Beadle testifies in WashingtonFederal projects drain University fundsAmerican universities are for other needs such as building sued in 1958 as Bureau of the ties have the right to charge the business. Argonne officials wereforced to pay for part of the maintenance, he said. Budget Circular ^21. The bureau government more than the direct then negotiating to raise the fignraoverhead costs arising from "Further, and here the practice « *?*,.“*??**,“* £ ** ^federally sponsored research of °°verto2 research grant deficits ‘Wld“1 U r'V se ‘ federal contracts. *** caused a split wi*m•^ .u . . becomes increasingly harmful to exPenencc ,n t*ie pro , em °* g( v • i * ^ the AEC, with some insisting thatprograms because they are insuf- ... prnmrnt finalred university re- While Argonne received a fixed *fidently reimbursed for these in- umversdy, funds are diverted * allowance from the governmeut the Umvemtjr would be makingfrom other scholarly areas which, searcn wah ' the problem is oomplioated by the money on government business jfunfortunately, have great difficulty Last year C?len Seaborg, chair- impossibility of accounting for all management allowance werecompeting with science programs,” man of the Atomic Energy Com- management expenses. D*®*1*^ increased. Seaborg. however, ac¬he said mission, outlined a major policy what was f^ oompeneation knowledsed that the increase wa*5cUQ*, ,, . , _ , . the use of UC librames was held Knowieagea mat toe increase. “This subtle encroachment'upon cilaoge in ttie reimbunsment of up ^ ^ eJcampie of the problem, justified. This policy would givepriations in as mg on, . e other budgetary resources within universities when dealing with the received « MM - universities business on the cost-represented tbe American Connell __ :ai. , . . .... case of Argonne National Labora- At the time UL receive® a w, , . ■. *■ institution Is not only modifying . ooerabed bv UC for the AEC. 000 compensation for administering plus fixed fee pattern used in in-** <ACE>. “ tbe fiscal suundacss at »c .per.- ^ uliveni- more fl>» $5. milllM of Argon™ dustrial rescam* contracts,tion representing more than 1,009 tion, but even worse, the intellec- lle sdirect expenses, according to UCPresident George Wells Beadle.Beadle testified yesterday beforea House Subcommittee oa Appro-educational institutions. Beadle isone of the 18 members of theACE's Board of Directors.He stressed“that all expendi¬tures madeeducational institution incident to,the conduct of re¬search are directcosts. The ac¬count ant's prac¬tice of classifyingcertain expensesas ‘indirect,*tends to obscure G. W. Keadlethe fact that the expenses soclassified are true costs,’* 6aidBeadle.It is impossible for universitiesto refuse those government re- tual character of institutions isbeing changed by slow but sure in¬roads upon funds which should beavailable for non-science areas.*'Beadle pointed out that what isneeded is a recognition that eacharea of academic study has itsown validity and that the funds ofmaintaining all areas of intellectualendeavor must be found, whateverthe source may be.“The primary function of thecollege or university president isto assume leadership in creatingan environment in which facultymembers can most effectively per¬form their scholarly functions ofteaching and research,” accordingto Beadle. Yol. 71 No. 82 University of Chicago. Thursday, March 28, 1963Mortimer: tax change beneficialgreat financial needs which existin these areas, Beadle explained.He added that refusals of govern¬ment programs would also effectthe ability of the universities to■te for top academic tale‘eventhus recruited, additional fundsmust come from some source tomeet the total costs.”funds which should have been used ning to ask: “DoIour laws and;government poli-lcies and attitudeshelp our economThe current tax discussion is a turning point opportunity in our national growing upIn order to accomplish this end, process. The right tax decision, one that shows enough national maturity to combine a_ he explained, numerous sources SOund long range fiscal policy with encouragement of better business conditions, can sets.arVk'^.jKta wkYck"';.'"^ £ lZofLS,^dthtoatir.runivS *** »n the road to accelerating our economic growth,” asserted Charles G. Mortimer vester-ficiently reimburse the universities oan accomplish its purposes. day.for overhead expenses, because tbe . . Mortimer, Chairman of the Gen- attached to the ‘distrust-business- economy moves forwarduniversities desire to “maintain j T , U”lversi^y w C0*,eSf pres!