Vol. 73 — No. 29 The University of Chicago cu£Sg|?*.31 Friday, February 19, 1965Gregory threatens tie-upComedian and civil rights support for his block-in would ?.leader Dick Gregory vowed come from the Negro popula-last night to block all Chicago Chicago, but he did nottransportation on March 22 if elaborate... . Gregory picked March 22,convicted policeman-slayer because it is the first workingBill Witherspoon is executed, day following the scheduledas scheduled, on March 19. execution date of March 19.Speaking at the Maroon for- Witherspoon has been grantedurn on capital punishment in twelve stays of execution sincethe Law School auditorium, his conviction for the murderGregory said that members of of Chicago patrolman Mitchellcivil rights groups, led by him, Stone.would stall all transportation Gregory said he left a con-and block all highways and ference with the FBI to par-cause $100 million damage for ticipate in the Maroon forum,the state — “quite a bit more He did not indicate, however,than the 25 cents worth of that he had revealed anythingjuice they’ll use to kill With- about the block-in plans previ-erspoon.” ously.Gregory also indicated that Complete coverage of theGradego upby Dinah EsralThe grade point average of the college for the academicyear 1963-64 has gone up “substantially,” according to dean Kerner" tfPcommute Wither"of undergraduate students George Plave. It is now a rise of spoon’s death sentence.08 since the year 1961-62 for the entire college. The femaleaverage has risen .06. the male ' |average .14. more approximate and less se-Playe. in releasing these figures quential.”to the Maroon ter med this in- IN VIEWING this variation,point averagesslightly GregoryMaroon forum will appear inTuesday’s issue.In recent weeks, protest ac¬tion has been mounting topressure Illinois Governor Ottocrease “substantial.” He attributes Hayes believes that a conclusionthus advancement to a more reg- cannot be drawn. The number ofular performance by students students in each section is un-which has been aided by the ad- known, he argues, and the aver-vent of quarterly courses. How- ages are based on the grade sever, he states, “More important awarded to declared majors inthan this is the fact that the same each field, when an increasingpeople (the students in each year- number of students are undecidedly class) have shown improving as to their field of concentration,averages.” But why are grades important,COLLEGE EXAMINER Albert anyw ay? According to Playe,Hayes believes the .08 increase “First, though students may say“suggests an increasing serious- it, I have never heard facultyness in students’ performances, state that grades are unimportant.The present ruse is significant,” he Second, the idea of late bloomers,said. “I would hope to see it con- although there are obvious excep-tinue, but I do expect to see it tions, is a figment of the imagina-taper off.” tiorr. And third, concerning theIrt contrast, Wayne Booth, dean good, solid “C” student who makesof the College, commented, “The his mark in the world, I have.08 improvement sounds nice but found a high correlation betweenus not that significant. Faculty the straight “A” student and thatgrading standards could have gone student’s success in life.”down, and other factors could be Playe concedes, however, thatresponsible. It cannot be conclud- total emphasis on grades is false The talk of Robert D.Gilman, former UC stu¬dent who is now a SNCCstaff worker in Missis¬sippi, was postponed fromWednesday evening untilthis Sunday afternoon at3:30 pm, in Ida Noyes.Gilman was attending aSNCC meeting in Atlan¬ta, which was held longerthan expected. He arrivedin Chicago Thursdaymorning, instead of Wed¬nesday morning. He willspeak on his experienceas a Freedom projectworker in Canton andWest Point, Miss. Bolling on House:too irresponsibleby Bruce Freed“The failure of the House of Representatives today is reallythe failure of the Democrats to organize themselves in a re¬sponsible fashion,” declared Rep. Richard Bolling (D-Mo.),leader of the House Democratic Study Group.Speaking Tuesday on his recent¬ly published book, House Out ofOrder, Bolling, Kansas City’s nine-term Congressman, said:“IT IS UNUSUAL for an activepolitician to write a book on poli¬tics, but it’s even more unusualfor a legislator to write on thelegislature discussing his col¬leagues.”Courage of convictionsHe stated that he decided towrite his book “because of a verystrong conviction that the way theHouse is organized currentlydoesn’t serve a modem legisla¬ture.”However, Bolling felt that “theHouse today is more representa- Bollingtive and responsive due to theJanuary reforms.” These reforms " - A-.**, mwere the 21 day rule and the strip- Democrats had their due repre¬ping of two Southern Goldwater sentation there, the bill would haveDemocrats, John Bell Williams and been out a long time ago.”Albert Watson, of their seniority.„ .. ’ . ./ TO PREVENT CONSERV-Commenting on House seniority, ATIVES from overturning the cur-Bolling said: “Seniority ,n the rem reforms in the * ,hHouse is new, coming in only , .. , _ _ ■yafter 1910 Until then everv Sneak con*l°^ next Congress, Bollingalter mu. Until then, every Speak proposefl that the Democratic cau-er appointed every chairman and cus „see t that itg committeemember of all the committees.’ members * representative of theBECAUSE SENIORITY is rela- majority of the majority party.”wmm tively new, Bolling felt that it was “This proposal is drawn fromnot sacred and that removal of history,” he declared. “The Houseit could be a threat against recal- has been an effective body onlycitrant Congressmen. when it has had an effective■ • . _ . . _ Speaker or a strong caucus.”Look at power structure _ 6_ , „ , , Boiling suggested that as theOn general House reform, he first part of reform the Speakersaid, “There is a great difference and the caucus be strengthenedbetween appearance and reality.” “After electing the Speaker,” he“What you need to do today is continued,” the Speaker shouldto look at the reality of the power have the right to nominate mem-structure before thinking of re- bers and chairman of the Houseform.” he added. Rules Committee and Ways andWith the Republicans over- Means Committee, the Housewhelmingly conservative, they put committee on committees. Theconservatives on the major House Ways and Means Committeecommittees because they reflect would then make suggested com-the party’s views, Bolling observed, oiittee ^assignments for theHowever, the Democrats are ir- **ouse-responsible in Bolling’s view. “The No dictatorshipproblem with the Democrats,” he In his opinion, these reformsasserted, “is that they didn’t move would not mean a dictatorship ofthe Southerners from power when the House by the Speaker becausethey received a liberal majority.” the caucus would pass on all hisThe conservative Democrats were nominations,thus allowed to dominate the Rules On the impact of his reformsCommittee since it was established 0n the House, Bolling declared,in 1937. “They would lead to greater partyAs an example of the Demo- responsibility and more policy con-crats’ failure, Bolling cited the de- flict between the two parties. Thelay over Medicare. “Wilbur Mills Democratic majority would takehas long prevented Medicare from over the House structure so theycoming to a vote in his committee, can get votes on their legislationBut if the liberal and moderate when they want them.”Need money, toolsed on this evidence alone that thequality of students has gone up.”Departments vary greatlyThe compiled averages for stu¬dents in various academic depart- and fallacious. He emphasizes, in¬stead, respect for the subject mat¬ter.A nice shorthand“In our imperfect society, SWPC moves into high gearments is known to have varied grades are a nice shorthand. The It’s full steam ahead to Fayette County for the Southern Work Project Committee(SWPC).In its third meeting Tuesday, the group made final plans for its trip to Tennessee to re-great ly for the last academic year, standards of schools vary, but the build a partially completed community center, while a nucleus of approximately 42 peoplealthough the figures are not avail- world learns that variance pretty who are at least fairly sure thatable for publication. soon. I believe that at Chicago we they can go moved ahead with not been painted. It serves as a a day) have been known to be dis-Plavele for publication. soon. I believe that at Chicago we they can go moved ahead with not been painted. It serves as a a day) heilaye explains this divergence are not as tough as the myth Jotter writing, fund-raising, and meeting nlace recreation center missed 1resulting from the different would have us. We are serious, tool-finding. and school for local Negroes. Even- workers. for housing civil rightsas resultinng from the different would have us. We are serious, tool-finding. an(j school for local Negr< ~standards of different staffs, and though, and this is proper.” SWPC PLANS TO leave Chi- tually, the building will have fourthe nature of the courses them- Booth teims giades a neccssa- cago bv Friday, March 19, and will wings and will be built of cinder . , , , .selves. “In day-to-day activity, ry evil, which do not determine remain in Sumerville, the seat of block so as to reduce the threat ^ckvvard, Miss Heinemann said,such as mathematics, achieve- whether or not an institution is Fayette County, until March 28. of complete devastation by bomb-merit is more measurable. There- succeeding.” He recalLs when Chi- Although it is not known exactly jngfore, there is a tendency to find cago attempted to eliminate grades how much remains to be done on ' a ™ ^„ .more negativistic grades, than in in the 1930’s and their subsequent lhe community center, the group ACC ORDING TO MARSHAother places where the work is return. Educationally, the entire countyBoth the white school and theNegro school are not accredited,she informed the group, but theNegro school is named the FavetteCollege grade averageAcademic year 1963-64(Includes students registered far nine courses during the year)TOTAL COLLEGE:All students 2:48Female average 2 .49Male average 2 46 , • * will "probably^busy itself mostly Heinemann, a UC student who County Training School, whichWith naintitw and finishing Thev sPent last summer in Sumerville “sounds like a reform school toexp^oHo do"a minimum of heavy <loinK v0»'r registration work with me/1 Miss Heinemann said,construction. » SrouP Cornell University, AMto HEARD FROM wereConsiderable supper. “orTh^Ne"^ £££* *»»■?