' ' % - ■ . • '%#' •• \y300 arrested in SelmaOver three hundred persons were orrested in Selma, Alabomo, yes¬terday for demonstrating in front of the county courthouse in sym¬pathy with the recent drive for Negro voter registration.A Chicago Area Friends of SNCC stoff worker soid that two SNCCfield secretaries, Ivanhoe Donaldson ond James Bevel, were beotento the ground by city police wielding electrified cottle prods. TwoChicago men, Bernord Lafayette, a civil rights' leader with the Ameri¬can Friends Service Committee, ond James Wilson, 17, a youth workerfor the West Side Christion Parish, were omong those orrested. Thetwo went to Selma one week ogo.The Chicago SNCC worker said the situation in Selmo hod gotten"so bad thot the police are coming into the SNCC office and arrestingeverybody, even the people who were just answering the phone." TheSelmo office hos asked for emergency help while the regular workersore in joil.A major telegrom campaign hos been requested, also. The FBIoffice in Selmo should be asked to intervene in the moss arrests, ondUS Attorney General Katzenboch should be osked to send investiga¬tors to Selma, SNCC says.* * *In response to on urgent plea for funds from the Atlonta SNCCoffice, UC Friends of SNCC is asking all students to sign up in their ldormitories this week pledging to give 25 cents or more eoch weekuntil the end of school to SNCC. The money is needed to continueprojects in Mississippi and to finonce the current voting drive in .Selmo, Aloboma.* * *UC FRIENDS OF SNCC is olso sponsoring two progroms Thursdaynight. The film. "A Drcom Deferred," will be shown ot Hendersonhouse, fifth floor Pierce, ot 7:30 pm, and at North house in NewDorm at 9 pm. Curtis Hayes, a SNCC field worker, will olso be fea¬tured at the North house program, but not ot the Henderson session.* *' V'■"*' % /*-'•' •' > \ -V ' -Ws; vSees apartheid on trialin South Africa disputeby Paul BursfeinThe decision as to whether South Africa may keep its man¬date over South-West Africa, which will decide the fate ofapartheid in South-West Africa, is of immense importance,said Gwendolyn Carter, professor of political science and di- Vol. 73 — No. 26 The University of Chicago Tuesday, February 9, 1965New group spurs Willis ousterThe fight to get rid of Chicago schools superintendent Benjamin Willis moved forwardSaturday as several hundred citizens gathered for the Leadership Conference on the schools’superintendency.They heard a panel of speakers lambast the Chicago general superintendent ^of schoolslector of African Studies at North¬western University, Sunday night,in a speech entitled "South-WestAfrica: Apartheid or Independ-anee?" given at Hillel House.“What will be at stake is notSouth-West Africa, or Africa, butthe rule of law and order in theinternational community." Mrs.Carter said. The great issue ofour day is not class struggle, shesaid, but the split between theraces. "We must change until wetalk not even of ‘multi-racialism,’but of non-racialism. In South-West Africa, the world is confront¬ing the issue in its most crucialform."Later this year, the InternationalCourt of Justice at The Hague willdecide if the LTnion of South Africa>s required to uphold the terms ofthe mandate over South-WestAfrica granted it by the League ofNation. The Court will decide ifthe Union of South Africa maykeep its control over South-WestAfrica, or whether control shouldbe given to the United Nations asthe legitimate heir of the Leagueof Nations.MRS. CARTER DELIVEREDthe first lecture in a series ofthree entitled "Challenge to Hu¬man Rights” being given at HillelHouse. The purpose of the lecturewas *o draw attention to the plightof South-West Africa and to thedrive of the World University Serv¬ice (WUS) to raise money forstudents all over the world.Last year the WUS raised morethan $2,000 at UC, most of whichwent to aid Bantu students inSouth Africa.South Africa is an area of tre¬mendous tension. The white minor¬ity has been established for threehundred years, actually as long asanyone else in the country; andthe whites feel that if apartheidis relaxed, they will all be in dan¬ger of a repetition of a situationlike that in the Congo. On theother hand, South Africa and itsmandate, South-West Africa, “re¬main the one area in the worldwhere color discrimination is en¬shrined in the law. This is theparticular point of concern to thoseof color,” said Mrs. Carter.SOUTH-WEST AFRICA, likeother African territories, wasplaced under the mandate of acolonial nation by the League ofNations. Under League mandates,the laws of the controlling nation,including apartheid, could be ex¬tended to the mandate. AfterWorld War II, all mandates butSouth-West Africa were placedunder the trusteeship system ofthe UN; under this system, even¬tual independence was guaranteedto trusteeships, and has in factcome to such nations as Togolandand Tanganyika. But South Africadeclined to acknowledge that the UN succeeded to the rights andobligations of the League, and re¬fused to yield control of South-West Africa.The case is important, said Mrs.Carter, because it constitutes atest of whether the South Africanpolicy of apartheid complies withthe League mandate, which stateslhat South Africa must "promoteto the utmost the welfare andsocial well being of the peoples ofthe mandate.” In a very realsense,” Mrs. Carter pointed out,“the system of apartheid is ontrial.”If judgment goes against SouthAfrica, and she refuses to giveSouth-West Africa to the UN,Ethiopia and Liberia may appealfor action to the Security Council.In this possible action lies a testfor America and the world. It in¬volves action, said Mrs. Carter,"against a system which we havecondemned, but which we havenot taken overt action against.”The distinctly possible decisionagainst South Africa by The Ha¬gue which might only be enforcedby decisive and, perhaps, forcibleaction on the part of the UN,would necessitate actual overt ac¬tion to back up moral judgments."Truly, in South-West Africa theworld confronts its commitmentto racial equality in its mostcrucial form,” Mrs. Carter con¬cluded.