V, > >^r H “' £ tv.Assembly votes to extendelection petition deadlineT h e Student Government(SG) Assembly voted 31-0 toextend the deadline for filingpetitions for the SG electionuntil noon tomorrow.This action was requested byDon Congdon, chairman of theElections and Rules (E&R) com¬mittee, who said, that he was“not aware and not informed ofthe by-law deadline for announc¬ing the Spring NSA SG election.”Consequently, petitions and can¬didacy forms were not distributeduntil the day before the officialdeadline, which was last Monday.The E&R committee, accordingto Congdon, has the power to ex¬tend the deadline, and passed amotion to that effect at its lastmeeting.To avoid possible litigation Cong¬don requested that the assemblyamend the bylaws to extend thedeadline for this election only.Murray Schacher (POL IT)moved to censure Congdon formaking a "major change in theelection procedure without consult¬ing the Assembly.” The motionwas tabled by a voice vote.S<; authorized the ExecutiveCommittee to incorporate a Stu¬dent Government Service Corpora¬tion to assume responsibility forthe business contracts of SG, suchas the charter flights. The SGExecutive Committee would con¬stitute the board of directors ©fthe non-profits corporation.The assembly voted to acceptthe administration’s offer to main¬tain the file of housing, availableto students in the community. Theadministration, according to theresolution, decided to drop thehousing file rather than make itnon-discriminatery, that is, ratherthan eliminate segregated housing from the file.The assembly amended the Stu¬dent Code so that student politicalorganizations may have the Stu¬dent Activities office return tothem the lists of members after ithas been certified that the per¬sons concerned are students ingood standing. Heretofore, the of¬fice had to keep a permanent rec¬ord of charter members of a stu¬dent organization.GNOSIS proposed that a consti¬tutional amendment providing forresidential SG representation inthe College be placed on the bal¬lot in next week’s election. A simi¬lar proposal by the Liberal Partywas considered instead.The Liberal Party motion neededa constitutional majority (36 votes)to pass. There were 16 votes forthe motion, 4;against, and 12 ab¬stentions.POLIT representatives cast twovotes in favor, four against, and11 abstentions. There were 14 non-POLIT votes in favor of the mo¬tion, and one abstention.The assembly rejected a pro¬posal to place a constitutionalamendment on the ballot whichwould change the time of elec¬tions to the Autumn quarter.Proposals by POLIT and theLiberal Party, which would haveradically changed the election pro¬cedure, were ruled out of orderby President Arthur' MacEwan.The POLIT proposal called fortwo elections. Candidates would bedeclared elected in the Collegeoniy if they received votes total¬ling more than one-half the numberof all votes cast, divided by thenumber of seats in the College.The remaining seats in the Collegewould be filled by candidates re¬ceiving the greatest totals in thesecond, “run-off,” election. Vol. 71 — No. 85 University of Chicago, Wednesday, April 3, 1883 31Will compare universities and oil companiesKimpton speaks todayLawrence A. Kimpton, Chancellor of the University from 1951-1960, will compare themajor management problems of large universities and large oil companies in a lecture thisafternoon.Kimpton, who is currently general manager of planning with the Standard Oil Companyof Indiana, will speak from 1 to — ———— —_______ J2 pm in Business East 103. The university every so often re- since 1958 and as general man*While heading UC, Kimpton 9uires a change in leaders who ager of planning since 1960. Inguided a broad revision of the cai5 »PPly fresh and sharply ob- the latter position, he is concernedCollege program, took major jeetive appraisals, and start anew, with long-range plans and evalu-steps in the rehabilitation of the fr<*e of the associations, friend- ation of investment opportunitiescampus neighborhood, and raised ships, and scars of a common in the petroleum business and$100 million in endowment funds, str uggle." other fields. In addition, he co-When he resigned, he listed the Kimpton has served as a di- ordinates research activities forhigh points of his career as “the rector of Standard Oil Company the company.creation of a great law school,business school, FTP faculty, thereconstruction of the College, andthe heightened criteria for the se¬lection of personnel.”In addition, he added the schoolof education and raised facultysalaries.Under Kimpton’* leadership theUniversity took the lead in form¬ing the South East Chicago Com¬mission, which has worked forurban renewal in the Hyde Parkneighborhood. Kimpton served asthe organization's first president.He explained his resignationfrom UC with his “conviction thatthe head of such a university asthis one can do his best for itwithin a reasonably short time. Before coming to UC, Kimptonserved as professor of philosophyand dean of students at StanfordUniversity, of which he is pres¬ently an honorary fellow and atrustee.Prior to being Chancellor,Kimpton held various posts onthe UC faculty and administra¬tion. He was professor of philoso¬phy, dean of students, vice presi¬dent and dean of the faculties, andvice president In charge of de¬velopment.Earlier this year, Kimpton vis¬ited campus as chairman of thecommittee to find “scholar-ath¬letes" to the first recipients ofthe University’s new Stagg schol¬arships.GenevcMferee*months " Committee stud ies Schwab education proposalHans J. Morgenthau, pro- J . _ , ,, .fessor of political science and At the first meeting of the sciences and profeasor of educa- education is not a prerequisite for would present proposals to the Col-, .’1 j., * \' TW* Committee on Multifile Col- tion- concerning a radical depar- the