!y Describe footbdll sit-in "Brecht on Brecht" comes(Editor's note: The MAROON presents below a somewhat extensive account of last Friday's events on State “Brecht on Brecht,” the long- the widow of Kurt Weil! composer“”“r* °r *“»*»' ■« PW* b *<» ******* Ml Brecht, wm be tmeJl bfSni^ Opera." for whiS? Brecht wrotereporters who were on, the scene. Additionally, many students and administrators were interviewed over the versity Theatre in Mandel Hall the book. It was in the role ofweekend by t te •) November 13 through 17. Jenny in the original Berlin pro-A sit-in by anti-football — — A living anthology of excerpts duction of ‘‘Threepenny Opera”11 i „ « . o. • , . , , from the plays, essays, sayings and that Miss Lanya first achievedstudents at the team S last stein removed the players before suggested that the University letters of the late German play- fame.game of the season nearly the second kickoff. should stop TV coverage. ‘‘I wright widely considered to be Originally destined for two per-erupted into a riot Fridayas eleven city police were called Leaders vs. lineAt this point, Don Congdon, SG thought we had freedom of the among the most distinguished ere- formances primarily for theatrepress,’ Wick said. ative writers of the twentieth cen- people, ‘‘Brecht on Brecht” soHe then made his appeal to the tury, ‘‘Brecht on Brecht” was as- caught the fancy of the New Yorkup to remove forcibly the demons- president. Jerry Hyman, SG vice- demonstrators to disperse. ‘‘You’ve sernbled by George Tabori and di- press and theatre-goers that it wastrators from the field. president, and several others cir- made yoqr point and had your fun. rected by Gene Frankel. moved to the Theatre de Lys,The sit-in was provoked by the culated the crowd and Now ,et other People have their The cas* wU1 ** ^aded by Lotta where it ran 424 performances.Plie sit in was provoxea Dy me b kind of fun.” Lenya, whose career in pre-Hitler Tickets, which range from $2 toannouncement the night before the asKea inem «> ,eaye the field, ar-_ Germany made her name inter- $4.50, are available at Reynolds(Continued on page 11) nationally known. Miss Lenya is Club.game that CBS television newscamer as would be present to tapeparts of the game for showing onin view of the unusually greatstudent response to the demonstra¬tion on Stagg Field and to thestatements subsequently made byadministrators, the Maroon has de¬voted an unusually large amountof space in this issue to studentopinion as expressed in letters. Wehope that the abundance of opin¬ion will be well received by ourreaders and will contribute to theresolution of the controversy.the Walter Cronkite evening news Suing that the demonstators badmade their point.Soon afterwards, O’Keefe cameonto the field to speak to the dem¬onstrators, and there resulted thefirst of what was soon to becomea great succession of meetings inbhe middle of the field.O'Keefe, as several others didafter him, told the demonstratorsthat they were not serving any pur¬pose in remaining on the field. Heassured the demonstrators that theUniversity had done nothing tobring the CBS cameramen to thegame, and told the crowd that theywere merely being used for news Vol. 72 — No. 18 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1963 31program. Several students who are materialmembers of Student Government During the demonstration there(SG) had originally organized the were reports of at least sixprotest with hurriedly printed minor scuffles involving studentsas well as outsiders. There were noindications of any injury. UC gets $5 million from Fordposters.The entire demonstration lasted UC announced today a gift such grant that the Foundation facilities in the natural sciences.Of $5,000,000 from the Ford has made an American univer- Funds for this program, which theT . XT . Foundation for the purpose of sltJ: _ .. Trustees are soliciting at this point,. . . . . . j Later. Newman came on to the At the same time as the an- , , 1for approximately two hours, dur- fie]d and proeeeded to explain to strengthening the umveisity S nouncement of the grant. UC pres- would total $40,000,000.ing which time Dean of Students the demonstrators that their busi- natural sciences program. ident George W. Beadle stated that Among other things, the FordWarner A. Wick, assistant Dean of ness could not be adequately set- ^he Sift, which represents one the Board of Trustees is in the grant would afford the opportunityof the largest single gifts UC has process of developing a programever received, is also the first to expand teaching and researchStudents James Newman, Direc¬tor of Student Activities ThomasO’Keefe. Dircetor of Physical Edu¬cation Walter Hass, and SG Presi¬dent Don Congdon all called uponthe demonstrators to leave thefield so that the game could beplayed. Their pleas succeeded inremoving about 150 of the originalprotestors, and Wick finally gavethe order to city police to removethe remaining 30 demonstratorsfrom the field.As the police moved in to dis¬perse the crowd, they carried offthe field three students who con¬tinued to protest. Another studentwas taken in for trying to blockthe paddy wagon from exiting fromthe field. These four were laterreleased at Wick's request. Nocharges were pressed.Wick had given the order to thepolice to remove the remainingdemonstrators shortly after New¬man had told them that in accord¬ance with University policy, theywould not be removed forcibly un¬der any circumstances. tied in the middle of a footballfield. He invited the crowd to talkAnti-football demonstrators smile at CBS cameraman on Stagg field for the geophysical sciences staffto have a building of their own.At present, the geophysicists arescattered all over campus.A. Adrian Albert, head of thephysical sciences division, told theMaroon yesterday that the majori¬ty, if not all of the Ford grant,would be used for the constructionof the new building and researchfacilities.The biological sciences division,Albert stated, will receive at least$2,000,000 for use at their discre¬tion. The amount of money thatthe physical sciences division willreceive, however, depends upon‘‘how effective the division canutilize the money.”In any case, Albert stated, thephysical sciences division’s shareof the Ford grant, whatever itamounts to, will be used to con¬struct a new science center and.if possible, a high energy experi¬mental physics laboratory.Plans for these edifices, Albertsaid, are still tentative.over the situation with him or anyAt approximately 2:30, half an member of the administration athour before the game was sched- any later time, but pleaded, as haduled to begin, there was a crowd O’Keefe, that the students permitof 1,000 people milling around,carrying signs both for and againstlootball.At 2:45 pm, a group of about 600students marched onto the field,50 of whom sat down on the 50yard line, spanning the entirewidth of the field. Their numberssoon increased to well over 200.At this point, with some of the the game to go on.Wick requests departureIn the midst of his remarks, a SG Assembly meets tonight; willconsider sit-in, Beadle statementThe Student Government Assem- (b) That the University dis- intercollegiate football will auto¬voice called distantly over a loud bly will tonight consider a resolu- claim any intention either now matically be discontinued,speaker: ‘‘Jim Newman, Jim New- tion which was approved by the or in the forseeable future, of de¬man.” It was Wick, speaking into Executive Committee last night, riving a net income from athletic ^ these simple precautions area microphone. The basic guidelines of the resolu- events, and toward this end, that no taken the form of establishedAsking if lie ‘‘might interrupt,” tion are ^ follows: admission charges will be levied University policy, the Studentanti-football students sitting on the Wick began by stating that he had Agree with goals of march as on any spectators of football games Government sees no reason whyfield and the rest with the pro- ^ a philosophy seminar five set forth in the original statement played at the University. those who would establish inter-^^idSjnTwid'u^norS^an? before when ** was told distnbuted Friday- (c) That under ^ circumstances collegiate football should not bestands, a battle of cheers began, that ‘‘he shook* be” at the football Regret action of people who sat will the budgeted expenditures of induiged.Those on the field chanted ‘‘Hutch- game. °° 50-yard line; any projected football team be The following is the text ofins is our leader,” and “No more “I thought this was organized Deplore the statement of Presi- greater than those for any other Beadle’s statement: At the Untthere is abun-football,” while the pro-football against unseemly publicity about dent Beadle as quoted in the Sun- intercollegiate athletic team- varettv „demonstrators shouted “We like orx-diilon," Wick said. “I find da, Sun-Times: intercollegiate athletic team, varsity of Chicagofootball, and paraded in front of ^is funny. The University did (d) That any scholarships or fi- dant opportunitythose on the field with their plac- nothing to" publicize the occasion,” Mandate the Executive Commit-ards and signs. continued. tee to deal as it sees fit withTen minutes later the SG football *<we were requested to help CBS, future situations connected withteam made its appearance on the which expressed interest in our the SG resolution passed lastfield, accompanied by coach Sid kind of sports. I think you can be month on football.Stein and assistant coach Fred proud of our kind of sports,” Wick _ . ,. .. ... . ,Pippin. said. “If CBS wants to tell the The ******* "***“* wlU startThe team began its pre-game world about us, I see no reason at 7:30 P111 i*1 Business East 103.warmups on the half of the field why they shouldn’t.” Dean of Students Warner A. Wickbounded by demonstrators and the Wick explained that the game will speak at 8.east goalpost. At no time did they had originally been scheduled to be in its original resolution SGattempt to run into or in any other played at North Central, but facili- , . ,way defy the human “line” that ties there are not adequate for TV the following:continued to protest. nanoial awards given to athleteswith athletic ability substantiallyin mind, e.g., Stagg Scholarships, for students toexpress their opinions on any mat¬ter, and there are appropriate andproper ways for doing so. Sit-ins,be awarded only on the basis of lie-ins, or other actions of similarestablished financial need; and mature that go beyond the boundsof. good sportsmanship are notamong them. A demonstration thattranscends reason, as did that oflast Friday on Stagg Field, mustnot recur. Any student who feels.so seriously compelled to deny his(f) that if a regular schedule of fellow students the freedom to en-primarily on the basis of academicachievement or scholarship;(e) That no formal recognitionbe given for excellence on thefootball field: andfilm crews. CBS asked him if it (a) That the budget of the Ath- .Later the North Central team could be transferred, Wick said, letie Department be made a public intercollegiate football be insti- gage in a particular sport that heA ° V aPPearan^e* StoLe?0 FfolT^wa^rK^* busv^’Mhe document available for inspection tuted, it shall be subject to auto- resorts to such methods of protest.An attempt to start the game btagg rieid was not busy, te . .was thwarted when one demonstra- commented. W responsible student, admmistra- matic review every two years, might more appropriately expresstor grabbed the ball as it was Wick said that he had earlier tion and faculty groups at regular such that if a positive assent by his disapproval by withdrawingabout to be kicked off, talked with several students who intervals; the Faculty Counoil is not obtained from the University.Rev. Cole finds religious isolationism in South“We went down to Jack- The police tried to be courteous weeks later to take part in thatson, Mississippi because there ^ him- However, while they let Sunday’s pray-ins. Four of thewas nobody else there to keep his Bible, they took away fjve jnin^ers were arrested. AJ his glasses. As a result the Bible Zuber: This is war“The American Negro is in out of its leadership,a war and D-Day is approach- “The solution to the problem ofins.” said New York attorney N't™ *iu n»‘bc achievedstand up for the Negro” the EaJmos:t useless to him unld Chicago lawyer, Inland Rayson, Zuber> Friday night. *•«£>£'*%*?*,?« “* ^ **24 tars srrcal^“““ in Nrzrkrd ■*•&&»•*£«£^ coie and his 2 &SM£sCnU hart <mr,P South to nartici- *?re a"ested: Chicago mm- asked jf ^ wouid be willing to go address sponsored by the Porter u,eir way through, they’re goinginc Ef risk ,sUirs who wfnt to the odier churc!1 down October 27. Foundation. He is now represent- to use their heads.”•' ‘ ‘ s were not. They were able to talk described what he termed ing eighteen Negro parents in awith several members of the con-pate in Negroa jail sentence Zuber added that the efforts of’, , . ,. with several members of the con- ^ “ecclesiastical isolationism,” suit demanding the firing of School n ,tudents were theCole described how his group gregation who came out to argue of the Southern Methodist church- Superintendent Benjamin Willis ZJS?of Chicago ministers attempted to with them. All four ministers hoped es> and particularly those in Jack- and the changing of School Boardgain admission to the two Method- they could avoid arrest. son Mississippi, which had assimi- personnel. “There are a greatist Churches in Jackson in groups The group including Cole had de- lated Southern cultural values, ig- many people in Chicago who would valuable in the civil rights move¬ment. It is the college studentsand even younger people who willbe active in the campaigns ofol two and with one . egro college cjded to go down to Jackson after noring the Methodist Creed of the have preferred my remaining in »r „ nrimarv candidates “Whit*,student. a serjes Gf pray-ins led by college “oneness of the Church.” N,pw York ’’ Zuber commented. .students from Tougaloo Southern Some of the staunchest segrega-When his group was cienied en- students from Tougaloo Southern Some of the staunchest segrega- Negroes represent a group of ^morrow^ the^'kids^'are"thinkirn?trance, he and the other minister Christian College led to the arrest tionists were members of the two people in the US who feel they what’s going to happen threeon the stairs, praying five weeks ago of three students. Methodist churches in Jackson, have been denied their rights andsilently. Within a few minutes the Because two of the girls, one Cole said. The police chief, the will go to extremes to get them,deputy police chief asked them to White and one Negro, were from mayor and the president of the Zuber said. He added that the weeks from now,” Zuber com¬mented. They will be the genera¬tion that will finally solve onrleave and, when they refused, ar- Chicago and because the churches bank, who was head of the White majority of Americans are quite bl if we don>t mes ,homr^ctcrt them for “disturbing reli- involved were Methodist, a group Citizens’ Council, were all devoted surprised to see the Negro actually - ’ - - - 'rested them forgious worship.” of Chicago pastors decided two church-members.Polish visitor lectures Chaplain clinic here try to get