■/V*-Vv»“ /' ** ■> Levey named nextyears editor-in-chiefRobert F. Levey, a second year student in the College,was elected editor-in-chief of the Maroon for the comingyear at a staff meeting last Friday.Levey, who succeeds third year student John T. Wil-will serve for one year begin- ——Leveyliamsning this summer. He has been onthe Maroon staff for two years, andhas held the positions of AssistantRewrite Edi-tor, NationalNews Editor, andActing Co-Editorin that order.Levey will an¬nounce his staffappointments!within the next (ttwo weeks. Hej;has, however, al¬ready appointedDavid L. Aiken as Managing Editor.As editor-in-chief, Levey said, hewill attempt to combat the majorproblem that confronts theMAROON: commitment on the partof the staff. He plans a mailing tointerested first year students and toreturning students who have ex¬pressed interest in working on theMAROON in the past. This will befollowed by a personal solicitationcampaign.Levey feels that the best way toachieve better quality for theMaroon is to strive for authoritative,complete coverage. “I hope that, bytraining editors in such fundamentalsas proofreading, rewriting, and edit¬ing, I and other members of theeditorial board will be ‘freed’ so thatwe can provide deeper coverage onevery story,” he said.More features next yearNext years’ Maroon will also havemore features in it, Levey said. Hewas encouraged by the recent"Workings of the Universitly” series,and hopes to continue the currentmovie and graduate student fea¬tures, as well as others. New fea¬tures, Levey said, would treat whathe called "recently untapped sour¬ces,” including Hyde Park, indivi¬dual research being conducted in thedivisions, and forthcoming changesin the College. Levey emphasized that the MA¬ROON’S primary area of coveragewould be campus events and issuesthat relate directly to campus. It isin these areas that he hopes mostof all to provide deeper and morecomplete coverage.Editorials, Levey said, while theywill not necessarily represent pre¬vailing campus opinion, will at alltimes be written reasonably and willreflect the opinion of the majorityof the editorial board. "We will notcondemn merely for the sake ofcondemning,” he said, "nor will wesupport without knowing the faotsconcerning a particular issue orwithout considering the consequencesof that issue.”Improve faculty contactLevey also hopes to improve Ma¬roon contact with members of thefaculty. He plans to arrange frequentappointments with administra¬tors and department heads, and willalso establish both student and facul¬ty contacts in the graduate schoolswho will act as news sources.Levey is pleased with the financialsituation of the MAROON, but feelsthat “there is still room for improve¬ment.” "We are not in a good enoughfinancial position to consider the re¬sumption of daily publication,” hesaid, "but neither are we in anydanger of returning to weekly pub¬lication.” Issues, he said, will appearTuesdays and Fridays as they havethis year.Above all. Levey said, he hopes tomake the Maroon reliable and in¬formative as well as interesting andreadable. He stressed that ‘‘the Ma¬roon staff is not a highly selective‘in group,’ as so many people think.”He urged all those interested injoining or rejoining the staff as re¬porters. photographers, business as¬sociates, proofreaders, or membersof prirt shop crews to do so. Posi¬tions, he said, are open on all staffs. Vol. 72 — No. 54 University of Chicago, Tuesday, May 19, 1964James Farmer tells of fight in Northivil rights fight at crossroadsNo increase of securityafter stabbing of studentNo increase in campus security has been plannedfollowing the stabbing of a student late Friday night, ac¬cording to Anthony J. Eidson, supervisor of campus se¬curity."Even with three times as manymen, things could still happen. Our other recent attacks in Hyde Park,men are being as vigilant as they Campus security was increasedcan,” Eidson told the Maroon. during autumn quarter when a guardwas added at the women’s dorm atThe student who was stabbed was 5513 Ellis following an attemptedwalking back to Pierce Tower at burglary by a narcotics addict there,about II pm Friday when his as- An extra campus policeman was alsosailant approached him at the corner assigned to street patrol with a dogof 56 street and Woodlawn and de- from iate afternoon until 1 am follow-manded money. Die student did not im attack on a female medicalresist, but the assailant stabbed him student at tigs comer of 57 street andanyway, and fled. He is recovering Kimbark during winter quarter,well in Killings Hospital. Some seventeen eompus policemenThe assailant, a 25-year old proba- were assigned to patrol the campustion violator, was apprehended by a area on foot four years ago to sup-campus policeman shortly after the plement the already existing automo-attack. According to Eidson, he is bile patrols. 56th street is among thesuspected of being responsible for regularly patrolled streets.Roosevelt Univ. reinstatesoutlawed 'Wobblies' “The problems they’re try¬ing to solve remain unsolved,the status is still quo. They’remad,” said James Farmer ex¬ecutive director of the Congress onRacial Equality (CORE), Fridaynight. Farmer spoke of the pressurestraining non-violence in the Northat Breasted Hall.The Civil Rights Revolution is ata crossroads, lie said. We must alterand remodel its tactics and strategy,because of the anger and frustrationbuilt up in the South arr! North.The authorities hi the Southernstates, in trying to prevent demon¬strations, he charged, have changedtheir tactics from economic pressures,such as arrests and lengthy court ac¬tion to "massive and organized policebrutality. The police in the South arenow the mobs, now the ones who arethreatening to lynch people,” Farmersaid.The pressure against non-violenceis even greater in the North thanin the South, however, because therehas been less progress in the Norththis year. Farmer termed “utter non¬sense.” Rumors that there willbe organized violence against police¬men this summer, and that rifleswill be carried on demonstrations.It would not work, he said, sinceFederal intervention against violencewould freeze the situation. Howeverthe long hot summer may be a sum¬mer of massive violence, he warned,especially where minority groups arehighly concentrated.Farmer spoke of the serious eco¬nomic situation "The Negro, beingthe lowest on the scale, is the mostaccurate barometer of the health ofthe economy." The Civil Rights revo¬lution must harness the technologi¬cal revolution, so that there may bejobs as well as the idea of equalityof opportunity. It must ally itselfwith all oppressed, depressed people,for full and fair employment; thenext marches will be of the unem¬ployed.”Die old alliance between the Civil Rights movement and liberals isn’tat the end, but it is strained,” Farmersaid. "The more natural alliance iswith people who have the sameenemies.” Alliance with the poor isharder, however, because these arejust the people Negroes have beencompeting with for jobs.Abouth the controversial stall-in atthe World’s Fair, Farmer said hesympathized with the principle, butit’s a "revolutionary tactic whichrequires a revolutionary situation”and that tactically, at this time, itwas bad. He said he knew it wouldn’twork, because “the cars in Harlembelong to the Negro Middle class —you can hurt his body, but don’tscratch his car.”Farmer described the horror of thepolice brutality in Placquemine, La.last August after some demonstrat¬ing youths had been chased and rundown by police on horses yelling“Run, nigger, run,” the ministers ofPlacquemine all met, and planned to pieach, all together, on integrationand freedom.At the church, the “thugs in blue,”as Farmer called the state troopers,showed up with their name tagstaped over and their badge numberscovered up, and hurled tear gas intothe church, forcing the congregationinto the parish house connected in theback, where again they were pursuedby tear gas. Those who ran out werepxirsued cm horseback and trampled.Inside they were suffocating, withthat "awful, sweet smell” of teargas, Farmer said, chased back andforth from the church to the parishhouse. One girl stopped breathing andwas given mouth to mout resusita-tion. All phone calls out of the Negrodistrict were cut off. Finaly someonecrawled through the tall grass at theback of the church to a fumel homehalf a block away, and asked thedirector to shelter them there. Al¬though she had been considered a“nervous Nellie,” a female UncleTom, the director agreed. The 300people crawled through the tall grassto the funeral home. The policestarted a house to house chase forFarmer, barging in and shouting. "Allright Farmer, come on out! We knowyou’re in there!”At the funeral home, the policemanat the door was a little cowed by thedirector’s demand to know what hewanted. “I’m holding a wake here,”the director told him. In the frontroom, a man brought out his gun.It was discovered later that the po¬lice didn’t even have a warrant forFarmer's arrest.About Robert Kennedy's role inthe Civil rights struggle, Farmer saidhe had only acted when it was politi¬cally more dangerous than not acting,but added, "only those of us whodon't have the responsibility to runthe country can afford to act on prin¬ciple and morally.”Farmer said that it’s "not going tobe any picnic in Mississippi this sum¬mer.” The Mississippi police forceis most efficient, not at all like Ala¬bama’s, and that "violence does nottake place unless there’s an order.”Will present new programmingWUCB may go FM by JanuaryThe Wobblies, a studentorganization at Roosevelt Uni¬versity will be reinstated,after being suspended for al¬leged affiliation with a "subversive”organization, Industrial Workers ofthe World (IWW).Soon after the suspension, in a spe¬cial session called to deal v/ith thedispute the Student Activities Board(SAB) at Roosevelt unanimouslypassed the following resolution; "Prop¬er procedures should be establishedfor the reinstatement of a suspendedgroup when it can offer