Vol. 72 — No. 55 University of Chicago, Friday, May 22, 1964Faculty, chaplains protest to CellerStaff: no prayer amendmentTwo attacks on the Becker Amendment to the US Constitution have recently beenlaunched by UC faculty members and religious leaders.The amendment is a response to the recent Supreme Court decision outlawing prayerin public schools. If passed, it would legalize voluntary prayer in public schools and alsomake legal references to God in anygovernmental activity.Ihe thirteen chaplains on campushave sent a letter protesting theamendment to Emanuel Celler, chair¬man of the House Judiciary Com¬mittee. which is presently holdinghearings on the amendment. Accord¬ing to the letter, “this amendmentwill, in effect, undermine the integ¬rity of the Bill of Rights . .The letter goes on to say: “Wefeel that such exercises in our publicschools contribute little to genuinereligious understanding in the mindsof our young people, and often timesharm sound respect for our severalseperate and particular religious tra¬ditions.”According to Rabbi Richard Wino-grad. director of Hillel, who initiatedthe letter, it is also going to be sentto BarraU O'Hara, congressman fromthe UC area, Everett Dirksen andPaul Douglas, Illinois US Senators,and the only Illinois representativeon the House Judiciary Committee,Roland V. Libonati. The second attack an the amend¬ment is in the form of a petition whichall UC faculty members wll beasked to sign. A letter asking forsignatures is going to be sent to thefaculty in a few days by W. BarnettBlakemore, associate professor in theDivinity School, Marc Galanter,assistant professor of social sciences,Martin Marty, professor in the Divin¬ity School, Thomas McDonough odCalvert House, Winograd, and others.According to the letter, the Beckeramendment would debase religion,threaten freedom of religion, harmthe public schools, and “encouragethose who oppose the judicial pro¬tection of our Constitutional libertiesand would set a precedent for furtherassault on the Bill of Rights.”The Becker Amendment was origi¬nally one of 147 different proiKusalsbefore the House to restore prayerin public schools. However, opponentsof the Supreme Court decision havenow united to back the BeckerAmendment. According to Galanter, one of tiieorganizers of the letter to the faculty,if the bill ever gets to the floor, itwill probably pass. However, be¬cause there are many congressmenwho oppose the bill but do not wantto be on record against it, it willprobably never get there, Galantersaid. The key is the House JudiciaryCommittee through which it mustpass. The committee right now isfairly evenly divided and will nodoubt be influenced by the trend inletter writing, Galanter believes. Sofar it has been in favor of the amend¬ment by large margins.To prevent the bill from being tiedup in tiie committee, Rep. Becker(N.Y.) is circulating a dischargepetition to bring it directly to thefloor. So far he has gotten 168 outof the 218 signatures he needs.Any student who would like to helpin the campaign against the amend¬ment should contact Dick Schmitt,3214X New Dorm. Schmitt is headof UC Students for Civil Liberties. >Community spokesmenweigh housing problemThe type of new housingwhich should be built inWoodlawn remained a matterof disagreement after a paneldiscussion with community leadersand housing experts Monday night.Irving Spergel, associate prof, inthe School of Social Service Admin¬istration moderated in the panel dis¬cussion at Breasted which was spon¬sored by UC Congress of RacialEquality (CORE). No one was ableto attend from The Woodlawn Organi¬zation.Spergel, who began the debate,first stated that housing is a criticalproblem in all major urban areas.He then went mi to describe thepresent housing project being con¬ducted by The Woodlawn Organiza¬tion (TWO) and the Kate MaremontFoundation Urban RehabilitationProgram.TWO recently announced plans fora middle-income housing project tobe built on Cottage Grove Ave. near63rd street. 762 units would providemoderate-cost oo-op apartments formore than 3,000 persons. TWOand the Kate Maremont Foundationwould operate and build the project,with aid under a Federal loan pro¬gram. The development would pro¬vide room for most but not all of theSouth campus area, which extendsfrom Cottage Grove Ave. to StonyIsland Ave. between 60th and 61ststreets. UC is now buying up theentire area and will clear it for newbuildings.Gus Savage, editor of the Wood¬lawn Booster, accused TWO of going back on its promise to provide ade¬quate relocation for residents of thearea before destroying their presenthousing. In recent editorials in theBooster, Savage has pointed out thatsince many of the families who willhave to find new housing are publicaid recipients, they cannot afford tolive in the TWO development.Mary Perry, recording secretary ofthe Citizens Housing Commission forthe Northwest side renewal area,maintained that the residents “don’tbecome aware of Urban Renewaluntil bulldozers are at tiie door.”Mrs. Perry described recent urbangHHUIIII«Hllllllllill!l!illII!lllllllllll[IIIIIIIIUIII!llll!l!ltll!llill!!llilll!lll!niill!IB!llllllll!lll|Registrar William J. VanH Cleve has reminded students \that pre-registration for autumn ;I quarter must be completed by j| next Wednesday, May 27, or |late fees will be charged in |October. Van Cleve urged stu-1| dents to see the Time Schedules §i for full details.3 Hliniiniiiiintiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittifflmiiiiiiiiiii1 iiiiiiiiinilrenewal in Northwest Chicago. Thecity proposed a project that wouldhouse 750 families on a half block.Hie residents of the neighborhoodopposed this project and managed toobtain instead a 44 unit duplex forlarge families at 42nd street andLangley. Perry felt that “if we couldget it, Woodlawn could do the same.”William Hill, a member of theUS Public Housing Administration,/TWO: new labor retraining experimentby Hendrik De JongThe Federal Governmenthas granted $76,000 to TheWoodlawn Organization(TWO) for an experimentaljob retraining program, whichwill involve UC faculty mem¬bers in research on retrainingpolicies.Provided for under theManpower Development andTraining Act, which was re¬cently enacted by Congress,the grant provides funds foran experimental retrainingprogram for unemployedWoodlawn residents.Present at the signing ceremonyat TWO headquarters were repre¬sentatives from the Department ofLabor, the Department of Health,Education and Welfare, tiie IllinoisState Employment Service, and themayor’s office. Also representedwere the ninety organizations whichnow comprise TWO.The representative from the De¬partment of Labor, John Donovan,indicated at the ceremony that theJohnson administration’s war onpoverty will proceed through grantssuch as the one TWO has now re¬ceived.Robert D. Hess, Chairman of theUC Committe on Human Develop¬ment, was also present at the cere¬mony. Hess heads a group of Uni¬versity faculty members which hasworked closely with TWO on thisnew project.The TWO project, Hess told theMaroon, is experimental because itrepresents a new approach to thetask of retraining laborers put outof work by automation. Presenttraining programs, able to providefor only a small proportion of thetotal number of unemployed workersin the city, screen applicants bymeans of tests which measure theireducational level.These tests, Hess said, complete¬ly ignore such factors as reliability,past employment records, and theability to learn by on-the-job train¬ing, regardless of formal education.TWO proposes to select men for re¬training on the basis of these factors,independent of test results.It will choose 200 unemployediioads of families, men who were put out of work by automation. Onceselected, the trainees will enter theregular retraining program of theIllinois State Employment Service.Throughout the course of that pro¬gram, TWO will keep in personalcontact with the trainees, encourag¬ing them and tutoring them in areaswhere their education is deficient.Once they have completed the pro¬gram, TWO will help them find jobs.The significance of this new ap¬proach, Hess said, is that every¬thing is to be conducted on a per¬This is the next to lustMAROON of the spring quarter.The last issue will appear onFriday, June 12. Advertisingand copy deadlines for the June12 issue are 3 pm, Thursday,June 11.sonal level, both in the selection ofthe two hundred, relying on per¬sonal knowledge and interviews rath¬er than tests, and the support giventhem throughout the training period,and beyond. Because it is a com¬munity organization, TWO is emi¬nently qualified to do this, Hesssaid.New type of demonstrationThe TWO experiment is officiallydesignated as a demonstration Man¬power Program. For TWO this isa new type of demonstration, ex¬pansion into a new area of activityand onto a new level of respon¬sibility.According to Arthur F. Brazier,former president of TWO, the civilrights struggle will be continued,but it is to be implemented by theretraining project TWO’s goal isstill integration, but the fruits ofthe integration struggle will be oflittle value if the Negro is too poorto take advantage of them.Open occupancy, for example, ismeaningless if the Negro hasn’t themoney to buy a house in those areaswhich were previously closed to him.The big need is for the jobs thatwill provide that money, Braziersaid.According to Hess, TWO’s dem¬onstration Manpower Program, ifsuccessful, will have profound im¬plications for the nation at large:• The success of TWO’s experi¬ ment will provide proof that presentretraining programs rely on screen¬ing devices which are both unreli¬able and unjust.