Take, rights steps at confab GNOSIS caucus meetsSeveral steps designed todevelop a political action armof the civil rights movementin Chicago’s Negro communitywere taken at a conference heldthis weekend at the Center forContinuing Education.The 150 conference participantsresolved to establish a non-parti¬san. independent political organiza¬tion. open to all citizens of Chicagoand aimed at increasing the quan¬tity and quality of Negro represent¬ation.In addition, the participants de¬cided to devote a large portion oftheir efforts in the April, 1964, pri¬mary elections, to challengingDemocratic Congressman WilliamDawson.The new organization would alsoback “acceptable” Negro candi¬dates for Democratic ward com¬mitteemen in the 5th, 6th, 8th, 16th.17th, and 21st wards; Republicancommitteemen in the 4th, 6th, and20th wards; and assemblyman inthe 11th, 22nd, and 23rd StateDistricts.(The University of Chicago islocated in the 5th Ward and the23rd State District.)The new organization will helppromote a voter registration cam¬paign. the training of workers inthe electoral process, and an in¬creased responsiveness on the partof candidates to the needs and in¬ terests of their constituents.The primarily Negro conferencerejected a move, however, tyingthe new organization with the all-Negro Freedom Now party.The speakers at the conferencegenerally agreed that the Negro isgoing to obtain definite and perma¬nent freedom only by determinedaction in the political arena.“You will not have a revolutionuntil you have a system organized,a plan; and until that time you aremoving on pure emotion,” saidPaul Zuber. attorney active in theChicago public school integrationcase.The speakers denounced the pres¬ent political leadership in the Negrocommunity. Charles Chew, aider-man from the 17th Ward, said “wecan do without selected leaderswho milk the community. If wemust put our future in the nowelected leaders . . . our politicalfuture is doomed.”The target of many of thespeeches was Congressman Daw¬son.Zuber advocated a non-partisanpower block in the Negro com¬munity. He told the conference par¬ticipants that, “there has beenmany an illegitimate child bornout of clandestine relationship be¬tween Republican and Democrat tokeep you down.”In addition to the quality of Ne¬gro political representation, its quantity was attacked.Augustus Savage, editor of theWood lawn Booster and of the Bul¬letin, said that “at present over 25%of Chicago’s population is Negro,yet only nine of the city’s 69 staterepresentatives are Negro — andthat amounts to only 13%.“Despite the boasted influence ofthe Dawson team in the Demo¬cratic party, the 23 state represent¬ative districts in the city are sogerry-mandered that Negroes con¬stitute a majority in only five ofthem . . .“Only one of the city’s 18 stateSenators is a Negro — and that’sonly 3*^% . . .’’ he continued. “Onlysix of the city’s present 48 aider-men are Negro — that’s only14% . . .“Moreover, as for Cook county,only one of the 36 elective officesexcluding judges is held by a Ne¬gro ... As for judges ... of112. only six are Negroes.” Plans football actionDistribution of paintings n theShapiro collection will take placeon Thursday. Numbers will be as¬signed beginning at 8:30 am inthe Ida l\ox*s Lobby. GNOSIS, the majority partyin Student Government, estab¬lished a special committee toinvestigate possible party ac¬tion on football at UC. This actionwas taken at GNOSIS’ first caucusheld Sunday.The chairman of the committee,Bill Connett, was instructed by thecaucus to include persons outsidethe party on the committee in or¬der to broaden the scoj)e of thestudy.While no official stand will betaken by the party until the com¬mittee repoi^s at next week’s cau¬cus, an unofficial vote was 10 to 1against the “present Universitypolicy” on football.Earlier in the meeting, DonCongdon, President of Student Gov¬ernment (SG) and Vice Presidentof GNOSIS, and Jerry Hyman,Vice President of SG and Presi¬dent of GNOSIS, discussed therole of the party in SG.In their remarks they empha¬sized the importance of GNOSIS’schange from an opposition partyto a majority party. The effect, they agreed, was that the partyhad to change from a basicallynegative -position to a positive one.Gerry McBeath, chairman of theStudent-Faculty Relations Com¬mittee, announced that there wouldbe a meeting to set up the con¬sultant boards Thursday at 7:30 inthe SG office, and invited every¬one interested to attend.Eugene Groves, chairman of theNational Student Committee, an¬nounced that the next regionalNSA meeting would be at UC,Nov. 8 and 9. He also stated thatdelegate and alternate would beselected for the meeting.The last item of business wasthe passage of a constitutionalamendment to split the office ofVice President-Treasurer into twooffices.The next caucus will be Sunday,Oct. 13, 7:30 pm at Ida Noyes.The Agenda will include the elec¬tion of party officers, the recom¬mendations of new members of theStudent-Faculty Court, the reportof the committee on football, andgeneral discussions on the comingyear’s activities.Bulletin' clock movesThe clock on the cover of had the ability to make the bomb,the bulletin of the Atomic The Bulletin then placed the clockScientists, which for seven- at three minutes before midnight.i The other forward move cameteen years has represented . , . ., • ,, _ , . a little less than four years later.mankind,s nearness to doom m Seplcmber of 1953f when thet>\ nuclear war, was moved cjoc^ was pjaced at two minuteshack last Sunday in recogni- before midnight as a result of theto the progress symbolized by development of the hydrogen bombthe ratification of the test ban by both the US and the USSR,treaty by the U.S. Senate. This was the closest the clock has Vol. 72 — No. 8 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1963300 hear Morgenthau speakMoving the clock away frommidnight symbolizes a gain inman’s struggle to avoid nucleardestruction. The move Sunday wasonly the second in the publication’shistory.The clock now ’reads twelveminutes before midnight. It hadpreviously read seven minutes be¬fore the hour.The last time the clock wasmoved backwards was in January,1%«. The move was made, ac¬cording to the Bulletin, “in the15 years—1945 - 1960 — of the Bul¬letin’s existence, public and gov¬ernmental opinion everywhere hadbegun to appreciate the revolu¬tionary consequences of the dis¬covery of nuclear energy, thuserecting a psychological dam thatmade the unleashing of the de¬structive power of the atom moredifficult — more difficult but notimpossible.”However, the clock has not onlybeen moved backwards in the his¬tory of the Bulletin. It has beenmoved forward twice as well. Itwas originally set at eight minutesbefore midnight in June, 1947,when only the United States pos¬sessed the atom bomb.The clock was first moved for¬ward in October of 1949, when itwas learned that the USSR also ever come to reaching the sym¬bolic midnight.Commenting on the latestchange, Eugene Rabinowitch, edi¬tor of the Bulletin and professorof biophysics at the University ofIllinois, stated: “Not that thetreaty is a significant step towarddisarmament; it is not. But thetreaty provides the first tangibleconfirmation of what has been theBulletin’s conviction in recentyears — that a new cohesive forceis making the future of man alittle less foreboding.” •The Bulletin, whose office is oncampus, was founded in Chicagoon December 10, 1945 by Rabino¬witch and Hyman Goldsmith. Itsoriginal function was as a news¬letter for the scientists who hadworked to develop the atomicbomb, but who were afraid ofthe potential consequences of itsuse.At one time or another, theBulletin’s Board of Sponsors hasincluded such scientists as HansBethe, A. H. Compton, Albert Ein¬stein, Robert Oppenheimer, LinusPauling, I. I. Rabi, FrederickSeitz, Leo Szilard, Edward Teller,and Harold Urey. Many of thesescientists have been associatedwith UC in one capacity or an¬other. Almost three hundred peo¬ple crowded into Social Sci¬ences 122 Friday night tohear Hans J. Morgenthau,Distinguished Service Professor ofhistory and political science, talkon “Justice and Power.”Tjie speech was transferred fromHillel House after many personsfilled the Hillel foyer, unable to getinto the meeting room. Even at thelarger lecture hall, scores of peo¬ple squatted in the aisles orlistened outside through open win¬dows.Rabbi Richard Winograd. direc¬tor of Hillel, has announced thatarrangements have been made forHillel to use larger lecture halls ifa similar situation should arise inthe future. “We won’t be caughtshort again,” Winograd said.Morgenthau stated he had hastilyexpanded his talk from the“sermon” he had planned to de¬liver, when he saw the size of theaudience.The terms “justice” and “power”are commonly thought to contra¬dict each other, Morgenthau began.This results from a misunderstand¬ing of their true meaning, he said.He quoted a passage from Pascalwhich said that both justice andpower must be obeyed, so it is necessary to make “just” what isstrong.