liberal education. lege faculty for legislation, that hishistory, wiU leave UC on April Cwmmttee on Mumple t ol ture>r a tngrm ubera, „ ample appr6acll woold „,oire Mveral19 for Geneva, Switzerland, leges, lL men bers gen ^ a . arts, aiming that the entire body of the seminars. One seminar would bewhere he will be teaching at the agreed that One main college, «. . . would be for liberal arts can be put in a genuine needed for each of the disciplinesGraduate Institute of International serving as the agency of the , ‘ ^Oyina in one of sev- and visible relationship to the con- to which the program was applied.Studies. He plan, to return to Chi- University charged with the re- S3,. wllo wouW begin tent of opeoinliau) programs in the added ^Geneva, he wi.i he speoini,^ when they entered *. «. f *•» “~ep,cd. would, ,. . % • :,,t„ college. enoes, only exist within one of the multi-teaching a course -in American a system of multiple colleges were jn the seminar, “the disciplines , .,h„. iJrforeign policy, and offering a semi- adopted. The Uberal education would be invoived in the pursuit of scientific nrkcticable for studentsnar on problems in American dem- The Committee met during toe accomplished through several knowiedge, for example, would be with Tromocracy. His leave is being fi- interim and also discussed a pro- weekly seminars continuing for pursuod through a study of thenaneed by counterpart funds sup- posal by Joseph Schwab, William three years. Although the student primary papers and monographsplied under the Smith fund act. Rainy Harper professor of natural would use materials related to his which record the development offield of concentration in these jmp0|.tant bodies of knowledge be-se min a is, he would examine them ing studied by the student in hisin ways that would train him In specialty."the liberal arts and humane disci- q-j,e disciplines exhibited in philo- would give the student “extensiveplines. For example, a biology work would be conveyed by practice in the grammar, rhetoric,student might be introduced to eXia!mming the instrumental prem- and logic pertaining to exposition,philosophy through an examination jses underlying research, togetoer From the humanities he wouldof the philosophical aspects of bi- wlJth philosophic documents which have had a thorough introductionology. criticize or attempt systematic to history and philosophy. AndSchwab thinks that a substantial formulation of these matters, he from the social sciences the stu-portion of the liberal arts can be said. dent toe physical or biologicalcommunicated by way of materials Schwab pointed out to the Coro- sciences would have had a thor-pertinent to one field of study, and niittee which is expected to make ough introduction to the principlethat much of toe systematic knowl- recommendations to the College methods, and problems of politicaledge acquired from the general Policy Committee, which in turn science,” economics, and otherfields related to the social sciences.Scholar-journalists neededGraduate and undergraduate students who wish towork on the Maroon thifc quarter may join the staff untilApril 8 by coming to the Maroon office, third floor of IdaNoyes Hall, or by calling ext. 3285, between 1 and 5:30 pmany weekday afternoon.The Maroon will train interested students for posi¬tions on the general reporting (campus, national, or citynews), feature, rewrite, culture, exchange, copy readingand headline writing, production, or photography staffs.No experience is necessary. There-are writing and photog¬raphy jobs for both weekdays and weekends. entering toe college with a com¬mitment to the biological, physical,or social sciences, his idea mightbe more difficult to apply for thestudent in the humanities.This program, Schwab believes,Maroon to interviewall SG candidatesMembers of th' Maroon editorialstaff will interview all the gradu¬ate and undergraduate candidatesfor Student Government and Na¬tional Student Association April5, 6, and 7.These interviews will form theprimary basis for Maroon en¬dorsements, which will be printedon Tuesday, April 9.All interviews will be conductedin the Maroon office, 303 IdaNoyes Hall according to the fol¬lowing schedule:FRIDAY, APRIL 5, pm2:30-3:80 Gnesis3:30-4:30 Fold4:30-5:30 LiberalSATURDAY, APRIL 6, am910 v Liberal10 II Polit11-12 ..GnosisSUNDAY. APRIL 7, pm3-5 any candidatesSince it is unlikely that theMaroon will endorse any candi¬date when it has not interviewed,all candidates are strongly urgedto appear for interview at one ofthe above times or to make specialarrangements by calling the Ma¬roon office ex 3265-6.«’&»!* ! Pictured above is Mies van der Rohe's drawing for the new School of Soetal Serv¬ice Administration (SSA) which will be built on the southwest corner of 80th streetand Ellis Avenue. The drawing was displayed for the first time today at the beginningof a nationwide fund drive aimed at raising the estimated $1,500,000 necessary forthe building's construction.The School of Social Service Administration currently occupies the second andthird floors of Cobb hall, Cobb is scheduled to be renovated in mid-1984 when theSSA will move into their new building. The SSA, founded in 1908, was one at Amer¬ica's first to specialize in graduate training for social work and fa conduct research anbasic problems in this field.The new building will join Eero Saarinen's Law School Center, and Edward DurellStone's Center for Continuing Education along the Midway Piaisance. However, he would not beequipped with the systematicknowledge contained within thesefields. For example, the studentof the biological sciences wouldnot be equipped with the desirableminimum of knowledge containedin systematic economics, politicalscience, and sociology. Schwabstated.