their rights.Zuber indicated that the Ameri- up, he said. Zuber concluded,“When it’s all over, the resultsof the civil rights movement willThe department of Slavic lan¬guages and literatures will present New concepts in pastoral care Other events scheduled for thea new series of lectures entitled will be the case in point when more day-long workshop include an ad-“Poland Today,” starting tomor- than 100 clergymen visit the Uni- dress by Dr. Edgar Draper, Assist- behindrow. versity of Chicago Hospitals and ant Professor of Psychiatry, on the These people are starting to say, wAt the first lecture Mrs. Maria Clinics today. theme of the meeting, “Pastoral “if i have to ,ive next door to ^ uPolish novelist and The clergymen will tour the re- Diagnosis.” can Negro is finally beginning to ^ (hose of the younger generationsee who his real enemies are. who have said *We shall not beThere were many segregationists denied ’ ”north of the Mason-Ifixon line, who Zuber said Aat the Ic ^are beginning to enme out from Uniled States owe the Negro a‘ “ the curtains, he stated.Kuncewicz, a Polish novelist and The clergymen will tour the re- Diagnosis. them; if my children have to go . " , . remindingvisiting professor of Polish litera- search and treatment facilities of Following a luncheon at which (o schooj with them, I m going to ^ “ g a q es‘ture at UC, will speak on “New the 11 hospitals and related clinics Charles R. Goulet, Superintendent fight” tiontr that Germany and JapanWriting in Poland ” operated on campus by the Uni- of UC Hospitals and Clinics, will ^ rcal enemv of lhe NcgroThe lectures, which are open to verity. These include the radio- speak, lhe clergymen will partici- „ not Bu„ Conner or Gcorge ^ “tad f«SS in World War II.the public and free of charge will active isotope hot cave, the an- pate m a panel d.scussion m re- Wall b,„ th(, , New „e^ added that the Negro has beenbe held m the Downtown College alog computer for patient treat- sponse to the concept of pastoral York an<J chl who hjm ™ 1 ' ^ e. ** hun(ll.edQ m rvxxvrv*- occoccmnni nnrl nnt.rvqliont rliacflnAtio AH hnpr in ihp mArivnff CIlMaVCU new lJat 8 p.m.foreign carhospitalbob testerMG psychiatrist5424 kimbarkmi 3-3113 ment assessment, and out-patient diagnosis outlined in the morningas well as in-patient care facilities, session.inquires into ed research “look buddy, you stay in your years and now he too deservesplace,” Zuber emphasized. The reparations.results of last Tuesday’s election-- Zuber predicted that Negro can-the relatively small plurality polled didates would run in the 1964by incumbent Philadelphia Mayor pr<xy;apnf;„i nrimaries of both oar-Ralph Tyler, a former Center for Advanced Studies in the John Tate—shows support for his t;es jn many states. These Negrochairman of UC’s department Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, Cali- opponent’s anti-Negro views,of education, will return to fornia. The Center, established by According to Zuber, labor lagsthe UC campus this week to the Ford Foundation, gives mature [ar behi"d othe.^ American institu-confer with members of the edu- b j resDite from the duties |!?nS fthe Clvd n£h,s 1™)ven\ent-cation faculty on the current needs ‘ , *n act> mana£enaent has donefor research in education. and distractions-which accompany much more than labor in project- .On Tyler’s agenda for the week normal university life, and enables mg the Negro into his proper Goidwater much concern. 1 knowis a free public lecture to be given their skills and *“■ Place>” since more and more busi* it would give Governor Rockefellerin Judd Hall at 8 pm tomorrow sights and work on conimon ness flrms are Putting Negroes m heart failure. I’m from New Yorkevenin0. His subject is “The Place Problems in additions to their in- positions of leadership. Businesses and j know how Rockefeller reallycawlidates know they cannot win,but they can force the others tomake commitments on the civilrights question. He said, “If I ranin the Illinois Presidential pri¬maries, I could give Daley anddividual study projects. have been doing this to sell theirTyler earned his PhD degree product to the Negro market, heof National and Local Efforts infrom UC in 1927. Ho was Dean oi explained, but since labor feels noTyler xs the d.rector of the ^ w|)(,n he Ieft such „eedi it has kepl lhe Ncgrothe University in 1953 to becomeCA 77-77HONDADREAM250 cc 305 CC• 100 m.p. k. * 100 m.p.g.• 4 stroke O.H.C. twin cyl.L* 23 to 25 h p. * 12 volt ignitio*250 cc$612.00 Delivered price 305 cc$647.00OPEN EVENINGS TILL 7:00Seaway Cycles10534 S. TORRENCE AVE.SA 1-9129 directorCenter. of the newly formed Bus shifts routeBOB NELSON MOTORSSouthside's LargestIMPORTSALES CENTRESERVICETRIUMPH & PEUGEOTFull Line On DisplayComplete RepairsAnd ServiceFor All Popular ImportsMidway 3-45016040 So. Cottage Grove University Campus Bus Servicehas announced a change in the op¬erating routes of the East-West stands on civil rights.”(It was announced Sunday thatZuber plans to enter the NewHampshire primary as an Inde¬pendent Presidential candidate.)New alumni funds manFred Kramer, president ofand evening campus busses. The Draper & Kramer, Inc., has beennew schedule is effective next Mon- elected chairman of The Univer-day. sity of Chicago Alumni FundStarting Monday the evening bus Board,will stop at 57th and Cottage Grove Re succeeds C. E. McKittrick,Avenue then proceed eastward on assistant to the publisher of the57th to University Avenue. From Chicago Tribune,this point the bus will follow its other appointments made byregular route until it reaches Dor- President George Beadle to theChester and 57th Street when it pund Board, in addition to Kramer,will travel east on 57th to Stony are: Mrs. Eugene Simon, Winnet-Island Avenue. A southward jaunt ka; james M. Sheldon, Jr., Chi-to 59th Street will bring the bus cago; and Maynard Wishner, Evan-back to its starting point.LayawayDiamondfor X-mas "SpecialStudent Discount"PHILLIPSJEWELRY CO.Wholesale Distributor LayawayDiamondfor X-masDIAMONDS • WATCHES • JEWELRYServing college students at wholesale prices for the past 30 years"50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDS,ENGAGEMENT, AND WEDDING RINGS"Watch and Jewelry Repairing. Rm. 1101, 67 E. Madison St., DE 2-5508For Further Information Call Andy Stein — Ext. 3265 ston.The Alumni Fund Board, thefund-raising arm of the Univer¬sity's Alumni Association, plansand supervises the annual giftscampaign. Last year Chicago re¬ceived 51.1 million from its livingalumni and $5.5 million in bequests.Kramer has been Chicago chair¬man, Steeling Committee of theUnited Negro College Fund, amember of a Visiting Committeeat Harvard University, a memberof the President’s Committee onEqual Opportunity in Housing, andpast president, Chicago Metroixili-tan Housing and Planning Council.RENT-A-CARPER DAYPER MlPER MILEATOMIC CARrental^inc.7057 StojfylslandMl 3-5155 {juce^attain g'f TtaAtet'anBUYING HYDE PARKSINCE 1937•ppolr»tm«ntsDO 3-0727 10% StudehlDISCOUNTtsn skilledHeir stylists alB242 HVDR PARK BL VD VAN'SBOOKSTORE( from the old Art Colony I1544 E. 53rdHY 3-5787Large Collection ofFine Used BooksIn All FieldsQuality Paperbacks1/3 off — ExchangeOPEN 11:00—10:00 ' a newworld ofdiningpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-16682 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 12. 1963Weintraub—Education is discipline for lifeBorrowing a phrase fromthe philosopher Whitehead,Professor Karl Weintraub ina lecture last night describededucation as “discipline for theadventure of life.”Weintraub spoke at an “Aims ofEducation” lecture sponsored bythe Orientation Board. The speech,which Weintraub delivered to en¬tering students during Orientationweek, was repeated for the bene¬fit of upper classmen.Weintraub stressed that thespeech was not a “summary” ofhis views on education, “but.” hesaid, “merely an attempt to statea problem which has appeared in¬creasingly important to me in mydiscussion with students.”Identity born in diffusionOur lives are adventure, accord¬ing to Weintraub, because we con¬front a constant stream of deci¬sions which only we can make.In our collision with unexpectedaccidents we have an opportunityto create our own identity andworld in coexistence with a worldwe did not make. “The true markof adventure,” Weintraub stated,“is the opportunity to enrich lifeby using the unforseen for fashion¬ing yourself and your world.”The role of education in prepar¬ing the individual for this adven-turf is twofold, he continued.Education aims first to assist theindividual through opportunities inbecoming a person, and secondly,to aid him in developing as a re¬sponsible and creative member ofhis culture.In assisting us to become people,education sharpens the senses wealready .possess. An educationwhich stuffs us full of inert factsand ideas, Weintraub maintained,or which indoctrinates us, or whichcheapens life by working withphony laboratory situations, willhinder rather than assist our abil¬ity to meet our adventure.Attention exacts priceInstead, the emphasis should beon developing the potentialitiesalready existing within us. “Wecannot give sight to the blind,”Weintraub put it, “but we havetechniques for sharpening the eyesyou have.”Particularly important is the de¬velopment of our power of atten¬tion. Hie term “pay attention,”he suggested, accurately indicatesthat a greater awareness is to behad only at a price.Since attention demands judg¬ment, education must sharpen ourability to make choices. By read¬ ing the works of the great minds,we are given a chance to “rethinksome of men’s best thoughts,” andthus to refine our own judgmentby being questioned against otherjudgments. Similarly, he stated,our intellect and imagination isrefined and nurtured by beingpitted against great intellects andimaginations.Love conquers existenceThe experience of other men’sthoughts, Weintraub asserted, ispossible only through “an act oflove,” in which we “step outsideour own existence while seekingto move into another.” This proc¬ess of testing our values enablesus to live with our inadequaciesand discover our genuine powers.The first phase of education,then, stresses the student’s devel¬opment as an individual facing anencounter with the universe. Butanother aspect of our lives is ourrelationship to society, and there¬fore a second vital aim of educa¬tion is to inculcate a responsibilityfor our civilization as it has de¬veloped.To this end, a thorough knowl¬edge of our culture is imperative.This means attaining knowledgeand respect for our post and insti¬tutions, the common stock of“myths, images, phrases and be¬liefs,” which give our culture co¬herence, and even a large bodyof factual matter. Without thistraining we are, Weintraub in¬sisted, little more than barbarians.Literacy of utmost importanceThe process of becoming liter¬ate stands out as perhaps the mostimportant step in acculturation, hesaid, since language is a supremeachievement of culture. Acquiringa style of expression is much akinto acquiring style as a person.These two aims of education, thepersonal and the social, mergeafter the student has chosen hislife’s work. As individuals, Wein¬traub remarked, we are given anopportunity to contribute to ourculture by becoming experts in aprofession. We add to our heritagewhat we can bring forth from our¬selves, and thus the adventure oflife depends upon a balanced rela¬tionship between the individual andsociety. It is a distinctive feature of ourcivilization, he continued, that weare permitted a great deal of free¬dom from the demands of society—and it is through the proper co¬ordination of our duties to our¬selves and to society that weshould live our lives.No "instant knowledge"In spite of the manifold advan¬tages our civilization offers, it alsoholds a potential serious threat toeducation, and Weintraub warnedagainst the “puerile mind,” in oursociety. This attitude seeks educa¬tion the easy way—a kind of pre¬digested, instant knowledge. Thementality likewise fosters a beliefin the power of money and organi¬zation to accomplish everything,and so undermines the individual’swill power and sense of responsi¬bility.Science, to the puerile mind,Weintraub continued, becomes akind of magic cure-all. We acceptit as a “supertoy to which we haveunquestioned rights.”Psychological escapismOne unfortunate manifestationof this attitude is the reliance toomany students place on their “psy¬chological problems,” to excuseinadequate work. This type of stu¬dent refuses to accept responsibil¬ity for his problems and hopes fora sudden removal of them—a sim¬ple impossibility in real life. Toooften this student convinces him¬self that if his problems were with¬drawn his abilities and energiescould break forth unhindered.This outlook leads to anothererroneous but highly popular atti¬tude, which Weintraub termed the“Mystique of the Natural andSpontaneous.” That fallacy assertsthat what is worthwhile in a per¬son is that which wells up spon¬taneously from within him. Thistype of expression, Weintraub sug¬gested, leads to “term paperslacking organized thought and pol¬ish, art emerging as a smear,poetry becoming a Howl,” — inshort, barbarism.Quite the contrary, a vital partof our training to live in societyis that part which helps us restrainthe “natural and spontaneous,”when that is inappropriate. Cul¬tured life is “disciplined, norma¬ tive existence,” and worthwhilework is done by struggling withproblems, not by wishing themaway.If the alms of education arc tobe achieved, Weintraub continued,the individual must guard againstthe pitfalls of our civilization bydeveloping discipline. He recom¬mended the monk’s routine, “oraet labora,” as a good pattern forlife.One part of our lives is beyondour control, and we can only praythat we will be fortunate, as forexample in our choice of a schoolor a profession. But over the bulkof our existence we do exert con¬trol, and we can best do so byfollowing “the narrow, disciplinedroad.”Academic disciplineThere are two sorts of disciplinethe student must encounter andmaster in the course of his educa¬tion, Weintraub continued. One isan external form of academicdiscipline — particularly strict atthe University of Chicago by thevery fact that there is so muchacademic freedom here also. Rulesand regulations concerning exami¬nations, what courses to take, andin what order, are, to an extent,necessarily laid down by externalpowers.But the second, more vital, formof academic discipline is self-dis¬cipline, by use of which the stu¬dent becomes an autonomous in¬dividual. This, he stated, includesin part the' ability to accept re¬sponsibility for the routine of life—how to behave, how to study, andwhen. It also means discipline ofmind, feeling and imagination, andthis discipline is basic to academicsuccess.Reading and writing are twooperations in which this disciplineis of clear importance, Weintraubcontinued. In reading it is import¬ant to learn what kinds of ques¬tions to ask of a work or an author. Focussed attention, attentive sen¬sitivity, and a real understandingof every word relevant to thequestion are supreme marks of thedisciplined mind.Craftsmanship, the guidepostSimilarly, in writing, a commit¬ment to high standards of crafts¬manship is a trait which separates“the flabby minded who make amediocre medley of our culturefrom the tough minded who de¬mand the utmost of themselvesand by whose efforts culturegrows.”