Final slates and petitionssubmitted for SG electionsTwo petitions and the finalslates of UC political partieswere handed in by yesterday’sdeadline and will be placedbefore the student body in nextweek’s Student Government elec¬tions.One petition proposes to changethe SG electoral system by revisingArticle II. Section C of the consti¬tution. Each Division and eachgraduated school would be an elec¬toral unit with 1 unit distributed iathe college to each dormitory com¬plex of over 100 undergraduates,each undergraduate residence ofa fraternity, and the general stu¬dent body consisting of all otherun.’ergraduates.Following their endorsement witrtmore than the requisite 362 signa¬tures, representing 6% of the stu¬dent enrollment, both petitionshave been tentatively ruled valid1 v the SG Assembly pending offi¬cial validation by the Electionsand Rules Committee.By this amendment, students liv¬ing in dormitories with less than100 undergraduates would be in¬cluded in the general student bodvof the college. This petition, whichwas jointly sponsored by Gnosisand the Liberal Party, received 474signatures.The other petition, signed by 399students, proposes an amendmentbv addition. It states, “StudentGovernment, as defined in thisconstitution, shall cease to existon April 23, 1963.” If this proposalis passed as an amendment, thenewly elected Student Governmentwill be in operation for only twoweeks before its extinction.SG officials are currently check¬ing that petition for repeated sig¬natures and possible forgeries. If38 signatures can be ruled invalidby this process, the petition willhave less than the necessary 362names and will be discarded.Of the 50 seats to be filled in theSG Assembly, 24 are in the collegewith the 26 others belonging to thegraduate schools and divisions.T he Division of Social Sciences,with 9 seats, has the largest gradu¬ate representation, while the Divi¬sion of Physical Sciences and theDivision of the Humanities followwith 4 seats each. The Law Schoolreceives 3 seats and 2 seats eachgo to the Divinity School, the Divi¬sion of Biological Sciences, and theSchool of Social Service Admini¬stration.Gnosis made most of the lastminute changes in candidacy peti¬tions while the slates of the otherparties remained essentially un¬changed. The Liberal Party, theIndependent Party, Gnosis andPolit have named candidates fromthe college.Gnosis submitted 49 names ascandidates for the 50 seats. Thenew additions to its slate in thecollege are Richard H. Buskong,Neil K. Komesar, and Henry Tol¬bert. The rest of its college slateincludes: Sherri Bukauskas, GregGogo, Eugene Groves, Tom Heagy,Edward Hertz, Jerry Hyman, LynnLarsen, Jerry McBeath, RogerPeters, Terry Peterson, Jon Ro¬land, Bev Splane, Ken Taylor,Linca Thoren and Marc Van Wor-mer„The candidates in the college forthe Independent Party are: Wil¬liam Klecka, Judy Magidson, Wal¬let Rogers, and William J. Rowe.The^ candidates of the LiberalParty s college slate are: RobertAxelrod, Jordan Epstein, BruceFreed, Bernie Grofman, Dale Gus-tin, Robert Haven, Robert Hattis,E. Steve Meckstroth, Robert Nixon,Ronald C. Pell, Gregory Pierce,Art Robins, Larry Robinson, KettyStein, Ron Tauss, Bonny Walter,Irving Wladawsky, and SylviaWoodby.Candidates from the College en¬dorsed by Polit are: Barbara Ca¬ress, Susan Goldberg, Eric Hirsch-horn, Dick Jacobson, Harris Jaffe,loda Kaplan, Arthur Kaufman,Russel Kay, Jean Mahoney, Mar-lorie Mazen, Pam Procuniar, PeterRabinowitz, Bruce Rappaport, Ter¬ri Ray, Martin Reisberg, AbbieSchirmer, Richard Schmitt, andAlan Sussman. -With the exception of the nomi¬nation! from the Law SchoolParty, only Polit and Gnosis are running candidates from the grad¬uate schools and divisions.The graduate candidate support¬ed by Gnosis and their departmentsare: Humanities, Donald F. Bran-nan, William A. Elwood, HenryA. Plaegstrom and Dan Lyons;Physical Sciences, Jan Finder,Richard Hill, Frank Richards, andRichard Sumner; Social Sciences,Don Congdon, Bill Hartman, Nor¬man Lefton, Dan Reber, Bill Rich¬ter, Julius Schlothaver, T. RussellShields, Ted Totman, and WalterWeisberg; and SSA, Charles Adamsand Nancy Kudriavetz.Gnosis graduate candidate run¬ning unopposed are: Biological Sci- Vol. 71 — No. 87 University of Chicago, Friday, April 5, 1963 3195 help launch SWAPLast night, 95 students the ability of the student body atjammed Ida Noyes Library in the University of Chicago,preparation for the launching duced Dr. Yetta Pace — advisorfrom the Institute of Juvenile Re-Hess spoke briefly on the neces- search, and Mark Ashin, Professorsity of the tutor’s becoming aware of English, who have offered theirw Of the Student Y\ oodlawn Gf the many difficulties they would services as advisors to SWAP,ences, Richard Gold, and Frank Area Project (SWAP), which will face in their new experience ofBrabarits; Business, David L. Beal, undertake to tutor students from the weeks to come.Harold Bailey, and Fred Pipin; Hyde Park High School.Divinity, Forest Hartman; Edu- At the meeting Ann Cook, co¬cation, Kay Trimberger; Library, director of the project, TimuelArlene Hansen; and Medical, M. Black, distinguished communityBernstein and Louis Leavitt. worker and history teacher at HydePolit’s slate of graduate candi- Park High School (HPHS), anddates includes: Humanities, Dan Robert Hess, chairman of the corn-Klenbort and Jack Mazelis; Phy- mittee on human development,sical Sciences, Gary Goldstein, discussed the mechanics of theGerson L. Levin, and Murray project and the problems it willSchacher; SSA, Morris Dick Rich- face. Tutoring will begin next week.Students interested in tutoring butProfessor David Bakan, professor who were unable to attend lastof psychology, advisor to the night’s meeting, should contactWoodlawn tutoring project and Ann Cook in the SG office, ext.moderator of the discussion, intro- 3273.Integration and SG roledominate election debateards and Susan Workoff; and So¬cial Sciences, A. Stephen Boyan,Jr., Alan Berger, Judy Brown-stone, Paul Carlston', John Fritz,Irene Gilbert, Margaret Huyek,Robert Richheimer, and DonaldTreiman.The Law School Party has Black opened the discussion witha capsule view of the standarddepravation of a neighborhoodyouth. He stated that the Wood-lawn area is rundown and vastlyovercrowded, and that its conditionis reflected in HPIIS, where over¬crowded conditions leave no roomnamed Dick Kinney, Carl Klotz, for personalized attention so des¬and A1 Levy as candidates from perately needed by children de-the Law School.Each party is allowed to namea maximum of five candidates andfive alternates for the UC dele¬gation to the National StudentAssociation. Students endorsed asnational delegates and their par¬ties follow:Gnosis: Don Congdon, EugeneGroves, Jerry Hyman, Neil K.Komesar, and Bev Splane.Polit: Sally Cook, Pamela Pro¬cun iar, Bruce Rappaport, TerriRay, and Andrew Stein.The students nominated as na¬tional alternates are:Gnosis: Tom Heagy, Jerry Mc¬Beath, Roger Peters, Terry Peter¬son, and Jon Roland.Liberal Party: Robert Axelrod,Bernie Crofman, Bob Haven, andMike Furstenberg and Polit, Bar¬bara Caress, Jay Flocks, Dick Ja- prived of any other opportunitiesin life.The young pupil is shuffledalong all the way through grammarand high school for mere admini¬strative convenience. There is noroom to leave students back. If astudent doesn’t drop school in hu¬miliation, he is a perpetual re¬medial case, but one for which nohelp is offered, said Black.When his interest in going toschool has been extinguished, hejoins, by default, his only peergroup; the gang of other failures. Open occupancy and thefunction of Student Govern¬ment were the main issues ina deba'ce last night amongmembers of three major campuspolitical parties at ThompsonHouse’s Pierce Tower.Jerry Hyman and Don Congdonrepresented GNOSIS; Mike Furs-tenburg and Bob Axelrod, the Lib¬eral Party, and Pam Procuniarand Bruce Rappaport, POLIT.The debate began with openingstatements from each party. Cong¬don asserted that the major issuein the election is the question ofStudent Government taking standson off-campus issues. He felt thatthis practice was not constructive,and that it hampered respect forSG in the University community.Criticising the past government,Congdon stated that it had gottenout of contact with the students,and had been looked on as ir-Most welfare problems are culti- responsible by the administrationvated as result of such depravation becaUse of this,in early years.Although most of the falteringyoungsters are quite capable, saidBlack, they are crippled by their Procuniar based her argumenton the contention that POLITcould stand on its record in SGwhile the other parties could not.She cited the numerous services claimed that POLIT’s ultimate ob¬jective was to abolish hours en¬tirely. She stated that anythingshort of violent means would beemployed in the campaign andthat action is hoped for by the endof the quarter.Axelrod of Liberal Party feltthat the University maintainedhours, regulations only as a deviceto protect itself, and pointed outthat room-checking as well ashours is a major problem.GNOSIS suggested that the prob¬lem be referred to the studentsby way of polls, and that studentsbe allowed to sit on committeespassing judgment on the issue.In their final statements, LiberalParty and POLIT debated whetherlast year’s representatives to theNational Student Association Con¬gress did as good a job as theymight have. Both agreed that NSAwas a vital organ of student ex¬pression, however.Hyman, in closing, clarified hisparty’s position on open occupancystating that the reason GNOSISwas opposed was that it hadbeen proved ineffective in the citybefore.inadequate backgrounds. .Blackcobson,”Richard' Schmittj and Joel called SWAP the beginning of a that POLIT had afforded the stu- MdrOOf1 to interviewShufro. most crucial service, dependent on A r'nCenter groundbreakinghighlights space month dents, giving the Student Co-op, .. c... .membership on committees, and 011 30 Candidatesthe flight program as examples.She then answered Congdon’spoint by saying that governmentcan and should represent studentson issues that may not be directlyrelated to campus life.As a part j?f the Midwest pheric circulation, and satellite Furstenburg argued primarilySpace Month UC President meteorol°gy- Speakers will include, for “bringing government back to\\7 11 ’ *n Colin 0. Hines, professor of aeron- the students.” He stated that SGGeorge Wells b e a d 1 e Will omy, department of geophysical should be a vehicle for studentbreak ground on May 1 for a sciences, Dave Fultz, professor of expression, and that it was not$1,775,000 space center, inaugurat- meteorology, department of geo- enough for a party to invite theing both the coordination and physical sciences, and Tetsuya students to caucuses but that thecentralization of UC’s space re- Fujita, associate professor of me- party should go out and contactsearch program. teorology. them in dormitories and cafeterias.Work will begin early in May on Harold C. Urey, Martin A. Ryer- He next asserted that POLITthe Laboratory for Astrophysics son distinguished service professor had failed to negotiate sufficientlyand Space Research of the Enrico emeritus, department of chemistry, or often enough with the adminis-Fermd Institute for Nuclear Stud- will chair the conference on space tration, and cited the demonstra¬tes, financed from a National medicine and biology. Topics to tion that POLIT called over theAeronautics and Space Administra- be discussed will include the biolo- Stagg Scholarship issue, sayingtion (NASA) grant. gists task in space science and that it could have been avoidedThe new research center will applied research on manned space and a better solution reached hadallow centralization of space proj- flights. POLIT looked into the effect ofects now scattered in various older “The Political and Social Impli- demonstration beforehand,buildings on campus. More intri- cations of the Space Age” will be He closed by agreeing with Misscate experiments can then be per- discussed by Hans J. Morgenthau, Procuniar that off-campus issuesformed and students doing PhD professor, departments of political were important, but only in mat-research will have an opportunity science and history, and director ters that reflected the students into take part in the space program, of the Center for the Study of some way.UC will also sponsor an 8-day American Foreign and Militaryspace conference embodying the Policy.nuclear sciences, atmospheric sci¬ences, biology, medicine, socialsciences and economics.Argonne National Laboratory In the question period that fol¬lowed, GNOSIS described its feel- Members of the Maroon editorialstaff will interview all the gradu¬ate and undergraduate candidatesfor Student Government and Na¬tional Student Association today,tomorrow and Sunday.These interviews will form theprimary basis for Maroon en¬dorsements, which will be printedon Tuesday, April 9.The interviews will centeraround each candidate’s qualifica¬tions for and attitudes towards SGand NSA, and the ideas he wouldwant to implement if elected.All interviews will be conductedin the Maroon office, 303 IdaNoyes Hall according to the fol¬lowing schedule:TODAY2:30-3:30 Gnesis3:30-4:30 Polit4:30-5:30 LiberalTOMORROW9-10 Liberal10-11 Polit11-12 GnesisSUNDAY3-5 any candidatesSince it is unlikely that theMaroon will endorse any candidatewhen it has not interviewed, allings on the Woodlawn neighbor- candidates are strongly urged tohood by saying that its ultimate aPPear for interview at one of thegoal was an integrated Woodlawn, above times or to make specibut a lot of work, on the part arrangements by calling the M -Weaver services set™ ^ Funeral services for/the late ^ _ _wm1 participate^the~progra«i Richard Weaver, professor of ofboth the administration’and^the roon office, ex 3265-6.with a session on nuclear aspects English, will be held Sunday students, would be necessary toof space studies. Speakers will in- jn Weaverville, North Caro- attain this.dude Gerald H. Golden, of the jjna Memorial services in Chicago Liberal Party called The Wood-Argonne reactor engineering divi- wju take place at a later date, lawn Organization the legitimatesion, on “Nuclear Heat Transfer Weaver was found dead in his voice of the community and addedRockets, and Joseph M. Harrer, apartment at 5532 Kenwood late that SG would do well to helpalso of the reactor engineering Wednesday afternoon. He had raise funds for the area,division, on “Advanced Power been on the UC faculty for some POLIT pointed out that open oc-Piants for Space Applications. 20 years, and was primarily as- cupancy was the real issue andIn the atmospheric sciences pro- sociated with the College Eng- again stood on its record in Wood-gram topics will include the dy- lish composition course. He had lawn.namics and physios of the high also, served as chairman of the Replying to a question on worn-atmosphere, large-scale atmos- course. en’s .hours, Miss Procuniar DeadlinesThe deadline for registra¬tion for the spring quarteris Monday, announced Reg¬istrar William Van Cleve.Students expecting tograduate at the spring con¬vocation must ftie an ap¬plication at the Registrar'soffice today.Guest EditorialA tribute to Richard Weaver Letters to the editorRichard M. Weaver was aquiet, dependable man. Forover eighteen years he de¬voted himself to the hard taskof helping students learn to ex¬press their thoughts in precise andsupple language. He asiked thestudents in his classes to look totheir writing styles as the goodcraftsman looks to his tools, tobe keipt sharp with use and readyfor all occasions. His studentsknew him as a helpful critic anda fair judge. He never courtedtheir favor, but he always gainedtheir respect.Perhaps he was seldom able totell them directly how much heliked them or of how he saw inthe educable mind the only hopefor a future better than the past,but in countless ways, in staffmeetings and in faculty councils,he was their firm friend. Oc¬cupied as they were with the con¬cerns of the classroom, they maynot have been aware that theywere seeing an example* of trueprofessional and personal integ¬rity.Very few people on this cam¬pus can claim to have known DickWeaver very well. I suppose itwas easy to see him as a stereo¬type. His entire life seemed to beconfined within a special and self-imposed routine. He always taughthis classes very early in the morn¬ing, left his office for lunch at thesame minute every day, ate prac¬tically every meal at the Commons(he was particularly unhappy about Its closing this year), re¬turned at 1:30 to devote his after¬noons to writing, studying, grad¬ing papers, or taking care of theadministrative details of the Eng¬lish course, and then went hometo a small bachelor's apartment.To some, this life was symbolicof professorial rigidity. Others,who perhaps knew more of hisaccomplishments and respectedhim as a man of principle andconviction, were kept at a distanceby his reticence, his sense of de¬corum, his rather formal cour¬tesy, and by a calm stability whichseemed to invite neither offers ofaid nor the exchange of confi¬dences. These qualities may haveseemed somewhat old-fashioned,even out of keeping with the pre¬vailing temper of the University,where things move fast and ideasflash forth in spontaneous bursts.Dick Weaver was a deliberativeman. He took the time and thepains to do his job right. Whenquestioned by colleagues or stu¬dents, he thought about his answer,and his answers reflected a philoso¬phy and a scale of judgment. Healways wrote with care and dis¬crimination because, to him, wordswere the insignia of character.The routine by which he livedwas a convenience to free hisenergies for the reading and writ¬ing that mattered to him as aperson and a scholar. However,the concentration of his intellectual activities was not stand¬ard or routine