“One quality, however, will dis¬tinguish the students in such aprogram from students who par¬ticipate in the traditional liberalor general education program: hewill have learned to read, to notewhat he reads, and to search outits structure with its burden ofmeta meanings. It follows thenthat the deficiencies outlined aboveshould be reparable efficientlyand with dispatch,” he said.The Committee on Multiple Col¬leges has been discussing possi¬bilities of establishing some sort ofmultiple colleges since toe start ofthe academic year. Proposals haveincluded setting up colleges arounda subject field, or colleges withvarying approaches to generaleducation, or creating collegeswith varying blends of specializedand general education. 1» iWarm weather regulations Letters to theEven though the Beadles’ tulips haven’t come up yet, we think Third-graders note errorthe following “Warm Weather Regulations” issued recently by the to the editor:Office of Student Housing to the residents of New Dorm may beconsidered an adequate substitute harbinger of spring.Introduction: The following policies for the use of the Court andCentral Unit have been formulated through the years by the Intra-Court Council on the Basis of student experience in using these fa¬cilities.Students using the Court area in warm weather should be thought¬ful of those whose rooms face the court and of other students usingthe court-yard. The following regulations have been formulated inthis spirit.1) Group musical activities (e.g. folksinging and guitar playing)will be permitted only between the hours of 5:00 and 7:00 p.m. Resi¬dents should not play record players or radios out of the windows.In general, noise is to be kept to a reasonable minimum.2) No game may be played in the court which involves the pro¬jection of any object through the air. A specific exemption to thisrule has been made by the Court Council, allowing Frisbee to beplayed between 3:00 and 8:00 p.m. Tlie picture on page 8 on theChicago Maroon March 29 issue isnot of an Egyptian fortress. Itis an Egyptian temple. If it werea fortress it would be for fighting.Why did the Pharaoh take so muchtrouble in building it if it weregoing to be ruined right away?Why was it built in a cliff nearwater? Who ever heard of gods be¬ing worshipped in a fortress? How¬ever, the text of the article is quitegood. In the text, it was called atemple.We hope you will be more care¬ful next time.MRS. McLEAN’S3RD GRADE CLASS its audience which permitted usto partake of a masterpiece. Tothis observer, the enthusiasticaudience repsonse was a more im¬portant criticism than Mr. Rabino-witz’ shameful outraged ear.As to the “unrelenting harsh¬ness of tone, overpowering vol¬ume . . . ,” I very much fear thatsuch criticism is about a hundredyears out of date. Those familiarwith Beethoven’s last works, thepianoforte sonatas, quartets andMissa Solemnis, will recognizethat the alternation of viscioustrills, bare harmonies and driv¬ing rhythms with adagio pass¬ages of other-worldly beauty was characteristic. If, as seems rea¬sonable, the contrast was integralto the spiritual content of themusic (especially in the “GreatFugue”) then it follows that onemust stress the harshness.A more detailed appreciation ofthe “Great Fugue” may be foundin The Life And Works ofBeethoven by Burke (Modern Li¬brary) and in Beethoven — HisSpiritual Development by Sullivan(paperback). I can only suggestthat Mr. Rabinowitz peruse thesebooks before “criticizing” anoth¬er Beethoven quartet.ROBERT A. MOSS3) Students should clean up any paper or other debris they’vecollected before leaving the court. Hits music reviewTO THE EDITOR:Despite Mr. Rabinowitz’ stric- Sixth-graders describecultural tutoring project4) Because this is a very public area, necking is not appropriate.It is, thus, not permitted.5) No object or liquid may be thrown or dropped from the windows.6) For women, one-piece bathing suits may be worn; two-piecesuits may not. Men may not wear abbreviated bathing trunks.7) Because of its public character, the Central Unit is not an ap¬propriate place for beach attire. Bathing suits may not be wornthere, and students should not come into the Central Unit with barefeet. An exemption to this policy is made for students passing throughthe Central Unit on their way to the beach. tures, this community is in debtto the Lenox String Quartet.Beethoven’s “Great Fugue” is notoften played in public concert, andeven more rarely is it heard asthe conclusion of the B-Flat majorquartet, which, as Mr. Robino-witz noted, was Beethoven orig¬inal intention. Editor’s Note: This article was writ¬ten by Jacqueline Brewer. Wilma Far¬ris, Lenore Wheeler, and Lauretta Wil¬liams, sixth graders at the WadsworthElementary school with the help ofVicky Shiefman, third year student inthe coliese.A responsible critic would havecongratulated the Lenox Quartetfor having the courage, and moreimportantly, the requisite faith in Last fall, a group of studentsfrom UC and Wadsworth Elemen¬tary school started a project tointroduce above-average elemen¬tary school students to the cultureof Chicago.The Project is the second half of'.s’ ^ *. -. - .. i36 DAYS THAT CHANGED THEPERFORMANCE PICTURE IN AMERICAIn 36 days, starting with the Monte Carlo Rallyein January of this year, our products have posted aseries of competition wins that have made perform¬ance history. Here’s what has happened: ,$jf entered ... a truly remarkable record consideringthat over 50% of all cars entered failed to finish.Three V-8 Falcon Sprints were entered in theMonte Carlo Rallye. This is not a race. It is a trialof a car's total capabilities. We did it (nervously) forthe experience and with practically no sense of expec¬tation, because we had not entered an event like thisbefore. One Sprint ended the experiment in a snow¬bank. But the others finished 1-2 in their class withsuch authority that they moved the