Vol. 73 — No. 27 The University of Chicago Friday, February 12, 1965Wick, O'Connell explainGrad, undergrad aid differsby Barbara Jur“Competition for graduate financial aid can be compared to a jungle working under junglerules,” according to Charles D. O’Connell, director of Admissions and Aid. HP clubs write LutheransTwo Hyde Park block clubs released this week the text ofa letter sent to the directors of the Lutheran School ofTheology at Chicago which is planning to demolish a blockof moderate-income housing to make way for a new seminary.The letter was signed by Eugene —•Feit, chairman of the 5450 Green- ations and local businessmen thatwood-University block club, and no further reductions in residen-Arthur Para head of 5400 Wood- tial density would occur.lawn-University club. It was sent It would also destroy a “stable,to each of the 28 members of the well-integrated block" lying be-Lutheran board of directors, and tween “virtually all-Negro areasasks that they reconsider its plans to the west and all-white areas toto build on residential land and the east" and represent a setbacklook for a nearby site “already ^ progressdesignated for institutional use.”Plans call for demolition of the toward racial integrationAdditionally, the LutheranSchool plans have been made with-5450 Greenwood-University block out consulting representative or-for the campus. The residents in ganizations in the area, andthe 5400 Woodlawn • University execution of the plans would denyblock are to be evicted in spring the residents a voice in community1966 and that block used for hous- planning, the letter states.Although five times as much money is available to the graduate divisions and schools as *ng seminar*ans- At the same time, the block clubscompared to the College, “the competition is “fierce,” according to O’Connell.“THERE ARE TWO very im-portant differences between the award he should receive. These Autumn 1964graduate and undergraduate a i d recommendations are coordinatedcompetition,” Warner A. Wick, on the divisional level by the dean Division students Awaits Awards creasedean of students and Chairman of of students of the respective divi- Biologicalthe University Fellowship Com- sions. The dean of students divides Sci. 293 347 308mittee, pointed out. the money allocation to his divi- Humanities 647 454 375First, merit, not need, is the sion and tends to go down each Physical Sci. 542 319 293principal factor in determining departmental list until the money Social Sci. 1143 862 774awards. Although graduate appli- runs out. However, the dean maygive more funds to departmentswith stronger candidates, accord¬ing to Wick.Loans get slightedcations include an application forfinancial aid providing for an esti¬mated budget, no serious attemptIs made to check the undergradu¬ate budgets in the application, ac¬cording to Wick.The real criteria“Academic performance and rec- 12.712.18.911.3TOTAL 2625 1982 1750 13.3 “WE ARE HAPPY to welcome announced a joint resolution inthe Lutheran School as a worthy which their complaints are out-addition to the University of Chi- lined in greater detail. Much ofcago community,” Para stated, the resolution is devoted to the“Our objection is to the site they role of the University of Chicagoand the University of Chicago have in arranging for the Lutheranchosen. There are a number of in- move in violation of communitystitutional sites available near the housing needs.University, and we think the-sem- FEIT RECOUNTED a Januarymary should bmld on one of those 12 meeti wjth Prof Ju]ian ^instead of tearing down good hous- whQ acted M spokesman for theing' University of Chicago, at whichAccording to the letter, the de- he and Para voiced the block club’smolition would intensify the acute complaints. According to Feit, Leviommendations are really the only of grants, loans, and jobs as in thecriteria for determining who is to undergraduate a i d competition,”receive awards; this is also true Wick pointed out. If a student isat must leading institutions," interested in loans, he would goO’Connell stated. Thus, the com- directly to the loan counselors inpetition is fierce among leading in- the Bursar’s Office,stitutions, for the good candidates Moreover, there are many moreand awards tend to take on the ap- sources of outside assistance forpearance of bids, according to graduate students—National Sci-O’Connell. The absence of national cnee Foundation grants, Woodrowagreement on need on the gradu- Wilson awards, NDEA Fellow-ate level also makes the competi- ships, etc.—as opposed to outsidetion much less manageable.“It is now an established prin “A further difference is that de- in that area support students aspartments do not think much research assistants; therefore aabout loans in awarding aid; grad- great many of them appear as em-..ate awards are never a package . tConHnued on four)f lAom; nnH mne ac in ThA r »“The award totals in the Phys¬ical Sciences seem so dispropor- , . ... ... , , *tionate because many departments shoJ'tage of well-maintained imod- acknowledged that the Universityerate-income housing which has kad made the decision to invite theresulted from earlier urban-re- Lutheran School to settle in Hydenewal remolition involving 6,000 park and sold the Lutherans build-housing units, and violate assur- jngs owned by the University andance given to community organiz- used for married-student housing.Levi was out of town when theMaroon called to check hs reactionto Feit’s report.Levi, stated that an average ofone application a week is receivedby the University from organiza¬tions and businesses wishing tomove to the area, Feit reported.Although sixty p^ple turned out for its first meeting thenewly created Southern Work Project Committee (SWPC) tk(T Lutherans’ request wasaid for undergraduates -sVaTe must still await word from the Student Non-Violent Coordi- granted at the urging of the Uni¬scholarships, if a state has such nating Committee (SNCC) as to what it will be doing and versity’s Divinity School. IxwiUC church rebuildersawait SNCC's wordciple that parents have a duty to a problem, Pullman scholarships wheie it will be going.support a child’s undergraduateeducation, but at the graduatelevel, parents’ contribution is usu¬ally discontinued. Therefore, wetake the view that almost all gradstudents have need,” Wick ex¬plained.THE SECOND DIFFERENCEbetween graduate and undergrad¬uate aid competition is that, in¬stead of graduate school-wide corn admitted that the decision hadfor residents of Cook County; Na- The new group plans to go to a partially-completed buildings which been made unilaterally for thetional Merit Scholarships, and a southern town during the coming were begun some time ago. University’s interest, without con*number of less important scholar- . . . , ... h Ud nr dpro. NEVERTHELESS, THE group suiting representative communityships, according to O’Connell. went ahead Tuesday with basic organizations, Feit claimed.THE MAIN SOURCES of money rate a church or some o er s iuc- pjans and preparations. Publicity, According to Feit and Para. Levifor graduate aid are University ture damaged in connection with -----endowed and unendowed fund sand outside awards and foundationfunds, according to Wick.Figures for the number ofawards and the number of stu-l»etition, the crucial decision as to dents for the Divisions are not ex-who should get how much is left aetly comparable. Endowed andto the individual departments'rec- unendowed grants are counted . . fund-raising, construction, and also reported that the Lutherancivil rights demonstra ions. transportation committees were School administrators refused toThe group’s leader Randy Rap- established in an effort to get as consider locating on available in-paport said that SNCC will not much basic groundwork as soon stitutional sites, such as the landknow exactly where they will want as possible. In addition, several being vacated by George Williamsthe group to go until the end of members of the group were asked College or the “South Campus"the week. The possibility of work- j0 contact faculty and community area south of 60th Street, becauseing on buildings in Fayette Coun- leaders for possible support. they dislike being too far fromr „ ty, Tennessee, is also being ex- Oberlin inspirational the center of the University.ommendations, Wicks said. In this separately; therefore, there is amined. The International Volun- sWPC’s project was inspired by Levi said that the University ofconnection, the financial need of a some duplication in the figures teer Service has a project with the a s|mi|ar venture that students Chicago wouldn’t release land im-candidate may bo taken into ae- for the number of awards, accord- Negro community in that county, and faculty at oberlin College un- mediately to the west of the cam-count in determining how large un ing to Wick. and the students could work on dertook over the past Christmas pas because the University plansholiday. The Oberlin group spent eventually to build on it. One oftwo weeks in Ripley, Mississippi the uses to which this land willrepairing and reconstructing a be put, Para stated, will be thechurch which had been ravaged construction of married-studentsduring a civil rights demonstra- housing to replace that being tornWith an execution date of March 19 set in Illinois’ highly of Instead of War. The Muck- tion. They were quartered in Rip- down for the Lutheran seminary,controversial Witherspoon case, the Maroon is sponsoring an rakers* and lvvo biographies of ley by local Negro•families^^and Para charged that, with greatcolloquium on capital punishment Thursday, February 18, at Clarence ttarrow. win talk on the a p,°' waste of funds-.some of themaortal Implications ol capital pun- of „„a ,roT ,he F<,<ta?.l governmentishment.» MAROON gives forum on capital punishment8 pm in the Law School Auditorium.