America's failure in Chinatopic of new Tsou book.. , Ba.c Aritraif R that happened it would certainlyby KCS5 fK ey make a difference, but that is al-Cllina’s emergence as a llOS- most an impossibility. Russia, how-file power in 1950 was par- ever, has been trying to make such.. ,, fu„ 4-i10 a rapprochement, but it could nottially due to the tact that the JX)ssibIv do so to the extent that it[-nited States assumed Ameri- would always oppose China,” hecan interests in China were not added.worth a war, according to Tang Tsou explained that his personalTsou, assistant professor of poli- feeling is that if there were antical science. open split, ‘‘then you would haveTsou has just completed a book two communist blocks competingentitled America’s Failure in China with each other within the com-which will be published by the UC munist system, but at the samepress in May. time they would both oppose theIn an interview, he explained West for different reasons.” University of Chicago stu- erative fellows. and Richard Yingling. biophysics,that ‘ the objectives of the United ^sou EJ\ned out that tbe Com' dents received over 60 of the The awards were made in fur- UC students receiving openStates in China have always been Ch nese arg^ment agamst ,... , therance of the NSF's policy of competition fellowships for studyto preserve the open door policy, ^.l^^ ^s teen supported 1,880 open competition gradu- encouraging outstanding Quints in physics are: Jeremiah Cronin,Vol. 71—No. 81 University of Chicago, Wednesday, March 27, 1983 31UC students get NSF grantsbut the American reluctance to usemilitary power was ineonsistantwith this policy.”In order for America to realizeher objectives, Japan would haveto get out of China, and this couirionly be accomplished if the UnitedStates was willing to oppose Japanwith force, Tsou said.w ^* Kv oPVPr„| r»f>vplr>,-.r^pnfc i n , . . , encouraging ouisiancung siuaents cxc. ucid.uauand to promote the administrative tu nr t • 1 , . ate fellowships awarded yes- to obtain advanced graduate train- Albert Feldman. William Maier,Md territorial integrity of China, Congo trouble ^demonstrate” that lerd“.v * National Science in the sciences on a full-time itobert McDonnell, Michael Parkin-the^ pJiicUs mighTTare worted Foundation. Seven,een other UC basis Of the 1.880 open competition aon Richard Powers^ David Tan-hPitPi- ” ho t^liovpu. td. , new fellowships, were 1,348 in ner and Lee Windmiller. Othersstudents were named NSF coop- the physical sciences, 437 in the in physics are Bruce Sherwood,life sciences, and 95 in certain Durwood Skiles, Elliott Krefetz,areas of the social sciences. John Fanseiow. Patrick Palmer,Paul Soven, Alan Bennett, Lawr-Harry Kalvin to appealLenny Bruce conviction Graduate fellowships provide "" B^mash.“Toseph" VuillemSn,basic stipends (for 12 months) of John Berryhill and William Mixon.$1,800 for the first-year level ofgraduate study, $2,000 for study Awards in chemistry were givenat the intermediate level, and to Steven Murov. Gerald Person,UC Professor of Law Harry offense.” “If Bruce had used the“Between the two world wars the Kalvin, Jr. has announced proper English words for the oneswhole balance of power arrange- that he will appeal the recent he did, there would have been no $2,200 for the terminal year. All Philip Stevenson, Dennis Patterson,"S™ conviction of entertainer Len- cSJecW Bruce was ccvict- ^diS™ “t T“. ^time China was not in a position ”y Rruce to the Illinois Supreme ed for the ideas he was expressing f * ,l . a ow Mathematics students awardedto deal with Japan but if the US. Court on constiutional grounds Kalvin stated that apparently cerl £de^dents” anfS ^ur" J^Id^taytnhad been willing to use force o Bruce was convicted of giving tarn words in the English language iimited travel are included. G?arTeharrLarson Gene Lew-lnstire her objectives, then stability an obscene performance at the are not to be used, and compared . , n t ,, ,,LarsoB,„. fmight have been achieved,” he Gate of Horn and sentenced to a them to taboos in primitive so- Named as cooperative fellows James McNamara, Diana Tay-explained. year in prison and $1000 fine. cietv. were Ronald Arendt, chemistry; ]®G Albert Whitcomb, Don Miller,Instead Japan took military ac- Kalvin noted that th»r« »t-» rw.i David Derosier, biophysics; Larry Dornhoff, Daniel Levine,tion in China by occupying Man- era I genuinely' hftlreslin/constT „ questlous ^ * raisfed in Charles Fox. biochemistry. I^slie Edward Spitznage Nicholas Pas-churia in 1931, and thereby con- tutional "ssues ra sod bv this ^ase *** easf ^ncern questions of urn- Freeman. Jr., anthropology; Jo sell. Richard Shaker. Marianskier■ably reduced the effectiveness Courts have nhelri nhi11' and mode of communication. Hayes, history and philosophy of Howe> and Michael Day.of American policy. However, he victions in which the nhsreniiv has Ka K™ stated that 1)11(1 words Bruce science; Harvey Margolis, mathe- Fellowships were given to as-pointed out that the failure of hwn L ® used are often used in informal matics; Janet Mather, physics, tronomy students Jeremiah Os-American poliev was not one in ducimi However it is not clear conversal‘on and do not seem to and Eugene McDowell, history and triker and Holland Ford; tothe sense that the United States wheth ’ statements which are COnstitute a c*3™031 offense when philosophy of