reasonable as¬surance of self discipline . . . with theassurance, that such reinstatement will not be contingent upon philoso¬phy, ideology or national affiliation.”The SAB also opposed RooseveltPresident J. Pitchell’s use of theSmith Act and IWW affiliation asreasons for the suspension of theWobblies.Dean of Students Arthur E. Hoover,withdrew a proposal which he wasto bring before the SAB May 8. Theproposal stated that student groupswhich apply for recognition or whichare already in existence and have"acknowledged connections with anorganization that appears on the USAttorney General’s ‘subversive list ”will not be permitted to exist atRoosevelt. Campus radio stationWUCB may become an FMstation by winter quarter ofnext year, but the decisionnow rests almost completelyin the hands of the FederalCommunications Commission,according to Charles Packer,WUCB program director.Packer described the present andfuture plans ot WUCB in a Marooninterview.Die station, Packer said, will re¬main in its present Mitchell Towerstudios for next year at least, inspite of the fact that the Music De¬partment will take over much ofthe building (Hutchinson Commons,and the C’-Shop) in September.Whether or not the station becomesFM. WUCB programs will remainessentially the same next year, Pack¬er said. These include a classical mu¬sic foundation, which serves as thebasis for the rest of the programs;weekly op>en end discussions withvarious people, including students;half hour programs for both the Ma¬roon and Student Government (SG);student music programs, which willpresent folk, jazz, and classical mu¬sic; a weekly spot for 5th Ward Al¬derman Leon Despres; the annualMarathon; and coverage of specialevents such as SG elections andbasketball games.The primary purpose of FM broad¬casting. Packer asserted, was toreach the entire university commu¬nity. At present, WUCB transmits via AM to only four residence halls:Pierce Tower, New‘Dorm, Burton-Judson. and International House.Broadcasting via FM, WUCB wouldhave a transmitter with a 5 milerange, enough to reach halfway tothe Loop and well into South Shore.WUCB tried once before to acquirean FM license, but ran into troubleboth from (he administration and theFCC. Five years ago, it was agreedto let the station apply for the li¬ tion about the trustees, after whichJohn P. Netherton. then Dean ofStudents, declared that he was with¬drawing permission for the applica¬tion. The staff of WUCB, Nethertonsaid at the time, was "not capableof handling the responsibility” of run¬ning an FM station.Packer stressed that, in conjunctionwith his current FM application, hehas the approval of the administra¬tion. The license will also bear thename of WUCB when and if it isgranted, not that of any administra¬tors or trustees.Packer also related that WUCBplans to go on the air at the begin¬ning of Orientation Week, much ear¬lier than it has in the past few years.Diis is possible, he said, because ofa relatively large hard core of sta¬tion personnel, who will have enoughexperience to prepare the station forbroadcasting in such a short timefollowing the summer recess.Hill' 'Hi' "HUM 'ivuin;, •"'illilHiiiiiilfttl' Mi! 'MlllHtiilil'Ililllliilllii'HIIMiHllilinillilllillllllllliiliilliiHIlIHlMllffllNffla§ n! To air Sharp tape on Teamsters (Quote of the Day"You will find the Klan an organizationthat Is seeking to engender a real,vital, and enduring fellowship amongmen."—Robert Scoqqins, KuKlug Klan Grand Draqonof South Carolinacense with the understanding that thelicense would be in the names of acertain number of trustees.The FCC rejected the oiiginal ap¬plication, asking for more informa-k- Tonight at 8 pm, WUCBwill broadcast the contro¬versial tape which WFMTrefused to air two weeksago. The program featuresLaw Professor Malcolm Sharpand Teamsters' Counsel Syd¬ney Zagri in a discussion ofalleged improprieties by theFederal Government in the Hoffa trial.The tape was to havebeen part of the ''News Per¬spectives'' series producedby UC. WFMT claims it isone-sided against the govern¬ment and is holding it untilthey can get a Federal rep¬resentative to take part inthe discussion.llHlliHliUII|U|l|li|l|j||||||l|||i|||i|||HI||l||l||||..ll..l'ii|l|HI!l!||l|IIIHHI!Mmimii!!!iWiliii!!li!!l!!!>li|M lin Jj M.iiji,,Note from Woodlawn: Who killed Eddie Martin?by Paul CowanThe Mid-Lawn FurnishedApartments is a building fortransients located just aroundthe corner from the AmericanBar Association, on Wood-lawn Ave. near GOth St.Its small suites usually con¬tain one spare bedroom and akitchenette. The average in¬come of people who live there(mostly Negroes) must be be¬tween $1,500 and $3,000 ayear. It is one of those mar¬ginal establishments that ex¬ist in any big city, where aman can live and die alone.One of the rooms on thethird floor of the Mid-LawnHotel belonged to a 43-year©Id Negro worker, Eddie Mar¬tin. Though Martin wrasknown slightly on the block,he was neither one of its“characters” nor its heroes.He had no wife, no children,and only a few good friends.Recently, he had beensteadily employed, thoughyears ago he suffered fromtuberculosis and went to aclinic to have a lung removed.But on Wednesday night hetold a friend who was visitinghim that he wouldn’t be ableto report for work the nextday because a severe attackof stomach cramps had laidhim low'.Martin must have lookedeven worse than he felt, forhis friend felt obliged tocheck up on him as early aspossible the next morning. Hewent to Martin’s room atabout 7 o’clock, and found theman terrified. His arms andlegs had ceased to function,his cramps had gotten worse,and he was feverish. There was no question in his friend’smind that he needed a doctoras quickly as possible.Who do you cgll, in a bigcity, if you are black, poor,and afraid you might die?The city agency with whichMartin’s friend had had themost contact was the policedepartment, and at about7:30 that morning he hailed asquad car. Within a few min¬utes the police arrived at theHotel, and two officersclimbed up to Martin’s room.Though they saw how illhe was they decided not toact. The police department,they said, can not take re¬sponsibility for any sick manuntil a doctor has diagnosedthe case. Then, having estab¬lished their role in such mat¬ters, they got back into theirsquad car and drove away.Martin continued to getworse. By 11 his amis andlegs were totally paralyzedand his breathing wascramped, according to hisfriend. By now both the pa¬tient and his companion weredesperate, and again theycalled the police. Soon anothersquad car arrived (there is nodifficulty in persuading po¬licemen that something iswrong in Woodlawn), butonce they learned the natureof the call they left. This timethey had not even botheredto climb the three flights toMartin’s room.By now other people on theblock had learned of Martin’ssickness, and someone sug¬gested that his friend call afire department ambulance.It arrived early in the after¬noon: once again two repre¬sentatives of the city entered the Mid-Lawn Hotel to ex¬amine an ailing citizen. Ap¬parently they chatted withone of Martin’s friends, whomentioned that, the patienthad once suffered from tuber¬culosis. That was enough forthe fire department. Theycouldn’t handle anyone whomight carry a contagiousdisease.Without checking into Mar¬tin’s case history any further,they called the welfare de¬partment to suggest that thecase be pursued by anotheragency, and left. Soon a thirdpolice car arrived, once againsummoned by Martin’s friend.The officers gave the sameexplanation as (heir predeces¬sors, and went off in the samedirection.It was now a little afterthree pm, time for both theschool children and the Uni¬versity students who live onthe block to return home fromtheir studies. Now more peo¬ple could assist the man, andmore would spread his story.“Look at what your police de¬partment has done now,”Martin’s friend told me as Iwas walking toward myapartment and then, taking along time to do so, he re¬counted the whole episode. Itwas hard to gauge how seri¬ous the case was, from theaccount told clumsily by ishabbily dressed and badl>shaken man. My first reac¬tion was to go to my roomand call up Billings Hospitalthe nearest source of helpBut it was a futile effort: m>call was sent from departmentto department, and afterabout five minutes I realizedthat no was was likely to re¬spond.Then, back on the street,three of us consulted aboutwhat to do next. Martin’sfriend, we decided, would waitin front of the hotel for theambulance that the relief de-partment had reportedlycalled, while 1 tried to get intouch with one of the city’sspecial doctors and the otherman summoned the fire de¬partment’s inhalation squad.As we were both successful inreaching our parties, and thecity doctor would cost $10 andtake some time to arrive, wedecided to rely on the inhala¬tion squad.But the decision was an academic one. As we walked department would have beenback to the Hotel we learned liable; if he had really suf-from some of the children on fered from a contagious di-the block that a man had died sease (though there was nothere—and, sure enough, we evidence to that effect)saw a private ambulance then the next person the fireparked out in front. department ambulance pickedEddie Martin had died. His up might be infected. Thebody was already cold: he had rules made sense, but not thebeen dead for more than an inhumanity of the men whohour, one of the ambulance enforced them,men said. By making a suggestion orWhy ? » Phone call slightly out of.... , . ,, „ i; „ „ the line of ordinary duly, anyWhy hadnt the police f • ht citv emnlove*«helped out? We asked a little mi ht ha*e helwd ^vewhile later The ambulance E(*^ Martin’s lif^But Eddiemen couldn t say. a Martin was a Negro and poor,never before heard of such a and was his friend. ,f ||w;thing. “Even if there are reg- didn.t know what action £ulations about moving sick |j|k then too bad for <hem.people, they could have called The licemen would not re_someone at least, o n e of cei from helpin theni,them observed. “Yes h,s medaIg for extraordinari ©f-friend replied, ‘but it com- fortMor condemnationpheates a working day to for indolance.Girl talk. Boy talk.All talk goes better refreshed.Coca-Cola — with a lively liftand never too sweet — refreshes best.things gObetter,!