Soc. division also aidedEstablish 45 hum fellowshipsFOTA meeting tomorrowPlanning for this year’s outside artists, including authorsFestival of the Arts (FOTA) James Baldwin, Norman Mailer andm Loo-in tomorrow after- James T. Farrell, dancer Eric Haw- _T . , , . ...begin wmor o a e... c The University has estab- tive with those available in thenoon, at a meeting to which kins; arhs^' f* tcAk singers. Some Hshed a nevv graduate fell0w- natural sciences.aU thase interested in helping in *“*?*“*■ m last quarters dis- ghip program in humanistic “Holistic alternatives in t h e ^ Humanities,” Mr. Levi said. “Buttlio Festival have been invited. cussions felt that the appearance of studjes under which fifteen , 101<:® of Careers must ** kep ,opeI} thev ^ inCiude manv asDects ofpso manv ontcirWc haH maHf* tho ocn a n u j n f°r the promising young people of ineV 3180 include many aspects otThe organizational meeting will be ~ 54,250 awards w ll! be made dually. country» Ml.i Levi said. study in the departments of the Divi-held at 3:30 in the office of Tom im • ^ The ProSram represents the Uni- “Financial considerations should sion of the Social Sciences.”. - i j __x, . ^p in tae “r per o1maac,^ versity’s response to a nationwide not distort the production of the fullOKcee, i usmess with heavy financial risk, tendency to neglect studies in the range of scholars on whom the intel-ties. second floor Ida Noyes. as Dean o. Students Warner A, Wick humanities in favor of scientific in- lectual life of the nation depends.quiries. This program reflects the Univer- special fields of interest which arepart of the University’s Division ofTl,» meeting follows two discos. pu^ . committee was com-last quarter in which interested fMtJ 0, s,ud(.nls with (inail. •The Umoersity seeks to help re- cities Srtte’fcSSILtta.'to science and history andD. Gale Johnson, Dean of the Divi¬sion of the Social Sciences, said that“there are aspects of the disciplinesof sociology, anthropology, econom-gtudents and faculty members c|a, and administrative help from dress the balance by placing more ult productive work inreach°d a general ^nsensus on the ^ Dean o( Students md Activlties emphasis on scholarly pursuit in the maT acadeSc fields withSover all nature of this years Festi- office Formeriy, there had been humanities,, according to President ^ q{ hl,manistiJ. studies.” thetheval. some faculty members on the com- George Wells Beadle. Mr. Levi emphasized that the hu- other of the social sciences whichare most fruitfully approached fromthe humanistic, rather than the sci¬entific, point of view. Both aspectsThey agreed that it should be a mittee. The committee to be formed UC Provost Edward H. Levi said inanities are interpreted broadly un- ?re 1T'P°rtant }° thf continued vitality of research and investigation inthe social sciences.”In the words of Robert E. Streeter,Dean of the Division of the Human¬ities, “The humanities do not lendthemselves to tidy description andmeticulous classification. In thebroadest sense, the subject matterof humanistic scholars is human lifeitself and humanistic scholarshiptends to be characterized by varietyand independence.”Fellows under the program will beselected by a national committeecomposed of scholars, business ex¬ecutives, and distinguished publicservants.The six members of the committeeare: Virgil Aldrich, the Guy DespardGoff Professor of Philosophy at Ken¬yon College and past president ofthe western division, American Phi-The University has received that the University has received for search in the field of librarianship losophical Association: James Phin-e the first major gift toward toe new library,” Mr. Beadle said, and to offer the Ph.D. in library ney Baxter, President Emeritus of'the construction of a new cen- “The ^ for a ne,w bbrary ^ science* ' ™ams College and winner of theing is great -precisely because the Th Univ itv>, ^ d f Truslees Pulltzer pnze m History: Williamme university s Board ot trustees Benton uc Trustee, chairman of the“home-grown” festival, largely fea- tomorrow will include faculty mem- that the humanities fellowship sti- der the Fellowship program,taring local people and events, with- bers. pends were designed to be competi- “They, of course, embrace theout large expense, according toO'Keefe. This would be similar tothe original idea when the Festivalwas started, in 1954. There would befewer events than in past years,with one outside artist attending.The Festival committee will inviten prominent woman representativeot the arts as the featured speakerfrom outside the university. Thiswill take advantage of the TalbotFund, an endownment which pro¬vides money to sponsor apjiearanceson campus of distinguished womeno( national or international promi¬nence.Tlie fund was established by Ma¬rian Talbot, who was UC dean ofwomen in the early 1920's, in mem¬ory of her mother. Under its provi-skins, visiting women live in thedormitories for a few days, providing informal contacts with students.They also give one public lecture.hi the past few years, speakers Vol. 72 — No. 23 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 1964UC receives first big library gifttral library.‘ riches of the University collection , , ... . . Benton, UL Trustee, chairman of theA check for $500,000 was presented imDres,;Ve We need to build ^ engaged tbe architectural firm board f Encyclopedia Britannica^ h to Ike University by the Harriet Skidmore, Owiags and Merriil to former {is Senator' and tormT Z-sivmsort y v Pullman Sehcrmcrhorn Ti-ust in a oerhans brilliantly an "irreplaceable <*evedop pinna .or the hbrary nr... gjgtant Secretary ol State; Danielits coronary facilities. Initial sketch- Hoffman, literarv critic nosuch notable women as Anna Mah-ler, sculptr* and daughter ol the SThe' *£££*,“iw.composer Gustav Mahler: SanthaRama-Rau, author from India, andMargaret Webster, a Shakespeareansoliolar and director. These visits brief ceremony yesterday afternoon intellectual resource,” said Beadle. Hoffman. Uterary critic, poet, andThe new hbrary will become the “ “* *ssoc‘“te P ’With this gift, the University “can central facility in a campus system y Swarthmore. Howard C. Peters**,now plan for construction of what that at present utilizes William Mr. Beadle said that the plans president of Fidelity Philadelphiawill be one of the finest libraries in Rainey Harper Library, 1116 East for library will be based on a doub- T™st Company and former Assistanthave usually been timed to coincide the academic world.” according to 59th Street, as the main unit and Ung of the number of volumes within ynton^UC trcTtU^d from^Pmwnti each year’s Festival of the President Beadle. The new structure, maintains 17 departmental libraries 20 to 25 years. That would require *ntema UL trustee and tromer Prowith each jears festival of the ^ ^ $15m m wiU various discipiines of scholar- faculties for 4.000,000 to 5,000,000 nf —— —entlv V,eeplace six-two year old Harper Li- ship at other locations on the cam- books. The collection now totals 2,-Those who attended the previous brary. pus. Harper, which will play a role 200,000 volumes,meetings to discuss FOTA, and all Nq ^ for ^ new i^^ary has in the future development of the Li- The designs for the building willOlliers interested, nave Deen invited announced vet Last vear the brary system, has virtually reached ineornorate nro vis inns fnr the mostto tomorrow’s meeting. In addition. . . ‘ ’ « a tt • its ranaeitv for books and nhvsicallv , , ' , Committee on Fellowships and Schol-Ih„ ^ ***** at 58 8treet and Urn- lor books and Physically adviced computer and electronic argh , Februan, 15 Annlicationsversity were under discussion. This needs. Harper was built m 1912 at a facilities, Mr. Beadle said, in order , P , ^ f PP , .j. . ■ nncf non . ... , , ... and lurtner information may be ob-year, discussion seems to have c°sl 01 wzu.uuu. to put the complex and proliferating tained from the committeecentered around Stagg field. Another Tlie new library building also will data of modern research and schol-cannot be modified to serve future serve as the headquarters and labor- arship at the immediate disposal of When the program is fully estab-location mentioned has been South atory of the University’s Graduate the scientists and students of to- hshed, there will be 45 holders ofCampus. Library School, founded in 1928 as morrow. University of Chicago Humanitiesfessor of economics, currently VicePresident, Ford Motor Company.Fifteen University of Chicago Hu¬manities Fellows will enter this fall.Applications must be filed with thethe Student Activities director hasasked representatives to come fromseveral campus organizations activein cultural activities. These includetheatre and film groups, musicgroups, and publications.Last year’s FOTA featured several “This is tlie first substantial gift the first to engage in serious re-Ex-administrator comments on current UC „ ..... ... Fellowships in residence—15 in eachThe arrangement withm the libra- q( ^ three years of stud leadingry also will serve the University^ to a Ph D degree. Annual expendi-interdisciplinary tradition, facilitat- ^gg for program will exceeding the easy flow of scholarly cu- $200,000. riosity across tradition^, lines ofThe 5th army base was moved in investigation. — Warner A. Wick, Dean of Studentsr—. 