I. 70, No. 20 The University of Chicago Friday, January 8, 1965 311C student arrested in Miss.by David L. AikenRobert D. Gilman, 20, a UC student on leave to work in the Mississippi Freedom»ject, was arrested Wednesday night in West Point with a group of other Projectrkers.Gilman, who called thetson who was called yesterday,this story:local teenage Negro boy, Carl?, was watching two girls fight-when a policeman came up and;sted hem, saying, “A nigger likeshould be in jail.”ice, according to the COFO in¬nation officer, had participatedthe November Freedom Vote,which the Mississippi Freedomnocratiic Party held a mockrtion for disfranchised Negroes,i Lyndon Johnson running forsident and three Negro womenrepresentatives from three offive congressional districts,nnson was not on the “regular”nocratic ballot in the state’s elec-i.)test Point COFO reported to thee COFO headquarters in Jack-that throughout the day oninesday after Rioe’s arrest, then police refused to give infor-tion on Rioe’s case, not evenit he was charged with. Maroon Wednesday night, and a COFO staff member inAt 8 pm that night, all four COFOstaff workers in West Point, andsix local Negro teenagers, wentdown to the jailhouse to investigateRice’s case, but were turned awaywithout information. Upon leavingthe jail, they sang Freedom songsin front of the jailhouse, and allwere arrested.(Gilman reported that there weresix local teenagers in the group,making a total of eleven persons injail, counting Rice. Jackson COFO,however, said its reports showedthat there were eleven teenagers,plus four COFO workers and Rice,giving a total of 16. It is likely thatthe Jackson office’s reports wereconfused.)All those arrested were held with¬out charge Wednesday night. Thearraignment took place Thursday, atwhich the charges were specified,but no bail was set. Those arrestedfor singing Freedom songs werecharged with disturbing the peace.Gilman faces an additional charge of resisting arrest. The chargeagainst Rice was inciting to riot.Jackson COFO reported that alllocal persons arrested were minors,ar.d that their parents met withpolice officials yesterday to discusstheir cases.Gilman, is from Bethesday, Md.He would now be in his third yearin the College, and plans to returnto UC next fall. Tlie other COFOworkers are John Buffington, 23, aNegro from 417 E. 76 street in Chi¬cago; Eddie Brooks, 19, Negro, wholives at 3647 Lake Park ave., Chi¬cago, and Mike Higson, a white28-year-odd Briton whose residenceis in New York City.The West Point chief of police toldthe Maroon last night that bail hadbeen set at $300 for everyone exceptGilman and $500 for Gilman. Thechief, Thomas Smith, said thata lawyer from COFO’s Jackson of¬fice asked for a continuance of oneweek for the trial, which wasgranted.'arking meters and red tapeStill suffering from the effects of the “cultural shock”?y experienced on seeing the world outside the University,J students returned from vacation to find the sidewalktside the administration building on Ellis avenue occupiedstrange new invaders — parking :ters. Maroon’s man was getting de-’he situation was more or less Pressec^vs worthy, so the Maroon .?ent outtenocent freshman reporter toI out who was responsible forsudden appearance of theseney-eating monstrosities. He wasn lost in the labyrinth of theiversity’s bureaucracy.i'IRST HE CALLED A Waynevsernan, the bursar, on the sup-lit ion that anything taking moneyir the University must be well-mu to, if not controlled by, UC’suncial department.‘You have to put a nickel in BUT THEN CAME his first biglead! On a tip from “usually re¬liable sources,’’ he contacted WestonL. Frogman, business manager ofcampus operations.Joy swept through the wholeframe of the Maroon’s muckrakeras Frogman declared, “The city putthem up.” What was mare, Frog¬man revealed that the city got allthe meter’s revenue.The case seemed just aboutwrapped up when Frogman, a veri¬table gold mine of information. drivers to park in the University’smeterless parking lots.Rumor has it that the ParkingCommittee ordered the Ellis avenuemeters to prevent the all day park¬ing that had prevented people withshort business at the administra¬tion building from parking near it.The Maroon has yet, however, touncover the names of the membersof the secret organization.The young reporter who originallycarried on the search for the me¬ter’s source did not survive his firstcontact with UC’s bureaucracy. Hehas converted to Catholicism and isabout to enter a monastery.All worked for the best, however,for the Maroon had planned to sendhim to cover a story on the USgovernment. The effect of this en¬counter on the young lad wouldhave been much, much worse. Lutheran victims join forcesResidents of the three blocks which are threatened bfplans for a Lutheran seminary joined forces on Wednesdaynight to carry on the fight. The 5400 Woodlawn UniversityBlock Ciub and the 5450 University Greenwood Block Clubwant to prevent the wholesale de¬struction of middle income housingin Hyde Park. The block dub ina unanimously-approved resolutiondenounced the Lutheran School ofTheology and the University of Chi¬cago as jointly responsible for thenew plans to demolish seven build¬ings with 149 family units on theblock bounded by 55th Place and55th Street between University andGreenwood Avenues.The Lutheran School of Theologyhas already acquired six of theseven buildings on the block. At themeeting, however, it was announcedthat the owners of the unsold build¬ing have signed an agreementamong -themselves to sell to no oneat the present time.Neighborhood concern over theproposed seminary appears to havereached a new high when over aclub meeting at the child care cen¬ter on University Avenue. The reso¬lution approved by the group statedthat the seven buildings in the blockare all sound, and that the hlock isone of the prize blocks in Hyde Parkhaving achieved racial integrationin well kept middle inoome housing.The group fears that long term resi¬dent families, now threatened withrelocation, will be forced out ofHyde Park because continued demo¬ lition is eliminating middle incomehousing which cannot be replacedby any comparable new residentialstructure. The relocation placed theblame for the current situation di¬rectly on the University of Chicago^which invited the Lutherans to HydePark and sold them property.Arthur Para, chairman of theblock club, declared that his groupis “ever more determined by theeffrontery of this site selection tobring to bear the maximum influ¬ence of the community to persuadethe Lutherans and the University toseek an institutional site which doesnot involve residential demolition.Their action will justly arouse atremendous outcry in the communi¬ty as going too far in ignoring theneeds of students and residents inthis community. It is my hope thatthe protest within the communitywill be of such strength that per¬haps once and for all the questionof institutional infringement uponresidential needs will compel theinstitutions to seek some othermethods of meeting its legitimateexpansion needs or build upward.”Para plans to attend the stu¬dent government meeting this Tues¬day to enlist student support for hisgroup’s fight.The apartment pictured above is the only one not soldto make way for the Lutheran Seminary. It is cooperativelyowned by residents of the condemned block.;m,” Gieseman told the Maroon’slocent abroad with efficient finan-il preciseness. Beyond that how-er, he knew nothing.'fext the resourceful reporter triedliter V. Leen, UC’s legal coun-i, a man sure to be versed in the»al wiles of parking meter place-sit.Habeas corpus seemed to be moreLeen’s line. "I know that they areire,” he declared without reser-tion. But no one had sued thestems yet, so Leen could not handwn any other decision. mentioned that the placement ofthe parking meters had been re¬quested by the University’s Park¬ing Committee.It’s . . . what?After swallowing a tranquilizer,the Maroon’s man about town de-decided that such an organization,if it really existed, must be regis¬tered at the University — with theregistrar, of course.THE REGISTRAR’S secretarydidn’t know anything, but the in¬trepid journalist was by now usedto dealing with people in high places.The secretary did say, he noted,that she liked the new meters.The registrar, Maxine Sullivan,turned out to be more than justanother ordinary news source. Un¬der questioning she revealed thatshe, herself, was chairman protem-pore of the mysterious ParkingCommittee. The chase had ended!Or had it? Mrs. Sullivan claimedthat she had not been connectedwith the committee when it had is¬sued its recommendation. WilliamJ. Van Cleve had been head of thecommittee, but he was no longerwith the University.The Maroon never did learn whomakes up the mysterious ParkingCommittee. That it is powerful,there can be no doubt; for it con¬trols the issuance of the fabled park¬ing stickers that allow certain lucky Meyerson new CaS Chancellorby Hugh LeticheOver the New Year’s weekend the University of Cali¬fornia at Berkeley underwent an administrative changewhen Chancellor Edward Strong, whose actions during therecent crisis provoked criticism from all political factions,took a leave of absence, and wasreplaced by Martin Meyerson.Meyerson started his career herein 1948 as an assistant professor ofsocial science in the undergraduatecollege. Between then and his re¬cent appointment at Cal, as a Deanof Environmental Design, Meyersonworked for Harvard, MIT and theUN.FSM describes die new chan¬cellor as a “nice guy who is morereasonable than was Strong and ismaking a conscientious effort to findout what’s going on.”One FSM spokesman greated thenews of Meyerson’s appointmentwith the comment that “He canseem a very sincere man who wantsto solve the current problems or asa very expedient man who wantsto solve the problems. Most of allwe hope he is a man we can talkto.”Cal quiet this weekSevered factors have made thenew chancellor’s first week a smooth one. First, the Berkeley weatherhas remained wet all week. Second,finals are approaching and the stu¬dents have shifted their attentionaway from the FSM. The proximityof finals has also driven manyFSM leaders, who cut classes for amonth or more, to try to drop outof Cal, in order to return in thespring.Though this is against Universityrules, it was done for Cal's all-American football star Craig Mor-tan. The FSM leaders are demand¬ing the same privilege.THIRD, MOST OUTSTANDINGissues have been resolved and thenew Chancellor has stressed hiswillingness to negotiate: “You shouldknow that I believe that civil diso¬bedience is warranted as a last re¬sort in our democracy. . . .Butcivil disobedience is warrantedonly when there is no recourse toreasonable deliberation. Avenues of recourse are not available on thiscampus.”FSM’s demandsThe FSM, despite the lull in ac¬tivity, remains active. She continuesto collect funds through the sale ofher record, which is a parody oftraditional Christmas oarrols. On themore serious side the FSM is ob¬jecting to three of the University’*rules.First, a requirement that allposters be cleared by thp adminis¬tration 48 hours before they areposted. Second, a ban that has beenplaced on the distribution of non¬student literature by student groups.Finally, and most strenuously, theFSM objects to an administrationdemand that police protection be pro¬vided for controversial figures whoaddress Cal students — at the ex¬pense of the student group involved.The FSM expects their demands tobe met by the Academic Senate andforesees little trouble in the future.The next MAROON willappear on January 15, aweek from today. Therawill be no issue this comingTuesday.Letters to thI Editor’s note: the following letterwas written by Robert D. Gilman, aUC student working wiih COFO in Mississippi. Gilman's letter was writ¬ten the night before his arrest, whichis described on page one.IThis morning is my 20th birthday, and I’ve just nowreceived mv present. Three people from Clay County justleft to go to Washington to speak for themselves about theirsupport of the Congressional Challenge. One is the lady I’mstaying with — Mrs. Dora Adams,53, disabled to work by high bloodpressure, with a mortgage on herhouse and bills on her furniture,unable after 20 years of hard workto get any kind of support moneyeither from her former employer,a meat packing house, car from thegovernment. Another is an 80 yearold lady who can hardly speak with¬out a quaver in her voice nor hardlymove without trembling, who has “Do you call yourself white?”That is the question posed to meby the very first white Mississippianwith whom I had any kind of en¬counter. He was an evil old manwho beat niggers and cheated nig¬gers and lived most of his wakinghours around niggers. He was try¬ing to drive me and others awayfrom the Freedom School we hadestablished. And do not laugh atthis old man, for you will find thatlived all her days in this hell holeof Mississippi yet who went to regis- ^ Pay„attf®^on j° ^eo^e .f11ter last month and now is going to m3ke 311 effort to understand, theyD.C. to represent her people. And meaningful things to you.the third is a farmer turned car- F<* evd °Id bl#* rajsed apenter because the white man won’t very basic question.