“The University of Chicago’sMaroon Forum on the Abolition ment. Among the speakers willof Capital Punishment” will fea- be Dick Gregory, well-known civilture talks by five speakers on rights leader and comedian,various aspects of capital punish- Moral, ethical aspectsThe Reverend James G. Jones, Beside the problems of time and student needs will eventually bemoney the group ako debated the satisfied through manv marriedkind of work that should be done. students will be forced to moveSeveral felt that, Instead of be- for tho third or fourth time. Noprovision is beng made for non¬rental housing, theresolution claimed. block clubFEIT STATED that Levi hadA iJfflThe five glowing examples of UC womanhood picturedabove are the candidates for the title of Miss UC for 1965.They are, left to right, Marge Horowitz (representingMaroon Key); Pat McKeown (Psi Upsilon); Sandra Baxter(Women's Athletic Association); Nancy Barty (RussianFilm Festival); and Judy McCrocklin (Quadranglers). ginning a building from scratch „ uui ^ARTHUR WEINBERG, author former head of Leonard House, which would probably stand very ^‘udent community" residents,a half-way house for convicts, will little chance of being finished in a many 0f them long-term Hydediscuss the moral and ethical as- ’ e group s ould devote it- Park residents who will be forcedpoets of capital punishment. alroadv ^n Sed" either out of «* neiffhbo, hood due toThe forme, warden of the Cook by decorating or finishing'its con- ,he shorlage °' sound modera,e-County Jail, Hans Mat t ick, will struction.talk on the merits and the record IN REGARD TO working inof capital punishment. Mattick is Fayette County, Tennessee, it waspresently head of the Chicago argued that as much good could admitted that Hyde Park wouldYouth Development Project. be done there as in Mississippi or be faced with the problem of hous-Norval Morris, professor of law Alabama with much less personal ing being lost to institutional useat the UC Law School, will dis- cisk, but the group was divided on fur many yeais, even if the Lu-cuss the legal and international *bis issue. theian School changes its plans,aspects of capital punishment. Question of where and how pointed out that no long-Morris served as chairman of Mrs. Rappaport also announced range plan has been developed forCeylon’s Commission of Inquiry at the meeting that a second meet- resolving the conflicts between in-into Capital Punishment, whose ing would be held early next week stitutional and residential landreport lead to the abolition of cap- to set final preparations into mo- needs.of residents had not receivedital punishment in Ceylon. tion. She emphasized that, by then, sufficient consideration.the basics would all be known and The block clubs have receivedGregory will comment that, as of now, “it is not a ques- sympathy or support from a num-GREGORY HILL END the tion of whether we are going but ber of community groups, Paraforum with some personal ref tec- one of where and how.” reported, including organizationstions on capital punishment. Mrs. Rappaport added that all representing businessmen, clergy-WFMT’s Studs Terkel will mod- those who could not attend the men, students, and other in theerate the forum. WFMT plans to Tuesday meeting and who are in- Hyde Park area. “We believe thatrebroadcast the forum, probably terested in participating should nearly everyone in Hyde Park ison Terkel's show. contact her at 324-4280. solidly behind us,” Para said.EDITORIALSupport southern projectsEven if no more than a few people can go down south tohelp build churches, everyone can contribute to the strugglefor freedom in other ways. The Student Non-violent Coordin¬ating Committee, which is the main force behind the Missis¬sippi Freedom project, desperately needs money.This is not a new situation for them; in fact, every civilrights group in the country can use lots more support for itsactivities. Right now is a crucial time for SNCC’s activities,however, since the Selma, Alabama voter registration drivehas put a strain on their resources just when planning andfund-raising must begin for whatever summer project therewill be in Mississippi.UC Friends of SNCC has come up with an enterprisingproject, to get students to pledge to donate some small amountof money each week for the rest of the school year. It needonly be 25 or 50 cents a week, but if enough people actuallycome through with regular contributions, SNCC can beassured of a constant flow of funds, not just spurts of moneyirregularly. Regularity is important, since creditors can’talways wait for the next lucky batch of contributions to dropinto the SNCC coffers.One of the most useful things to do for the civil rightsstruggle, then, is one of the easiest. Just drop a quarter intothe collection canister every week, maybe in place of a packof cigarettes if you’re really financially pinched. Do it often.B’NAI B’RITH HILLEL FOUNDATIONsecond lecture in the seriesCHALLENGES TO HUMAN RIGHTSTHE STATUS OF SOVIET JEWRYPROF. ARCADIUS KAHANDept, of Economics and the CollegeSunday February 14 8:00 p.m.HILLEL HOUSE5 715 Wood la wnRepresentative Richard Bolling<D) Kansas City, Mo.Speaking on:"HOUSE OUT OF ORDERReform in the House of RepresentativesTuesday 3:30 I'MBREASTED HALLNo ChargeSponsored by Student Government} 0 <J<KHKKJ0<HJ O 000-0000 0 0000>0-00-0-0-00H00-000J0H000#0-0-0-0-007‘>AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111— TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH —Sales and Serviee on all hi-fi equipment.24 HR. SERVICE CALLS — $3.00Tape Recorders — Phonographs — AmplifiersPhono Needles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cordsCHICAGO MAROON Letters to the editor1 4 * ■ ♦Happily, the Southern Work Project Committee’s propo¬sition to spend the coming interim in the south rebuildingdamaged Negro churches or other buildings does not seemto be about to die from lack of support. Sixty people or there¬about is as good a turnout or better for an organizationalmeeting as any so far this year. Unhappily, though, theproject may not turn out to be as effective as it might havebeen primarily because of the short time left. This shortageof time might mean not only a lack of adequate funds butalso an inability to accomplish very much at all.Randy Rappaport, leader of SWPC, informed the firstmeeting of the group Tuesday that she must wait for SNCCto inform her as to where the group will go and what, exactly,it will do. This delay is unfortunate, but little can be doneabout this particular problem now. What can be done, how¬ever, is for all those who attended the meeting as well asthose who constitute the great “sympathetic but do nothing”group at UC to work all the harder to assure that southernNegroes get as much help as possible.The benefits that this project could provide, both to thestudents who participate and to the southerners who willeventually make use of whatever structures are built or fin¬ished, are indisputable. Unlike the Student Aid For Equality(SAFE) drive this summer, which was designed to enablestudents to participate in the Freedom movement vicariously,the SWPC project is the first chance for UC students en masseto help out directly. The UW case: dowe hide behind labels?TO THE EDITOR:Scanning the lively front pageof last Tuesday’s issue. I read withgruesome wonder that one of mybest friends, John Gruber, an edi¬tor of the University of WisconsinDaily Cardinal, is being smearedas a ‘communist-type’ by a localpolitical dung beetle.Of course it is all a farce, guiltby association, violation of civilfreedoms, and shades of McCarthy.But what particularly struck mewas the cartoon character of thewhole episode, the complete re¬duction of John as the complexperson I have happily known foryears to a unidimensional flavor¬less. little label.ADMITTEDLY, THE ‘marching-society’ mentality of our very in-grown America eases the burdenof having to select from a confus¬ing array of feelings, choices, andideas.This pesty Wisconsin legislator,for instance, would appear a verysilly legislator indeed if he hadsaid, “I think Mr. Gruber is acommunist dupe, he campaignedfor Johnson last fall, he has beenprofessionally commended for bisjournalism, he is always willingto help a friend, and he is wellliked by all.”So to communicate in thesimplistic jargon of today, hedrops all phrases but the first andturns life into a comic strip.THIS CONTEMPTIBLE episodehopefully will not hinder John’sotherwise bright future as a jour¬nalist, but then again it might.And this doubt which I feel some¬what personally for John is sig¬nificant in its hideous contrast toan absolutely neutral feeling Iget when the news reports 14 peo¬ple killed in Vietnam.Whereas John mght lose a job,people living in Vetnam are losinglife itself. And as silly ‘liberal,’and sentimental as such concernsounds it poitrays so disturbinglythe potential for dehumanizationwhen we live by the simplisticlabel rather than having the gutsto face the marvelous complexityof every person.It is frightening to have to con¬ceptualize each villager scorchedto death by one of our incendiarybombs as a humorous, feeling, lov¬ing human being whom you mighthave admired had you met himbeyond his label.What is particularly shameful about our warring in Vietnam isthat not only are our ‘enemies’clumped under the unidimensionalbanner of ‘communist,’ but theyare further clustered together(and of course even more de¬humanized) by nature of their‘alien race.’ASIATICS ARE ‘sly,’ ‘cute,’ andthey have quite a novel color.Their religions are interesting andthey have special ways of killingwith their hands.They look like millions of twins.They are impressionable andeasiiy taken in by communism.With this one-two label combin¬ation (political and physical) onecan react to a napalm bomb at¬tack on a hundred