1 f t •^ .at the University, said that apartWithin the building, provision will from the new Humanities Fellowshipkiliv WUUIJ MVWV**, IVVNIMIMW wnUC feam studies electrons in cosmic raysUC scientists have discov- vided for the experiment. The U.S. trons and shoot them out into space, the direction the particle was travelingby M. Stevens prised that the transfer of the army“The University of Chicago finally taken place. He Mid-December of 1963 from its forfoue-ht to nrpvcnt the mov- jokingly noted ^ ^ University mer location near the Museum of• r ,1 P r.i * , does not have the power to reverse Science and Industry to a site on the be made for the most flexible use program, graduate fellowships andj. * 0 ,^t)' / i- >Hfr n*” overrule governmental decisions, North Side on Sheridan Road near ot library materials of all kinds to scholarships from University fundsironi Hyde 1 ark to the North but added that, during his tenure, the campus of Loyola University. meet the changing nature of inquiry are at an annual level of $235,000 in• Kie because it wanted to prevent administration officials met with lo The former administrator thought which will be shaped by future the Division of the Humanities anda subsequent influx of Negro resi- ^ politicians and succeeded in fore- that the recent football sit-in was events and discoveries, Mr. Beadle $410,000 in the Division of the Socialdents, stated a former high ad- bailing the army action. (Continued on page 8) said. Sciencesrmnistrative official of UC last weekin an interview with the Maroon.The transfer of the army base, thetv r m e r administrator explained,would create a vacancy in Hyde , ' if• nt aKmit Navy Office of Naval Research and Of course, this would result in de- when it hit the package. Particles^rk lake-front real estate. Th^, eiea signiiicant Clues aooui ^ ^ Force at tection o£ many more electrons than passed through the two spark cham-ne felt, would probably lead to the ® .. Fort Churchill, Manitoba, provided positrons, since it produces electrons bers in straight lines before reachingconsti notion of low-cost housing on mic rays. Iney made the dis- SUppQj^ facilities. almost exclusively. the magnet.the vacated land, and this in turn covery by performing an ex- tj^e jwo theories which the scien- The experiment found a ratio of The magnet was doughnut shaped,would provide living quarters for periment at the Magnetic tists set about to test involved the three electrons to one -xisitron. This about 12 inches across, and six inchesNegroes, by virtue of their inability North Pole in Canada last relative numbers of positrons and indicated that both processes are ac- thick, with the hole opened upward.to pay rents in excess of those which summer. electrons found in the cosmic radia- five, but that the “P-P collision” Two indentations in the hole of the^ ** l<m<<>St Scientists have speculated about tion. pre^ss is not predominant, as some magnet formed a narrow gap through°TH*» aiLim«i nt mor* Question ever since an experi- Positions are anti-particles. They bad ou§hb wTh e parb. esf. . av^_ ' .,Kr^s livTng^vde pik wTcaltod ment 111 1961 b^ tw0 other UC pro' are electrons with f)sitive’ instead of ™e.api£ratus the ,three scienti,sts oT^e malet toegroes uving m llyde rarK was canea fessors ^ mother from the Uni- negative charges. Positrons have been used in their experiment was de- Pples> ot tae magnet caused me•obvHms’ ky the fonner executive. versit of Minnesota *„wed created artificially, detected in unsta- signed to separate the positive parti- ^ ^'“.to ™erva 'o"311*He asserted that more Negroes in there „re c|ertroa, ta the rosmic We elements, and found in secondary cles from the negative by use of a sldke »r the other dependent uponHyde Park would not only mean in- radiation which reaches the earth. radiation filtering to Earth. They magnet, and measure the number of dieir chaige Since they were travel-Creased hazard for students, but that Lgst summer, the three scientists have never before been identified as each kind of particle with high speed 13g 3 near J e sPee^ 0 'SIt would also lower the image of the sent two huge balloons to the top of part of primary cosmic rays. motion picture cameras. , IT ,uS _ hCy uUmversUy in the eyes of residents the atmosphere to test tlie two preva- According to one hypothesis, called At the heart of the scientific pack- a J mUC ' 11 1 WdS enOUgof Hyde Park, the rest of Chicago, ient theories on the source of the the “P-P collision” hypothesis, elec- age was a 185-pound magnet which T ' k rharnhpr<. ^and the entire country. electrons. tron radiation originates from colli- created a magnetic field about 12,000 , showed the chinfie in direc-Ttiis, he added, would contradict The experimenters were Associate sions between protons in cosmic rays times as strong as that of the Earth. .. , . , which oassedthe basic duty of a university, which professor Peter Meyer and Professor and hydrogen nuclei, each of which Above and below this magnet were through the naekaeeho called “the obligation to educate Roger H. Hildebrand, of the UC de- consists of one proton, floating in spark chambers. A new type of parti- a fifth chamber' containing tenstudents as well as possible and the partment of physics and the Enrico space. In such collisions, positrons de detector, each spark chamber is speciaj tantalum plates told whatnecessity, in the particular case of Fermi Institute for Nuclear Studies, and electrons are produced in about 3 stack of thin horizontal metal plates partic]e passed' through thetoe University of Chicago, as a ma- and James A. DeShong, Jr,, senior equal numbers. If the experimenters with slight gaps between the plates.jot* neighborhood employer and in- physicist in the High Energy Physics had discovered protons and electrons They are surrounded with neon gas.Stitution, to keep on the good side division of Argonne National Labora- in equal proportions, this hypothesis When a particle enters the chamber, plates.of those who live near the Univer- tories, which is operated by UC for would have been strengthened. a spark is set up between the plates, Two cameras, each loaded withsity.” the US Atomic Energy Commission The other hypothesis was that su- tracing a line through the gas along 1,200 feet of very high speed movieHaving been out of touch with (AEC). pemovae, which are “exploding stars” the path of the particles. film, captured the spark tracks be-^toninistrative affairs of UC for The National Aeronautics and Space in our galaxy, the Milky Way, ac- Two of these spark chambers v/ere tween the plates each time a particlesotoe time, tlie ex-official was sur- Administration and the AEC pro- celerate the negatively-charged elec- placed above the magnet, to determine entered.equipment by the distance traveledand the products it created in thel■JeducationcenterAT THEHYDE PARK YMCATen week term begins Mon. Jan. 13thOver 80 informal classes including:Hold freedom vote in Mississippi NSA hit by disaffiliationsLanguages (Adult and Family)Frencht GermanItalianSpanielSwedishRecreationSwimmingJudo Co •#*<1TrampolineThe ArtsRecorder placingBalletModem DanceI,earning to DanceOil PaintingPortrait PaintingChildren's PointingTl ater ColorGuitarInterior Design Commercial & BusinessShorthandMathematicsT > pingBookkeepingHow to StudyHumanitiesPhilosophy of ReligionVoice and DietionRapid Reading & ComprehensionExistentialism & ChristianityCultures of AfricaSpecial InterestsYogaDriving an AutomobileWeight ControlCosmetic ApplicationDressmakingmid many, many othersubjects.Registrotion now in progressColl or stop by for free catalogHYDE PARK YMCA1400 EAST S3RD STREET — FA 4-5300 He found it at Western ElectricDennis Moffatt, B.A., Coe College, Cedar Rapids,Iowa, '57, joined Western Electric in 1961 after twoyears of graduate work at the State University ofIowa and two years with the Army. Most importantto Dennis was the fact that WE offered him thechance to move ahead . . . fast. Dennis startedat Western Electric’s Hawthorne Works in Chicagoas a Staff Trainee in Industrial Relations.After only a year with the Company and thecompletion of one of WE’s training programs forcollege graduates, Dennis became a PersonnelPlacement Analyst. Advancing rapidly, Dennis wasrecently promoted to Section Chief, Employment and Placement, Systems Equipment Engineering.If you, like Dennis Moffatt, want a career witha company that will recognize your skills and abili¬ties, and have the qualifications we’re looking for—let’s talk! Opportunities for fast-moving careersexist now for liberal arts, physical science andbusiness majors, as well as for electrical, mechani¬cal and industrial engineers. Get the Western Elec¬tric Career Opportunities booklet from your Place¬ment Officer. Or write: Western Electric, Room6405, 222 Broadway, New York 38, N. Y. And besure to arrange for an interview when the BellSystem recruiting team visits your campus.Western Electric MANUFACTURING AND SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEMAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERPrincipal manufacturing locations in 13 cities • Operating centers in many of these same cities plus 36 others throughout the U S.Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J. • Teletype Corp., Skokie, III., Little Rock, Ark. • Gen. Hq., 195 Broadway, New YorkBy Douglas T. Yates Jr.Yale Daily NewsNew Haven, Conn. (CPS) —Eighty thousand MississippiNegroes cast ballots for AaronHenry in the “Protest Votelor Freedom’’ recently. Spokesman*4 the campaign headquarters inJackson feel that the number ofvotes may reach 100,000 when allreturns have been counted.The northeast section of thestate had what was described as“a whopping turnout.” Clarksdale,a city in that sector, reported 6.501lor Henry, wrhile the county lyingdirectly outside of Clarksdale ad¬ded another 10,401. The returns inCoahoma county also located in the northwest part of the state re¬flected the extensive three weekcampaign of the SNCC workers,Stanford students and Yale stu¬dents as 17.000 Negroes cast pro¬test ballots for Aaron Henry. Ad¬ditional votes are still expectedfrom the Gulf Coast area.The satisfaction with the protestelection results was unanimouslyvoiced by campaign leaders. Rob¬ert Moses, campaign manager forAaron Henry, stated that the pro¬test election was “an historicevent. For the first time Negroesare going to realize that they arein touch with each other becauseof the freedom vote. The virtualisolation of the individual Negrowithin the state has come to anend.”A SNCC worker in Jackson saidNC frats admit bigotryChapel Hill. NC (CPS) —Seven of the 23 social frater¬nities at the University ofNorth Carolina admit to hav¬ing membership clauses discrimi¬nating either by race or religion.Another four have a ‘‘sociallyacceptable” clause that is used todiscriminate in some cases. Thisclause says that the national fra¬ternity of which the chapter is apart, must approve all members.The fraternities and their re¬strictions are Alpha Tau Omega-white Christians only, Kappa Al¬pha—white Christians only, KappaSigma — Christians “socially ac¬ceptable to national, Phi DeltaTheta—white Christians, Pi KappaPhi—secret clause against Negroesand non-Christians, Sigma Nu —whites only, Sigma Chi—Christianssocially acceptable.The four with the “socially ac¬ceptable clause are Chi Phi, St.Anthony Hall, Phi Gamma Deltaand Sigma Alpha Epsilon.Three of the seven sororitiessay they have no discriminatoryclause. The other four, Alpha DeltaSeek ticket sellersMeeting for people interested inselling tickets for Folk Festival.