Sweatshirt- causes uproarOf commies, cops, and clinkAn exhortation to commit the act of fornication against analien ideology printed on a UC student’s sweatshirt hasbrought him a charge of disorderly conduct.Alan Ruby, 19, appeared in Municipal court on the chargeyesterday, but his case was conVol. 73 — No. 43 The University of Chicago 3 1Vice: Snell-Hitchcock fro go undergrodDorm changes will ease load tinued until May 25.Ruby, a first year student from- - Ottumwa, Iowa, was arrestedTuesday, May 11, 1965 April 30 while playing tennis inback of Burton-Judson, where helives. Part of his tennis attire con¬sisted of a sweatshirt emblazonedwith two words, one of them afour letter word, the other theword ‘Communism.”AT ABOUT 8:45 In the evening, charge of disorderly conduct athis May 25 hearing, he is liablefor a maximum fine of $200, butthere is no jail penalty provided.Mama was hipAccording to Ruby, when theoffended patrolman was question¬ing him, one of the questions heasked was: “Would you show thatto your mother or sister?”Replied Ruby: “I don’t have aSnell-Hitchcock will be a totally undergraduate dorm next fall in order to accommodate another enforcer of the^w^ueht sister* but, mother’s alreadynext fall’s entering class, according to James Vice, director of student housing. a giimpse of the questionable 5660 the ldentlcal Slgn-’In addition, entering students in the graduate schools, along with some returning gradu- slogan. Another motioned to Ruby ,P°th th?. “d. the,_ sweaVate students, will be obliged to live in the YMCA and a few Hyde Park hotels and rooming to come over to him, then toldhouses due to a lack of space. The — —— ——— him to climb the fence. Ruby ^Piccadilly Hotel on 51st street has space, Vice does not foresee any planning to enter in the fall, the chose the more leisureiy way 0falready been designated for this problem with older students wish- situation is not as desperate as it aroUnd through a doorpurpose, and negotiations are cur- mg to keep their rooms. “We was a year ago, when over 700 and out t0 the streetrently underlay with other pri- should be able to house all stu- students entered. There are ten 1st, a New York-based satire mag¬azine. The sign sells for $1; thesweatshirt goes for $2.50.dents by the conversion of Snell- people who are out in the coldHitchcock,” he said. “by present computations,” ViceAnother O-Week crush said, but he emphasized that, withThe only problem that Vice sees normal pattern of changes andis during Orientation Week, when vacancies arising over the sum-the College will occupy the great as many as 50 students who will mer, this number did not repre¬majority, if not all, of these be living at home during the year sent a serious problem.will be obliged to live in the Some space at 5400dorms. “Things will be tight then,” IN ADDITION TO using theVice said, “and we’ll probably be YMCA and other non-Universityusing the guest rooms again as we housing for graduate students,did this past fall.” Vice said that there will be someUsing the guest rooms was far space available at 5400 Greenwooda board contract on some sort from the only thing that the har- after the normal sign-up periodwhich will provide them with ried housing office had to do this concludes. This space will proba-meals at New Dorm. “We haven't fall, when the admissions office bly be used for graduate studentsworked out the details yet,” Vice was deluged with acceptances of all years and transfer students,said, “but it does seem very !m- from many more students, and Vice said.portant that they have some board particularly mail students, than In sum, Vice called the situa-contract somewhere. They need an it had expected. More than two tion “confused,” but said that as ...... ... , „ , .opportunity lust to meet students students lived in some rooms for the summer progresses and the t}jf first of a three-part series on however, give no assurance thatand also each other.” a time, and those who had re- first year students in the College of drugs, habit forming two weeks of hard work and aPresent plans call for an en- quested single rooms were given are all taken care of, “we should or otherwise, on college cam minimal amount of sleep wouldforced New Dorm dinner contract temporary roommates. have a pretty good idea of where ^ ™eA fSJ iLll*With 671 first year students we stand.”vate owners.THE CONVERSION OF Snell-Hitchcock should probably free inthe neighborhood of 110 spaces,Vice said. First year students inspaces, he added.Probably on contractAlthough they will be living InSnell-Hitchcock, first year stu¬dents will "In all probability” have Escorted to stationUpon Ruby’s appearance on thestreet, still in the two-word sweat¬shirt, the patrolman told him toget into the waiting patrol car.Not heeding the pleas of Ruby’stennis partner and other onlook¬ers, they drove him to the Engle¬wood police station, let him sit ina cell for about an hour, and final¬ly let him post $25 bail bond.Ruby says he was denied a chanceto make any telephone calls.IF RUBY is found guilty on the The MAROON will holda staff meeting Friday at 4pm in the Maroon office,third floor, Ida Noyes Hall,to vote on a proposed con¬stitutional amendment andto elect an editor-in-chieffor the coming year. Allstaff members are requiredto attend.Dex: not at exam time(Editor’s note: the following is berstadt reported. These studies,for the Snell Hitchcock first yearmen, with an option to sign unfor additional meals on an indi¬vidualized contract, Vice said. Buthe emphasized that all plans arevery Indefinite as of now. Plan Springfield protest series, the MAROON will present fatigue, or that they are not harm-the views of VC officials on the ful to bodily health when used indrug problem). this way. When non-fatigued sub-_ . jects are studied, psychomotorperformance is not raised striking-WASHINGTON — Using ly above normal,” he continued.A meeting will be held Wednes- measure. A student sit-in on these jVice said that he had thought day night at 8 pm in Ida Noyes to hearings is planned as part of the P P P J BARBITURATES HAVE a de¬in terms of no board contract at organize a “March on Springfield” march. around exam time does not pressant effect on the centralall for the Snell-Hitchcock first and on the state legislature in sup- A full discussion of the problem seriously impair nealtn or per- nervous system and are usuallyyear