4 Discuss FOTA structure —wih - speak - — meefi"9The Festival of the Arts(FOTA) committee, whichmet Wednesday, is scheduledto choose its officers and be¬gin planning for this year’s FOTAat its meeting next Wednesday.The committee is made up of in¬terested students, including repre¬sentatives of campus groups involvedin cultural activity. The structure ofthe committee will be one of thequestions to be decided.At the last meeting, two generalways of organizing the group weresuggested. One would set up com¬mittees of an over-all FOTA organi¬zation to deal with reception ofshakers, finding sites for the activ¬ ities, and finances. Under the otherplan, the participating campus or¬ganizations would handle arrange¬ments for each event they sponsor.Some over-all committees might alsoexist to co-ordinate the plans. Thiswill have to be decided.Another topic of discussion will bewho should be invited as an outsidewoman representative of the arts. Awoman will be invited to take ad¬vantage of a fund which sponsorsnotable women’s appearances oncampus.The meeting, to which all personsinterested in helping with the Festi¬val are invited, will be at 3:30 pmin the conference room of studentGovernment, 2nd floor Ida Noyes. Hillel to start S. Shore projectHillel House announcedplans this week for a projectdesigned to stabilize the SouthShore neighborhood, whichlies to the southeast of campus.The South Shore project will belaunched by a meeting Sunday of allpersons interested in working to re¬habilitate the neighborhood, whichhas been hit by problems of dis¬crimination, slumlording, and block¬busting in recent months.Morris Janowitz, professor of so¬ciology. will speak at the meeting on“Creating an Integrated Community: Prospects and Problems in SouthShore.” The meeting will begin at7:30 pm on Sunday and is free ofcharge.The Hillel organization, which callsitself the Hillel Civil Rights ActionCommittee (HCRAC), will begin theSouth Shore rehabilitation imme¬diately after the meeting. Plans callfor the formation of three groups.The first will conduct a survey ofattitudes in South Shore, in order togather necessary information for theother groups and to reshape the at¬titudes of South Shore residents.The second group is a tutoring-recreational group, which win workat Parkside School, a high schoolin the area. HCRAC feels that thisgroup will help to contribute to afeeling of stability in South Shoreby indicating to the residents thatactions are being taken to maintainand improve the cultural and educa¬tional levels of the community. The group also hopes that their serviceswill demonstrate both that they areinterested in working and that theyare interested in civil rights.The third group will address it¬self to a civil rights action program,whose aims are to investigate SouthShore’s particular racial problemsand subsequently to take appropriateaction, whatever it may turn outto be.In recent months, South Shore,predominantly a white, Jewishneighborhood, has had to contendwith the problem of Negroes movinginto it. The influx of the Negroeshas brought about changes in theattitudes of a great many residentsof the area, with the result thatthey have felt compelled to moveout. The three Hillel projects willattempt to correct both the changesin attitude among the residents andtheir increasing tendency to leavethe neighborhood.O-Board sponsors panelVol. 72 — No. 24 University of Chicago, Friday, Jan. 10, 1964 31Playe predicts high averagesGeorge Playe, dean of un¬dergraduate students, predict¬ed yesterday that graderesults, when tabulated inabout three weeks, will show thatstudents generally did much betterthan usual in last quarter’s grades.In a Maroon interview, Playe saidthat, at present, he thought therewere slightly fewer students thanusual lost their registration privilegesfor this quarter. Students are pre¬vented from returning if they are onquarter - to - quarter probation andmake less than a 1.75 average.Playe said fourteen full-time stu¬dents were prevented from register¬ing. This, he said, was approximatelythe same as normal. In addition,about five part-time students weresuspended. Several other cases arestill pending for students who re¬ceived incompletes, which must bemade up.According to the UC AcademicRegulations, “students whose gradeaverage at the end of an academicyear is below 1.75 will be permittedto register for one more year underprobationary status. Failure to re¬move the probationary conditionsafter one academic year will result in the loss of registration privileges.”Students who may have mitigatingreasons for their failure may be“given another chance,” as Playeput it, instead of thrown out immedi¬ately. They are put on “quarter-to-quarter” academic probation, and may be suspended if quarterlygrades are lower than 1.75.Playe said he based his predictionof a better-than-average over-allgrade records on “subjective judg¬ment” from the evidence he hasseen. The Orientation Board willsponsor a panel discussion onchanges in the College, and aseries of meetings designed toacquaint prospective O-Board mem¬bers and the public with the historyand status of the College.The first meeting in the serieswill be Sunday, at 3 pm in Ida NoyesHall. Mrs. Julia Ashenhurst, direc¬tor of orientation, and George Playe?dean of students of the college, willdiscuss the status and function ofOrientation Week. During O-Week,entering students are introduced toRevive Quad grass discussions“Nothing would please memore than to be rememberedin perpetuity as one of themany who helped save thequadrangle grass” remarked Presi¬dent George W. Beadle in the latestcommunique in the year-old Quad¬rangle grass controversy.Beadle's statement, made as an“anonymous member of the Commit¬tee on the Grass (C.O.G.)” was inresponse to card sent to him by theCommittee to Keep the Committeeon the Grass Off the Grass.The “CTKTCO(T)GOTG” had sentthe President a greeting card mem-orrandum picturing an equestrian-type statue on the first page accom¬panied by a statement that therewere plans to erect such a statue in the President's honor, with an in¬scription “Keep off the Grass.”President Beadle’s statement ofthanks, has not ended the controver¬sy, however. CTKTCO(T)GOTGleaders were reportedly “bitter”over the suggestion in Beadle’s letterthat the Committee was to be con¬gratulated for its purity in trying tokeep even the Committee On theGrass off the grass.“Our position has always been oneon the grass rather than off thegrass,” stated the major initiator ofthe CTKTCO( T )GOTG Movement,Dick Schmitt. “We felt that the ac¬tion of the C.O.G. in keeping studentsfrom their beloved grass positionswas a travesty and urged that theonly persons who should be banned from the grass should be the Com¬mittee on the Grass.”Other leaders of the organizationremarked that they were also upsetby Beadle’s suggestion that theCTKTCO(T)GOTG use any appropri¬ate means—“short of sit-ins,”—to ex¬press objection to thoughtless grasstrampling. “UC students don't tram¬ple grass,” the leaders objected,“they sit down on it and study.”One observer noted that the Presi¬dent had signed the letter with theinitials G.O.G. and suggested thatthis was an abbreviation for ‘George-Qn-the-Grass’ as opposed to C.O.G.,Committee on the Grass, and was ahint that the President, himself,secretly wanted to be on the grassalso. life in the College by the O-Boardmembers, who live in the dormito¬ries for that week.Next Wednesday, several facultymembers will discuss the topic, “HieCollege Within the University:Where Do We Stand and Where AreWe Going?”Participants will include EdwardRosenheim, professor of Englishand humanities; Leo Nedelsky, pro¬fessor of physical sciences; GerhardMeyer, associate professor of eco¬nomics, and Benson Ginsburg, pro¬fessor of biology and head at theCollege biology section.They will discuss the changes tak¬ing place in the College, particularlythe apparent movement from an“autonomous” College to a “depart¬mentalized” one. The influence onundergraduate teaching on the grow¬ing amount of research done by in¬structors will also be discussed.The panel will be in Soc Sci 122at 8 pm Wednesday.The second in the series of fourweekly meetings will be on Sunday,January 19, when the present statusof the College will be explained.Topics of the subsequent meetingsare the history of the college, whichwill be explained by Russell Thomas,professor of humanities, on January26, and general education in the col¬lege. on February 9.These meetings are designed totrain and select prospective futuremembers of the Orientation Board.The general public is also invited.All meetings in the scries will beat 3 pm in Ida Noyes.UC psychologists conduct research in many areasby Ellis LevinWith the increasing com¬plexity of modern life and theeffect that this faster pacewith more pressure has on theindividual, many have stereo¬typed our age as one of pho¬bias and complexes. While thisimage is open to question, itdoes point out how far psy¬chology has come since Sig¬mund Freud interviewed hisfirst patient before the turnOf the century. It has madevast progress, and yet is stillin its infancy. It has branchedout into so many areas whichFreud could not have evenComprehended 50 years ago.The U of C Department of