- erai Foods Corporation, was the as-usual’ attitude that has lingered when both the investors'momentum in biological and medi- “ ™ executive program lecturer at the among us for.cal research,” and because of the ,B aU a^as. of his 11th Annual Management Confer- three decades.!tion s program is, in a practical ence 0f the Graduate School of They are begin-sense. forced to accept funds from Business, held at McCormickalmost any source,” said Beadle. place yesterday.Beadle pointed out that shortly Mortimer's talk was the high-after World War II it was realized light of the conference, which also. j .... that if universities were to continue included panel discussions on vari- „ --- —.e,» <>r itOP apaderTUC lal®nt’ their role as effective instruments <*is aspects of the business com- ic progress, or dooug” for advancing science and tech- munity such as taxation, automa- they hinder it?”nology. then suitable ways would tion, the profit squeeze, and eco- Mortimer ex-have to be found to reimburse nomic growth. George P. Schultz, horted business-them for their efforts. The “Blue Dean of the School of Business, meo meet ^ ^ „WfDin ing tlie past few years uni- Book Formula,” he said, was an presided at the dinner at which solution to the problem of clarify Rosow, Coordinator, Compensaversifies have often met the extra attempt to meet this need. Mortimer spoke. ing the relationships between vari- tion and Industrial Relations Re-overhead expenses by transferring “While the adoption of the “Blue OUS parfcs °* bhe American eoo- search. Employee Relations Divi-Book Formula” was an important \ ' „ °“t th<“ ?lb,,C nomy' *** P^Posed that business- sion, Standard Oil Company ofstep in the right direction, k came S ™ * T"’ ^..^g^. with, make dear New Jersey discussed the possi-to be recognized that the formula t°d*y* • J** j w‘bat redlly are, remove the bilit-y of the United States enteringhad inherent shortcomings in that foL00^'1*^ *° V* stlgma ** attached to them, into a system involving nationalit did not recognize adequately I , wnfn1 Dus,nrss n®™* and make the people aware that planning and supervision of eco-so does the whole economy, and profits are vital to investment, nomic growth. Said Rosow:that when there aren t enough pro- which in turn are vital to produc- “France has formulated a systemfits, there aren t enough jobs,” he tion. of economic planning. Italy is es--SL. i- ^ walks .( life .. <X)«»0(«>Q witfi thfe. Mor . new «x,nom» plan-Americans m an wanes ot lue, ,. . rung commission, and Britain haslie continued further, are begin- added that. It has repeat- seated a national eco-of revised formula, intended for gov- ning to comprehend the enormity ediy been demonstrated, but not nomic development council seekingernment wide application, was is- of the unconscionable price tag too widely appreciated, that our to provide a blueprint for plannedgrowth after the French model.C. G. Mortimer onlymoneyand the workers’ labor are com¬bined efficiently to produce profit¬ably what the consumer wants.This combination must provide:Prices that represent sound valueto the customer; the wherewithalfor good wages for the worker;a profit which will provide an ade¬quate reward for the investor forrisking his funds; and—of greatimportance—leave enough capitalfor business expansion.”Another speaker, Jerome M.Financial aid applications 10 be reoosnizedFinancial aid applications forstudents in the college will be gj] elements of the research cost,”available April 15 and will be due according to Beadle.A1 a y 1. According to RobertCharles, director of college aid, 1*50 a interagency federal corn-students who choose to take in- “uttee was organized to reviewcompletes or postpone their exams revise the “Blue Book.” Thewill jeopardize their chancesfinancial assistance.Army needs fewer men; deferments riseby Laura GodofsfcyThe number of men of this genera¬tion who will serve in the armed forcesdepends on what happens in the nextfive years. Jf world conditions remainunchanged, quite a few people will not sprve,said Lt. General Lewis B. Hersey, head of theUS Selective Service System.In a recent interview in his Washingtonoffice, Hersey discussed the relatively lowcurrent demand for armed forces manpower,which has resulted in the deferment of nearly100% of US college and university