men but he discovered that port of fair housing for the state as well as of Housing Bill 224 and formance, according to a Food prescribed to induce sleep, or inthe kitchen facilities at Snell- of Illinois. other proposed legislation will and Drug Administration small amounts, a calming effectHitchcock were ‘just not enough.” The march scheduled for May take place at the Wednesday meet- medical officer. An occasional user, however, re-‘If all the Snell-Hitchcock rest 18, is being organized in conjunc- ing in addition to organizing the On the other hand, “the use of apts to a normal dosage with ex¬dents cooked at once, there would tion with approximately 15 other March. All interested in going on sedatives or stimulants to aug- citement rather than sedation, Al-be a terribly confused situation,” Illinois colleges and universities to the march, which will run from ment the pleasure-producing effect bers^adt warned.Vice said. demonstrate the wide student sup- early Tuesday morning and run of alcohol, such as might occur Pins before exams badEVEN THOUGH NO other plans port for the legislation. On the until late in the evening, are urged at unsupervised social gatherings,” Taking barbiturates the nightbeside the conversion of Snell- day of the demonstration, the to attend the meeting. If this is is extremely dangerous. This, ac- before an exam would not be aHitchcock are being made to ease state senate will begin holding not possible, please contact Ellis cording to Norman Alberstadt, good idea, according to Alber-the strain on available dorm subcommittee hearings on the Levin, PL 2-9718. could lead to “automobile acci- stadt, for “there is impairment ofdents or impulsive sexual as- psychomotor performance for sev-saults.” eral hours after awakening.”ALBERSTADT DISCUSSED Another side effect of longer-act-the physical effects of using stim- ing barbiturates, such as pheno-ulants and sedatives in a seminar barbital, is a “hangover,” consist-of the annual meeting of the Na- ing of lassitude, dizziness, andtional Association of Student Per- gastrointestinal symptoms thesonnel Administrators. morning after the drug has beenAmphetamines galore taken.Among the stimulants are am- “Thus, there is a hazard in us-Algren, McGorr debate issue ot ForumDeath penalty: a deterrent or not?Is capital punishment a degrading, offensive spectacle, or is it one of society’s best weap¬ons in the war against crime? , __.0 , __This was the point of disagreement between Nelson Algren, noted Chicago author, and phetamines, including ampheta- ing barbiturates to induce sleepFrank McGarr, a former US attorney, at Friday night’s debate on capital punishment, mine itself, methamphetamine, if the subject is going to engageSDonsored hv the Maroon and held — : — T, 7—7Z desoxyphedrine, and phenmetra- in activities which require com-in the law school auditorium. The convicted ^ in a county near the lays and intervention by the gov- zjne Amphetamine drugs are also plete alertness the following morn-ernor. known as “bennies,” “co-pilots,” ing,” Alberstadt warned.He insited, however, that any «jiear^s>» and “footballs.” Among “When taken in small doses for^ . discussion of the merits of capital sedatives are barbiturates, daytime sedation, the barbituratesAlgren denied t a e punishment must not be in terms gucj1 ag phenobarbital, pentobar- alleviate feelings of anxiety, andof death acts as a detenen o 0f “subjective feelings about bitak secobarbital, and amobarbi- in normal subjects, produce littlewould-be criminals. A person in whether any particular man, such taj jjarbiturate drugs are also if any change in psychomotoruve as a deterrent Mcuarr ar- the act of comfni^t^ a ® as Paul Crump or Bill Wither- known as “red birds,” “goof balls,” performance. With larger doses,gued that the death Denaltv’s passlon 1S n?t abo,ut , . spoon, should be executed. That “yeuow jackets,” or “blue havens.” such as are used to induce sleep,. u „ a moment and consider t P issue was foreclosed a long time nndpr federal law. illegal deliv- a significant imDairment of over¬debate was moderated by JohnCallaway, public affairs directorof CBS radio outlet WBBM.Algren described the repulsive-ness of an electrocution, and ar¬gued that the penalty is ineffec¬tive as a deterrent. McGarr ar convicted instorage place.Death no deterrentjustification is not so much as adeterrent as it is socity’s expression of “revulsion against certain figure that their chances of con-particularly heinous crimes.”ALGREN, WHO SPOKE firstfor twenty minutes, quoted de¬scriptions of electrocutions, inwhich the victim “lurches for¬ward in the chair, so that it wouldall over if it were not bolteddown.” Current is often appliedthree or even four times before , .. „ ., 4fC- „ , ^ ^ t Under federal law, illegal deliv- a significant impairment of over¬bile penalty, Algren -aid. ago by the jury that set the pen- ^ amphetamines or barbitur- all psychomotor function is pro-if they did, they would probably alty,” McGarr said. J - -ates is punishable by a fine and duced consistently.. . Beware of emotionalism imprisonment. Illegal possession Both ampetamines and barbit-viction and execution are aoou Emotionalism too often takes is not' an offense under federal urates have been restricted bytwenty in three tb0iisa.1?,; an over when a condemned man “has law, but the drugs can be con- government regulation because ofwould go ahead and do it. the good sense to write a book, fiscated from a person involved hazards—in extreme cases evenA person sentenced to the death or gets Irv Kupcinet (of the Sun- in their illegal sale. Illegal pos- death — that could result frompenalty must often live through Times) or Nelson Algren to argue session, however, is an offense their excessive or continual use.many times when execution is jor him,” McGarr said. Emotion- under many state and local laws. CHRONIC USE by individualsstayed at only the last minute. ausm ^ aiso on the other side, Amphetamines are prescribed “habituated” to amphetamines of-Citing the case of Bill Wither- when the public is swayed by a chiefly to cut appetite and relieve ten produces weight loss. “Inthe victim is’ declared dead Al- spoon’ currently living on his recent or particularly revolting depression, Alberstadt said. Their doses of 20 mg or more, ampheta-gren said This tvDe of punish- thirteenth stay of execution, Al- crime. He