■Maroon poll No. 4C-Group girls object to Harper Interfaith colloquium slatedJews and Protestants will and author, will speak at the din-meet to exploie the similan- 0ther Molars of the two faithsThe residents of C Group Sider living in 5426 Harper next ate men’s dormitory, but there is ties and differences between include Paul Ricoeur, of the Uni-almost unanimously object to year stated that her parents no place else to put women. their faiths at a seminal’ on versity of Paris; Nahum N.the prospect of living in the wanted her to live in the dorm A proposal whereby some under- Tuesday, sponsored by the Divinity UnWorsi^, andnew women’s dorm at 5426 system, and that the new dorm graduate women would live in the school of UC and the Anti-Defama- 1 ’ °r WCS Gin niverHarper next year, according to a was the closest approximation to first and second floors of Pierce tion League of B nai B rith’ Public sessions will be held inMaroon poll taken yesterday. C Group, in that it offered close Tower was found to be impractical ^ie c°hoquium, called Perspec- ^e Law School auditorium, 112129 of 30 women questioned stated community living. * because of the limited amount of w*eUtL*^ S°Ciety’ WiU E- 60111 St- There wm be an admis-that they would not live in the new In fact the issue ^ community closet SDace in each of the pierce 1 C l d Jsion charge only for the luncheondormitory. Their reasons were ]jving was touched upon by many ^ ., . Dore Soli ary, chairman of the and dinner sessions, which will besimilar to those given by residents c Group residents. Almost all of Tower rooms- Also, said Wick, that League's national commission and in the Center for Continuing Edu-of New Dorms in a Maroon poll them agreed that community liv- such 3 change would interfere with prominent producer, playwright eating, 1307 E. 60th St.nuesday: the dorm is too far from jng was ^ ^ desired, but that tlie burgeoning success of Piercethe numerous inconveniences of Tower House system,Harper Surf would make the com* A second proposal, to put womenmunity hard to maintain. in Snell-Hitchcock. had been con-There were also smaller objec- sl(ler^<i hut it too was found im-tions to community living in the Practical because many of thenew dorm, among them problems graduate men now living in theof kitchen space, size and attrac- building are foreign students whocampus, it is situated in a rela¬tively bad neighborhood, it wouldnot allow them to utilize theirspare time as effectively as theymight, and the proposed rates aretoo high.Although the great majority of^the women stated that they had tiveness of living quarters, and the would be unable to meet the higherpetitioned out of the dormitory sys- et-fect Qf dorm on studies. costs of other University-operatedtern, 27 of them felt that, if C dormitories. At present Snell-Hitch- ,Group were to exist next year as Warner Wick, Dean of Stll- cock is the most inexpensive dor-a dormitory, they would rather dents, yesterday reiterated mitory on campus, said Wick,continue to live there. the }l0USing- office’s commit-Many of the women considered . „ . , , , A ,ment not to let first yearWomen live in the new women’s Rylaarsdom Scott Scharytheir housing choices for next yearf the result of a “lesser of twoevils" situation. The majority residence hall at 3426 Harper avewould have liked to remain in CGroup but, since C Group is to be Instead of assigning first yearwomen to Harper, he said, a limitturned into an office building next may bave 10 he set on the numberyear, they were more inclined to °* 1 lird and fourth year womenlive in private, off-campus apart- who can live in New Dorms. Un-ments than to’live in either 5426 der these circumstances some^Harper or in another part of the women might then be required touniversity housing system. llve at 5426 Harper.In most cases, women would Wick, however, said that muchhave preferred to remain in C work will be done on refurnishingGroup for the antitheses of many Harper and that the campus busof the reasons they disliked the service will be rerouted to includeidea of living in the Harper Surf, the new dormitory. He added thatThey pointed out that C Group Harper will be used only tempo-v*fc the closest of the dormitories to rarily for women and that the Uni-the main quadrangle, that it is versity might soon construct a newliveable, and that it is relatively dormitory,private. Vol. 71 — No. 95 University of Chicago, Friday, April 19, 1963Dorm petitions up by 150%-CORE will picket WoolworthsThe number of College stu- doubled since last year. With today tions can be considered solely ondents who have petitioned for the last day for submitting peti- their merits, said Wick. But whenThe University, Wick said would exemption from the residence tions, over 230 students have al- the number gets as large as it isThe one woman who would con- prefer to use Harper as a gradu- requirement has more than ready turned in letters to the Office now, external, more or less arbi-of Student Housing.But, although slightly more than90% of the 104 undergraduates whopetitioned last spring were re-UC CORE, along with other five Workers, the Student Non- continued to employ segregationist leased from the dormitories theorganizations, has announced «?*«”• ll.C^rdi"*,“* t policies when the national manaRe- nl seems Ukel to’drop *arthW-ye^“studen!s wUh' s^that it will Picket Woolworth’s e"d * ,,,em . bie, e„od records" wil, be give,ornoilow, from 11 a,rn. to -p^ purpose 0f tijg picket is to Request for the demonstration Dean of Students Warner Wick preference.1 hm. protest the jailing of 250 Birming- came from King and Shuttles- said yesterday that he “doubts" Last year, assistant Dean of Stu*Tlie demonstration will take ham, Alabama Freedom Fighters, worth, Rappaport said. Demon- whether the same percentage of dents James E. Newman wasplace in front of the store at 211 including the Rev. Martin Luther strators are expected to number pgyyons wjh be granted because quoted in the Maroon as statingC’"‘" " — King, Rev. Abernathy, and Rev. around 2°°- In addition, other Qf the exceedingly iarge number that the policy of the housing officeSliuttlesworth, all leaders in south- demonstrations are planned in submitted. was to grant all petitions “unlessern integrationist movements. other northern cities.Further information about the trary factors, will enter into con¬sideration.Wick said he suspects that firstyear students will find it hardestto get their petitions granted, andS. State St. Demonstrators areasked to meet either at Ida NoyesHull at 10 am or in front of thestare at 11.Besides UC CORE, the picket isbeing sponsored by the StudentPeace Union,-the United Automo- The reason Woolworth’s is beingpicketed is, according to BruceRappaport, head of UC CORE, thatWoolworth’s in Birmingham has The petitioning procedure waspicket "can *be * gotten by calling initiated to coexist with a residen¬tial college, rather than be itsRobie's grandson visitsFrank Lloyd Wright’s fam- Public Relations office. 372-4251.GNOSIS slates there was some positive groundfor denial."The residence rule, announcedin the summer of 1960, requires allundergraduate women and first andmeans of destruction, he said. Itwas intended to excuse a minority,rather than a majority of under- second year undergraduate men toAt a parliamentary caucus graduates from the regulations if live in university housing. Menlast night, GNOSIS slated Don they had good reasons for wanting living in fraternity houses or stu-Cnne-don as a candidate for to live outside the housing system, dents living at home are automa-k i aim juiuyu wngms lam- Student Government nres i- As long as the number of peti- tically excused from the require-OUS “Prairie House” at 58 Starting on the ground floor and „ , , , ... . , tions is reasonably small, all peti- ment.c,, , , s dent. Congdon, of the division ofstreet and Woodlawn Avenue walking up, young Robie was told social sciences, was nominated atwas inspected yesterday after- about the history of the house, its the closed caucus for GNOSISpoon by Private 1st Class Fred- prominent features, and its strue- representatives,erick C. Robie III, grandson of the tural design. He expressed the jerry Hyman of the college washouse’s original owner. hope that the house, once restored. slated for vice’ president StudentReturning to Ft Bragg, North would be used as a museufti, open Government officers will be electedCarolina, from his leave-home in to the general public, and not for b the 50 member Student Govern-San Diego California, young Robie, purposes of recreation, ment next Tuesday at its first meet-, s opped in Chicago to see the jn 1909, Robie House was com- ing since the election. GNOSIS NORC conducting study ofgraduate student financesby Gail KirnbouerThe National Opinion Re¬ director in charge of this projectand assistant professor of socio¬logy, maintains that one of thehis giamifather Frederick C. Robie. q Robie, a Chicago bicycle manu- Four seats are vacant due to ties. a SUvVev on how Ameri- 1S inai,1L, \lls **! vveu 'J*' wask es™rt*d JhT8h ,.‘he facturer. 17 yea.5 lateV the Chi- Other officers slated at the cau- “* * w*?™* hems done atSTofythT~bHemae: Theological Seminary pur- cus were Bev Splahe of the college ca S gT^Uht^tudents pay for ^ Peter H. Ro?.._D,ree,~ _ .r. 01 the Chicago Heritage cbase R0bje House and used it as for secretary, and Dave Beal, busi-C<«nmhtee, a group presently giv* a classroom buiiding, refectory, ness school, for treasurer.mgSaturday and Sunday tours of d temporary dormitory. For committee chairmen GNO-the home, and by Sy Friedman and ^ JMrs. Virginia Weissman of the UCresidence designed by Wright for pkted for occupancy by Frederick ho!ds 29 ^eats in the assembly, search Center is now conduct- main advantage of doing this studyhi.« r J J — - - - is that it fits m well with otherNORC.Director of thetheir education. The results of NORC and Professor of Sociologythe survey, which is supported by at the University, said the Founda-the National Science Foundation, tion authorized the study becauseIn 1957 Robie House was threat- SIS nominated Tom Heagy, college, will be used in determining fed- 0f growing concern over how theened with demolition but Webb lor campus action; Nancy Kudria- eral policy toward graduate schol- nation is losing its talented people,and Knapp, Inc., redeveloper in vetz> SSA, for community rela- arships and fellowships. “If we are losing valuable indi-Hyde Park,* purchased the archi* tions; Dan Reber, social sciences, The survey will be based on viduals because of financial pres-tectural landmark. f°r election and rules; and Eugene questionnaires, completed by 25,- sures,’’ Rossi said, “we should ob-Williarn Zeckenrinrf «lt Chair. Gr<>ves. college, for NSA. All four 000 graduate students in 37 fields tain a clear picture of how theseman of the Board of Webb & are members of GNOSIS. at 130 institutions. It will be con- stresses* operate.”Knapp, Inc., presented the deed c Tentatively nominated are Bill cerned with the sources and This wilJ be the first study onto Robie House to the University S0113^ of the Law School Party amount of stipends received by stu- this subject to combine large-scalelast quarter for the committee on recognized dents, their academic workload coverage with depth. A prelum-Presentlv the Rohie Ho.i«p Ra. student organizations, and Pam and degree programs, how much nary report should be released instoSTTuSd * KTratae Procun,ar' P0LIT representative they fPom outside employ- the fall, followed by a detailed•oarrono1 U a trTmg t(? raise in the college, for student-faculty nipnf and their career plans report. However the effect of this$250,000 m order to properly ren- relalions Miss Procua ’ and ‘heir caree .p study would not be felt throughovate the structure and to re-create The“was^ slated without The Questionnaires will be sentits original fixtures and furniture. ^ consent lo students from most majorThose interested in contributing 1 fQUr officers and six com- fieIds’ ex,cePt gradaal® education,to the fund may send checks to mittee chairmen make up the Stu- laW> medicine, and the humam-Mr. Ira J. Bach, Chairman, Robie dent Government executive com- ties other than English Since eachHouse Committee, Room 1006, City mittee *ield 1S divided into the specificHall, Chictgo 2, Illinois. Both' poLIT and GNOSIS will areas, it will be possible to makeStarting tomorrow tours of the hold open caucuses Sunday at 7:30 tailed comparisons between thehouse will be conducted by the pm in Ida Noyes Hall. different types of science orChicago Heritage Committee be- engineering, i.e., the student intween 10 am and 4 pm on Satur- jy|r< Leakey’s lecture is this microbiology can be compareddays, and Sundays between 1 and afternoon, and was not yester- wit,h the student in anatomy or5 pm. The tours will continue day as erroneously announced botany.through the first weekend of June. ‘ Seymour Warkov, senior study studylegislativeyears. measures throughfor severalApplications for finan¬cial assistance for studentsin the college are nowavailable. The deadline forapplications is May 1. Ap¬plication forms may bepicked up at the receptiondesk of the Office of Ad¬missions and Aid.im*II Mil E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & QalleryFeaturing Our Hors d'oeuvres TableT: Free Delivery to U.C. Student'.•Vifc, ON ALL PIZZA|| Complete Italian-American RestaurantJf PIZZA PIESSmall SmallCheese $1.45 Bacon and Onion .. $2.15Sausage 1.80 Combination .... 2.40Anchovy 1.80 Mushroom .... 2.15Pepper and Onion ... 1.65 Shrimp .... 2.40LIMITEDINTRODUCTORY OFFERWITH THIS COUPON25 C OFF ONALL PIZZACHUCK WAGON LUNCH — All you can eat forone dollar and twenty-five cents.BLACKFRIARSPRESENTSASIDEFROMALLTHATAnOriginalMusical Satireabout England todayAPRILFRI. 