(From Collegiate Press Service)MADISON, Wis. — A Wis¬consin state legislator hascalled for an investigation ofthe political associations of themanaging editor of the DailyCardinal, campus newspaper atthe University of Wisconsin.In a letter to the UniversityBoard of Regents, Senator JerrisLeonard asked the Regents toinvestigate alleged communist as¬sociations of managing editorJohn Gruber and warned that if“the Board of Regents does notcome forth with findings withintwo weeks, by February 15, I willcall for the estalbshiment of aspecial legislative committee tostudy this matter and take ap¬propriate action.”IN THEIR REGULAR meetingFebruary 5, The Board of Regentsstrongly defended the right of theCardinal editors to publish theirnewspaper without outside inter¬ference.The University of Wisconsin’sbudget has come before the statelegislature and is now under con¬sideration.In his letter, Leonard cited Gru¬ber’s residence in the same build¬ing with Mr. *<and Mrs. EugeneDennis. Dennis is the son of a for many sins, including respon¬sibility for inadequate mentalhealth facilities for students andfor gross egocentrism.Philip M. Hauser, chairman ofthe UC department of sociologyand author of the famed reporton segregation in Ihe public scholsin Chicago, was keynote speakerat the conference, held in the Cen¬ter for Continuing EducationSaturday aftqproon.Hauser granted that Willis has“been successful in eliminatingsecond shifts from the elementaryschool system,” and “has beenparty to the development of manynew ideas in public school educa¬tion relaling to curriculum andteaching practices.”"Despite these contributions,”Hauser said, “Willis has succeededin becoming so bitter a focal pointof controversy that virtually allother public school issues havebecome obscured. This in itself isample evidence to indicate thathe has outlived his usefulness tothe City of Chicago.”"He has mal administered andresisted the Board’s instructionsto test the cluster plan,” Hausercontinued. “He has ignored andfailed to utilize the Friends of theChicago Schools committee and leftthe blue ribbon citizens groups ina state of complete frustration. Hehas stubbornly adhered to his“four-walls” school policy, refusingto cooperate with other govern¬ment agencies . . . and has costChicago millions of dollars by rea¬son of his uncooperative attitudetoward community organizationand government agencies withfunds for youth and education pro¬grams.”Willis, Hauser commented, “hasan egocentric personality the likesof which I have never seen beforein public life.” He treats everyoneelse in the school administrationlike servants, and runs it like hisown “feudal principality, takingsuggestions from no one.”Ner Littner, a noted child psychi¬atrist, charged that Willis has“actively opposed efforts to im¬prove mental health facilities” inthe city, and that “the basic reasonfor the lack of such services isthe lack of understanding and co¬former leader of the CommunistParty of the USA, and Mrs. Den¬nis is the head of the campuschapter of the W.E.B. DuBoisClub, an organization describedby F.B.I. Director J. Edgar Hoov¬er as a “commuist-oriented youthorganization.”Leonard erroneously listedHerbert Hoover as head of theF.B.I.The Dennis are leasing a nineroom house in Madison and rentseveral of the rooms to students,among them Gruber.Leonard said, “In view of Mr.Gruber’s reported associationswith these people and the factthat Eugene Dennis has writtenCardinal columns, it is not diffi¬cult to determnie why this publi¬cation has been full of left-orient¬ed journalism.”A NUMBER OF individuals andgroups rallied to defend the news¬paper before the Regents metFriday. President of the BoardArthur DeBardeleben noted thatthe Board “has repeatedly andconsistently declared itself as sup¬porting freedom of the press andas encouraging and permitting theexposiure of various ideologiesand viewpoints however unpopu¬lar some of them may be.” operation of the administration.”Littner observed that the manyschool children who are referredto him with psychological problem1*should be treated within theschools themselves. Teachers areoverworked, without the time tospend on individual students withproblems, and the bureau of ChildStudies, though it does as gooda job as possible, is grossly over¬worked and understaffed.Wayne C. Booth, dean of UC’sCollege, was another speaker inthe panel program. He related hisexperiences in tutoring school chil¬dren at a neighborhood study cen¬ter. where he found several chil¬dren who had never had the oppor¬tunity to read aloud or to taketextbooks home. Booth invitedWillis to come to the study centerand “have a hard dialog with someof the children, such as the fourth-grader who had five differentteachers in the space of sixmonths. "Chicago is at this momentwasting human lives at a fantasticrate,” Booth concluded.The great loss of potential inthe students was discussed byArthur Falls, director of the Com¬mittee to End Discrimination inMedicine. He related his experiencein a program supported by theNational Science Foundation,which would provide positions forpromising school students frompoorer areas to work in hospitalsand laboratories. Over four hun¬dred students were recommendedThe Indiana Supreme Court,in a surprising decision lastmonth, overturned a lowercourt and upheld the constitu¬tionality of Indiana’s controversialanti-subversion act.Three Indiana University stu¬dents, James Bingham, Tom Mor¬gan, and Ralph Levitt were firstindicted in 1963, for sponsoring atalk advocating revolutionary tac¬tics. The three are officers of theIU Young Socialist Alliance.The 3-1 decision of the IndianaSupreme Court sets aside an earli¬er ruling in favor of the studentsby Nat U. Hill, an Indiana Circuitjudge. The anti-subversion law,which is an outgrowth of the Mc¬Carthy Era had made it illegal toattend a meeting at which theviolent overthrow of the govern¬ment was advocated. The defend¬ants were charged with attendinga campus meeting of the YSAwhere violence was allegedly sug¬gested to secure the rights ofNegroes in the South.IN SETTING ASIDE the AntiCommunism Act, Hill had