^withCoke have a tough case like that onyour hands.” Martin’s friend, terriblytired, was sitting slumpedAs one of the witnesses to over on the battered woodenpart ot the episode 1 was chair next to the dead man’sasked to go up to Martin’s bed. -The police question meroom with the ambulance jf i drink a quart of beer onmen. Some of the children on fi1P ct.wt ” Iip «aidthe block tried to follow us- they picked up my wife andthe idea of death didn t seem helcl her for two days withoutto bother them but as 1 tried even telling me where sheto explain why this was a bad was< j wanted to bail her out.idea, one of the ambulance 1 went from jail to jail lookingmen shouted “get away from for her.” Then he turned tohere, you kids.”Martin’s body wasfresh, lying slightly curledup under twisted sheets. me: “Well, we lost our man,still didn’t we.”About half an hour later afourth police car arrived.There were no marks, no By now the front of the hotelscars—it was hard to believe was crowded with school ehil-that lie was really dead. But dren, college students, andhe had no pulse and his body people from the block. Therewas cold. Next to the bed was nothing we could do anywere some of the medicines longer, and our anger washe had used the evening be- dulled by frustration. For thefore, and a magazine he had people who had always livedbeen reading. The radio was on the block—or on one of thestill tuned to the station that thousands of blocks like it—had .sent him a ball game the the incident was not surpris-previous night. In the kitchena day’s worth of dishes layunwashed, some of them bear¬ing traces of his last fewmeals.The ambulance men stayedfor only a few minutes. Therewas nothing they could do ing. Day after day the cityhad failed them, in one wayor another.We began to talk with thepolicemen. Now, they couldmove the body—then depart¬ment wasn’t liable for any¬thing that happened to a deaduntil a doctor or a coroner man. “You couldn’t take himarrived to pronounce Martin to the hospital when he wasdead. When they left the sick, but you can carry him tothree or four men present be- the morgue now that he’sgan to discuss what had hap- dead?” someone asked. “Ix)ok,pened. All of us blamed the 1 don’t make the rules,” onecity, though we could under- of the policemen answered,stand the regulations behind and the two of them enteredeach move. If Martin had the hotel to spend nearly aildied in a squad car the police hour questioning witnesses.The Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Chicago, Inc.CHICAGO MARCON • May 19, 1964 SUMMER CLASSES2000 WORDS A MINUTEWITH EXCELLENT COMPREHENSION AND RETENTIONYOU CAN READ 150-200 PAGES AN HOUR using the ACCELERATED READING technique.You'll learn to read smoothly DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute.And retention is excellent. Many people comprehend at over 2,000 words a minute. This is not a skimmingmethod; you definitely read every word.You can effectively apply the ACCELERATED READING technique to textbooks and factual mate¬rial, as well as to literature and fiction. The author's style and the flavor of the reading are not lost ordiminished when you read at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increasedby this unique method. No machines or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READINGtechnique. And results are guaranteed.An evening class in ACCELERATED READING will be held at the HOTEL SHERRY in Chicagobeginning on June 29. It's wonderful lo be able to read a book in one sitting, and see it as a whole.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READING technique bycollege students on THURSDAY, MAY 21 at 7:30 P.M., WEDNESDAY, MAY 27 at 7:30 P.M., andWEDNESDAY, JUNE 24 at 7:30 P.M.BRING A BOOK!Demonstrations will be held at the HOTEL SHERRY153rd St. and Lake Shore Drive)NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING INC.507 Fifth Avenue, New York 17, N. Y.& s ’NS A to discuss national issuesby Dean M. GottehrerGeneral SecretaryU S. Student Pratt AtsoelofloaPHILADELPHIA (CPS) —The paramount issues at the17th National Student Con¬gress (NSC) will be greatlyafteoteci by several areas of nationalconcern raised by President LyndonB. Johnson.'Hie NSC, sponsored by the UnitedStates National Student Association(USNSA) and held this year at tiveUniversity of Minnesota, Aug. IS-27,is likely to find itself concerned withtliree major areas of debate on na¬tional issues and with one area per¬tinent only to tlie student community.Ia the areas of national concern,the tone of the discussion will havebeen greatly influenced through theissues raised by President Johnsonduring his fulfillment of tlie remain¬der of die Kennedy term.These issues are:• POVERTY: The declared “Waron Poverty” will be the basis fordiscussion. Many liberal studentshave already said that, while theJohnson administration has done agood thing by declaring the “War,”so far tlie plans do not amount 10anything more than a “skirmish.”In terms tha4 specifically concernstudents, the considerations will in¬volve questions of improving educa¬tion as a means to improving eco¬nomic conditions and lowering theunemployment rate among studentsand youth in the 18-26 year-old agebracket. The Domestic ServiceCorps, renamed the Volunteers forAmerica tVFA) by Johnson, willprobably once again be endorsed.While these specifically concern livestudent parts of the program, nodoubt other tangeotal issues will en¬ter avo debate. How much controlof federally initiated programs shallbe vested in the hands of state andlocal officials wlio tend to reinforcetlie status quo? How much federalmoney is required to eliminate pov¬erty? What new federal programsare necessary to eliminate the pov¬erty gap between the affluent andthe poor?• THE DRAFT: While the drafthas long been an issue among paci¬fists and the peace groups, onlyrecently has it become respectablefor tlk* more moderate liberals toraise the question of eliminating diedraft.TTiis issue, spurred by the recogni¬tion given it recently by PresidentJohnson, will more than likely beraised at the Congress. The alterna¬tives which will be debated willinclude questions such as: shouldThe ell-newBeautifulnew gracenew sweepBrawniernew 1800 c.c.power plantBetter comfort... wind-upwindows the draft be totally eliminated, orshould it he modified so as to befairer to students and all other groupsof society? If the draft is eliminated,will it still be necessary to maintainthe armed forces at their presentstrength? If the armed forces are tobe maintained at this ievel ofstrength, will it be necessary to im¬prove the benefits of military servicein order to recruit more men thanare now recruited since the draftacts as a prod in the recruitment ofthe Navy and the Air Force?• CIVIL RIGHTS: While civilrights lias been an annual issue atUSNSA Congresses, k will be evenmore vital this year. Due to the cur¬rent filibuster in Congress, die issueof civil rights may also germinatediscussion about congressional re¬form.Regardless of the passage, failureor dilution of the Civil Rights Bill,the jiroblenis encountered this sum¬mer by student civil rights groupsoperating in the South and North willcause long and sometimes heateddiscussions over the directions themovement has recently taken. TherewAI probably be some attempt tothrash out a statement on the useof non-violence, the place or lack erfplace of violence in civil rightsdemonstrations, and the types ofdemonstration which the studentcommunity considers legitimate.If there is widespread violence inthe South this summer, as some civilrights leaders are privately predict¬ing, and the federal governmentdoes not act to send in troops, thiscould provoke much more heateddebate and stronger statements.There will probably be an attemptto endorse the type of protest thatwill characterize the national politicalconventions. Many leaders of themovement have already stated theirintentions to attempt to unseat dele¬gations from states that do not allowNegroes to register in proportion totheir percentage in the population.This means that for instance, a dele¬gation of Mississippi Negroes willattempt to get recognition and beseated in the place of the normallily-white delegations.In the area of student concerns,the main issue that will arise is theresolution passed by the ColumbiaUniversity Student Council that instructe its delegates to vote only onmotions that “have a direct causalrelationship to matters of concern tostudents and their educational or social milieu, by their virtue of beingstudents.’*The Columbia interpretation of the“students in their role as studentsclause" of the USNSA Constitutionhas received the endorsement of theCaroLLnas-Virginia regjon, while sev¬eral schools have specifically refusedto instruct their delegates to vote thatway.This issue also raises the questionof the Associated Student Govern¬ments of the United States of Ameri¬ca (ASGUSA). ASGUSA has alreadyclaimed that it is no rival of USNSAand that it will refuse to take anycontroversial or political stands. How¬ever, them is some question as towhether or not ASGUSA will becomea iight-wing organization.The delegates, by their interiweta-tion of the Constitution and theirvisions of USNSA’s role in the educa¬tional community, will decide thequestion of how to interpret the“students in their role as students”clause. But in the process of doingso, there will probably be manyheated debates that will be vaguelyreminiscent of the confrontation be¬tween the right and left that tookplace at the 14th National StudentCongress.This summer's Congress does notpromise the glamor of another Left-Right tight. In fact, it is possiblethat the left, if as displeased withthe 17 th NSC as it was with the 16thNSC may also withdraw, leavingNSA to those in the “radical middle.”In the process of deciding the futureof USNSA and the positions it willtake, the tone established will be aresponse to the “better deal” talkedabout by President Johnson, onethat may go a long way to producea very lively congress.JOIN to demonstrateThe Committee for Jobs or In¬come Now, (Join) an organizationinvolved in organizing the unem¬ployed, is having a demonstrationthis Saturday. Unemployed workerswill sell apples to passers-by in theLoop to remind them of the depres¬sion arvd dramatize the problem ofunemployment a6 it exists today.JOIN needs cars to drive demonstra¬tors to the Loop, and help in otherareas to make the demonstration asuccess. If you are willing to lendyour car, or your time contact SarahMurphy at 2219 New Dorms, or callthe JOIN office, 588-4667.