26th, SAT. 27th, SUN. 28thTICKETS$1.50 —$2.00MANDEL HALL5700 S. UNIVERSITYMl 3-0800 EXT. 3280University of Chicago Letters to the editorThe scope of a reviewTO THE EDITOR:I have not the faintest notionwhether Ray Still is an oboe playeror a cellist or a garbage collector ;I do not know whether the SaintMatthew Passion is the world’sgreatest musical accomplishmentor not; I wouldn’t know a weakentrance if I heard it; and I willnot attempt to hide my absencefrom the performance of Bach'smasterpiece over which Mr. Swanand Mr. Rabinowitz so violentlydisagree. Events have made allquestions of musical accomplish¬ment, tone-deafness, identity ofperformers, and taste irrelevant.The important point in this con¬troversy is that Mr. Rabinowitzhas directed his latest flare ofindignation at being criticized pre¬cisely to the ends of rendering allsuch normally significant matters,irrelevant, and to evading theissue.The central controversy seemsto be that the ,,Tenor” made apoor showing which was excusedby the reviewer, but not by thereviewer’s reviewer. The latter al¬leges that “twenty or thirty” such“shaky pitches” were available forenumeration, whereupon Mr. Rabi¬nowitz accuses Mr. Swan of beingtoo much of a stickler for detail(“he was gleefully counting er¬rors”). Need it be pointed out thatit was the original reviewer whobrought up the issue of technicalflaws in the first place? Surelyhe too noted some errors, since hementioned them, but was not asalert as Mr. Swan in that he failedto note them all, and excused whatwould seem to this observer agross inadequacy in the perform¬ance.Mr. Rabinowitz still must ex¬plain why technical imperfectionis excusable — a matter he neatlyavoided in both his articles—andwhy, if he chose “to dwell as littleas possible upon the technical as¬pects of the music” in his review,he chose to mention “shaky pitch¬es” at all. Why, furthermore,should a reader care what thestate of the reviewer’s mind wasupon his arrival and his departurefrom the scene of the performance,if the reviewer does rtot tell thecauses, including technical, for thechange of opinion?And if Mr. Rabinowitz is goingto complain so much about falseimplications, accusations, andstatements, he should not lowerhimself to the level of interpretingan English idiom literally, in orderto confuse the issue and unjustlyridicule his antagonist. If twentyor thirty flaws “could have beencounted” they were obviously thereand that is the matter for discus¬sion, not a question of whether ornot they were “actually” countedand marked down in a book. No¬tice that Mr. Rabinowitz at nopoint addresses himself to a dis¬cussion of the mistakes or weak¬nesses of the music, but, rather,he clouds the whole issue with ir-relevancies.A reviewer should, especially indefense of his views, confine him¬self to his proper subject matterand not indulge in personal ac¬cusations based on his critic’s useof satirical overstatement. Mr.Swan’s use of a sharp and un¬concealed literary needle does notprove him “incapable of rationaldiscussion on a civilized, intel¬lectual level.” Mr. Rabinowitz, ontihe other hand, has failed to pro¬duce a rational, intellectual, oreven honest defense.GLENN LOAFMAN Passion,” there would have beennothing objectionable to his letter.However, when Mr. Swan puts hisobjections in the form of a gathernasty personal attack on Mr. Ra¬binowitz, the effectiveness of hisletter is ruined, and the reader be¬gins to doubt the legitimacy of hisobjections.Indeed, theTe are other excellentgrounds for doubting the validityof Mr. Swan’s letter. Ray Stillwould doubtless be rather surprisedto hear that he is a cello player;I am sure he always thought theinstrument he plays is called an“oboe.” He might also like to knowthat the chapel at which he playedthe “St. Matthew Passion” was notthe Rockefeller Chapel (since Mr.Swan says Mr. Still was not there).Perhaps the Maroon could get aninteresting story on the reactions ofa man who has just discoveredsuch things. I would suggest thatMr. Swan consult the program ofthe performance.I find myself sympathizing withMr. Rabinowitz on the actual ques¬tion of the quality of his originalreview of the performance. WhileI am certainly not posing as aqualified critic, I must say myreactions to the performance werequite similar to those expressed inthe review, and I found the reviewto be up to the usual standards ofMaroon reviews, which is to sayadequate. What Mr. Rabinowitzcalls “subjective criticism” seemsa reasonable way of writing sucha review.Surely Mr. Swan’s letter con¬tained errors of fact and unfoundedstatements. However, I must pro¬test Mr. Rabinowitz’s conclusionthat this “proves that the authorof the leter is incapable of rationaldiscussion on a civilized, intel¬lectual level.”It proves nothing of the sort.It proves merely that several ofhis “facts” were erroneous, andthat his objections are very muchopen to question.Unfortunately, the two letters doprove that normally civilized, intel¬lectual people sometimes let them¬selves be carried away in the flowof their own rhetoric.DAVID L. AIKEN grass seed. It has been my pleas¬ure and duty to point out this mis¬take to our kindly, paternal Ad¬ministration, and no specialThanks are expected from * thatqr r.DAVID TILLOTSONRESIDENT BJInvective out of placeTO THE EDITOR:Readers of the Maroon on April16 had the dubious pleasure of read¬ing letters in which two music-lovers, who we can only assumeare both normally civilized people,“hit” each other in public.Their weapon was some of themost degrading invective I haveever had the misfortune to readin such a normally high-level placeas the Maroon letters column.Perhaps if Mr. Swan had re¬stricted himself to pointing out anyalleged inadequacies of Mr. Rabino¬witz’s review of the “St. Matthew Save our tennis courtsTO THE EDITOR:About two weeks ago I waselated to notice that a hard work¬ing crew from B&G was plowingup the deteriorated and unuseableclay tennis courts behind BJ. Itook the activity as a sign that thecourts were going to be replacedwith new all weather oourts in aneffort to add the advantages ofdormitory living. How nice . itwould be to be able to get upearly in the morning and play aset of tennis before heading off toclasses! A wise move by an Ad¬ministration anxious to keep stu¬dents from moving out of thedormitory system. I even boughta new can of balls so that I’d beprepared to participate in the open¬ing of the new courts.But today, when I walked overto see how the new courts werecoming along, I was much dis¬mayed to discover that rather thanputting in new tennis courts, some¬how, and it must have been anerror, black earth has-been layedinstead. This is obviously a mis¬take as the Administration knowshow eagerly the residents of BJhave awaited the new tenniscourts, and I hope that our wiseand benevolent Administration,which would only act in the bestinterest of the dormitory residents,will act quickly to remedy the mis¬take before B&G, seeing all thatrich black earth, begins to seedit with grass (or maybe put ina vegetable garden to reduce ytheoperating costs of the BJ kitchen).Luckily, B&G acts with care anddeliberation (i.e., slowly) so if theAdministration is quick to correctthis dreadful mistake they will notsuffer the further waste of moneywhich seeding this large plot (bigenough for 2 whole tennis courts)would entail. It also would beeasier for the Administration tosell the black earth that they willhave to remove if they are to goforward with their original inten¬tion of laying tennis courts if thatearth is not contaminated with Open occupancy worksin eleven statesTO THE EDITOR:On April 12, Jerry Hymanwrote a letter to the Maroon clar¬ifying” his personal attitude to¬ward a state wide open occupan¬cy law. In as much as Mr. Hymantries to rationalize a “temporarysystem of proportions” (quotas)and in as much as he now repre¬sents the College in Student Gov¬ernment and NSA, I feel his lettermust be answered.Mr. Hyman first explains thatlu; is all for integration and thatlie also recognizes that the Negropeople are being exploited by “theimmoral and illegal practices ofunscrupulous realtors.” Here, ofcourse, I must agree. HoweverMr. Hyman then proceeds to“prove” that the "possible socio¬logical and anthropological (whatthis second term means here Ido not know) results” of "an openoccupancy law indicate thatquotas are a more effective meth¬od of achieving an integrated com¬munity.Mr. Hyman's sociological andanthropological analysis seemsrational and eloquent. There isbut one problem — it is WRONG.Reports concerning open occupan¬cy laws now in effect in elevenstates are unanimous in reportingthat there has been NO inundationof white areas surrounding iheghetto as Mr. Hyman predicts.For example, the March 21, 1961,report to the Mayor and CityCouncil of Chicago from the Com¬missioner of City Planning states1 Hat while open occupancy lawsprovide legal relief for Negroeswishing to leave the Ghetto andthus achieve a gradual solutionof the problem of segregatedhousing, they have caused nostriking change in “(1) The rateof residential construction andlent levels, (2) The rate of whitemigration to the suburbs, (3)Property values and the availa¬bility of mortgage funds, (4) Themovement of non-whites into theall-white neighborhoods, (5) Ra¬cial tensions.”In addition to Mr. Hyman’s*failure to predict the actual ef¬fects of open occupancy laws, hisalternative of a “temporary sys¬tem of proportions” in unaccept¬able both morally and constitu¬tionally. As Julian Levi (soon tobecome Professor of UrbanStudies) said, “Quotas are stilldiscriminatory, no matter howgood your intentions are.” Cer¬tainly Mr. Hyman is not tryingto rationalize discrimination; how¬ever his proposed system ofquotas would give this immoraland illegal practice the full sup¬port of our system of justice. Inaddition, the Supreme Court de¬cision Concerning racial segrega¬tion by legal quotas in Kentuckymake it amply clear that besidesbeing immoral, Mr. Hyman’s sys¬tem is unconstitutionally.In light of these facts I suggestthat Mr. Hyman seriously evalu¬ate his familiarity with campusand community problems. I hopethat on the issue of open occupan¬cy he will come to the same con¬clusion as the Faculty Report ofFebruary, 1962, and the 150 fac¬ulty members who recently askedthe University to support the Illi¬nois Open Occupancy Law.RICHARD H. SCHMITTLIES A GENTLEMANLOOK AT HIS BOOTi— BERNARDSHAWPROTECT THTGRA5S-'• CHICAGO MAROON • April 19, 1963 *;Rabinowitch gives four lectures Argonne hosts conferenceArgonne National Labora- the realm of ordinary chemicalTTncrAno Rabinowitch visit- Shorey Night is an annual event various fields. Professors of the —„ , x . ,infprofessor Of social sciences honoring Paul Shorey, 18574934, CBS will then moderate discus, tory will play host on Monday r^!“ns'taWe6”will begin a series of four put,- who was chairman of the UC Greek l\ons between students and sPeak- and Tuesday to the first con- fi>‘° lhe rcst ot the lable-lie lectures on “The Scientific department. A classics scholar ei6’ ference ever to be held on theRevolution” Monday. From 9 to 10:30, two sessionsnoted for hia vast. . . . . erudition, win ^ hel(L professor MarshallRabinowitch, who is professor Shorey was also known for his Ketehuiri and asociate professorof biophysics at the University of XiVrely interest in undergraduates. Joel Segall will present RexIllinois, is editor of the Bulletin ofAtomic Scientists, published at UC 01The P^am will be held in theShorey House lounge, ninth floorHis lecture series is sponsored Pierce Tower, at 9 pm.by the division of social sciencesand the Bulletin of the Atomic To disCtISS Unemploymentto? Victor * Perlo, a Marxist*Science Building ^ economist, and Harry G. John-S‘ son, UC professor of econom-The dates and topics of the lec- ics, will discuss problems oftures follow: unemployment in the UnitedApril 22—Man’s New Habitat States Sunday afternoon. The disand Outlook. James Bates, partner, Stein, Roeand Farnham, who will speak onfinance. Yale Professor Brozenwill introduce Louis Hampel, vice-president of business economics,United Air Lines, who will dis¬cuss business economics.Three concurrent meetings willbe held from 10:45 to 12:15. JamesHarlan White, manager, dataprocessing, Joseph T. Ryerson andcussion, sponsored by the Forum Son, Inc., will discuss accounting.-T-i ^ • on the Left, will take place at 3 Professor Sidney Davidson willApl'i‘ 24 The Dynamic of Sci- pm, jn Breasted Hall. moderate the discussion. In addition to Argonne Nationalchemistry of inert gas compounds. Laboratory, which is operated byThis unique conference comes UC for the U.S. Atomic Energyless than a year after the first ob- Commission, institutions which willservation of a chemical reaction present scientific papers at thebetween an “inert gas” and an- conference include Oak Ridge Na-other element when xenon tetra- h°nal Laboratory, research labo-fluoride (XeF4) was made atArgonne.Chemists had traditionally as¬signed the property of completeinertpess — inability to enter intonormal chemical compounds — tothe rare “noble” gases. Since thetime of their original breakthroughwith XeF4, Argonne scientists have ratories of the Ford Motor Co.,the Westinghouse Electric Corp.,Brookhaven National Laboratory,the University of California atBerkeley and the Lawrence Radia¬tion Laboratory, Cornell University.ence and the New Content ofpolitics.April 29—The End of Historyand Beginning of World Com¬munity. Perlo, a contributor to The After a luncheon in Cox LoungeWorker and to Political Affairs for students and guests, sessionsmagazine, was author of a recentarticle about the Federal ReserveBoard’s Revised Index of Indus- will be held from 1:30 to 3 pm.Andrew Taafe, manager, agen-May 1—The Shape of Things to trial Production, in The Aineri-Come.Admission is without ticket andwitlvout charge. can Economic Review’. He is alsoauthor of many books on Ameri¬can capitalism and on the needfor disarmament.Johnson is editor of the Journalof Politician Economy, and au¬thor of International Trade andMoney, Trade and EconomicEinarson to speakBenedict Einarson, profes¬sor of classics, will be thespeaker at this year’s Paul Growth.vj^Shorey night, to be held at — _ , ,f Shorey House this monday. <»SB Slates WorkshopEinarson’s talk will concern his Nine UC faculty members dub office.1 work in editing the writings of the and eight representatives fromg “pseudo-PIutarchians,” a group of major industries will partici-|| writers who “stood some philos- pate in the Graduate SchoolI ophers on their heads, and came of Business (GBS) Student man-M vUp with some very interesting agement workshop tomorrow.*deasHe intends to deal especial- After introductory remarks atly with the humor found in these 8:30 am by GBS Dean Georgewriters, which he says is “fasci- Shultz, sessions will be held. Atnating, and sometimes almost each session, industrialists willobscene.” present 15 minute lectures on Koch dismissal hitThe University of Illinois chap-made several compounds both of ter of the American Associationxenon and another “inert” gas, of University Professors (AAUP)radon. has condemned the University’sA host of other research labora- firing of Leo Koch three yearstories which have begun experi- a»° of his views on sex.mentation on chemical compounds The chapter termed the dismissalof the inert gases will send rep- unduly severe and unwarrantedresentatives to the Argonne con- fn<^ endorsed the findings of anference to present reports explain- iovestigatk>n committee of the na-ing their research. tional AAUP.Dr. Winston M. Manning, Di- The committee held that the dis-Franklin Evans, while^ William rector of Argonne’s Chemistry Di- missal was a violation of academicMcEachron, director, long-range vision commented on the develop- due process and constituted “se-planning, Standard Oil of Indi- ment of this entirely new field vere impairment of academic free-ana, will discuss capital budgeting of chemistry: dom on ^ the University of IllinoisAt the session assistant professor “The creation of compounds of campus.the inert gases has stirred wide Koch’s dismissal followed theexcitement because these discov- publication of a letter in the stu-eries open up a new area for the dent newspaper in which he con-study of chemical bonding. A doned pre-marital relations underfamily of elements, once outside certain circumstances.cy planning and research, Pru¬dential Insurance Company, willspeak on marketing at a sessionheaded by assistant professorH. Martin Weingartner will head.Tickets for the workshop areavailable in the assistant dean’soffice and outside the BusinessHOBBY HOUSERESTAURANTOpen Dawn to DawnDINNERSNACKSBREAKFASTLUNCH1342 E. 53rd St. | MR. 