declaredthat matters of subversion wereunder the jurisdiction of the feder¬al government. The state’s attorneyappealed Hill’s decision to the In¬diana Supreme Court.The defense maintained that thelaw violates freedom of speechand freedom of assembly, is pre¬empted by federal legislation inthe field and is unconstitutional inother ways, including vagueness.The position of the majority ofthe Indiana Supreme Court wassummed up by Chief Justic Arter-burn who said, “absolute and un¬limited freedom in society is onlythe reverse side of the coin ofanarchy.”He likened the restrictions onthought to traffic regulations. He by teachers but only 75 can beaccepted.When the conference broke intofour discussion sessions, dozens ofenterprising ideas were broughtout on possible ways of securingthe ouster of Willis. Most, personsagreed that Mayor Daley must becontacted, and that School Boardmembers should continue to becontacted.Director of the Leadership Con¬ference will be A1 Raby, who wasa teacher in a West Side school,and is also convenor of the co-or¬dinating council of Community Or¬ganizations (CCCO), which spon¬sored the two school boycotts oflast year.In a press conference after thepanel discussion, Edwin C. Berry,director of the Chicago UrbanLeague, who served as moderatorfor the discussion, said that allexcept two members of the Boardhad been willing to see represent¬atives of the confernce. On ques¬tioning, he said that the two whodid not see representative wereThomas Murray, vice president ofthe board, and Frank Whiston,board president.Future plans for the LeadershipConference call for using it as a“clearing house” for informationon Willis and on such topics asthe Hauser report and the Havig-hurst report. It may also sponsoranother conference similar to thatof Saturday.said that just as people are re¬strained in their conduct on thehighway, so they should be re¬strained in their speech. Both re¬strictions, he said, work for thebetterment and protection of socie¬ty as a whole.The stated purpose of the Sedi¬tion Act is to “exterminate Com¬munism, Communists and any orall teachings of the same.” Itsinvocation at IU was the firstinstance of action by a civil pros¬ecutor involving the freedom ofspeech of students.The indictment of Morgan,Levitt, and Bingham resulted inthe formation of the Committee toAid the Bloomington Students(CABS) whose purpose was tosecure the support, publicity, anddefense necessary to win the case.The committee includes over 600sponsors across the country, in¬cluding 33 UC faculty membersand administrators.The committee is asking forfunds and support to carry on thefight on behalf of the three defend¬ants who are once again in dan¬ger. For more information UCstudents can write: Committee toAid the Bloom^’gton students P.O.Box 213, Cooper Station, NewYork 3, New York.Joel McNally, chief editorialwriter of the Indiana Daily Stu¬dent, said he thought most studentsand faculty feel it is the federalgovernment’s duty rather thanthe state’s to control subversiveactivity, and that the AttorneyGeneral’s list of subversive organ¬izations was the one recognized andused on campus with respect tostudent organizations. “As for stateregulation,” McNally said, “well,you mentioned McCarthyism.That’s a blot on the record ofhistory that must not be repeated.”Reject probe of UW editor Indiana supreme court rulesagainst YSA officersMUSIC REVIEWGiulini brightens dull afternoon Calendar of EventsEven the briefest of ac¬quaintances is often painful tobreak off, and it is likely thatmany will miss Carlo MariaGiulini for quite some time. Foralthqugh his second concert didnot quite match the peak of hisall-Mozart miracle two weeks ago,it came close enough to rate asone of the season’s three or fourbest.The concert’s major failing wasthe program. Although hardlyorthodox (two unfamiliar works,two battle steeds), it was a hodge¬podge with little but the conduc¬tor to recommend it, especiallysince the new works turned out to be somewhat less than medio¬cre. The better of the two wasthe group of excerpts from Res¬pighi’s Ancient Airs and Dancesfor the Lute, Suite Three. It’s anot-too-inspired transcription ofsome extraordinarily insipidscores, but Giulini's tasteful re¬straint and elegance, coupled withan unusually shimmering andsensitive outpouring of tone fromthe string section, almost madeone forget just how shallow it allwas.Nothing could have salvaged thefirst American performances ofGhedini’s Appunti per un Credo,a hopelessly Impersonal affair,« LASSI IF! S’I) ADSPERSONALBEE7' I MISS YOU! HONEY. BRAUN ELECTRONIC FLASHGUN.Cost $124, sell $50. DO 3-4300 x 410.watch out t:::is week for kittyFURPLUS!SG SPRING VACATIONTRANSPORTATIONNew York Bus March 18-28 $35Philadelphia Bus March 13-28 $35N Y. Charter March 19-28 $64*N Y JET Grp March 13-28 $30*Boston JET Grp March 19-28 $92*{•including airport busiA $15 depoeit is required to reserve spaceon any of the carriers. Contact SG Office1-5 pm. Mon.-Fri. X3272.WRITER S WORKSHOP (PL 2-8377]"TO ALL WOULD -BE TRAVELERS:SC Charter Flights are 75% booked up.If YOU intend to fly with us. callext. 3272, M-F 1-5 pm, soon!~~TYPING AND EDITINGHome typing: theses. papers, ms.,statistical. After 6. 493-9317.EXP. REAS. 943-7326.NEAR CAMPUS 324-2089.IBM. 752-4131.EXPR ~ REASONABLE — HY 3-2438FOR SALEZENITH 23" REMOTE CONTROL T V.Like new, ’64 model. Cost $340, sell $160.DO 3-4300 x 410.V. W. 57 sedan, $550 or offer. HY' 3-3500/BR 4-2288. ORTHOPEDIST. UC Hospitals & Clinics.Full or part-time. Call x 6067.Want to obtain 1 set of duelling pistols.(Buy, rent or borrow.) Contact KeyfitzPierce 1903.RIDERS to Balt.-Wash. area. Leave March15/16. return 27/28. Contact Jerry Klein,SA 1-9014.PART TIME JOBS AVAILABLEREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT—2:30-4:30FOR RENTLarge comfortable rm, kitchen privi¬leges, 53 & Harper. Pay, $4 and 4 hrs.typing/week. Call x 3138.Rm.