“The real problem arises whenwe try to find what is just.Humans cannot find what justiceis for three reasons, Morgenthausaid.First, we are too ignorant. Weshould receive and give what isdue, but how can we determinethis? It is impossible, since wemust know the purpose and natureof the universe before we can ap¬ply these general principles to in¬dividual cases.Second, we are too selfish. Wemake up our own idea of justiceto fit our own desires. In this way,the interests of the most powerfulgroup in a society become identi¬fied with justice. The search forjustice transforms itself into mereideology.Third, we are too poor to pay theprice required by all the groupsdemanding L‘justice.” We areforced to assign priorities to thedemands.Our dilemma is that we aspire tothe goal of justice, but cannotreach it. There have commonly been three remedies proposed, hesaid.One is the principle of equality.As formulated by Morgenthau thisprinciple is: “If we can’t knowwhat is just for each situation, let’sdistribute what we can equally.”It is, hbwever, only an evasionof the problem, not a solution, heexplained. The principle assumesthat everyone is entitled to anequal share, but this, Morgenthausaid, is exactly the issue—how todetermine what share is justified.Another proposed remedy is toidentify power with justice. An ex¬ample of this is the tendency toregard the police as an instrumentof justice, a neutral, mechanicalapplier of the law.This concept of “a governmentof laws, not man,” according toMorgenthau, has “small veracity.”Men determine what to do in eachcase according to what they thinkjustice requires, he said.These limitations seem to beovercome in the third attempt tosolve the problem of justice, that(Continued on page 5)Chase asks school changes‘‘The provisions for the edu- schools are to provide adequateCORE head readies years plansThe following discussion of('ORE's plans for the year took placebefore Mr. Rappoport learned of therejection Of Willis' resignation by theBoard of Educaton.“School Superintendent Wil¬lis’ resignation can’t reallyhe called a victory for theChicago civil rights movementat all,” declared UC CORE presi¬dent Bruce Rappaport recently.“Coming at the time it did, it ac¬tually presents definite problems.”According to Rappaport, thewhole racial issue, the primary fac¬tor in the controversy surroundingWillis’ policies, was obscured bythe circumstances of the Superin¬tendent's resignation. “The removalof Willis was just an attempt ofthe power structure to pacify thecivil rights movement without mak¬ing any changes,” Rappaport saidin a Maroon interview.The momentum of the driveagainst de facto school segregationhas been seriously hurt by Willis* exit, noted Rappaport. “The factthat Willis has left doesn’t reallymean anything — we have to makepeople understand that. Conditionsare still the same.”Rappaport commented that Chi¬cago and UC CORE plans, whichhad been based largely on attemptsto oust Willis, are now up in theair. Decisions on specific coursesof action will probably be madeat the next Chicago CORE meet¬ing on Friday, he stated. Plansfor UC CORE will be discussed ata “coffee hour” gathering October17 and voted on at a business meet¬ing October 20.UC CORE’s primary emphasisthis year will be on activitiesthroughout the city, according toRappaport. One possibility would beto conduct sit-in demonstrationsand picket homes of school boardmembers “to force Willis’ succes¬sor to announce an official policyof working for racially balancedschools, similar to the New York City school statement.“We also plan to organize large-scale boycotts of segregatedschools, especially in the Wood-lawn-Englewood area, with theboycotting students sitting in at‘under-utilized’ white schools,” saidRappaport.Other courses of action includeefforts to encourage more ChicagoNegroes to attend UC, as well asto continue action to secure, openoccupancy in the Hyde Park area.Stated Rappaport, “last year wecanvassed southeast Hyde Park andgot eighty per cent of the residentsto agree to open occupancy — thisyear we’ll ask realtors to complywith the residents’ wishes.”“We also intend to check intothe supposed non-discriminatorypolicy of the University, as an¬nounced last summer,” Rappaportdeclared. “We’ll also attempt touse the SG off-campus housing fileto get white students to move intoNegro buildings.” cation of teachers during thenext decade will condition thequality: of American educationfor the remainder of the century,”said Francis S. Chase last week.Chase, dean of the GraduateSchool of Education at UC, spoketo approximately 1.000 teachers atthe dedication of a new educationbuilding at Idaho State Universityin Pocatello.In his speech. Chase called fora complete revision of Americaneducation. He called the presentmethods of education “obsolete,”and called upon teachers to effectthe reconstruction which he feelsis so necessary.“Teachers,” Chase said, “shouldexemplify in high degree the qual¬ities of educated persons. No ma¬jor aspect of human knowledgeand no human culture should bewholly closed to them. They shouldbe able to learn from and to usesymbols of many kinds—linguistic,mathematical, and/or musical.”Chase outlined four conditionswhich he said must prevail if education. They were:“1) Intellectual curiosity on thepart of those who choose careersin teaching. 2) Acquisition byteachers of a substantial body oforganized knowledge, together withmethods of inquiry through whichknowledge can be extended. 3) Acertain amount of leisure andfreedom from demands that swal¬low the day without allowing pausefor reading or reflection.“4) Cherishing of scholarship andits fruits by the teaching profes¬sion, the local community, and thelarger society.”Chase also advocated a broadgeneral education, advanced studyin the field of specialization, op¬portunity for early identificationwith the teaching profession, in¬duction into the art of teaching bygifted and sympathetic teachers,and analytical study of the teach¬ing-learning process for prospec¬tive teachers.Idaho State University producesthe majority of the state’s gram¬mar school, high school, and col¬lege teachers.—EDITORIALSW School board abandons roleThe refusal of the Board of Education to accept the resig¬nation of Superintendent Willis indicates that the Board isno longer able to function as an independent policy-makingbody for the city’s school system.Clearly, Willis’ departure would be in the public interest:his dictatorial policies and unhealthy objectives have madeeach year of his tenure more unbearable for the Board, forthe general public and, most important, for the city’schildren.But the Board decided yesterday that it did not wantWillis to resign and it tacitly endorsed his view that heshould make policy for the school system as well as adminis¬ter it. The Board demonstrated that it is willing to give upits policy-making role in order to retain Willis.By threatening to resign earlier this year, Willis*Nvas ableto thwart the Board’s attempt to obtain an objective studyof the schools. His resignation may well have been a grandplay for complete control of the school system.The Board’s action at best is an irresponsible one; atworst it is a complete sellout to Willis.Should Willis retract his resignation, the educational sys¬tem would be doomed to selective mediocrity and one-manrule. ——Classifieds4,1 1r APTS., ROOMS, ETC.ROOM and board in East Hyde Parkto woman student in exchange forevening help and baby-sitting. MI 3-0232after 6 pm. Ext. 3664 days.TO SUBLET apartment, perfect loca¬tion; on Blackstone between 57th &58th; one large room with doubleMurphy bed; huge dressing closet, bathwith built-in shower, Pullman kitchenwith almost new refrigerator. Freshlypainted, light, airy. Quiet building. $82a month includes utilities. Couch thrownin as bonus. Call DO 3-1061.FOR SALE2 RARE Church Pews, 1 red velvetcouch and easy chair. Cali eves. MU4-0427. We deliver.MGA ’61 coupe, wire wheels, radio,$1,550. Call Sehwille at Ext. 260.VEGAPHONE 5 string Banjo, perf.cond. Long neck, Ivory inlay, with re-sanator. Barton, NO 7-0671.FOR SALE: 120 wooded hilly acres,7 room house, tile bath, hardwoodfloors, new furnace, lge. barn withwalnut beams, easy commuting on So.Shore R.R. or Indiana toll road. Pricereas. Write or acll Arnold Crowl, R. 1,Rolling Prairie, Ind. WANTEDWANTED man’s bicycle. Rm. 436 In¬ternational House.PERSONALSCREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP(PL 2-8377)To place a classified ad, call ext. 3265(MI 3-0800). Special student, faculty,and University-staff rates.SWAP needs Greek tutors urgently.Call Ext. 3587.Bored??? Try Quads. Thursday nite.The Russia* Choir will hold itsfirst rehearsal tonight at 7:30 inthe East Lounge of Ida Noyes Hall.All former and new members areurged to attend.The choir is still in need ef anaccompanist who will receive a•mall salary. ‘Willis' last instructiosn, sir."