• Also important are possible dif¬ferences in the incentive of the train¬ees, caused by the fact that TWOwill continue to encourage and sup¬port them throughout the program.• The Woodlawn Organization,founded on the discontent of the un¬derprivileged, represents an efforton the part oi a needy communityto help itself, Hess said. The newexperiment, while utilizing outsideresources, will be a community proj¬ect.Success will be an important boost¬er to community spirit in an areawhere the economic failure of theunemployed and the social despairof the Negro often create conditionsin which men are totally alienatedfrom society. Even the attempt ofa needy community to create a pro¬gram which will meet its peculiarneeds may make important con¬tributions to the creation of sucha spirit.The Federal Government has pro¬vided the funds, but TWO will applythem to the problems of the com¬munity, which it represents.Role of the UniversitySince April, 1963, when the projectwas first conceived, members of theUniversity faculty have been partof the drive to see it enacted. Thefirst task was to obtain the Federalfunds. Now that the grant has beenreceived, the role of the Universityin the Demonstration ManpowerProgram will be to document it.The success of the experiment isof importance to other needy com¬munities. For this reason, documen¬tation is vital. The faculty mem¬bers, headed by Hess, will study theprogress of the trainees, comparingthe methods used by TWO with thosewhich are standard among retrainingprograms, and determining whichof the procedures used by TWO maybe universally applied.In a real sense, this Woodlawn ex¬periment is a cooperative project.The Federal Government has pro¬vided the funds, the Illinois StateEmployment. Service will provide theactual training, TWO will select tiietrainees and maintain personal con¬tact with them, and the Universitywill study the progress of the ex¬ periment. The cooperation betweenthe University and TWO is espec¬ially significant, Hess said.It represents a determined effortby both parties to resolve the dif¬ferences that have until now dividedthe two communities on either sideof the Midway. stated that there are no essentialcontradictions between section 221-d-3of the housing code which providesfor privately built housing withFederal loans and the section whichprovides public housing tor those whocannot afford decent, sanitary hous¬ing. According to Hill, the real ques¬tion is whether or not provisions arebeong made for both low cost privatehousing and public housing.Start book drive for Miss.A book drive in the HydePark area to aid the Missis¬sippi Summer Project will be¬gin next Monday.The drive, sponsored by the UCFriends of the Student Non-ViolentCoordinating Committee, aims tocollect books for use this summeras equipment in schools and com¬munity centers.The Summer Project, sponsoredjointly by SNCC, the Congress ofRacial Equality (CORE), The Na¬tional Association for the Advance¬ment of Colored People (NAACP),and the Southern Christian Leader¬ship Conference, will bring about2000 people to Mississippi this sum¬mer for a massive freedom projectaimed at bettering the lives of Mis-sissippians and preparing them formeaningful direct action.Specific programs in the projectinclude legal, medical, and socio¬logical research; voter registration;community center activity; freedomschools; and a special attempt toinvolve more white southerners in the movement.Books collected in the neighbor¬hood drive will be used at the tenday schools and three residentschools that will be set up. Empha¬sis in the day schools will be onremedial work in reading, math, andbasic grammar. Emphasis in theresident schools, which will be at¬tended by more advanced students,will be on history, politics, and socio¬logy.Boxes for receiving donated bookswill be placed in all dormitoriesstarting Monday. In addition, visi¬tors to the 57th street Art Fair onSaturday and Sunday, June 6 and 7,will have an opportunity to contrib¬ute by visiting Woodworth’s Book¬store across the street on the formerdate or by visiting the Green DoorBookstore on the latter.At both locations, donors may buybodes and deposit them in contain¬ers designated for that purpose.Books not bought at either of thetwo stores may also be contributedat these times.Noiseproofing in New DormAll rooms in New Dorm willbe soundproofed for the aca¬demic year beginning in Oct¬ober, it was announced yes¬terday.James Newman, assistant dean ofr indents, told the Maroon that thesoundproofing is being done to cutdown on the noise that is “one of themajor defects in the dorm.”Four rooms were soundproofed inthe men’s rooms and four in thewomen’s rooms last summer, New¬man said, as an experiment. The re¬sults, he said, were more than satis¬factory.The New Dorm cafeteria had been soundproofed after examination by anacoustical expert two years ago. Itand tiie men’s and women’s roomswere not soundproofed during theoriginal construction of the dorm,Newman said, because “noise wasn’trecognized as a problem in the or igi¬nal construction.”The soundproofing process involvessealing off the doors from each roomthat lead to the main corridor. New¬man claimed ignorance as to acous¬tical details, but said that tiie prob¬lem was basically one of noise leav¬ing one room, entering the corridor,and seeping into other rooms.Tiie soundproofing will be donean independent contractor.mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmamr'Who killed Eddie Martin Vraises other questionsTO THE EDITOR:Paul Cowan’s article entitled “WhoKilled Eddie Marlin” slates a posi¬tion that is well fortified by itsvehicle; one’s instinctive reaction isto avoid tampering w;ith a poignantaccount of the last hours of a poorman. If the article were merely anaccount of a particular tragedy, oreven if it were an indictment of thepolice force’s role in the occurence,the instinct to leave it alone wouldbe overpowering.But, by drawing in a number ofcity and public aid institutions, andby attaching a symbolic importanceto Martin’s death, Mr. Cowan’s articletranscends the particular and at¬tempts to present us with a battlebetween the apparently helplessadvocates of good and an inhumanlyimpersonal city.The general problems Mr. Cowanis getting at are very large andgrave, and few of us would faulthim for overstating his case. But, theparticular events described in thearticle are somewhat less than con¬vincing as a reflection of the generalproblem. I think it is unfortunate, forexample, that Eddie Martin’s friendschose to do battle only with city orpublic facilities. The picture we getk that of several concerned butbewildered people trying to determinewhich public agency to call on next.It is unbelievable that the policeforce behaved as Mr. Cowan de¬scribes. But, it is equally unbeliev¬able that Martin's friend, havingdetermined at 7 am that Martinneeded a doctor as quickly as possi¬ble,” exhausted his resources forthe entire morning on two abortiveattempts at eliciting the help of thepolice department. Did he ignore theconclusion of the police officers whoarrived at 7:30 am that the policedepartment could not aid Martinuntil the case had been diagnosed?Or did his second call, at 11:30 am,to the same agency indicate a beliefthat the policemen who had comeearlier were exceptionally steadfastIn their adherence to the rules?The fire department ambulancedriver certainly might have taken a chance with the rules and helpedMarlin; the Good Ambulance Driverwould have ignored the possibilitythat be might lose his job. But, if the“rules made sense” to Mr. Cowan,Ne can hardly accuse the ambulancedriver of inhumanity few drawing thesame conclusion. And if the inhuman¬ity of the city employees arises outof their unwillingness to do somethingextra, their lack of persistence orimagination..I would suggest that the wholeunfortunate episode might be char¬acterized by these terras, as in Mr.Cowan’s phone call to Billings where“after about FIVE MINUTES Irealized that no one was likely toreply,” or in Martin's friend’s ap¬parent failure to give any thoughtto the possibility that he might beremoved in a private car to Billings,just a few blocks down the Midway(emphasis supplied).The question “Who Killed EddieMarian?” is, I think, somewhat morecomplex than Mr. Cowan suggests.JOHN MARCOUXPaul Cowan repliesSuppose that Eddie Martin’sfriend had made just one call to thepolice department, found they wereunwilling to help, and gone home tobed. The burden of guilt would stillrest with the police. A public agency exists in the public interest, and issupposed to help citizens—all citi¬zens. Does anyone doubt that if asimilar case arose in a middle classpart of Hyde Park the policeman’sresponse would have been different?It was a poor, black man calling few*help, and the police saw no reasonto oblige; I don’t see how that factcan be disputed.Now that the episode is done, andEddie Martin is dead, k is easy forthose of us with college educations—with sophistication and connectionsin the right places to sit back andcriticize the behavior of Martin’sfriend. But imagine yourself in simi¬lar circumstances. A man is dying,you have no money, the city is nota series of seperate agencies butrather a single, amorphous entity.What’s more, it is an enemy: youhave good reason to be wary ofevery white man you see (they ar¬rest you, shout at you, gyp you,fire you), and especially those whitemen with power. From a long his¬tory of similar episodes, you doubtthat anyone will be willing to help.What do you do?Moreover, even if Eddie Martin’sfriend had trusted every man whorepresented the city government, hewould not have known whom to call.Doesn’t the city bear some respon¬sibility for his ignorance? Educationin citizens’ rights would not be hard to provkle—through television an¬nouncements, mobile units (like li¬brary bookmobiles), communityclasses, or charts distributed tolandlonks to be posted in all build¬ings.This education is not provided be¬cause it is a matter of such littleconsequence to most people in power if people in Woodlawn live or die.This is not to make a contrast be¬tween guilt and innocence, good andevil. It is only to state a fact thatmust be patently clear to anyone whohas ever bothered to walk acrossthe Midway, and keep his eyes openas he continues on down to 63rdStreet.