science. earth scientists Keith Carlson andlost something, but rather that the mor . reVolvintr can constitution S° used' A*S° Kalvin said 41131 lie Also receiving cooperative fellow- Paul Moore: to oceanography stu-US was no able to gain its desired „,|v L considered a criminal nf- knowS ol no other case which “* ships are Lawrence Messe, psy- dent Robert Byrnne.relationship with China. feiise volves the oral rather than the chology; Richard Morton, bio- Zoology students who will studyAlthough the United States was * written word, and thus there is physics; Robert Moss, chemistry; under NSF fellowships are Susanunwilling to back up her policy with Kalvin indicated that another in- the question of whether there is Patrick O’Donovan, physics; Jacob Langreth and Dallas Edwards;force, Tsou believes America was Cresting aspect of the case is that any difference between writing ob- Raab, zoology; Murray Schacher, botany students are Donald Krizekalso reluctant to completely aban- i( involves the nature of language, scene words and reciting them be- Mathematics; Robert Silbey, chem- and Daniel McMahon; biochem-don these goals and follow a policy The oflense was actually a “word fore an audience. istry; Stephen Webber, chemistry, (Continued on page 4)of total disengagement.The conflict that developed be¬tween American objectives and therefusal to support the means re¬quired by these policies contrib¬uted to several American illusions.‘‘For -example, the United States - . , „ , ,ft* fte Nationalists^ Park took one step forwardtlie Communists would be able to an(1 one backward last week. 53 street. The sponsoring group,The Committee For Harper Court,is chaired by Mrs. Muriel Beadle," — icar on duutvttbv. tbtty, oieprien weoDer, cnemisiry, (.continued onArt colony to go; new center plannedby John T. WilliamsUrban renewal in II vde prospects for Harper Court areclear. who was then director of UC’s continued Mrs. Beadle,planning program. His “two cen- Any project of this type has toters project” called for deal with the staggering cost of1. “A lighted center which would n:w construction. The problem isbe a pleasant place where one one of keeping the rents low. Onemight stroll, or browse and shop method of reducing rentals is byin a leisurely fashion, or window securing long-term financing. Thisestablish a coalition goverment,”he said. First, the seven occupantsIn his book Tsou approaches of bhe communily-s art oa yc ‘"presTdenl ‘ George shop‘ or in genera,‘ spend a pleaS' ^ay be done by securing a 25-yearhuman actions and their conse- 57 Stree{ q£ ‘ C P " **“ “ '“~“quences as if they were the prod- tioo effective May 31.nets of complex conditions. “Theassumptionsone type of conumou. Aiioiner ijih- “dumj. auDau ucmei were pre- mg up anouner urst in ui-ban piace activities and services reare the objective conditions; and sented to the city department of renewal, according to Mrs. Beadle. |ated to the fine and applied artsit is from this point of view that urban renewal. It has been a general rule in ur- and t0 the improvement of homes.”Beadle.Harjier ant evening in his own neigh¬borhood.”2. “An art and building centerCourt, provides Hyde iiu <ui aiiii „H11 VV1TO.tions of the actor constitute Second, plans for a pioneer com- Park with the opportunity of chalk- whicb would bring together in oner of condition. Another type munity artisan center were pre- ing up another “first” in urban nlnr® activities and services re-the unwillingness, and inability touse military power or abandon theambitious goals emerges as themost crucial parts of Americanpolicy.”When asked how he interpreted “,v- ‘'’1'cutu “ftp ideological differences between P“*-KenwoodCommunist China and the SovietUnion, Tsou said, “The conflict isdeveloping rapidly, but even ifthere should be a split, it wouldmake relatively little difference onthe world situation during the nextfew years “ The $500,000 project, named Har- ban renewal projects that the peri0ff added that the “best op-per Court, would provide facilities sma 1T)argl.na bu^fesse^. are ab portunity for achieving the renew-tor “small businesses which have ^rcfd aut- The citizens of aJ ^ jies in making Hyde Park-traditionallv reflected and enriched Ryde Park’ however’ are taking Kenwood the most attractive com-the special character of the Hyde the indlative in saving the com- munity in the entire Chicago met- morLgage fromhe federal SmallBusiness Admin¬istration. In ad¬dition. the inves-ors in the pro¬ject may be giv¬en only a small,-etum. A non-,, „ wy >rofit company1 m could be estab-Mrs. Beadle lished whichropoHten*district’f<jr famibes who ^OU“ey^“s^. 