(Complimentary tickets are given toticket sellers.) Ida Noyes Hal!, Wed¬nesday, Jan. 8, 7:30 pm. Pi, Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta,and Kappa Delta replied that theycould not discuss the matter with¬out specific permission from theirnational office because member¬ship requirements are secret.UNC policy on the discrimina¬tory clauses states that no frater¬nity may establish a chapter thathas such a clause, according toUNC Dean of Students William G.Long. Howver, chapters alreadyestablished on the campus mayhave the clauses.New mag seekslocal talentPodium, an undergraduate jour¬nal in the humanities and socialsciences, will begin publicationthis quarter.Designed to publish original andscholarly works, the journal willbe w’ritten and staffed by under¬graduates. Articles will range fromantropology to architecture, frommusic to monetary theory, andfrom philology to philosophy.The journal, to be national inscope, was begun by students atthe University of California atBerkely. UC Students who are in¬terested in joining the Podium staffor submitting articles are askedto contact Ed Stein c/o Particle,Ida Noyes, or at RE 4-8030 eve¬nings. that the vote total might well havereached over 200,000 were it notfor constant police harassment. Hepointed out that the protest elec¬tion, regardless of the number ofvotes recorded, was a major stepbecause it was the the first timethat the Negroes "overcame theirfear of identifying themselves in aprotest against vote deprivation.”John Lewis, chairman of SNCC,echoed the prevalent opinion instating that the “Mississippi Free¬dom Ballot is one of the most sig¬nificant events of the civil rightsmovement. We believe that itsimportance lies in the fact Uiat80,000 disenfranohized Mississip-pians in over 100 towns and citieshad an opportunity to participatein the electoral process for thefirst time in their lives.”Nicholas Bosaquet, a Britishgraduate student at Yale, is stillin Mississippi after back-to-backarrests in Jackson. Bosaquet hadbeen arrested for “breach of thepeace” after attending a concertin Jackson with a Negro student.Bosaquet was released on $500bond. At the insistance of theBritish consulate, charges were la¬ter dropped. Last night Bosaquetmade a second trip to Jackson jailafter being charged with “seed¬ing and suspicion of car theft.” Hewas fined $25 on the speeding of¬fense and was later released whenhe presented his car registrationpapers. of several student bodiesPhiladelphia (CPS)—TheUnited States National Stu¬dent Association (USNSA)has suffered a rash of dis¬affiliations recently, which accord¬ing to national affairs vice-presi¬dent Joel Sharkey “are commonin the fall, when each school isfaced with the NSA membershipdues.”The latest addition to the list ofdisaffiliations is the Senior Advis¬ory Board of Yale Universitywhich voted November 13 to endYale's affiliation with USNSA.Commenting on the disaffiliationof Yale and Dartmouth, both IvyLeague schools, Sharkey said thatthe withdrawal of the two “pres-tige’’ colleges was not a seriousblow to the prestige of USNSA.Sharkey wTas further critical ofthe actions of the two schools, “Ifthey are unhappy with presentpolicies of NSA, they are certainlynot going to accomplish anythingby withdrawing. If the more con¬servative schools choose to disaf¬filiate because of disagreement onpolitical issues, the result of theiraction can only be the furtherliberalization of USNSA policies.”At Ohio State University, USNSAlost a referendum to bring Ohioback into the association by a vote of 3065 to 1447. Ohio disaffiliatedearly last year. This year’s stu¬dent leaders were working to getOhio back but lost in the vote LastWednesday.Earlier in the month, AntiochCollege Community Council votedto withdraw from USNSA. One ofthe main reasons for the Antiochvote was the failure of the Antiochdelegation to obtain individualmemberships rather than studentgovernment membership as nowexists.At the time of the Antioch at¬tempt, during the annual USNSACongress, delegates from Antiochstated that the school would proba¬bly withdraw if the reform wa«not passed. It did not pass and theassociation was expecting the An¬tioch disaffiliation.Vanderbilt University’s studentsenate voted in late October to dis¬affiliate from USNSA. Bob Brame,sponsor of the move, said thatUSNSA was “ignoring its watch¬word of academic freedom anddemocratic processes.”USNSA is a confederation of over350 student governments thatclaims to be the most representa¬tive group in the United States.As a national union of students, Ris recognized by over 80 other na¬tional unions that participate inthe International Student Confer¬ence.Dennis Moffatt sought a job with responsibilityLEARNING FOR LIVING2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 7, 1964*veral hundred crowd Latke—Hamantash debatelattle at the 50 yard line continues Hillel traditionby Sharon Goldmanflie Latke - HamantashBowl, hard-fought on the Hil-Griddle-iron at the end ofHast quarter, ended with a tieIjoore, but neither team (class?)could be accused of resting at thejO-yard line.t Participants in the 18lh annualHillel Foundation Faculty HanukahSymposium fought long and hard toprove that their favorite delicacy, theround, flat, potato pancake (latke),traditionally eaten on Hanukah, orthe hamantash, a triangular pastryfilled with prunes or poppy seeds,''eaten on I be Purina feast, was su-perioi physically, economically, sex¬ually, psychologically, and academ¬ically.Experts at throwing the ball (bull?or is that another sport?) were Mil-ton Friedman, distinguished service.professor, department of economics,David Orlinsky, assistant professorof social sciences in the College, SolTax. professor, department of an-throixdogy and derm of UniversityExtension, and Warner Wick, profes¬sor, department of philosophy anddean ol students.Discussants (relief team?) includedJohn Hayward, associate professor,Meadville Theological School, JacobGet/els, professor, departments ofeducation and psychology, Dr. JosephB, Kirsner, professor, department ofmedicine, and Hans J. Morgenthau,professor, departments of politicalscience and history, while Louis Gott-schalk, Swift distinguished serviceprofessor, department of history,acted as moderator (referee?). Rap¬porteur Herman Finer, professor,department of political science, re¬cited the traditional ode to thehamantash “Rolling Down the Ages.”Tux, wlio discussed his newestanthrojxjlogical research, insistedthat he did not know anything aboutthe 50 yard line but had been calledbecause his name lends itself topunning—an easily overtaxed humor. Presenting the hypothesis that theAmerican Indians are really one ofthe 10 lost tribes, Tax stated, ‘‘Asyou know, the potato is a nativeAmerican plant, domesticated by theIndians probably in South America.It is also well known that the majorbreadstuff in Mexico and Guatemalais the tortilla, which is a latke madenot of grated potatoes but of groundmaize. One obvious conclusion thatmight be drawn is that this lendscredence to the theory that theAmerican Indians originated as oneof the lost tribes of Israel.”Pressing tongue against cheek,Tax also discussed the theory thatthe Israelites are lost Indians fromGuatemala. ‘‘In the little Indian townwhere I studied for many years, andto which I am now returning, thetradition is that the whole world—the Creation itself began right there.If you believe the Hebrew Bible ofcourse they must be wrong; but Icannot as an objective scientistchoose between Bibles.”“There is another foodstuff madeby the Indians; it is the tamale, alsomade of maize. In shape this isalmost exactly like the hamantash.But it is 1) filled with meat and 2)boiled. To one who thinks compara¬tively, what does this suggest?Kreplach, those meat-filled ravioli¬like delicacies that too seldom appearin the chicken soup,” Tax charged.Tax pointed out that Jews makeKreplach out of wheat, Indians maketamales out of maize, but Indiansand Jews make latkes. “Only thelatke bring the two peoples together”Tax stated.Wick, noted for his open-air dialec¬tic discussions, notably concerningthe proper methods of direct action,took his seat flatly on the 50-yardline. “So,” he explained, “Do thevast majority of the students. Untilsomeone can reason them away fromdead center there they will sit. ...We at Chicago don’t do things exceptfor the best intellectual reasons.”Wick then announced that he hadcome to plead another cause to setbefore the university community anobler example. “I implore you to turn your thoughts toward a moreexalted goal. The Latke and theHamantash, like the Yang and theYin, Republican and Democrat,Liberal and Conservative, live ineverlasting strife and contention. Thisbattle has been renewed with tire¬some fruitlessness for eighteen yearson this campus alone! And where hasit got us? Nowhere but HillelHouse.”“Think of the pretty cheerleadersin their white shorts and maroonsweaters! Think of the cheery cheer¬leaders and their hearty halfbacks!Or, if I may use the more commonYiddish expressions, reflect on theMadel and Jocks! Madel and Jocks,like Bagel and Lox, always go to¬gether, There is no unseemly strifebetween them, but only affectionatecooperation,” Wick continued.