««-First responses from faculty and Even though Sumerville Ls very H°J! an?. tool raising. committees,clergy in the University neighbor- sprea(j out, Negroes still oongre-hood indicate that there is consid- who said, respectively, that thecost of transportation might havethat there is consia- „„t(l rP!?iilarlv al the communitv : u<«^uaiiuii■t behind the project, * «f, * .^.by, the p^UdpMbt,White attitude hostile;> Class of 1968:All students 2.42Female students 2:40Male average 2.43Class of 1967:All students 2.37Female average 2.35Male average 2.39 Class of 1966:All students 2.52Female average 2.57Male average 2 47Class of 1965:All students 2 63Female average 2 71Male average 2.55 students and that personal con¬tacts who might have tools shouldThe atlitude toward Negroes in ^ tapped by SWPC membersThose who still have not•few'. V.W'.!••• ' w erable supporbut as yet i( is only financialSWPC hopes to persuade facultyas well as men of the cloth tomake the trip lo Tennessee them- Sumerville, Miss Heinemann toldselves. the group, is “hostile, to say the formed SWPC of their desire toThe community center that least.” Negroes are grudgingly per- participate in the project or whoSWPC hopes to complete is being mitted to eat in the one candy wish further information may con-used even now, in spite of the store and buy food and gas, she tact Randy Rappaport, SWPCfact that it has no floor and has said, but maids (who earn $1.25 leader, at 324-4280. if 1.i ir !i!l eII*;! •!ji fcNews Muse\ ietnam guessing gameby Bruce FreedWither or whither Viet¬nam? That is the question thatcan no longer be dodged. Thetime has come when the WhiteHouse must issue a clear state¬ment informing the American peo¬ple of the direction in which Amer¬ican policy is heading.After last week’s strikes againstVietcong staging areas in southernNorth Vietnam, a bevy of inter¬pretations were presented, all try¬ing to explain in some way therationale behind the American ac¬tion.The only problem is that notmuch of the speculation wasbased on conjectures of what theadministration policy is or shouldbe.HOWEVER, THE ONE POINTclear in the present crisis is thatthe United States-South Vietna¬mese position is crumbling swiftlyand that it is only a matter oftime before new steps will haveto be taken to deal with a totallynew, even worse, situation.This status quo is bound tochange soon because of the newboldness of the Vietcong, thequickened pace of the musical gov¬ernment game in Saigon, and theheightened American military in¬volvement.While the atmosphere in Viet¬nam is especially mysterious, sois the air in Washington over fu¬ture American policy, as gaugedfrom the daily press.Is the US already secretly nego¬tiating in Paris or is it trying toinitiate talks by threatening toexpand the war? Were the USbombings only isolated actionsaimed at warning the Vietcong notto expand the war in the Southan}r further or were the raids partof a more grandiose diplomaticplan?GOOD CASES CAN be constructed for a number of differentcourses but none can be substan¬tiated fully because of crucialmissing links.Perhaps Averill Harriman’s ap¬pointment last week as Ambassa-dor-at-large meant that he wasto take part in forthcoming orcurrent talks on the SoutheastAsia crisis. Perhaps American si¬lence is due to Russian Pre¬ mier Kosygin’s secret feelers be¬ing extended to reduce the ten¬sion.These guesses are presentedonly to show that in the Vietnamcrisis more questions can be askedthan answers given, and that anyanswer provided leads to evenfurther questions.Nevertheless, whatever declara¬tion the President issues clearingup the American stance, the fu¬ture is gloomy, with either nego¬tiations or a greatly expanded warseeming to be the alternatives.The war hawks and the dominotheorists do not present a fullycogent case for their position be¬cause the risks are so great andthe long range benefits for theUS so imponderable.IN THE LONG RUN, any solu¬tion to the current crisis most like¬ly will be unfavorable to the US.Further US military action prob¬ably would lead to another Koreaand the same settlement termsthat will be achieved now by nego¬tiations.The most that can be hoped foris that a nationalistic Communistgovernment will arise eventuallythat will show the diplomatic in¬dependence that some of the East¬ern European Communist stateshave shown.This assumption is crediblebased upon the latent antagonismsbetween Ho Chi Minh's North Viet¬namese and the Chinese and thecontinuing Sino-Soviet rift thatwill allow maneuvering room forthe Communist satellites.Withdrawal from Vietnamwould mean pulling back the de¬fense perimeter to Thailand, Ma¬laysia, India and the Philippines.Hopefully, the US will learn fromthe Vietnam agony and not makethe mistake in these countries itmade in Vietnam.Undergraduate candidatesfor aid are reminded thatthe deadline for filing a Par¬ents' Confidential FinancialStatement is March 15.Statements should be mailedto the College ScholarshipService in either Princeton,New Jersey, or Los An¬geles, California. Civil rights workersseen as ‘hull sellers’To the Editor:The latter-day carpetbaggers(the so-called “civil rights" people)are here now. Yes sir, they are the(psuedo ) sophisticated intellectual-liberals real “forward lookingyoung people” (substitute “fro-ward” for “forward” to get acloser fit to reality). Anyway theyare messing around in the dormssoliciting (which seems to me, butnot to them, to constitute a viola¬tion against the bans on solicitingwhich are in effect in the dorms).They are propositioning people!The beggars are bull sellers.They tell you that they need fundsto send some dear student towicked Mississippi. Come on stu¬dents, surely you can salve yourconscience by digging out a fewcents — you who come from thesegregated neighborhoods of theNorth — it surely won’t hurt youto integrate old Miss.THE MAJORITY OF you are tobr> commended on not wanting totake a year off from your studiesto go troublemaking in the South¬land. Don’t support solicitorseither.Why? The answer is found ina poet who is not read too mucharound here. Let me quote fromRudyard Kipling’s “The WhiteMan’s Burden” (the title could beupdated to “The ‘Liberal’s’ Bur¬den”):Take up the White Man’s bur¬den —Send forth the best yebreed —Go bind your sons to exileTo serve your c a p t i v e s’need;To wait in heavy namessOn fluttered folk and wild —Your new-caught, sullen peoples,Half devil and half child.* * *Take up the White Man’s bur¬den —And reap his old reward:The blame of those ye better.The hate of those ye guard.AS A JEW FROM Brooklyn,New York I can hardly forgetthe uncalled for attack on the in¬nocent school children of the Bob-over Chasidim. They had to leavean area that they had lived inpeacefully — here is at least one instance where integration didn’twork.No, you can’t force integrationon people unless they are readyfor it and willingly accept it. Wehave no right to start troublemak¬ing activities in the South untilwe straighten things out up herein the North.LOUIS H. BLUMENGARTENTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATREANNOUNCESDIRECT FROM NEW YORKWinner of the 1963-64w BEST SHOW OFF-BROADWAY nAWARDIN 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-OFFICE Lovitz approach cheap(Editor’s note: The follow¬ingi letter was addrt’ssed toGene Lovitz, author of theGadfly on IVilfinm Wither¬spoon that Mimenrerf in Tues¬day's III liOOX.)DEAR MR. LOVITZ:This article of yours is unbeliev¬able. At first I thought it hadbeen written by an undergraduatestudent (not that it would havemade much difference), but I findthat you are a “gentleman of thepress, of sorts,” and I think thatmakes it even worse.Who are you trying to reach orinfluence or alert to the situationof Bill Witherspoon? I know thatthe melodramatic drivel you wrotewas an insult to at least this read¬er. I have no doubt that yourcause is a good and just one; Ithink a majority of the people,including myself, who are awareof the Witherspoon case and thewhole problem of capital punish¬ment would agree with you, inprinciple, but the journalistic style(if indeed that is what one mustcall it) which you employed tovoice vour appeal is better suitedto MA PERKINS or OUR GALSUNDAY.It is a cheap, sensational wayyou have explained Mr. Wither¬spoon’s case; such a cause de¬serves a more coherent, intelligentargument. Save your melodramat-ies, Mr. Lovitz, for the soap operas- Bill Witherspoon is entitled tomuch more.