good, grey Lon¬don Times to say: ‘The Falcons are part of a powerand performance plan that will shake up motoring inevery country in the world.” That was Number One. Why do we keep such an interested eye on compe¬titions such as these? Is speed important to us?Frankly, no. The speed capabilities of the leadingAmerican cars are now grouped so closely togetherthat the differences have no real meaning. To us, whoare building cars, success in this kind of competitionmeans just one thing: the car is strong. This kind ofperformance capability means that the car is so wellbuilt that it can stand up to normal driving—thekind of day-in, day-out demands you put your owncar through—for thousands of miles longer than lesscapable cars.Number Two was a double win in the Pure OilPerformance Trials. Fords captured Class 1 and Class2 (for high performance and large V-8’s). Both ofthese trials were for over-all points rolled up ineconomy, acceleration and braking tests.Then, at Riverside in California, in America’s onlylong-distance stock car event that is run on a rCfedcourse (as opposed to closed circuit, banked trackssuch as the track at Daytona), Dan Gurney pusheda Ford to first place. In tests like the Daytona 500 and Riverside, wefind out in an afternoon what might take us 100,000test-track miles to discover. We learn how to buildsuperior strength into suspension systems, steeringsystems, drive train, body, tires. Anyone can builda fast car. What we’re interested in is the concept of“total” performance.We believe in this kind of total performancebecause the search for performance made the automo¬bile the wonderfully efficient and pleasurable instru¬ment it is today—and will make it better tomorrow.The latest news comes north from Daytona. Therein the open test that tears cars apart—the Daytona600—Ford durability conquered the field. Fordsswept the first 5 places ... something no one else hadequaled in the history of the event. In a competition—which anyone can enter—designed to prove howwell a car hangs together, 9 Fords finished out of 12 America's liveliest, most care free care!FORD TOR 60 YIARS THE SYMBOL OfDtPINDABlE PRODUCTSmoiorTompany the Woodlawn Tutoring projectwhich began last spring. Theoriginal Woodlawn project soughtto tutor poor readers in the areaadjacent to Hyde Park.For the cultural project, one UCstudent meets with a group of fourstudents once or twice a week.Each group has their specific ar¬rangement varying from teachingart appreciation to Spanish to poli¬tical science to visiting museums.Mrs. Schaffer of Wadsworthschool at 6420 University is incharge of selecting students. Jac¬queline Brewer, one of the studentsinvolved in the project, tells aboutthe Wadsworth school:“I think our school is very capa¬ble of accomplishing anything wewant to. Our school has modernequipment every school shouldhave. For instance, we have anauditorium which accommodates2.000 people at one specific time.We’ve a lunchroom also. Althoughwe have all of these specific places,contractors and wreckers are tear¬ing down the block of University.“Wadsworth school is verycrowded with the people from Du¬mas school coming over to ourschool, Wadsworth. This has beenthe vital action for more room!This is why we’re tearing downthe block of University. The bricksare scattered everywhere. This isalso upsetting our beauty.“The name of our principal isMr. Raymond J. Griffen. Wc havemany, many teachers. We’ve atleast 69 rooms.”Jacqueline as well as Wilma Far- '•At CON • lAtRlANf • fORO • TMUNDt RBIRD ris, Lenore Wheeler, and LaurettaWilliams is part of the group whichmeets each Friday with VickyShiefman, third year student in thecollege.Their group does not concentrateon one central subject. Their ac¬tivities have included art apprecia¬tion, reading poetry, and tours ofthe campus.Lenore Wheeler tells rtbout apoetry session:“Vicky took us to the music li¬brary that is on campus. Welistened to various records by Og¬den Nash, and Carl Sandburg. Welistened through ear phones whichwe had to place on the top of ourheads and the ear phones hungdown off the band that fits on topof your head.“Lauretta and I listened to onerecord while the others (Wilma andJacqueline) listened to another one.We found the records quite inter¬esting! After listening to the rec¬ord Vicky read us a poem called“Chicago” by Carl Sandburg.Lauretta Williams describes 9visit to two museums:“We went to the Field Museumin January. We had a lot of fun.We saw the Dinosaurs, Cavemen,Native Costumes, Stuffed Animalsand lots of other things. Wc alsoate lunch there. Now I will tellyou about the dinosaurs. We sawa great big Brontosaurus! Ofcourse, not the real one. Just hisbones. (If they would have hadthe real one there, I wouldn’t havegone!) Wow was that Brontosaurusa big one! There were more too*but I didn’t wait to get their namesbecause we had to go on to seemore things.“We also went to the Aquariumtoo. That was fun too. We saw allthe different kinds of fish. Whenwe were looking at the fish, *guessed one without looking at thename.2 * CHICAGO MAROON • April 3, 1963SPU conference hereThe Student Peace Unionwill hold an education confer¬ence, “Crisis Around theWorld,” April 6 and 7 on theUC campus. The role of the USand USSR in recent crises, back¬ground information on world ten¬sion spots, and the elimination ofworld tension, will be discussed bystudents and guest speakers.Speakers at the conference willinclude Dallas Smythe, Professorof Communications at the Univer¬sity of Illinois, and Harold Fey,editor of “The Christian World”and a member of the SPU advisorycommittee.Workshops will be held on Cuba,Viet Nam, Hungary and EasternEurope, Canada, France, India,China, Berlin, Algeria, LatinAmerica, and the Alliance forProgress.Registration should be com¬pleted by April 1. The registrationMaroon letters