'SH™done, the average rentalwould still be higher than theaverage rent'presently paid by thecommunity’s-artisans ($1.50 squarefoot), according to Mrs. Beadle.In order to reduce rent stillmunity’s many cultural shops.O • x WflnK . , “Cultural activities are absolute- vXe""in^ectual^ and‘"cultural to th« investors. Even if theseVuist wants to stay ly necessary for community sta- activities highly, so that such fam- areUrban renewal officials contend bility,” according to Julian H. dies can be attracted into the com-that the art colony structures-— Levi, executive director of the mimjty from a wide area.”some of which are vacant—repre- South East Shicago Commission -sent possible firetraps. Egil Quist, and UC professor of Urban Studies. HPKCC appoints com iw vears - president of the Art Colony Asso- “The addition of cultural facilities About a year ago, the Hyde ParkThe savM lTninn rnmmnnkl ciation replies “that the buildings is not predicated on a desire to do Kenwood Community Conference further, it has been suggested thatChina have been unable to eoordi- haye stood for 73 years without good or to save ‘the little man’ appointed a committee to con- % 0f the Harper Court spacenate their foreign policies for the one f*re.” Most of the occupants but on a realization that cultural sider: When the urban renewal should be given to purelylast rear or two he said. “So °f the art colony would qualify for activities constitute the heart. project is finished, who will be commercial interests who wouldthe conflict has already effected space in Harper Court but work Three buildings left? WUJ 4he comr™mity lo*e pay regu]ar r^lal rates- Tbe4,re‘(hp unity o( the Communist world." ~ ftb Pr.jrct « .«B in the ex- „ar|H.r Court wooWo( commercial mterest* ,t wauta and ot ft,, Spa«couldthen“But even if the split were to ploratory stage. The Art Colony three two-storv buildings ioined bv needs? a j j ^ ifased to «ie ptisans at ap-occur. it is unlikely that Ch ina residents feel that they should be ro^<l^ver walkway^ O^rbuild- The c«mmittee decid®d 4ha^)Proximately the $1.50 rate.• • » *- -x * .—a —8*.® rooieu-over waiKways. une nuna- commercial concerns would The Committee For Harper Court“5 ,s 1(1 be located on west kg ab]e to re-establish themselves; has been exploring the details in¬side of Harper avenue and two on of them wouid be able to pay volved in the plan. It has generallythe east. Between them> w,u tbe generally higher rentals of worked within the framework ofstretch a sunken court. s Jwould seek rapochement with usr allowed to stay at least until theEach building would have fourentrances, one on each side. Thebuildings would contain a total of36,000 square feet of floor space new buildings. the broad outline described above.The committee could not see 0f ^e tentative plans haveany hope, however, for the artisan already had to be dropped. Forgroup, the small marginal busi- example, some of the membersness concerns. These businesses of the Board of Trustees of theand could be subdivided into as canmg survive unless they have University had indicated a willing-many as 36 stores. The exact num- cj,eai, old buildings are nec- ness to |,Uy the land for the siteber of shops, however, has not as wgary this reason, according and then lease it to the Harperyet been determined. The plans ^ jyjrs Beadle. Court group. The funds for con-provide for expansion of the three jj- (bese groups are forced out, straction would then be borrowedbuildings as well as additional tbe eommunity loses the intrinsic jro|J1 the sma]j Business Admin-construction. cultural value of shops as well as jstration. But SBA would not lendThe group hopes to borrow $400.- vital community services. The ar- as much money to a group which000 from the federal Small Busi- tjsan has a pressing relocation was using leased land as to oneness Administration. The remain- problem because he needs an un- which owned the property. Foring one hundred thousand dollars USual community in order to sur- jjarper Court still envisions theis to be raised by selling bonds vive. Harper Court is designed to b()nd saje d|-ive as a communityin the community. i. “hold in those concerns who re- wjde effort which will not dei»fndA community artisan center for fleet tlie charaoter of the corn- OI1 University support. The Uni-IHyde Park was proposed eight munity and 2. provide the conn- versity will, however, be eneour-years ago by Harvey S. Peroff, munity wiHi the services it needs," aged to buy bonds.■YAF head backs McCarthyism"TareytorTs Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!”says Marius (The Profile) Lucullus, star actor of the Players Romani. “Gaudeamus,” he declaims,"at long last here’s a filter cigarette with flavor bono — tie gustibus you never thought you’d get fromany filter cigarette. Ave Tareyton!”Dual Filter makes the differenceDUAL FILTERtwitui 9$ cJ/u. uxwt t UoC*.nyx*ay — JotfxuCvo is on i nnjiiir name Ia-T fTareytonis our midair name La T (•CHICAGO MAROON • Mar. 27, 1963"The era of looking at collegeresidence as a problem of nocturnalstorage is behind us. And, happily,so are days when a dormitory wasa big box filled with equal-sizedboxes, its ice-cube geometry con¬senting only to long, narrow,straight, surgical-tile corridors con¬necting interminable rows of ce¬ment-block cells with their bolf-of-lightning cracks. Cold and clam¬my to the touch, the.se ceramic vaults, relieved only by the vit¬reous enamel of the gang toilets,spoke to the student only of twomatters: indestructibility and anti¬sepsis. Any similarity to the pur¬poses of the college, living ordead, was purely coincidental.”HAROLD B. GORES,. president,Educational FacilitiesLaboratories, Inc. WASHINGTON (CPS) —When the late Senator JosephMcCarthy was at the heightof his career during the 1954army investigation, one of hisstrongest supporters was a 16-year-old page boy.Robert E. Bauman, then a Cap¬itol page boy, circulated a peti¬tion among his colleagues, sup¬porting the Wisconsin Republicanwho was soon to be censured byhis fellow senators. Today, Bau¬man heads one of the largest con¬servative political