Seeks $14,000 more for FM switchWUCB to receive $7000 in matching fundsby John BealWUCB, the UC student radio station, has been voted $7000by the Student Government committee on recognized studentorganizations (CORSO) to convert to FM next fall, providingthis money is matched two to one by other University andoutside funds. —If this matching money is raisedit will be the last obstacle in thelong process WUCB has been goingthrough in its attempt to convert toFM broadcasting.THE NECESSARY applicationfor the Federal CommunicationsCommission has been all but com¬pleted and will be filed later this was considerable doubt that themoney could be raised, Capp said.Two thousand dollars has beenallocated from this year’s CORSObudget and a provision for So,000 innext year’s budget has been desig¬nated, although it will have to bepassed again next year. Howardmonth. A detailed budget prospec- Abrams, chairman of CORSO, stat-tus has been submitted to the ad- , (l„r ,, .. »ministration, calling for a mini- ed’ We can 1 tlnance WUCB b>‘mum expenditure of $19,000, ac- ourselves, but we hope that thiscording to Todd Capp, president of will give the necessary impetus tomake the conversion a reality.”WUCB hopes to be broadcasting FMto match a $7000 CORSO grant. the station.The sum of $19,000 is almostsoon if it can raise $14,000 three times vvhat the administra¬tion had thought the cost of con¬version would be, and until theCORSO decision last Sunday there Warner Wick, UC dean of stu¬dents, indicated that it will still bevery difficult to raise the matchingfunds. But he added, “The CORSOaction will be very helpful psy¬ chologically in stirring up match¬ing money.”WICK SAID that there is a possi¬bility of outside help, but even if itis obtained it is very unlikely thatit will be sufficient to supply allthe money necessary to cover theCORSO appropriation. Therefore,he continued, it will be necessaryto go to “the money bags up¬stairs.’’ A special University ap¬propriation may be required, hesaid.As for raising the money in timeto begin broadcasting in FM by thebeginning of the fall quarter, W !<said. “If the University is in a po¬sition to provide the money, it c~nprobably be decided to do so intime.”But he emphasized that $14,000 is“a hell of a lot of money,” and if afund raising campaign is neces¬sary, it could be longer tr lUC’ers with FM sets will be ableto tune in on the programming onWUCB.VOL. 74-No. 44 The University of Chicago Friday, April 8, 1966surveystudent support for townhouses anddislike for living in South Shore.Last quarter questionnaires onstudent housing were distributed todorm residents by SG in coopera¬tion with UC’s the office of studenthousing and community and realestate office.Of the 403 respondents—170 fe-to-one vote an election and rules (E and R) committee decision not to accept the candidacy mal®s and 233 ma,le^r-74 peri.i. . . . , . , , ,, .... , r. x. m J J Of the women and 67 per cent ofpetitions of eleven students who filed them within an hour after the Tuesday noon deadlineThe exec further ruled that petitions filed by noon today were also to be accepted.Jerry Hyman and Tom Heagy - SG housing poll showsdorm students’discontentAn overwhelming number of undergraduate dormitoryresidents would prefer to live in apartments if suitable apart¬ments were available, says "Student Government presidentBernie Grofman on the basis of the results of an SG housingThe survey also indicatesHyman, Heagy take case to SFA courtSG exec overrules E and Rby Joan PhillipsThe Student Government executive council (exec) Tuesday night overturned by an eight-fboth GNOSIS) are bringing a suitin the Student-Faculty-Administra¬tion (SFA) court against the E andR committee and the exec. The suitseeks to vacate the executive com¬mittee ruling and to prevent the Eand R committee from carrying itout.INCLUDED in the candidacy pe¬titions involved are the entire-manSPAC slate for the National Stu¬dent Association (NSA), the onlycandidates SPAC is running in nextw'eek’s elections; the petition ofJohn Bremner, GNOSIS candidatefor NSA, and the petitions of PeterRatncr, independent SG candidatein Pierce, and Jerry Lipsch, EdP.irnbaum and Jeff Blum, independ¬ent SG candidates in the Collegeat-large.The SPAC NSA slate includesDavid Satter, Rusti Woods, Joe Lu-benow, Dave Stameshkin, BruceMann, Joan Phillips, Lipsch, andBirnbaum.At the Tuesday night meeting,the exec based its ruling to extendthe deadline for candidacy peti¬tions on a resolution passed at anSG