Psy¬chology through its faculty is con¬tributing more than its share to thisprogress in areas ranging from pre¬paring ADC pre-school children fortheir education to making it possiblefor senior citizens to remain activeand employed past 65, from under¬standing the background of schizo¬phrenic children to comprehendingthe social habits of the U of C stu¬dent, and, of course, including dreaminterpretation and clinical hypnosis.Fred StrodtbeckDr. Fred L. Strodtbeck, AssociateProfessor of Psychology and Sociolo¬gy, runs a nursery school at 56th and1‘Illls Avenue, but this is not an or¬dinary pre-school school, it is aspecial pre-kindergarten for four year olds who come from broken homes.Their families are on Aid to De¬pendent Children (ADC) and in mostcases the fathers are absent fromthe home. The combination of beingpoor, being a Negro and being father¬less is believed to initiate a syndromeof poor socialization which eventu¬ates in dependence as an adult.The object of Dr. Strodtbeck’s proj¬ect, financed in part by the SocialSecurity Administration, is to learnjust what these children are missingwhich is necessary for emotional andintellectual growth. He is also con¬cerned with the development of waysof facilitating the school readiness ofculturally deprived children.The experimental nursery has beenin existence for two years. With thecooperation of the Illinois Public AidCommission, children four years oldare chosen from families receivingpublic assistance in the WoodlawnNegro area. A social worker thengoes out to talk to the mother to dis¬cuss the project with her and to se¬cure her approval. The interviewwith the mother as to socializationpractices plays an important part insetting the school’s program goalsfor each child. The children then par¬ticipate for 13 weeks in testing, learn¬ing, games and taking trips as agroup. In the course of this periodthey come into contact with manynew experiences that they may havenever run across at home — every¬day things such as color, magic,language, and the leavening of realitywith fantasy.The children usually show a risein their perceptual alertness, con¬ centration and IQ at the end of the£3 weeks. In one of the tests used,the adult supervisor puts on a chick¬en mask and asks such questions as“Am I a bird?” “A real bird?” “Andcan I pick corn and lay eggs?” Thenthe child is asked if he will put onthe mask and if he is the chicken.The poorer children for the most partusually have trouble telling realityfrom fantasy, and have a great dealof fear in trying new things. Thus,the child in the experiment may com¬pletely refuse to respond, be veryfearful, act as if he actually believesthe adult is a chicken, or refuse toput on the mask himself. This con¬trasts with middle class children whodisplay little disposition to believethat the adult is a chicken..Professor Strodtbeck’s big point isthat the mother’s conscientious effortto keep their children out of troublecreates the primary impediment tothe children’s later educability. What¬ever importance race has does notrelate to the genetic character of thechild, but to the decrease in func¬tional intelligence which the Negromothers induce as they attempt totrain their children to avoid jhe phy¬sical and moral threats in their en¬vironment. The exact way in whichwhat Professor Strodtbeck calls the“phenomenonological premises of so¬cialization” become differentiated be¬tween ADC and middle class mothersis being particularly sought in re¬peated interviews of mothers in thenursery program.Ward HalsteadIn contrast to Dr. Strodtbeck, Ward C. Halstead, Professor of Psychologyand Medicine, set out to study thenature and localization of mentalfunctions in the brain of the individ¬ual. His research has led to the iden¬tification of some of the higher brainfunctions—which he terms biologicalintelligence—and has gained for hima world wide reputation. He hasachieved this by adapting techinquesof experimental psychology to thestudy of neurosurgical patients alongwith various control groups of adultsand children.Several of the brain functions iden¬tified in the human have been foundin lower animals. Because the brainproblem is ubiquitous in society, Pro¬fessor Halstead has had to extendhis probes into such areas as thenature of human intelligence, thenature of aging—including its non¬health controlled aspects, the role ofemotional or personality factors ininfluencing learning and intelligence,and the role of individual cycles ofarousal or hyperconsciousness in in¬fluencing cognitive aspects of learn¬ing.Professor Halstead believes thatthrough a better understanding ofthe functioning brain, education, forexample, can become more person¬alized and effective, with progress atapproximately twice the present rate.His power or arousal factor in bio¬logical intelligence is known to havea diurnal cycle, reaching a peak inthe daylight hours for some individ¬uals. and at night-time for others. Hebelieves that a significant fraction ofchildren would learn better and fast¬ er if formal schooling were geared totheir personal biological cycles ofpeak mental power. Teachers wouldalso be matched appropriately interms of their personal cycles.In addition to his theory of biologi¬cal intelligence, Professor Halsteadis a co-author, with a chemist at theArgonne Laboratories, Dr. Joseph J.Katz, of the macro-molecular theoryof memory (RNA), based upon thegene as a model of a biologicalmemory device. He is the author orco-author of several books and mono¬graphs. One aspect of his work hasresulted in the development of aspecific battery of tests aimed at themeasurement of the ability to reasonand make decisions, mental power orarousal — both on the sensory andmotor sides, perception — involvingverbal, visual, auditory and temporalabilities, and aspects of memory in¬volved in organization and form aswell as for place and relationship.These are popular terms for verycomplex processes underlying the be¬havior known as thinking. Injury tothe brain can impair any or all ofthese factors.Professor Halstead is now enteringa third stage of his work, which, insome respects, is the most excitingof all — namely, computer diagnosisof neuropsychological impairments.Using identical methods in his lab¬oratory and at similar laboratoriesat Indiana University and the Uni¬versity of Wisconsin, impairment ofbrain functioning can be detectedin children or adults with the help(Continued on page 8)Sisters were dean, officialLibrary given papers of social workersThe University library hasacquired the papers of Edithand Grace Abbott, sisters andformer professors of SocialScience Administration at the Uni¬versity of Chicago. The collectionincludes more than 40,000 letters,speeches, pamphlets on social wel¬fare and legislation in twentiethcentury America.Grace Abbott studied law at theUniversity’s Law School and becamethe first Director of the Immigrant’sProtective League in 1915. In Wash¬ington, two years later, she headedthe Child Labor Division of theUnited States Children's Bureau. In1934 Grace left the Bureau to joinher sister in Chicago as Professor ofPublic Welfare and Editor of theSocial Service Review. Grace Abbottdied in 1939.Edith received her Ph.D. fromChicago in 1905 and joined the facul¬ty of the University shortly after¬wards. She eventually rose to be¬come Dean of the Graduate Schoolof Social Service Administration.During her career, Edith corre¬sponded with leading politicians and The School of Social Service Ad¬ministration of the University ofChicago received the papers fromthe sisters’ heirs. Their writingsduring the formative period of so¬cial service in the United Stateshave now been incorporated into thepermanent collection in the archivesof the University’s Harper Library.educators. She died in 1957.The collected papers of the twosisters cover the broad spectrum ofsocial work and social legislation inthe first half of the twentieth cen¬tury and reflect their close associa¬tion W’ith national and internationalleaders in government and welfare.On returning to Chicago, Grace Ab¬bott wrote to Frances Perkins, Sec¬retary of Labor, that people in theMiddle West were concerned aboutfederal waste. Public opinion, shebelieved, was mounting against WPA ^ # _on the conviction that the project C |AWCwasted large sums. * ICI wV wf 5Grace wrote: “The Outer Drive,down which nearly everybody fromthe South Side goes to work, islined with men with hardly a bentback among them day after day Hillel talk onIn recommending a young Chica¬goan for a Washington post, GraceAbbott wrote, “. . . It has occurredto me that a Chicago man by thename of Adlai E. Stevenson mightbe very good . . . his southern con¬nections would be very useful inCongress ...”Calendar of Events ‘‘The Jews in the SovietUnion: The Sovietische Heirn-Iand and the Soviet Press”will be the subject of tonight’sHillel Fireside. Howard Aronson,Assistant Professor of Slavic Lan¬guages and Linguistics, will discussthe situation of Soviet Jewry as re¬flected in the new Soviet journalin Yiddish, Sovietische Heimland,and in articles discussing Jews andJudaism in the Soviet press.Edward Stankiewicz, Professor ofSlavic Languages and Linguistics,will be a discussant after Mr. Aron¬son’s talk.FridayArt Exhibit: Carole Nelson Stodder,Center for Continuing Education; Re¬ception, 4:30 pm.Sabbath Service: Hillel, 7:45 pm.Movie: "Experiment in Terror," LeeRemick, Glenn Ford, BJ Cinema, 50c,S and 10 pm.Travelogue: "The Caribbean andBermuda," International House Home¬room. Students 50c, 8:15 pm.Hillel Fireside: "The Jews in SovietRussia,” Howard Aronson, assistantprofessor, department of Slavic Lan¬guages, Edward Stankiewicz, professor,department of Slavic Languages, Hillel,2:30 pm.SaturdayTravel Show: "My Impressions ofSouth America in 1963,” slides, ex¬hibits, social hour, music, literature,non-members 50c, Curtiss Hall, 410 S,Michigan, 2:30 pm.Meeting: Christian Social ActionCommittee, Ida Noyes Library, 7:30pm.Meeting: Organizational meeting ofChristian Student Action Committee,Interdenominational civil rights action group: Ida Noyes library, 7:30 pm.Adult Fun Night: Hyde Park Neigh¬borhood Club. 5480 Kenwood, admission75c, all welcome, 8 pm.SijndayMeeting: O-Board training and selec¬tion meeting, Ida Noyes. 