoday in Bartlett Gymna-TRY OUTS!SINGERS - DANCERSMUSICIANS - ACTORSMON., TUES.. WED..MARCH 4, 5. 6 at 7 p.m.REYNOLDS CLUB THEATERBlackfriars 44th AnnualMusical Comedy"Aside From All Thatdirected by James O'Reilly ■■ TIKI TOPICSHave you heard! CIRALS,HOUSE OF TIKI is servinglunch! Stopped in with friendsfor lunch the other day, andwhat a pleasant surprise. Oneof the Daily Lunch Specialswas Fried Chicken SandwichPlate for 90c. The Special ofthe Day ‘‘Beef Stew7” wasdelicious for only $1.00. Cock¬tails are available. Kitchen isopen from 11 :00 A.M. to3:00 A.M.CIRALS, HOUSE OF TIKI1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-758551st and Lake ParkTypewriters & Photographic ItemsSee the I%3 models of both portable and standardtypewriters now shown in our display window. In¬quire about the sides plans, rentals and free typechanges available.Note the pre-season prices on the limited stock ofMovie Equipment.The University ef Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AYE.T- R-CAL 1 Aid. couocnoviED^Pis5«/i3ie tsa«ST.II AM TO lO PM3P M13-34-OTwe otuvEo. /Jackets by famous H.l.S. Crafted of Alpaca-type knit that’slaminated to foam for warmth without weight, this jacket israyon-lined for extra luxury, has suede elbow patches forextra dash and long wear. Flattering button-front cardiganstyle; striking colors . . .$19.95THE STORE FOR MENMll'SlftllSftutttt (tfampuaIn the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100MICshore drive motelFACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chicago Rotes. Beautiful Rooms,Free TV, Forking, Courtesy Coffee.Closest Motel to Univ. of Chicago and Museum of Science ll industry.FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTEL55th St. & So. Shore Dr. • Chicago 37, IllinoisMarch 5. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON 3Seaborg: science dominates modern world“The larger objectives ofhigher education are ... toexpand and accelerate theprocess of creative evolution,and to insure that this processserves and gives further meaningto the modern Western concept ofthe individual as the focus of hu¬man values,” stated Glenn T. Sea¬borg, chairman of the US AtomicEnergy Commission, at the openingsession of the National Conferenceon Higher Education.Seaborg, who was head of theUC Manhattan Project which cul¬minated in the first self-sustainingnuclear reaction, discussed the im¬plications for education of the sci¬entific revolution Sunday night,”11 a liberally educated personis one who can make critical judg¬ments of his society and his time,who today is liberally educated ifhe knows nothing about science?”Seaborg said.“It would be impossible to stocka general student’s head with scien¬tific facts sufficient for him to beknowledgeable, even for a brieftime after graduation, about thebroad expanse of science.Yet it is most unfortunate to send him into a world evolving swifltlyunder the impact of scientificknowledge without a grasp of sci¬entific method, an elementary un¬derstanding of the larger principlesof science, an appreciation of theinfluence of science in philosophy,economics and history, and aknowledge of the power and dy¬namics of science in creative evo¬lution.”Seaborg suggested developmentoi college courses in science fornon-scientists, possibly by develop¬ment on a national level for na¬tional use. He also suggested in¬cluding in non-science departmentsmen who have a special interest inand knowledge ot science as it re¬lates to those fields.“I believe that every historydepartment should have one ormore historians with a special ori¬entation toward science. This isnot a new idea, of course, for suchinstitutions as the University ofChicago, Harvard, and the Univer¬sity of California already havesuch men in their history depart¬ments. But I believe the practiceshould be more widespread, andshould be adopted over a largerspectrum of the curriculum. It isFrank talk about your hair: Vitalis with V-7keeps your hair neat all day without grease.Naturally.V-7isthe greaseless grooming discovery .Vitalis®with V-7® fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dry¬ness, keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Try it! difficult to imagine departments inwhich this practice could be moreimportant than in economics, busi¬ness administration, political sci¬ence, and education.”Seaborg also suggested that someappointments in science depart¬ments be given to teachers whohave special interests in the arts,humanities and social sciences. ‘‘Inthese ways, I believe we couldsignificantly increase literacy ofscience, as well as increase cul¬tural literacy among scientists,without doing violence to the aca¬demic structure.”According to Seaborg, the provi-Today's EventsMeeting of the Council of the University Senate, Business East 1063:40 pm.Lecture (Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures), classics 104:30 pm “Tolstoi—Between War andPeace,” W. Lednicki, Professor, Dcpartment of Slavic Languages andLiteratures, University of CaliforniaBerkeley.Varsity Wrestling Meet, Bartlett Gymnasium, 4:00 pm, Chicago vs. NorthCentral College.Lecture (University of Chicago History Club), Ida Noyes Hall 8:15 pm‘‘The Historical Point of View.” ArchieJones, Asssitant Director, Chicago Historical Society.Tryouts, ‘‘Aside From All That,”Reynolds Club Theater, 7 pm.Seventh Ernst Freund Lecture (LawSchool). Law School Auditorium. 