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 There’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 Parking McNeill offers World Hist.William H. McNeill, professor and chairman of theDepartment of History, will teach an experimental worldhistory course in the College next year.The course, designed along the lines of the History ofWestern Civilization course, will en- 'deavor to deal with all the principal Is a real question” said McNeill ofcivilizations of the world and thedr the course. “Most existing worldinterrelations through time. history courses do not really dealThere are no prerequisites for the with 'he history of all the world, andcourse. It is open to all undergradu- tnany of them are put together in aatcs way that leaves both teachers andThe couree will be limited to a stt,dcn,s 9*?nDU£l*' dissatisfied."single discussion section, meeting at NcNeill hopes to overcome this8:30 Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fri- difficulty with an organizing idea thatdays. McNeill will offer the same was pot forth in his book THE RISEcourse downtown through University OF THE WEST. He hopes to be ableExtension in a class intended to to translate a good part of its struc-serve teachers of world history from ture mto the classroom.the Chicago high schools.Materials for the new course have , ,been prepared during the current ForUIH TO SGGK DCiiCI*academic year. A group of studentsregistered for a ‘colloquium’ in world psych courses formedhistory have gathered readings andphotographic reproductions of art The Psychology Discussion Forum,objects. Tliese will constitute the a group formed to promote somemain study materials for the new communication among undergradu-eourse. ate psychology and human develop-In addition, McNeill plans to writ* rne*1^ students and faculty, will meeta Handbook of World History this Tuesday night at 8:30 pm, in Idasummer that will provide a matrix ^°yes first floor library,of information and narrative of events ‘•'Hie undergraduate -psychologyagainst which each separate reading students are tired of being neglected,and work of art can be approached. ;in<l being orphans in the academicAs is done in live Hktory of West- community. We have insufficientenn Civilization course, readings and courses, insufficient staff, and aart reproductions will be grouped severe lack of departmental espiritinto ‘Topics of Concentration.’ These de corps. We also feel the lack oftopics have been chosen lor the in- serious discussion about controver-sights each offers into particularly sial issues in the field, and want tocritical or strategic episodes in world remedy this situation,” said Armhistory. Materials from existing Hulsizer, chairman oi the newlycourses will overlap only occasional- formed group.y’ All interested undergraduate psy-"Whetlier world history can be chology and human developmentsatisfactorily taught in a single year students are encouraged to come.Serving the University ofChicago Campus Since 1921SAM MALATTBARBER SHOPBUtterfield 8-09501011 East 61st StreetChicago 37, Illinois Silk Screen SuppliesA Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALS,MIMEOGRAPH PAPERAND SUPPLIESIWholesale Prices in QuantityOnlyIDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd ST.HY 3-4111 TAhSAM-YhNCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing in( AMflMiSK AMIA>III(I4\> IMS HUNOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1310 East 43rd St. MU 4-1062 Another library Duplicate & Discard SaleMAY 22 THROUGH MAY 28All Sales FinalAt 1 0® & UpThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Fully InsuredCOLDSTORAGESave On Box StorageOUR 10W RATES Will ASTOUND YOU"The right way is the Wright way"WRIGHTLAUNDRY & CLEANERS1315 E. 57th St.★ Serving Hyde Park since 1900 ★ 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 i 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.An evening class in ACCELERATED READING will be held at the HOTEL SHERRY in Chicagobeginning on June 29. It’s wonderful to be able to read a book in one sitting, and see it as ■ whole.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READING technique bycollege students on WEDNESDAY, MAY 27 at 7:30 P.M., and WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24 at 7:30 P.M.BRING A BOOK!Demonstrations will be held at the HOTEL SHERRY(53rd St. and Lake Shore Drive)NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING INC.507 Fifth Avenue, New York 17, N. Y. sYS. D. Seiri. McGovern to speakGeorge McGovern, Demo¬cratic Senator from SouthDakota, will speak at the LawSchool Auditorium tonight at8 pm on “Changing Requirementserf American Security.” The talk issponsored by The Council for aLivable World.' McGovern, the first Democratic Senator from South Dakota in 26years, served as special assistant toPresident Kennedy in 1961-2. He alsodirected the Food for Peace program,which enabled 93 billion pounds ofUS farm surplus to be distributedoverseas.On the senate floor, McGovernrecently proposed a bill which wouldestablish a National Economic Con-RC performs RC reformOn Monday evening in RockefellerChapel, 20 Protestant groups, 5Catholic groups, and five other or¬ganizations will sponsor jointly a dem¬onstration of a completely reformedRoman Catholic Mass in English byCliicago composer and liturgist Den¬nis Fitzpatrick.The work incorporates actual andcontemplated changes by the Vati¬can Council II. It has been releasedin both record and altar missal form,and has been sent to more than 500bishops of English-speaking dioceses, with the result that it is being con¬sidered by various hierarchies, in¬cluding the English-speaking bishopsof Canada. The work is also beingused as a reference work by expertsat the Council. **"The demonstration, believed by thesponsors to be an opportunity to fos¬ter and deepen interfaith understand¬ing and prayer, will be held at 7:30pm. Admission is by free ticket,which can be obtained by writing tbeCatholic Adult Education Center, 21W. Superior St.; or by telephonkigMO 4-0344. version Commission to work on plansfor the transplanting of defense in¬stallations, industries, and workforces to civilian activity.The Council for a Livable World,an organization that transmits cam¬paign funds to selected congressionalcandidates and works to reduce therisk of nuclear war, was recentlythe subject of an article by AliceWidener in the Omaha (Nebr.) WorldHerald, which was in turn the subjectof several remarks by McGovern onthe Senate flow. His remarks appearin the Congressional Record underthe heading “Alice in Wonderland.’’The Widener article referred to the“pacifist” programs *bf the Counciland its “left wing” attitude. It wasprinted under the heading: “Howlefties aided McGovern.” In hisremarks, McGovern noted that “Alicein Wonderland somehow imaginesthat anyone who favors a livableworld must be a ‘lefty’ or a ‘paci¬fist.’ . . . the members of the Councilare neither.”McGovern’s talk will be followedby an informal discussion session.Admission is without ticket and with¬out charge. Harrington, Thomas, andRustin here next FridayBayard Rustin, Michael Harrington, and Norman Thom¬as will participate in a discussion entitled “America’s Dilem¬ma” Friday, May 29, at 8 pm in Mandel Hall. The discussionis being sponsored by the UC Young Peoples’ SocialistLeague.Rustin was the deputy director oflast August’s March on Washington,and is active in civil rights andpeace movements. He is the execu¬tive secretary of the War ResistersLeague, and he organized the firstmajor school boycott in New YorkCity. On May 14 he spoke on non¬violent direct action techniques for ous works on socialist history andtheory, and has been active inSANE, Turn Toward Peace, Ameri¬can Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)and the Congress of Racial Equali¬ty (CORE).Friday’s discussion will center onmany questions facing America to¬day: poverty, unemployment, auto-instigating social changes at a Social mation, civil rights, and peace. TheScience 123 lecture and receive astanding ovation.Harrington, a member of the So¬cialist Party, is the authw of “TheOther America,” a book on poverty.Thomas, a veteran socialist lead¬er, has run for president and otherposts on the Socialist Party ticketmany times. He has written numer- speakers will attempt to formulatestrategy and programs to solve theseproblems.Tickets for the meeting are avail¬able from Joe Weiner, 56 Hitchcock,1009 E. 57th St. at $1 for general ad¬mission and $1.50 for the reservedsection. Tickets will also be avail¬able at the door.Mortimer J. Adler to discuss world's philosophiesMortimer Adler, director ofthe Institute for PhilosophicalResearch, will review thewhole history of philosophyTuesday in the last of his series ofERRATUMThe story in Tuesday'sMAROON concerning WUCB'sproposed FM plans containedtwo errors:1) The administration hasnot yet approved the FM pro¬posal. It is on the agenda forconsideration by the President'sBoard.2) When and if the proposalis approved, the FM license willbear the names of the trustees,as it must, since WUCB is anon-commercial station.The MAROON apologizes forits error. lecture on the present state of phi¬losophy.Adler told the Maroon he will tracethe “accidental and somewhat tragichistory of philosophy” that has pre¬vented it from “doing what it shouldbe doing.”In his first lecture last fall, Adleroutlined certain conditions which phi¬losophy must satisfy to be of value.The following lectures defended theseconditions and showed that philosophycould meet these conditions.In Tuesday’s talk, Adler proposesto show why philosophy has failed tomeet these conditions and show howit could. Adler says that philosophersare “confused,” but do not need tobe. Tuesday’s lecture, he says, willnot deal with the substance of theactual content of various, philoso¬phers, but will deal with their pro¬cedures and methods.Adler came to UC in 1930 humColumbia and started teaching a twoyear course in the great books, withRobert Maynard Hutchins, then UC chancellor. The course was a successand the students asked that they be al¬lowed to repeat it. By the early1940’s a project to publish the greatbooks as a set had started and in1945 Adler left the University towork on the “Syntopicon an indexto the ‘great ideas.’ ” Since thistime Adler has given several seriesof lectures at the University. Thiscurrent series of lectures grew outof his experiences in teaching the great books course at the University.Adler has plans to expand the cur¬rent series of lectures into a book.He feels that if a lecture is well-planned and has good content that itcan easily be explained. Several ofAdler’s earlier books are also ex¬pansions of lectures he has given.Adler’s plans for next year includea possible series of lectures based onan old one he gave earlier at UC titled “The Defense of Man AgainstDarwin.”Adler’s series was sponsored by theGreat Books Foundation of the En¬cyclopedia Brattanica. He will speakat 8 pm in the Law School Audito-CHAMBER MUSIC BENEFIT sponsored by The Council ofHyde Park and Kenwood Churches and SynagoguesTRE CORDA TRIO, Nationally KnownSheppard LehnofiFritz SiegalJoseph Sciacchitano Guest Artists:Leonard SherrodJoanne BennettWEDNESDAY, MAY 27 — 8 P.M.Temple Rodfei Zedek 5200 Hyde Park Blvd.Tickets available by phene (FA 4 5300 or at the dew. Aum. S2.CCWorks by Schubert, Mozart, Sounders, & Danzihaving service problems?foreign car hospital and clinic, inc.authorized sales and service foraustin, mg, morris, austin healey, triumph 9C jaguarand we fix all other european cars, too5424 south kimbark avenue mi 3-3113 JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190. DO 3-8190 1340 E. 53rd long on versatilityand style . . .SEERSVCKEBspout comof Dacron* & CottonHALLETT& SONSEXPERT MOVERS, INC.LOCAL - INTERSTATE - WORLDWIDESTORAGEWhen You Have a Moving ProblemLarge or SmallCALLTOM HALLETTHALLETT ,,u HALLETT■ ■ ■ JACK HALLETTPHONE VI 6-1015AGENT FOROffice & Warehouse10 E. T0H, NATIONALVAN LINES. INC.'HIM’ Next tomy boyfriend, Ilike myAmericanRadio & TVT ransistorBestS. 8. 9.10 TRANSISTORSAM and FM53 KIMBARKPLAZAAmerican Radio and Television Laboratory1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111 Trim, authentic and in quietgood taste — it all adds up to“that look.” Enhanced by colorsof the Caribbean, here are cooland crisp seersucker sport coatsyou’ll wear for dress and casualtimes too. Young-idea tailoredof Dacron polyester and cottonfor the young-in-build.•Du Pont’s registered trademarktor its Dolyester fiberNaturallyAvailableatTHE STORE FOR MENfohl v2TiMtnt ttnh ttampUB 0i|ujrIn the New Hyde ParkShopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St.Phone 752-8100Open Daily 9 a.m. to 6 p m.Thursday and Friday 9 a.m.-9 p m.May 22. 1964 • CHICAGO M A D O O N • 3THEATRE REVIEWHull House double bill palatable, sensitively donefswiiiiiiiii!!iiiiiiiii:i.'!: • ;:::! mm iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinintHiiiwiiiiiiiHiiiiiniiB"THE TYPISTS” and "THE TIGER" §by Murray Schlsgal"THE TIGER"Gloria: Pot TerryBen: Mike Nussbaum"THE TYPISTS"Sylvlo: Pot ferryPaul: Mike NussbaumDirected by Bob SlcklngerHull House Theatre3212 N. Belmontitiiiiiiiiiiii ' i" •HiiswwiRirwr n.:: whciiiimmSThe bill-of-fare at theHull House Theatre betweennow and July 4 is one of themost palatable which hasappeared anywhere in the Chicagoarea this year. The two one-act playswere originally conceived and writ¬ten, sensitively directed, and actedwith superb style and understanding.“The Tiger,” which is presentedfirst on the program, is a mordantspoof of certain overworked themesin contemporary “serious” drama.Ben, the “rebel against society,” kid¬naps Gloria, a suburban housewife, with the plan of murdering her ritu-alistically a la Jean Genet.Ben’s philosophy, that one must beless than one is, in order to be trulywhat one is, scores a hit with theexistentialists. But Ben’s rebellion,it is found, was produced by hisinability to pass his college entranceexam in the French language; Gloriasolves his problem by offering totutor him every Thursday night inFrench, and the rest of the play turnsto the vein of bedroom farce.“The Typists” is in a gentler mood,but while it is often humorous in itsdepiction of two typical New Yorkoffice clerks, its dominant tone is thepathos evoked by the typists’ hum¬drum existence.Paul, the junior typist, is a would-be lawyer whose ambitions are firstfrustrated, then abandoned. Sylvia,the “supervisor,” lives the life of theold maid with her ill-disposed mother;her hopes of marriage and familyare never realized. The emptiness and futility of bothlives are emphasized by the author,for the drama is played out as thoughit takes place in a single day, theactors aging, it would seem, fromminute to minute.Both the plays show thp hand ofan author with a lively sense ofhumor and a profound sympathy forthe pathos of the human condition; Ilook forward with pleasure to seeingmore of his work.Mike Nussbaum and Pat Terry performed the two pas de deux withprofessional dexterity. In “The Typ¬ists,” which required a smooth, flow¬ing change in character—a difficultassignment when one is coping withan unfamiliar New York accent aswell—the two were less sure of them¬selves than in “Tie Tger,” whichdid not require quite so much ofthem. At no time, however, did theyfail to do justice to the admirabledramas. Mr. Sickinger’s direction wastrue and sensitive without calling attention to itself—a style whichothers might do well to imitate.It is extremely gratifying to finda community theater group like theHull House Theatre, where good tasteand talent are consistently present.It seems an island of excellence ina city where many professional dra¬matic companies, with “name”actors and experienced pro, 1 actioncrews, are incapable of producingplays well.David RichtvrCulture CalendarExhibitsTHE SAFE WAY to stay alertwithout harmful stimulantsNoDoz keeps you mentallyfclert with the same safe re¬fresher found in coffee andtea. Yet NoDoz is faster,handier, more reliable. Abso¬lutely not habit-forming. Next time monotony makesyou feel drowsy while driving,working or studying, do asmillions do .. . perk up withsafe, effective NoDoz tablets.Another fine product of Grove laboratories.#* COCA-COLA" AN# *'COKt'» ARK ARGlSTfREO TAADI* MARK#jWHICH IDENTIFY ONLY TH« PRODUCT OP THC COCA-COLA COMPANY* 1{ ATake 5... and swing out refreshed.Coca-Cola — with its bright lively lift,big bold taste,never too sweet — refreshes best.things gObetter,!^withCoKeBottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company byiThe Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Chicago, Inc. Paintings by Robert Savlin. Fac¬simile etchings by Duerer and Rem¬brandt, Medici Gallery and CoffeeHouse. 1450 E. 57th, daily 5:30-12. Fri¬day 5:30-1, Saturday 11-1, Sunday10-12.Etchings of Edgar Degas, May 3-June 12. daily 10-5, Saturday 1-5. Re¬naissance Society, Goodspeed Hall.57th Street Art Fair, June 6-7, noontill dusk, 57th Street, between Kenwoodand Kimbark, free admission. MU4-6231Lectures"Culture and Freedom,” Richard P.McKeon, professor of philosophy andGreek, May 22. 8 pm, Room 201, Down¬town Center, 64 E. Lake, $1.00. FI6-8300.Folk Music Seminar series, led byDr. Robert Cosbey, May 22, “Typesof Folksong,” June 5. "The Blues,”June 12, “The Ballad.” June 19. “Cur¬rent Uses of Folksong in our Culture.”8:15 pm. Old Town School of FolkMusic. 