“Do you call yourself white? Imumbled something at the time, butwas not satisfied with the answer,indeed it has taken me some timeto work out a decent reply. Do Icall myself white? Do you? Is thatthe way I identify myself? Is thatthe way others identify me? Whatgive him but 5 acres of cotton on a140 acre farm.And having myself received thisfine present, I’m going to do some¬thing unusual and pass along to youa birthday present — and that isthis, some thought* about Freedom.EDITORIALGifts to COFO urgentA UC undergraduate who is on leave this year to workin the Mississippi Freedom Project is in jail — again.Robert D. Gilman, who would be in his third year inthe College, went to the jailhouse in West Point, Miss., withseveral other COFO workers to investigate the arrest of aNegro teenager from there who was standing around watch¬ing other people fight.Both the original arrest and the subsequent jailing ofthe people who vainly sought information about it were,of course, wholly gratuitous. The West Point police evidentlyjust felt like sitting on all those troublemaking “freedomriders,” as civil rights workers are often known to segrega¬tionists.Gilman and some of the COFO workers have alreadyvisited the inside of the West Point jailhouse, in connectionwith their work in November “Freedom Vote” that theMississippi Freedom Democratic Party held to give Negroessome chance to know what a free election is.Through all of yesterday afternoon, bail had still notbeen set for those arrested. It took until late in the afternoonjust to announce what charges were to be placed, namelydisturbing the peace, and, for Gilman, resisting arrest.When bail is set, however, it is quite sure to be high.In a call to a Maroon editor the night before his arrest,Gilman asked for a concerted campaign to raise sorely-neededfunds for the general COFO operations, which are continu¬ing through the winter, and must be planned for the summer.In this season, Gilman said, publicity about the FreedomProject is scarce, especially compared to that given it duringlast summer. COFO’s bank balance is very low. COFO can¬not, it seems obvious, afford to bail out all fifteen peoplenow in the West Point jail.Money is more urgently needed now than ever before.You can help. If you wish to contribute to the bail bondmoney, a contribution may be sent to the Maroon, Ida NoyesHall, 1212 E. 59th street, Chicago 37. Contributions to thegeneral COFO operations should be addressed directly tothe Council of Federated Organizations, 1017 Lynch st.,Jackson, Miss. does it mean to call yourself white?I noticed when I repeated the in¬cident to Negroes here, they gener¬ally were very tickled by it. Andmany would say that I could haveanswered, “I’m just as white asyou are!” And to get that responsefrom the people I’m working with isnatural, but still a disappointment.For, after mature consideration,I have decided that I do not callmyself white — white is somethingthat people call me, just like “nig¬ger-lover” (yelled at me from apassing car today). White is some¬thing that has nothing to do withskin color; it has to do with thesystem. The system tells you thatyou are white and teaches you whatthat means. And to the extent thatyou believe it, you are trapped.For in the South, there are many"niggers” with skin as light as mineand many with blue eyes wheremine are brown. Whiteness, likeniggerness is a matter of conformingto a social system, it does not referto skin color but to behavior. And,indeed, when one ceases to conform,people sense the change. It is im¬portant that that old, trapped, evil,“white” man felt he had to askthat question, just as it is importantthat the dark-skinned, brown-skinned, light-skinned, so-called nig¬gers here begin to “forget you’re anigger.”And the illusion that the North isfree — that white and black do notexist there, is just that — an illusion.Segregation is as much a part ofthe social system in the North asit is in the South, and it is evenbetter camouflaged. When I say that,I know you’re going to think of theghetioes and the schools, which areindeed the material manifestation ofthe fact, but what I am saying entersinto another sphere, that of personalcontact. For one thing, this contactis so, so limited. In Chicago thereare some 800,000 Negroes. Howmany do you know? In the South,white and Negro are constantlyaround each other; and though theyconstantly lie to each other, they atleast have the chance for observa¬ tion. Not so in the North. And whatcontact there is in the North is seg¬regated too, although the fact ishidden. For with my friends, I willgo any place, but to go into oneanothers homes, to do certain thingstogether is still awkward and, in themain, avoided. Nor does one gener¬ally feel free in conversation. Bymutual consent, some subjects areleft untouched. And again I say, theNorth is as segregated in its wayof life as the South.Nor is segregation limited to race.It extends also to social classes —which I contend are like race, some¬thing imposed by the system andwhich a man should be able todefy. The setting up of barriersof mistrust in one area tends to setthem up in others. The setting upof barriers in the relations amongmen sets them up inside them. Westand in danger of being segregatednot only from other people but alsofrom ourselves. For people persistin the notion that they can lie toothers, yet be honest with them¬selves. It is not so. More than halfthe lies you tell are seen throughanyway — people are not fools, andan attitude or opinion truly heldwill exhibit itself despite oneself.You cannot fool people in the bigthings any more than you canfool them about whether you likethe tie they bought you. And it isonly conventional politeness whichprevents people from saying theyare not fooled. The biggest victimof the lie is the liar, for each lieconfuses him more within himselfand prevents him further from work¬ing a true solution to his problems.And, sadly, so much of this coun¬try is based on lies — the lie ofequal opportunity, the lie of fairremuneration for one's efforts, thelie of non-discrimination, the lie offreedom. Mississippi is very nicethat way — the lies here are suchwhoppers, and they give the peopleso little even just to pacify them.Here, quite plainly, only courageis needed to tell the truth; thereis no difficulty seeing the reality.BOB GILMANU- WEST POINT, MISSISSIPPIJanuary Clearance SaleWomen's Skirts - Dresses - Blouses20% DISCOUNTBras - Slips - RobesDRASTICALLY REDUCEDANNUAL SALEOne Week Only — Jan. 9 to Jan. 16Hanes Seamless HosieryRegularPrice Sale Price3 Pairs3.453.754.054.95Stock up now — and SaveUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave. Talk slated on’animal clocks'Frank Brown, professor of biol¬ogy at Northwestern University,will be a Tea and Taurus lecturerhere next week. Brown is wellknown for his many articles on the“clocks” by which animals andplants tell time; he has lent scien¬tific credulence to farmers’ andwives' tales about the effects of themoon on growing com and otherorganisms, including humans.Some of Brown’s recent studiesseem to indicate that magnetic andother fields, as well as gravity, mayhave subtle yet real effects on allliving things; for example, bymeans of magnetic fields no strong¬er than the earth’s it is possible tocontrol which way the worm turns,a phenomenon of interest to man¬kind since time immemorial.The lecture will be given at 8 pmWednesday, January 13, at the AlghaDelta Phi House, 5747 Universityave. Student resident protestsLutheran takeover of blockTO THE EDITOR:The residents of the block boundedbe Greenwood Ave., UniversityAve., 55th St., and 54th PI., receivedthe week of December 4, a letterfrom the Lutheran School of The¬ology at Chicago, informing thatleases would not be renewed, sincethe site was to be cleared for theuse of the Lutheran School. Resi¬dents of an adjacent block are tobe removed for the same purpose.Advice on relocation will be pro¬vided; occupants of married stu¬dent housing have been promisedequivalent housing at comparableprices at another site (probably near■ 51st St. On a previous occasion,“comparable prices” meant rent in¬creases of $20 to $30 per month);and a month’s rent for moving ex¬penses. Occupants of all other hous¬ing on the sites, have been promisednothing.All toll, about 350 middle incomedwelling units will be destroyed.These are in good -to-excellent con-ASAMATTEROF...the man who has a planned SunLife program is in an enviable position.No one is better prepared to face thefuture than the man who has providedfor his retirement years and hisfamily’s security through life insurance.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood. Jr.. CLUHyde Park Bank Building. Chicago IS, IB.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hoars 9 to S Mondays A Friday*SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY ditian. Roughly half the units arestudent-occupied; the building nre6tably integrated. We believe thatthe community can only be damagedby their destruction. Suitable dwell¬ing units now exist in Hyde Parkonly for a small fraction of those tobe displaced. Some residents masttherefore leave Hyde Park. This pos¬sibility is unreasonable for student*.THE STUDENT HOUSING situa-t ion in Hyde Park is now desperate.Destruction of many student-occu-pied apartments in the last fewyears, rising enrollment, and slowdisappearance of graduate dormshave all contributed to the homingshortage. Students are now “living-in” at the YMCA. Snell-Hitchcodt isa fire hazard and will not be usedindefinitely. The planned demolitionwill make an acute situation impo«.sibie. Married students with earsand money may be able to relocatefar from campus. New housing forsingle persons is “not yet on thedrawing boards.” It is needed today.The university bears major responsi¬bility for creating this need; 4should meet this responsibility.This situation was brought to theattention of Dr. Warner A. Wk*,Dean of Students, in the hope thatthe university, as principal propertyowner involved in the transaction,would make some provision for itsown students, whom it was displac¬ing. This hope proved illusory.DEAN WICK expressed the viewthat students who have chosen tolive in commercial housing, subjectthemselves to the vicissitudes of themarketplace. It was pointed out thatthis particular vicissitude arosefrom the actions of the universityitseif-by its having sold land to theschool. The response was that theuniversity may legally sell its prop¬erty. If students are hurt by thus—tough luck.When questioned as to the pro¬priety of a university dealing withits students in terms of a freemarket economy, no improprietywas seen. The view was expressedthat a student choosing to live out¬side university-run housing forfeitsany claims, even moral, on the uni¬versity; he should not complainwhen the university dodble-crosseshim by taking away his home. Itwas stated that not much thoughthad been given to the problem ofwhere students might be able tolive, or whether sufficient dwellingsfor them existed in Hyde Park.Also, that this was proper: studentswho want consideration should bewilling to pay the price of paternal¬ism and live in a dormitory or otheruniversity housing. Pleasure was ex¬pressed at the present arrange¬ments, because “Jimmy’s” will besaved. No conoem was expressedthat hundreds will be left homeless.We do not believe that a vindic¬tive, callous, or indifferent attitudeis proper toward students not liv¬ing in dorms. At no time could theuniversity have accommodated allstudents in its own facilities, hadthe students desired it. That theydid not is easily explained: privateapartments are often cheaper anmore suitable than university ac¬commodation. In fact, the HousingOffice of the university maintained,until recently, for student conven¬ience, a file of off-campus housing.We believe that if commercial hous¬ing is destroyed, the university mustprovide alternatives. If it is unwill¬ing or unable to do so, it shouldask the Lutheran School to refrainfrom displacing students.THE CURRENT ACTION repre¬sent a third attempt to place a Lu¬theran School on a block with ade¬quate housing. Several of us havealready been moved by previous at¬tempts; we must now again facethe costs of relocation, if we canfind a place. This is what DeanWick calls “tou^h luck.”It is not our desire to keep Godor the Lutherans out of Hyde Park.They are both welcome, but not atthe cost of our homes. We recom¬mend consideration of alternatesites on non-residential or vacantland in the community, so that HydeParkers wifi not be displaced. Thesoon - to - be-abandoned campus ofGeorge Wihiame College at 53rdand Drexel suggests itself as onepossibility. The Fifth Army Head¬quarters is another.DAVID F. GREENBERG2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jo*. 