for the teacher ofEnglish. He read constantly and Wants Shapiro reform;widely, but his office overflowed one person, one numberwith books on politics, history, ^ THE ed1Tor:philosophy, and rhetorical theory A reform is Operative in therather than with novels, plays, or manner of alloting priority num-poems. He knew a great deal ^rs for the Shapiro Collection,about the Civil War but, in spite Thursday’s events demonstratedof his feeling for the South and (be terribly unfair results that havefor North Carolina, he never oc- issued from the present lack ofcupied himself wilh refightins the vision. since „„ one of au-issues of that conflict. ^ . . , .thority was watching, several m-He was always engaged in some div.duals took more than onekind of writing task. (I realize j number. I was approxi-how much I am going to rrnss the mate] twentieth in line; by thenoisy staccato rapping of what time j selected my slip of paper,must have been the oldest portable lowest number was thirty-five,in the University.) However he Qne ahead of me walked outdid not write much that could be ^ h three priority slips and justi.called literary criticism or schol- this with the claim that he hadarship. Instead, in books like Ideas D cardsiHave Consequences and The Eth¬ics of Rhetoric, he was concerned If the Office of Student Activitiesabout how modern men had cut is going to allot priority numbersthemselves off from the great on the basis of first come, firstsources of traditional wisdom by served—thereby rewarding lowtheir adoption of false theories numbers on the physical basis ofin philosophy and superficial goals early rising and lengthy shiveringin politics and ethics. —fairness requires that there be, . only one number to one person.His correspondence was stagger- Thig ig easily and equitably ac-ing. He was always writing let- complished by having a personters to friends and strangers, an- preserd (0 distribute the priorityswering questions about his con- numbers# xhe office of Studentsevative theories or turning out re- Activities shoidd not permit Thurs-views for his favorite monthlies, day.g eventg to reoccur> 0NE PER-Modern Age and the National Re- Qjsjg NUMBER,view. ’ 1 WILLIAM F. STEIGMANDick Weaver’s reticence kept . ,him from being known intimately SSA building d06Sn tby many people on this campus r*. architecturewhen he was alive. However, 111 CampUS arcniieciuremany people will be affected by to the editor:his death, and I think that his col- The University’s latest plannedleagues and his students will miss addition to the South Campushim in a hundred ways. seems aimed at pleasing alumniMark Ashin rather than carrying through a uni-GRAND OPENINGSUCCESS SPECIALWe’ve sold so many brandnew Studebakers this week, we'dlike to thank you with this exciting,once in a lifetime offerLook Forward... AJmil!The driver who wants record-shattering performance naturallylooks forward to AVANTf. Just as naturally, he looksforward to AVANTi’S distinctive elegance thatmakes this fine car as at home in frontof the opera as it is on the openroad. Built-In steel safety arch,front caliper disc brakes andbucket seats are standard. Avail-able are a floor-mounted manual 4-speedgear box and the Paxton centrifugal supercharger.Forward JRiXNTI!SAVE $800.00 - on the spot deliveryonce you drive the AVANTI you'll neverbe satisfied with anything lessSOUTH SIDE STUDEBAKER46th & Cottage Grove BO 8-1111 fied scheme of architecture. Miesvan der Rohe’s design reflects thefunctionalism for which he hasbecome famous, but it is abouttime he showed some imagination.The design for the SSA buildingplanned by Mr. van der Rohe isindistinguishable from any of theother buildings he has designed inthe past 15 years.For an outlay of $1,500,000 theUniversity could have demanded a• design which bore some resem¬blance to the neo-gothic theme ofmost of the campus architecture.Instead, the University appears towant Mies van def Rohe’s nameand is not interested in design.The South Compus already bearsstructures by Edward Durrell Stoneand Eero Saarinen and as suchseems destined to become anexample of who’s-who in the fieldof architecture.Of the structures built recentlyon the south side of the Midway,only Saarinen’s shows a success¬ful consideration of the stylefound on the rest of the campus.Mr. Stone attempted to draw uponsome of the architectural spirit ofthe campus, but unfortunately hefailed. Yet as bad as Mr. Stone’sbuilding may appear from the Mid¬way, the new SSA design, if con¬structed, would be worse.The South Campus is notanother world to be used withoutregard to reason or esthetics. Inshutting out the area to the southof (Jlst Street the University needsmore than just a wall, though thenew SSA building admirably ful¬fills that function. (Mr. van derRohe’s buildings are functional.)But something can still be done.The money has not been raised,construction has not yet begun,there is still time to get servicesof an imaginative architect or elsedemand that Mr. van der Roheextricate his thoughts from hispast glories and take some noticeof the area into which his designis to be placed.CHRISTOPHER WRENQuote of the dayAt an off-the-record gatheringin Washington, attended by Presi¬dent Kennedy and Chief JusticeEar] Warren, the President re¬marked that he had checked withthe Chief Justice and discoveredthat his school aid plan was en¬tirely constitutional.“It doesn’t have a prayer,’’ heexplained.—Education USAChicago MaroonEditor-in-chief Laura GodofskyBusiness Manager .... Kenneth C. HrylAdvertising Manager. .... Stephen KleinNews Editart Andrew SteinRobin KaufmanCity Newa Editor. .... .John T. William*Asst. City News Editor. . .Gary FeldmanFeature Editor .. .. .Ross ArdreyCulture Editor..., Vicky ShiefmanRewrite Editor Sharon Goldmandtif. Rewrite Editor. ........ Bob LeveyPhoto Coordinators ...... Les GourwitzStan KarterExecutive Secretary ..... Marvella AltheimerSports Edito.- ......... .Rich EpsteinErratum Editor ...... Sherwin KaplanEditor Emeritus Jay GreenbergStaff: Sue Goldberg, Barry Bayer, Ron Dorf-man, Jane Rosenberg, Tom Hoagy, MichaelKaufman, Jim Byer, Arthur Kaufman. Mur*ray Batt, Paul Greenberg, David Aiken,Ilene Barmash, Cynthia Spindel, DeirdreHolloway, Art Sondler, Murray Schacher.Howard Rosen, Steve Becker, Pete Rabino-witz, Robert William*, Carol Horning,Samye Fuqua, Tom Assent, Kathy Fritz,Dan Groai, Dave Richter, Don Baer, SteveSarkett, Paula Hiza, Connie Carnes, Ste¬phen Sharnoff, Joan Kapstein, Jackie Fried¬man, Mike Silverman, Richard French, TomStanton.Issued free of charge on the Quad¬rangles every Tuesday through Fridayduring the academic year by student*of the University of Chicago. Addresscorrespondence to: Chicago Maroon,1212 E. 59 Street, Chicago 37, Illinois.Telephones: MI 3-0300. exts. 326.7, 3266.Printed at West Side Press, Chicago,Subscription by mail is $4 per year.The Maroon is a charter member ofthe United States Student Press Asso¬ciation, and subscribes to its newsservice, the Collegiate Press Service(CPS).The CIMW is a news alliance, con¬sisting of the Maroon, the MichiganDaily, the Wayne State Col’egian, andthe Daily Illini.The Maroon alto subscribe* to th« lotto-collegiate Pro# (IP) New* Service.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 5. 1M3Keyfitz joins UC faculty;named PRTC co-director Medical school bill dischargedaid bill which would include theUC Medical School among its ben¬eficiaries.The bill, which had previouslybeen held up by a 7-7 tie vote, pro¬vides funds for the construction andrehabilitation of medical schoolteaching and research facilities might correct the imbalance thatnow exists in medical schools be¬tween research and teaching.”The construction funds wouldby Laura Godofsky George P. Berry, dean of theThe House Rules Commit- Harvard Medical School, addedNathan Keyfitz, distin- policy and helping in the develop- tee decided in closed session that “by Providing money forguished sociologist and demog- me°t and implementation of “pop- Wednesday to discharge a classro<>m Space, the governmentrapher, will join the faculty ulaUon action programs." $237 million medical schoolthis autumn as professor of lhe Center plans to completeSociology and co-director of the tbis year a five-year comparativePopulation Research and Training urban research study. This studyCenter at the University. He will deals with problems relating toshare the directorship of the Pop- ecology, physical structure, health,ulation Research and Training growth, change, the patterns ofCenter with Philip M. Hauser, the Peopling of cities, distribution,Professor and Chairman of the segregation and aspects of theDepartment of Sociology. problems of local government. At JIlcIt„s «IIHMIH.U U1B sanie MHauser, who announced the ap- |east twelve different studies are d f°r UP to $2>000 a year in b reqUired to put up 50%pointment of Keyfitz said that being prepared. loans for needy students q 10 put upKeyfitz will have an excellent Another work in progress is a .. the Rules Committee s ac-opportunity to continue his num- SI million study of differentials in *loI\’ th® bl now be broughterous contributions to the litera- mortality rates. The Center in to 1 ie House f,oor-ture of demography due to the analyzing a nationwide sampling Robert G. Page, assistant deanlarge amount of research being of deaths by cause for all social f°r medical education in the divi-done here. and economic groups. The data are sion °f biological sciences, com-Keyfitz, a former advisor and also controlled for housing char- merited that he was very happy toalternate to the Canadian Dele- acteristics, sex, color, age, edu- hear that the bill has been passedgate to tiie Statistical and Popu- cation, income, occupation, andtation Commissions of the United quality and diversity of housing.Nations, received his Ph.D. in So- The purpose is to determine whichciology from UC in 1952. Since of the various groups have rela-1959 he has been professor of so- tively high or low death rates. sor, was reportedly quite angry atthe decision.“I feel the needs of higher edu¬cation are so great that Congresswill be derelict in its duty if itdoes nothing for higher educationgenerally,” she said.Nonetheless, when asked to ela-be awarded on a matching basis, borate on her attitude towards theSchools with increasing enroll- medical bill, she commented, “I’mi._ j pay onjy 33%ments wouldcosts, while schools whose enrollments remained the same wouldciology at tlio University ofToronto, Canada.Dean of the division of the so¬cial sciences D. Gale Johnson de¬scribed Keyfitz as “an outstand¬ing demographer and statisticianwho has had a wide range of ex- out of the rules committee.He pointed out that this bill isthe first to provide specific federalfunds for teaching facilities aswell as for research activities.NSA 'in loco parentis' confab hereThe Illinois-Wisconsin Re- ized into five sessions: Student Re- tic school aid supporters decided passed this year, it would be Mrs.gion Of the National Student sensibilities within the Demo- to11drop temporarily a $2 7 billion Green’s. Her bill was introducedThe Medical School’s currentsituation would require UC to pay50% of building costs, said Page.Last year, a similar bill to pro¬vide federal aid in training per¬sonnel for the health professionswas reported out of committee inthe House, but no further actionwas taken on it.The American Medical Associa¬tion has testified in support ofthe construction provisions of thebills, but has no stand on theloan provisions.In exchange for rapid action onthe medical aid bill, the Democra- a team player.”After a conference with Presi¬dent John F. Kennedy, DemocraticHouse leaders stopped their ef¬forts to rush the college assistancebill to the House floor.The White House decision to in¬troduce the medical school aid billcame shortly before Mrs. Green’seducation sub-committee was tohave approved a bill giving aid toall types of colleges, among themdental and medical schools.Mrs. Green’s bill is a somewhatmodified version of the highereducation aid provisions in Ken¬nedy’s omnibus education bill.It was generally agreed that ifany aid to education bill would beAssociation will hold a con- cratic University (tonight); Whatj>erience and has held a variety ference on “Student Rights are student rights? (tomorrow sions.college assistance bill which con- to guarantee aid to the nation’stained similar medical aid provi- colleges and universities even ifof important government and academic posts in Canada and theBritish Commonwealth.“For many years Professor Key¬fitz was responsible for the sta¬tistical methods used in the high¬lya ^°nth,y P°PJ1^ad®n conference, open to all UC students, morrow night)' 11 “ “ *" will begin tonight at 7 pm andwill run through tomorrow night.The conference will be organ- the omnibus bill were to be boggedand Responsibilities: in Loco Par- morning); The moral responsibility Representative Edith Green (D- down in arguments about elemen-entis” here today and tomorrow, of the administrator (tomorrow Oregon), the college aid bill’s spon- tary and secondary school aid.The conference is being organ- afternoon); Rights and Responsi-ized by UC student Neal Johnston, bilities of the Student OrganizationDirector of the national office’s (tomorrow night); DisciplinaryAcademic Freedom Project. The proceedings and due process, (to-and labor force survey in Canada.He has made a number of im¬portant contributions to statisti¬cal theory, especially In the fieldof sampling.”Keyfitz will join the faculty inthe autumn quarter, 1963.The Population Center is launch¬ing a three-fold program whichwill become its major concern overthe next ten years. The plan callsfor 1program to increase the output ofdemographers. 2. studies of prob¬lems of population as they relateto economic development. 3. of¬fering assistance, when asked, tocountries involved in populationresearch studies. This includeshelping to formulate population Peace Corps placement examswill be held in the Chicago areaon April 27 and June 8. Furtherdetails are available in the officeof Career Counseling and Place-a more intensive training ment, Reynolds club, room 202.The office of career counselingand placement has also announcedpublication of its second bulletinon summer jobs. Both the firstand second bulletins are availablein Reynolds Club 202. All sessions of the conferencewill be held in Ida Noyes Hall.There will be a $2 registration feepayable at registration at the con¬ference.the prime rib14 west, randolphchicaao, ill. dearborn 2-1112AftwffmtFraternities, women’s clubs, organizations, plan to haveyour next luncheon, dinner, or party at Chicago's newestand smartest supper club and restaurant.Serving complete banquet lunches from #2.45Serving complete banquet dinners from #3.25DINING — DANCING — ENTERTAINMENTfree lunch or dinner to interestedand accredited group representativeStttf ttt ItfohfomlTYPEWRITERS AND TAPE RECORDERSWe rent the newest models of standard and portable typewritersupon which you may apply up to 3 months rental payments towardthe purchase of the machine. If a rental covers a full quarter we willmake two type changes without extra charge.Rent a tape recorder as a study aid. Get more information at ourPhotographic counter.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS TOJOINTHEMAROONCALL3265ORVISITIDANOYES305 Frank talk about your hair: Vitalis with V-7 JJLkeeps your hair neat all day without grease. §u,*<J,riNaturally.V-7 is the greaseless grooming disco very .Vitalis®with V-7® fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dry¬ness, keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Try iUMR. PIZZAWE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTSHY 3-8282FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 4 FortySausage 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green PepperAnchovie 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.002.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Olive 1.50 2.00- 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Va and Va 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra ingredients .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pizza 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 5.00Shrimp 2.50 4.00 5.00 5.00Bacon 2.50 4.00 5.00 5.00Cenev Island Pizza 2.50 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers) Box of Broasted Chicken20 Pieces, Golden Brown10 Pieces, Golden BrownBAR B-Q RIBSSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGE,MEAT BALL1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Weak — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. —> Fri. fa 3:00 a.m.Sat. ta 3:00 a.ai. — Opaa 2 p.m. SundaysApril 5. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON •U”T— -Multiple A1l MBblimey, or. Tory go homeI say! That busy chap,Alan Simpson, has come outwith a new one: Multiplecolleges. Blimey, now!In these days when the wholeworld is being Americanized andis shouting “Yankee, go home!”at the people who finance theprocess, I do fear we are losingsight of something dangerous. In¬filtrating into certain positions ofpower in our own U.S.A. are cer¬tain bloody Englishmen, who aresimultaneously trying to AnglifyAmerica! And Englishmen, believeit or not, are not Americans atall, but (pardon, sil vous plait,General deGaulle) Europeans! “Weappeal for your best advice,’’ saysSimpson. It’s “Tory, go home!”says I.Is Simpson radical?I have just read Simpson’s planfor “infecting the general Col¬lege . . (all quotes are from hisarticle. Maroon, March 29), and Iagree with the Dean that “it is anice problem in rhetoric.” The ar¬ticle, that is.