students.In World War I, the total mobilized forcesof tlte US totaled 4,355.000; in World War II,the peak strength of the US armed forces was8,291.336.But since the Korean War, the armedforces have remained at about two and onehalf million people, and many of these areenlisted men who have volunteered to servefor periods longer than the two-year draftterm.Consequently, the army has been able toaccept more qualified men and grant moreexemptions and deferments from militaryservice.The increased number of military exemp¬tions and deferments has been made possibleoy changed concepts of war and service, ex¬plained Hersey,Twenty years ago, war was quite a differentnng’ Lir more easily recognized than now, hesaid. Countries openly declared war, broke off*uj)iomatic negotiations, and fought.Now, however, there exists a modified formwar—cold war—which is considered a form• bave reached a stage where wea,f ‘describing peace in terms of its op¬posite.” We have also been changing our concept ofservice, expanding it to include civil as wellas military operations, he said.People are being deferred who neither wearuniforms nor work for the government, butwho are engaged in what would previouslynot have been called warlike operations.People whose work is vital to the “nationalhealth, safety, and interest” are increasingly**being excused from in-uniform military serv¬ice to continue “serving” their country incivilian jobs such as engineers or scientists.Seventy to eighty thousand men engaged in“defense industries” are currently deferred.Peace Corps volunteers are deferred “becausetheir work is presumably in the nationalhealth, safety, and interest.” 15% more ele¬mentary and secondary school teachers aredeferred now than were in 1957 before Russialaunched Sputnik.One problem arising from this expandedconcept of service is determining “where de¬fense leaves off and peace begins,” saidHersey.He mentioned tl*e Boeing Company, whoseemployees have been deferred since 1940. The707 jet manufactured by Boeing and usedcommercially in civilian life is tive outgrowthof a military endeavor, he said.Ultimately, said Hersey, deferments are formen whose contributions are so valuable thatthey cannot be replaced if tliey were to bedrafted.In addition, many college students, as per¬sons getting ready to perform irreplaceablework, are also being deferred, he said. Ifworld conditions do not change, an increasednumber of people will be deferred “to getready to do something, and then deferred todo it,” he predicted. In exempting students, the problem arisesof deciding whom to defer. It is easy toexempt medical students who will soon be¬come doctors, but it is much harder to find“the person preparing to be a great citizen,”lie said.When the demand for men Is low, as it Isnow, anyone who goes to college or doesgraduate work gets “great consideration” fordeferment, with the percentage now deferredapproaching 100%, said Hersey.Generally, however, deferment of collegestudents is based on a test of on class stand¬ing, continued Hersey. “Just hanging on incollege is not enoundi.”Students in the upper half of their freshmanclass, in the upper two-thirds of their sopho¬more class, and in the upper three-fourtIk oftheir junior classes are normally consideredfor deferment. With the current low demand,many students ranking lower in their classeshave also been deferred.The test is devised so that a score ofseventy approximates the required freshmandeferment rank. Graduate students are ex¬pected to get 75 to qualify for deferment.In addition, students who seek defermentmust be full-time students, studying subjects“of consequence.’*“We assume,** said Hersey, “that if aschool offers a certain course of study, it is ofconsequence.” We also assume that if theschool hasn’t thrown the student out, he isengaging in some form of success.But despite a broad exemption programfor students, “we don’t suppose that every¬thing you get at college is education, and wedon’t supix>se that aU education oan be gottenat college,” noted Hersey. “It is conceivable, therefore,that the United States itself willbe willing to consider experimen¬tation with national planning foreconomic growth—a type of plan¬ning which will seek a more defi¬nitive integration of the diverseinterests in our pluralistic society.’