said the bill to abolish effect is influenced by the per- mine usually causes a rise ingren said that “when a man goes eapita.l punishment almost totally sonality and mental state of the blood pressure. It can also causement is “unconstitutional, cruel,and unusual,” Algren argued.To support his point that elec¬trocution is “neither experitiousnor swift,” Algren said that Geor¬gia has onlyfor the whole state. When a per¬son is sentenced to death in acounty far away from where thechair is stored, the sentence maybe commuted to save transporta¬tion expenses, but a sentence willbe carried out if the person is to sleep the night before his jn Illinois is presently bogged user. “Generally, a normal dose abnormalities of heart rhythmscheduled execution, oversleeps down in the legislature due par- produces wakefulness, alertness, and can precipitate attacks of an-the time of execution and awak- tially to the recent killing of increased initiative, elevation of gina pectoris in certain individu-ju mai ucur ens without being told for two Fred Christiansen by youths on mood, talkativeness, and increased als,” Alberstadt said,one electric1 chair daYs that he has been granted an- pep pj]is> motor activity,” he said. “It should not be used by per*other reprieve, he pays a thou- McGarr surmised that what Studies of individuals who do sons with advanced arterioscleros-sandfold for accidentally shooting most people find repulsive about not use amphetamine habitually is, over active thyroid, or ner-a policeman.” capital punishment is its “deliber- but who take normal doses for vousness. Some individuals are un-IN HIS PART OF the debate, ateness.” This must make all the two or three days show that the usually sensitive to the drug andMcGarr agreed that, if the death difference, he said, since we don’t drug is most effective in “miti- develop symptoms of overdosagepenalty is imposed, it should be get nearly as upset about the gating the effects of fatigue or after taking a normal dose,” hecarried out without inordinate de- (Continued on page three) psychomotor performance,” Al- concluded.EDITORIALBetter solutions available for housing problemsThe problem that James Vice* director of stu¬dent housing, has faced for the past two years andmight face every year to come is one that allowsof two kinds of solutions: one temporary and theother permanent. Working with the available dormspace that he has, Vice’s decision to turn Snell-Hitcheoek over to undergraduates in order to con¬serve space fpr the entering class is reasonable.But unless somebody realizes pretty soon that suchtemporizing and temporary measures are far fromideal, and that there are better and more perma¬nent solutions, either Vice will go insane or stu¬dents will be living in the streets, or both.A far better solution to the housing problemfrom a long-range point of view would be for moredorms to be built without the slightest delay.Richard F. O’Brien’s development office is cur¬rently conducting a huge fund-raising campaign,but even so it has not been definitely determinedwhether dorms are on the top of the priority list. One can only hope that they are, since first thingsmust be taken care of first. Students certainlycan’t live in a new library or a new chemistrybuilding.But given that there won’t suddenly be a shim¬mering new dorm next fall, we ask whether Vice’sdecision to ease the strain by converting Snell-Hitchcock is the best way to solve the problem.Despite administration claims that it would be “un¬feasible,” we wonder whether Snell-Hitchcockmight not be made not only totally undergraduatebut also co-ed. This would effectively kill two birdswith one stone; it would provide the only thingclose to a co-ed dorm on campus, and it would freemuch space in New Dorm for incoming first yearwomen. .‘ An alternative might be to liberalize even morethan was done last year the residence requirement,particularly that for women. The situation as itnow stands is one of people who want to live on .*53rd street living in the dorms and of people whoWant to live in the dorms living on 53rd street (in*the YMCA). Everybody is unhappy as a result,both the graduate students in the Y and the upperclass women bound to the dorms, to say nothing|bfthe incoming first year class. By letting second!’year girls free, more people, if not everybody- will:',be a great deal happier.The best long-range solution of all, of courserwould be for the administration to provide not dniffa new dorm or two but also to prevent the chain*on apartments by swearing off such clandes?@maneuvers as the sale of an entire block ofdominantly student apartments to the I.mli,fjfTheological Seminary. The improvement of ;®these possible categories for student living woMSvery simply, afford students a choice. And -w^^it comes to something as basic as living quatlflllshouldn’t students have that choice? ■■■sASaRwhether dorms are on the top of the priority list, now stands is one of people who want to live on shouldn’t students have that choice?Medic named to Science Acad. Political camp holds meetingDr. Leon O. Jacobson, chairman of the department of medi- tinent to problems of disease and UC students interested in spend- profitable experience aVjffifjl>4, cine and director of the Argonne Cancer Research Hospital, health in man.” ing the summer at a New York ,"n<eS*.h*? w‘",Wwas elected to the National Academy of Sciences last week. Jacobson has also made exten- city political discussion camp will na <onst oumh.s.Application forms yill be/availJacobson, 54, is the twenty-ninth UG faculty member to be sive pioneering studies of the have an opportunity tonight to a( lhe moelin which is'^jHihormone erythropoietin, which is mwt with camp representatives to ajj students. 'v elected to the Academy. He wasone of lhe IJiim In. i„ l» <1.-. mil "« tlm '<»].■ lhe s|,Wn anil by th(, kiilnoy and con- and past participants.U’is v,-sr- ‘""'inK m ["eventing ^ |h, tnmw1ion ol ,he Tho Inc. which will begiJACOBSON IS intemationalh and ref tailing radiation damage ^1<))>(J (.()! j,,s at 7:30 pm. on the third floor <• known forMswoik on blood foi ]),• 1.