“The discipline which you de¬velop in these daily academictasks will ultimatley shape you,”Weintraub concluded. “For whatyou will be, and what your culturewill be, depends on your abilityto give style to your personalityand to your way of life. Style isthe form which the artist imposeson recalcitrant material. And sincehuman life is rich, despite its limi¬tations, it demands a very specialartistry.”Polish writer to speakAn eminent Polish novelist willspeak on new writing in Polandtomorrow at the first in a seriesof lectures sponsored by the UCdepartment of Slavic languages atthe Downtown Center, 64 E. LakeSt.Mrs. Maria Kuncewicz, visitingprofessor of Polish literature atUC, will speak at 8 pm, in room409 of the Center. The lecture isfree and open to the public.TYPEWRITERSNew — Used — RentalsWe service what we sell and guaranteewhat we service.May we assist you with your typewriterproblems?The Univ. of Chicago Bookstore5802 South Ellis AvenueTUXEDO RENTALnow availableatCOHN & STERNin theHyde Park Shopping CenterSpecial Discounts to fraternitygroups, wedding parties, etc. -0 tj— CONTINENTAL1 ' MERCURY1 § COMETSALES — SERVICE — PARTSLAKE PARK MOTORS. i»c.6035 S. COTTAGE GROVE CHICAGO. ILLHYde Park 3-3445 VISIT THENEW AND BEAUTIFULCLASSIC ROOMin the Windermere HotelEnjoy Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner orLate Snacks — OPEN TILL 12:00 PM.FREE PARKING IN OUR NEW GARAGETRANSIENT SINGLE ROOMS $7.50TWINS $12.00ALSO INCLUDES FREE PARKINGWINDERMERE HOTEL1642 EAST 56th STREETCHICAGO 37, ILLINOISHOBBY HOUSE ZETA BETA TAUPROUDLY ANNOUNCES ITS SENSATIONALRESTAURANT RUSH PARTY FOR FIRST-YEAR MEN“ADDAMS AND EVIL”BREAKFAST DINNER Inspired By Cartoonist Chas. Addams !FEATURING: \• An Erotic 13 Piece LIVE Dance BandLUNCH SNACKS • Gourmet Delights Prepared By The Amazing Mae Thompson• Chicago Premier Of SPOFK Theatrical Troupe \1342 E. 53rd St. SO REMEMBER TO GET A DATE AND COMEFriday, Nov. 15 at 8:30 P.M.Zeta Beta Tau — 5554 S. Woodlawn Ave.Nov. 12. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Sorority locals in trouble at ColoradoThe aftermath of the re- Pam Gooding, president of Alpha Oriental girls in an attempt tocent sorority discrimination Clhi Omega, stated that the sorori- show that they were not discrimi-suspensions at Portland State ties ^ n<Vnly nating against any particularCollege in Oregon has Struck much the members like the rushesthe University of Colorado. but also how happy the girl would g^up. ......Four sorority chapter presidents ^e in the house Sometmjes we The other three presidents statedat Colorado denied recently that M*>a girl a lot, she stated ‘ but that they had nothing againstdiscrimination exists in their if she comes from a different back- pledging a Negro if she had thehouses. Thev are the presidents of *round *e «“*** ** haW « Qualifications they were lookingthe same houses that were sus- ** house.” for. The presidents declined topendetl at Portland State. She added that some chapters enumerate the necessary quali-These four sororities and two on other campuses had accepted fications.others were suspended at Portland ■ ■Urologist leaves bequestUC has received a bequest teacher training center of the Grad-Of $191,647 from the late uate School of Education, is namedWilliam Thomas Belfield, a for him-The° Colorado presidents stated Chicago surgeon who was A^J/eceiving his MD degree atthat neither their chapters nor called the dean of American urolo- ^ush Medical College in 18/8, Dr.their national offices had discrimi- gists.nation clauses written into their Belfield was a professor of 1 tr 1 ® county Hospitalcharters The presidents however gemto-urmary surgery at Rush ?ta" ,ot,, , bounty Hospital,cnarters. ine presiaems. nowever, roller in thp vparc when He joined the faculty of Rush indeclined to guess what would hap- affiliated with the Uni- 1898 and was Pr°fessor of genito*™ “ ' " "i"’ verity aHlllated »*<h lhe Unl urinary surged there from 1909The bequest, which amounted un,d bis retirement,to half of the doctor's estate, was His bequest comes to the Uni¬left as a tribute to his brother versity after the termination ofHenry Holmes Belfield, who was a trust from which income wasprincipal of the University High paid to several individual bene-School. Belfield Hall, now the ficiaries during their lifetime.Stern named research chairmanGardner H. Stern, Sr., pres- man of the United Negro Collegeident of Hillman’s Inc. and Fund- a member of the Board ofof Gaper’s, Chicago food serv- 7rustees °* the Chicago Planetar-ice firms has been namedchairman of the Council on Med,- of thfi Jewish Federation of Metro-cal and Biological Research of the Htan chicago and a djrector ofUniversity of Chicago.Stern replaces David McDougall,who was Chairman of the councilState for refusing to pledge Ne¬groes. Of 115 girls who took partin rush activities, only four wererefused. Two Negro girls wereamong the four.pen if a qualified Negro girl wentthrough rush procedures.Three SFRC boardsto discuss problemsThe Student-Faculty RelationsCommtitee of SG has set upthree consultant boards for thecoming year. They are Admis¬sions and Financial Aid, Hous¬ing, and Residence Halls andCommons. The consultantboards will meet with appro¬priate members of the admini¬stration to discuss problems ofthe University Community ap¬plicable to their respectiveareas.Any student interested inworking on one of the boardsshould contact Gerry McBeathor leave their name at the SGoffice, ext. 3274. the Chicago Educational Televi¬sion Association., , ... Stern has been a member of thefrom 1958 and will remain a mem- Council on Medical and Biologicalber of the Council.In addition to being a memberof the Board of Trustees of the Research since its earliest daysof formation in 1948. It is com¬prised of a group of more than10% discount to students with ID cardsSoles and Serviceon all hi-fi equip¬ment, foreign anddomestic.TAPE RECORDERSPhono Needles and CartridgesTubes - Batteries24 hr. Service CallsUniversity, Stern has been chair- ,hirt business and civic lei,dt,rsproviding interest and support forthe academic and scientific needsof the Division of the BiologicalSciences of the University.TV—HI-FIRADIO $300 EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1200 East 53rd StreetIn 53-Kimbark PlazaHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount Tilt Decline and Fall of the Hutchins EmpireBeing a Short Treatiseon theIW-Nature of FootballAs Attested by Divers PersonsOne day in Kenwood's studied pastures fairSat I on carpets green in raptures rare;I’ll eulogize Olympus which has gotA new Chem Building planned; thus ran my thought;When suddenly from regions etherizedA Voice bespake my name, and me chastized:Be thou beknighted so, thou hast not heardThe aweful judgment of th’ almighty Word:Proclaimed it is hereafter and henceforthA Team we'll have for our e’erlasting worth.Oh no! cried I, and quickly set my Mind(Dear, fragile Creature, preciously refined)To mark the meaning of this Musing wind.(Dear Reader, at this juncture I confessMy comprehending talents are yet lessThan this most subtle Subject does demand;Not Plato’s Pen, just mine I take in hand:)The august Rumor, rumbled for some time,Is true, and some take it for horrid Crime:Eleven stiffs, presumably sans WitShall fiercely fight, not for the fun of it.Upon a sometime weedy BattlegroundUnpeopled while Olympus stood yet sound;And while their Rumpus brings in worldly gainWe'U be ivy beleaguered in the Brain.Oh Sacrilege! cry they (who, so they say,Fear Ruin with approaching Pigskin days),And frantically a “no admittance’’ fenceSeek they, to save Olympic eminence,By barring non-Aristotelean menFrom entering our classic discipline.Yet some, displaying greater agape.Think that the total Mountain may not sway(No doom impend, unless the Team should pay);Since, seemingly, we do already holdSome amateur Footballers in our fold.Still, hubric, or susceptible to pride,They feel the others’ case be justified.Sad schisms rend our academic bliss,For Citizens perceive the problem's this:How to expand our Souls athleticallyBut keep the intellectual polity!But, if this be ’t: to our DiversityDevoted sportsmen soon will added be.And that poor Football's recent acclamationSignals our Standards’ fateful ruination,.I ask, where is the theme of Toleration?And, while I'd opt for Excellence primum, In Arles and in Scientificuni,I’d ask, aren't some here now who make their BaseNot Cell, but so much in the Marketplace,That they unwittingly sometimes forgetThe Studies which, one time, they came to get?Dear citizens, ere Football you adjudgeDistraction Foul: judge not lest you be judged.AD 1943. de sedt Sara C. HeslepAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY•st. 19291300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111In the 53rd-Kimbark Plazaopportunity:\Opportunity is built into a career at IBM—opportunity for training, education, financialrewards, and other benefits. I But especiallyopportunity to face the unique challenge oftoday’s—and tomorrow’s —information han¬dling problems. IAsk your college placement officer for our bro¬chures. I Check with him for an appointmentwith the IBM representative who will be inter¬viewing on campus. I IBM is an Equal Oppor¬tunity Employer. IIf you cannot attend the interview, write: IManager of College Relations, R IBM Corp.,590 Madison Ave., New York 22, N. Y. IMOVE AHEAD: SEE JANUARY 17ASM® This is noweak-sisterdeodorant!... it’s new MAN-POM*deodorantlAN-POWERNew Man-Power Deodorant has what it takes to do a MAN'Sjob. Gives you the stepped-up penetration power, the stayingpower a man needs. Covers in seconds...controls perspiration...stops odor. And it’s absolutely non-sticky. Try it...the new deo¬dorant that does a MAN’s job. New Man-Power. 1.00 plus tax*Extra Bonus —the clean masculine aroma of OLD SPICE I' shuutoN4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 12. 1943NSA region holds Fall conventionlhe Illinois-Wisconsin legion of the National student often feel any student unwilling ing list for both the primary and EduoThe Illinois-Wisconsin region of the National StudentAssociation, at its Fall convention Saturday, passed aresolution accusing the Kennedy administration of having“frequently appointed to the Federal bench and otherFederal positions of law enforcement in the South, personsknown to favor the continued nullification of civil rightslegislation.”The resolution called upon President Kennedy to “redress thegrievances of those C'tizens denied their civil rights by enforcing theexisting civil rights statutes.”The body also endorsed efforts —to get “fair housing” legislation , ,enacted in Wisconsin. Must have powerA third resolution on civil rights ±~ • li.paralleled a UC Student Govern- 9®' Student rightsment resolution in condemning the Delegates speaking onChicago Board of Education and “Action for Students’ Rights”Superintendent of schools Benja- highlighted the conference onnun C. Willis for alleged de facto campus action. ai vv-segregation in Chicago schools.The resolution states, “the facts, Clark Kissinger, of the Univer¬sity of Wisconsin, said that stu-and they are numerous, clearly h„ua" , '*7, . ,point to inferior Negro schools in tion . th = V1 a'^reiratiid areas ” U their University in any5„ ” , * , , court of law. They must organizeThe resolution goes on to endorse f_ arv,llir_ Bthe demands of the Coordinating & the,r r‘ehUi °" oaml,us’rrn?°nTJ!% ,PrSmiza' Talks with officials are meaning.JCCO) mclnding the remoe- less un,ess sluderts hav<_ som“eal ol Wtllut. the assumption by Dr. power. Kissinger said. He saidRobert J. Havighurst, UC professor thal a bad siluatlon when an ad-of education, of sole charge of the ministration officer ‘‘smilingly saysschool survey, institution of inte- to a student ‘Well, if vou‘ don’tgration of both staff and students like it here you can alwaysas basic policy, and the appoint- leave.’ ”ment of new members to the The proper relationship betweenBoard who are publicly on record students and the University Kissin-as opposing de facto segregation. ger said, should be a contractualCondemn college censorship rather than one of univer-Two resolutions on freedom of sit£. paternalism.the student press were passed bythe regional. The first condemnedLoyola University for firing itsfeature editor and imposing cen Kissinger, who was a leader ofPOLIT when a student at UC, saidoften the office of the dean ofstudents is given too many re-sorship on the school paper. The s possibilities, and manages ’ theaction was taken after the paper students. He suggested studentprinted a feature story satirizing a g°vifrnmf.r“^ would, do well tohigh-society fund raising function. make a lx>wer a™1^15 ot theirThe second expressed outrage uruversl -v*that the student paper at Chicago 'Community’ governmentsTeachers College North is beingsubjected to “voluntary** censor- ^ same panel, Larry Liss-ship. The college, which is oper- ner- of Shimer College, advocatedated by the City Board of Educa- Lhe replacement of the usual sepa-tion, suspended and later rein- ra^e stedent and faoulty commit-stated the paper after it published ^ccs’ an<^ their replacement witha cartoon critical of Superinten- •,omt oonamittees.dent Willis.A motion to endorse the inclu¬sion of funds for birth controlinformation in foreign aid was in¬troduced but postponed indefinite¬ly. According to the resolution,“The population explosion hascaused severe shortages of food,shelter, and clothing in manv coun- „ ,. . , ~tries to which we provide foreign „ _ . * ....* ° I .pArcfn Warcnn nrAWeoAr a! rwv.li.tiLissoer said there are now onlyone or two schools which havethis “community of scholars” gov¬ernment system, but he urgedothers to try it to bring it to theirschoolsDean urges free intellectIn a speech which was part ofaidThree program mandates werepassed. The Regional ExecutiveCommittee was mandated to in¬vestigate the possibilities of char¬ter flights to Europe, to cooperatewith the UC NSA Committee toplan and run a conference on thef ederal Government and college iated while the faculty and admin-students in April, and to appoint istration usually feel it ^ theirrepresentatives of the regional rjgjjt ^ jnvoke any rules they sonews bureau for each campus. desire. He said administratorsOFFSET PRINTINGMULTILITHINGDISSERTATIONSCLASS MATERIALS* POSTERSFLYERSBUSINESS STATIONERYEYERCREEN OFFSET «1230 EAST 63rd STRUTFA 4 6360 • 363 4353 CLCAL°DISU«/ 1319 E. 53“ ST.3W 5/ II AM TO 10 PMM13-34.07uc 'WC 6SLIVEJLIF YOU HAVE TRIED THE REST . . .Now Try ‘THE BEST". JUST PICK UP THE PHONEand wo will deliver to your home.WE ALSO HAVE TABLE SERVICEPizza Platter1508 Hyde Park Blvd. KE 6-6606 — KE 6-3891HYDE PARK TELEVISION AND RADIO1543 E. 53rd ST.SALES AND SERVICERENTAL F.M. UNITS $2.50 PER MO.PL 2-2700 STUDENT DISCOUNTS WITH I.D. often feel any student unwillingto co-operate with such rules neednot attend, because enrollment inan institution is voluntary.