8:30pm. ‘‘A Giimpse of the Supreme Courtat Work,” The Honorable John M. Har¬lan, Associate Justice, United StatesSupreme Court.Lenten Organ Recital Series: Fred¬erick Swann. Organist, RiversideChurch. New York City. RockefellerMemorial Chapel, 8:30 pm?WHAT’SNEWIN THE MARCHATLANTIC?Evelyn Waugh reminisces about hisyounger days in ‘‘Father and Son”Oscar Handlin: A critical look at neu¬tralism. Its development and the disas¬trous form it has now takenSaul Bellow writing on “The Writer asMoralist”James R. Killian. Jr.: On the impactof federal research spending on privateindustry and on our economyALSOSpecial Supplement on Children:Some fascinating views of children bjDr. Robert Coles, Jim Brosnan, WaltKelly, Ogden Nash and others. a.Mk.Every month theAtlantic provides aplatform for many ofthe world’s most ar¬ticulate and creativemen and women. Theresult is always enter¬taining and informa¬tive,often brilliant, oc¬casionally profound.More and more, theAtlantic is finding itsway into the hands ofdiscerning readers.Get your copy today."COTA-COLA" AND "COKE” ARC REGlSTEUPO TAAOf-MAR** «0«NTinr ONLY Tm£ PRODUCT OF TMf COCA-COLA COMRANf.8a.m.calculus...laterush...arrive...quiz...Eng... read. ..write..... .correct... Psych...psychotic...neuroticPavlov... bell... lunchwhew...pausetake a break.. .things go better with CokeTRAOC4NARK %Oottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company byt The CoCQ-Colo Bottling Company of Chicago sion of adequate means for ad¬vanced training may be even morecritical than the expansion of un¬dergraduate work. Seaborg sug¬gested extension of graduate pro¬grams with the assistance of Fed¬eral fluids.“There has been considerabledebate about the desirability ofFederal support, esjjecially for fac¬ulty and facilities,” Seaborg said.“I believe the experience of thepost-World War II period, in whichFederal government has come tosupport more than halt of our sci¬entific research, demonstrates thattechniques can be developed whichincrease the capacities of our grad-u a t e schools without deprivingthem of their independence. TheFederal government appears to bea needed source of the funds re¬quired for the necessary expan¬sion.”Classifieds4 ROOM, unfurnished apartment tosub-let: stove and refrigerator, $100per month. Phone 737-4316 after 6 pm.and weekends.1*2 ROOM unfurnished apartment withample closet space, near campus. $82per month, utilities included. 324 1538after 6 pm.STUDENT, preferably grad, to sharefurnished 4 rin. apt. Call .after 6 pm.Ron House, 752-3674.WANTED: an apartment for one per¬son to sublease over the interim. Call1919 Pierce Tower, FA 4-9500.FELLOWSHIP available for young manor woman, college education or equiva¬lent, with strong peace concern. Workand study program at Hyde Park Com¬munity Peace Center. $3000 grant forone year. Write R. Palter, 5220 Harper,Chicago 15.WILL do typing, general and statistical.Call 254-3442.RIDERS wanted to New York andFlorida over spring interim. $30 roundtrip to New York City: $40 round tripto Miami. Call 664-4761 immediately.RIDE wanted to Boston. Will leave14th or 15th. Contact A. M. Duerson,68 Green.PART time day help to prepare simpletax returns. South side. Phone BE3-4053 evenings.TRAILER, water-and-wind-proof, me¬tal enclosed, doors front and rear. 6-ft.long, auto size tires, lights, reflectors.Great for tent camping, $180. BU 8-8725.LOST: one pair tortoise-shell glasses inEckhart. If found, please notify NewDorms 2106, or leave in physical sci¬ence office.ROD—Aside from all that. I'll be thereat 7 pm. Brigitte. YACHTINGSUMMERPOSITIONSTlie Kennard Co., a crewplacement intermediary withyacht listings on the East roast.West coast, Gulf area and theGreat Lakes is soliciting forcrew members. Due to thepreference of most yachtsmenwe are accepting applicationsfrom college students amigraduates as crew on motorcruisers and sailboats. Posi¬tions for experienced as wellas inexperienced men amiwomen are available. Experi¬ence with cooking or childrenis helpful.Each application will hesent to over 3000 large yachtowners in April. Crewing af¬fords an opportunity to ac¬quire or sharpen boating skills,visit new plaoes here and a-hroad while earning a goodsalary in pleasant outdoor sur¬round ings.To apply send us a shortresume using the following for¬mat along with $3.00 proces¬sing free.M) N-mp (2)A ice. school. (3) Available from ....to .... in .... i.e. Northeast. GreatLakes. East and South, etc. (4) Pre¬vious boating: and relevant wovk ex¬perience (5) two references (6) Pre-perence i.e. Racing, sailboat, cruis¬ing, motorboating, none, etc. (7)Other pertinent facts. Two appli¬cants wishing to work together,state this preference. Every appli¬cant will receive a finished resume.Deadline for applications isMarch 13, 1063. Semi to ken-nard Company, Box 12304.Phila. 19, Pa.CREATIVEPL 2 8377. WRITING WORKSHOP.LADY'S watch, found outside Ida NoyesHall, retrieve in Student Activitiesoffice.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LFNSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTSTUDENTTRAVEL...STUDENTSCANAFFORD! 40 ITINERARIESfeaturing:Western & Eastern EuropeScandinavia • AfricaSouth America • Japanround-the-world54-80 days from $600TRAVEL-STUDYPROGRAMSwork camp & hostelingprograms also available40-70 days from $600 SPRING VACATIONTRIPSBermuda • Puerto RicoHawaiifrom $195STUDENT TRAVEL PUBLICATIONSInternational Student ID Card $1.00Hostels & Restaurants Handbook 1.00Work, Study, Travel Abroad 1.00U. S. NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATIONEducational Travel, Inc., Dept, cn20 West 38th Street, New York 18, New YorkOXford 5-5070“OTs'.t in a non-profit orgnnizaf'on arming fir Amrr'rnri aUuIrnt community"SHARE-A-RIDE CENTRAL *Offers A Unique New Service To Our Mobile Society /yNow You Can Find Share Expense Rides or >Riders to Any City Nationwide. £i!Subscribe NOW! For Tour Trip Home For Spring Interim.For Complete InformatioaTELEPHONE FI 6-72634 • CHICAGO MAROON * March 5, 1963