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7444 W* DO 3-fc844EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES _STUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNTCrazy Book Sale Continuesthrough Thursday May 21.MANY BARGAINS REMAINThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Drive the MGB today at—BOB NELSONMOTORSIMPORT CENTREfull line on display 0 now & used6040 S. Cottage GroveMidway 3-4501 332There’s a Beautiful, New Old-FashionedDelicatessen In Hyde ParkThat tempts your palate with hot pastrami (natch!), Lox andbagel (what else?) Rye bread, pumpernickel, chole-Hotcorned beef (the best), Good old-fashioned soups, big gooeysundaes, choc, phosphate (could you want more?) — Andreal good coffee (it goes without saying)UNIQUE1501 E. 53rd Street(corner Harper)Phone: FA 4-0633 . . . Customer ParkingIV.v. Martinon ingenious andsuperficial in first yearA blazing brandish ofBrahmsian brass broughtJean Martinon’s first seasonas Chicago Symphony MusicDirector to a close with the samequestion that has be :n wrigglingthrough Orchestra Hall all season:what can we expect of the new re¬gime?Although even after a full year thesphynx has not been completelydecoded, certain changes are ap¬parent. Most encouraging is therepertoire expansion. Statisticiansmay note the twenty per cent in¬crease in number of composersheard, and the doubling of works(from Rameau to Henze) played bythe orchestra for the first time. Re¬sult? A minimum of stodgy standard-ism. Even if many of the new scoresare eminently forgettable, at leastthe principle of pioneer spirit hasbeen established.Equally welcome was the frequentuse of a small ensemble (Mozart'sSERENADE FOR 13 WINDS, Strauss’DANCE SUITE AFTER COUPERIN.Webern’s FIVE PIECES, etc.), onefacet of Martinon’s basic anti-show¬manship. These works not only pro¬vide contrast to their full-scoredcomrades (Martinon concerts areusually weB balanced), but also givethe rare chance to hear profes¬sional performances of works toointimate for more circus-minded con¬ductors and too large for most cham¬ber groups. An innovation to con¬tinue.The region of the musical literatureleft untapped was more disturbing.Perhaps the silence from Schoen¬berg, Boulez, and other “radicals”can be partially blamed on the or¬chestra’s management, with which, itseems, the maestro was not on thebest of terms. If so, then SeymourRaven’s recent resignation as Gen¬eral Manager ought to help resolvethis aspect of the problem.However, Martinon didn’t oonductWagner, Liszt, Mahler, or Brucknereither, which may be a subtle sug¬gestion that we will soon see agrowing German-Romantic Gap.It is more difficult to evalute Mar¬tinon’s interpretive qualities:, theredoesn’t as yet seem to be a con¬sistent “Martinon style” in the sameway that there is, for instanoe, thataii-too consistent “Ormandy style.” In fact, there was an alarmingdegree of < ontradiction. The bombastwhich turned up in such unexpectedareas as Beethoven was frustratinglyabsent from such sonic spectacles asthe Prokofieff FIFTH and BerliozROMEO, Frequently, (the BeethovenFIFTH and Brahms SECOND cometo mind) (here was a preponderanceof the ponderous coupled with a mini¬mum of grace. And yet, listening toRavel’s MOTHER GOOSE (one ofthe most ethereal pieces ever com¬posed and. perhaps, Martinon’s great¬est achievement) or the two outstand¬ing Mozart performances in May (theSERENADE and the PARIS SYM¬PHONY), such sins would seem im¬possible.One generalization that can besafely made, however, is that Mar¬tinon has a propensity for superfi¬ciality. Too often, only the most ob¬vious in the music reaches the gal¬lery, and sometimes even this facadeis shoddily presented. Not only dolarger works lose continuity and dis¬integrate, but also the orchestra'stechnique has deteriorated to such adegree that it can sound nearly asbad as the New York Philharmonic.And finally, Martinon’s “objectivity”often flaunts openly its family resem-blenoe to its half brother, boredom.Tilings have been better. Theycould be worse. While Martinondoesn't seem destined to be at thehelm of many of those “never to beforgotten” concerts (provided withuncanny regularity by Rosbaud anaReiner), he does have the capacityto supply substantial entertainment.You 11 enjoy him a lot more if youstop listening to your old Reiner re¬cordings. Pete Rabinowitx“BE OUR GUESFBOOKLETSEntertainmentBuy of the YearatUniversity of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Men, Women—Earn Extra Moneywith your good appearance by modelingfor photographers, illustrators, on TV,in films, fashion shows, conventions.Experience or schooling unnecessary.For interview, come in or call 664-3224Mondays thru Fridays.Professional Talent Placement, Inc.030 North WabashYou won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORACE CO.,1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711 PER DAYPER MILEWEEKEND SPECIAL KATEFRIDAY 4 P.M.TO MONDAY 10 A M.ATOMIC CARRENTALS, INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155Lecture“Honest To God And After”Mandel HallTHURSDAY. MAY 21-8 P.M.THE RT. REV. JOHN A. T. ROBINSONTHE BISHOP OF WOOLWICHAuthor: Honest to GodSponsored byThe Divinity School andThe Episcopal Church Councilat The University of ChicagomMOVIE REVIEWJames Bonds Disneyland of sex'In the old days you cheeredthe hero and hissed the vil¬lain, or, if you were in thatkind of mood, you might rootlor Helmut Dan tine instead of Er¬rol Glynn—but you did not cheerlor both indiscriminately, as did theaudience at the sneak preview ofFROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE.The audience, perhaps full ofJames Bond buffs, was delightedwith the faithful recreation of theirrid subliterary friends and with theirown ability to recognize Bond, RosaKlebb, and Red Grant on sight. Hap¬py comrades in Bondage, the de¬lighted spectators cheered Good guysand Badguys with equal enthusiasm.Their democratic glee was un¬hampered by the racist and politicalimplications of the Ian Flemingnovels, notably absent in the film.The Communist organization has be¬come a vague international murderring dedicated to the destruction ofEngland and Russia.Donovan Grant has become DonaldGrant but it is still dear that direc¬tor Terrence Young is slipping us aMickey. But Fleming’s Irishman hasbeen overhauled — his humor turnedto viscdous taunting, his chastity tosexuality, his brawling good natureto homicidal mania.In the lead role, charminglysinister, Sean Connery evokes all thecynical patriotism, and lecherousderring-do needed to portray JamesBond, the Secret Service Super-Fop.But the supporting cast does sucha good job that he often has his scenesstolen right from under him — evenagent 007 can’t prevent the theft when the culprit is Lotte Lenya. Shedoes a marvelous characterization ofa Russian torturer, a sort of hideousMammy Yokum. She is lucky tohave this role, since Rosa Klebb isprobably the only Fleming womanworth playing, the rest being, for themost part, animated Barbie dolls.An example at hand is TatianaRomanovna, the Russian spy who issent to tempt Bond but falls predict¬ably in love — and bed — with him.Though Fleming’s Tatiana was adark Russian princess, Daniella Bian-chi is a coy blond sex kitten.As the villain Red Grant, RobertShaw is a much more heroic figurethan the slightly slimy Sean. Theaudience senses his menace (andparadoxical innocence) long beforehe says a single word — he remainssilently sinister until the final show¬down scene, but it is well worth thewait for he steals the climax fromthe hero with ease.Nevertheless, a jolly good time ishad by all in the ultra-modem worldof James Bond, that Disneyland ofsex, cruelty and violence. The heroholes up in no sleazy hotel room asmight have sufficed for Philip Mar¬lowe. Instead the palatial bridal suitegoes on his Valhallan expense ac¬count. No tough waterfront girl say¬ing “If you want me ... all youhave to do is whistle” in the caressinggrowl that has been rememberedfor twenty years. No, our heroine isa daughter of the Romanovs, no less,who squeals “Ooh, Shames” in astyle that might be remembered fortwenty minutes.No beat-up tough-looking face that passed for handsome in Sam Spade— our hero looks like a Hathawayshirt model who has lost his eyepatch. Most of all, no sleazy entic¬ing suggestions and inventive titilla-tions as in the days of heavy cen¬sorship — instead we are given theheavy-handed reality of Conneryclambering naked into Daniella’ssumptuous bed.Nor do the villains fare muchworse. Their island hideout is a mar¬velous Grecian temple, a veritableHomicide Hilton. This is Fleming-land, where all good spies go whenthey die. The color is bright, thecostumes beautiful, the scenery lush.When Bond shoots a pilot, the fellow-does not merely drop dead; his heli¬copter explodes in a brilliant fire¬ball which plunges into a sapphiresea as the bleachers roar their ap¬proval.In such a luxurious world, the moreserious side of Fleming’s work hasbeen eliminated. Hie sense of steril¬ity that pervades the novel and theconstant references to castration areabsent.Reading the Fleming novels,one cannot help feeling that they areabout the world’s last, perfect,doomed generation and that