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Torrence Ave.SA 1-9129 -14 west randolphChicago, ill. dearborn 2-1112AtfettfUmFraternities, 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 representativeHut* i« ilrtitmlApril 19, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3b■|\ li Chem course changed Contests to ciose SOOnThe two-quarter organicchemistry sequence (chemis¬try 223-4) will not be offerednext year, according to JamesParsons, professor emeritus andadministrative aid in the depart¬ment of chemistry.The two quarter course will bemerged with chemistry 220-1-2,Parsons said, and premedical andbiology students will be held forthe first two quarters of the longercourse. Chemistry majors will con¬tinue to take the entire organicsequence.Parsons believes that next year'sorganic course will be a well-rounded sequence in which all stu¬dents will get a good backgroundin alliphatic and aromatic-chemis¬try. The third quarter will be con¬cerned largely with qualitativeanalysis, he added.Earlier this year, the first year chemistry course was divided intotwo courses, chemistry 105-6-7 and131-2-3. Parsons explained that thissplit was made because students’science backgrounds vary.“Since Sputnick, the high schoolshave developed college level math¬ematics, physics, and chemistrycourses,” Parsons continued, “sowe set up chemistry 131-2-3 to becompatible with the previous train¬ing of many entering students. Thepeople in this course must simul¬taneously take calculus or musthave credit for calculus.Chemistry 105-6-7 is offered tostudents whose high school sciencetraining is less advanced. “Thesplit is not made according to ma¬jor,” Parsons emphasized. Instead,the group is divided according toability on the basis of written tests.Next year these tests will be ad¬ministered during Orientationweek. Deadlines for contestswhich will award a total of$1,225 in prizes in the fieldsof English and social scienceare approaching.Poetry competitionMay 1st is the deadline for en¬tries to the John Billings Fiskepoetry competition. Prizes of $125,$50, and $25 will be offered for thebest original poem or cycle ofpoems.Competition is open to everyonewho has not previously won firstprize in the contest. Contributions,which must be unpublished poems,should be typewritten and signedwith a-pseudonym. A card with thename and address of the writershould be enclosed in a sealed en¬velope. Poems should be sent tothe English office, Wieboldt 205.CALENDAR OF EVENTSFriday, April 19Episcopal Communion: Bond Chapel,7:30 am.Varsity Tennis Match: Chicago vs.Parsons College, Varsity courts, 1:30pm.“Hokusai, His Life and Work,” Lec¬ture by Dr. Harold Stern, Assistant Di¬rector Freer Gallery, Classics 10, 3:30pm.Alexander Nevsky: Eisenstein movjp,with score by Prokofiev, Social Science122. 3:30 pm.“New Evidence on Early Man andHuman Evolution from Eastern Africa,”Lecture by L. S. B. Leakey of Coryn-don Museum, Kenya, Breasted Hall,4:30 pm.DO YOURECOGNIZETHIS MAN?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLU1 N. LaSALLEChicago, IllinoisFR 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 CANADA The Celluloid Couch: Doc films,“Pleasure Garden,” "Object Lesson,”and "Ai-Ye,” Social Science 122, 7:15and 9:15 pm.Jewish Babbath Services: Hill elHouse, 7:45 pm.“Chosenness and Mission in Judaismand Christianity,” Lecture by NahumN. Glatzer, Professor of History, Bran-deis University, Hillel House, 8:30 pm.“The Last Hurrah,” Movie, Burton-Judson Court, 8 and 10 pm.Saturday, April 20SNCC Picket to support Birminghamfreedom fighters, meet Ida Noyes 10am.Collegium Musicum: Madrigal Group,Sixteenth-Century Mass’for Easter Sun¬day, Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm.The Sacred Note: Radio Series sacredchoral music from Rockefeller ChapelChoir, WBBM, 10:45 pm. Forum on the Left: Discussion be¬tween Victor J. Perlo Marxian eco¬nomist, and Harry Johnson, Canadianeconomist, on “Problems of Unem¬ployment in the US,” Breasted Hall,3 pm.Carillon Recital: Mr. Robins fromRockefeller Chapel, 4 pm. .From the Midway: Radio Series“How Necessary is the UN to theUS?” Andrew Coidier, Dean, Schoolof International Affairs, Columbia Uni¬versity, WAIT, 5:15 pm.United Vesper Service: Taylor Chap¬el, 6:30 pm.Seminar: "Ethical Nihilism andChristian Love, “Chapel House Semi¬nar Room, 7:15 pm.Open Polit Caucus: "Re: 1963 Elec¬tions,” Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.Israeli and Russian Folk Dancing:Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm. Prose prizeThe deadline for the DavidBlair McLaughlin Prizes for theWriting of Prose is also May 1st.These prizes of $100, $50, and $25will be awarded for the best criti¬cal essay on some subject relatingto the humanities or the socialscience.Competition is restricted to stu¬dents who have completed lessthan two years in the college orstudents in the college who enteredbefore graduating from high school.The essays must be between 1500and 3000 words long and shouldbe submitted in typewritten formto Wieboldt 205. They will bejudged on the basis of originality,clarity, cogency of argument, andskill in use of prose.Poetry reading contestPrizes of $125, $100, $75, and $50will be awarded in the FlorenceJane Adams Poetry Reading Con¬test. Preliminary competition opento all students from the ages of17 to 26 who have completed twoquarters of residency and are reg¬istered for two or more coursesthis quarter. Former winners maynot compete for the same or lesserprize. Because the award will bemade on the basis of interpretativereading and not on vocal expres¬sion, reading will be done from abook. All selections must be ap¬proved by Catherine Ham of thedepartment of English. Four min¬ utes will be allowed in Ihe pre¬liminary competition and ten min¬utes in the finals. Deadline forregistration for this contest isApril 26.Bureaucracy papersA $500 prize will be offered fora research paper on “Reorganiza¬tion.” The paper, not to exceed30 pages of double-spaced typing,will be judged for a novel empiri¬cal analysis or an original model.According to Thomas Whisler,associate professor in Ihe BusinessSchool, papers are welcomed fromall departments, including thephysical and biological sciencesand the professional schools. Dead¬line for the paper is May 1.The contest is an outgrowth ofa social science seminar on or¬ganizations held last June in Pitts¬burgh. Whisler and Harrison While,assistant professor of sociology, at¬tended and were invited lo sug¬gest ways of stimulating furtherresearch in organizations. Thiscontest is the result of their re¬quest for money to stimulate suchresearch in the University.In addition to Whisler and White,judges include Leopold Haim.son,associate professor of history;Herbert Landahl, visiting associ¬ate professor in the committee ofMathematical biology; Lloyd Fal-lers, associate professor of an¬thropology; and Benjamin Wright,associate professor of education.UN confab here in fallSunday, April 21Roman Catholic Mass: Calvert House,8:30, 10, 11, 12 am.Faith of Our Fathers: Radio series.Reverend W. Blakemore, AssociateDean of Rockefeller Chapel, 8:30 am.Episcopal Eucharist with Sermon:Bond Chapel, 9:30 am.Lutheran Communion: Graham Tay¬lor Chapel, 9 am.From the Midway: Radio series,“Nuclear Power and Human Exist¬ence,” Hans J. Morgenthau, Professorof History and Political Science,WFMF, 11 am.University Religious Service, Rocke¬feller Chapel, 11 am. Monday, April 22“The Cultural Development of Chi¬cago:” Lecture series, UC DowntownCenter, 64 E. Lake St., 7 pm.Attila: Int. House, movie, 8 pm.Paul Shorey Night: Benedict Einar-son. Professor of classics, on biog¬raphies of Greek philosophers writtenby pseudo^Plutarchians, Shorey House(9th floor Pierce) 9 pm.ExhibitsMatta: Painting, sculpture, drawingfrom Chicago collections, GoodspeedHall, 10 am through 5 pm.Books of Flowers Herbals and Printsfrom Library Collection: Harper Lib¬rary, first and sixth floor West, 9 amthrough 5 pm. UC and twenty-three otherlocal institutions will prepareand present the Ninth AnnualConference of the U.S. Na¬tional Commission for UNESCO tobe held in Chicago next October.Approximately 1500 academicand community leaders fromacross the country are expected toattend the conference. The con¬ference will deal with the “funda¬mental changes which are takingmArvJTJ3HIRTMAKBR9THE BUTTON TAB HUGGERThis trim tapered-body Gant Button Tab Is now short-sleeved in a cool ba*tiste oxford for warm weather comfort. Its slim-trim lines combined withGant’s new easy-to-adjust button tab makes it a handsome dress shirt•tt«» #ANT aHIItTMAKEA* tooOne of Hyde Park’s Finest WHITE & BLUEARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIR $6-50SPECIALIZING IN: THE STORE FOR MENHeels ChangedHeels RepairedToes Cut OutVamps LoweredOrthopedic WorkZipper Repairs fiAn* Ston,me.Otaron tttth (Samput*In the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 Cal frats end biasClark Kerr, president of the Uni¬versity of California at Berkeley,announced Tuesday that all frater¬nities and sororities on campusmust cease discrimination prac¬tices by September 1, 1964.Although many of the chaptersare associated with national or¬ganizations which have discrimina¬tion clauses in their constitutions,Kerr said, they will be forced toabide by the new ruling or bebanned. MUseum 4-4420 Free EstimatesREASONABLE RATESA-l Express MoversSHIPPING, CRATING. PACKING6760 S. STONY ISLAND AVENUEStudent MovingPRANK ALO PRANK ROMACKStudent Government CharterFLIGHT TONEW YORKplace in contemporary Europe.”It will deal with the relations ofthe European Economic Commu¬nity to national identities of eachof its six member countries, theevolving concept of parliamentarydemocracy, and an evident move¬ment towards international cooper¬ation.The National Commission holdsbiennial conferences on topics ofinternational significance. Sol Tax.professor of anthropology and CyrilHoule, professor of education, aremembers of the Commission.$ 35 ONE WAY66 lbs. baggage allowanceAsk For "Empire City Flight"Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3272,12:00 - 1:00 MWF •'tSets?**}■Getzels discusses research on student creativityThere is a need to encour¬age more “divergent think¬ing” among children, statedUC professor Jacob Getzelsin a speech before the Scholarshipand Guidance Association in theLoop yesterday.Getzels, professor of educationand psychology and a member ofthe Committee on Human Develop¬ment. addressed the group on“Creativity and Intelligence.” TheAssociation is a counseling serv¬ice for Chicago Area students hav¬ing difficulty in school, and pro¬vides needy students scholarshipsfor incidental school expenses.Discusses his researchGetzels discussed research helias done on the relationship be¬tween students’ performance onstandard IQ tests, their perform-ance on special “creativity” tests,and their actual achievement inschool.Getzels has been doing researchwith Philip W. Jackson, associateprofessor in the department ofeducation, year they published abook on their findings entitledCreativity and Intelligence.The research had been begunafter Getzels observed, while work¬ing on another project, that IQdata, which was available for allstudents was considered a veryimportant factor by school offi¬cials.Designs own testsThey designed tests to meas¬ure students’ ability in more crea¬ tive endeavors than the mererecognition and recalling abilitiesmeasured by conventional multiplechoice tests.Instead of having the studentsselect the correct answer fromseveral stated answers, they weregiven a word and asked to saywhat it means. Some childrenwould answer that “bolt” means tobar, or block, while others wouldanswer bar, block, or run away,or “bolt” down ones supper.In another type of question, stu¬dents were asked to give uses forfor a stereotyped objects. Somewould say that a brick is goodfor building or making patios.Olliers would give answers suchas “paperweight,” hammer, or“dead weight” for sinking a person.Another testing device used wasgiving the child some informationin the form of the type of storyon which word problems in arith¬metic are hased, asking the childto make up several questionswhich can be answered with thedata given. Some students gavethe simple, traditional type ques¬tions which appeared in arithmeticbooks, while others asked compli¬cated questions that must havetaken a bit of originality to pro¬duce.Finally, students were given afable without an end and askedto complete it in several differentways, first with a moralistic, thena sad, and then a comic ending.Defines creativity“Our definition of creativity”was not creativity in the usual sense of the word, but rather thekind of ability required to answerthe types of questions referred toabove, stated Getzels.After testing the children withthis test, and using the conven¬tional IQ scores, two groups wereselected for further work: thosestudents who were in the upper20 % of their class in IQ but notin the upper 20% on the “creativi¬ty” test; and those students whowere in the upper 20% of theirclass on the “creativity” test butClassifiedAPTS., ROOMS, ETC.Sub-lease 4 rm. apt. unfurn. on campus$100. Phone 464 during office hrs.3 Female students desire fourth to share7 room apt. FA 4-7838.WANTEDWANTED IMMEDIATELY: Part timetemporary typist for visiting professor;flexible hours. Call ext. 3330 or DO 3-5225.Rosie wants light weights bicycle. Callext. 3611, or call MU 42385 after 5 pm.FOR SALE were not within the upper 20%on the IQ testThe researchers then tried tocompare these groups in their per¬formance in school, the reaction oftheir teachers to them, and cer¬tain “creative tasks” such as writ¬ing stories or drawing pictures.It was found that both groupsof students had scores greater thanthe average for their class onstandard achievement tests. Thestudents who had done well onthe creativity tests did slightly bet¬ter than those who had done beston the IQ tests.High IQ's preferredIt was found that the teachersgenerally liked the higher IQ stu¬dents more than the higher creati¬vity students (although the teach¬ers were reluctant to rate theirliking for students at all). In theprivate schools used for testing,the teachers liked the creative stu¬ dents about the same as the aver¬age student, while in the publicschools, they tended to like the“creative” student slightly less.Finally, the students were showna picture and asked to write astory about what happened justbefore the picture, what was hap¬pening in the picture, and whatwould happen next.The difference between the fivegroups of students on this testwas much more clear cut than onthe others, stated Getzels.Getzels explained that he was“not attacking intelligence tests.The IQ test is still the best knownmethod of testing to predictachievement. “But it can still wellbe supplemented with other tests.”The conventional multiple choicetest tends to encourage convergentrather than divergent thinking, heconcluded. “But we must workmore to encourage the divergentthinking.”56 Volks, perfect cond.. new tires, over¬haul etc. Must sac. Best offer, 643-4552.MUST SELL 7,000 books and periodi¬cals in Italian, Latin. Greek, Frenchand German from 16th to 19th cen¬tury, in the fields of humanities, litera¬ture, medicine, law. philosophy and allfields. Archaeological pieces from 2ndcentury B.C. from $1.50 up. Oil paint¬ings and lithographs, old stamped postcards and letters. Open 11 am to 9pm. 2915 W. Cermak Rd. FR 6 6992 or247-1264.Peace corps test offered 1962 Volks, convt. Very clean, 7009miles, radio, htr., plus extras. Pvt.party. RE 1-9777.A new and much shorterPeace Corps Placement Testwill lie administered Saturday,April 27. Interested personswho have not submitted a ques¬tionnaire to the Peace Corps mustbring a completed questionnaireto the test site with them.The now test, which will be giv¬en on an experimental basis, willcontain half-hour sections on gen¬eral aptitude and modern languageaptitude. Applicants who have anyknowledge of French or Spanishmust remain to take a 1-hourlanguage achievement exam. Appli¬cants who took the eight - hourexam need not take the new one.Edward Henry, director of thePeace Corps’ selection division, ex¬ plained that the new test was de¬signed because “some tests in theformer battery have been foundto be of low validity in relation tothe success of volunteers in train¬ing and overseas. Other sectionswere more useful for proper classplacement in training than theywere for selection.”He added that college transcriptsprovide much of the informationobtained from sections of the form¬er test and that the Peace Corpsnow requires transcripts fromevery candidate.Questionnaires and additional in¬formation may be obtained fromthe office of the Dean of Students. 