mauledThe first night of inter-mural volleyball competitionsaw the Maroons (of thenewspaper of the same name)drop two close ones to Doctor Kil-dares, 4-21, 0-21.In other games, Internationalhouse beat Henderson north, 21-8,20-22, 21-9; Henderson north wona victory from Vincent, 21-16, 21-16; and the CTS Prophets won aclose 20-22, 21-12, 21-7 match fromthe Witnesses. Henderson southtook two Tufts south, 21-19, 21-17.The Road Runners handed thenewly-formed Samurais a 21-13,21-19 defeat. Tufts north, Shoreynorth, and Mead, walloped theirrespective opponents, Dodd,Thompson south, and East L, byunprintable margins. In the lastgame of the night, Hitchcock tookthe underdog 21-17, 22-20.Advancing with the aid of forfeitwere International house, Cham¬berlain, and East Lv. The tourna¬ment is eliminational and will runthrough the week.Exhibit of works byMFA candidate opensThe first of five one-manshows by candidates for theMaster of Fine Arts degreehas opened in the Court Gal¬lery of the Midway Studios.Cynthis Barton will exhibit paint¬ings, lithographs and sculpturethrough April 6. Arthur HowardWiner,, will open his exhibition ofpaintings, sculpture, and ceramicson Sunday with a reception from3 to 5 p.m. in the Court Gallery.Later exhibitors this quarter willinclude Wendy Kindred, HowardStrassman, and Herbert Jackson.Bachelor of Fine Arts candidateswill present a group showing fromMay 32 through May 25. Exhibi¬tors will be Jerome Grubaug, Mari¬lyn Hammersley, Judith Klein,Vicky Chaet, and Frank Slobefz. fee of $4.00 will cover food for theweekend, and a complete set ofworking papers, “to be used asguides to the understanding of theworld conflict between the twocold war blocs.”According to the Peace Union,“The conference will bring togetherconcerned students for two days ofstudent-led workshops devoted tocrisis discussions, and lectures byexperts in international affairs.Various points of view will be rep¬resented, with plenty of opportunityfor everyone to express and con¬sider their position in relation toothers presented at the confer¬ence.” Shapiro picturesThe more than three hun¬dred pictures in the Sha¬piro Art Collection will beavailable for rental to stu¬dents and faculty tomor¬row. The selection of pic¬tures will be at 3:30 pm.Numbers will be given outat 8:30 am to assign an or¬der for the selection of pic¬tures.The Shapiro collectioncan be rented for theSpring quarter* The onlycharge is 50c for insur¬ance.CLASSIFIED ADSPERSONALSLAWYERS TAKE NOTE: Ann's IBM.electric, has a legal keyboard and ANNhas a legal background. Call ext. 3552.HAPPY BIRTHDAY Sammy Nella, youhave brightened our year. Many hap¬py returns.RESPONSIBLE for my treaties only.—Sultan BluefishFOR SALEHARPSICHORDWill build Zuekermann Harpsichord toyour order. Beautiful hand crafted cab¬inet. Del., $600. Phone GR 7-0940.MUST sell books, all fields In Italian,Latin, Greek, French and German.Open 11 am to 9 pm. 2915 W. CermakRoad. FR 6-6992 or 247-1264.1960 FIAT. 600 model. Two door sedan,good condition. New tires and battery.Best offer. Call 221-9509 before 10 amor after 9:30 pm.WHAT is spiritual thought? What is itsorigin? How does man become con¬scious of it? How does it differ fromhuman thought? Does a knowledge ofspiritual thought have practical appli¬cation in the daily life of man?These are some of the questions whichwill be discussed in a lecture entitled:“THE ORIGIN AND POWER OFTHOUGHT,'* by Paul Stark Seeley.C.S.B., a well-known practitioner andteacher of Christian Science and amember of the Board of lectureship ofthe Mother Church, The First Churchof Christ, Scientist in Boston, Mass.,Wednesday, April 3. 1963, at 4:30 pm,in Mandel Hall. All are welcome. Ad¬mission: FREE.HELP WANTEDNow interviewing women: Experiencedpersons in magazine subscription ful¬fillment for national publication. CallDO 3-5225 or ext. 3330 for an appt.Work in Hyde Park; full time or parttime position possible. Job to beginend of April. WANTED2 USED late model, medium sized por¬table typewriters. Call HY 3-3256.FEMALE roommate who observes thelaws of Kashruth to share apartmentin Blackstone next year. Call SharonGoldman, BU 8-6610, 1104X.Calendar of eventsHoly Communion: Brent House, 7:30am.Morning Communion: The LutheranChurch, 7 :45 am.Meeting: New Boys and Girls of theStagg Party, Quadrangle, 11:30 am.Lecture: "The Universities and HieOil Companies’* Lawrence Kimpton,Business East 103, 1 pm.Class: Elementary Yiddish, HillelFoundation, 3:30 pm.Film: Pudovkin’s Mother, Social Sci¬ences 122, 3:30 pm.Meeting: POL IT candidates, EastLounge Ida Noyes, 4 pm.Seminar: “Adsorption of Ions atFixed Charges and Phase BoundaryPotentials,” George Kerreman, Associateate Professor University of Pennsyl¬vania, 5153 Drexel, Room 208, 4 pm.Lecture: “The Origin and the Powerof Thought,” Paul Stark Seeley, MandelHall, 4:30 pm.Carillon Recital: Rockefeller Chapel,5 pm.Evensong: Brent House, 5:05 pm.Illustrated Lecture: “The Epic ofGilgamesh,” Thorkild Jacobsen, Profes¬sor of Assyriology, Harvard University,Breasted Hall, 7:30 pm.Seminar: “Voice of the Poet ki theModern City,” Ralph Mills, junior So¬cial Sciences 302, 8 pm.Country Dancers: Ida Noyes, 8:30 pm.itutM iNocps tA’Th.XYI<dNdrA*OCRVPHA y,„ DEMAGOGYruRCHAS* 'tMMM.fUTURSS TRADING ceoMwru a'°,r don”* ™**QWenumerated P«"»'"covmitsoon*,4MrT lAWdecles ctniena nulia ||m ,AMD *£**«•*»!*, "-* V n >GRAND OPENINGSUCCESS SPECIALBRAND NEW1963V, LARK $1 CQQ99STANDARD I WWWFully factory equipped, 36 monthsto pay—no money down—4V,%bank rates.Rambler ServiceSOUTH SIDE STUDEBAKER. Inc.46th & Cottage GroveBO 8-1111 “LITTLE” FACTS YOU FORGET MAKEBIG DIFFERENCES IN YOUR GRADES!THEATRE FIRST, INCPresents.WilliamShakespeare's_ KING LEARArnold Nelson, DirectorMar. 