(Editor’s note: Today the Maroon introduces a new cartoonist, George Alexander Pope, whose work will appearperiodically throughout the year. The above cartoon was created before the Hoard of Education decided not toaccept U Mis’ resignation. The attitudes and opinions expressed in Maroon cartoons do not necessarily reflectoffical Maroon policy.)Chicago Maroon CdlGncLcir of EventsEditor-in-chief John T. WilliamsBusiness Manager Stephen H. KleinExecutive News EditorSusan J. GoldbergCampus News Editor David L. AikenNational News Editor Bob LeveyCulture-Feature Editor S. GoldmanEditor, Chicago Literary ReviewMarc CoganExecutive Sec’y Marvella AltheimerAccount Rep’s Sherman D. Fogel,William Crawford, Jr.Circulation Mgr William BennettSpecial Projects DivisionAndrew H. Stein, Dir.,Robert JaffeMedia PromotionRichard D. RosenbergStaff Artist Robert GriessExecutive Secretary Marvella AtheimerEditor emeritus Laura Ruth GodofskyIssued free of charge on the Quad¬rangles every Tuesday and Fridayduring the academic year by studentsof the University of Chicago. Addresscorrespondence to: Chicago Maroon,1212 E 59 Street, Chicago 37. Illinois.Telephones: MI 3-0800. exts. 3265 . 3266.Printed at West Side Press, Chicago,Subscription by mail is $4 per year. Tuesday, October 8Service: Hie Lutheran Church; BondChapel; 11:30 am.Riding lessons: Intermediate riding les¬sons for Riding Club; Meet at NewDorms; 3:30; all welcome; $3.Folk dancing: Israeli Folk Dancing,Hillel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn Ave.;7:30-10.Hebrew lesson: Elementary Hebrew:Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn Ace.: 4:30.Film: "Hunchback of Notre Dame"with Lon Chaney; "The Barber Shop"— W. C. Fields; Social Sciences 122;6:45 and 9 pm.Public Meeting: On Viet-Nam; StudentPeace Union; Cobb 110; 8 pm.Wednesday, October 9Services: Episcopal Holy Communion.7:30 am, and Evening Prayer, 5:05pm: Bond Chapel.Recital: Daniel Robins, carillonneur;Rockefeller Chapel; 5 pm.Class: Mishna-Jewish Civil Law andPolitical Organization; Hillel Founda¬tion, 5715 Woodlawn Ave.; 3:30Study Group: Basic Judaism; HillelFoundation, 5715 Woodlawn Avenue. 4 30Protest: South Viet-Nam Protest: Stu¬dent Peace Union; State and MadisonStreets; 3:30 pm.Class: Lay School of Theology. TheLutheran Church; Chapel House; 7:30pm.Service: Sirnhat Torah service andcelebration, Hillel Foundation, 5715Woodlawn Avenue: 8 pm.Thursday, October 10Service: Episcopal Holy Communion;11:30 am. Bond Chapel.Lecture: **DNA. and RNA ProteinSynthesis in Vaccina-virus infected He-I.a Cells," Dr. Aaron J. Shatkin, Na¬tional Institutes of Health; RickettsNorth: * pm.Colloquium: "Tune-up for the ZGS. " Dr.L. G. Teng, Argonne National Labora-torial; Eckhart 133; 4:30 pm.Lecture: "Economics and the Law ofNature," Friedrich A. von Hayek, Pro¬fessor. Committee on Social Thought;Breasted Hall: 4:30.Coaference: Student-Faculty RelationsCommittee of Student Government:7:30; Student Government office. IdaNoyes Hall.USEDnew TEXT BOOKSSTUDENT SUPPLIES• W.FOUNTAIN PENS-NOTE BOOKS-STATIONERY-LAUNDRY CASESBRIEF CASES-SPORTING GOODSTYPEWRITERS sold - rented-repairedPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57th STRUTS Df/OCRM EAST OF MANDEL BAIXSTORE HOURS: DAILY 8:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. ... EVENINGS — Mondoy, Wodnosdoy, Friday to 9i00 P.M**—*—*—*—*—*—*—*—*—*—*—*—o^o303*303030303030303 030 3 0303 03 03 030303 0303 o:go~oi~<o~o*~0~~oi'zo~o*~T'zo3,o'3tJ• CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 8, 1963% ii ’• .'/• \ !*>Letters to the editor < -• w / . •v ‘ i''MAnswer to Heagy GadflyTO THE EDITOR:Mr. Heagy seems concernedwith the idea that the return offootball* is a sign of the comingdisintegration of the college as weknow it, that the students formerlyattracted by the intellectual aura<>[ the school (apparently symbol¬ized by the absence of a footballteam, rather than by the presenceot a capable and dynamic facultyand student-body) will no longerapply.Where then will they go* Per¬haps they'll all apply to Reed CqI-Jetio. Perhaps some of the less in¬tellectual of them will actuallysink so low as to apply to one ofthe indistinguishable, typed IvyLeague schools, where there arefootball teams.Mr. Heagy also believes that thesymbol of intellectuality is moreimportant than the fact itself. Ifsuddenly we have a football team,we may no longer be regarded asgreat thinkers, who spend moretime discussing Viet Nam than sex(and why not? Where does talkingabout it get you?), and then, byGod. we won’t be great minds!Mr. Heagy seems to imply thatwe're a 1 1 intellectuals becausethere isn’t anything else to do around here: no big social organi¬zations, no sports of any import¬ance, no recent peace marches.When football comes back, we areall, led by the-freshmen (that evilterm), going to become fanaticsand rush forth to fill Stagg Fieldwith people and ourselves withrum, leaving our books and intel¬lectuality behind. If the people onthis campus cannot rememberthat they are serious students,merely because there are 22 menplaying football in Stagg Field,then the disintegration of the col¬lege is not beginning, it is com¬plete.I think football has a place oncampus along with SPU, SG, andthe Smyrd run. If I had abouteighty extra hours a week, andforty extra pounds, I'd play my¬self. I by no means advocate spe¬cial considerations for footballplayers, just as there are none forany other group on campus (per¬haps Mental Health Service?), butif a man wants to play football ofa rather different nature from theinsane game played in I-M, andcan meet his scholastic obligationswhile so doing, I see no reasonwhy he should not have the oppor¬tunity.WILLIAM WOLFSONPhy Sci division announces changesThe Division of PhysicalSciences has announced twoadministrative changes, botheffective October 1.Samuel K. Allison will take overthe duties of director of the EnricoFermi Institute for Nuclear Stu¬dies, and Richard H. Miller willbecome director of the Institutelor Computer Research.Allison, a Frank P. Hixon Dis¬tinguished Service Professor in Physics and in the Fermi Institute,is reassuming the same position heheld from 1946 to 1958. He succeedsHerbert L. Anderson, who is leav¬ing the post in order to devotefull time to research.Miller, associate professor ofastronomy and associate directorof the instiute, succeeds NicholasC. Metropolis, who had held the]X)st for the past five years. Metro-ix>lis will also return to full-timeresearch.HUNCHBACK-TONIGHT!Lon Chaney andW. C. FieldsSoc. Sci. 1226:45 & 9 P.M. TUXEDO RENTALnow availableatCOHN & STERNin theHyde Park Shopping CenterSpecial Discounts to fraternitygroups, wedding parties, elc. Replies to SPU letterTO THE EDITOR:In the last issue of the Maroonthere appeared a letter from theStudent Peace Union denouncingthe Kennedy Administration’s poli¬cy in South Viet-Nam. This letterwas well intentioned, but unreal¬istic, and it contained considerableerroneous information.The main point of the letter wasthat the United States is support¬ing an oppressive dictatorial regimein order to help “America’s ColdWar machine.” This simply is nottrue. Since 1954 the United Stateshas been supplying considerable aidto South Viet-Nam. Up to 1959 thataid was concentrated on develop¬ment projects with excellent re¬sults. For instance, since 1954 ele¬mentary school enrollment has in¬creased three-fold, and by 1961 ma¬laria was reduced by 87 per centin large areas. In 1959, however,the Communists launched an inten¬sified campaign against the SouthVietnamese Government. It becamenecessary for the United States toshift the main of its aid to meetthis threat.The heart of the United Stateseffort is the Strategic Hamlet pro¬gram, which the Student PeaceUnion describes as a series of“glorified concentration camps.”In reality, this program consists ofa series of strategically locatedareas which have been set up asvillages where the people havecome in order to escape from theterroristic activities of the VietCong. In these hamlets democraticgovernments are set up with offi¬cials elected by secret ballot, mod¬ern methods of farming are taught,and defenses are set up for thewhole community. This programprotects the people in these areasfrom having their food stolen bythe Communists, from being con¬scripted into the Viet Cong, andfrom being bodily injured or killedby the Viet Cong. In addition, boththe young and old are being taughtdemocratic government on the lo¬ cal level in a country with authori¬tarian political traditions nearly2,000 years old.All of these accomplishments donot, of course, erase the religioussuppression being employed by theDiem Government. President Ken¬nedy does not pretend that theUnited States is supporting a demo¬cratic regime. But he does believethat if the United States with¬draws its military assistance. SouthViet-Nam will fall into the handsof the Communists, and a greatdeal of the rest of Southeast Asiawill follow.The solution to the problem isbased upon the successful outcomeof this struggle. Withdrawing United States support, or initiating aUnited States sponsored coup,which would have the effect ofmaking South Viet-Nam a UnitedStates satellite, are both bad alter¬natives. President Kennedy seemsto be currently basing UnitedStates policy on the conception ofthe United States helping SouthViet-Nam to win the war, hope¬fully by 1965, and then leavingSouth Vietnamese internal affairsto the people of