^.0- the first phvsician somalion and disease and the effects . ,of radiation on living tissues. ' 'Much of his research has been -y Jn 1962, he was given the Borden ( Chicago MaroonTYPEWRITERS &TAPE RECORDERSinventory sole, ;;Inquire at our *I typewriter counter ,The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.; i ginpm. on the tnird rioor ofIda Noyes Hall, will feature lec-Studied tissue recovery Clines and the distribution of in- Kditorin^Thler Robert FLcveylHK WAS AW’ARDKD the 1956 f°rma,*on about the Encampment Business Manager Michael" ‘ * for Citizenship. Every year, the Managing Editor David t v■JQO Assistants to the Editor, Sharon GoldmanfJoan PliilTiMjover Campus New* Editor Dan Heri7berg|runs Assistant Campua New*. , ... -/ , . . . 1V./1 ..I^ V. ' V ,,.1,II1 ■ II ■ 'k M * OUndtover allw they are 'objected to ,h(> ^ of JuncThe program that the Enoairip-began using rnent offers Ls a combination of _ ...us .iZ in tile seminars and discussion periods Movie Editor Kenn- ih kleukemias and on national affairs and curient Music Editor...... peter Rabinowita|polycythemia rubra vera a polities IV students who have "ft,*"* V. p J? $WhliWiEditor Dinah EsfS|Editor. Ctiicago LiteraryReview,.;.. ,.*. .... Martin MlchaeliSSSruKiire-Eeature Editor David HRlchUPhoto /.’/./“**Co-ordinator*. BUI Caff rev Steve WofivRewrite Editor Eve Hochwkidlblood disease marked by abnormal^nart j,>j 1 mtptl in thp program in the Editor Emeritus .... John t wil> high amounts of r.il cells. p.,M i);,\<.Hlled it "an extremely ser?»S*r ■,cnlber ofJacobson became the first man tomake clinical use of radioactiveisotopes in the UC clinics. ,He was also a member of thescientific team whose work dur-**■•/ ing World War II led to the usek of a nitrogen mustard compound /,5." . « • 3 v'. ' . . , ' . ‘ . Letters to the editorof Hodgkins Tells SCLC plansilmrase. a di-nrdei of the white j0 'm TUPhlrioil i«>lk cinvilai In lnnknmin ‘ * r, • v I tlE*Some scotch instead?,v Dining the coming summer, theSouthern Christian Leadership; EDITOR:I should like to make one < <Tm|The new novelby the author ofCAT’S CRADLEis at-your bookstore!VONNEGUT.JRPearls Before Swine ,tiori"and Political Education pro- . , _ . , , «jeet T.,e purpose of the SCOPE ^,oun^ Lxpe. tmenlaR Th - ^.project will be to implement the mended that you ha\e a -■■ ■;>voting rights bill by political edu Iwfore you come. I thinkcation and registration of voters should have been changed ' toin many counties in. the deep recommendation to down at •' /,>ouih a lifth of Scotch.SCOPE is now ‘uvk'mg under- ANN HUI S1Z1gi ad t late and gradual e -a ij<Iim,k'interested in working for the pi ojeet. If the students from a partie- Sees SWAP requestular campus would like to form , , .one or mm e teams, such I earns as SBOft Oil llllOwill then be assigned to work rpO THE EDITOR:- //together in the Mme county; For ^ ‘.W appnoanu.a^g part 'iH.h.T fj pwgSin imP'ying 'hal ‘°me SWAP '"Mfrom June 14 to 18. , *, Z "OW ,on,a,ivay p,n„no,|■ J5*' 'h',e Wl1 "»«•"* »«* which would Immediately henifl'YJl1'S “'r“re both the elementary and ht^an official from the Southern . , . , » ,,,Christian Leadership Conference scho°' B'uaen's o! Woo,llawnwill address students interested The onlY 8roun,J for lh<‘,r °JPSin lhe summer project. Details of Pasi,ion seemed to bo that Wood|the meeting will be announced senior hi«h Sth°o1 s,ud^llater. would prefer not to walk as!|§II now have information sheets as stivet. lhe tutois ateand application blanks for the reptvsented as having many Mproject. Anyone who is interested kernes of instruction, includingmay pick up the forms from me a lower-middle-upper organizein my office in Gates-Blake 127 tion of grades, which ihey thinkVpr call me at Ext. 2826 or ext wil1 require only an extra3521. ■ /■, •■ “A hilariously wacky■ comedy.... Its chief target:is inherited wealth, butVonnegut takes pot shotsat many varieties of folly,”. ‘ — Saturday Review■ "Vonnegut is one of themost effective satirists ofour day.” — New YorkHerald, Tribune3rd LARGE PRINT ING$4.95..f^HoIt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. , MARK H. HAIXER .; ASST. PROF. OF HISTORYMay 11, 1965 Take TWATake the Easy Way:1 Airline-— 1 Tic ketService to Major Cities/■ / of Europe - vTWA Campus Rep.:MIKE LAVINSKY Ml 3-6000Or See Travel Agent and a new (1500-child?) cdnspjaidated kindergarten building!If SWAP docs propose topublic educational policy in thi^Jdistrict, may I suggest that ,its|members provide themselves withmore information (possibly ijgainsulting some of the many/ex^pert sources available at this■■Unjaversity) and that they consid«^further the negative conscqucnci^of rushing to the barricades to d*^fend both Hyde Park and Woodllawn against the 3,500 new clas|lroom seats that would becom^available under the Cohler (cdt;^lection—not the Willis) proposal 1%4 McKIM MARRIOJT,Professor of Anthropologytheatre reviewAnna: good acting, bad playANNA KARENINANovel by Leo TolstoyDramatic Adaptation byJames GoodwinandEucenie LeontovichTast:Anna Karenina Dolores SuttonCount Alexei Vronsky.... Saadoun Al-BatayiAlexei Karenin William PappasKonstantin Levin .. Richard PaulPrince Stiva OblonskyDavid R. Sai;rprincess Betsy Tverskala Mary BestSappho slinoli* Uretehen OehlerDirected by — Joseph Slowik andEugenie LeontovichSot by — Richard Kent WilcoxNo. you probably don’t want1o see the production of AnnaKarenina which opened at theGoodman last Friday, not un¬less you have an unusual passionfor dramatizations of Tolstoy anda saintly patience with technicalincompetence.The acting, paradoxically, wasseveral cuts above the usualstandard for the Goodman.Saadoun Al-Batayi played Vron¬sky with astonishing maturity, ex¬pressing with excellent vocal andgestural command the torturednobility of his role. David Sagewas very good indeed as PrinceStiva, and although I felt that hewas more the good-natured coun¬try squire than the perennial ado¬lescent that Tolstoy portrayed,this was more likely to have beenthe director’s fault than his.Richard Paul played Levin withgreat enthusiasm and verve; hemade me W’ant to .see him againin a larger and more expansivepart. Minor kudos are also due toWilliam Pappas, Mary Best, andG ret t hen Oehler, who did splen¬didly in their less important roles.BI T THE JEWEL of the evening was Dolores Sutton ilate ofthe National Repertory Theatre),who raptured the elusive charact¬er of Anna completely. A bit ofvanity, a little courage, an im¬mense amount of untapped pas¬sion — these are counterbalancedin Anna’s personality by her fearof social anathema and by a deep,abiding love for her son. She isoften contradictory, at times