*“Planning of this nature needno longer have a socialistic tingeand may come to be observed andconsidered in terms of its meritsand contributions to industrial ex¬pansion, so long as the role of gov-erament does not invade the pre¬rogatives of the private parties.”The final speaker on the pro¬gram, Tiiford C. Gaines, Presidentof the First National Bank of Chi¬cago, also addressed himselflargely to the current tax question.He stated that the greatest im¬provement that could be made inour fiscal structure would be “anover-all reduction and revision inour federal tax rates.” His reason*for tiro contention were that thecurrent tax rates drain off a largeport of the national income, andthat the tax system “imposes seri¬ous restraints upon capital forma¬tion and the incentives for businessrisk-taking.”He closed by pointing out thatthe new system now under con¬sideration in Washington is experi¬mental, and that its efficacy can¬not be determined until after ithas been in effect for some time.The conference was sponsoredby both the School of Business andits Executive Program Club.Exhibits, concerts offered hereArt show to openThe Renaissance Societywill sponsor an art show ofpaintings, drawings, andsculpture by Malta (RobertoMatta Eehaurren) starting Mon¬day.The .show, wlhidh will continueantil May 11, will be held in theSociety gallery, and will consist offifteen paintings, ten drawings, andone bronze from the Shapiro col¬lection.Contributors to the exhibition areMr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Bergman, Allen Fuankin. Earle Ludgin, Mr.and Mrs. Morton G. Neumann, Mr.and Mrs. Joseph R. Shapiro, andMr. and Mrs. Harold X. Weinstein.The galleries will be open forthe exhibition from 10 am to 5pm Monday through Friday and1 to 5 pm on Saturdays.Photo exhibit at CCEAn exhibition of works ofphotography taken by WilliamD. Muncke opened yesterdayon the second floor of the Cen¬ter for Continuing Education.Wanted: scholar journalistsGraduate and undergraduate students who wish towork on the Maroon this quarter may join the staff untilApril 8 by coming to the Maroon office, third floor of IdaNoyes Hall, or by calling ext. 3265, between 1 and 5:30pm any weekday afternoon.The Maroon will train interested students for posi¬tions on the general reporting (campus, notional, or citylews), feature, rewrite, culture, exchange, copyreodingand headline writing, production, or photography staffs.No experience is necessary. There ore writing and pho¬tography jobs for both weehdays end weekends.1. According to the Department ofLabor, you’re worth over $350,000•s soon as you get your sheepskin.That’s theoretical, of course.^ 1 didn’t even know theDepartment was thinkingabout me. S. The way they figure it, that♦350,000 is how much theaverage college graduate willearn by the time he retires.I’ll take it right nowin a lump sum. WouldI live! Penthouse. Yacht.Homburg. The works.•--As an Eeo major, I feel obliged totell you what would happen tothat bundle. First, Uncle Samwould help himself to about 290 Gs.With the going rate for penthouses,your life’s earnings would disappearin one year.You’ve ruined my day. Since you’d be only 22, youcouldn't qualify for SocialSecurity. You’d have to goback to your dad foran allowance.J never couldhandle money.ft. Fortunately, there’s a way outj for you.m Tell me - tell me.Well, you won’t be getting all thatmoney in one year. You'll be get¬ting some of it each year, at a muchlow er tax rate. What you should do isput aside a certain amount of it S«*STV\B. Put some money into cash-valueinsurance, the land they callLiving Insurance at Equitable.It gives your wife and kids solidprotection and it saves for youautomatically—builds a cashfund you can use for retire¬ment or any other purpose.You Eco guys haveall the answers.) The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States ©1963Home Office: 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York 19, New YorkFor information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable in yourcommunity. For information about career opportunities at Equitable, seeyour Placement Officer, or write William E. Blevins, Employment Manager. The pictures range from views ofChicago to Venice. There is nocentral theme to the exhibit whichWill continue to April 13.Harold Hayden, director of Mid¬way studio; Edward Maser, chair¬man of the art department; andAlec Sutherland, director of theCenter selected the photographsfor display.The center will be open forviewing the exhibit from 9 amto 9 pm weekdays.Two weekend concertsTwo major music