that country.I urge the students of this Univer¬sity to consider the whole complexsituation in order to make reason¬able, realistic judgments on thisimportant matter.JOHN BEALTELEPHONE Plena 2 3786Air ConditionedJACKSON INNCHINESE & AMERICAN RESTAURANTALL KINDS of CHOW MEINand CHOP SUEYLUNCHES • DINNERS1607 EAST SSth STREET CHICAGOKoga Gift ShopDistinctive GiftItems From TheOrient and AroundThe World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 BOB NELSON MOTORSSouthside's LargestIMPORTSALES CENTRESERVICETRIUMPH & PEUGEOTFull Line On DisplayComplete RepairsAnd ServiceFor All Popular Import*For All Popular Imparts6040 So. Cottage GroveMidway 3-4501 RENT-A-CARPER DAYU*' PER MlPER MILEATOMIC CARRENTALS, INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-51552000 WORDS A MINUTEWITH EXCELLENT COMPREHENSION AND RETENTIONYOU CAN READ 200-250 PAGES AN HOUR using the ACCELERATED READING tech¬nique. You’ll learn to read smoothly DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000words a minute. And retention is excellent. Many people read up to 4,000 words a minute. This isnot a skimming method; you definitely read every word.You can effectively apply the ACCELERATED READING technique to textbooks and factualmaterial, as well as to general reading. Your accuracy and enjoyment will be increased by this uniquemethod of reading. No machines or gadgets are used in learning this skill.A class in ACCELERATED READING will be held at the Shoreland Hotel in Chicago begin¬ning on Oct. 22. One 2Vi hour session each week for 10 weeks is all that’s necessary for you to bereading 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute with good comprehension by Christmas. It’s wonderful to beable to read a book in one sitting, and see it as a whole.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READING methodon WEDNESDAY, October 9 or TUESDAY, October 15 at 8:00 p.m. BRING A BOOK! Demon-strations will be held at HOTEL SHORELAND (55th St. at the Lake—near 55th St. 8C Hyde ParkBus stop).NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING INC.507 Fifth Avenue, New York 17. N. Y. e Phone OX 7-5895 WELCOME BACKPane’s ftizzerici"Home of Hyde Pork's Tastiest Pizza"Welcomes everyone back to the UniversityFREE DELIVERY WITH STUDENT I.D.SPECIAL25c OFF ON MEDIUM & 50c OFF ON LARGEWITH THIS COUPONPHONE NOrmal 7-9520 1403 E. 53rd ST.OPEN DAILY 11:00 A.M.-2:00 A.M.CONTINENTALMERCURYCOMETSALES — SERVICE — PARTSLAKE PARK MOTORS, Inc.6035 S. COTTAGE GROVE CHICAGO. ILLHYde Park 3-3445There’s a Beautiful, New Old-FashionedDelicatessen In Hyde ParkAnd it's the only place serving reallyfine food anywhere near you —at prices that remind you of thegood old daysUNIQUE1501 E. 53rd Street(corner Harper)Phone: FA 4-0633 . . . We deliverHOBBY HOUSERESTAURANTBREAKFAST DINNERLUNCH SNACKS1342 E. 53rd St.0*1 t, mi • CHICAGO MAROON • 3✓ ★ G A D F LY *Football at UC might be a healthy companion to PlatoWe, here at the University of Chi-cage, are all aware of the valueof symbols and their everpresencein our daily lives. Yet there is an¬other side to the picture of life asa series of symbolic things and in¬terludes. It goes something like,“the map is not the territory, theword not the thing itself.”It is difficult to imagine thatthing which most of us picture asbeing a ‘‘Chicago education” beingdestroyed by the disappearance of a symbol such as the absence offootball from the U of C. That edu¬cation must have an incrediblytenuous existence to begin with ifit needs to be buttressed by sucha distinction.It is, after all, not the sport butthe quality of people it attractsthat is the subject of approbation.I think, however, it will be foundthat the quality of student that thisschool attracts was not measurablychanged by either the removal ofOn Canps withMttShuImanBy the Author of “Rally Round the Flay, Boys!'' and,“Barefoot Boy With Cheek.’’)WORDS: THEIR CAUSE AND CUREToday let us take up the subject of etymology (or entomology,as it is sometimes culled) which is the study of word origins(or insects, as they are sometimes called).Where are word origins (insects) to be found? Well sir, some¬times words are proper names which have passed into thelanguage. Take, for instance, the words used in electricity:ampere was named after its discoverer, the Frenchman AndreMarie Ampere (1775-1836); similarly, ohm was named afterthe German G.S. Ohm (1781-1854), watt after the Scot JamesWatt (1736-1819), and bulb after the American Fred C. Bulb(1843-1912).There is, incidentally, quite a poignant little story aboutMr. Bulb. Until Bulb’s invention, all illumination was pro¬vided by gas, which was named after its inventor Milton T. Gasfflt [iw iiutitimc werdj itjvvdwho, strange to tell, had been Bulb’s roommate at Cal Teeh!In fact, strange to tell, the third man sharing the room withBulb and Gas was also one whose name burns bright in theaunals of illumination—Walter Candle!The three roommates were insejxirable companions in col¬lege. After graduation all three did research in the problemsof artificial light, which at this time did not exist. All Americaused to go to bed with the chickens, and many fine citizens were,alas, severely injured falling off the roost.Well sir, the three comrades—Bulb, Gas, and Candle-promised to be friends forever when they left school, butsuccess, alas, s]x>iled all that. First Candle invented the can¬dle, got rich, and forgot his old triends. Then Gas invented gas,got rich, bankrupted Candle, and forgot his old friends. ThenBulb invented the bulb, got rich, bankrupted Gas, and forgothis old friends.Candle and Gas, bitter and impoverished at the ages resjjec-tively of 75 and 71, went to sea as respectively the world’soldest and second oldest cabin boy. Bulb, rich and grand, alsowent to sea, but he went in style—as a first-class passenger onluxury liners.Well sir, strange to tell, all tliree were alxmrd the ill-fatedLusitania when she was sunk in the North Atlantic. Andstrange to tell, when they were swimming for their lives afterthe shipwreck, all three clambered aboard the same dinghy!Well sir, chastened and made wiser by their brush with peril,they fell into each other’s arms and wept and exchanged for¬giveness and became fast friends all over again.For three years they drifted in the dinghy, shaking handsand singing the Cal Tech rouser all the while. Then, at longlast, they spied a passing liner and were taken aboard.They remained fast friends for the rest of their days, which,1 regret to report, were not many, because the liner which pickedthem up was the Titanic.What a pity that Marllmros were not invented during thelifetimes of Bulb, Gas, and Candle. Had there been Marlboros,these three friends never would have grown apart because theywould have realized how much, despite their differences, theystill had in common. I mean to say that Marlboros can be lit bycandle, by gas, and by electricity, and no matter how youlight them, you always get a lot to like—a filter, a flavor, apack or box that makes anyone—including Bulb, Gas, and Can¬dle-settle back and forswear pettiness and smile the sweetsmile of friendship on all who pass!fe 1903 Mw HimIuijuiEtymology is not the business of the makers of MarlboroCigarettes, who sponsor this column. We deal in rich to¬baccos and tine tiltere. Try a pack soon. football as an intercollegiate sport,nor will it be changed by the rein¬troduction of football.The administration of the univer¬sity stopped Chicago’s participationin intercollegiate football becauseof the corruption that then existedin the sport, not to mention the factthat our team had been going downto deteat regularly for years. Thekind of student then admitted didnot change as drastically as thepolicy on football, and though theremay have been changes in the com¬position of the student body, trac¬ing these more or less naturalchanges to the policy on footballhardly meete the criteria for anykind of rigor — although I’m sureany right thinking individual justfeels that it is trueWhen intercollegiate football wasplowed under, the university calledinto being something called intra¬mural football, to be played . be¬tween teams whose members allcame from the student body. It hasbeen suggested that this providesenough of an aggressive outlet forthose who need it, and there hasbeen no suggestion that such ac¬tivity warps the university’s imageor attracts the wrong kind of stu¬dent. I would be willing to bet,however, that many of these peo¬ple who play intermural footballare those who would, or perhapswill, play intercollegiate football forthe U. of C. If they have notwarped us before, can their ac¬tivity do it now? 1 hardly think so.In so far as the appearance offootball on this campus might at¬tract the wrong kind of student,the quality of our teams will dis¬suade him from even attemptingto enter for many decades, if notforever. The person who goes tocollege to play football can findmany places where the glory ofvictory will amply repay his ef¬forts and where the campus at¬mosphere will please him imeas-urably more than it would here.This does not change the fact,Typewriters and tape re¬corders for sale or for rent.See our photographic linesalso.