29-30-31; Apr. 5-6-7Fri. A Sat. 8:00 p.m.»Sun. 7:30 p.m.Gen. Adm. $1.75Students with ID $1.10THE ATHENAEUM2936 N. Southport LA 5-9761 THE PROBLEMiFew »tudents can remember everyname, date, formula, conjugation,theorem, definition, principle, de¬manded by a 4-year program. Edu¬cators know that through the “ex¬tinction process” you will forgetmany of the facts taught last week,last month, last term, last year.Thus a "Memory Gap” develops be¬tween the facts you are requiredto remember and the facts you doremember. The smaller you canmake your “Memory Gap” thehigher your grades will be.THE SOLUTION:Only DATA-GUIDE solid plasticloose-leaf summaries are specific¬ally designed to close the "Mem¬ory Gap.DATA-GUIDES preserve,on solid plastic, the essential fact- core of each subject to give you apermanent, portable reference thatcan be used from term...to term...to term—throughout your en¬tire school career. Thus in spite oflost notes, surrendered texts, a dif¬ficult program, and an overbur¬dened memory, with DATA-GUIDEsolid-plastic charts, you will al¬ways have the facts you need.Authored by leading educators, thesubject matter on each DATA-GUIDE solid-plastic chart is imag¬inatively written and uniquely or¬ganized for rapid fact location andmemory strengthening. Studentsthroughout the U.S. are using all¬plastic DATA-GUIDES to insuresuccess in school. REMEMBER:Today’s lessons are based on yes-terdav’s facts! HOW IS YOURMEMORY?FfWMHOH GRAMMAR ;; bkmjoovPLASTIC SUBJECT SUMMARIESMEnglish: English Grammar: Punctuation Guide: Writing Guide; Vocabulary for Litera¬ture; Library Guide. Languages: French Gr.: Spanish Gr.; German Gr.; Latin Gr. 1,2.3,History-Government: U.S. History 1,2; World History 1,2: Principles of Gov’t; Vocabu¬lary for Gov’t. Mathematics: Elementary Algebra; Plane Geometry; Intermediate Alge-Jbra; Trigonometry; Basic Algebra Summary; College Algebra; Analytic Geometry;]Differential Calculus; Integral Calculus; Statistics; Slide Rule Guide. Sciences: Basic]Biology 1,2: Basic Chemistry 1,2; Basic Physic* 1,2; College Chemistry; Human]Anatomy 1,2,3: First Aid. Soc.-Psych.-Phlto,: Principle* of Sociology: Vocabulary forSociology: Principles of Psychology; Vocabulary for Psychology; Basic Philosophy. |Musle: Basic Music Theory: vocabulary for Music. Butinets-Economics: Bookkeeping |1,2; Accounting 1,2: Business Law 1,2; Principles of Economics; Vocabulary for |Economics: Vocabulayrfiw^jj«lu:ftogj^^^ Prof reports Egyptian findsProfessor Keith C. Seele ofthe Oriental Institute, pres¬ently on an archeological ex¬pedition in Southern Egypt,reported the discovery of “morethan 60 finds,. including alabasterand copper objects of exquisitequality” to Robert M. Adams, di¬rector of the Oriental Instituteyesterday.Reporting his discovery by tele¬gram, Seele stated that the ob¬jects were found in “ a New King¬dom tomb,” which Adams ex¬plained was a tomb prevalent inthe era dating from 1570 to 1085B.C.Commenting on the discovery,Adams stated that: “ Until we learn further details, we can onlyspeculate about the tomb and itsoccupant. Possibly he was a nobleor a high official concerned withthe administration of this borderdistrict of ancient Egypt.” iThe purpose of Seele’s expedi¬tion is to record ancient historicalmonuments and relics before theyare lost because of the AswanDam project,*which is currentlyunderway in the area.Seele has been a member olthe faculty since 1936. He is anauthority on the language andancient culture of Egypt, and haswritten extensively in the field.He received his PhD from UC in1938. jMARKING ON THE CURVE—AND WHATTO DO ABOUT ITTwonkey Crimscott was a professor, Choate Sigafoos was asophomore. Twonkey CrimBCott was keen, cold, brilliant.Choate Sigafoos was loose, vague, adenoidal. Twonkey Crim¬scott believed in diligence, discipline, and marking on the curve.Choate Sigafoos believed in elves, Julie London, and thirteenhours of sleep each night.Yet there came a time when Twonkey Crimscott—mentor,sage, and savant—was thoroughly outthought, outfoxed, out-maneuvered, outployed, and outwitted by Choate Sigafoos,sophomore.It happened one day when Choate was at the library studyingfor one of Mr. Crimseott’s exams in sociology. Mr. Crimscott’sexams were murder—plain, flat murder. They consisted of onehundred questions, each question having four possible answers—A, B, C, and D. You had to check the correct answer, but thetrouble was that the four choices were so subtly shaded, sointricately worded, that students more clever by far than ChoateSigafoos were often set to gibbering,So on this day Choate sat in the library poring over hissociology text, his tiny brow furrowed with concentration, whileall around him sat the other members of the sociology class,every one studying like crazy, every one scared and pasty.Choate looked sadly at their stricken faces. “What a waste rJhe thought. “All this youth, this verve, this bounce, chained tomusty books in a musty library 1 We should be out singing anddancing and cutting didoes on the greensward 1 Instead weare here.”Then, suddenly, an absolute gasser of an idea hit Choate,f*Listen!” he shouted to his classmates. “Tomorrow when wetake the exam, let’s all—every one of us—check Choice ‘A’ onevery question—every one of them.’!“Huh?” said his classmates..“Oh, I know that Choice ‘A’ can’t be the right answer toevery question,” said Choate. “But what’s the difference? Mr.Crimscott marks on the curve. If we all check the same an¬swers, then we all get the same score, and everybody in the classgets a ‘CV!“Hmm,” said his classmates.