eventswill take place on campus thisweekend.The first is a concert by theCollegium Musicum on Friday eve¬ning. The concert features Baroquemusic written in the period around1700. Included will be works byBuxtehude, Baeh, Francois Cou¬perin. and Marais.This concert will be the firstsponsored by the Music Depart¬ment to be held in what was (andmay still be) Hutchinson Commons.Admission is free; the concert be¬gins at 8:30.On Saturday evening, at 8:30 inMandel Hall, the Lenox StringQuartet will present the fifth inthe Music Department’s ChamberMusic Series.The concert will consist of theString Trio by Schoenberg, theSecond String Quartet, Op. 6. byUC's Assistant Professor of MusicEaslev Blackwood, and the QuartetOp. 130 by Beethoven, with theGreat Fugue as the finale.Tickets for this concert are S3.00for non-students, $1.00 for UCstudents.RAISING YOUR CHILD IN A FATHERLESS HOMEby EVC JONESA valuable guide to the problems a woman faces as a singleparent in raising her child, by one of our own faculty’.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELUS AVE.LE TRETEAU Dejq VuO'Neill drama retains powerin unimaginative film versionLong Day’s Journey Into Night will probably pleasedrama buffs and disturb those who consider film a creativemedium. We say it will disturb rather than annoy becauseelements usually subservient to creative cinema such as plotand acting are so superbly com- ~ ~ ——:bined here. Journey uses the r<nerte to i'ts original use as aoriginal O'Neill dialogue and what recording device. Journey js .sel-little adaptation that was done for 1 om moy® ™a” a recor<L Camerathe screen apparently did not even ’ a though by the very ex-merit credit since only O'Neill is en* .ris Kaufmann, is not veryacknowledged as author and script- imaSmative. It is usually fixedwriter. and only the use of sharp contrasts_ . " ¥ . ... of light and dark relieve visualBriefly. Journey recounts a cr.t,- nKnrA,;my The camera u ^cal day m the We of the Tyrone iled ^ ^ lMita ^ , hfamily. It., day of discovery action. However, visual imagine.and disappointment. The youngest tlon „ drama M s,son finds he is consumptive and would on] detraot s f shis mother has resumed her dope )itcra,T qualities. For all o' itsaddiction. It is a family of.strang- foulls as cine Joonwy „ a„«■■»■"* from eat* other and impressive, document well worththemselves through dr.nk, drugs goi to (h€ (ar i<,and self pity... . ., .. . . ^ Other films this weekThe acting is the finest we have T.. , ... . ..1 it ns Hus week is lull of film activi-burn dees net receive an Oscar “«• * ‘“2*there is ne justice er judgment left ' ' \..‘U1, 00in Hollywood. Ralph Richardson .". s f,lmand Jason Robards handle their ” g,h‘' 1>0c l'1"’* f'glns a''... , ., . „„„ of four experimental film programsroles as the father and eldest son ... . *. s... . . r»«e.„ with se\eral classics of this genre,with equal skill and although Dean <fc.M ... . .. _ , ,, . . . among tneni will be the SalvadorStockwell is good as Edmund he is .... „ .overshadowed by these acting gi- “ S’1"! c ^ants. Stockwell is also handicapped L fo 'by a pretty lace and an altempt ’ p.ar' ot ,hf san»'on Ihe part ol Hollywood In make has ohla'"’d »"•him into another James Lean. Sid- *f Tney Lnmefs direction is generally “ fhieago-hke Shirley t ark ,unobtrusive and occasionally the- Jl"' ‘"n m"' !,atricaJ take place the last weekend inApril.Journey poses the interesting 1IT-S film socIely (John< Johl)question of when is a film not a j0hn & Hans) will show the secondfilm? The answer is when film par(- 0f ivan rpj,e tj,jsSunday at 8:00 (UC’s Russian CivCourse will show it later thisquarter). They are running an ex¬cellent series in a magnificent hallon their campus. Other films intheir series will lie Resnais’ Hiro¬shima and Renoir’s Regie De Jeu.Admission is 50c.Roosevelt Film Society begins aseries of early American soundfilms which will be highlighted byGary Cooper in The Virginian andJoan Crawford in Rain.Cleopatra opens June 26.RWE PARISCOCTEAU0RPHEEGIRAUDOUXL'APOLLONDE BELL AC>■ HAND NEW1963Va LARK $<flSTANDARD . ..T l|QT^Fully factory equipped. 