$12. & bath for fern, in Madison Park.KE 8-1324.Unv. of Chicago 15 min. away! lg. bdrm.apt. 2nd fir. sep. dining rm. $110. newlydecorated - refinished floors - 2 blks. -shops - beach - IC trans. Draper & Kra¬mer. 324-8600.VISAVolunteer BrunchSot. A M. 10:30 - 12:30CONVIVIALITY AND FOOD1453 E. 56 St. VISA bus will leovefrom brunch and New Dormsparking lot. KROGER'S STORE5030 S. HARPERISSTILL OPENAND WILL REMAIN SOTO SERVE YOU! sounding as if it could have beenwritten at any time, anywhere,by anyone in a slump. At best,it was sadistically reminiscent oflesser Shostakovich.THE STANDARD ITEMS weremuch better. Giulini conjured upwhat was, sonieally, about themost beautiful performance ofthe Schubert Eighth one is likelyto encounter. In his feverish con¬centration on detail and subtletiesof orchestral color, however, hesometimes lost track of the mu¬sic’s momentum. The result, Isuppose, could have been eitherhypnotic or sogey, depending onyour mood and taste: I somehowfound it both at once.The coup, of course, came last,in the form of a shattering read¬ing of Ravel’s Rhapsodic Espag-nole. Here, Giulini’s obsession withtonal nuances was far more appro¬priate than in the Schubert. Aconductor who really knows whatpiano means, he kept the openingnot only subdued, but almostmystic; and he continued to holdhis forces back until the lastmovement. Luckily, he didn’thestitate to throw in some honestspectacularism in the orgasticfinale; the colors literally spurtedin all directions. Standing out incontrast to the quiet which char¬acterized the rest of the after¬noon, it left the audience com¬pletely dazed. In something lessthan twenty minutes. Giulini hadmanaged to demolish Martinon’ssole excuse for existing.Peter Rabinowitz Tuesday, Feb. 9LECTURE SERIES: “The Alliance ForProgress and Other Failures,-’ EdmundoFlores, visiting professor of the socialsciences in the College, second of aseries, Soc Sci 122, 4 pm. ,COLLOQUIUM: “Electron-Impact De¬sorption.” Robert Gomer. professor ofchemistry, Research Institutes 480, 4:15pm.SEMINAR: “The Role of Cell Organ¬elles in Cartilage Differentiation.” J P.Revel, assistant professor of anatomy,Harvard University, Anatomy 101, 4:30pm.FOLK DANCING: International House,7:30 pm.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: HillelHouse, 7:30 pm.ORGAN RECITAL: Edward Mondello.University organist, Works of Bach.Hindemith. and Liszt. RockefellerChapel, 8:30 pm.DORMATORY DISCUSSION: The LeviCollege and Student Opinion on thereorganlztlon of the college and itscurriculum The Academic affairs com¬mittee of student government. TuftsHouse Lounge. 9 pm.Wednesday, Feb. 10LECTURE SERIES: “Auto Bargaining.1964,” Leonard Woodcock. United AutoWorkers, spon. by business school, Busi¬ness East 103, 1 pm.LECTURE: “The Nature of Hypnosis:An Empirical Approach, “Martin T Orne,director. Unit for Experimental Psy¬chology, University of Pennsylvania,Eckhart 133, 3 pm.SWIMMING MEET: UC vs. GeorgeWilliams College. Bartlett Gvm. 3:30 pm.LECTURE: “RNA Synthesis DuringAmphibian Development." Donald D.Brown. department cf embryology,Carnegie Institute of Washington, Zoolo¬gy 14, 4 pm.LECTURE: “The Relationship of Bi¬ology and History According to Teil¬hard.” Georges Crespy, professor ofphilosophical theology in the protestantfaculty. Montpellier, France, MandelHall. 4 pm.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins,University Carlllonneur, RockefellerChapel. 5 pm.LECTURE SERIES AND SEMINARS:"The Comic View,” Alfred Stern, pro¬fessor, Monteith College, Wayne StateUniversity, visiting associate professor,committee on social thought. Classics 10,5 pm. SYMPOSIUM: “Existentialism” GeriiKreyche. DePaul University; JordanScher. director of the Psychiatric Foun¬dation of Chicago, and Harry Bon tarstist and lecturer, Pick-Congress Hotel7:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: Country DancersIda Noyes Hall. 8 pm.CURRICULUM DISCUSSION AM*EVALUATION: The general educationbiology course, Roy Koppelman, chair¬man of the course. Student Committeeon Aims of the College, Shorey HouseLounge, 9 pm.Thursday, Feb. 11LECTURE: “Boundary-Value Problemsfor Elliptic-Parabolic Second-Order Equa¬tions," Olga Oleinik, professor. Univer¬sity of Mosoow. Eckhart 206. 2:30 pmLECTURE: “The Genetic Map of Bic-terlophage SP82,” D. MacDonald Greendepartment of biology. University ,,iPittsburgh, Ricketts North 1, 4 pmSEMINAR: “Dye Mixing in the Circu¬lation and Related Stochastic ProcessesC. W. Sheppard, professor of physiolo vUniversity of Tennessee, 5753 DrexelRoom 208 4 pm.LECTURE: “The Natural History ofAHB Tissue Antigens In Human Embry.)A E Szulman, associate professor ofpathology, University of Pittsburgh,Zoologv 14. 4:30 proFILM AND LECTURE: UC Friends ,fSNCC, film: The Dream Deferred, speak¬er: Curtis Hayes. SNCC field wnkorfrom McComb, Mississippi, North Houselounge, 9 pm.The Last Staqe produc¬tion of Daryl Hine's newtranslation of Alcestis, byEuripides, will be held overthrough next Sunday, Feb¬ruary 14. Tickets are avail¬able, and may be reservedby calling OA 4-4200.TAPE RECORDER RENTALS$10.50 mo.Including the Teiefunken— Try Them as a Study AidTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5S02 Ellis Ave. WATCH FOR OURFRIDAY SALE!Big bargains in shelf-wornbooks. 75c and up.One Week OnlyCome Early for Best SelectionThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. RUSS NIXON, GeneralManager of the NationalGuardian, speaks on his re¬cent HUAC hearing and thecontempt of Congress trials(beginning March 3) ofhimself and Women Strikefor Peace leaders, DagmarWilson and Donna Ellen.Wed., Feb. 10 — 8 p.m.5104 S. Kimbark A Useful Valentine GiftCasual Slippers for WomerComfortable slippers to beworn either indoors or outLeather with leather solesand tiny heels. Also gold,silver or multi.$4.00 and $5.00Enclose a suitable Valentinecard with this or anotheritem from our Gift Department.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.University TheatreandThe College Humanities StaffPresent Shakespeare'sOTHELLOwith James O'Reilly and the St. Joseph's College DramaClub — Directed by John BettenbenderONE NIGHT ONLY!Monday, February 15thMANDEL HALL — 8:30 pm — $1.50, $1 Student/Faculty Ticketson sole at Reynolds Club Desk CAP AND GOWNCRADUATESDON'T FORGET TO HAVE YOUR PICTURE TAKENFOR THE 1965 UNIVERSITY YEARBOOKPhotographer's Dates Have Been ExtendedFeb. 