“The University of Chicago is acommunity. A face-to-face commu¬nity is good, but a cheek to cheekcommunity is better. Away withLatke and Hamantash. Let ourmodel be Madel and Jocks. Theywill get the ball off the fifty-yardline.”Friedman explained that by chang¬ing the names of the latke andhamantash to LOB(ster) and HAM(murabi) in a computer program,he could assure scientifically de¬tached variables. “Having renamedthem, my next step was to feed allthe basic data into the 7090. I amsorry to report that all that cameout was hash—though by some proc¬ess of transmutation I have not yetprobed, it came out beef hash with¬out potatoes. Three graduate studentsare now writing doctoral theses onthe unexjjected result.”Friedman then turned to the basicproblem in his scientific research:the “functional relation between themarginal rate of substitution of LOBfor HAM in the indifference functionsof the relevant consumer units andthe parameters describing the psy¬chological, gastronomical and intel¬lectual characteristics ol those rele¬vant consumer units.”Investigating a representative sam¬ple of consumer units, Friedman found that he embodied thoroughlyrepresentative higher qualities. Byusing himself as a microcosm ofcomplex society, Friedman was ableto arrive at a mathematical form ofthe desired relation, which he hum¬bly named “the Friedmanian con¬stant.”Orlinsky, Lenny Bruce professor ofhip dirty talk, and author of “Un¬printable Verse” and the classic“Latke, Hamantash, and Other DirtyWords,” introduced “case histories”of two students at a “great Mid¬western university” where there hadoccurred what he labelled "riots”over an event which he declined toidentify. He did reveal that one stu¬dent from each “camp” had beenbrought to his office in paddy wagonsafter the affair.By interpreting the students’ dreams,Orlinsky was able to determine thatthe student who favored the athletic-event was a hamantash supporter.Tins poor misguided psyche sufferedfrom a dream in which his girl friendIrma’s mouth turned into a haman¬tash.The latkeman was “simple andtranquil,” Orlinsky asserted. Hisdream concerned a delusion that thefrontispiece of a book illustrated twolatkes, one with a spigot dispensingsour cream, the other pouring outapplesauce..The Latke, according to Orlinsky’sinterpretation, symbolized the ever-flowing breast. Latkemen, he charged,have a strongly developed but re¬pressed need for fulfillment.The hamantash, on the other hand,has a forbidden aspect, since its con¬tents are hidden. Hamantashmen, hesaid, have phallic sexual attachmentsto their mothers, involving an Edible,if not a Oedipal complex.Orlinsky then proceeded to relatehis analyses to football, pointing outthat, since it is made of pigskin, itcannot be Jewish. Thus, the latkemencan be considered defender of thesanctity oi the Jewish home.Hayward discussed football in thelight of Dante’s “Inferno” whileKirsner added a clinical note. Using references from tlie Journal ofHamantashology, the Archives ofHamantashery, and the 1964 Haman¬tash Yearbook, Kirsner discoveredan enzyme Hamantashase, formedby the reaction of Hamantashic-enol-levo-pyrophosphate (H.E.L.P.) andextract of potato latke.Upon further investigation, he dis¬covered that it inhibited tlie citricacid cycle and destroyed ATP, re¬sulting in biochemical inactivation.Kirsner concluded, “Latkes andHamantashen don’t mix.”Getzels, author ol You Can’t GoHomantash, and Bertold Brecht andLatke Lenya. noted that “you can’tinflate soggy latke into football andexpect to get a kick out it.” He did,however, make some suggestions forchanging the image of the university.Besides paying homage to KnuteLatke, Getzels suggested a programof slotke machines in rooms, similarto that oi Nevada University. Ac¬cording to Getzels, this would “keepthe students off the streets and outof the libraries, and bring in somemoney for faculty salaries.”Getzels noted that the slotke ma¬chine program could not be insti¬tuted in Pierce Tower yet, becauseat present there is not enough spacein one room for a slotke machineand a student.Morgenthau, the final speaker,acted as general critic for the otherparticipants, stating that there wereno words to describe the intellectuallevel of his colleagues.He went on to comment that“some of my colleagues talk aboutsex if Uiey had just discoveredit. . . . Maybe they have.”Morgenthau related the tale ahrttrta man having difficulty getting ajob at a great midwestern Univer¬sity. After being turned down, heinsisted; “you can’t turn me down.I’m the biggest SOB in the world.”“Why didn’t you say so, was theresponse. “We’ve got a deanship toryou.”If success comes that easily, theremay yet be a future lor L&H.>=>=>=«=*=«=>=t=t=»=.=*=*=t=.=t=.=«=«=>=>=.=>z>=>=>=«r>=«=.=»=>=>=.=«=.=>=»=.=.=.=.=.=.=«=t=»=»=«=t=.=>=.=«=»=>^USED» TEXT BOOKSSTUDENT SUPPLIESrODfJTMV PENS — NOTE BOOKS-STATIONERY-LAUNDRY CASESBRIEF CASES-SPORTING GOODSTYPEWRITERS sold - rented-repairedPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57th STREET1 BI.O<KK EAST OE MANXNSL BALLSTORE HOURS; DAILY 8:00 A M, to 6:00 P.M. » . . EVENINGS — Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9:00 P.M.Jan. 7, 1964 CHICAGO MAROONMovie Review'Mad world:' Too many comics, but not enough laughsIn a famous sequence from•‘Safety First,” Harold Lloydhangs from a skyscraper withhilarious results. Thus fifteencomedians hanging from a buildingon a screen fifteen times as largeshould be fifteen times as funny. Thisis the sort of reasoning that seemsto lie behind Stanley Kramer’s pro¬duction of IT’S A MAD MAD MADMAD WORLD.This wide screen film is crammedwith more familiar sight gags andfamous gagsters than you could slapa stick at. The picture begins welland has its moments, but on thewhole Kramer would have gottenmore laughs if he plunked his gangof professional comics in the middleof the Grand Canyon and left thecamera rimning for three hours.The creator of such significant‘‘think” films as The Defiant Ones,On the Beach, Inherit the Wind, andJudgment at Nuremberg, has nowgiven us a work which proves nothingmore than that imitation is still thesincerest form of flattery' and also,as in the past, one of the surest waysto big box-office.Cinema history will look back onMAD WORLD as just another at¬tempt on Hollywood’s part to givethe moviegoer something too big tofit into a TV set. Unlike the makersof “Ben-Hur” who had enough re¬straint to use the chariot race as aclimatic highlight, Kramer builds hiswhole epic around a cross-countrydash, the race toward a Californiapark where the many zany contest¬ants hope to unearth $350,000 in sto¬len cash.The start of the greedy competitioncomes off with light humor and plea¬sant excitement as the first moneyhungry motorists play automotiveChinese checkers and peekabooaround the corner of a mountain.But when Kramer tries to stretchthis simple situation into a hundred-mile melee with unrestrained may¬hem and repetitive cross-cutting, he looks like a man trying to blow glasswith a tire pump.Once the story shifts from a studyof greed to a travelogue on frustra¬tion, the big race slows to a comicstandstill and bogs down in dozensof elaborate but stock situations thatevoke more impatience than nostal- sage. But, unlike the indirect buteffective depiction of greed in Chap¬lin’s "Gold Rush,” the simple-minded moral observations on hu¬man behavior in MAD . . . WORLDevidence the artistic naivete thatmade ‘‘On the Beach” so ineffectualand “Inherit the Wind” so gross.As a director, Kramer has turnedout a neat visual package—his am¬bitious camera effects are not in¬appropriate here as they often werein “On the Beach,” “Inherit theWind,” and elsewhere. Kramer Casts WellIn a picture devoted to a money-hunt, a comment on avarice is al¬most unavoidable, and Mr. Krameris the last person to eschew a mes- Kramer has done better as a cast¬ing director. The individual appealof each renowned comic personalityin the huge cast helps to keep theaudience’s mind off the size of thescreen. Considerable tension is builtup in waiting for the next gag andthe next entrance of a famous funnyface, and sometimes the laughs aredelivered as promised. Much credit for the high spots inMAD (etc.) WORLD must go to itsall-star cast. Buddy Hackett gives anefficient demonstration of the beau¬ties of stupidity. Sid Caesar, shush¬ing a fireworks explosion, provesagain that he can turn the mostelaborately contrived — or the sim¬plest situation into a personal andhilarious success.Ethel Merman, without a song tosubdue, gets along quite well as ashrewish mother-in-law. Edie Adamsdeserves some kind of a hand forsuffering through the whole showwithout a single funny line. BusterKeaton is present in the roll call butis not asked to perform. Surpriseappearances by Jack Benny, Jerry Lewis, and the Three Stooges, lastingfrom 3 to 30 seconds each, are shortand sweet. An extension of sucheconomy of presentation would havemade MAD WORLD much morepalatable.MAD WORLD, whatever its faultsand virtues, was probably inevitable—despite the death of Cecil B. De-Mille, someone was bound to filmJimmy Durante’s nose in Cineramasooner or later, and it’s just as wellthat Stanley Kramer beat Joe Levineto the box-office draw. As the ciga¬rette ads say, “They said it couldn’tbe done,” and as Terry-Thomas saysin the picture “It could only happenin America.”—$Keducation:“There is no saturation point in education.”And with this point of view in mind since thedays of its founding, IBM has pioneered educa¬tion and training programs. I People joiningIBM are not only “taking a job"—they are start¬ing a career. I No matter what their academicbackground, education is their vocational fore¬ground. I To repeat: “There is no saturationpoint...” IAsk your college placement officer for our bro¬chures—and for an appointment when the IBMrepresentative is interviewing on campus. IIBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. IIf you cannot attend the interview, write: IManager of College Relations, I IBM Corp.f590 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N. Y. IMOVE AHEAD: SEE IBM JANUARY 17WELCOME BACKWe Hope Your Holidays Were PleasantWe are ready, willing and anxious to fulfillyour requirements for:* Textbooks -Every title required or recommendedby your instructors.* Tradebooks -Thousands of general and scholarlytitles representing a wide range ofinterests.* Student Supplies -Of every description.* Periodicals -A large selection of academic, andcultural interest.* Newspapers and Magazines -Both local and specialized.* Typewriters -New, reconditioned, service andrentals.* Tape Recorders -New and rentals. ★ Photographic Supplies -Cameras, film, developing andprocessing.★ Gifts and Novelties -See our attractive lines.★ Greeting cards andColor Post cords-A wide selection of Universityscenes in color.★ Men's and Women's Wear -Shirts, socks, slacks, ties, blouses,stockings, skirts, lingerie, handbags,and cosmetics.★ Snack Bar-Coffee, iced drinks, sandwiches, andcandy.