Asiatics withthe same passive curiosity asspritzing a cluster of roaches withBlack Flag. In contrast, if an American <is killed, a wave of sensitivity c;be generated ‘at home’ becauwe can sense someone loved hiiHe probably had a snotty littbrother who is going to miss hiiand he used to eat Hostess Twjkies and laugh like us.So we have a feeling about hiihe is no roach.Can you imagine the reactionsuch a headline as, “Sixty FaculWives and Children Maehirgunned to Death at QuadrangClub?”OF COURSE THERE is no dference between such a calashphe and the devastation inflict,every time a Vietnamese townstrafed and fire-bombed by ufighters.But real lfe is only on our si.of the world and Vietnam is jua comic strip on the back page.ARTHUR KAUFMACalendar of EventsFriday, Feb. 12Saturday, Feb. 13Sunday, Feb. 14RADIO SERIES: 'From the Midway,WFMT, 100.3 me., 7 am.A Trip To EuropeFor Less Than $100Switzerland — The International Travel Establishment will locate Jobopportunities in Europe tor anyone who likes the idea of a fun-filled,low cost trip to Europe. Jobs are available in all fields throughoutEurope. Interested students should send $2 to Search Dept., ITE, 68Herrengasse, Vaduz, Liechtenstein (Switzerland) for a complete, do-it-yourself prospectus which includes the key to getting a job in Europe,the largest European job selection available, instructions, money savingtips and conclusive information making a trip to Europe (includingtransportation) possible for less than $100.Feb. 12, 1965 SHOP WORN — SHELF \TOR\EtATIISCIl*BOOK SALE75 and UPSale clearance of old stock at a fractionof the original price. Mostly single copiesof titles — add to your library at low cost.Sale begins Friday, February 12One Week OnlyTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.If '‘ill'll RADIO SERIES: ‘'The World of the Fperback,” WFMT, 100 3 me., 8:li am.LECTl'RE: ‘ Boundary - Value Problemsfor Elliptic-Parabolic Second Order Equa¬tions.’’ Professor Olga Oleinik, Eckhart206 , 2:30 pm. RADIO SERIES: “Faith or Our FatherWON, 120 kc., 8:30 am.SKI TRIP: To Alpine Valley, Wisconsin,leaves from New Dorms, 2:30 pm.LECTl'RE SERIES: “Cancer Epidemiolo¬gy,” Dr. Michael Shlmkin, Chief of Can¬cer Biology. Temple University School ofMedicine. Billings Hospital P-117. 5 pmMOTION PICTURE. “The Oirl with theGolden Eyes,” Social Science 112, 7:15and 9:15 pm.FIRESIDE ONEG SIIABBAT: “MartinBuber’s Interpretation of HasidismEvaluation and Selections from h i sworks,” Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn,8:30 pm.MOTION PICTURE: “From Here to Eter¬nity,” Billings Hospital P-117, 7:30 pm.COLLEGIUM Ml SH I M: Excerpts fromPurcell's "Fairy Queen.” “Dido and Ae¬neas.” Howard M. Brown, conductor,Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.HOOK AND BAKE SALE: Hyde Pa kStudy Center, 1328 E. 55th St., 10 am-3pm.VARSITY FENCING MEET: University ofNotre Dame and Detroit Institute ofTechnology, Bartlett Gymnasium, 12 30pm. SERMON: "The Brothers.” The RevereB Davie Napier. Holmes Professor. TDivinity School Yale University, Rockfeller Chapel, 11 am.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel RobilUniversity Carillonneur, RocketellChapel, 12:15 pm.ORATORIO SERIES: Netherlands Chaiher Choir, Felix de Noble, director. Rocefeller Chapel, 3:30 pm.RADIO SERIES: “The World of the Fperback,” WAIT, 820 kc., 5 pmRADIO SERIES: From the MidwaWAIT. 820 kc., 7:05 pm.INTERCOLLEGIATE PAR T O C It N !MENT: University of Chicago B: idClub, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:15 pm.FOLK DANCE: Instruction fol! wedrequest session. Ida Noyes.Hu!!. 7:30 p:DISCUSSION: "The Role of Womanthe Intellectual World," John Platt, p;lessor of biophysics, Brent House, 5£Woodlawn, 7:30 pm.RADIO SERIES: “The Sacred NoteWBBM, 780 kc., 7:45 pm.RADIO SERIES: "Nightllne, WBBM, 7kc., 10 pm.Monday, Feb. 15VARSITY TRACK MEF.T: Wayne StateUniversity, Field House, 1:30 pm.MOTION PICTURE: “Goldrush,” JuddHall, 7 and 9 pm. LECTURE: "ExistentialLsm and Matism: Are the two philosophies compabie?,” William F. Warde; sponsoredUC Young Socialist Alliance; Ida NojLibrary, 7 30 pm.VARSITY BASKETBALL GAME: KnoxCollege, Field House, 8 pm.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Excerpts fromPurcell’s “Fairy Queen,” “Dido and Ae¬neas," Howard M Brown, conductor,Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm. MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9251PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhair stylists at5242 Hyde Park Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710% Student DiscountTYPEWRITERSTO 53% OFF*New-Used-Electric-Office-Porta blAll machines (new or used) orguaranteed for 5 years. We oran authorized agency for mosmajor typewriter manufacturersIf any machine we sell can bpurchased elsewhere (within 3(days) for less, we will refund thdifference in cash.* Discounts average 37%Discount Typewriters50 E. Chicago Tel. 664-355-HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domestiwines, liquors and beer ot lowesprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA A = '»*■ ^ — 7699, [ [ l HY 3-6800News Muse Suggestion from students — port- twoAutomation poverty gap The large student-faculty gapby Bruce FreedWho would have thought 19 years ago that the progenyof Univac I would be spearheading the second Industrial Revo¬lution?Who considered then that these electronic monsters, insteadof alleviating social and economicproblems such as poverty, would flrst Industrial Revolution sinceonly be compounding them? ...in this second half ot the 1960's. “ htghly skilled laborserious consideration must be giv- ra”iei ^ian unskilled workers anden to the relationship between requires a higher degree of educa¬tes second Industrial Revolution, tion and training for the new jobsan automated revolution, and pov- created than for some of the oldererty’ outmoded skilled jobs.war on Poverty has turned the But as the experience ot thespotlight on the invisible one-fifth Industrial Revolution proved,of the population, forgotten in the problems accompanying thetheir rural and urban slums and new technology cannot be dodgedin their chronically depressed nor can they 5e stopped as King Many first year students come to this university expecting to find a stimulating intellec¬tual atmosphere, an atmosphere which develops, they think, from frequent interchange ofideas between faculty and students. Students will not only meet professors in the classroom,they believe, but often after class might continue a discussion over a cup of coffee anda donut. Such an atmosphere 7- ———would create the opportunity for publish and to possibly gain hon- mainly recruited to do research,a student to get to know faculty or and recognition. The pressures Competence in a field also doesmembers well and vice versa. *° publish which exist at this uni- not make an individual competentYet when first year students ar- versity do not make this situation to communicate his knowledge torive, they are shocked to find that any ,e?sier- Publishing is a pre- others. This policy and the pres-they have been sadly mistaken in re9u.isite \° advancement and the sures to “publish or perish” aretheir expectations. Indeed, on the Even.Jhe fac; attributed to the administration.undergraduate level, there exists ulty members who are interesteda gap between the student and feac|\*n2 purely for the sake Student just as guiltyAn equal share of the guilt canareas.With remedial legislation nowbeing passed by Congress toprime these sections and open the Canute tried vainlyincoming tide. to halt the faculty, a definite lack of commu¬nications.This gap is manifested in anumber of ways, some of largeconsequence and others of minorimport. One rarely sees facultymembers eating or relaxing inBOLD NEW approaches are de¬door of opportunity to those long manded in the President’s War on-cled plans must be JormM Poverty t0 mcct the chaI, o[m I ho bills to deal with the long aulomation and poverty. Theserange impact of automation on must g0 above a£d beyJond pro.p0VCI y* grams already established or con-As more unskilled, semi-skilled templated.and highly skilled jobs are auto¬mated out of existence, the gapwill widen between the new jobsopen to the resurrected poor andthe jobs they will be able to han¬dle because of their educationaland cultural deprivations. In education, more intensiveplans should be made to preparethe children of the poor to meetthe rigors of automation. Thismeans special education pro¬grams, not just remedial ones, de¬signed to provide the backgroundGranted that creeping automa- needed for technological employ-lion will create three jobs for ment. This is a prerequisite forevery two it eliminates, the great absorbing them as visable mem-problem is that the new jobs pro- bers of the economy,duced are either highly skilled or In depressed areas where indus.in new service industries, jobs for tries will not move due to ,a(.kwhich the poor cannot compete of a skillod labor , it mightbecause of their gross handicaps. bo necessary to relocate some ofIN ESTABLISHING long term the poor in areas where labor isaims for the War on Poverty, needed to open to them the oppor-closing this automated-poverty tunities closed before,gap must be given primary em- These are only two ideas. Cer-phasis. W’ith the number of me- tainly many more are necessary,nial and semi-skilled jobs decreas- some dealing with structuraling, the jump the poor will have changes needed in the economy toto make between their present eradicate poverty and with newcondition and the background de- roles the Federal governmentmanded by the new jobs will con- should play in meeting this prob-tinue to grow wider. lorn.However, technological unem- The future health of the eeon-ployment is only a facet of the omy and of our society requiresbroader problem of technological that