“So why should we knock ourselves out studying?” saidChoate. “Let’s get out of here and have a ball!”So they all ran out and lit Marlboro Cigarettes and had aball, as indeed, you will too when you light a Marlboro, for ifthere ever was a cigarette to lift the spirit Mid gladden theheart, to dispel the shades of night, to knot op the ravelledsleeve of care, to put spring in your gait and roses in yourcheeks, it is filtered Marlboros—firm and pure and fragraht andfilled witli rich, natural, golden tobacco. And, what’s more, tliisdarlin’ smoke comes in soft packs that are actually soft andflip-top boxes that actually flip.Well sir, the next morning the whole class did what Choatesaid, and, sure enough, they all got ‘C’s, and they picked Choateup and carried him on their shoulders and sang “For He’s aJolly Good Fellow” and plied him with sweetmeat* and Marl¬boros and girls and put on buttons which said .“I DOTE ONCHOATE,.But thev were celebrating too soon. Because the next timeshrewd old Mr. Crimscott gave them a test, he did not givethem one hundred multiple choice questions. He only gavethem one question—to wit: write a 30,000 word essay on: “Crime Does Not Pay.”| ..‘You and your ideas,” they said to Choate and tore off Miepaulets and broke his sword and drummed him out of theschool. Today, a broken man, he earns a living as a camshaft< in Toledo. e> 1**3 m»» shuim*** • *At the lop of the curve of smoking pleasure, you’ll findiMarlboro Cigarettes, available at every tobacco counter in|ell fifty States of the Union,April 3,19*3 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3News from other campusesWheaton. Notre Dame editors under fireby Tom DeVriesof the Roosevelt TorchCHICAGO — Two Wheatoncollege students have joined*the list of students to fallbefore school board of publica¬tion after they had , published anoff-campus magazine previouslydiscouraged by school officials.Jack Hommes. editor of thecampus newspaper, the Record,was removed from his job by a17-1 vote of the Wheaton CollegePublications Board, and PhilipMellnay, Hommes’ partner inpublishing the magazine, Critique,was given a one-year enforcedleave of absence from the college.In the same week as the Whea¬ton incident, three editors of aUniversity of Notre Dame studentmagazine resigned, charging theuniversity administration with cen¬sorship.One of their faculty adviserswithdrew from the advisory post insympathy.Resigning were John McCabelof Evanston, III., editor of theScholastic, a weekly publication;John Aheam of Chicago, manag¬ing editor, and associate editorJanies Wyrsch of Springfield, Mo.The Board said it removedHommes for a “breach of faith.”Mellnay, who is not responsible tothe Board, was ejected from theschool in a closed session of theFaculty Committee on Student Af¬fairs for “disregard for the spiritof the college.” Homines’ statusin school is pending.Critique, a literary magazine,had been denied official recogni¬tion by the Publications Boardearlier in the semester. It was pri¬vately financed and circulatedthrough the mail.The content of Critique was nota factor in the dismissal ofHommes. a college spokesmansaid. Mellnay charged, however,that the college has been sensitiveto student publication, hoping toavoid adverse publicity for theevangelical protestant college.The Student Council had passeda resolution March 4 advisingHommes and Mellnay not to pub¬lish the magazine, and the Coun¬cil voted 7-4 last Wednesday (3-27)upholding the Publications Board’saction on Hommes.In handing Mellnay his leave ofabsence. Richard Gross, dean ofstudents, reminded him that hehad been “advised by the faculty,administration, and students thatan off-campus publication wouldnot be in the best interests of thecollege.”“Your failure to accept this ad¬vise is construed by the committeeto l>e a disregard for the spiritof th® college,” Dean Gross con¬tinued.M^’lnav said the dean of stu¬dents a» the college advised him“as a friend" to withdraw volun-tarib- fr‘*m school but that he re¬fit-el to so. He said he will lose“se:hundred dollars” in tui¬tion t>v leaving. He does not planto return.In importing the Board of Pub-lien -n the Student Council saidthat Hommes had the “moralright” to publish the magazine butwas wrong in attempting to eir-cum\"'nt “proper channels.”En>-1:er this year, the college’sBoaril of Trustees voted to suspendpublication oT KODON. a studentliterary magazine, citing “recentabiu'py.”I,;v ! spring the publication ofanet’ er magazine. Brave Son, wasended after three issues.A college committee is now re-viewb’g all aspects of campuspuhpcations.The magazine and its editorialboard have been the center of con¬troversy since an editorial urgingreplacement of Notre Dame’spresident was published on Feb.22.The editorial criticized the Rev.Theodore M. Hesburgh for spend¬ing too much time away from thecampus and suggested the appoint¬ment of a layman as presidentwith Father Hesburgh as chancel¬lor.The editors resigned in a dispute involving the content of the maga¬zine's March 29 issue. Scholasticwas published as usual but with¬out three articles originally sched¬uled.One of them was a “declarationof rights and grievances” by theStudent Senate, asking for moreliberal dormitory rules. Also can¬celed were a satire on springcampus riots — “an incitementto student riots,” according to acampus spokesman, and what hecalled “an uncomplimentary pre¬sentation of a faculty memberwhose name was changed but wasstill recognizable.”Catholic Universityreviews speaker banThe faculties of the Gradu¬ate School of Arts and Sci¬ences and of the School ofSacred Theology at CatholicUniversity in Washington, D.C.,have voted to review the adminis¬tration's barring four noted Cath¬olic theologians from speaking oncampus.Fathers John Courtney Murray,Gustave Weigel, Hans Kung, andGodfrey Diekmann were to speakat a Lenten lecture series. Thesemen have repeatedly urged theChurch to modernize to keep pacewith modern times.A spokesman for the administra¬tion said the men were bannedbecause the university did notwant to be put in the positionof seeming to take sides over is¬sues raised at the EcumenicalCouncil in Rome.The Rector of the universityclaimed that once a speaker