“The College stands in need ofradical change,” quoth Simpson.Since when are you .a radical,Dean? We're all more inclined toagree with you that “We are allconscious ... of the conservatismwhich has overtaken some of uswho were once rebels.” But tellus, Dean, when were you a rebel?Were you one of Cromwell’s men? It would at least explain yourgreat familiarity with that parti¬cular era of English history.How good is the status qua?Seriously, though, it is goodrhetoric to say, “Good as the statusquo is ... it is not good enough.”I believe it was another inspiringBritisher, Prime Minister MacMil¬lan, who, bumbling through one ofhis party’s last elections, utteredthe thrilling words, “We have donewell, but we can do even better!”However, I fail to see how multi¬ple colleges will do anything toimprove the college.If there is one actual problemthis College has had, it is thatthere has been SO much changethat the dust has never had achance to settle down. But DeanSimpson has seemingly never beensatisfied with this College, how¬ever reorganized, so long as U hastruly been the College of the Uni¬versity of Chicago. How un-Britishit is! Students can truly get aliberal education, shopping aroundin all the different curricula. Why,they can even stay “undecided”for 3(4 years until they know whatthey really want! One misses thatfeeling of bureaucratized securityone gets in England. There, at age11, or thereabouts, they decidemore or less what one will go into,and then continue narrowing itsteadily down until one is acceptedinto a specific college at a univer¬ sity. By then, the future is virtu¬ally fixed.And so, rather than simply toset up a new, new, . . . , new Col¬lege (which would place Simpsonin the inconspicuous middle of along list of innovators), the Deanhas decided to do away with theCollege altogether by graduallysplitting it up. This will give himthe added distinction of devisingthe last University of Chicago Col¬lege! This one will graduallychange the University of Chicago(starting with the College, untilthe Dean gets promoted) into an¬other Oxford! Yes, we have triedto be Harvard, and failed, butAlan Simpson will lead us to gloryas Oxford!Is multi-college plan new?That’s right, we have discoveredthe plot! They have tried to foolus by speaking of multiple collegesas a new idea and stressing “theinventiveness of its example.”That’s bloody untrue! Such a sys¬tem has existed for centuries atOxford, England. It provides aperfect training system to producethose English experts in everyspecialty, who learn more andmore about less and less until theyknow everything about nothing!I realize, Dean, that you are try¬ing “not to identify either the gen¬eral ends of education or the par¬ticular challenges which press onus today.” That would be too American! Too much in the spiritof Chicago, whereas we are nowtrying to be Oxford! Too realistic,too stimulating, too liberal! Youwill lead us toward AlmightyChange, while at the same timemaking sure in each change thatthe College slips a little to theright. Did it ever occur to youthat, when you have the best gen¬eral system, radical change cannever be an improvement?Your thrilling goal for a greatuniversity: “The institutionalmeans through which interestedpeople can hammer out interestingsolutions.” Pip pip, let’s have thatagain.Quality down, tuition up?Mr. Simpson “misses today thatsense of forward movement . . .”No wonder; why hasn’t he foughtthe movement BACKWARD whichhas characterized the College eversince he has been Dean of the Col¬lege? We have seen the progres¬sive (in a regressive direction)death of the comp system; a resi¬dence requirement (which is sup¬posed to include four years formen just as soon as the secondPierce tower is built); Victorianhours for our women; the gradualextinction of apartment life; etc.etc. (Meanwhile, tuition skyrocketsso that only the privileged canlearn here . . . while Dean Simp¬son is obviously not to blame forthis, it is, at least, one part of thedevelopments which is consistently English, to keep college for (heprivileged elite.)We care not that the multiplecolleges “would not at first beseparate living units.” (This quote,excepting the underline, comesfrom page five of the same Ma¬roon issue, which was so cleverlyput together that Simpson’s reportends two pages before it starts!)How can we trust any change anymore, let alone a Simpsonian one?Will communication die?I, for one, see the threat of agradual, painless slipping into asystem where the “General Col¬lege” will be a name for the staffwho plan the General Educationcourses. (The latter, incidentally,will have specialized sections anddifferent-tests for the members ofdifferent colleges, and there willbe no comps.) Students will apply,not to the University of Chicago,but directly to the College of Eng¬lish History, the College of Britishand Commonwealth Relations (tobe dissolved if Britain gets intothe Common Market), etc. Theywill live there, and will only withgreat difficulty be able to changefields if it involves changing col¬leges. (Of course, no one willchange, because no one will ha\eany opportunity to be influencedby professors in other fields whowill be segregated into othercolleges.)I say, old chap, * Tory, gohome!”Ronald HoHisThe easiest'tO'Use automatic calculator of them allNATURALLY, IT S A FRIDENOperation of the Friden Calculator is really child’s play. Just enter thefigures and touch a single key. That’s all.You get outstanding features such as automatic positive and negativedivision with automatic positioning and decimal point; automatic regular, accumu¬lative, or negative multiplication; automatic dial clearance; and* for those whoneed it, optional automatic squaring.Wouldn’t it be a big help to have the easiest-to-use calculator of themall in your office? Of course it would. Get in touch with us now for purchase orrental of new or used machines. We’ll gladly arrange a no-obligation trial.CHICAGO BRANCH OFFICE, 29 N. WACKER DRIVE TEL 726-8640 Friden4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 5. 1963Extended weekday library hours to stay in effect* • 1 i _ ll i • <• i , ,i *Library hours, lengthenedexperimentally last quarter,will continue on the presentschedule for the remainder ofSpring quarter, according to assis¬tant director of readers’ servicesfor the library, Stanley E. Gvvvnn.The Social Sciences ReadingRoom will remain open until 12p.m. Monday through Thursday.The use of the reading room, in¬creased about 25% during lateevening hours, warranting thisextension of hours. Gwynn, doesnot think that Sunday hours willbe altered, although it had beenrequested that the library openearlier on Sunday. Saturday clos¬ing hours will remain the same(5 p.m.).The present library hours wereinitiated as a response to a requestlast quarter by Student Govern¬ment Campus Action Committee.Earl Choldin, a member of thecommittee, who has been workingon library hours for the past year,indicates that the present hoursmay become permanent next yearif the present study of libraryhours indicates such action.Playe warns studentson summer jobs abroadDean of Undergraduate StudentGeorge Playe has urged all stu¬dents planning to seek summerwork abroad through the Inter¬national Student Travel Center(ISTC) to contact him before do¬ing so.He explained that he has beenin touch with the group, and has some “reservations” abo«t theirprogram.The Maroon printed a storyyesterday describing the summerjob outlook in Europe, as seen bythe ISTC. The Maroon’s informa¬tion was taken from an ISTC pressrelease.Playe may be reached at ext.3251.Foreign student pane!starts new radio seriesA' discussion with foreignstudents of their problemsand experiences in the UnitedStates, and particularly atUC, will open a series of Maroon-SG radio programs dealing withcampus personalities and issues.The programs will be presentedon Monday nights at 10 p.m., start¬ing next week. They may be heardon campus radio station WUCB,640 KC, in various dormitories andInternational House.Future programs will featurestudents, faculty, and administra¬tors discussing the aims of educa¬tion, the curriculum, research, ur¬ban renewal, examinations, andthe grading system.Lee speaks at Brent onpsychology and religionOne of the leading participantsin the dialogue between psychologyand religion in England and inAmerica, The Rev. Lee, willAUsJTSHIRTMAKERSTHE BATISTEOXFORDThe cooling propensities of lightest-weight Batiste are now joined to thetexture and weave of fine Oxford. The result? A cotton conservative thatwill stand up to the warmest days in style. Handsomely, comfortablydesigned with an authentic button-down collar and short sleeves.Blue, White and Linen$5-95THE STORE FOR MENftfcivSteMt©own ttnh (dampusIn the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100MC speak at Brent House (5540 Wood-Tawn) on Sunday.Rev. Lee, Fellow and Chaplainof St. Catherine’s College, Oxford,and Chaplain of Nuffield College,will speak at 7 pm.He is the author of Freud andChristianity, Psychology and Re¬ligion, and Your Growing Childand Religion.New tutoring projectMichigan State University isconsidering a plan to give studentscredit for participation in a Stu¬dent Education Corps, whichwould work with economically andculturally deprived youngsters.Within the past three weeks,schools from nearby cities haverequested about 80 student work¬ers, and other communities haveexpressed interest in the program.Student reaction has been en¬thusiastic, with many offers ofvolunteer work.U of Mich, considersstudent faculty govt.The Studenl GovernmentCouncil (SGC) of the Univer¬sity of Michigan met this pastweek to determine whetherstudent-faculty government is orcould be a possibility for the uni¬versity.Speaking at the SGC meeting,Professor Charles F. Lehmann,representative on the Faculty Sen¬ ate and chairman of the com¬mittee on Student Relations statedthat ‘‘a viable, meaningful unityin the governing of the Universityis desirable,” but that it wouldtake a long time to constructsomething useful.Further comments came fromChairman of the Senate AdvisoryCommittee on University AffairsWilbert J. McKeachie, who as¬serted that the proposal “meritsserious consideration,” and fromRegept Carl Braeblec, who addedthat “the idea of closer communi¬cation and participation is reason¬able.” Professor John Reed of theLaw School, however, felt that itwould be a fallacy for the studentsto have an interest in governinguniversity affairs.The SGC, in a statement con¬cerning the issue, called the meas¬ure “an initial testing step towarda joint government,” and pointedout that “the ideal of a free inter¬change of belief and knowledgeis essential to the effective func¬tioning of any educational com¬munity.”Used books availableSecondhand books are availablein the Business Club office, 27Business East, from noon until 1pm each weekday. Hillel post to GottschalkLouis Gottschalk, GustavusF. and Ann M. Swift Distin¬guished Service Professor ofHistory at the University ofChicago, was elected Chairman ofthe B’nai B’rith Hillel Commissionat that body’s 40th anniversarymeeting held on the campus ofBrandeis University. Gottschalkhad previously served as chairmanof a special committee to evaluatestandards and operations of Hilleloverseas. He is also NationalChairman of the Hillel Faculty pro¬gram.J Wear Contact J\endedbyDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1207 E. 55th St.■I University Avc. HY 3-8372mwA $100 A WEEK SUMMER EDITORIAL JOBAT A NEW YORK PUBLISHING HOUSEUniversal Library paperbacksBOOK REVIEW CONTESTfor college studentsOFFICIAL ENTRY RULES:1. Prepare an original "Book Review” of no morethan 500 words covering any one of the followingUniversal Library books:THE GOOD SOCIETY (Walter Lipproann)MEASURE OF MAN (Joseph Wood Krutch)PURITAN OLIGARCHY (Thomas Wertenbaker)SHOCK OF RECOGNITION, Vol. I (Edmund Wilson)SHOCK OF RECOGNITION, Vol. II (Edmund Wilson)IRISH FOLK STORIES AND FAIRY TALES(William Butler Yeats)THE UPROOTED (Oscar Handlin)JOHN ADAMS AND THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION(Catherine Bowen)THE STORY OF MY LIFE (Clarence Darrow)THE SHORTER NOVELS OF HERMAN MELVILLEFOUR SELECTED NOVELS OF HENRY JAMESTHE AMERICAN PRESIDENCY (Harold Laski)U.S. GRANT AND THE AMERICAN MILITARYTRADITION (Bruce Catton)THE HORSE'S MOUTH (Joyce Cary)HERSELF SURPRISED (Joyce Cary)FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT: ON ARCHITECTURE(Ed. by Frederick Gutheim)ROOSEVELT AND HOPKINS (Robert Sherwood)GO TELL IT ON THE MOUNTAIN (James Baldwin)PUBLISHERS ON PUBLISHING(Ed. by Gerald Gross)ONE (David Karp) .EXCEPT THE LORD (Joyce Cary)COMPULSION AND DOUBT (Dr. Wilhelm StekelyTHE BULL OF MINOS (Leonard Cottrell)EDITORS ON EDITING (Ed. by Gereid Gross) Utt on your entry your full name, class, college,college address, plus home address. Also list nameof college bookstore. Send your entry to: BookReview Contest, P.O. Box 55-A, Mt. Vernon 10, N.Y.2. All undergraduates of accredited colleges or uni¬versities in the United States are eligible to enter,except employees and their families of: Grosset 4Dunlap and its affiliated companies and its adver¬tising agencies.3. Judging will be handled by the Reuben H.Donnelley Corporation on the basis of:Appropriateness • Clarity • FreshnessNo entries will be returned and all entries becomethe property of Grosset & Dunlap.Duplicate prizes will be awarded in case of ties.4. Contest runs from March 15 to May 1st, 1963.Entry must be postmarked no later than midnight.May 1st.5. Contest subject to Federal, State and local laws.All prize winners will be notified by mail.FIRST PRIZE• 9-week summer job as art assistant editor ofUniversal Library in New York, July 1 throughAugust 31, 1963.• Salary $100 per week PLUS free transportationto New York and return, and free use of dormitoryfacilities at a university in New York City.23 SECOND PRIZES• 25 Universal Library paperbacks of your choice.25 THIRD PRIZES• 10 Universal Library paperbacks of your choice.WOODWORTH'S BOOK STORE1311 East 57th Street UNIV. OF CHICAGO BOOK STORE5802 Ellis Ave.R.EAL I AIQ. COMOITKW&O, CMlNlSirSt /Oisuts/ 131Q E. 53w ST.MAM TO |0 PM_ MI3-34-OTWC MOVER. '4 PIZZAS ***TB For The Price OfNICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780KM You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711 HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONE- a M — 123*FA A— 1318^—7699April 5, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5i rI■tyt»S LIBERAL PLATFORMLIBERAL PARTY has as itsobjective a student governmentwhich will promote liberal idealson behalf of the student body. Inorder to achieve this goal, SGmust be an effective agent of thestudent body by providing crea¬tive and timely leadership. Thisconcept of SG requires represen¬tatives who are responsive to thewill of the students and are con¬stantly engaged in an exchange ofideas with their constituents. Thebargaining power of the studentscan only be exercised effectivelyby leaders who have the activesupport of the student body.The current POLIT-dominatedSG does not meet these require¬ments. POLIT has failed to pro¬mote the interests of the studentbody adequately because 1) POLIT the students at this university arein fact individuals and should betreated as such. Specifically, wefeel that women’s hours is an ex¬ample of an archaic regulationwhich restricts the students’ free¬dom. We endorse abandonment ofhours restriction for those wom¬en who receive parental permis¬sion for unlimited hours. We alsoreject the practice of room checksas an invasion of privacy. Theseare necessary first steps towarda reevaluation of the concept ofin loco parentis as it applies tothe residence system.Finally, there is the conflict withthe administration over the food, would be invited from a variety offields including international law,anthropology, government, mili¬tary science, psychology, and po¬litical science. The conferencewould include lectures, debates,movies, and workshops to provideexamination in depth of the issuesof disarmament and arms control.National Student AssociationThe University of Chicago haslong been in the lead in the pro¬motion of liberal ideals throughthe National Student Association.However, this year the Chicagodelegation lacked the imaginativeleadership necessary to make NSApolicy statements more effective.which is low in quality and high *or example, itwould be' morein price. LIBERAL PARTY main- constructive if NSA COI^ldeied ^®tains that facilities for meals merits of the variousshould be regarded as a service to to tbe angeioushas not maintained contact with the university community and not don that exists today, instead ofas a business proposition.the student body, 2) it is not res¬ponsive to the students, and 3)it has been unable to negotiate Residence representationsuccessfully with the administra- The events of the past yeartion due to its own belligerency clearly demonstrated that the pres¬and its inability to act as the agent ent system of at-large representa-of the students. LIBERAL PARTYintends to meet these deficienciesby basing its action on the prin¬ciple that SG ought to be an in- tion for the College is inadequatein maintaining contact with thestudent body. A student govem- just condemning nuclear testing.The University of Chicago shouldwork with other major schools toinsure that the National Congressgives serious attention to the in¬stability of tlie Cold War.The growth of the National Stu¬dent Association is hindered by thefailure of the campus representa-ment which does not effectively tives to involve their studentstrument of the student body represent the student body cannot bodies in the work of NSA, and inrather than of a particular group.Negotiations with theAdministrationStudent-administration relationsare a central aspect of SG activi¬ties. Conflicts exist in areas suchas athletics and activities, dis¬crimination in University-ownedoff-campus housing, women’s hoursand other regulations, and the en¬tire food situation. The LIBERALPARTY recognizes that the bar¬gaining power of SG dependsupon the active support of