action groupsin the United States.As National Chairman of YoungAmericans for Freedom, Inc.,(YAF), Bauman's opinions aboutMcCarthy have changed verylittle. “1 think he did a great serv¬ice to the country,” Bauman toldthe Collegiate Press Service, “inpointing out the Communist threatwithin the government.”Bauman says that he is more ofa Goldwater than a McCarthy con¬servative these days. And so arethe 200,000 members of YAF in310 chapters scattered across thecountry, according to Bauman. Hesays that there is nothing secre¬tive about YAF membership. YAFofficials keep a tally of membersby issuing membership cards at$3 for students, $5 for non-stu¬dents. By simple arithmetic thatadds up to more than $60,000 ayear for YAF to spend, most of iton publications such as its “NewGuard” youth magazine.Bauman says that YAF hasgrown by 1,000 members a monthsince January, 1962. Ages of YAFmembers range from 16 to 30,meaning that YAF has also beenbusy organizing high school chap¬ ters. The high point of YAF’s ac¬tivities to date was a MadisonSquare Garden rally last Marchwhere Goldwater intoned to a capa¬city crowd that “a wave of con¬servatism is sweeping the coun¬try.’’Y AF was originated at a meet¬ing of 100 students from 44 col¬leges at the Sharon, Conn., homeof right-wing editor (National Re¬view) William Buckley. The YAFcharter, now called the “SharonStatement” by Y'AF faithful,spelled out principles of conserva¬tive politics as limited federal gov¬ernment, “economic freedom,”militant anti-( ommunism.Joining YAF after it got under¬way were various young Republi¬can groups, such as the “Youthfor Nixon” ■— a GOP national con¬vention - born organization. Itspresident, Carol Dawson of In¬dianapolis, Indiana, found somuch in common with YAF andBauman that she decided to marryboth of them.While Bauman has been divid¬ing his time between runningYAF and finishing up at George¬town University’s law school,Carol has been both wife and edi¬tor of “New Guard.”LeFlore County, Miss. Since it was organized, YAF hasdrawn support from conserva¬tives of both parties. Senate back¬ers of Y’AF, besides Goldwaterand John Tower of Texas, includeStrom Thurmond of South Caro¬line, conservative Democrat. Oth¬er supporters read like a "who’swho” compiled by the NationalReview.Bauman admits that YAF is byand large without any positiveprogram of its own — most of itsefforts are expended reacting toNew Frontier policies and at¬tempting to revise or negate lib¬eral trends. When the majority ofAmerican colleges and universi¬ties were opposing the disclaimeraffidavit provision of the Nation¬al Defense Education Act, YAFmembers wore vigorously sup¬porting it.The main theme of YAF thesedays is that of the Kennedy ad¬ministration is trying to put thepolicies of the New Deal into ef¬fect 30 years too late. EchoingRichard Nixon, Bauman says “thepresident would be a lot betteroff it he got rid of some of hisadvisers and used some of his ownvigor in making decisions.”Food distribution resumedThe LeFlore County (Missis¬sippi) Board of Supervisorsvoted March 20 to resume, forone month, a full-scale surplusfood distribution program.The surplus food program was discontinued last year after theAtlanta-based Student NonviolentCoordinating Committee tSNCC)began a voter registration drivehere. The student anti-segregationgroup charged that the food cut-offwas aimed at “starving out” Neg¬roes who attempted to registerand vote, and discourage othersfrom doing so. An estimated 22,1)00Negroes, mainly seasonal workers,were affected.Through student and othergroups in the North, the StudentNonviolent Coordinating Commit¬tee has sent “many thousands oftons” of food and clothing intothe Delta, a SNCC worker said.The drive will continue, the workersaid, "untii we have some assur¬ance that LeFlore County’s Negroscan survive.”Sikes to discuss'One Man's Religion'George Sikes, consultant forthe Cook County Departmentof Public Aid, will give a talkon “One Man’s Religion’’ to¬night at 8 pm at the William Fennhouse, 5638 Woodlawn.Sikes’ speech will be the firstin a series on “Liberal Religion,”sponsored by the Channing-Mur-ray Club and the First UnitarianChurch. All four of the talks inthe series will be held at the sametime and place as the first.The second talk, on “A Politi¬cal Liberal’s Religion,” will bedelivered by Douglas Anderson,administrative assistant to USSenator, Paul Douglas nextWednesday.On April 10, John F. Hayward,associate professor of theology atMadville Theological School, willdiscuss “The' Foundations of Lib¬eral Religion.”The final speech will be on “Lib¬eral Religion—A Humanist View.”It will be delivered on April 17by Randall Hilton, Dean of theAbraham Lincoln Center.Today’sWise1955 ChevroletBel-Air.Radio, beater, automatic, 4 brandnew tires.Bring in ad for this price.SOUTH SIDESTUDEBAKER, INC.46th & Cottage GroveBO 8-1111 t:■Tobias and the Angel*A dialogue inThe Goodman Theatre's productionof James Bridie's “Tobias and the4ngel” runs through Saturday night,performances are at 7:30 on Tuesday,ZZ? Kednesday and Thursduy; at 8:30■ on Friday and Saturday.! “Who is James Bridie?”I she said as we sat down in thefifth row center of Goodmani Theatre.■ “Why don’t you read the Pro-r -ram Notes?” I replied. She be¬gan to thumb the pages. “Nevermind,” 1 said, using any excuseto talk. “James Bridie is the penname of Osborne Mavor. He wasa popular Scotch playwright ofthe 1930‘s. ‘Tobias and the Angel’is one of his early plays. VeryJ l>opular on the other side.”