(MRS.) LINDA VISGTTTOMaroon reply ‘moronic’TO THE EDITOR:I have never read such a sopho-moric and moronic response to aperfectly justified letter as wasin the Tuesday Maroon (J. J. Mur¬ray and Vaseline petroleum jelly).I should think you would try tobe civil to one who is only offer¬ing helpful criticism instead of alawsuit. Your staff seems to feelthat it can do no wrong and willnever let its mistakes be pointedout, no matter in how friendly away, without some inane and un¬called for remarks. If you haveto vent your insulting spleen,please do not publish it in an other¬wise decent paper.PATRICIA PALMQUIST Should be surer aboutWitherspoon reformTO THE EDITOR:The basic questions of the With¬erspoon ease are: should Wither¬spoon’s death sentence be commu¬ted, and, if so, under what condi¬tions could he rejoin society as afree man?I believe that his sentenceshould be commuted, since nochance of rehabilitating a criminalshould be lost. The question whichthen remains is whether Wither¬spoon has reformed, or is stilla menace to society.THE FACT IS THAT Wither¬spoon killed a man. Was he notoutrageously playing God w i t hother people’s lives when he car¬ried a loaded gun, since the weap¬on's sole use could only he tothreaten robbery victims withdeath?Under the Swedish penal sys¬tem, rehabilitation of criminals isplanned and carried out by a groupof expert psychiatrists. Whatsurety exists that the UnitedStates penal system has achieveda successful rehabilitation in thisease? The acquisition of a literaryagent, of feelings, and of sensitiv¬ities seem strange criteria!Does Witherspoon understandthe meaning of his deed — themurder of a human being likehimself, or like you and I? Isthere any chance that he will re¬peat his crime if set free? Untilthese questions are satisfactorilyanswered by expert opinion, With¬erspoon should stay in jail.1 THINK THAT Mr. Gene Lo¬vitz has lost sight of the fact thatsociety, and not Witherspoon, isthe aggrieved party in this ease.BOTOND VARGAChicago MaroonE«lilor-in-Chief Robert F. LeveyBusiness Manager. .Michael KasseraManaging Editor David L. AikenAssistants to the Editor, Sharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsCampus News Editor Dan HertzbergAssistant Campus NewsEditor .' Dinah EsralEditor. Chicago LiteraryReview Martin MichaeisonCulture-Feature Editor. .David H. RichterPhotoCo-ordinators.Bill Caffrey, Steve WofsyRewrite Editor Eve HochwaldMovie Editor Kenneth KranizMusic Editor Peter RabinowitzScience Editor Ed StemPolitical Editor. Bruce FreedEditor Emeritus John T. Williams2 f CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 19, 1965 Today'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN$ 1995lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL Expert Service on All BrandsHI-FI STEREOFree Pick-up, & DeliveryFree EstimatesColl 521-0460(Corona, StuJitojPORTRAITS1312 E. 53rd684-7424PassportPhotosLAST MINUTE NEEDSfor theWASHINGTON PROMLipstick and Nail Enamelin Pastel Shades to MatchMascara - Both Brush-onand Roll-on - Eye ShadowAlluring ShadesDon't forget — o poir ofDemi Toe NylonsUniversity ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.LOW students lose first cose Broader gen ed proposedf by Dan HertzbergFour UC Law School students have just completed their first trial work in criminal lawan experience usually reserved for law school graduates.Under the direction of UC law professor Dallin H. Oaks, the students carried out streetinvestigation and legal research for the courtroom defense of a man accused of robbing aliquor store. —a °iwforH1o serveJNa5E'oourt^p* ?.vdge fP(lared °aks’ client Sumy. to be an experiment in the train-a lawyer to serve as coin tap- «you don t make the facts,” Oaks ing of law students.man Law^udents°John Satskfv commented on the verdict “you The law students involved in thePeter Mone and Robert Funk am JU^ tak" 'fl^ them‘” case ffound experience veryswered OaUs' caU for s.uden, aid s,u- and^'dents who helped him as having cedures involved,” Cratsleyrendered “extremely valuable as- stated, “and a greater appreciationin preparing his client’s defense.Accused of burglaryChicago police sa*d that two sjstancey» He considers their use for the condition of an arrestedpolicemen arrested Oaks’ clientwhen they found him inside alocked barroom. They accussedhim of attempted burglary.The client claimed, however,that when the police first saw himoutside the barroom after havingjust scared away two men whowere robbing the bar.When the police shot at him,the client said, he ran through a in preparing the criminal case man.’To war or not to war?Vietnam policy unclearWill US foreign policy — or this project it might be possiblelack of one — lead this coun- to build a viable peace in thebroken door into the barroom for try into a war in Vietnam? area, combining United Nationsprotection. That was the question dis- policing of dissident groups withThe three students conducted cussed yesterday afternoon in a international support for a posi-an investigation of the scene of the forum on the current Vietnam .. . , . , , ,crime and questioned residents in crisis, sponsored by Students for t,ve economlc and 800181 deveIol)-the area, a predominately Negro a Democratic Society (SDS). ment project,section of Chicago. Norton Ginsburg, associate dean Ross discussed the role of theTHE STUDENTS FOUND that of the College and professor in citizen in a time of crisis likemany people they questioned re- the department of geography, this He t forward the viewfused to acknowledge that they Richard Flacks, assistant profes- . ,,knew anything at all about the sor of sociology, and Robert Ross, at lt 1S not the role of the ln‘crime. co-director of SDS for the Chicago dividual to try to “second-guess'Hard to persuade' region, spoke on the subject at the president” by trying to pre-“VVe found hostility, fear and the Reynolds club lounge. sent a pian which is "presently ac-mistrust,” said Cratsley. “People FLACKS EXPRESSED his con Cepted by the leaders,” but ratherwo mg*. e no t the duty 0j each citizen to “make (Editor’s note: The followingis the second in a series ofproposals for specific coursestructures that might be con¬sidered for inclusion in the re¬organized College. The authorsare members of the AcademicAffairs committee of StudentGovernment, but these articlesare in no way official reportscf the committee itself. It ishoped that faculty membersand students will consider theseproposals, and perhaps reply tothem. The Maroon encouragesletters to the editor concerningthe structure of the Collegeprograms.)In our first article we enumer¬ated what we considered to bethe three aims of a general edu¬cation program: (1) to teachcritical reading and writing; (2)to teach the patterns of thoughtand the methodologies of the ma¬jor disciples; (3) to teach themajor ideas of the disciplines. Wealso proposed a new course to ful¬fill the first and most importantof these ends. an acquaintance with each of theseareas sufficient for the studentto build upon, either throughfurther formal study or on hisown.Whatever loss to general edu¬cation there could be through thisprogram would diminish the spe¬cific content required of the stu¬dent. The weakening to generaleducation through the presentsystem of mitigation involves notonly a loss of content, but alsoa loss to the student of ideas andpatterns of thought of wholefields.Advanced gen ed coursesThe remainder of the generaleducation program will be devotedto fulfilling the other two aims.We therefore recommend that one-year courses be offered in humani¬ties, social science, history, biologi¬cal science, physical science,mathematics, foreign language.Detailed course description willfollow this general discussion. We plan, moreover, a group ofadvanced general educationcourses beyond the basic eightwhich we have now proposed, in¬tended to integrate and supple¬ment the required courses. Thefirst of these, a course in the or¬ganization, methods, and princi¬ples of the natural sciences, socialsciences and humanities, would berequired of all students who placeout of at least one course. Therest would be recommended elec¬tives. Following our discussionof the required courses we willdescribe these advanced generaleducation courses.The objections to the presentgeneral education program havebeen that:thought that we were cops or bill cern oyercollectors. It is very hard to per- increasing evidence t h at the himself one of the factors whichsuade people of this segment of United States has no definite poli- the President must consider whenthe population that we are on their cy towards Vietnam, and feated making his decisions ”q:dp” that this underlying aimlessness . ’ .The students also spent time might facilitate an uncontrolled d SttU<J™)fo^.® tS°nreviewing law cases that supported escalation of the war into a major - hnllHi ttheir client. “We wanted to be confrontation. On the other hand, ir°nt of the Federal building atprepared on any issues that mi»ht be expressed a concern for what Adams and Dearborn to protestSe un," Cra2[ey MM he felt was happening in the US involvement in South Vietnam,Oaks and his client decided to United States itself as a byproduct An SDS handbill which explainswaive a jury trial and try the case the involvement in \ ietnam. their position demands immedi*before a judge. They did so be- In particular, he pointed to the ate withdrawal of US troops fromcause they felt that a judge would “blunting of the American con- Southeast Asia; and end to at-be iess prejudiced than a jury by science” in the face of napalm tacks on North Vietnam; and atheir client’s past criminal record, bombing, defoliation, poisoning of conference to guarantee the righta fact w'hich would come out when the food supplies and other ac- of self-determination,their client took the witness stand, tions of American fighting forces Co-sponsors of the picket includeBASED ON THE testimony of against the Vietnamese. He also Fellowship of Reconciliation, Du-the arresting policeman, the trial noted the increasing role of secret Bois clubs of Chicago, Americangovernment agencies in policy- Socialist Organizing Committee,making, and the increasing extent Women for Peace, and the Worn-of news management by the gov- en’s International League forernment.. . _ Peace and Freedom, South SideGinsburg more optimistic branch.Ginsburg indicated that he felt Chicago’s march is one in aa greater optimism over the pos- serjes 0f demonstrations in citiessible course of the United States across the nation, which will cul-involvement in Vietnam. He min£de jn a march in Washingtonagreed that the United Slates on Saturday, April 17. At theneeds to find some reasonable al* Washington march, Sen. Ernestternatives to the present involve- Gruening, Democrat from Alaska,ment. Pointing to the traditional and ncded liberal journalist I. F.enmities between the many ethno- stone will speak.linguistic groupings in Southeast national organizationAsia, he described the one major ^ 1S a national organization’. , .. . . of students concerned with radi-example of cooperation in recent j c^an_ j societv With moretimes, a United Nations pro ect pai cn.anfe in socie*y-. wun moreunity, a u /0.J than forty chapters in campusest o deve op e c tong i across the country, SDS is the stu-DtT.