thestudent body. Based on this prin¬ciple, the LIBERAL PARTY in¬tends to deal with these problemsin the following manner: accurately be called a student the reluctance of many schools togovernment. Representatives participate in the progressiveshould carry on a running dialogue policies of NSA. The Universitywith the students: talking, ques¬tioning, and even arguing withthem. For only by these meanswill the student government beable to ascertain the views of the of Chicago can be influential inovercoming these problems only ifour Student Government can pro¬vide an example of how the workof NSA can be made meaningfultheir support and respect.To achieve unese ends, a systemof residence representation isneeded, since representativeselected by living unit would befamiliar with their constituentsand accessible to them at all times.Residence representation would beattained by dividing the collegeinto electoral units as follows: one1) Many of the problems can be unit for the residents of frater-avoided if SG anticipates them and nities, one unit for each dormi-takes appropriate action. tory-complex which contains more2) Problems should be discussed that one hundred fifty students,with administration officials with and one unit for all other stu-the understanding that on major dents in the College. Instead ofdifferences only time and effort nineteen at-large representatives,ran attain the desired ends. each student would vote for the3) Only as a last resort, after number alloted to his electoralnegotiations have failed, should unit. Residence representation willSG organize a protest. Such a pro- encourage a responsible studenttest can only be effective with the government.students, simultaneously retaining to the students on its own campus.The NSA committee of SG shouldbe an active group which worksto attain campus support for NSAprojects. The NSA efforts to bringmore foreign students to the NSAdeserve more sustained backingby SG. General student participa¬tion in the regional conferences ofNSA should be sought. If Chicagois to continue to be a leader inofactive support of the campus.LIBERAL PARTY recognizesthat at present three main areasof disagreement witlj the adminis¬tration exist: activity and athleticscholarships in excess of the needof the recipient, the concept ofin loco parentis, and the food avail¬able on campus. Improvements in servicesThe student co-op bookstore ful¬fills the need for a place wherestudents can get books withoutpaying full list price. Unfortun¬ately, the co-op has not served asmany people as it might, becauseit has failed to make its advan¬tages widely known on campus. AAt present, activities scholar- concerted membership drive wouldenable it to serve more students.Departments should be encouragedto .post lists of textbooks wellbefore the quarter begins.Chartered planes and buses helpstudents travel economically, andLIBERAL PARTY would main¬tain and try to expand these serv¬ices by investigation of transpor-ships are awarded to officers ofthe Maroon, SG, Cap and Gown,and WUCB. Several of these arefull tuition regardless of need.Also, two full tuition Stagg schol¬arships will be awarded next year.LIBERAL PARTY recommendsthe following program:a) A student w'ho would be pre-/;nted from becoming an officer lation additional cities. LIBER-in a major student activity be¬cause of term time employmentcould apply lor an activities schol¬arship.b) If he were awarded financialaid on the basis of academicachievement, he would receive anadditional amount equal to themoney listed on his recommended AL PARTY seeks to improve themanagement of these servicessince past trips have often lackedcareful advance planning.Proposed projectsLIBERAL PARTY proposes twoprojects which will serve the stu¬dent body by promoting mature NSA it must bring the effortsNSA to its own campus.Foreign policyStudents are not only membersof a university, but also are mem¬bers of society as a whole. It isessential that there be means bywhich student opinion can be com¬municated and made to influenceevents. Only a truly representa¬tive Student Government can ef¬fectively present and take steps topromote the views of University ofChicago students as a whole. Stu¬dent Government should takestands on broad issues of studentconcern as agents working in thestudent’s behalf. We do not feelthat SG should become a specialinterest group concerned with thepromotion of particular foreign ordomestic policies. We do feelstrongly, however, that SG has aresponsibility to represent the stu¬dent body on issues which are ofvital concern to them as stu¬dents and as citizens.Student Government has the re¬sponsibility to voice student con¬cern over the dangers inherent inthe current world situation. Ac¬tions which are available to a stu¬dent government to communicatethe concern held by the studentbody include the following: lec¬tures and seminars, publicitythrough the news media, peti¬tions, letter and telegram, writingcampaigns, leaflet distribution, andaction through NSA. SG also hasthe responsibility to provide annmjucj iiaicu mi ms rewiiunenueu ~I ——o ... v. t f tup ctndpnt to ex¬budget under term time emolov- discussion of policy alternatives oppor L - , .uuugei, unuer term ume employ- , , amine and reflect upon the meritsavailable on problems of current , , , ,. ,of the various foreign policy ai-mentc) Stagg Scholarships would like¬wise offer additional aid to theathlete who would sacrifice termtime employment; however, the interest to students. Student Gov¬ernment is in a unique position to ternatives existing. This opportun-amount of the scholarship would resenting the entire student bodynever exceed financial need. 1) SG should sponsor a series ofThis proposal meets the condi- .seminars, each dealing with prob-tions of the National Student As- lems of current interest, such assoeiation’s Basic Policy Statement the concept of in loco parentis,*““v*n xo aaa a umvjuv. jA/oxuvu csjsponsor these projects, since it is ity could not be provided by SGif it espoused a specific foreignpolicy program, since other alter¬natives could not be received inthe only student organization rep-on Model Educational PracticesStandards. In addition, it reflectsstudent Opinion as it was deter¬mined by the referendum on schol¬arship policy last winter.LIBERAL PARTY feels that thepolicy of in loco parentis, by whichIhe university assumes the par¬ents’ function, is incompatible withthe university’s expectations of the role of the university in theAmerican community, perspec¬tives in civil rights, aid to under¬developed nations, and the place ofathletics at the U. of C. The semin¬ars would be open discussionson specific topics in which bothstudents and faculty would be in¬vited to participate.2) A conference on disarma-the student’s academic maturity. ment and arms control should be an unbiased manner. LIBERALPARTY’S proposed conference onDisarmament and Arms Controlis one such opportunity for anobjective, factual presentation ofth<5 issues.Civil Rights andCivil LibertiesLIBERAL PARTY feels that is¬sues of civil rights and civil liber¬ties should be a major concern ofall students on the University ofChicago campus. We think thatissues of this nature should exer-LIBERAL PARTY believes that arranged by SG. Leading experts cise a major influence on the at-(Conlinticd on pape 10) POLIT PLPOLIT is a political party con- establishment of a free university picerned with liberal political action, community. Specifically, POLIT piIt acts as an independent group, believes that the residence require- fooften working with other organiza- ment should be ended, that worn lations and through Student Govern- on s hours and curfews should be Siment on campus, community, na- dropped, and that students should l>:tional, and international issues, be free to purchase their meals IkPOLIT bases its program on the where they wish. POLIT will oo--premise that education is neces- operate with House Councils and otsary for effective action and that other organizations in trying to tfcaction itself is educational. end these regulations by any up- fr-POLIT’s policy and course of propriate means. idaction are determined in open A POLIT SG will supply infor-caucus by its members. Mem- rnation and assistance to students v<bership is open to any person who wish to petition out of the ticommitted io liberal action as the dormitories. alThe re-organization of the Stu- 1,1dent Consultant Boards, staffed Nmainly by non-SG members, a P1dent body is 1) to provide it with originated by a POLIT ^services, 2) to represent it to the Government, was begun this year,administration and to the com- Under a POLIT government, more tlmunity, 3) to promote education will be established. These foand action on issues of political boards provide a method ofand social concern, and 4) to wor ministration - student eommunica- rrin the National Student Association (-on which js often lacking. The p.to promote liberal political action ^g^g (Student Housing, Scholar- c<among students at the Umversity Parking, Registrar, Bursar, isof Chicago and throughout the 1 iUranv Athl^fin onrl Qtu/Iontsolution to today’s problems.A POLIT Government considersthat its responsibility to the stu-Library, Athletic, and Student siHealth) will be organized depend- ning only on student willingness to feiuAfter negotiations with the P0- kOCX vicca ucoigiicu tvf ituucv vuw , icational and supplementary costs ^ ^ ^>ra*-y ^as ^creasedto a minimum. No other UC Stu-nation.ServicesPOLIT firmly believes that SGmust act to provide students withservices designed to reduce edu-the time the Social Science Read- 3ident Government in history has Room jg open at night and on aprovided the students with as many weekends. POLIT will continue to h'services as have the past three work for longer library hours for tiPOLIT administrations. SSRR and for other librariesThe SG Cooperative Book store camPus. oilinitiated in 1961 by a POLIT SG, POLIT subscribes to the view fccontinues to offer considerable tbat lbe athletic program of the dsavings on textbooks and other University should be for all who &material. The COOP’s expanded care to particips-rfe, regardless of 5<services enabled its members to ability. POLIT commends the nsave over $3,000 last year. Athletic Department for the ob- 1<The SG Student Service Center, servance of this philosophy, eve$in the Reynolds Club basement, on Varsity teams, and hopes that abesides offering small short-term practice will not end with the Ploans, with no red tape, to all coming of Stagg Scholarships. tlstudents, was expanded this year A POLIT SG will negotiate with hto include a ticket serVice to down- the Athletic Department for the 9town theaters. following reforms. 1) the pool in kThe POLIT SG continued its in- Bartlett Gymnasium should be «terim travel service of busses and kept open for longer periods dailyv ^flights to New York City. The At present the pool hours con- Bsuccess of the SG flights io flict with both lunch and dinnerEurope (one plane has already for dorm residents. 2) The bowl- ubeen filled) has been so great that ing lanes in Ida Noyes should be dit has been necessary to initiate open for more than one day a bcharter groups of twenty persons week. In addition POLIT suggests aat a cost of $295. that a regular pinboy should be isThis year’s SG continued the hired. 3) POLIT feels more use nPOLIT-initiated service of permit- should be made of Ida Noyes titing recognized student organiza- Hall’s excellent facilities by simp-. <1tions, such as the Woodlaw’n Tu- lifying the procedures of reserv- Ptaring Project, CORE, and the ing the gym and by extending the tiForensic Association, to use its hours of the swimming pool. iifacilities in Ida Noyes Hall and POLIT conti.iues to support stu-the Reynolds Club. dents wishing to organize eoopera-Wlien the weekly Twist Parties tive living groups, specifically the nin the New Dorm lounge were dis- student-faculty dormitory current- *continued, the POLIT SG agreed ly being discussed by the MaroojL.ilto take the responsibility for run- and others. A POLIT SG will re-ning them and thus arranged to quest the administration to in- d,have them reinstated at Ida Noyes corjjorate this program, and oilier aHall. such cooperative living groups, in- nDuring the coming year, a P0- to its housing system and asks that pLIT SG will continue to expand help be given in obtaining a build- uand improve its services to stu- ing for it. Bdents by increasing the efficiency In addition a POLIT SG wiiL. £of the Coop, expanding the pro- investigate the increasingly exor- sgram of discount travel to other bitant rents charged in the pres- tiparts of the country besides NY ent dormitories. POLIT feels the ^if the demand warrants, and in- University must provide housing *ceasing the scope of the Student in accordance with students’ needs tjService Center. and comparable in cost to similar 0POLIT SG will work towards non-University housing in the area,getting a system of student dis- The POLIT SG has obtained. $counts in as many neighborhood from the Office of Student Activi- cstores and restaurants as possible, ties an agreement whereby the §These stores will be listed in a membership lists of recognized stu- tipamphlet distributed to all stu- dent organizations which are po- odents at the beginning of the year, litical in nature will not have to FRepresentation ^ kept *n *n die SA office, liEach yeahPOLIT runs on a com- This wm allow students to join kprehensive platform explaining its organizations without fear of re. *positions on a grea^um^ ‘of ?™als being visited on them afterissues which its members will face thg.fave the University. pin SG and as delegates to NSA. , f°^IT Sieves ?at a meaning- $*If elected, a POLIT assembly will fal ^cabon “ dependent upon vassume that its positions on such n®htJof students to explore allissues, as outlined in this plat- ldeas fd any convictions, sform, will represent the views of Students should be free to join any »the majority of the student body, organization and to associate with-eA POLIT majority in SG will not, any^on ,as ^ 1chooses- "however, take stands on other is- POLIT also believes that stu- hsues of a controversial political (en*® bave a ri»b* eciiicational tnature without first ascertaining opportunities regardless of their twhat student opinion on the isstrf Political beliefs or associations. (is Therefore POLIT is in strong odisagreement with the University iOn - Campus over its position on the National sPOLIT believes that university Defense Education Act. The ad-students are capable of regulating ministration was instrumental in gtheir own social lives and that the drafting and enacting the ‘‘crim- cregulation of morality imposed by mal provision” of the NDEA which tthe administration hinders the provides for the fining and im- cApril 5, 1963ATFORMprisonment of any student who ap¬plies for assistance under the Actfor merely belonging to a particu¬lar type of political organization.Such a law harms every studentby denying an education to thosefolding certain political views andby denying to other students theopportunity to exchange ideas withthese people, thereby limiting theirfreedom to investigate all politicalideas.A POLIT SG will urge the Uni¬versity to either cease participa¬tion in the program or create analternate fund to be administeredunder the same conditions as theNDEA excepting the “criminalprovision” until the law ischanged.The POLIT SG has maintainedthe policy of a minimum wagefor its employees of $1.50 per hour.We ^recognize, however, that themajority of students who workpart time for the University re¬ceive far too small a wage. Thisis true because of the surplus ofstudents seeking jobs over thenumber of jobs available. POLITfeels that the administration takesadvantage of this surplus in orderto fill its own needs for cheaplabor. Since the University expectsstudents receiving financial assist¬ance to be employed in order tohelp pay for part of their educa¬tion, it has an obligation to providejobs for these students at a rate'of pay consistent with the expensesfacing the student. It is clear thatthis responsibility has been ne¬glected. Tuition has increased by50% in the last three years, whilemost wages have gone up only10% and some have even beenreduced. POLIT SG will supportftncf work with any student em¬ployees who wish to organize forthe purpose of collectively bargain¬ing with the administration on thequestion of wages, hours and work¬ing conditions. The right to soorganize has been guaranteed byfhe .Administration in the StudentBUI or Rights.A POLIT SG has repeatedlyurged the University to excludediscriminatory housing from theUniversity listing of housing avail¬able to students. The Universityis considering the mere abandon¬ment of its housing list rather thanthe more positive action of makingthq list non-discriminatory. APOLIT SG will establish and main¬tain a non-discriminatory listingif the University does not.Off - CampusPOLIT believes that the singlemost effective means for SG towork on off-campus activities is-throught the National Student As¬sociation. However, this cannot bedone solely at regional and nation¬al Congresses. Much work on com¬munity, national, and internationalproblems can be accomplishedthrough the NSA and CommunityRelations Committees of the SGAssembly. We also believe thatSG can help advance liberal ac¬tion through the support and spon¬sorship of student organizationswhich are working on local, na¬tional and international problemsof a social or political nature.POLIT will continue to supportthe‘efforts of students fighting forcivil rights. Specifically, a POLITSG will continue the support givento the Student Non-Violent Co¬ordinating Committee by pastPOLIT governments. POLIT be¬lieves that the concept of academ¬ic freedom is intimately connectedwith