3 pm.Bridge Tournament: Ida Noyes, 7pm.Seminar: "Christian Ethics and theSit-In,” Chapel House, 7:15 pm.Meeting: YPSL, Ida Noyes, 7:30.Dancing: Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.Gnosis caucus: Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.Lecture: "Is Urban Integration Pos¬sible? Problems and Prospects in SouthShore.” Morris Janowitz, professor, de¬partment of Sociology. Hillel CivilRights Action Committee, Hillel, 7:30pm.MondayClass: Elementary Yiddish, Hillel,3:45 pm.Coffee Plus: Erika Fromm, depart¬ment of psychology, on hypnotism;Shorey house lounge, ninth floor Pierce,9 pm. Mr. Aronson spent nine months inthe Soviet Union as a participantin the first exchange program be¬tween the United States and Russiain 1958-59, studying Russian lan¬guages at Russian universities. Mr.Aronson attended the ShalomAleicliem Centennial Celebration,then being held in Moscow. ShalomAleichem is a noted Yiddish winterwho was born in Russia, but whodied in the United States.The deteriorating condition ofSoviet Jewry has been of greatconcern to the world intellectualcommunity. A special meeting ofAmerican Leaders was held last fallin New York to discuss the plight ofthe Russian Jew. Hans J. Morgen-thau, Martin Luther King, andWalter Reuther were among thosepai-tieipating. Shorey to feature scienceCoffee Plus at Shorey begin a week from Monday, on Jan-House this quarter will fea¬ture a symposium series oftalks on “Life and the PlanetEarth.”The series, to be held on six con¬secutive Monday nights, will presentsix UC scientists in various fields,mostly in the natural sciences.This Monday’s program, not partof the series, will feature Mrs. ErikaFromm, of the department of psy¬chology, speaking on sypnosis andgiving a demonstration.The symposium series, an innova¬tion in Coffee Plus programs, willThere will be o playbackof Hans Morgenthau's lec¬ture: The Future of Ameri¬can Politics in the libraryof Ida Noyes Hall on Sun*day, January 12, 1964 at3 pm. The lecture wasoriginally given shortlyafter President Kennedy'sassassination. uary 20. Robert N. Clayton, associateprofessor of chemistry, will speak atthe first program, on synthesis ofelements.He will be followed on Jan. 27 byJohn A. Wood, Jr., research asso¬ciate in the Enrico Fermi Institutefor Nuclear Studies. His subject willbe the origin of the solar system.In subsequent weeks, topics willbe “The Earth as a Laboratory,’’with Wilfred A. Elders, assistant pro¬fessor of geophysics; “Are VirusesLiving?’’ discussed by Earl A.Evans, Jr., chairman and professor,department of biochemistry; “Evolu¬tion of Life,’’ with Ralph G. John¬son, associate professor of geophy¬sics ; and “Thoughts on Human Evo¬lution,’’ by Clark F. Howell, profes¬sor of anthropology.On March 2, S. Ronald Weiner,instructor of English at Illinois Insti¬tute of Technology, and formerly atUC, will speak. His subject will beannounced later.All programs will begin at 9 pmin the Shorey lounge, ninth floor,Pierce Tower.CLASSIFIED ADSFOR RENT. ROOMS, APTS.. ETC.TWO males desire a third to share aspacious 6 rm. 2 bath apt. Rent incl.utilities is approximately $58 a month.Call 684-0427 ask for Ross or Harris.ROOMMATE wanted Female: am An¬tioch Co-ed working — prefer quiet,working, undergrad. Call day, PL2-6444; Night PL 2-9835.5462 S. CO RN ELI..—6 large unfurn.rms., natural fireplace, newly decor¬ated, like new w'all to wall carpeting.Suitable for a group of doctors orteachers. Avail, now. also 3*2 rm. apt.,newly decorated. Tile floor covering.Avail, now. Call MU 4 8222.ROOM and board in exchange for someafternoon and weekend eves, baby¬sitting. Also help with dinner. Wood-lawn Ave. near 56th St. Own room andbath. Ml 3-6446.SITUATION WANTEDWILL do baby sitting Mon. thru Fri.Call PL 2-3841.FOR SALEI960 VALIANT auto., excellent cond.,reas. 288-6757. HELP WANTEDNEEDED; good sound man ex- 'liam’*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¬garet 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.STUDENT, 21 yrs. old or older, righthanded who would like to participatein well paid Psychological experiments.Please contact. MI 3-0800, ext. 2902 oreves. DO 3-4954.PERSONALSRUMOR: Party to celebrate the secondanniversary of the CORE sit-ins againstthe U. C. Administration to be heldJan. 23rd. Activists on both sides willbe invited, though not necessarilytreated similarly.To place a classified ad call ext. 32661 to 4 pm. i MI 3-0800). Special student,faculty and University staff rates.irc.USEDnew TEXT BOOKSSTUDENT SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS—NOTE BOOKS—STATIONERY—LAUNDRY GASESBRIEF GASES-SPORTING GOODSTYPEWRITERS sold — rented — repairedPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57th STREET2 W4HKS EAST OP JUAN DEI. HA IXSTORl HOURS: DAILY 8 00 A M. to 6:00 P.M. . . . EVENINGS — Monday, W.dnouioy, Friday to 9:00 P.M.2 • CHICAGO,MAROON • Jan. 10, 1964Scramble over state house seat Sell Folk Festival ticketsJn a series of recent “sur¬prising developments” in thelast two months, the politicalpicture of the twenty-thirdlegislative district, which includesthe UC area, has changed radically.‘Long-standing agitation for aNegro representative in the statelegislature was interrupted when itwas announced that Abner Mikva(Dem.) would not be a candidate forreelection. A state representative forpie last eight years, Mikva was con¬sidered one of the most articulate oftpe state legislature’s liberals.]n the wake of Mikva’s withdraw¬al, Marshall Korshak, Fifth WardDemocratic committeeman, an¬nounced that a Negro would be oneof the Democratic candidates. Hestated: “I promised to do this whenthe next vacancy occurred, and Ishall.”Earlier this fall, Fourth Ward Al¬derman Claude Holman announced his support for Richard Gumbel, aNegro assistant probate judge. Kor¬shak, however has stated that anycandidate for the state legislaturewould have to come from the FifthWard. He emphasized that it wastraditional for candidates to bechosen from the ward of the incum¬bent, and that the Fifth Ward con¬tained fifty-seven of the seventy-fourprecincts of the twenty-third district.The second Negro to announce hiscandidacy was Tim Black. Longrumored to be an independent can¬didate, Black is a prominent Negrocivil rights leader. He stated, ‘‘Some¬how and somewhere the courageousactivity of the ‘Summer of Discon¬tent’ and the civil rights strugglemust take on real meaning in thefield of politics. I feel that the timehas come for the voters to be in¬dependent.”The third Negro candidate wasgiven public support on Dee. 31 byNEWSBITSGerman concert GNOSIS caucusThe contemporary German com¬poser Karlheinz Stockhausen, assist¬ed bv pianist David Tudor and per¬cussionist Christof Caskel, will pre¬sent a concert of his music onFriday evening, January 10. at 8:15,at the Parker School Auditoriiuri, 330Webster Avenue.The concert, sponsored by Con-temporary Concerts, will includeZykins. Klavierstueck No. 7 and No.8. Refrain for Three Perfomers, andKontakte for electronic sounds,piano and percussion.Amission for students with IDcards is $1.50.\ Housing crisis"The Urban Prison” is the topicof a discussion by Debbie Meier,Sunday at 7:30 in Ida Noyes Librarysponsored by the Young PeoplesSocialist League and the SocialistParty.Mrs. Meier will speak on the crisisin housing and the New Frontier.She is the former chairman of thehousing committee of the Hyde Park-Kenwood NAACP and a member ofthe Socialist Party National Commit¬tee. The first GNOSIS caucusof the winter quarter will beheld Sunday at 7:30 in theEast Lounge of Ida NoyesHall. Tile caucus will discuss a fewof the campus issues which soon willcome into focus, according toGNOSIS spokesmen. Social rules —their formation (by administrationproclamation or by student-faculty-administration committee) and ex¬ecution — is one of the issues of im¬portance. as is that of UniversityBookstore discounts and the fate ofthe Student Cooperative. The caucuswill consider SG vacancies, newproposals for NSA elections, andunfinished party business. ‘‘In ad¬dition, plans for the winter quartercaucuses and programs to buildGNOSIS into a campaigning organi¬zation for the spring elections will liediscussed,” according to party offi¬cials. All students interested incampus politics are invited to attendthe caucus.Basketball tonight;Intramurals beginThe University of Chicago basket¬ball team will play the Universityof Illinois, Chicago Branch, tonightat 8:00 pm in the Field House. Ad¬mission is free for UC students andpersonnel. The Maroons finishedthird in the recent Holiday Toum-men! which Chicago hosted.Tlie team thus far has lost five ofits first six games. In its only suc¬cessful battle, the squad defeatedColorado College 50-49 during a De¬cember tournament hosted by UC.Winter inlramurals begin this Mon¬day with a five-week league basket¬ball season. 