Assembly meeting. The resolu¬tion, proposed by Hyman and unan¬imously accepted, gave the execthe power to make decisions in ad¬ministrative matters pertaining tothe upcoming election.The exec decided that the accept¬ance of candidacy petitions was anadminstrative matter and there¬fore it could mandate the E and Rcommittee to accept petitions filedafter the original Tuesday noondeadline.IN EXTENDING the deadline,the exec noted that its action alsoinvolved an amendment of the SGby-laws which state that the dead-hne for filing petitions is noon onmmScholarship applicationsare now available in Ad¬ministration 201. The dead¬line for filing an applica¬tion is May 2. Tuesday of the second week ofspring quarter. Consequently SGpresident Bernie Grofman, aschairman of the exec, ruled that athree-quarters vote of the exec wasnecessary to extend the deadline.This was obtained.The only dissenting vote at theexec meeting was cast by DannyBoggs, (Law School Party) chair¬man of E and R. Grofman (GNO¬SIS) abstained.In favor of the ruling were SGvice president Rusti Woods(SPAC), community relations com¬mittee chairman Heather Tobis(SPAC), student services commit¬tee chairman Dave Stameshkin(SPAC), academic affairs commit¬tee co-chairman Peter Nagourney,(SPAC), NSA coordinator Joe Lube-now (SPAC), secretary EileenHanson (SPAC), treasurer SteveLivernash (GNOSIS), and CORSOchairman Howard Abrams (LawSchool Party).LUBENOW declared that “It’s ashame that Danny Boggs is able tocommandeer the attention of halfthe campus to his personal varia¬tion on the Theatre of the Absurd.I hope the SFA court will realizethat to penalize the inadvertence ofa few late sleepers will be detri¬mental to the larger interests ofthe entire student community.”Boggs told the Maroon that the Eand R committee’s decision wasbased not upon “the love of theAbstract Word” but upon a dueconsideration of the rights of thosecandidates who did file on time.He pointed out that the interestsof those who did file on time couldbe adversely affected by allowingother candidates to file withoutcomplying with those rules andwith knowledge of those who hadalready filed.Lipsch maintained that the ac¬tion of the E and R committee con¬sisted of a strict interpretation ofthe rules with complete disregardfor the campus as a whole. “To ex¬clude the entire SPAC slate andthe other independent SG candi¬dates is contrary to the best inter¬ ests of the students who deserve achoice,” Lipsch said."IT IS unfortunate that certainmembers of SG are more interest¬ed in clinging idolatrously to rulesand procedures regardless of hu¬man consequences,” he said.Hyman explained that “unfortu¬nately the attempts to convince thePRAXIS candidates to admit latepetitions failed, and as a result theE and R committee was forced toreject the late petitions.” the men said that they would ratherlive in apartments than their pres¬ent accommodations if apartmentswere available.THE REASON most often givenby the women who preferredapartments to dorms was a desirefor more space and privacy. Otherreasons included a dislike for dormfood and meal contracts, a desireto cook for themselves, and a wishfor greater independence and free¬dom from social rules.Dislike foodDislike of dorm food and a needfor more space and privacy were the reasons most often given bythe men who would prefer to livein apartments. Others included thedesire for increased independenceand for less institutional surround¬ings.Both the men and the womenwho preefrred to live in dormscited the availability of social ac¬tivity, the presence of friends, andfreedom from household responsi¬bilities as their main reasons.The percentage of students fa¬voring dorms over apartments washighest in Burton-Judson andBlackstone Hall. The percentage ofstudents preferring apartments todorms was higher in New Dormsand Pierce Tower.APARTMENTS were often favor¬ed by second-year students—84per cent of the second-year men inPierce and 82 per cent of the sec¬ond-year women in New Dormspreferred apartments.