“What is it,” she asked, “a Bibleplay?”“Almost, but not quite,” I said.•The story is from the Book ofTobit in the Apocrypha. It’s allabout how the Angel Raphael. brings God’s blessing to Tobit, akind, blind, old Jew of Nineveh,and makes a man out of his cow¬ardly son Tobias.”The house lights dimmed to thestrains of definitely Ninevehisticmusic, and the curtains parted onthe sumptuous hovel of Tobit.)After the first act“Well, what do you think?” 1aid.“The angel is cute,” she giggled.“And?”.“And the first scene was slow. . . until the Angel came in.”“What about Tobias?”Tobit, the father, is all right,but he doesn’t communicate tome. He’s too old, too doddery, andloo goody-goody. Anna, the mother,overdoes the Jewish gestures abit, don’t you think?”“What about Tobias?”“No,” she said.“I think you’re wrong. Wait un¬til the second act.After the second act“You’re right about Tobias,”she said. “He’s getting better.”"It’s a delight. It’s really funny,isn’t it?”"Yes, thanks to the director.It’s a breezily paced show. Andk the blacklight for the monsterI helps with the spectacle. HowI about the girl and her father?”"The lather is terrific! He’s thatIranian actor who played in ‘Pas¬sage to India,’Saadoun Al-Bayati.”“And the girl?”“Looks like Natalie Wood.”l. Don’t hold that against her.She’s doing a pretty fair job of it.A little too much the ingenue, may¬be, but good. Let’s see . . . Son-dra Hirsch.”“The angel is cute!” she said.!> CANOE TRIPSLow cost adventure in the Quet-ico-Superior wilderness. Write:Bill Rom. CANOE COUNTRY OUT¬FITTERS, Ely 5. Minnesota.ATTENTION STUDENTS!BOOK FOR SALEOrder your current text books,references books, etc., etc., froma wholesale house direct. Hardcover or paper back. New orslightly used. The largest selectiosin the market on all subjects.Latalog sent on request. Send 25ccoin or stamps for handling andpostage. (Deductible from first or¬der.) Prompt service.MIDWEST BOOK CENTER7635 N. Paulina St.< Chicago 26, IllinoisTHEATRE FIRST, INC.PresentsWilliamShakespeare'sKING LEARArnold Nelson, DirectorMar. 29-30-31; Apr. 5-6-7Fn. & Sat. 8:00 p.m.-Sun. 7:30 p.m.Gen. Adm. 51.75Students with ID $1.10THE ATHENAEUMMl* N. Southport LA 5-9761 three acts Burchqrd attacks American professorsLiterary manners are boorish“With a name like Anthony Cor-so, he ought to be,” I said, “butI don’t think he’s acting as wellas some of the others.”“You’re just jealous,” she re¬plied. “He’s strong and brave andhandsome and true . . . and he’sgot a great physique. So there!”After the play“Well ...” I asked.“Didn’t you hear me applaud¬ing? Very funny play.”“Well-acted, well-staged, beauti¬ful sets, excellent costumes . ..but bad lighting.”“You think so? I liked it,” shesaid, “especially the way they litthose tents, (pause) You knowsomething? I was even moved alittle by the miracle scene. Bridiewas able to bring it off . . . Andwhy did they have Jimmy Kahntake off that tunic? He's soskinny.”“And a good Tobias!” I empha¬sized. “Skinny, boyish, sincere, in¬nocent; but he still made his mar¬riage to the girl seem credible ...”“You know, both the mother andfather—who were they (she fum¬bled through the program) ... oh,yes, Ruth Mintz and Orest Kina-sewich—well, they were muchbetter in the last act.”“Did you notice all the cliches?In that third act they came oneright after the other. And thewhole routine with the Angel . . .the whole play is sort of one ex¬tended joke on the “deus ex ma-china.”“So what?” she said. “I sup¬pose now you’re going to tell meyou didn’t like it? Well, you werecertainly laughing your hear off.”“No, I wasn’t going to say Ididn’t like it. On the contrary, Ithink they have a hit. What I wasgoing to say was that I thoughtthe cliches were beautifully played. . . you know, as cliches. Theyl^ayed the whole thing straightIt’s really a rollicking good farce.“True,” she said, “but somehowthere was something serious un¬derlying the whole thing. It is pos¬sible, you know, for there to besomething more than what is firstapparent . . . ”“Who cares? I liked the per¬formance. That's enough lor me.“Good,” I said “So do I.”“The Angel was cute!” she said.“Tobias gets the honors in mybook,” I replied.“You’re just jealous,” she con¬cluded. -Joe Ehrenburg “By the evidence of theirwriting, a very large fractionof American professors todayare, if not illiterate, at leastboorish in their literary manners,”according to John Burchard.Burchard, dean of MIT’s schoolof humanities and social sciences,discussed some of the trends inAmerican education at the annualmeeting of the North Central Asso¬ciation of Colleges and SecondarySchools which was held during in¬terim in Chicago’s Palmer House.The guilty are not only the sci¬entists and engineers, “who are infact no greater offenders than thesocial scientists, than many hu¬manists, or the foundation staffswho accept turgid prose, and evenseem at times to demand it at theprice of their benefice,” he said.Although he did not recommenda return to Latin or Greek, Bur¬chard suggested that a dynamicand profitable change in Americaneducation would develop education¬al programs which create a loveand respect for words.Hits contemporary subjectsAnother trend in the educationwhich Burchard deprecated wasthe belief that only contemporarysubject matters are really worthwhile. While he conceded that“there are fields in which this isso, like cosmology, the situationis not quite the same in literature“where, by any standard I know,few and perhaps no contemporaryworks are really the peers of theworks of the giants, of the Greekepic, tragic and comic poets ofVergil, and Dante, or of Moliereand Shakespeare.”The student today, he suggested,hears about Camus or Moraviaand wants to read them. “This isreasonable and to be encouraged.”But he ought to be able to discussthem with less help than he needsto discuss the writings of Euri¬pides, Cervantes, or Dante.