8 - Feb. 12 Reynold's Club North Lounge12:00-5:00 P.M.All Graduates Invited Even If No AppointmentHas Been MadeLet Yourself Go-Once A Year-At Washington PromenadeSec WALTERasGEORGEWASHINGTONandBRINGBACKTHE OLBCOLLEGE? Bomb icanted to take KittyProfuse to Wash Prom, but couldhe get the date? — that was thequestion.Bomb had developed his tech¬nique to perfection. “First,” hethought, “a chop to the Adam’sapple. Then a quick right to thesolar plexus.” “This,” he specu¬lated, “was a perfect set up for aknee to the face which, if skillfullyapplied, should make a big impres¬sion on Kitty.”“No one,” concluded Bomb,“could resist that approach.”Next . . . “Kitty’s Reply” . On Saturday, February 13, thefive finalists in the Miss UC con¬test will be presented during half-time ceremonies at the basketballgame in the fieldhouse. The eventwill be presided over by the Spiritof Wash Prom Past, George Wash¬ington Jeschke.REMEMBER: TICKETSARE $5 PER COUPLEAFTER FEB. 102 • CHICAGO MAROON Feb. 9, 1965Vol. 73— No. 27 The University of Chicago c.^gg»».31 Friday, February 12, 1965 HP clubs write LutheransTwo Hyde Park block clubs released this week the text ofa letter sent to the directors of the Lutheran School ofTheology at Chicago which is planning to demolish a blockof moderate-income housing to make way for a new seminary.The letter was signed by EugeneFeit, chairman of the 5450 Green- ations and local businessmen thatwood-University block club, and no further reductions in residen-Arthur Para head of 5400 Wood- tial density would occur.lawn-University club. It was sent It would also destroy a “stable,to each of the 28 members of the well-integrated block” lying be-Lutheran board of directors, and tween “virtually all-Negro areasWick, O'Connell explain asks that they reconsider its plansto build on residential land andlook for a nearby site “alreadydesignated for institutional use.”Plans call for demolition of the5450 Greenwood-University blockfor the campus. The residents inthe 5400 Woodlawn - University“Competition for graduate financial aid can be compared to a jungle working under jungle blo(k are t0 1)0 evk>ted in springrules,” according to Charles D. O’Connell, director of Admissions and Aid. 1966 and that block used for hous-Although five times as much money is available to the graduate divisions and schools as ing ^""^rians.Grad, undergrad aid differsby Barbara Jurcompared to the College, “the competition is “fierce,” according to O’Connell.“THERE ARE TWO very im- —portant differences between the award he should receive. These Autumn 1964graduate and undergraduate a i d recommendations are coordinated347454319862 308375293774 12.712.18.911.3competition,” Warner A. Wick, on the divisional level bv the dean Division student* Awards Awards creasedean of students and Chairman of of students of the respective divi- Biologicalthe University Fellowship Com- sions. The dean of students divides Sci. 293mittee, pointed out. the money allocation to his divi- Humanities 647First, merit, not need, is the sion an(j tends to go down each Physical Sci. 542principal factor in determining departmental list until the money Social Sci. 1143awards. Although graduate appli- runs out. However, the dean maycations include an application for give more funds to departmentsfinancial aid providing for an esti- with stronger candidates, accord- “The award totals in the Phvsmated budget, no serious attempt ing t0 Wick.. leal Sciences seem so disproporLoans get slighted“A further difference is that de- in that area support students aspartments do not think much research assistants; therefore a resuI,ed from earher urbanreTOTAL 2625 1982 1750 13.3 “WE ARE HAPPY to welcomethe Lutheran School as a worthyaddition to the University of Chi¬cago community,” Para stated.“Our objection is to the site theyand the University of Chicago havechosen. There are a number of in¬stitutional sites available near theUniversity, and we think the sem¬inary should build on one of thoseinstead of tearing down good hous¬ing.”According to the letter, the de¬molition would intensify the acuteis made to check the undergradu¬ate budgets in the application, ac¬cording to Wick.The real criteria“Academic performance and rec¬ommendations are really the only of giants, loans, and jobs as in thecriteria for determining who is to undergraduate aid competition,”receive awards; this is also true Wick pointed out. If a student isat most leading institutions,” interested in loans, he would goO'Connell stated. Thus, the com- directly to the loan counselors inpetition is fierce among leading in- the Bursar’s Office,stitutions, for the good candidates Moreover, there are many moreand awards tend to take on the ap- sources of outside assistance forpearance of bids, according to graduate students--National Sci-O’Connell. 'Hie absence of national ence Foundation grants, Woodrow tionate because many departments ot “well-maintained mod-erate-income housing which hasnewal remolition involving 6,000about loans In awarding aid; grad- great many of them appear as em- housing unlte> and violate asiur-uate awards are never a pac age (Continued on page four) ance given to community organizUC church rebuildersawait SNCC's wordagreement on need on the gradu- W,, s „ „ awards; NDEA Fellow- Although sixty people turned out for its first meeting theale level also makes the compete shipS, etc.