“The question of injustice,” Wat¬son said, “has a different complex¬ion in each situation.” what isjust and right is dependent uponthe purpose of the institution, heexplained. A basis for studentrights exists only when a collegepurports to be the kind that allowspeople to study, teach and learnthe truth through the free exer¬cise of the intellect.If this is so, Watson said, thestudents in such a college are en¬titled to their rights, and to dueprocess of law. Watson warned,however, that “in essence, rightsare something people get becausethey demand them effectively.”Procuniar speaksat direct action talkDirect-action techniques ofthe civil rights movementwere examined at a workshopat the NSA regional.Pam Procuniar of the Universityof Chicago gave an informal dis¬cussion of the Student WoodlawnArea Project (SWAP). Foundedin March of 1962 SWAP is theproduct of a group of UC studentswho want to perform a functionfor the children of nearby Wood-lawn.The original program, called theWoodlawn Tutoring Project, wasconfined to basic skills on a pri¬mary school level. As the projectprogressed however, new relation¬ships emerged. Methods becamemore sophisticated and in Marchof 1963 a new program was openedfor high school students in Wood-.lawn.“The tutorial projects are abeginning” and anyone interestedin them must see this. Miss Pro¬cuniar discussed procedure for theformation of similar projects atother schools. The initial discus¬sion on the questions of tutorialsand their organization broadenedinto the iwrticular problems of theChicago school system and thelikely difficulties of similar tutorialsetups.The success of SWAP is evi¬denced by the present huge wait¬ ing list for both the primary andsecondery openings. All those in¬terested in this project and wouldlike to help can contact Miss Pro¬cuniar at the SG office, ext. 3273.‘Means of publicity'“The primary purpose of theworkshop is to illustrate the mech¬anisms of the movement,” statedDeborah Meier, of South SideCORE.“We created the situation; theNegro has been out off from his¬tory, and from his {dace in socie¬ty.” In efforts to correct the situ¬ation direct action methods areemployed as a “means of publicityand dramatization” which pro¬vide an outlet for active participa¬tion.Miss Meier continued to pointout the overall objectives of themovement. “We must transformthe Negro community to involvethem.” Eventually such measuresas preferential treatment and com¬pensation are needed, she said, toexpediate the exodus of Negroesfrom the bottom rung of the socio¬economic ladder.Techniques must be suitableThe techniques employed forthese goals must be suitable fora minority group situation, andproduce results which focus on theproblem.” She said that the meth¬ods of direct action are ofcourse, not the only ones. Meiersaid that these techniques must bereinforced by the utilisation of“Press, Pulpit and (Politics) Leg¬islation.”In conclusion she said, “ulti¬mately direct action compels soci¬ety make a choice, either for thebetterment or a suicide.”“The two main dynamics of thecivil rights movement must be toconvert the opponent and to ob¬struct the normal functions ofsociety to florce decision,” saidPeter Allen, member of ChicagoCORE. Both of these must be at¬tempted if the movement is to besuccessful.Stewart Hist gave a backgroundof the boycott at the Board ofGeorge Watson, professor of politi¬cal science and former dean ofstudents of Roosevelt University,said that student rights are oftenmisunderstood because of a con¬flict between students and faculty.Students, he said, are willing tocompromise only when they feeltheir principles are not being vio- 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 SAMUEL A BELL*Buy Shell From Boll‘SINCE 192*4701 So. Dorchostcr Avo.KEnwood 8-31 SOSURPRISING VALUESAuction bought clothing—pants,hats, furnishings, shoes at the low¬est prices.Guaranteed FitI. C. MEN'S WEARTAILORS1547 E. 63rd"Over 25 Year* in theNeighborhood"THE BOOK NOOKSCHOLARLY BOOKS IN EVERY FIELDMl 3-7511 1540 E. 55thRANDELL-HARPER SQUAREBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALONOPEN EVENINGS5700 HARPER AVE. FA 4-2007MRS. BILLIE TREGANZA. PROP.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7*44 DO 3 *8**EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNTCHILDREN'S BOOK WEEKWindow and table display of manyJuvenile titles continues.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 South Ellis Avenue Education and how it grew froma small demonstration against the“Willis wagons” to a city-wideboycott of the public schools. Asan illustration of the problems ofa movement of this type, Ristpointed out the unfortunate posi¬tions of the Chicago metropolitannewspapers on the events of thepast year in the area of civilrights.Malayan indicts wattitude to visitorsAn indictment of the “conde¬scending attitude” of Americanstoward foreign students was givenby Malayan student MohammedSliuhud Sa-id at the conference onthe International Campus.Sa-id said most Americans, in¬cluding students, ask stereotypedquestions of the foreign studentswhich indicate that Americanslack interest in other countries.“When they ask how you likethis country,” he said, “I feel likeasking them, ‘how much do youknow about my country,’ becauseI know all they want is to knowhow much I know about America.”Sa-id explained that since mostforeign students are “highly politi¬cized” and sensitive to beingAmericanized,” the problem ofcommunication with foreign stu¬dents is made even harder by theforeign students’ antipathy towardAmericans.A primary point of every foreignstudent program, Sa-id went on,should be to teach the Americansworking in the program somethingof the geography and political sys¬tem of the foreign student’s coun¬try.He said it is time the Americanslearned it is not “sophisticated” tobe “cynical and blase.” He con¬tinued, “Unless Americans stopequalling compassion and tender¬ness with weakness, this feeling ofcondescension will persist.”HYDE PARK SHOE REPAIR1451 E. 57th ST.HY 3-1247Servfo« Th* Univtnity Community formil »v«r 40 Y*artDO YOURECOGNIZETHIS MAN?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank BuildingChicago 15, litFAii-fa* 4 *800Office Hours 9 to 5Mondays & FridaysHe 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 you«t your convenience?SUN LIFEASSURANCE COMPANYOF CANADAEDITORIALSSit-in initiates irrational chain of eventsAfter more or less passively oJ>lerving the events of the past fewdays, we find it hard to believethat we are members of a rationalcommunity. The now famous “laststand’’ on the fifty-yard line, andthe resulting statements by UCadministrators, particularly thoseof our President, suggest the kindof thinking most inimical to free¬dom of thought, freedom of action,freedom of expression.The demonstration itself touchedoff a most unhealthy chain ofevents which can do nothing butharm the University.The demonstration as originallyconceived was good; a group ofstudents who were concerned lestthe wrong “image” be conveyed onTV decided to stage a demonstra¬tion and get it televised in orderthat the TV audience understandthat football is by no means an“accepted thing” on this campus.But not everyone wanted to stopthere. Much to the horror of the“leaders” (if the demonstrationmay be said to have had any)the fifty-yard line demonstration“happened.” Why did these students sit-in?We spent an afternoon attemptingto find out and were quite shockedby our findings. Some studentswent onto the field “to have agood time” or because they thoughtit would be “fun.” Others felt itwas the “most symbolic” way ofregistering a protest against foot¬ball. One student said he had “nocoherent reason” for participatingin the demonstration. Although weonly talked to a small percentageof the demonstrators, we were ableto conclude that the students hadno common motivation. Each of thepersons interviewed gave a differ¬ent reason for participating. (Oneof the group's most vocal and per¬sistent members told us that hisoriginal intentions were merely tohave fun).Once on the field however,they were committed in varyingdegrees to delaying or stopping thegame.We deny the right of these stu¬dents to impose their wills onothers and we seriously question whether this was the most effectivemeans of “solving” the problem.If they sought an immediatecessation of football games, theyshould have realized that WarnerWick has not the power to unilater¬ally make such a decision. If theywanted publicity, we ask them totake a second look at the Saturdaynewspapers and decide whetherthey really wanted the totally in¬accurate coverage which almost ofnecessity accompanies “sponta¬neous” demonstrations.SG, by its inaction, bears someresponsibility for the mess. HadSG quickly attacked Wick’s replyof last week to the football resolu¬tion, thereby giving the studentbody some indication that SG wasnot willing to let the issue die, per¬haps there would not have been afifty-yard line demonstration.Beadle’s statement ignores theexistence of a tine Universityproblem, and it suggests thatshould a problem exist, the ad¬ministration would be totally capa¬ble of solving it without any helpfrom the tuition-payers. The most discouraging aspect ofBeadle’s statement was its pre¬dominantly negative tone.Instead of attempting to discussthe football issue, Beadle re¬affirmed the administration’s“hard line” or. demonstrations.His attempt to “clear the air”could have conceivably succeededin antagonizing more students thanany of his previous statements.While we do not attempt to drawan analogy with the non-spontane-ous 1962 sit-ins, it should be pointedout that Beadle did not completelydismiss them. He met with COREand pledged the University’s sup¬port to housing integration in itsproperties. And just a few monthsago, Beadle proudly announcedthat all segregation had ended inUC properties.Not so with the 1963 sitters-in.They were strongly condemnedwithout any steps taken to find outtheir views or to try to ascertainwhat on earth caused 200 personsto act as they did on Friday.What should be done? As a firststep toward solving the problem, SG should assume, for once. tt«proper role as the representativebody for students.The Assembly will consider to.night resolutions on football andthe demonstration. Wick will bethere to clarify the administra¬tion’s views.Hopefully, the chain of irrational¬ity will end with tonight’s meetingand what will emerge will be areasoned opinion which may serveas the basis for further student-faculty-administration discussion.Students interested in helping SGaccurately represent campus opin¬ion should certainly attend tonight'smeeting.We feel that the football “issue"has reached such proportions thatanother opinion by the Council ofthe University Senate is imita¬tive. In 1955 that body opposed thereturn of intercollegiate footballand should it reconsider the ques¬tion, we hope that the same eon-clusion will be reached. The Coun¬cil has its next meeting one weekfrom today and we strongly urgethat the question of intercollegiatefootball be considered at that time.“Why Isn’t he on the team?”Letter to the editor TV showThe'idea of the University” aspresented Sunday night by NBCnews certainly gives a peculiarversion of what we like to thinkof as the University of Chicago.In fact, it makes one wonder what“image” we are trying so hardto preserve.Judging from the show, the Uni¬versity consists of beards, bi¬cycles, and a football class. Wealso possess an all-American foot¬ball alumnus who made a spectac¬ular 70 yard run in 1934. a chem¬istry department whose membersdraw diagrams on Quadrangleclub napkins, and a small schooltalent search which next year willbe responsible for 10% of theentering College class.The New Dorm staircase, oncethe symbol of in loco parentis,became, for TV, the contrivedhome of 50 guitar-playing, folk¬singing undergraduates. And inanother posed scene, PresidentBeadle, bordered by Mrs. Beadle’squadrangle flower-beds, tells aboutraising $100,000,000 to keep this agreat university.The intellectual atmospherewhich is supposed to characterizethe University of Chicago is com¬pletely lacking the TV show. Theonly reference to schoolwork camefrom foreign students who notedthat work at UC is “hard” and“demanding.”Nowhere in the show was anymention made of curriculum,classes (except for football), lec¬tures, or seminars. Football cal¬isthenics were shown but the 13University libraries were ignored. on UC disappointingStudents were never shown study¬ing, and the faculty was neverportrayed teaching courses. Theclosest the show got to academicswas its picture of Beadle in com¬mencement garb.Though it was mentioned thatgraduate students outnumber un¬dergraduates, the divisions andgraduate schools went virtuallyunnoticed. Harper’s “idea of auniversity,” on which the showwas “based,” in fact centeredaround its graduate departments,but NBC spent a majority of itstime on the entering College class.The Law School was mentionedonly in the light of urban renewal.The sciences were heavily empha¬sized, but the humanities and so¬cial sciences went without com¬ment.The show insisted that the Uni¬versity is “unique for many rea¬sons” but gave only one; the lackof a football team.Perhaps it should be singled outfor the excellence of research andstudy in all its graduate fields,for the distinctive general educa¬tion program of its College, andfor the freedom of discussion andinquiry which permitted GeorgeLincoln Rockwell to speak here.Finally, with the exception ofthe Student Woodlawn Area Proj¬ect and extracurricular athletics,the many other activities werepassed over. The Stagg Scholarand a group of five unidentifiedactivities leaders were given equaltime.The show’s director told the Maroon that “we came to campusafter taking a survey of the peoplearound town, of the residents ofHyde Park. People questionedthought of the University as ahaven for beatnicks and eggheads,and as a school without a footballteam.