333 W. North Avenue, $.50 perlecture."Three Unpublished Etchings by Ed¬gar Degas,” by Paul Moses, instructorin art and humanities, sponsored bythe Renaissance Society, June 1. 8 pm.Room 10, Classics building, free ad¬mission.Concerts, OperaUC Symphony Orchestra, H. Colin Slim, conductor. Mozart: Clarinet Con¬certo, Stravinsky: Symphonies ofWinds, Dvorak: Symphony No. 4, May23, 8 pm. Mandel Hall, admissioncharge, ext. 3885.American Opera Company, Bizet’s"Carmen” in French, conducted byFedor Kahalin, May 23, 8:15 pm.Eleventh Street Theatre, 62 E, 11thSt, $3.00. HA 7-1733.Pop Concert, Walter Hendl. conduc¬tor, May 28. 8:30 pm. Orchestra Hall,220 S. Michigan. $1.25-2.25. HA 7-0362.Roosevelt University Opera Work¬shop, Giannini’s "Beauty and theBeast.” Wolf-Ferraris' “Suzanne's Se¬cret.” May 29. 8:15 pm. Ganz RecitalHall, 430 S. Michigan, $1.00. WA 2-3580,ext. 225.Films"Throne of Blood,” modern adapta¬tion of "Macbeth” (Japan, 1957), AkiraKurosawa, director; May 25 , 7:45, DePaul Center Theatre, 25 E. Jackson.$.50. MO 4-0344.“Pow Wow” (1960), Downs and Lieb-ling, directors; “The Cry of Jazz.” Ed¬ward Bland, director; "Desist Film,”Stan Brakhage, director; "Fireworks,”Kenneth Anger, director: May 28, 8pm. Art Institute. Michigan and Adams.$.50. CE 6-7080.Theatre"The Connection,” by Jack Gelber,directed by Bob Stickinger, with castfrom Hull House Theatre production,starting April 10 for an extended en¬gagement, Fridays and Saturdays at8:30 pm, Sundays at 7:30 pm, HullHouse Sheridan, 717 W. Sheridan Road,$3.00. MI 2-7810.“Mother Courage and Her Children,”by Bertold Brecht, starring EugenieLeotvtovich, directed by Joseph Slowik,May 8-27, nightly 7:30, Friday andSaturday 8:30, Thursday matinee atEYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist53-Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount 2, Goodman Theatre, Monroe andColumbus, $2.50. Friday and Saturday$3.00, students $1.90, Friday and Sat¬urday, $2.50. CE 6-2337."The Frogs,” .by Aristophanes, di¬rected by Bill Bezdek, May 1-3, 8-10,15-17, 22-24, Friday and Saturday 8:30pm, Sunday 7:30 pm. The Last Stage,1506 E. Hyde Park Boulevard. $1.502.00. OA 4-4200."A Man for All Seasons.” withGeorge Rose, May 18-June 1. Black-stone Theatre, 60 E. Balbo. CE 6-8420."Thnrber Carnival,” staged by Rob¬ert Sehneiderman, May 22?!. 29-31,nightly 8:30. Sunday 4 pm. Northwest¬ern University Theatre, 1905 Sheridan,Friday and Saturday $2 50. students$2.00, Sunday $2.00, students $1.50,Evanston, 864-1900, ext. 2H2"Awake and Sing.” by Clifford Odets,directed by Bill Piletic, May 22-23. 29-30. 8:30 pm. Old Town Garden Players,Sedgwick and Evergreen. $1.50. 664-2846."Ltitlier,” Opening June 1. K eckstoneTheatre. 60 E. Balbo. CE 6-8240."The Innocents,” by William Archi¬bald, directed by James Krulish. May22-23 . 8:30 pm. Chicago Stage -Guild.640 N. State, $2.00, students $1.00. WH4-8050.Show movie on SouthVietnam Sun. afternoonA documentary film on South Viet¬nam, produced by the NationalLiberation Front of South Vietnamjuid distributed by the ProgressiveLabor Movement, will be shown thisSunday at 3:30 and 4:45 pm in theEast Lounge of Ida Noyes Hall.The film discusses life in Vietnamfrom the end of French rule in 1954to the end of the Diem regime in1963. It has been seized by US gov¬ernment officials in the past.Admission to the showing is 25c.Ait students who borrowedpaintings from tha Shapiro codoc*tion this quarter most return themto the Cloister Club of Ida NoyesHe!! ee M;sday asd Tsai day,June 1 and 2.All persons who submittedworks for the FOTA art exhibitmust pick up their entries ot Lex*ington Hall between 2 and 5 pmtodoy or tomorrow.The writer we're looking forprobably never thought ofgoing into advertisinguntil two minutes from now.If you thought about it at all, you thought you were aboveit. Now, we’re asking you to think again. After all, here it isgraduation time, and here you are a writer without portfolio.You’re secure enough technically to write with facility andeconomy, thereby freeing most of your energies for thinking andlearning. Make no mistake, you’ll be expected to do both inaddition to copywriting. You take direction well, so you won’thave to take it for long. You’re flexible; you know that there’smore than one way to say it. But you care enough to say it aswell as you are able.The copywriting trainee selected will work in a medium sizedagency that receives more awards for its creative work thanmost goliaths. Now we anticipate increased business as a resultof this work. Hence our search.Interested? Then here’s your first assignment: sell yourself.Tell us why you’re the man (or woman) we’re looking for—inas many words (or as few) as are necessary to make that sale.We’ll see as many convincing applicants as we can; offhand, wecan think of no disqualifications that would override talent.Please write;Creative Director, 200 East Ohio StreetChicago, Illinois 60611§ • CHICAGO MAROON *May 22, 1964.i* *. Report prejudice survey findingsPreviews of comingdistractionsby Citizen KahonDFG has terminated screen¬ing so that its members canbegin their studies for Springquarter. Meanwhile BJ Cine¬ma holds down the screen scene, pre¬senting ‘‘War of the Worlds” tonightand "Suddenly Last Summer” nextweek.Looking forward to next year, DocFilms offers an attraction lineup ofexcellent film fare in its tentativeschedule. An International Crime se¬ries will feature Orson Wells’ "LadyFrom Shanghai,” Ingmar Bergman’s"Naked Nights,” Josef von Stern¬berg’s "Blue Angel,” Akira Kuro¬sawa’s "Rsasomon,” and CarolReed’s "Outcast of the Islands,” thefilmization of Joseph Conrad’s novel,starring Trever Howard. Also fea¬tured will be "El,” a mastepiece bythe great Spanish director LuisBunuei, w!k> made "Virdiana.”There may also be a special show¬ing on The War Crime, featuringAlain Resnais’ study of the after-math of war, "Night and Fog,” andIcni Reifenstal’s famous documen¬tary of Nazi militarism, "Triumphof the Will.” Both of these films arestrong treatments of strong topicsand will carry a great deal of emo¬tional impact for many.A series of French classics will in¬clude "The Passion of Joan of Arc”and Jean Cocteau's "Blood of aPoet,” as well as other masterpiecesby eminent French filmmakers suchas Jean Renoir, Macrel Came, andJean Vigo.The Spring quarter will be re¬served for Fantasy Films, high¬lighted by a touch of the comic. Ex-(jerimentals new and old will beshown, including (of course) BruceConners’ "Cosmic Ray.”"Son of Bogey Flicks” will offersix more appearances by HumphreyBogart. Also on hand will be juniortough guys, such as James Cagney,Edward G. Robinson, and SydneyGreenstreet, filling out the BogeyBrigade.DFG will devote a series to "Im¬mortal Dusties,” great westernswhich will include "The Great TrainRobbery,” Gary Cooper in "Die Vir-Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15. III.MU 4-6856Read 3 to 7 X Faster... ginian,” John Ford’s "My DarlingClementine,” a John Wayne epic,Marlon Brando starring in his owncreation, "One-Eyed Jacks,” and theJoel McCrea-Randolph Scott feature"Ride the High Country,” a recenthighly praised feature.Next month’s features at the ArtInstitute will provide a preview ofthe DFG Series devoted to OrsonWelles and Alfred Hitchcock. Hitch¬cock will be represented by “TheLady Vanishes,” a memorable mys¬tery-comedy; "Spellbound,” the fa¬mous psychiatry drama starring Ing¬rid Bergman and Gregory Peck,with dream sequences by SalvadorDali; and "Rear Window,” the colormurder story, starring James Stew¬art and Grace Kelly at DFG. Hiisentertaining trio spans Hitchcock’scareer from the early thirties, con¬sidered by many his vintage years,to the late fifties, when he achieveda popular success comparable to hisartistic merit.The work of Welles will be on viewin the suspenseful political adventure,“Journey Into Fear,” his strikingfilmization of "Macbeth” with thedirector playing the title role, andthe more recent crime drama, "Touchof Evil.” The latter film also starsOrson Welles, along with CharltonHeston and Janet Leigh. A memor¬able guest appearance is contributedby Marlene Deitrich as a philosphicalprostitute.As they say after the World Series,the Academy Awards, and Springquarter, “Wait till next year.”A last minute bulletin from ourman in Hollywood tells of JosephLevines plans to film the life ofThorsten Veblen, starring BobbyDarin. A movie crew will be on cam¬pus next week to film the famousscene in which Veblen, a formerUC teacher, gets drunk on the Mid¬way before a crowd of astonishedonlookers, thereby creating the nowfamous phrase, "conspicious con¬sumption.”GETBETTERGRADESREADMORE,RETAINMORE,This new method ofreading will help youredueeyour studyhours, studymore e ffec*tively andimproveyour grades.Learn toread 3 to 7times fasterwith increasedcomprehensionand retention.Summer classesnow forming.Meet Evelyn Wood, inventor ofREADING DYNAMICS, and seeher demonstrate this revolutionaryreading method.DEMONSTRATION DATESWed. June 10 & Thurs., June 115:30 P.M. & 7:30 P.M./ atCentral YMCA19 S. LaSalle St.You are invited to attend.Obsolutely no obligation.For reservations call:Evelyn WoodREADING DYNAMICS INSTITUTE180 West Adorns St.Telephone: STote 2-7014 ENJOY APROFITABLESUMMERNATIONAL PUBLISHERIS SEEKING REPSTO WORK NEAR HOMEOR IN COLLEGE AREA$1000 AWARDTO CONTEST WINNERplus oilier valuable prizesIn Addition To TlwRemarkable Income You CanKara Call inf* OnInterested FamiliesWith Our