- , as opposed to outside now >' created Southern Work Project Committee (SWPC)tion much less manageable. aid for undergraduates - s t a t e still await word from the Student Non-Violent Coordi-“II Is now an established prin scholarships, if a state has such nating Committee (SNCC) as to what it will be doing andciple that parents have a duty to a problem, Pullman scholarships wheie it will be going.support a child’s undergraduate for residents of Cook County; Na- The new group plans to go to a partially-completed buildings whicheducation, but at the graduate tional Merit Scholarships, and a southern town during the coming were begun some time ago.level, parents’ contribution is usu- number of less important scholar- in(erim ar)d either rebuild or deco- NEVERTHELESS, THE groupally discontinued. Therefore, we ships, according to O’Connell. went ahead Tuesday with basictake the view that almost all grad THE MAIN SOURCES of money *“ate a church or some o ei s i - pjans and preparations. Publicity,students have need,” Wick ex- for graduate aid are University ture da™aga 111 (on,\ec lon VV1 fund-raising, construction, andplained. endowed and unendowed funds civil rights demonstra ions. transportation committees wereTHE SECOND DIFFERENCE and outside awards and foundation The group’s leader Randy Rap- established in an effort to get asbetween graduate and undergrad- funds, according to Wick. paport said that SNCC will not muoh basic groundwork as soonuate aid competition is that, in- Figures for the number of know exactly where they will want as possible. In addition, severalstead of graduate school-wide corn- awards and the number of stu- the group to go until the end of members of the group were askedpetition, the crucial decision as to dents for (he Divisions are not ex- the week. The possibility of vvork- j0 contact faculty and communitywho should get how much is left actly comparable. Endowed and ing on buildings in Fayette Coun- jeaders for possible support,to the individual departments’ rec- unendowed grants are counted ty, Tennessee, is also being ex- Oberlin inspirationalornmendations, Wicks said. In this separately; therefore, there is amined. The International Volun- SWPC’s project was inspired byconnection, the financial need of a some duplication in the figures teer Service has a project with the a sjmiiar venture that studentscandidate may be taken into ac- for the number of awards, accord- Negro community in that county, aild faculty at Oberlin College un¬count in determining how large an ing to Wick.MAROON gives forum on capita! punishmentith an execution date of Mf _ .,ovc,,ia> Witherspoon case, .he Maroon is sponsoring an>quium on capital punishment Thursday, February 18, at , .. , fessor of philosophy.and the students could woik on dert00j( over pas^ Christmasholiday. The Oberlin group spenttwo weeks in Ripley, Mississippirepairing and reconstructing achurch which had been ravagedduring a civil rights demonstra-With an execution date of March 19 set in Illinois’ highly of Instead of War. The Muck- tion. They were quartered in Rip-conttcolloquium on capital punishment inursaay, reoruary ±o, ai ------- . fessor of philosophy8 pm in the Law School Auditorium. s0,nal 'raphcat,ons 01 cal,"a' P“n' Beside the problems ot time and“The University ot Chicago's ,Shm0nt money the group also debated theMaroon Forum on the Abolition ment. Among the speakers will Moral, ethical aspects „in °. v'°.1 a s. 011 ? do£e'of Capital Punishment” will tea- be Dick Gregory, well-known civil _ ' . . 'r Ton„ f?ve.ral fe,‘ tkat> ln/tead of ***ture talks by five speakers on rights leader and comedian. Th<* *eve,end James G. Jones, ginning a building from scratchvarious aspects of capital punish- ARTHUR WEINBERG, author former head of Leonard House, which would probably stand very- a half-way house for convicts, will llttlp chance of being finished in a“.. .. , „ , , „„ week, the group should devote it-discuss the moral and ethical as- se„ ,0 finlshlnP „ bullding whichpects of capital punishment. had already been started, eitherThe former warden of the Cook by decorating or finishing its con-County Jail, Hans Mattick. will struction.talk on the merits and the record IN REGARD TO working inof capital punishment. Mattick is Fayette County, Tennessee, it waspresently head of the Chicago argued that as much good couldYouth Development Project. be done there as in Mississippi orNorval Morris, professor of law Alabama with much less personalat the UC Law School, will dis- nsk, but the group was divided oncuss the legal and international lssl*e-aspects of capital punishment. Question of where and howMorris served as chairman of Mrs. Rappaport also announcedCeylon’s Commission of Inquiry at the meeting that a second meet-info Capital Punishment, whose ing would be held early next weekreport lead to the abolition of cap- to set final preparations into mo-ital punishment in Ceylon. tion. She emphasized that, by then,the basics would all be known andGregory will comment that, as of now, “it is not a ques-GREGORY WILL END the tion of whether we are going butforum with some personal reflec- one of where and how.”tions on capital punishment. Mrs. Rappaport added that allWFMTs Studs Terkel will mod- those who could not attend theerate the forum. WFMT plans to Tuesday meeting and who are in¬rebroadcast the forum, probably terested in participating shouldon Terkel’s show. contact her at 324-4280.The five glowing examples of UC womanhood picturedabove are the candidates for the title of Miss UC for 1965.They are, left to right, Marge Horowitx (representingMaroon Key); Pat McKeown (Psi Upsilon); Sandra Baxter(Women's Athletic Association); Nancy Barty (RussianFilm Festival); and Judy McCrocklin (Quadranglers). to the west and all-white areas tothe east” and represent a setbackin the community’s progresstoward racial integration.Additionally, the LutheranSchool plans have been made with¬out consulting representative or¬ganizations in the area, andexecution of the plans would denythe residents a voice in communityplanning, the letter states.At the same time, the block clubsannounced a joint resolution inwhich their complaints are out¬lined in greater detail. Much ofthe resolution is devoted to therole of the University of Chicagoin arranging for the Lit thereinmove in violation of communityhousing needs.FEIT RECOUNTED a January12 meeting with Prof. Julian Levi,who acted as spokesman for theUniversity of Chicago, at whichhe and Para voiced the block club’scomplaints. According to Feit, Leviacknowledged that the Universityhad made the decision to invite theLutheran School to settle in HydePark and sold the Lutherans build¬ings owned by the University andused for married-student housing.Levi was out of