“We came here to find thetruth,” he explained. But theirprogram showed merely that UC’sbeard-wearers are bathed, the sci¬entists do research, and that UC’sfootball class competes with otherschools.The show’s director added thatlack of air-time was his majorproblem. “We had a half-hourshow but we really needed an hour.We tried to present the atmos¬phere, the overall picture and themajor problems. There may bemore to the school but there wasn’tthe time to put it on the air.”If time was such a problem,were Jay Berwenger’s 70 yard run,baby strollers, and the Stagg Scho¬lar really necessary?The subjects omitted are thevery subjects which characterizethe University of Chicago, and itis unfortunate that the newsmennever realized this. Further, gaug¬ing from the director’s list of prior¬ities, we cannot be sure that alonger show would ever have in¬cluded the topics we felt were leftout. With great disappointment werealize that television, which hassuch great potential as a meansof communication and iniorma-tion, has stopped so far short ofits possibilities.Football controversy involves larger issuesTO THE EDITOR:No doubt there will lie (and infact have been) many others topoint out what the football contro¬versy is not, so I will try to suggestwhat it is.The football question is anotherphase of a trend that began—sinceI’ve been here—with the residencerequirement, followed by the StaggScholarships, and numbering a hostof minor issues, such as the writingof the catalogue. The issue is thatof the image of the University andits effect on the size and characterof the student body.Every University—H a r v a r d,UCLA, Reed,—has an image, acharacter, which it presents to theoutside world. The image of thestudent body created during theHutchins period, depending on youroutlook, was either that a group ofnon-conformist, highly intellectualrebels, or of left-wing, unwashed,egghead beatniks. Whatever one’soutlook, however the fact is indis¬putable that the University of Chi¬cago was unique, and that thisuniqueness both attracted a cer¬tain sort of student who might nothave been as happy any place else, but discouraged many more andresulted in a relatively small (atleast in terms of the present size)student body.The pres e n t administrationwishes to change this image. Itwishes to build a school patternedmore closely after the other fineschools of the nation—the IvyLeague in particular. It wants toattract the very best high schoolgraduates, seen in terms of scho¬lastic average and extra-curricularactivities; it wishes to grow, andbasically to become accepted inAmerican culture as one of thevery, very “best” universities—asour culture understands this. Clear¬ly the first step in the process is toremove the “different” label, tocreate an image acceptable to so¬ciety at large—as Harvard has sosuccessfully done. Clearly football,residence rules, athletic scholar¬ships, a review in the curiculum,are but a few of the more promi¬nent steps. (Incidentally, the selec¬tion of a Nobel-Prize winning scien¬tist of international repute as Presi¬dent, a man who would bring pres¬tige and money to the University,but would abstain from involve¬ment in undergraduate educational policy, was one of the chief steps.Now I would suggest that the ad¬ministration is hardly to be un¬necessarily condemned for this. Itclearly has a legitimate goal inmind, one requiring much energy,effort, and even imagination. Thewish to build a large universitywith a highly academically quali¬fied student body is one that can berationally justified and discussed,and is a serious question to beconsidered by us all. It is not—asit is too often seen by many of thestudent body—some sort of aMachiavellian plot aimed at des¬troying The Republic.But clearly, opposition to thischange also springs from a ration¬al, justifiable opinion about thecharacter of the University of Chi¬cago. There are those who honest¬ly feel that the University shouldremain unique; that there shouldbe a school or two (Reed is theonly other one which comes tomiid)where the student who can¬not fit a recognizable pattern andwho would not be happy at a con¬ventional Ivy League school canattend; that student can attainpeak efficiency and satisfactiononly in an atmosphere where they feel free; that the proposed changein image will produce a studentbody less creative, less imagina¬tive, less stimulating than that ofthe Hutchins era.The change is taking place. Thestuden body is by and large farless creative, intellectually stimu¬lating, and non-conformist than itwas fifteen years ago. But it isalso far less unkempt, maladjusted,unstable, as well (hard as it maybe to believe,—everything is rela¬tive). In addition, the University isgrowing, the streets are safer, theChicago degree is worth more. Butean the University grow withoutmolding itself to a conventionalpattern? Can you upgrade theChicago degree, make Hyde Parkmore secure,—and still keep theUniversity unique?What is called for is an honestdialogue upon the substantive issuesinvolved. I would suggest that Fri¬day’s demonstration stems asmuch from the absence of such adialogue as from opposition topolicy.In this we have all been guilty.Faculty and many students haveremained passive. The administra¬tion has confined itself to explain¬ ing that “those who like fool bullought to be allowed to play it”rather than why the Universityshould pattern itself in the IvyLeague mold. (Although in theabsence of a challenge to do so, it’sguilt is largely theoretical). Andfinally, those opposing it have failedto evolve a clear positive alterna¬tive to the Administration's con¬ception of a future University ofChicago.To sum up, whether or not wehave football here—by itself—isrelatively unimportant. But whatthe nature of the University will be—who its students, what their edu¬cation, what its role in society—is of the greatest moment. Shouldthe results of an honest dialoguereveal a consensus in favor of thepresent change, or no program tocounter it,—than we may safetystop dissipating so much energy onthe specific questions—like foot¬ball, residence rules and the like.But surety, if this is the way ourworld must end, it ought to be at¬tended by just a little bigger bangthan sit-ins on the 50-yard line.FRED BRANFMAN6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 12, 1963PETER LIVINGSTONProtests ‘arrogant attiude*Animal farm The farmer had to bring in theJi, m S.P.C.A. to move the cattle out ofTO THE EDITOR. the pen, for no amount of coaxing,There once was a farmer w threatening, or bribing could get► had a medium size farm not as the hard c>ore oJf cattle out Rutlarge as some but muc arj^r the farmer was not dismayed, forthan others. At one time this ^ he ^ ^ ..j shall Keep Buyingfarmer had kept all sorts of am- other Animals until the othermals: sheep, goats, ca ie pigs, majs so Outnumber the Cattle thatturkeys, chickens, and even ducks they wm ^ poweri€SS and thenHe used to be especially proud Will Return to theof the fighting cocks e rais , Animal Farm ” And sure enough,so much that he would enter them the cattle didn-t under_in the national cock-fighting charn- stand that it was the buying poli-pionships every year, an o n 0jeg the farmer that were caus-enough his cocks won. ^ the change on ^ farm andBut, sad to say, the day came ^ the (XX,k.fighting ^ se %when the farmer found that his wasn-t very long ^fore big-timeeocks could no longer win a lg . cock-fighting was reintroduced toAs if this wasn t enough, the en- the farmtire farm was in grave financialdifficulties because the farmer hadneglected his other animals infavor of his fighting cocks. So thefarmer stopped raising cocks and TO THE EDITOR:started concentrating on raising As a member of the UC footballonly cattle, saying, “Cock-Fight- team, I am incensed at the ar-ing is a Symbol of the Decadence roga,nt attitude of my fellow stu-of Farming!” dents (“they are not our greatYears later the farmer had a students”). Certainly there arerelatively prosperous cattle farm, legitimate gripes one can haveThere were all kinds of cattle — against the administration, butblack and white, brown, all black, why take them out against the 30and so on — but there were only players on the football team?cattle. The farmer, believing that \ve are not a “big time” team,there was more money to be made tye are n,>t jocks, armpits, or ani-by raising diversified livestock de- mats. To those demonstrators whocided to introduce other kinds of jeered us and told us to “go to aanimals once more. Fearing that state school,” I can only advisehis cattle might be jealous for that it is to them that Beadle ex-their position of dominance on the tended his invitation to withdrawfarm, he moved very slowly, first from the University,introducing a very few sheep, say- The football team deserves aning, “Sheep are Very Like Cattle, apology from those leaders ("Stu-and anyway, it is Good for Cattle dents qMa students”) of Studentto Meet Other Animals. ’ Government who lead the sitdown.The cattle grumbled, but ac- How would they like it if the foot-cepted this. Next the farmer intro- ball team and friends broke up theiluced a lew goats, and a few pigs, next SG meeting?once again saying, “Goats and (NAME WITHHELD)Pigs are Very Like Cattle (andSheep) and anyway. It is Cjxxl Student Writes to Wickfor Cattle (and Sheep) to MeetOther Animals!” Soon the farm TO THE EDITOR:had all sorts of animals on it again The students who sat too long onand the cattle were worried for all the fifty yard line Friday owe youof these other animals didn’t do and the university an apology. Thethings the way they did. But the sit-in demonstration is an extreme-cattle said, “The Farmer says that ly potent weapon, and it must notall of these Other Animals are be mis-used for trivial causes.Very Like US, and anyway, it is Furthermore, when the sittersGood for Cattle to Meet Other were asked to rise and let theAnimals, so long as they Act Like game proceed, their protest hadUs or Aren't Very Conspicuous!” already been strongly made. TheirSuch a situation couldn’t last for feelings clear, they owed the uni-long, and it didn’t. The other ani- versity a respect for its rules,mals wanted to see cock-fights, However, you also owe us an apol-and the farmer longed for days ogy; indeed, I think your crimewhen his cocks won the national against discretion was worse thanchampionship. The farmer bought ours. You ought never to havesome cocks and tried to train called in the city police; better tothem to fight, but the cattle, sud- have cancelled the game. For youdenly realizing that all these other are making a terrible assertionanimals weren’t completely like when you call the police. You arecattle after all, sat in the middle asserting that in this universityof the cock-ring, saying “Cock- you cannot appeal to reason butFighting is a Symbol of the Days must drag away the dissidents.When Other Animals were Impor- If this is your reaction in a trivialtant and We Refuse to Let This affair, how would you react in aHappen again!” ' • crucial one? Let us further consider why thedemonstration occurred as it did.Well, first of all, it was virtuallyunorganized. People were merelyasked to come without being toldwhat it was planning to do. Natu¬rally enough, the spirit of the dem¬onstrators soon ran far ahead ofthose who imagined themselvesleaders. But surely the administra¬tion ought to have anticipated ademonstration, and, as there wasshort notice, ought to have antici¬pated disorder. Out of prudenceas well as principle, you mighthave refused CBS. (Such a conces¬sion would have greatly reassuredthe student body about the generalpolicy.) Nor is it so, as you sug¬gested, Dean Wick, that to haverefused CBS would have iater-ferred with the freedom of thenews media. Universities like in¬dividuals have certain areas ofprivacy to be invaded only attheir discretion.Moreover, the atmosphere thatyou have helped to create con¬tributed to the demonstration. Youhave consistently refused to rec¬ognize the sentiments of an obvi¬ously substantial number of stu¬dents. You have been unwilling toexplain why in recent years thefootball class has been rising fromobscurity.As for President Beadle’s state¬ments in Sunday’s Sun-Times —that the demonstrators shouldleave UC — I hope he is mis¬represented. But if, as I fear, heis not, 1 resent his attitude towardus. This is our university too, andwe are deeply devoted to it. Thatis why we are so active when wefeel its values in danger. We donot express preferences amonguniversities as we express prefer¬ences among toothpastes. We areso much more deeply committedto our education than to our tooth¬paste. But President Beadle’s re¬marks were those of a ToothpastePresident. If he is going to runUC like a toothpaste company,then the gap between us will sure¬ly widen,R. D. GILMANDemonstrator gives reasonsLETTER TO THE MAROON:It is now very popular and, Ithink, important to discuss thereasons for the anti-l'ootball dem¬onstration on Friday. I want topresent my reasons for trying to prevent the game and for not leav¬ing after, as many people said, ourpoint had been made. I think myreasons are the same as those otfmany of the demonstrators.Why prevent a football game?Why this football game? Whatabout the rights of the players?What about the resulting publicity?Many students believe that the‘administration’ has been tryingto change the character of the Col¬lege. Consider the residence re¬quirement, the Stagg Scholarships,the plans to build (with Universityfunds) a ‘fraternity quadrangle,’and .the return of football, even ona very small scale. I think manystudents also find differences inthe character of the enteringclasses in recent years. We do notcontend that there is a great mali¬cious creature Administration. Butwe do believe that these things arepart of an attempted change inthe character of the College; achange which is bad. (Why we con¬sider it bad is really irrelevant towhat I am trying to explain).Friday’s game was to be pub¬licized. Certainly this would con¬tribute to this change of UC’s’image,’ again a bad change. Andtherefore I rejoice over the pub¬licity, even though it was so veryinaccurate.) Though, of course,some were demonstrating only forthe ‘fun’ of it, I think the motiveof most was to stop this badchange as much as we could.Do students have a right to playfootball? Do students have a rightto play football at the University’sexpense, as they do badminton?If, by doing this, they help elimi¬nate a peculiar college ‘spirit,’dear to many students and per¬haps both valuable and unique (andthis is where the important differ¬ence between football and bad¬minton lies) in the college systemof this country, do we have aright to stop them? I think so.• Many people thought that after‘our point had been made’ (thatis at, or soon after, the scheduledbeginning of the game), we oughtto have left. However, during thedemonstration many people felt, Ithink, the strength and strongwill of our opposition would onlyhave an effect on ‘policy’ if weprevented the game altogether.More important, probably, was the fact that only in this particularcircumstance did we have bargain¬ing power: Mr. Wick did agree toa meeting. A referendum was stillbeing discussed when we foundourselves being ‘led’ away by po¬licemen.MICHAEL R. ACKERMANSitters disgrace imageTO THE EDITOR:Once again the students of theUniversity of Chicago have demon¬strated their maturity and abilityto get to the heart of a matterquickly and logically. The sit-in onthe fifty-yard line at Friday’sgame with the North Central Jun¬ior Varsity, which started as alaughing demonstration, ended bydisgracing the very image they’retrying to protect.Students on this campus pridethemselves on their ability tojudge a situation on its merits, andboast that they’ve outgrown thestage of reacting to a stimulusword. Friday’s demonstration cer¬tainly proved their contention.Those students who refused tomove after their point had beenwell-made are just as react ionaryand dogmatic as those who arecontinually decried on this cam¬pus.The leaders are attempting todisclaim responsibility by stating(correctly) that they had no inten¬tion of leading a sit-in, and thatthey attempted to talk the demon¬strators off the field. Nevertheless,those responsible for the instiga¬tion of a mass movement musttake responsibility for its conse¬quences.Those obstinate students whorefused to move and let the“scrimmage” take place showedthe world not that the students atthe University of Chicago areproud of their tradition of academ¬ic excellence, but that they (andby association, we all) are imma¬ture, unthinking, obstructionist re¬actionaries.BEVERLY SPLANESecretary, Student GovernmentKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 MITZIE’SFLOWER SHOPS1225 E. 63rd St.HY 3-53531340 E. 55th St.Ml 3-4020 QoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302WALL PLAQUESHave you seen the beautiful hand painted moulded plasterwall plaques, book ends, and Christmas items in our gift de¬partment.You will like this new line and find it bard to resist a pur¬chase either for yourself, or as a gift.