the problem of automationnon-employment which many of and poverty be met. While auto-the poor face because they have mation offers great advantages tonot been prepared to handle even society, it also threatens to makea semi-skilled job. the poor more invisible, more for-Today’s revolutionary auto- gotten, and more useless. Only bymated industrial revolution poses coming to grips with this chal-even greater problems than the lenge now can tragedy be averted. of teaching and enjoy communi- be attributed to the student him-cating with students are caught self. There is among many stu-UP in this pressure and find it dents little interest in getting todifficult to resist. know any faculty members. InSOME HAVE BLAMED the ad- discussing this with others, I haveministration and administrative found them frank in admittingpolicy for this situation. The Uni- this. The doors might be discov-places frequented by students. versky is undoubtedly interested ered to be open if only someoneAnd when a group of faculty are *n attracting famous professors would turn the handle and comein such a place, they are usually institution. Administrative in.off in a corner together discuss- officials have said as much. The The difficulty lies, however, ining some highly technical and spe- ohject is to enhance the level of turning that handle. It is verycialized problem related to their the faculty and quality of the hard for a student to approachfield. University and at the same time a faculty member and just savMANY A FACULTY’ member to increase its status and reputa- “I think you are a great guy andhas no idea of the concerns of fi°n- Many academicians with es- I want to get to know you bet-the student body, nor even any fablished reputations are not in- ter.” There usually has to be someknowledge of student opinion ferestcd in teaching, and they are (Continued on page six)about his own particular courses.The thirty or fifty or one hundredstudents to whom he lecturesthree times a week appear to himas one faceless mass, individualsknown to him only by their nameon an examination or term paper.Bad for recommendationsSuch a phenomenon may notaffect or bother a student in anyway throughout the first threeand one half years of his under¬graduate life, but it becomes quiteevident when he discovers that itis difficult for him to find threeprofessors who know him wellenough to fill out graduate schoolrecommendations for him.MUCH OF THE BLAME forthis problem, if indeed one canblame anyone, has been attrib¬uted to the faculty and to pres¬sures that they are exposed to.Some faculty are just not con¬cerned with the student and lookupon undergraduate teaching par¬ticularly as a type of drudgerywhich they must endure untilthey have achieved tenure or havein some other way come to havemore of a say in what they spendtheir time doing. Many obviouslyprefer to do research and to con¬centrate on their own interests.Their desire is to make a signifi¬cant contribution in that area, toTRAVELING?Get Nearly FreeTRANSPORTATIONBy Driving a Car to California,Arizona, Florida, Seattle,Salt Lake, EastALL CITIESMinimum age 21WE 9-2364AUTO DRIVEAWAY CO.343 S. DEARBORN ST. HILLEL SUMMER INSTITUTE IN ISRAELSTUDY WORK TOUR OF ISRAEL7 weeks $89.) total eoslLed by Hillel Directors and Professional GuidesField Trips Study GroupsMeetings with Leaders in Science, Arts, GovernmentCultural and Social eventsTwo weeks work on Agricultural SettlementsStopover in EuropeLeave last week in JuneCall or stop in atHILLEL HOUSE5715 Woodlown PL 2-11271000to 2000 WORDS A MINUTEWITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENSIONYou can read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCELERATED READING method.You'll learn to read DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words aminute. And retention is excellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely readevery word.You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual materialas well as to literature and fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at thesespeeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased.Consider what this new reading ability will allow you to accomplish — in your requiredreading and also in the additional reading you want to do.No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATEDREADING method. In this way the reader avoids developing any dependence upon externalequipment in reading.A class in ACCELERATED READING will be taught on Tuesday fevenings at the HOTELDEL PRADO.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READINGmethod and see it applied.BRING A BOOK!Demonstrations will be held at the HOTEL DEL PRADO, 53rd St. and Hyde Park Blvd.ON Wednesday, February 17 at 7:30 P.M.Wednesday, February 24 at 7:30 P.M.NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING, INC.18964 Coyle Street Detroit 35, Michigan It has become difTieult lately to read a magazine orwatch Sunday afternoon television without hearingabout something called “the leisure problem.” For ^those of you who were working on a paper until dawffand require a definition of this phrase, it is used mostoften by those who are concerned because, 1), peoplehave too much free time these days and, 2), they useit very badly.It is this modern myth that Sebastian de Grazia de¬molishes in Of Time, Work, and Leisure (Anchor,$1.95). Professor de Grazia takes as his thesis thedistinction between “work time,” “free time,” and“leisure,” the last of which he defines as “the stateof being in which activity is pursued for its own sakeor its own end.” The New Yorlcer writes: “His bookis actually a plea for withdrawal, untidiness, Cock¬aigne, the leisurely life in the good society, and awarning against such entrenched foes as advertising,time-mindedness, the Protestant work ethic, andtyranny.”If you look hard enough, you might find these samefour adversaries under attack in Don Marquis’s classic,archy and mehitabel (Dolphin, Dot*). Don Marquisfirst introduced archy, the poetic cockroach, andmehitabel. the worldly-wise alley cat, in his newspapercolumn in 1916, and if you haven’t yet met them, youare in for a treat. The songs and meditations of archy,composed late at night on the boss’s typewriter, are aspointed and to-the-point today as they were back inthe 1920s, when quoting Don Marquis was a nationalpastime. Why the lower case title? archy, philosoph¬ically inclined as he is, isn’t strong enough to makecapital letters:the main question iswhether the stuff isliterature or not.It is. Get an extra copy to give away this week. Whatbetter valentine than a lovable cockroach?As far as we know, Robert Warshow never wroteabout archy or mehitabel. Before his death at the ageof 37 in 1955, however, he had established an enduringreputation as a superb critic and commentator onmany other aspects of popular culture. Many rankhim with the late James Agee as a film critic; onceyou’ve read his famous study of the Western movie inThe Immediate Experience (Anchor, $1.25), you’llnever again see John Wayne in quite the same light.Above all, Warshow was a brilliant prose stylist.Lionel Trilling places him “in the line of Hazlitt, atradition in which I would place only one other writerof our time, George Orwell, with whose feeling forlanguage Warshow had much in common.” Buy orborrow a copy of The Immediate Experience to enjoy19 fine examples of the vanishing art of the essay.The three books reviewed above are published bythe sponsors of this column, Doubleday AnchorBooks, 277 Park Avenue, Neiv York City andDoublcday & Company, Inc., Carden City, NewYork. You’ll find them all at one of the bestequipped booksellers in the country — your owncollege store.Feb. 12, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Committee views majors Graduate aid sources differEditor's note: This is the firstof a series of notes gleaned fromweekly meetings of representa¬tives of the SG Academic Affairscommittee with dean of the Col¬lege Wayne C. Booth. Jack Cat-lin, a member of the committee,will report the results of themeetings for the MAROON “asbits and pieces,” he promises, un¬less developments merit full-length stories.THE ACADEMIC AFFAIRSCommittee is undertaking, withthe encouragement and coopera¬tion of Booth, a systematic eval¬uation of the undergraduate ma¬jor field programs.It is hoped that in each fielda few students, preferably grad¬uating this year, will get togetherand write a critique (includingsuggestions for constructivechange) of (1) the major areaprogram as it is now and as itshould be, as part of a liberal edu¬cation, (2) *what should be thenature of general education forpeople in the major area, and i3>what should be the representationof the major area’s subject-matterin the general education of peo¬ple majoring in other fields.People are needed in all majorfields, of all divisions, to helpcarry out this program. Anyoneinterested please call Student Gov¬ernment, campus extension 3272,and leave name, address, phonenumber, and major field, for EllisLevin, committee chaiiman.* * *THE LEVI PROPOSAL for reorganization of the College, in amodified form but of the samespirit as the initial publisheddraft, was approved by the Boardof Trustees of the University onFebruary 11.BOOTH HAS APPOINTED acommittee to evaluate, and pos¬ sible re-name and expand, the “MyLife and Yours” program. This isa program that was fully func¬tioning in academic year 1961-62under Dean Simpson; in the pro¬gram occasional visiting notables,in various fields, would meet with50-100 undergraduates to give alecture, and have informal dis¬cussion afterwards.By means of the program,which Booth prefers to call the“big shot program.” it is hopedto increase the contact betweenprominent visitors to the univer¬sity and undergraduates. Boothenvisages a program with per¬haps, for a given person, a generallecture in Mandel Hall, and an¬other meeting with a smallergroup of students specializing inthe visitor’s field.