•, , v dent affiliate of the League forGinsburg was one of tht ad- Industrial Dem0Cracy, headed byvisors to t is projee . Michael Harrington.Ginsburg suggested that around &EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 Eost 53rd StreetHYde Pork 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscountBOB NELSON MOTORSImport- CentreM. G.SpriteTriumphComplete RepairsAnd ServiceFor All Popular ImportsMidway 3-45016052 S. Cottage Grove THESE SEVEN COURSES,plus the course in “Critical Read¬ing and Writing” mentionedabove, will be required of all stu¬dents, with two kinds of excep¬tions. As is done at present, stu¬dents will be exempted fromcourses if they have shown suffi¬cient preparation at entrance bytheir scores on placement tests.Also, a one-year introductorycourse in chemistry or physicsmay be substituted for the gen¬eral physical science course.With six of the proposedcourses the student is introducedto the methodologies and ideasof the major disciplines; theseventh, foreign language, is anecessary adjunct to advancedstudy in any of the disciplines,and serves, as well, to widen thestudent’s scope of communication.This program, because it en¬tails only eight required courses,eliminates the conflict over course¬time between general educationand specialization (especially inthe physical sciences division),without the dishonest compromiseof mitigation.IT MAY BE ARGUED that byreducing the time spent in hu¬manities and social sciences, gen¬eral education is weakenedthrough insufficient coverage inthese area. It seems clear to us,however, that the breadth andvariety in these two fields pre¬clude what anyone would like tocall sufficient coverage even in twoyears. In one well-planned year,though, the student can be given • The struggle between generaleducation and specialization forthe student’s time has resultedin the compromise of mitigationwhich has disrupted the planningand betrayed the purpose of thegeneral education program;• The program lacks interdis¬ciplinary cohesiveness because thecourses have been eliminatedwhich were instituted to providethis when the program wasplanned;• The student lacks freedomof choice in his general educationdue to the static and pre-moldedset of courses.Our program:• will accommodate the studentwith the time conflict withoutunjustifiably relieving him of re¬quirements;• will relate the several aca¬demic areas to each other throughthe OMP course, as well asthrough the other advanced gen¬eral education course;• will add freedom of choicethrough the advanced general edu¬cation program. Our program willalso furnish some good guidedelectives, which are in short sup¬ply at present.This recommended curriculumwill incorporate all of the aboveadvantages, without losing thebreadth of the present programand without modifying the pres¬ent status of general education asa required set of courses plannedas a whole.Charles Dashe andDavid RichterLeaving for New York City EarlyDuring Spring Vacation? You canstill take advantage of the lowerchartered plane fare. Fly to NewYork on Thursday, March 18, re¬turn to Chicago March 28 on pri¬vately run student flight. Fare?Just $64. Interested? Then call869-8968 or 328-5776 soon! 1000 to 2000 WORDS A MINUTEWITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENSION..: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. You 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 evenings at the HOTELDEL PRADO.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READINGmethod and see it applied.BRING A BOOK!As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience? Demonstrations will be held at the HOTEL DEL PRADO, 53rd St. and Hyde Park Blvd.ON Wednesday, February 24 at 7:30 P.M.Ralph J. Wood. Jr.. CLUHyde Park Bank Building. Chicago 15, RLFAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & Friday* NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING, INC.18964 Coyle Street Detroit 35, MichiganSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY/ " Feb. 19, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3 ■ v■ •;i ■■Culture CalendarUC prof studies Egyptian tombsby Dorie SolingerIronically, Oriental Institutedirector Robert M. Adams, inprefacing Keith Seele’s talkWednesday night, termedSeele’s findings “exasperating” inthat they stir up "loose ends thatcry out to be followed up.”The irony lies in the fact thata dam, now under constructionwhich is designed for irrigationof Egyptian fields, will cause theflooding of the entire area Seelehas excavated. This will precludeforever tying these loose ends to¬gether, Adams said.THE TOPIC OF Seele’s lecturewas “Latest Report on our Exca¬vations in Egypitan Nubia.” Seeleis a professor emeritus of Egyptol¬ogy, and has served since 1929 asa member of the Oriental Insti¬tute staff.Showed slidesSeele explained that he and histeam conducted their expeditionon a concession about one thou¬sand miles up the Nile River,from the site of Abu Simbul tothe Sudan border. He supplement¬ed his talk by showing slides ofboth the region and their findings.In his speech, Seele illustratedvarious ways in which the arch¬aeologist draws inference in thecourse of his research. The discov¬ery of pottery from both the classi¬cal and the late periods in onetomb, for example, indicated tohim that the dating of objectsmust be made with greater pre¬cision.A coin bearing the name of aruler from the year 250 BC wasevidence that the tomb was con¬structed subsequent to this year,Seele said. A BELL SKULL found in oneof the enclosures afforded proof,when coupled with art workfound in the same encasement,that the people who had buriedtheir dead in that vicinity werecattle-breeders. Further facts ledto the notion that they had per¬haps migrated from the Westerndesert, as it became drier, to theNile Valley.Wealthy the victimsThe objects found in the plun¬dered tombs showed that the rob¬bers had known the deceased, forit was invariably the tombs ofthe wealthy which were vandal¬ized. Those left intact containedless valuable items.A pallet bearing deeply-carvedMesopotamian boats, found in thefar south of Nubia, was termedby Seele one of the most import¬ant objects ever to come out ofNubia. This is due to its proof ofMesopotamian influence, possiblyas early as 3200 BC, Seele said.Ceramics, discovered in a tombfrom around the year 3000 BCbore evidence of what was per¬haps the first clay modelling ofanimals in all Nubian art.Coptic texts, and some scantquotations from the scriptures ona wall led Seele to search for achapel, and to deduce that hehad found monk cells. The chapelwas indeed there, as were furtherremains of a monastery.AMONG THE FINDINGS in¬teresting in themselves, the ex¬cavators uncovered a tomb, be¬longing to the earliest known peo¬ples who left remains containingthe entire stock of a jeweler. Overfive thousand pieces of jewelrylay encased there. The tombs be¬longing to this earliest group areDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty Discount DO 3-6866CONTACT LENSES designated the “A-group” tombs,and were built about 3000 BC, inpre- and early dynastic times,Seele related.Also in the tombs of this groupSeele unearthed scattered pebbles,creating a link with the modern-day Nubians, who aL^o cover theirtombs with these small stones.Prehistoric motherhoodSuperstructures of stone hold¬ing the grave within it, and bear¬ing the pottery on the exteriornortheast side, form the tombsin the next, or B-group. Seelesaid.The C-group comprises tombswhich date from around the timeof the Egyptitan season. In oneof these, bearing jewelry, a wom¬an was found, lying with a newly-born baby between her legs.SEELE LISTED VARIOUS rea¬sons why he was unable to com¬plete his excavations. First, thearea is vast in scope. He did notobtain good co-operation from theofficials with whom he had towork, and obstructions blockedhis progress. Furthermore, he wasforced to complete his work inone spot before venturing intoanother, which slowed him down.Then it was impossible to exca¬vate in the courtyards of the vil¬lage homes until the people hadevacuated them.‘There must be a vast amountof material that will perish be¬cause we were unable to excavatefor one reason or another,” Seeleconcluded.9 All proceeds from Sundaynight's performances of theOxford-Combridge Revue, the| new show currently occupyingSecond City's quarters, willbenefit CORE. Tickets for theif shows at 7 and 9 pm, are avail¬able through North side CORE, "'i642-6719. Benefit price is $5per seot. ConcertsCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA:Feb. 18-19: Martinon, cond. Maria Staders. Kenneth Smith br. Chgo. Sym. Cho.,Margaret Hillis, cond. Brahms: AcademicFestival Overt, and German Requiem.Feb. 20: “Pops” concert. Irwin Hoffman,cond. Mozart: Marriage of Figaro Overt.Schubert: Sym. No. 5. Mozart: Ein KleineNachtmusik. Music by Strauss. Feb. 25-26:Jean Martinon, cond. Christian Ferras, v.Wagner: Tannhauser Overt., Berg: Cone.Beethoven: Sym. No. 6. Thurs.-Sat. con¬certs—Thurs. at 8:15; Fri. at 2; Sat. at8:30. $2-6.50. Fri. gallery seats for students$1 (available until 1 pm only!. OrchestraHall, 220 S. Michigan. HA 7-0362.LENOX QUARTET: Mozart: Quartet inF. K.590. Perkins: Three Miniatures forString Quartet. Brahms: Quartet No. 1,Op 51. Feb. 19 at 8:30. Tickets $3. MandelHall.ExhibitsCHICAGO SCHOOL—1960 TO PRESENT:at Hyde Park Art Center, 5236 S. Black-stone. Thru March 13.DANIEL LANG: Paintings, drawings andprints. At Lexington Gallery. Daily, 10-4thru March 8. Free. Closed Sat. and Sun.RUTH DUCKWORTH: Pottery and cer¬amics. At the Renaissance Society. Daily10-5, Sat. 1-5. Free.FilmsHORSEFEATHERS: starring the four(count ’em, 4) Marx Brothers; Doc Films,SocSci 122. Feb. 19 at 7:15 & 9:15 pm, 60c.THE 41st, dir. Grigori Chukrai. RussFilm-Fest Mandel Hall, Feb. 20 at 6:30 & 8 .00.(Plenty of time to go to Wash Prom 1, 75c.INSPECTOR GENERAL: starring the castof the Moscow Art Theatre. ThompsonHouse. Lounge, 7th fl. Pierce Tower,Feb. 21, at 8:00 pm, 50c.CHILDREN OF PARADISE, dir. MarcelCarne. Hyde Park Theatre, Lake Park &53rd (must see). 75c.Folk MusicODETTA: Feb. 19 at 8:30. Tickets $2-5.Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michigan. HA 7-0362.JAMES YOGHOURTJIAN: Classical gui¬tarist. Feb. 21 at 8 pm Old Towne Schoolof Folk Music, 333 W. North Ave. Tickets$2 50.GINNI CI.EMMENS, JOHN BROWN, DELCLOSE AND GENE FARMER: Benefit forBill Witherspoon. Feb. 21 at 8:30 pm.Tickets, $1,50. Mother Blues, 1305 N.Wells St.RecitalsNATHAN MILSTEIN: violinist. Feb. 21 at3:30 pm. Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michigan.Tickets, $2 50-6 50. HA 7-0362.TheatreOLIVER: With a slight bow to CharlesDickens. Nightly at 8:30; matinees Wed.mmm“You’re the only teacher that ever learned meEnglish real good.”“They shouldn’t allow bad morals in the book room.”“Can you tell by my writing it I’m white or not?”These are some of the notes from the classroomworld of Sylvia Barrett, an idealistic youngteacher in her first semester in a metropolitanhigh school. Lip the Down Staircase is the storyof her encounter with waste and frustration, in¬adequate facilities, trivia in triplicate, gobbledy-i gook and pedagese.3 Blending wit and wisdom, humor and pathos,Bel Kaufman weaves an utterly delightful novelthat will captivate anyone who has ever been toschool. Funny, poignant, imaginative, nothingquite like Up the Down Staircase has ever beenwritten, for it is told in a style utterly unique.A short excerpt has already won bravos fromreaders of Saturday Review. Casual reading of“Staircase” will provide a merry and entertain¬ing story; thoughtful reading will reveal shrewdinsights and great depth.“It has the ideal mixture of tragedy and humor,and a superb balance of the ludicrous and the PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhair stylists at5242 Hyde Park Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710% Student Discount MILLIESSportswear HeadquartersTURTLENECKJERSEYS1375 E. 53rd St. HY 3-592210% Student DiscountLeaving for New York City LateDuring Spring Vacation? You canstill take advantage of the lowerchartered plane fare. Fly to NewYork on Saturday, March 20, re¬turn to Chicago March 28 on pri¬vately run student flight. Fare?Just $64. Interested? Then call869-8968 or 328-5776 soon!AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111— TELEFUNKEN Cr ZENITH —Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.24 HR. SERVICE CALLS —$3.00Tape Recorders — Phonographs — AmplifiersPhono Needles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cards4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 19, ITtTTffVTVVTTVTVVTTVTVT'rVTVTTVTTTVTTTVTVTTTTTTTTVI<ii*iiii<iiii<<<<<i<iii<<<<<<<<<<<<<*<<<<THE WORD FROM THE BIRD:QUALITYJhsL TYlcoc (B/wdIl fo.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERS"Unexcelled Quality Since 1917”Phones: Ml 3-7447 1013-17 East 61st St.HY 3-6868 Across from B-J Ct. ,Serving the Campus since 1917 and Sat. at 2. Nightly, $2.50-$5.95; Fri.and Sat. $2.50-$6.60; matinees $2.20-$5 5o]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 Benedettl. Nightly at 9 and11 pm; Sat. at 9 and 11 pm and l am.Dark Monday. Nightly $2.50; Fri. andSat. $3 at Second City, 1842 N. Wells.DE 7-3992.SIX AGES OF MAN: a comic revuewith music. Allerton Hotel Theatre inthe Clouds. 701 N. Michigan, 9 and npm Tues.-Sat.; 4 and 9 pm Sun. Week¬days $2.65; Fri. and Sat. $2.95. SU 7-4200.JOHN GABRIEL BORKMANN: by Hen¬rik Ibsen. International House Theatre.Feb. 19-21, 26-28. Call for times andprices. FA 4-8200.RASHOMON: by Ryonosuke Akutagawa.Dir. 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 discount.CE 6-2337.THE BRIG: by Kenneth Brown. RobertSickinger, dir. Weekends thru Feb. 28.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.IN WHITE AMERICA: Winner of tlhe1963 Best Show Off Broadway award Feb.25-28 at 8:30 pm. Matinees Feb. 27-28 at2:30 pm. Tickets $2.50-3.50. Mandel Hail.Wayne C. Booth, dean ofthe College, and Edward H.Levi, provost of the Univer¬sity, will hold a public dis¬cussion, "The Future of theCollege," at 4 pm Mondayin Mandel Hall. Studentsand faculty alike are strong¬ly encouraged to attend.Levi will speak on oppor¬tunities opened up for inno¬vation in the College by thenew administrative struc¬ture, the Levi Proposal,which was recently approvedby the Board of Trustees.Booth will delineate somecriteria the collegiate facul¬ties might use in developingnew, integrated four-yearcurricula. After these pre¬pared statements, there willbe a period of questions anddiscussion from the floor.MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 7.4 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-92598 lbs. of Clothing Dry Clconcdin 45 minutes for $1.75, otCoin Operated Dry CleanerKnits, sweaters never sagor need reblockingHours: Daily 9 a.m. - 10 p.m.Sunday 10 a.m. - 7 p.m.1611 E. 53rd St. (Near Cornell)TRAVELING?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.You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.T2655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411Minn, legislator hits UM pr©xy Washington students aim atby Collegiate Press ServiceMINNEAPOLIS, Minn. —The ouster of University ofMinnesota President O. Mere¬dith Wilson was demanded bya St. Paul city official last weekafter Wilson defended the exist¬ence of radical groups on the Min¬nesota campus.Wilson’s remarks came as heand other University officials ap¬peared before the State House Ap¬propriations Committee to presentthe University request for fundsto finance research projects.IN RESPONSE TO a statementabout "undesirable” groups oncampus, Wilson said that Univer¬sity officers should not give"young radicals” an administrative"wall against which to bouncetheir ball.”'Rational pattern'"The rational pattern of the Uni¬ versity’s student body is the bestcontrol I know,” he continued.The discussion began when Rep.Walter Klaus read a preparedstatement which set forth what hecalled “apprehensions about allow¬ing . . . children to attend a schoolwhere they are exposed to indoc¬trination of the violent overthrowof the government.”Klaus asked if the WEB Du-Bois Club, blacklisted by the USAttorney General, has a group oncampus. Wilson replied that theDuBois Club does not have a groupon campus. But noting that “itwould be better for me to continuethis discussion,” he acknowledgedthat a Young Socialist Alliance(YSA) group does exist there."THE MOST ACTIVE membersof the organization have foundthey can’t get a response on cam¬pus when there is no resistance,”Announce 'open sing'The 57th Street Chorale has an¬nounced its second open sing tobe held on Tuesday evening, March2. Miss Margaret Hillis, choraldirector of the Chicago Symphonyorchestra, will direct a "sing-it-yourself” exploration of the Vi¬valdi "Gloria” and the Brahms"Nanie.” The open sing will beheld in the North Lounge of theReynolds Club.Participation in the sing is opento all interested singers in the Chi¬cago community. Those coming areasked to bring their own scores of Vivaldi, Brahmsfor the works if they can do so.The Chorale will provide scoresfor those who need them. The ad¬mission charge is one dollar.For those on campus and in theimmediate community, the re¬hearsal of the Chorale on Tuesday,February 23 at 7:30 will pxeviewthe two OPEN SING works. Thatsession, in Woolman Hall at 1174East 57th Street, is open to thosewho may wish to prepare them¬selves for fuller participation inthe SING itself the followingweek.HAVILL’S Ltd.1368 E. 53rd S». Chicago 15, III.PL 2-7800The New Shape of SoundIt's the exciting all new nf?ri STEREOCOLUMBIA ODU SYSTEMTrue stereophonic high fidelity,IN A SINGLE COMPACT UNITDELUXE FEATURES:solid state circuitryacoustical sound chamberGarrard record changerCBS "flooting" cartridgetwo diamond needlestwo transistorized amplifiers30 wotts peak music powersix perfectly matched speakerslustrous oiled walnut hardwood cabinetSwitch it on . . .And the whole room playsTwo hundred fifty dollars the systemCheck Havill's for their generous university discount. he said. "They can’t get a crowdon campus so they move their 'cleaner man/ outdomeetings downtown.”'No control, then leave'The call for Wilson’s removalcame from Milton Rosen, St.Paul Public Works Commissioner.Rosen said that Wilson shouldleave the University if he can’tcontrol things there.In a St. Paul television inter¬view Rosen continued his attack, Victor Bass, UC’s answer to degeneracy and chief proponentof Vaseline, has been matched by two University of Wash¬ington students who attempted but apparently failed to provethat, as the UW student paper put it, in the West, there willalways be a cleaner man. 'The two students, Terry Em- ment more philosophically, how-mett and Paul Waldschmidt, ever «n0 matter how long weequaled Bass’ record of 48 hours, wenthe said, “the record wouldwhile playing cards and chatting be broken anyway.”to pass the time. Bass, perhaps in the shower,BASS HAD READ “Othello” was unavailable for comment.saying, "Wilson should be pushedout ... I don’t think he is quali¬fied to be the head of that fineUniversity.”Last year Rosen called for theremoval of Mulford Sibley afterthe political science professor out¬lined his position on academicfreedom in a Dec. 3, 1963 letterto the Minneapolis Daily. Rosensent a letter to the Board of Re¬gents urging that they dismissSibley.In a review last week,the MAROON erroneouslyindicated that Phale I is“Hyde Park's new andonly coffee house." We arepleased to note that theHiedici, not new but cer¬tainly a coffee house, alsoexists. until the book became too soggyto read and had committed theunpardonable sin of sleeping forhalf an hour during his then-rec¬ord sojourn.Had sought publicityThe two Washington students,unlike Bass, had gone out of theirway to seek publicity. Said one:“The main reason we went forthe record was publicity, but nowthe novelty has worn off As fordoing it again, though, I’m allfor it. I’d like to set a recordthat would be unprecedented.”The other viewed their achieve-Complete LineOf Pet AndAquaritnn Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012 Job opportunitiesThe following recruiting organizationswill visit the Office of Career Counselingand Placement during the week of Feb¬ruary 22. Interview appointments mayhe arranged through L. S. Calvin, room200, Reynolds Club, extension 3284.February 28—Roswell Park Memorial Institute, Buf¬falo, N. Y.