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 South Ellis AvenueBRITISH SCIENTISTSRepresentatives from Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd.,England, will be visiting the campus on Wednesday,November 13, 1963, to meet and exchange informationwith post-graduate or post-doctorate scientists fromBritain or the British Commonwealtth who would liketo consider careers with I.C.I. in the United Kingdom.Arrange an interview with your Placement Officer. Will We trade Kansas Wheat or Marching Feet 9-i ■ ■Will we exchange legions of books or clusters of H-Bombs?PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY (June 10th) said: “Let us re-examine our attitude toward the Cold War ... In the finalanalysis our most common link is that we all inhabit this smallplanet/'MR. ANDREI A. GROMYKO (opening session, 18th meeting ofthe UN) s “WVat we are calling for is not divisions of soldiersbut legions of books • •READ THE OFFICIAL SPEECHES, reports end public stefementsof the Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Union of SocialistSoviet Republics, Mr. Nikita S. Khrushchev, which have appeared inthe Soviet press during the period 1956 to 1963, now published infive selected collections!ALL FIVE COLLECTIONS FOR $1(pkM 25c postage} Of as single copies ?n any quantityIhAlrllhAHhA ORDBR, $1)1. N. S. KHRUSHCHEV—To Avert Wan-Our Prime Task 25c2. N. S. KHRUSHCHEV—Socialism andCommunism 25c3. N. S. KHRUSHCHEV—The Revolution¬ary Working Class and theCommunist Movement ,25c4. N. S. KHRUSHCHEV—The NationalLiberation Movement .........25c5. N. S. KHRUSHCHEV—Imperialism,Enemy of the People, Enemyof the Peace •.• 25cALSO: ALL FIVE $1266. N, S. Official Documents of the 22ndCongress of the CommunistParty of the Soviet Union.650 ppv hard cover.. ..$2.00 WORLD BOOKSN East nth St, Rm« 212, tow Yark 10003Please send me the following collections:□ I—To Avert Wei—One Prime Taskcopies.□ 2—Socialism and Communism copies.□ 3—The Revolutionary Working Classcopies.□ 4—The National Liberation Movementcopies.□ 5—Imperialism, Enemy of the Peoplecopies.□ ALL FIVE OF THE ABOVE (f U5)□ 6—Official Documents of the22nd Congress ......copies.Enclosed findNAMEADDRESSCITY ...........ZONE....STATENov. 12, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON •hospitals International Relationstheir'praot!o^The'case ih , , dub plans conferencetlw courts. , Thirty-five students .met -theory of world politic*->FreeiTMn declared, that-Sunday evening in Ida Noyes Aecord.ng to Roger Pci<-. ;crHoti'iivg Li« po*ed hr the city to form the VC International ttalil'’er oftlK-c-lub, thi-group,*,eotmol tipi - - Relation. Clulua group which ".ZSlpot t.pit cten .. cut puling .d,scorn,- »UI 4-uic prohrms of the cold - ;ks'nation "on Hie t of reel <M.„e tnterrraUomthpolI.Ucsv under- , M Sunda -s meelingi: \ .me*. and srt up to vmmlt-The l.iw loolii effeclivelv Mikvtt to Speak dineunyfons with faculty rne,nl«, ■ST , o .v- ; * w . J.ut'-t speakers fiom gmet n>tused^;.agaHtS’t%(Usc*runir>ation fQ .Young DtlttS >’ ' *■?# \<and other universities..apartment rentals;’1TheVonly 'sanc-^ State Representative Abner Planning for a two^ia/?disa^Z^tu>n jof/Mlie law i» the rev.K-ut.nn va will be the first speaker in the ment conference to be held':dur7n£i'/ hiokt'i s litcnse lilt* law political discussion series of the rwinter quarter, for die1 Natlo^llhowever. 1. met,,.nicer,ttsrsr Jh„tl-e ie,»:-: r;d VcUr-,,^ ^:^ week. RKthnrd- ^NoVm^1;™^,^an s Adimi st a 10 * e • Wade, professor of. historywill in the Ida Noves Sun P.irloi Zj£ipny:a:;n..ndiscrinunatorv-;ha^. In-ta!k - on - vTli0;.N,w aMd the -Old - As soon' as*'..sufficient• turi&Mtegt.uion in communities in 0,1 Romney.:*., Both events will be held Xrais<?d the club will affiliate1( „ This* -Thursday,-YD ^ members. United Nations and the AssociahorflT!u....Sun«l .v ('..her* ll.H.wej: w:ll^wi]| U> present-■at;stations in Bur- of International Relate. (ha>;e'3th§.third^lecturenn sene^ton-Judson, thesNew vDorm,;,Piercek-the ■;two maW,hntional^llllon.-'theg urban ^racial erisis^CThe and. International Hou^e -to. dis- ^iorts of grou|>s of thus kind ijgilec4u^wiU^be«on4 theU^^m^ tribute lilgrature Jj and, signgup,/ The next scheduled WentHM.tcmk,: y : pro.^H c::w- nn-miH-r*. mlornud d; (,,,on on ni.l/WjCites discrimination ina»s-:'tf^SHA.RE-A-RIDEJfCENTRAL 5 *' A, : -■ • $%&- &lOEFF.RS&you,^economy travel.' to. »HSFTND>shar> expenserides,;or':-ridersrfif>;riRENT ia ■"earfj'no-. niileage i;-charKe'’§i&i^^jjfcHARTFK|buss trips. ?N Y C. Anotherma j 1 ti eiMAKKlyiHjrl'hptiday,*: reserVations^riow ifDELIVER ‘ drive a« a v<; autos U> 'other«-ities■PHONt MO 4 i 1 5477lean, h.id'alread;tMtitiW. v OiTOWNtiwaslier;aanipustfpurmi ihe.htwar <ac> n'SKE-'JheAVrt-ifi!\ni:^\V.hite;ivii»i!«'4'*Ri<lihcclul); inct't iiifi Tin; i ' - 7 ''0 l«i., ,N,nes .._iPEA fN. se \v fn gS a 1 t er a h< >ns. &£hie nidi n g’.’-■i#MVtijIfeinos.gHELP. WANTED^'i■c; etarjf shorthand fm^EXPiSstudyDO , ii mmwm&m.rrrr •.*r* v*C^^'V'-EOR-iSALgh imIui - -P- - f; fin i - II-r>f f n i ... t' K i Ml ■« , >s.-f 7 10 ptTi.fU’enl'erffi>i fOonlihmhgSEducaJtn.n • . 107 h 00th MCREATIV^WRITlNGWORKSHOPj* mmmm8377 m wbh wkKalipi a've^a-Srtal's i'fled feadll^ ImkxtSr ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAwipiMfepfeaaaSttBsati 1PHONE Noj-fMU/4i326J. Mul-^JO.M f' J^-vic^ Cliarq*\«jifikirr Or def SreCIAL PRICE ON ALL P^RTf OR06RS ; C vbil i n tee rflw'h^r Oiicagpl' State; Meht^lH^pit ai; {willv^|':BiiS?|ieaving?tid^Ndyesf'pai^l.nr lot rvery SaUuMi.v 12 MContact Hen'hr:. I s, .Mi *^l W HoT5riee1ds^Twist Pjiim wlien1' a West House Coflee Horn 1 C,1 . '!> *-' the: ''Cafe-v Bi/arre.’.-O-.VVedne.s'dJ.tSS’j^/O^PhiV.onl'^No’icdyerrChoilhiniiiiuiPEDMdMtp^eattle.n m'g.\there «>.if Iv..fRUMMAGE;BARGAINS)*kIPoes a man really take unfair advantage of womenwhen he uses Mennen Skin Bracer?Most men Simply think Menthol-Iced Skin Bracer is the best \* 8||0^ter^shave lotion aroupd. Because it cgols rather than.burns: , ESJBecause jt ,helps heal shaving mcks^and scrapes.^Becausedtihelps prevent blemishe% >: .3^^(pJ^^B^!*^M^^lB'^iif£l^»4^dndi|astihia;af:6m^l|lflsjdnbracerM • n >. '■ . ■vp *i e t'wI » c C C-l,.C.n^,Sf=; COtfisg® lOTTLING CO ‘ OF CHICAGO• ■■ .•ffl | pHm iV^V ; gv,,rJames Newman comments on football, sit-ins, communicationTO THE EDITOR:One of the great frustrations inlife is that of carrying on a con¬versation in which there is nocommunication, I, among others,was involved in a whole series ofsuch conversations on Stagg Fieldun Friday afternoon, and it was amost frustrating experience (forall concerned, I'm sure). Not be¬ing one to leave things up in theair, I propose to say an yourcolumns some things which Icould not develop fully on Friday,speaking specifically to those stu¬dents who had seats on the fifty-yard line but also to anyone elsewho cares to listen.As I understood it, some stu¬dents who were on the field onFriday were saying that they areopjx>sed to the return of footballabsolutely and others were sayingthat they are against “big-time”football. Whatever differencesthere were, all seemed in agree¬ment in believing that the Ad¬ministration is for football and isforging ahead with its plans incomplete disregard of that seg¬ment of student opinion which isopposed either to football as suchor to “big-time” football. Nowthis is an unfortunate misunder¬standing — unfortunate because itled to the kind of extreme actionthat we witnessed on Friday. It isimportant that this misunderstand¬ing be cleared up so that discus¬sion can proceed in a rationalmanner. Let me re-state here whatthe University’s position is. First,no decision has been made as towhether or not football should re¬turn as an official sport. What hasbeen decided is this. An oppor¬tunity will be (and has been) pro¬vided for those students who wishto play football to do so throughthe football class and for thosestudents who like to watch footballplayed to do so through the“games.” We will see how thisdevelops. If enough interest is dis¬played to indicate the sport can be supported, that will answer thatquestion. But that will tell us onlywhether we can play football ifwe want to do so; it does not an¬swer the question of whether weshould or of whether we can trulyplay the only kind that anyone isinterested in having, that is,“small-time football.” I believethat many students have assumedthat because we have asked the“can we?” question first that thelatter questions have already beenresolved affirmatively in admini¬strative minds. This is not thecase. As a matter of fact, thereare administrative officers who be¬lieve that a return to footballwould be unwise and whose coun¬sel is against such a move. Thisis, then, a time for discussion andfor clarification of the issues.It would be useful if a way couldbe found, after full discussion ofthe issues, to find exactly wherethe student body does stand.This leads me to my second topic—the use of the sit-in on campus.It seems quite clear that it servesonly to obfuscate matters and toraise tempers. Beyond that, it isevident that the use of the sit-inon this campus carries with it realdangers to the welfare of theacademic community and shouldhave no place in it. (I make adistinction between its use in anacademic community and its useelsewhere in situations in whichother overriding factors are in¬volved). Like all communities,ours is governed both by writtenlaws and by custom so generallyaccepted as to have the force oflaw. The written laws come large¬ly from the Statutes drawn up bythe Trustees or from rulings ofthe several faculties or from ad¬ministrative officers through pow¬ers delegated to them by thetrustees. Although the Student•Government and the Student-Fac¬ulty-Administrative Court havesome powers delegated to them, it is true, by and large, that thestudent body does not have a greatvoice in the area of law. Thiscauses some frustration amongstudents and a sense that discus¬sion is not worthwhile or that itis a most ineffectual method ofparticipating in the decision-mak¬ing process. This leads occasion¬ally to a resort to force, which is,after all, what a sit-in amounts to.But all of this ignores the greatinfluence of custom in this com¬munity. That is, there is an ac¬cepted tradition in the Universitythat students should discuss allissues openly and freely and thattheir opinions should be weighedin the decision-making process. Inthe same sense that the Jaws werean educational force in ancientGreece, so in our community thesecommonly accepted customs shapeboth the administrative and stu¬dent mind in the direction of free¬dom. Their force is so great thatthey are the chief safeguard of thetradition of freedom we prize sohighly. The sit-in is dangerous be¬cause through it students departfrom discussion to force. In doingso, they put administrators in aposition where force can be theonly response. Both the sit-in onFriday and the use of police t*clear the field were departuresfrom our tradition. The freedomwhich we prize can only be pre¬served if we continue to followthe customs of free discussion onthe student side and respect forstudents on the administrativeside. Both are important and theygo hand in hand.One last comment.1 have stated that for this com¬munity to function well, studentsshould make their opinions knownthrough discussion and adminis¬trators should consider those opin¬ions carefully in making decisions.There is a problem though, in thaton this campus there has not beena clear channel through which stu¬dent opinion could be expressed. The natural channel would bethrough the Student Government.While recent governments havedone many things well and havegrown in stature, it is not yetclear that Student Government isviewed by the student communityas its voice. Nothing could im¬prove relations between the ad¬ministration and the student bodymore than a strengthening of theStudent Government in the eyesof the student community. Recentgovernments have worked at this.The effort can be successful onlyif all students take an active in¬terest in the Government. If out of the fracas of Fridaycan come a better understandingof the spirit of this communityand better means of implementingit, then we will all be furtherahead. Let us also hope for a good(and lively) discussion of the foot¬ball question.JAMES NEWMANFRAMED PRINTSSec Hie beautiful framed prints OHour Gallery Walls.THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 South Ellis AvenueOnCan^tts with(Author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!”and “Barefoot Boy With Cheek")SHOULD AULD ACQUAINTANCEAND JAZZ LIKE THATI am now an elderly gentleman, full of years and aehes, butmy thoughts keep ever turning to my undergraduate days. Thisis called “arrested development.”But I cannot stop the healing tide of nostalgia that washesover me a* I recall those golden campus days, those ivy-coveredbuildings (actually, at my college, there was only ivy: no bricks),those pulse-tingling lectures on John Dryden and CottonMather, the many friends I made, the many deans I bit.I know some of you are already dreading the day when yougraduate and lose touch with all your merry classmates. It ismy pleasant task today to assure you that it need not be so;all you have to do is join the Alumni Association and every yearyou will receive a bright, newsy, chatty bulletin, chock-full oftidings about your old buddies.Oh, what a red-letter day it is at my house, the day theAlumni Bulletin arrives! I cancel all my engagements, take thephone off the hook, dismiss my resident osteopath, put thecheetah outside, and settle down for an evening of pure pleasurewith the Bulletin and (need I add?) a good supply of MarlboroCigarettes.One of theseven golden keysto brewingBudweiser.CHOICEST HOPSPremium-priced imported hops, blended with fine domesticstrains, are part of the secret of that refreshing Budweiser taste.One more of the seven special things we do to make yourenjoyment of Budweiser even greater!JUNO OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA Whenever I am having fun, a Marlboro makes the fun evenmore fun. That filter, that flavor, that yielding soft pack, thatfirm Flip Top box, never fails to heighten my pleasure whetherI am playing Double Canfield or watching the radio or knittingan afghan or enjoying any other diverting pursuit you mightname—except, of course, spear fishing. But then, how much■pear fishing does one do in Clovis, New Mexico, where I live?But I digress. Let us return to my Alumni Bulletin and thefascinating news about my old friends and classmates. I quotefrom the current issue: •.“Well, fellow alums, it certainly has been a wing-dinger of ayear for us old grads! Remember Mildred Cheddar and HarryCamembert, those crazy kids who always held hands in Econ II?Well, they’re married now and living in Clovis, New Mexico,where Harry rents spear-fishing equipment, and Mildred has justgiven birth to a lovely 28-pound daughter, her second in fourmonths. Nice going, Mildred and Harry!.“Remember Jethro Brie, the man we voted most likely tosucceed? Well, old Jethro is still gathering laurels! Last weekhe was voted ‘Motorman of the Year’ by his fellow workers inthe Duluth streetcar system. ‘I owe it all to my brakeman,’said Jethro in a characteristically modest acceptance speech.Same old Jethro!