36 monthsto pay—«o money down—4'je«bonk rates.SOUTH SIDESTUDEBAKER, INC.46th & Cottage GroveBO 8-1111FIFTH COAST TO COAST COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY TOUR OF THEATREFROM FRANCE ON THE AMERICAN CAMPUS UNDER THE AUSPICES OF‘'L'ASSOCIATION FRANCAISE D'ACTION ARTISTI9UE” 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 HALL57fb and University AvenueIn FrenchTickets NOW ovoitable. la ell information coll Ml 3-0800, e»t. 3581Reserved seats: SS.00 8 S3.50. General admission S2.S0SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT of 75c per ticket. Group rotes also. TIKI TOPICSHave you liearil! CIRAI.S,HOUSE OF TIKI i* eeninglunch! Stopped in with friembfor lunch the other Jay, anJwhat a pleasant surprise. Oneof the Daily Lunch Specialswas Fried Oiicken SandwichPlate for 90c. The Special <»*the Day “Beef Stew” " <•*delicious for only $1.00. Cock¬tails are available. Kitchen i*open from 11:00 A.M. •<>3:00 A.M.CIRALS, HOUSE OF TIKI1510 Hyde Park Bhd.LI 8-758551tl and Lake ParkCHICAGO MAROON • Merck 28, 1963Mississippi voter drive continues10 SNCC workers arrestedby Andrew SteinTen leaders of the StudentNonviolent Coordinating Com¬mittee (SNCC) were arrestedyesterday in Greenwood Mis¬sissippi, when over 100 Negron at¬tempted to register to vote.Led by SNCC Executive Secre¬tary James Foreman and FieldSecretary Lawrence Guyet, 100Negroes marched yesterday morn¬ing to the county courthouse inorder to register. As they passedthe police station, policemen cameout and arrested Guyet.Foreman told the police thatthe group was not going to demon¬strate. but just trying to register.The police then arrested Foreman.Neither Foreman or Guyet weretold on what charges they werebeing arrested.Following the arrest. Green¬wood's mayor ordered the ehief-of police to disperse the crowd byletting loose a police dog among'he crowd? The dog seriously bita local resident and also bit. aSNCC field secretary Bob Moses,though not seriously.The crowd dispersed and re¬turned to the church that has beenused as a base of operations sincethe SNCC office was burned downSunday. At the church the Negroesdecided that they would try to reg¬ister a second time.As SNCC field secretaries wereleading people into cars, Green¬wood policemen arrived and ar¬rested eight field secretaries oncharges of inciting to riot. Arrestedwere James Jones, Curtis Hayes,Bob Moses. Charles McLaurin,Frank Smith, Bob Talbert, Willy, Peacock, and Lafayette Sumey.All ten of the SNCC workers ar¬rested plan to stay in jail, notaccepting bail. SNCC has con¬tacted the Justice Department andhas asked that federal marshalls be sent to Greenwood.In order to intensify efforts inGreenwood, SNCC is sending allavailable field secretaries toGreenwood as soon as possible.In addition, SNCC is working onsetting up demonstrations all overthe country protesting what hasbeen happening in Greenwood. InChieago, there will be a demon¬stration on Friday from 11 to 2:30outside the federal building at 219South Clark.Greenwood is the county seat ofLeFlore County in which SNCCworkers have had to face shootingsand near lymchings in the pastyear.Last summer, two girls wereshot by night riders. On August26, Sam Block and three otherfield secretaries narrowly missedbeing lynched when they jumpedfrom a second story window of theSNCC office in Greenwood to es¬cape a mob of white men carryingpipes, ropes, and chains.Last December, distribution ofsurplus food by the county to theout-of-work migrant workers, most¬ly Negroes, was stopped. Thisdistribution was only recently re¬sumed upon pressure from theAgriculture Department.On February 20, four Negro busi¬ness establishments next to theSNCC office in Greenwood wereburned down. Sunday the SNCCoffice itself was burned to theground.On February 22. Block was ar¬rested on a charge of circulatingbreach of the peace. The chargewas later changed to making state¬ments calculated to Incite breachof the peace. Block was arrestedbecause he had said that the fireon February 20 had been an at¬tempt to burn down the SNCCoffice.On February 2S. a SNCC worker—20-year-old Jimmy Travis—wasshot twice by three white menwho fired into the car he wasdriving. A week later. Block andPeacock and two other voter regis¬ tration workers were cut by flyingglass after some white men shotinto their car.Len Friedman, former presidentof Student Government, who ispresently working for SNCC inAtlanta, Georgia, commented thatone of the primary difficulties ingetting civil rights in Mississippiis that there are no Mississippilawyers who will handle civilrights cases for Negroes.The only two Negro lawyers mthe state are in Jackson and theynever leave Jackson. James Higgs,a white lawyer who has in the pastdone valuable civil rights work inMississippi, cannot return to thestate because he faces criminalcharges there.