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. of course, that something mightoccur if a good football team wereto happen to appear on the Quad¬rangles. Happen, of course, is thewrrong word, for this would onlycome about through the hard workof both the coaches and players,If we have a good team, somethingwhich is always a greater pleasureto watch than a bad one, it is up tothe administration and faculty toprevent it from overpowering therest of the college.Yet the danger does not lie in theexistence of a football team itself.If any particular class is worsethan the standard group of stu¬dents entering the U of C, it isup to the faculty to retain itsstandards and to provide a rate ofattrition which will indicate to theadministration that their admissionpolicies are below the standardsset by the faculty for previousstudent bodies. It is up to the ad¬ministration to make this unneces¬sary. I might note that there havebeen very few first and secondyear classes which have not beenconsidered inferior in mental capa¬city by the corresponding third andfourth year classes.If this kind of control is placedon the selection of the enteringstudent, and no awful collusionexists between the admissions of¬fice and the faculty to change thecharacter of the student body forthe worse, then there should be nodanger. No one can deny the rightof the individual who wants tospend his recreation time in prac¬ticing and playing football, to do so,or those of the individuals whowant to spend their time awayfrom the scholar business In watch¬ing a football game. Further, thereis no reason why the Universityshouldn’t be the one to supply thefacilities. It does so for fencing,golf, soccer, and basketball as wellas other sports.These sports are not consideredevils of any magnitude becausethey are run by the University forthe pleasure of the students in¬volved, and the entertainment ofthose who care to watch, and notfor the monetary or publicity profitof the University itself. As such,they constitute part of the meansthe University provides which maybe used by the student to roundhimself, or perhaps prevent him¬self from becoming round.I see no reason why the Univer¬sity cannot financially support afootball team. They now buy equip¬ment for the football class, andcould without unreasonable ex¬penditure send the team on a sched¬ ule of games. Further, there seemsto be no real objection to chargingadmission to the games' whichwould be tailored to cover the ex¬penses of the team. The only timethat the students of this Univer¬sity, as opposed to those of anyother, could protest would be ifthe team began to show a profit.This would be a danger signal andone by which the consequences offootball which most foresee couldbe avoided.The most general question is thepreservation of the character ofthe University. This character isnot stimulated, caused, or pre¬served by the relative unimpor¬tance of sports, fraternities, or so¬cial pressure, nor by noneomform-ity as a value. It is rather thatthese things are in the stale theyare because of the character ofthe college and not vice versa.This character is a result of thecomposition of the faculty and stu¬dent body, and stems from the kindof person which they represent.To say that this is not the kind ofstudent that plays football is apatent falsehood, to which the suc¬cess of the intramural program canbear witness.If the administration is “uneasy”about the composition of the stu¬dent body and intends to changeit, and the faculty in any way con¬curs or allows this to happen thereis little that the students can doto prevent it. Protesting the appear¬ance of football on the campus canhardly ohange a trend to the worse,if such is what is happening. Theadministration w’ill simply admitthose kind of students which wouldplay football rather than study,they will find something else to do,and still do as poorly in class. Ifit does not admit those kinds ofstudents, and the ones it does ad¬mit wish to play football, there isno problem, as I have pointed out.If there is a real danger of achange in the character of thestudent body, the present studentbody should protest the admissionpolicies which make it possible,not the football team which couldonly be a reflection of those jxdi-cies, if it is, in fact, that.Plato is not a substitute for foot¬ball, but football may be healthy,if minor, companion to Plato. Tosuggest that the character of theCollege is based on such super¬ficialities as the absence of foot¬ball, not using the term “Fresh¬man,” and the lack of discussionson sex (?!) is to greatly insult theadministration, the faculty, andthe student body.GERALD M. KODISH1 **tecA«\ ■ AM ACCUTfMD TAAOI-KAAXI V..1CI1 ittftf.fv «NtV fill MC60CT Of tMt COOA-CeiA CCl'MInl....gym....tumble....flip...flop...lug...tugpush...jump...leap......chin...lift...pull......run...puff puff...things gObetter,!.withpauseCokeBottled under the authority of The Coco-Cola Company by: The Coca-Cola Bottling Company of ChicagoInstructorMcQuowuThe following course section changes were announced yesterday by#he Kegistrar’s office:C*ur»« No. sect. No. Course titleANTHROPOLOGY.aoo 338 01Xi 576 01 Interview analysts400 377 01BIOCHEMISTRY:1U 306 01115 30* 01ART:205 351J05 400205 458BlOlOGY:SOI 111 010101BAHBDADBFAFB Current tit in biochcmThesis courseResearch in Amer. art staffstaffTaylor, J. locationSS 305LanglabF 507AB 101CL 10ArrArrSFL 8SFL 7SFL 8SFL 7SFL 8SFL 7 time10:30-12 TT10:30-12 WF4:30 TTF4 WArrArrmOFMYSlCS:120 396 01 General virology Haselkorn, R. RKS N-l 10:30 MWF8101’ YCHOLOGY:.125 302 01 AB 133BUSINESS:500 300 01 BE 103500 301 01 BE 103 2-3:30 MW500 310 01 BE 106500 331 01 BE 10500 361 01 BE 107500 380 01 CancelledrHKMISTRY338 91 7-8:30 M—Begins Oct. 7K ONOMICS:072 201 91 UH 211072 240 01 SS 106405 331 Ol Ro 6405 498 01 SS 106I-DUCATION:415 307 01 3-4: 30 TT415 372 91 Weintraub415 489 01 150 CretinsY(,l ISH LANG. &. LIT.:i>2' 101 DC English comp-1 Blair, W. 8C staff Lei 6 11:30 MWF(125 101 DE Cancelled025 107 DA Cancelled025 203 01 1-2:30 Th2-3:30 T &025 216 01 Sw 208025 296 91 6:30-9:30 W025 289 91 Lei 2225 309 91225 315 Ol Davit, A. - C 402 2-3:30 TTK225 393 01 Wb 1031RKNCH:026 103 91 Elementary French-3 Chamberlin, W. DC 6:30-9:30 WPQ Fr. 102 or 6 hrs. Coll. Fr. or Cona lnstr.0^6 212 01 Wb 402212 304 01 Place, E. 2:30 MWF2)2 390 91 Wb 206212 599 02 Grin, N. Cl 11 12:30 MWFGEOPHYSICAL SCIENCES:(40 471Stl5( 131053 201(40 339 01010101 Rsch Phys Upper Atmos Hines, C.Paleoecology(40 377GERMAN.027 104GREEK:242 400HISTORY:5076 2414(04(04(04(04(04(04(0 346410416490493498540 01 Read ing010101010101Ol01 Johnson & OlsonBurnett, A. ArrW 204Ro 26W 204 Arr9:30 MWF3-4:50 TT—PQ Cons Instr10:30-12 TT1:30 MTWFC 410SS 107S 107F 307SS 108R 232SS 105BE 17 Arr2:30-4 TT2:30 MWF5-6:30 TT2:30-4:30 WHIMORY OF CULTURE:2 50 300 01 CancelledHUMAN DEVELOPMENT:077 250 01 1-2:30 TT4 40 301 01 HHB 134A 8:30-10:30 MWFHIM MANITIES: .'oil 121 AC Wb 103(HI 2 83 01 Aronson, H.215 400 01 Sem John Hay Fellow* Haydon, H. Arr ArrITALIAN:OH 101 91 Scalzetti, E.256 332 01 Wb 206 1:30-3 TTLINGUISTICS:0)5 290 Ol Informal Course-Ling staff Arr Arr260 377 01 Adv Tamil-1 Pillai, S. Arr Arr260 341 Ol Cl 16 1:30 MWF260 363 Ol Read Old A Mid Hind-1 Pandey, S. • Arr ArrMATHEMATICS:150 390 01 Org. A Des Dig Comp Metropolis, M. 1RC-C113 2:30 MWFPQ Math 285, Cons. Instr.OMENTAL LANG. A CIV.:272 302 01 Read Ssro-Paletrinian Kantor, H. Arr Arr278 360 01 11:30 MWF278 494 01 Thesis Res. staff Arr Arr289 301 01 Elem. Sumer,an-l Sjoberg, A. Arr Arr289 307 01 Sem Adv Sumer-1 Sjoberg, A. Arr Arr252 320 01 Elem Hittite-1 Guterbock, H. Or 318 Arr252 434 Ol Inter Hittite-1 Guterbock, H. Or 318 Arr101 (83 Ol Cancelled #•oi 330 Ol Read Akkad Lit Rainer, E. Or 217 Arr284 301 01 Or 210257 111 01 Or 226 9:30 MWFPHILOSOPHY:iH9 201 01 4:30-6 MW019 281 01 Reading course «. staff Arr Arr285 325 01 1:30-3 TT285 345 01 Sw 201POLITICAL SCIENCE:4"0 354 01(80 398 01470 495 01PSYCHOLOGY: SS 122Cl 10SS 107 after Oct. 83:30-6:30 W475 300 01 Ab 133 1:30-3 TT475 302 01 Ab 133475 349 91SLAVIC:046 103 91 . Sorokin, B. 6:30-8 TuF046 216 01 C 316 3-4:30 TT"46 253 01 • 4-5:30 MW046 263 01 C 103287 490 01 Res. Slavic staff Arr ArrSOCIAL SCIENCES:"82 121 Lecture for Soc 2 11:30 Thurs. only082 219 01 Elem math for soc sci Polemis, B. C 305 3:30-5 TT082 280 01 Prep bachelor's paper staff Arr Arr"82 271 01 C 410SOCIAL SERVICE ADM.:740 540 01 Lab to be ArrSOCIAL THOUGHT:480 398 01 Cl 10SOCIOLOGY:485 308 01 SS 105 1:30-3 TT485 465 01 Ro 27 2:30-5 M>85 537 01 CancelledSPANISH:042 212 01 —■ » Wb 401042 283 01 Wb 402288 304 91 Place, E.288 34i 01 El Ensayo Espanol Cadenas, D. W b 206 1:30 MWFSTATISTICS:"59 200 91 Wallace, D.'70 400 01 Sem statistics staff Arr Arr470 401 01 Masters thesis stat staff Arr Arr"’0 402 Ol PhD thesis stat staff Arr Arr>70 403 01 Consultation stat staff Arr Arr470 404 01 Read stat staff Arr Arr''OOLOGY:*4*5 301 01 Lab Z5c ArrZ 14 9:30-11: 30 TTS,4*5 302 01 Ab 133o 18 240 01 Cancelled018 207 01 Z 29 Morgenthauaf Hille!