Characteristics, futureof atomic age discussedIn the second campus lec¬ture last night French authorand political analyst, Ray¬mond Aron, discussed thecharacteristics and prospects ofthe atomic age.About three hundred people,many of them faculty members,attended the lecture, which was in- based on the impossibility of ex¬cluding all dangers at the sametime and of achieving security atall levels. Stability at the thermo-neuclear level would reintroducethe possibility of limited war.Another unique characteristic ofthe atomic age is that enemiessuch as the US and the USSR havebeen put in the position of allies.troduced by Professor of Political The strongest alliance in the worldScience Hans Morgenthau. may well be that of the US and theAron listed three characteristics USSR against war, said Aron. Vol. 71 —No. 90 University of Chicago, Thursday, April 11, 1963 31Russian Poet scheduled for FOTAof atomic weapons from which hederived three key concepts of thepresent age:First, the smaller quantity ofweapons needed for a greater de¬struction has led to deterrence andto the “diplomatic use of weap¬ons.”“For the time being, the threatof loree has replaced the actualuse' of force,” he said. For thefirst time in world history, man¬kind is preparing for a war it hopesnot to wage.Second, the ever-present dangerof attack due to the small amountof time needed to launch a mis¬sile attack has produced an un¬easy stability in which there Is adesire to avoid force despite un¬satisfactory political situations.This afternoon, Aron will give aseminar on ‘‘Is the Atlantic Alli¬ance Compatible with the Realitiesof the Atomic Age?” The seminarwill be from 3:30 to 5 pm in Cobb101.And third, the ability to defeata nation without totally destroy¬ing it has lead to a new relationbetween escalation and limitedwar. While the danger of escala¬tion is great it minimizes thechances of limited wars, whichwould be as destructive as atomicwar for the nations where theywere fought.Aron then went on to discussseveral other features of the atom¬ic age. comparing them with as¬pects of the pre-atomic age.In the atomic age, a balance ofterror has replaced the balance offorce. And while relations betweenstates are often tested by war inthe latter, we cannot dare testthem now. Aron pointed to the un¬certainty in relations under thebalance of terror as advantageousbecause it deters nations from tak¬ing risks.In both the atomic and pre-atomic ages, complete security hasbeen impossible. Under the bal¬ance of |X)wer no nation could beguaranteed safety without the ex¬istence of an international tribunalor police force.The essence of atomic age in¬security, said Aron, is that it is Aron said that the recently in¬stalled direct line between theWhite House and the Kremlin may,b y improving communications,weaken both nations deterrents,which by mitigating uncertaintyof their actions. And yet, this com¬bination of communication and un¬certainty is conducive to peace.In the atomic age, diplomacyand strategy have merged, whilethe aim of strategy has changedfrom winning wars to avoidingwars.Aron pointed out the advantageof traditional territorial defense inthe atomic age. Such defensewould leave would-be aggressorswith the “impossible” choice ofinvading or the “ridiculous” al¬ternative of destroying.In concluding, Aron said that thepresent is “much more tolerablein reality than in the analysis ofthe specialists.”Aron pointed to the desirabilityof maintaining hierarchies andgroups of power. “Taking every¬thing into consideration, the main¬tenance of blocks and groups ofpower is one of the conditions ofpeace, and beyond that we musthope for the best.” by Lawrence LindrenAlthough the scheduled ap¬pearance of Russian poetEvgeny Evtushenko in thisspring’s Festival of the Arts(FOTA) is uncertain, the two weekprogram will include lectures, ex¬hibits, concerts, and films by manyother well known personalities inthe contemporary arts.Among those definitely sched¬uled to appear in FOTA (April 25-May 12) are: authors James Bald¬win, James T. Farrell and NormanMailer, and artists Bruce Connerand Anna Mahler.Evtushenko is scheduled for areading of his own work Saturdayevening. May 11, as part of a tourof 16 colleges in this country. Theproblem is that nobody knows defi¬nitely whether he will visit theUnited States or not.Evtushenko has been attackedsharply for some time by Sovietleaders and his poem, “Babi Yar,”a criticism of anti-Semitism, wasbelittled by Khrushchev himself.The most recent attack came ashe returned from a European tourduring which crowds jammed hisreadings and arrangements weremade in France for the publicationof his autobiography.This dissatisfaction has givenrise to news reports that his visithere had been canceled. But Al¬bert Todd, professor of Slavic lan¬guages at Indiana University wasreported in Tuesday’s New YorkTimes as saying he had “neitherbeen informed of a cancellationnor received confirmation thatthe poet was coming.” Todd is anold acquaintance of Evtushenkoand was asked by the poet to co¬ordinate his itinerary.According to the Times, Todd didnot wish to disclose the cam¬puses which Evtusheko will visitbecause he did not wish to “supplymaterial for campaigns for oragainst” the poet’s appearances.Todd said he spoke with Sovietembassy officials in Washingtontwo weeks ago and that they hadNo one now studying Hindu lawDerrett“As far as I know thereisn’t one man in the worldwho is taking up the study ofHindu law from either a com¬parative or historical point ofview',” stated Duncan Derrett.I Derrett, visit¬ing lecturer atUC from the Uni¬versity of Lon->don, is currentlygiving a series ofecturers on law,religion, and ther state of India.