des¬perate, and always fascinating —in short, the dream role of anactress. Miss Sutton made thedream come alive.There Is not much that can besaid for the technical-quality ofthe production. While it was nice¬ly explained that the performanceI attended was a rehearsal, nota finished show, the fact remainsthat the paying public was in¬vited the following evening. Irather doubt that the lighting,which was flubbed in each andevery scene, will miraculously be¬ come perfect as soon as the Good¬man begins demanding its shekels.It will more probably remain dis-tractingly incompetent.The set, by Richard Kent Wilcox, was well designed aesthetic¬ally, but it was a bit too struc¬turally complex for the play.There were many levels and stair¬ways connecting them, whichslowed up the action. There werea large number of acting areaswhich the directors tried to keepin perpetual flux, managing onlyto thoroughly confuse the audi¬ence. There were also missed en¬trances, missing scenes, misplacedscenery, and mismanaged props.THESE TECHNICAL imbro¬glios will undoubtedly clear upbefore the play is too far alongin its run. What won’t clear up,unfortunately, is the script. Tol¬stoy’s novel is a “loose and baggymonster” (if I may paraphraseR. P. Blackmur), unwieldy topresent adequately, and impossi¬ble to present intact. Goodwin andLeontovich’s solution to the prob¬lem of too much plot was to cap-sulize. So Anna Karenina comesout a series of tiny, inadequate,disjointed vignettes.Part of the problem might havebeen solved by discarding theopening, and beginning, as Virgildid, in the midst of things. The relation of what had gone beforemight have been quickly andneatly done by some skilfully re¬written dialogue. But Goodwinand Leontovich have peiverselyinsisted on starting at the begin¬ning and slogging right throughto the end.They insisted, in their passionfor inclusiveness, on throwing ineverything including the kitchensink. The kitchen sink was inIhis case the touching incident inTolstoy’s novel in which Levinmakes love and proposes to Kittyby writing the initial letters ofwhat he wants to say with chalkon a table-top. But what Tolstoygot away with in his novel maybe dramatically far-fetched; in¬stead of inspiring a joy mixedwith a certain pathos for the in¬articulate lovers, the scene dis¬solved in howls of laughter.I appear to be criticizing theadaptors for having failed to dothe impossible — dramatizingAnna Karenina. This is true, forthe public need not be called uponto subsidize such failures. ButGoodwin and Leontovich alsofailed in taste and in creativity,and so I must also rebuke themfor having made a sorry failureand not a magnificent one.David H. Richter Pin down londlords* roleLaw students examinelegal aspects of slumsView death penalty's role(Continued from page one)“carnage on the highways” whendozens of persons are killed inauto accidents over holiday week¬ends. The small numbers of per¬sons killed under the death penal¬ty does not make it as “brutal”a problem as many people as¬sume.THE QUESTION OF whethercapital punishment deters crimeis highly debatable, McGarr said.Statistics can be used on eitherside of Die question.The best justification for thepenalty, he said is that “the pen¬alty must fit the crime.” Heagreed with a quote from JusticeDenning of England that a penal¬ty “should adequately reflect therevulsion felt by society” in par¬ticularly heinous crimes. He saidpersons convicted of such offensesas cold-blooded murder, sex of¬fenses against children, or geno¬cide, as in the case of Adolf Eich-man„ cannot be treated the sameas bank robbers or petty thieves.He advocated use of capital pun¬ishment only in this ilimited kindof case."AKTKK so many years of the rhetoricol Liberal abstractions, ot contain¬ment and coexistence and convergenceaial appeasement our verbal armoris rusty. Until the President relateshis acts to a fundamentally changedstrategic posture and perspective,until he initiates the shilt from apassive strategy of containment andretreat to a forward strategy of re¬sistance, advance and victory, theacts can amount Denies rehabilitationIn answer to the argument of¬ten presented, that the aim ofpenal sentences should be to “re¬ habilitate” the convict, McGarrpointed out that “the denial ofthe opportunity for rehabilitationis indeed the most significant partof the penalty.” Rehabilitation isforeclosed when the jury makesits decision, he said.In his ten-minute rebuttal atthe end, Algren expressed puzzle¬ment over McGarr’s justificationof the death penalty by the largenumber of highway accidents. Healso ridiculed McGarr’s sugges¬tion that a better term for “re¬venge” would be “sense of re-tributory justice.” Algren said hecould see lhat “when we reach theGreat Society, we will probablycall the electrocution ‘benificentimmolation’or deterrence by elec¬trified transfiguration.’ ”Collegium plays setOn Saturday in Bond Chapel, theUC Collegium Musicum will pre¬sent a concert of three centuriesof Petrarch settings.Included on the program willbe instrumental and vocal worksby Philippe Verdelot, Jacopo daBologna, Claudio Monteverdi,Marco da Gazliano, Orlando diLasso, and others.The concert begins at 8:30; thereis no admission charge.to little morethan episodicspasms.” I For o Iin copy of tkoI currant iituo of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writ#to Dept. CP-4, 130 E.135 St., N. Y. 10, N. V.SUMMERWORKMen register now for ogreat summer job. Carnecessary.