★ Tobacco-A good selection of pipes, cigarettes,cigars and tobacco.A Self Service - Please use our free coin return lockers while shoppingThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUERegular hours: 8-5 Mon. thru Fri.; Sat. 8:30-12:30Open all day Sat., Jan. 4 and Sat., Jan. II• CHICAGO MAROON • Jon. Z. 1964 On Campus withMocShutnan(Author of Rally Round the Flag, Boys!'1and “Barefoot Boy With Cheek")1964: YEAR OF DECISIONWell sir, here we go into 1904, which shows every sign of Wingquite a distinguished year. First off, it is the only year since1954 which ends with the Figure 4. Of course, when it comesto Figure 4\s, 1964, though distinguished, can hardly comparewith 1444 which, most jreople agree, hud not just one, not just,two, but three Figure 4’s! This, I'll wager, is a record that willstand for at least a thousand years!1444 was, incidentally, notable for many other things. It,was, for example, the year in which the New York Giantsplayed the Philadelphia Athletics in the World Scries. As weall know, the New York Giants have since moved to San Fran¬cisco and the Philadelphia Athletics to Kansas City. There isa movement afoot at present to move Chicago to Phoenix —the ctty, not the baseball team. Phoenix, in turn, would ofcourse move to Chicago. It is felt that the change would lx*broadening for residents of both cities. Many Chicago folks,for example, have never seen an iguana. Many Phoenix folk-,on the other hand, have never seen a frostbite.3 MW ttitMpmM'/cu ;There are, of course, certain difficulties connected with amunicipal shift of this size. For instance, to move Chicagoyou also have to move Like Michigan. This, in itself, presentsno great problem, what with modern scientific advances likeelectronics and the French cuff. But if you will look at yourmap, you will find Lake Michigan is attached to all the otherGreat Lakes, which in turn are attached to the St. LawrenceSeaway, which in turn is attached to the Atlantic Ocean. Youstart dragging Like Michigan to Phoenix and, willy-nilly, you’llbe dragging all that other stuff too. This would make ourBritish allies terribly cross, and 1 can’t say as I blame them.Put yourself in their place. What if, for example, you were aBritish costermonger who luid been saving and scrimping allyear for a summer holiday at Brighton Beach, and then whenyou got to Brighton Beach there wasn’t any ocean? There you’dbe with your inner tube and snorkel and nothing to do all daybut dance the Lambeth Walk. This, you must agree, would nothelp make you NATO-minded!1 appeal most earnestly to the residents of Chicago andPhoenix to reconsider. I know it’s no bowl of cherries goingthrough life without ever seeing an iguana or a frostbite, butI ask you—Chicagoans, Phoenicians—is it too big a price topay for preserving the unity of the free world?I feel sure that if you search your hearts, you will make theright decision, for all of us—whether we live in frostbittenChicago, iguana-infested Phoenix, or narrow-lapelled NewHaven—are first and foremost Americans!But I digress. We were speaking of 1964, our new year. Andnew it is! There is, for one thing, new pleasure in MarlboroCigarettes. How, you ask, can there be new’ pleasure inNlarl boros when that fine Havorful blend of tobaccos, that cleanefficient Selectrate filter, have not l>ecii altered? The answer issimple: each time you light a Marlboro, it is like the first time.The flavor is sucli that age cannot wither nor custom stale.Marlboro never palls, never jades, never dwindles into dullroutine. Each puff, each cigarette, each pack, eacli carton,makes you glad all over again that you are a Marlboro smoker!Therefore, Marlboros in hand, let us march confidently into19(14. May good fortune attend our ventures! May serenityreign! May Chicago and Phoenix soon recover from their dis¬appointment and join our bright cavalcade into a brave to¬morrow! © 1964 Max Sbulmso* * »We, the makers of Marlboros, available in soft pack or Hip-top box in all fifty states of the Union, wish to join Old Maxin exlending good wishes for a happy and peaceful J96i. i>-■HH- V ..... , ■ • ■Rights strife, loan debates highlight autumn quarterby Bob LeveyNotional News editorCivil rights incidents anddemonstrations and CapitolHill action on the NEDA Stu¬dent Aid Program high¬lighted the autumn quarter in na¬tional news.The civil rights incidents, manyof which involved fraternities andpledging procedures, occurred pre¬dominantly on the west coast, al¬though there were smatterings ofincidents in the midwest and in theeast.Perhaps the most flagrant de¬nial of civil rights occurred at theUniversity of California in Berke¬ley. There, on the eve of a foot¬ball game and accompanying cele¬bration, Lynn Mark Sims, a Negrostudent, was asked to withdraw asone of eight escorts to white foot¬ball queens chosen for the celebra¬tion.In asking Sims to leave, con¬cern for the “physical and mentalwell-being” of the queens was ex¬pressed by the Berkely Chamberof Commerce, which was in chargeof the event. The Chamber waslater required by action of theBerkeley City Council to file a non-discriminatory statement with thecity records bureau.In fraternity and sorority incidents,sororities were suspended early inOctober at two west coast collegesfor failure to admit interested NegroStart The New Year Right . .. girls who were qualified for member¬ship.At Long Beach College in Cali¬fornia, six out of seven sororitieswere suspended by college offi¬cials for failure to meet the col¬lege’s anti-discrimination require¬ments in fraternities and sorori¬ties.The censured sororities had re¬moved themselves from campus-supervised rushing in order toavoid compliance with the anti¬discrimination rule.The sororities were placed onprobation and were ordered toabide by the law before September,1964, or face expulsion.At Portland State College in Ore¬gon six other sororities with na¬tional affiliations were suspendedfor failure to pledge the only twoNegro girls who had expressed in¬terest in joining.The president of the collegeplaced the sororities on an inac¬tive basis because he was con¬vinced that discrimination was in¬volved. The sororities countered bysaying that the president was ineffect presenting them with an ul¬timatum to admit Negroes.No definite action has been takenon the Portland case at this time.Similar incidents also took placeat the Universities of Colorado andOregon. At the former, sororitypresidents of the Colorado chaptersof the same sororities that cameunder fire at Portland State and atLong Beach denied the existenceof discrimination in their houses, but could not imagine what wouldhappen if a Negro attempted topledge the Colorado branches ofthe sororities.At Oregon, Herb Sanders, a Ne¬gro student, charged that he hadexpressed interest in seven fra¬ternities, and all but two haddropped him after the first visit.The other two did the same soonafter. In Oregon, as well as inCalifornia, there is a Board ofEducation law that forbids dis¬crimination in fraternities andsororities. “I was amazed at thelack of courage of the fraterni¬ties,” Sanders said at the time.While most campuses across thecountry looked with scorn on theseproceedings, a poll taken at theUniversity of Kansas indicatedthat the Kansas student body wasin favor of segregation. In reac¬ting to a statement which read“It is best that Negroes have theirown fraternities and sororities sincethey have their own particular at¬titudes and interests which theycan best engage in together,” 54%of the students agreed with thestatement. Only 32% of the studentsdisagreed with the statement.Campus disturbances lor otherreasons were also commonthroughout the quarter. The inci¬dent which received the most no¬tice was the announcement byDean of Students John U. Munroof Harvard University that regu¬lations allowing women into men’srooms was producing “wild par¬ties and sexual intecourse.” Munro did not indicate what would bedone to curb this outbreak, butstated that the acts “are not onlydistressing but promise to moveus closer to outright scandal.”During the past few weeks, con¬troversy has arisen at FrostburgState Teachers College in Mary¬land over charges of intimidationof the students by the FrostburgPresident. The President, it wascharged, was forcing students toaccept administrative decisionswithout question, impeding theirrights to free speech, and abuseof other rights, and required ac¬ceptance by organization leadersto assume full responsibility fortheir group’s actions as well astheir own actions. In the last twoweeks, the National Student As¬sociation (NSA) has been conduct¬ing an investigation of the matter.Here in Chicago, the studentnewspaper at Chicago TeachersCollege was suspended for a dayby college officials for a cartoonmocking superintendent of schoolsBenjamin C. Willis, at the heightof the Willis controversy. Thepaper, the administration con¬tended, was unjustified in printingthe cartoon because it failed toaccompany the cartoon with edi¬torial coverage of any sort. Thestaff of the paper felt that thesituation was well-known and thatcoverage accompanying the car¬toon would have been superfluous.The paper was allowed to resumepublication when the administra¬tion and the editorial staff reached an agreement on policy that wouldprevent a similar incident from re¬curring.In Washington, it seemed for awhile as if the National DefenseEducation Act (NDEA) loan pro¬gram would be expanded withoutany opposition to provide $35 mil¬lion dollars more than the originalprogram. This did not, however,turn out to be the case. After pass¬ing through the Senate with rela¬tive ease, the improved bill metopposition in the House and wassent to the House Rules Commit¬tee where it has remained un¬touched until now. Action is notexpected before January, if then.Since its inception on September2, 1958, the NDEA program hasprovided a total of $800 million toover 700.000 students and facultyat eight thousand schools.