57 teams are entered forseven different leagues. The divi¬sional league will again include manyformer collegiate stars on their ros¬ters. Last year the Unknowns wereall-University champions with PsiUpsilon, runners-up. Managers nowhave the league schedules, which arealso posted on the bulletin boards inBartlett Gym.Table tennis and handball entriesare due today. Submit entries to In¬tramural Office in Bartlett by 5:00pm.Set history meeting Peace Corps testA Peace Corps placement test willbe offered tomorrow morning at 8:30in room 1154 ol the U.S. Custom¬house, at 610 S. Canal St.Volunteers over 18 years of age,including married couples withoutdependents, are eligible. The testhelps the Corps determine the as¬signment for which the applicantsare best suited.To qualify, an applicant must pickup a Peace Corps questionnaire atany post office, and bring it to thetest center.Deadline for fellowship applica¬tions for Graduate students inresidence is January 15. Applica¬tions may be picked up in theoffice of the Committee onFellowships.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3*5986 RA 6-1060There will be a meeting of all un¬dergraduate students who have ap-liied or who are thinking of applyingto graduate schools in history eitherin this or another university on Wed¬nesday, January 15, in Cobb 106.Information on the details of appli- RENT-A-CAR$5 PER DAYc ation and recommendations and in¬formation concerning the possibilitiesof graduate study in history will beprovided. PER MILENINE WEEKS IN EUROPESUMMER '64$1,000 includes ALL expense*Contact Tow Goltz, Pierce Tower ATOMIC CARRENTALS. INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155 the Democratic Federation of HydePark. Charles LaPaglia, of theDemocratic Federation of HydePark, urged the Democratic partyorganization to endorse RichardNewhouse as its second candidate.LaPaglia stated that Newhouse hasbeen ‘‘an active participant in com¬munity, social welfare, civil rights,and business and professional organ¬izations. He emphasized that New¬house ‘‘is not a captive candidate ofjust one group or one cause.”Newhouse stated that his candi¬dacy was ‘‘only a possibility at thepresent time.” He is an attorney forthe Chicago office of the FederalHousing and Home Finance Agency.The Democratic Federation ofHyde Park is a reform organizationwithin the Democratic party. LaPag¬lia said that it is composed of ‘‘vol¬unteer Democrats working in supportof the party outside the regularparty organization. He said their pur¬pose is to improve the quality ofleadership within the party.Soc 2 wants papersThe Soc 2 staff is consideringpublishing sections from or perhapsentire student papers in the Maroon.Would all students who have doneresearch papers in the last few yearson some aspect of campus life, pleasebring a copy to the secretary inGB 428. Three evening concerts, aSaturday afternoon stringband concert, lectures, films,workshops, discussion groups,a Hootenanny and a folk dance willhighlight the Fourth annual Univer¬sity of Chicago Folk Festival.Tickets go on sale Monday in Man-del corridor. The three day pro¬gram of traditional American folkmusic will be presented the week¬end of January 31.The evening concerts will featurefolk musicians from all over theUS, according to Danny Auerbach,Festival chairman. Some are pro¬fessionals and give concerts regu¬larly throughout the country, whileothers are simply people who havebeen raised with the traditional folkmusic of America all around them,and in whose lives this music playsa very important part. They per¬form for their families, their neigh¬bors, maybe at square dances, andperhaps make a few records or givean occasional concert.Often, the "amateurs” outshinethe ‘‘professionals” in the Festivalprograms. Some of the performersand the kind of music they performare: Doc Watson & Family, old-time traditional southern mountainmusic; Furry Lewis, old stlye blues;The Lilly Brothers and Don Stover,bluegrass music. Larry Older, per¬forms a wide variety of materialWUCB to be on the air Mon.Equipped with a strongersignal and a redecorated stu¬dio, campus radio stationWUCB will begin broadcast¬ing its winter programs next Mondayevening, January 13.WUCB presents programs everynight of the week except Saturday,from 7 pm until midnight. Withstudios in Mitchell Tower, the stationbroadcasts at 640 kilocycles and canbe heard in most of the buildings oncampus.The station’s first presentation ofthe new quarter will be a specialprogram beginning at 8 pm this Mon¬day. Entitled ‘‘The New WUCB Be¬gins Broadcasting,” the program willconclude, appropriately, with Mah¬ler’s Symphony #2 ("Resurrection”).In addition to its regular scheduleof classical music of all sorts andjazz and folk music, the station willinaugurate this quarter several spo¬ken-word programs.Fifth ward Alderman Leon Depreswill report each week on the ChicagoCity Council meetings. He will beheard every Thursday evening at8:30 in a live telephone discussionof the results of the latest meeting.The first program in this series willbe broadcast on January 16.Among the members of the UCfaculty who will speak is Prof. KarlJ. Weintraub of the history depart¬ment. He will be heard deliveringhis lecture entitled ‘‘The Aims ofEducation,” which was recorded dur¬ ing orientation week, 1963. This pro¬gram will be broadcast Wednesday,January 22, at 7:30 pm.Professor Hans Morgenthau, of thepolitical science department, willgive his lecture on ‘‘Justice andPower,” which was recorded lastOctober. This speech will be heardThursday, January 23, at 8 pm.Several students will speak on sub¬jects on which they have writtenpapers or done extensive study.Harold Jacobs, student in the college,will read his paper ‘‘FDR, AmericanLabor, and the Critical Turn to theRight,” on Wednesday, January 15,at 8 pm.David Lopez, a third year studentin sociology, will discuss the resultsof a survey he made of UC housing.The program, entitled "Apartmentor Dormitory, Virtue or Vice,’’ willbe heard on Monday, January 20, at9:30 pm. On Monday, January 27 at10 pm, Richard Merbaum, a gradu¬ate student in economics, will discussthe Rand Corporation.Howard Carter, third year studentin the college, will read a paper hehas written on Shakespeare’s ‘‘Corio-lanus,” on Wednesday, January 29,at 8 pm. His talk will be followedby a performance of the completeplay by the Marlowe Society Play¬ers.A program originally scheduled forSunday nights, Viewpoint, moderatedby Laura Godofsky, has been can¬celled. The replacement has not yetbeen announced. from New York, including lumber¬jack songs, folk tales, and old bal¬lads; Muddy Waters, modern cityblues, New Lost City Ramblers,"Old Timey Music”; and MaryRoss, old style Negro spirituals.Saturday afternoon at 3 p.m. aspecial string band concert will bepresented featuring Doc Watson &Family, The New Lost City Ram¬blers, and Lilly Brothers. Stringbands are groups that use combina¬tions of the usual folk instruments—guitar, banjo, fiddle, and mandolin—to accompany songs and play instru¬mental music. The special concertwill be organized to present thehistory of string band music fromthe earliest combinations of fiddleand banjo up through the present.It will be run by Ralph Rinzler, anexpert in the field.Reserved seats for the eveningconcerts are $2.50, and general ad¬mission $2.00. For the string bandconcert all seats are reserved, for$1.50, with a 75c discount to UC stu¬dents, faculty, and employees forthis concert only.Futher information is available atthe box office or from the FolkloreSociety, Box 67, Faculty Exchange,Midway 3-0800, extension 3567. Peo¬ple desiring to work on the Festivaland earn complimentary ticketsshould contact the Folklore Society.Slate lectureson BuddhismThe History of Religions Field ofthe Divinity School and Committeeon South Asian Studies are jointlysponsoring two lectures on Buddhismby Professor Edward Conze of Oxford,on January 14-15. His first lecture,"Buddhist Meditation” will be givenon Tuesday afternoon, January 14,at 3:30 p.m. in Social Science 122.His second lecture, "Buddhism andEuropean Thought,” will be givenon Wednesday afternoon, January 15,at 3:30 gt Swift Hall Rm. 106.Dr. Edward Conze lives at pres¬ent in Madison, where he is for thecurrent academic year a "VisitingDistinguished Professor of BuddhistStudies” at the University of Wis¬consin. In autumn 1964 he will returnto Oxford to resume his duties as aResearch Fellow of Manchester Col¬lege.He is the author of fifteen booksand of several hundred articles andreviews devoted to Buddhist thought,history and art. His special interestis the literature of the Prajnapara-mita (“Perfection of Wisdom”),which during the last decade he hassucceeded in making largely accessi¬ble to the West.In two of his books, l.e. in BuddhistMeditation (1956) and in BuddhistThought in India (1962) he has writ¬ten at some length about the sub¬ject matter of his two lectures. Bomin London in 1904, he was educatedin Germany, where he became aPh.D. of Cologne University in 1928.Since 1933 he has regularly residedin London, Oxford or the Englishcountryside.MR. PIZZAWE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTSHY 3-8282FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 6 Party#Sausage 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper .1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Olive 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vi and Vi 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients .50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pizza 200 2.50 4.00 5.09 6.COShrimp 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacon 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pizza 2.50 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers) SPAGHETTIMOSTACCOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF. SAUSAGE.MEAT BALL1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — Fri. to 3:00 a m.Sat. to 3:00 a.m. — Open 2 p.m. Sunday*Jan. 10. 