$120 to startPart-time also avail¬able. Order taking orlight delivery.372-7766Miss B RECORDSWe now corry o stock ot records covering oil cotegories of music andspoken word recordings which ore priced to sell os follows:Code List Now selling atA $ 1.98 $1.69B $ 2.49 $1.98C $ 2.98 $2.39D $ 3.98 $2.79E $ 4.98 $3.69F $ 5.98 $4.59G $ 6.98 $5.49DD $ 7.98 $5.58EE $ 9.98 $7.38FF $11.98 $9.18See them atThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONS DO 3-6866I PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent b Faculty Discount Present lease laws are wellsuited for the sixteenth cen¬tury England in which theywere designed, but are hardlyadequate in present-day so¬ciety, said George A. Ranney,Jr., at a symposium entitled“Slum Tenants and the Law,”given Friday at the law school.Ranney and three other studentsin the law school, John A. Cratsely,Robert C. Funk, and David C.Long, each delivered a shor t speechon a different aspect of the re¬lationship of tenants in slum build¬ings to their landlords and tourban renewal commissions.IN HIS SPEECH, called “TheRent Strike and the CommonLaw,” Ranney emphasized thegrowth of the lessor-lessee con¬tract in common law. Originally,the lease was a private contract,implying mutual obligations be¬tween landlord and tenant. Inorder to give the tenant completecontrol over his property, however,the lease gradually came to em¬phasize the rights of the lessee.The lessee became paramount onhis own property.In the sixteenth century it waseasy for a prospective lessee toexamine for defects a farm heliked, and to repair whateverminor defects occurred after leas¬ing the place. Now, of eour.se, itis practically impossible for a pro¬spective apartment dweller to in¬spect adequately the whole pre¬mises before leasing it, Ranneysaid. And the tenant cannot evenafford to make most repairs inthe common areas of the building;only the landlord has enoughmoney.Landlords implacableIt is, however, impossible inmost places to force a landlordto repair his property, Ranneysaid. In only six states does theresponsibility for repairs rest withthe landlord. The building codesof other areas are often impracti¬cal or are utilized inefficiently orcorruptly.Desperate tenants have resortedto rent strikes or support forurban renewal programs. Rentstrikes, however, have been suc¬cessful only in New York, andhave two disadvantages—they canlead to tenant irresponsibility andcan cut off from the landlord theonly source of funds he can usefor repairs. Renney noted.Ranney’s proposal to correct thesituation was to cause the leaseto revert to contract form, as itwas originally, instead of leavingit as an estate-in-land. This actionwould make it possible for tenantsof neglected buildings to sue theirlandlords on the basis of stated orimplied inhabitability clauses intheir lease. This remedy, Ranneysaid, involves only a slight changein the judicial view of leases, and,he said, “only if the law respondsto the pressures and needs (ofthe tenants) will it be meeting itspurpose in our fast - changingsociety.”JOHN C. CRATSLEY, speakingon “Legislative Remedies for Ten¬ants in the War on Slumlords,”noted that judicial and commonlaw remedies for slum housinghave proven ineffective, and 1hat,although some modern laws on thesubject exist, they are still insuf¬ficient.Cratsley proposed four coursesof action that might be taken forthe betterment of slum conditions.A citizen might give an “informa¬tion” to the state’s attorney’s of¬fice, pressuring the attorney toissue a summons or warrant asthe beginning of legal proceedingsbringing the slumlord to account.Cratsley thought that laws thatwould legalize non-payment or re¬duced payment of rent when thecondition of buildings fell belowcertain standards would be a goodidea. He also suggested, much likeRanney, the place of standardsof quality for the building in thelease.Public 'aggrievance*Another suggestion was that laws might be passed allowing amember of the public-at-large tosue the owner of a slum buildingbecause the appearance of such abuilding “aggrieves” the public.This would partially solve the legalproblem caused by the fact thattenants of slums are often toopoor or ignorant to bring suitagainst their landlords, even whensuch a course is open to them.“I propose that the individualsinvolved can’t play an importantrole in protesting urban renewalplans,” said Robert C. Funk inhis speech, “Individual Rightsand Judicial Review: A Responseto Total Slum Clearance?” “Theusual method of urban renewalcommissions is this: A city com¬mission declares an area of land tobe a slum; the city buys the land(often getting most of the moneyfrom the federal government) orgets it through the privilege ofeminent domain. The land is soldto a private developer, who de¬velops it in accordance with apreviously agreed - upon plan,”Funk said.The individual living on the to-be-renewed property may sup¬posedly protest his displacementtwo ways — through the courtsor the usual city review board,Funk pointed out. Unfortunately,what seems true in theory is nottrue in practice. The courts offerlittle hope for the about-to-beevicted tenant.Federal courts have held thatindividuals lack the power to chal¬lenge the federal government. Atthe state level, courts are satisfiedwith ensuring the honesty andprocedural correctness of the ur¬ban renewal boards. “What holdsat the state level, holds at the locallevel,” Funk declared. Clearanceplans, therefore, cannot be at¬tacked on the basis of their lackof merit.REVIEW BOARDS, Funk said,are basically arenas in which peo¬ple may let off steam or makesuggestions. Plans are not can¬celled because of protests, he as¬serted.Unlike the other speakers, Funksaw nothing wrong in this stateof affairs. “As in all cases whereihe government acts,” Funk said,“the equity of the individual isignored for the public interest.The government should have theright to decide the public interest."David C. Long, in his speech,“Relocation without Representa¬tion: Individual Rights to ProtestUrban Renewal,” disagreed withFunk. Long said that many ofthose relocated due to urban re¬newal clearance wind up in sub¬standard housing, and felt thatthe governments should not causesuffering among individuals; thatif governments must renew, theymust also relocate those that theythereby evict.Concurring with Funk, Longsaid that judicial review of clear¬ance projects was “phantom,” andthat review boards were ineffect¬ual. Dwellers in clearance areahousing must be protected, hesaid. The power of the governmentmust not be utilized to the detri¬ment of individuals.Deputy att. gen.Clark speaks todayRamsey Clark deputy attorneygeneral of the United States, willspeak to law school students to¬day on “The Federal Lawyer.”Clark, a 1951 graduate of thelaw school, was appointed deputyattorney general January 28. Hewill talk informally in the HaroldJ. Green lounge.Clark, 37, a native of Dallas,Texas, is the son of US supremecourt justice Tom Clark. He re¬ceived both an MA degree in 1950and a JD degree in the law schoolin 1951. He practiced law in Dallas10 years before being appointedAssistant Attorney General in1961.Clark’s talk will begin at 10:30am. All students are invited.May 11, 1965 CHICAGO MAROON © 3classified ADS UC part of national teach-inPERSONALRound Trip to N.Y. by chartered bus(air cond., spring ride) June 12-19, $35,bus leaves lnt. House Hotel rms. $3-$4nite if desired. Inquire lnt House Assoc.,FA 4-3200 evenings.Chartered bus to Shakespeare Festivalat Stratford. Ont. July 9-11, $15 roundtrip. Tickets reserved for JULIUS CAE¬SAR $2.50, HENRY IV $4.25, BEETHO¬VEN TRIO $2.50. Leave from lnt HouseFriday, 6 pm. return Sunday evening.Call lnt House Assoc., FA 4-8200, eve¬nings.WRITER'S WORKSHOP—PL 2-8377.Europe this summer? FLY TWA. DAILYnon-stop Jets to London. Campus rep.:M. Lavinsky, MI 3-6000.