“Probably the most glamorous time had by any of us oldalums was had by Francis Macoinber last year. He went on abig game hunting safari all the way to Africa! We received manyinteresting post cards from Francis until he was, alas, acci¬dentally shot and killed by his wife and white hunter. Toughluck, Francis!“Wilametta ‘Deadeye’ Macomber, widow of the late belovedFrancis Macomber, was married yesterday to Fred ‘Sureshot’Sigafoos, white hunter, in a simple double-ring ceremony inNairobi. Many happy returns, Wilametta and Fred!“Well, alums, that just about wraps it up for this year.Buy bonds!”© 1963 Max Shulman* * mOld grads, new grads, undergrads, and non-grads all agree:that good Richmond tobacco recipe, that clean Seleetratefiller, have turned all fifty states of the Union into MarlboroCountry. Won’t you join the throng?Nov. 12. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9I ■ I I Abstract painter speak sRosen provides pleasure and problems a nti-artCharles Rosen, who grave a The other failure was therecital Friday evening: inMandel Hall, could be classi¬fied as an “intellectual’'pianist. The deliberation which un¬derlies his decisions about suchfactors as dynamics, phrasing,tempo, and sonority, is always evi¬dent, seldom disguised by theseeming spontaneity for whichsuch performers as Richter areknown. Logic and coolness pre¬vail; his interpretations tend to beobjective “descriptions” of a piecerattier than an attempt to involvethe audience in an immediate sen¬sual experience.There were only two placeswhere his approach seemed in¬valid. The first was the openingSonata in A-flat Major, Op. 110, byBeethoven. The meditative sec¬tions were moderately successful,but elsewhere Rosen was too rigid,especially in the fugue of the finaliltovement, which was reduced toan exercise. tral piece of Debussy’s Estampes,“Soiree dans Grenade,” where theswirling Spanish rhythms were tosquare and lacking in freedom.This same fault was less apparentin the other two pieces, however,which emerged as remarkablysubtle and free of the sloppinesswhich is so common in Debussyperformances.The two newer works on theprogram, Arthur Berger’s ThreeOne-part Inventions and MiltonBabbitt’s Partitions seemed wellserved by Rosen’s style. Neither,however, was very impressive. TheBerger seemed far too undeviat-iag, as if an etude in monotony.And while I have no doubt thatBabbitt’s work is very carefully,perhaps ingeniously, organized, Iwonder whether it can be under¬stood from listening, or whether itis rather a piece which must bestudied: music to be seen and notheard. The first hearing, and anyrate, left an aftertaste of innocu- lertaenze. The result was an out¬standing reading of this infre¬quently heard masterpiece, main¬taining that rare balance betweenemphasis of individual detail andmolding of the work as a whole.It was free of oversentimentaliza-tion, yet at the same time respon¬sive to the emotional range of themusic.The two encores which closedthe concert, a Debussy etude anda nocturne by Chopin, displayedclearly the sensitivity Rosen isable to bring to light-textured mu¬sic. They provided a fitting con¬clusion to an evening notable bothfor the choice of the program andthe artistry of the performer. Itwas a good concert, and anyonewho didn’t appreciate it shouldwithdraw from the University.Peter Rabinowite soon becomes artAbstract painter Carl Holtyspoke on “Art and Anti-art Move¬ments in our Time” to a large gath¬ering of members and friends ofthe Renaissance Society Saturdayevening at the Center for Contin¬uing Education.Holty stated that what is usuallyconsidered anti-art while it is beingdone generally becomes acceptedas art later. It is necessary tojudge movements in the light ofthe time from which they derive,the time in which they exist, andtheir reflection oti later move¬ments. According to Holty, op¬posing movements weaken after atime and then combine to formother movements. In the questionperiod following the lecture, Holtyapplied this to Pop Art and said inresponse to the question of whetherpop art will survive, “If pop artdoesn’t, nothing will.” Holty stressed continually thatart is non-utilitarian and shouldhave no message, social, political,or religious. The art form whichwill grow is the trouvaille, orfound art object. Meaning, he said,is given to an object by recogni¬tion and separation from its usualassociations. This meaning, ofcourse, is not social, political, orreligious.The effects of modern massculture on the art market werewittilly and entertainingly analyzedby Holty in the remainder of hisspeech. His position was that em¬bellishment and ostentation are themajor causes for much art buying.Some artists, such as Bacon, havetaken advantage of this and havepainted sucessful formulas overand over.CALENDAR OF EVENTSFurthermore, the dynamic rangewas too restricted. Rosen consist¬ently reached his maximum vol¬ume in the middle of a crescendo,levelling off where he should havecontinued to build, negating muchof the music's power.1. What’s the matter, no appetite?I have more important thingsto think of than food. ous neutrality.An overly intellectualized ap¬proach to the passionate music ofRobert Schumann can be disas¬trous. Rosen, however, was flex¬ible enough to modify his outlookwhen performing the Davidsbuend-2. Worried about exams, huh?No, about getting old. Tuesday, November 12Lecture: (Humanities 201). Rosen-wald 2, “Hamlet,” David Grene, lec¬turer, Committee on Social Thought,10:30 am.Lecture: (Dept, of Microbiology),Ricketts North 1, "Specificity Patternsin Enzyme Induction and Action,” Mr.Gunsalus, 11:30 am.Riding Club: Intermediate Lesson,^2 50, meet at New Dorms at 3:30 pm.Varsity Cross-Country Meet: Wash¬ington Park, University of Illinois,4 pm.Colloquium: (Institute for the Studyof Metals), Research Institutes 480,"Ultrasonic Attenuation in Supercon¬ductors.” L. T. Claiborne, 4:15 pm.Seminar: “The Problem of the Roleo0 the Osteoclast in Bone Resorption,”Dr. Frederico Gonzales. NorthwesternUniversity School of Medicine, Anato¬my 101. 4:30 pm.Dental Seminar: “Dental EducationIn Denmark,” Dr. Kirsten Jeppsen,Billings Hospital S-255, 4:30 pm.Cine Seminar: “American College ofSurgeons Meeting in San Franciscofrom Oct. 28 to Nov. 2 ” Dr. Hilger P.Jenkins, coordinator, Billings HospitalP-117, 5 pm.SWAP Workshop for Tutors, Univer¬sity High, 7 pm.Israeli Folk Dancing: Hillel Founda¬tion, 5715 Woodlawn, 7:3010 pm.Chorus Rehearsal: 57th Street Cho¬rale, Woolman Hall. 1174 East 57th St.Business session follows. 7:30.Lecture: Prof. Dr. Helmut Thieliche,"Die Frage nach dem Sinn des Le-bens.” Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.Ent. Journal Club, Armour Conf.Room E-110, 8 pm.Wednesday, November 13Lecture: (Dept, of Microbiology),Ricketts North 1, “Metabolic andGenetic Variation in Terpenoid Meta¬bolism,” Mr. Gunsalus, 11:30 am. Pediatric Conference: Dora DeLeeHall, 1 pm.Dermatology Clinical Conference:Goldblatt Hospital G-216. 2 pm.Surgery Research Seminar: BillingsHospital P-117. 3 pm.Lecture Series: Sociology of Religion(Dept, of Sociology and Center forSocial Organization Studies), SocialSciences 122. “Formal OrganizationTheory and Religious Schisms.” Nor¬man Miller. Senior Study Director,NORC, 4 pm.Far, Nose and Throat Seminar:Armour Conf. Room E-110, 4 pm.Basic Judaism: Prayer, Hille' Foun¬dation, 5715 Woodlawn Ave., 4:30 pm.Carillon Recital: Rockefeller Memo¬rial Chapel, Daniel Robins, UniversityCarillonneur, 5 pm.Clinical Conference: Billings Hospi¬tal P-117, 5 pm.Radiology Student Seminar: BillingsHospital P-117, 7 pm.Science Lecture Series: "WeatherCharting and Forecasting,” LawrenceA. Hughes. Downtown Center, 64 EastLake Street, $1.50 (students $1.). 8 pm.Lecture: (Dept, of Education), "ThePlace of National and Local Efforts inBuilding the School Curriculum,” RalphW. Tyler, Judd Hall, 8 pm.Lecture Series: Poland Today (Dept,of Slavic Languages and Literatures)“New Writing in Poland.” Maria Kun-cewicz. novelist. Visiting Professor, 84E. Lake St.. Room 400. 8 pm.English Country Dancers: meeting,Ida Noyes. 8 pm.Illustrated Lecture: (Oriental Insti¬tute) “Two Excavations in Iraq- TheEighth Season at Nippur and the Sound¬ings at Abu Salabikh.” Richard C.Haines and Donald P. Hansen, BreatedHall, 8:30 pm.Brecht on Brecht with Lotte Lenya(University Theatre) Mandel Hall,8:30 pm. Thursday, November 14Lecture: (Humanities 121) "The Char¬acter of the Tragic Hero: Antigone.”Mr. Grene, Mandel Hall, 10:3# am.Medicine-Religion Case Conference:"Illness is Divine Judgment: A Clergy¬man’s Relation to a Parishioner Who isa Psychiatric Patient." discussantsDr. Robert Snyder. Dr. Erl Dordal,Dr. Joseph Sutler, Theologian and RevHomer Bain, Armour Conf. RoomE-110, 11:30 am.Hug Ivri: (Hebrew ConversationGroup) "Religion in Israel — a non¬religious viewpont,” Shmuel Kamel.Hillel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn Ave.,12 noon.Medical House Staff Rounds: Gold¬blatt Conf. Room, 12:30 pm.South Asia Language and AreaCenter: “Bengali Literature in the I9tband 20th Centuries,” Buddhadeva Bose,Foster Commons, 4 pm.Lecture: (Zoology Club) Zoology 14."The Study of Protein Synthesis ip E.coli.,” Robert Haselkorn, 4:30 pmMeeting: Faculty of the Division ofthe Humanities. Classics 10, 4:30 pm.Obstetrics and Gynecology ClinicalConference: Dora DeLee Hall, 4:30 pm.Medical - Surgical • Pediatric CardiacConference: North Basement 29-A, 5pm.Psyrhriatrle Consultation ServiceConference: Billings Hospital W 265,5 pm.Riding Club: movie, "White Mane.”Ida Noyes, 3rd floor theater. 7:30 pm;a meeting of the riding club will fol¬low the movie.Surgery Conference: Billings Hospi¬tal P-117, 8 pm.Brecht on Brecht: with Lotte Lenya(University Theatre) Mandel Hall. 8 J8pm.8. You’re kidding?Not at all. I’ve reached amilestone today. I’m 21. Thedays of my youth have flown, 4.You should Ire celebratingnot brooding.The age of responsibilityis upon me. invisible,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 takecare 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 crreer 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. ©1963 man!It's incredible, incomparable, 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, CodelO.It’s invisible, man!10 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 12, 1?*3Wick attempts to persuade demonstrators to leaveGrand Duchy of Luxembourg Nov. 6Summer jobs are available forstudents desiring to spend a sum¬mer in Europe but who couldotherwise not afford to do so.Among available jobs are officeand sales work, tutoring, life¬guard and high paying (to #400a month) resort and factorywork.The American Student Infor¬mation Service also awards #200travel grants to students. Inter¬ested students may obtain theASIS 24 page prospectus listingall jobs, and a travel grant andjob application by writing to —Ikept. N, ASIS, 22 Ave. de laL i b e rt e', Luxembourg City,Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.Send #1 for the prospectus andairmail postage. The first 8000inquiries receive a credit to¬wards the book, ’’Earn, LearnTravel in Europe.”Kov. 12, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11(Continued from page 1)"Now I’d like to get back to myphilosophy seminar,” Wick con¬cluded.The game began anew soonafter Wick’s talk. It had gone onfor two plays during the debatesoc the field when Jesse Vail, thep ooach of the North Central team,ordered his team to stop play andwalked over to where Wick wasconversing with Friedman andWalter Haas, director of athletics."I don’t think we should con¬tinue.” Vail told Wick. "It (thegame) could lead to violence,” headded, and mentioned that NorthCentral had come to Stagg Fieldto play football and was not happyabout "the bad reception” it hadreceived.In a subsequent discussion withstudents, Wick said that he would^ order police to remove them ifthey didn’t leave.Wick said that if a referendum<>n student opinion of footballshowed students were "overwhelm¬ingly” against football, the admin¬istration would "obviously takethis opinion seriously,” He said hewould not make any promises onadministration action in responseto any poll, however.Wick explains policyHe explained administration pol¬icy on some points of the Stu¬dent Government resolution, whichurged several measures to limitf(x>tball. He pointed out that theadministration had accepted theresolution, but disagreed with somepoints.In a public letter November 5Wick responded to an SG resolu¬tion by saying, "I believe thatthere are no important differencesin our views of what the Univer¬sity's policy about athletics shouldbe; and in particular I believe thatour policy is in full accord withthe intent of the Assembly in spiteof what I have to say . .. aboutsome of the details of the Resolu¬tion.”As for making tihe athletic de¬partment budget public, he saidit was basic University policy notto release any such information.In response to a request for apromise not to charge admissionto UC games, Wick said UC stu¬dents are always admitted free,but the general public is charged^ admission "to keep out wanderers.”He said he thought "this is reallysuch a simple matter. The minori¬ty has its rights, too.”Hass also made unsuccessful at¬tempts to persuade the demonstra¬tors to leave.During one of Condon's talkscampus police officers offered toassist him by removing the stu-flents bodily, but Condon declinedthe offer, saying, "they won't goif they’re forced; we must reasonwith them.”Meanwhile, Wick, who had be¬come more and more upset by the^ ineffectiveness of his requests, metwith Sergeant Hines of the Chicagopolice. Hines offered, as the cam¬pus police had, to remove thedemonstrators from the field. Wickasked him how hard it would beto order them off. "Well,” saidWORK IN EUROPE Hines, "it wouldn’t be hard toorder them off. Getting them offis tougher.” The sergeant added,however, that he could do that ifnecessary.Wick once more asked the stu¬dents to leave- the field and, whenthey refused, he told the sergeantand his men to remove them.Tliis scattered most of the crowdalmost immediately. However,three students persisted in remain¬ing on the ground and were imme¬diately ushered to a city policepaddywagon which was waitingnear the 57th street exit.Soon, a jeering, booing crowdcongregated around the paddy-wagon. As the crowd grew, anotherstudent was led over to the paddy-wagon by a city policeman. Hereportedly had been "obstinate” inleaving the field, and the police¬man had decided to "arrest” him.The three students were loadedinto the paddywagon amidst criesof “police brutality” and "BullConnor rides again,” and the wag¬on started to pull away. It hadgone only about ten yards, how¬ever, when a student walked ontothe track and stood in the pathof the wagon. Although she wasquickly taken away by police, shewas not put into the wagon.Once clear of the crowd of stu¬dents, the paddywagon acceleratedaround the entire length of thetrack.Several students, realizing thatthe paddywagon would have to pass through the huge gates of theexit, had closed these gates. Asthe wagon came around the lastturn toward the gates, the studentsscattered, with the gates closedfirmly behind them.The paddywagon ground to a haltabout ten yards in front of thegates, and