% ; Today he will| discuss the “Ad¬ministration ofHindu Law bythe British” at 3:30 p.m., in theLaw School.Hindu law affects some 400 mil¬lion people in India. “It is thetraditional law of India is nowconcerned with family affairs,marriage, and religious concerns,”he explained.‘ But because there is no moneyin the study of Hindu law froma comparative or historical pointof view no students are willing toenter the field. Of course, thereare many low students in Indiatoday who study Hindu law. Butthey are learning it for purelypractical purposes, and are onlyindirectly concerned with its ori¬gin or history,” said DerrettThe first traces of Hindu law,I>errett said, occur in Vedic litera¬ture between 1500 and 500 B.C.While these are not legal as sources in themselves; there arepure legal texts dating from 500BC, and lawyer’s comments anddigests until the British came in1790.”“When the British came theyweren’t quite satisfied with Hindulaw. They introduced their own lawof crime and evidence which super-cecded the legal standards andpractices set up through Hindulaw.“The dual standards which exist¬ed in India at that time left Hindulaw in a funny situation. So faras the courts were concerned itwas applied in matter of family,inheritance, and religion, eventhough the people still honored itas the traditional law.”“But in the villages where thepeople haven’t the funds Hindulaw in its old and traditional formcontinues to be respected.“For example, if a North Indianboy wants to marry a girl of an¬other caste the courts will allowhis to do so, and their children willbe legitimate. But a geneologistmay come along later and refuseto recognize the marriage eventhough (he courts will not enforcehis claims.”The spirit of the law, accordingto Derrett, outside the courts stillis traditionally bound to Hindu law,and there exists an element ofartificiality in the Indian systembecause there are two legal sys¬tems in the count ry — one basedon case law from the courts, andthe other on tradition.”*Derrett pointed out that one fac¬ tor responsible for the lack ofstudents now entering the field ofHindu law. is that any people in¬terested in law are concerned notwith what the people think or feel,but rather with the practical as¬pects of what the courts have said.“Today I am the only person inEngland studying Hindu law. Thereis one man in Germany, one inFrance, and one in Belgium. Inthe library of the United Nationsthere is one man, and in Indiathere are three. But none of thesescholars have any students,” andmost of them are very old, Derrettexplained. “Could anything beworse from an academic point ofview.”When asked what value thestudy of Hindu law had, Derrettsaid that “if you want to knowabout law you have to have aknowledge of other legal systems,like the Islamic, or Hindu. Youcan’t describe law from one stand¬ard.”From the point of view of legalhistory a study of Hindu law isinteresting in itself, but more im¬portant, he said, was the knowledgethat could be gained about changeand interaction. ‘The Indians havetaken much from other people.They have also rejected manyideas, and you can study interac¬tion on this basis,” he explained.Derrett is in America trying toencourage people to take up thestudy of Hindu law. He hopes toreturn to England in June andtake up the chair of Oriental I,awsat the University of London. not been too pessimistic about thechances of Evtushenko makingthe trip, according to the Times.But the story added, “that wasbefore the press reports last week,renewing criticism of the poet’swork.”Hugh McLean, chairman of thedepartment of Slavic languagesand literature, who is handling thearrangements for Evtushenko’sscheduled visit to campus, saidTodd told him the tour would becanceled unless a formal accept¬ance or cancelation was receivedby tomorrow, nine days before thepoet is scheduled to appear at areading in New York.McLean said, “Evtushenko hasbeen attacked repeatedly—day af¬ter day—in the Soviet press andby government officials. Theycharge he misbehaved abroad andeven entered into relations withthe bourgeois press, having hisautobiography published in a Parisnewspaper.”McLean thought it was unlikelythat the Russian government wouldallow Evtushenko to leave thecountry while the criticism con¬tinued.For the May 11 appearance InMandel Hall, all tickets, althoughthe Festival of the Arts Commit¬tee. Evtushenko is also scheduledfree, must be reserved