| Calendar of Events |TuesdayRehearsal: Russian choir, EastLounge, Ida Noyes; 7;30; all invited.Israeli Folk Dancing: Hillel Founda¬tion, 5715 Woodlawn, 8-10 pm.WednesdayMeeting: Organization meeting farFestival of the Arts; Office of Directorof Student Activities, 2nd floor IdaNoyes; 3:30 pm.Dance: Twist party; Ida Noyes;10:30; admission 25c.ThursdaySpeech: Warren Wood, speaker ofIllinois House, candidate for Lieut.Gov.: 3d floor Ida Noyes; for YoungRepublicans; 7:30 pm. iGETBETTERGRADESrl his new road-ig method willlelp you stiumore effec¬tively a n <1master exams.Learn to re*d3 to 7 timesfaster withincreasedcom prehen.sion and re¬tention. (Hasses now forming.Special winter rates for students.Meet Kvelyn Wood, inventor ofthis revolutionary reading meth¬od, and see her demonstrate thistechnique oil January 9, 19(4.For information anil timesehedule, call STate 2-7014.Evelyn WoodREADING DYNAMICS INSTITUTE180 West Adams St.Chicago 6. IllinoisTelephone: STate 2-7014CEntral 6-8600WHAT’SNEWIN THE JANUARYATLASme?Sean O'Faolain: "Vive Moit”: Ireland's -finest writer tells of his early yearsand the influences which awakened hisImagination. An Atlantic Extra.ALSO"The Power of James R. Hoffa":A. H. Raskin reports on the TeamstersUnion and the secret of Hoffa’s power."The Art of Being Free”: Are today’scolleges educating men in the art ofbeing free? Author-critic Gerald W.Johnson discusses the question."Born a Square: The Westerners*Dilemma": Wallace Stegner believesthat most writers who have spent theiryouth in the western part of the UnitedStates don't feel at home in A<4a literary generation.What happens whenan outstanding staffof editors sets outto produce a maga¬zine of the high¬est academic andcultural interests?You’ll know when youread The Atlantic.In each Issue you'llfind fresh new ideas,exciting literary tech¬niques, keen analy¬ses of current affairsand a high order ofcriticism. Get yourcopy today. THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESSALUTE: JOHN HAMILTONSeventeen District Plant telephone offices depend on JohnHamilton (B.A., 1958) for direction. As NorthwesternBell’s District Plant Supervisor, John is, in effect, responsi¬ble for the uninterrupted operation of communicationfacilities in seventeen different Minnesota communities.John prepared for his latest promotion on two earlierassignments. On one he was Wire Chief in Anoka, Minne¬sota, where he supervised 18 telephone craft employees tokeep Anoka’s telephone system operating smoothly. He was next promoted to Manager of the Shakopeeexchange, where he gained experience running a localtelephone office.W ith his variety of assignments—each capably handled—John was the logical choice for the District job.John Hamilton, like many young men, is impatient tomake things happen for his company and himself. Thereare few places where such restlessness is more welcomedor rewarded than in the fast-growing telephone business.BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESTELEPHONE MAN-0F-THE-M0NTHAt CCNY:Allow FBI to see student records 28% of students marriedBy Howard P. GreenwaldPolitical, religious, and ra¬cial information submitted bystudents of the City Collegeof New York to their school’sadministration is available to the FBI.Associate Dean of Students JamesS. Peace revealed this after chargesby several student organizations.Peace issued a memorandum lastNovember which stated that althoughgovernment investigators do not havepersonal access to student folders,the FBI is given all the informationit requested.Peace's statement was an answerto charges by the CCNY MarxistDiscussion Club (MDC) and othergroups that Department ot Studentlife (DSL) files were being used bythe FBI to obtain information alxvutmembership in student politicalgroups, and to harass students byasking and coercing them to becomeinformers.“Last spring, seven CCNY studentswere visited or telephoned by FBIagents and asked to give informationon certain students who had beenpolitically active on the left.’’ EricEisenberg, President of the MDCcharged. Last November's MDCstatement added that these studentswere asked to become paid spies ofthe FBI by attending certain meet¬ings. All seven students refused.Some were told that they refused todefend “their country's security" andthat this “would go on the record."The MDC specifically charged thata foreign student. Romero Donoso.was contacted by the FBI as a resultot the Department of Student Life'sdisclosure of information about him.Donoso. the club charged, filed astatement with the DSL office statingliis intention to go on a two-day Marx¬ist Discussion Club outing. The state¬ment was required by the college.Donoso never actually went on theouting, nor had he ever been to anMDC meeting. The only person otherthan Donoso himself and Dean Peacewho knewT of the student’s plan toattend the outing was Eric Eisen-berg.Later, FBI agents contacted Dono¬so and threatened him with loss ofhis visa if he did not cooperate withthem. The agents requested his aidby attending Marxist Discussion Clubmeetings and reporting on the pro¬ceedings and identity of members.Dean Peace, when asked to com¬ment on the MDC charges finallystated that the FBI had free accessto any information in tile DSL filesof file students at CCNY.Students at the City College of NewYork are required to fill out DSLforms on admission. These formsrequest information such as religiousaffiliations and extracurricular includ¬ing community and political activities.During a student’s tenure at CCNY,membership cards submitted to DSLby organizations the student joins areadded to his file.A general faculty statement datedMay 21, 1959, said “The name of amember in a sensitive organizationshall not without the consent of theindividual involved be disclosed toany non-college persons having nodirect or legitimate interest therin.’’DSL forms imply that informationsubmitted will be held strictly confi¬dential. Information is requested onlyfor appropriation of Student Govern¬ment funds.Observation Post, one of CCNY’sstudent newspapers, has {jointed outthat in granting FBI requests forinformation about students, collegeofficials violate a New York Statelaw. The law makes it illegal for acollege to divulge racial, political orreligious information about individualstudents.Observation Post states editorially that the controversy resulted from aseries of contradictory statements byCity College officials and led to thedisclosure by Dean Peace. “Nothingless than academic freedom is atstake. A learning situation cannotexist if students are afraid to go tomeetings and speak their minds. Theintegrity of the University (of theCity of New York), and New YorkState laws must be preserved,” con¬tinues the editorial. It added that DSLis currently under reappraisal by theCCNY administration.The Marxist Discussion Club hasbeen severely criticized for makingits charges concerning the FBI's ac¬cess to DSL files public before dis¬cussing them with the administration.“If the MDC had come to the admin¬istration in good faith mid talked thisover, this might all have beenavoided,” explained Israel Levine.CCNY's Director of Public Relations.“After all, in a case like this, evenwhen charges are false, it leaves ablack mark against the school,” headded.Dean of Students Willard W. Blaes-ser called MDC's strategy “odd" andtheir reasoning “devious.” “It ap¬pears as if they didn't trust theirown administration or Student Gov¬ernment,” declared Peace.Tile Observation Post editorial addedthat MDC behavior showed that thissegment of the College population,“far from trusting the administration,is wary of it.” “Past administrationbehavior has apparently given themsome reason to regard it as less thantrustworthy," the editorial concludes. The University of Chicago office ofstudent activities does not give outthe membership lists of student ac¬tivities. They will, however, confirmwhether someone is an officer of agiven organization.As far as records of grades anddegrees are concerned. William vanCleve, UC Registrar, told the Maroonthat all these records are confidential.They may be released, liow’ever, up¬on request of the individual studentin connection with a job opportunity.Other than requests from indivi¬dual students, records of grades anddegrees are shown to FBI or CIAagents or upon presentation of a sub-peona. These procedures, van Clevestated, are designed to protect theprivacy of the student. His office, hecontinued, keeps only academic data.Comments, favorable or not, fromresident heads, teachers, and advis¬ors are kept by the Dean of Students.Anderson UC TrusteeRobert O. Anderson, an industrial¬ist from New Mexico, has beenelected to the UC Board of Trustees,it was announced recently.A native of Chicago, Anderson re¬ceived his bachelor's degree in Busi¬ness Administration from UC in 1939.After graduation and marriage, heworked for oil companies, and soonbecame an investor.His business activities have beennumerous and varied. He is present¬ly owner of a livestock company,chairman of the board of two cor¬porations, and trustee of a founda¬tion. Approximately 28 per centof the students now enrolledin the University are married,according to a report issuedby Registrar William Van Cleve.Last year, the percentage of mar¬ried students was about 32%.Present enrollment is around6,700 students, 5% higher than lastyear.The Registrar’s report statedthat 1,654 of this year’s 1.901 mar¬ried students are married to non-students. Half the married studentslive in University-managed resi¬dence halls and apartments whilehall' reside in non-Universityhousing.Ninety-three of the married stu¬dents are candidates for bachelors'degree, while 1,046 are going formasters' or professional degrees.762 are PhD candidates.Four per cent of the students inthe College are married. Amonggraduate students, percentagesvary from about 30% married inthe Law School to about 75% mar¬ried in the Divinity School.Fifty per cent of die marriedstudents told the Registrar thatthey would be operating cars.According to census-card in¬formation, 45 per cent of the mar¬ried students did not intend to beemployed this quarter. Nineteenper cent reported that they wouldwork more than 20 hours a week,while the remaining studentsplanned to work less than 20 hourseach week.Employment, as defined by the census-card question, includes workdone under an assistantship. VanCleve noted, however, that thenumber of married students hold¬ing assistantship awards is notaccurately known because thecenus-card question pertaining tothis was ambiguously phrased.Sixty-seven students in the mar¬ried-student group are the parentsof four or more children, while19% have one child, 15% have twochildren, and 7% have three.Some 593 of the married studentsexpect to receive degrees in 1965.Spring 1964 will be the graduatedate for 367 others. 