ap¬pears on a public platform at theuniversity, the university cannotseparate itself from the speakerand his views.After the original ban, Fr.Weigel was allowed to speak ina religious class, but not in thelecture series.U. of Texas leaves NSAThe Student Assembly of theUniversity of Texas voted lastweek to withdraw immediatelyfrom the National Student Associa¬tion.Assemblymen favoring with¬drawal based their votes on theresults of a March 13 campus opin¬ion poll, which resulted in a 3-2vote against continuing in the or¬ganization.Ul profs firingcalled 'outrageous'A committee of the Ameri¬can Association of UniversityProfessors (AAUP) describedthe firing of Leo F. Koch, aUniversity of Illinois (UI) profes¬sor, as “outrageously severe andcompletely unwarranted” recently.Koch was fired as of Aug¬ust 31, 1960, following publica¬tion of a letter he wrote to thestudent newspaper, The Daily Illi-ni, condoning pre-marital sex re¬lations.The AAUP’* powerful “Com-mitee A,” which deal* with mat¬ter’* of ecadenjic freedom andtenure, reported in the associa-tion’s 1963 Spring bulletin thatkoch was denied “academic dueprocess” by the University admini-tration.The commitee, however, did notfind Koch blameless, but insistedthat letter did not warrant termi¬nation of his contract, which stillhad a year to go. The committeealso protested that Koch was notgiven a proper hearing before hewas fired.If the committee’s report, whichis to be considered by the member¬ship of the AAUP at its annualconvention, in April, is approvedthe University of Illinois faces avote of censure for violation ofprominent UI students, quotingthe report of Hie AAUP, was pre¬academic freedom.A letter, signed by twenty-fivesented to the Board of Trustees ofthe University of Illinois Wednes¬day. Because of the possibility of censure by the AAUP, the openletter asked for a re-examinationof the board’s actions and policiesat the time.The letter requested the boardpay Koch the back salary for whichhe is suing the University. In ad¬dition, it asked that the Board ofTrustees lift the censure laid uponDr. Koch because of the opinionshe expressed and that the boardreconsider the administration’s dis¬missal action.The Board voted to accept theletter but refused to allow out¬side comment on the issue sincethe Koch case is new in litigation.Rice curfews extendedThe Rice University Dean ofWomen has recently granted allJunior women one weekly curfewof 12:30. Previously they had 11:30curfews seven nights a week. Sen¬ior women may return to the dor¬mitories by 12:30 twice a week.Dr. Alma Lowe, Dean of Women,stated that: “The junior class hasdemonstrated bhat it is worthy ofthis special permission and I amsure that the class will not abusethis additional privilege.”Dr. Lowe’s statement was metwith wild aptwoval on the part ofjunior women. Student protest leaderdismissed at Findlay(CPS)—The abrupt dismis¬sal of a student protest leaderfrom school has brought astudent - administration con¬troversy to new heights at FindlayCollege, in Western Ohio.The expelled student, JohnKrouse. 26. was head of a newlyformed “Student Complaint Com¬mittee” which issued a news let¬ter and voiced student grievanceson censorship, compulsory crowd¬ing of student housing, compulsorycafeteria food, and several otheraspects of student life.Krouse had been scheduled toappear before Findlay’s studentcourt last week, but he declined,saying he was denied the right tocounsel. Charges against the stu-ent were reported to be failureto support college regulations, con¬duct unbecoming a student, un¬authorized pre'ence in collegebuildings, unauthorized po-ting ofmaterials on campus bulletinboards, and attaching material toplaster walls.The administration of the schoolcharged the student nrotest groupwith failure to work through theproper channels of the StudentGovernment Association, which Krouse called “no more than adummy organization.”According to the Findlay admi¬nistration, Krouse’s dismissal camebecause of his “open defiance andexpressed disregard for the rulesand regulations of Findlay Col¬lege and its Student GovernmentAssociation.” Krouse announced hewill file suit to stay in school.The student’s dismissal came onthe heels of earlier shakeups atthe school. Both the editor of theschool’s student newspaper andstudent yearbook resigned theirposts recently charging heavy-handed censorship by the admini¬stration. The paper editor claimedthat she was forced to secure theinitials of the college’s public re¬lations director on every piece ofcopy before she could send it tothe printer.Berkeley bans ApthekerThe University of California atBerkeley has refused to allowHerbert Aptheker, Communist his¬torian, to speak on campus. Ap¬theker was banned because of auniversity ruling which prohibitsmembers of the Communist partyfrom speaking.Aptheker spoke here on campuslast Thursday under the auspicesof the newly-formed Forum on theLeft.No A.F.R.O.T.C.?Go A.F.O.T.S.!These letters stand for Air Force Officer Train¬ing School—the gateway to an Air Force careerfor ambitious college men who didn’t have thechance to enroll in AFROTC.OTS is a tough course. But it’s a great oppor¬tunity-one that may not always be available.If you’re within 210 days of graduation, wewelcome your application now. We can’t guar¬antee that we’ll be able to in a year.As an Air Force officer, you’ll be a leader on the Aerospace Team. You’ll be serving yourcountry while you get a flying headstart onan exciting career.The U.S. Air Force is at the forefront of everyvital new technological breakthrough of theAerospace Age. It sponsors one.of the world’smost advanced research and developmentprograms—and you can be part of It.OTS is open to both men and women. Forinformation, see your local recruiter.U.S. Air Force4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 3, 1963