19*4 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Hundreds af Arlington cemeterySolemnity, silence prevail at JFK graveby Bob LeveyIt has been more than sixweeks since John F. Kennedywas assassinated, but the pas¬sage of time has apparentlynot dulled the compassion of theAmerican people for the slain Presi¬dent and his family. This compas¬sion has been demonstrated in hun¬dreds of different ways, but perhapsit is best demonstrated by the sceneat the grave of the President in theArlington National Cemetery in Ar¬lington, Virginia. On a cold December day duringthe past vacation, this intrepid Ma¬roon reporter ventured to the grave-site, an unassuming plot on the sideof a steep hill about 100 yards belowthe Custis-Lee Mansion, the formerhome of Civil War general Robert E.Lee and his family.From the Lincoln Memorial, justacross the Potomac from the Ceme¬tery, it was possible to make out aline in the shape of a wide loop onthe side of the hill where the Presi¬dent and his two children who died in infancy are buried. At first itseemed as if the loop were onlyfoliage of some sort, but the closerone got to the Cemetery, the clearerit became that the loop was com¬posed of people.A good sign of the nationwide ap¬peal of a trip to the President’s gravewas reflected by the license plateson the ears in the improvised park¬ing lot, which was actually more asea of mud. Almost every state alongthe eastern seaboard was repre¬sented, as were several from theSpace drive seen dying in HouseEUGENE, ORE. (IP) —The post-sputnik surge in sup¬port for basic science has be¬gun to decline, and a “back¬lash” has become apparent in theU.S. House of Representatives, ac¬cording to a National Science Foun¬dation official who visited the Uni¬versity of Oregon campus recently.William V. Consolazio, senior an¬alyst in the NSF science resourcesplanning office, said in an interviewthat the appointment of a selectHouse committee to investigate allgovernment-supported research “isfundamentally a reaction to big gov¬ernment spending, especially in sci¬ence.”The select committee reflects con¬ servative elements in the House, henoted, who suffer from an ignoranceof the subject matter and a lack ofawareness of the value of scientificresearch. A House appropriationssubcommittee last year voted out abudget for NSF which freezes ap¬propriations for the government’sbasic research support agency to lastyear’s level, despite a request thatthe budget be raised from $322 mil¬lion to $589 million, Consolazio ex¬plained.Scientific activities which promotedefense, the economy, and health andwelfare are still enjoying consider¬able support, but basic science andscientific education are beginning tofall behind, due in part to the factthat they do not have effective lob-SALE!NOW INPROGRESSSUBSTANTIAL SAVINGSON ALL SUITSSPORTCOATS, JACKETSOUTER COATS, SWEATERSPVTHE STORE FOR MEN6iAh* StoHr©mutt attfc (HampaaIn the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 bies, a legitimate part of the demo¬cratic process, he said.Such a lobby exists potentially inthe colleges and universities, butthese institutions have not becomeeffectively organized for this sort ofactivity, Consolazio said.Part of the money cut from theproposed NSF budget was to setup a traineeship program, part of anover-all administration plan to ex¬pand support of graduate educationin science and engineering, hepointed out. NSF presently receivesthree times as many applications forfellowships as it is able to grant, hesaid.There are now 135,000 students atthe graduate level in science andengineering, and one half of theseare able to work on their degrees ononly a part-time basis because of theneed to earn a living. Some Ph.D.candidates may take up to ten yearsto earn their degrees, he said, rep¬resenting a waste of some of theirbest and most productive years.Answering the criticism leveled bysome scientists that nationwide thereare more fellowships available thanthere are qualified students, Con¬solazio said, “There is no doubt thatthere are some institutions which arescrapping the bottom of the barrelto find qualified applicants, but it isalso undoubtedly true that some in¬stitutions don't have enough funds totake care of all of their applicants.” midwest. A few cars had even comefrom California and Colorado.While the atmosphere in the park¬ing lot was quite casual (in fact,almost reminiscent of a zoo; childrencrying, horns blaring), that withinthe portals of the cemetery wassolemn and silent. Hordes of visitorsmade their way shakily along theicy paths, which maintenance menwere frantically trying to salt. Thevisitors were directed to the graveby hastily constructed signs whichbore the words "John F. Kennedy—Gravesite.”At the gravesite, or rather thegeneral area, a huge line, of perhapsas many as 2000 people, waited si¬lently, almost petulantly, to view theplat, which was surrounded by anunassuming white picket fence. Fewwords were spoken and not a singleperson was seen smoking a cigaretteor nipping from a flask, probablyout of respect, although the weather(15 degrees) seemed to warranteither or both.Finally arriving at the grave, onewas struck with the tremendous num¬ber of floral displays that had beenlaid there. Included among themwere wreaths from Fairleigh Dickin¬son University and the AFlrCIO, aswell as a multi-colored display fromthe government of Venezuela, whichdepicted the faces of the late Presi¬dent and his wife. Four guards, inplain khaki uniforms which read"Army Special Service’’ on the arm,hovered about silently, except for anoccasional plea to the line to "Keepmoving please.”The scene was solemn, but notcompletely. On the slope a few hun¬dred feet away three boys were hav¬ing a grand old time sliding downthe hill on the seats of their pants.One of the Special Service guardsshooed them away after two de¬scents.In retrospect, it seems as if thegravesite will become a nationalmonument in the manner of theothers across the river in Washing¬ton. But this is not the way one ofthe policemen directing traffic hopesit will turn out. “With all thesepeople,” he said, “I wish the wholething had never happened.” So do180 million others. DO YOURECOGNIZETHIS MAN?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank BuildingChicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800Office Hours 9 fo 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 youat your convenience?SUN LIFEASSURANCE COMPANYOF CANADATHE BOOK NOOKSCHOLARLY BOOKS IN EVERY FIELDMl 3-7511 1540 E. 55th TAI-SAM-Y6.NCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYII A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd Sf. BU 8-90184th Annual University of ChicagoFOLK FESTIVALDoc. Watson & FamilyMuddy WatersNew Lost City RamblersMaybelle CarterFurry LewisLarry OlderBig Joe WilliamsMary RossDock BoggsLilly BrothersDon StoverGeorge ArmstrongSTRING BAND CONCERT:Saturday, Feb. 1, 3:00 p.m.Doc. Watson & FamilyNew Lost City RamblersMaybelle CarterLilly Brothers & Don StoverReserved Boats only $1.50 ■ EVENING CONCERTS:-JANUARY 31, FEB. 1 & 2, 1964Reser\e<l $2.50General $2.008:15 pm fTickets available inMandel CorridorFor information:FOLKLORE SOCIETY,Box 67, Faculty Exchange,Chicago 37, IllinoisMI 3-0800, extension 3567 *• CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 10. 1964l« minimum loleiitf required•e monthly some* chargeRo charge for depositsr« charge for monthly sfafemenfspostage paid both ways when banking by mail„ J•mmmNATIONALBANKHYDE PARKIN CHICAGO5 3 r d a n d LAKE P A R K /PLaza 2-4600/q INTEREST on SAVINGS ACCOUNTS field on deposit for 1 yearMEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATIONNICKY’SRESTAURANT AND PIZZA1208 East 53rd Street53-Kimbark PlazaNICKY'S TAKE-OUT t DELIVERY MENUPIZZASAssortments small medium largeCHEESE 1.20 1.90 2.90SAUSAGE 1.40 2.15 3.25ANCHOVIE 1.40 2.15 3.25ONION 1.25 1.95 3.00PEPPER 1.40 2.15 3.25MUSHROOM 1.60 2.40 3.50BACON 1.40 2.15 3.25HAM 1.60 2.40 3.50SPAGHETTI WITH MEAT SAUCE 90SPAGHETTI with Meat Balls or Sausage 1.20MOSTACCIOLI .95MOSTACCIOLI with Meat Balls or Sausage 1.25CHICKEN CACCIATORE ■ Salad .. 