OutstandingEducational ProgramNo experience necessaryCan lead to full-time positionFor full details, write:PAUL SCHRAUEREDUCATIONAL DIVISIONParent's MagazineEnterprises, Inc.52 Vanderbilt AvenueNew York 17, N.Y. Two UC professors have re¬cently completed a study ofvarious aspects of interracialprejudice among families ofdiffering ethnic backgrounds.The analysis was made by Don¬ald J. Bogue, professor of Sociology,and director of the Community andFamily Study Center, and Jan E.Dizard, instructor in Sociology.The interviewing for the surveyhas been going on for the past fouryears. The findings represent thebeliefs and attitudes of seven hun¬dred twenty-one ’Negro and eighthundred thirty-nine white households.A variety of social, economic, andethnic groups within Chicago weretapped.48°/o favor mixed livingTlie findings concerning residenceindicated that forty-eight per centof those questioned wished to livein neighborhoods where whites andNegroes were about equal in number."Those who are least interestedIn living near whites are the new¬comers to Chicago and the residentsof the slums. Negroes who havelived their lives in Chicago andNegroes that live outside the slumsare much more interested in inte¬grated living,” the survey found.Further, Negroes desire accept¬ance into neighborhoods where itwould be appropriate for a whiteperson of their socio-economic statusto live.Queries about marriage concludedthat "almost no Negro respondentsreported that they would encouragetheir child to marry a white per¬son.” Approximately half of thoseasked responded that they wouldtolerate it; the remaining half wouldoppose it.The questions relating to prejudic¬es showed that whites of Europeandescent had the greatest desire forresidential segregation. The Negroes,though having some prejudice, doThe IT car for '64 not object to living with other groupsas much as white people object toliving near Negroes.Ethnic prejudice highThe general level of racial andethnic prejudice was termed "quitehigh” by the survey. Jewish respond¬ents evidenced a greater amountof prejudice toward others than othersdid toward the Jews. Groups ofSpanish ancestry display a loweroverall level of ethnic prejudice thanany other group. Negroes followthem. Negroes from slum areas aremore prejudiced than are those whodo not dwell in slums.The data presents the belief thatdiscrimination has not broken thespirit of the Negro, although themajority of them have admitted thatthey cannot get ahead as fast asothers.The general reaction among Ne¬groes to discrimination is either de¬pression or anger, the survey re¬ports. "Urbanization is accentuatingand strengthening the movement todefy the past and bring about achange,” the findings state.Whites blameworthy forracial discriminationNegroes tend to attribute primaryresponsibility for racial discrimina¬tion to the white population. They are, however, ready to admit thatsome behavioral changes on the partof the Negro community could Im¬prove the situation. They feel, ac¬cording to the survey, that personswho practice discrimination shouldbe punished by law.The survey questions were spe¬cifically directed to obtain informa¬tion according to the racial andeconomic classes consulted. Theywere designed to reveal any prej¬udices which these classes might en¬tertain.Major areas covered in the inter¬views concerned residence prefer¬ences, attitudes about marriage,prejudices, the state of Negro mor¬ale as it is affected by current dis¬crimination, and discrimination ir,general.INTRAMURAL SPORTSTn the softball competition, play hasbegun in the first round of the Cham¬pionship Playoffs, with Chamberlin de¬feating Henderson N., making Cham¬berlin the College House Softball Cham¬pions. Undefeated Chamberlin will playPsi Upsilon for the UndergraduateChampionship.In both of the divisional leagues, thechampions were undefeated: RobberBarons—Divisional Blue and Res Ipsas—Division Red. These two teams willplay on Monday at 5 pm on NorthField to decide the Divisional LeagueChampionship. The winner will playthe Undergraduate Champions for theAll-University Softball title Wednesdayat 5 pm on North Field.Jimmy’sand. the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.IV1EEIXI !IT has wind-up windows. IThas a new up-in-a-jiffy top.IT has hinged side-windowvents. IT has power to spare.IT is the sensational newAUSTIN HEALEY3000 Sports ConvertibleBOB NELSONMOTORSIMPORT CENTREHealeyPeugeotAustin M.G.SpriteTriumphFull line on display • new & used6040 S. Cottage GroveMidway 3-4501ill!mDIRECTORSTheodore Bikelh Clarence CooperRonnie GilbertAlan LomaxJean RitchieMike SeegerPeter YarrowGeorge WeinChairman NEWPORTFOLKFESTIVALMS. - FRI.. SAT.. SUN.JULY 23-24-25-26Frwbody Park. NEWPORT, 1.1.Ticket.: $3, $4, SSOn Mail OrcUrt, add 2S centsEvening concerts will beaugmented by morning andafternoon panels and workshops,Special group rates cau 1msarranged in advance now.For Tickets and Program Information:Newport Folk Festival, Newport, R. I. Here’s deodorant protectionYOU CAN TRUSTOld SpiCC Stick Deodorant...fastest, neatest way to all¬day, every day protection! It’s the man’s deodorant pre¬ferred by men...absolutely dependable. Glides onsmoothly, speedily... dries in record time. Old Spice StickDeodorant — most convenient, most economical deodorantmoney can buy. 1.00 plus tax.uee STICKDEODORANTU L T O NMay 22, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROONCalendar of events Distribute Mark Lai he'sFriday, May 22Lecture: “The Development of a mod¬ern Indian Artist.” K K. Hebber,(Committee for South Asian Studies);Classics 10. 11:30 am.Lecture: " ‘Romanesque’ 9tyles inSaint-Sernin,” Thomas W Lyman.(Committee on Social Thought); Class¬ics 10. 4 pm.Lecture: “Death Prediction In theKanya Kubjas: A Study of Symbols andSymbolic Structures.” Ravindra S.Khare, Fellow. Department of Anthro¬pology, (Committee for South AsianStudies': Foster 10*. 4 pm.Lecture: “Mode of Action of CoJi-cines,” Dr. Masayasu Nomura, Depart¬ment of Genetics, University of Wis¬consin. (Department of Biophysics);Research Institutes 480. 4 pm.Dinner and Discussion: “The GospelAccording to Peanuts.” Robert Short.(Lutheran Koirtonia); Chapel House,5*10 Woodlawn. 6 pm.Discussion: “Christian Faith.” (Inter¬varsity Christian Fellowship): IdaNoyes 7:110 pm.Radio Series: “H. Colin Slim Con¬ducts the TTC Orchestra,” Fall Concert,1983. WUCB, 7:30 pm.Lecture: “Changing Requirements ofAmerican Security.” Senator GeorgeMcGovern. iDem., S.D.), (Council Fora Livable World); Law School Audito¬rium, 8 pm.Motion Picture: War of the Worlds;Burton-Judson Courts. 8 and 10 pm.Theatre: Tonight at 8:30 II. Albee’sAmerican Dream, Saroyan’s The ManWith His Heart in the Highlands, Yeat’sOn Baile’s Strand. (University Thea¬tre): Reynolds Club Theatre. 8:30 pm.Semi-Formal Dance: Mavflower Ball.Don Carron Orchestra: InternationalHouse. 9 Dm.Saturday, May 23Volunteer Work: VISA members atChicago State Menu'l Hospital, end-of-year picnic for patients and volunteers:bus leaves Ida Noyes 12:30 pm.Court Theatre Tryouts: Open audi¬tions for all parts in Taming of theShrew. The Tempest. Romeo andJuliet: Reynolds Club Theatre. 1-3 pm.Varisty Baseball Games: UC vs. Wa¬bash College: Stagg Field. 1 pm.Concert: UC Symphony Orchestra.H. Colin Slim. conductor, Mozart,Clarinet Concerto: Stravinsky. Sym¬phonies of Winds; Dvorak, SymphonyJr4: Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.Theatre: Tonight at 8:30 IT, Sunday, May 24Radio Series: From the Midway "TaxSupport for Non-public Schools,” Dr.Tyler Thompson, Garret TheologicalSeminary; WFMF. 100.3 me., 11 am.Carillon Recital: Rockefeller Memo¬rial Chapel, 4 pm.Track Meet: UC Track Club Develop¬ment meet; Stagg Field, 5 pm.Radio Series: From the Midway '"TOieEthical Aspects of Foreign Policy,”Senator Eugene McCarthy. (Dem,S.D.): WAIT, 820 kc„ « pun.GNOSIS Caucus: Election of officer*;Ida Noyes Library, 7:30 pm.Folk Dancing: Folklore Society; IdaNoyes. 7:30 pm.Radio Program: “The Eight O’clockSpecial,” prof, of English Raven Me-David talks about his researches indialect: WUCB. 8 pm.Theatre: Tonight at 8:30 IT.Radio Program: Analysis of Hum Tmusic, "Tragic Overture': WUCB, 9:15pm.Tuesday, May 26Israeli Folk Dancing: HiUel Founda¬tion. 5715 Woodlawn, 8 pm.Organiaztional Meeting: Psychologydiscussion Forum, to promote commu¬nication among undergraduate psy¬chology and human development stu¬dents and faculty: Ida Noyes Library,8:30 pm.Lecture: “Has Philosophy A Fu¬ture?” Dr. Mortimer J. Adler. Director,Institute for Philosophical Research;Law School Auditorium, 8 pm.Wednesday, May 27CCCO Picket: To protest recentBoard of Education appointees; CityHall. 4-6 pm.Lecture: “Impressions From a Visitto Israel,” Dr. Bruno Bottleheim, Pro¬fessor Departments of Education. Psy¬chology, and Psychiatry: Hillel Foun¬dation, 5715 Woodlawn. 