Faculty approves Levi reorganization proposalsT lit! Levi report took a giant step forward Monday, part of Levi’s proposals was finallythe College faculty approved the substance of Provost passed after discussion. Problems fo meetEdward H. Levi’s proposals for reorganization of the College, according TO LEVI, the actual '€|*"1 s!t^es’ J"16. problemAt its regular meeting, the faculty approved all points content ui any first year in common itted h ^ undergradu111 Levi’s “memorandum” is- — would be decided upon by a facultysued last August, which would particularly qualified permitted to curriculum committee. The onlybring alwmt a reorganizationof the College into five “areac«•lieges,” and set up a compactCxtllege faculty council as the newruling body for College decision¬making. amcmg other measures.DISCUSSION ON the proposalscentered on two points, aocoi-ding toKnox C. Hill, chairman of die Col¬lege philosophy staff and spokesmanjnr the College faculty policy com¬mittee. Tlie two points were:• Levi’s proposal that ‘‘the firstyoar ol the undergraduate curricu¬lum should in general be a year inoimmon of general education coursestor all students, but with students defer one general education course inlavor ot specialized work.”• The creation of a CollegeCouncil, which would be a ruling-body whose powers would be dele¬gated ft-om the entire faculty.Flexibility discussedSome faculty members in the sci¬ences and languages expressed fearsthat the ‘‘one year in common” fea¬ture would present difficulties tocertain students who would need tostart their specialized work right atfirst, according to Hill. It waspointed out, however, that these dif¬ficulties already exist under tirepresent structure. Hill said this necessary provision would be thatall students would take a portion oftheir general-education studies in thefirst year.In the memorandum containing hisoriginal projxxsals. Levi put forth theidea as a way of meeting problemsarising hum the organization of theCollege into sections. This new divi¬sion would parallel the four graduatedivisions of biological sciences, phy¬sical sciences, social sciences andhumanities, and would include a“general college” for those who havenot picked a major field or wish todo more independent work, such asthe tutorial studies program nowprovides. ate work, or if committed, changesthat commitment, as so many do,after a certain period of work. Itis to be assumed that transfers willbe permitted hum one College orsection to another. But after a cer¬tain point this undoubtedly will andshould entail a loss of student time.“There are advantages in havingthe first year of tlie student's workin a general a year in common withother first-year students. . . . Theemphasis here is on ‘a part’ ( of thestudents’ general education courses),since a division between one year ofgeneral education followed by threeyears of specialization is not in¬tended,” Levi’s report says.Council discussedOn the proposal to set up a Col¬lege Council, Hill said there wassome question of giving up the entirefaculty’s authority to such' a coun¬cil, which would then be the effec¬tive ruling body for College facultydecisions. SUCH A COMPACT body, how¬ever. is the “heart of the whole Leviidea,” Hill commented, designed asa more effective, efficient body thanthe faculty as a whole. It would bemade up of forty members, halfelected by the College faculty :tndhalf apixnnted by the president oftlie University.Hill pointed out that a CollegeCouncil would be parallel to thepresent Council of tlie UniversitySenate. The Senate consists of ailfaculty members and usually meetsjust to hear the president’s annual“State of the University” message;the Council of tlie Senate contains51 members and meets every monthof the academic year.Next step — to CouncilLevi told the Maroon the next, stepfor his proposals will be the Councilof the Senate. The next meeting ofthat body is December 15, but Levisaid he was not sure whether itwould consider his proposals at thatmeeting. If the Council approves theproposal, the next step will be topresent it to the Board of Trustees,which meets next in January.Vol. 70, No. 16 The University of Chicago Friday, November 27, 1964 a-jsp31Anti-fire cooperation askedUC bans classroom smokingThe administration ruled last week that smoke-filledclassrooms should be a thingof the past, but not, for a change, because of cancer.In a letter to all deans, administrative officers, and departments heads, Weston L.Krogman, business manager for campus operations, implored the entire Universityoinmunily to give up the classroomhabit because of fire regulations.11k* Chicago Fire Commissionercalled the University’s attention toNo Smoking” violations, Krogman-akl. and compliance with the rulenow indicated, lest what befellCobb Hull belaU oilier camjJus buikl-mg.s.Cobb closedCobb was closed down last spring>y the Fire Commissioner becauseil was a general fire hazard. Planscurrently call lor its renovation bytlie fall ot 15166.IN HIS LETTER, Krogman envphasized that the smoking crack¬down is not merely a thing at themoment. The Fire Commissioner’sdeputies, he said, will make regularreinspections, so that compliance isnecessary on a permanent basis.“Reinspection will take place prob¬ably twice a year,” Krogman toldthe Maroon.The text ol Kmgman’s letter readsas follows:“A recent inspection of all build¬ings on the University Quadrangleswas made by representatives of theFire Commissioner’s Office. Cityol Chicago. Our specific attentionhas been directed to violations ofthe “No Smoking” notices postedin class rooms, laboratories, ele¬vators and similar areas of thecampus. •“Inasmuch as faculty members,employees, and students alike playa dominant role in any really et-feetive fire-safety program, may weagain ask your -cooperation in ob¬servance of the “No Smoking” reg¬ulations to maintain a fire-safe en¬vironment. The Fire Commissioner’sdeputies will make regular reins pee-tioas ol these premises and we trustthat their future reports will bevery favorable in this regard.“Also, the Department of Buildingsand Grounds (Extension 3076) willappreciate your reporting of anycondition which you feel may pre¬sent a real or potential fire hazard.”All buildings threatsAsked which buildings presented'he greatest fire hazards, Krogmanstated that all were potentialthreats, but that old and archaicallyconstructed buildings such as Cobbwere at the head of the danger list.KROGMAN WOULD NOT lay par Communications Board forWUCB still is necessarytitular blame on faculty or studentsfor tlie violations that have takenplace in the past. “It's a generalthing.” he said.He did express hope, however,that his letter would bring quickand favorable results. ‘‘Our pastexperience in this regard has beenfavorable,” he pointed out.UC’s fire insurance, Krogman re¬lated, does not differentiate betweenfires caused by smoking and firescaused by other factors. He noted,however, that 25% of all US firesare caused by smoking. Only one enforcerA Maroon survey revealed that,prior to the smoking ban, only onefaculty member had been enforcingthe “No Smoking” rule. He wasChristian Mackauer. William RaineyHarper professor emeritus of history.THE SURVEY ALSO revealed thatseveral other faculty members hadenforced the ban last winter whenthe US Surgeon General's reporton smoking and cancer was issued,but that this resolve has now van¬ished. by Bob LeveyIn the aftermath of SG’saction in referring the Com¬munications Board proposalto an executive sub-commit¬tee lor redrafting, the question that,remains is: what does WUCB donow?The answer, according to CharlesPacker, WUCB station manager, isthat the campus radio station mustnow convince the administration atthe need for a CommunicationsBoard very quickly, whether tlieboard is handled through StudentGovernment (SG) or not.“REGARDLESS OF WHETHERSG is involved or not,” Packer toldtlie Maroon, “it seems as if tl*eadministration will have to accepta Communications Board which dealswith us alone.” The reason lor this,Packer said, is that the administra¬tion recognizes the need for a hastyfinal decision on FM and sees tliepossibility of an SG resolution bog¬ging down in committee.Needs enough powerFurthermore, Packer said, “SGwould be inclined to give the com¬munications Board a minimum olpower. But we need to make surethat it has enough power to getthrough the administration.”The board must be set up quickly,according to Packer, because ot redtape that 'will almost certainly beencountered in dealing with the Fed¬eral Communications Commission(FCC), not because of a shortage ofavailable channel space as had previ¬ously been thought.For WUCB to go FM. Packer re¬lated, two licenses are necessary'.First, there is a construction per¬mit, which would enable the sta¬tion to get a transmitter and othernecessary broadcast equipment, Tnispermit itself would require onlyabout two months to get, Packersaid. However, before the secondlicense, a station license, could beapplied for, all sorts of tests wouldhave to be made, and “this mighttake as much as six months,”Packer believes. Then, after whatcould be eight montlis of waitingtime, five actual station license ap¬plication might require another six— a total of fourteen possiblemonths before the station could ac¬tually begin FM operations. Becauseof ail this, and because next fall isthe projected time for the beginningof FM, Packer feels that time isclearly of the essence.Changes not staggeringTHE ACTUAL CHANGES thatWUCB would have to undergo to become FM — both in terms ofequipment and manpower — are“nothing too terribly staggering,”Packer feels. On the technical side,two major purchases are necessary:a transmitter, which would cost ap¬proximately $2,200, and an antenna,which would oast $500 and whichwould be situated on top of MitchellTower.A couple of buildings and Groundsemployees are scheduled to cometo the WUCB studio in the nearfuture to check out the feasibilityof this equipment in light ot thesize and limitations ol' tlie studio,Packer added.On title manpower side, Packet-said simply that expansion “dependson five number of people we have onour staff.” With a staff of 60, Pack¬er foresees immediate and highlyThis is the next-to-last MA¬ROON of the quarter. The lastissue will appear a week fromtoday. There will be no issuethis coming Tuesday.imaginative changes in WUCB pro¬gramming. but with a staff of only20 or so. the changes, he feels, willbe more gradual.The specitic changes that areplanned at present include, for one.seven days a week broadcasting. Atfirst, Packer said, this would meanonly a minor increase in total airtime, but eventually he hops tobroadcast all day on Saturday andSunday.OTHER CHANGES INCLUDE anew and more comprehensive folkmusic program, a series of lectureson the development of contemporarymusic by Grosvenor Cooper, profes¬sor of music, and a twice-weekly'news broadcast in cooperation 'withthe Maroon.Budget being preparedPacker is currently preparing abudget for all these changes for pre¬sentation to the administration.As to final acceptance of the FMapplication by the FCC, Packer ishopeful but nevertheless wary.