* * •Voting registration records infour Mississippi counties have beenordered opened for federal inspec¬tion in a lawsuit which seeks toopen voting rolls to disenfranchiseNegroes.United States District JudgeHarold Cox signed an order direct¬ing circuit clerks in Amity, Clair-borne, Lowndes, and LeFlore coun¬ties to turn over to the federalinvestigators all records pertainingto voter registration.A federal suit has charged thatstrict voter requirements were setinto law to discriminate againstNegroes.Only one Negro was listed as aregistered voter by the Civil RightsCommission in Amity County in1961. Negroes constitute morethan 50 per cent of the populationof the county.In LaFlere County, only 9 percent of the voting age Negroes areregistered. In Greenwood some250 to 300 of the cities 13,567 Ne¬groes are registered.In 13 other Mississippi counties,no Negroes are registered, and in42 counties, less than 10 per centof the voting age Negroes areregistered. SG board plans lecturesThe Student-Faculty Rela¬tions committee (SFRC) ad¬missions and scholarship con¬sultant board has announceda series of informal lecture-dis¬cussions on various aspects of theUniversity of Chicago.The lecture series came intobeing as a result of the desire ofmany UC students to competentlypresent a total picture of univer¬sity life to students at their re¬spective high schools.Speakers, who will be providedby the admissions office, will dis¬cuss the aims of the university, its history, and research that var¬ious departments are conductingat the present time.Anyone interested in workingon the lecture project should con¬tact Pamela Procuniar or HarrisJaffe at the Student Governmentoffice, extension 3273.| Calendar of events |Episcopal Services: Holy Communion,Bond Chapel, 11:30 am.Lutheran Vespers, Bond Chapel, 5:05pm.Lecture, UC Forum on the Left,"The New Frontier and the ColdWar," Herbert Aptheker, editor. Poli¬tical Affairs magazine, Social Sciences122, 7:30 pm, 50 cents.IT’S SPRINGBrighten up your Lifewith FRESH FLOWERSBuy 1 or Buy a BunchBova Florist‘Where Your Dollar Has Blooming SenseOff the Corner but on the Square*irUSEDnew TEXT BOOKSf *STUDENT SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS-NOTE BOOKS— STATIONERY- LAUNDRY CASESTYPEWRITERS sold - rented-repairedPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORE1311 CAST 57th STREET* MLOCmS EAST W MAMMUL BALLSTORE HOURS: DAILY ft>00 AM. #• *:00 E.M. . . . EVENINGS — Monday f Wedneedoy. Frtdoy H> 9:00 P M.March 28. m3 • CHICAGO MAROON 3Compares college hours Discusses religious backgroundThe social regulations af¬fecting coeds around the coun¬try reflect a liberalization ofthe restrictions imposed uponthem by their administrations.Brandeis, Columbia CeneralStudies, and Radclit'fe, with un¬limited curfews for many women,exemplify the liberal trend. Rad-cliffe juniors and seniors, andBrandeis seniors, may stay out un¬til 5 a.m., seven days a week.During the week, other Brandeiswomen must be in by midnight;Radcliffe freshmen and sopho¬mores by 1 am. At Smith, womenare permitted to stay out untilmidnight during the week. All Bar-Aptheker to speakon cold warHerbert Aptheker. Marxisthistorian and editor of Politi¬cal Affairs, a “theoretical or¬gan of the American Com¬munist Party,” will speak tonighton ‘‘The New Frontier and theCold War.”The lecture, which will be heldm Social Sciences 122 at 7:30, isbeing sponsored by the newlyformed Forum on the Left.Aptheker has written numerousbooks including A DocumentaryHistory of the Negro People in theUnited States. On the Nature ofFreedom, and The World of C.Wright Mills.Call Ext. 3265To BuyA Classified nard women, and Simmons juniorsand seniors, have unlimited 1:30permissions. Saturday night thecurfews are extended.Barnard and Boston Universitiespermit women of 21 to have apart¬ments. With this policy, womenare able to avoid live “burden¬some” social restrictions govern¬ing dormitory residents.The University of Michigan,which already allows senior wom¬en to live off campus, is presentlydebating further change.from the TL’FTS WeeklyMaroon staff photoCrocus appears in frontof the Administration build¬ing. Spring is here!Here’s deodorant protectionYOU CAN TRUSTOld Spice Stick Deodorant.. .fastest, neatest way to all*day, every day protection f It's the active deodorant foractive men... absolutely dependable. Glides on smoothly,speedily...dries in record time. Old Spice Stick Deodorant—most convenient, most economical deodorant money canbuy. 