town when theMaroon called to check hs reactionto Feit’s report.Levi, stated that an average ofone application a week is receivedby the University from organiza¬tions and businesses wishing tomove to the area, Feit reported.Levi told them that most of theseapplications are refused but thatthe Lutherans’ request wasgranted at the urging of the Uni¬versity’s Divinity School. Leviadmitted that the decision hadbeen made unilaterally for theUniversity’s interest, without con¬sulting representative communityorganizations, Feit claimed.According to Feit and Para. Levialso reported that the LutheranSchool administrators refused toconsider locating on available in¬stitutional sites, such as the landbeing vacated by George WilliamsCollege or the “South Campus”area south of 60th Street, becausethey dislike being too far fromthe center of the University.Levi said that the University ofChicago wouldn’t release land im¬mediately to the west of the cam¬pus because the University planseventually to build on it. One ofthe uses to which this land willbe put, Para stated, will be theconstruction of married-studentshousing to replace that being torndown for the Lutheran seminary.Para charged that, with greatwaste of funds — some of themfrom the Federal government —student needs will eventually besatisfied, through many marriedstudents will be forced to movefor the third or fourth time. Noprovision is beng made for non¬student community residents,many of them long-term HydePark residents who will be forcedout of the neighborhood due tothe shortage of sound moderate-rental housing, the block clubresolution claimed.FEIT STATED that Levi hadadmitted that Hyde Park wouldbe faced with the problem of hous¬ing being lost to institutional usefor many years, even if the Lu¬theran School changes its plans.Levi pointed out that no long-range plan has been developed forresolving the conflicts between in¬stitutional and residential landneeds of residents had not receivedsufficient consideration.The block clubs have receivedsympathy or support from a num¬ber of community groups, Parareported, including organizationsrepresenting businessmen, clergy¬men, students, and other in theHyde Park area. “We believe thatnearly everyone in Hyde Park issolidly behind us,” Para said.MUSIC REVIEWGiulini brightens dull afternoon Calendar of EventsEven the briefest of ac¬quaintances is often painful tobreak off, and it is likely thatmany will miss Carlo MariaGiulini for quite some time. Foralthqugh his second concert didnot quite match the peak of hisall-Mozart miracle two weeks ago,it came close enough to rate asone of the season’s three or fourbest.The concert’s major failing wasthe program. Although hardlyorthodox (two unfamiliar works,two battle steeds), it was a hodge¬podge with little but the conduc¬tor to recommend it, especiallysince the new works turned out to be somewhat less than medio¬cre. The better of the two wasthe group of excerpts from Res¬pighi’s Ancient Airs and Dancesfor the Lute, Suite Three. It’s anot-too-inspired transcription ofsome extraordinarily insipidscores, but Giulini’s tasteful re¬straint and elegance, coupled withan unusually shimmering andsensitive outpouring of tone fromthe string section, almost madeone forget just how shallow it allwas.Nothing could have salvaged thefirst American performances ofGhedini’s Appunti per un Credo,a hopelessly impersonal affair,CLASSI FBi’ll ADSPERSONALBEE? I MISS YOU! HONEY. BRAUN ELECTRONIC FLASHGUN.Cost $124, sell $50. DO 3-4300 x 410.u: a VTirnwatch out t;::is week for kittyFURPLUS!SG SPRING VACATIONTRANSPORTATIONNew York Bus March 18-28 *35Philadelphia Bus March 13-28 *35N. Y. Charter March 19-28 $64*N Y JET Grp March 13-28 $30*Boston JET Grp March 19-28 $92*(•including airport bus)A $15 deposit is required to reserve spaceon any ol the carriers. Contact SG Office1-5 pm. Mon.-Pri. X3272.WRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL 2-8377)~TO ALL WOULD-BE TRAVELERS:SC Charter Flights are 75% booked up.If YOU intend to fly with us, callext. 3272. M-F 1-5 pm. soon!TYPING AND EDITINGHome typing: theses. papers, ms.,statistical. After 6. 493-9317,EXP. REAS. J443-7326.NEAR CAMPUS 324-2089.IBM. 752-4131.EXPR . REASONABLE — HY 3-2438FOR SALEZENITH 23" REMOTE CONTROL T V.Like new, '64 model. Cost $340, sell $160.DO 3-4300 x 410.V. W. 57 sedan, $550 or offer. HY 3-3500'BR 4-2288. ORTHOPEDIST. UC Hospitals & Clinics.Full or part-time. Call x 6067. *Want to obtain 1 set of duelling pistols.(Buy, rent or borrow.) Contact KeyfitzPierce 1903.RIDERS to Balt.-Wash. area. Leave March15/16. return 27/28. Contact Jerry Klein,SA 1-9014.PART TIME JOBS AVAILABLEREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT—2j30-4 30FOR RENTLarge comfortable rm„ kitchen privi¬leges, 53 Sc Harper. Pay, $4 and 4 hrs.typing/week. Call x 3188.Rm. Sc bath for lem. in Madison Park.$12. KE 8-1324,Unv. of Chicago 15 min. away! lg. bdrm.apt. 2nd fir. sep. dining rm. $110. newlydecorated - refinished floors - 2 blks. -shops - beach - IC trans. Draper Sc Kra¬mer, 324-8600.VISAVolunteer BrunchSat. A M. 10:30 - 12:30CONVIVIALITY AND FOOD1453 E. 56 St. VISA bus will leavefrom brunch and New Dormsparking lot. KROGER'S STORE5030 S. HARPERISSTILL OPENAND WILL REMAIN SOTO SERVE YOU! sounding as if it could have beenwritten at any time, anywhere,by anyone in a slump. At best,it was sadistically reminiscent oflesser Shostakovich.THE STANDARD ITEMS weremuch better. Giulini conjured upwhat was, sonically, about themost beautiful performance ofthe Schubert Eighth one is likelyto encounter. In his feverish con¬centration on detail and subtletiesof orchestral color, however, hesometimes lost track of the mu¬sic’s momentum. The result, Isuppose, could have been eitherhypnotic or soggy, depending onyour mood and taste: I somehowfound it both at once.The coup, of course, came last,in the form of a shattering read¬ing of Ravel’s Rhapsodic Espag-nolc. Here, Giulini’s obsession withtonal nuances was far more appro¬priate than in the Schubert. Aconductor who really knows whatpiano means, he kept the openingnot only subdued, but