256 hojx' tocomplete degree programs in 1966and another 215 in Summer 1964117 will receive degrees at the endof this quarter.GOP candidateto speak to YRsWarren Wood, a Republican can¬didate for Lieutenant Governor, wiltaddress the UC Young Republicanclub Thursday at 7:30 pm on thethird floor of Ida Noyes.Wood, who will speak of statepolitics, reapportionment, and states’rights, is the Speaker of the Houseof the Illinois legislature, a positionhe has held for the past eight years.He has been a member of the legis-latiu'e for 33 years.There will be no admission chargefor the speech and non-members areinvited to attend. The speech will befollowed by a question and answerperiod.EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1200 East 53rd Street53-Kimbark PlazaHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount ONLY FORD-BUILT CARS MEET THE CHALLENGE WITHTOTAL PERFORMANCE!Something wonderful’s happened lo Ford MotorCompany cars! Under Ihe freshest styling seen inyears, there's a new kind of durability and vigor thatmore than meets the demands of today’s and tomor¬row's high-speed turnpike driving conditions.What’s Ihe secret? Quality engineering for total per¬formance. Quality engineering so outstanding thatFord Motor Company received the NASCAR Achieve¬ ment Award for engineering excellence which “superblycombines the prime essentials of great automobiles—performance, reliability, durability, comfort and safety.”Total performance makes a world of difference. Bodiesand frames are solid and quiet even on the roughestroads. The ride’s so smooth, so even-keeled, it seemsto straighten the curves and shorten the miles. Aralnothing matches the spirit, sparkle and stamina ofadvanced Ford-built Y-8’s and thrifty Sixes. Totalperformance is yours to enjoy in all our 1964 cars—fromthe frisky Falcon to the matchless Lincoln Continental.MOTOR COMPANYThe American Road, Dearborn, MichiganWHERE ENGINEERING LEADERSHIP BRINGS YOU BETTER-BUILT CARS6 • CHICAGO MAROON * Jon. 7, 1964I Asks strong"The United States cannotafford to fail in the field ofcivil rights. Without a strongbill, there may be literally hellto pay,” declared Congressman Rob¬ert W. Kastenmeier (D. Wis.), re¬cently.Kastenmeier spoke at the annual<*ate convention of the IndependentVoters of Illinois (1VI) at thePalmer House.Kastenmeier described to the Illi¬nois affiliate of Americans forDemocratic Action the congression¬al progress of the bill in the house,which began in May with the ap¬pointment of eleven man subcom¬mittee (including him) by the judi¬ciary committee to hold hearingson the need for civil rights legisla¬tion. Up until that time congres¬sional interest had been mild, andnumerous half-hearted bills hadbeen presented by both Republicansand Democrats.As the hearings moved on intotlie late spring and early summer,the increased tempo in civil rightsaction put a new urgency into the► hearings. The proposed bills hadbecome obsolete and more sweep¬ing legislation appeared necessary.This was reflected in the hearingsthemselves. For the first timeleaders of all three religious groupstook strong stands before the com¬mittee in favor of legislation action.Several witnesses appeared withscars on their faces secured whilefaying to organize Negro registra¬tion drives in the South. At oneol the committee sessions Kasten¬meier, alluding to the coercion ofNegroes, asked the attorney gen¬eral of South Carolina why onlyone of fifty registered Negroes hadbeen able to vote. The Southernerreplied that this was obviously anexample of Negro voter apathy.When the subcommittee hearingsconcluded on August 8, Kasten¬meier, for one, had come to theconclusion that there could be nocompromise on civil rights.Hie next week the subcommitteewent into executive session withfour bills to consider, two republi¬can and two democratic, one be¬ing the more moderate Adminis¬tration bill and the other Kasten-meier’s more sweeping measure.A conflict in strategy became ap-parent from the beginning. Severalcommittee members wanted to pur¬sue a realistic approach and to pre-Russian Choir will meetThe Russian Choir will hold its firstrehearsal of the quarter this eveningat 7:30 in the East Lounge of IdaNoyes. All old members are urgedto attend, and new members areinvited. No knowledge of Russian isrequited. The Choir’s first concertwill be given for students in theRussian Civilization course in earlyFebruary. rights bill Student killed in Everest climbsent a bill acceptable to the greaternumber, a watered down bill. Asecond group, led by Kastenmeier,urged a strong bill and hoped itcould be safely guided through thehouse and senate.Kastenmeier particularly believedthat it was necessary for the Ne- David Charles Wyatt, a stu¬dent in the College, was re¬ported to have been killed ina fall on the approaches toMount Everest in Nepal last month.Wyatt, who interrupted his studiesafter completing his third year last spring, was part of an expedition tocollect insect specimens for the Chi¬cago Museum of Natural History andthe Smithsonian Institution of Wash¬ington. He was accompanied by twobiology students from Reed Collegeof Portland, Oregon.Wyatt was a native of Eugene,gro to be guaranteed the right tovote not only in federal elections, m 'hw^ibut also in sitate and local ones, B Bli BPlest his vote and position remain __________^of little importance.The Birmingham bomb explosion ROOMS, APTS., ETC.acted as a catalyst to arouse the graduate student seeks furnishedcommittee to act. An FEPC pro- MMafak. m SSSt.campus' fio’>crlvision was added as were stateelections and other more sweeping HELP WANTEDfeatures.According to Kastenmeier, thisalarmed the Administration, whichviewed the developments different¬ly from tile subcommittee. In addi¬tion, the newspapers took the jxi-sition that the bill was too exten¬sive and radical. The result wasthe compromise bill which willemerge from the judiciary com¬mittee early this week.Kastenmeier cited four majorchanges made in the original sub¬committee bill: 1) The right of theattorney general to inaugurate civilrights actions in court was con¬siderably modified; 2) The bill was BABYSITTER WANTED: Workingmother needs babysitter for 5 yr. oldm your home, 8 am-6 pm, Mon. thruFri., near 54th and Harper. Call WA2-6540, Mrs, Chase. 9 am-4 pm.WHO wants to drive Lady Doctor 5morn, a week from South Shore toHyde Park Bank Bldg.? Call FA 4-5822eves, after 6 or weekends.NEEDED; good sound man ex-"ham”interested in extra time work. 5 to 15hrs. per week at $2.00 per hr. to carryout preventative maintenance on re¬corders and assist with research atSocial Psychology Lab. Contact Mar-Parkman, ext. 4393. MALE or female, part time typist,must be able to speak and translateGerman. Call FA 4-6087 between 9 am-4 pm.LOST AND FOUNDFOUND: Four keys on floor of NewYork charter plane, Sunday, Jan. 5.Claim at SG office.PERSONALSCREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP(PL 2-8377)WEDNESDAY NIGHT TWIST PAR¬TIES are back! U-C students only. IdaNoyes Hdll, Jan. 8, 10:30. Admission25c.To place a classified ad, call ext. 3265(MI 3-0800). Special student, facultyand University staff rates. Oregon. Twenty years old, he was acandidate for a BA in Tutorial Stu¬dies. His field of major interest wassocial sciences.In an interview before they left onSeptember 15, one of Wyatt’s com¬panions said their hope to scaleEverest ‘‘started as a joke, turnedinto a dream, and finally an expedi¬tion.” They planned to travel in theMideast and Europe after the climb,and return lo their studies this sum¬mer.The students budgeted $5,000 forthe expedition, about one per cent ofthe budget for the successful Ameri¬can expedition which triumphantlyascended the mountain last year.Much of their equioment was donatedby Oregon business firms.Ask VISA volunteersVolunteers interested in work withVISA at Chicago State Mental Hos¬pital will leave this Saturday at 12:30from Ida Noyes parking lot. For in¬formation, contact Heather Tobis,New Dorm.not to affect state or local elec¬tions; 3) Only public accomoda¬tions specified in the bill would becovered (instead of the reverse);4) Enforcement powers were Likenaway from FEPC. A fifth modifi¬cation, he felt, did not improve thebill.Civil rights cases were to go toa three-judge federal court. In thisway, one judge could not stifle theproceedings.Generally speaking, Kastenmeierfelt it was a ‘‘good'’ bill, far betterthan no legislation at all. Speakingof the prospects for its passage,he held no hope of House actionbefore Christmas. Forseeing itspassage this month, he hoped thesenate could pass it by April. Thesenate leadership is committed tocalling this bill up i mined ia tel.vafter its passage in the house, hesaid. Because people, generally,are getting tired of discussing civilrights and feel some action isneeded, he said, there should be asufficient number to invoke cloture.In other areas, the 1VI called forstate election, reform, election ofparty precinct captains in CookCounty as is done outside Cook,a ‘‘small Hatch Act” for state andlocal government personnel an endto discrimination in the Fire De¬partment and in hospitals againstNegro doctors, an immediate taxcut for low middle income families,the removal of School Superintend¬ent Benjamin Willis, and took noteof far-right pressure on legislatorsat the Illinois State Assembly. Grow with UsAt Xerox, you become a part of one of America’s fastestgrowing corporations; a dynamic, well established companywhich is a world leader in the exciting and expanding fieldof graphic communications. More than 85% commerciallyoriented, Xerox enjoys constantly increasing operatingrevenues with which it can explore dramatic new applicationsof electricity and light. For example:□ Total operating revenues for the first nine months of 1963reached $116,100,443; up 56% from 1962.□ Expenditures for research and engineering ($5 million in 1961;$13.5 million budgeted for 1963) have kept pace in a programof planned growth extending far into the future.In five years, the number of Xerox employees has grown from1500 to more than 6000, and it's constantly gainingmomentum. Such a growth pattern constantly createskey job opportunities in many technical and non technicalareas, for applicants with exceptional abilities.Many facets of our growth include:□ 157 new products marketed since 1950.□ 47 new patents were issued in 1962 alone.