* .• *Students and administratorswill meet the week-end of Feb¬ruary 27-28, for an intensive ex¬amination and re-evaluation of (1)Orientation week, (2) the place¬ment program, (3) the role of theorientation board, and (4) the ad¬visory system.Participants in the two-daywork session will be a numberof people from the offices of DeanWick and Dean Playe, the place¬ment test examiner, three mem¬bers of the Orientation Board,two members of Student Govern¬ment, one member of Maroon Key,one member of Freshman Coun¬cil, five students chosen at ran¬dom from the student body, andeight or nine faculty memberschosen by Booth.That Saturday afternoon, from1:30 to 3:30 at the Center for Con¬tinuing Education, there will bean open session, where all inter¬ested in the above matters cancome and express their views. (Continued from page one)ployees and are not listed in stu¬dent aid figures at all,” Wick ex¬plained.Speaking in terms of actual cashvalue of awards for the divisions,the following figures represent allstudent aid paid through Univer¬sity accounts, according to Wick,although there are other outsideawards paid directly to students:Value ofAwards,Division 1964-65Biological Sciences $ 715,000Humanities 628,000Physical Sciences 632,000Social Sciences 1,469,000TOTAL $3,444,000This year, with the tuition in¬crease, $155 of the $255 increaseper student went directly to theacademic areas in proportion totheir enrollments. Wick disclosed.This "plowing back of tuition” con¬stitutes University unendowedfunds for aid.Deans, Wick, Levi distribute“University funds are dividedamong the Divisions by the Pro¬vost, Academic Deans, and Wick.”O’Connell pointed out. O’Connellhimself administers the distribu¬tion but is not “a policy maker,”as he stated it.“The professional schools operate their own Fellowship Competi¬tion using University funds,”O’Connell stated.THERE ARE ALSO specificUniversity grants, such as theSpecial Humanities Fellowships;fifteen are awarded each yearwhich are renewable for 3 yearsand comparable to the best scienceawards, according to O’Connell.“The purpose of this fellowship istwofold: since it has often taken8 9 years to get a PhD in the hu¬manities versus three years in thephysical sciences, the fellowships are awarded to avoid the breakand delay in education many hu¬manities majors take to earnmoney for continuing their educa¬tion; then, too, it is hoped that thisfellowship would seed the idea toother universities to strengthenthe humanities,” O’Connell stated.Outside grants coming to theUniversity were also up from 1963-65, according to Wick. Some ofthe outside fellowships last yearwere as follows:N umberFellow ships Entering UCWoodrow Wilson 54Science Foundation 68NDEA, Title IV 58NDEA, Title VI 35“The NDEA Title IV Fellow¬ships are undergoing a change,”Wick stated. Formerly, this pro¬gram provided graduate fellow¬ships in new or expanded pro¬grams; 1,500 were awardedthroughout the country. “The Uni¬versity did not often qualify un¬der this program; since it has awell-established graduate school,it was hard to show new or ex¬panded graduate programs,” Wickexplained.Next year, the number of fel¬lowships w ill be increased to 3000and increased each follow ing yearby 1500 until a total of 7500 isreached, if voted by Congress. Fur¬thermore, awards would no longerbe given specifically for new’ orexpanded programs, and wouldcover almost every area except re¬ligion, art, music, and ancient his¬tory and the classics (this is hardto connect with national defense),according to Wick.Depts. have own cookie jarsIn many cases, specific depart¬ments have their own funds fromrestricted gifts, endowed f u n d s u and funds given for the purposeof an academic program w h i <■ h“can also be used as aid to stu¬dents,” Wick pointed out.For instance, the GraduateSchool of Education received afoundation grant to support itsMAT program, which may beused for students as well as forstaff. Biology receives funds fromthe National Institutes of Ileallh,and similar training giants aiealso awarded in the physical sci¬ences. according to Wick.“THE UNIVERSITY attemptslo establish some balance with re¬spect to enrollment for the depart¬ments which do not receivemuch from outside sources, but itis not an attempt at strict equal¬ization,” O’Connell stated. "Thiswould penalize departments whichcan raise their own money,” Wickexplained.An overall picture of Universityaid ranks as big business; approx¬imately $1000 is awarded per stu¬dent, according to Wick. The totals from all sources of aid forthe entire University graduate andundergraduate are as follows:Grants1963-64 $6,124,0001964 65 test.) 7,660.000Student Employment1963-64 $2,766,0001964-65 test.) 3.040,(hK)Total, Jobs and Grants1963-64 $8,890.1 H)01964-65 (est.) 10,700.000"These totals are larger than thetotal tuition income on the Quad¬rangles,” Wick emphasized.the One, the Only-the Originalforeign car hospital & clinichome of team winkauthorized BMC and Triumph sales and service5424 s. kimbark ove. mi 3-3113 Study inGuadalajara, MexicoThe Guadolajara Summer School,a fully accredited University ofArizona program, conducted incooperotion with professors fromStanford University, University ofCalifornia, and Guadalajara, willoffer June 28 to August 7, ort,folklore, geography, history, lan¬guage ond literature courses. Tui¬tion, board and room is $265.Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.0Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. THE CONTEMPORARYCHAMBER PLAYERSTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16MANDELL HALL, 8:30 PMWorks by: Carter, Ronshcim,Babbitt, Perkins, ShapcySoloists: Neva Pilgrim,Easley Blockwood, Max NcuhousTickets: $1; students, 50c. (UCstudents free with special ticket.)Tickets at Music Dept.(NOTE: The Chicago SymphonyOrchestro conducted by Jeon Mor-tinon will play on campus Sundayand Monday evenings, March7 and 8.) UC Young Democrats will holdelections for officers for the com¬ing year thi» Thursday, Feb. 18,ot 7:30 pm, in Ida Noyes Hell.A business meeting will followthe election to discuss the comingclub program. All members oreurged to attend.KROGER'S STORE5030 S. HARPERISSTILL OPENAND WILL REMAIN SOTO SERVE YOU!HARKEN!WASH PROMDRAWS NEARAN EVENING OF DANCING HIGHLIGHTED BYTHE CROWNING OF MISS UCSumptuous Cuisine Catered by the Quadrangle ClubandSPECIAL ENTERTAINMENT BYMiss Judy BruceSTAR OF "OLIVER"ALL PROFITS DONATED TO THELIBRARY FUND OF MILES COLLEGEBIRMINGHAM, ALABAMASAT., FEB. 20 BIDS: $5.00IDA NOYES HALL COUPLEONCE A YEAR-LET YOURSELF GO, GO HYDE PARK YMCANewly redecorated student rooms ovoiloble with or without meal plans.Study lounge, private TV room, hcolth, and physical facilities oHavailable for student use.Call FA 4-5300JAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSSHIRTS — MIS KISSRepairs fir Alterations 5 Hr. Service1363 East 53rd PL 2-966210% Student Discount with i.D. CardDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty DiscountIT'S GETTING LATEVALENTINE DAY ISSUNDAY, FEB. 14See Our Valentine Window DisplayWe still have a good supply ofValentine CardsGifts for Men, Women and ChildrenFree Gift WrappingFor Bookstore PurchasesTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Aye.. A 4 ’(• k4 © CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 12, 1965Aid forms at $$ officeUndergrads: worried aboutfunds for next year? Applica¬tion forms for financial aid forthe academic year 1965-66 willb<> available for distribution at theCollege Financial Aid desk, Ad¬ministration 201, according toHubert J. Charles, director of fi¬nancial aid.This year, aside from returningthe application form, adviser’sform and the letter of recommen¬dation, upper class students mustalso submit a Parents’ Confiden¬tial Statement to the CollegeScholarship Service. The PCSform, moreover, must be inPrinceton or Los Angeles by March15, instead of the May 1 deadlineset for the rest of the applicationto be returned to the FinancialAid Office. "One month is allowedfor students to get the statement,send it to their parents, and sendit in to the College ScholarshipService,” Charles emphasized.PCS FORMS WILL be distrib¬uted separately from the applica¬tion itself. First year students,furthermore, need a special namelag for their forms which shouldbe requested with the statements.Costs $1.50The cost for the professing ofITS forms will be $1.50, payableto the College Scholarship Serv¬ice, according to Charles."We are using a new scholar¬ship renewal service of the Col-UNIVERSALARMY STORE“fhr nnirer.se in xtudrntn-enr for entnpnx andramping.”Levis - Tennis ShoesAN OUTFIT FROMTOP TO TOE1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856 lege Scholarship Service on a trialbasis for the next year or two,”Charles explained. There are twoadvantages to this system, accord¬ing to Charles:First, students will receive twoanalyses of their financial needs,one from College ScholarshipService plus the analysis of theCommittee on Financial Aid. "TheService is not being used as anexclusive analysis,” Charles em¬phasized.SECOND, THERE IS an advan¬tage for the Committee on Fi¬nancial Aid. The analyses of firstyear students will be collated withtheir original analyses and printedon individual sheets. Thus, thechange in financial status will bereadily observable."The Committee would like toemphasize that the financial formis due much earlier; however,since the Committee meets at theend of June, the March 15 dead¬line was the only one which wouldassure the forms being returnedon lime,” Charles explained.Undergraduates with questionsabout financial aid or loan policiesmay talk with Charles, AnthonyPallett, Loan Counselor, this aft¬ernoon. Beginning at 4 pm, theywill be available in Soc Sci 122to meet with students to answerquestions for people applying forfinancial assistance and about gen¬eral policies.JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2 2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdTYPEWRITERSWe always have reasonably priced used portableand standard typewriters which carry a new ma¬chine guarantee.If you want to keep your typewriter in A-1 work¬ing condition at all times, inquire about a main¬tenance contract which would entitle you to 4cleanings per year and free repairs . . .Gel more information from the Typewriter Dept.