1.00 plus tax.©IdSpice STICKDEODORANTS M O L.T O M With a description of his“religious pilgrimage” to theUnitarian Church, GeorgeSikes opened the Channing-Murrav club lecture series on“liberal religion” last night Sikes,who is a counselor on family sup¬port for the Cook County Depart¬ment of Welfare, entitled hissketch “One man’s religion.”In tracing his spiritual growth,Sikes recalled his early affiliationwith the “orthodoxy” of the Meth¬odist and Episcopalean denomina¬tions. Disturbed by the vague deal¬ing of dissatisfaction he encoun¬tered in each of these churches,Sikes stated he switched to mili¬tant atheism but found spiritualcontentment only when he becameassociated with a “community offellow believers” in the Unitarianchurch.Sikes cited the Unitarian religionas one which offered the freedom,even the pressure, to mature inthoughts and attitudes. The policyof the Unitarian church to encour¬age each individual to seek the| ClassifiedROOMS, APTS. ETC.SOUTH SHORE6801 S. CRANDONUnfurnished deluxe 6 room. 3 bed¬room apt. with breakfast room, 2 tilebaths and shower stall, large livingroom, full size dining room and am¬ple closets. To inspect see Carl Bookon premises. FA 4-8330 or phone weekdays 427-8935. Benj. E. Sherman Ac Son.NICELY furn 3V2 rm. apt tile bathand shower $115 month incl. utilities.5143 Kenwood or call SO 8-0439.FOR SALESale of private collection—call for ap¬pointment. FR 6-6092 or 247-1264. 6000books from 15th to 20th century inparchment, leather, vellum, and paper¬back in all subjects. Antiques and oilpaintings. 3000 sheets and volumes ofpiano, vocal and choral music. Foreigncoins, old prints, lithographs, old let¬ters, stamps, documents, postcards.500 archaeological pieces, vases, terralata figures, lamps from 4th centuryBC.SCOTT 35 O.B. Stereo. F M tunerother components. Call 538-2367HELP WANTEDMALE student to work 3:30 to 6 p.m.5 or 6 days a week with group of ne¬gro boys age 10 to 12 at CHILDRENSCENTER. Pay and trans. available.Call Sue Duncan, BU 8-6003.PERSONALSAttention scholar - athlete - journalists:Take a 50 mile hike to get into prac¬tice.TO PLACE a classified ad, call ext.3265 (MI 3-08001. Special student, facul- truth for himself, unhampered byofficial creed, allowed Sikes tocontinue in his “amateur pursuitof religion” and search foe hisown beliefs.His religious searching, Sikesstated, decreased his optimism inman’s natural condition of harmonywith the universe. The end resultof his “pilgrimage” was his dis- according to coach Robert Retel!covery of the “emotional satisfac- The squad meets ait 4 pm on Tues-tion, intellectual stimulation, and days. Thursday, and Fridays inspiritual regeneration” of Unitar- North field.ian universalism. Later this spring, the squad wit!Receiving his undergraduate edu- participate in a tournament a*,cation in economics and sociology Lake Forest College,at the University of Illinois, Sikes Interested students should concompleted graduate work at the tact Retel at Bartlett gymnasium.Meadville Theological SeminaryHe served as a research counselorfor social workers advising welfarefamilies on economic matters.Soccer team meetsAll undergraduates are invitedto join the UC soccer squad, whichbegan spring practice yesterday.3 PIZZAS FOR_PI»ICJ_OF_2Free UC DeliveryTERRY'S PIZZAMl 3-40451518 E. 63rd StreetCOLOR DEVELOPINGPREPAID MAILERS8 mm Roll, 3 mm 20 exp $1.2035 mm, 36 exp $1.98MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55tfc HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTS Learning for LivingINFORMAL ADULTCLASSESTen week term begins April 1stHalf tuition for seniors over 60 yearsOver 80 InformalAfrican HeritageMasterpiece of ArtAutomobile DrivingBridge, ContractVacation CampingModern DanceFencingFlower ArrangementCo-ed JudoThe MethodFolk MusicEnjoying Great MusicGregg Shorthandand many others Classes Include:Portrait PaintingPhotographyPublic SpeakingVoice & DictionRapid Reading &ComprehensionPlaying the RecorderAccordionConversational(beg., inter., adv., superior)'Languages:SpanishItalianGermanFrenchJapanesePortugueseZen BuddhismArt of YogaREGISTER TODAYCall or stop by for a free descriptive catalogHyde Pork YMCA c A A KO/V)1400 E. 53rd Streof ■ A 4-OOWSflWMG you..THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE« • CHICAGO MAROON • Marc* 28, 19*3