□ A new manufacturing and research complex situated on1,000 acres of campus-like setting to which more than800,000 square feet of modern facilities have been addedsince 1956.Text Books and School SuppliesThe University OfChicago BookstoreMain Store, 5802 Ellis Ave.Hours 8-5 Mon., thru Fri.; 8:30-12:30 Sat.Open 8-5 Sat., Jan 4 8C Jan. 11The Education Branch, Rm. 138, Belfield Hall(Erening program and Eduaction Course)Hours 8-4:30 Mon. thru Fri.Special Hours: 8-8:30 weeks of Jan. 6 6C Jan. 13.8-12 Sat., Jan. 11The Downtown Center Branch, 64 E. Lake St.Hours 11:30-8:30 Mon. thru Fri.Special Hours: 9-6 Fri., Jan. 10 and Fri., Jan. 17;9-9 on Jan. 13,14, 15 and 16;9-1 Sat., Jan 11 and Jan. 18.Downtown Program Branch, 190 E. Delaware Pi.For Graduate School of Business, Downtown Programcourses.Hours: 5:30-8:30 Mon. thru Fri. Among the exciting projects presently underway withinthe broad discipline of graphic communications are:□ Information storage and retrieval systems□ Information transmission□ New product concepts in the medium of electro photographiccopying equipmentIf you would like the satisfaction and challenge of working forsuch a company . . . and have the potential and desire togrow .. . there’s a place and a future for you at Xerox.Opportunities exist in the following areas:□ Research and engineering □ Finance□ Manufacturing □ Marketing□ ControlContact your placement office to arrange an interviewwith a Xerox representative who will be on your campus ...January 13or, write: Xerox Corporation • Dept. 64 • College RelationsBox 1540 • Rochester 4, N. Y.XEROX"\ an equal opportunity employerJon. 7, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Clear way for new NDEA Ex-official approves of sit-inWASHINGTON (CPS) —The Senate approved a $1.2billion college aid bill after agentle nudge from PresidentJohnson. House-Senate also clearedthe way for passage of a two yearextension of the NDEA.The $1.2 billion authorization to helpU.S. universities and colleges buildclassrooms sailed through the Senateon a 54 to 27 vote and was sent tothe White House. It had already beenapproved by the House.The breakthrough in the confer¬ence committee came after a two-hour session between House and Sen¬ate conferees and two reported tele¬phone calls from the President tokey negotiators over last weekend.Except for a few minor details,the conferees approved a compromiseversion of a $58 million federal aidto vocational training bill — legisla¬tion which had deadlocked Senateaction on the college bill.The Senate had refused to act onthe House-passed college aid bill untilHouse education leaders acceptedtheir proposals on the vocational train¬ing bill.The vocational aid package alsocontained a Senate-approved versionof the NDEA act providing $45 mil¬lion in new funds for the $90 million-a-year loan program for U.S. collegestudents. The House has yet to re¬port a bill on the NDEA act. butthere were indications that it wouldapprove the Senate version when itreached the floor.House education leaders had hopedto make the NDEA a more sweep¬ing program. But negotiators agreedon a simple two-year extension in¬stead of a three-year duration as pro¬posed by the Senate.The main point of the vocational aidprogram which had bogged down alleducation legislation this year washow' the $58 million would be dis¬tributed to aid vocational training.UC gets Sloan grantUC was one of four privateuniversities which received$250,000 last month from theAlfred P. Sloan Foundationfor strengthening research and in¬struction in the basic sciences.Half the unrestricted gi ants will bepaid this spring, the other nextspring.The other institutions receivinggrants were Washington Univ.. St.Louis; Vanderbilt Univ., Nashville,and Tulane Univ., New Orleans.The Foundation cited UC and theother institutions for “the ambitiousand forward-looking nature"’ of theirplans for strengthening their naturalscience program. Also important inthe choice of UC and the others, itsaid, were “evidence of . . . vitality”and service to the public, and “in¬variable concern, for the future notonly of the sciences, but also of theother components of an integratedand liberal education.”In commenting on i h e grant,George Wells Beadle, president of UC,said the University especially appre¬ciated the freedom given by the lackof restrictions. “Without flexibility,”Beadle said, “the imbalance that nowexists within many universities maybe dangerously increased.”COMESKIV WITHME7^1 /SKI WEARat tine stores everywhereWrite for free catalog408 Soath Hunting!!* Am. Boston 90, Mate The Senate wanted to distributemoney on a per capita basis, favor¬ing Southern states, while the Housewanted to allocate it on a populationbasis, favoring the North.The compromise agreement callsfor fund allocation giving weight tothe relative wrealth of the state aswell as its working-age population.President Johnson made the fol¬lowing comments on the Senate ac¬tion:“The Senate is to be commendedcm its passage today of the conferencereport on higher education. This Con¬gress is well on its way to doingmore for education since the Land-Grant College Act that was passed100 years ago.“Members of the House and SenateEducation Committees, Republicansand Democrats alike, are to be con¬gratulated on this major step for¬ward. I extend my special congratu¬lations to Senator Morse and Con¬gresswoman Green, who have a longrecord of interest and leadership inthis field.” (Continued from page one)definitely worthy of approval andthat the actions of UC officials inconnection with it were “ludicrous”and “ill-considered.” “The adminis¬trators weren’t giving the studentsa fair shake,” he felt, and “the stu¬ dents had every right to protest.”When asked what he thought wasbehind the apparent return of foot¬ball, he stated that faculty opinionmight very well be a factor, alongWith alumni pressure, monetary orotherwise. He noted that the stu-YR's favor GoldwaterTwist parties resumeWednesday night Twist Partiesresume tomorrow night at 10:30in Ida Noyes Hall. Attendance isrestricted to UC students only.Guest of the University may alsoattend if permission is obtainedin advance from the Twist Partymanager of Student Union. Admis¬sion charge is 25c. Two-thirds of the new membersof the UC Young Republican clubfavor Barry Goldwater for theRepublican presidential nomina¬tion, according to the results of apoll taken recently at the beginningof this quarter.Out of 104 members who signedup at a booth during registration,64 people indicated they favoredGoldwater. He was far ahead ofany other candidate. New YorkGovernor Nelson Rockefeller, whois the only prospective candidatewho has already announced hisAnnounce soc. sci.Two new appointments in socialscience departments were announcedlast month.Robert William Fogel, a specialistin economic history, will be AssociateProfessor in the department of eco¬nomics as of next Autumn. Fogel iscurrently a Ford Foundation VisitingResearch professor at UC, on leavefrom the University of Rochester.He specializes in applying mathe¬matical and statistical techniques toeconomic history.Bernard S. Cohn, an authority of candidacy, received sixteen votes,followed by Michigan GovernorGeorge Romney with twelve.Other votes were scatteredamong various politicians. WilliamScranton, Governor of Pennsylva¬nia. received three. One vote eachwent to Thruston Morton, senatorfrom Kentucky; Walter Judd, far¬mer U.S. representative from Min¬nesota; John Tower, senator fromTexas; former vice-president Rich¬ard Nixon, and AM Landon, GOPpresidential candidate in 1936.appointmentsSouth Asian history and anthropolo¬gy, was named associate professorin the departments of history andanthropology. His appointment isalso effective next fall.Cohn is also presently on the facul¬ty of the University of Rochester,where he is associate professor andchairman of the department of an¬thropology and sociology. Before go¬ing to Rochester in 1961, Cohn servedat UC. His anthropological and so¬ciological studies of Asia have con¬centrated on India. dents during his tenure failed torealize the importance of generalfaculty opinion in adminstrative de¬cisions. and that, as far as he knew,the same was still true today.In connection with future changesin and around UC, the former ad¬ministrator felt that plans will soonbe announced for the final destruc¬tion of Stagg Field. A new librarywill be constructed where StaggField is now, he predicted, and altathletic fields, with the exception otBartlett Gym and the Field House,will be moved to a site north of53rd street.He also noted that UC has begunto build newer and better facultiesin almost all departments, and that,as a result of this, faculty turnoverin the next several years will hehigh. Tlve recently announced tuitionraise for next year was “no doubtnecessary,” he added, but he “feltsure” that every effort would bemade to keep the tuition level stablefor at least five years. He declinedto predict whether tuition stabilitywould actually remain, however.The former official apologized forbeing so critical of UC, for hethought it was and is “a great uni¬versity, perhaps the best in the coun¬try.” He left the university with nohard feelings, and often wishes hewere an administrator again. But attimes, he stated, he has no misgiv¬ings. “When I see how harassed afellow like Warner Wick is, I’m gladto be right where I am,” he said.STAND TALL!with the leaderinIllinois Bell Telephone Companywill interview on campusWould you like to work with a company that starts you In aresponsible position? Insists that you move up in your job?Promotes from within? Gives you a present, as well as a future?Then the Bell Telephone System may offer just the oppor¬tunity you’re looking for.You’ll learn the exciting field of communications .. .withadvancement dependent on your ability. You’ll develop yourability to direct and work with people ... and you’ll be work¬ing with one of the fastest-growing, most vital industries inthe world.In your work, you’ll be associated with the company thathas developed the Telstar satellite, the transistor... and theOptical Maser-perhaps the greatest single communicationsdevelopment since the transistor.If you are in the upper-half of your class-with either a tech¬nical or a non-technical degree-Bell System interviewers arevery much interested in talking to you. Simply make anappointment at your placement office.Bell System Team Interviews:Liberal Arts and Sciences;Business Administration GraduatesIllinois Bell Telephone CompanyArt equal opportunity employerILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE *8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 7, 1964