•WANTEDApt. — $60 bonus for 5 bedrm. apt. or2 3-bedrm apts. for June or Sept. Call1221 or 1303 New Dorm.Wanted: room for summer in exchangefor babysitting. DO 3-9293, rm. 209.SUBLETCompletely furnished with TV, hi-fi, ful¬ly carpeted, 3-bedroom, 6-rm. apt. with2-car garage. South Side, lVa ton air con¬ditioner avail., occ. June 10-Sept. 25,8115/month, 374-3308.SUMMER SUBLET —5428 S. WoodlawnAve. (Apt. 3C) 4}i furn. rooms — CHEAP.Call 667-2740.Apartment, 54th St University, 5 rooms,furnished, $115 mo., available June 15-Sept. 15, call x3774, Chris or Vicki.Large 3'2 rm. furn. apt. — June 13-Sept. .1 Paid utilities. Call 684-6978 after4 pm.Cool. 6 rm., 2 baths, fully furn. Black-stone nr. 55th. Avail. June 9 thru Sept.1. 667-2683REWARD offered for info, leading torecovery of my small blue bicycle stolenfrom in front of Jimmy’s 7 pm Saturday.B. C. Lumbert, PL 2-6666. Summer sublet in NYC—four safe blocksfrom Columbia on Riverside Drive. 2 lge.bdrms., lge. living room, kitchen, dish¬washer, doorman, $200 monthly. Write:Ben Stein, 512 Furnald, Columbia College,NY, 10027,Near campus; 3 bedrooms; 324-1395 earlymorning, late evening.Large, i.e. big, 4-room apt. beautifullyfurnished: rugs & fan, $90; June 13-Oct.1; 324-7637 after 6.FOR RENTNice room for rent, private entrance,kitchen privileges: available June 1. 5407S. Harper, call 493-7443.Nice, reasonable, clean room near Univ.for rent. Call MI 3-9257.Unfurn. apt. 6 large rooms, naturalwood burning fireplace, 3 large bedrooms,4 big clothes closets, bookcases, linenclosets, pantry. Suitable for business orprofessional people. Garage $10 extra.Call between 8-10 sun., 6-9 pm. MU 4-8222.Need a place to live for the summer?We've got rooms for 2 guys, private bed¬rooms, near Univ. St Lake. $40 mo. Call684-8120 after 6 pm.Partly furn. apt. 4*,i large rms., 2 masterbedrooms, natural wood burning fire¬place, suitable for professional or busi¬ness people. Also 3>i rms. Call between8-10 am., 6-9 pm. MU 4-8222.FOR SALELOUDSPEAKER: Janszen 300. $80. MU4-1357.MOTORBIKE — 3 horsepower, top speedaround 45 mph. Will sell for $50 (maybeless). Contact K.K. x2898 days; 493-1129nights.HELP WANTEDCamp Cnslrs. to work at CAMP KENICOin Conn. Berkshires, 6 male min. age 20."ALSO” Spclsts. — Riflry., Archery,Fencing, Photog., Golf. Write 8. Green-baum, 852 E. 57th St. for infor. St appi.or call 752-5868. 10-11.2 girls to share apt., newly decorated,furn., near campus, $40/month plus util.288-4278. UC will be one of 50 schoolsacross the country to behooked into a national teach-in on the war in Vietnam,which will originate fromWashington on Saturday.The national teach-in, the firstin which a representative of theadministration will defend USVietnam policy, will last through¬out the day. Panel discussions, in¬formal discussions, and questionperiods are on the agenda.RICHARD FLACKS, assistantprofessor of sociology and coordin¬ator of the UC hookup, told theMaroon that three rooms in IdaNoyes will be set up to broadcastthe proceedings. They are thecloister club, the theater, and theeast lounge. The teach-in beginsat 8:30 am and concludes at 4:30pm.Morgenthau to participateDuring a morning panel discus¬sion, UC’s Hans Morgenthau, dis¬tinguished service professor ofhistory and political science andan outspoken critic of US Viet¬nam policy, will confront Harvardhistorian Arthur Schlesinger andEnglish kremlinologist Isaac Deut-scher.The teach-in will adjourn forlunch at 11:30, at which time therewill be an informal discussion peri¬od. At 12:30, McGeorge Bundy, thePresident’s advisor on foreign af¬fairs, will face off against George Kahan, an expert on Asia fromCornel University.Later on in the afternoon, twoteams, one of critics of US policyand the other of its defenders, willfinish off the teach-in with a sec¬ond debate. The crtiic’s team in¬cludes William Appleman Wil¬liams of the University of Wiscon¬sin and Mary Wright of Yale. Thedefenders will be Henry Kissingerof Harvard, Zbigniew Brzizinskiof Columbia (an expert on Rus¬sia), and Wesley Fisher, a statedepartment advisor on Vietnamfrom Michigan State University.UC'S HOOK-IN to the teach-inwas brought about through thecontributions of faculty members.Only about $120 was necessary.Same committee organizersThe student-faculty committeeto end the war in Vietnam is or¬ganizing UC’s link to the Washing¬ton sessions. It is the same groupthat staged UC’s initial teach-inon Vietnam, which was held be¬fore 700 people on April 9.One of Flacks’ greatest hopes Isthat, by hearing the discussions inprogress, students will be movedto write letters to certain partici¬pants, particularly to Bundy.Flacks hopes to set up tables inIda Noyes Saturday on which willbe found such essentials as sta¬tionery, envelopes, and stamps byway of encouragement.Flacks called the national teach-in “remarkable” in that it will represent “the first visible debatebetween pro-administration andanti-administration academics ina public form.’* The teach-in “sig¬nifies a breakthrough in public in¬fluence on foreign policy.” Flackssaid.Sleep lab directorto speak tonightAllan Rechtschaffen, associateprofessor of psychology, willspeak on his research on dreamstonight at 8 pm in the eastlounge (second floor) of IdaNoyes.Rechtschaffen, who operatesthe UC sleep lab, specializes inphysiologically-oriented studies ofsleep and dreams. His talk issponsored by the UndergraduatePsychology Club. The club willhave a business meeting, andelection of officers, at 7:30.Students for a DemocraticSociety will hold a twist par¬ty Saturday night beginningat 8 pm in Ida Noyes. Ad¬mission is 50c, and themoney collected will be usedto finance a protest in theLoop on May 21 against USpolicy in Southeast Asia.TOWNE HOUSESA CO-OP forBetter LivingforMarriedStudentsand FacultyWithin easy distance of the Campus. Excellent city¬wide transportation via bus, 1C, and Expressway.1, 2, 3, AND 4-SPACIOUS BEDROOMSSEVEN MODELS TO CHOOSE FROMNO MONEY DOWN$370 MEMBERSHIPDEPOSIT MOVESYOU IN! per month TOTAL MONTHLYPAYMENT INCLUDESPRINCIPAL, INTEREST,TAXES, INSURANCEAND ALLMAINTENANCEYour co-op has: Hotpoint Range, Refrigerator and Disposal! •Lovely Custom Kitchen Cabinets • Storms and Screens • Full.Basements • Lavishly Designed Baths • Beautiful Sliding GlassPatio Doors • Ceramic Tile • Extra Large Wardrobe Closets •Full Insulation • Genuine Oak Floors • Lifetime Face Brick •Aluminum Siding • Convenient Gutters and Downspouts • Sound*proofed for Privacy • Private Rear Yard Areas.Plumbing. Heating, Electrical Repair Bills . . . Complete Cam ofLawns and Shrubs . . . Everything is Taken Care of For You asLong as You Live in Beautiful London Towne Houses.