4 rms. of furn. phone eves, or Thurs.,Sat., Sun. for appt. MI 3-5938.1957 Pontiac Superchief station wagon.Engine excellent. Tires good. New clutch,muffler, etc. Clean and well maintained.But financially ombarrnssod owner mustsell. Biran, ext. 3336 or 288-3986,1956 DODGE. $125 or best price. MI3-2563 after 5 pm.* PERSONALSPrompt expert typing at home. 431-24571 to 3 pm or DO 3-0466 weekends.UC Hospitals selectemployee of the yearMrs. Elizabeth Ash James hasbeen named Employee of the Yearby The University of Chicago Hos¬pitals and Clinics. Selected fromamong more than 1,100 employees,she has worked for Chicago Lying-in Hospital, the maternity and gy¬necologic hospital of the Univer¬sity’s medical complex, for 41years, starting when she was twen¬ty and when the hospital was stilllocated on 51st Street. SUNDAY night's folk dance at IdaNoyes devoted entirely to Israeli andRussian dances. Requests honored allevening, starting at 7:30.WILL the girl who has my history131-2 notebooks please return them tome at 2210 North or the Maroon office.Laura Godofsky.WANTED DESPERATELY: Someone topick a lock. Call ext. 3265-6.Do you have darned up libidinal energy ?Twist away your frustrations to themusic of Paul Butterfield, at the Play¬boy Party, Beta Theta Pi, April 27.Krueger gets FullbrightMaynard C. Krueger, associateprofessor of economics in the Col¬lege. has been awarded a Full-bright grant to lecture at the Uni¬versity of Athens in Greece nextyear.Krueger taught a course in urbanrenewal last quarter, and is cur¬rently teaching Soc I.SPECIAL STUDENT-FACULTY DISCOUNTNow, vacationing students andfaculty members can enjoy summeraccommodations at Sheraton Hotelsand Motor Inns, at special low rates!(Thanks to Sheraton’s Student I.D. orFaculty Guest Cards, you’ll have a.(better vacation this summer for lessmoney! Sheraton Hotels get straightA’s in every department: Comfort,Convenience, and cuisine. And ifVou’re traveling by car Jhere’s Freeparking at most Sheraton Hotels andAt all Sheraton Motor Inns. Get thesediscounts at any of Sheraton’s 80hotels in the U.S.A., Hawaii andCanada by presenting your Card. Toget a Sheraton I.D. Card or Faculty(Guest Card with credit privileges,write us. Please state where you are•full ti me faculty member or studentMr. Patrick GraanCollage Relations Dept.Sheraton Corporation470 Atlantic AvenueBoston 10, Mast. UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII SUMMER SESSION 1963-HAWAIITear out this couponSIX $WEEKS 795 ooTAXINCUFROM CHICAGO-ROUND TRIP JETlidflL Imagine ... 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 Hawaii IAsk for details.LEAVE JUNJ 23 RETURN AUGUST 4, 1963LEILANI TOURS, INC. 1DEPT. G, 18 LAKE STREET, OAK PARK, ILLINOIS • PHONE 848-7144•4Address -Tear out and mailthis coupon with your name NOWSEE ALLFOURWITHmtmCHORE! Advanced thinking fromStudebaker as never before!Performance options no othercars provide!• Caliper disc brakes-stop inhalf the distance! • Super*charged engines-for saferpassing-power! • Unique auto*matic transmission with •'stick-shift" manual over-ride! Realdriver control... and moredriving fun. • Double-safetyhydraulic brake systems, Powerassists!And never before such sensibly-sized cars! Inside room to sparsoutside-size leaves you parking space to spare!So come in and get out of the hum drum—into the excitingnew cars with the advanced thinking from Studebaker '631(Ever see a station wagon with a sunroof in the rqar? We heve &find it alone is worth a visit.)COME SEE THE WAGONAIRE.SOU HUT’S UV...MIE 10 SEE,..SOU FOI YOUR SONET IN '03SOUTH SIDESTUDEBAKER46th-Cottage Grove B0 8-1111April 19. 1963 • C H I C A G O MAROON »UC scientists study space with NASAEditor’s note: The University of Chicago is cooperating withother educational institutions and with industrial organizations andgovernment agencies in sponsoring Midwest Space Month (April9 - May 9). UC’s formal participation in space month begins onMay 1 with ground-breaking for the Laboratory for Astrophysicsand Space Research of the Enrico Fermi Institute for NuclearStudies. During the following week, UC scientists will participateis * number of conferences and dscussion programs on space.by Suzy GoldbergOver fifty University of Chicago scientistsare participating in space research.Under grants from the National Space andAeronautics Administration (NASA), US phys¬icists, chemists, and geophysicists are studying the moon,the planets, interstellar space, and the earth’s atmosphere.In addition, social scientists are considering the effectsof space research on the society as a whole.NASA was set up by Congress in 1958 for the study of‘‘phenomena in the atmosphere and space.” It was au¬thorized to improve and develop space vehicles, and toexamine the benefits, the opportunities, and the problemsinvolved in the utilization of aeronautical and space ac¬tivities for peaceful and scientific purposes.NASA hopes to land a man on the moon by the endof this decade.Planned NASA projects will make available to scien¬tists "bus” space on satellites bound for the moon. SeveralUC scientists will be able to send to the moon small instru¬ments designed to relay necessary information back tothe earth for analysis.Flight to MarsNASA announced recently that UC will have a cosmicray experiment aboard the 1964 Mariner flight to Mars.This project is under the direction of John Simpson, pro¬fessor in the department of physics and the Enrico FermiInstitute.During the past few years Simpson has been designingand flying equipment on satellites to investigate variationsof cosmic rays as a function of time and distance from thesun. Simpson and Peter Meyer, also of the department ofphysics and the Fermi Institute, participated in the 1959Explorer 6 and the 1960 Pioneer 5. They are now preparingto measure the energy spectra for various species ofnucleii present in space.Meyer explained that ‘‘the study of spectra and in¬tensities reveals the nature of physical processes goingon in the solar system. We think that the sun causes thechanges in cosmic radiation, presumably through theemission of plasipas, highly ionized gas. By looking atthe changes in the cosmic ray energy spectra, we can getan idea about solar mechanism.”In addition Meyer has been involved in balloon re¬search. Balloons can carry data-gathering equipment 'to aheight of 130,000 feet, and can radio information and storeIt on board on magnetic tape.‘‘Since balloon flights can carry more weight thansatellite flights^ we can build larger detectors for balloonfights,” he said. “Also, balloon equipment can be recov¬ered and used again.” These flights, which last 15. hourseach, are made during July at Hudson bay, close enoughto the pole to be out of the influence of the earth’smagnetic field.Over a year ago balloon equipment discovered thepresence of electrons in cosmic radiation. Previously ithad not been known that a finite flux of electrons wouldreach the earth, Meyer stated.This year’s flights will study the ratio between posi¬trons and electrons to get an idea where the particlescome from. ‘‘We want to find out about galactic fields,”added Meyer.Eugene Parker, professor in the department of physicsand the Enrico Fermi Institute, is doing a theoreticalstudy of the sun and interstellar space. Parker is workingfrom the known properties of matter and not from gath¬ered data in figuring "what the magnetic field of the earthought to be.”Parker is also interested in the change of cosmic rayintensities in space as an indication of the varying coronas•f the sun. He commented that he uses the findings of Simpson and Meyer to check out his own work.Chemicals on moonAnthony Turkevich, professor in the department ofchemistry and the Enrico Fermi Institute is studying thechemical composition of the moon in an effort to discoverhow the chemical elements were originally formed. Vari¬ous theories predict certain ratios of abundances, Turke¬vich explained, and his research is testing the theories."The earth is a poor sample of the elements becauseit is not homogeneous, with iron mostly on the inside anduranium mostly on the outside,” according to Turkevich.The moon, on the other hand, is a good sample becauseit was probably formed when cold matter accumulatedand condensed. "On the moon, high temperatures neveroccurred and there was no chemical fractionation, so theelements there are present in their original abundances,”Turkevich continued.To obtain information, a device weighing less than7Vi pounds will be placed on the moon by one of NASA’s"soft-landing” satellites. The device utilizes the method ofthe deflection of alpha particles by which Ernest Ruther¬ford discovered the nucleus of the atom some 50 yearsago. From the moon the instrument will radio data whichwill enable Turkevich to determine to 1% sensitivity theproportions of carbon, oxygen, silicon, and magnesiumpresent.James Lamport, physicist at the Laboratory for Ap¬plied Science, is developing instrumentation for Simpsonand Turkevich. "The scientist is assigned a certain amountof space and power on a satellite and we must devisedetector and electronic equipment to meet the assignedphysical environment,” Lamport said.The instrument must be able to translate the data itgathers into a code which can be given to the satellite.The information is transmitted to earth where it isanalyzed by a computer.A model of the instrument is made, Lamport con¬tinued, and subjected to intense testing: extreme tempera¬tures, pressures, bouncing. The instrument actually usedin flight is a duplication of the corrected model.Studying weotherTetsuya Fujita heads a group of UC meteorologistsw'hich is helping NASA and the weather bureau interpretpictures taken by the meteorological satellite TIROS(television infra-red observation satellite). TIROS 5 and 6are currently orbiting the earth.Fujita, associate professor in the department of thegeophysical sciences, devised a method by which the posi-lion of the satellite can be recognized from a picturereceived through telev ision at the ground station."Electronic and lens distortion are graphically elimi¬nated,” Fujita explained, “and then ten different graphsand charts are used to solve for the orientation of thesatellite, the field of view, and the exact location. Thegraphs are computed through mathematical formulae.”Fujita noted that the need for ground landmarks inposition identification has been eliminated. "Almost 90%of the satellite photographs can be analyzed in this man¬ner, and usually a 10 mile accuracy is achieved,” he said.Since 1961 satellites have been measuring the tem¬perature and brightness of the earth's surface using fivescanning radiometers. Fujita’s group receives data di¬rectly from NASA and is analyzing the pattern of tempera¬ture and brightness of various parts of the world."Our analysis discovered an incipient stage of ahurricane over the Atlantic three days before the stormwas detected by surface observation,” Fujita stated. Heexplained that as a result of convection, the hurricane hasvery cold clouds above it, and this horseshoe-shaped coldspot was picked up by the satellite.Fujita’s group is using TIROS radiation data to mapthe Sahara Desert. This study revealed that sand dunesthere are much cooler than the mountains between thedunes, contrary to expectation. Further, the presence ofsmall cool areas in the Sahara turned out to be hiddenlakes.Fujita is designing and constructing a scanning printerwhich will be able to follow recorded lines on the datasheets obtained from NASA, convert this into temperature,and print the information out, thus multiplying by 30 thepresent speed of analysis.Jay Burns, senior physicist at UC’s Laboratory forApplied Sciences, has a NASA grant to study image con¬verters for orbiting telescopes.Images of interstellar space, originally in the farultraviolet range, enter the telescope from a spectrograph.Within the telescope the image tube converts the lightimage into an electric signal which can be radioed toearth. Ordinarily the ultraviolet part of the spectrum doesnot pass through the earth’s atmosphere, Burns stated.This type of investigation can describe the distributionof atomic hydrogen in our galaxy, and tell whether molec¬ular hydrogen is present. Burns also mentioned that thecurvature of the universe could be found by counting veryfar distant galaxies which are beyond the range of earth-bound telescopes.Primordial dustEdward Anders, of the department of chemistry andthe Enrico Fermi Institute, is examining meteorites tofind out how old they are and what bearing they have onthe origin of the earth and the solar system."Meteorites turn out to be .the oldest material,” Anders stated. "They acquired most of their properties atthe time the solar system was forming, so they can becompared to the archaeological record."People believe that the earth and the other planetsarose from a dust cloud accumlated around the sun. Wewant to find out what this ’primordial dust’ was like andwe think that meteorites are only a few steps removedfrom the dust. Some contain organic compounds similar tothe starting material from which life evolved on earth,”Anders added.Anders believes that meteorites are fragments of theasteroids, the small planets between Mars and Jupiter. Attimes the asteroids collide with one another, and mete¬orites are the debris from these collisions. Five hundredcome to earth each year, Anders continued, but we canrecover only four or five; the remainder fall into theocean or to uninhabited regions.The inner portions of an asteroid are not subjected tocosmic radiation, bat the radiation does affect a meteorwhen fragmentation occurs. As the meteor travels throughspace, stable products—noble gases—and radioactive prod¬ucts result. "We have the facilities to measure radio¬activity and we can tell the age of the fragment,” Andersadded.Anders, who is working in collaboration with C. M.Stevens of Argonne National Laboratory, explained thatrecent research indicated that two meteorites had arrivedon the earth less than 200 thousand years after leavingthe parent asteroid. Previous estimates for traveling timehad been around a billion years. "There is the possibilitythat the meteorites came from nearby—maybe the moon,”Anders said, "but it is more likely that people have beenover-estimating the travel time needed.”Economic aspectsUC social scientists Morton Grodzens and ThomasWhisler are studying the influence of NASA’s efforts oneconomics and society.UC social scientists are studying the influence ofNASA’s efforts on economics and society."NASA wants to learn about the transmission of re¬search and technological information between and amongthe