8. 1965Tutorial studies program fullfils broad goalby Dinah Esral(Editor's note: The following (s thefirst in a series of articles on liberaleducation at l/C.Tutorial studies exists as aprogram which cuts acrossthe traditional lines dividingthe humanities from the socialsciences, according to Russell B.'Hiomas. professor of English andcollege humanities, and director ofthe Council of Advanced GeneralStudies.“Tlie program provides an op¬portunity for any student capableof individual work and self-disci¬pline, who wants a broader moreflexible type of liberal educationthan a departmental specializationoffers. Thus, tutorial studies is anunusual opportunity,” states Thom¬as.Presently in its eleventh year,the studies were devised in an ef¬fort to work out a degree programEYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist53-Kimbark Plaza1200 Em* 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount both flexible and general in itsscope which would satisfy the in¬terests of students desiring to con¬tinue their general liberal educa¬tion*Upon completion of general edu¬cation requirements as determinedby initial placement testing, stu¬dents enter the tutorial program. Inthe third year of undergraduatework students complete two quar¬ter courses in each of the followingareas: humanities, natural science,philosophy, and social science, anda third course in one of these fields.Three additional courses are alsoelected by the student, as the pro¬gram requires twelve courses in thethird year.Work is directed toward the writ¬ing of a tutorial paper, often termeda • Bachelor’s Essay, in the fourthyear. Selecting a topic after con¬sultation with a faculty member,the student is assigned a facultytutor, who recommends threeYou won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.444-4411JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870. PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chico** IS, in.MU 4-4854 Complete LineOf Pet AndAquarium Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111— Tekfunken & Zenith —Sales and Servica on all hi-fi equipment.24 HR. SERVICE CALLS — $3.00 courses which would be useful inthe writing of the paper. Three ad¬ditional courses may also be electedby the studint in this year.Accompaq/ing the completion ofa satisfactory paper, two examina¬tions are also required for the at¬tainment of a BA degree in thisprogram. A three hour written ex¬amination on the student’s reading,as well as a one hour oral examina¬tion are given. At the latter testthe student’s tutor, two specialistsin the field from the university fa¬culty, Dean Wick, chairman of ad¬vanced general studies of the col¬lege, and Thomas are present.“No more comprehensive essay, norrigorous examinations are requiredwithin the college,” states Thomas.“Yet, our results have been good,and several students in the programhave been recommended for honors,providing they have the necessarygrade point average.”At present three seniors are en¬rolled in the program, as comparedto seven last year. Five or six thirdyear students will begin their tutorialpapers next year.Defining the desirable student fortutorial studies, Thomas comments,“unless a student has an intellec¬tual interest in a problem — how¬ever vague it may be at the begin-ing — the program isn’t for him.A student must have interests whichhe would like to explore under thedirection of a tutor.” No specificgrade point average is specified foradmittance into the program, al¬ though it may not be below a Caverage and usually is above thislevel in the student’s field of spe¬cialization. “This program has beenthe salvation of some *C’ students,”he continues, “as they are finallyworking on a problem which inter¬ests them.”Thomas also stresses that the pro¬gram demands more self-disciplinethan most .other programs as thestudent is more on his own duringhis fourth year of study.The advantages of the program,according to the director of the stud¬ies are its flexibility and the person¬al relationship which exists betweenthe student and his tutor.“The tutorial subject may cutacross three or four fields or maycenter in one if it is a respectabletopic and has been approved,” ex¬plains Thomas. “Thus may a stu¬dent bring all his skills together inthe attack of one problem, and in¬versely one paxjblem may lead toknowledge in many fields.” Exam¬ples of tutorial essays which havebeen completed include: Freedomand Fulfillment in Spinoza, The Roleof Newspaper Editors in Contro¬versies, Analytical Chemistry andthe Iron and Steel Industry, andChekhov and the Moscow Art Thea¬ter.Regarding the personal relation¬ship which exists in the program,Thomas describes it as “an impor¬tant one. The program is unusualin this respect.” When a student inhis senior year needs recommenda¬ tions for graduate school he knowsboth Thomas as the director of theprogram and another faculty mem¬ber as his tutor.Thomas cites faculty cooperationas a major factor in the successof the program. “Members of thefaculty have been very generous, andmore than that willing and eager, toparticipate as tutors. In the last fiveyears no member of the faculty hasrefused to serve as a tutor when aproject was worthy of pursuit. Re¬sponse to serve on the examiningcommittee has also been verycordial.”Reorganization of the college asdescribed in the Levi report willprobably place the tutorial studiesin the fifth college of general stud¬ies, expects Thomas. “Our programwill likely be strengthened,” heconcludes.j Chicago MaroonEditor-in-chief Robert F. LeveyBusiness Manager, Michael KasseraManaging Editor David L. AikenAssistant to the EditorSharon GoldmanCampus News Editor ... Joan PhillipsEditor, Chicago Literary ReviewMartin MichaelsonAdvertising Manager, Michael KasseraCulture-Feature EditorDavid H. RichterPhoto Co-ordinators .... Bill CaffreySteve WofsyRewrite Editor Eve HochwaldMovie Editor Kenneth KrantzMusic Editor Peter RabinowitzEditor Emeritus John T. William*MR. PIZZAWE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTSHY 3-8282FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENAlso Ch. Broiled HamburgersPIZZAFor 2 For 1 For 4 For ft PartySausage 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Greea Pepper 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Ancho vie 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Oliva ... 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vi and Vi 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients JW .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Piiza 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacon 2.50 4.00 5.00 4.00Coney Island Pina 2.50(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers) 3.00 5.00 4.00 7.001445 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. t« 2:00 a.m. — Frl. to 3:00 a.m.Sat. ta 3:00 a.m. — Opea 2 p.m. Sundays Box of Broastad Chicken10, 14. 20 PiecesSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCIOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGE.MEAT BALLNow FeaturingST. LOUISSPARE RIBS10% discount to students with ID cardsTIKI TOPICSCIRALSHOUSE OF TIKIIs proud to offer all of ourfriends of Hyde Park and thesurrounding areas a selectionof Polynesian dishes as wellas our choice American menu.This choice of Polynesianfoods is now part of our regu¬lar menu.JUST A SAMPLE OF OURMENU:Shrimp Polynesian; chickentahitian; lobster Polynesian;beef and tomatoes; egg roll;ono ono kaukau; shrimp dejonghe; beef kabob flambe.Try one of our delightfulHawaiian cocktails.CIRALSHOUSE OF TIKI51** ft HARPERFodd served 11 A.M. to 3 A.M.Kitchen closed (Fed.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.U 8 7585 LET YOURSELF GO ONCE « YEAR ...BUT MAKE SURE IT’S ATWASH PROMSATURDAYFEBRUARY 20thJan. 8, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Factual discussion desiredSG hears Lutheran disputantsStudent Government willbring together at its Tuesdaynight Assembly meeting theparties involved in the currentcontroversy over the Lutheran Theo¬logical Seminary’s plan to tear downHvde Park buildings lor a newseminary campus.Gene Groves, SG president, saidhe ha? asked Stuart Herman, presi¬dent of the Lutheran School of The-ok«y and the director of UniversityRealty Management to either come in person or send representatives.Arthur Para, chairman of vhe 5400Woodlawn-University block club, hasalready agreed to appear.GROVES SAID SG was interestedin a factual discussion of the im¬mediate issues involved, such ashow many students will be evicted,and what alternative sites are pos¬sible. Other issues involve long-range considerations, Groves said,such as how much housing will belost by the construction of the seminary, and the desired composi¬tion od the neighborhood.The discussion of the seminaryplans is scheduled to begin at 8 30pm. The regular SG assembly busi¬ness will be conducted beginningat 7 pm., in Business East 106.Groves said the Assembly will dis¬cuss questions about WUCB’s ap¬plication for an FM license, andabout the controversy about allow¬ing James Balwin’s book, AnotherCountry’, to be required reading fora Wright Junior College EnglishCourse.59 DAYS IN EUROPE7th Annual European Inheritance TourART and ARCHITECTURE7 day Seminar in London21 day Seminar at Oxford32 days of Travel on Continent4 hours academic credit availableCONTACT: Dean Robert P. AshleyRipon CollegeRipon, WisconsinPERSONAL INSIGHTS FROM RELIGIOUS CLASSICSFirst Unitarian Church57th and WoodlownSunday mornings at eleven o'clockJanuary 10 through February 7"Modern man's major quest is to find meaning in life. We hnow that our re¬ligious beliefs must change in order to keep abreast of modern knowledge; yetwe must not neglect the personal religious insights which come from great religiousliterature. This series of sermons will stress our personal quest for meaning intoday's world."The Reverend Jack A. KentMinister of the ChurchDostoevski'sBrothers KaramazovJanuary 10Schweitzer'sOut of My Life and ThoughtJanuary 17Hinduism'sBhagavad-GitaJanuary 24Buber'sI and ThouJanuary 31Chardin'sPhenomenon of MonFebruary 7 UC Crusade hits recordFaculty and staff members resents 2,194 individual eontribu-at UC contributed a record tions, averaging $26.20. All threefigures are record highs for Univer-$57,484.51 to the 19(>4 Cru¬sade of Mercy — a 10 per centincrease over the 1963 contribution.An Employee Generosity Bannerwas awarded to the University byGlen A. Lloyd, general campaignchairman of the Chicago Crusadeof Mercy, at the annual AwardsLuncheon in mid-December. Lloydis a trustee and former chairmanof the Board of Trustees of UC.Alton A. Linford, dean of theSchool of Social Service Adminis¬tration. and Charles R. Goulet,superintendent of University Hos¬pitals and Clinics, were co-chair¬men of the campus fund drive. Acommittee of faculty and .adminis¬tration members assisted them.James M Sheldon. Jr., assistantto George Wells Beadle, UC presi¬dent. served as chairman of thecity-wide Education and WelfareDivision of the 1964 Crusade. Sheldonsaid the University’s contributionwas the largest made bv an educa¬tional institution in Chicago thisyear.In 1963, 2.069 members of theUniversity faculty and staff eachcontributed an average of $25.30.This year’s total of $57,484 rep- sity participation in the Crusade oiMercy.YSA meets SaturdayThe Young Socialist Alliance wlltie holding its first meeting thisquarter on Sunday, January 9,at 2 pm in Ida Noyes Hall Library.Pieter Clark, a young person whovisited Cuba this past summer, willbe speawing on what he saw there.In his talk he will stree the econom¬ic problems and successes of Iheresolution. He will specifically dealwith the question of politics in rela¬tion to democracy and election andthe position of the Afro-Cubmi in thenew society.Collage jfudMh wishing to trousfrrto (ro4uot* status, and to bo c on.lidtrtd for financial assistance i« tbefellowship competition for academic1945-46. are advised to secvre anApplication for Orodwate Status Theseforms are now available at the Col¬lege Office or the Office of Admissionsand Aid. and should be returned tothe Office of Admissions by Jonuory 15.(Corona —liosPORTRAITS1312 E. 53rd St.684-7424PassportPhotos Silk Screen SuppliesA Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALS,MIMEOGRAPH PAPERAND SUPPLIESI Wholesale Prices in QuantityOnly IDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd ST.HY 3-4111IN A HURRY?RUSH SERVICEAVAILABLE WHEN NEEDED.