this struggle and that failureto aid these students in every waypossible would be a betrayal ofthe intellectual ideals of the Uni¬versity of Chicago.The University and the Univer¬sity community have been thescene of a good deal of controversy-over the issue of racial discrim¬ination in housing. The POLIT SGhas cooperated with and will con¬tinue to cooperate with organiza¬tions such as UC CORE in op¬position to the University s policyof “managed integration” whichin practice becomes “managedsegregation.”POLIT further supports the pas¬sage of open occupancy legislationon a city or state-wide level. Par¬ticularly, a POLIT SG will supportorganizations working for the pas¬ sage of the State Fair Housing lawnow before the Illinois Legislature.POLIT regrets the failure of theUniversity Administration to en¬dorse this law though its ownFaculty Committee on Rental Pol¬icies stated that “the Universityshould recognize that its commun¬ity objectives can more effectivelybe realized in the long run if thecity as a whole and, in fact, themetropolitan area as a whole, isopen to Negro occupancy” eventhough it has been requested to doso by a group of 150 professors ina recently distributed faculty let¬ter. POLIT feels that this refusalto take a moral stand even on alaw which is clearly in its own in¬terests, is representative of a dis¬turbing trend in the UniversityAdministration’s attitude towardthe Hyde Park community. POLITregrets that the Administration,now that its physical objectives inthe community have been realized,seems ready to abandon the moralresponsibility of the University ingeneral.POLIT feels that the Administra¬tion has shirked its responsibilityto act as a force of progress andas an aid to the people of Wood-lawn in solving their communityproblems, many of which stemfrom the very policies <of con¬trolled housing which the Univer¬sity employs in the area. TheAdministration has maintained a“Cold War” policy toward thepeople of Woodlawn, even refusingto meet with leaders of the mostoutstanding civil group in the area,The Woodlawn Organization, or toconsider the needs and problemsof the residents of the area andnot merely the physical needs ofthe University.A POLIT SG will work for in¬creased communication betweenthe University community and theWoodlawn community, particularlywith respect to TWO. A POLIT SGwill urge the University Adminis¬tration to meet with TWO officialsand consider their demands as wellas the demands of other legitimaterepresentatives of the Woodlawncommunity. A POLIT SG will alsowork to encourage students tofamiliarize themselves with andwork with The Woodlawn Or¬ganization.A POLIT SG will continue itssupport of the Woodlawn TutoringProject and will cooperate to ex¬pand it beyond the immediateUniversity community.EducationPOLIT believes that politicalunderstanding and action are ne¬cessary parts of a student s edu¬cation. Unless students are edu¬cated on the issues affecting them,they cannot act efficiently. SGshould provide such informationon important issues in addition tosponsoring speakers, films, de¬bates, and discussions on contem¬porary political questions.A POLIT SG will continue itsprogram of bringing to campusspeakers such as Leon Despres,Chauncey Eskredge, Gus Hall,James Hoffa, and State Represen¬tative Abner Mikva. POLIT be¬lieves that such speakers help toincrease the student’s political andsocial awareness.Planning for a series of lectureswas begun this year by the SocII staff and the POLIT SG. Itspurpose is to bring to the cam¬pus outstanding speakers who areprominent in their fields. Amongthose who have expressed interestin taking part are Erich Fromm,Eugene Burdick, Jane Jacobs, andJules Feiffer. A POLIT SG willwork with the Soc II staff to com¬plete this program for the nextschool year.The POLIT SG, together with theMaroon, helped organize a dis¬cussion series with students, fac¬ulty, and members of the admin¬istration, which will be broadcastover WUCB during the springquarter.To finance SG projects, a POLITSG will continue to show moviesof recognized artistic merit suchas “Wild Strawberries,” “TheMagician,” and “The VirginSpring.”POLIT in NSAThe United States National Stu¬dent Association is a confedera-(Continued on pace 8) GNOSIS PLATFORMThe purpose of GNOSIS Is toeffect a fundamental change instudent government at the Univer¬sity of Chicago. Student Govern¬ment has in the past failed torepresent accurately the wishesand interests of the student body;it has dissipated its energies inendeavors fundamentally irrele¬vant to its purpose; it has lost therespect of both the students andand th.e administration of the Uni¬versity, with the result that it hascome to be regarded as a farce bya large segment of the Universityof Chicago community. GNOSISis pledged to restore the standingof student government by bringingits activities into line with itsopportunities.The recent recall election didnot work the change that had beenexpected. The fact remains ines¬capable that POLIT does notrepresent the overriding studentinterest: the party caucus is nota substitute for an active assemb¬ly; the . jjKesent assembly is arubber stamp. The attempts ofPOLIT to change the foreign policyof the United States were doomedfrom their inception, and onlyshowed the Chicago student bodyin a ridiculous light. The recallresulted in no change in POLITjxjlicy. The April election is theopportunity to bring about real andlasting change.Restructure of StudentGovernmentGNOSIS believes in a StudentGovernment which is both respon¬sible and responsive to the stu¬dent body. Sovereignty resides inthe student body, not in a partycaucus. SG should act for thestudents and not in spite of them.Students should be encouraged totake an active role at the SGlevel in administering their ownaffairs. In order to correct thepresent inadequacies in structureand to more efficiently achieveits purposes, GNOSIS supports:1) Representation in the collegeby residential constituency. If wewish our representatives to be ob¬jective and responsible, we can¬not leave them responsible to thecollege-at-large and held account¬able for their actions only at thenext election. Residential repre¬sentation would insure each stu¬dent a voice in the actions of theperson representing him. Further¬more, vacancies could be filled bydemocratic election in the resi¬dential unit, rather than by ap¬pointment. GNOSIS has sponsoredan amendment to the SG consti¬tution to implement this.2) Fall elections for the SG As¬sembly. GNOSIS proposed anamendment to hold SG elections inthe first week of November. Thiswould 1) insure representativeswho live in the unit they repre¬sent, 2) give first-year studentsa voice in their government, and3)allow the majority party anunbroken year to fulfill their plat¬form.3) A change in SG rules to giveall students of the Universityspeaking privileges now deniedthem; Parliamentary privilegesare to remain in the hands of SGmembers. GNOSIS also favors in¬stitution of a regular open questionperiod at the beginning of eachregular SG meeting, in which stu¬dents could query and criticizetheir government.4) Posting SG minutes in prom¬inent places on campus, andgreater communication through thefacilities of the Maroon. Minutesare necessary to indicate the roleof all parties—not just the groupcontrolling the executive commit¬tee. We seek communication, notpropaganda.5) Student - Faculty - Adminis¬tration Court. If the decisions ofthe court are to be meaningful tothe administration, it should con¬tain an equitable number of stu¬dents and non-students. The courtshould be composed of four stu¬dents elected by the SG Assemb¬ly, three members of the facultyappointed by the Council of theUniversity Senate, and two mem¬bers of the administration, selectedby the Dean of Students. Thejurisdiction of the court should be expanded to include all cases ofinfringement of social rules, afunction now exercised by the Dis¬ciplinary Committee.Campus ActionCurriculum Discussions. Whileretaining due regard for the super¬ior experience and training of thefaculty, students should have theopportunity to express their viewson curriculum in a formal situationand receive recognition and con¬sideration of their views by thefaculty. GNOSIS is concerned withcontinuing the Chicago tradition ofconstant re-examination and im¬provement of educational methodsand practices. GNOSIS proposesto establish a series of curriculumcommittees in each undergraduatedivision.Advisor Program. GNOSIS advo¬cates a program whereby upperlevel undergraduates and gradu¬ates would be hired to ad'ise in¬coming students during their firstyear at the University. Facultyadvisors are prevented by theirposition from offering frank adviceon professors and courses whichfirst-year students need, and theyare too much separated from thestudent situation to offer usefuladvice on other matters of im¬portance to these students.Residential College. GNOSISwould work in SG in this area withsix aims:1) to insist that the University,in its building programs, givesfirst priority to provision of ade¬quate dormitory housing;2) to provide student consulta¬tion in all phases of planning fornew residential facilities;3) to reduce rents in Universityapartment-dormitories to a levelcommensurate with neighborhoodhousing;4) to implement the demand forfaculty-student housing and co-op¬erative student apartments;5) to allow co-operative food en¬terprises where it is “unprofitable”for the University to operate; and6) to work with the administra¬tion in planning either e-vistruc-tion of a student activities build¬ing with adequate facilities forrecreation, or provision of theseservices in existing buildings.Student Employment. GNOSISwould work in SG to insure fullemployment for students, to insistthat all jobs ■which students couldfill be channeled through the stu¬dent employment office, to applythe minimum $1.30 wage scale toall student jobs, and to review therate of increase in student wages.Many students find it difficult tofind part-time work due .o theUniversity policy of giving jobsthat students could handle to non¬students. Many jobs, especially inRH & C-run cafeterias, should behandled entirely by students, asthey are at most universities.Social Regulations. GNOSIS ab¬hors the idea of the University ad¬ministration legislating student so¬cial behavior. Such action is con¬trary to the basic idea and spiritof a University and hinders thefull development of a personalsense of responsibility and dignityin UC students. Social rules areprimarily and properly a matterof student concern and responsibil¬ity.GNOSIS pledges to:1) Establish a committee com¬posed of three assembly membersresiding in University housing, twoJacuity members, and two mem¬bers of the administration, em¬powered to enact all social legislation. Adjudication of social ruleswould be in the hands of the re¬vised S-F-A Court. #2) Seek—through action in theSocial Regulation Committee —automatic abolition of womenshours for all women above thefirst-year level. .3) Extend visiting hours in allUniversity controlled student hous-Campus Services. GNOSIS wouldcontinue to maintain the servicesprovided by Student Governmentand expand them to benefit meffestudents where possible. Until theadministration decides either torecognize the Co-op and send itbook lists for courses, or to give discounts on books at the Univer¬sity Bookstore, current savingsare bound to remain minimal rela¬tive to a student's large book ex¬penditures. GNOSIS will work toresolve the present situation andmaximize savings for students.Chicago-Area Council. The UCStudent Government would take theinitiative to organize a Chicago-area council of colleges and univer¬sities. There are 33 colleges anduniversities in the Chicago areawith almost 100.000 students, whichbelong to no common association.A great potential exists here whichhas not been tapped. Benefits toUC students from programs wouldinclude; an expansion of studentservices such as charter flightsand buses; greater access to, andbetter information on lectures, con¬certs, and other cultural events;and a general increase in intellec¬tual and social contact betweenstudents at different colleges.Renewal and IntegrationGNOSIS believes that the socialconditions and dangers to life andproperty which prevail in HydePark and Woodlawn are inconsist¬ent with achievement of the Uni¬versity’s educational purposes. AHmembers of the University com¬munity have a responsibility forconstructive improvement of theirenvironment. Present action hasbeen encouraging in some parts ofHyde Park, but much remains tobe done. Instead of a fence aroundthe Law School and the rest of thesouth campus facing into Wood¬lawn, it is important to integrateinto the Woodlawn community—to practice, in addition to philo¬sophizing, the obligation of a Uni¬versity to lead its community. Wesuggest, for example, that theproposed student-faculty coopera¬tive housing be established southof the Midway, where a substantialproportion of the faculty alreadyresides. GNOSIS particularly sup¬ports those programs which in¬volve University students teachingtheir skills to grade and highschool children and the activitiesof the Woodlawn Organization injob training, slum conversion, andcontinuing education, GNOSIS en¬dorses a fair-housing law for thecity of Chicago and will work fora University endorsement. GNOSISproposes that a list of non-discri¬mination housing be on file in theSG office, not in the Housing office.Scope of StudentGovernmentGNOSIS is seriously concernedwith the lack of respect now ac¬corded to the Student Governmentin virtually all segments of theacademic community. For manystudents, the current majority hasmeant little more than arbitraryactivism and partisanship. Ill-chosen, irresponsible, and non-rep¬resentative resolutions contributeto low status and ephemeral effec¬tiveness of the institution. Untilthe record of the Student Govern¬ment is so consistent and respon¬sible that most students can sup¬port it, SG will deny itself the roleof leadership and authority whichit rightfully should exercise. Onlythen can SG become the students’bargaining agent it aspires to be.Therefore, GNOSIS pledges itsellto a Student Government whichwill speak forcefully, responsibly,carefully, and consistently on allmatters directly and immediatelyaffecting the University commu¬nity, with due regard for opinionsof the electorate. GNOSIS furtherpledges to support an SG whichwill cooperate for efficacious cam¬pus political action with any groupsseeking clearly recognizable bene¬ficent action and policies in theUniversity community.No one can expect responsiblegovernment without knowing therange of powers committed to thebody. GNOSIS proposes that it islegitimate and proper for the Stu¬dent Government to concern itseliprimarily with problems of thiscampus and the Hyde Park-Ken-wood-Woodlawn community. GNO¬SIS suggests that in case of doubt,the jurisdiction of motions and not(Continued on page 8)April 5. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7GNOSIS platform POLIT platform(Continued from pay 71their controversiality be the cri-terian of judgment.Due to the close relationship de¬manded by the NSA constitutionand the by-laws of the Student Gov¬ernment, the Assembly must, onoccasion, debate such matters per¬tinent to the functions of the NSAcommittee. But the Assemblyshould not debate national or in¬ternational issues outside this con¬stitutional limit, such as the Ber¬lin wall, tax reform, disarmament,Cuba, or admission of Red Chinato the UN. GNOSIS pledges to keepthese debates to a minimum andto insure the observance by NSAerf its constitutional limits.NSANational student problems de¬mand a national student response.GNOSIS considers US NSA to bethe forum for expression of nation¬al and international views oi' stu¬dents about their peculiar prob-STATIONER/SUPPLIESBookstore5802 Ellis Ave. lems. We support as a pragmaticguideline for priorities anef action,NSA’s stated purpose: to considerthe affairs of students as students—their rights, their responsibili¬ties, and their living conditions—affairs which are within the rangeof constructive action and agita¬tion by NSA. Debates on such im¬probable topics as Cuba or disarm¬ament may indeed be stimulating,but they hardly contribute to theresolution of issues facing studentsas students.We support the National Execu¬tive Committee in its action tolimit the number of resolutionsconsidered by the National Stu¬dent Congress; USNSA would con¬stitute a much more effective in¬strument of student action if itwere to emphasize only a fewmajor issues, eg., advancementof academic freedom, rather thanto hastily contrive scores of neb¬ulous resolutions and statements(about 150 this last Congress).The GNOSIS delegation pledgesto. fairly represent the opinions ofUC students by active disapprovalof segregation in both South andNorth; opposition to infringementupon students’ civil liberties byHU AC, the McCarran Act, and theSmith Act: disapproval of speaker,travel, and information bans; en¬couragement of greater interna¬tional student exchanges; and rec¬ommendation of improvement ineducational standards in the na¬tion’s schools. GNOSIS pledges toeffectively project the convictionsof its constituency onto a nationaland international forum, and toactively communicate NSA policiesand decisions to the camp.GNOSIS in StudentGovernmentThe candidates running for elec¬tion this spring on the GNOSISslate support this platform and willintroduce and attempt to resolveit within the framework of theStudent Government Assembly.They pledge themselves to servethe members of the academiccommunity in order to rebuild Stu¬dent Government as a construc¬tive force. from page 7)tion of almost four hundred mem¬ber schools. One of the funda¬mental beliefs of NSA is thatstudents in institutions of highereducation have a legitimate con¬cern for all issues which affectthem in their role as students.The policies and programs of theAssociation are established by theannual National Student Congressto which all member schools senddelegates.In the past, University of Chi¬cago delegations have taken im¬portant roles at the National Stu¬dent Congress. The POLIT dele¬gation to the 14th NSC played aleading part in the drafting andobtaining of passage of legislationcalling for the House Comtnitteeon yn-American Activities, andcondemming the film “OperationAbolition.” Last year’s delegationwas instrumental in writing anumber of resolutions, among themone urging that the US Congress“reconsider the McCarran Actgiving special attention to the pos¬sibility of such infringements ofcivil liberties resulting from theact” and urging the federal gov¬ernment to take a much strongerrole in helping obtain civil rightsthroughout the nation.POLIT believes that NSA cancontinue to take a leadership rolein developing student political ac¬tivity in the United States onlyif its member schools provide theAssociation with experienced andcapable delegations. The POLITslate for the UC delegation to theNSA is the only one with the ex¬perience and capabilities neededto implement its stands and helpprovide leadership for NSA.ReformsThis summer the 16th NSC willfocus a good deal of attention ona number of reforms of the As¬sociation. A rules change alreadypassed by NSA's National Execu¬tive Committee at its winter meet¬ing, will go into effect at the 16thNSC. This change will limit eachof the four committees of the Na¬tional Affairs Commission to onlytwo resolutions, whereas there waspreviously no limit. POLIT recog-PRO-E(.