government and private business,” said Whisler, as¬sociate professor in the Graduate School of Business. "Thebusiness school is interested' in the factors which inhibitor encourage technological change within industrial or¬ganizations,” he added. ,Whisler will examine the degree of internal centraliza¬tion and its effects on the willingness and ability of abusiness organization to innovate. "Hopefully I will studyinsurance firms,” he commented, "and I will use theintroduction of computers as a measure of innovation.”He plans to rate degree of centralization by lookingat the firm’s distribution of compensation, a method onwhich he had recently been working. "I think it can beshown that the pattern of individual compensation reflectsthe pattern of control and centralization of an organiza¬tion,” he explained."As a firm becomes more centralized, fewer peoplehave a bigger role and assume more responsibility. Thetalent for such a role is scarce and the compensationis high.”WhisHer will compare his method of rating centraliza¬tion with the sociometric measure of conceived patterncontrol, developed at the University of Michigan.In addition, he will look mro the relation betweeninnovation and size, profitability, and rate of growth ofthe insurance firms. ,Science and politic!Grodzins, professor in the department of politicalscience, is concerned with the connection between scienceand public policy. Grodzins plans to spend a year ot"extensive exploration” to come up with a small numberof crucial research areas conducive to full scale fieldprojects.This quarter Grodzins is offering a seminar coursecalled Science and Public Policy along with Edward Shilsof the committee on social thought, and biophysicist Eu¬gene Rabinowich, editor of the monthly Bulletin of AtomicSciences. "Students will be presenting papers at theseminar,” Grodzins noted, "and this will add to our ideas.”Grodzins proposed a colloquium of faculty membersand selected students in the natural and social sciences.Again papers would be informally presented.According to Grodzins, the problem is not thinking upfield projects but is instead choosing the research which ismost significant and which can illuminate larger issues.For example, NASA's moon effort is disturbing thedistribution of engineers and scientists in industry. A pos¬sible study can examine the "ripples” of NASA activitieson training engineers and overcoming shortages. Alsostudies can be made of the development of new instru¬ments and new power and their effect on employmentand consumption.Grodzins would like to consider the possibility ofbringing social and physical scientists closer togetherthrough training programs having systematic linkages.“Would it be useful for a PhD in chemistry to spend apost doctoral year in the social sciences?” he asked."Also, is it advisable to have a scientific PhD administerscientific programs or would Trained administrators bebetter in such positions?”HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFuH line of imported and domesticwines, liquors ond beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4 123313187898 CoBEAUBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent Wavingand4dair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 In addition to hooks, Type¬writers, Tape Recordersond Photographic supplies,see our stock of SchoolSupplies, Stationery, Gifts,Novelties, Men's ond Wom¬en's Weor, Snacks ond To¬bacco.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5602 ELLIS AVE. ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti • beef • sausage and meatballsandwiches • shrimp pizzaFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-1014,1015 1427 East 67th St.* CHICAGO, MAipOK • April 19, 1943\m 'v ^ ■■■ J§^ ; ■ '-' • *; • Sg ..Sr .;'.> :• Zii X'^' ■* . \'Z'.' ' ■ - <? y, >«. xy'.' f'->• • .. ••' - ' • . .V ':•: ?••• . • ■ I, - <• •. •.•. ' ' < •, f*«> i. - .V. |k« "b y.%JST UC doctors find needleto relieve cancer painWJm**' 1 $ ' * V* , v, ’ *•*>&'••- ' • ' * •Ground wUI be brokenon Moy 1 for Hie Labora¬tory for Astrophysics andSpace Research of the En¬rico Fermi Institute of Nu¬clear Studies, one of thenation's first inter-disci¬plinary space research cen¬ters. Made possible by a$1,775,000 grant from theNational Aeronautics andSpace Administration, theLaboratory will be located at 56th Street and InglesideAvenue.The new Laboratory willconcentrate initially ontheoreNcal and experimen¬tal astrophysics. It willhave facilities for ground-based investigation as wellas for developing satelliteexperiments in space.Heavily shielded subterra¬nean facilities will permitanalysis of low-level radio¬activity in meteorites and : :extra-terrestrial materials.The training of space-oriented scientists will bepart of the new Labora¬tory's programs.The structure will adjoinbuildings that form thecomplex of scientific re¬sources that include theEnrico Fermi Institute, theInstitute for the Study ofMetals, the Nuclear Accel¬erator Building and the In¬stitute for Computer Re¬search.Studies cosmic raysMore than two yews agotwo huge blocks of photo¬graphic film were hoisted tothe edge of space in a projectjointly sponsored by the Universityof Chicago, the Office of NavalResearch and the National ScienceFoundation. Known as the Inter¬national Cooperative EmulsionFlights, these cosmic ray experi¬ments are still being studied atUniversities around the world forclues to the fundamental natureof matter."Cosmic rays —• the ultra-fast,lonely travelers of space — cantell about the structure of matteraround us,’' according to LeviSetti.. A cosmic ray, born on astar, is the nucleus of an atomlike that found on Earth.Levi Setti, professor inphysics and the Enrico Fermi In¬stitute for Nuclear Studies, is incharge of current cosmic ray re¬search.“We have on Earth powerfulatom smashers to probe the insideof atomic nuclei to understandhow they hold together.” LeviSetti explained, “but cosmic raysare still the most powerful projec¬tiles available to man. They act asnatural atom smrwrWrs.“To get a first hand view ofprimary cosmic rays we must goup where they strike another atom¬ic nucleus for the first time,”Levi Setti continued. “If that firstimpact occurs inside a photo¬graphic emulsion — a thick blockof sensative gelatin—a picture ofthe collision results. •UC balloon experiments have re¬corded several hundred nuclearcollisions produced by cosmic rayswith energies greater than 10,-000 billion electron volts. (Thehighest-energy rays carry 200 bil¬ lion times the energy given off ya uranium nucleus during an atom¬ic explosion.This has lead to an understandingnot only of the structure of atomicnuclei but also the structure ofelementary nuclear particles them¬selves — protons for example. Re¬sults so far have failed to revealmuch of a discrete kind of struc¬ture of these particles, Levi Settisaid.The investigation of the forceswithin the nucleus of the atom byscientists throughout the world hasresulted in the discovery of atleast 32 elementary particles. Theyinclude nucleons such as protonsand neutrons, the tiny leptonssuch as the electron and neutri¬nos, and several varieties of me¬sons and hyperons. Some of theseare referred to as “strange parti¬cles.”“Scientists are constantly find¬ing more particles,” Levi Setti ex¬plained. “If you count resonantstate particles (interacting com¬pounds of elementary parti¬cles) tiie number would be in¬creased considerably.”In 1954, Levi Setti helped iden¬tify several of the first hyperonsand heavy mesons produced in nu¬clear emulsions.Following this new line of sci¬entific research; Levi Setti beganunraveling strange particle phe¬nomena, especially hyperons andhypernuclei, produced in balloon-borne emulsions. In 1955, hestarted working on strange par¬ticles produced artificially on ac¬celerators. In 1956, he joined TheUniversity of Chicago, where Pro¬fessor Valentine L. Telegdi of theDepartment of Physics and theEnrico Fermi Institute had beguna study of hypernuclei.Hyperons, living only for bil¬lionths of a second are unstableparticles heavier than the proton.Hypernuclei are ordinary nuclei ofatoms which have gained a lambdahyperon. When the hyperon dis¬integrates, according to Levi Setti,it smashes the carrier hypernuclei, spilling out otheiL nuclear frag¬ments.Levi Setti’s group has discov¬ered and identified several hyper¬nuclei such as the lambda hydro¬gen three and lambda helium sev¬en. Gelatin-like emulsion plates arestudied under high powered micro¬scopes for , important nuclearevents and record rough sketchesof them.“In natural cosmic radiation,hypernuclei are produced aboutone in every 10,000 collisions,”he explains “With accelerators wecan produce about five in lOfrsuch event. But it is only throughour ballon work that we learnhow to duplicate these events onaccelerators.” University of Chicago scien¬tists have developed a simplenon-surgical technique with anew radioactive isotope needlefor the relief of pain in can-cerand some other diseases.The needle was devised by PaulD. Harper, UC professor of sur¬gery and associate director of theArgonne Cancer Research Hos¬pital. oapital. Requiring only a local anes¬thetic, the procedure is similar toa spinal puncture.The needle is inserted into thespinal canal, close to the spinalcord. Intense short-range radia¬tion from radioactive strontium-90 and yttrium-90 sealed in the endof the steel needle cuts pain-trans¬mitting nerve fibers in the cord.Then the needle is withdrawn.John F. Mullan, associate pro¬fessor ef neurosurgery at UC, de¬scribed the new technique at the31st annual meeting of the HarveyCushing Society at the SheratonHotel in Philadelphia, Thursdaymorning, April 18th.Mullan said the radiation tech¬nique avoids both the hazards andthe long convalescence involvedin a surgical operation on thespinal cord.Because of its safety and sim¬plicity, he said, the new procedurecan be used to help patients whoare too ill for a major surgicaloperation. The technique can alsobe used for patients whose painis too severe to be alleviated bysimple pain-relieving drugs, andyet not severe enough to warrantmajor surgery, Mullan added.This technique has been used atthe UC hospitals and clinics on42 patients, from three to 71 yearsold. Thirty-seven of the 42 had far-advanced cancers; five had painfrom disorders related to diabetesand non-malignant neurologicalconditions. The radioisotope tech¬nique was successful in relievingpain for 34 ef the 42, the neuro¬surgeon reported.Strontium-90 has a long half- life of 28 vears, and although itgives off Beta rediation of onlymoderate energy, it decays to Yt¬trium-90, which emits Beta parti¬cles of very high energy. The com¬bination of Sr-90 and Yr-90 pro¬vides a long-lasting source of pow¬erful and precise radiation.Because the Beta particles emi-ted by each isotope have a smalland predictable range, they canbe used to produce accurately con¬trolled destruction of tissue in avery small area, on the order of aneight of an inch in diameter.The completed needle was triedin a long series of tests withlaboratory animals, which showedprecisely predictable areas of tis¬sue destruction from periods ofradiation ranging from 10 to 30minutes.Effects of radiation are not com¬plete immediately, however, theanimal tests showed. A centralzone of total destruction increasesslowly for three to five days, anda surrounding area, where tissueis damaged severely enough to de¬story its function, continues to in¬crease up to the 12th dav.In the patients treated with theradioisotope needle, relief of paindeveloped over periods rangingfrom one day to several weeks.Mullan noted that the loss of sen¬sation, as tested by pin pricks,developed, more slowly, and in onecase was not noticed until tenweeks after treatment.In treatment of patients, afteradministration of a local anesthet¬ic, a spinal puncture needle isinserted between the first and sec¬ond cervical vertebrae, just belowthe base of the skull, and is gentlyguided to the sensory area of thespinal cord with the aid of am¬plified fluoroscope images of thearea shown ok two t elevisionscreens.Mullan noted that standard X-rayequipment w ith multiple Polaroidfilms can also be used, but thatstandard X-ray films make theprocedure extremely slow.Doctors examine heartbeatsThe human heart beatsmore than 100,000 times aday, according to a report bythree UC professors and asenior medical student deliveredat the annual meeting of the Fed¬eration of American Societies forExperimental Biology.Dr. Seymour Glagov, assistantprofessor in the department ofpathology, Dr. Donald Rowley, as¬sociate professori in the depart¬ment of pathology, Dr. RobertG. Page, associate professor inthe department of medicine, andDirk V. De Young, senior medicalstudent, recently made a studyof the heartbeats of 100 normal¬ly healthy men.Participants in tlie studyranged from 16 to 65 years old,and included students, teachersdesk workers, and light laborersWith a new pocket-sized cumulative heart beat recorder developed by Glagov and Rowleywith the aid of the Service Activities of Volunteer Engineersgroup, heart rates of the men were measured during regulardaily activities and rest for a 24hour period. Each man was testedthree times or more.Tests showed' that the 24 hourtotal for each individual remainedfairly constant. The count for dif¬ ferent individuals, however,ranged from about 98.000 to about135,000 heart boats in 24 hours.The 24-hour heart beat countalso frequently showed differ¬ences in the heart rate that werenot evident in traditional rests thatcover a shorter period of time.Huge new planet discoveredA huge new planet has beendiscovered outside our solar sys¬tem by an astronomy professorat Swarthmore College. Dr. Petervan de Kamp announced his dis¬covery yesterday at a meeting ofthe American Astronomical Society on the University of Arizona cam¬pus.The planet is 1.5 times as mas¬sive as Jupiter and is located sixlight years away from the Earth,according to van de Kamp. Thenew plane- k called Barnard’sStar B.Fellowships awarded to fiveThe department of education hasawarded five fellowships for gradu¬ate study next year in universiextension work.The fellowships, each for $5000,were established by a grant fromthe Carnegie Corporation of NewYork. They are available to per¬sons now working in the extensionfield.Five more fellowships will beawarded for the 1964-5 academicyear. Further information and ap¬ plications may be obtained fromCyril Houle, professor of educa¬tion.The fellowships went to Mrs.Lucy Hill, assistant director of theDowntown C e n t e r’s LeadershipTraining Consultation Center; Har-land Copeland, Federal ExtensionService; Richard John, Universityof Wisconsin in Milwaukee, Ed¬ward Phoenix, Rutgers University;and Ben Shively, Purdue Univer- Isity. ’April 19, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Blackfriars show next weekendThe 44th Annual Black-friar’s show “Aside From AllThat," written by RodneyPhillips and Robert Apple-baum opens April 26th at 8:30 pmin Mandel hall. This year's showruns through the 28th of April."Aside From All That’’ is asatire on the social system inpresent day England. The plot re¬volves around ‘‘the Searcher,”played by Joe Ford, whose ‘‘experi¬mental sociology” involves theupper and lower classes and thepoet Charles Mandel played by LouYeidel. Representatives of the twoclasses are, Linda Handelman, Judy Hollub, Judy Deutsch, JohnLyon, Irving Wladawskv, WendyPortnuff, Robert Swann. Don Swan-ton. Robert Lessner, Steve