“The argument goes, of course,Sartre and Camus today, Moliereand Tasso tomorrow. Unhappilyfor many students and for an in¬creasing number of teachers, to¬morrow never comes.”Because of doctoral programs,there are increasing number ofyoung men ready and anxious toteach contemporary literature andAmerican studies, while few arebrave enough to tackle the greatwritings of the world or the greatmoments of history,” he stated.“This leads inevitably to a cur-j Attention SENIOR and GRADUATE MEN Students EE WHO NEED SOME FINANCIAL HELP in order to com- JO PLETE THEIR EDUCATION DURING THIS ACADEMIC YEAR $z AND WILL THEN COMMENCE WORK. 0a. Apply to STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION, INC. 3J A Non-Profit Educational Corp. 610 Endicott Bldg., St. Paul 1, Minn, pjr’Nothing rasher for your hair than grease. Let Vitatiswith V-7 keep your hair neat alf day without grease.Naturally. V-7 is the greaseless grooming discovery. Vitalis® withV-7® fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dryness, keeps yourJiairjieat all day without grease. Try Vitalis today. You'll like it} Vitalis|_:Y_ ricular concentration in the wrongdirection. I think we have no rea¬son to be happy about it. If anyeducational change is desirablehere, it is first a deceleration andthen a reversal of direction.”Stresses the arts“Furthermore, we have to bedisturbed about the contempt inwhich we hold the arts in our edu¬cation system, especially the non¬verbal arts. They have neverseemed comfortable to scholarswho prefer doing, or to those whoseinterests lie elsewhere. So histori¬cally the makers of the arts havebeen un-coml'ortable in universi¬ties.”Although many universitycourses on other subjects use ob¬jects of art as examples, “we areso scornful of their ultimate sig¬nificance that we tolerate miser¬able and deceptive reproductionswhich are travesties of the worksthemselves,” he said.“The experience we offer in thearts, is one of the least of our edu¬cational achievements—and it willrequire much more imaginativeexperiment and much more finan¬cial support than it is getting.”Another change that has occurredin American education, Burchardsaid, was due to the explosion ofuniversity research and the declineof the premium placed on under¬graduate teaching.“It is not easy or always fun toteach undergraduates. It is easierto work with graduate students andespecially post doctoral students.The responsibility for being carefulabout what you say is less awe¬some. So it is tempting to leavethe undergraduate teaching tosomeone else,” he explained.In the competition for names,universities are offering greaterand greater inducements not toteach and thus luring the easilynoticed out of teaching altogether,according to Burchard. He pointedout that at the same time facultiesrarely evaluate how a professor behaves in the classroom.Consequently, promotion tends torest on the tangible elements ofteaching. He suggested that a sys¬tematic and reasonably objectiveway of measuring who is a goodteacher would offer a chance fora dynamic change as powerful asthe teaching machine.Absentee ProfessorsWhile Burchard pointed out thatmany professors on leave may becontributing more to the interna¬tional welfare than they could byteaching students whose activedays would come after the presentcrisis, this new role of the profes¬sor contributes to the short supplyof first-class people engaged inteaching.But the problem of formal leavesis much less difficult than that ofthe professor who is not on leavebut who is absent “conferring inNew Delhi, or Accra, or sittingwith Robert Hutchins’ Academy ofLynxes.”“Fortunately this is not neces¬sarily an occasion for despair butrather for ingenuity and resource¬fulness. The technology of teach¬ing is now such that there is noreason in principle why an absentprofessor cannot continue to teachin absentia,” he said.Because of the population explo¬sion, Burchard thinks it is bothright and necessary for Americancolleges and universities to look tomachines for help.Mechanical aids, he explained,are intended to help the professorto do w-hat he wants, to free him,not to limit him. “But if he doesnot know what he wants to do, thefilm makers, and the designers ofrapid selectors, and the purveyorsof complicated electronic deviceswill march into the breach.”