almostmystic; and he continued to holdhis forces back until the lastmovement. Luckily, he didn’thestitate to throw in some honestspectacularism in the orgasticfinale: the colors literally spurtedin all directions. Standing out incontrast to the quiet which char¬acterized the rest of the after¬noon, it left the audience com¬pletely dazed. In something lessthan twenty minutes, Giulini hadmanaged to demolish Martinon’ssole excuse for existing.Peter Rabinowitz Tuesday, Feb. 9LECTURE SERIES: “The Alliance ForProgress and Other Failures,” EdmundoFlores, visiting professor of the socialsciences in the College, second of aseries, Soc Sci 122, 4 pnu ,COLLOQUIUM: “Electron-Impact De¬sorption.” Robert Gomer. professor ofchemistry, Research Institutes 480, 4:15pm.SEMINAR: “The Role of Cell Organ¬elles tn Cartilage Differentiation.” J P.Revel, assistant professor of anatomy.Harvard University, Anatomy 101, 4:30pm.FOLK DANCING: International House,7:30 pm.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: HillelHouse, 7:30 pm.ORGAN RECITAL: Edward Mondello,University organist. Works of Bach.Hindemith. and Liszt, RockefellerChapel. 8:30 pm.DORMATORY DISCUSSION: The LeviCollege and Student Opinion on thereorganiztion of the college and itscurriculum The Academic affairs com¬mittee of student government, TuftsHouse Lounge, 9 pm.Wednesday, Feb. 10LECTURE SERIES: "Auto Bargaining.1964,” Leonard Woodcock. United AutoWorkers, spon. by business school, Busi¬ness East 1C3, 1 pm.LECTURE: “The Nature of Hypnosis:An Empirical Approach, “Martin T Orne,director. Unit for Experimental Psy¬chology, University of Pennsylvania,Eckhart 133, 3 pm.SWIMMING MEET: UC vs. GeorgeWilliams College. Bartlett Gym. 3:30 pm.LECTURE: “RNA Synthesis DuringAmphibian Development.” Donald D.Brown. department of embryology,Carnegie Institute of Washington, Zoolo¬gy 14. 4 pm.LECTURE: “The Relationship of Bi¬ology and History According to Teil¬hard,” Georges Crespy, professor ofphilosophical theology in the protestantfaculty, Montpellier. France. MandelHall. 4 pm.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins.University Carillonneur, RockefellerChapel, 5 pm.LECTURE SERIES AND SEMINARS:“The Comic View.” Alfred Stern, pro¬fessor, Monteith College. Wayne StateUniversity, visiting associate professor,committee on social thought. Classics 10,5 pm. SYMPOSIUM: “Existentialism ’’ GeraldKreyche. DePaul University; jorduiScher. director of the Psychiatric Foun¬dation of Chicago, and Harry Bou ,arstist and lecturer, Pick-Congress HoVc7:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: Country DanersIda Noyes Hall. 8 pm.CURRICULUM DISCUSSION A\|»EVALUATION: The general educationbiology course, Roy Koppelman. chair¬man of the course. Student Commit;,-?on Aims of the College, Shorey HouseLounge, 9 pm.Thursday, Feb. 11LECTURE: "Boundary-Value Problemsfor Elliptic-Parabolic Second-Order Equa¬tions.” Olga Oleinik, professor. Univer¬sity of Mosoow. Eckhart 206, 2:30 pmLECTURE: “The Genetic Map of Bac¬teriophage SP82,” D. MacDonald Greendepartment of biology. University ,,rPittsburgh, Ricketts North 1, 4 pm.SEMINAR: “Dye Mixing in the Circu¬lation and Related Stochastic Process*-C. W. Sheppard, professor of physiolo vUniversity of Tennessee, 5753 DrexelRoom 208. 4 pm.LECTURE: “The Natural History ofAHB Tissue Antigens In Human Embry,A. E. Szulman, associate professor ofpathology. University of PittsburgnZoologv 14 4:30 pmFILM AND LECTURE: UC Friends ofSNCC, film: The Dream Deferred, speak¬er: Curtis Hayes, SNCC field worke-from McComb, Mississippi, North Hon elounge, 9 pm.The Last Staqe produc¬tion of Daryl Hine's newtranslation of Alcestis, byEuripides, will be held overthrough next Sunday, Feb¬ruary 14. Tickets are avail¬able, and may be reservedby calling OA 4-4200.TAPE RECORDER RENTALS$10.50 mo.Including the Telefunken—Try Them os o Study AidTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave. WATCH FOR OURFRIDAY SALE!Big bargains in shelf-wornbooks. 75c and up.One Week OnlyCome Early for Best SelectionThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. RUSS NIXON, GeneralManager of the NationalGuardian, speaks on his re¬cent HUAC hearing and thecontempt of Congress trials(beginning March 3) ofhimself and Women Strikefor Peace leaders, DagmarWilson and Donna Ellen.Wed., Feb. 10 — 8 p.m.5104 S. Kimbark A Useful Valentine GiffCasual Slippers for WomerComfortable slippers to beworn either indoors or outLeather with leather solesand tiny heels. Also gold,silver or multi.$4.00 and $5.00Enclose a suitable Valentinecard with this or anotheritem from our Gift Department.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.I'niversity TheatreandThe College IIuinanities StaffPresent Shakespeare'sOTHELLOwith James O'Reilly and the St. Joseph's College DramaClub — Directed by John BettenbenderONE NIGHT ONLY!Monday, February 15thMANDEL HALL — 8:30 pm —$1.50, $1 Studenf/Faculty Ticketson sate at Reynolds Club Desk CAP AND GOWNGRADUATESDON'T FORGET TO HAVE YOUR PICTURE TAKENFOR THE 1965 UNIVERSITY YEARBOOKPhotographer's Dates Have Been ExtendedFeb. 8 - Feb. 12 Reynold's Club North Lounge12:00-5:00 P.M.All Graduates Invited Even If No AppointmentHas Been MadeLet Yourself Go-Once A Year-At Washington PromenadeSee WALTERasGEORGEWASHINGTONandBRINGBACKTHE OLBCOLLEGE? Bomb wanted to take KittyProfuse to Wash Prom, but couldhe get the date? — that was thequestion.Bomb had developed his tech¬nique to perfection. “First,” hethought, “a chop to the Adam’sapple. Then a quick right to thesolar plexus.” “This,” he specu¬lated, “was a perfect set up for aknee to the face which, if skillfullyapplied, shendd make a big impres¬sion on Kitty.”“No one,” concluded Bomb,“coidd resist that approach.”Next . . . “Kitty’s Reply” . On Saturday, February 13, thefive finalists in the Miss UC con¬test will be presented during half¬time ceremonies at the basketballgame in the fieldhouse. The eventwill be presided over by the Spiritof Wash Prom Past, George Wash¬ington Jeschke.REMEMBER: TICKETSARE $5 PER COUPLEAFTER FEB. 102 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 9, 1965