Ego,Robert Lesner, Steve Dworkin.Robert Applebaum. composer ofthe music ior ‘‘Aside From AllThat” is a fourth year Chemistrystudent and composer of the musicfor last year’s Blackfriar’s show‘ Sing Out Sweet Rock.” This isRodney Phillips first venture intowriting for the theatre and Phillipsis a third year student in English,who incidentally only came to thiscountry from England three yearsago.Choregraphy for ‘‘Aside FromDiscount tickets to play All That” was designed by MaryEllen Gist, who established herselfwith the dance work lor “GoodNews.”This year’s director JamesO’Reilly (Associate Director ofUniversity Theatre) was the direc¬tor of last year's Blackfriar’s .show.For “Aside From All That” hehas called upon some unusualstaging, design and lighting byPaul Bostin and Mike Conroy.Tickets for “Aside From AllThat,” April 26, 27, 28th are nowon sale in the Mandel Hall boxoffice between the hours of 10 amand 7 pm everyday. Student dis¬counts are available on all seats.Curtain time for “Aside From AllThat” is 8:30 pm. For informationcall campus extension 3280. Linguistics prof Cornelius Berryslated to give Indonesia lecturesTickets are available, at spe¬cial studen’c-faculty discountrates, for four plays in Chi¬cago. Discount coupons for thetickets may be gotten at the Stu¬dent Ac tivities Office, Second Floorof Ida Noyes Hall.One of the plays offering thediscount rates is the musical re¬view. “Put it in Writing," showingat the Happy Medium Theater.The discount offer for this show isone dollar off for each regularticket price.The two comedies offering dis¬counts to students and facultymembers are “A Shot in the Dark,’’at the Studebaker Theater, offer¬ing $2.75 and $2.50 seats for $1.50with the discount coupons, and"Mary, Mary,” at the Blackstone Theater, with the same offer.Hermione Gingold stars in “OhDad, Poor Dad, Momma’s HungYou in the Closet and I’m Feelingso Sad” at the Civic Theater,which offers all seats for $2.00,with the discount coupon.All of the shows memioned arecurrently playing in Chicago, withthe exception of “A Shot in theDark,” which will begin April 26.ErratumThe fact that students may buyseries tickets to the Midwest FilmFestival was inadvertentlyomitted from yesterday’s story inthe Maroon, Student tickets forthe entire ten-event program areavailable for $6. Regular seriestickets are $12.50. A lecture series on thelanguage, myth, and historyof Indonesia given by Visit¬ing Professor of Indonesialinguistics Cornelius Berg will be¬gin Tuesday.The first lecture will be on“Language, myth, and the studyof foreign civilizations.” Berg isa Professor of Indonesian linguis¬tics at the University of Leiden.All the lectures will be givenfrom 3:30 to 5 pm in Breasted.The series is sponsored jointly bythe Department of Linguistics andthe Committee on South AsianStudies.The second lecture in the serieswill be next Thursday on “the Expanding mental universe in In¬donesia and elsewhere.”On Tuesday, April 20, he willtalk on “Priestly Literature, anIndian Plant on Javanese soil.”On Thursday of that week he willspeak on “Hinduism. Buddhism,and Islam in Indonesia.”On Tuesday, May 7. he willtalk on “The problem of the for¬eign ruler in Javanese myth andLiterature.” The lecture series willconclude on May ft with “Thespiritual outlook of the New Indo¬nesian States.”Berg is the Netherlands delegateto the Union Academique Interna¬tional. and was its president from1959-1962.Scholarship sale for Lab SchoolThe Lab School’s Semi-An¬nual Scholarship Fund Salewill be held Monday, at SunnyGym, 5823 S. Kenwood. Pro¬ceeds from the sale, which willrun from 8:30-1:30-a.m. and 3:00-6:00 p.m.. will go towards aidingstudents with tuition payments.Originated as an exchange dur¬ing World War II when clotheswere at a minimum and not easi¬ly replaced, the sale has expandedto a source of antiques, furniture,books and toys as well as ofclothes, old and new. This year an auction for par¬ents of Lab School students,which will take place prior to thesale on Sunday, at 2 pm, has beenexpanded to include paintings,Hyde Park artists who havecontributed canvasses for the auc¬tion are Hairy Bouras, CynthiaBarten, Rairrfv Bernctt, EdgarBernstein, Harold Hayden, andMiseh Kehn.Bouras. who is presently artistin residence at UC, has consentedto be guest auctioneer for someof the pieces.Kennard returns home; wants booksHow Ford economy wonfor Tiny Lund at DaytonaThe Daytona 500 is one of America’stoughest stock car events. It measuresthe toughness, stability, over-all per¬formance and economy characteristicsof the cars that take up its challenge—in a way that compresses years of drivingpunishment into 500 blazing miles. Thisyear mechanical failures claimed over 50per cent of the cars that entered. That’swhy Tiny Lund’s victory in a Ford (withfour other Fords right behind him) is aremarkable testimony to sheer engineer¬ing excellence.Lund attributed his victory in part tothe “missing pit stop." He made one lesspit stop for fuel than his competition-proving that Ford economy can pay offin some fairly unlikely situations!Economy and the winner of the Day¬tona 500 might sound like odd bedfellowsat first. Yet economy is basic in every carwe make . . . yes, even the Thunderbirdis an economy car in its own way. Here'swhat we mean ...Economy is the measure of service andsatisfaction the customer receives in rela¬tion to the price he pays for it. It doesnot mean, however, austerity . . . youhave taught us this. Americans want—and we try hard to give them—cars thatare comfortable to ride in, fun to drive,and powerful enough to get out of theirown way. Not many Americans want tosettle for basic transportation. You seethis in our sales figures—more than halfof our 1963 sales are coming from the topof each model line. We’re selling con¬vertibles, hardtops, the jazzy cars . . .the bucket-seat, high-performance, lux¬ury editions are going like hot cakes.Vet for all the fun that people aredemanding in their cars, they still are very conscious of the element of thrift —of avoiding unnecessary expense. This isthe kind of economy we build into everycar from the compact Falcon to the lux¬urious Thunderbird.There's a special economy, for instance,in Ford’s freedom from service. Everycar and virtually every wagon can travel36,000 miles before it needs a majorchassis lubrication. Other routine servicehas been reduced, too—because theseFords are simply built better—and ofbetter materials—than ever before.In its own elegant way, even theThunderbird gives you economy. It willtravel 100,000 miles or 3 years before youhave to lubricate the chassis. Thunder-birds have a way of becoming classics—as a look at their remarkably high resalevalue will quickly tell you. This, too, iseconomy. *Once, long ago—before the arrival ofthe Income Tax—a wealthy lady wasasked to comment on the solid goldplumbing of her latest villa at Newport.“So thrifty, my dear," said the dowager,. . “it will never, ever rust."Economy then, is many things to manypeople. Whatever economy means to you,you’re pretty sure to find it in a Ford.America’s liveliest,most care-free cars!FORDFalcon • Fairlane • Ford • ThunderbirdFOR 60 YEARS THE SYMBOLOF DEPENDABLE PRODUCTSMOTOR COMPANY Clyde Kennard, former UCstudent who recently under¬went surgery for cancer atBillings Hospital, returned tohis home near Hattiesburg, Missis¬sippi Wednesday.Kennard will stay at his chickenfarm there until, he returns to Bil¬lings May 15 for a checkup.While at home, Kennard has stated that he would welcome con¬tributions of books that would helphim pass the time. He is especiallyinterested in books dealing withthe American Negro, in the fieldsof history, political science, nateral sciences, philosophy, and soci¬ology.All books may he sent to Ken¬nard at Rural Route 1, Box 70,Hattiesburg, Mississippi.Beadie to get Ul honorcry degreeUC President George Beadleis one of five American edu¬cators who will receive hon¬orary degrees in June fromthe University of Illinois.Beadle, winner of the 1958 NobelP/ize in medicine and physiology,already holds honorary degreesfrom Yale, the University of Neb¬ raska, Northwestern, Rutgers. Ken¬yon. Wesleyan, Birmingham (Eng¬land), and Oxford.He received his BS and MS de¬grees at Nebraska in 1926 and 1927respectively. In 1931, he receivedhis PhD from Cornell.Beadle was inaugurated as UC'sseventh chief executive officer onMay 4, 1961. 4Chamberlain leadsChamberlain leads all col¬lege houses in the cumulativeintra-mural point standingswith a total of 1366. Tufts N.is a clo# second with 1335 whileHenderson N. follows at 1120.Fraternity competition findsPhi Kappa Si edging out Psi U1361-1331. Trailing a distant thirdis Phi Delta with 1028.The above points are weightedmeasures of participation andachievement in intra mural com- intra-mural racepetition. Yet to 6e totaled on theyear’s tally are the squash, tennis, and horseshoe tournamentsnow in progress and the softballcompetition which begins nextweek.There will be one fraternity,two college houses, and two in¬dependent leagues in softball.Games are scheduled at 4:00 pmand 5:15 Monday through Thursday on the Midway and Northfield. Schedules are now postedin Bartlet gym.Health staffers attend conferenceSix members of the UC Stu¬dent Health Service will par¬ticipate in the annual meetingof the American CollegeHedlth Asociation at Kansas City,Missouri next week. The meetingwill take place from Wednesdaythrough Saturday at the Universi¬ty of Kansas at Lawrence andKansas City.The six UC participants are Dr.William G. DeYoung, Miriam El-son, Alice Ichikawa, Betty Kohut,Dr. John F. Kramer, and Dr. Hen¬rietta Herbolsheimer.Dr. DeYoung will deliver an ad¬dress on the double blind study onuse of steroids in infections mon¬onucleosis. Elson, Ichikawa, and Kohut willspeak collectively on “The Re¬turning Patient” to a mentalhealth seminar.Dr. Kramer will speak on “Ob¬servations of Psychiatry for Stu¬dents in Three English Universi¬ties.”Dr. Herbolsheimer, director ofStudent Health, will discuss re¬search she has been conductingon proposals for a performancebudget.The conference will be attendedby approximately 500 personsfrom universities and collegesacross the country. Besides gen¬eral meetings, there will be sem¬inars on special aspects of stu¬dent health, and various exhibits. (•'1Alumni program director appointedDavid R. Leonetti, 26, has beenappointed Program Director of theAlumni Association.Leonetti received his BA in psy¬chology from UC in 1958. As anundergraduate, he was presidentand treasurer of Phi Gamma Del¬ ta, a member of the Blackfriars, i-<and a cheerleader for the basketball team. He had a four-yearscholarship at the University.He served in the Admissions 01fice as an admissions counselorin 1959.8 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 19, 1963Spring Phoenix is dedicated to FOTAThe Spring issue of ThePhoenix magazine, a combinedeffort of both the Festivalof the Arts and Phoenixmagazine staffs, goes on sale to¬day. The magazine features arti¬cles by nationally known artistsand a circulation which ranks it asthe second largest magazine in Chi¬cago.The cover is a four-color repro¬duction of a college by FestivalArtist in Residence Bruce Conner.Included in the magazine will bean interview with Norman Mailer,poems by James T. Farrell, andreproductions of the art works ofConner and sculptress Anna Mah¬ler.Milton Babbitt has written anarticle on the composition of elec¬tronic music, and dancer ErichHawkins is represented by a pieceentitled “Why A Man Dances.”Erich Leinsdorf, musical directorof the Boston Symphony Orchestra,has written an article on Wagner’sThe Flying Dutchman, and SevernDarden writes on “The Origin ofChicago Comedy.”George Dickerson, formerly amember of the New Yorker edito¬rial staff and now managing editorof Cavilier magazine, has writtena short story for the magazine.The story represents Dickerson’ssecond appearance in The Phoenix.“Chico,” a story by Dickerson, pub¬ lished in The Phoenix last year, hasbeen selected by Houghton-Mifflinfor inclusion in their anthology ofBest Stories of 1963.According to Stephen Westheim-er, business manager of the maga¬zine, the expected circulation is25,000. “This is an experiment,”Westheimer said. “We are mailingthe magazine to all University ofChicago alumni in Cook and Lakecounties in order to develop anadvertising market. This enablesus to charge a much higher adver¬tising rate than in the past, andthus make it possible to finance amagazine of much higher quality.“If this is the success we hope itto be,” Westheimer continued, “wecan maintain a much higher edi¬torial standard than in the past andgive the University the kind oftop quality student magazine whichit deserves.”The special issue of The Phoenixwill be on sale for thirty-five centsat all Chicago area bookstores andnewsstands, with Festival tickets inthe Mandel Hall corridor, and inthe housing units.FOTA program variedThis year’s Festival of theArts will present lectures, ex¬hibits, concerts and films bycontemporary personalities inthe arts between April 25 and May12.Author 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.Authors James T. Farrell andNorman Mailer will give lecturesand read from their works on May7 and May 10 respectively. Bothwill be in Mandel Hall at 8:30 pm.Farrell, who grew up in Chicagoand studied at the university inthe 1920s, is expected to relate hisexperiences then to a recent visithere, which was his first in manyyear. He will also describe whathe feels should be the relationshipof universities and colleges to liter¬ature and the arts.Mailer will not commit himselfto a specific topic but will arrivehere with an arsenal renewed ona recent tour of Ivy League col¬leges.In addition to the exhibit of col¬leges, constructions and drawingsby Festival-Artist-in-ResidenceBruce Conner in Lexington studioand the annual Student Art Showand Competition, two other exhib¬its 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 haveADDITIONAL STOCK JUST ARRIVED FORCLASSICAL RECORDSSALE!!MANY NEW TITLESYOUR FAVORITE COMPOSERS’ —-A HAVON * VIVALDI ★ MOZART . ★ BEETHOVEN★ BACH ★ BART0K * CHOPIN ★ HANOEL★ BERLIOZ * PROKOFIEV ★ TCHAIKOVSKV * SCHUBERT— MOST BRILLIANT WORKSWESTMINSTERWERE $4r9?fSCHWANN CAT. LISTPER 12" L.P VOXSCHWANNCAT.