“The machines will lengthen ourarms and multiply our powers. Inthis as in all other matter it willnot be the machines which willdecide, unless, we let the decisionsbe made by default,” he said.COCTEAU0RPHEELE TRETEAUFIFTH COAST TO COAST COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY TOUR OF THEATREFROM FRAHCE OH THE AMERICAN CAMPUS UNDER THE AUSPICES OF“L‘ASSOCIATION FRANCAISE D'ACTION ARTISTI«UE" OF THE GOVERNMENTOF THE FRENCH REPUBLIC AND UNDER THE PATRONAGE OF MR. E.MOROTSIR CULTURAL COUNSELOR TO THE FRENCH EMBASSY IN THEUNITED STATES.DIRECT FROM PARISSPECIAL PERFORMANCE One Night Only!presented byUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATREFriday, March 29th, 1963 8:30 P.M. in MANDEL HAI L57th and University AvenueIn FrenchTickets HOW cvoiloble. For oil informetion cot! Ml 3-0S00, ext. 3581Reserved seats: SS.00 & $3.50. General admission S2.50SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT of ?5c per ticket Group rotes olso.L 'APOLLONDE BELLACMar. 27, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON 3NSF gives UC grantThe National Science Foun¬dation lias awarded a grant of$50,600 to the University fora three year biochemicalstudy of genetic recombination byBernard S. Strauss, associate pro¬fessor of microbiology and directorof the genetics training program.Strauss is investigating the eventsthat take place at the molecularOther grants given(Continued from page 1)istrv students are Helen Sell in andRonald Groor.Fellowships in sociology weregranted to Paul Siegel. DonaldTreiman, Janet Abulughod. Mar¬garet Parkman, and Roberta Ash.Other recipients are Gary Bo-risy, biophysics; Paula Fozzv. his¬tory and philosophy of science;William Hines, microbiology; Da¬vid Mertz, biology; Stuart Stru-ever and Allan Hanson anthro¬pology. and Patricia Linck, psy¬chology.UC qets two DanforthsTwo UC students. Guy Oakes andJames Hood, won Danforth Fellow¬ships which provide for up to 4years of post graduate work atany college which the recipientselects. The scholarships providefor tuition, fees, and S1500 peryear for single students. $2000 peryear if the student is married.Oakes and Hood also won Wood-row Wilson Fellowships.Of the 104 Danforth scholarshipsawarded, only Yale and Princetonreceived more than two.19 students win WilsonsNineteen UC students from UCwere among the 102 Illinois andIndiana recipients of Woodrow Wil¬son Fellowships which carry a$1,500 stipend in addition to tuition.UC received the largest numberof any college in this area.Recipients at UC were: LannyBell, Alan Berger. Mark Coburn,Virginia Davis, Lawrence Domash,Susan Guggenheim. James Hood.Sidney Huttner, Robert Kass. NeilKomesar, Daniel Levine. ArthurMacEwan, Janet Mather. BrunsonMcKinley. Mane Morse. GuyOakes, Michael Ormond, CarolSimpson, and Sarah Staves.ClassifiedFOR SALESCOTT 35 O.B. Stereo., F.M tuner,other components. Call 532-2367.MOTOR SCOOTER FOR SALEAn exceptionally well-running 1961Lambretta. Engine rebuilt Feb. Hasradio. Top speed 80—new paint, spares.To the Loop in 15 min. $300. Tradefor a 500 c.c. something Call McNa¬mara. extension 3273.SALE of private collection—call forappointment. FR 6-6992 or 247-1264.6000 books from 15th to 20th centuryin parchment, leather, vellum, andpaperback in all subjects. Antiques andoil paintings. 3000 sheets and volumesof piano, vocal and choral music.Foreign coins, old prints, lithographs,old letters, stamps, documents, post¬cards. 500 archaeological pieces, vases,terra lata figures, lamps from 4thcentury BC.NOTICESSG CHARTER FLIGHT (LONG1New return date from Paris, 13 Sept.66 lbs. baggage allowance. Remit $1and passport photo for NSA ID card.ROOMS, APTS., ETC.NICELY furnished 3*2 room apt , tilebath and shower. $115 month includeutilities. 5143 Kenwood or call SO 8-0439WANTED2 USED late model, medium sizedportable typewriter. Call HY 3-3256.PERSONALSAttention scholar-athlete-journalists. IfLoyola can win, so can you. To placea classified call ext. 3265. Special stu¬dent, faculty, and university staffrates. Classified must be submitted twodays before publication. level to create new combinationsof the inherited traits carried onthe chromosomes of two parents.Using a common microorga¬nism, the Bacillus subtilis, Straussis testing a hypothesis related tothe belief that the chromosomeis essentially a nigTily coiled lengthof deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA).Evidence from his own and otherrecent studies suggests that thereis frequent natm-al breeding andrejoining in the DNA molecule.Strauss is now trying to find outwhether recombination occurs bychance during this process, whenfragments of DNA from one par¬ent are joined into the brokenstrands of DNA of the other parent.Strauss has been a member ofthe UC faculty since 1960. He isauthor of Outline of ChemicalGenetics, and has contributed tomany scientific journals.Calendar of events |Episcopal Services: Holy Commun¬ion, Bond Chapel, 7:30 am.Lutheran Services; Morning Com¬munion. Bond Chapel. 7:45 am.Conference: 11th annual Manage¬ment Conference, Graduate School ofBusiness, McCormick Place, 11 am.Seminar: "The Therapy of Infertil¬ity,’’ Chicago Lying-in Hospital. 2 pm.Carillon Recital: Daniel Robins, Uni¬versity carrillonneur. Rockefeller Chap¬el. 5 pm.Evensong: Bond Chapel. 5:05 pm.Meeting: POLIT platform caucus.All interested students are invited, IdaNoyes hall, 7:30 pm.Country Dancers: Ida Noyes hall,8:30 put. Visiting professor Aptheker speaks tomorrowof Indian law to talkJ. Duncan Derrett, visitingprofessor of Indian law, willdeliver a series of 6 lectureson “Law, Religion, and theState of India.” Darrett is a prof-feSsor of oriental laws at the Uni¬versity of London.The lectures are being sponsoredby the Law School, the Committeeon Southern Asian Studies, and theCommittee for the ComparativeStudy of New Nations. They willbe held in room 3 of the LawSchool from 3:30 to 5 p.m.The first lecture on “The Roleof Hindu Law in ComparativeLegal Research” will be deliveredon April 2. On April 4, Derrittwill discuss “Hindu Law as aScholarly Discipline.”