1.80SHRIMP DINNER,Salad, Potatoes & Buttered Bread 1.50SHRIMP Va LB 1.25 1 LB 2.25BAKED LASAGNE with Meat Balls or Sausage 1.55RIB TIPS SMALL 1.35 LARGE 2.25PHONE: FAirfax 4-5340Open Seven Days a Week — Hours 8:00 A.M. to2:00 A.M. Sundays 12:00 Noon to 2:00 A.M. M»M MMICHICKIE IN THE BOX10 Large Pieces .H16 Large Pieces ,N20 Large PiecesSANDWICHESPlain or BAR BQ BeefMeat BallSAUSAGE 2.503.754.75« .60. .55.55Above Served with PeppersHAMBURGERCHEESEBURGER —CORNED BEEFBAKED HAMPlus Many OthersRIBS1 Slob2 Slabs ^3 Slabs ,, M > * Ul HirttN JO.60.70J52.003.755.50 THE FRET SHOPGuitars — Banjos — MandolinsFolk Music Books — Records at Discount1547 E. 53rd ST. NO 7-1060glcal \ om. coMomouEO°DISUts) 1316 S3” $T.• 11 am TO 10 PMMIS-34 07UUt5*DlUUtRS^ WE DELIVER. Geary's1009 E. 61 st St.General Scholarly BooksWith Special EmphasisOn Unrequired BooksIn The HumanitiesMultiform — the favorite of professional people.Multiform — the freestanding wall units. Inter¬changeable bookcases, bars, desks, chests withdrawers, endless combinations for a complete wall.Or start with a bookcase unit for as little as $24.00,and add to it later on.SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSNO 7-40401538 East 53rd StreetFormerly of the Art Colony12 Noon-8 P.M. Daily; Sunday 12 Noon-6 P.M.THE Wjcol (B/wdIl COCLEANERS - TAILORS • LAUNDERERSServing the Campus with Unexcelled Qualityand Service Since 1917Prompt Pick-Up & DeliveryPHONES; Midway 3-7447HYde Pork 3-6668 1013-17 EAST 61 ST STREETAcross From Barton & Judson Ct.iUsssText Books and School SuppliesThe University OfChicago BookstoresMain Store, 5802 Ellis Ave.Hours 8-5 Mon., thru Fri.; 8:30-12:30 Sat.Open 8-5 Sat., Jan 4 &. Jan. 11The Education Branch, Rm. 138, Belfield Hall(Evening program and Education Course)Hours 8-4:30 Mon. thru Fri.Special Hours: 8-8:30 weeks of Jan. 6 & 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.Jon. 10, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5fuliiirc Calendarf«.-,sor of tlu'o]o(jv Di\ imt> ‘UhJ.i'iu.ii \ ,.m North Slum cgrt'K.itimi Isrorl. H+!» A'oi non (.icirc.i,• •• ifiiio. ;i;t< 1 Development ViO.. In.Miisic," lecture recital in Raje imDatU, visiting lecturer, and singerjfrX'.ik'ult;i. .l.inu.i x .1 ■it’,r..av ScIkm.I Audit"! runTheatrea'‘single ‘issue, lo glimpse- -an inex-or ablestres u 1 tWt h roughfsa*' chaos * of sf . - . 'I' I • •wasvthe barejbone-.^ the abstractions’pi.de- ! i i‘ a 1 ri \ cal the;'; ' * "V, * ' ->- ' • ' , " *^; ■ l '‘t*[ >>S II lc Pai h 'ionlv^residentslittle.&theatreiKThe not-’pfpr^profjl^group^is® affedJentirely • by|! 'X ■. $j£. £■;' ' >K. ./ ■ '*{ :! ' *1 '; . ~ > ' bIjV^vl l:t present f,Glu‘khd\>s«JThree^ Sisters. JBC ur t a i^t i n ieS is v 8.30 tf>nk FridaysPand'^Sa’.urtl.'iN t^aridt’i7: ■ 30. .'on -Sundays,.fand-p tickets .\'are.'*>$2 00 r Friday . and:fSattirdayTand $1 5o on?Sunda\. Reser>:; ■} .. a;m ....calling OAkland, ExhibitsT 1^1 * 11 y£ s.|i, • • ;^a^\y hore;»'W " .’"-.‘fi >t *a Jacobea**''*$. ; ■ shibits-jK||LTIUtW*G*J3o N s|||ps -At|;R IAL ST&sSJiit e r s £ ‘JP- ^SjjWh £. FLYER■■"'•faP ’ ‘ ’ ' \<MBE B J SIN fc S S £t> TA TIO N E R '§&PPilmntliiiUN lifts ijpltiaaM.*...- y- - 8Serving the University of 3S■Chicago Campus Since 1921gj§SAM MALATTK. BARBER SHOP , 'BUtterfield ,8-0950 ty,««!> 1011 East 61st Street.1 iWsSjmt Chicago 37 Illinois ; ’ m ii k -\.ui\itvH.W nr III ml kill I Willi III Song.t "'1 (&HYDE PARK SHOE REPAIR^pii45llE: 57thlsfljlIQj HY 3-1247^p^y^■MMi h reM.U njy, e rs f t.y^Co'mm■fcfr/r 1 4QlY 1‘Q* sljSjSfeS*■ ■■ ' '> Lectures^RIGINM|'G0L0WAfERkgins^-'s.x9nrfti«»>i4i iSWEAT-SHIRTS, TNena^OT" education. 'i i.cd .. for broad federal liiianjT I ’■ die public-. elliKilf#'linik- .I'lrward with ,eaii!.<i< nee l.« IB<X»L1^. !■.tfel'he NK\ statement was seen.^a^^xeekin^ the Piexident\ sii|»|m>i( ln^’?s large federal aid to elementary ainijg•-^'secondary schools and teachers #program side-step|K*d by l*resideny|Kenned> to avoid a church-state <l<\j|’** bate ,whith has killed all past aid, J education programsp /*BI??, ->‘V • ■ ^f ; • i *. •. ii *.I• • 1111-.>ri ''m."^ttau. h1 1. gfi iMlol in Texas' lx■ t■ a ,*W:- jg- Hhfdhn onV i*>x’.on on aid ‘o.*,. ond ii v public schools might ih.in'*^by/’ni'Xt year. But hi we again t f-■.*v ifPiX showed that he^held i (.■ •f' * fmt•^•veln that vote, Johnson, as n‘iaj>> jE■,^:|.;,:'ie.- Sihl.i'e, < >| >1 H»S<-, j Jsojimendmcnt, to 'the National Defi ri (jrh')!-.line.riuii Act (NDEA) which W"fc'^h.i'Ve^ aiitliin i/i'd'ygruhts.of St 1j®6\er'dwo \eai 'ikl<n.tptiMh b -. f-' ''.ac Ur ■*rSapB:fclne^amendment.jdefeateil l,v ar2»as^ w rung, Johnson*j®lsaid at the Uine because he thoughts^ii^:would endanger tlie entire NIH '%»piogram for’higher education.jjl : - i V-. dud leami'J *' - ' \;’j-'eiterat'c(mff^B'ii?'' iip|Mjrt/(»f fe Icral a .ATmVs*. ,, JHa*enncation*Ji.while» nuv ing - w ithaeTKj,$4.50^each;Orff) r1200^East.53rd St ‘P|Hld-8372:•; 53 Kimbm It P aia^ -G0LDWATER|.SWEAT.^SHIRTSjaffiBStist Locust; stggfc.Or.cenca die? Indiana*#\?ve*s(la \j»e AJpTntr trgHi:. H* slfw‘a i"i>I)at':fe.' ; iin t it?*i ua 1;•pnljffjj'imt"ti’lc littajj^uli^VQuikemWntsMfotfS.*op 1*. jgplrxk111 ,i11'uri i\T|i<n*PrEMgcil«JPc'sl?if'dS2iuub .■H. 'ut .Xir^Iy^^^^mnineii'cliallMv?i ■ iiiqCqS' MB S.-*'^'U.x. - w;>l!^yaenwuppl* tlunMRtimTCitli#|Mpi y111 it; a l&iit e-tjc^pWspap^^ana;.;Ma gazihelJot)iylt H " f.I'T. r [M■ I u 11 /(■ 11' M clrP_s(T\;i,. B^N i w!T.m j^'irt iltjj range[l*|,iii\TFsit vMIWMMlirBg.- y-y -rt'..- --'r. - ,s . .,• ..hc-'f t'nivcr.sitV RoomRESERVED EXtLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELE^ ' -1’' J ■ „ . ;jfflS.»i£yFiHy Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.i*' st be kin gs,*^ skirt$pamlr cosi net i cs?.K★ Snack BarC+ offer riu’ i^-"Special 4|SftdentJDiscoui^fwODdjCCttip mmfeJEWELRY^COa^igyGw-gM|wgpfcts^ t! % . /- . r-p.v r .Ji^naSgySg^ H in man d'mPj^pfgmJ^k Wholesale Distributor for X-m "^91g^tblAMONDS • WATCHEV, • JEWELRHfS^ving'.college, sfudenti .al - wholciale. pricc'i 'fof^ the past 30vy i'a/‘j^SrA’SO^o OFF 1 ON ALLi DIAMONDS. V,:.|1^ENGAGEMENT. AND WEDDING RING5’*|Wotch and. Jewelry Repairing, Rm. 1101, A7 E. Madison St., DE 2-6S08jJj• For Further Information Call Andy Stein —- Ext. 32L5I'LO y o woiDiamondl[/or X-masS^^58°2|ELL1S^AVEnUEM^MDpen all^day Sot., Jan. 4,-and Sat. [Jan. I 1.. $CHICAGO MAROON Discuss Vatican CouncilWEEKEND GUIDElake 0 PAR K AT £the tyyde pa1T S>RD : N O 7 9 O 7 1park theatreStarts Friday, Jan. 10Winner of the 1963 Cannes Festivalas "Best Film of the Year"20tN CENTURY-FOX proudly presentsBurt Lancaster in"THE LEOPARD"also starringAlain Delon and Claudia CardinaleFree Weekend Patron Parking at 5230 S. Lake ParkSpecial Student Rates WITH Student I.D. Cards»*»pt ^. dmimj* pleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668EveryoneEATSatGORDON’S1321 E. 57th The Most Popular BookOn Your Campus Is NowAn Exciting MovieiA Shocker"Lord Of The Flies 1/CINEMAChicago at MichiganStudents $1.00 with I.D. CardsEvery Day But SaturdayCoJBEAUTY SALONExperlPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302Triangle Theatrical Productions, FRANKLIN FRIED, presents3 WEEKS MIT—in. 14 ... F.E. 1THE WORLD OF KURT WEILL IN SONGMUSICAL HIT DIRECT FROM 9 MONTHS IN N.Y. mmstarring MARTHA SCHLAMME & WILL HOLTBY MAIL ONLY 1 s*nd stamped self-addressed envelope;■ mHIk With ■ e W|th alternate date, fa TRIANGLE THE-ATRICAL PROD., 156 Superior. Chicago 11. Tickats: $2.50. $3.50. $4.50.lues, thru Sat. 8:30 P.M.; Sun. at 7:30 P.M.; Sat. Mat. 2:30 P.M.(Student Rate $2); Sun. Mat. 3 P.M. No Pert. Sun., Jan. 26.FOR GROUP RATES PH. SU 7-758SFrl, Jan. 24, 8:3032, 3,4,5Orchestra Hall ODETTASAT. FIB. 29, 8:3(32,3,4,5—Arle Crown,McCormick Placa 1 First Time Together in ContortMiriam Makeba & Oscar Brown J !r.FRI. MAR. 6, 8:3032,3,4,6—Arle CrownMcCormick Placa Peter, Paul and Mary•y Moll Order t# Triangle Theatrical frad. Ticket* also available farAbove Three Concert* at Discount Records, 201 N. LaSalle; HarmonyHall, 4103 Lincoln, Lincoln Village; Baca Radio, 1741 Sherman, Ivon*-ton; Co-Op Credit Union, 55th and Laka fork. CHICAGO, ILL., Jan. 6 —The lay people of the Church¬es are deeply relieved to seethe ancient, frozen patternsof alienation and enmity betweenChristians swiftly melting away asa result of the ecumenical move¬ment, Chicago Theological SeminaryPresident Howard Schomer, whorecently returned from the SecondVatican Council, said this week.“Although the Council is far fromthe end of its labors, it has stimu¬lated great expectations amongChristians in many denominationsand in many lands. Tbere is greatrejoicing that relations between theRoman Catholic Church and otherChristian Churches, in both the Eastand the West, are warmer than theyhave ever been before.“As the Roman Catholic Churchunder the leadership of John XXIIIand Paul VI has become less aloofeverywhere, the major Christian communions have hastened to graspthe outstreched Roman hand,” Dr.Schomer said.He predicted that the final revisionof the Constitution on the SacredLiturgy, adopted in the Council bya vote of 2,147 to 4, wall have animmense attractive power on vastnumbers of nominal Protestants. Hesaid that the adoption of the Consti¬tution will make the full spiritualpower, beauty and logic of Catholicworship readily accessible to thewhole population of the UnitedStates.