“There is no set formula by whichthe FCC judges applications,” Pack¬er said, “but they do take into ac¬count whether one station would bemore beneficial to tlie general com¬munity than another. Given thateverything else runs smoothly, weshould liave a good chance, but ab¬solutely nothing is certain.”(Continued on page three)tNews museNew outlook needed in Vietnam Letters to the editoby Bruee FreedMaxwell Taylor’s candidrevelation yesterday that theoutcome of the Vietnam war“is very much in doubt” atlast puts the official seal on whathas been known for a long time.Even before the coup which over¬threw the Diems last year, the jointVietnamese-US effort to quell theVietcong subversion and take-overin the provinces was faltering.ONE YEAR LATER, the questionsto be answered are when will nego¬tiations on the future of Vietnamcommence and what steps will theUnited States take to strengthen itsbargaining position.The American strikes last Augustagainst the North Vietnamese mili¬tary installations, it was hoped,would stem the tide of Vietcongvictories and put pressure on theNorth to temper its support of theVietcong. During the American Presidentialcampaign, it was understandable thatthe Johnson Administration tried tokeep the Vietnam war quiet. It wasjust too hot and any American initia¬tives toward negotiations would havehanded Goldwater an issue.WITH THE PRESIDENT reelect¬ed, by a handsome margin how¬ever, a far reaching reapraisalshould now be undertaken and freshapproaches to the problem sug¬gested.American special advisors do notseem to have increased the efficien¬cy of the Vietnamese army norrolled back the Vietcong tide. Norhas American support of Gen.Khanh and his provisional govern¬ment dampened the political unrestin the cities and the countryside. The United States, because it isa global power, must, still remaininvolved in Southeast Asia. But whena conflict will either degenerate intoa long loosing guerrilla war or es¬calate into a world war, a halt mustbe called. Birth control onSocial Rules Committee?TO THE EDITOR:Must include Red ChinaNeutralization?Drastic steps neededBut now that the Vietcong hasbecome bolder and the US backedVietnamese provisional governmentis floundering, drastic steps must betaken. Perhaps Gen. De Gaulle's call fora neutralization of Vietnam shouldbe given more consideration inWashington.With the American involvementbecoming more costly and less pro¬ductive, some way must be foundto allow the U.S. to withdraw butalso prevent a complete Vietcongtakeover. However, in any Vietnamese nego¬tiations, Red China must be included.This introduces the imponderablevariable.How will China react to a call fortalks now that the situation is rapid¬ly disintegrating in its favor? Is itin the US interest to begin bargain¬ing now or should it threaten to ex-jiand the war by striking NorthVietnam?Responses will soon be forthcom¬ing since time for American militaryaction to bolster its diplomatic posi¬tion is running out.Whatever the outoome of the pre¬liminary maneuvering, another con¬ference on Southeast Asia of thepowers involved is inevitable. Thismight present the US with an op¬portunity to start reevaluating itsChina policy in the light of thelessons of the Vietnam agony. We are sure that Maroon readers(including the Administration) havebeen amused by the classified adsabout the Social Rules Committee.We think, however, that the situa¬tion demands a little more seriousattention.Last March 6, Dean Wick an¬nounced that he would appoint thefaculty members of the Committeewithin a week. At that time, Wickconsidered the Committee so closeto reality that when Students ForBetter Living Conditions made theproposal of having the central unitof New Don ns count as being “in”with regards to women’s hours, Wicksuggested that we bring it up beforethe Committee. proved of the hasty action of Pchefl; ergo, the disregard for sident liberties is a result of the fmienee of the Student AotivitBoard.GENE GROVESSG reports: SG housing officeIn the last SG column. I begananswering the question ‘‘Just whatdoes SG do for me?” In that col¬umn I discussed at length the SGCharter Flight Program, the Stu¬dent Loan Service, and the RideExchange Board. Because of themany students who wished to availthemselves of these services, SG hasscheduled three additional jet groupflights to New York for the XmasInterim (20% off commercial fare),and has extended the maximumamount which a student can borrowfrom the Loan Service from $15 to$25. Further information about theseservices is available in the SG office,1-5, Mon - Fri.Perhaps the most important singleservice which SG offers besides itscharter flights is the Student Off-Campus Housing File. This file,which is the best single source forlistings of available off-campus hous¬ing, was formerly operated by theStudent Housing Office. SG assumedresponsibility for the File so as tooperate it upon a nondiscriminatorybasis. Funds are provided by theHousing Office to enable SG to main¬tain the file. Each homeowner wholists with the file is asked to sign anondiscriminatory pledge. If thispledge is not returned, and sub¬sequent notifications fail to elicit asigned pledge, the homeowner’s list¬ing is removed from the file. SOME 500 STUDENTS used theFile during the summer and manyof them found housing through itslisting. Many of those who did notfind housing directly through theFile, found it indirectly: either bybeing referred to a realtor, or, aswas the case with some 60 or morestudents, by being referred to theSouth Shore Referral Agency, a sub¬division of the South Shore Com¬mission.The Housing Market in Hyde Parkwas tighter this year thaan it hasever been. Housing which is avail¬able to students is even scarcer. Per¬haps a third of all available housingis available to students.Students as a wliole are discrimi¬nated against to quite a great de¬gree in the housing market. Fewhomeowners wish to rent to studentsif there are other more ‘‘desirable”tenants available. With the urbanrenewal of housing which was form¬erly occupied by students, the in¬creased enrollment, and the great¬er stability and desirability totenants of the Hyde Park communi¬ty, many students found it impossi¬ble to find economical and desirablehousing in the University area.Because of this, many studentshave moved into South Shore. TheSouth Shore Commission obtained formany UC students 9 month school- year leases. The Referral Agencywas instrumental in placing manyUC students in desirable low-c»sthousing in South Shore.DURING AUGUST and Septemberwhen most entering graduate stu¬dents and many returning studentswere seeking housing, the SG Hous¬ing File offered not only a list ofavailable housing in Hyde Park andSouth Shore, but listings from themajor oamiJus bulletin boards, copiedby the SG secretary, to save stu¬dents the need to check these also.The File, under SG managcmriit al¬though its operation is not ideal, stilloffered students a greater and motediversified selection of housing list¬ings then when the File was ope¬rated by the Housing Office.In future columns, I shall conti¬nue my discussion of the studentservices which SG offers, and I andother SG personnel will then begin adiscussion of some major campusissues.Bernie GrofmanVice-PresidentStudent Government NINE MONTHS LATER, the ap¬pointments have yet to be made.Nine months ought to be enoughtime for one creation of any con¬ceivable committee. This delaywithout explanation can hardly becalled reasonable.Some have interpreted this merelyas gross irresporeubility: others,more prone to exaggeration, havegone so far as to suggest that thewhole plan was a rather dishonestplot intended to pacify the studentsduring a period of crisis, and thatthe Administration never planned toset up the Committee at all.We hope that neither of these in-terpretat ions is correct and thatthere is some explanation for thedelay. We believe, however, that itis Mr. Wick’s responsibility to ex¬plain his puzzling conduct.. STUDENTS FOR BETTERLIVING CONDITIONSGroves: logic lessonTO THE EDITOR:It was extremely difficult to fol¬low tile logic of the Maroon's Tues¬day editorial. It was something like:Roosevelt University has a StudentActivities Board that appoints anddismisses editors; President Pitchellremoved the editor of the RooseveltTorch; the SAB unanimously disap-PROGRESSIVEPAINT & HARDWARE CO.1641 E. 55th HY 3-384010% STUDENT DISCOUNTArea Code 312Telephone 471-4484DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONS DO 3-6866PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty Discount R HOTRAINING, INC.F.A.A. APPROVED FLIGHT SCHOOL5315 WEST 63rd STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS, 60638MiqiJE EASTSoft Lights. Soft Music. Soft BagelsWhat happened is this: that beautiful new old-fashioneddelicatessen in Hyde Park is spreading out. Gettingbigger, plusher and better 'n ever.No kidding. Now there’s a Unique and a Unique East. With wall-to-wall everything and a most relaxing decor. Also a fantastic 12 oz.filet niignon for under four dollars, some new sandwiches so monstrousthey must be seen to be believed, corn beef like mama only wishedshe could make and the kind of service you can only get where thepeople really like you.All for the modest prices that make this really fine restaurant justabout the most popular eating place within a jillion miles of you.Come on over!UNIQUE EAST1503 E. 53rd FA 4-0633 HARPERTHEATER5238 S. Harper Chicago Critics on hpstcin'sperformance: "... a quicksilver actor with a dancer'sbrilliance of movement, andhe has a trenchant powerwhen he underplavs." Claudia( assidy. Tribune. . . ariorof stunning virtuosity, whoilluminates the tortured titlerole with both intelligenceand passion." Sydney JHarris. News. **. . . hauntingperformance.” C.lenna Syse,Sun-Times.TheGENI FRANKIL production ofPIRANDELLO'STo««., W«4., Thar*. (i:30)#3.