8:30 pm.Thursday, May 28Lecture: “Revolution, Genuine andSpurious,” Hannah Arendt. Committeeof Social Thought, (Social Science 1*3);Mandel Hall. 11:30 am.Honors Assembly: (Office of the Deanof Students); Ida Noyes, 3:30 pm. defense of Lee OswaldFr!day, May 29(Official Holiday)Discussion: ‘‘America's Dilemma,'*Michael Harrington, author, The OtherAmerica, Bayard Rustin. Deputy Direc¬tor 1963 March on Washington, "NormanThomas, (UC YPSL and Socialist Par¬ty); Mandel HaH, 8 pm.Motion Picture: Suddenly Last Sum¬mer; Burton-Judson Courts, 8 and 10pm.Monday, June 1Lecture: “Three Unpublished Etch¬ings by Edgar Degas ” Paul Moses.Departments of Art and Humanities,(Renaissance Society); Classics 10,8 pm.Thursday, June 4Lecture: “Tlie Role of Art in Reshap¬ing Culture,” Saul Beliow, Commit¬tee on Social Thought, (Social Science123); Mandel HaM, 1:30 am .Thursday, June 11Honors Tea: Department oi History;Social Sciences Lounge, 4:30 pm. A group of UC studentsconcerned by the lack of in¬formation concerning the as¬sassination of the late presi¬dent John F. Kennedy will distributeattorney Mark Lane’s brief in de¬fense of Lee Harvey Oswald to stu¬dents and faculty of the University.The brief will be handed out uponrequest at 5625 University Ave.from 1 to 1:30 weekdays as long asthe supply lasts. There will be nocharge, first come first served, andonly one issue can be given to eachperson because of the limited sup¬ply.The purpose behind the studentdistribution of the brief is to informmore members of the University community of the facts of the assas¬sination and the handling of it bylegal agenciies and the press in lightoi Lane’s speech at UC on May 10.Oswald’s defense has been re¬printed for the general public andwas obtained by the students at abulk rate. Each student donatedenough money to cover the oast ofseveral hundred copies. One spokes¬man said, “We’re planning to distrib¬ute them free hoping to reach manystudents who might ordinarily passthem over as some sort oi leftistpropaganda.”Anyone interested in working withthe distributors or suggesting moreeffective means of distribution callArthur Kaufman or Robert Brock-house at 752-7066.AMALGAMATED CLOTHING WORKERSOF AMERICA - AFL-CIO15 Union Square • New York 3, N.Y. t Telephone: ALgonquin 5-7800Breathtaking, 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 250 for Wedding Guide to J. R. Wood &Sons, Inc., 216 E. 45th Street, New York 17, NewYork, Department C. •*«*«"*« Dear Student Consumer:You may have heard rumors about the Amalgamated’s consumer education campaign onthe Henry I. Siegel Company (H.I.S.).May we tell you a story about this Company:The H.I.S. firm (Henry I. Siegel of Tennessee) makes men’s wear designed for the studentcrowd; it is sold in nearby stores. When you see its label, think of this: This firm, throughintimidation and pressure, has barred workers in its largest non-union plant in the South fromexercising their rights under federal law to self-organization. It is this kind of outfit which hasgiven strength to the feudal-like conditions which prevail in much of southern industry today.FACTS: The U.S. Court of Appeals has only recently affirmed the National Labor RelationsBoard’s holding that this company was guilty of unfair labor practices because of pressures di¬rected against workers who wanted to organize a local union. These activities included: requir¬ing employees to surrender copies of affidavits given to NLRB investigators; and questioningemployees about their union activities.FACTS: The H.I.S. plant in Bruceton, Tennessee, has a cozy setup. Plant Manager Siegel isMayor of the town. Before a recent NLRB election, the town apparatus was mobilized to pres¬sure the workers to vote against the union. The threats of discharge and plant closure wereheld over the heads of the workers if they voted for the union. Racial appeals were directedagainst the union.FACTS: Despite this pressure and other acts, which included company observers looking intovoting booths while employees were voting in a ’’secret” election, the company beat the workersby less than 10% of the vote. THE MEMPHIS OFFICE of the NLRB has recommended thatthis result be set aside because of the company intimidation and that a new election he ordered.YOU CAN VOTE on this too: Don’t use your shopping dollars to support this firm. Yourpurchasing power can help southern workers to win their rights. Let the store know that youdon’t want H.I.S. to be YOURS.YOU CAN DO SOMETHING:1. Distribute ’’Don’t Buy H.I.S.” leaflets (available Chicago office 333 S. Ashland)2. Note your protest on the reverse side of the ’’Don’t Buy H.US.” leaflet, or on a post cardand mail it to stores carrying this anti-union clothing.3. Call on a store manager to express your opinion.See 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 RoadOak ParkHAYWARD JEWELERS111 N. Marion StreetZionASHLAND JEWELERS2716 Sheridan Road UNION LABEL DEPARTMENTAMALGAMATED CLOTHINGWORKERS OF AMERICA AFL-CIOPaid Public Notice6 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 22, 1964THE BEACH rfOUSE On Lake MichiganFREEwaterskiinggolfbeachpartiescontinentalbreakfast 500 ft.privatebeachpatiospaciouslawnsheart ofresortsectionrestaurantand loungenearbyFOR THE YOUNG IN SPIRIT AND MEANS$25-$35 Per Week Per Person—Inquire About Group RatesFOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS WRITETHE BEACH HOUSE 111 North Shore DriveSouth Haven, Michigan 2 Hrs. From ChicagoPatronize Our Advertisersshore drive motelFACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chicago Rates. Beautiful Rooms,Free TV, Parking, Courtesy Coffee.Closest Motel to Univ. of Chicago and Museum of Science & Industry.FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTEL56th St. A So. Shore Dr. • Chicago 37, IllinoisB. J.CINEMA"War Of The WorldsFriday May 228:10 P.M.1005 E. 60th ST.50c RENT-A-CARPER DAY5c PER MilPER MILEWECKEND SPECIAL RATIFRIDAY 4 P.M.TO MONDAY 10 A.M.ATOMIC CARRENTALS, INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155SAMUEL A. BELL•Buy Shell From Bell*SINCE 142*4701 So. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150LAKE /PARK AT £RDthe (A-yde park NO 7-9071yde park theatreStarts Friday, May 22 —"BEAT THE DEVIL"HUMPHREY BOGART ★ JENNIFER JONESGINA LOLLOBRIGIDA * PETER LORREANDALBERTO SORDI * SILVAN A MANGANOVITTORIO GASSMAN". . . And Suddenly It's Murder"BR Starts Friday, May 29 —HALLELUJAH THE HILLS ii“W ildest & Wittiest Comedy Of The Season" — N.Y. TimesPLUS — 2 Mack Sennett Shorts"THE WAITERS' BALL" with Fatty Arbuckle"SATURDAY AFTERNOON" with Harry LangdonStarts Friday, June S —Cannes Prix Actress MARINA VLADY"THE CONJUGAL BED"AND »Claude HI AfcinDII11 <Blue-Chabrol's beard)Free Weekend Patron Parking etc.Special Student Rate etc. CHICAGO MAROONWEEKEND (®) GUIDESTUDENTS ATTENTION!ATTENTION STUDENTS!Become an exclusive member ofthe Tracy Theatres Student Club!Good at the Howard Theatre, 1621W. Howard St. Plus other theatresto he 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 forMembership Card!HOWARD Theatre1621 W. HOWARD ST.PHONE RO 4-0808M3world oldining. pleasurel dark ,hea,r'50 ■iitimesfor college studentswith i.d. card• different doublefeatures daily• open dawn to dawn• little galderyfor gals onlyfri., 22 - "the 39 steps,”"twilight for the gods.”snt., 23 • "man’s favorite■port,” "4 for texas.’’sun., 24 - "love with theproper stranger," "sun-day in new york.”mon., 25 - "man frotnthe diners’ club,” "bellesommers."tues., 26 - "invasion quar¬tet,” "the hook.”wed., 27 - "cry in thenight.” "courtship ofeddie’s father.”rhurs., 28 - —sodom &gomorrah,” "secret ofthe purple reef.”«r 2-2843dark A madison **... fine and funny ..—Anne Pippin Burnett, MAROON“THE FROGS” RUN EXTENDEDResponse to James Redfield’s new translation ofAristophanes’ “The Frogs” has been excellent and TheLast Stage is therefore extending the run for anadditional two weekends at 1506 East 51st.May 22-23-24/29-30-31June - 5 - 6 - 7FOR RESERVATIONS CALL OA 4-4200DEARBORN AT DIVISIONThe EXCITEMENT . . .The COLOR ... The SUSPENSEof the Greatest EntertainmentSpectacle on Earth."THE GRAND■■OLYMPICS'V_ in Eastmancolor Chicago's most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films.STUDENTSTola advantage of thespecial discount avail¬able to you. 90£ any dayexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. card to the cashier.charcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668TIKI TOPICSVinit (Urals House of Tiki for aquiet, relaxed evening conducivefor a twosome. Our candlelightletting ii idea! for an intimateconversation, spiced with achoice of Jumbo Fried Shrimp,Barbecued Back Ribs, FriedChicken, I-obster Tail, BeefPlatter, etc. Try Cirals House ofTiki where the Hawaiianatmosphere sets the seene for anenjoyable evening with the ladyin your life.For an added treat after dinnertake in the new show at “TheLast Stage.” T he production is“The Frogs” byAristophanes. Don’t miss it. -“After the Show” hack toCirals House of Tiki for adelightful Hawaiian drink.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51st and Lake Park Ave.1510 HYDE PARK BLVD.LI 8-7585 VISIT THENEW AND BEAUTIFULCLASSIC ROOMin the Windermere HotelEnjoy Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner orLate Snacks—OPEN TILL 12:00 P.M.FREE PARKING IN OUR NEW GARAGETRANSIENT SINGLE ROOMS $7.50TWINS $12.00ALSO INCLUDES FREE PARKINGWINDERMERE HOTEL1642 EAST 56th STREETCHICAGO 37, ILLINOISri- University TheatreTONIGHT AT 8 30!Km Albee - The American DreamSaroyan-The Man Willi HisHeart In TheHighlandsYeats - On Bailees StrandMAY 22, 23, 24, 29, 30$1.50; students $1.00REYNOLDS CLUB THEATREMay 22, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON" aCLASSIFIED ADS CCCO, CORE plan picketsFOR RENT, ROOMS, APTS., ETC.SUBLET mid June to late Sept. Cool,comp, turn., attractive 2'.