throughto participate in the “My Life andYours” program sponsored by theCollege.Baldwin aeeeptsAuthor James Baldwin, anotherFestival participant whose appear¬ance was only tentative, has ac¬cepted an invitation and will speakin Mandel Hall May 12 at 8:30pm. Prior to this week, Baldwinwas unable to commit himself toappearing because the date of hisreturn from Turkey were uncer¬tain. The lecture by Baldwin, whorecently published “The Fire NextTime”, will be co-sponsored bythe UC chapter of CORE.Authors James T. Farrell andNorman Mailer will give lecturesand read from their works onMay 7 and May 10 respectively.Both will be in Mandel Hall at 8:30pm.Farrell, who grew up on thesouth side of Chicago, studied atthe university in the 1920’s, is ex¬pected to relate his experiencesthen to a recent visit here, whichwas his first in many years. Hewill also describe what he feelsshould be the relationship of uni¬versities to literature and the arts.Mailer has not committed him¬self to a specific topic but willarrive here with an arsenal re¬newed on a recent tour of IvyLeague colleges.Exhibits Planned ^In addition to the exhibit of col¬leges, constructions and drawingsKrug to lectureon Labour PartyTomorrow, Mark Krug, as¬sociate professor of history inthe School of Education, willdeliver a lecture on “HaroldWilson and the prospects of theBritish Labor Party” at 8:15 pmin Ida Noyes hall which is beingsponsored by the UC History club.Wilson, who visited UC last year,is the current leader of the BritishLabor party, and could becomePrime Minister within the next sixmonths. At present Harold Mc¬Millan is Britain’s Prime Minister.He, however, is required to call anelection before October and as theleading labor candidate, Wilsoncould be elected if his party cameto power. by Festival - Artist - in - ResidenceBruce Conner in Lexington studioand the annual Student Art Showand Competition, two other exhi¬bits are planned.A show of Paintings by Matta,sponsored by the Renaissance So¬ciety, currently hung in the So¬ciety’s gallery in Goodspeed Hallwill remain through the Festival.The second, the Chicago Area In¬vitational Artists show, will be inthe New Dormitories through June8. More than 15 area artists havealready agreed to supply paintingsto the latter exhibit at the invita¬tion of the Festival Committee.The Student Art Competition con¬sists of four broad categories thisyear in order to provide largerprizes than given during previousfestivals. Prizes of $100 will begiven the first place winners inpainting and sculpture and $50 inphotography and graphics. Dead¬line for entries is April 25. Theyshould be submitted to the Stu¬dent Activities office in Ida Noyes.The Competition entries, hungin Ida Noyes, will be judged byConner, University Artist-in-resi¬dence Harry Bouras, sculptressAnna Mahler and Harold Haydon,associate professor of art and col¬lege.Miss Mahler, daughter of com¬poser Gustav Mahler, will give theEmily Talbott Lecture May 7 at3:30 in the Law School Auditorium.Her subject will be “The HumanFigure” and a short film titled,“A Stone Figure,” will be shown.She will also participate withBouras, Conner, in a paneldiscussion the following evening inthe Law School Auditorium on thetopic, “Motivation and the ModernArtist.”John Cawelti, assistant professorin the Humanities, will moderatethe panel which will include BrunoBettleheim, professor in the de¬partments of education, psychiatryand psychology and also noted arthistorian.Official scheduleof ballot boxesStudent Government electionsgo into their second day today.Some 754 persons voted yester¬day. The breakdown by elec¬toral unit follows:College, 518; Law, 86; Edu¬cation, 1; Phy. Sci., 20; SSA.17; Bi. Sci., 6; Soc. Sci., 39;Business, 32; Humanities, 20;Med. School, 1; and Divinity,2.On the constitutional amend¬ment 735 votes were cast, while737 votes were cast for NS A.DormitoriesBlackstone Fri., 4:00-6:00Burton JudsonThurs., 4:30-6:30InternationalHouse Thurs., 4:30-6:30New Dorms Fri., 4:00-6:00Pierce Tower Thurs., 4:3016:30Snell-Hitchcock Thurs., 4 :30-6:305400Greenwood Fri., 4:00-6:00Fraternities(roving) Fri., 4:00-6:00Academic BuildingsBusiness East Fri., 9:00-12:00Classic Thurs., 1:30-4:30Cobb Thurs., 9:00-4:30Fri., 9:00-4:00Eckhart Thurs., 9-12:00Judd Fri., 12:00-4:00Mandel Thurs., 9:00-4:30Fri., 9:00-4:00Med. SchoolLounge Thurs. 11:30-1:30Social Sci. Thurs., 12 - 4:30Swift Fri., 9:00-12:00Zoology Thurs., 9-11:30Attacks housing positionsTO THE EDITOR:As a member of U.C. CORE andas a person interested in the prob¬lem of open occupancy or non¬discrimination in housing, I amsomewhat disturbed by the posi¬tion taken by two of the three stu¬dent political parties.The Gnosis platform, for in¬stance, forthrightly states that“Gnosis endorses a fair-housinglaw for the city of Chicago.” Sofar so good. But, alas, to my sur¬prise I discorvered at the Thomp¬son House debate Thursday nightthat ‘fair housing’ according toGnosis is not a non-discriminatorypolicy with reference to housingfacilities but rather “a generalquota system” (Gerald Hyman,Thompson House Debate, April4th). From further statementsmade at the debate, I gatheredthat Gnosis supports quotas be¬cause they feel that open occupan¬cy simply doesn't work. Yet openoccupancy laws, not quota sys¬tems, have been adopted in threecities and eleven states and anumber of recent reports haveshown that these laws have beensingularly successful both in open¬ing up housing opportunities forminority groups and in preventingany ‘mass white exodus’ or Negro‘inundation.’ It’s hard for me toappreciate Gnosis’ espousal of apolicy which still maintains, and infact gives legal sanction to racialdiscrimination.The Liberal Party does supportopen occupancy but seems unableto grasp the underlying issues in¬volved in the Chicago open occu¬pancy disputes or to be aware ofany of the recent developments in this area. For instance, the Lib¬eral Party platform while endors¬ing a rather full list of civil rightsprojects, fails to mention the mainconcern today of local open occu¬pancy groups, i.e. the State openoccupancy law now before the Illi¬nois legislature (noteworthy is thefact that the other political party,Polit, spends part of its platform indealing directly with this issue).For the record, it should be men¬tioned that UC CORE recently pub¬lished a letter to the UC adminis¬tration and board of trustees askingfor their support of this law andthat a group of 145 of our mostprominent faculty members signeda letter requesting the same. Inaddition, a large number of civicand religious groups have joined ina tremendous drive to pass the bill.Nonetheless, the Liberal Partycompletely overlooked this* as¬pect of the open-occupancy fightwhich is probably the most impor¬tant one today.Recently, the Liberal Party con¬gratulated the Administration onrelinquishing or giving its off-cam¬pus housing lists to Student Gov¬ernment. In doing this, I thinkthat the Liberal Party has clearlydemonstrated a basic misunder¬standing of the problems involvedin view of the following facts: Alarge number of northern urbanuniversities have distributed non-discriminatory policy statementsto neighboring apartment ownersrequiring conformity to these state¬ments as a precondition for beingput on their approved housing lists.Our University, however, has re¬fused to take a public stand fornon-discrimination in such a man¬ner and has avoided the issue by turning their list over to Stu¬dent Government. Instead of con¬gratulating the University, the Lib¬eral Party should have checkedinto the issue more closely andcriticized—as I notice the Politplatform did—the University for itsrenouncement of moral responsi¬bility.For those of us interested in civilrights, it is extremely difficult tosupport either Gnosis which sup¬ports discrimination, even if onlya limited variety, or the LiberalParty whose lack of understandingof civil rights issues would quicklymake it an ineffective supporterof civil rights projects.BRUCE STARKTreasurer, U. C. COREShapiro methods reformedTO THE EDITOR:First of all, let me assure Mr.Steigman (Letter to the Editor,Maroon April 5) that the policyof alloting priority numbers inthe Shapiro Collection has beenon a first-come, first-served basiswith one number only to a singleI.D. card. Supervision has not beenpossible, or thought necessary, notonly because our staff is limited,but it seemed also that studentswould realize that this was the fair¬est way possible to distribute theCollection. But to no avail. All sortsof exceptions and devious methodshave been used to get one’schoice. What was meant to be aneducational, cultural pursuit, andone of the most unique programson college campuses, has evolvedinto a sort of calisthentic grab bag.Other examples of discourtesy,more flagrant than the above,have occurred, but rather than enu¬ merate those, perhaps it is bestto deal with the present complaint.When we originally started dis¬tributing numbers, the time wasset for the half hour before theloan. However, the lobby was con¬gested, the office and first floordesk were besieged with questionsand cries of UNFAIR! Studentswere in class at that time andunable to pick up their numbers.With all this protest, we announcedthat numbers would be posted atnoon on the day of the loan. Stillthe same conditions existed; andthe next time the Collection wason display, numbers were postedat 8:30 A.M. when Ida Noyes Hallopened, and on the day of distribu¬tion.This has worked fairly well un¬til Thursday’s events. Mr. Steig-man's protest was not the onlyone; and, at this stage, it wouldseem that the Office of StudentActivities cannot supervise or im¬pose courtesy or consideration be¬tween student and student. How¬ever, the problem is not insoluble.One student has volunteered tobe at the desk at the time of thedistribution of numbers and secthat they are equitably taken.Moreover, this office is ready toreceive any suggestion or opinionsregarding the improvement of dis¬tribution.OFFICE OF STUDENTACTIVITIESBlasts useless GothicTO THE EDITOR:Of course it is obvious that dieproposed Mies van der Rohe build¬ing on the