—will interview biochemists,chemists (organic), and microbiologistsat ail degree levels. The Institute isone of the foremost cancer researchcenters in the world.Application for the 1965 Foreign Serv¬ice Officer examinations for both theU. S. State Department and the IJ. S.Information Agency are available inroom 200, Reynolds Club. These exam¬inations will be held on May 1 and De¬cember 4 with application deadlines ofMarch 15 and October 18, respectively.HYDE PARKAUTO SERVICEStudy inGuadalajara, MexicoThe Guadolojaro Summer School,o fully accredited University ofArizona program, conducted incooperation with professors fromStanford University, University ofCalifornio, ond Guadolajora, willoffer June 28 to August 7, art,folklore, geography, history, lan¬guage ond literature courses. Tui¬tion, board and room is $265.Write Prof. Juon B. Roel, P.O,Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. UNIVERSALARMY STORE(iThe universe in studentwear for campus andcampingLevis - Tennis ShoesAN OUTFIT FROMTOP TO TOE1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856 LANCIA MUSTANGOPEL CHRYSLERD.K.W, PACKARDFIAT KISSELA. H. SPRITEJIM HARTMAN5340 LAKE PARKPL 2-0496A Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESPICTURE FRAMINGMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSDUNCANS1305 E. 53 rd HY 3-4111 CottliebBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 RENT A TRUCK^ Per HourDO-IT-YOURSELFTRUCK RENTALSO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hourSAVEMONEY!Create A Small Life Insurance Estate WowThree Reasons To Buy NOW!1. You lose hundreds of dollars in savings every year you wait.2. You and your family are not protected otherwise.3. You may lose your insurability by waiting.If you prefer, payment of premiums may he deferreduntil three months after you graduate.NATIONAL LIFE OF VERMONTHere to Stay—Established 1850—Over $1,000,000,000 in AssetsFREDRIC M. OKUNSUITE 1120, 120 S. LA SALLE ST.CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60603CE 6-2500I would like more infcrmotion obout your insurance progrom.NameAddressPhoneFrederic M. OkunYour On-CampusRepresentativeFeb. 19, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON © 5THEATER REVIEWOthello has his ups and downs Award to teacher-actorWell, what could you ex¬pect? Put thirty terrified ama¬teurs on the stage with twoveterans, add some sloppytechnical work, stir well, and younaturally come up with a per¬formance with distractions, unin¬tentional hilarity, and fizzledlines—but also with some highlycharged, exciting moments.Director John Bettenbender’sinterpretation of Othello was care¬ful and conservative. His overallinterpretation emphasized the im¬portance of Othello, placing Iagoin a definitely subordinate posi¬tion, as was evidenced by his cuts:Iago’s long soliloquy in Act I,scene 1, and all of V., 1, in whichIago murders Roderigo.Bettenbender’s Iago is basicallyan evil intellect, and so he re¬mains: we never see him turnedinto the savage, predatory beastdepicted in that murder scene. Itseems that Bettenbender wasmore interested in reaching theclimax of Othello’s story than incompleting the evolution of Iagofrom intellect to beast.THE DIRECTOR’S CONCEP¬TION of Othello was one fasterto wake to jealousy but morevacillating than the Othello I hadimagined, but he retained the tre¬mendous dignity and nobility ofthe Moor. Othello’s entrancemarked for me the real beginningof the play.Othello’s dignity contrastedwith the poor acting and uncon¬vincing characterization of theminor characters. The Duke ofVenice was perhaps the worst Ihave ever seen; when he beganto recite his lines in a voice en¬tirely without inflection, and inperfect iambic pentameter, I—andthe rest of the audience—couldnot restrain ourselves from laugh¬ter. The rest of the bit playersran from passable to miserable.Bianca seemed a bit mousy andclinging, in place of the brazenhussy that I had imagined. Hercomic relief was of the sort af¬forded by a starving puppy dogtrying to ingratiate itself with abig bumbling bear. For MichaelCassio seemed exactly that; hisbody and his mind seemed to be¬long to a football player whoshould have been Othello’s body guard rather than his lieutenant.&He lacked the strength of char¬acter necessary to the man whowas destined to become Othello’ssuccessor.THE REAL COMIC relief ofthe play came from Roderigo,played bv Alec Lazar. His ges¬tures and his mugging providedmany laughs for the audience,this time ones which his perform¬ance was intended to elicit. Hisportrayal of the fool who is Iago’sdupe, and in the end his victim,was of the traditional Shakespear¬ean clown, and was well received.Emilia and Desdemona playedwell together; Emilia as theworldly older woman against theinnocent and pure Desdemona.Both, however, were a bit melo¬dramatic at times when under¬statement would have been farmore effective. Particularly in thebedchamber after Desdemona smurder, Emilia sounded like ascreeching fish wife. Desdemonaseemed not as much a noble wom¬an as a spoiled child used tohaving her own way.The best and most convincingperformance of the evening wasJim O’Reilly as Othello. From themoment he entered the stage tothe moment of his death, he wasa pleasure to watch. I could findno fault with his performance ex¬cept that it was almost too goodin contrast with the calibre of themajority of the cast. When he andIago were alone on the stage,one could feel the electricity, andthe enjoyment of the two actors,once the rest of the rabble wereout of the way.Director Bettenbender, chair¬man of the department of speechof St. Joseph’s college, playedIago with a light touch and un¬derstanding of the complexity ofhis role. At first he understatedIago’s hatred for Othello and therest of the world, but as the firstact progressed, he became moreand more virulent and evil in hisintentions and speech.Bettenbender knew exactlywhen and where to play his partto the hilt. In the final scene, hisbestiality and cruelty are appar¬ent to their fullest extent, and onerealizes that, had he attemptedto play that way throughout the evening, he would have been un¬bearable.THE INATTENTIVE, SLOPPYtechnical work would have beenexcruciatingly funny, were it notthat it marred the production.Like the barrels put on stage inthe second act, which were ac¬tually round, but had been paintedto look like cardboard facsimiles.Like the lighting crew, whichcouldn’t have missed more cuesif they had been paid to do so.These are little details which, likethe performance of the minorcharacters, needed to be improvedto have made this Othello a first-rate production. As it was, it wasrather obviously just a collegeshow with professional leads.Jamie Beth GaleMUSIC REVIEW The $1,500 first prize In theCharles H. Sergei Drama Con¬test, conducted biennially byUC for an original, unpro-uced play, has been awarded toCharles Nolte for his two-charac¬ter play, “Do Not Pass Go.”The announcement was madeby James O’Reilly, acting directorof University Theatre.NOLTE IS A professional actorwho is now an instructor at theUniversity of Minnesota, where heis a candidate for a PhD degreein theatre arts. He said the playis under option to Theatre, 1965,a New York producing unit com¬posed of Richard Barr, ClintonWilder, and Edward Albee. Theplay is scheduled to go into re¬hearsal under Alan Schneider’sdirection in mid-march and toopen April 14 in the Cherry Lane Theatre, New York.Second prize to YaleThe $1,000 second prize wasawarded to J. J. Scott, a graduateof the Yale University DramaSchool and head of Spoken WordRecording at Mercury Records,for his play, “The Minotaur.”The $500 third prize was award¬ed to Karl Eigsti, designer and di¬rector for the Arena Theatre,Washington, DC, for his play,“Swawgo’s Place.”“DO NOT PASS GO” is thestory of two men—one young andthe other old—who work as han¬dlers in a supermarket. The playreadies its climax when the olderman, after being taunted andthreatened by the younger man,finally is forced into a walk inrefrigerator where he is left todie.Modern musicians display skillsG/\COPPER-MAIZECopper-Maize—a spirited cottonoxford shirt that lends “color”to dark-tone suits. Versatile—itwears handsomely with blues,greys, olives or browns. Like allGant shirts, it has elanin a gentlemanly manner^Sit 50THE STORE FOR MENme.5btmn anil (Hutttpu*»»* the New Hyde E*urU Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 If the success of RalphShapey and the UC Contem¬porary Chamber Players(CCP) Tuesday night (thethird straight they have tossed offsince their formation) is a validindication, Chicago’s center of.musical interest may be stridingsouth; at least, it provided a vigor¬ous antidote to the execution ofBerlioz’ Syniphonie Fantastiquewhich served as a curiously placidfanfare to Jean Martinon’s returnhome.The CCP has two rare qualities.First, the group as a whole, aswell as its soloists, boasts supervirtuosity. Many groups perform¬ing contemporary music, wheresingle strands are often spun fromone instrument to another, arecontent to try to fit the notes inthe right places, forgoing the lux¬ury of phrasing. Not so the CCP,which has not only the techniqueto get the notes and rhythmsright, but also the ensembleshipwhich permits proper phrasing:and this makes quite a difference.Nowhere was this more apparentthan in the Composition for TwelveInstruments by M i It o n Babbitt,where the lines were carried fromone performer to another with a deftness which was truly astound¬ing.THE OTHER CRITICAL area inwhich the CCP enjoys a surplusis taste and musicianship. Thispertains not only to the high levelof their performances: it extendsfurther to the programs whichShapey chooses, always impecca¬bly balanced to give as wide arange of good music as a singleprogram will allow.Actually, this program was hisleast successful on that count, al¬though so far above the norm ofmast similar ventures that com¬plaints might well