£cBEFo*e.s„ *°44 0°N°r,onNo dripping, no spilling! Covers completely!Old Spice Pro-Electric protects sensitiveskin areas from razor pull, burn. Sets upyour beard for the cleanest, closest,most comfortable shave ever! 1.00SHU LT O N TH4r nizes this as a sincere attempt toallow the Congress to concentrateits efforts on significant resolu¬tions. However, we believe thatit might prevent the NSC from dis¬cussing issues of major importanceto students. A POLIT delegationwill work to modify the rule inorder to prevent this.A POLIT NSA delegation willalso introduce and work lor thepassage ol a Constitutional amend¬ment requiring the direct electionof NSA delegates by their consti¬tuent student bodies. At present,many delegates are chosen bytheir student governments. POLITbelieves that for NSA to be trulydemocratic, delegates must bechosen directly by the studentswhom they are to represent.A third reform currently underdiscussion is the abolition of thepresent twenty-two regions and thesubstitution of four or five largerareas, each with a full-time na¬tional officer. POLIT supports thisproposal since it feels that mostregions (Illinois - Wisconsin beinga notable exception) are almosttotally inactive and serve littlepurpose.National affairsIn the area of civil rights, aPOLIT NSA delegation will urgeNSA's continued support of theStudent Non-Violent CoordinatingCommittee, of the Northern Stu¬dent Movement, and of the South¬ern Student Freedom Fund. APOLIT delegation will continue tosupport legislation calling forequal opportunities and conditionsfor all people regardless of theirrace, color, or creed.POLIT continues to be a strongadvocate of the abolition of HUACand will support legislation at the16th Congress condemning thisand other infringements of civilliberties. A POLIT delegation willcontinue its work in opposition tothe McCarran Act and will intro¬duce legislation calling for its re¬peal. The threat of the McCarranAct to the civil liberties of stu¬dents is demonstrated by the an¬nouncement of Attorney GeneralKennedy of proceedings againstADVANCE, a New York youthgroup, aimed at ordering the groupto register as a “communist-frontorganization” as defined in theAct. Such an order is against theinterest of all students becauseit sets a precedent for the perse¬cution of any student group thoughtto be undesirable by a few peoplein the government. POLIT in NSAwill urge passage of a resolutionasking that the proceedings againstADVANCE be dropped.POLIT realizes that many stu¬dents bear heavy financial burdensand that any programs which helpdefray the cost of education, suchas ISCU and reduced travel ex¬penses, are necessary and desir¬able. A POLIT NSA delegation will work for the Improvement ofexisting programs and the estab¬lishment of new programs on anational level which would con¬tribute to the student’s economicwelfare. A POLIT NSA delegationwill press for NSA’s increasedstudy of curricular matters andthe improvement of educationalservices. It will urge that the 16thNSC express its approval of Presi¬dent Kennedy’s National Educa¬tion Improvement Act ‘ to en¬large the federal government'sinvestment in the education of itscitizens.” POLIT favors aid tonon-sectarian education on alllevels and for all necessary ex¬penditures, including support ofteachers’ salaries.POLIT will support and urgepassage of the Youth Opportu¬nities Act submitted to Congress bvPresident Kennedy, which, amongother things, calls for the creationof a Youth Conservation Cori>sto give jobs to unemployed youngpeople, and the proposal lor theNational Service Corps, a domes¬tic peace corps.International affairsA POLIT delegation will urgeNSA to continue its opposition tocolonialism, imperialism, dictator¬ship, totalitarianism, discrimina¬tion, and economic deprivation,and its support of students aroundthe world who are working to endany such conditions ol oppression.We specifically urge the Associa¬tion to continue its support of stu¬dents fighting for their freedomin Portugese-dominated Africa, inthe Union of South Africa, inSpain and in Portugal.POLIT believes that any UCNSA delegation is morally boundto follow the results ol the cam¬pus opinion poll which supportedPresident Kennedy’s blockade ofCuVa should the question arise atthe 16th Congress.The POLIT delegation to lastyear’s Congress helped to draftand obtain passage of a resolu¬tion on nuclear testing which op¬posed testing by any nation “be¬cause of the consequent radioac¬tivity contamination and tlie effectsof such tests in accelerating thearms race.” A POLIT NSA dele¬gation to the 16th NSC will sup¬port the continuation of this po¬licy and other feasible measuresaimed at a multilateral disarma¬ment agreement.POLIT affirms the position ofUSNSA in affiliation with ISC in¬stead of IUS. POLIT feels thatthe positions taken by ISC reflectmost nearly those of the Ameri¬can student. However, POLIT alsofeels that in order for the studentsof the world at large to be hon¬estly represented, the divisionwhereby IUS usually reflectsopinions of the Communist blocand ISC usually reflects those ofthe West should be ended.1510 E. 55th St.DR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometristns THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERDO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS riCLEO CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES** STUDENT DISCOUNT JOSEPH H. AARONAll Forms of InsuranceSUITE 82S135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 Tear out this couponUNIVERSITY OF HAWAII SUMMER SESSION 1993-HAWAII7951SIX $'WEEKSFROM CHIC AGO-ROUND TRIP JETImagine ... six weeks (43 days) inHawaii, the Paradise of the Pacific.During this wonderful summer touryou can attend (optional) theUniversity of Hawaii. Included isround trip Jet travel from Chicago,Waikiki hotel accommodations,sightseeing, beach parties, surfing,dinner dances, hula lessons,and more . .. only $795.00. Plannow for your summer in HawaiilAsk for details.LEAVE JUNE S3 RETURN AUGUST 4, 1963LEILANI TOURS, INC.DEPT. G, 18 LAKE STREET, OAK PARK, ILLINOIS • PHONE 848-7144Tear out and mailthis coupon with your name_ Address.8 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 5. 19638 Cornell students sleep-inProtest code change rejection Pfeiffer SC dissolves itselfIn protest against the re¬jection of a proposed changein the student code, eightCornell University studentsrecently staged a sleep-in in apart¬ments adjacent to the campus.The areas that the amendmentare intended to clarify are: over¬night mixed company; universitydisciplinary action; and actionsof students when they are not inresidence.The Board of Executives of theStudent Government feels thatovernight mixed company shouldnot be grounds for disciplinaryaction. They would prefer a clausein the code which would disallowimproper sexual conduct in all stu¬dent living accommodations underthe jurisdiction of the university.The Board also objects to thepresent wording of the code con¬cerning the university’s right to discipline offenders. The code nowstates that the University “cannotpermit to go unnoticed or undis¬ciplined disorderly and irrespon¬sible conduct such as harmful ordisorderly behavior or public sex¬ual behavior which is clearly in¬decent." The Board would like tosee the words “such as" strickenfrom the code, so that the offenseswhich are punishable would beclearer.Finally, The Board feels that theUniversity, in exerting its powerover students while they are notin residence, is interfering with thestudent’s private life. It acknowl¬edges the university’s power topunish students for violations oc¬curring while the student is inresidence, but feels that the uni¬versity cannot legitimately expectto be able to punish students whenthey are off campus.3 African nations join IUS(CPS) —The national un¬ions of students of three EastAfrican countries have applied'for full membership in theCommunist - dominated Interna¬tional Union of Students, the Col¬legiate Press Service learned re¬cently.The national unions (corres¬ponding to the United States Na¬tional Student Association) arethose of Tanganyika, Kenya, andUganda, all former British terri¬tories. They follow a recent de¬cision of the National Union ofNigerian Students to seek fullmembership in the IUS.The unions, including Nigeria,will also continue to participatein the International Student Con¬ference, which includes the Amer¬ican national union and the unionsof most Western countries. Thisrolicy of dual membership in thetwo international student organi¬zations is interpreted as an at¬tempt to carry out the neutralforeign policy of independent Afri¬ca on a student level.The TUS has its headquarters inPrague, Czechoslovakia, and in¬cludes all of the national unionsof students of the Communistworld in its membership. The In¬ternational Student Conference,with headquarters in the Nether¬lands, was founded in the earlyl!)50’s after the American secre¬ tary of the IUS, USNSA’s BillEllis, resigned from the IUS secre¬tariat in protest when the IUS re¬fused to protest repression ofCzech students during the Com¬munist take-over in that country.American and Western Euro¬pean students formed the ISC witha purposely loose structure to en¬sure that all decisions taken bythe ISC would be democratic andresponsible to the wishes of themembership.The ISC has charged that theIUS has no freedom to deviatefrom the doctrines of Soviet pol¬icy.TAPE SPECIAL1800* Mylar 3.49Acetate 600* 98cAcetate 1200’ 1.79MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th, HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTS"When TWO t eterans of TeachersCollege take time from their foun¬dation and government assignmentsto attack 'educationisrn,’ it seems asif the tide is turning. But lookcloser: they are attacking JohnDewey for being too conservative,and the life-adjusters for adjustingto ancient ways. This strategy wasto he expected. ■ for the current issueThe best de- Ifence is attack.’’ I of the opposite sex.Details of the sleep-in are sparse,but it is reported that the fourcouples spent the night studying, MISENHEIMER, North fusal to grant the students’ peti-Carolina (CPS)—The student «on. the student government votedrm. t ,i_ i * , , ^ „ .to disband. The administration,i rh,eMUrK°Se, °f hG s!eep'in was body of Pfeiffer College is acting under regulations govern-wo-ioid; beside protesting against without student government ing inactivity of student govern-the rejection oi the clause, the t , . f fh ti hpinfT ment, took over the functions ofstudents hoped to prove that sexual The stlKlent government of this 1116 student government temporalrelations do not necessarily result snia„ S(.hool voted to ily, and set new student elections0t * membCT dissolve itself following college tor April 4.administration otficials’ refusal to Student body vice president Fredgrant a student petition to estab- Davenport said that he was “dis-lish a locally-drafted student hill mayed and disillusioned. I feel. . , °f rights. Pfeiffer College Presi- there has been misunderstanding ofa mg, and s eeping. The eight dent j Lem Stokes said that he the intent of the student govern-s udents are also reported to be was jn favor of a student bill of ment asociation.”student leaders. rights, hut that he wanted one Thp f.0iwp nresidenf said theentU^XrhnenfTa'^r *** uf desiffned after the prolotvpe biH loeally-draftfd bill would allowentire experiment may prove noth- Gf student rights for all American students to lisurn resnnnsihilitiesmg. One of the eight participants college and university students vvhic.h the facuity should solelyhas written a letter describing the adopted by the National Student have, something which the gen-incidents that took place, but is Association NSA several years ago. eral]y accepted NSA prototype billthe only one among the eight who The 800 students of the Metho- of student rights does not do. Thewants to send it to the adminis- (jjst school, led by their student Pfeiffer student government is atration. He pointed out that dis- government, had asked the college member of NSA.cipilinary action probably would administration to grant a studentnot be taken unless the adminis- bill of rights drawn up locally, COUI"T Considerstration knew full details of the but were repeatedly turned down. n|MHrevening. Irate at the administration’s re- "©Segregation plans# # - - # Th§ U.S. Supreme Court hasl Annif IAHC fllf* C OI h ■ under consideration, followingVVIIVIIUVMO VII VWI. IIIV recent arguments, constitution-A resolution, attacking re- fair and impartial. We resent the ality of desegregation plans em-ront pvont<? and pxtetinp- rnn. accusation of partiality, particular- ployed in Knoxville and Nashville,dltions at thru^ivei s?ty Of ly since such a change implies that Tennessee.Colorado, has been passed by Z w0,uld ^,wi1“”f.,bystanders ,0 t*™ i*™*the Colorado faculty favoritism, it stated. transfer out of a school whichThp rpcnlntinn nrimariiv aHnckc Further on, evidently in an ef- bas become desegregated if theThe resolution primarily attacks fort to prevent further resigna- c.Af.e desegregation has outthe resignations ot President Quigg tlons aIJng the sta„, the re£lu. a Sr v growNewton and Provost Oswald Tippo, tion called “the continuing leader- th to y S P-calling them “not in the best in- ship of Vice-President Eugene Wil-terest of the university” and regret- SOn, Vice-President of Medical Af- - , ,,ting the circumstances under which fairs Dr. Robert Glaser, and all woulc* be affected by the court sthey occured. other deans particularly important decision.“We deeply regret your resigna- at this time.” This is only the second schooltions,” the resolution continued. Finally, the student body was case (the other was Little Rock)“We affirm our belief that you assured that the consignees of the in which the court has granted awere making excellent progress in resolution would continue to strive full review since its historic 1964developing a strong intellectual for “a University at which there is ruling that racial segregation wasteaching and research center.” complete freedom to follow the unconstitutional.“Your administration has been truth wherever it may lead.” —Education USAOther cities in the South haveadopted similar plans whichof NATIONAL REVIEWwrite for free cop/,150 E. 35 St., NewYork 16, N.Y. Nothing else needed but you to complete this picture of filtersmoking at its flavorful best. Enjoy yourself...light up a Winston.One of Hyde Park9* FinestARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRSPECIALIZING IN;Heels ChangedA \ Heels RepairedToes Cut OutVamps LoweredOrthopedic WorkZipper RepairsProfessional Dyeingand Refinlshing ofShoes and HandbagsColors MatchedFAirfax 4-96221749 E. 55th St. PURE WHITE, jMODERN FILTER iplus ; FILTER • BLEND up front©1962 R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.April 5. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • fLiberal platform Purdy: talented but uneven(Continued from page 6)titudes of students, and that Stu¬dent Government should encouragediscussion and action in thesefields. LIBERAL PARTY advo¬cates specific SG stands on civilrights and civil liberties becausestudents appreciate the need tosafeguard these rights and hencethe role of SG should be to trans¬late this concensus into action.In this belief, LIBERAL PARTYadvocates the following civil rightspositions:1) Endorsement of the work ofthe Student Non-Violent Coordin¬ating Committee, and help in fund¬raising activities.2) Endorsement of ideals of thenational Congress on Racial Equal¬ity and support of the Universityof Chicago chapter in their at¬tempts to achieve open occupancyin Chicago.3) Condemnation of any policyon the part of the University ad¬ministration contributing to hous¬ing discrimination in this neigh¬borhood on the basis of race.4) Support of the Northern Stu¬dent Movement, an organizationdedicated to combatting racialprejudice in the North through aprogram of education and localtutorial projects in urban slumareas.5) Full support to the TutorialProject at the University of Chi¬cago with the hope of directly par¬ticipating in its implementation.6) Recognition of the Wood-lawn Organization as a spokesmanfor the Woodlawn community, andencouragement of initiative on thepart of the University to consultand negotiate with TWO on thequestion of campus expansion.LIBERAL PARTY recognizesthat civil liberties as protected inthe Bill of Rights should be theessence of American democracy,and that there exists today astrong tendency to subvert diemon the grounds of protectingAmerican security. In accord withthis statement, LIBERAL PARTYadvocates the following:1)Opposition to those actswhich abridge freedom of Ameri¬can citizens on the basis of theirpolitical beliefs, including theSmith Act which makes member¬ship in the Communist Party acrime and the McCarran Act,which requires ■ American Com¬** foreign car liospte! & dinkdealers in;• WJI• morris• aush'n• riley• lambretta5340 s. take corkdo 3-0707eervice tlinic: .2306 e.