|| JhsL WIcol&JwoIlQd. jjCLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERS jj’Unexcelled Quality Since 7977'Phones: Ml 3-7447HY 3-6868 1013-17 East 61st St.Across from B-J Ct.Serving the Campus since 1917++**e*+e***e+ee++**eeee*+++ee+eeeeeee+e+eeeeeeeeee****+++*e*i*41A Lecture byLESLIE A. FIEDLERauthor of Love and Death in the American Novel. An Endto Innocence, Come Back to the Raft Ag'inHuck Honey, No! In Thunder, The Eye of Inno¬cence, and other works.Mr. Fiedler has taught at New York University, Princeton,Rome, Columbia and Montana State. He has been aRockefeller Fellow, a Kenyon Review Fellow, anda Fulbright Fellow.MANDEL HALLJanuary 28, 19658:30 p.m.Sponsored by Student GovernmentTickets: 50c student; #1.00 non-student. Available at StudentGovernment Office, Ida Noyes Hall or Mandel HallBox Office. Mail and phone orders accepted: Stu¬dent Government, Ida Noyes Hall, Telephone—Ex*tension 3272-74 (1-5 p.m.)3 iT"^CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 8. 1965UC gets unrestricted gift THEATRE REVIEWAn unrestricted gift of $39-000 was received Thurdsay,December 10, 1964, by UCfrom the Standard OilFoundation.T. G. Hanlon, a representative ofthe Standard Oil Foundation, pre¬sented the check gift to George WellsBeadle, President of the university,at a ceremony in Beadle’s office,office.Hanlon said the grant was madeto UC as a leading educational in¬stitution noted “for its general ex¬cellence, its contributions to nationallife, and the quality of Us graduateeducation.”Jolin E. Swearingen of Chicago,President of Standard Oil Founda¬tion, in transmitting the grant toUC. said:“We are placing no restrictionson the use of the funds granted aslong as they are spent currently toimprove education and are notused for endowment purposes. Theymay be applied wholly or in parttoward research, faculty salaries,libraries, training teachers, operat¬ing costs, building programs, or any other purposes desired.”The gift to UC is one of 65 un¬restricted grants, totaling $593,000,made in 1964 to outstanding privateuniversities and colleges by threefoundations. The foundations areStandard Oil Foundation, financiallysupported by the parent StandardOil Company (Indiana); AmericanOil Foundation, supported by Ameri¬can Oil Company, Indiana Stand¬ard’s principal domestic marketing¬refining subsidiary; and Pan Amer¬ican Petroleum Foundation, financedby Pan American Petroleum Cor¬poration, Indiana Standard’s NorthAmerican exploration - productionsubsidiary.The three foundations have con¬tributed more than $6.3 million insupport of higher education since1952.VISA—Volunteer work atChicago State Hospital —First meeting of WinterQuarter, 12:15 pm Saturdayin New Dorms parking lot.ELEGANT SUBURBAN LIVING IN THE CITYSouth Shorenear lake, park, and all public transport) I ion3 story brick homelandscaped 177 x 100 foot lot.2 car heated attached garageFirst Floor — living room with wood burning fireplace, oaklibrary, large dining room, terazzo floored breakfast room,targe kitchen, butler’s pantry, powder room.Second Floor — six bedrooms, 4 modem baths, dressing room,balcony overlooking greenhouse and waterfall.Th'rd Floor — fur storage vault, two bedrooms, one bath.Basement — Paneled rec. room, Vi bath, laundry.Excellent Storage and Closet Space ThroughoutOWNER MUST SELLand Will Make Optimum Financing Availablecall Mrs. Sutton 684-6000 Occidental Playboy well doneTfca Playboy of tba Wester* Worldby Joha Milingtoa SynqeOld Towa Repertory Theatre CompaayChristopher Mcthaa Guy BorileOld Mahoa Russell InatkMichael James Flaherty, Shelly MatakiaPeqren Mike Christine MusilWidow Quia Joan SpataforaShawa Keoqn Robert SxatkowskJDirected by Arnold NelsonAt the Eucore Theatre,Schiller and WallsA certain lack of profession¬alism marred OTRC’s produc¬tion of The Playboy of theWestern World, but the playcame off little the worse for all that.In fact, it may even be doubtedwhether a polished production wouldhave caught the spirit of John Mil¬lington Synge’s folk comedy as wellas the delicately sloppy version nowat the Encore Theatre.The play concerns a youth, Chris¬topher Mahon, who seeks refugein a Mayo inn from pursuing justice— he is sure that he has killed hisfather with a loy, a spade usedfor digging potatoes. His notorietyand his personal courage quicklyendears him to the unattachedwomen of the vicinity, all of whomMODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 Hr.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PK. BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICEKE 6-6606 — KE 6-3891CHICKEN - SANDWICHESPIZZA &ITALIAN FOODS are eager to trap into marriage thePlayboy who has “destroyed hisda’.” But the chief contenders forhis affection, Pegeen Mike, the in¬keeper’s daughter, and the WidowQuin are much put off when OldMahon returns looking for his wan¬dering son. The Playboy’s subse¬quent efforts to justify himself tothem are the source of much ofthe humor and much of the pathosof the play.The coarse, unsophisticated natureof the drama make polish and skillof production much less necessarythem good-natured humor and en¬thusiasm, and for this reason theOTRC production is a success. Thedirector, Arnold Nelson, is to becommended for having caught theessential mood of the play and hav¬ing instilled it into his company ofactors. His blocking was inconspicu¬ous, which is almost a sure sign ofits being good. There were a fewunresolved technical problems —the dialect of the actors was some¬times inconsistent, sometimes im¬perfectly enunciated — but this in¬attention to detail is the mark ofJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK"a strong bank"1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C.NEW AFTER HOURS PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICEUSE THE FILM DEPOSITORY JUST NORTH OF OURSOUTH EAST ENTRANCE FOR FILIM^ TO BE PROCESSEDFor future use please pick up proper film envelopes at ourphoto counter or use well identified envelope for your deposit.Inquire about this service at our Photo CounterThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. inexperience rather than of incom¬petence. In the elements of his artwhich matter, Arnold Nelson hasshown himself a director of skill.The acting was a cut above thelevel to be expected from an ama¬teur company of this sort. Guy Barileand Shelly Matzkin, in the two leadmale parts, and Christine Musil,as the leading lady, tended to carrythe show in spite of the sloppy act¬ing in the minor roles. Robert Szat-kowski, for example, playing thecowardly Shawn Keogh, made such *a caricature erf his timorous quali¬ties that he was actually painful towatch.The OTRC is presenting Othellosimultaneously with The Playboy ofthe Western World, on alternateweeks. While more care would seemto be necessary for a play of suchintensity and power, this productionof Playboy would seem to be anexecllent omen for the concurrentand the subsequent productions ofthis company.David RichterPaperback Book SaleLarge Selectionon Jewish SubjectsHILLEL HOUSE5715 Woodlawn9-5 P.M.Expert Service oe Ail BrandsHI-FI STEREOFree Pick-up, & DeliveryFree EstimatesColl 521-0460STUDENT GOVERNMENT PRESENTS.-DEBATETopic: Resolved, That the Federal GovernmentShould Establish a NationalProgram of Public Work for theUnemployed.(1964-65 National Inter-CollegiateDebate Topic)PARTICIPANTS:UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO DEBATING TEAMSAFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVEUlrich Melcher Patrick HanlonHarry Davidow James GordleyTuesday • January 12, 1965 - 8:00 p.m.Breasted Hall - 1155 East 58th StreetNo Admission Charge — Question-and-Answer Period Qack. (B&hnsu^MEN S WEAR1517 East 53rd Street MU 4-8830”ln the Hyde Park Bank Building”Wishes You Every Success Duringthe New Term.ANNUAL CLOTHING SALEQuality Merchandise For The Young ManSUITS . . .by CricketeerOUTERWEAR ...by Strato JacWind BreakerEurope Craftslacks ...by HaggarFarahBotanyJan. 8,1965 • CHICAGO MAROON a Sir( i \ssini:i> aiis Calendar of EventsPERSONAL Yeah! Yeahl Yeah! TO RENTPROFESSIONAL ALTERATIONSFormerly with Bonwit Teller. LeahRothenburg, 5216 Cornell, 324-2871.FREE TENANT REFERRAL SERVICEWell-maintained bldgs. Reas, rentals.Eff. $70.00: 1 bdrm. $00; 2 bdrms.$125; 3 and 4 bdrms. 7 mins, to UC.exc. schools. South Shore Commis¬sion. NO 7-7020.WRITERS WORKSHOP <PL 2-8377).The newly revised UC calendar pro¬claims Washington's birthday changedto February 20!?ATTENTION! Students, Faculty, Em¬ployers. Alumni. SIGN UP NOW forStudent Gov. 1st Class JET charterflights to Europe.A65 June 14-Sept. 24 under $200B65 June 28-Sept. 5 under $310C65 Aug. 10-Sept. 6 under $200CALL X 3272 1-5 Mon.-Fri. AllFlights Chicago-Paris; London-Chi-cago.Now don’t forget Uncle Tom Cobley!Can clams, com and crayfish reallytell time? Frank Brown knows-Wed. night. Go on treat yourself to a Maroonclassified ad. X 3265.Another Tea & Taurus? Of course!Frank Brown, “Biological Clocks’’Wed. at Alpha Delta Phi house, 8:00p.m.TYPINGYour papers in English and French.Reas. Call 324-9218.TUTORINGEng. Grad (Classics Honours) willingto educate lesser mortals cheaply.Contact Box A, Maroon Office, IdaNoyes.French Lessons by Swiss-Frenchgrad, student. Call 324-9218.ROOMMATE WANTEDFemale: Neat, quiet, to share2Vz rm. apt. nr. campus, furn. $46.50p.m. 363-2387 eves, and weekends.Go on-treat yourself to a Maroon6 room townhouse $130. 1443 E. 60thPlace, 324-5751. Will offer rm. and bath to anyonewilling to babysit or the same for$12.00 without obligation. 268-9132.6900 S. Crandon (E. S. Shore) BEDRMAPTS. $110. New prestige elevatorbldg. Fully auto, laundry, staffedreceiving rm., indoor parking avail.We have So. Shore Seal of Approval.See agent Mrs. Haley on prem. orcall MU 4-7964 or 248-6261 or 677-9073.Nice, light room. Vs bthrm. $9 p.wk.MU 4-8493.HELP WANTEDWAITERS NEEDED: EXCELLENTMEAL INC. APPLY QUADRANGLECLUB.FULL OR PART-TIMEINTERVIEWERSResearch Project on CommunityLeadership is in need of interviewersfor approx, a 2 mo. period. Inter¬views conducted in the city. Pay$2.00. Start immed. Exp. desired butnot necessarv. Contact Soc. Sci. Rm.316. Ml 3-0800 x 2971. Friday, Jan. 8SERVICES: Jewish Havneh SabbathServices at Hillel House, 5715 Wood-lawn, 4:15 pm.KOINONIA: Lutheran Services andLecture: “The New Religious Situa-tion’’ by Dr. Nathan Scott, professorin the Divinity School; Chapel House,5810 Woodlawn 5:45 worship; 6:00dinner; 7:15 program.SERVICES: Jewish Sabbath Services,Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn; 7:30pm.MOVIE: The Passion of Joan of Arc;Socill Sciences 122; 7:15 and 9:15pm.LECTURE: Professor Eugene T.Gendlin. “Experiential Meaning andMan’s Freedom’’; Hillel House, 5715Woodlawn; 8:30 pm.WUCB: "Round Midnight” (jazz);640 AM 10:00 pm.TRAVELING?Get Neoriy FreeTRANSPORTATIONBy Driving a Car to Calif.,Arizona, Florida, Seattle,Salt Lake, EastALL CITIESMinimum age 21WE 9-2364Auto Driveaway Go.343 S. Dearborn St. “BUDGETWISE"AAA Approved: 24 hr.Switchboard.Maid Service: each roomwith own bath.Special student rates:$180.00/qtr.Special daily, weekly &monthly rates.Broadview Hotel5540 Hyde Park Blvd.FA 4-8800 HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4='»‘■ ‘^ _ 7699HY 3-6800<!i:<.i:<><><><><><><><><>i:«.<><><.!» DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th ST. EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNT <><><><><><>«><><><>DO 3-6866 — DO 3-7644 jjCONTACT LENSES i;<><><><><><>WE RE SORRYIf the crowded conditions of our largestQuarter Opening prevented us from servingyou as well as we would like.Please Try Us Againfor*Textbooks —Every title required or recommended byyour instructors.*Tradebooks —Thousands of general and scholarly titlesrepresenting a wide range of interests.^Student Supplies —Of every description.^Periodicals —A large selection of academic, and culturalinterest.^Newspapers and Magazines —Both local and specialized.Typewriters —New, reconditioned, service and rentals.Tape Recorders —New and rentals. Photographic Supplies —Cameras, film, developing and processing.Gifts and Novelties —See our attractive lines.Greeting cards andColor Post cards —A wide selection of University scenes incolor.Men's and Women's Wear —Shirts, socks, slacks, ties, blouses, stockings,skirts, lingerie, handbags, and cosmetics.Snack Bar —Coffee, iced drinks, sandwiches and candy.Tobacco —A good selection of pipes, cigarettes, cigars,and tobacco.