$ 069PER 12" L.P2 FOR $5 VOX BOXESSCHWANNCAT. LISTPER SETOF 3 -12" L.P.’sBEAUTIFULLYBOXEDINC. LIBRETTO MONITOR$4r98TSCHWANNCAT.PER 12" L.P2 FOR *5OUTSTANDING ARTISTS - CONDUCTORS* SCHERCHEN * OISTRAKH ★ BADURA SKODA ★ KLEMPERER* BOULT ★ RICHTER * RODZINSKI * HORENSTEIN★ GILELS ★ KOGAN * PERLEA ★ MORALE. . . AND MANY MORESALE CONTINUES THROUGH APRIL 27CThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE already 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 StudentActivities office in Ida Noyes.Miss Mahler, daughter of com¬poser Gustav Mahler, will give theEmily Talbett 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 and Conner in a panel dis¬cussion the following evening in theLaw School Auditorium on thetopic, “Motivation and the ModernArtist.” John Cawelti, associate professor in the Humanities willmoderate the panel which will in¬clude Dr. Bruno Bettelheim, prolessor in the departments of edu¬cation and psychology and also anoted art historian.Art show to openAn exhibit of paintings and printsby Wendy Kindi'ed, a graduatestudent in the department of art,will open with a public receptionin the Midway Studies Court Gal¬lery on Sunday from 3-5 pm.The exhibit will remain in Mid¬way Studies, 6016 Ingleside, untilApril 27. It is the fourth in a seriesof six one-man shows by candidatesfor the degree of Master of FineArts.At present the work of HowardStrassman is on display. Exhibi¬tions by Herbert Jackson and BelaPethee will open April 28 and May6 respectively, and will follow MissKindred’s show.KINGSTON TRIOGREENBACK DOLLAR DAYSV O Til gIN&STOM TRIO O ^ONLY $1 FOR ANYKINGSTON TRIO ALBUM...WHEN YOU BUY ONEAT REGULAR PRICE’Inspired by the trio’s latest hit, "Greenback Dollar,” this offermakes any Kingston Trio album available for only $1, when youpurchase another at the regular price. There are 16 to choos#from, including their newest "#16.” Buy as many as you like,**but buy them soon! This offer is limited,(S)T1871 (S)T-1809<S)T1747 (S)T1705COLLEGECONCERT (STT-1658 • CLOSE-UP (S)T-1642 • KINGSTON TRIOENCORES DT-1612 • GOIN’ PLACES (S)T-1564 • MAKE WAY (SJT-1474 • STRINGALONG WITH THE KINGSTON TRIO (S)T-1407 • SOLD OUT (S)T-1352 • HERE WEGO AGAIN! (S)T 1258 • THE KINGSTON TRIO AT LARGE (S)T-1199 • STEREOCONCERT (S)T-l 183 • FROM THE hungry I T-1107 • THE KINGSTON TRIO T 996♦Optional with dealerS 1235 E. 55thPIZZASFor The Price OfMICKY’SNO 7-9063, MU 4-4780April 19, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9Sex a C A D F L Ynd the single girl--Part TwoThe purpose of this paperis to challenge the right of theAdministration of the Uni¬versity of Chicago to forbid,by threat of disciplinary action,the students in the College to en¬gage in sexual relations—this de¬mand for sexual abstention being,of course, the motivating factorbehind the four year residence andhours regulations imposed on thewomen, and the two year regula¬tions imposed on the men. Underthese regulations no woman is al¬lowed to live in an off-campusapartment. Then, haying beenforced to live within the dormitorysystem, she is subjected to variousrules concerning the time whichshe may spend outside of her room.These regulations, plus various sub¬sidiary rules such as not allowingmen into women’ rooms, and viceversa, have the total effect of pro¬hibiting sex in the college; that is,if the rules are obeyed.The administrators of the Uni¬versity do not believe that studentsshould engage in pre-marital sex¬ual relations. The housing systemwhich they have created, and theregulations which they have im¬posed make this fact so obviousthat we needn’t go into this ques¬tion at any length. It is perhapsenough to mention that when firedrills are held in women’s dormi¬tories at six o’clock in the morningin order to check attendance, andthat when “room checkers’’ areassigned the task of eliminatingthe privacy of couples, we can as¬sume that the University is at¬tempting to prevent sexual inti¬macy.The administrators of this uni¬versity have the right to BELIEVEthat unmarried students should notengage in sexual intercourse, or inany kind of sexual relationship forthat matter. They have the rightto BELIEVE that for unmarriedpeople sex is dirty, sinful, criminaland unhealthy. They have the rightto BELIEVE all of these thingsYACHTINGSUMMERPOSITIONSDeadline extendedto April 25,1963The Wetherill Company, divi¬sion of the Kennard Company, acrew placement intermediary withyach listings on the East coast,West coast, Gulf area and theGreat Lakes is soliciting for crewmembers. Due ot the preferenceof most yachtsmen, we are ac¬cepting applications from collegestudents and graduates as crew onmotor cruisers and sailboats. Po¬sitions for experienced as well asinexperienced men and women areavailable. Experience with cookingor child care is helpful.Each application will be sentto over 3000 large yacht ownersin April. Crewing affords an op¬portunity to acquire or sharpenboating skills, visit new placeshere and abroad while earning agood salary in pleasant outdoorsurroundings.To apply send us a shortresume using the following formalong with $5.00 processing fee.(1) Name, address, phone no.(2) Age, school. (3) Availablefrom toin i. e. Northeast,Great Lakes, East and South, etc.(4) Previous boating and relevantwork experience. (5) Two refer¬ences. (6) Preference i. e. Racing,sailboat cruising, motorboating,none, etc. (7) Other pertinentfacts. Two applicants wishing towork together, state this prefer¬ence. Every applicant will receivea finished resume.Deadline for applications isApril 25, 1963. Send to WetherillCompany, Box 12304, Phila. 19, and, as parents they have theright, and perhaps the obligation,to tell their children how they feelabout sex.However, it is inconceivable andintolerable that these men shouldhave the right to forcibly imposetheir moral, religious, social, andsexual beliefs on the 2000 studentsof the College. Disregarding for themoment the stupidity of their par¬ticular approach to sex, that offorced virginity, it must be statedin the strongest possible terms thatno group of men should be giventhe power to believe that they can“regulate” one of the most im¬portant aspects of a human life;the right to develop deep andmeaningful relationships with otherhuman beings.Not only must the administratorsnot be allowed to forbid studentswho desire sexual intercourse frombeing able to have it, but theymust also not be allowed to preventa man and a woman from spendinga night in conversation, or fromsimply studying together, alone.Who is to measure the value thata group of people, or two people,can receive as a result of a night’sconversation. How are the admini¬strators so knowledgeable that theycan say that one long and intimateconversation, which might extendbeyond one o’clock in the morning,is not worth more to the peoplewho participated in it than a yearof academic education? What dothe administrators know about edu¬cation or about life? Are theyserious in believing that anythingimportant can come out of fouryears at a university if students donot have the freedom to talk to¬gether at two o’clock in the morn¬ing?The latest restatement of theUniversity’s policy of forced sexualabstention can be seen in the re¬cent announcement of AssistantDean of Students, James Newman,where he discussed the question of“women’s hours.” The immediatepurpose of the statement was toinform various dormitory councils,student government, and the stu¬dent body in general, that theAdministration had refused the stu¬dent request to ease up on thehours system regulation which gov¬ern student life in the domitories.The deeper meaning in the state¬ment was the reiteration of theAdministration’s belief that it hasthe right to dictate, upon punish¬ment of disciplinary action, a par¬ticular code of social and sexualbehavior to its students.Mr. Newman, in his statement,says that the Administration willretain “the current hours rules(which) allow women living in Uni¬versity residences (which will soonbe all women) to use at their dis¬cretion, a certain number of hoursafter midnight each week, with alimit of 3 am on any night. SuchAdvertisementLast week I had a delightfulexperience in Hyde Park.After hearingabout the delicious FriedChicken at CIRALS, HOUSEOF TIKI, 1510 Hyde Pk. Blvd.I decided to check formyself. The first pleasantsurprise was enteringCIRALS, HOUSE OF TIKI!!Lovely Hawaiian BlackLight murals, hamboo, &soft lights greeted jne.Dinner consisted ofappetizer, salad, FriedChicken, potato, roll & butterand was concluded withcoffee & sherbet. Icouldn’t believe the costof $1.95.P.S. Since then I’ve been backto try the Beef, Ham, FriedShrimp, & Filet of SoleDinners at the same $1.95 priceUnfortunately the kitchen isclosed every Wed. Food isserved from 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. a system is REASONABLE (bold¬face mine) and we see no reasonto abolish it. To do so would meaneither a rigid curfew for all or anadmission that a University ad¬dress did not necessarily mean thata woman ‘lived’ there, but onlythat she came in occasionally topick up her mail.”I would agree with Mr. Newmanand his fellow administrators thatit is an intolerable situation for awoman to have a University ad¬dress if she uses it only to pick upher mail. But it is intolerable, notbecause she refuses to stay in thedomitory, but because she has beenforced to live there in the firstplace. It is obvious that she shouldhave the freedom to live whereshe pleases.What do Mr. Newman and hiscohorts mean by a “reasonablesystem?” On what scientific andintellectual basis (the only basisacceptable in a so-called ‘institu¬tion of higher learning”) is a sys¬tem “reasonable” if it preventspeople who would like to spend thenight together from doing so? Isthis system “reasonable” for peo¬ple who do not accept the code ofvirginity before marriage, or is itonly “reasonable” for some ad¬ministrators who refuse to acceptthe fact that love and sex exist, andthat here is nothing shameful, sin¬ful, or “unreasonable” about it.Is it a “reasonable” system for twopeople who might simply want tospend some hours, alone, talkingtogether; or is it “reasonable” forsome administrators who are soafraid of sex, that they must pre¬vent ANY sort of meaningful rela¬tionship from developing betweenstudents of the opposite sex.The administrators are attempt¬ing to force the student body toaccept their dogmatic beliefs onperhaps the most sacred and im¬portant aspect of human life. . . .Through their various regulationsthey have drawn up a code ofsocial and £ e x u a 1 “rights andwrongs” which they feel are “rea¬sonable,” and are forcing their stu¬dents, on pain of disciplinary ac¬tion, to conform to them.An analysis of these regulationsleads us to believe that at thepresent time the University Ad¬ministration considers the follow¬ing sexual activities “reasonable.”(2) Petting, so long as all cloth¬ing remains on. (The fact that“room checkers” are not assignedto. watch EVERYTHING that acouple does, but are only sup¬posed to report cases in whichclothing has been removed, seemsto imply that the Administrationwill tolerate limited petting.)(2) Making out or Necking. (Inthis case the Administration has noalternative. It is very difficult tostop people from kissing. Also, Isuppose that they are not reallyagainst it so long as they can pre¬vent it from going “too far.” Inthe cold weather they can do justthat. By not giving any privacy tocouples, they can keep the activityin the open. As a result, we seecouples performing in dormitorylounges, hallways etc.)In respect to sexual intercourse,the University, of course, does notconsider this “reasonable” for stu¬dents. However, at the presentmoment, the University is caughtin an uncomfortable position. Asmuch as they would like to enforcetheir policy of sexual abstention,they are unable to completely doso as long as student apartments(and the apartments of friends)exist. All that the University can doin respect to sexual intercourse, therefore, is to limit the timeswhen it can take place. At the pres¬ent moment, the University can dono better than forbid sexual rela¬tions from occuring after midnighton six nights a week, and after 3o’clock am once a week.It is of vital importance to un¬derstand that the College is cur¬rently undergoing a radical transi¬tion in social and sexual habits. Ina few years, when all the studentsin the College will be forced to livein dormitories, and when studentapartments will be eliminated, stu¬dents in the College are going tobe in a desperate way in order tofind privacy to do ANYTHING. Ifthe situation is bad now, it will beinfinitely worse then. Although thedoing away with all student apart¬ments will have a marked effecton the sexual life of the College, itwill also have a most serious effecton those students who want nothingmore than to be able to talk inprivacy within the confines of aroom, or perhaps to attend an occa¬sional closed party.The very important relationshipbetween the University's sexualcode and its social code is not dif¬ficult to see. The simple, but sad,fact is that because the administra.tors do not believe that any stu¬dents should engage in pre-maritalintercourse, everybody, includingthose students who have no inten¬tion whatever of engaging in pre¬marital intercourse must suffer.The fact is that women are shuffledoff into their rooms at the com¬pulsory bed time in order to pre¬vent them from having a sexualrelationship, regardless of wheth¬er or not they want one.The question must now be asked;What is the intellectual basis onwhich the social and sexual codesof the University lie?” . . .Have they gone to the psychologydepartment in order to get a sci¬entific opinion? Have they gone tothe psychiatrists at Billings to seewhether or not sex is “reasonable,”or what the effects of forced chas¬tity might have on people of stu¬dent age? Have they consultedthese authorities about the prob¬lems which guilt feelings can causefor young people who have beenmade to feel guilty, and abnormalbecause of their sexual needs? Inshort, is the Administration’s deci¬sion in favor of forced chastity, andthe right to punish violators of it,based on scientific and rationalopinion (the only kind of opinionwhich students should accept), oris it simply based on a combinationof the Bible and Ann Landers?In my opinion, the administra¬tors of this university are as quali¬fied to legislate on sex as they areto mend broken bones. One canbest use an old saying to describetheir actions; that their ignoranceof the matter is only matched bytheir presumptuousness. If theydislike sex, or if they think that itis “dirty,” or “evil,” or “sinful”that is their misfortune. It is in¬credible, however, that they shouldbe allowed to pass their attitutes,or neuroses, on to the studentbody.It is a well-known fact that alarge part of the student body doesnot agree with, or ACCEPT, thesocial and sexual codes of the Uni¬versity. Despite all their varipusrules and regulations the Admini¬stration is not, nor will it ever be,successful in its attempt to bansex from the College.No matter how hard the Univer¬sity tries, it just can not legislateit away. Love, and the need andright of students to do what THEY consider correct will be here for¬ever; university regulations, notwithstanding.However, it must be admittedthat if the University does not ac¬complish its main purpose, it doesaccomplish its secondary purpose.If it can not legislate away naturaland human needs, it can convertthem into “sinful,” “criminal” and“dirty” activity. If people can notbe prevented from expressingthemselves honestly, as THEY seefit; then they can at least be madeinto sneaks and criminals andmade to absorb all the mental pun¬ishment which goes with “criminalactivity.” If the beauty and joywhich love and sex is composed ofcan not be totally eliminated, thenit can be severely maimed by theneed to “catch sex” when the Uni¬versity isn’t looking. If people cannot have the privacy to do whatthey think is good, and right, theywill do it without privacy. They willdo it in motels, in cars, on theMidway, or behind the Chancellor’shouse, but they will do it.In short, if the Administrationcan not do away with sex as theywould like to do. they can takepleasure in adding to the tragicharm which comes from the ar¬chaic, barbaric, and oppressive“code of morality” of the societyat large; that code which shoutsout so loudly that there is no suchthing as sexual need. Our Univer¬sity, following its long tradition ofleadership in society, feels com¬pelled to shout loudest.How did the College of the Uni¬versity of Chicago evolve into thestate in which it Is now? Ignoringall the other changes which havetaken place in the College over thepast ten years, how did a freecollege, where students were al¬lowed the freedom to live wherethey pleased and to determine theirown social life, gradually evolveitself into a high class house ofdetention? How did a great collegebecome transformed into a placewhere men and women are notallowed to talk t > each other afterone o’clock in the morning?The answer to this question isnot a simple one, but we can saythat at the core of it lies the sim¬ple fact that the faculty, he menwho are responsible for the factthat students come to the Univer¬sity, have grossly abrogated theirresponsibility. The administratorsdo not intentionally mean to beharmful, It is just that they don’tknow any better. But by now, be¬cause the faculty has remainedquiet for so long, the situation isbeyond their control. How a psy¬chology teacher, or a doctor inBillings, or any rational member ofthe faculty could have allowed theadministrators to seriously developa policy of forced chastity, with allthe harm which it implies, is be¬yond comprehension. If they couldnot have gotten the University totake a forthright and honest posi¬tion on sex, they should have atleast prevented this. But they havenot.Bernard SandersDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1207 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372at Uaivarsity Ava.