-Tlstmi 3-3113bob ?estermg psychiatristCoBEAUTY SALONExpert-Permanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 munis ts to register as foreignagents, a violation of the FifthAmendment.2) Opposition to the House Com¬mittee on Un-American Activities,and to the Attorney General’s List,which designates organizations asCommunist or Communist frontsand is used as a basis for re¬prisals and prosecutions.3) Opposition to the requirementof loyalty oaths and disclaimeraffidavits for obtaining jobs andscholarships.4) Encouragement of students to'participate in political activities oftheir choice and opposition to anyintimidation of them on the partof university administrations, gov¬ernment, or private individuals. In¬sistence on the establishment’ andpreservation of complete academicfreedom for both professors andstudents. , Children Is All: Ten Stories andTwo Plays. James Purdy, NewDirections, $4.25.Like most collections, Chil¬dren Is All cannot be judgedas a whole, so diverse in qual¬ity and effect are the unitswhich comprise it. Four of theshort stories and one of the twoplays are completely successful;the rest are failures of one sort oranother, some of them greviousfailures indeed.“Daddy Wolf” is the best of theshort stories. It consists of a mono¬logue by a strange sort of Under¬ground Man who is impoverished,abandoned by his wife and child,subsisting on cream of wheat andthe solace he gets from speakingwith strangers over the telephone.He seems to be completely lack¬ing in self-pity, but Purdy verycunningly shows us that it is merelyTournament continuesLast night the following semifinals volleyball games wereplayed:In the college House League: Cham¬berlain 21, 21, Mead 3, 14; Tufts North21, 21, Henderson North 16, 11.In the Fraternity league: Beta ThetaPi 25, 21, Phi Sigma Delta 23, 15; PsiUpsilon 21, 21, Phi Delta Theta 2, 11.In the divisional league: Dr. Kildare’s21, 21, International House 14, 18;Hitchcock 21, 21, the Prophets 16, 13.In the B league: Psi Upsilon B 10.21, 21, Chamberlain B 21, 10, 13; andInternational House B 21, 21, Phi DeltaTheta B 10, 19.The intramural volleyball tour¬nament quarter-finals were heldWednesday in Bartlett Gym.In the contests, Mead beat astrong Henderson South 21-15, 13-21,21-19; Chamberlin won over Shorey North 21-18, 21-16; Tufts Northslaughtered Shorey South 21-5, 21-3,and Henderson North overpoweredFourth East 21-6, 21-16.In the fraternity league, PhiDelta Theta beat Phi Gamma Del¬ta 22-20, 11-21, 21-6; Beta ThetaPi outscored Phi Kappa Psi 21-14,23-21; Psi Upsilon trounced ZetaBeta Tau 21-2, 21-9; Phi Sigma Del¬ta won over 21-15, 21-15.Other scores were Hitchcockover Road Runners 21-6, 21-14; Dr.Kildare’s over FAQ 21-8, 21-10;Psi Upsilon B over Zeta Beta TauB 21-17, 9-21, 21-9; Chamberlain BPhi Sigma Delta B 21-10, 21-17;and International House B overTufts North B 21-18, 21-19. repressed and that his desire tospeak with strangers is really aneed to express his rage and shameat his situation. While the char¬acter is a simple-minded and ri-ridiculous person, somehow Purdyputs pathos into each of his ex¬pressions:My wife and kid would standand watch me eat the cream ofwheat, but they was entirely in¬different to food. I think it waspartly due to the holes in thelinoleum, and them knowingwhat was under the holes ofcourse. We have only the onechair in the flat and so my kidnever had any place to sit whenI was to home.The three other short stories Ithought more successful are “TheLesson,” “Night and Day,” and“Everything Under The Sun.” Thefirst two of these are stronglyreminiscent of Kafka’s shortstories in that while the individualactions are described with a sur¬realistic clarity, the whole of thestory is not immediately revealedto the reader. The effect of this isnightmarish.In all the stories is a discovery:that the protagonist, seeminglydriven by mere circumstance isactually motivated from within.Characteristically Purdy revealsthis in a conversation seeminglyabout trivial matters, but throughwhich the characters doff masksthey present to the world.In addition to this art of con¬struction, Purdy has a rare giftfor convincing dialogue; his earis quite as good as Salinger’s, andhe is without Salinger’s relianceon certain New York types. Evenin the stories I consider failures,Purdy’s dialogue does not dis¬appoint.Holy Week, Passover ServicesFollowing is a schedule of religiousobservances on campus scheduled forHoly Week and Passover.Friday, April 5Passover observances, Hillel House,5715 Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.Sunday, April 7Non-denominational services, BillingsHospital Chapel, 9:30 am, conductedby the Rev. Carl Nighswonger, chap¬lain, Billings Hospital.Holy Week services, 11 am. Rocke¬feller Chapel, The Rev. Charles R.Stinnette, professor of pastoral theologyin the Divinity School will preach.Concert: Bach’s St. Matthew Passion,performed by the Rockefeller ChapelChoir and members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, conducted byRichard E Vikstrom, associate profes¬sor of music and in the divinity school,3:30 pm. Rockefeller Chapel. Ticketsare available at the chapel office; re¬served seats $4, general admission $3,student tickets $1.50.Monday, April 8Mitchell Tower Chime Concert, 12:15pm.Passover Service and Seder for Stu¬dents and Faculty, Hillel House, Serv¬ice 5:30 pm. Seder 6:15 pm, SederFilled.Tuesday, April 9Mitchell Tower Chime Concert, 12:15pm.Organ Recital of Holy Week Music,THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH ATTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPalm Sunday and Holy Week Services in Bond ChapelPalm Sunday, April 7, 9:30 a. m. Blessing of Palms, Passion Gospel,-Sung Eucharist, Sermon by the Rev. Roy Lee, D. Phil., Chaplain,Nuffield College, Oxford.Monday, April 8, 7:30 a.m.—Holy CommunionTuesday, April 9, 7:30 a. m.—Holy CommunionWednesday, April 10, 7:30 a. m.—Holy Communion; 5:05 p. m.—Evening Prayer and MeditationMaundy Thursday, April 11, 11:30 a. m.—Holy CommunionGood Friday, Aprl 12, 7:30 a. m.—Litany and Ante-CommunionEaster Even, April 13, 5:00 p. m.—Evensong, Baptism, Blessing ofNew FireEaster Day, April 14, 9:30 a. m.—Sung Eucharist and SermonANCONA SCHOOLMONTESSORI SCHOOLIn Hyde Parkis now accepting applica¬tions forSEPT., 1963Call PL 2-6359 after 8:00 p.m.ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti • beef • sausage and meatballsandwiches • shrimp pizzaFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-1014,1015 1427 East 67th SL TAKXAM-NfcNCHINESE - AMEkICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1311 East 63rd S». IU 1-9018 Walter Blodgett, curator of MusicalArts at the Cleveland Museum of Art,Rockefeller Chapel, 8:30 pm.Wednesday, April 10Billings Hospital Services, main floorwaiting room, 950 E. 59th Street. 12and 12:30 pm, conducted by Rev. CarlNighswonger, Chaplain of BillingsHospital.Mitchell Tower chime concert, 12:15pm.Carillon Concert, Daniel Robins,University Carillonneur, 5 pm,Thursday, April 11Episcopal Holy Communion, 11:30 am.Mitchell Tower chime concert, 12:15pm.Billings hospital services, main floorwaiting room, 950 E. 59th Street, con¬ducted by Rev. Nighswonger.Anamnesis of the Last Supper: HolyCommunion, Sermon, 7:30 pm, BondChapel (Lutheran)Thursday of the Lord’s Supper Mass,5 pm, Calvert House (Roman Catholic)Holy Communion, Rockefeller ChapelMeditation will be delivered by theRev. W. Barnett Blakemore, Dean ofDisciples Divinity House and AssociateDean of Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.Friday, April 12Litany and Anti-Communion, BondChapel, 8:30 am (Episcopal)Sext with Litany, 11:30 am, BondCahpel (Lutheran)Community Service, 12 noon. Rocke¬feller Chapel, sponsored jointly by theHyde Park Kenwood Council of Church¬es and Rockefeller Memorial Chapel,Sermon to be delivered by the Rev.E. Spencer Parsons, Minister of theHyde Park Baptist church.Friday of the Lord’s Passion andDeath, stations of the Cross. 1 pm,Calvert House, (Roman Catholic)Liturgical Service, 5 pm, CalvertHouse (Roman Catholic)Solemn Compline with Sermon, 7:30pm, Graham Taylor chapel (Lutheran)Passover Sabbath Service, followedby Oneg Shabbat, 7:45 pm, Hillel House.Students will assist Rabbi RichardWinograd, acting director of HillelHouse in the observances.Saturday, April 13Episcopal Evensong, Baptism, Bles¬sing of New Fire. 5 pm, Bond Chapel.Easter Vigil, 7:30 pm, Graham Tay¬lor Chapel (Lutheran)Easter Vigil Service, 11 pm, CalvertHouse (Roman Catholic)Easter Mass, midnight, Calvert House(Roman Catholic)Sunday, April 14Easter Mass, 8:30, 10 am, 11 am, 12noon, Calvert House (Roman Catholic)Easter Choral Eucharist, 9 and 10-30am, Graham Taylor Chapel (Lutheran)Sung Eucharist and Sermon. 9:30 am.Bond Chapel (Episcopal)Non-denominational service, BillingsHospital Chapel, 9:30 am, conducted byRev. Nighswonger. •Change-ringing exercises, MitchellTower Chimes and Rockefeller ChapelCarillon, 10:30 am.Passover Services, Billings HospitalChapel, 10:30 am, Rabbi Harold Karpwill officiate.University religious service, 11 am,Rockefeller Chapel, The Rev. W. Bar¬nett Blakemore, Dean of Disciples Di¬vinity House and Associate Dean ofRockefeller Memorial Chapel, willpreach.Carillon recital, Daniel Robins, Uni¬versity CariUonneur, 12:15 pm, frmoRockefeller Chapel. Why then are the other storiesfailures? Three “Home BeforeDark,” “Encore,” and “GoodnightSweetheart,” have all the elementsof construction of the four besttales, but lack the capacity tomove. Two more are matterlesscharacter sketches which boredme. The last “story,” “Sermon,”is not a sermon so much as a dull,repetitive imposition on the pa¬tience of the reader. It is either anill-written bit of existential doctrineor a satire of existentialism whichdoes not come off, because one ismuch more irritated with “Ser¬mon” than with the Existentialists.The two plays, “Children Is All’’and “Cracks,” are consistent inquality than the short stories.“Children Is All” draws heavilyupon Joseph Conrad’s one act play“One Day More” for its plot ma¬terial. Both plays concern an err¬ing son who returns to a parentwho does not recognize him, whodoes not wish to recognize him,and who goes on waiting for theson to appear. Both Conrad andPurdy develop considerable dra¬matic intensity, but to me Purdy’swas empty, unreal. The pitch of“Children Is All” has been calledunbearably high, and indeed Ifound it so, but only because I wasnot involved in it. It was a greatdeal like seeing a play performedin a language foreign to you: youcan see what the author meant toportray, but you remain utterlyunmoved.“Cracks,” by far the shorter ofthe two plays, is the better work.Purdy has here treated a questionof importance: why go through thepain of creation if what is createdis to come to nothing in the end?He has not only treated it withseriousness and tenderness, but hisanswer to the question is bothdramatically and emotionallysatisfying.This has been my first experi¬ence of James Purdy. He seemsto be a writer who has alreadylearned to write well in a numberof genres. While he does not al¬ways hit the mark, his powers arerespectable, and I think him cap¬able of rather pleasantly surpris¬ing us with what he can do—inthe future.Dave RichterDO YOURECOGNIZETHIS MAN?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLU1 N. LaSALLEChicago, IllinoisF* 2-2290 FA 4-6800He is an active member ofyour community and he rep¬resents the Sun Life Assur¬ance Company of Canada.With the backing of thisinternational organization —one of the world’s great lifeinsurance companies — he iswell qualified to advise youon all life insurance matters.He is a valuable man toknow. May he call upon youat your convenience?SUN LIFEASSURANCE COMPANYOF CANADA10 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 5, 1943Calendar of events Rockefell©r choir sings German play opens tonightFriday. April 5Varsity tennis match: Chicago vs.Elmhurst College, Varsity Courts, 1:30plLecture: "The Genetic Effects ofRadiation,” Crossroads Student Center,'Jewish Sabbath Services: HillelHouse 7 45, followed by discussion.-Introduction to Passover and Chants'of the Haggadah,” Hillel House. 8:30P Chicago Orchestra Ensembleby Bach 'Passion' SundayThe Rockefeller Chapel choirs, in almost a one-for-one The Graduate Germanics est for American audiences in thatClub, after the success of its hf wa! °ne °f *he .m°st popular, .. f K" K 1 a Playwrights of the nineteenth cen-Choir will present Bach’s Pas- balance between orchestra and ,10n 01 a e ^n<* tury in this country and has, in-sion According to St Matthew c^°‘r’ *n exposition of the Uiebe last year, is venturing1 deed, been referred to as thei, . ff * story sung by the Evangelist, the into the realm of comedy in its cur- "father of the American theatre.”on Sunday afternoon. choir and soloists serve the func- rent production (Ida Noyes Hall, The present pjay whIcll is aTiie performance will be broad- tions ***** of dramatic characters Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m.) story of mistaken identity and•hicago ..renesvra Trios cast live in stereo on WFMT (98.7 who advance the plot through di- with August yon Kotzebue s Die mayora] bunging in the sma]1Bach anda Beethoven. First Umta- FM) from 3:20 to 6:15 pm. This is aiogue acid exclamation and of the Deutschen Kleinstaedter. town Df Krahwinkel (crow corner)I .»I F1 (SVrman Play: “Die Deutchen Klein-I staedter,” Ida Noyes Hall, 8 pm.I Movie: "Operation Mad Ball," Bur-I ton Hudson Court. 8 and 10 pm.I Lecture Series: "Works of the Mind,I "Philosophy and Moral Values.” AlanA GewtrthV Professor of Philosophy. 64' K. Lake Street. 8 pmArmchair Travelogue to Spain; Inter¬national House, 8 pm.Saturday, April 6 Kotzebue has a particular infer¬tile first time a performance of devout congregation reflecting onthis magnitude has been broadcast die events as they occur. — —live by a multiplex FM stereo in^ Midwest: Encampment sponsors workshopRichard Vikstrom, associate pro- *fessor in the divinity school and The eighteenth annual En-music department and director of campment for Citizenship, achapel music, will conduct the 40 non-profit, non-sectarian, non also has a violently satirical under¬tone, in that it is a direct attackupon August Wilhelm von Sehegelwho is lampooned in the play asthe idiotic poet Sperling (sparrow)and reflects the dislike of Kotzebueweekend Conference Begins: "Crisis voice Rockefeller Chapel Choir, 25 nflrtioon odimitionol nvo-iniAround the World.” Student Peace Un- members of the Chicago Symphony Pa\.n’ educational Olgam-^‘nance workshop: Ida Noyes Orchestra, and seven soloists in za 10n\ ,wlU sP°nsor its six pie having wide experience inworld affairs. Several colleges are f°r the towns of Weimar and Jenaoffering academic credit for En- the centers of German literarycampment attendance or special classicism in the later eighteenthprojects done there.Kolk Bance workshop:Hull. 2 pm. A _ .Varsity track meet, Chicago vs. Al-, bion College, 2 pnvGerman play: "Die Deutchen Klein-staedter,” Ida Noyes Hall, 2 pm.Television series, “The PrairieGiant ’’ "The Story of Jane Addams,”Perrin Lowrey. Associate Professor ofHumanities, host, WBBM-TV, 3 pm.Play: "Die Deutchen Kleinstaedter,’Ida Noyes Hall. 8 pm. lT . ., . . ... , ,Concert: International Society for University organist, will play theContemporary Music, Mandel Hall, oontinuo.Orchestra, and seven soloiststhis traditional Palm Sunday event.Featured soloists will be JacksonSheats as Evangelist, and SherrillMilnes as Christ; also, PeggySmith, Charlotte Brent, Elsa week workshop experience in dem¬ocratic education thiJune 30 to August 10.Purpose of the Encampment,founded in 1946, is experience in century.Kotzebue attacks the small-mindedness of the inhabitants ofAny person between the ages ofor ratio education thU vear from 18 and 23 may aPP]Y for anY o£ V ^the three Encampments being of- Jena while poking fun at the typi-fered simultaneously.The cost of tuition, room andboard for the six week session is cal German love of high-soundingbut almost meaningless titles.Those taking part include Pro-ChaHesion. Roger Piliet, and Ar- fio^^recreahofal^Tnd11 cultural 5350, but financial aid is available, lessors Goff and Hiller as well aswin Schweig. Edward Mondelio, „_1_5_CC All students wishing further in- many other members of last year'sformation or application blanks cast, the costumes have been de-should write to Encampment for signed by Pamela Northcott andCitizenship, 2 West 64th St., New the play is directed by KennethThe work is cast in a series ofmusical scenes employing twoequal orchestras and two equalClassifiedAPTS., ROOMS, ETC.ROOM and Kitchen privileges in ex¬change for baby sitting. Female pre¬ferred. BU 8-6672. programs. Encampers participatein self-government, election ofleaders, and planning their pro¬gram.Basic topics of the study pro¬gram include: the history andmeaning of democracy, humanresources and their effective use.fairs. Educational methods usedare lectures, workshops, discus¬sion groups, and field trips.S 30 pm. „ , ...Radio series: "The Sacred Note.Sacred choral music by RockefellerChapel Choir, WBBM. 10.45 pm.Sunday. April 7Roman Catholic Mass: Calvert House,7 .30, 10, 11 and 12 am.Radio series: "Faith of Our Fathers,"WBBM. 8:30 am.Lutheran Communion: Taylor Chapel,9 am.Episcopal Sung Eucharist with Ser¬mon: Bond Chapel, 9:30 am.University religious service: Rocke¬feller Chapel, 11 am.Radio series,’’ "From the Midway."Foreign Policy and Domestic Uto¬pias,” John P. Roche, Visiting Profes¬sor of Political Science, WFMF. 11 am.Carillon Recital: Mr. Robins, 3 pm.Track meet: Stagg Field. 