*Se!f Service — Please use our free coin return lockers while shopping.Newly lighted and air conditioned for your convenience and comfort.THE UNIVERSITY of CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenueRegular hours: 8-5 Mon. thru Fri. — Sat. 8:30-12:30Open all day Sat., Jan. 9 The Woodlawn TutoringProject needs people tovolunteer at its elementaryschool study center inWoodlawn. If you havetime either on weekdayafternoons or evenings, oron Saturday, please callBU 8-3230. Rides to andfrom campus are available.Project Director is Char¬lotte Ritter.Chicago CORE will holda march on January 13, de¬manding the end of thecontract of Chicago SchoolSuperintendent Benjamin C.Willis. Call Dick Schmitt at324-6789.CoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 Saturday, Jan. 9SERVICES: Jewish Havneh SabbathServices at Hillel House; 5715 Wood-lawn 9:00 am.. 4:00 pm.TRACK: Invitational Relays; FieldHouse: 1:30 pm.GYMNASTICS: Ball State; BartlettGym; 2:00 pm.LECTURE: Pieter Clark; “The Trulhabout Cuba”; UC Young Socialist Al¬liance; Ida Noyes Library; 2.00 pmBASKETBALL: Illinois Institute ofTechnology; Field House; 8:00 pmWUCB: Basketball game (live) 7:45pm.; “Saturday Party” 10:00 pm.Sunday, Jan. 10SERVICES: University Religious Serv¬ice; W. Barnett Blakemore; Rocke¬feller Memorial Chapel; 11:00 am.LECTURE: Dr. Robert Havighurst on“Public Schools and the Social De¬velopment of the City”; ChicagoEthical Society at the Ancona School,4770 S. Dorchester; 11:00 am.SWAP: Openhouse: SWAP Office IdaNoyes. 1212 E. 59th; 7:00 pm.TEA: “The Chalet Qumo,” InterclubWomen, all undergraduate womenInvited, Ida Noyes: 3:30 pm.BRIDGE: Team of Four Club Cham¬pionship, UC Bridge Club, Ida Noyes7:30 pm.WUCB: “Arourd Campus,** Interviewwith Dean Wayne Booth, 9:00 pm.Monday, Jan. 11SEMINAR: "Possibilities for n NewHumanism": Ecumenical Program,Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn; •! :;(>pm.WUCB: “Blues and Ballads" 9:00 pm.Tuesday, Jan. 12LECTURE: Alfred Stern, visiting as¬sociate professor; Committee on So¬cial Thought; Classics 10; 1010 F.59th; “The Private and Public Func¬tions of Laughter; 3:30 pm.MOVIE: On the Nigbtstaff. Making ofBronco Billy, The Great Train Rob¬bery. Social Sciences 122, 7:15 and9:15 p m.LECTURE: Frank A. Brown, profes¬sor of biology at Northwestern, aTea and Taurus Talk by Particle,Alpha Delta Phi House, 5747 S.University, 8:00 pm.“Predictions for 1965: A uni¬versal drought in the Communistbloc will cause the 48th crop Iall¬ure lince 1917 . . . The dollar willbe declared, loudly and often, tobe every bit as good as gold; andita silver content will be re¬duced . , . The University of Cal¬ifornia will open its campus to stu¬dents and faculty in return tor settingaside a smallarea tot adu-cational put•poses.” for a tree (opy cl thecurrant tuus of NA-TIONAl REVIEW, writ*to Dspt. CP 4, 130 L3j st, n. r. 16, n. r.LAYAWAY DIAMOND FOR JUNEPHILUPS JEWELRY CO.Wholesale DistributorsLAYAWAY DIAMOND FOR EASTERDiamonds it Watches ★ JewelrySERVING COLLEGE STUDENTS AT WHOLESALE PRICESFOR THE PAST 30 YEARS"50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDS,ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING RINGS"Watch and Jewelry Repairing, Rm. 1101, 67 E. Madison St. ChicagoDE 2-6508For Further Information ContactM. Kassera — Ext. 3265 or 363-6228Count the Changes in the All•HewHere's a start/ Netv styling, new comfort,new power. Want more? OK go ahead...The MQB's got tots more/ Even wind-up Bwindows. _Count 'em allBOB NELSON MOTORSl.,.n ctr. We don't advertise hr-Austin M. C. *0W C0,t I”''*®* bMtSprite compere our deliveredTriumph prices before you buy!HealeyPeugeotFull line on display • new & used6040 S. Cottage Grove foreign & domesticMidway 3-45016 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 8. 1965V• ! •• . «• i o• •• •4I d theatre reviewArthur Miller's Fall' falls short < nl<urc CalendarAFTER THE FALLby Arthur MillerQuentinMica ....MotfierMogqiaLm Jndi WestMickey David SpielbergDirected by Edward fa roneAt the Blackstone Theatre,Baiba at MichiganArthur Miller’s After TheFall, which opened at theBlackstone last week, fell farbelow my expectations. Intro¬duced by a pompous program noteto the effect that it takes place “inthe mind and memory of Quentin,”#»e play presents an autobiograph¬ical k>ok into Miller’s life. AlisaQuentin X, Miller doubts his ownability to love, and examines hischildhood, his two marriages, andhis political beliefs, searching forthe meaning of his life. ,Unfortunately for the audience,although perhaps not for the readerof the play, Miller’s self-examina¬tion is neither profound nor originalenough to keep one’s attention onthe stage. Moy own concentrationwas exhausted, and my eyes roved throughout the audience, where Inoticed that in fact many peoplewere dozing in their seats.This reaction may seem sacrile¬gious to admirers of Miller’s ear¬lier work—of which I count myselfa member—but the explanation isnot difficult. Miller’s play is essen¬tially undramatic. His choice ofmonodrama style inhabited him fromthe beginning, for it is difficult topresent true dramatic conflict whenthe action takes place only in themind of the principal character.LIKE THE monodrama Every¬man six hundred years before,After the Fall is only a moralityplay. But where Everyman achieveda certain universality, the autobio¬graphical elements in After theFall keep the soul searching herojust Arthur Miller, and not an ab¬stract Modem Man. Since the playderives interest from neither dra¬matic conflict, nor a universal“message’’ for contemporary man,the sentiments expressed becomemerely pompous and profoundlydull. could have been more involved intheir roles than they were. CharlesAidman was wonderful when heplayed up Quentin’s wry sense ofhumor, but during those long solilo¬quy s I could almost see him read¬ing the script. Perhaps this was be¬cause of the script itself; in anyevent, I felt that Mr. Aidman couldhave been more interesting.The liveliest performance of theevening came from Miss West. Herinterpellation of Maggie, the dumbblond who becomes famous as asinger, combined the proper amountsof insouciance, naivete, and the fun¬ny charm which comes from alwaysbeing painfully honest. Her firstscene with Quentin sparkles withwit and wakes up the audience ina hurry. ConcertsCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHES¬TRA: Willem van Otterloo, cond.Lois Marshall, soprano: Haydn: Symno. 88, Mahler: Sym no. 4. Jan. 8 at2 pm. Irwin Hoffman, cond. ZinoFrancescatti, violin: Hindemith: suitefrom Noblissima Visione; Tschaikov-sky: Cone, for Violin and Orch;Dvorak: Symphony no. 7 (old no. 2).Jan. 14 at 8:15 pm. Orchestra Hall, 212S. Michigan Ave. $2-$6.50; studenttickets to gallery on Friday afternoonconcerts, $1. HA 7-03(52. Arno, Frank Porretta, and MischaAuer. Music Theatre of Lincoln Cen¬ter. Jan. 4-16. 8:30 pm. Wednesdayand Saturday Matinees, 2:30 p.m.Mon.-Thurs. eve. $2.50-$6; Fri. andSat $3-$6.75. Mantinees $2-$5. OperaHouse, 20 N. Wacker. FI 6-0270.RecitalsANDRES SEGOVIA: Guitarist. Or¬chestra Hall. Sunday, Jan. 10 at 3:30,$2.50-0.50. FR 2-0566.JULLLARD STRING QUARTET:program to include works by Mozart,Beethoven, and Bartok. Jan. 13 at8:30 pm. $5. Tickets: Pro Musica So¬ciety, 900 N. Lake Shore. DE 7-6781. TheatreNORTHWESTERN UNIVERSI-TY CONCERT WIND ENSEMBLE:John Paynter, cond. Jan. 10 at 4pm. Free. Allice Millar Chapel, Sheri¬dan at Chicago. Evanston. UN 4-1900. AFTER THE FALL: by Arthur Mil¬ler. Blackstone Theatre, 60 E. Balbo.Nightly at 8 pm: Wed. and Sat. at 2.Nightly, $2.95-$5.95; Fri. and Sat.$2.95-$6:50; Matinees $2-$5.50. CE 6-8240.ExhibitsThis dullness is not entirely dueto the play; I feel that the actorsSDS holds Wash, protestStudents for a DemocraticSociety (SDS) will sponsor amarch on Washington to pro¬test the war in Vietnam atits National Council meeting lastweek.The date of the march is set forSaturday, April 17, but no otherconcrete plans have been decidedupon to date. SDS intends to stressboth the damage the war is doingto the people of Vietnam, and thefact that America itself is beinghurt, by creating an atmospherehere of government deception ofthe public.SDS LS CURRENTLY enlistingsupport from all interested in thepurposes of the march. Further de¬tails will be released as soon asthese are available.Besides the plans for the march,SDS has also determined to usesome, still uncertain, means of di¬rect action against the Chase Man¬hattan Bank to protest US involve¬ment in South Africa, particularlyon the financial level. Possiblemethods for this still under investi¬gation are sit-ins or otherwisetying up the bank. Chase Manhat¬tan was picked as the target becauseit has invested heavily in SouthAfrican firms. The council further hopes to ex¬pand their community action proj¬ects, and will follow this up withfuture meetings in Boston, and NewBrunswick, New Jersey. These pro¬grams exist at present in sevencities, their character varying withthe needs of the cities involved.Such urban problems as unemploy¬ment, housing, and welfare are be¬ing attacked.The National Council concludedwith a proposal to hold more futureconferences, expand campus pro¬gramming, and recruit additionalstaff members.SDS is a national organization oistudents interested in the issues ofcivil rights, peace, and socialchange. There are chapters in manycampuses across the country, in¬cluding UC.1 There will be • meeting o4 all ]| those interested i* the Festival of| the Arts art show on Tuesday. |1 January 12. 7 pm at Ida Noyes || Hall.Anyone interested in the fine garts, production of an art show, .I publicity, or any allied field is pwelcome. If interested but unableto attend, please contact Ed Stem,acting chairman, e/o FOTA, Ida y| Noyes, fac. exch. UNFORTUNATELY, HERCHARM doesn’t quite last through¬out the play. When Maggy becomesa performer, she loses her inno¬cence and becomes just a selfishmixed-up woman. Miss West’s per¬formance does not fall down; it issimply for play itself.Miller seems to have done awaywith the convention that when anactor comes on stage he has some¬thing to do there. Several of thecharacters appear on the stageeight or nine times without sayinga word. Presumably they representmemories in Quentin’s mind, butafter the second or third time theybecome impractical jokes, or so itseemed to me. EDWARD HOPPER: A Retrospec¬tive Exhibition of work 1908-63. ArtInstitute. Free. Ub THE BALLAD OF THE SAD CAFE:by Edward Albee from the novel byCarson McCullers. Goodman Theatre,Monroe at Columbus. Jan. 8-30. Sun -Thu. at 7:30 pm; Fri. and Sat. at 8:30.Nightly $3; Fri. and Sat. $3.50. 50cStudent discount. CE 6-2337,PIERRE BONNARD: Exhibition.Art. Institute. Free.MIRIAM BROFSKY: Exhibition ofsculpture. John L. Hunt Gallery.Free. OLIVER: With a slight bow toCharles Dickens. Nightly at 8:30; ma¬tinees Wed. and Sat. at 2. Nightly,$2.50-5.95; Fri. and Sat. $2.50-6.60;matinees $2.20-$5.50. At the ShubertTheatre, 22 E. Monroe. CE 6-8240.BUCK MILAM: Recent paintings anddrawings. Ontario East Gallery. Free.FilmsTHE PASSION OF JOAN OFARC: Carl Dreyer, dir. Doc Films.Jan 8 at 7:15 and 9:15. Soc Sci 122.60c, or series admission. SECOND CITY: Their seventeenthreview, entitled “The Wrecking Ball’’includes UC personnel David Steinbergand Robert Benedetti. Nightly at 9and 11 pm; Sat. at 9 and 11 pm and 1am. Dark Monday. Nightly $2.50; Fri.and Sat. $3. at Second City, 1842 N.Wells. DE 7-3992.ON THE NIGHTSTAFF (William S.Hart): THE MAKING OF BRONCOBILLY (Bronco Billy Anderson): THEGREAT TRAIN ROBBERY (Porter):DOC Films' first program on the his¬tory of the Western hero. Soc Sci122; Jan. 12 at 7:15 and 9:15. 60cor series admission. SIX AGES OF MAN: a comic revuewith music. Allerton Hotel Theatre inthe Clouds. 701 N. Michigan. 9 and 11pm Tues.-Sat.; 4 and 9 pm Sun. Week¬days $2.65; Fri. and Sat. $2.95. SU 7-4200.IVAN THE TERRIBLE, PART II;Sergei Eisenstein, dir. Rus Films. Man-del Hall. Jan. 9 at 7:30 and 9:30. $1.Students 75c. THE BRIG: by Kenneth Brown.Robert Sickinger, dir. Weekends thruJan. 31. Hull House Theatre, 3212 N.Broadway. Fri. and Sat. at 8:30; Sun.at 7:30. Fri. and Sat. $3.40; Sun. $3.348-8330.My general impression was thatit was a good thing that Millerwrote the play, because he now hasno excuse for saying the same thingagain. THE PETRIFIED FOREST: WithHumphrey Bogart. NU Film StudyGp. Speech Building. Sheridan eastof Foster, Evanston. Jan. 13 at 7:30.Series Admission only: 2:00. 869-2848. THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERNWORLD: by John Synge. Dir. by Ar¬nold Nelson. Encore Theatre, 1419 N.Wells St. Dec. 2, 3, 9, 10, 30, 31, Jan.13, 14. Tickets $1.55 and $2.65. WH 4-8414.Jamie Beth Gale OperaTHE MERRY WIDOW: Richard Rog¬ers, dir. With patrice Munse), Sig OTHELLO: by William Shaxpur.Dir. by Arnold Nelson. Encore Thea¬tre. 1419 N. Wells St. Dec. 10, 17. 23,Jan. 6, 7, 20, 21. $155 and $2.65.WH 4-8414.• •• •• • TEXT BOOKS AND SCHOOL SUPPLIESThe University of Chicago BookstoresMain Store, 5802 Ellis Ave.Hours: 8-5 Mon. thru Fri.Open 8-5 Sat., Jan. 9 8:30-12:30 Sot.The Education Branch, Rm. 138 Belfield Hall(Evening Program and Education Courses)Hours: 8-4:30 Mon. thru Fri.Special Hours: Week of Jan. 4, 8-8:30Sat., Jan. 9. 8-12Mon., Jan. 11 & Wed.. Jan. 13, 8-8:30The Downtown Center Branch, 64 E. Lake StreetHours: 11:30-8:30 Mon. thru Fri.Special Hours: Thurs., Jan. 7, 11:30-9:00Fri.. Jan. 8. 