##i Frl. (1:30), Sal. (0,10A M.IS) UN: Saa. (1.30)M S#, Saa. <#>M) #3.30 E&RjCOl?■ i.rriag ALVINMAIL ORDERS ACCEPTEDStudents Price Tue*., Wed.. Thur* $2.25Reg. Price 3.00Friday 8:30 p.m. • Sot. 6:30 p m $3.25Reg. Price 3.90Sunday 8:30 p.m $2.50Reg. Price 3.30 Asks better handling oferratum on Fast donationTO THE EDITOR:Miss Jarett’s requesv for an ,planation of the difference in amoidonated by R H & C per plcdgabstention seems eminently roastable; the lack of this expl ana lionthe part of the Maroon (or evenindication as to where to find texplantion, namely page six), whit possessed full knowledge of tmisunderstanding involved (in Lit might be said they had creaithis misunderstanding through tinfailure to check the facts in tinprevious article) seems eminentunreasonable.Let us contrast the treatment acorded the two complaints direct<toward R H & C in Friday’s MarotiMr. Hauser complained about tiegg (shell) foo young he was serv<and the Maroon felt constrainedprint immediately following it Lyl.Kay’s very illuminating and unprdictable response. In the caseMiss Jarett’s complaint, howeve— and one wonders why her lot t.was printed in the first place, sm<tiie issue to which she was addresing herself was not an issue, as (IMaroon well knew — which w;1 mked to an issue of great emotioal appeal, Lylas Kay’s response (arthe Maroon’s admission of erroiwas buried after “Job Opportunties,” four pages away. I beiievthe Maroon owes an apology (R H & C and the community alarge for this hi^ily misleading anirresponsible journalism.MIKE HASELKORANCHOR CAMERA1523 E. 53rd ST.PL 2-2228FAST PHOTOFINISHING SERVICESELL — RENT — TRADEIKY BEFORE YOU BUYALL VOI/CSWAGEWDEALERS CAM SELLYOU A NEW *65 VWsepakj roi&*1647OU£ PRICE 15 "THESAME. OU£ SERVICEIS EXCELLCKJT,super, b—unquestionablyTHE PIFT6REKJCETHAT MAKESTHE PEAL/ )OUR USED CARSARE GREAT TOO!100% GUARANTEEFARTS ANO LABOR 30 DAYSsms'64 SlMCA4-dr. Sedan63 VOLKSWAGENSedan'63 KARMAN GHIAConvertible'62 VOLKSWAGENSedan62 VOLKSWAGENConvertible'62 KARMAN GHIAConvertible'62 MERCEDESConvertible 190 Si.*62 MERCEDESSedan‘62 TR-3Convertible'61 VOLKSWAGENSedan'61 RENAULT4-dr. Sedan'60 VOLKSWAGENSunroof'60 VOLKSWAGENSedan‘60 PORSCHEConvertible'59 VOLKSWAGENConvertible $1295SI 795SI 145S1345SI 395SI 795S2195S129SS995$5955945S895$2195$995IMPORT MOTORS ;jgSAUTHORIZED VW — ‘bfiPORSCHE DEALERNEW CAR| 71st & BU 8-4900i USED CARSTONY IS.643 4040, CLOSED SUNDAY ^2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 27, 1964IWork-study aid useless at UCRestrictions on the Work-Study Program of aid to needycollege students, a part of thegrants made yesterday in con¬nection with the “War on Poverty,”make it practically useless to theUniversity at the present time, ac¬cording to UC Director of CollegeAid Robert Charles.Under regulations set up by theDepartment of Health, Education,and Welfare, federal aid to studentsdenied a college education becauseof a lack of funds is limited tostudents wliose parents make nomore th.ai $3,000 a year and cancontribute no more than $200 a yearat this sum to their child's collegeeducation.THESE TERMS. Charles ex¬plained. eliminate all but a very fewof UC’.s scholarship students.The Work-Study Program, in whichUC is taking part, seeks to find jobsfor students eligible under its provi¬sions. The jobs are either created<m campus by the participating col¬lege or found by it in the surround¬ing community.Benefit communityThe jobs found in the communityare to be aimed at benefiting thecommunity as a whole. Among thepossibilities are jobs with social workagencies or positions as playgroundcounselors.Initially, the Federal Governmentpays 90% of the student’s wages,with the college paying the remain¬ing 10%. After two years of aid toa student, the college pays 25% ofthe wages, with federal aid consti¬tuting the'rest.Charles, however, finds this wholejob system inadequate for UC stu¬dents eligible for the program.NEEDY STUDENTS whose familyincome is within the program’slimits are probably handicapped intheir cultural background in relationto the rest of the University studentbody, Charles pointed out.All the time spent on a job undertl« Work-Study Program, he said,UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK"a strong bank"1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C.Photographic ItemsTypewritersTape RecordersPerhaps we can help you select• fine gift from our attractiveMock of item*.See our window display or letu* serve you at our counter.Many itemi at reduced prices.The Universityof Chicago Bookstore5802 ettli Ava. will be needed by these students tokeep up with Llieir studies. Thus, theywill have to receive direct scholar¬ship aid from the University if theyare to come here.Officials see the lightThere are indications, Charlessaid, that federal officials are be¬ginning to see the overly restrictivenature of the program’s present in¬come limits. There is no hope, however, that inthe near future the maximum al-lowijble family income will beraised to the $5,000-$6,000 range. Ifis in this financial region, Charlessaid, that the Work-Study Programwould be truly applicable at UC.IF THE PRESENT program issuccessful, Charles noted, it mayconvince Congress of the need for anadequate federal scholarship pro¬gram. 2 groups play Dec. 5 Musicum honors bardUC NSA hosts LatinsIn the last week, six Venez¬uelan students visited UC aspart of a program sponsoredby the Slate Department.While in Chicago, the studentswere guests of NSA. The visits werearranged by Sally Cook, NSA coor¬dinator. The State Department pro¬gram which financed the trip worksthrough NSA in the United States.THE STUDENTS, representingthree of the political parties in Ven¬ezuela, were chiefly concerned witheconomic issues. Before coming toChicago, they stayed in New YorkCity, New Orleans, and Berea, Kv.While in New York, they visitedthe election headquarters of theDemocratic and Republican Partiesto gain some familiarity with Amer¬ican Election procedures. In Berea,Ky. they examined some aspects ofthe War on Poverty program.Lunch with DespresArriving in Chicago last Tuesday,the Venezuelan students had lunchwith Fifth Ward Alderman LeonDespres. On Friday, the students met with professor of economics HarryG. Johnson for a Seminar on “USInternational Trade Policy.” Most ofSaturday was spent with staff mem¬bers of SWAP.On Monday, which was the lastday of the students’ stay in Chi¬cago, they met for three seminars.These were “The Cooperative Move¬ment in America” with staff mem¬bers of the Cooperative League ofAmerica, “US Domestic EconomicPolicy; Industry & Labor,” with UCprofessor of economics Albert Rees,and “Problems of Latin AmericanEconomics” with Arnold Harberger.chairman of UC’s department ofeconomics.FROM CHICAGO, the Venezuelanstudents travelled to Washington forfurther studies in economics.David Bakan's Social Sciences121 class will not meet Monday,but will qo to the showing ofFREUD at International Houseinstead. Bakan will lead a dis¬cussion after the film. All SocialSciences 121 are invited to at¬tend the discussion and the Hie UC Symphony Orchestra, di¬rected by H. Colin Slim, will beassisted by die 57th Street Chorale(Christopher Moore, director) in theAutumn quarter concert in MandelHall, Saturday evening, December 5.Tlie concert will include the LordNelson Mass of Haydn and Sibelius’Symphony No. 1. In addition, Thom¬as Rosenwein, fourth year collegestudent, will direct two works byCharles Ives: The Gong on the Hookand Ladder, or Fireman’s Paradeon Main Street, and the Tone RoadsNo. 3.The concert will begin at 8:30;there is no admission charge.The University Symphony also an¬nounces its annual Concerto Contest,open to all students in the Universi¬ty. Tlie winner will perform with theSpring concert next May. Applicantsshould leave their names with thesecretary of the music departmentby the end of the quarter.Set Israel ed planHillel Foundation at UC has an¬nounced that UC students may spendJuly through December in Israel andreceive full academic credit, througha program of the Jacob Hiatt In¬stitute of Brandeis University.Interested second or third-yearstudents should have an interviewwith Miss Phyllis C. Silverman, as¬sistant director of the Hiatt Institute,on December 9 between 2 and 3:15pm at Hillel.FULL INFORMATION on theprogram will be available at the in¬terviews. The Collegium Musicum of theUniversity of Chicago, HowardBrown, director, will present twoconcerts in honor of the ShakespeareQuatercentenary-The first, on Saturday, November28, will be given by the Solo En¬semble of the Collegium Musicum.It will feature music composed forthe theatrical troupe, The King’sMen, for which Shakespeare wroteand acted, as well as selected worksof the period intended as privatechamber music.THE SECOND, on Sunday, De¬cember 9. will be given by theMadrigal Singers of the CollegiumMusicum, a chamber chorus of ap¬proximately 30 voices. It will in¬clude anthems and madrigals byGibbons, Byrd, Morley, Ferabosco,and Marenzio.Both concerts will be held in BondChapel and will begin at 8:30. Thereis no admission charge.Grad opportunitiesThe following representatives ofgraduate schools or corporations willbe available in the office of CareerCounseling and Placement on thedays indicated. Appointments maybe made by phoning ext. 3282.Monday. Nov. 3CJohn P. Wilson, assistant dean ofthe Harvard Law School, will be avail¬able at 2, 3, and 4 pm to meet withstudents who would like to talk withhim.Jules T. Roche, administrative as¬sistant of the , New York University-Graduate School of Business Adminis¬tration. will be available all day tointerview students interested in stud¬ies there.Groves comments on FM plans(Continued from page one)SG President Gene Groves com¬mented on tlie present situation ofthe FM proposal and the Communi¬cations Board as follows:“Tbe desire to set up a stationdoes not justify haste when a cri-NEW BOOKSBy Campus AuthorsVarieties of Unbelief $CQ0by Martin S. Morty WThe Conquest of theMaterial World $Q95by John U. Nef ©look i Make fine Christmas siftsThe Universityof Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. tical question of who will have howmuch power over WUCB remainsunresolved.“I have received no indicationsfrom any administrator that a ‘hastyfinal decision’ is desix'ed. In fact, itseems to me to be the consensusthat we should take enough timeto arrive at a reasonable proposal— one in which we can hive someconfidence.