« rm. apt.Suit, for one. 5220 Cornell, 643-7876eves, weekends. WANTED: Male roommate to sharewith medical student (June to Sept.)Large 4 rm. furnished apt. (6102 S.Kimbark) CaU 363-0030. $40/per mo.WANTED: 3rd girl to share apt. CaUBU 8-6684 after^ 6.SUMMER Sublet—welf furnished, neat,V2 rooms; reas. rent. Call 493-2362. SUBLET “June thru Aug.”—5 quietlarge rooms — cool front and backporch. 5338 Harper. Very reas. rent.Call 363-0930.THE DUNES: This summer shareour house and 15 acres near lakeMichigan and Dunes State Park butcompletely private. Very inexpensive.752-7646. SUMMER SUBLET: Spacious 4 rms.,furn.; option to renew lease, $80/mo.6009 Woodlawn CaU 493-6409.WANTEDWANTED: 2 female roommates forsummer. Big apt., close to campus, lowrent. CaU Sue or El, BU 8-1956. EXP. Dental Asst, desires part timework. No eves. CaU RE 1-4095.Summer Sublet: 2 bedrms, 2 baths,comp, furn., in Hyde Park. PL 2-2190.TO SUBLET furn. lg. apt. June 1 toDec. 1 or fractions thereof. Facultyonly CaU FA 4-9274. RIDE wanted to N. Y. between June12 & 17. Share driving and exp. Man& Wife Ext. 4194.RECOND., GUARANTEED HI-FI's.Discount prices—amps, tuners, TV's—Schwartz Bros., 1215 E. 63rd. FA 4-8400.ONE MALE share spacious 7 rm. furn.apt. June 15-Oet. 1 or portion. Priv.rm. and bath, $45. CaU 324-3764.SUMMER sublease: 2!a rm. bsmt. apt.,new kitchen, bath. $75. Call 363-5162.WANT female roommate to share apt.near north. June-Sept. Reas. Call MO4-7698 eves, or weekends. - EXPERIENCED, responsible secretary-typist needs fuU time summer and/orpart time school year job. 3 yrs. highlydiversified experience. Dictaphone. Ref¬erences. Can start immed. Hilda Hoff¬mann. BU 8-6610. Leave message if out.FOR SALE4 FEMALE roommates wanted for thesummer. Own bedrm., 2 baths, attrac¬tive 8 rm. apt. Call 752-6581 $60 TAKE my beloved ’51 Plymouth,reas., cond., caU PL 2-3186.I 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.FURN. 5 rm. apt. sublet early June-Sept. 1. $97.50/mo. PL 2-2294. after 5.NICE. reas. room near Untv. for rent.Call MI 3-9257. NEW-USED BOOKS 10-30% DISCOUNTTYPEWRITERS — new-used-electric-manual TO 45% OFF CURRENT MAR¬KET PRICE. Used typewriters fuUyfactory rebuilt (not just reconditioned)and fully guaranteed. Discounts aver¬age 25-30%. J ALLYSON STERN-BOOKSELLER. PI, 2-6284. Anytime(even late at night).RM. & KITC. priv. in exchange forbaby sitting. BU 8-6672. Near Campus. FOR SALE—Rare red velvet couch &chair set—unique church pews & othergoodies. Call 684-0427 in the evenings.SUBLET for summer 2% lg. rms.,newly furn. Reas. rent. Call after 6.493-5744.SUMMER SUBLET: beautiful, spa¬cious, 13 rms., 6 bathrms., gardeningfacilities, convenient to campus, compfurn., pref. students, $90 month, callext. 2345 , 3001, or 3009. FOR SALE: Desk, chairs, desk lamp,bookcases. Royal standard typewriter,electric blanket. 250cc BMW motor¬cycle. Call 643-2453, 6-8:30 pm, MU4-2718, 8:30-11 pm.HELP WANTED2'i-RM. Studio apt Unfurn.. by lake.Avail. June 15. Cali 493-5171SUBLET: June 10-Sept. 30 Comp,furn., cool 3l,2 rm. apt. $87.50. Call548-6059 after 6:30.FURN. 4 rm. apt. for summer sublet.$82.50, mo. 2 blocks from campus. CallPierce 1612. FA 4-9600. WANTED 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 answ'er 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.SUMMER sublet open for next year. WANTED person to drive my car to2Vj rms. $94/mo. incl. util 5728 Black- Colo, end May or beg. June. Call MIstone, call 288-3757. 3-9565. Tlie Coordinating Council of Com-— munity Organizations (CCCO) has de-PERSONALS dared a “month of mourning” forUC summer session racial justice in Chicago, May 27-visrr California June 21.Avoid heat and frustration come to .temperate Berkeley, California for the Students are asked to participate1964 summer sessions., in demonstrations protesting the schoolLive economically while either attend- “* * , . ... , ,,ir.g the University of California or tour- board appointment of Mrs. Wendelling San Francisco Green, at the Clark Street entranceRoom & Board plus 5 hours . TT ... ,ir j j . Awork weekly $86.52 to City Hall, this Wednesday at 4Board only plus 3 hours pm, also to wear black armbandsWperV Hix*week session of mourning throughout the month.University students’ Cooperative Pickets are asked to wear blackAssociation mounting clothes, or a white shirtBe&^ey ^California and black tie. Interested studentsTTT~~ should contact the Reverend J. Pres-TYPING of term papers and theses. , .« .. „Exp., rush jobs. On state st. Subway, ton Cole, Chapel House, or the Rev*943-6544. —NEEDED: girl to practice ballroom «... . ... .dancing with. CaU Alan. 326-6700, ext. Neighborhood COlICCtl Wed.TYPIST exp. all fields, manuscripts, Trin will nrrionttheses Sr papers stat. Call 493-9317. The Tre Loroa lrio will presentIS willi ard real? a benefit concert ot chamber musicFLY TWA to the Worfd’s Fair. Campus in the Newberger Auditorium ofrep: Michael Lavinsky, 745 Linn House, Congregation Rodfei Zedek, 5200 HydeMl 3-6000.. Park Blvd., Wednesday, May 27, atEXP typist, term papers, theses, etc. g pm.HY 3-2438. . , , .— ——: , "7 The concert is being sponsored byJUSTICE LIVES, as the forces of good- , .« •ness truth and beauty the Friends of Chamber Music, Con-triumpH! gregation Rodfei Zedek. the Hydegf ta,.a). 8 Park-Kenwood Community Confer-Dogiovers of the worid. ence, and the Council of Hyde ParkUNITE!!! and Kenwood Churches and Syna-NEED to find origin of quotation ‘ To o0gUes in an effort to obtain funds todance is to live, to live is to dance. , <‘Tr,w= tor Teens” nm-Caii Short. Snell HaU. ext. 260 support the Jobs tor leens - pro-try BARTLETT’S! gram, which enlists and trains teen-wanted : rider to Baltimore this age boys for jobs from now untilweekend: 324-7106._ September.LOST: gold sepent ring with Garnet nmPr,m will include the foi-stone. Monday in womens washroom. Ine program Will include uit. u*Please contact Judy Zetzel, 324-625J. lowing works: a string trio by FranzHAPPY birthday JOHN T. Schubert; a quartet for flute and—•— —— strings bv Mozart; a' trio for flute,pr^40FL^wE$50:Cc^en4sCa7^-?r^ viola and bassoon by Max Saunders;— —— and a quartet for bassoon and stringsSTUDENTS interested in the Philoso- n„n_-phy of Ayn Rand and wishing to meet by I?ianz Uanzi.con'uT r',0,r»k%»nii?k.xT Tickets for the concert arc $2 and3767 or call Nielsen. 493-8945. can be purchased at the YMCA, 1400capitalists of the world unite, you East 53 or at Congregation Rodfeihave nothing to lose but your virgmUy. Checks should ^ made outBRUTUS please come home. to Council Qf Hyde Park-Kenwoodeat Yi?U Ca w.wV 3 beMer breakfast~ Churches and Synagogues. erend Alan Anderson, 5477 Green¬wood, 324-1268.The month will be climaxed by acivil rights rally at Soldiers’ FieldJune 21, featuring Dr. Martin LutherKing, Mahalia Jackson, and DickGregory. The rally is sponsored bythe Illinois Rally for Civil RightsCommittee; co-chairmen are Dr.Edgar Chandler, Executive Directorof the Church Federation of greaterChicago, and Edwin C. Berry, Execu¬tive Director, of the Chicago UrbanLeague.UC Congress of Racial Equality(CORE) will participate in this move¬ment by sponsoring two pickets inaddition to the one planned by CCCOThe first will be a picket of a meet¬ing of the Illinois Fair EmploymentCommission at the Sheraton ChicagoHotel today. Demonstrators are tomeet ait the CORE office, secondfloor, Ida Noyes Hall at 9 am.UC CORE will also picket Evanstonrealtors on May 23. Anyone interesied in participating in these demon¬strations should contact Eric Gold,1315X, Pierce Tower.Randy Ross of UC CORE is incharge of selling armbands on cam¬pus. Anyone interested in helpar^j hershould call 1428X, New Dorms.ASAmm rOF.., more than three million Sun Lifepolicies and group certificates are inforce and over two-thirds of Sun Life'spolicy payments are now being madeto living policyholders and annuitants. DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-684*EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESA3 a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr„ CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY UniversalArmy Store145? E. 53rd St. FA 4-5854Hooded ArmyRaincoats*10% Off On All PurchasesWith This Coupon*£xcept Fair Trade Items C(0^EAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 Today'sAssignmentCOMETCUSTOMLIMITED$ 1882Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - ParfsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTALNOW Storage Special!You can have Ample Closet Space byusing our Safe Storage Facilities foryour Out Of Season Garments. Fullprotection against . . .FIRE • THEFT • HEAT • MOTHSAsk about our Sensational Thrifty BoxStorage ... A Real Money Saving Value!the Wxdl S/wdJlCLEANERS • LAUNDERERS1013-17 E. 61st STREETMl 3-7447 - HY 3-6868 CO.For Over Fiity Years • . .FINE DRY CLEANING NICKY'SRESTAURANT AND PIZZANICKY’S TAKE-OUT & DELIVERY MENU(BbsDi, and PIZZASAssortmentsCHEESE .....ANCHOVIEONIONPEPPERMUSHROOMHAM small medium targe1.20 1.90 2.901.40 2.15 3.2S1.40 2.1 S 3.251.25 1.9S 3.001.40 2.15 3.251.60 2.40 3.501.40 2.15 3.251.60 2.40 3,50RISSSlab .SlabsSlabs 2.003755.50CHICKIE IN THE BOXLarge Pieces 2.50Large Pieces 3.75Large Pieces 4.75 SANDWICHESPlain or BAR BQ Beef 60Meat Bali 55SAUSAGE 55Above Served with PeppersHAMBURGER 50CHEESEBURGER 60FA 4-5340*******************************************»***e***********r9rre**^eeee»e*e***e^e^re*ee**^*****'t • CHICAGO MAROON • May 22, 1964■a iivt- - ■■