South Campus is not inthe tradition of most of the otherbuildings on campus. But instead of condemning the erection ofsuch a building we ought to havea holiday and rejoice the occasion.And our rejoicing should stemfrom the fact, that we, at the Uni¬versity, have at last gotten anoriginal architectural work to takethe place of dirty, gray Gothicimitations (and clean new imita¬tions of Gothic imitations). It isonly desirable to maintain a uni¬fication of structure if the originalconcept is worth such a unifica¬tion; the concept of Gothic in the20th Century is not.When Gothic architecture wasfirst constructed (about sevencenturies ago) there was a sig¬nificance to the general design.The actual construction was onlymade possible by new advances inthe use of supports. While itmight have been fitting to buildsuch structures now if the levelof civilization or the developmentof building techniques had notbeen surpassed, the developmentof our engineering ability and thevast improvement (I hope) of ourcivilization has been so great thatnew forms and new ideas had tobe developed to use those ad¬vances. Should we build only newslum buildings in a slum neigh¬borhood to preserve the archi¬tectural conformity? Th?n whyshould we stifle new* ideas justto preserve a meaningless uni¬formity based on an outmoded andthoroughly useless idea of gar¬goyles and Indiana Limestone.J. STANTON WOODROSETo the muggers andrapists of Hyde ParkMO'/'/* J A'21 Great Tobaccos make 20 Wonderful Smokes!CHESTERFIELD KING tastes great, smokes mild. You get21 vintage tobaccos grown mild, aged mild and blended mild,and made to taste even milder through its longer length.CHESTERFIELD KINGTobaccos too mild to filter, pleasure too good to miss! 3IP : - *> - KINGr- '••• • ••' -I GAZETTESi coot t Mv,,, texcee in..I..,,,,.,. )ORDINARY CIGARETTESI 1CHESTERFIELD KINGLonger length means milder tasteThe smoke of a Chesterfield Kmymellows and softens as it flowsthrough longer length.. become*smooth and gentle to your taste. Many of you have complainedthat there are still more than ahundred women in C-group wholive so close to campus that theyare nearly out of your reach. TheUniversity Administration, in sym¬pathy with your problem, hastherefore declared, beginning nexlfall, permanent open season onwomen. The creation of a dorm at>426 Harper (and concurrent elimination of C-group will soon giveyou a chance to sharpen thoseskills that you have been so dili¬gently practicing on the residentsof Blacks tone. Harper Hall willoffer, in conjunction with the near¬by Co-op Supermarket, a widerange of choice delicacies, bothdomestic and imported. But don't, play on the long dark streets aftermidnight, for it is then that theevil spooks and goblins come out• and endanger the safety andmorals of our poor girls.jan howard finderToday's eventsLecture: The Foundation of Liberal1L ligion, John F. Hayward. AssociateProfessor of Theology, Mertdville Theo¬logical School. Soe. II course. MandilHal!, 11:30 am.Lecture series: Law. Religion, and theState in India. "Administration of HinduIjiw by the British.” J. Duncan Derret.Law Building, Room 3. 3:30 pm.Varsity Baseball: Chicago ' s. Univer¬sity of Illinois, Chicugo. Stngg Field.3:30 pm.Lecture: “Homing Orientation in Mi¬grating Fishes,” A.D. Hosier. Departmentof Zoology. University of Wisconsin.Zoology Club. Zoology 14, 4:30 pm.Lecture Series: Personal Contacts be¬tween Christians and Moslems in theMiddle Ages. Sir Steven Runeiman, "WestChristians and Moslems: Religious andCultural Contacts.” Soc. Sei. 122, 4:30nm.Lutheran Vespers: Bond Chapel, 3:0->pm.Readings: from Arthur Schnitiler andother Austrian authors. Graduate Ger¬manics club. Mrs. Susi Nicoletti, actressof the Burgtheater, Vienna. Law SchoolAuditorium, S pm.Lecture: “Harold Wilson and theBritish Labor Party,” Mark M. Krug.Associate Professor, Graduate School o'Education. Ida Noyes Hall, 8:15 pmDepartment, of History, History Club.TYPEWRITERSWe are equipped and staffed to sell,rent, repair, recondition, and makenecessary type changes.See our Stock.THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.TAPE SPECIAL>800' Mylar 3.49Acetate 500* 98cAcetate 1200' 1.79MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTSI • CHICAGO MAROON • April 11, 1963.►r Russian choir presents concert Kennard returns to MissThe Russian Ghoir will pre¬sent a Lenten concert ofchurch music tomorrow atBond Chapel. Stejan V. Laza-revic, a specialist in Slavonic mu¬sic, will conduct.The Choir has been rehearsingsince January for the concert,which will begin at 8:15 pm andis free.Church music from the 18th,19th, and 20th centuries, includinga Byzantine chant, will comprisethe program. In addition, Lazare-vic will give a short explanatorytalk about Russian music, andUCers get chem awardsThe American Chemical Societyhonored two UC faculty scientistsand an alumnus at its recent na¬tional meeting in Los Angeles.xRobert S. Mulliken, Ernest De-Witt Buton Distinguished ServiceProfessor Emeritus of Physicsand Chemistry, and Director ofthe Laboratory of Molecularstructure