policemen jumped outto open it. The students who had closed the gates, along with manyothers, reappeared at this point,and did their best to get in the wayof the policemen. One more stu¬dent was forcibly escorted into thepaddywagon for blocking the way.The gates, however, were openedand the wagon prepared to makeits way through the crowd. Theshouting and insults to the police-How to spend a pleasant Friday afternoon at a foot-boll game; or; bring your lunch. men reached their height at thisinstant. The policemen formedlines on either side of the wagonas it passed, and bearhugged allthose who attempted to interfere.The wagon was parked on 57thstreet opposite the field, and re¬mained there for several minuteswhile police tried to get theirorders clear. Wick reappeared on57th street and motioned the paddy-wagon to remain. He told the policethat the University would not presscharges against the students andthat “he would be glad to see themset free if they would agree notto return to the field.” This ap¬parently was agreeable to thepolice, and the students w-ere setfree.Back on the field, the two teams,who had been sitting in uniformin the grandstand ever since Wickhad finished speaking on the public-address system, came back ontothe field and the game began forwhat proved to be the final time.Police stationed themselvesaround the sidelines to prevent thedemonstrators from returning tothe field.The coaches had agreed toshorten the game because of thelateness of the hour, so that thefirst two quarters were twelve min¬utes long and the last two ten.Normally quarters are fifteen min¬utes long. Starting with 7tM). thecrowd thinned out considerably as(Continued on page 12)HOWARD HUGHES DOCTORAL FELLOWSHIPS. If you areinterested in studies leading to a doctoral degree in engineering orphysics, you are invited to apply for one of the several new awardsin 1964 on the Howard Hughes Doctoral Fellowship Program.This unique program offers the doctoral candidate the optimumcombination of high-level study at an outstanding university pluspractical industrial experience at the Hughes Aircraft Company.Each Howard Hughes Doctoral Fellowship usually provides about$9,000 annually. Of this amount approximately $1,800 is for tuition,thesis and research expenses, other academic fees and books, andfrom $2,Q00 to $3,300 is for a stipend. The remainder is composedof salary earned by the fellow.Howard Hughes Doctoral Fellowships are open to outstanding stu¬dents. A master's degree, or equivalent graduate work, is essentialbefore beginning the Fellowship Program.HUGHES MASTERS FELLOWSHIPS. The Hughes MastersFellowship Program offers unusual opportunities for education lead¬ing to a master’s degree...and, in addition, provides each fellowwith practical industrial experience at the Hughes Aircraft Company.New awards will be made in 1964 to qualified applicants possessinga baccalaureate degree in engineering, physics or mathematics.The great majority of the award winners will be assigned to theWORK-STUDY PROGRAM and will attend a university sufficientlynear a facility of the Hughes Aircraft Company to permit them toobtain practical industrial experience by working at the companyat least half time. Those associated with a Southern Californiafacility usually attend the University of Southern California or theUniversity of California, Los Angeles. An appropriate stipend willbe awarded in addition to salary earned and certain academicexpenses paid by the company.A small, highly selected group will be offered FULL-STUDY Fellow-HughesFellowshipPrograms ships. These fellowships permit attendance at an outstanding uni¬versity on a full-time basis during the regular academic year witha substantial stipend.After completion of the Masters Program, fellows are eligible toapply for a HUGHES DOCTORAL FELLOWSHIP.For both programs, typical areas of research and development towhich fellows may be assigned while working for Hughes full timeduring the summer, and where appropriate, part time during theacademic year, include: theoretical and experimental work in somebasic technology such as atomic, nuclear and solid-state physics,chemistry and metallurgy—space technology including stability andtrajectory analysis, thermal analysis, energy conversion, and struc¬tural design and analysis —computer and reliability technology,circuit and information theory, plasma electronics, microminiaturi¬zation, and human factor analysis — research, development andproduct-design on such devices as parametric amplifiers, masers,lasers, microwave tubes, antenna arrays, electron-tube and solid-state displays, and components — design analysis, integration andtesting of space and airborne missile and vehicle systems, infraredsearch and track systems, radar systems, communication systems,antisubmarine warfare systems, and computer and data process¬ing systems.The classified nature of work at Hughes makes American citizen¬ship and eligibility for secret security clearance a requirement.Closing date for all applications: February 1, 1964. (Early appli¬cation is advisable, and all supporting references and transcriptsshould be postmarked not later than February 1, 1964.)How to apply: To apply for either the. Howard Hughes DoctoralFellowship or the Hughes Masters Fellowship, write Dr. C N.Warfield, Manager, Educational Relations—Corporate Office, HughesAircraft Company, Culver City, California.Creating a new world with electronics1 1HUGHESI 1HUSHtS AIRCRAFT COMPANYProtest was not to be on 50-yard line(Continued from page 11)the game progressed. North Cent¬ral won the game by a score of 7-6.Many administrators commentedto the Maroon on the demonstra¬tion after everything was over.Hass called the demonstration“just not part of UC,” while Steinwould say nothing except that “thegame was well-played and the finalscore was 7-6.“Pippin declared that he couldn’tfollow the reasoning of the demon¬strators. “I just don’t follow theirlogic,” Pippin stated.When the players had beenstanding along the sidelines priorto coming onto the field for thesecond time, one of the playersasked Pippin if they (the players)could drag them (the demonstra¬tors) off. “That’s just what theywant,” Pippin said.Stein then came over and in¬structed both Pippin and the play¬ers not to say anything. He hadearlier ordered a Maroon reporterto get away from the players, say¬ing that only he could be spokento. However, he refused to com¬ment when asked.Tlie players generally felt thatthe demonstration was uncalledfor. “We want to play, that’s all.”said one player. “We don’t careif people come or not. We are satis¬fied with this season’s scrimmages,and Coach Stein is a good coach.”Several of the players also toldthe Maroon that Stein had toldthem earlier in the day to “actdignified.”Hass maintained that everyoneon the team gets a chance to play.This came after two boys had com¬plained last week that the secondteam was not seeing enough action.“The second team necessarilydoesn’t play as much as the first.”Hass stated. There will aways be griping, he added, but Stein is “agood coach.”Wick, commenting on the neararrests of the three students, saidthat he was only interested in get¬ting the demonstrators off the field.He had the officers release the stu¬dents, he added, and never askedfor names. called inPresident during the sit-ins, in of Chicago if Mr. Cronkife had have not received adequate as-Beadle’s office three filmed a lecture on Plato or SUrances that these suggestionsyears ago, Wick replied that the Aristotle, or had televised one of wiU ^ ins.titutionalized j .sit-ins in Beadle’s office were con- the innumerably bull sessions on n^eau,ducted bv “serious persons ” “We current social problems confront- we m®t Wlth nation-wide pubprepared there,” Wick stated. inS our society, or even if he had licity lor football through variouswere“The sit-inners at the ad building chosen an appearance of just one public media. This is a distortion,were an inconvenience. These were ol the prominent individuals who We oppose such distortion. That*han that ” continually choose the University is why we are demonstrating.of Chicago as a sounding board Heagy said he could “under-Wlien asked why, if this Weis a ^ ideals. These are the stand” the point of view of thoseclass and not a team, the press ijnds 0f things which character- on the line. “They felt the waywas allowed in (the press is not ^ our school — we object to a to stop big-time football was topermitted to observe university distortion of this climate. stop all football, starting with thisclasses), Wick replied that a nor- ^ for these reason; that we game.” Heagy felt the people onmal class lecture is “privileged have asked the university, the line did not trust the adminiscommunication. A football class, through the Student Government, tration to keep football insignifithough it contributes to the Uni- to take certain steps insuring that cant, since it had allowed TVversity community, does not de- football will be treated like any coverage, and had expanded thepend upon a free exchange of other sport at the university. We playing season this year,ideas. Wick stated.On the discrepancy between himand Newman on the question offorcibly removing students fromthe field, Wick said, “I guess Ijust have a shorter temper.” Simpson and Hutchins commentDean of the College Alan People convinced that the adminSimpson commented that the is tration is doing “large-scale planThe players were instructed to demonstrators were practicing ning determined to give attentiontalk to nobody. Wick guessed, be- a most ‘‘dogmatic and out- to Jo^ball ’ are wrong, Simpsoncause some of them may have rageoms” kind of “prohibitionism. said, because “we are far too busybeen “hot under the collar.”Original plansTom Heagy, an SG representa- They don't like a part totter thing ZZTl^i, ., , , , t oiuipmjii dgiceh wiwi joeaaie sand they want to stop others from . , . , ,. ..... 1 statement, and that if such a demenjoying it.'Well. Wally, what dowe do now?" five, explained the origins of thedemonstration. When it waslearned that CBS was planningcoverage of the game, several peo t, . *, , i . ... . c. onstration were to happen again.It is completely legitimate. Simp- ^ wou)d a,* tteson continued, “to arrange games ~ ... . ,ol our type with schools which Dnaaphnary Commtttee take action.Wick stated that he and Ham-bourger had arranged to meet thisweek to discuss further what theyhad been discussing on the field.Wick had suggested, he said, thatthe meeting be put off until “theMaroon could do something,” butthis was abandoned.The demonstration marked “asad day for the University,” Wickstated. “The students were onlybeing ornery,” he added.When asked why the police werecalled in Friday and were not pie decided to organize a demon- ing other pieties, he said, would Chancellor of the University, destration to “correct the false imageNew Phoenix Paperbacks by Campus Authors!The Long Encounter by Merlin Bowen $1.95Collected Poems by Elder Olson $2.45THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue the demonstration:We, as University of Chicagostudents, are concerned not thattwenty-five or thirty or even onehundred students are playing foot¬ball in university uniforms and onuniversity property; in fact, wefully support the physical eduea- Freud's myth valuableto study of religionforPane’s Piizzeria"Home of Hyde Park's Tastiest Pino"Welcomes everyone back to the UniversityFREE DELIVERY WITH STUDENT I.D.PHONE NOrmal 7-9520 1603 E. 53rd ST.OPEN DAILY 11:00 A.M.-2:00 A.M. Freud’s myth explaining re- havior and is the chief rivalligion as the product of an possession of the mother,tion department in its position that original nuclear conflict gives Freud postulated a primal hordethose who wish to indulge in valuable insight into the myth of man’s early social organi-sports as an enjoyable interlude psychodynamics of religion in our zation. Rubenstein continued. Into study should be offered univer- own time, said Rabbi Richard each tribe, one male dominated,sity facilities. We completely en- Rubenstein at Hillel Friday night,dorse the policy of Mr. Hass and , . , , ,his staff that anyone applying for Rubenstein. director of the Hillelteam mcmbers.hip should automati- Foundation at the University ofcally receive it. Pittsburgh and lecturer in FrenchWe object, however, to the image existentialism spoke at the Hillelof the university as an institution Fireside on the topic, “Freud andin which such activities as football the Origins of Religion.”have a prominent place. It is pro- In groups, as in individuals, thegrams such as that being filmed Oedipal conflict is at the basis ofby NBC which promote such an an neurotic striving Rubensteinsaid. The child and the society ,inassimilating and introjecting theerroneous image.It would have been much closerto the true spirit of the UniversityGilbert & Sullivan s RuddigoreMonde! Hall Nov. 21. 22. 23$2.00 U.C. StudentsAvailable from Mrs. H, F. Wright5739 Kimbark DO 3-5456JOHN DINOU'S Ml 3-4900SURF &RESTAURANT —COCKTAIL LOUNGE — COFFEE SHOP — OPEN 24 HOURS5000 S. LAKE SHORE DRIVELong Known For Prime Steaks And Dry MartinisThe banquet season lias started, and it is time now to plan for Thanks¬giving, Christmas and holiday partying. Call John Dinou for prices andfull information • • • MI 3-4900. Our newly remodeled Century Room will seat 100 persons. Our newPier 50 Room is also available. Other rooms include the Surrey, theSurf, and the Captain's Cabin.think of sports as we do. Abandon- Robert M. Hutchins, formerresult in a justifiable outcry from dined to comment on the presentwhich would be shown to the coun- students.’ football controversy. “My mind istry with coverage of the game.” The issue of football, he added, fixed on higher things,” HutchinsSitting on the fifty-yard line was is “being blown up by students explained. Hutchins, now Presidentnever part of the original plan. The who feel that the absence of the of the Fund for the Republic, wassit-in was started spontaneously game on this campus is a unique in Chicago for a meeting of theby people not connected with the and precious thing. This is a ludi- board of directors of the Encyclo-original plans. The original organ- cr0us viewpoint. pedia Britannica.izers issued this statement before> lall young males were either cas¬trated or exiled, and there existeda pattern of guiltless violence. Theyoung males, driven by sexualneed, finally, act to rid themselvesof the father, wanting at the sametime to assume his identity. Theonly way to attain both ends is tokill the father and to eat him.Rubenstein explained that thefather, now removed from the do¬main of natural encounter, befather as the superego, performs comes infinitely more terrifying toand act of “psychic cannibalism.” his sons. They commit an act ofHe explained that in both Judi- Sartarian maavaise foi in denyingasm and Calvinism, sin is seen the deed and at the same timeas a want of conformity to the will are compelled to repeat it. Sacri-of God, and rightousness as a fice of animals serves this purposeconforming to God's will. The fa- and religion becomes an act olther is the force which distributes homicidal violence in the place olpunishment, sets patterns of be- the sacred.12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 12. 1963