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.• •(TESTUN... La protection financier© que vou*donnez A votre famille aujourd'huidevra lul fetre procure© d’une autrefacon demain. L'assurance Sun Lifepeut certalnement accomplir cettetAche A votre place.Cn tant que reprdaentant local de la SunLife, puis-Je voue visiter A un moment devotre cholxtRalph J. Wood, Jr.. CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hoars 9 to 5 Mondays ft Fridays8UN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA_ MUTUAL company Service provides off-campus jobsA new University-sponsoredorganization has been formedon campus for the purpose ofsecuring part-time jobs forstudents.University Student EmploymentService (USES), a student organi¬zation, will have as its first goalthe implementation of an effi¬ciently run program to seek outoff-campus jobs which will be re¬ferred to interested students.Dean of Students, Warner Wick, Fred Bjorling, director of person¬nel, and Sol Tax, dean of the Uni¬versity Extension, have all in¬dicated strong support of USES,and are all anxious to see the or¬ganization succeed, according to aspokesman for the group.THK IMPLEMENTATION o fthis new service will have benefitsfor both the employer and thestudent, the spokesman continued.For the student there will be theprospect of Increased earnings,Job opportunitiesThe following recruiting organizations will visit the Office ofCareer Counseling and Placement during the week of February 15.Interview appointments may be arranged through L. S. Calvin,room 200, Reynolds Club, extension 3284.February 15— National Security Agency, Fort Meade, Md. (Washing¬ton DC area)—mathematicians, physicists, and statis¬ticians at SB and SM levels.February 15 General Foods Corporation, Chicago, Ill., Battle Creek,Mich., Tarrytown, NY, and Hoboken, NJ—SB and SMchemists for production management; SB and SM, andPhD chemists (analytical, organic, bio) for researchand development.February 16-IIT Research Institute, Chicago, Ill.—SM and PhD can¬didates in microbiology, pharmacology and physicalchemistry.February 16 Chicago, Milwaukee. St.. Paul, and Pacific RR, Chicago,Ill. (primarily)—training programs for men in areas ofsystems analysis, transportation, marketing, data proc¬essing, or market research.February 17—Connecticut General Life Insurance Co., Hartford,Conn.—training programs for men leading to positionsin actuarial work, sales, underwriting, administrative,service, staff, and investment analysis.February 18 Wisconsin Civil Service Commission- will speak with.students interested in employment with the State ofWisconsin. Positions are available in a variety of careerfields including management and staff functions, fi¬nance, labor market analysis, casework, counseling,writing and editing, and laboratory services.February 19 US Agricultural Research Service, Peoria, Ill., Wvnd-moor, Pa., New Orleans. La., Albany, Cal.—chemists atall degree levels (physical and organic). Will also inter¬view chemists for summer employment in Peoria whowill complete three years of academic work in June orare at any level of graduate study. not formerly possible because ofa lack of knowledge of job oppor¬tunities. For the employer therewill be the increased services ofan organization which can devoteall its time to providing studentworkers for particular employmentneeds.In addition to steady part-timejobs, there will be opportunitiesfor seasonal and temporary work,such as conventions and inven¬tories. USES will also help ingetting jobs for those students whodesire to remain in Chicago overthe summer.Any student who is now unem¬ployed, and wishes to work atleast ten hours per w'eek can re¬ceive more information aboutUSES by calling Steve Kennedyat extension 3561 or by stopping inat the USES office in the ReynoldsClub basement between 2:30 and4:30 pm Monday through Friday.USES is also looking for a stu¬dent to operate its baby-sitterservice. The position requires aminimum of fifteen hours workeach week; interested studentsmay apply at the USES office.UC 10th in PhDsThe University of Chicago wastenth in the nation in the numberof doctorates it awarded from1953-1963, according to a recentUS Office of Education report.The University accounted for2.398 of the total of 98,645 doctor¬ates awarded by all US institutionsof higher education during theten-year period.Chicago was topped by Colum¬bia, California (all campuses) Wis¬consin, Illinois, Harvard, Michi¬gan, NYU, Ohio State, and Minne¬sota.RENT A TRUCK$*) 00 Per HourDO-IT-YOURSELFTRUCK RENTALSO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hour EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount GoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATREANNOUNCESDIRECT FROM NEW YORKWinner of the 1963-64"BEST SHOW OFF-BROADWAY"AWARDIN WHITE AMERICAFEB. 25 to 28 at 8:30 P.M. FEB. 27, 28 at 2:30 P.M.MANDEL HALL57th and University Ave. $5.00, $3.50, $2.50Student-Faculty Discount — 50c Off Any TicketTICKETS ON SALE —MANDEL HALL BOX-OFFICEFeb. 12, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5wmmmmaw —CABARET REVIEWPhase I: new, welcomeThe Phase I, Hyde Park’snew and only coffee houseopened last Saturday night.Originally scheduled for Fri¬day, the opening was delayed dueto vagaries (ahem) in Chicago’slicensing procedure.Folk music is the entree of thePhase Is menu; espresso coffee,soft drinks and pastries round itout. Phase I occupies small, can¬dle-lit premises at 1603 E. 53rd st.The atmosphere is subdued andstark. On Saturday and Monday,when this reviewer was present,the waitresses were efficient buthappily not pushy. Bob Gibsonand Dodi Kallick handled theweekend show. Ginni Clemens re¬placed Miss Kallick on Monday.GIBSON SANG HIS folk-blues-jazz potpourri, accompanying him¬self on the 12 string guitar. Asusual he was competent, off-key,non-ethnic and thoroughly enjoy¬able. Kallick's set was composedof Appalachian and English bal¬lads. Her delivery was quiet butconfident. She handles her guitarreasonably and plays the dulcimeras well.Ginni Clemens presented a live¬ly performance on the guitar,banjo, and kazoo. Her voice isrich and versatile, her materialpolished and her instrumentalskill, particularly on the banjo, isconsiderable—this gal can reallyMILLIESSporfsweor HeadquartersTURTLENECKJERSEVS1375 E. 53rd St. HY 3-592210% Student Discount frail. She sings blues and Appala¬chian ballads and is one of thefew citybillies who can handle it.After the show I interviewedBob Keller, the manager. Whenasked about the purpose of PhaseI he replied: “It will appeal joint¬ly to both ethnic and commercialfolk music lovers.” I was toldthat, in the near future, we canexpect Josh White, MississippiJohn Hurt, The Greenbriar Boys,and Jesse Colin Young.The Phase I is a good house. Intime it will probably get evenbetter. It is a valuable addition tothe Hyde Park cultural scene withgood entertainment for all. Lastbut not least it’s a real boon tothose who want good music butcan’t produce a 21 ID.Mike KasseraSet Collegium concertHenry Purcell’s seldom producedopera Dido and Aeneas, one of thefirst written in English, will bestaged by the Collegium Musicumof UC in Mandel Hall on Fridayand Saturday evenings, February12 and 13.The performance will be con¬ducted by assistant professor ofmusic Howard Brown, and sung bythe Madrigal Singers. SopranoSylvia Stahlman, presently withthe Frankfurt Opera, will makeher only American appearance ofthe season in the title role.Tickets at $1, $2, and $3.50 areavailable from the Music Department, 5802 Woodlawn, ext. 3886.a National Guardianexclusive!Frontline Report:The U. S. Is SureTo Lose in Vietnama five-part series byWILFRED C. BURCHETTdocuments the strength ofthe liberation forcesStarting February 6in theNATIONAL CUARDIANnewsweekly197 East 4th StreetNew l’ork, N.Y. 10009SenJ $1 to Dept B for 10-week sub beginning with Feb.6 issue. Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060VISAVolunteer BrunchSot. A M. 10:30 - 12:30CONVIVIALITY AND FOOD1453 E. 56 St. VISA bus will leavefrom brunch and New Dormsparking lot. The gap: a(Continued from page three)reason for the student to talk tothe faculty member. A series ofquestions might suffice as anopener, but what does one do afterhe has exhausted his repertoire ofquestions? One girl went to seea faculty member she wanted toget to know and after exhaustingher one question, frankly admit¬ted to him that she just wanted toget to know him. And she did.This, however, is an exceptionalcase. There is a need for someelement to be employed to bridgethe psychological gap which existsbetween the possessors of knowl¬edge and those who want to sharesome of that knowledge.IN THE PAST administrativeattempts to find a solution to thisproblem have almost inevitablyfailed. As dean of the CollegeWayne Booth says, “they havepoisoned the well.” The facultyfellows program, under which fac¬ulty were assigned to particulardormitories to eat and to com¬municate with the students there,never got very far when it wasintroduced a few years back. Thefaculty were indignant at beingassigned to this function and thestudent body was equally unhap¬py with the establishment of suchan artificial arrangement. A pro¬gram to house students and fac¬ulty together met with even lesssuccess.Some success this yearA form of the faculty fellowsconcept has met with considerablesuccess this year in Shorev housein Pierce Tower. The critical dif¬ference between it and the orig¬inal concept is that the currentidea was initiated solely by inter¬ested students and has involvedfaculty members who themselveshave expressed an interest in it.There was nothing artificial aboutit.Booth, in discussion of this mat¬ter with the Academic AffairsCommittee of Student Govern¬ment, suggested a couple of pos¬sible solutions. He called for theestablishment of tutorials for eachyear of the undergraduate pro¬gram. In this way the studentwould be certain of knowing atleast four faculty members well.This might easily become the ba¬sis for branching out to meetToday'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN‘1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL Hyde ParkAuto ServiceLOTUS TR-IMG CORVETTEBLICK PEUGEOTALFA ROMEOFIAT MORGANFERRARI VBJim Hartman5340 Lake ParkPL 2-0496 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411REMEMBERJPul VTImc fiJwnlL Qo.