Bondis the darling playboy of T. S. Eliot'sWasteland. In the film there is muchdeath but no thought of rebirth. Inplace of Fleming's vision of modemman hurtling through oppulence to¬ward destruction, we are given themore common happy ending, withthe hero and heroine sailing off intothe sunset in a gondola. UC Symphony Orch.to perform 3 worksThe University Symphony Orchestrawill present its Spring Concert inMandel Hall this Saturday. Thesoloist will be Robert Hammatt, whowill perform the Mozart ClarinetConcerto.The concert begins at 8:30. Thereis no admission charge.Set six chamber musicconcerts for next yearThe Department of Music has an¬nounced the six Friday evening con¬certs in the 1964-5 Chamber MusicSeries.The English Concert of Viols willpresent a recital on October 16, to befollowed on December 4 by violinistStuart Carun performing works byBach, Sessions, and others.Arthur Weisberg will lead the Con¬temporary Chamber Ensemble onJanuary 22, and the Lenox StringQuartet will perform on February 19.Works by Schoenberg, Shapey, Black¬wood and others will be performedby the Aesolian Chamber Players onApril 9, and the series will concludewith Alwin Nikolais and his DanceCompany on April 30.Tickets are available at the MusicDepartment, 5802 South Woodlawn.by Jackie Friedman The SG Student Services Com¬mittee opened its Student LoanService on Monddy, 25 May 1964;Guy Mahaffey, SSC chairman hasannounced.Eligibility for Loans; All DCSite of Loans; Up to $15,000.Term of Loans: Two weeks. (Allloans made this 9>M>rtora w'tktheir services charges, will comedue on or before 5 June 1964.)FI ace: Student Government Of¬fice, 2nd floor, Ida Noyes Hall.Office Hours: 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Indian novelist tospeak on English writingAward - winning Indian NovelistRaja Rao will lecture on “Languageand Self-Expression: Indian Writingin English,” on Wednesday at 8 pm.,in Social Science 122. The lecture issponsored by the Indian CivilizationCourse and the Committee onSouthern Asian Studies.Mr. Raja Rao is the author of twonovels in English, Kanthapura, pub¬lished in 1938 and reissued by Pan¬theon in 1963; and The Serpent andthe Rope, published in 1962. He isalso the author of a collection ofshort stories, The Cow of the Barri¬cades. The Serpent and the Ropewas awarded the Sahitya AkademiPrize (Indian Academy of Letters)in 1963 as the best book written inEnglish in that year.Mr. Raja Rao has been visitingthis year at the University of Texaswhere he gave a series of lectureson Indian philosophy. His next novelis expected to appear this year.In addition to his lecture onWednesday, Raja Rao will join withthe noted Indian artist, K. K. Hebberin an informal discussion, “Traditionversus Modernity: The Indian Situa-ation,” in Foster Commons on Thurs¬day, May 21, 1964 at 7:30 pm.Inframural SportsThe College House softholl champions,Intramural department ha* announced,are: Henderson North IW the BlueLeague and Chamberlin Id the RedLeague.The Fraternity and Divisional leaguetitles are undetermined. AM-Universdtyplay-offs begin on Tuesday, May 19with the College House title game onNorth Field at 5:15 p.m The Under¬graduate championship. College housechampions vs fraternity, will be playedon Wednesday. May 20.There was a tie between MesHbaumof Phi Kappa and Nonaka of the Di¬visional League for the High IndividualSeries trophy with a seore of 574.Nonaka with a seore of 238 won thehigh individual game award. The col¬lege house team champions wereChamberlin, and the fraternity teamchampion was Phi Kappa Psi.s | Spring Clearance Sale | EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESa See the many bargains in the Gift Department Dr. Kurt Rosenbaum^ J at reduced prices 3 Optometrist53-Kimbork PlazaI 5 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 8 1200 East 53rd StreetI 8 BOOKSTORE S HYde Park 3-83721 ^ 5802 ELLIS AVE. § Student and FacultyDiscountNEwJ>urjj>tgrJw-A rtcarved'Breathtaking, beautiful and yoursAll the surging beauty, the exciting mystery of thesea itself seems captured in this newest engage¬ment ring from Artcarved. See the distinctly new,yet timeless, design of Surf Star at your ArtcarvedJeweler. Priced from $180. For more information,plus helpful suggestions on wedding etiquette,send 25C for Wedding Guide to J. R. Wood &Sons, Inc., 216 E. 45th Street, New York 17, NewYork, Department C.' •TRADEMARKSee Surf Star only at these Authorized Artcarved JewelersChicagoCOLE & YOUNG9144 Commercial AvenueChicagoFARMER JEWELERS3153 W. 63rd StreetChicagoLOUIS FRIED6007 Irving Park Blvd. ChicagoROMAN KOSINSKI5754 W. Belmont AvenueChicagoR. L. SEIDELMANN2615 S. Pulaski ReadOak ParkHAYWARD JEWELERS111 N. Marie* StreetZioaASHLAND JEWELERS2716 Sheridan Road Enhance your Orient tripwith the unique “extras” of JALON YOUR TRIP TO THE ORIENT THIS SUMMER—whether you are returning home or making your firstOrient visit—be sure to add the extra delights ofJapan Air Lines. In both Economy and First Class,JAL offers you the authentic atmosphere of Japan,from the moment you are welcomed aboard byyour kimono-clad hostess. She attends your•very wish... makes you serenely at home amidclassic surroundings. And because all Jet fares arethe same, it costs no more to fly JAL and enjoy atravel experience unique in all the world. j’J Now Daily DC-8 Jet Courier Flights to Tokyofrom Los Angeles or San Francisco via Hawaii— where you may stop over at no extra fare.Excellent JAL connections ere available atTokyo to all the Orient, and now on to Europe.See your travel agent orUJK PANAIRSEND FOR “YOUR WORLD ON JAL” TRAVEL KITAt no obligation, this coupon will bring you colorful literature on the variety of JALtions, tours that fly Japan Air Lines, and travel costs. Check and mail coupon todayO Japan & OrientO Orient & So. Paciflo□ Round-the-world0 For the complete200-page guidebook"Seeing Japan"encloee $1 with coupon JAPAN AIR LINES, Box 2721, San Francisco, CaliforniaNAME destinft*to:MUCADDRESS.CITY□ I am a foreign etudent returning home to.I plan to leave(date) -STATE..end return.(date)I • CHICAGO MAROON • May 19, 1984THEATRE REVIEW'Blackfriars'Last week-end’s attempt by theBlackfriars to combiine Gilbert &-Sullivan and Shakespeare in a musi¬cal comedy was incongruous enoughto be entertaining for about twentyminutes. But long before the la¬bour first act was over, it becameapparent that the humor and imagi¬nation exhibited were not sufficientto sustain a parody of Macbeth.> This was the major weakness ofthis year’s show, “The Road toDunsiane.” Nevertheless, a liveliersecond act, the enthusiasm of thewhole cast, some outstanding indivi¬dual performances, and colorful cos¬tumes made the evening a pleasant( one.' J Unfortunately, before the lastscene, the play did not stray muchfrom the plot of Macbeth. The fewcute twists which were thrown in in¬cluded transforming the ugly witcheson the heath into sexy, tartan-cladwenches, and letting Macbeth shiphis victims Due an and Banquo offiparcel post instead of murderingthem. One totally unnecessary andhighly distasteful innovation was theintroduction of a Hitler-type Germancharacter in the banquet scene.James O’Reillys generally excel¬lent direction helped turn the lastscene into a highlight of the play., r, j’he final battle between Macbethand Mac Duff featured cheerleadingfrom the sidelines, a peanut and pop¬corn hawker, and plenty of slap¬stick. okay for 20 minutesThe writers, Fred Schlipf, Gary three coquettish witches, sparkledKarnpen, and Minor Meyers, evenmanaged to dig up a happy endingfrom their bag of tricks. The vic¬tims came back none the worse fortheir postal adventures, and Macbethgot to be king through a strictlyGilbert- and Sullivanesque switchof identity with Duncan. Even thewitches got their men.Though the plot sickened, Indivi¬dual lines and blackout scenes pro¬vided some bright spots.Puns were plentiful. Omelette,Prince of Denmark, appeared as ahard-hoiled poacher who had fallenfrom egghead to yokel. “Excessprophets” and syntaxes were amongthe expedients proposed to balancethe Scotch budget. And Banquo,fallen by Macbeth’s sword in thebattle scene, was dubbed a “Scot onthe rocks.”The best soliloquy parodies were“out, out, damned spot, see Spotrun, see Jane run, see Dick run,”and “is this a postage stamp I seebefore me? . . . come, let me lickthee . .Several individual cast membersturned in truly distinguished per¬formances. Sandra Roos, Anne liial,and Richard Cassel were outstand¬ing. Miss Roos, with the best sing¬ing voice in the cast, spiritedly por¬trayed a vitriolic, pushy, and sadis¬tic Lady Macbeth.Fetching Miss Thai, as one of the particularly in her “marsh-mellow”song. Cassel, hidden behind a whitebeard, showed good timing in hisrole as the miserly, aging totteringKing Duncan.Michael Klein as Macbeth wasgood in his soliloquies, but in generaltended to overplay. His characteri¬zation lacked variety and contrast.Robert Swan was fine as a vainand obnoxious Banquo. Don Swan tonbrought appropriate oafishness to theoafish part of MacDuff.The costumes were bright, color¬ful, and very appropriate to the play.Best-dressed man was Music Direc¬tor Robert Dewar, who like the othermen in the cast, wore a kilt. Thechoreography by Barbara Von Eck-bardt was lively and well-staged.The scenery, by Robert Benedetti,was good, but seemed to add littleto the show. The lighting, also byBenedetti, was well planned, butsuffered from apparent lack of re¬hearsal.Finally, although attendance wasn’tpoor, it is unfortunate that more peo¬ple did not attend Blackfriars. Per¬haps a lower ticket price might at¬tract larger audiences.David AikenLaura GodefskySue GoldbergMl HydeJane Raseeberg Calendar of eventsTuesday, May 19Lecture: "Maize Cytogenetics.” Mar¬cus Rhodes, Department of Botany,Indiana University. (Chromosones:Genetics Training Committee); Rick¬etts North 1, 1:30 pm.Folk Dancing: International House,8 pm.Lecture; “Forgeries and ModernArt,” John Rewald. Professor of Art,(Department of Art); Breasted Hall8 pm.Lecture: “Consequences of the Bo¬livian National Revolution,” Herbert S.Klein, Chairman. Latin American Civi¬lization course, (International Rela¬tions Club); Ida Noyes. 