“A BOARD IS NOT sin automaticOK for WUCB to go FM. Tliereare many other details which havenot yet been completed by WUCB;SAMUEL A. BELL'Buy Shell From Bell"SINCE 19264701 So. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150 eg., submitting a satisfactory con¬version and operating budget, in¬vestigation of tlie local labor situa¬tion for station engineers, and as¬sessing the realistic scope of thestation. These and other items arenecessary in order to get the ad¬ministration’s approval to go FM.Not a serious delay“While we are trying with duespeed to construct a satisfactoryboard, the present lack of a boardis not a really serious delay forWUCB.“Apparently the Chicago office ofthe FCC told Charlie Packer thatthere was plenty of channel space,but the engineers in the BroadcastDivision in the FCC in Wasliing-ton told me in October that airspace was almost filled in the Chi¬cago area. I hop£ Charlie is right,but I do not know the actual situa¬tion.” Chicago Maroon |Editor-in-chief . Robert F. LeveyBusiness Manager , Harris S. JalteManaging Editor David L. AikenAssistant to the EditorSharon GoldmanCampus News Editor ... Joan PhillipsEditor, Chicago Literary ReviewMartin MichaelsonAdvertising Manager Jan PaynterCulture-Feature EditorDavid H. RichterPhoto Co-ordinators .... Bill CaffreySteve WofsyRewrite Editor Eve HochwaldMovie Editor Saul KalianMusic Editor .Peter RabinowitzEditor Emeritus .,. . John T. WilliafhsStaff: Tom Heagy, Barbara Jur. BarryWeitz, Dan H e r t z b e r g. MarianSchwager, Joan Tapper, Dick Ganz.Dinah Esral. Howard Fishman, SteveFord. Jerry A. Levy, David Satter,Bruce Freed, Matt Joseph, TobeyKlass, Abe Aamidor, Dick Atlee,William Herzog, Allen Adcock, JudyFavia. Cissie Hatch, Dorie Solinger,Ellis Levin. Ken Krich. Barry Salins.Suzanne Harris, Hugh Letiche, Rob¬ert Haven, Edward Chickovsky,Charles Dashe, Rhea Rollin. JamieBeth Gale, Mary McMullen, JudithSchavrien, Bob Yaspan.The Maroon is published Tuesday andFriday mornings by students at the Uni¬versity of Chicago. Its editorials and lettersto the editor do not indicate Universitypolicy. Offices are in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E. 59th st., Chicago 60657. Phones: MI3-0800; extensions 3265, 3266, 3269. Sec¬ond class postage paid at Chicago, III.BOOK EARLY... LIKE NOW!EAST OR WESTNEW YORKNEWARKBOSTON WASHINGTONPHILADELPHIALOS ANGELESSAN FRANCISCOSee Your Travel Agentor Call TWA 332-7600 SINAI TEMPLEFORUM5350 SOUTH SHORE DRIVEpresentsOTTO PREMINGERWORLD-RENOWNED MOVIEAND THEATRICAL PRODUCER AND DIRECTORWEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28:15 p.m.“CENSORSHIP AND THE ARTS”Admission $2.00For Further Information: BU 8-1600Nov. 27. 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON •Assassins of US Presidents share characteristicsThe four presidential assas¬sins in American history allwere lonely, hate-filled menhaunted by self-doubt, accord¬ing to UC psychiatrist Lawrence Z.Freedman.Freedman, Foundations' Fund re¬search professor in psychiatry inthe university’s division of the bio¬logical sciences, drew this conclusionafter an extensive study of presi¬dential assassins and would-be as¬sassins.The first, unsuccessful attempt wasmade against President Jackson in1835. Lincoln was the first Presi¬dent to be slain, by John WilkesBooth in 1865. In all, four Presidentshave been assassinated and fourhave been assaulted with murderous JFK; Hit latest victim jintent.“MEN WHO HAVE murdered ourPresidents share certain consistentcharacteristics,” Freedman said ina recent research report. ‘‘Their ownpersonal lives are usually chaotic.No work, no love“They were failures in their owneyes, seemingly unable to handletheir own personal problems. Theyhav« been capable neither of work¬ing nor of loving. Unable to get orto keep jobs which they consideredsatisfactory, they wandered fromcity to city, (and in the twentiethcentury from country to country)without discernible roots or apparentgoals. They were incapable of sus¬tained love for a woman and theywere incapacitated for friendshipswith a man. They were lonely andisolated.”In general, Freedman's study in¬dicates, the presidential assassinshave been pathologically disturbedto a degree extending beyond neuro¬sis, but legally were, or would be,considered responsible for their acts.“THE PSYCH0PATH0L0G1CALsymptoms which characterized LeeHarvey Oswald (President Ken¬nedy's assassin) are fragmentary,elusive — the diagnosis obscure,”Freedman’s report said. “Yet if weParticle talk onMathematical bioPeter Greene of the committee onmathematical biology will speak on“Mathematical Biology: Models ofthe Nervous System" at Particle'sthird Tea and Taurus Talk. Greenewill give his informal lecture onTuesday, December 2 in the firstfioar West Lounge of Ida Noyes.This is another of the lecturesParticle is giving with the purposeof introducing undergraduate sciencestudents to areas of .science outsidetheir specialty. are to protect the health of ourPresidents, we must do more thanencase them in ever more heavilyprotected limousines. We must dis¬cover the etiology (causes) and pro¬vide the cure and the means of pre¬vention of this disease and itsterrible results.“The pathological system whichmust be understood involves notonly the disturbed murderer but hisvictim and, in the case of the Pres¬ident, his family, the nation, andthe world.’'Would have been executedOswald was of above-average in¬telligence, Freedman said, and “al¬most certainly” would have beenjudged sane, found guilty of crimi¬nal assassination, and executed.“And yet we are faced with theparadox that the' Chief Justice ofthe United States, alter the mostpainstaking and, I believe, fair-minded search, had to conclude thatJob interviewsThe following recruiting organiza¬tions will visit the Office of CareerCounseling and Placement duringthe week of November 30. Interviewappointments may be arrangedthrough L. S. Calvin, room 200,Reynolds Club, extension 3284.December IUS Marine Corps — recruiting teamwill be available from 10 am to 3pm in Mandel Corridor to discussOfficer Candidate programs.December 2US Naval Ordnance Laboratory,Silver Springs, Md. — will interviewmathematicians and physicists at alldegree levels.December 4Miss Virginia D. Hermann, assistantpersonnel secretary of the UnitedChurch Board for World Ministries,will be in the office of Career Coun¬seling and Placement to interviewcandidates for service overseas.There are opportunities for gradu¬ate students as teachers, ministers andChristian educators, and other medi¬cal specialists, and people with variedtraining in such fields as library sci¬ence and social work.Students who wish to meet withMiss Hermann may call extension3282.AIR CONDITIONEDLa Russo’sFINE FOODS AND COCKTAILSNow Open for Lunch 11:30-3:30Phone NOrmol 7-9390 JhicaIo.^lunI!:ASAMATTEROF... Sun Life insurance is a sure wayto financial independence for youand your family.As a local Sun Life representative, may! call upon you at your convenience?Roloh J. Wood. Jr.. CLUHyde Pork Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY he could ascribe no ‘reasonable’motive to this act.“If we are committed to the prop¬osition that every effect is mean¬ingfully related to some cause, wemust assume that such a murderdoes have a motive which if dis¬covered would appear rational lomost reasonable men — or that themotives which impelled him werepowerful but irrational.“AND IN FACT Oswald had asan adolescent been diagnosed aspsychiatrically disturbed — unableto act or to feel ‘normally’ or ‘rea¬sonably.’ Treatment was recom¬mended, but never received.”John Wilkes Booth, like Oswald,was killed without a trial. Therewas no opportunity for psychiatricexamination. Freedman observed inhis report: feeling of the morbid egotist in thiscase.”Guiteau was found sane andguilty, and was executed.But why kill a President?Assassins blame othersFreedman explained that the as¬sassin “blames his sense of failureon others. The assassin does notlive however in a true communityof men. His relationships are notimmediate, personal. He relatesrather to an abstraction, aggregateman, the political community. Thefault therefore lies not in himselfbut in the structure of the commu¬nity within which he must live, andis concentrated in the person whois the powerful leader of that com¬munity, the President. . . .IF THE PRESIDENT is responsi¬ ble for the failures of his societywell as himself then the potentialassassin, in the name of ail suffer¬ing humanity (or Guiteau, in morereligious times and places, in thename of God) is impelled some¬times against his own ‘will’ to carryout a ‘mission.’“Alone and secretive before theassassination, every assassin butOswald has sought his fulfillment inthe praise of other men and of pos-teritv. Fame and recognition as thekiller of the President were, weknow, a part of their expected reward. Acclamation ami martyrdomfrom this community of their fantasy was also part of their expecta¬tion. Of these assassins it may liesaid that they could not live untilthey had killed,” the repori coneluded.Sinaiko on civil rights:accept Negro as person“Until the Negro is accepted as an individual insteadof as a Negro, the civil rights movement cannot he suc¬cessful,” according to Herman L. Sinaiko, associate pro¬fessor of Humanities.irrational, as are grouj*s such .i.s the“Booth, a Southern sympathizer,and a successful but inferior actorcompared to his father and brother,had been considered irascible, cruel,vain, grandiose, moody, shallow,volatile, unpredictable — but nevermad — until he murdered the Presi¬dent.Leon Czolgosz (pronounced Sehol-gosh), who assassinated PresidentMcKinley in 1910, was convictedand executed speedily, without psy¬chiatric examination.Charles Julius Guiteau, who killedPresident Garfield in 1881, was ex¬amined both by a psychiatrist anda neurologist before his trial.Guiteau coherent Sinaiko made this statement atthe Alpha Delta Phi fraternity houseTuesday night in a discussion on“Why the Civil Rights Movement isNot Resolving Itself.”Sinaiko presented in his talk somethoughts that four books concerned Black Muslims.If this is true then the civilrights movement has barely l>e-gun,” Sinaiko thinks it is “a shamethat people either won’t discuss thisor dismiss as nonsensical all possi¬bility of it being true.The psychiatrist, Charles F. Fol¬som, testified that Guiteau wras notincoherent, “but the want of con¬nection in thought was very striking.The weakness of judgment, reason,and reflection was as strikingas the quickness of perception, andin matters interesting him, readi¬ness of memory.