(Continued on page five)SG and NSA candidatesThe follow ing list of SG and NSAcandidates is unofficial, since thecandidates must still he certified bythe registrar’s office as having theminimum required grade point aver¬age.National Student Association (10)Stephen Livernash (GNOSIS)David Aiken (GNOSIS)Paula Meinetz (GNOSIS)Patrick Hanlon (GNOSIS)Howard Abrams (GNOSIS)Irving Wladawsky (GNOSIS)Ellis Levin (GNOSIS)Tom Heagy (GNOSIS)Jonathan Still (GNOSIS)*John Bremner (GNOSIS)"Ed Birnbaum (SPAC)"■David Satter (SPAC)Merry Lipsch (SPAC)Moan Phillips (SPAC)"Rusti Woods (SPAC)":Joe Lubenow (SPAC)"Dave Stameshkin (SPAC)"■Bruce Mann (SPAC)Guy Mahaffey (PRAXIS)Kenneth Shelton (Ind.)Pierce Tower (2)Larry Silver (PRAXIS)Ken Levin (GNOSIS)Ted Krontiris (GNOSIS)"Peter Ratner (Ind.)Burton-Judson (1)Timothy Naylor (Ind.)Gary Midkiff (GNOSIS) Woodward Court (3)Alan Bloom (Ind.)Steven Henikoff (Ind.)Sydney Unger (Ind.)Judy Van Herik (Ind.)Sneil-Hitchcock (1)David Lukoff (Ind.)Steven Genden (GNOSIS)Fraternities (1)Donald Weinberg (Ind.)Kenneth Shelton (Ind.)Ellis Levin (GNOSIS)College At-Large (6)Charles Russell Twist (Ind.)Margaret Olson (Ind.)Alfred (Sandy) Lewy (GNOSIS)Tom Heagy (GNOSIS)Jonathan Still (GNOSIS)David Aiken (GNOSIS)Linda Mae O’Brien (GNOSIS)Todd Capp (GNOSIS)"■Ed Birnbaum (Ind.)"■Jerald Lipsch (Ind.)"■Jeffrey Blum (Ind.)Bio Sci (2)Edward Louis Stern (Ind.)Thomas Green (GNOSIS)Frank Seydel (GNOSIS)Med School (2)Richard Sohn (Ind.)Daniel Blumenthal (Ind.)Hugh Hazenfeld (GNOSIS)Timothy Lindquist (GNOSIS) Education (1)Mark Joseph (Ind.)Nancy Wilson (GNOSIS)Social Sciences (9)Peter Richmond (Ind.)Charles Horner (Ind.)Peter James Sharfman (GNOSIS)Jerry Hyman (GNOSIS)Wyatt Mankin (GNOSIS)Steven Silver (GNOSIS)Arleen Freeman (GNOSIS)Warren L. Coats (GNOSIS)Paula Meinetz (GNOSIS)Renee Hirschon (GNOSIS)Physical Sciences (4)Zalman Gaibel (Ind.)John Harper (GNOSIS)Irving Wladawsky (GNOSIS )Leon Glass (GNOSIS)David Friedman (GNOSIS)Business School (4)Michael Yesner (Ind.)Charles S. Davis (GNOSIS)Stephen Livernash (GNOSIS)Mike Baldigo (GNOSIS)Graduate Library School (1)Kenney Schowalter (GNOSIS)Law School (3)H. W. (Pete) Wales (Law SchoolParty)Chuck Marvin (Law School Party)Danny Boggs (Law School Party)(Continued on page ten)EDITORIALSPAC exitsThe Student Political Action Committee has taken leave ofStudent Government. The Left, SPAC declares, is a preciouscommodity that can not be wasted at UC—something like theUS stockpiles of copper and uranium. For, as one SPAC leaderput it, “We have more important things to do.”But what are these vital tasks? Are they so important, and isSPAC so capable of doing them, that the job of giving UC stu¬dents more say in how their courses and living conditions aredetermined shrinks to nothingness in comparison? SPACdidn’t seem to think so last spring when its platform—the plat¬form on which it won half the seats in the SG Assembly andthe position of SG vice-president—called for a greater role forstudents in all aspects of University life. But now all such on-campus concerns are “trivia” to SPAC.One would have thought at least that SPAC would have notrouble dealing with such trivia this year while it was honoringSG with its presence. But the present crisis in student housingand the lack of a greater student role in course structuring in¬dicate that SPAC had some trouble dealing with unimportantstudent matters. Not that the leaders of SPAC do not have anexplanation—an “inherent” bureaucracy in SG “that saps thevitality and idealism of its members.” Yet with SPAC controll¬ing half of SG, surely GNOSIS isn’t entirely to blame for thisbureaucracy. In short, the precious Left of SPAC is as muchto blame for SG’s troubles as anyone else.Not, of course, that SPAC doesn’t have the answers to theproblems of UC’s students. One SPAC leader recently visitedthe Berkeley campus, and now has decided that UC should be“politicized” like Berkeley. This is slightly confusing, forSPAC has proven itself incapable of using the very instru¬ments of negotiation that the students at Berkeley have had tofight to get. If SPAC has “more important things to do” thandeal with student problems, we can only hope it will revealsome competency of action that has remained largely hiddenwhile it concerned itself with the “trivia” of campus life. Letters to theContrast in latest housingGeorgeIts own Williams College,gym. SPAC'S stand on SGsupports abolition standWhile I don't agree with SPAC’srefusal to support PRAXIS’s abol-ish-SG efforts, I do find myself inalmost complete agreement withRusti Woods’ comments which arequoted in the Maroon of 5 April,1966.Miss Woods, SG Vice Presidentand former chairman of SPAC,said: “There is something inherentin the Student Government bureau¬cracy that saps the vitality andidealism of its members.” Echoedby most of the other members ofher (former) party, Miss Woodswent on to say that she thinks thesolution is action through voluntarygroups—in her words, through“politicizing the campus.”While I am glad to see