9-8Week of Jan. 11,9-9Sat.. Jan. 16, 9-1Downtown Program Branch, 190 L Delaware PL(For Graduate School of Business, Downtown Program Courses)Hours: 5:30-8:30 Mon. thru Fri. Welcome Back To CampusOur Semi-Annual SALEbeginsMonday, January llthREDUCTIONS ON ALLTRADITIONALCLOTHINGSUITS - SPORTCOATS - TOPCOATSTrousers Regularly $15.95, Now $12.95All Winter Jackets, Sportshirts, Sweaters,Scarfs and GlovesREDUCED 20%THE STORE FOR MEN(Mh* Stottme.Sfattm attit Ohtmpua $(]ntiin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100Jan. 8, 1965 CHICAGO MAROONGADFLYAdvantages of a unicameral legislature for IllinoisThe citizens of the State of Illi¬nois recently elected the entire low¬er house of the legislature on anat-large basis. This American firstresulted from a reapportionmentconflict between the Republicandominated legislature and Democrat¬ic governor Otto Kerner. When nei¬ther side prevailed, the legislaturelimited the number of candidatesany one party could place on theballot to 118 or exactly two thirdsof the 177 seat House. The votersreceived a bright orange yard longballot on which the candidates werelisted with the man having the mostseniority at the top of his partycolumn. With 177 noncumulativevotes to be cast, a straight partyvoter would still be able to crossover and help elect 59 candidates inthe other party.In the wake of Lyndon B. John¬son’s landslide within the state, theDemocrats seem assured of seat¬ing almost all 118 candidates. Theincumbant Republicans, especiallythose from Southern Illinois, maybe shut out as cross over votersapparently voted from the bottomup on the GOP side, electing mostof the “blue ribbon” candidates.The Republicans faired better inthe state senate races. These weresingle member districts appoitionedalong geographical-population bases.While Johnson pulled Kerner, therest of the state ticket, and Con¬gressmen to victory, the GOP re¬tained control of the state senate.The overall procedure and patternof voting for Hie Illinois legislatureresembles the elections for theBundestag of the West GermanFederal Republic. The West Ger¬man voting for the Bundestag re¬ceives two ballots. On one he votesfor an individual candidate runningin his local single member district.On the other he casts a vote fora party list. The Bundestag is thenfilled by a mixed electoral systemot single member districts andpro{x>rtional representation.The individuals elected from .singlemember districts are seated first.Then, proportional seating is as¬signed to the parties according totheir percentage on only the partyballot. Several rules govern the dis¬tribution of proportional seats. Aparty must first carry either threesingle member districts or five percent of the party ballot vote inorder to be assigned seats. A partycannot have more members froma Lander (State) than the propor¬tional party ballot vote in thatLander. Tlie party must subtractthose candidates who have wondistrict victories and are assuredseats from the number of seats alloted to it by the party ballot. Apary then has so many seats leftto its credit which it fills fromits party ballot list.The people of Illinois did essen¬tially the same thing except thatthe single member district candi¬dates ran for one legislative cham¬ber and the at-large or proportionalrepresentative candidates ran forthe other. Hie State of Illinois, in¬stead of reapportioning, should con¬sider the possibility of adaptinga modified version of the West Ger¬man system. A carefully workedout plan would comply with theUnited States Supreme Court’s de¬cision of one man — one vote,would guarantee representation forthe minority party and local inter¬ests, andjwould better reflect thetype of body politic which Illinois is.Under such a proposal the statelegislature would be unicameral.The State congressional districts,which must be drawn up on theone man — one vote basis wouldbe divided in half. This would create48 single member districts and,using 100 as a round workable fig¬ure, 52 seats to be filled by at-large,proportional voting. Hie Illinois vot¬er would vote for a representativefrom his district in the same wayhe voted for state senator. Hewould also receive a paper ballotfor the at-large proportional voting.Hie paper ballot may take a vari¬ety of forms. It could simply haveparty circles with the names printedbelow. It could have the party cir¬cles and individual boxes in frontof the listed names enabling votersto preference individuals for partyseats. This latter ballot could per¬mit or prohibit cross over preferenc-ing. Hie recent Illinois ballot per¬mitted cross over preferencing. Itis assumed that this ballot wouldnot carry more than 35 names (two-thirds of 52 seats ) per party or atotal of 70 names for the two parties.These 70 would be the equivalent ofthe blue ribbon candidates in thepast election. They would runagainst incumbants from singlemember districts.Several questions now arise perti¬nent to this proposal. They concernthe practicality and acceptance ofa unicameral legislature and theposition of minority groups, splinterparties and special interests underproportional representation.A unicameral legislature shouldnot be discounted just because itdoes not coincide with the Americanmyth of bicameralism. The Con¬stitution of the United States doesnot stipulate what form a statelegislature should have. Nebraskahas a unicameral legislature, withB'NAI B’RITHHILLEL FOUNDATIONCLASSES AND SEMINARSWinter Quarter 1965MAJOR JEWISH IDEASContemporary Views of God andMan, Torah, IsraelBIBLICAL CONCEPTS AND VALUESCovenant, Holiness, Sin, MessiahINTRODUCTION TO HASIDISMDiscussion of the Hasidic TalesMODERN HEBREW LITERATUREAdvanced ReadingHUG IVRILuncheon Conversational GroupINTRODUCTORY HEBREWConversational and Biblical WednesdayINTRODUCTORY YIDDISH Monday andHALACHA — Readings in MaimoniMishnah Torah (Yavneh)HALACHIC CONCEPTS INTRADITIONAL JUDAISM (Yavneh) . .READINGS IN TALMUO (Yavneh) TuesdayThursdaAll classes meet at Hillel Ho5715 Woodlawn AvenuePlaza 2-1127 Tuesday 4:00 p.m.Thursday 4:30 p.m.Wednesday 7:00 p.m.’Wednesday 8:30 p.m.Wednesday 12:00 noonMonday andWednesday 4:30 p.m.Monday andThursday 4:30 p.m.Thursday 8:00 p.m.Tuesday 8:00 p.m.Tuesday 4:30 p.m.Thursday 7:30 p.m.Hel House representatives from more or lessequal population-geographical dis¬tricts. Nebraska has no income tax,no sales tax and no bonded debt.The urban cities of Omaha, Lincolnand Grand Island have home rule,something which the major cities inIllinois do not enjoy.Although it has been done inNebraska does not imply that a uni¬cameral legislature should be formedin Illinois. The other 49 states havea bicameral legislature mainly be¬cause the federal government wascreated bicameral. The ConstitutionConvention first considered the Vir¬ginia plan which called for a two-house Congress, both to be electedby states in proportion to population.It is interesting to note that thissame proposal has arisen under thepresent Supreme Court dictum. HieVirginia plan did not please thesmall states which countered withtlie New Jersey plan. It called fora unicameral legislature with allstates having an equal number ofvotes. This is not to be confusedwith either the present New Jerseyplan of weighing the votes of statelegislators according to populationor this proposal which features aunicameral legislature based onequal population districts and pro¬port ional representation. The Con¬stitutional Convention finally ac¬cepted the Connecticut compromisewhich had one house elected bystates according to population andthe other house having two repre¬sentatives from every state.The compromise has two effects.One is the representation of boththe states and the people. Hie otheris the so called cup and saucertheory of legislative compromise.First consider the representationaspect. In a letter to Thomas Jef¬ferson, James Madison wrote:The Senate will represent theStates in their political capacity;the other House will representthe people of the States in theirindividual capacity. . . . Hiis de¬pendence of the General on thelocal authorities seems effectuallyto guard the latter against anydangerous encroachments of theformer; whilst the latter, withintheir respective limits, will be con¬tinually sensible of the abridg¬ment of their power.The Senate represents the sover¬eign governments within the terri¬tory of the national government,that is, it represents the severalstates. Hie House, on the otherhand, represents the popularsovereignty. Senators, then, repre¬sented sovereign political bodies andwere, prior to the SeventeenthAmendment, elected by the appro¬priate state legislature or appointedby the state governor.In contrast to the United Stateswhich is a federation of sovereignstates, Illinois contains no politicalbody within it which is sovereignto the same degree or in the samesense as Illinois is sovereign withinthe Union. Yet the unitary state ofIllinois has a government based onthe assumption that the body poli¬tic is, in fact, federal and com¬posed of sovereign sub-divisions. Byextension this would imply thatCook, St. Clair and Alexander coun¬ties are all sovereign and relate toIllinois and to each oilier in thesame way that Illinois relates tothe Union and to the several states.Yet the state legislature has anupper chamber representing geo¬graphically oriented districts and alower chamber representing thepeople and only one, the people,is really sovereign.Madison continues in his letterto discuss this very problem.We find Hie representatives ofCounties and Corporations in theLegislatures of the States muchmore disposed to sacrifice the aggregate Interest, and even Hie proportional representation orauthority, to the local views of at-large aspect has one chieftheir constituents, than the latter vantage. It forces the parties tto the former. search for “blue ribbon” candidate^ *And, it might be added, to sacri- who would be more politicallyfice their authority to the Federal aware, more concerned with thegovernment. Madison, then, implies trend of public opinion and prob-that a state legislature based on Jems than with pleasing the viewsgeographical or political sub-units of a narrow constituency. This would *will tend to accomplish little and to be balanced by the single memlvrloose power both to federalism, by districts which would guaranteeimplication, and to parochialism, equally populated areas a voice ;nThe problem of effective legislation the legislature,and compromise between local and Dispersed minorities would benstate wide goals necessitates a dls- fit from the proportional votingcussion of the “cup and saucer” they can preference certain par-tvtteoHy- candidates over others. This willThe process of reaching legislative become more important in the fu- »accord between the two Houses of tune as Illinois continues to urbanizeCongress has been called the cup Of 102 counties, 15 are consideredand saucer process because just as urban by the Census Bureau includ-one pours coffee into the sauoer and ing Winnebago (Rockford), Mailback into the cup to cool it, so legLs- son (Granite City) and Macon (D, - *lation must pass back and forth ratur) counties. Eligibility to votebetween the two Houses in order to depends upon residence and in ur-moderate it. This has two results, banized districts, the residential pat-The first is to hear all sides, that terns less and less resemble the pu¬is, the states’ views in the Senate litical-social-economic hornogenitv *and the people’s views in the House, they once did. It will become moreIt aims at acliieving a workable difficult for an ethnic or incomemajority consensus. Hie second is group to dominate a representativeto produce agreement on identical district. In some cases this resultsbills from both Houses. in an undirected garbled position 1Because of the diversification of supplanting a more articulate pro¬interests among the states, views gram of a minority or interestand programs of a minority in one group. Some form of proportiunalstate may be indirectly represented representation seems to he a satis-by an elected Senator from another factory solution. *state. Similarly the views of a It is known, however, that pro¬minority in one congressional dls- portional representation tends to en-triot may be expressed by the con- courage splinter parties and exgressman from the neighboring dls- tremlst groups. But the proposedtrict. Within the nation, then, the legislature is a mixed system and *diversification of population com- the single member district portionbined with the geographical distribu- would seriously limit a small minor-tion of the states and state popu- ity gaining complete control of thela tuns, strikes a balance of sorts, legislature. In addition two otherMost elections find the same party safeguards exist. One