“Hindu Law and Hebrew Law”is the topic of his third lecture,on April 9. On April 11 he willspeak on “Administration of Hinduby the British.”His April 16 lecture will dealwith ‘The Codification and Re¬form of Hindu Law by the British.”Derrett’s final lecture. “ReligiousLaw and the Secular State,” willbe given on April 18.Call Ext. 3265To BuyA Classified Marxist historian, HerbertAptheker will speak on “TheNew Frontier and the ColdWar” tomorrow in Soc Sci 122at 7:30.Sponsored by the newly formedForum on the Left, Aptheker isthe first of several speakers whichthe Forum hopes to bring tocampus.Green favors changein women's hoursThe residents of GreenHouse have voted overwhelm¬ingly in favor of a change inhours regulations in a recenthouse poll.Slightly more than half (37) ofthe residents voted in the poll.Only one’ girl was in favor of re¬taining the present hours system.Of the 36 in favor of a change,28 were in favor of the recom¬mendation of their house councilto retain present hours for firstyear students and abolish them forgirls in their second year or above.Most of the others were in favorof a complete abolition.The West House councils, whichearlier voted 7-2 in favor of abol¬ishing hours, recently voted unan¬imously in favor of a modifiedsystem. “We feel that Aptheker is com¬ing here as an academic scholarto present, and that he should l*met on the basis,” according to aspokesman for the Forum on theLeft.Aptheker is the editor of Politi¬cal Affairs, the theoretical organof the American Communist Parly,and has written numerous booksincluding A Documentary Historyof the Negro People in the UnitedStates, On the Nature of Freedom,and TThe World of C. Wrikht Mills!“As a marxist scholar, Apthekershould present to the University aninteresting and thought provokinganalysis of American foreign pol-icy,” said the spokesman.Programmingcourse setThe University of ChicagoComputation Center has an¬nounced a FORTRAN pro¬gramming system coursebeginning today.Dick Frederickson, IBM repre¬sentative, will teach the coursefrom 10:30 to 12 noon on Monday,Wednesdays, and Fridays throughApril 12. in Room C-113 of theInstitute for Computer Research.There will be no charge or prerequisites for the course. Registra¬tion should bo made by calling evtension 4086.The story of a classicSPECIAL PRICESPHOTOGRAPHYWe offer special prices o«mailers through April 30, processing1963.3 mm.Movie Kodak S-|.2920 ExposureKodacrirome $1.2936 ExposureKodachrome $1.298 mm. MovieTechnicolor $1-2020 ExposureTechnicolor $1-2036 ExposureTechnicolor $1-90Kodacolor processed by Technicolor »*-eluding prints—$2.30.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Av«. In many ways the story of the Thunderbird is one ofthe most unusual in the automobile business. Thewhole idea of the car was born at one of the greatEuropean automobile shows. The then president ofour company pointed to some of the small, lush sportscars that are always a center of attention at suchshows and asked his companion, "Why can’t we buildsomething like these?”The companion, who later became a vice presidentof the company, said, "It just so happens l have oneon the boards. I’ll show it to you when we get back toDetroit.” Then as fast as he could discreetly get to atransatlantic telephone he called his assistant and toldhim, "Remember that car we’ve been talking about?Finish those sketches on it.”The Thunderbird became one of the few cars everbuilt that was produced essentially as the originalsketches presented it. Most cars undergo countlesschanges in the design period. But there was a naturalclarity and cleanness to the Thunderbird design thatimmediately captured all of us at Ford.It was probably this clean, sharp look that won somany friends so fast when the car went into produc¬tion. That first Thunderbird had its drawbacks. Forexample, it was too soft-sprung for true sports-carhandling. But, the truth is, it was not designed in theEuropean tradition of the fast performance car. Somepeople called it a sports car but we never did. Wecalled it a "personal" car; a small, fairly luxurious carthat was fun to look at and fun to drive. It had itsown integrity: it was one alone.We built the Thunderbird as a bellwether car forFord. It was our intention to test new ideas beforewe put them into our Fords, Fairlanes and Falcons.The new Ford ride and Swing-Away steering wheelappeared first on the Thunderbird, for instance. How¬ever, we never foresaw the extraordinary influenceThunderbird would have on the whole automobilebusiness here and abroad. Almost everybody offersthe Thunderbird bucket seats these days. And theThunderbird look is the most decisive styling of the '60s.The Thunderbird is a classic, made so by a peculiarblend of magic ingredients of which we would loveto know the secret. We're building cars right now wehope will become classics, but the truth is, we don'tmake classics, we make cars. People make the car aA classic. And that's the story of the Thunderbird.1963 America’s liveliest,most care free cars l,FORDfAl.CON . FAIRIANE • T0H0 • THUNOERt"*® *FOR 60 YEARS THE SYMBOL OF DEPENDABLE PRODUCTS motor COMPANf]^J • CHICAGO MAROON • Mar. 27, 1943