that somemembers of the Left are at leastbeginning to see the value of vol¬untarism, I hope that they willsoon see its wider application. Ihopp that they will soon under¬stand that almost anything the Stu¬dent Government does could bedone better by interested personsbanding together for particularpurposes—activist projects by ac¬tivist groups; bureaucratic pro¬jects by bureaucrats (however dullit may seem, there are bureau¬crats.). If they accept this widerapplication of a voluntarist posi¬tion, SPAC members cannot denythat SG should be abolished and itsfunctions left to voluntary groups.guy MAHAFFEYCHAIRMAN, PRAXISHousing shortage acufe;slates possible remediesIn the March 29 edition of theMaroort an article stated that SG“would like to see the Universitybuild or acquire apartment build¬ings for students.” As this wouldbe a major step for the Universityto undertake, I should like to ex¬plain the reasons for this state¬ment.There is a serious shortage ofhousing facilities available to Uni¬versity of Chicago students — ashortage that will grow more acutewith increased enrollment. In thefall of 1965 the University had tak¬en no visible steps to remedy thissituation. The SG consultant boardon student housing and facilitieswas then formed to seek solutionsto the housing crisis. Since thattime the committee has been in¬volved in a continuing effort to ex¬amine the practicality and the suit¬ability of various solutions. One ofthe results of these investigationswas CAC 19-5, a bill passed almostunanimously by the Assembly,calling for immediate action by theUniversity to make townhousesand apartments available to stu¬dents. Since the passage of thatbill the University has announcedthat it has purchased the facilitiesof George Williams College, aswell as two townhouses for use asstudent housing facilities nextyear. The committee had recom¬mended that these steps be takenand it commends the Universityfor its action.These steps, however, are not•nough. The facilities mentionedabove will be available to less than150 students, while over 500 stu¬dents are currently unable to findsuitable housing. The committee,therefore, has also urged the ad¬ministration to build or acquireapartments for students. Aftercareful investigation, the commit¬tee has found that apartmentbuildings—a number of which areavailable ©n the open market inHyde Park and the surroundingarea—could be purchased, and re¬conditioned if necessary, and stillbe rented to students at rates low¬er than current dormitory rates. Inaddition, it has been found that theUniversity could construct newapartment buildings—on land it al¬ready owns in Hyde Park, or onland it could purchase in the Uni-with singles for 100 upper classmen, has versity area—and rent the apart¬ments to students at rates lowarthan current dormitory rates.These apartment units would beavailable to students and faculty,Two townhouses at 56th st. and Maryland ave. recently purchasedby the University will each house four to six students. and rented on the same terms asapartments on the open market.The shortage of student housingfacilities is extreme. The need forsolutions is urgent. While any stepstaken can only be partial solutions,all possible steps must be takenimmediately. The University hasno excuse for not taking action.The next step is up to the Universi¬ty.DAVID ROSENBERG,CHAIRMANSG CONSULTANT BOARDON STUDENT HOUSINGAND FACILITIESCritical of US actions;sees peril for studentsThe article on the Draft and UCstudents in Tuesday’s Maroonraises two serious problems for thestudent living in wartime.First, any implications of reassur¬ance seem to us to be a delusion.One need only note that in lastSunday's Sun Times it was report¬ed that 350,000 additional troopsmay be sent to Vietnam this year.Remember also that marriage wasonce a ‘safe’ refuge. (Furthermore,unlike marriage, being a student isnot a permanent condition.)More important and from a moregeneral, longer range perspective,it seems to us that the govern¬ment’s present commitment to amilitarily enforced “Pax Ameri¬cana” is clearly not limited toVitenam, the Dominican Republic,and Thailand. It seems equallyClear that not even Americantroops and American napalm cancrush the growing resistance to aworldwide American hegemonywhich brings neither freedom northe hope of a better life.Thus as things stand now we arefaced with a society increasinglyengaged in continuous conflict,a society requiring ever largerarmies in its “defense” and which isincreasingly dependent upon