8 pm.Israeli Folk Dancing: Hillel Founda¬tion, 8 pm.Radio Broadcast: taped discussionwith Malcolm Sharp and SydneyZagri, WUCB, 8 pm.Wednesday, May 20Carillon Recital. Rockefeiic. Memo¬rial Chapel, 5 pm.Lecture: "Genetic Studies of theAmish,” Victor A. McKusick, Profes¬sor of Medicine, John Hopkins Uni¬versity; Billings P-117, 5 pm.Discussion and Student Evaluation:Biology 111-112-113-115-116-117-118-150,Ray Koppelman, chairman of BioloPv111-112, Benson E. Ginsburg. chairmanof the college biology section, otherstaff members, all students invited(SG Curriculum Committee): EastLounge. Ida Noyes Hall, 7-30 pm.Lecture: “Language and Self-Expres¬sion: Indian Writing in English,” RajaRao, Indian Novelist, (Committee onSouth Asian Studies); Soc Svi 122,8 pm.Folk Dancing: Country Dancers; IdaNoyes. 8 pm.Lecture: "From Cave to Village Lifein Palestine,” Jean Perrot, Maitre deRecherches, Centre National de laRecherche Scientifique; Head, FrenchArcheological Mission in Israel:Breasted Hall; 8:30 pm.Thursday, May 21Lecture; “Political Change in a Tra¬ditional Society: A Study of Institu¬tional Conflict in the Political Systemof Lebanon, 1711-1845,” Iliya Harik,(Committee on Social Thought); SocSci 122. 11 am.Lecture; “The Community Action Approach,” Saul Alinsky. ExecutiveSecretary, Industrial Areas Founda¬tion, (Modes of Reshaping Culture:Social Science Lecture Committee):Mandel Hall. 11-30 pm.Varsity Baseball: UC vs. Universityof Illinois: Stagg Field, 3 pm.Lecture: “The External Policy of anAfrican Monarch, Menilek II of Ethi¬opia,” Professor Harold Marcus, De¬partment of History, Howard Univer¬sity, (Committee on African Studies);Soc Sci 122, 4 pm.Lecture: “Relations Among Charac¬teristic Classes,” Edgar Brown, Pro¬fessor of Mathematics, Brandeis Uni¬versity, (Senior Mathematics Club);Eckhart 206. 4:30 pm.Lecture: “Chromosomal Evolution inthe Black Fly, Simulium,” Dr. KlausRothfels, Professor of Botany7. Univer¬sity of Toronto, (Zoology Club); Zo¬ology 14, 4; 30 pm.Business Meeting: UC CORE, agenda— election of officers, plans for Mal¬colm X panel, summer projects* Evans¬ton demonstrations; Ida Noyes, 7:30pm.Discussion: "Tradition vs. Moderni¬ty: The Indian Situation.” Raja Rao,Indian novelist. K. K. Hebber, Indianartist, (Committee on Southern AsianStudies); Foster Commons, 7:30 pm.Lecture; "Honest to God and After,”Anglican Bishop John A. T. Robinson,Bishop of Woolwich, England, (DivinitySchool); Mandel Hall, 8 pm.Radio Broadcast: “Today’s CityCouncil Meeting,” Leon Despres;WUCB, 8:30 pm.Berman Gibson, of the Commif-tee for Miners, will speak on theminers’ movement in Hazard, Ken¬tucky tomorrow night at Roose¬velt University. Gibson will discussFederal harassment of the miners,and the possibilities for studentinvolvement in Hazard this sum¬mer., The talk will be in theRoosevelt Fine Arts Building, 410S. Michigon Ave„ at 7:30 pm.The Peseta is local currency in Spain.So is this.Toledo, Spain—or Toledo, Ohio—Bank of AmericaTravelers Cheques are as good as cash the worldover. And safer than cash to carry—because theycome with a money-back guarantee which assuresprompt replacement of lost or stolen cheques any¬where in the world. Ask for them by name at yourbank-BANK OF AMERICA TRAVELERS CHEQUES. mck up your heels in the new Adler bhape^Up cottonsock. Nothing gets it down. The indomitable Shape-Upleg stays up and up and up in plain white, white with tennis a -jr\ Y Y~^ 71stripes, or solid colors. No matter how much you whoop j\ # 31 jit up. In the air, her Shapette, 69^, his Shape-Up, 85^« tm aou. company. Cincinnati m. omc**" " •»•*•** Oman«Htt mt.nnt i:iscim» • •mu nmn iirttiT inmici {tiimmi———-—National humanities Fulbright grant contest now openfoundation proposedA report recommending: theestablishment of an independ¬ent National HumanitiesFoundation, similar to theNational Science Foundation (NSF),will be issued soon by the Commis¬sion on the Humanities.The mission of Oie proposed hu¬manities foundation would be broad—including support of ‘’social sci¬ences not supported by the NSF/'scholarly research and “creativeails” projects, teacher institutes,student fellowships, and the con¬struction of needed facilities in rele¬vant areas.The Commission on the Humani¬ties is composed of twenty distin¬guished educators and humanistsand the chairman of IBM. It is spon-sored by the American Council ofLearned Societies, the Council ofGraduate Schools in the U.S., andthe United Chapters of Phi BetaKappa.Tlie forthcoming report, which issi ill in the draft stage, was outlinedat a session of the National Confer¬ence of the Association of HigherEducation recently by Charles Blitzer,tlie Commission's staff director.Hopefully, the proposal for a na¬tional humanities foundation will lieintroduced to Congress as legislationnext January, stated Blitzer. BothBlitzer and the other panelists whoparticipated in the session stressed,however, that if the foundation is tobe set up. humanists themselves willhave to actively campaign for it. Inother words, there seems to be aneed for scholar-lobbyists.The immediate goal of the Foun¬dation's supporters is the recogni¬tion of the principle that there shouldbe a federal agency supporting thehumanities for their own sake ratherthan for any contributions theirstudy might make to national de¬fense or any other particular con¬cern of the federal government.Opposition among Commissionmembers to the proposed foundationcentered in a fear of federal controlor limitations on sponsored research,particularly in “sensitive” areas orin fields not related to the nation’sdefense.Congressional opposition is antici¬pated to the Commission’s basic con¬clusion that the federal governmentshould provide support for the hu¬manities because the health of thehumanities at all levels is an issueof national concern. “The “hardcases” put forth by Blitzer werejustifying federal support for folk¬lore and church music, two fieldsstudied by humanists.The proposed National HumanitiesFoundation, like the government-runSmithsonian Institute, would beauthorized, and expected, to receive private donations, according toBlitzer. One purpose of such dona¬tions would be to enable the Foun¬dation to use its own, rather thanfederal funds to support extremelycontroversial or sensitive projectsthat might otherwise arouse the ireof Congressional critics.Blitzer emphasized that the pro¬posed Foundation would by no meansbe considered a replacement forother sources of support for the Hu¬manities in the U.S. It would be ex¬pected, he said, that private anduniversity support would continue togo to the humanities.Blitzer also pointed out that noone on the Commission believedthat federal funds for science, ashas been maintained, release moneyfor the humanities. Rather, federalfunds for science tend to draw freeuniversity funds to science and leavethe universities with less money forthe humanities.Copies of the Commissions Reportwill be available free from theAmerican Council of Learned Socie¬ties, 345 East 46 Street, New YorkCity, New York.STUDENTS ATTENTION!ATTENTION STUDENTS!Become an exclusive member ofthe Truer Theatres Student Chili!Good at the Howard Theatre, 1621W. Howard St. Plus other theatresto be announced for only $5 a yearReceive the Following Benefits:1. Membership I.D. Card2. Photograph For Card3. Half Price Admission ForMember and Guest4. Monthly Bulletins5. FREE MOVIES During MembershipCOME IN NOW AND REGISTER:MONDAY THRU FRIDAY —1:00 TO 5:30 P.M.Photographer will be on premisesto take your picture torMembership Card!HOWARD Theatre1621 W. HOWARD ST.PHONE RO 4-0808There was still news in [the ac¬tivities of Republican hopefuls]—andthe hipest of all was that Arizona'sBarry Coldwater was running like thelower Gila River during a drought. '(Time, Feb. 14.) “Suddenly, like abrush fire racing out of control, theword crackled among informed Re¬publicans: Coldwater’s almost got it( l ime, May 8.)Racing dothat dry tivbed, no doubt.o.,w n ■vet Ii'll Competition for the 1965-66 Fulbright grants for aca¬demic study or researchabroad and for professionaltraining in creative and performingarts is now open. Applications areavailable at the office of Miss CassieAnderson. Fulbright Adviser, SecondFloor, Administration building. Thecampus competition closes October26.Students wlto wish to apply for anaward must be US citizens, have aBachelor's degree or its equivalentby the beginning date of tlie grant,and be proficient in the language ofthe liost country.Selections will be made on tliebasis of academic and/or profession¬al record, the feasibility of the appli¬cant’s proposed study plan and per¬sonal qualifications. Preference isgiven to candidates who have notpreviously lived or studied abroadand who are under the age of 35.The full award provides tuition,maintenance, and round-trip trans¬portation. Thirty-seven countries par¬ticipate in the full-grant program.There are also a number or jointgrants and foreign government grants available under private programs.Students should check with Miss An¬derson for further details.In 1965-66 additional grants forLatin American study will be avail¬able. It is expected that as many as50 grants will be offered to graduat¬ing seniors and recent graduates forstudy in such countries as Bolivia,Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Gua¬temala and* Venezuela. Recom¬ mended fields of study are socialsciences, political science, history,law. and humanities.There will be opportunities forteaching assistant ships in India andItaly for students interested in teach¬ing English as a foreign language;also teaching fellowships in Italyfor the teaching of Ameriosm lan¬guage and literature, history, philo¬sophy, or law.Shorey holds contest in art and literatureShorey House will award twoprizes of $50 each for an originalwork of art and an original pieceot creative writing, to promote in¬terest