(Continued from page 1)of love. Here, said Morgenthau isspontaneous giving of all that isto be given.Love, however, transcends thedilemma of justice, and does notsolve it, Morgenthau said. Givingeverything is not justice, he ex¬plained. We still are unable to un¬derstand the problem and to copewith it.The closest approximation of jus¬tice we have is in the mechanics ofpower. We have assumed thatlimited power is more just thanabsolute power, even though thisis not self-evident, Morgenthausaid. The ideal government wrouldbe absolute power with absolutejustice and absolute wisdom.If we assume limited power ismore just, however, we can findan approximation of justice themechanics of power. Morgenthauconcluded that there are a numberof semi-autonomous centers ofpower, one checks the other andprevents concentration of power byusing the self-limiting dimensioninherent in power itself.Open house formarried studentsAn open-house party for UC mar¬ried students on Thursday will beihe first event in the new MarriedStudent Center.The party will begin at 8 pmwith a discussion on the center’soperations and facilities. The cen¬ter is located on the ground floorof the Fairfax Hotel at Hyde Parkand Dorchester. Dancing and re¬freshments will follow the discus¬sion.Tickets, at 75 cents per couple,may be purchased at the door.Pritchett namedAssociation headC. Herman Pritchett, chairmanof the department of political sci¬ence at UC, has been elected pres¬ident of the American PoliticalScience Association for the com¬ing year.Active in the association formany years, Pritchett’s field ofinterest is constitutional law andjudicial process. He has held hispost as head of UC’s political sci¬ences department since 1948, ex¬cept for one three year period.The American Political ScienceAssociation was founded in 1903and has a membership of ten thou¬sand including political scientistsfrom various schools, writers onpublic affairs, and government of¬ficials. DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55tli St. DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNTA STRESSANALYSISOFASTRAPLESSEVENINGGOWKAnd Other Essays for a Scientific AgeEdited by Robert A. Baker, PsychologistIllustrated by Stanley WyattWho says structural engineering work is dull? Finding theformula that would hold up a strapless evening gown wasn’teasy—but it was a ball. This is only one sample of the scientific research that is graphically recorded in this peculiar col¬lection of essays. Some of the others —Leo Szilard, a world renowned physicist, looks atman’s future on Planet Cybernetica. Things don’tlook so good.Meihem in Ce Klasrum ushers in "National EasyLanguage Week”. Al unecesary leters in ce alfabetar dropd to alow us tu hav a reali sensibl writenlangug.A Psychoanalysis of U. S. Missile Failures. Allmissiles that crack-up on the pad are secretly sentto a nut doctor in Miami.There’s more by such lighthearted, egghead types as JohnUpdike; C. Northcote Parkinson; James E. Miller, Chairman,Dept, of Meteorology and Oceanography, N. Y. U.; NormanApplezweig, Consulting Biochemist; Rudolf B. Schmerl, Research Administrator at the University of Michigan. $3.95Take this coupon to your bookstore or mail it to publisher.PRENTICE-HALL, INC. Dept. 300, Englewood Cliffs, N. J.Please send me copies of A STRESS ANALYSIS OF A STRAPLESS EVENINGGOWN @ $3.95 a copy. Postpaid if I enclose □ check Q money order,AnnarsdCITY ZONE STATESUNDAY MORNING SERIES-11 a.m.• Modern science has given mankind a new view ofhimself and his universe. In this * series of sermonsRev. Jack A. Kent will explore the impact of scientificthought upon religious belief: THE WORLD VIEWOF THE RELIGIOUS LIBERALN13th OctoberI. The Origin of the Universe20th OctoberIV. The Beginning of Religion27th OctoberII. The Beginning of Life3rd NovemberIII. The Coming of Man10th NovemberV. What Can We Believe?THE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCHCHICAGO57th Street and Woodlawn Avenue FA 44100H lytMtowtMvy*> ^.-fri-fift 1yiltl ' ■ o: '•• ••• •■?V,'yt c Am KA1 JcAOLtiVER interested in modern promotional techniques, exterior garment mer-i cliandising-wise. we at Eagle have devoted particular attention of late toSAVE 3* ON YOUR VERY NEXTEAGLE INISHOWEN CHEVIOT SHIRT!(Price before discount, about $7.50)MR. DEALER: For your convenience in obtaining prompt accurate payment for this coupon, send it to Eagle Shirtmakers. HerringboneOst'ord Inishowen Cheviot Brooketowne Prompt Accurate Payment Department, Quakertown, Pennsylvania (Attn. Miss Afflerbach).Oder void where prohibited, restricted, or ignored. Only one (1) coupon per customer. Cash value: 1/100 of one cent. Eagle Shirtmakers.® 196.1 EACH F, SI I tit (MAKERS, QUAKERTOWN', PENNSYLVANIAinand universities, as well as Englishdepartment chairmen throughoutthe country and anyone else whowishes a copy.Streeter asserts that Booth’s es¬say, the trial balloon of the series,is a “fresh view” to the perpetualproblems of teaching first-year col¬lege English.Booth’s main thesis, a gentleecho ,of John Dewey, is that theEnglish student should write aboutwhat he knows and has interest in.“Our students bore us,” he asserts,. . because they have nothing tosay, to us or to anybody else.”He feels that a solution to thisproblem will occur “if andwhen they discover something tosay . .He continues, “Obviously ourstudents are not going to interestus until they too have some ideas.But it is not easy to impartideas.” He adds that teachers mustinstill in their students an interestin ideas, must literally inspirethem—something no machine cando—but that is an end difficult ofattainment. Yet teachers may, onoccasion, witness a miracle: a manand a style where before there wasonly a bag of wind and a bundleM I TZIE 1 SFLOWER SHO1225 E. 63rd St.HY 3-53531340 E. 55th St.Ml 3-4020^ foreign carhospitalbob lesterMG psychiatrist5424 kimbarkmi 3-3113EveryoneEATSatGORDON’S1321 E. 57thR~GALCUlUfrStOI5UG5> AIR. COMQtTIOMkQ131Q £. 53** STII AM TO 10 PM_ M13-340Tpublishes essayEAGLE SHIRTS ARE AVAILABLE AT Marshall Field of received opinions.Booth departs from theory,though, and lambasts current writ¬ing trends as soporific excuses forgood narrative, journalese pot-''^boiled to order for students whocouldn’t care less for what they’rewriting about. . . almost everyReader’s Digest article (is) intelli¬gible to everyone over the chrono¬logical age of ten and boring toeveryone over the mehtat age offifteen,” he laments.“Even relatively skillful narra¬tion, used too obviously as a gim¬mick to catch interest, with no realrelation to the subject, can bp asdull as the most abstract pomposi¬ties.”Author as well of The Rhetoricof Fiction, which in December, 1962 **won the Christian Gauss award ofthe Phi Beta Kappa Society fornotable work scholarship. Booth isa graduate of Brigham Young Uni¬versity. He received his doctoratefrom the University of Chicago in1950. Prior to joining the facultyhere in 1962, he taught at Haver-ford and Earlham.His essay was adapted from aspeech he delivered in May, 1963,to the Illinois Council of CollegeTeachers at the University of Illi¬nois. Copies may be obtained fromthe Dean of Humanities, 1050 East ,59th street, Chicago 37.the commercial practices of our colleagues in the tunafish, soup ai\d soap lines.It seems that these three diverse industries have all discovered that byoffering you a free discount coupon good for three cents off the purchase priceof their product, they can lure you down to the neighborhood store. Well,we have been considering various ways to market (we believe that's the wordthey use) our fnishowen Cheviot Brooketowne. The first two adjectives describea heavy herringbone oxford designed by our shirting gourmet who describes thisfabric as meaty. Brooketowne is our tapered body button-down with the sloppybulge we used to call flare before everyone else did too. So, tunafish on themind, we decided to dip into that great fund of American advertising knowhow.Friends! as soon as you've written us to learn the name of your nearestEagle dealer (not all Eagle shirts have the Eagle label in them, recall), and weanswer you, and you need a shirt, run! don't walk and claim your Eagle f. C.shirt at three cents off! At once! Recent Faculty PublicationsTIip Statp and the Farmer, byPeter Self and Herbert J. Storing.