“I believe that when Protestanttheologians and seminary studentshave had time to study this Consti¬tution with care, they will see in ita tremendous encouragement toecumenical rapprochment at thevital center of all Christian life. . . .The restoration of clear meaningand simple expression to every as¬pect erf the Church’s own worshiplife will contribute much to thePianist opens music seriesThe Musical Society willopen its winter series of mid¬day concerts with a recital bypianist David Gross on Janu¬ary 24. Other concerts in winter quar¬ter will include a program of stringquartets performed by the first-deskplayers in the University Symphony,and a concert by university pianistEnrieque Arais.The concerts, given from 12:30 to1:30 in Mandel Hall and Reynoldsclub lounge, will give students achance to hear music.Gross was last heard at the Uni¬versity when he played the BrahmsFirst piano concerto with the Univer¬sity of Chicago orchestra. He hasstudied with Rudolph Serkin andplayed for three summers at Serkin’sMarlboro Festival in Vermont. Grosshas also appeared as soloist with theChicago Chamber Orchestra.In his Musical Society concert,Gross will present a few short piecesby Brahms, and Beethoven’s ’Diabel-li Variations,’ often considered Beet¬hoven’s greatest in the piano medi¬um. Due to its technical and inter¬pretive difficulties, ‘Diabelli Varia¬tions’ is seldom played.According to Richard Sennett,Norman talk on GrimmThe Department of GermanicLanguages and Literatures will pre¬sent a lecture, in English, by Pro¬fessor Frederick Norman, Universi¬ty of London.The title of Professor Norman’slecture will be Jakob Grimin and itwill be held in Cobb 110, Not classicsII as originally advertised, nextTuesday, January, 14th at 4 p.m.Professor Norman will deal withvarious aspects of Grimm’s activityincluding his views on grammar andhis pioneer work in the field of lexi¬cography in Germany. president of the Musical Society, theSociety also promotes informal cham¬ber music sessions throughout theyear for its members. These groups,which now total about 40 studentsand professors, are open to anymember of the university commu¬nity, and those who wish to join mayobtain information from Sennett at752-8629.Appoint criminologistto law professorshipNorval Ramsden Morris, aninternationally renownedcriminologist, has been ap¬pointed professor of Law, itwas announced this week. An authori¬ty on criminal law, Morris formallydirected the Asia and Far East Insti¬tute for the Prevention of Crime andTreatment of Offenders, an agencyof the United Nations.Morris received his Ph D. in crimi¬nology from the University of Londonin 1949 and held academic positionsat University of London, HarvardLaw School and New York Univer¬sity.“Mr. Morris has what is probablyan unmatched knowledge of correc¬tional practices and problemsthroughout the world,” said Phil C.Neal, Dean of the Law School of theUniversity. “He extends the rangeof research and teaching interests ofthe Law School’s distinguished facul¬ty to the social and legal questionsof crime in many cultures and coun¬tries other than the United States.”Morris’s works include The Ha¬bitual Criminal, a discussion ofBritish efforts to respond to the prob¬lem of the recidivist, and a reportfor the Ceylon Commission on Capi-t a 1 Punishment, described as a“major addition to the literature oncapital punishment.”GOLD CITY INNTREAT YOUR DATE TO THE BEST CANTONESEDINNER IN HYDE PARK THIS WEEKEND10°/o discount to student with this adSpecial: Fried Wonton Free5228 HARPER ST.HY 3-2559U.C. S.G. FILM FESTIVALJan. 14—Cabinet of Dr. CaligariJudith of BethuliaJan, 28—MThe Fatal Glass of BeerFeb. 11—VarnpyrKnockoutNew York FlatFeb. 25—The Thirty-Nine StepsThe Case of the Kukkinese BattlehornMar. 3—The Lost WorldNomads of the NorthSoc. Sci. 122, 7 SC 9 P.M.Student Series $3,00, Individ. 70cTickets on sale S.G. Office andReynolds Club—Fri., Mon., and Tues. growing dialogue with the modernworld.”Dr. Sehomer said that tabling ofthe chapters of the schema onEcumenism dealing with relation¬ships with Jews and religious libertywas given too much importance bythe press. He said that the impor¬tance given these two chapters bythe press was more a sign of thepolitisation of all news than of ‘hereal situation in the Council.“Actually, these items of specialpositive concern to the Westerndemocratic peoples, and sources ofsome anxiety to the Middle Eastern¬ers and some Latin-country Bishops,are no more rejected then lots ofother proposals which got a brieflook from the Council and then weretabled for the next session.”Dr. Schomer stated that if theEcumenism document were to beadopted by the Council in substan¬tially its present form and in itsentirety, it would improve the qualityof Roman Catholic relations with allChristian Churches, with other reli¬gious bodies, and with civil society,beyond which officially has everbeen known in any earlier time.“Yet all ecumenical workers,Roman Catholic and Protestantalike, left the Council at the closeof the second session in a moodsomewhat subdued. What this draftproposal states about Catholic rela¬tions with the other ChristianChurches still falls far below whatwe already experienced in personalrelations, and much of what weheard from the lips of Bishops, andindeed of the Holy Father himself,in the great Basilica of St. Peter’s.”Dr. Schomer said that the Angli¬cans, Orthodox, and ProtestantChurches, with an estimated 350million Christians take it for grantedthat Rome’s estimated 4!50 millionCatholics are brothers in Christ. Hesaid there is a groundswell of hopethat the leaders of all branches ofthe one Christian Church, consciousof the unity which already is presentin their diversity, will now overcomethe outstanding points of practicaldifficulty which needlessly embittershuman relatione.“With due regard for prudentwarnings against enthusiasm andUtopian dreams, Christians now liv¬ing ask for the elemental freedomto study together, pray together,praise together. They look impa-tiently to the day when they cangather in one family about theLord’s Holy Table,” Schomer said.His address, “The Vatican Coun¬cil and the Ecumenical Hope,” wasgiven before a Winter Convocationaudience gathered in Graham Tay¬lor Hall, 5757 Univesrity Avenue.Other participants in the CTSConvocation, marking the secondquarter of the Seminary’s 109 yearhistory, were The Reverend ThomasMcDonough, Chaplain of CalvertHouse, University of Chicago: TheReverend David Jamieson, Pastorof the Plymouth CongregationalChurch in Goshen, Indiana and sec¬ond Vice-President of the CTSAlumni Council; and Graham J.Morgan, President of the U. S.Gypsum Company and a memberof the Seminary’s Board of Direc¬tors.TIKI TOPICSV isit Cirals, House of Tiki for aquiet, relaxed evening conduct \ efor a twosome. Our candlelightsetting is ideal for an intimateconversation, spiced with achoice of Jumbo Fried Shrimp,Barbecued Back Bibs, FriedChicken, Ixdistcr Tail, BeefPlatter, etc. Try Cirals House ofTiki where the Hawaiianatmosphere sets the scene for anenjoyable evening w ith the ladyin your life.For an added treat after dinnertake in the newr show at “TheLast Stage”! The production isthe well-known “Tis a Pity.”Don’t miss it. “After the Show”back to Cirals House of Tikifor a delightful Hawaiian drink.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI1510 HYDE PARK BLVD.51 st and Lake Pork Ave.LI 8-7585Food served from 11 a.m. to 3:00 a.m.Kitchen Closed Wed.Jan. 10, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Sawyer, Beck, Fromm engaged in various research(continued from page one)of our IBM 7094 computer with anaccuracy of nearly ninety per cent.Professor Halstead believes that notonly will this approach prove usefulin hospitals and clinics, but that itwill also help raise fundamental ques¬tions to be resolved, which haveramifications in psychology and neur¬ology. His research is supportedprimarily by government grants.Jack SawyerTwice a year residents of PierceTower find their mail boxes filledwith thick stapled mimeographedsheets with long lists of names andquestions of preference and habit.These are sociometric questionnaires,the chief method Jack Sawyer, As¬sistant Professor of Psychology andSociology, has been using since I960to collect data for his sociometricresearch study of the friendship pat¬terns of UC students.The questionnaire sent out bySawyer each fall and spring asksabout the student’s friends, interests,habits, background, and views. Fromthis he determines friendship patternsbased upon a sizeable numeber of re¬sponses. He is further able to com¬pare patterns in the fall with thosein the spring and to plot changes inindividual preference. In the case ofseventeen Pierce Tower residents,this comparison has extended over3 four year period.The 7094 computer has been usedto record, code, classify, and evaluatethe vast amount of data obtained,much of which is still being analyzed.Sawyer has found that physical dis¬tance is a determining factor infriendships. In analyzing “those whomyou recognize” on one’s own floor,on the other floor of the two-floorhouse unit, and in the rest of thetower, he found the average first-year student, two months after ar¬rival, knew 6 of 10 on his floor. 