be out of order.No one could find fault with MaxNeuhaus’ percussion solos; but I,for one, would have preferred tohear him perform something lesslimited than Elliott Carter’s Reci¬tative and Improvisation for FourKettledrums. And the Babbitt bit,although an effective showpiecefor the ensemble, painfully por¬trays the dangers inherent in per¬mitting mathematicians to playwith music: the logic may be per¬fect, but the conclusions are par-alyzingly sterile.The second half of the concert,however, devoted to music by UCfaculty, regained Shapey’s highest standards. Easley Blackwood'spianism was shattering in JohnPerkins’ stormy Caprice, a workwhich testifies to the composer'sability to shun the staticism whichmars so much serial music (ex¬emplified by the Babbitt).Shapey’s own Incantations forSoprano and Ten Instruments,however, was the evening’s coup.From the opening backgroundgong trill, here was a piece trulygrappling with the mid-centurvchaos. Angry, brutal, ohsessive, andyet thoughtful, it was the sort ofexperience which converts ap¬plause into sacrilege.SPECIAL MENTION SHOULDgo to soprano Neva Pilgrim, whomade the scattered syllables inthe Shapey almost as meaningfulas words. But then again, specialmention ought to go to everyoneinvolved: it’s a very special group.Peter RabinowitxJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060TAPE RECORDERRENTALSTransistor typeat $10.50 mo.Woflensaks at $17.50 mo.Inquire as to uses at ourPhoto CounterThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. RANDELLREALTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open Evenings — Bittie Tregonza, ManageressGROUPSEUROPE• CRIMSON SeriesGrand Tour * Continental TourFavorite Tour A Fiesta TourComprehensive TourIsrael Adventure TourHoliday Tour * panorama TourBY STEAMER OR AIR STfA*35 TO 75 DAYS from / / U• DISCOVERY SeriesDiscovery Tour ★ Explorer TourPrep & High School Swiss CampBY STEAMER OR AIR $4 01!*42 TO 68 DAYS from »t03• excluding trans-Atlantic transportationor Form your Own GroupAsk for Plans and ProfitableOrganizer Atrangements’SPECIALISTS INSTUDENT TRAVEL _SINCE i»26 guTRAj^for folders and detailsSEE YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENTor write university travel companyCambridge 38, Mass. the One, the Only-the Originalforeign car hospital & clinichome of team winkauthorized BMC and Triumph sales and service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113CHICAGO MAROON Feb. 19, 1965 <C voikswassn or AMimcA, me.Get the bug in Europe*Piclc up your Volkswagen in Europe and save a bundle on import POsttend European travel expenses. As your local authorized VW dealer wohandle everything: purchase, delivery, insurance, licensing, the works. Justtell us where you want it delivered: France, Italy, Great Britain, Ireland,Germany, Denmark, Belgium, Switzerland or The Netherlands.r For Informotion send coupon toBox 101, Maroon, 1212 E. 59 St. AuthorizedDealerName-Address— ■ ■ - (I City Zone State — J1MAROON m WEEKEND GUIDEH-CALCUlUfrStOI5U65 ■JS-3T—u • CCJCLAltt. COSJOtTtOMtO1316 t. 53R0 ST.II AM TO IO PMM13-3407W£ D&LIVEJLTIKI 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 & HARPERFood served 11 A.M. to S A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.1510 Hyde Park Blx:d.LI 81585 PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PARK BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICERE 6-6606 — RE 6-3891Chicken - SandwichesPizza &Italian Foods[ dark thcatr«mmmm 50* SLfor college studentswith i.d. card• different doublefeatures daily• open dawn to dawn• little gal-leryfor gals only HIfri. 19—“the oppositesex,” "les girls.” ■M sat. 29—"1st space shipon venus,” “timemachine.”sun. 21—"first men in thez moon,' “robinsoncrusoe on mars.”mon. 22—“village of thedamned,” "journey tothe center of the earth.”rues. 23—“riot in cellblock 11,” “revolt inthe big house.”wed 24—"new kind oflove," “wheeer dealers.” ■m thurs. 25—“chapmanreport,” “bachelor in ■paradise.”■—I LIfr 2-2843dark & madisonENDS THIS SUNDAYJOSEPH 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.Friday 8:30 — Sunday 2:30, 7:30/\k Ewmq unfit One Night OnlyFri., Feb. 268:30 p.m.Orchestra Hall(THAT WAS THE WEEK THAT WAS)The Original British Version ofTHAT WAS THE WEEK THAT WASIn Person—The Sparkling, Witty London CastTickets: $2.50. $3.50, $5.00, $10.00, $15 00. Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelopeMake checks payable and mall erders to: YG-YS—Chase House Benefit. 664 N. Rush.Phone $37-3308. Tlekets also on sale at Orchestra Hall Box Offiee, 216 8. Michipan;Discount Reeerds, 201 N. La Salle: Harmony Hall In Lincoln Village. 6103 M.Lincoln; Laury’e Records, 1741 Sherman. Evanston.MR. PIZZAWE DELIVER —CARRY OUTSHY 3-8282DELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENSandwiches and Ch. Broiled HamburgersPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 6 PortySausoga 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom ......... 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper 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 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vi ond 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 2.50(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers) 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.001465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — Fri. to 3:00 o.Sat. to 3:00 a.m. — Open 2 p.m. Sundays JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAP Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 SAMUEL A. BELL'Buy Shell From BelV*SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150"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 4-8800 TAi-2AM-\fcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062 HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4 — 1318— 1233— 7699HY 3-6800B’NAI B’RITH HILLEL FOUNDATIONThird Lecture in the SeriesCHALLENGES TO HUMAN RIGHTSTWO CENTURIES OF NEGROAPPEAL FOR JUSTICEPROF. JOHN HOPE FRANKLINDepartment of HistorySunday, February 21—8:00 p.m.HILL E E II O l S E5715 Woodlawn0,o*'e , h 'l enterB a newworld ofdiningjk- pleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668 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. 53rd'WHAT ARE WE DOING TOMORROW NIGHT?'NOTHING, I GUESS," REPLIED GEORGE.WANNA BET?" SNAPPED MARTHA. QUESTIONED MARTHA.WASH PROMIT'S WORTH THE PRICE OF THE DINNER ALONEBUT IN ADDITION:The Crowning of Miss CCEntertainment by Miss Judy Bruce, Star of “Oliver”and the S.W.A.P. TrioAnd the Music of A1 Ford‘s OrchestraTOMORROW EVENING9:30 P.M., IDA NOYES HALLBIDS: $5/COUPLE PROFITS DONATED TO MILESCOLLEGE, BIRMINGHAM, ALA.x **, ** * *\-v; *» t it r ir: :> r u ?nr/s?’"xx 'x.xxxx'*You can eat at The Eagle• Luncheon • Dinner• Late snacksYou can drink at The Eagle• Schlitz and Bass Ale on draft• A fine selection of imported whiskiesand liqueursYou can enjoy The EagleSeven days a week from noon 'til . . .THE EAGLE5311 Blackstone(World Headquarters of the ARAK Refining Co.)324-7859Feb. 19, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7.CLASSIFIE» ADS Calendar of EventsPERSONALDANCING. DINNER, ENTERTAINMENTAll for $5/couple at WASH. PROMDOES OUR COMMUNITY LOVE ART?A Washington graphics gallery sells lotsof facsimile etchings (Rembrandt andDuerer > at prices three time higherthan those at the Medici. Would HydePark appreciate them more if the priceswere higher? 1450 E. 57th St.PR & MW are definitely NOT attendingWash Prom.THE INTERNATIONAL STUDENT IDCARD — GOOD FOR STUDENT DIS¬COUNTS ON FOUR CONTINENTS —IS AVAILABLE ($1) FROM SG. THE IDWILL BE $2 AFTER MARCH LWASH PROM — TOMORROW EVENINGAT IDA NOYESATTENTION Students graduating at theend of the Winter Quarter. I am aresearch assistant whose employer willbe gone after this quarter. Ergo, I'd bewilling to take over someone’s job. Call©57-1846 anytime for qualifications &experience. (Particularly strong back¬ground, Statistics.)Pasadena College student would liketo start correspondence with UC studentswho don’t like popular music. Write:George Frederick, JR. 281 Crescent Drive,Pasadena. California.SUMMER jobs in Germany. All fields.Contact immediately, Toby Hac.hera, 176W. Adams. AN 3-6726.PROFESSIONAL ALTERATIONSFormerly with Bonwit Teller.Leah Rothenberg, 5216 Cornell, 324-2871KITTY PROFUSE decided to let herselfgo with Bomb at the Ptom.~SG 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 bus)A $15 deposit is required to reserve spaceon any of the carriers. Contact SG Office1-5 pm. Mon.-Frl. X3272.WRITER S WORKSHOP (PL 2-8377)TO ALL WOULD-BE TRAVELERS:SC Charter Flights are 94% booked upIf YOU intend to fly with us, callext. 3272. M-F L-5 pm, soon!Anyone desiring return SG charter Aug.19 Sept. 24 call Lefton, 731-2649KROGER'S STORE Experienced, responsible & literate youngsecretary-typist seeks job 20-30 hrs. aweek, on/near campus at $2-plus per hr.Now or at beginning of spring quarteras desired. Extensive and diverse experi¬ence and responsibilities within Univer¬sity last 4 years. References. After 6pm & weekend, 288-8432.FOR SALEKNIGHT Tape Recorder, mono recordstereo playback with mike. Takeup spool,$40,000. Walz Electronic Flashgun, bat¬tery or AC operated, battery AC cord in¬cluded. $25.00. See H. Juris Haskell ID orcall 348-5817 after 7 pmGUITAR: Gibson SJN (Country-West¬ern) 9 mo. old. Contact H. Fishman.1915 Pierce, FA 4-9500,Bedroom set (Box springs & men'sdresser). Call 338-1978. V. ReasDining room set. Living rm. pieces. Rugs,Lamps, Book Cases. Call 643-2630. VeryReasonable.Blaupunkt “Frankfurt” AM-FM AutoRadio: Fits Volks, Karmann Ghia &Porsche: never been used: list $141.25.now $100. Call Hendrick de Jong, DO 3-9851 eves.CITROEN station wagon: white; '62: newtires. Must sell, best offer; HY 3-1083.HELP WANTEDSTUDENT GOVERNMENT SECRETARY,8-12 hrs. per week, $1.50 per hr. Applyx 3272 Mon.-Fri. 1-5.