is the fivein control of both the House and the per cent or three district seat re-Sen ate. The Senators tend to take quirement. This means that aa broader view and the Representa- minority or special interest partytives a slightly narrower one, but would need a substantial base before ,compromise between the two is it would qualify for proportionalnot exceedingly difficult. seating. Hie second is the strengthIn Illinois, however, the diversi- of the two party system in thefication of population and interest United States which has weathereddoes not occur on a level equiva- several attempts to establish a ^lent to that found in the nation third party. In addition this mixedas a whole. A sizeable minority may system has tended, in West Ger-be spread evenly throughout the many, to create a two party systemstate and be unable to elect or find where several major parties com-a legislator who represents their peted for power shortly after theviews. The main division is between Second World War.Chicago on the one hand and South- A political lag currently exists inern Illinois on the other. Hie sub- Illinois. The governmental machin-urban areas of Chicago and the ery. particularly the legislature, doescities of Downstate Illinois tend to not adequately meet the problemsget lost in the process. The Illinois of the industralized city or the me-legislature, instead of having a work- chanized farms. It does not reflectable balance within each chamber, the unitary nature of the overallhas one chamber dominated by Chi- political scheme within the state. Itcago and the other by Downstate. does not represent the current social ,Bills pass the Chicago dominated conditions of the people. The gapHouse without too much concern or between the legislature and the poli-compromise with other elements, deal, social and economic realitiesand bills pass the Downstate domi- in Illinois ought to be dooed.nated Senate without too much qo»- Harry Perlstadt •cern or compromise with the highlyurbanized elements. Hie result isa stalemate and the House-Senateconference system which works on ^ 70th Annual Washingtonthe national level fails on the state ppomeivade, the only semi-formal ‘level. It fails because the House (iaftCe ^ ^ie year at UC ,will be onand Senate bills to be correlated 20, from 9:30 pm to 1:30come not from compromise worked year jt will be held in Idaout in each chamber but from two Noyes Haii AU sUidents and faoul-conflicting one sided positions. ^ ty <y[ the University are invited. *unicameral state legislature, on the As in the past, there will be aother hand, would bring the oppos- Cootest before Wash Prom,ing chambers under one roof, facili- ^ cancKdates being sthmitted bytate the process of compromise and ^ student organizations startingenable the legislature to cope with week. Three judges composedthe problems of the state. ^ ^ f^cuJty choose the finalistsHie second major argument put and tlie Queen is elected by secretto this proposal is the feasibility and ballot by the students of the Univer-effect of a mixed district — pro- sity. President George Beadle willportional representative system. It crown the winner Miss UC at mid¬is important to note that this is night. Added features will be speciala mixed system and not strictly entertainment and a midnightsingle member or proportional. By a brunch following. There will be fourproper blend perhaps the advantages hours of dancing and the Cloisterof both may be taken while lessen- Club and lounges will be festivelying the pitfalls of each. decorated.Prom will ride anewthe One, the Only - the Originalforeign car hospital and clinichome of foaa winkauthorized BMC and Triumph sales and service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113 TAhSAM-Y&NCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing iwCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYn A.M. to 9t4J P.M.ORDERS TO TAKB OUTlilt Ka*» MrO St. MM 4-1*1Sees need to integrate Congo in Africanism"The Congo roust be understood in the context of Pan- Lumumba. In January erf 1959 riots in power. Nkrumah saw the Congo Drake concluded by saying, "TheAfricanism and the fight against Apartheid in South broke out in Leopoldville and Bel- as the industrial base of an African Congo is crucial both to the PanAfrica and Rhodesia, said St. Clair Drake in a talk here promised the Congo inde- union aligned against South Africa. African movement and the whiteAccording to Drake, "The inde¬pendent Congo was crueial to Nkru-mab’s dream of a United States ofAfrica and the Ghanian PrimeMinister counted heavily on his pro¬tege, Patrice Lumumba remaining Hence it is understandable thatGhana and a number of other Afri¬ca countries should object to a gov¬ernment in Leopoldville that usesSouth African mercenaries to stayin power and was probably respon¬sible for the murder of Lumumba." supremacists of the south. Its cru¬cial position and great wealth makeit a valuable prize. African andCongolese sentiment was over¬whelmingly behind Lumumba. Theadvent of Tshomhe with Belgian sup¬port is anathema to Ihem."SG s Levin asks studentopinion concerning CollegeWednesday.Drake, a leading Roosevelt Uni¬versity sociologist and co-author ofJriark Metropolis, speaking under,he auspices of the UC AmericanSocialist Club said that, "The situa¬tion in the Congo cannot be isolated(,,,m the situation in all of Africaand to begin to understand the situa¬tion in Africa we must first take al,net look at African history.”Drake was an exchange professor;tl the University of Ghana at Accrator two years, 1959-1960.' • U HEN THE PORTUGUESE|,rst discovered what is now the((*igo they found a friendly, recep¬tive and civilized people. It was notuntil Ihe introduction of the slavehade that the Africans first turnedagainst Ihe whites and this seed ofanimosity, planted years ago. isI rst beginning to fiower in thisdecade.”Sketching African history, Drake-aid, "Europeans came to considerAirna as a reservoir of c heap rnan-lower that eoukl be transported atWill ”Slavery at homeWith the end of slavery, the onlychange mark', according to Drakewas that . . . "instead of takingAfricans to work elsewhere theEuropeans put them to work inAfrica.”Drake said that by the 1880\s theCongo was the tally section of Afri¬ca still unclaimed by a Europeantower. In 1882, King Leopold actingon the suggestion of Stanley, the ex¬plorer, claimed the Congo as hisp rsonal property and organized itinto commercial districts each to bedeveloped by a company known asa "ctncessjooaire.’* “TIIE CONCESSIONAIRES,”Drake continued, "would pay chiefsto give them men for gathering rub¬ber. These men were then workedfrom 12 to 16 hours a day and thehands of reluctant workers were cutoff. The Belgians like to refer tothe- Congo as a ‘civilizing mission’yet by 1900 Belgian atrocities inAfrica had become an internationalissue.”Belgian paternalism"King Leopold leaded to Ihe criti¬cism el his African policy by sell¬ing the Congo to Belgium and theBelgian government set about mak¬ing the Congo a model colony. Thename of the new policy was pater¬nalism and its philosophy was mini¬ma] benefits for all the people. Theidea was that an educated elite wasdangerous and the regime was safestif the people were moderately sa¬tisfied with their lot. This policy re¬sulted in a high literacy rate ( 50%of the Congolese can read andwrite) bit no leadership (by 1960only 16 Congolese had been to col¬lege).”According to Drake, paternalismcarried the* seeds of its own destruc¬tion. Drake stated that the Belgians,by giving the Congolese a chanceto learn how to rear!, enabled themto leam of independence and the“winds of change” that were sweep¬ing Asia and Africa. Drake saidthat as a result pressures lor in¬dependence mounted."IN DECEMBER OF 1958 Ghanaconvened an all-African conference.Among the two hundred delegatesfrom all over Africa was Patrice With the passage of theLevi Report by the Univer¬sity Senate last month, a newchapter was opened in thedevelopment of the College. Theplan, which provides -a new struc¬tural framework for undergraduateeducation, makes changes in cur¬riculum, majors requirements, andother aspects of college educationmuch easier to effect.In the past such changes had tobe approved by Ihe University Sen¬ate as a whole, which is composedof over 300 members of the faculty,graduate as well as undergraduate,individuals of many different orien¬tations and interests. Under thenew plan the College faculty alonewill decide the direction of the Col¬lege.WHILE THE PLAN outlines thebasics of the reorganization of theCollege, it does not spell out thedetailed changes whach will takeplace under the new system, norwas it meant to. These changeswill occur gradually after the struc¬tural reorganization has been com¬pleted and the needs and problemshave become clearer.The plan stioukl be in effect by next fall, but the new Dean of theCollege, Wayne Booth, expects onlyrelatively minor changes to takeplace in the curriculum by then.That year will be a time of "re¬thinking of problems and possiblesolutions.’Some major aspects of the planremain uncompleted. In addition tothe four area colleges following thetraditional pattern of the graduatesections; social sciences, humani¬ties, physical sciences, and biologi¬cal sciences, a fifth area college isto be established. Its context k stallat issue. Some faculty see it con¬cerned with interdisciplinary pro¬grams, some as an advanced gen¬eral education in the Hutchins tradi¬tion and stall others as a secondpolitical science of humanities de¬partment.AT THE SAME TIME a great op¬portunity is opened for studentopinion to significantly influence thedirection in which the College de¬velops under the new filan. The Col¬lege is made up of students and itschief aim, at least theoretically, isto benefit the student. The studentthrough his experiences in the sys¬tem can judge much of its success or failure in this regard. With theLevi Plan just now being initiated,the opportunity is at its greatestfor the student to make his experi¬ences and ideas know and felt.The Academic Affairs Committeeof Student Government is attempt¬ing to fill this role by making rec¬ommendations as to student prob¬lems and possible solutions. DeanBooth js very interested in studentopinion, (something that has im¬pressed almost every student hehas talked with), and will be work¬ing closely with the committee onthe problems of the College, bothacademic and non-academic. As theindividual most directly responsiblefor the direction of the change, hisaccessibility increases the possibleeffect of student opinion.The committee will be meetingin about a week to formulate someof its hasic ideas and to develop itsplan of action. Any student inter¬ested cun join the committee. Con¬tact me at x3272 or at PL 2-9718.Ellis LevinSG Academic AffairsChairmanNEW TEXT BOOKS USED4*.STUDENT SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS-NOTE BOOKS-STATIONERY-LAUNDRY CASESCASES-SPORTING GOODSTYPEWRITERS sold - rented-repairedPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57th STREETS BLOCKS BAST OF MANBEL HALLt MDUftfr: DAILY S:0G A.M. to 6:00 P.M. . . . EVENINGS — Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9:00 P.M.Jan. 8,1965 • CHICAGO* MAROONFisher will aid teachersUC scholar to teachA scholar at UC will visitthe Soviet Union to learn howhe might improve teachingRussian to high schoolstudents.Hie scholar, Wayne D. Fisher, as¬sistant professor of education inRussian, also will try to help hisRussian colleagues teach English toSoviet high school students.Currently, two Russian teachersof English are in this country underarrangements worked out betweenthe American Friends Service Com¬mittee of the School Affiliation Serv¬ice in Philadelphia, and the Ministryof Education of the Russian Republicof the Soviet Union.FISCHER DESCRIBED THE pro¬gram as “intended to extend theexchange teacher’s familiarity withthe literature and teaching methodsof the host country, and to broadenhis understanding of the entire edu¬cational system.”He plans to spend February andMarch in Russia dividing his timeequally between two high schools.He will learn the identity of theschools when he arrives in Russia.In both schools, the first few daysare scheduled to be spent observingand talking with persons qualified tointerpret the educational philosophyfrom which the school develops its program. Fisher said, “While ob¬servation will focus on languageclasses, both English and Russian*the introductory phase will probablyinclude observation of the teachingof other subjects and of such generalactivities as assemblies, sports, art,music, and drama. It is intendedto give an overall picture of theeducational experience of high schoolstudents there.”He outlined four major purposesfor the exchange teacher:• To fill the role of consultantand teacher for the classes in whichEnglish is taught: and to assist theregular classroom teacher by directlanguage teaching, stressing conver¬sation; to advise on the choice ofEnglish literature best suited to theage and language facility of the stu¬dents; and to describe life in theUnited States and aspects of Ameri¬can culture.