among undergraduates in ar¬tistic and literary expression of theiruniversity experience. All registeredundergraduate students will beeligible.In the art contest, all ink, pencil,chalk and charcoal drawings, andwater color jointings will be eligible.All poems, short stories, essays, andall types of fictional writing will beeligible for literary awards.Literary manuscripts must be un¬ signed, typed in duplicate, anddouble spaced.Prizes will be awarded at ShoreyHouse on June 1 at 9 pm.All manuscripts and the winningart work will become the propertyof Shorey House.In case there is no worthy pieceof work. Shorey House reserves theright to withhold the prize untilnext year.All judging will be final.All entries must be delivered. Inperson, to Matthew Nitecki, Resi¬dent Head of Shorey House, on orbefore May 25, Monday, at Room1924, Pierce Tower, 5514 S. Univer¬sity.for a free copy o*current i»jue of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writ#to Dept. CP-8, 150 R.35 St., N. Y. 16, N. Y. THE TROUBLE WITH SPORTS SHIRTS ISWHEN YOU WEAR AN ORDINARY TIE WITH ONEYOU LOOK LIKE A GANGSTER:# t - «.HOWEVER there are times that are a little too dressy for an unadorned throat (as when you’rewearing a blazer), and for these the Ascot is finding increasing favor. Women apparently findthem madly attractive, and men like their go-to-hell feel once they get around to wearing them. Thetrick seem* to be in tying them; actually, there is nothing to it. All you do is slip the Ascot aroundyour neck, inside the collar, and loop one end over the other below your adam’s apple; and loop ittwice so it won’t slip down your chest after awhile. ★ It just so happens that, foreseeing this demand,we have gone into the Ascot game. You will find a nice selection at your Eagle Ascot store, whichis the same store where you buy Eagle Shirts. ★ Not to change the subject, but this magnificentshort-sleeve sports shirt at about $9.00 which we have portrayed here is an exclusive Eagle patternin two-ply cotton oxford, and comes in blue, green, or burgundy stripes alternating with skinnierblack ones on an Eagle’s Cream ground; ★ We also have a magnificent matching check; let’s see ifwe can describe it: it’s something as though we ran transverse stripes in the same colors across thispattern. No, that’s a terrible description, you’d better go take a look for yourself. If you don’tknow where that would be, drop a line to Miss Afflerbach and she’ll write right back with the news.<& 1964, EAGLE SHIRTMAKERS, QVAKEJUW.N, PENNSYLVANIA,t • CHICAGO MAROON • May 19, 19*4To raise issue of voting rightsBudweiser.that Bud«...that& beer]ANHEUSER BUSCH, INC • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPACOFO to run four Negro candidates in MississippiMr. Shulman is, of course, joshing, huf the makers ofPersonnu Blades are not: if, after trying our blades, youthink there's another stainless steel blade that gives youmore luxury shaves, return the unused Personnas to Box500, Staunton, Va., and we’ll buy you a pack of any bladeyou think is better. How much foam should there be?You’ll hear some people say there shouldn’t be any headat all. They say phooey on the foam ... where’s the beer!They shouldn’t. Not when it’s Budweiser, anyway.Budweiser is brewed so that it will kick up a healthyhead of foam. We go to a lot of trouble to let Budweisercreate its own tiny bubbles, rather than pumping them in.Natural carbonation and our exclusive Beechwood Ageingare two things we just won’t get modern about. It takes alot longer this way, and costs more money. (In fact, itgives our treasurer fits.) But the results—a good head offoam, real beer taste, smoothness and drinkability—aremore than worth it.So pour your Budweiser with about an inch-and-a-halfcollar of foam. Two inches if it’s a tall glass. Watch thosebubbles gather... then taste. (That’s what we tell ourtreasurer to do when he starts fussing about the high costof bubbles and beechwood. And he just smiles and swallowshis arguments.)"Rut I digress. We were speaking of Planck’s Constant, whichSk not, as many think, difficult to understand. It simply statesthat matter sometimes behaves like waves, and waves some¬times behave like matter. To give you a homely illustration,pick up your pencil and wave it. Your pencil, you will surelyagree, is matter—yet look at the little rascal wave! Or takeHags. Or Ann-Margret.Planck’s Constant, uncomplicated as it is, nevertheless pro¬vided science with the key that unlocked the atom, made spacetravel possible, and conquered denture slippage. Honors wereheaped upon Mr. Planck (or The City of Brotherly love, ashe is familiarly known as). He was awarded the Nobel Prize,the Tattle Brown Jug, and Disneyland. But the honor thatpleased Mr. Planck most was that plankton were named afterhim.Plankton, as we know, are the floating colonies of one-celledanimals on which fishes feed. Plankton, in their turn, feedu|H>n one-half celled animals called krill (named, incidentally,after Dr. Morris Krill who invented the house cat). Krill, intheir turn, feed upon peanut butter sandwiches mostly—or,when they are in season, cheeseburgers.But I digress. Back to Max Planck who, it must be said,showed no indication of his scientific genius as a youngster.In fact, for the first six years of his life he did not speak at allexcept to pound his spoon on his bowl and shout “More gruel!”Imagine, then, the surprise of his parents when on his seventhbirthday little Max suddenly cried, "Papa! Mama! Somethingis wrong with the Second l*w of Thermodynamics!’’ So aston¬ished were the elder Plancks that they rushed out and dug theKiel Canal.Meanwhile Max, constructing a crude Petrie dish out of twosmall pieces of petrie and his gruel bowl, began to experimentwith thermodynamics. By dinner time he had discoveredPlanck’s Constant. Hungry but happy, he rushed to HeidelbergI niversity to announce his findings. He arrived, unfortunately,during the Erich von Stroheim Sesquicentenmal, and everyonewas so busy dancing and duelling that young Planck could findnobody to listen to him. The festival, however, ended aftertwo years and Planck was finally able to report his discovery.Well sir, the rest is history. Einstein gaily cried, "E equals•iic squared 1" Edison invented Marconi. Eli Whitney invented1 ieorgia Tech, anti Michelangelo invented the ceiling. Thislater became known as the Humboldt Current.<C> 1904 Mfti ShotaMM* * *Moy 19. 1964 * CHICAGO MAROON • 7For the first time in thiscentury, four Negroes arecandidates for national officeJFrom Mississippi. One is a can-* didate for the Senate and three fordie House of Representatives.The four campaigns are being co¬ordinated by the Council of FederatedOrganizations (COFO), an umbrellacivil rights organization in Mississip¬pi comprising the Student Non-Vio¬lent Coordinating Committee (SNCC),CORE, the Southern Christian Lead¬ ership Conference (SCLC), and theNAACP.All four candidates are entered inthe regular Democratic primary inMississippi to be held June 2. Theyare running on the Freedom Demo¬cratic Party. If they are defeated inthe Democratic party, they will beable to continue their campaigns asIndependents in the general electionin November.The candidates are Mrs. FannieLou Hamer, James Monroe Houston,u ■> withMfcQhulmanFlag, BoysrCheek.”)•WELL-KNOWN FAMOUS PEOPLE: No. 1This is the first in a series of 48 million columns examining thecareers of men who have significantly altered the world we livein. We begin today with Max Planck.Max Planck (or The Pearl of the Pacific, as he is oftencalled) gave to modern physics the law known as Planck’sConstant. Many people when they first hear of this law, throwup their hands and exclaim, “Golly whiskers, this is too deepfor little old ine!”(Incidentally, speaking of whiskers, T cannot help but men¬tion Personna Stainless Steel Razor Blades. Personna is theblade for people who cau’t shave after every meal. It shavesyou closely, cleanly, and more frequently than any otherstainless steel blade on the market. The makers of Personnahave publicly declared—and do here repeat—that if PersonnaBlades don’t give you more luxury shaves than any otherstainless steel blade, they will buy you whatever blade youthink is better. Could anything be more fair? 1, for one, thinknot.) Mrs. Victoria Jackson Gray, and dieReverend John E. Cameron. Mrs.Gray is running for a senate seat,while the other three are running forseats in the House of Representa¬tives.The candidacy of the Freedom Can¬didates is a direct challenge to theone-party political s-tructure of thestate. Only 28,000 or 6.6% of Missis¬sippi's 422,000 Negroes of voting agehave been registered to vote, while525,000 whites are registered voters.All the Freedom Candidates willmake Negro voting rights one of thebasic issues of their campaigns. Thecampaigns themselves will serve asthe focus for Voter Registration ac¬tivities by COFO during the comingmonths.For those not allowed to register onthe official books, there will be aseparate program: Freedom Regis¬tration. The Freedom DemocraticParty has set up its own unofficialvoter registration books for the pur¬pose of registering as many as possi¬ble of Mississippi’s 400,000 disen¬franchised Negroes.These books, known as FreedomRegistration Books, will be managedby Freedom Registrars appointed by COFO, who will have the power toappoint deputy registrars to aid themin covering the county to provideevery Negro with the opportunity toregister to vote.The program will serve as a mech¬anism through which Negroes canorganize across the state. Secondly,k will be the focus of attempts toget Negroes registered on the officialcounty books.Also, Freedom Registration willform the basis lor Freedom Electionsto be held at the same time ag theofficial elections in June and Novem¬ber. In the Freedom Elections, theonly qualifications will be that votersare 21 or over, residents of the state,and registered on the Freedom Regis¬tration Books before the election.Whites as well as Negroes will beallowed to vote. Democratic and Re¬publican candidates will be listed to¬gether with Freedom DemocraticCandidates.Through Freedom Registration andthe Freedom Elections, COFO hopesto demonstrate that thousands ofNegroes who are denied the right tovote in the official elections would doso if they could. On this basis, theseating of successful Republican and Democratic candidates will be chal¬lenged in C ongress and in the Feder¬al Courts on the grounds that a signi¬ficant portion of the voting-age popu¬lation has been denied the right tovote because of color or race.The Freedom Candidates will servea*; the titular heads of the FreedomDemocratic Delegation. Other dele¬gates will be chosen through a .scriesof open meetings on the precinct,county, district, and state levels justas in the regular Mississippi Demo¬cratic Party.At the National Convention, theFreedom Democratic Delegation willattempt to have the Regular Demo¬cratic Delegation unseated and theFreedom Delegation seated in itsplace. It will do this on the groundsthat the Regular Democratic Delega¬tion was chosen by undemocraticmeans and that the Democratic Partyof Mississippi has been disployai tothe National Democratic Party.The Regular Mississippi Demo¬cratic Party split with the NationalDemocratic Party in ^960. It did notsupport the national Democratic tic¬ket selected by the National Conven¬tion or the platform adopted by theNational Convention.