“I’m not going unless Tom and Alexand the rest of the boys are there!"growled George. “But it's your birth¬day party,” shrieked Martha. "Go powderyour wig ..." snorted GeorgeTUTORINGFor courteous, personal tutoring in Ger¬man. French. Italian, call 363-4298.SWAP YOURS x 3587!UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“« strong hank*95030 S. HARPER NEW CAR LOANSISSTILL OPEN $4<>0 per HundredAND WILL REMAIN SOTO SERVE YOU! 1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C.HYDE PARK YMCANewly redecorated student rooms available with or without meal plans.Study lounge, private TV room, health, and physical facilities aUavailable for student use.Call FA 4-5300JAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSSHI H I S — I I\IASRepairs & Alterations 5 Hr. Service1363 East 53rd PL 2-966210% Student Discount with l.D. CardCAR EUROPE THIS SUMMER??Would you like to wander through Europe"By Car" for TWO exciting and educationalMONTHS?ALL THIS FOR UNDER $950.00This includes round trip air fare, English Chan¬nel crossing, complete hotel accommodationsincluding breakfasts, plus all transportationcosts while in Europe.Travel with congenial students, teachers, andprofessors with similar interests from variousschools and colleges.Enjoy the fun and freedom of independent travelwhen you and three others drive a car under thisunique program.For details write to:Mr. A. J. Dellea30 WILLETT STREET, ALBANY, NEW YORK WANTEDROOMMATE for lge., 2 bedim., 5-rm.apt. *2 blk. off campus. Call 667-0475 eve.FEMALE to share apt. with another.752-0968.SUBLET July-August? We will care forfurn. apt. and pay rent. Call Maroon x3265, am.PEOPLE to collect money for SNCCat any of the six performances of “InWhite America.” For further info., callKaren Justin, ext. 3773.APTS TO RUNTSTUDENTS & UNIVERSITY EMPLOYESONLY! 4-rm. apts.. $90.00; 5-rm. apt.,$95.00. 6104-10 Ellis. To see call RE 4-4141.Univ. of Chicago 15 min. away! Lg. bdrm.apt. 2nd fir., sep. dining rm„ $110. New¬ly decorated - refinished floors - 2 blks.shops - beach - IC trails.Draper & Kramer 324-8600Free chest x-rays will be pro¬vided for UC students ot Hutchin¬son Commons Friday, February19, and Tuesday, Wednesday,and Thursday, February 23-25 at9 am-l2:30 pm and 1:30-4 pm.The x-ray unit is being suppliedby the Municipal Tuberculosis In¬stitute of Chicago and CookCounty. Friday, Feb. 19SEMINAR: “Influence of Amino AcidSequence on Protein Structure,” Antho¬ny V. Guzzo. dept, of biophysics, Re¬search Institute, 480, 4 pm.LECTURE: "Mechanical Factors In Nor¬mal and Pathological Physiology of theVascular Wall,” Izaak Opatowski, associ¬ate professor, committee on mathemat¬ical biology. 5753 Drexel. room 208 4:30pm.LECTURE SERIES: “Cancer." "Patho¬genesis of Virus-induced Leukemia inMice.” Thelma B, Dunn, laboratory ofpathology. National Cancer Institute, Bil¬lings P-117, 5 pm.MOVIE: “Advise and Consent,” BillingsP-117, 7:30 pm.S1IABBAT SERVICES: Hillel, 7:30 pm.LECTURE SERIES: “Works of the Mind,""Locke's Doctrine of Natural Law — ItsMeaning and Its Contemporary Rele¬vance.” Alan Gewirth, professor of phi¬losophy, 64 E. Lake St., 8 pm.CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES: “The LenoxQuartet,” Mandel Hall. 8:30 pm.HILLEL FIRESIDE: “Beyond Ethnicism:A Reappraisal of Jewish Identity.” RabbiSamuel Karff, Congregation Sinai. Hillel,8:30 pmWUCB: "Round Midnight," 10 pmSaturday, Feb. 20MOVIE: “The Forty-First,” MandelHall, 6:30 and 8 pm.VARSITY BASKETBALL GAME: UC VS.MacMurray College, Field House, 8 pm.WUC'B: Basketball broadcast, 8 pmWASH PROM: Ida Noyes Hall, 9:30 pm.WUCB: The Saturday Party, 10 pm. RADIO SERIES: “The World of the Pa¬perback," “The Genius of the F’renchTheatre,” Albert Bermel, playwright andtranslator, WFMF, 8:30 am.RADIO SERIES: “Faith of Our Fathers”The Reverend B. Davie Napier, professorof Divinity, Yale University, WGN, 8 30am.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel RobinsUniversity CarUloneur, RockefellerChapel. 12:15 pm.UC CHOPIN FESTIVAL: Lecture by Gros-venor Cooper, professor of music. Film“In the Footsteps of Chopin,” SocSci122, 2:30 pm.LECTURE: “Report from Mississippi.”Robert D. Gilman, former UC studentworking with COFO in Mississippi, id*Noyes library, 3:30 pm.RADIO SERIES: "The World of the Pa¬perback,” same as above. WAIT. 5 pmRADIO SERIES: “From the Midway,"same as above, WAIT, 5:15 pm.RADIO SERIES: “Chicago Dialogue."James Fitzpatrick, director of the De¬partment of Air Pollution, city of Chi¬cago, WIND, 7:05 pm.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes Hall, 7/fOpm.RADIO SERIES: "The Sacred Note.” chor¬al music from Rockefeller Chapel. Rich¬ard Vikstrom, conductor, WBBM. 7:45 pmLECTURE: “Two Centuries of the NegroAppeal for Justice,” John Hope Franklin,professor of history, Hillel, 5715 Wood-lawn, 8 pm.MOVIE: “The Inspector General,” Thomp¬son House, 50c, 8 pm.RADIO SERIES: “Nightline." public fo¬rum program on both national and in¬ternational issues, WBBM. 10 pmSunday, Feb. 21RADIO SERIES: “From the Midway,’“Art in the Marketplace.” Harold Haydon, professor of art, WFMF, 7 am. Monday, Feb. 22COFFEE PLUS: Lawrence Bogorad, pro¬fessor of botany; Shorey House, ninthfloor. Pierce, 9 pm.GREAT MASTER PAINTINGS SIFine art reproductions of the highest quality, using collotype, lithographyand other processes to achieve maximum fidelity to the originals. Thesemasterpieces of drawing, etching, drybrush and watercolor techniques aremostly in two to six colors, printed on heavy permanized paper. Eachdrawing comes completely matted, with a die-cut opening to fit thepicture area.Redi Frames $2.95 eachTitleDR 101. Rubens: Young Womanwith Crossed Hands IV)DR 102. Blake: Laocoon (V)DR 103. Botticelli: Abundance, orAutumn (V)DR 104. Del Sarto: Four Studies otApostles < H)DR 105. Durer: Study for St.Apollonia (V)DR 106. Gainsborough: Study of aBulldog (V)DR 108. Goya: Charles V Fightingthe Bull at Valadolid (H)DR 109. Kuhn: A PleasantEvening (H)DR 111. Lorrain: Tree andVines (V)DR 113. Lulni: Virgin with theChrist Child & St. John theBaptist (V)DR114. Maillot: Two FemaleNudes (V)DR115. Maresa: Ancient Chariotwith a Pair of Horses & SeveralFemale Figures (H)DR 116. Paroda: St. JeromeWriting (V)DR 117. Rubens: Study for a St.Magdalen (V)DR 118. Rubens: Study for a RiverGod (H)DR119. Soyer: RecliningWoman (H)DR121. Titian: Portrait of aYoung Woman (V)DR123. Lautrec: WomanSleeping (H)DR124. Yuan-Ch'l: The Wang-CH'uan Villa, after WanWot (H)DR 125. Van Gogh: The BlueCard (H>DR I 26. Coricoult: FightingHorses (H >DR 127. Lautrec: Portrait of JaneAvril (V)DR 128. Picasso: Mother and Child,and Four Studies for a RightHand (V)DR129. Rubens: Study of MaleFigure, Seen from Behind (V)DR 130. Dyck: Study for ChristCrowned with Thorns (V)DR] 31. Dyck: Studies of aWoman Sleeping (H)DR 132. Rembrandt: The Return ofthe Prodigal Son (H)DR 133. Degas: GiovannaBellelli (V)DR 134. Degas: Ballet DancerFacing Inward, Hands onHips (V)DR 135. Degas: Houses UponCliffs Overlooking a Bay (H)DR136. Cezanne: Study for CardPlayers (V)DR! 38. Conchilos: Nude Man,Seen from the Back (V)DR 139. Rubens: Portrait ofIsabella Brant (V)DR 140. Sir Peter Lely: Portrait ofa Man in a Turban (V) TitleDR 141. del Verrocchio: Head of aWoman with ElaborateCoiffure (V)DR142. Brou: Portrait of a YoungWoman (V)DR 144. Whistler: MaudReedling (V)DR 145. do Vinci: Study of aWoman's Head (V)DR 146. Buffet: Interieur (H)DR 147. Kollwitx: Mother andChild (H)DR 148. Jongkind: Le Pont deLegiguieres < H ’DR 151. Cexanne: Still Life WithPears and Apples (H*DR153. Picasso: Blue Boy (V)DR 154. Morisot: Portrait Studiesof Jeanne Pontillon (V)DR 155. Homer: Study for "TheWreck of the Iron Cross" (V)DR156. Gainsborough: Landscapewith Resting Men (HIDR 157. Boucher: Girl withJug (V)DR158. Chardin: Reading Womanwith Child (H)DR 159. Greuze: Head of aGirl (V)DR 160. Liotard: Profile of aWoman (V)DR 161. Lulni: Portrait of o Ladywith Fon (V)DR 162. Modigilani: Portrait of aWoman (V)DRI63. Durer: Praying Hands (V)DR 164. Renoir: LaPromenade (V)DR 165. Renoir: Nude Torso of aWoman (V)DR 167. Jules Pascin: Two SeatedWomen (V)DAI69. Jongkind: GrenobleLandscape (H)DR 170. Picasso: Head of aBoy (V)DR171. Turner: Landscape (HIDR 172. Seurat: The Stone-breaker (H)DR 173. Rubens: SeatedWoman (V)DR 174. Rubens: Head of aBoy (V)DR 175. Durer: View ofInnsbruck 4H)DR 176. Monet: Seaside Villa (H)DR 177. Constable: Coast Scenewith Ships <H)DR 178. Watteau: Woman Stand¬ing & Seated (V)DR 179. Picasso: Nu Torso deFemme (V)DR181. Renoir: Bather DryingHerself (V)DR182. Durer: Courtyard ofInnsbruck Castle (V)DR183. Monet: Seascape1873 <H>DR 184. Canaletto: GrandCanal (H)DR185. Durer; Young Hare (V) TitleDR 186. Daumier: Print Collec¬tor (HIDR 187. Brueghel: Landscape (H)DR 188. Kollwitz: Child inArms (V*DR 189. Kollwitx: Mother andChild (V»DR 190. Rubens: Son of theArtist (V)DR 191. Manet: Lady withFon (V)DR 192. Rubens: InfanteIsabella (V)DR 193. Rubens: Portrait of aWoman (V)DR 194. Corot: Girl with Beret (V)DR 195. Cezanne: Olympia (H)DR 196. Modigliani: Caryatid (V)DR 197. Rouault: EsquestrienneThe Circus (V)DR 199. Degas: Nude ScratchingHer Bock lV)DR200. Shen Chou: Gardeners ina Fenced Enclosure (H)DR201. Van Gogh: Iron Bridge atTrinquetaille on the Rhone (H)DR202. Gericault: Mounted Offi¬cer of the Carrabineers (V)DR203. Li Tang: Old Man & Childon Buffalo < M >DR204. Marini: Horse andRider (V )DR205. Klee: Harbor Scene (H)DR206. Constable: Brighton Beachwith Colliers (H)DR207. Watteau: Three NegroBoys (V)DR210. Vuillard: Quay otPouliguen (V)DR21I. Picasso: SeatedWoman (V)DR301. da Vinci: Madonna,Child, St. John (V)DR302. Chinese Flower Water-colors from MustardseedGarden I (H 1DR304. Chinese Flower Water-colors from MustardseedGarden III (H)DR306. Piranosi: Santa MariaMaggiore (H >DR307. Piranosi: Saint JohnLateron (H)DR308. Michaiangelo: Piste (V)DR309. Russell: The Autumn (MlDR310. Russell: Fight Between theBlackfeet and the Pidgeons (H)DR311. Klee: At the Beginningof a Feast (H)DR312. Morin: Deer Isle,Maine (H)DR313. Remington: A SiouxCAief (V)DR314. Remington: An ArmyPacker (V)DR315. Remington: A Breed (VIDR316. Remington: A Trapper<Y)DR317. Nolde: Portrait of aYoung Mon (V)DR318. Nolde: Portrait of aYoung Girl (V)THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORES5802 ELLIS A VENUE - CHICAGO 37. ILLINOIS8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 19, 1965