• To observe and consult withteachers of Russian literature inorder to become familiar with thechoice of literature taught at dif¬ferent age levels.• To observe and consult withteachers, administrators, and curric¬ulum specialists on the use of teach¬ing and testing materials, and tocompare experience in the use oflanguage laboratory equipment. New dean Booth on WUCBWayne Booth, dean of the gram will feature a special “RushCollege, will be interviewed Period” discussion between Klow-Sunday by WUCB’s news and ^ and thr^ fraternity presidents“sports” director Mike Kk>w- 0,1 ^ toplc ^ s abolish fraterni¬ties.”in Russia• To allow time to examine booksand trying out materials; attendteachers' meetings within the school;meet with school and communitygroups interested in education; visitmuseums and places of historicalgeographical interest; participate inenough social life to allow some ob¬servation of Russian leisure timepursuits.FISHER EXPECTS to demon¬strate his “overlay” method ofteaching Russian which he developedin the Laboratory Schools of UC. Inthe Language Laboratory the learn¬er listens bo the recorded voice ofa contemporary Moscow speaker ofRussian, and seeks to duplicate hissounds, intonation, rhythm, tone,and even breathing. When he can‘overlay’ his voice on that of therecording, he knows he has devel¬oped the characteristics of the for¬eign language.Fisher is associate coordinator forRussian in the Master of Arts inTeaching program in the Universi¬ty’s Graduate School of Education.He is responsible for guiding thetraining of graduate students wl»are preparing to teach Russian mhigh schools.Fisher. 41. is married and has twochildren. Ha wife teaches Englishin a suburban school. His family,however, will remain in the UnitedStates. den. The interview will be heard aspart of the “Around Campus” pro¬gram which will begin at 9 pm onWUCB-640 A M., heard in campusdorms.new student social oenters, Che Uni¬versity’s admissions policy, and thepossible effects on students of pro¬posed curriculum changes. Job opportunitiesJanuary 8Purfx Corporation. Lakewood,California and nationwide—will in¬terview men graduates of any De-“Around Campus” is a programof light music and odd comments partment for positions in all phasesfeaturing a discussion or interview ^ marketklg (sales> market ^concerned with campus affairs. It . .will be heard on alternate Sundays searc”, sales administration, salesat 9 pm. On January 24, the pro- promotion, etc.)Jimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Are.The following recruiting organiza-The interview will center around U°n will visit the Office of CareerBooth’s ideas for the implementa- Counseling and Placement duringtion of the Levi Report for proposed the week of Janury 4. Interviewchanges in the College. Other topics appointments may be arrangedto be discussed include proposed throng L. S. Calvin, room 200, Rey-changes in the dormitory set-up, no Ids Club, extension 3284.STAND TALI!with the leaderinIllinois Bell Telephone Companywill interview on campusJanuary 15Would you like to work with a company that starts you in aresponsible position? Insists that you move up in your job?Promotes from within? Gives you a present, as well as a future?Then the Bell Telephone System may offer just the oppor¬tunity you’re looking for.You’ll learn the exciting field of communications.. .withadvancement dependent on your ability. You’ll develop yourability to direct and work with people ... and you'll be work¬ing with one of the fastest-growing, most vital industries inthe world.In your work, you’ll be associated with the company thathas developed the Telstar satellite and the transistor.If you are in the upper-half of your class - with either atechnical ora non-technical degree - Bell System interviewersare very much interested in talking to you. Simply make anappointment at your placement office.Bell System Team Interviews:Illinois Bell TelephonePart of the Nationwide Bell System THFFRET SH°PliutruaienU — New, U»ed, A«l»<iuGUITARS, BANJOS, MANDOLINSBook* *nd Folk Mu»ic MjgixiaeeDISCOUNT ON FOLK RECORDS5sr* st.ChicagoNO 7-106011:30 to 6, 7:30 to 10 Mon.-Frl.11:30 to 6. SaturdayLiberal Arts and Sciences; 2-DOOR SEIBusiness Administration GraduatesJanuary 15 $1 AOIllinois Bell Telephone Company 1 HHAn equal opportunity employer 1 vvToday'sAssignment1965COMETLake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL10 • CHICAGO MAROON Jon. 8, 19651NEWS MUSEby Bruce Freed(Editor’* note: This h mother Install-m rnt of 4 regular column of commentZ, politics by Bruce Freed, 4 third-yearv student ut history.)James Heston’s caricatureof Lyndon Johnson as a"whirlwind of caution” is theaptest description of the first" Southerner in the White House sincehis namesake, Andrew.Employing in a different settingthe political axioms and strategy» of caution and prudence he testedduring his effective term as Senatemajority leader, LBJ has the intui¬tive and understanding touch neededto handle a sometimes fickle Con-* gress.He never picks a fight unlessvictory k almost certain; he neverbludgeons Congressmen into hastydecisions; and he never calls up for4 a vote an important piece of legisla¬tion unless passage is reasonablyassured.THE PRESIDENT’S State of the.• Union message last Monday nights an excellent example of haspolitical prudence and caution. Whilemaking tension-relaxing and trade-promoting overtures toward the.Soviet Union and the restive East¬ern European states, be reaffirmed Cautiously to the Great Societythe previous guidlines and aims ofAmerican foreign policy. He did notoffer policy changes for Vietnamnor did he say anything that wouldoffend sensitive France or upsetthe greatly weakened NATO alli¬ance.Domestically, the President askedfor what he feels he can expect toget through Congress. Again, hissense of the realities of Congression¬al politics were important in shap¬ing his program.ON EDUCATION, he attempted tosidestep the thorny religious issue,which has killed education legisla¬tion in the last few years, by propos¬ing federal school aid to low in¬come areas and increasing scholar¬ship and loan aid to college students.In economic policy, the President’srequest for an excise tax cut andtemporary standby authority to cuttaxes and pump greater emergencypublic work funds into the economyif a recession threatens should beaccepted by this liberal Congressand should increase the effective¬ness of his policy of maintainingthe current prosperity.HIS CALL FOR doubling fundslor the War on Poverty, for a newregional development program, an overhaul of the unemployment com¬pensation system, and an extensionof the minimum wage law areaimed at meeting the current fes¬tering economic problems such aspoverty and stagnation in areas ofpersistent unemployment.And his call for passage of medi¬care, for revision of the right-to-work section of the Taft-HartleyLaw, and for long overdue govern¬ment reorganization, undoubtedlywill be heeded by Congress.However, one program omittedfrom the State of the Union messagewhich hopefully will be revived laterwas the idea leaked by Walter Hel¬ler, that the Federal governmentshould return to the states a per¬centage of Federal income tax rev¬enues.THIS PLAN could revitalize theability of state governments to meetlocal responsibilities taken over bythe Federal government by defaultsince k would provide states withneeded funds that cannot now betapped. Most states’ prohibitions ofan income tax and archaic and nar¬row tax bases thus could be cir¬cumvented.WHILE SOME PEOPLE wfllargue that LBJ’s proposals are too small or do not go far enough, theyshould realize that many a broadreform program has been wreckedby a balky Congress, an unsympa¬thetic committee, or an obstinatecongressman, because it was pushedtoo hard or at the wrong time. Prop¬er tact, necessary compromise ormore realistic strategy could havesaved or at least salvaged suchprograms.Lyndon Johnson has this raretouch that will be called upon manytimes during his first full term toshepherd his programs through Con¬gress. While his speech was notan appeal for radical surgery, itwa6 a call for constructive reformand followed in the pragmatic tradi¬tion of asking for the possible.HIS CURRENT legislative out¬lines are but the beginning ofnew plans designed to tackle thedisparities, blights, problems andneeds touched upon in his message.As the President correctly ob¬served, solutions do not come in aday, a year, a decade or even ageneration. They must be worked oncontinuously.However, when considering LBJ’sattributes of prudence and caution,they must be viewed within the con¬text of his program. The President’s broad vision ofAmerica in the future and his senseof the vast potentialities that canbe tapped by his Great Society arethe stimulus for his short- and long-range legislative goals.LBJ’s prudence, caution and politi¬cal realism are his means forachieving his end of a more perfectUnited States. He is only strivingfor something that this country hasbeen gradually working toward sinceits inception.A limited supply of OralPolio Vaccine (Sabin) hasbeen obtained by the Stu¬dent Health Service andwill be available to all reg¬istered students under age25, between 8:30 am and 4pm on Tuesday, January26th. Those who have hadno previous vaccinationwill require a second doseon Tuesday, March 9th. Forthose who have had onlySalk vaccine, re - vaccina¬tion with the oral vaccine issuggested as a booster.There will be no charge.Maroon Weekend GuideSAMUEL A. BELL'Buy Shell From Bell’since it2*4701 So. Dorckostor Avo.KEawood 8-3150h. /IN♦09 ^ a newworld ofd«n i n acharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*•616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668 Kb SMASH MONTHChicago's Longest Running Musical“The* blow ■ ft, ft 11 Irat* air l«W tha■■•id nm keaiaaaa.” — Lamar. N«*«•‘They ktYatta la litaraay hr Uahraralty ofChita, a mamliW —Banal. A mar,Tni. Wat. Thun. • Frf.. t A II:Sat. CM. ISM. IIM: Sal. 7M A tM;WiehUaya. $2 *5; frl. A Sat.. S2.SSTheater la the CloudsALLERTON HOTEL^ 701 N. Michiqaa A»«.Reservations: SU 7-4200. 'r.lou D.aaa fllaaaf «r> • 1 1. |Cofoay Room Dinner< > Show and 4-Courso Dinner.,,{'15.50; Frl. and Sat.. $5.75.<.—WWWWWMNW?, Clark$.50 STUD. DISC.(Except Sotwrdoy) of oil timesfor collegestudentsO NM ffem dawn M dawnO a different double feature. da#*o -tmia BaJ-lary" for gala onlyO dark parking one dear aeuth... law hours 09c afterB pm.fri. 8 • "invitation to thediMt," "ailk stockings.”sat. 9 - ”pt 109,” "gun-hght at coanmanchc creek.”sun. lO • "the huatler.”"confessions of felixkroll.”moo. 11 • "commando,”"secret door.”tues. 12 - "six black horses,""taras bulbs.”wed. IT • "the wind cannotread,” "farewell to arms.”thurt. 14 • "badlanders,”"spencer's mountain,” CAFE ENRECOACROSS FROM THE THY 3-5300 FA 4-5525PIZZAMed. 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 50cI ON ANY PIZZA DELIVERY fI IN JANUARY iNICKY’SRESTAURANT AND PIZZA LAKE /park AT R D : NO 7-907 1the v*yde park theatre■ ■ ■.■(BsaJe and(jJinsL TAKE-OUT & DELIVERY MENUPIZZASAssortments small mediumCHEESE 1.25 2.00SAUSAGE 1.50 2.25ANCHOVIE 1.50 2.25ONION 1.30 2.05PEPPER 1.50 2.25MUSHROOM 1.60 2.40BACON 1.50 2.25HAM 2.40 forge2.903.253.253.003.253.503.253.50I* SANDWICHESPlain or BAR BQ Beef 70Meat Ball 55Sausage 60Above Served with PeppersHAMBURGER 50CHEESEBURGER 60BAKED LASAGNE 1.55SHRIMP—'/2-lb 1.25; 14b 2.25FA 4-5340RIBS1 Slab 2.252 Slabs 4.253 Slabs 6.00CHICKIE IN THE BOX10 Large Pieces $ 2.5016 Large Pieces 3-7520 Large Pieces 4.75Free Student Delivery Starts Friday, Jan. 8Vittorio Gassman it Claudia Cardinalsin Nanni Loy’s Hilarious Italian Comedy"FIASCO IN MILAN"andANNiE GIRARD0T * MARIE BELL"LA BONNE SOUPE"'Bawdy as 'Irma La Duce!'"—New York NewsNext Friday—"One Potato, Two Potato"FREE WEEKEND PATRON PARKINGAT 5230 SOUTH LAKE PARKSPECIAL STUDENT RATESWITH STUDENT I.D. CARDSJm. 8,1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • IIEliza White. 5470 B!o«h»toMAnd now is the time to know it.Now, when you can best appreciate the many happy returns our members are realizing on lastyear's investments.Now, when each dollar saved will be matched by up to a dollar’s worth of life insurance.Now, when your savings investment will work hardest throughout the year to bring you a happyand prosperous 1966. *>Now is the time, the best time, to open or add to your savings account at your credit union —the credit union that knows it needs you.12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jon. 8, 1965