□ none? □ 1 inch? □ 1'A inches?CLASSIFIED ADS Sexual pressure on coedsSchwartz Bros. Hi-Fi StudiosSTEREO AMPLIFIERSorf* ' MQ95$129.00 NOW ®iOwrHi this ad90 day guaranteeLarge Selection of Clean, Used Components15 days money bock — 39 days full exchange1215 E. 63rd FA 4-8400 8533 S. COTTAGE GROVE JConvenient Location vn m nans nParkinq Lot In Rear I K 4-4 I 2 I ^Open 10 to 6 P{Warehouse Store) Open 10 to 9—Sundays 11 to 5 ^FOR RENT, ROOMS, APTS., ETC.FURN. 5 rm. apt. sublet early June-Sept. 1. $97 50 mo. PL 2-2294, after 5.ONE RM apt. avail. June 15 to Sept.15. Furn. plus T V. & Stereo. Directlyacross from Point. $65/mo. Call MI3-3268 afternoon or eves.1 OR 2 MEN to share large house forsummer and/or autumn with Prof, ofEng. Com pi. furn., Steinway, Stereo,gardens. 6039 University. FA 4-6796.4 FEMALE roommates wanted for thesummer. Own bedrm., 2 baths, attrac¬tive 8 rm. apt. Call 752-6581.314 RM. summer sublet. $98. Comp,furn., avail. June 15. 53rd and Kim-bark. CaU 667-4753.WANT female roommate to share aptnear north. June-Sept. Reas. Call MO4-7698 eves, or weekends.SPACIOUS 8 RMS. Furnished for sum¬mer sublet 2 MALES or 3 FEMALESor more. Beautiful sun porch. 26th offKIMBARK PLAZA. Only $145 a month.Call 752-7066._____FOR RENT or summer sublet 5 rm., 2or 3 bedrm. apt. 53rd and Woodlawn.$115/mo. Call ext. 3812 or eves. MU4-1670. .SUBLET 4 rm. furn. apt. (basement)$96/mo., inc. heat. Avail. June 10-Oet. 1. Inquire 5627 S. Maryland.SUMMER sublease: 2'4 rm. bsmt. apt.,new kitchen, bath. $75. CaU 363-5162.ONE MALE share spacious 7 rm. furn.apt. June 15-Oet. 1 or portion. Priv.rm, and bath. $45. Call 324-3764WANTED: Male roommate with bright¬ness in his heart and mind to sharewith medical student (June to Sept.)Large 4 rm. furnished apt. (6102 S.Klmbark). CaU 363-$930. $40/per mo.SUBLET: June thru Aug. 5. Quiet,large rooms — cool front and backporch. 5338 Harper. CaU 363-0930.TO SUBLET furn. lg. apt. June 1 toDec. 1 or fractions thereof. Facultyonly CaU FA 4-9274.Summer Sublet: 2 bedrms, 2 baths,comp. furn.. in Hyde Park. PL 2-2190.WANTED: 2 female roommates forsummer and/or next year. Big apt.,close to campus, low rent. CaU Sue orEl, BU 8-1956.THIS DUNES: This summer share ourhoi. jc and 15 aces, near lake Michiganand Dunes State Park but completelyprii 'ate. Very inexpensive. 752-7646.SUBLET: June 6-Sept. 15. Comp. furn.2 bedrms . 2 bathrms., spac., cool apt.wear Uhiv. Garage and cleaning serviceincl. Low rent. Ideal for couple withinfant. 324-8085._ _SUMMER Sublet—weU furnished, neat.2>4 rooms; reas. rent. CaU 493-2362.WANTED: 3rd girl to share apt CallBU 8-6684 after 6.TO SUBLET 5 rms., 3 bedrms., 2bathrms. Furn. $135 . 54 and Dor¬chester. Avail, next year. 324-5731. 3GIRLS wanted to share 4-bdrm. apt.with 4th yr. student for summer. Ken¬wood & 57th. CaU 288-5742 evenings.SUBLET mid June to late Sept. Cool,comp. furn.. attractive 2'4 rm. apt.Suit, for one. 5220 Cornell. 643-7876eves, weekends.SUMMER sublet beaut, conv. 6 rm.apt., 5559 University. BU 8-5737.COLLEGE girl wants girl to share 4rm. apt. Call Kathy. MI 3-0800, ext.2757, Mon. thru Fri. 9-5. PERSONALSFOR SALEGIRLS’ Dunelt English racer for sale.1 yr. old. excel, cond. Contact Rm.3426 New Dorms.ONE return flight ticket from Londonto Chicago—Sept. 15th for sale to mem-l>er of University Community. $140.00.Phone: HY 3-3721.ONE gardening handbook—reas. priceCaU G.W.B.. ext. 2345.NEW-USED BOOKS 10-30% DISCOUNTTYPEWRITERS — new-used-electric-manual TO 45% OFF CURRENT MAR¬KET PRICE. Used typewriters fullyfactory rebuilt (not just reconditioned)and fully guaranteed. Discounts aver¬age 25-30%. J. ALLYSON STERN-BOOKSELLER. PL 2-6284. Anytime(even late at night).FOR SALE—Rare red velvet couch &chair set—unique church pews & othergoodies. Call 684-0427 in the evenings.HELP WANTED UC SUMMER SESSIONVISIT CALIFORNIAAvoid heat and frustration come totemperate Berkeley, California for the1964 summer sessions.Live economically while either attend¬ing the University of California or tour¬ing San Francisco.Room & Board plus 5 hourswork weekly $86.52Board only plus 3 hourswork weekly $57.96PER SIX-WEEK SESSIONFor Additional Information Contact;University Students’ CooperativeAssociation2424 Ridge RoadBerkeley 9, CaliforniaTYPING of term papers and theses.Exp., rush jobs. On State St. subway.943-6544.INT. HSE. FOLD-DANCING8-10:30 Tues.8-915 InstructionResidence free — non-res. 50cTYPIST exp., all fields, manuscript,theses, papers Stat. Call eves. 493-9317.Memo to Sky WritersI’M SORRY SALLYPH.WANTED person to drive my car toColo end May or beg. June. Call MI3-9565WANTED CHEMISTRY MAJORSHave you had organic chemistry?Are you interested in a per. position inIndustrial chemistry?Do you like the idea of tuition reim¬bursement?If your answer is yes to all thesequestions call Howard Rubin at ParkerPersonnel (HA 7-4571 Our business atParker is placing people).This is not for summer employmentonly. NEEDED; girl to practice ballroomdancing with. CaU Alan, 326-6700, ext.342.MALE. 21 or over to share driving andexpenses to Portland or Seattle. June11 or 12. Bob Beaty. FA 4-9600.WANTED MOTORBIKE or LIGHT¬WEIGHT MOTORCYCLE. Must be rea¬sonably cheap and in fair to-good oond.,although not necessarily new. CaU493-129.WANTED: Large office desk. CaUDave at 3266TYPEWRITERSFOR SALE OR RENTALL MAKES REPAIREDType Changes — All LanguagesThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Albee-The American DreamSaroyan-The Man With HisHeart In TheHighlandsYeats-On Bailees StrandMAY 22, 23, 24, 29, 30$1.50; students $1.00REYNOLDS CLUB THEATRERECORDS•' EPIC, M*'C* ll|. T.M. MINTEO IN U SA TONIGHT AT 8 30GODFREYCAMBRIDGEIS HERE IN AHILARIOUSNEW ALBUM!FLM 13101With wickedly pungent satire and wit,Cambridge hits the funny bone—andmore! He dramatizes vital issues...1he brilliantly uncovers “moments oftruth’' of the fads and foibles of ourtimes...he comments, with disarm¬ing innocence, on the after-effects ofthe Negro revolt. Godfrey Cambridgeis uproarious. Godfrey Cambridge isa name to remember. “Ready or Not,Here’s Godfrey Cambridge” Is analbum to own.C epic! Girls at the University ofCalifornia in Berkeley have a“distorted view” of sexualbehavior because many oftheir friends lie about their sexualexperiences, according to Dr. Ger¬trude M. Mitchell, assistant directorof the Student Health Service atBerkeley.Dr. Mitchell believes that somegirls have adopted the traditionallymasculine practice of recountingamorous adventures which are large¬ly fictitious. These stories give othergirls the impression that everyoneis indulging in sex and increase thepressure on them to do the same,Dr. Mitchell said. trust” answers to questions aboutsex, since students may not tell thetruth about their sex life.Although no one can be sure, Dr.Mitchell suspects that fewer collegestudents are indulging in premaritalsex than previously estimated, and tthat most of those who do are en¬gaged couples.“They talk about It a lot more to¬day,” she said, but the actual pro¬portion of students may not havechanged apf.reciably since the Twen¬ties. To explain the difference shequoted a current epigram: “Thenthey pulled down the shades; nowthey don’t/*Besides the pressure of friends*opinions, a college coed must alsomeet the pressure to stay in collegeand remain unmarried until she is21-25. This pressure is complicatedby th^fact that she has been matureand ready to marry since she was15. Dr. Mitchell believes. Curriculum Committee viewsDr. Mitchell stated that ignoranceof birth control methods or simplyignoring them leads to serious prob¬lems when pregnancy results. How¬ever, birth control information anddevices can easily be obtained, shesaid. “A lot of unmarried girls canget them through family service andeven family doctors.’*Challenging a recent study basedon interviews with 200 men and 200women students at Berkeley whichindicated that 20% of the studentsindulged in premarital sex, Dr.Mitchell contends that “you can’t Biology 111-112 Wedn.The Student Government Curricu¬lum Committee will conduct a dis¬cussion of Biology 111-112 Wednesdayat 7:30 pm in Ida Noyes Hall. Thefuture of the variant in the GeneralEducation biology sequence will beamong the topics discussed.Representatives of the biology staffwill include Ray Koppleman, chair¬man of Biology 111-112, and BensonE. Gins burg, chairman of the Collegebiology section.The meeting, which is open to aidinterested students, will involve anexchange of ideas, criticisms, andsuggestions concerning the aims, cur¬riculum, teaching method, innova¬tions, and examination in the course.University Theatre• CHICAGO MAROON • May 19, 1964_