3 pm.Public lecture: Dr. J. B. Rhine, hold¬er of BS, MS, PHD from UC. on "Pro¬gress and Prospects in Parapsychol¬ogy," McCormick Place. 3 pm.Lecture: "Tradition and Revolt inIndian Poetry.” in English, FosterCommons Room, 4 pm.Radio series: FromThe Ghandian Theoryance,” Raghaven Iyer. FeUow andLecturer in Politics, Oxford University,WAIT. 5:15 pm.Lecture: "FreudBrent House, 7.30 pm. Latin, Greek, French and GermanFolk dancing: Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 Open 11 am to 9 pm. 2915 W. Cermakpm ( Road. FR 6-6992 or 247 *264.Discussion “Election Issues,” West MODERN 9 piece dining room set and quarter are Bach S Peasant Can-White Antique Satin drapes. Priced »» from Rpmstein’sreasonable. CaU BU 8-6642.56 VW, perfect condition, original own¬er, best offer. 643-4552. York 23. New York.Seeger benefit setPete Seeger will appear withnatural resources and the econom- a group of Freedom Singers in situationsic system, and international af- a folk music program at the in English "wdl be provided, - *U~J- •—>» Opera House on Saturday,April 13.All members of the Freedom Northcott.For (hose members of the au¬dience whose German has becomea little rusty or who are willing torely upon the visual comedy of thea synopsis of the playIncidentally, the company hasbeen invited to perform the playIMMEDIATE occupancy, 4‘i roomsunfurnished. Fireplace, screen porch,quiet bldg. 1154 E. 54th PI. $95 permonth, 2nd floor. Call DR 3-3735 after5 pm.WANTED2 USED—late model, medium sizedportable typewriter. Call HY 3-3256. The faculty consists of university worked as field audiences in Milwaukee underr i non. Singers nave worked as neia ausnif.ps nf thp flnpthethere.professors and professional peo Non^o- ,he auspices oI the Gocthe Hauslent Co - ordinating Committee(SNCC) in its work to register Tickets are available, price $1.00Negroes in the South and other °r 51.50 (student rates), at NO 7-which «,r°iects- , ,• j *. • Tickets are on sale for $2. $3,was organized to sing simple ^ Qr ^ -n lhe Reynolds clubGleeful Club seekssingers and pianistsThe Gleeful Club, 5063 or at the door.Kenneth NorthcottHaggadah,*House, 8 pm.Monday, April 9Discussion: "KibbutzHillel House. 4:30 pm.Passover Service: Hillel House, 5:30Seder: Hillel House, 6:15 HI - FI Equipment: CONCERTONEmodel 20/20 professional recorder, $200.Knight 50 Stereo All-transistor ampli¬fier, $70. Stephens 15 inch theatrepm.PassoverF1 u te/'S Mon gu 1 * a n dMI a j put° Pa i n ti n g* 'i n speaker with reflex cabinet (Cost newthe 16th century, "Chinese CeramicsThrough the Ages,” and 'ChineseBronze,” SS 122, 8 pm.ART EXHIBITS tata,” selections from Bernstein s"West Side Story,” Dawson’s “StealAway,” and Schroth’s "Shenan¬doah.” A concert will be held onMay 12.1 Radio18series:' From the Midway. OBVIOUSLY, copyreaders for the Ma- classical music, Spirituals, co'rridor from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m."The Ghandian Theory of Non-Resist- room 5:15-6 pm. 1 day a week. f()lk song.s an() sj10W tuneS, weekdays. Proceeds from thesefor sale will hold its last open meeting tickets will go to SNCC.and Christianity,” must sell books, all fields, in Italian. Monday, on the second floor of Ida Further information is avail-Noyes Hall. . able from Steve Fortgang, of UCIncluded in the music for this Friends of SNCC, at BU 8-5121.TIKI TOPICSHave you beard! CIRALS,HOUSE OF TIKI is servinglunch! Stopped in with friendsfor lunch the other day, andwhat a pleasant surprise. Oneof the Daily Lunch Specialsw’as Fried Chicken SandwichPlate for 90e. The Special ofthe Day "Beef Stew*’ wasdelicious for only $1.00. Cock¬tails are available. Kitchen isopen from 11:00 A.M. to3:00 A.M.CIRALS, HOUSE OF TIKI1510 Hyde Park.Blvd.LI 8-758551st and Lake ParkPaintings of Malta, Goodspeed Hall,10 am to 5 pm.Photographs of William Muncke, UCCenter for Continuing Education, 9 amto 9 pm.JiOMEOF THE FLAMING! $350), $100 Rekout Table, arm, G.E.Stereo Cartridge, $80. 12" E.V. SP12Bin Cabinet, $40. Bogen DB10—new tubes,$25. The whole lot for $400. Call RobMcNamara, ext. 3273 or write c/oS.G. Office Ida Noyes Hall.I-KABAB and ‘TENDER STEAKS■% •URREYaitiLake Shore DriveI—J PERSONALSONLY 8 more cycles to go, Joe.POLIT is AURIFEROUS, its oppositionmerely ARGILIFEROUS.WILL build Zuckermann Harpsichordto your order. Beautiful hand craftedcabinet. Del. $600. Phone GR 7-0940.EXP. typing done at home. HY 3-2438.VOTE for Alan Sussman. He’s a goodguy.THE ADMINISTRATION—ROWEANN S margins are lovely to look at.JOHN MARTIN is surly.I am NOT. J. M.I FIRMLY believe there should be bet¬ter student-faculty-administration rela¬tions. Rowe. CINEMA THEATERChicago Ave. at MichiganNow Playing"DAVID and USA"Nominator for 2Academy Awards’’BEST AMERICANFILM OF 1962”TIME MAG.Winner San Francisco andVenice Film FestivalsBEST PICTURE.ACTOR AND ACTRESSStudent Rates $1Daily Except Saturday UponPresentation of ID CardsPUBLIC LECTURESBased onTHE DIVINE LOVE AND WISDOMby Emanuel Swedenborg*Tuesday evenings at 8 o'clock atTHE SWEDENBORG CENTER5710 Wood lawn AvenueThe speaker: Mildred K. Billings, Ph.D.Resident LecturerApril 9 - Swedenborg and the Language of the BibleApril 16 - Samuel Taylor Coleridge andthe Language of the BibleApril 23 - Horace Bushnell and the Language of the BibleApril 30 - Whence Comes the Human Form?May 7 - The Heat and Light of Man’s SpiritMay 14 - Man’s Graded MindMay 21 - A Universe of UsesMay 28 - What the Heart and Lungs Can Teach Man*Of this work, Helen Keller said: "Divine Love and Wisdom is afountain of life I am always happy to be near.” The book is availableat Woodworth’s and the University of Chicago Bookstore at 50cper copy. Admission Is without ticket and without chart*. DEARBORN“AMUSING, AMAZING’’— TIMETHERELUCTANTSAINTMAXMILIAN SCHELLRiCMOO MONTALBAN AT DIVISIONChicago's most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films.STUDENTSToliu advantage of thespecial discount avail¬able to you. 90£ any dayexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. card to the cashier.JBILLYBUODPETER USTINOVROBERT RYAN•TERENCE STAMP- ., MAGNIFICENT- new romren „«"STUNNING!.. the kind ot electricity Msst re calledspecteclts aim st but seldom •clUxviP• At Y. HfRALO- TRWUNt“BEAUTIFUL,TERRIFYING!”. mt MAOAZtMidSpecie! student rets of HAS in•Poet during this sngsgsmentfnly (except Saturday niahtl. **** A .JOY!”•A r, OAKYRtWS lhe secondcheapestway to seeEurope...Walking is cheaper. (Bicycles?Square!) But if you’re going throughEurope by car this summer, andwant accommodations for 15* to 35*per day, you need this book!CAMPING THROUGH EUROPEBY CAR is packed with informationyou just can't do without. Here’sjust a sampling from this amazingpays-its-own-way guidebook:• A complete evaluation of camp¬sites fall classes) in Western Eu¬rope, Central, Southern, NorthernEurope, the Scandinavian coun¬tries, England and Scotland.• Everything you need to knowabout buying or renting your carin Europe: how, where, shipping,and re-selling at maximum profit-plus invaluable info on fuels,maintenance and repairs.• A bip guide tooS-the-beaten-pathattractions which the averagetourist never sees.• Special section on Europe’s fab¬ulous sports events and festivalsall summer long.eThe monetary exebange-andhow to make it pay off for you.e Handy, parallel, “instant” phrase¬making columns-that will get youresults in 8 European languages.• Easy-to-read campsite maps forevery country in Europe-includ¬ing distances between sites-soyou can plan ahead.a A checklist of what essentials tobring along-and what you shouldleave behind.And a few thousand more tipsthat will save you time, money,and embarrassment, and help youhave a ball.Order vour ropy of CAMPINGTHROUGH EUROPE BY CARtoday. Only $2.95 now at yourbookstore or direct from CROU VPUBLISHERS, Dept CC, 419Park Avenue, South, N. Y. 16.Refund in 10 days if not delighted.April 5, m3 .-CHICAGO MAROON • UDespres analyzes Daley rise“Daley is not a reformer,” stated 5th W ard Alderman Leon Despres during a SocialSciences 2 lecture yesterday.Despres described three main types of political men:The first is in politics for business but is ‘clean’ about it. Such a man. he said, is Ricli-who struggled all the Attitudes on urban renewalsignificant in Daley victoryard Daleyway up from ward politics to statepositions to the Chicago mayoralty.In so doing, he did all his dutiesin the line of debts, patronage anddevotion which were necessary toinsure his success in the businessof politics. One must be “safe”to be given party control of about40,000 patronage jobs and being“safe” means you can’t be a re¬former. Instead his effort was tooffend few, cultivate friends andloyal followers which finally gavehim the strength to control theParty in the city', Despres believes.Despres called Daley’s route thesurest and most common way ofgetting into politics and stayingthere.The next type of political mandescribed was Illinois Senator PaulDouglas, whose career was dia¬metrically opposed to that ofDaley. Unlike Daley, Douglas doesnot rely on politics as a businessbut regards it rather as a fascinat¬ing clash of ideas ami a means ofreform.Douglas is at base a universityprofessor of economics so that thelure of politics was not for income.From the very beginning, Douglaswas an outspoken liberal and re¬former who, in 1928, supportedNorman Thomas for president, anda little later was a fire-ball onStudents rule againstBerkeley honor codeThe Student Judicial Com¬mittee at the University ofCalifornia at Berkeley recent¬ly ruled “unconstitutional” apetition calling for an honor codereferendum in the upcoming elec¬tions.The petition, supported by theStudent Senate, was ruled out oforder by the Student Governmentbecause the Government constitu¬tion states that referendums mayonly be held on ‘‘an act’ of theSenate and the Judicial Commit¬tee by a four to one vote.Ed Germain, Student Govern¬ment president, argued that al¬lowing the referendum to appearon the ballot would set a bad prece¬dent, and would lead to the para¬phrasing of any motion in thefuture.Paul Hoffman, Judicial Commit¬tee member, felt, on the otherhand, that the fact that the studentbody had shown their desire tovote was much more importantthan upholding a technicality in theconstitution.Shows Africa slidesHenry Halstead III willshow slides of his African tripat a meeting of the alumni ofthe Experiment in Interna¬tional Living to be held on Wednes¬day, April 17, at 8 pm at 1125 E.49th St. Halstead will also speakabout the activities of the PeaceCorps, Crossroad Africa, the Ex¬periment and other programs.Participants in the Experiment,an educational travel plan, caneither live with a family abroador act es host to an Experimenterin their own home. Persons whowould like to travel abroad or behosts are invited to the meetingWednesday.Car permit deadlineMonday is the deadline forfiling an Automobile Use Per¬mit with the Registrar. Thepermits, obtainable from Ad¬ministration 103, must be filledout by those students who indi¬cated in their registration cardsthat they would operate an auto¬mobile on campus this quarter.Students who do not turn in theirpermits by this deadline will beassessed a $10 fee. Students arereminded that this permit does notallow one to occupy a reservedspace in the University parkinglots. Information about this privi¬lege, costing $11 per quarter maybe obtained from the Parking Of¬fice, Administration 103. improvements on the Chicago CityCouncil.This made him less “safe”which caused the DemocraticParty to run him for the Senate in1948 instead of for governor whichthey entrusted to a more moderate,“safe” candidate, Adlai Stevenson.Douglas has been a hard-work¬ing, highly principled man in theSenate ever since, noted Despres.This road to politics, however, ishighly risky and requires an inde¬pendent income.The final type of political manwas Congressman William Dawsonwho, like Daley, considers politicsas a business but is unlike Daleyin two respects. First, his partyloyalty shifts depending on hischances of being re-elected. Sec¬ ond, he has been accused of deale Chicago gamblingsyndicate, a scandal which would a significant role in Tuesday’sbe unbefitting a more important mayoral electionpolitical figure such as Daley. Herman Finer] professor of pmAlderman Despres told the audi- litical science, noted that whileence that he was in politics for the Daley’s plurality was small inopportunity to help solve political comparison with his showing fourproblems. Despres does not spend years ago, it was larger than hisall his time in politics but has anindependent source of income asa lawyer. He commented that heis always suspicious of aldermenwho do not havesources of income. performance in his first victoryin 1955.(Daley won Tuesday by 137,531votes. He had 55.64% of the totalindependent vote. In 1959, Daley polled 71.4%of the vote and amassed a 466.672Despres represents the Fifth vote plurality. In his first electionward, which includes UC, in the bid in 1955, Daley s margin wasCity Council. In the aldermanic 126,672.)election on February 26 he smashed If any election is an expressionChauncey Eskridge by polling of anything. Finer continued, Tues-15,650 votes to his opponents 2,436. day’s election was a remarkableWhenacigarettemeansa lot...get Lotsmore bodyin the blendmore flavorin the smokecjkjd more tastethrough the filter Two faculty members expression of confidence In theagreed that the voters’ atti- ^a-vo',s admi™stration This wasona, ne nas neen accusea oi aeai- a j a i i nlnved austj( prmnari y by the changeding with the Chicago gambling tudes to urban renewal played social and economic onentation ofuvu/iioaiu a co„Hoi u,hi»h wmiM a siornfirnnt role in Tuesdav’a nation, he said.Finer believes that America isapproaching the crest of a nationalconflict which is intensified in ur¬ban areas. It involves the relationship between absolutely essentialgovernmental expenditures and thetax burden. Daley’s opponent, Benjamin Adamowski, emphasizedgreat increases in the tax burden.The people who use this approachgenerally fail to specify how theypropose to reduce the tax load,according to Finer. Against thisirrational argument, Daley had thedifficult task of justifying city e::penditures. It is difficult becausepeople think they’re entitled toservices without charge, Finer continued.“For an administration to carrythrough a transformation of thcity and to stand against irrational,unqualified prejudice is a triumph,” Finer said. He added thatif the Republicans had slated amore rational candidate they wouldhave had fewer votes, since thegeneral body of the people, who aremore easily swayed by irrationalappeals, voted for the Republicancandidate in large numbers. In contrast, many rational persons whoare normally Republicans in na¬tional politics supported Daley,according to Finer.Many whites supported Adamowski simply because Negroes werein favor of Daley. “These are thepeople who feel that urban renew: Imeans the urban league,” coneluded Finer.Daley’s relatively poor showingreflects a long-term decline in hispopularity, according to Peter H.Rossi, professor of sociology anddirector of the National OpinionResearch Center (NORC).Daley has steadily moved awayfrom the grass roots support byw'hich he came to power, Rossicontinued. “Generally, as onemoves from the grass roots to re¬spectability, one becomes less ableto deliver the masses.”Another indication of Daley’s de¬clining popularity was the defeatlast year of a $66 million bondissue, Daley’s only defeat in a cityelection.Voters in many cities across thecountry have rejected urban re¬newal bond issues and at least twobooks are in the works which areviolently anti-urban renewal. ‘Thecity doesn’t realize urban renewalis unpopular,” concluded Rossi.Marshal Korshak, fifth wardDemocratic committeeman, report¬edly .offered an entirely differentinterpretation of the election. Hecontends that Daley’s victory maybe attributed ultimately to his(Korshak’s) decision to endorseLeon M. Despres, an independentfor alderman. If he had not donethis and had slated a regular Dem¬ocratic candidate Despres wouldhave had to seek support from theRepublicans which would have in¬volved endorsing Adamowski formayor. Assuming that Despreswould have won with the supportof the Republicans, Adamowski’scampaign would have begun witha significant victory over theDemocratic machine. Desprescould not be reached for commenton this question.ore from Eiv V,v,xTHE MIRACLE TIPuaarrr i myim tobacco eo.And I£M*s filter is the modem filter— all white,inside and outside—so only pure white touches your lips.Enter the IiM GRAND PRIX50For college students only ! 50 Pontiac Tempests FREE! Raymond Aron tolecture next weekNoted French intellectualand author Raymond Aronwill be on campus next weekas Paul Vincent Harper Visit¬ing Scholar.Aron, professor of sociology atthe University of Paris, will de¬liver two lectures and meet in¬formally with students and faculty.On Tuesday afternoon at 4 pm,he will speak in Mandel Hall on“Ideals and Realities in the At¬lantic Community.” On Wednesdayevening at 8 pm, he will discussthe “Theory of International Rela¬tions in the Atomic Age.” Hissecond speech will be delivered inthe Law School Auditorium.J2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 5, 1963