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 11, 1965 Calendar of EventsTuesday, May 11LECTURE: "The Political Philosophy ofDavid Hume,” Eugene Miller, doctoralcandidate, committee on social thought,Ryerson 358. 3:30 p.m.VARSITY TRACK MEET: UC vs. Wa¬bash college, Stagg Field, 4 pm.COLLOQUIUM: "Persistent Flow andQuantization of Circulation in Super¬fluid Liquid Helium,” William Zimmer -mann. Jr., professor of physics. Univer¬sity of Minnesota, Research Institutes480, 4:15 pm.LECTURE: "The Cohomology of theSteenrod Algebra,” J. Peter May, pro¬fessor of mathematics, Yale University,Eckhart 206, 4:30 p.m..SEMINAR: “Functional Anatomy as aTool in an Evolutionary MorphologicalStudy of Some Teleost Fishes,” K Liem,department of oral anatomy, Univer¬sity of Illinois, Anatomy 101, 4:30 pm.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Hillel, 7:30pm.LECTURE SERIES: “The Music of In¬dia,” “Rhythm or Tala and the MusicalInstruments of India.” Rajeshwari Dat-ta, lecturer, department of music, IdaNoyes library, 7:30 pm.REHEARSAL: 57th Street Chorale, Wool-man Hall, 7:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: International House,8 pm.CONCERT: CCP Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.BENEFIT: for Mrs. Viola Gregg Liuzzoand Rev. James Reeb, professionalwrestling show, Trianon Ballroom, 6201Cottage Grove, general admission $2,8:30 pm. Wednesday, May 12LECTURE: “Machiavellian Aspects ofPost-Renaissance Ideology,” John G. A.Pocock, department of political science.University of Canterbury, Christchurch,New Zealand, law quadrangle. 10 am.LECTURE: “International Business,’*Garret K. Vandenburgh, Anocut Engi¬neering Co., Business East 103, 1 pm.SEMINAR: “Analogue Computers andSome Applications to Biology," LesterS. Skaggs, professor or radiology, Bil¬lings M-137, 4 pm.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins.University Cartllonneur, RockefellerChapel, 5 pm.MEETING: Aoademlc Affairs Commit¬tee, Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes, 8 pm.LECTURE: “Three Nineteenth-CenturyCritics of the Russian Intelligentsia:Bakunin, Tkachev and Dostoyevskl,”Michael Corfino, professor of Russianhistory, Hebrew University, Jerusalem,Ida Noyes east lounge, 8 pm.Thursday, May 13LECTURE SERIES: “Political Actionand Social Change.” "RevolutionaryLeadership: The Case of Gandhi,”Susanne Rudolph, associate professorof political science, Mandel Hall, 11:30am.VARSITY BASEBALL GAME: UC vs. IIT,Stagg Field, 3:30 pm.SEMINAR: “A Stochastic Calculus andIts Applications to Some Fundamental Theorems of Natural Selection,” CharlesJ. Mode, Professor of mathematics,Montana State College, 5753 Drexel,room 208. 4 pm.LECTURE: “Medical Care: Old Goalsand New Horizons,” George Baehr.chairman, New York state public healthcouncil, Billings 0-106, 5 pm.LECTURE: “Jung’s Concepts of theCollective Unconscious and Archetype*.Daniel C. Jordan, associate professorof psychology, Indiana State Univer¬sity. Thompson House, 8:30 pm.Friday, May 14LECTURE: “Machiavellian Aspects ofPost-Renaissance Ideology.” John G APocock. department of political science,University of Canterbury, Chrlat-church,New Zealand, Classics 10, 3:30 pmLECTURE: “Differential Problems withAmbiguous Boundary Conditions,” G.Fischera, professor. University of Rome,Eckhart 206, 4 4pm.SEMINAR: “How and Why BacteriaSwim,” Julius Adler, department ofbio-chemistry. University of Wiscon¬sin, Research Institutes 480, 4 pm.LECTURE: “The Greatest Sermon forthe Smallest Crowd,” John J. Kiwlet,associate professor of church history.Northern Baptist Theological Seminary,Ids Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.Saturday, May 15SATURDAY SEMINARS: third of seriesfor high school Juniors who are honorstudents in the humanities, WilliamH. McNeill, professor of history, speakson "The Art of Hlstorianshlp,” Breast¬ed Hall, 9 am.LECTURE SERIES: “Heme Proteins.”“Oxygen - Carrying Heme Proteins,”Emanuel Margoliash, professorial lec¬turer, department of biochemistry,Abbott 101, 10 am.MOVIE: “Knock On Any Door,” withHumphrey Bogart, proceeds used tosend a student south to do civil rightswork this summer, Kent 107, 75c perperson, 7:30 and 9:30 pm.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Solo Ensemble,Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm.INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCE PAR¬TY: admission $1, International House,8:30 pm.MOVIE: “They Were Ten,” Hillel, 8.30pm.Sunday, May 16RADIO: “From the Midway.” RalphShapey, director of UC’s ContemporaryChamber Players, discusses contem¬porary music, WFMF, 7 am.RADIO: “The World of the Paper¬back,” John Hope Franklin, professorof history, discusses Three Negro Clas¬sics, a Journal of which he is editor,WFMF, 8:15 am.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins.University Carillonneur, RockefellerChapel, 12:15 pm.RUGBY: US vs. University of Illinois"A” team, Washington Park, 3 pm.RADIO:. “Chicago Dialogue,” Philip MHauser, professor of sociology. a‘S"cusses Chicago’s technological future,WIND, 7:05 pm.BRIDGE: Ida Noyes Hall. 7:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30Pm.BENEFIT: Dick Gregory, comedian anacivil rights leader, stars, Mandel Han.7:30 pm.BENEFIT CONCERT: children fromSullivan House arts and crafts centerplay conga drums, First UnitarianChurch, 5650 Woodlawn, student tickets$1.50, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: “The World of £dw*r“Lewis Wallant: The Jew as PsychicBarometer,” Marvin Mlreky. Instructorin humanities, Hillel, 8 pm.RADIO: “Nightllne,” public discussionshow, WBBM, 10 pm.RADIO: “Soulstream,” Jazz show,WUCB, 10 pm.