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERSRUSH SERVICEavailable when neededPhones: Ml 3-7447 1013-17 East 61st St.HY 3-6868 Across from B-J Ct.Serving the Campus since 19176 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 12, 1965 solution?other faculty. Such an approachis used at schools such as SarahLawrence with considerable suc¬cess. Booth also suggested thatthe area college lounges envi¬sioned under the reorganization ofthe college might provide a placeswhere students and faculty canget together, thus solving part ofthe problem.SUCH IDEAS, while they offerat least a stariing point fromwhich to reach a solution to theproblem of lack of communica¬tions, might be considered super¬ficial in themselves if there is lit¬tle interest in them on the partof the students and faculty. Whilethe administration can aid in thesolution of this problem, the finalanswer must be found in an in¬creased awareness and interestamong the student body and fac¬ulty.Ellis LevinChairmanSG Academic AffairsCommittee Contemporary Playersperform on TuesdayThe Contemporary ChamberPlayers of UC, under the directionof Ralph Shapey, will present aprogram of music by living Amer¬ican composers on Tuesday at8:30 in Mandel Hall.Included will be Carter’s Reci¬tative and Improvisation for FourKettledrums, John Ronsheim’sSongs for Soprano and Vibra¬phone, Shapey’s Incantations forSoprano and 10 Instruments, Bab¬bitt’s Composition for 12 Instru¬ments, and the Caprice for Pianoby John Perkins, assistant pro¬fessor of music.FEATURED SOLOISTS will beMax Neuhaus, percussion; NevaPilgrim, soprano; and EasleyBlackwood, piano.General admission is $1; stu¬dents tickets are 50c. UC studentswill be admitted free if they pickup a special ticket at the MusicPenartment, 5802 South Wood-lawn.Asks change in draftby Gary PorterCollegiate Press ServiceWASHINGTON — SenatorGaylord Nelson (D-Wis.) hasdisclosed that he will introducea concurrent resolution ex¬pressing the sense of Congressthat the draft should be replacedby a voluntary system if nationalsecurity can be fully maintained.He also said his conclusion thatthe draft can safely be ended hasbeen confirmed by representativesof the Department of Defense whohave told him that the main ques¬tion is not any danger to the na¬tion but simply the cost of addedincentives for enlistment.Resolution gives voiceIn a speech before a meeting ofrepresentatives of religious, farm,labor, and voter groups, called bythe National Council of Churches,Nelson said his resolution wouldgive the public and Congress avoice in the decision which is ap¬proaching on the future of thedraft.Complete LineOf Pot AndAquarium Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2 4012Silk Screen SuppliesA Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALS,MIMEOGRAPH PAPERA.VO SUPPLIES(Wholesale Prices in QuantifyOnly)DUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd ST.HY 3 4111 NELSON’S RESOLUTION willhe the boldest congressional actionthus far in the movement to re¬place the present Selective Servicesystem with a voluntary plan tofill military manpower require¬ments. Last year Senator KennethKeating (R-NY), who has sincebeen defeated, proposed a Presi¬dential commission to study theproblem in depth. The Executive,however, spurned the idea in favorof an expansion of the Depart¬ment of Defense’s already existingstudy of military manpower.Nelson himself introduced a billin June, 1964, which would have di¬rected the secretary of defense topresent alternatives to the draft toCongress by 1967. His new resolu¬tion will be phrased so as to invitesupport from Senators who mighthave some doubt that manpowerrequirements could be fulfilledwithout the draft but who wouldlike a voluntary system if enoughenlistees can be attracted withnew incentives.Expert Service on All BrandsHI-FI STEREOFree Pick-up, & DeliveryFree EstimatesCall 521-0460"BUDGETWISE"AAA Approved: 24-hourSwitchboard.Maid Service: each roomwith own bath.Special student rates:$180.00/qtr.Special daily, weekly andmonthly rates.BROADVIEW HOTEL5540 Hyde Park Blvd.FA 4-8800HYDE PARKTHEATRE53rd at Lake ParkNO 7-9071Starting Feb. 12“Girl With TheGolden Eyes"“subtle, exciting, exquisite,wistful, haunting"— Crowther, N.Y. Times“Women andPleasures”Alain Jelon, Mel Ferrer, Fernandel FRErriESH°P>ru meats — New, Used. Antiq««ITARS, BANJOS, MANDOLINSAs ind Folk Music Msgssine*iCOUNT ON FOLK RECORDSSSrdSt.Cj*ica£oNO 7-10601:30 to 6. 7:30 to 10 Mon.-FrL11:30 to 6, Saturday w»•**sVtMAROON M) WEEKEND GUIDESAMUEL A. BELL“Buy Shell From Bell**SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150TAh2AM-\fcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpeciolizing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062 PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PARK BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICEke a-into a— ke oiChicken - SandwichesPizza &Italian Foods JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAPGOLD CITY INN"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559 50for college studentswith i.d. card• different doublefeatures daily• open dawn to dawn• little gal-leryfor gals onlyfri. 12—“jailhouse rook,”“bye-bye birdie.”sat. 13—“rhino,”"flight from ashiya.”sun. 14—“passionatethief,” “cartouche.”mon. 15—"golden arrow,”"hellions.”tues. 16—“power and theprize,” “drum beat.”wed. 17—“women of theworld,” "boccaccio 70.”thur. 18—“house of bam¬boo,” “hired gun.”fr 2-2843dark & modi son Extended ThroughFebruary 21JOSEPH BULOFF3 ChekhovsketchbookSPECIAL STUDENT RATE'This coupon and $2.25 may be exchanged at the Box Officeno later than half hour before performance for regular $3.00 seat.Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 8:30 — Sunday 7:30THE COLLEGIUM MUSICUMpresentsHenry Purcell'sDIDO AND AENEASwith Sylvia Stahlman as Didopreceded byThe Fairy QueenFriday and Saturday, February 12 and 13Mondel Holl 8:30 pm Tickets: $3.50, $2, $1Tickets ore available at the Music Department or otMandel Hall Box Office on the evening of performancea^ enterworld ofdiningpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken5^616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668 CINEMAChicago at MichiganTwo Peter Sellers Hits“AmorousGeneral”in color withMargaret LeightonandRobert Morley inJames Thurber's“Battle tile Sexes”Students $1 with I.D. CardsEvery Doy Except Saturday%}iiiimiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiniiiii[]iimiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiic}iiiiiiiiiiii[}iiiiiiiiHiic]mimiiiiit}iiiiiiiiiiiiuMiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiii[}iiiii£wmm Fifty-Seventh at KenwoodUNUSUAL FOODDELIGHTFUL |ATMOSPHERE jPOPULARPRICES□ ?sniiiuiiiimiimnmiiiiiiiiiniiiimwiiinMiiimiiicjiiiiiiiiimnmiiiiiminimiiiiiiiiniiiiiimiioiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiifiioimiiiimnK- TIKI TOPICSCIRALSHOUSE OF TIKIIs proud to offer all of ourfriends of Hyde Park andthe surrounding areas a se¬lection of Polynesian dishesas well as our choice Ameri¬can menu. This choice ofPolynesian foods is now partof our regular 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 TIKI51st Cr HARPERFood served 11 A.M. to 3 A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-7585 1603 E. 53rd St.Coffee House — EntertainmentFolk Blues JazzBOB GIBSON dodi kallick Feb. 12-14DUAIN STORY GINNI CLEMMENS Feb. 15-22Admission $1.50 — At the Door or withReservation by Mail—Specify Date Cr TimeFRIDAY-SUNDAY 9:00- 11:00- 1:00WEEKDAYS 9:00 - 11 :00MR. PIZZAo\* WE DELIVER —CARRY OUTSHY 3-8282FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARK NDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENAlso Ch. Broiled Hamburgers *>« Ofo;<*APIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 6 PartySausage 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom .1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Olive .1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vz and Vi 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients .50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pizza .2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bocon .2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pizza ....(Sausage, Mushrooms and 2.50Peppers) 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.001465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 o.m. — Fri. to 3:00 a.Sat. to 3:00 a.m. — Open 2 p.m. Sundoys Box of Broasted Chicken10, 16, 20 PiecesSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCIOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGEMEAT BALLNow FeaturingST. LOUISSPARE RIBS Jeffery Theatre1952 E. 71st ST. HY 3-3334Now Showing — Held OverExclusive South Eust Showingr* * «*♦*+* + ******, ACCLAIMED j* as ;Walt Disney’s :reatest achievement!Julie Andrews • Dick Van DykeDavid Tomlinson • Glynis JohnsTECHNICOLOR' ©I964 WahDerey^odudons^Qr.gmal Cast Album on sate now' jFEATURE TIMESWEEKENDS Cr HOLIDAYS12:00-2:30-5:00-7:30-9:50WEEK DAYS2:00-4:30-7:00-9:40fotitttig Soon"GOLDFINGER"Feb. 12, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Culture CalendarPERSONALHAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU!NANCY BARTY FOR WASH PROMQUEEN’ (Why shouldn't a quiet, seriousperson be Queen?)Charlie Chaplin'sGOLDRUSHSat., Feb 13. Judd Hall, 58th & Kimbark,behind New Dorms. 