“WHEN IN THE LEAST opposed,his excitement was simply mani¬acal, but on indifferent subjects heconversed calmly and amiably. Heinsisted that he was not insane, andnever had been so.”Edward Spitzka, the neurologist,testified that there was'a hereditarystrain of insanity in Guiteau’s fam¬ily, and that he observed in Guiteau“a tendency to delusive or insaneopinion and to the creation ol mor¬bid and fantastical projects ... amarked element of imbecility ofjudgment.”The neurologist said Guiteau “hada tendency to misinterpret the realaffairs of life, especially those of acomplex nature, and to interpretthese affairs in some way as havinga connection with himself, the start¬ing-point being the exaggerated self-ProfessorLake ParkToday'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN*1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGF GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL with the racial issue had prompted.The books were: Another Country,Light in August. $l»o Misundcrstand-ing, and Invisible Man.SINAIKO SAID THAT one of thereasons civil rights anti integrationis not working out as it should isthat people do not realize that it isdifficult for the Negro to attainequality witliout becoming a stereo¬type.Sinaiko slated that Ralph Ellison’sbook. Invisibly Man may be rightwhen it suggests that Negroes aregiven only two alternatives: to beeither totally irresponsible and ac¬cept the world as it is and useit to their advantage, or to be totally the civil rights movement "is in¬going to succeed as it should ev >rin the north. This has enabled th.white world to make conce sions t<the civil rights movement withoutany real change,” Sirri.ko let I“Tiiis must be stopped.”McKeon at ShoreyRichard P. McKeon, distinguishetservice professor of philosophy, \v i Ispeak on “Philosophical assump.iorin scientific method” Wednesdaynight at Shorey Coffee Plus.The talk will be in the Siorevhouse lounge, ninth floor PieivtTower, from nine to ten pm.Girl talk. Boy talk.All talk goes better refreshed. .Coca-Cola — with a lively liftand never too sweet — refreshes best.things gobetter,!CokeBottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company bp xh« Coco-ColoBottlinq Co. ofChicago. Inc.4 • CHICAGO MAROON e Nov. 27. 1964Undergraduate exam ination schedulesThe time and place of examinations not listed be¬low will be announced by instructors. Eveningclasses (section 91), unless otherwise announcedby the instructors will have examinations atregular class times. Please carefully note roomassignments for examinations.Anthropology 211Art 210Art 230Biology 111: sec.AA, CA, EA, GABA. DA. FA. GBAB. BB. CB. DBEB. FBBiology 113Biology 117Biology 201Botany 212Botany 250Chemistry 105Chemistry 131Chemistry 201Chemistry 220Chemistry 240Chemistry 241('[ministry 261Chinese 201Economics 270Education 200English 101English 117English 216English 225English 230English 237, sec 01English 243English 273English 275English 260English 205French 101F rench 104French 201French 202French 206French 207.French 210French 212French 232 Wed. Dec. 16 1:30^3:30 SS 122Wed. Dec. 16 8-10 CL 10Wed. Dec. 16 10:30-12:30 CL 10Mon. Dec.Mon. Dec.Mon. Dec.Mon. Dec.Mon. Dec.Mon. Dec.Wed. Dec.Tue. Dec.Wed. Dec.Fri. Dec.Fri. Dec.Wed. Dec.Tue. Dec.Fri. Dec.Fri. Dec.Wed. Dec.Wed. Dec.Tue. Dec.Wed Dec.Mon. Dec.Tue. Dec.Wed. Dec.Wed. Dec.Wed. Dec.Thu. Dec.Thu. Dec.Tue. Dec.Tue. Dec.Tue. Dec.Tue. Dec.Mon. Dec.Mon. Doc.Fri. Dec.Wed. Dec.Tue. Dee.Fri. Dec.Fri. Dec.Thu. Dec.Mon. Dec. 10:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:304-68-104-61:30-3:308-108-108-104-010:30-12:3010:30-12:308-101:30-3:3010:30-12.308-108-1010:30-12:304-610:30-12:301:30-3:304-64-61:30-3:3010:30-12:30l: 30-3:3010:30-12:30l:30-3:301:30-3:308-101:30-3:304-610:30-12:308-108-101:30-3:30 E 133CL 10 and S106K 107K 107Law BCL 20B 106CRB 101B 205K 107K 103K 107K 107K 10K 10K 103CL 16SS 106J 105K 103, K 107E 133, Ro 2CL 10, B 106LMHCL 18SS 302CL 20CL 11WB 102CL 11WB 102LX 6CL 16K 107E 133S 106K 301SS 108WB 202SS 108WB 202WB 202 French 230French 240Geography 207German 101German 104German 212German 215German 230German 236German 237Greek 1.01, sec 01Greek 204Greek 295History 131History 211History 221History 231History 245History 251History 257History 261History 271, sec 01History 278History 280Humanities 111Humanities 121Humanities 201Humanities 278Humanities 281Humanities 283Ideas & Methods 201Ideas & Methods 211Ideas & Methods 251Ideas & Methods 201Italian 101Italian 203 (201, 210)Latin 101Latin 204Linguistics 221Mathematics 101Mathematics 103Mathematics 150Mathematics 151 Wed. Dec. 16Tue. Dec. 15 10:30-12:^0 SS 108Wed. Dec. 16 1:30-3:30 WB 202Fri. Dec. 18 10:30-12:30 Ro 27Mon. Doc. 14 1:30-3:30 LMHMon. Dec. 14 1:30-3:30 CL 20Fri. Dec. 18 8-10 WB 203Fri. Dec. 18 8-10 WB 203Wed. Dec. 16 10:30-12:30 WB 202Wed. Dec. 16 8-10 WB 207Fri. Dec. 18 10:30-12:30 WB 103Wed. Dec. 16 10:30-12:30 CL 31Wed. Dec. 16 8-10 CL 31Thu. Dec. 17 4-6 S 200Thu. Dec. 17 8-10 LMHFri. Dec. 18 10:30-12:30 SS 108Tue. Dec. 15 10:30-12:30 SS 305Wed. Dec. 16 10:30-12:30 Ro 2Wed. Dec. 16 1:30-3:30 S 200Thu. Dec. 17 10:30-12:30 SS 105Fri. Dec. 18 10:30-12:30 SS 302Wed. Dec. 16 8-10 Ro 2Wed. Dec. 16 1:30-3:30 Ro 27Tue. Dec. 15 1:30-3:30 K 110Tue. Dec. 15 1:30-3:30 SS 303Tue. Dec. 15 1:30-3:30 LMHTue. Dec. 15 10:30-12:30 LMHTue. Dec. 15 1:30-3:30 Ro 2Tue. Dec. 15 4-6 LX 6Fri. Dec. 18 10:30-12:30 CL 10Tue. Dec. 15 10:30-12:30 CL 10Wed. Dec. 16 1:30-2:30 Law BTue. Dec. 15 1:30-3:30 Ro 26Thu. Dec. 17 1:30-3:30 Ro 26Mon. Dec. 14 4-6 S 106Mon. Dec. 14 1:30-3:30 CL 16Mon. Dec. 14 1:30-3:30 SS 108Mon. Dec. 14 1:30-3:30 Ro 26Fri. Dec. 18 10:30-12:30 Ro 26Tue. Dec. 15 10:30-12:30 CL 10Wed. Dec. 16 4-6 LMHMon. Dec. 14 8-10 E 202Wed. Dec. 16 4-6sec. 12 - A 101sec. 21 and 31 - E 202sec. 23 - C 402sec. 62 - K 1034-0sec. 11 - K 110sec. 12 - B 106sec. 21 - E 305sec. 31 - Ro 2sec. 41 - Z 14Mathematics 152/ Wed. Dec. 16 4-6Mathmtcs. 153, sec. 12 Thu. D6c. 17 4-0Mathmtcs. 153, sec. 32 Thu. Dec. 17 4-6Mathmtcs. 203, sec. 21 Wed. Dec. 16 8-10Mathmtcs. 203, sec. 32 Wed. Dec. 16 4-6 sec. 42 * E 200sec. 51 -S 106sec. 62 - S 201sec. 71 - S 208C 406E 206E 305E 207E 308 Mathmtcs. 203, see. 4-1 Fri., Dec 18Mathmtcs. 203, sec. 51 Wed. Dee. 16Mathmtcs. 204 Mon. Dee 14Mathmtcs. 205 Mon. Dee. 14Mathmtcs. 251, see. 31 Wed. Dec. 16Mathmtcs. 251, sec. 41 Fri. Dec. 18Mathmtcs. 252, sec. 11 Tue. Dec. 15Mathmtcs. 252, sec. 42 Tue. Dec. 15Mathmtcs. 253 Fri. Dee. 18Mathmtcs. 261 ■ Fri. Dec. 18Mathmtcs. 280 Thu. Dec. 17Music 151 Wed. Dec. 16/ Music 221 Wed. Dec. 16Philosophy 201 Mon. Deo. 14Philosophy 205 Thu. Dec. 17Philosophy 206 Wed. Dec. 16Philosophy 231 Wed. Dec. 16Philosophy 241 Tue. Dee. 15Physical Science 105 Tue. Dec. 15Physics 111 Tue. Dec. 1.5Physics 121 Wed. Dec. 16Physics 131 Wdd. Dec 16Physics 215 Wed. Dee. 16Physics 221 Wed. Dec. 16Physics 225 Fri. Dec. 18Physics 235 Wed. Dec. 16Political Science 204 Wed. Dec. 16Political Science 261 Tue. Dee. 15Portuguese' 101 Mon. Dec. 14Psychology 202 Wed. Dec. 16Psychology 211 Thu. Dec. 17Psychology 220 Wed. Dec 16Psychology 253 Thu. Dec. 17Russian 101 Mon. Dec. 14Russian 201 Wed. Dec. 16Russian 204 Wed. Dec. 16Russian 275 Wed. Dec. 16Social Science 111 Thu. Dec. 17Social Science 121 Thu. Dec. 17Social Science 220 Wed. Dec. 16Social Science 230 Mon. Dec. 14Social Science 240 Mon. Dec. 14Social Science 245 Wed. Dec. 16Social Science 252 Wed. Dec 16Social Science 276 Mon. Dec. 14Sociology 202 Wed. Dec. 16Sociology 205 Tue. Dec. 15Spanish 101, sec. 01 Mon. Dec-. 14Spanish 104 Mon. Dec. 14Spanish 201 Mon. Dec. 14Spanish 207 Wed. Dec. 16Spanish 210 Mon. Dec. 14Spanish 220 Wed. Dec. 10Spanish 230 Wed. Dec. 16Statistics 200 Wed. Dec. 16Zoology 240 Fri. Dec. 18 10:30-12:304-68-108-1010:30-12:3010:30-12:308-108-1010:30-12:308-101:30-3:301:30-3:3010:30-12:308-104-61:30-3.304-64-68-108-101:30-3:308-108-101:30-3:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:308-101:30-3:304-6l:30-3;3010:30-12:308-101:30-3:30 "1:30-3:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:301:30-3:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:304-64-6-1:3<V3:3010:30-12:304-68-104-61:30-3:301:30-3:301:30-3:3010:30-12:301 :30-3:301:30-3:308-101 :30-3:308-10 E 305E 312E 305E 308E 305E 207E 202E 202E 206E 308E 202Mus 201Mus 101CL 11Ro 26SS 108CL 20CL 20K 107E 133E 133E 133E 202E 207E 202Ry 251SS 108SS 122K 304Ro 2AB 101SS 122SS 106Ro 2Wb 103Wb 203S 106LMHLMHLX <iRo 2E 133S 200Law BLx 5SS 122Ro 2BE 10K 301C 104BE 11Ro 27Ro 26Wb 200E 202WH 200CALENDAR OF EVENTS FOR NEXT WEEK IHIlllitlllltllillitHi’illtilllllFriday, November 27DISCISSION: C. S. Lewis and His\V ;/tings—Clyde Kirby, choirman. d.jpti.f english, Wheaton College. IntelVarsity Christian Fellowship, Ida NoyesH 11, 7:30 p.m.DISCUSSION: Graduate Work and(' ireers in Sociology — James Davis,professor of sociology and senior studydirector. National Opinion ResearchCenter; refreshments served, Ida NoyesLibrary, 7:30 pm.SONGFEST: evening of Yiddish andHebrew folk singing. Hillel. 8:30 pm.THEATER: Tonight at 8:30s, Escural,Captain Cook, Ubu Roi. admission $1.50, students $1, Reynolds ClubTheater, 8:30 pm.Saturday, November 28VOLUNTEER WORK: VISA, work inmental hospital, meet New Dorm park¬ing lot, 12:30 pm.CROSS-COUNTRY MEET: NationalAmateur Athletic Union NationalChampionship, Washington Park, 11:30am.CONCERT: Collegium Musicum, MusicFrom Shakespeare’s Time, BondChapel, 8:30 pm.LECTURTS: A Lift for Humanity,Norman Thomas 80th Birthday Testi¬monial, speakers: Michael Harrington, Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., Norman Thomas,toastmaster—Leon Despres, MidlandHotel, 172 W. Adams st., admission$2, 8:30 pm.THEATER: Tonight at 8:30’s. Escural.Captain Cook, Ubu Roi, admission$i .50, students $1, Reynolds ClubTheater, 8:30 pm. pm.i :30FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes Hall,pm.THEATER: Tonight at 8:30s—Escural,Captain Cook, Ubu Roi, admission$1.50, students $1, Reynolds ClubTheater, 8:30 pm. CONCERT: Contemporary ChamberPlayers, Webern, Concerto for NineInstruments, and Four Pieces for Vio¬lin and Piano: Varese. Octandre,Schoenberg, Piano Christos; Davidov-sky. Electronic Study No. 2; RalphShapey, musical director, Mandel Hail.8:30 pm.Sunday, November 29 Monday, November 30 Wednesday, December 2GANTSHIRTMAKER®Pin-Tab Oxford 6.95Very versatile, this new Gant cotton oxford jshirt; it goes handsomely with tweeds or \worsteds. Very distinctive, its double pencil'stripings; in navy, green or burgundy.,THE STORE FOR MENStall'me,Qtatttn mb (JampmiIn the New Hyde fork Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 SERMON: Dean Ronald E. OsbornChristian Theological Seminary, Indi¬anapolis, Rockefeller Chapel. 