and Spectre, receivedthe Peter Debye Award in Physi¬cal chemistry.Stuart A. Rice, Professor ofChemistry, and Professor in andDirector of the Institute for theStudy of Metals, was pesentedthe Amtrican Chemical SocietyAward in Pure Chemistry.Mai-tin D. Kamen, a UC gradu¬ate, now at the University of Cali¬fornia, San Diego, received theSociety’s award for nuclear ap¬plications in chemistry. songs in the program will be ex¬plained.Russian music is very westernin style. The sacred music, whichincludes many chants, is muchlike that heard in modern churches,on Sundays. Russian church musicremains traditional and has stayedaway from the changes which af¬fected Russian music as a whole.In the 18th century, there wasno native school of Russian music.Then, Slavic music resembled Ital¬ian music or whatever westernEuropean style happened to bemodish at the time. In the 19thcentury, Moussourgsky and Boro¬din created a new Russian stylewith an imitation of folk music.Stravinsky and other experiment¬ers are noted in the 29th century.Thomas Riha, assistant professorof history and chairman of the Russian Civilization course, organ¬ized the choir three years ago.Since that time, the choir hasboasted 35 regular members whomeet each Tuesday night at 7:30in Ida Noyes.The members of the choir arepeople interested in singing. Veryfew of them speak Russian; thelyrics are transliterated for them.As well as singing Russian musicin the original, the choir also at¬tempts Ukrainian and Serbiansongs. Their repertoire includesfolk and secular music aside fromthe church music which will bepresented at the concert.The choir's most recent concertwas given in January before thestudents in the Russian Civiliza¬tion course as an example of Rus¬sian art. Clyde Kennard, the Negro try to go to school in Mississippiformer UC student who was again>jailed for two years aftertrying to enroll at the Univer¬sity of Southern Mississippi(USM), has announced that heplans to return to his home townof Hattiesburg, Miss. Friends ofKennard also announced the startof a fund to help pay off his debts,which total over $10,000. Dr. Andrew L. Thomas, M.D., acollege classmate of Kennard, an¬nounced that with the founding ofthe Clyde Kennard Fund of Chi¬cago, all other funds for Mr. Ken¬nard have been dissolved, includ¬ing one in Jackson, Miss. Ken-nard’s sister and contributors havealready paid off $900 which wasMidway studio drive beginsThe Women’s Board of theUniversity has launched adrive to improve the MidwayStudios at 6016 Ingleside. Thestudio, which has been the placeof work for sculptor Lorado Taftand many other artists, is nowused by the Department of Art ofthe University.At a tea yesterday, plans for thedrive to renovate the 56 year oldstudio were announced. The boardhopes to be able to raise funds toconstruct a special exhibit gallery,a new painting studio, and conduct a general renewal program in theremainder of the studio, accordingto Mrs. Harris Ward, Chairman ofthe Women’s Board.Expansion of the University’s artprogram is also planned, said Mrs.Ward.At the tea yesterday, Mrs. PaulDouglas, daughter of sculptor Taft,will discuss the history of thebuilding. Mrs. Margaret FrenchCresson, daughter of Americansculptor Daniel Chester French,was also a guest of honor at thetea.The Women’s Board was formedtwo years ago to acquaint womenwith the educational and researchactivities of the University and toprovide a channel for them toutilize their skills and energy inUniversity projects. Kennard was sentenced to seven owec* on a mortgage note on theyears in jail on charges of stealing Kennard farm.$25 worth of chicken feed in 1961, Money raised by the new fundafter attempting three times to wiu Pav existing debts and preventenroll at USM, but was released foreclosure on the farm’s mort-last January after it was revealed Sage, help finance any educationalthat he had cancer. expenses if Kennard returns toHe was given a suspended sen- sc^<M)h aid any legal procedurestence and flown to Chicago to be needed to clear Kennard of thetreated at Billings Hospital. theft charge, and. establish aNow living in Chicago with his scholarship fund in Kennard.ssister, Mrs. Sarah Tarpley, Ken- honor if he cannot resume bisnard will return to Mississippi this studies.month. Thomas said the Kennards oweAfter paying his debts, he would $8>000 to the Farmer s Home Ad-like eventually to attend law ministration on their farm s mort-school, either at UC or at Howard °aSe, $2,000 to the NAACP stateUniversity, if he doesn’t decide to branches on a loan for equipment,and $900 to local businessmen.Address of the fund is ClydeKennard Fund of Chicago, Box4820, Chicago 80, Ill.Austrian poems readAustrian Actress Susi Nico-letti will present readingsfrom a wide range of modernAustrian authors this evening.Miss Nicoletti, a regular per¬former at Vienna’s famed Burg-theater, will read selections from ment of Astronomy, died Sat-such authors as Arthur Schnitzler, urdav in Berke]y California.Ilse Ai-ehmger, Hugo von Hof¬mannsthal, Franz Werfel, and | Struve, Fyvie die |Otto Struve, a former headof the University’s depart-Antn Wildgans. Struve had been head of the depart¬ment of Astronomy from 1932 to1950, was director of the Univer-The program, sponsored by the .. ,’ Yerkes Observatory at LakeGraduate Germanics club, will be Geneva U >at 8 pm in the Law School audi¬torium.1. With graduation coming up, looliilike we’ll have to start thinkingah.nil the future.Mv philosophy i* to lirafrom day to day. 9 That’s fine when you have n#responsibilities. But ehancesare you'll have a wife to think•bout soon.I may just <le> ide to Iea4^the bachelor We. HOBBY HOUSERESTAURANTOpen Dawn to DawnBREAKFAST DINNERLUNCH SNACKS1342 E. 53rd St.t. Hardly likely, since 93 j»er centof all men and women gel married.I* that so? Struve had been awarded the goldmedal of the royal AstronomicalSociety of London, the highestaward in astronomy.William Fyvie, a laboratory tech¬nician at the University for 30years, also died this week in Bill¬ings hospital. Fyvie, 52, had re¬tired in 1961.Fyvie’s funeral will be held Sat¬urday at 3 pm from the CocoranFuneral home, 1420 East 87th st.ClassifiedsAPTS., ROOMS, ETCModern 31” rm. apt. nicely furn., clean,tile bat & shower. 5143 S. Kenwood.SO 8-0439WANTEDVIGOROUS, efficient secretary seeksfull-time summer job. Experiencedtypist filist. Call 2217, new dorm.2 USED late model, medium sized por¬table typewriter. Call HY 3-3256.PERSONALSRide to New York on April 21, 22 or23. Call S. Pollack 648-7379 or Fotaoffice ext. 3569.FOR SALE1962 VOLKS, convertible, very clean6000 miles, radio, heater plus extrasPvt. party 81,800. RE 1-9777.4. Yes, indeed. What's more, youlhave children to consider.4 Maybe we won’t have any.,$. I doubt that —after all. 90 percent of the women who get marriedtoday have children. And, on theaverage, they have all their•hildren before they’re *7.All my life I’ve shirkedresponsibility. Have a Imenjoy yourself—that’s mymotto. Now, in two minuU ,you’ve given me a wife andwho knows how many childreato take care of. Whatshould I do? Where do I begin* i First relax. Then look into .««]*»good insurance... like LivingInsurance from Equitable. Itgives the kind of protectionevery family should have. Helps 4you save for the future, too.And don’t worry—yourchances for a happy family-life are very good. «I should never have roomedwjrith a statistic* major.The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United State* ©1965Home Office: 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York 19, New YorkFor information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable in yourcommunity. For information about career opportunities at Equitable, seeyour Placement Officer, or write WiHjam E. Blevins, Employment Manage*. Happy Easter20% Discount To UniversityStudents and Facultyupon presentation of T.D.Bova Florist‘'W here Your Dollar Has Blooming SenseOff the Corner but on the Square” MUST SELL 7.000 books and periodicals in Italian, Latin, Greek, Frenchand German from 16th to 19th century,in the fields of humanities, literaturemedicine, law, philosophy and all fieldsArchaeological pieces from 2nd centuryB.C. from $1.50 up. Oil paintings andlithographs, old stamped post cardsand letters. Open 11 am to 9 pm, 2915W. Cermak Rd. FR 6-6992 or 247-1264KELLY! KELLY 7 KELLY!At last. Sue & Abel ! !Those KELLY girls are doing it again!9-11 tonight..To place a classified ad, call ext. 3265(MI 3-0800). Special student, facultyand University staff fates.Tea and sympathy « KELLY at 9tonight.Real Cool Special59 LARK WAGONFully Factory Equipped,$395°° MICEWith This AdSOUTH SIDE STUDEBAKER. Inc.46th ic Cottage GroveSO 8-1111April 11, m3 • CHICAGO MAROON 3SPU to walk 30 miles for peace From other campusesThe UC Student PeaceUnion is among the sponsorsof a two-day thirty-mile East¬er Walk for Peace from FortSheridan in Highland Park to theLoop, scheduled for this weekend.Marchers will leave Fort Sheri¬dan at 10 am tomorrow, spend thenight in two Evanston Churches,and conclude their walk at 2 pmon Saturday with a standing dem¬onstration at Congress and Michi¬gan i»i the Loop.A bus will leave the SPLr house,6029 S. University at 8:30 tomor¬row morning, announced Bob Ham-bourger, walk coordinator and afirst year student in the College.Students interested in walkingshould contact the SPU House, NO.7-0571.The Fort Sheridan marchers willmeet a second march, which willleave from Stagg Field, at Lin¬coln Park. The Stagg Field march,sponsored by Women for Peace,will begin at'9:30 Saturday morn¬ing.The purposes of the walks, ex¬plained Hambourger, are “con¬frontation and commitment.”By “confrontation,” he said, theSPU hopes to make the generalcommunity aware that serious al¬ternatives to the Cold War exist.By "commitment,” he continued,“SPU involves individuals in peaceaction. Hopefully, they will workfurther for peace, though perhapsin less dramatic ways.”Leaflets will be distributed bythe marchers calling unon bothmajor power blocs to “take stepswhich leave no doubt” that theyare “no longer interested in domi¬nating the course