7, 9, 11 p.mMady. if you don't buy June some bitter¬sweet chocolate ice-cream at the Medici,I'll drag you back on the bathroom floor.Herzog.Year’s Study at Hebrew University inJerusalem Generous Scholarship aidavailable. Call Hillel House. PL 2-1127.WILLIAM F. WARDE, who debated Her¬bert Aptheker last year, will speak on“Existentialism & Marxism, are the twophilosophies compatible?’’ Monday, Feb.15 at 7:30 p.m. YSA Ida Noyes Library.Sweet Valenine be mine. And whisper iam thine, or at least send me a classifiedad in the Maroon. B.G.’PROFESSIONAL ALTERATIONSFormerly with Bonwit Teller.Leah Rothenberg, 5216 Cornell, 324-2871UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“a strong bank**NEW CAR LOANS$A0 0■■ per hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C. SIGNE — HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY*LOVE. THE PHANTOMSG SPRING VACATIONTRANSPORTATIONNew York Bus March 18-28 $35Philadelphia Bus March 18-28 $35N. Y. Charter March 19-28 $64*N. Y. JET Grp March 18-28 $80*Boston JET Grp March 19-28 $92*<‘including airport btis)A $15 deposit is required to reserve spaceon any of the carriers. Contact SG Office1-5 pm. Mon.-Fri. X3272.WRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL 2-8377)TO ALL WOULD-BE TRAVELERS:SC Charter Flights are 94% booked up.If YOU intend to fly with us, callext. 3272, M-F 1-5 pm, aoon!“Introduction to Indian Poetry,' A. K.Ramanujan, asst. prof, linguistics,Blackstone Hall, Sunday — 8 pm. Coffeediscussion.FOR RENTUnv. of Chicago 15 min. away! lg. bdrmapt. 2nd fir. sep. dining rm. $110. newlydecorated - refinished floors - 2 blks. -shops - beach - IC trans. Draper & Kra¬mer, 324-8600.Large comfortable rm., kitchen privi¬leges, 53 & Harper. Pay, $4 and 4 hrs.typing week. Call x 3188.Rm & bath for fern, in Madison Park.$12. KE 8-1324.FOR SALEELECTRIC VACUUM CLEANER. $8. Call ConcertsCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA:Feb. 12: Jean Martinon. cond RudolphFirkusny, p Hindemith: Neues vom TageOverture. Martinon: Cone. No. 2. Berlioz:Fntastic Sym. Sat., Feb. 13: Martinon.cond Firkusny, p. Beethoven: CoriolanOvert., and Cone, to be announced. Feb.18-19. Martinon, cond. Maria Stader s.Kenneth Smith br. Chgo. Sym. Cho..Margaret Hillis, cond. Brahms: AcademicFestival Overt, and German RequiemThurs-Sat. concerts—'Thurs. at 8:15; Frt.at 2; Sat. at 8:30. $2-6.50. Fri. galleryseats for students $1 (available until 1pm only) Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Mich¬igan. HA 7-0362.CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERS:Ralph Shapey, dir. Babbit: Compositionfor 12 Instruments. Shapey: Incantationsfor Soprano and 10 Instruments (NevaPilgrim, s.) Other works to be an¬nounced. Feb. 16 at 8:30. $1. free to stu¬dents. Tickets: Music Dept. ext. 3885At Mandel Hall.________NETHERLANDS CHAMBER CHOIR: Felixde Noble, dir. Works by Bull, Gibbons,Purcell, di Lasso, Sweelinck. Schuetz, De¬bussy, and Dallapiccola. RockefellerChapel Oratoria Series. Feb. 14 at 3:30.Tickets $3-4.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Dido and Ae¬neas by Purcell, dir. Annette Fern; withSylvia Stahlman. s.; with the UC Colleg¬ium Musicum conducted by HowardBrown. Mandel Hall. 57th and University.Feb 12 and 13 at 8:30. $1-3.50. Tickets: Folk MusicMIRIAM MAKEBA: Feb. 13 at 8:30 $2-5.Arie Crown Theatre, McCormack place.SU 7-7585.ODETTA: Feb. 19 at 8:30 $2-5 OrchestraHall 220 S, Michigan. HA 7-0362; SU 7-7585.BOB GIBSON. DODY KALLICK. GINN ICLEMMENS: At Phase 1, Entertainment-type Coffee-house. Cover charge $1.50.Shows at 9 and 11 pm, with extra showsat 1 pm Friday thru Sunday nights. Pres¬ent show thru Feb. 14. 1603 E. 53rd StTheatreOLIVER: With a slight bow to CharlesDickens Nightly at 8:30; matinees Wed.and Sat. at 2. Nightly, $2.50-$5.95; Fri.and Sat. $2.50-$6 60: matinees $2 20-$5.50.At the Shubert Theatre, 22 E. Monroe.CE 6-8240.SECOND CITY: Their seventeenth re¬view, entitled "The Wrecking Ball" in¬cludes UC personnel David Steinbergand Robert Benedetti. Nightly at 9 and11 pm: Sat. at 9 and 11 pm and 1 amDark Monday. Nightly $2 50; Fri. andSat. $3 at Second City, 1842 N. Wells.DE 7-3992.THE WILD ONE: Stanley Kramer prod.,with Brando Thompson House Cinema.Feb. 14 at 8:00. 50c. with music. Allerton Hotel Theatre mthe Clouds, 701 N. Michigan, 9 and lipm Tues.-Sat.; 4 and 9 pm Sun. Week¬days $2.65: Fri and Sat. $2.95 SU 7-420uALCESTIS: by Euripides in a newtranslation by Daryl Hine. Directed byMartha Roth. The Last Stage, 1506 E51st St. Weekends thru Feb 14. 8:30 FriSi Sat. 7:30 Sun. Tickets $2 on Frt &SaL, $1.50 Sun. OA 4-4200.A CHEKHOV SKETCHBOOK: stairiueJoseph Buloff. Thru Feb. 12. HarperTheatre, 5238 S. Harper Ave. Tues.-Frtat 8:30, Sat. at 7 and 10:15, Sun. at 2:30and 7:30. Student Discount available ex¬cept Fri. and Sat. Call for ticket pricesand reservations — BU 8-1717.JOHN GABRIEL BORKMANN: by Hen¬rik Ibsen. International House TheatreFeb. 19-21, 26-28. Call for times andprices. FA 4-8200.RASHOMON: by Ryonosuke AkuUg .a iDir. by Fay and Michael Kanin. PatrickHenry, dir. Goodman Theatre, Monroeand Columbus. Feb. 19-Mar. 13. Sun -Thurs. at 7:30; Fri.-Sat. at 8:30. Nightly$3; Fri.-Sat. $3.50. 50c student discountCE 6-2337.THE BRIG: by Kenneth Brown. RobcrSickinger, dir. Weekends thru Feb 28Hull House Theatre. 3212 N. BroadwayFri. and Sat. at 8:30; Sun. at 7:30. Friand Sat. $3 40; Sun $3 348-83301961 Comet 2-dr. sedan. Exc. cond Mustsell. Call 324-8223. ExhibitsDREAMS?? Call x 3265 and place your ad CHICAGO SCHOOL—1960 TO PRESENT:V. W. 57 sedan, $550 or offer. HY 3-3500/BR 4-2288. at Hyde Park Art Center, 5236 S. Black-stone Thru March 13.TYPING AND EDITING DANIEL LANG: Paintings, drawings andprints At Lexington Gallery. Daily. 13-4thru March 8. Free. Closed Sat. and Sun,Home typing: theses. papers, ms.,statistical. After 6. 493-9317.RUTH DUCKWORTH: Pottery and cer¬amics. At the Renaissance Society. Daily10-5, Sat 1-5. FreeEXP. REAS. 943-7326.NEAR CAMPUS. 324-2089. Mo. Congressman here Tuesday afternoonIBM. 752-4131.EXPR. REASONABLE~ HY 3-2438WANTEDOROTHOPTIST—U. C. Hospitals andClinics. Full or part-time. Call x 6067.TUTORS FOR S W A P, x 3587.Asst. Theater Manager: Candy CounterAttendants and Ticket Takers. Male orFemale. Apply Hyde Park Theater, eves.WASHINGTON PROMSee the window display done by the Prom CommitteeTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE. FilmsTHE GIRL WITH THE GOLDEN EYESand WOMEN AND PLEASURES: The for¬mer is directed by Albicocco; the latterstars Alain Delon, Me’ Ferrer, and Fer-nandel. All at the Hyde Park Theatre,53rd at Lake Park. 75c with stud. IDTHE GIRL WITH THE GOLDEN EVESagain: At DocFilms Feb. 12. for 15c less:60c SocSct 122. 7:15 & 9:15.GUNFIGHTER: Henry King dir Doc-Films. Feb. 16 at 7:15 and 9:15. SocSci122. 60 cents.THE GOLD RUSH: directed and starredin by Charlie Chaplin. At RussFims. Feb.13 at 7 and 9 pm Judd Hall. 75c.WOMAN IN THE MOON: dir. Fritz Lang’Art Institute Fullerton Hall. Feb. 18 at7:30 . 75c. Rop. Richard Bolling (D-MoJ,a leading figure among HouseDemocratic liberals, will speak at3:30 pm Tuesday at Breasted Hall,on “House Out of Order.” Thespeech is sponsored by StudentGovernment.Bolling has been a member ofthe House since 1948 and is chair¬man of the Joint House-SenateEconomic Committee. His bookon the operations of the House,also called “House Out of Order,”was published yesterday.Bolling is a principal mover ofthe Democratic Study Group, theHouse liberal caucus, which ledthe successful fight last monthfor passage of the 21 day rule andstripping two renegade Demo¬crats, John Bell Williams and A1bort Watson, of their seniorityfor supporting Republican candi¬date Barrv Goldwater. Socialist to speakWilliam F. W’arde, a leadingtheoretician of the Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party, will speakat UC Monday on “Existentialismand Marxism: Are the Two Phi¬losophies Comjiatible?” The talkwill be given at the Ida NoyesLibrary at 7:30 pm.Warde’s talk, sponsored by theUC Young Socialist Alliance, willbo the climax of an exciting program of activity. On Saturday andSunday, February 13 and 14, hewill deliver a series of five lec¬tures on “The Evolution of De¬mocracy From the Greeks to thePresent.” The lectures will begiven at Debs Hall, located at 302South Canal Street.Cor on aPORTRAITS1312 E. 53rd684-7424PassportPhotosSALE!Building CoiningDOWNDon’t Miss ThisSALE!SCANDINAVIANIMPORTS1538 E. 53rd St. NO 7-4040 1 niversily Theatre and The College Hu inanities StaffPresent Shakespeare'sOTHELLOwith James O'Reilly and the St. Joseph's College DramaClub — Directed by John BettenbenderONE NIGHT ONLY!MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15THMANDEL HALL — 8:30 pm —$1.50, $1 Student/Facully Ticket*on sale at Reynolds Club DeskThe family sedan with sports car performance THE MG SPORTS SEDANiHere she is-two cars in one. A roomy, easy to-park family car with thepower and performance of an 80 mph sports car. Revolutionary fluidsuspension, 4-speed synchromesh gear box, aircraft-type disc brakesup front and up to 30 miles per gallon economy. All at a price so lowyou'll hardly believe it. Come see this MG at our showroom now.AustinHealeyM.G.Sprite Import Centre Full line on display * new 8C used• foreign & domesticBOB NELSON MOTORS6052 S. Cottage GroveMidway 3-450!ft • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 12, 1965