10 am.LECTURE: Economic Growth and Hu¬man Well-Being — Walter Weiskopf,professor of econmics, Roosevelt Uni¬versity, Hillel, 11 am.BRIDGE: Fall Charity Game, UCBridge Club, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:15 MOVIE: Freud, International House,8 pm.Tuesday, December 1ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Hillel,7:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: International House,non-residents 50c, 8 pm.FRANKLIN FOOD STOREORIENTAL FOODSJAPANESE OUR SPECIALTYCHINAWARE GIFT ITEMS1309 E. 53rd STREETHY 3-5057 MODEL CAMERAMOST COMPLETE PHOTO SHOPON SOUTH SIDENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259CoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 Corona d10SPORTRAITS1312 E. 53rd St.684-7424PassportPhotos HUG 1VRI LUNCHEON: Hillel, 12noon.SEMINAR: A Diverse Population ofCells in Pancreatic Islets—A Lightand Electron Microscopic Study, BryceL. Munger, assistant professor of an¬atomy, Washington University. St.Louis, Anatomy 301, 4:30 pm.KITH ANNUAL LATKE-HAMANTASHDEBATE: The Latke, The Hamantash,and The Moral Crisis of Our Time—Reynolds Club North Lounge. 7 pmLECTURE: Mathematical Biology:Models of the Nervous System— PeterGreene, Committee on MathematicalBiology, sponsored by Particle maga¬zine, Ida Noyes first floor west lounge,8 pm. jCOFFEE PLUS: Philosophical Assump¬tions in Scientific Method — RichardP. MeKeon, professor of philosophy,Shorey House, ninth floor Pierce Tow¬er, 9 pm.Thursday, December 3BEGINNING-INTERMEDIATE F O L KDANCING: with Andor Czompo, IdaNoyes Hall, 8 pm.XMAS SG BUS$35JET GROUP$76x 32.72 NEWYORKMR. PIZZAS9 WE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTSHY 3-8282FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENAlso Ch. Broiled Hamburgers 0cPIZZAFor 2 Far 3 For 4 For 4 fortySausage 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom . - 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Creen Pepper 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Aacbovie 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuaa Fish or Olive ... 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese „ ... 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50'/a and »/z 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Eztra Ingredients 50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pizza 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacoa 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pizza 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.001 Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppersl1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Ope* 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — Fri. to 3:00 a.Sot. to 3:00 a.m. — Opea 2 p.m. Sundays RIBEYE STEAKSANDWICHB«» of Broasted Chicken10, 16, 20 PiecesSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCIOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGE,MEAT BALLHow FeaturingST. LOUISSPARE RIBSNov. 27, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5_/1,1 SC It EE N SCENE OPERA REVIEWOn CampusThe showing of BLUE ANGELSaturday will be a benefit for theDocumentary Film Group productionunit. All profits will go toward fi¬nancing a new production by theunit which made THE COLLEGE.BLUE ANGEL, which was shownearlier this quarter to a recordcrowd, is a perennial favorite ofcampus and film society audiences.The Joseph von Sternberg classicstars Emil Jarmings and MarleneDietrich.WALK ON THE WILD SIDE isa Hollywood version of the NelsonAlgren novel involving prostitutes,lesbians, and other fashionable Hol¬lywood topics. Despite an all-starcast, tlie main attraction of thispicture is the now famous titles bySaul Bass, featuring an insidiousblack cat traversing the screen tothe rhythms of Elmer Bernsteinjazz. Bass is the man responsiblefor the excellent titles which openedCARMEN JONES, EXODUS, andMAN WITH THE GOLDEN ARM.among others. His credits for NINEHOURS TO RAMA were muchsuperior to anything else in the film.John Huston's FREUD stars Mvmt-gomerv Clift in the title role. Itdramatizes part of the life of theyoung doctor who made medicalhistory by curing the psychosomaticlameness of a -young girl. The filmreceived mixed reviews when itplayed a few years ago.THE YOUNG LOVERS Essay Con.test is now over. UC came through with a smashing four entries, all byDoc Film members. The three luckywinners will be announced next week.The fourth unlucky contender willreceive a condolence card fromMGM. A more enthusiastic responseis expected to another possible cam¬pus exploitation venture later thisseason. THE PUMPKIN EATER,a new drama from England, may bescreened for UC students. The filmis bv Jack Clayton (ROOM AT THETOP, THE INNOCENTS) and starsAmi Bancroft, who won awards twoyears ago in the title role of THEMIRACLE WORKER. The pictureliolds promise as the best thing outof Britain in a long while.Friends of International VoluntaryService will do the campus a tradi¬tional favor on Dec. 4 by reshowingLONELY BOY. This prize-winningpicture by the National Film Boardof Canada has been shown severaltimes on campus to justifiably en¬thusiastic response. The candiddocumentary on the life (existence,not biography) of pop singer PaulAnka is unquestionably one of thefinest documentaries ever made.With fluent naturalism. Keonig andKroiter have captured the wholetenor of show business life, back-stage, onstage, and on the road.Their brilliantly edited shots ofAnka’s in-persen appearances arebitingly significant comments on theworld we live in, ranging betweensociological interest and rich humancomedy. With LONELY BOY is an¬other short called THE BLUES, fea-UC students to get free admissionThe Music Department has an¬nounced that UC students will beadmitted free to the concert by theContemporary Chamber Players ofUC on Tuesday, December 1. Thisis due in part, according to LeonardMeyer, department chairman, to the“persuasive arguments” of Maroonmusic critic Pete Rabinowitz.Students are asked, however, topick up free tickets before the con¬cert at the Music Department, 5802Woodlawn, so that accurate recordsof attendance may be maintained.The concert will include tlirceJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 works new to Chicago: Varese’sOetandre, Davidovsky’s ElectronicStudy No. 2, and Esoot’s Christos.Also to be performed are Schoen¬berg’s Three Pieces for Piano, Op.11. Berg’s Four Pieces for Clarinetand Piano. Op. 5, and two works byWebern, the Concerto Op. 24 and theFour Pieces for Violin and Piano,Op. 7.The concert will be directed byRalph Shapey and will begin at 8:30.Tickets for non-students are SI; forstudents at other institutions, $.50.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago IS, III.MU 4-6856JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd9 VOLT TRANSISTOR BATTERIES 19c10% discount to students with ID cardsSales and Serviceon all hi-fi equip¬ment, foreign anddomestic.TAPE RECORDERSPhonographs - AmplifiersPhono Needles and CartridgesTubes - Batteries24 hr. Service CallsTV—HI-FI $Q00RADIO . *0— Telefunken & Zenith —AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd nt. 1929In the 53rd-Kimbark Plaza Ml 3-9111 hiring Sleepy John Estes. MemphisWillie Bee, and oJiers.On the TownSneak Preview of a Sneak Pre¬view: Friday night tlie Woods The¬atres will offer an advance look atone of the big holiday pictures of theseason, FATHER GOOSE. Thuscomedy stars Cary Grant as a un¬kept beachcomber, with Leslie Caronand Trevor Howard. It is directedby Ralph Nelson who did LILIESOF THE FIELD. Tlie regular Woodsfeature will be KITTEN WITH AWHIP, starring Ann-Margret andJohn Forsythe.Latest victim of the Chicago cen¬sorship powers is CONTEMPTi thenew film by Jean Luc Godard. Therelease of this film is being held upbecause of an alleged excess of nu¬dity. Meanwhile, filmlovers arebeing deprived of the chance to seea very promising work by one ofthe most exciting and respectedfilmmakers in the world.A welcome holiday attraction willbe available at the Carnegie wheretwo old Marx Brothers features willscreen next month.HollywoodHollywood seems determined toprevent WHO’S AFRAID OF VIR¬GIN A WOOFL from geting to thescreen in recognizable shape. Nowthat Liz Taylor and Richard Burtonhave been confirmed for the leads,latest rumor has it that the youngprofessor may be played by WarrenBeatty. Prospective director is MikeNichols, formerly of Nichols andMay, recently director of Broadway’sBAREFOOT IN THE PARK.Marsaul Kahane Don Giovanni impressiveDon Giovanni by W. A. MozartThe CommMdotore ... Bruno MaranganiDonna Anna Teresa Stich-RamlallDon Ottavio Alfredo KrausDon Giovanni Nicolai GhiaurovLeporello Erich Run*Donna Elvira Phyllis CurtinZerlina Nicofetta PcimhMasetta Theodor UppmanConducted by Josef KripjThere is a curious phenome¬non in the performing arts.W h e n e v e r the productionstarts to look really good,even, the weaker members of thecast are stimulated to surpass theirprevious levels o4 competence. Thecontagious excitement infects eventhe peri|iieral performers, and theresult is a production of surprising,astounding excellence. This seemsto have been the case with the LyricOpera’s Don Giovanni.The result is the more surprising,when one considers Mozarts vocaland emotional requirements. Butthe company not only did justice tothe composer in these respects, butthey seemed (and this is unfortu¬nately rare in Lyric Opera produc¬tions) to be aware that grand operais a dramatic as well as a musicalart: the cast's acting was almostwithout flaw.The most impressive performanceof the evening was by Erich Kunz,whose fine performance as Leporellowould have alone made the eveningworth while. Kunz is not only a bari¬tone with power and range, butan excellent clown: he managedto get laughs in his aria “Madamina,in questo catalogo” merely byswitching from the grand to thebuffa voice. He stole scenes from Ghiaurov right and left — the bal¬cony scene in act three, the grave¬yard scene, the fiyst part of thegreat final scene in the Don's palace— not by outsinging the principal,but by outacting him.GHIAUROV’S PERFORMANCEwas equally exceptional. He too isa singing actor, with greater emphasis, however, upon the “singing''His voice is rich and lusty, and hecarried over perfectly tlie Don'ssupreme sexual confidence. His halfof the duet “La d darem la mano"was a masterpiece of insinuatingseductiveness. One could well believe in his thousand and threeconquests.Miss Stich-Randall and Miss Cur¬tin w'ere also excellent. The formerseemed to be straining her voicea bit in her impassioned aria at Iheend of the first scene “Or chais’onore” but I am not sure thatthis was not actually due to realinvolvement. Miss Curtin was uniforrnly good, perfectly articulatingeach syllable in her high, clearvoice.KRAUS AND UPPMAN were quin-good. but they were overshadowedby the rest of this superior castKraus did, however, manage tomake believable his aria “U miotesoro,” which I had heretoforefound unbearably stilted.The only thing unfortunate aboutJosef Krips’ conducting was that iimade one wonder why the LyricOpera Orchestra doesn’t alwayssound that good. Here, as every¬where else, justice was. done toMozart.David RichterClPERSONAL LOSTMAKE XMAS RESV NOW! U.C. Rep.M. Lavinsky, MI 3-6000-or see atravel agent. BIOL. Ill NOTES! Please contact 1423xNew Dorm.FOR SALE OR RENTHANUKKAH MENORAHS A- CAN¬DLES for sale FANTASIC BUYS.Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn.TUTORINGSTUDENT needs TUTOR in begItalian Grammar. 288-6638. TOWNHOUSE: 3 bedrms.: I<4 baths,radiant heating: patio: huge yard:Pioneer Co-op. 5437 Dorchester. 043-8325.FOR SALEWANTEDA HOME! 3 mos. old fern, kitten,(sweet, lovable, loving) needs newhome; present owners are out a greatdeal and are unable to give her suf¬ficient attention. 463-9409.APARTMENT WANTEDApt. nr. campus with 2-3 bedrmsfrom Dec. 1st or Jan. Phone 684-1727. NEW TOWNHOUSES: 52nd & Dor¬chester: 4 bedrms.: 2’4 baths: centralair-conditioning: RCA Whirlpool kitch¬en: separate dining-rm.: parquet firs,thruout: rec. rm.: campus bus stops infront of door. Prices from $32,050.HA 7-4017.Furn. 4 mis. 2*4 desks: rampingequipment. BU 8-7304.TYPING & EDITINGEXPER. REAS. HY 3-2438.HYDE PARK SHOE REBUILDERSServing Hyde Pork for 40 YearsProfessional DyeingColors MatchedRefinishing of Shoes andHandbags1451 E. 57th HY 3-1247 TERM PAPERS: THESES: ARTICLES:BOOK MS: CORRESPONDENCE:STENORRETTE TRANSCRIPTION:SMITH-CORONA ELECTRIC. CALL667-1508, 1-4 pm. After office hrs. & wknds. Telephoneanswering service' mimeo: pre-typedstencils run while you wait. Call684-2450.TERM PAPERS: THESES. ETC. Elec,trie machine: nr. campus. 324-2080.ROOMMATE W ANTEDTHIRD GIRL: start win. qu. 324-0740tmined to share. BEAUTIFUL 2 bdrmapt. nr. campus. LX. LIVING $47.50per mo. Sharon, BU 8-8134.With 3 girls. Gd. loc. A- trans Con¬tact Carlene Coen, PL ’2-6414, exi40. 403*2126 eves.FURN Male Student: 37*4 mo. Call288-6826: Avail. NOW.FOR RENTSTUDIO APT. MOD. KIT. A BAT1169th & Jeffery, 288-6757.HYDE PK. 1440 E. 52nd St_ 1 4Studio, comer apt. main fir. $u moMr. Rosen. HY 3-1213.See The Fabulous“Hits Of Broadway”Lavish Musical RevueFine Dining—DancingDEL PRADO HOTELHY 3-9600 RANDELL - HARPER SQUAREBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALONf>700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air Conditioning Open Evenings Billie TrrgnnzaEYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist53-Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount there is only jone^ ‘ foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.authorized sales and serviceaustin, mg, morris, austin healey, triumph Sc jaguarand we fix all other european cars, too5424 South Kimbark Midway 3-3113(UALCMlkl&StOI5U&5, Ain. couomotdto131Q £. 53 w ST.II AM TO lO PMM13-34-07WGL DtllVOL Christmas Gift SuggestionsGifts Women will AppreciateFur Lined GlovesHanes or Berkshire HosierySlips — Sleepwear — RobesPurses — Jewelry — CologneGifts Men will AppreciateGloves — Socks — ScarfsShirts — Ties — HandkerchiefsSlippers — Men's Cologne — Bill FoldsFre* Gift Wrapping for items purchased in this store.University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 27, 1964iCINEMAChicago at MichiganHELD OVER 6th WEEK!Could be the 7965Academy Award Winner"Ome of the Best America*Pictures of the Year"CANNES FILM AWARD!■ the tradition of Marty, Davidand Lisa, aod Lilies of the Field.SUN-TIMES V/i stars"ONE POTATO,TWO POTATO"STUDENTS $1.00with I.D. Cardsevery day bet SaturdayWeekdays Open 6 P.M.Sat. & Sun. Ope.. 1:30 — 4th SMASH MONTH—Chicago's Longest Running MusicalThoy blow a gust of freth sir into thomusical rovu# business.Lesner, Newt"The keynote Is literacy by Unlv. atChicago Cosmopolites.'' larzel, Amer.Tees . W«S . Thurs. • F.N.: Frl. • A II;•st S SO, 10:30. 12:30; Sue. 7:80 A 1:88Weekdays $2.65, Fri. & Set. $2.95Thtattr In tha CloudsALLERT0N H0TCL701 N. Michigan Ave.Reservations: SU 7*4200HSSHWWWWmSWHSS Colony Room Dinner offer, ♦# Shew end ( Course Dinner, Xf 75.50; Frl. 6 Sot. |5 >5. $■tHmwmtwwmwmf., PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PK. BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICEKE 6-6606 — KE 6-3891CHICKEN - SANDWICHESPIZZASITALIAN FOODS MAROON ® WEEKEND GUIDEiprfMtWUlWUlltUtHMlIilWUnNMIlilWHtnUMMttMMWItMIHHWNIIHttNMUHMIHHIHIHNtHWIMHHIItftltlMItFifty-Seventh at KenwoodUNUSUAL FOODDELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICESLAKE^PARK AT SjRO : N O 7 • 9 O 7 1the {^yde park theatreStarts TonightJean-Paul Belmondo ^ Claudia Cardinal#"CARTOUCHE"Award Short — "THAT'S ME"Starts Friday, Dec. 4DIMKA"andCARRY ONREGARDLESS" tSk■ i|iiFREE WEEKEND PATRON PARKING AT 5230 SOUTH LAKE PARKSPECIAL STUDENT RATES WITH STUDENT I.D. CARDS V*9 ^ ’j. a newV world ofdiningpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668shore drive motel■ mm 50* ■m at all times wa for college DCa students ■M e open Item dawn til dawn ■# a different double featureM deify ■■ • -Little Gal lery" for gel* only me dark parking one door aouthM ... tout hour* 95c after ■8 p.m.FACING 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. $ So. Shore Dr. • Chicago 37, Illinois fri. 27—"music man,” "it'swonderful to be young.”sat. 28 — "david. and lisa,”"lord of the flies.”stut. 29—"el cid,” "the hoywho stole a million.”mon. 30—"liane, jungle god¬dess,” "love in a hotclimate.”tuet. 1 — "sitting hull,”"quantrillo raiders.”wed. 2—"god’s little acre,”"anna lucasta.”thurs. 3 — "warlock,” "dayof the outlaw.”THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATRESTL DEN TS* WORKSHOP SERIESi$ iv* A* X || %* .Tonight at 8:30NOVEMBER 27. 28. 2957th & University $1.50 Students: $1.00 rfey. GOLD CITY INN'"A Gold Mine of Good Food**10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK’S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559Try Our Convenient Take-Out Orders(Eat More For Less)CAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THE THY 3-5300 FA 4-5525PIZZA %Med. LargeCHEESE . 1.45 2.00SAUSAGE . 1.80 2.35PEPPER & ONION . 1.65 2.20BACON & ONION . 2.15 2.70COMBINATION . 2.40 2.95MUSHROOM . 2.15 2.70SHRIMP . 2.40 2.95! THIS COUPON WORTH 50c "l■ON ANY PIZZA DELIVERY l1 IN DECEMBER lTickets on sale at Reynolds Clnb, at the door, or by mail 5300 South on the Lake HY3-9600Frank Amorosi Triocomedy — music — songsBILL CURTISsightless keyboard artistDOTTIE BEE TRIOe musical show-stoppersCONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT!TIL 4 A.M.NO COVER — NO MINIMUMNov. 27, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7MOVIE REVIEW H Apartment schools" areFail-safe visually interesting subject of controversyFAIL-SAFE, the most re¬cent “doomsday film,” fallssomewhere between the flag-waving- melodrama of SEVENDAYS IN MAY and the seriouscomedy of DR. STRANGELOVE.Half suspense drama and half politi¬cal comment, FAIL-SAFE is, oil thewhole, a stylized topical film thatshould be interesting, if not excit¬ing, to everyone.In form and content, the film ismainly concerned with the hazaixlsos) technology. The reliance of thecontemporary political-military establishment on ma¬chines requires a disquieting amountat faith from the layman, andnecessitates a huge amount oltechnical exposition from the movie¬makers. The nature of the dangeris explored in terms of charts andscreens, blips and dials which fillthe first pjtft of the film, showingus the intricate refen.se mechanismsthat, are the inevitable tools of cur¬rent international politics.The machine motif is expressedby director Sidney Lumet in a strik¬ing visual style which depicts men aswell as computers in rigid, geometri¬cal stances. The SAC control! roomlike Kubrick's War Room in DR.STRANGELOVE, is almost surreal¬istic, filled with soldierly spines asstraight as antennae and eyes asglassy as panel lights. At a privateparty where a leading nuclear sci¬ entist pontificates on megadeatlvsover martinis, the swank crowdgroup themselves around the oraclein equally stultified positions.FINALLY. WHEN TWO US planescrash into die sea in futile pursuitof a misguided bomber, the fallingaircraft are shown in extreme longsiwts so that they look just liketwo more dots on a conference roomscreen.Tlie less cinematic parts of thefilm are less successful. Hie hot¬line scenes in which President Hen¬ry Fonda tries to talk out the af¬fair of the misguided bomber withthe Russian Premier illustrate whyDR. STRANGELOVE was changedfrom a suspenser to a satire. Tlieresurgent banality of telephone con¬versations proves unavoidable, andinappropriate comedy creeps intomore than one scene.Hk* pervasive technology alsoprovides an interesting case of auupdated clinche. Instead ol tlx* twosoldiers in a ditch declaring theirfriendship before they reluctantlykill each other, in FAIL-SAFE twogenerals exchange mutual admira¬tion via transcontinental telephonebefore Moscow and New York arewiped out.LUMET'S PERSISTENT VISUALstyle, aided by skillful editing, pre¬vents these moments from becom¬ing fatal to tlie film. His individualdirectorial touches are not as effec¬tive as the general atmosphere. Lumet remains primarily a directorof staging and mood rather than im¬age or movement. These are tlx?qualities that enabled him to filmLONG DAY’S JOURNEY INTONIGHT, successfully, without chang¬ing tlie monumental play into cine-matic terms or losing the essenceof O'Neill’s ponderous masterpiece.As a war film, FAIL-SAFE ulti¬mately falls into the insidious classof tlie ostensible anti-war picturewhich is essentially a glamori/ationof battle. In this department if isnot nearly as offensive as films suchas THE LONGEST DAY. But, asDaniel S. Davis says in the OctoberFilms in Review. “Seeing tlie Pres¬ident talking on the ‘hot-line’ to theSoviet Premier, a Joint Chiefs ofStaff meeting, the Omaha WarRoom, SAC bombers in the air, be¬comes pruriently exciting in muchdie way war films, which show com¬bat action, raise the blood pressurerattier than induce disgusts for war.The way Lumet shows the seatsof power, and men wielding power,makes the audience feel part of theestablishment, not rebellious againMnuclear armament. The very ideaof nuclear war is so fantastic andbeyond the range of tlie averageman’s comprehension that pseudo¬documentary realism is not the mosteffective way of presenting it. “Atleast it isn’t in FAIL-SAFE wherethe melodrama obscures tlie mes¬sage.” SK “Keep your children out ofthe apartment schools to getthem into real schools untiltlie classrooms are removedfrom the Public Housing Projects.”orders a leaflet published by theTenants Committee for Better Edu¬cation of the Robert Taylor Homesand the Washington Park Hones“We seek Freedom through QualityEducation!! 