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNT10 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 19, 1963'David and Lisa' is peepshow for intellectualsEveryone kept telling us tosee DAVID AND LISA, soCulturally we waited a monthbefore doing so. We found themovie of slightly more than rou¬tine interest. What fascinates usmost, however, is the popular re¬action among intellectual audiencesto this work.-DAVID AND LISA is a filmabout two adolescent psychotics ina “school for exceptional children”(in case you’re not up on educa¬tional or psychological jargon,“exceptional” is the current eup¬hemism for abnormal). As the sto¬ry unfolds it carefully avoids manyr*“of the cliches seen in films of thisilk — the head head-shrinker isnot God-like and a worker of mira¬cles. David does not fall passion¬ately in love with Lisa, nor Lisawith David. There is not the grosspresentation of mental illness ala SNAKE PIT. The film is agentle study of how two disturbedpeople effect a kind of sante adeux. The acting is good and KierDullea’s DAVID is more demand¬ing than Janet Margolin’s mimick¬ing of a schizophrenic LISA. ThePerrys collaborated to produce aquiet story without scenery-chew¬ping histrionics. The film is un¬usual in the story it presents andthe way it does it but we foundlittle in it to merit the veritableadulation it seems to have elicitedpmong the intelligentsia. The onlyinterpretation we could come upwith was that DAVID AND LISAis a peep show for intellectualvoyeurs.We could hardly help overhear¬ing the comments of the audiencewhile viewing the film (indeed, afew people around us were talkingin a conversational tone throughoutmost of the movie). Now the CIN-‘-EMA, where D & L is playing, isnot the type of theatre attehdedby the lower classes. The audienceseemed to be from the middleclasses and the never-never socialorder of college students. But thecomments! As the first creditsroled on the screen a group be¬ll i n d me audibly pronounced,“DAVID-AND-LISA”. Shortly aft¬er Mr. Dullea made his first ap¬pearance there was what seemed to be an incessant murmuring of“isn’t he handsome — isn’t hegood looking?” Once everyone hadagreed on this the next problemto be solved was his age — “doyou think he’s 17 or 18?” MissMargolin’s appearance provokedidentical comments with additionalremarks on her costume and fun¬ny behavior. We were too em¬barrassed to look but there musthave been several blind peopleamong the spectators since weheard some of the audience liter¬ally describe what was going onon the screen. “They’re going totown now.” It is obvious that notonly is such behaviour on the partof an audience rude and stupid,but that it probably detracts fromany real comprehension and en¬joyment of the film. So how comeeverybody found D & L so “sensi¬tive”?Our theory is that D & L has thebasic appeal of any popular movieregardless of its intellectual levelof allowing the spectator to peepat otherwise hidden events. Whilesome hold that movies representthe audience’s fantasy world, wethink they most closely representthe desire to witness the forbidden—violence, crime, love and sex, tolist a few D &L is particularly ap¬pealing to the intellectual becauseit affords him an opportunity towitness the exotic world of thepsychotic and to exercise his skillas an amateur psychiatrist. Thatthe leading characters were at¬tractive did not help much — whowouldn’t like to treat a beautifulpatient? To wax analytic, wewould say there was a mass trans¬ference' to the film. To be corri-pletly blunt, we say that DAVIDAND LISA is a freak show inwhich would-be Freuds get achance to exercise their clinicalacumen without facing the realdificulties of the profession. Thatthe audience reacted more to theproblems presented (the case his¬tory) than to the way in whichit was presented (the cinema)seems to prove my point. ^P.S. Would any undergradpsych major care to venturea diagnosis of David’s disorder?RW Typewriters &Tape RecordersforSale or Rent.See our selectionThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. PENTAX CLINICAPRIL 27th JOSEPH H. AARONHeilond factory rep. will answer ques- All Forms of Insurancet*ons or SLR cameras and electronic SUITE 825MODEL CAMERA 135 S. LaSalle St.1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060PUBLIC LECTURES Based OnThe Divine LOVE and WISDOMby Emanuel SwedenborgTuesday evenings ot 8:00 o'clock atTHE SWEDENBORG CENTER5710 Woodlawn Ave.The Speaker:MILDRED K. BILLINGS Ph.D.Resident LecturerApril 23 Horace Bushnellond the language of the Bible DEARBORN AT DIVISIONWINNERIHKMIlilllDBEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEAR! i Chicago's most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films.STUDENTSTola advantage of thespecial discount avail¬able to you. 90tf any dayexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. card to the cashier.OAK HI A R > MICHIGAN Special student rate ef $1.00 ineffect during thie engagementonly (except Saturday night).You Live Through A Supreme Experience AsANDComes Alive On The Screen In I Technico^^IAUDREY HEPBURN HENRY FONDA*MEL FERRER asidefromallthat!a musical satire in mandel hall at 8:00April 26, 27, 28\44* ANNUAL BLACKFRIARS SNOWUpHOMS OF THE FLAMINGSHIISfH• HAB A B AND FPRIME TENDER STEAKSSlihs Pf‘v*te jBanqt*»H jCINEMA THEATERXhicago Ave. at MichiganNow Playing"DAVID and LISA"Nominated for 2Academy Awards"BEST AMERICANFILM OF 1962"TIME MAG.Winner San Francisco andVenice Film FestivalsBEST PICTURE.ACTOR AND ACTRESSStudent Rates $1Daily Except Saturday UponPresentation ef ID Cards PIZZA — PASTA — DANCINGBEER ON DRAFTTHE PLACE TO GOON RUSH STREET900 N. RUSH STREET MO 4-8600 Jhst Tkw (pla$a JhsuaihQ308 W. NORTH AVE.In the Heart of Old TownAnnounces Its Premier ProgramOPENING FRIDAY, APRIL 19th—(for a limitedengagement)A GREATMOTION HCIUAE, . Do.* Ch.khov full honor"Wei/.r, N y. Timtt| "A film lo b. thon'shod.”—Zunttr, CUE"A MASTERPIECE! AMONG THE ALL-TIME GREATRUSSIAN FILMS!" -Film Quarterly IUSAI"A THING OF BEAUTY ... it is that rare kind of art¬work that lingers in the mind afterward, A Triumph!"— Winsten, N.Y. Post"ONE FILM that I shall want to see many times!"— Ingmar Bergmanplus GOOD NIGHT, SOCRATES!Outstanding documentary produced by Northwestern Univer¬sity students, dramatically accounting the death and destructionof Chicago’s “Greek Town.” First prize winner at both the Mid¬west and Venice Film Festivals. “An immensely moving experi¬ence and the best film ever created in and about Chicago.”^^_^i^i^^^^^^^^JRichardChristiansen^Chicago^ail^^IewsAdmission PricesGeneral 90c ($1.25 weekends)Students 65c (90c weekends) Feature TimesMon-Fri. 6:30-8:30-10:30Sat. ond Sun. 2:30-4:30-6:30-8:30and 10:30Maroon 1962-1963 readership surveyThe Maroon requests your cooperation inperforming the following survey. Please answeras many questions as you wish and return thispage to the Maroon office, via faculty exchange•r the US mails. Faculty exchange mail may beleft in all dormitories, and there are faculty ex¬change boxes in most campus buildings. The Ma¬roon's address is 1212 East 59 Street, Chicago37.Although we realize we are not conductingthis survey in a very scientific manner, we areinterested in seeing how our readers have beenreacting to the Maroon this year.1. How often do you see a copy of the Maroon?Once a week (indicate day)Twice a week (indicate days)Every issue or almost every issueMost issuesLess than half the issuesOne or two a quarter ......2. When you see a copy of the Maroon, do you typicallyGlance through it?Read some parts, glance at others?Read it from cover to cover?3. (Answer only if you have been on campus 2 years ormore.) Do you read more of the Maroon now that it has4. 8, and 12 page issues than you did when it was a 1<».20, or 24 page weekly newspaper?More Less Same4. When you read the Maroon, how often do you read(check one in each row)Occa-Usualiy sionally Seldom NeverThe front pageEditorialsThe Culture CalendarLetters to the Editor ......SportsClassified Ads (Other Ads.The Daily Calendar ......GadfliesBook ReviewsPlay ReviewsFilm ReviewsMusic ReviewsOther ReviewsNeighborhood NewsNews from othercampusesNews about EducationLegislationCampus News cussion of aimsand problems ofeducation)Campus opinion inthe form of letters6. Please rate the Maroon’s coverage and treatment olthe following as to over-all QUALITY (rather than em¬phasis), in terms of accuracy, objectivity, completeness,etc. Irregardless of your feelings on whether we doenough with these topics, do you think what we do piintis of a good enough calibre*’Good Fail- Poor VariesCultural eventsin generalBook reviewsDrama reviewsFilm Reviews «Culture CalendarRoutine NoticesIntramural SportsIntermural SportsAcademic NewsFaculty MembersGraduate StudentsStudent GovernmentNews about individualstudentsHumorous NewsNational and worldnews directly relatedto university lifeOther national andworld newsInternational studentnewsCampus IssuesNews from othercampusesNeighborhood news ' .Education newsLettersEditorialsCopyreadingMake-up and layoutdesignPhotography5.Of all the kinds of news and features which mightappear in a campus newspaper, the Maroon gives moreemphasis to some and less to others. (By “emphasis.” wemean relative amount and placement of coverage, ratherthan quality, which will be dealt with in question #6.)Please indicate your opinion of the Maroon’s emphasis onthe following:The rightToo much amount of Too little Noemphasis emphasis emphasis OpinionCultural eventsRoutine notices (regis¬tration, deadlines,scholarships, etc.)Academic News(Curriculum chang¬es, new courses,grading, etc.) .......Campus Sports 'Intramurals- VarsityFaculty membersGraduate news ......Student Govern¬ment •News about indi¬vidual studentsStudent social newsHumorous newsNational and worldnews directly relat¬ing to universitylife (EducationalLegislation, PeaceCorps, AcademicFreedom, etc.) ...... •Other national andworld news (de¬segregation, HouseCommittee on Un-American Activities,peace, disarma¬ment, politicalmovements) ...... ......Internationalstudent news ...... ...... ■Campus issues(tuition, bookstore,dormitory fopd,housing problems,etc.) ......Political and educa¬tional news fromother campusesNeighborhood (HydePark, Woodlawn,urban renewal)newsScience NewsEducation News (Con¬ferences, speecheson education, dis- 11. Please list as many Maroon advertisers as you canremember (up to six).12. Please list the ads you most like:13. Please list establishments you have patronized be¬cause of Maroon advertising:14. Do you think (be Maroon should accept cigarette ads?Yes No15. What would be your reaction if the Maroon were tobecome a weekly again?A good idea ......A bad ideaNo reactionMi. If the Maroon were to crarge 5c or less per copy,would you buy it?Always Most issuesOccasionally Never17. Even if you did not buy the Maroon, would you slopreading it? ....... Would you be willing to pay SI aquarter to have the Maroon delivered to your door (on oroff-campus)?IK. (low often do you read the following?Always Often Rarely,Never7. The following are headlines which have or may haveappeared in the Maroon. Please rate each one as to itspotential interest to you.Definitely Probably Probably Definitelyread the read the not rea.» r.ot reaustory story the story the storySeeks petitionsignersCongress toinvestigate aidto educationUC professor endscolorful careerGroup to re-examinethe CollegePrize-winning playto come tocampusMaroons lose to IITin final sec’ds .1Xenon reacts atArgonneUniversity discrimi¬nation chargedProfesor getsgrant -John Smith joinsfacultyFaculty react dif¬ferently toelections55th Streettorn down -Hutchins: University isfor educationUniversity buysapartment8. In general, how would you rate the news articles inthe Maroon in terms of quality of the writing?Uniformly well-writtenMostly well-writtenHalf and HalfMostly poorly writtenNo opinion9. Please rate your agreement or disagreement with Ma¬roon editorials.Campus N’b’hd Off-CampusI tend to agree with the editorials:Always or almostalwaysMore often than notLess than half the timeSeldom or neverI usually have no opinionson the issues involvedI seldom read theeditorials10. Regardless of your agreement or disagreement withMaroon editorials, which of the following do you endorsein principle?A student newspaper should express its opinions force¬fully in editorials regardless of whether or not they arerepresentative of campus opinion.The editors should sound out campus opinion and writetheir editorials to reflect the majority opinion among thestudents. *..Editorials should stay away from controversialissues. Sun-TimesDaily NewsChicago Sun-TimesChicago Daily NewsChicago’s AmericanChicago TribuneThe DefenderN.Y. Times (daily)Hyde Park HeraldWoodlawn BoostedTimeNewsweekHarjiersNew RepublicNational Review 'Scientific AmericanNational GuardianSaturday ReviewThe ReporterSat. Eve. PostThe NationOthers (list)19. Did you read the following special Maroon sectionsthis year?most Some Little NoneGuide to Neighborhood25th Anniversary otsplitting the atomCollege CurriculumBulletinRecall statementsSG party platformsFolk Festival *History of the College20. Do you think the following stories and/or issues re¬ceived too much, too little, or the right amount of em¬phasis :Too Much Not RightEnough AmountNDEA revisionStagg scholarships ;...SNCCS. G. recall electionsRockwellDespres ‘Women’s HoursCigarette adsCurriculum *21. How many a week are you on the quadrangles duringthe quarter? Check off ones that apply:Monday Tuesday Wednesday....... Thursday Friday SaturdaySunday/22. Including this year, how many years have you com¬pleted at the University of Chicago?23. As of this quarter, are you aFirst year student’ \Second year student?Third year student? ;Fourth year student?Graduate student (MA) (PhD)?A. If you are an undergraduate, what is, or is mostlikely to be, your major field?B. If you are a graduate student, what is your field?24. Where do you live? < .25. Please list any campus organizations to which youbelong.247. What is your sex?27. Are you married?28. What is your age?29. Are there any things in particular you would like tosee the Maroon cover or investigate?