4of 10 on the other floor of his house,and 1 of 10 in the rest of Pierce.The strong effect of proximity wasfurther illustrated by comparing,among those pairs of persons whoeach called the other his best friend, those who were roommates and thosewho were not. Despite the presum¬ably greater attraction originallynecessary for non-roommates to be¬come friends, these persons wereless likely than were roomates toremain best friends at a later time.Sawyer is also presently analyzingthe effect of background and behav¬ior upon friendship and. particularly,the way in which these change afterstudents have been around longer.Samuel BeckSamuel J. Beck, Professorial Lec¬turer in Psychology and Psychiatry,studied schizophrenic children for anumber of years, first at MichaelReese Hospital and then at the Ortho¬genic School here. He has tried tounderstand in what way their psy¬chological traits differ from those ofhealthy persons and to search forleads as to the causes which liebehind their deviant behaviors.Schizophrenia is the condition of“split personality” and is generallyrecognized by fantasies, delusionsand abnormal emotional behaviorand thinking. An individual sufferingfrom schizophrenia may emotionallyover-react, that is, show an excessiveamount of emotion: or under-reactand not respond to others as normal¬ly expected. Such a person, to use aclassical example, may believe heis Napoleon. He masks reality withfantasy to “protect himself” by iso¬lating himself from others. Beck citesthe saying of a noted psychiatrist(Campbell) that the schizophrenic“lives as a one-man secret society.”If we knew his code, i.e. his queerideas, we could understand why heis unable to understand the emotionsof others or to communicate effec¬tively.Until 1949 Beck was investigatingchildren of economically disadvan¬taged families at Michael Reese Hos¬pital. Following that research,through the courtesy of ProfessorBruno Bettelheim, he begun to studythe children of the Orthogenic School.They are in the main from well-to-dofamilies. Thus the research couldcompare families from contrastingeconomic classes in both of which were found children with symptomsof schizophrenia. He also extendedhis research to include well-to-dofamilies with only well children.From his findings Beck tentativelyconcludes that parental relationshipsdiffer in the families that produceschizophrenic children as comparedwith those of only well children. Theatmosphere in the former is less re¬laxed and understanding. The atti¬tude toward the child suffers accord¬ingly. In the normal home problemsare less taxing and the membersgenerally get along better. They arebetter able to accomodate new situ¬ations and problems.Erika FrommIf you ask 20 psychoanalysts tointerpret a dream, you might getas many as 12 different interpreta¬tions, according to Dr. Erika Fromm,Professorial Lecturer in Psychology,most partially right. This comes be¬cause dream interpreters intuitivelyinterpret dreams but often fail toevaluate their intuitive hunches criti¬cally. During the past five years Dr.Fromm (together with Dr. ThomasM. French) has been searching fora method which would combine in¬tuition with methodical scientificevaluation.She has developed it through pa¬tient therapy, from which she collect¬ed dreams and applied differenttechniques with varying degrees ofsuccess. She has taught her methodto her pupils and to other psycholo¬gists who have in turn criticized vari¬ous aspects and suggested modifica¬tions. This is the clinical way of pro¬ducing a new method, the psycho¬logical counterpart of the scientificmethod of laboratory experiments.The method she has developedcalls for the analyst to develop ahypothesis based on the dream, theassociations given to it, and the pa¬tient’s current life situation. Unlikepast methods the hypothesis is thenchecked and counter-checked by ap¬plying it and seeing if the materialin the dream fits the interpretation.If even a minor part does not fit in.the interpretation is wrong, for all of the elements are part of a singlewhole in which all the pieces of thepuzzle must fit together and makesense..Dr. Fromm says dreams are aproblem solving device of the mind.A single dream may propose oneor several solutions to a problem; ora series of dreams, even over sev¬eral days, may deal with some singleproblem from many different ap¬proaches.The ego, according to Dr. Fromm,needs to master problems in dreamsin order to reduce inner tension,maintain a balance between the idand super ego, and deal with reality.It uses dreams to achieve this, butfaces many barriers before an ac¬ceptable solution is found. Dreamsdeal with unconscious wishes thedreamer has, wishes that arouseanxiety, guilt or shame in him.The use of dreams and free as¬sociation is but one way of psycho¬therapy which has been very effec¬tive in coming to grips with neurosisand other emotional problems. Yetpsychoanalysis is very time consum¬ing and expensive. An analyst mayspend hundreds of hours with a pa¬tient over a period of two or threeyears. This tends to limit the use ofanalysis both as to the number ofpatients the analyst can see and tothose who can afford it. Hypnosishas been suggested as one way ofaccelerating therapy and therebymaking it possible for more peopleto benefit from it. In hypnosis, thereis closer contact with the precon-scious and unconscious. Dr. Frommhas been utilizing it during the pastthree years in an effort to systema¬tize its use jointly with free associa¬tion. She also used hypnosis as atool in experimental research.Freud used hypnotism only at thevery beginning of his career withunsatisfactory results because heused a method in which the hypno¬tist controlled the patient. Under themethod employed by Dr. Fromm,which Ls permissive hypnosis, theanalyst does not dominate the patientbut only helps him to relax and tothe clockBREAKFAST, LUNCH,DINNER, LATE SNACKSfeaturing‘BREAKFAST SPECIAL’1342daily 3 am-11 am2 EGGS ANY STYLEHASH-BROWN POTATOESTOASTPLENTY OF COFFEEDAILY ‘DINNER SPECIALS’monday through fridayyour choice—• ROAST BEEF—carved to order; medium,medium rare, well done—as you like it . . .• VEAL CUTLET• LIVER 6c ONIONS• PERCH—golden brown• CHOPPED SIRLOINabove orders include SOUP,POTATOES, VEGETABLE,DESSERT, 6C BEVERAGE‘LUNCHEON SPECIAL* 49t.09951342 SOUP &SANDWICHmonday through fridayTj open 60 make contact with his unconscious.Thus, like free association, hypnosiscan be used to facilitate the recallof repressed feelings and memoriesbut at a much more effective rate.Dr. Fromm describes the feelingof being under hypnosis as similarto that one experiences just beforefalling asleep or just before wakingup fully. It is found by the vast majority to be very enjoyable andleaves one relaxed and invigorated.These projects are but a few ofthe hundreds being conducted by thefaculty with the aid of 136 graduatestudents. Many are deemed of suchimportance as to receive outside aidand grants from private corpora¬tions. trusts, foundations, governmentagencies, and the military. The projects he in many diversified fields,even within the general area of psy¬chology'. Dr. Strodtbeck is interestedin pre-school children, Dr. Halsteadin those people near retirement. Dr.Beck in schizophrenic individuals.Dr. Sawyer in normal university stu¬dents, and Dr. Fromm in increasingthe effectiveness of psychoanalysisin general.Those associated with psychologyhere have worked under a severehandicap in the past of being spreadout all over the campus and with nocentral place for contact and ex¬change of ideas. The psychology de¬partment headquarters themselves liein a remodeled three story apartment building, and a number of fac¬ulty work in a temporary buildingconstructed 20 years ago.With the completion of the remodeling in the summer of this year ofBeecher, Green, and Kelly halls onUniversity Avenue just north of 59thStreet, the department will for thefirst time in 60 years have a centrallocation with modem equipment and.most importantly, room for expan¬sion of the department and of thevastness of the research it conducts.The National Science Foundationhas awarded a grant of $490,800towards the total cost of the project.The university has pledged to matchthe sum.1v*understandingTHE NEGRO REVOLTAMERICAN HISTORY: A NEGRO VIEW -January 12THE REVOLT: ITS BEGINNINGS -THE FUTURE: WHAT IS IT? January 19January 26Sunday morning series - 11HH) a.m.FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH57th Street and Woodlawn AvenueJack A. Kent, ministerHHIWT—MI liafflMI « ►!• v >:• •> •> •> •> •> •:< •;< •> •> *:• v -!• v *;> •> •> •>DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th Street - DO 3-7644, DO 3-6866 *EYE EXAMINATIONS fPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSES $NEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES *STUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNT ?LENS & FRAME REPAIR;. s. ...... ... ... ...... ......... .j,... ... ... ... ............... ...... ,j....... ... ......... ... ...... ... ... ...... ...... .J. ^.J.^CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 10, 1964