1,” it reads.Hie purpose of this boycott is foeliminate the makeshift classroomsin the first-floor apartments ol theChicago Housing Authority’s build¬ings. Its co-ordinators insist thatpupil concentration, alertness, andgeneral well-being are now beingsaciiticed to administrative expe¬diency.THEY REFER TO a study madeby the Iowa Center for Researoh inSchool Administration, which con¬cludes that classroom environmentalconditions affect mental efficiency.Among the complaints registeredby the protestors are: lack ol pro¬tection during .school attendance, kickot proper toilet facilities, faulty ornon-existent heating, lack of propermaterials, poor acoustics, psycholo¬gical effect which isolation from con¬tact with outside enviroment hasupon children, lack of qualifiedteachers, and low quality, educationreceived.Tlie overall total of pupils attend-Culture C alendarConcertsChicago Sympony Orchestra: JeanMartinon, cond.; Frances Bible andSaramae Endich s-s. Florence Kopleftc Chicago Sym. Orch. Cho. Vivaldi:Gloria. Debussy: Nocturnes (com¬plete. I Ravel: excerpts from DaphnisSr Chloe. Nov. 27 at 2 pin. JeanMartinon, cond. Janos Starker, ’cello:Haendel: Royal Fireworks Music:Haydn; ’Cello Concerto; Tsehaikovsky:Variations on a Rococo Theme; Pro-kotief: Suite from the Ballet Chout.Dec. 3 at 8:15 pm. Tickets $2-6.50;auident gallery tickets to Fri. concerts$1. 220 S. Michigan. HA 7-0302. After5, HA 7-OHIO.Collegium Musicum of the Univer¬sity of Chicago: Howard Brown, cond.Elizabethan music for solo voices,harpsichord, lute, viola da gamba. andrecorders. Bond Chapel. Nov. 28 at8:30. Free.Fine Arts quartet: Leonard Sorkin,Abram Loft, violins; Gerald Stanick,<viola; George Sopkin, violoncello. Bar-tok: Quartet No. 2; Haydn: QuartetOpus 50, No. 0; Brahms: Quartet No.3 for Piano and Strings (John Brown¬ing, piano). Nov. 30 at 8:15, at theGoodman Theatre, Monroe and Colum¬bus: $2.75 and $3.25. Dec. 1 at 8:15.at the Howard School Aud., 17th andLake. Wilmette: $l.25-$3.25. HI 6-3831.UC Contemporary Chamber players:Ralph Shapey, Cond. Webern: Con¬certo for Nine Instruments; Varese:Octandre; Webern: Four Pieces forViolin and Piano; Schoenberg: PianoPieces; Berg: Four Pieces for Clarinetand Piano; Eseot: Christos; Davidov-sky: Electronic Study No. 2. MandclHall. Dec. 1 at 8:30. $1, students 50c.Tickets available from the Music de¬partment: Ext. 3885. UOK1S MARTINSON ANI> GREGO¬RY' NIZNIK: an exhibit of oil paint¬ings. University of Chicago Center forContinuing Education, 1307 E. 60thSt. Thru Nov. 27.LE GARAGE: original oils by morethan tOO artists, 70 E. Walton, Chi¬cago.Films LecturesIvan .Albright pectlve: byJohn W Parker. Art Institute Gallery.Nov. 20 at 3:30. Free.THE BLUE ANGEL: dir. Josef VanSternberg. With Marlene Dietrich andEmil Jannings. Doc. Films. Soc. Sci.122. Nov. 28 at 7:15 and 9:15. 60c.CARTOUCHE: With Jean-Paul Bel¬mondo and Claudia Cardinale. TheHyde Park Theatre. 53rd at LakePark. 75c students. Consult local list¬ings for times.FREUD: With Montgomery Clift.Int. House Auditorium. Nov. 30 at 8.50c.THE GODDESS: written by PaddyChayevsky. St. Xavier College FilmSociety. 103rd and Central Park. Nov.”30 at 7:30. $1.00.THE THREEPENNY OPERA: WithSammy Davis Jr., Curt Jurgens, Hil-degarde Neff, June Ritchie. The Car¬negie Theatre. Rush and Oak. $1.80.Consult local listings for times. OperaTosca: by G.^-juio Puccini. WithCrespin, Tucker, Schmorr, Gobbi, C'e-sari, Tadeo; Bartoletti, cond. Nov.27, 30, Dec. 2, 5. Nightly at 8 exceptSunday at 7:30. Opera House, 20 N.Wacker. $3-$ll.Die Eledermaus . (in English): byJohan Strauss. New York City Opera.Arie Crown Theatre. McCormick Place.Nov. 29 at 2:30. $2-6. FR 2-0560.Die Lustige Witwe (in English): byFranz Lehar. New York City Opera.Arie Crown Theatre, McCormickPlace Nov. 29 at 8:30. $2-6. FR 2-0560.RecitalsMarian Anderson, contralto. Fare¬well appearance. Orchestra Hall. Dec.0 at 3:30. $2.50-0.Emil Gilels. pianist. Orchestra Hall.Nov. 29 at 3:30. $2.50-0.50.TheatreFolk MusicHENRI MANCIN1 AND THE CHRIS¬TIE MINSTRELS: at Arie CrownTheatre, McCormick Place, Nov. 20-28 at 8:30. Tickets $2.50-$5.50.PETER, PAUL. AND MARY: At theArie Crown Theatre, McCormickPlace Dec. 1 at 8:30. $2-5. SU 7-7585.JazzExhibitsIVAN ALBRIGHT: a retrospectseexhibition of work. Art Institute,Michigan and Adams. Thru Dec. 11. Gene Krupa Quartet: at the LondonHouse. 300 N. Michigan. Nov. 10-Dec.10. Nightly 8-4. Fri. Sc Sat. 8-5Cover. Fri. & Sat. only-$l.Sonny Stitt and Benny Green: AtMcKie’s Disc Jockey Lounge. 6319 S.Cottage Grove. No “cover. No minors. A Funny Thing Happened on theWay to the Forum: starring JerryLester, Edward Everett Horton, PaulHartman, Arnold Stang, and ErikRhodes. Shubert Theatre. 22 W. Mon¬roe. Nightly at 8:30, Sun. at 7. Sat.Matinee at 2:30. Mon. dark. $2.50-0.95.CE 0-8240.The Madwoman of Cliuiltot:play by Jean Girnudoux. GoodmanTheater,, Monroe and Columbus, ThruNov. 14, Sun.-Thurs 7:30, Fri. and Sat.8:30 pm. $2.50-$;:.Farther Along: Second City Players.1840 N. Wells. Tue. thru Sun., 9 and11, 1 on Fri. and Sat. Improvisationsafter 11 show Thurs. $2, $2.50 week¬ends. DE 7-3992. UNIVERSAL ARMY STORELevis — TurtlenecksWinter Jackets — RaincoatsPeacoats — Parkas1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856Free CoffeeDOUBLETO ALL OUR THANKSCUSTOMERSLast Thanksgiving we were in tlie Art Colony, aboutto move to our present location — so we did not haveour 4th Anniversary Sale.This year, startingDECEMBER 1stwe are celebrating our combined 4th and 5th Anniver¬sary Sale! For which we have made extensive prepara¬tions.Come on over and celebrate with us.We hope to see you atSCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS1538 E. 53rd St. NO 7-404010 cs.m.-IO p.m.; Sunday 12 noon-8, p.m.Home of Multiform SPECIAL SALEHIGH INTENSITY DESK LAMPSNOW $645Were $7.95See o.tier values ie our Stationery Department.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.THE WORD FROM THE BIRO:QUALITYxJUm-T/LcccSjwoLQo. \ harperI CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERSX Phones: Ml 3-7447: HY 3-6868"Unexcelled Quality Since 1917"1013-17 East 61st St.Across from B-J Ct. mg these deficient schools numlKithree thousand seven hundred fortylive. The children involved ate m thefirst through the fourth grades.The first boycott was held threeweeks ago, and was sponsored byACT. “It was done hcwtily to delay(he Board of Education's signing ol alease extension for the da&axxxns.’’explained boycott head, Mrs. VioletWilliams. This attempt was ©fleelive due to tl»e boycott. Hie tenantsobained, lor he first time, an audence with tlie Board erf Directors fotlie Chicago Housing Authority.AT PRESENT, THE tenants do ti> dknow whether tlie lease has yet beensignal. They are currently planninga dinner with members ol die Boardof Education. If the dinner Is unsueceastfufl and the lease signed, asecond boycott will occur sometimeafter Thanksgiving, probably abendthe first ol December.An undertaker, Mr. A. R. Leak,who is influential with oomnxuFyministers, will then aid the jirojtvt insetting op Freedom Schools for diechildren involved.UC CORE and SNCC will provideteachers for the Freedom Schools.Interested students may amt act MrsWilliams at 2S8-5642, or obtain inf r-mation through these organisations.Six Ages of Man: a comic revuewith music. Allerton Hotel Theatre inthe Clouds. 701 N. Michigan. 9 and1 I pm Tees.-Sat., 4 and 9 pm Sun.Weekdays $2.05, Fri. and Sat. $2.95.SU 7-4200.Enrico IV: by Luigi Pirandello, Dir.by Gene Frankel. Harper Theater, 6238S. Harper. Tues.-Fri. at 8:30. Sat. at0:30 &• 10:15. Sun. at 2:30 St 8:30.Tues-Thurs. $3; Fri. & Sat. $3.90;Sun. mat. $2.50. Sun. Eve. $3.30. Bl>S-1717.Endgame: Samuel Beckett. Dir. byRobert Benedette of UC. With WesSanders, Robert Benedetti. Hull HouseTheater, 3212 N. Broadway, Chicago.u •■Ml* “Associate Justice William ODouglas has lamented that theSupreme Court hears fewer hoursol argument per year and sitslewer day* per week then it usedto in the good old daye. ‘Themyth about the Supremo Court,'aay* Douglas, ‘is that it's over¬worked." Overworked? Who eversaid that? What we said wasit was over-wrought, andmaybe shouldbe hanged. for m fro* copy ot '•»current ietue ol NATtONAl Review writ*•e Dept CM. 150 t33 St. N Y 1*. N YNov. 20-Jan. 2. Fri. Sc Sat. at 8:50;Sun. at 7:30. Tickets Fri. & Sun,$1.90-2.90. Sat. $2.10-83.40.Tonight At 8:.T0: Captain Cook byGiraudoux, Kscurial by Ghelderode,aud I'bu Ro| by Jarry. ChamberTheater. 3rd floor Reynolds Club- Nov.27 Sc 28. at 8:30. Tickets $1.50, stu¬dents $1.The Playboy of the Western World:by John Synge, dir. by Arnold Nelson.Encore Theatre, 1419 N. Weils Si. Dec.2, 5. 9, 10. 30. 31. Jan. 13. 14. Tickets$1.55 and *2.65. WH 1-8414.Othello: by William Shaxpur. Dir.bv Arnold Nelson. Encore Theatre.1419 N. Wells St. Dec. 10, 17. 23. Jan.0. 7. 20, 21. $1.55 and $2.05. WH 4-8414. UNIVERSITY THEATRETuesday night reading hourLuigi Pirandello's"The Man with theFlower in his Mouth"READING — COFFEEdiscussion led byPerrin H. LowreyReynolds Club LoungeDec. 1, 7:30 p.m.Silk Screen SuppliesA Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALS,MIMEOGRAPH PAPERAND SUPPLIESI Wholesale fricei ie QuantityOnly IDUNCAN’S1305 E. 53rd ST.HY 3-4111TAhSAM-YhNCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE AM>AMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUTT310 East 63rd 5f. MU 4-106ZLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetServing the Campus since 1917 Full line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEImm m a —1133FA 4-74”— 1318HY 3-6800• CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 27, 1964 :