$5.50.The Poor Pay More, by DavidCaplovitz. $5.50.The University ofChicago Booksiore5802 Ellis Ave.Sensitivity in 'Cybele' Hum divisionThe acclaimed winner* of theOscar division of foreign films,Sundays and Cybele. has come tothe Hyde Park with its runnerup,The Four Days of Naples. Not sur¬prisingly, the two are tragedies,the former a very personal one,the second in the epic vein.Cybele, in French with subtitles,is an excellent product of the so-called New Wave in foreign films.The potentially typical melodramaof a Hollywood mold was insteadraised to a level of classic dramaby purely technical skill, especiallyevident in the quality of directionand camera work. With an acutesensitivity rare to films, directorSerge Bourguinon succeeds in por¬traying the conflict within a lonelyamnesiatic sculptor’s apprenticewho falls in love with an eleven-year-old orphan girl whom liesees every Sunday.One is so captured by the di¬rector’s exercise of charm thatone does not sense until after¬wards that the script is nothingremarkable, nothing more than anepisode worthy of The New Yorker.How'ever, profundity is lent to everyline by master technician Bour¬guinon and his talented troupe.The Four Days of Naples is anoverlong, bloody affair so deaden¬ ing to the nerves that by the end,the viewer could calmly step overthe battered body of a dead childlying in the aisle and ask for pop¬corn.Concerned with the story of Na¬ples’ population resisting the Naziconscription of it men in 1943,Nanni Loy drafted the people ofNaples one generation later tomake up the cast of his movie.The story oF the resistance isquite interesting, the acting believ¬able. If Loy wished only to portraya city’s valor in massacre, he suc¬ceeded well. However, one wonderswhat classic the picture mighthave been if handled with moretaste and discretion.The mass tragedy, ironically,was not as effective as the per¬sonal tragedy of Cybele. To avoiddetriment to the effect of Cybele,it is advised that the film be seenfirst, if they must be seen to¬gether. Dan BarshayMust register bikesStudents should register theirbicycles with the University byOctober 15. Registration cards maybe obtained at the information desk,International House, the registrar'soffice, and the security office. “Any teaching that boresthe teacher is sure to fail.”Wayne C. Booth, PullmanProfessor of English makesthis point in an essay recently pub¬lished by the division of the hu¬manities.Entitled Boring from Within: TheArt of the Freshman Essay,Booth’s opus is the first in a pro¬jected series of occasional essays,issued in pamphlet format, that aredesigned to illuminate various fac¬ets of liberal-arts scholarship andteaching techniques.Robert E. Streeter, dean of thehumanities division, told a Maroonreporter. “We hope that these es¬says—informal, topical, and sharp¬ly directed to important currentquestions in education and culture—will do something to express theconcern of humanists for the intell-lectual vitality of our commonlife.”This scries of occasional essays,Streeter says, will probably beisued at three or four month, inter¬vals. Recipients of the pamphletinclude all students in the co-oper¬ative three year master’s programat thirty-seven Midwest colleges• CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. «. 1*43NEWSBITSNSF applicationdeadline[Applications for 1964-65National Science Foundation» (NSF) cooperative graduatefellowships must be completedby November 1, 1963. In addition,application deadline for NSF sum¬mer fellowships is December 6.Both programs provide tuitionand fees for graduate study in^mathematical, physical, medical,biological, and engineering sci¬ences, anthropology, economics,geography, the history and philoso¬phy of science, psychology andsociology.The cooperative fellowships payf a stipend of $2400 for the first yearof graduate study, $2600 for the in¬termediate year, and $2800 for theterminal year of graduate work.| In addition, $500 is allowed foreach dependent of the recipient.►s To be eligible for the grant, onemust be a United States citizen ornational, have demonstrated abilityfor advanced training in the sci¬ences, and be admitted to a partici¬pating institution prior to the be¬ginning of the fellowship tenure.^ Summer fellowships for graduateteaching assistants provide sti-pends of $50 to $85 a week for grad¬uate teaching assistants doinggraduate work during the summerquarter. Applicants must have hadone year’s teaching assistant ex¬perience, be a United States citi¬zen, and be engaged in full timeacademic work in one of the fieldscovered under the program.All applicants for cooperativegraduate fellowships must be sup¬plied by Graduate Record Exam¬ination scores.Completed applications must bein the Office of the Committee onFellowships and Scholarships, Ad¬ministration Building, Room 201before their respective deadlines inorder to be considered for the pro¬gram. Award announcements willbe made shortly after March 15,1964.Peace Corps testsThe Peace Corps is looking forqualified American volunteers tofill posts in developing nationsaround the world; and Tests willbe given to determine specificskills, on October 19.Tlie tests will be administeredin room 1154, US Customhouse, 610South Canal Street. Volunteersmust be American citizens at least18 years old. They must have theequivalent of a high school educa¬tion. Married couples are eligibleif both qualify and have no de¬pendents under eighteen.To take the test applicants mustfill out a Peace Corps, question¬naire, available at post officesand from the Peace Corps, Wash¬ington. D.C. 20525. The applicationshould be returned or brought toihe test center.Trade in green stampsGreen stamps and usedcars can be “traded-in forFreedom” this summer bydonating them to the StudentN o n v i ol e n t Coordinating Com¬mittee. The stamps will helpsustain SNCC workers while thecars will be used to put Freedomon the road as well as in the airthroughout the South. Both thestamps and cars will be gratefullyreceived at the SNCC office, 6Raymond St., Atlanta 14, Georgia.IM season beginsHie Intramural season beginstomorrow when College House Redand College House Blue leagueteams dash at touch football. 48college house, fraternity, and divi¬sional teams have signed up forthe season. Interested partiesshould contact their athletic mana¬gers.Intramural tennis entries aredue today by 5 pm in the intra¬mural office at Bartlett gym. NSA trip selectionsThe United States NationalStudent Association(USNSA), in conjunction withthe Institute of InternationalEducation, is selecting ten stu¬dents to make a thirty-day visitto Singapore, Malaya, and Indo¬nesia. The trip will begin in mid-December.The delegates will visit univer¬sities, major cities, and rural com¬munities and will meet with lead¬ers in each locality, for the pur¬pose of observing cultural, socialand political aspects of the south¬east Asian countries.Selection will be made on thebasis of leadership qualities, knowl¬edge of international affairs, abil¬ity to discuss American societyand student life articulately, andtact and discretion in confrontingindividuals with differing points ofview. Applicants may be asked toappear for oral interviews.Knowledge of languages of thearea is desirable, but not neces¬sary. Those selected will be givenreading lists and a weekend orien¬tation program to acquaint themwith the countries they will visit.The sponsoring organizations willpay all expenses. Applications maybe obtained from Eugene Groves,NSA Coordinator, Student Govern¬ment office, Ida Noyes Hall, 1212East 59th Street, or from the AsianDelegation, USNSA, 3457 ChestnutStreet, Philadelphia, Penna. Thedeadline for applications is Novem¬ber 1.New campus bus routeNew routes and newschedules have gone into ef¬fect on the UC campus busservice.The east-west line will use 56thstreet this year instead of 57thstreet to avoid heavy traffic.The bus sei*vice operates twolines in the campus neighborhood.The north-south line runs between59th street and 48th street, on Uni¬versity and Dorchester Avenues. Aneast-west service runs on 56thstreet and 59th street from CottageGrove to Stony Island Avenues.The service was established in1957 to provide transportation inthe neighborhood for faculty, staff,and students living in Hyde Parkand Kenwood.A total of over 110,000 passengerswere carried last year, at a chargeof ten cents a ride. Tickets can bepurchased at the Bursar’s office.The university provided $13,424 insubsidy for the operation last year.Information on routes and ticketsis posted around the campus.Cut ticket rateStudents and faculty can securea discount rate for tickets to theBritish comedy, “Beyond theFringe,” at the Studebaker Thea¬ter.The discount coupons are avail- .able to student and faculty mem¬bers with ID cards at the StudentActivities office on the secondfloor of Ida Noyes Hall.They can be exchanged for sec-cond balcony tickets for one dollarand can be used any night exceptSaturday and for Wednesday' andFriday matinees.57th Street choraleThe 57th Street Chorale, a newUniversity community chorus, heldits first rehearsal last week. Twen¬ty seven singers explored an un¬usual collection of rounds andglees and two choruses of theMozart “Coronation” Mass. “TheChorale is off to an excitingstart” commented musical directorChristopher Moore at the close ofthe session.New interested voices are in¬vited to the second rehearsal, at7:30 pm tonight in John WoolmanHall, 1174 East 57th Street. A pros¬pectus of the project is availablefrom Courtner King in East Houseor from Mr. Moore at the Coraleoffice (1174). The 57th Street Chor¬ale succeeds the Gleeful Club oflast year. You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711 HYDE PARK SHOE REPAIR1451 E. 57th ST.HY 3-1247 1 sfqllr/fJjServing The University Community for V^(/vvvviA/well over 40 Tears BEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingSAMUEL A. BELL“Buy Shell From Bell"SINCE 19244701 So. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150 andHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-83022000 WORDS A MINUTEWITH EXCELLENT COMPREHENSION AND RETENTIONYOU CAN READ 200-250 PAGES AN HOUR using the ACCELERATED READING tech¬nique. You’ll learn to read smoothly DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000words a minute. And retention is excellent. Many people read up to 4,000 words a minute. This isnot a skimming method; you definitely read every word.You can_effectively apply the ACCELERATED READING technique to textbooks and factualmaterial, as well as to general reading. Your accural and enjoyment will be increased by this uniquemethod of reading. No machines or gadgets are used in learning this skill.A class in ACCELERATED READING will be held at the Shoreland Hotel in Chicago begin¬ning on Oct. 22. One 2V2 hour session each week for 10 weeks is all that’s necessary for you to bereading 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute with good comprehension by Christmas. It’s wonderful to beable to read a book in one sitting, and see it as a whole.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READING methodon WEDNESDAY, October 9 or TUESDAY, October 15 at 8:00 p.m. BRING A BOOK! Demon¬strations will be held at HOTEL SHORELAND (55th St. at the Lake—near 55th St. & Hyde ParkBus stop).NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING INC.507 Fifth Avenue, New York 17, N. Y. • Phone OX 7-5895You have room for growthin data processing-at IBMIBM offers graduates with bachelor’s or advanced degrees in Engineer¬ing, the Sciences, Business Administration, Economics, or Liberal Artschallenging assignments in the marketing of information systems andequipment. IRewarding opportunities exist in more than 190 IBM Sales and ServiceOffices located in major cities throughout the United States. IThese opportunities increase with each new system that is designed tomeet the growing needs of business, industry, government, research,education, or space. Iwide range of positionsMarketing: I The IBM Data Processing Representative is a consultantto his customers. I He demonstrates how customers can achieve bet¬ter business management and controls through data processing. ISystems Engineering: I IBM Data Processing Systems Engineers aremen and women who study customer requirements in depth, devise anapproach, define a preferred machine and operational solution, andassist in implementing this solution. Iopportunities for advancementIBM, an Equal Opportunity Employer, offers you extensive training inthe area of your special interest. I This training continues as you ad¬vance along a planned career path leading to professional or managerialpositions. IWe also have comprehensive company-paid benefits plans...trainingprograms to keep you abreast of developments in your field...and atuition-refund plan to give you financial assistance for graduate study. Ion-campus interviewsSee your college placement director to determine when IBM will inter¬view on campus, and make an appointment to see our representative.If the interview date is inconvenient for you, please write or call: IW. B. Merrill, Branch Manager, I IBM Corporation, 9415 S. WesternAvenue, Chicago 20, Illinois, PR 9-8000. IJBM will interview November 6. IMOVE AHEAD WITH IBM DATA PROCESSINGOct. 8, 19*3 • CHICAGO MAROON • /I fI#r ?.l'b Western race incidents Sees aid as threat to schoolsRecently racial incidents involving1 sororities have crop¬ped up at three colleges.••Long Beach State Collegewithdrew recognition of six of itsseven sororities. They had with¬drawn from campus-supervisedrushing, without consulting the col¬lege, to avoid compliance with aproposed anti-discrimination ruleeffective next September.The rule, passed by trustees ofthe state colleges, demands thatsororities and fraternities signpledges agreeing not to discrimi¬nate against members by Septem¬ber 1, 1964.Each of the six sonorities. AlphaPhi. Delta Delta Delta, Delta Zeta,Gamma Phi Beta, Sigma Kappaand Zeta Tau Alpha, is a memberof a national organization.Also in California. Rev. C. Ed¬ward Crowther, senior Episcopalchaplain at UCLA announced hisintention to lead pickets of soror¬ities there because there is not onenon-white member in a UCLAsorority.Sue Herney, president of thePanhellenic Council, stated that nonon-white student had registered for rush or had rushed this falland that the council welcomed anyone who wanted to rush.At Portland State College in Ore¬gon six national sorority chapterswere suspended for refusing topledge the only two Negro girlswho sought membersliip.The sororities involved are AlphaChi Omega, Alpha Omicron Pi, Al¬pha Phi, Delta Delta Delta, PhiBeta Phi. and Delta Zeta.Branford P. Millar, president ofthe college, placed them on aninactive basis because there wasno doubt that discrimination wasinvolved. Millar noted that thesororities had rejected the Negroesbecause it was the wish of thegirls in the houses not to live withthem.In a joint statement the sorori¬ties said the college’s request forevidence of nondiscriminatorypractices amounted to an ultima¬tum to admit the Negroes.Millar revealed that he will ap¬point a faculty board to reviewthe case and to establish the fu¬ture status of the sororities at thecollege. John A. Howard, Presidentof Rockford College, has de¬scribed continued extensivefederal aid to educational in¬stitutions as a threat to thediversity and creativity of colleges.In an article in Spotlight, which isdistributed by the Committee forConstitutional Government, Inc.,Howard stated that the '.‘stam¬pede” of universities for federalfunds would lead 10 uniformity andobligation to party politics of thoseinstitutions.The present eagerness of educa¬tional institutions for subsidies, hesaid, leads one to believe ‘‘that wemust have a Washington super¬authority to make plans for theacademic segment of our societyand to coordinate as well as payt col*, x 9 inches for education through a centralbureaucracy.”Howard sees the prospect of in¬creasing federalization and cen¬tralization as leading to the elimi¬nation of the autonomy and, ulti¬mately, the diversity, of the vari¬ous colleges.Political freedom, he believes,will be sacrified by those who de¬pend upon government aid, for“the mere flow of money has si¬lenced the opposition.”Howard cited cases where fed¬eral grants have already silencedcollege administrators who areafraid to speak out on politicalmatters lest their prime source offunds be curtailed.Colleges readily accept federalaid. Howard stated, because the Federal Government is more prod¬igal with its funds than are othersources. However, Howard doubtsthe feasibility of sacrificing aca¬demic individuality for “easymoney.”He said “the course does not lievia the Federal Treasury,” but infunds from the traditional sourceswhich will “preserve the freedomand the strength of American edu¬cation.”Miss Gtsrfic Am Gayer, re¬porter far tee Chicago DailyNews, will speak at a Maroonmeeting Friday, at 4 pm. Themeeting will be held in Ida NoyesHall. 1212 East Sfth Street.Attendance is required for staff1. What’s the matter, no appetite?I have more important thingsto think of than food. 2. Worried about exams, lmh?No, about getting old.8. You’re kidding?Not at all. I’ve reached amilestone today. I’m 21. Thedays of my youth have flown. 4. You should be celebratingnot brooding.The age of responsibilityis upon me.5. How come you’re not a memberof the Drama Club?Already my father’stalking about my being“self-supporting." I seeresponsibilities all aroundme — wife, children,lawn, leaves. 6. Relax. You can let LivingInsurance from Equitable takacare of responsibilities. It canprovide for your family, yourmortgage, the kids’ education.,. even build a sizableretirement fund for you.Say, this is good spaghetti.For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable,For information about career opportunities at Equitable, see yourPlacement Officer, or write to William E. Blevins, Employment Manager.’ The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United StatesHome Office) 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York 19, N, Y. ©1963l"*~* CHICAGO MAA0ON • Oct. S, 1M3 ARROW NATIONAL AO C-292Greet the shirtwith anOxford educationw ~ARROW~Any scholar will appreciatethis new Decton oxfordshirt... the latest graduateto the world of wash-and-wear by ARROW. A blend of65% Dacron* polyester and35% cotton... it outlastsall cotton shirts. Fromthat famous button-downcollar to the back button andback pleat, it’s UniversityFashion at its best.Tapered to trim you down,“Sanforized-Plus” labeled toensure a lasting fit, Dectonoxford comes in white,colors and British stripes.Short sleeves as illustratedonly $5.95*DuPohI T.U. for its yolftrtei >6«rIt’Sinvisible,man!It’s incredible, in comparable, infallible! Code 10 for men, the newkind of hairdressing from Colgate-Palmolive. The new invisible wayto groom a man's hair all day. Non-greasy Code 10 disappears in yourhair, gives it the clean, manly look that inflames women, infuriatesinferior men. Be in.Get the non-greasyhairdressing, Code 10.It's invisible, man! ' {HiGrooms your hairall day invisibly!