of world eventsby means of military force.”The leaflets urge massive, non¬military foreign aid to underde¬veloped countries because “theproblems faced by these countriesare not primarily military, butrather, economic and political.”In addition to the SPU, spon¬sors of the Fort Sheridan includeWomen Strike for Peace. SANE,the American Friends ServiceCommittee, and the locals of fourChicago labor unions.Marches and demonstrations arealso planned for this weekendin New York. Newark, Cleveland,Philadelphia, Minneapolis, Boston,Washington, Detroit, Los Angeles,San Diego, and San Francisco.The largest rally is scheduled forSaturday at UN Plaza in NewYork.SPU holds conferenceLast weekend, 75 students fromMidwestern schools attended theSPU’s conference at UC on worldcrises.Working papers and seminarsdealt with Algeria, Cuba, Vietnam,Hungary, France, The Alliance forProgress, and BerlinThe papers, copies of which areavailable at the SPU house re-CLASSICAL RECORDS SALEStarts FriiiayS«e our Friday ad ia Friday’s lUjroom.THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE lated the specific crises, to theCold War, and discussed theirbackgrounds and causes.The conclusion of most discus¬sions was that the foreign policyof the United States and the So¬viet Union had worked to causethe crises and that the US shouldbegin a “democratic” foreign pol¬icy.The Alliance for Progress dis¬cussion group, for example, con¬cluded that the US should supportdemocratic reform governments with massive economic aid andshould withdraw aid from the un¬democratic military regimes.The participants in the group feltthat this policy would stop thespread of Castroism and bring abetter life to Latin Americans.On Saturday evening, DallasSmythe, professor of communica¬tions at the University of Illinois,spoke on the need for students tobreak the hold and effect of theUS’ current foreign policy uponthe nation’s mass media.Davidson made professorSidney Davidson, prominet ac¬counting theoretician, was honoredthis week as the first recipient ofthe Arthur Young Professorshipin Accounting in the GraduateSchool of Business at a dinner inthe Quadrangle Club.The named professorship wasestablished by the Arthur Youngand Company Foundation in 1962in honor of the late Arthur Young,an outstanding contributor to thedevelopment of the accounting pro¬fession and founder of the inter¬national accounting firm whichbears his name.Davidson has been a member ofthe faculty of the Graduate Schoolof Business of the University since1958. He also is Director of thenewly-established institution ofProfessional Accounting of the Graduate School of Business.Davidson is active in the Ameri¬can Institute of CPA’s and theIllinois Society of CPA’s, and isa member and former Director ofResearch of the American Account¬ing Association. Vote on UCLA banStudents at the Universityof California at Los Angeles(UCLA) will vote this monthon whether the school’s Aca¬demic Senate should ask the Boat'dof Regents to remove the speakerban on members of the Commu¬nist Party.The issue will be on bhe ballotduring student body elections inorder to determine “how strongstudent interest in this is.”In connection with the upcomingelections, the Student LegislativeCouncil ordered the editor of thecollege newspaper to refuse anyadvertising pertaining to the cam¬paigns for office.Question grads in SGStudents at the Universityof Nebraska will decide in anupcoming student body elec¬S.G. CHARTER FLIGHT (Long)N.Y.—LONDON/PARIS 16 June -13 SeptSEATS OPEN! BU 8-3045 after 6 P.M. tion whether graduate stu¬dents will be represented in thestudent council.The proposed amendment to thestudent council constitution wouldgroup all of bhe graduate unitstogether. The quota of graduaterepresentatives could be filled bystudents from any of the graduateschools. There would be one gradu¬ate representative for every 500students.The student council passed anamendment which provides for vot¬ing by secret ballot and for a re¬call election if thirty-five per centof the student body petition for it.Limit number of pupilsRep. Carroll Newton, amember of the MichiganHouse of Representatives hassubmitted a resolution to thelegislature which would limit bhenumber of full-time students in astate-controlled institution to 27,500.Newton contends that the smallerstate-supported schools should ex¬pand in order to accommodate theincreasing number of college-bound students.Michigan State University (MSU)and the University of Michigan(UM) each have 21,000 to 22,000full-time students enrolled.Opponents to the size-limit con¬tend that it would be much easierto let the large institutions expandbecause of their already great re-Get LuckyPlay "Crazy Questions"(Rosed on the hilarious book "The Question Man.")50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE’S HOW:First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up witha nutty, surprising question for it, and you”ve done a“Crazy Question." It’s the easy new way for students tomake loot. 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