waras a way of life due to the veryprocess of gearing the society tomeet the needs of such wars. Aslong as American foreign policypays only lip service to true socialrevolutions while crushing themwith America’s friends, the puppetoligarchs, if possible, and by mili¬tary intervention, if necessary,personal safety of students or any¬one else will be at best transitory.And staj’ing out of the war ma¬chine will be next to impossible.Another serious implication ofthe article concerns the view thatwe hold of ourselves. Our “safe”,“smart” ivory tower sanctuary isbased on nothing, which in anysense of the word human, could becalled superior. Rather, most of uswall be expected to run the ma¬chine (make the draft tests, designthe crop sprays, justify the myths,run and serve the growing list ofwar corporations) all the time dis¬claiming responsibility in ourbureaucratic niche. We have beengiven this carrot of special privi¬lege only to pull the cart.Right now most of us will proba¬bly avail ourselves of this tem¬porary immunity from the awfuldirect reality of the war in Viet¬nam. But we must not let our¬selves be trapped by test andgrade into a false security, silence,and acquiescence. We are eitherinvolved in creating the horror orending it. We must not only learnwhat brought this war into being,we must also mobilize ourselves,and whomever we can reach to re¬mold this society which breeds warand breeds upon war into onewhich truly meets human needs.UC CHAPTERSTUDENTS FOR A DEMOCRATICSOCIETYWeak response doomscourse evaluation planThe course evaluation committeeregrets that inadequate studentresponse to the course question¬naire will prevent publication ofthe booklet evaluating springcourses and Instructors. The pro¬ject, started last spring, was origi¬nally to have produced a booklet by September, 1965, rating manv ofthe undergraduate courses and instructors for the entire academicyear. Though 560 or more question¬naires had been returned by theclose of school in June, there wereno more than a ftw questionnairesfor courses with one instructor andperhaps no more than a couple ofdozen for all sections of the gener¬al education courses. The responselast fall quarter, when we decidedto restrict evaluation to springquarter courses, was astonishinglysmall despite what the committeefelt was good publicity in terms ofMaroon articles, posters, and openacademic affairs committee meet¬ings. Response was even light indormitories in which we put blankquestionnaires in residents’ mailboxes.The inadequate response seemsin part due to general student apa¬thy and in part to some apprehen¬sion about the objectives of theevaluation booklet and the methodsof evaluation. We thought that wehad very carefully defined the pur¬poses of such a booklet. We hadstressed our desire to be objectiveThe questionnaires were quitecomprehensive. In fact this coiri-prenensiveness was overdone inthe first questionnaire, which wastedious and repetitious. The ques¬tionnaires asked for information onstudent s’ own performance-grades on papers, course grades,grade point average, major field—so that the committee could takeinto account particular studentprejudices when printing the finalevaluations. We emphasized thatthe booklet would contain construc¬tive-fair and pertinent—criticism.The fact that the project has nowtwice been held up because of in¬sufficient response demonstratesthis desire to be objective and con¬structive.All of the committee membersfeel a course evaluation bookletwould be a valuable formal aid inthe process of informal exchangethat already occurs among stu¬dents seeking advice from one an¬other on particular courses, teach¬ers, and curricular requirements.But until we have at least one finished publication, its real valuecannot properly be assessed. Wethank those stvidents who have a!ready-completed and returnedquestionnaires. We ask that otherstudents take a few minutes tocomplete questionnaires so that abooklet can perhaps be printed inMay for use in pre-registration forfall quarter of next year.MARK JOSEPH,for the course evaluationcommitteeI fliirago Maroon !EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Danlal HtrfiW'OBUSINESS MANAGER Edward G>«sso*MANAGING EDITOR Dinah EsralNEWS EDITOR David SatterASSISTANT NEWS EDITORDavid E. GumpertASSISTANTS TO THE EDITORDavid L. A thanSharan GoitlminJaan Phillip*COPYEDITOR Eva HochwaidCULTURE EDITOR Mark RoiinEDITOR. CHICAGO LITERARY REVIRWDavid RicherASSOCIATE EDITOR, CHICAGOLITERARY RfiVtRW Rich Pd.ackMUSIC IDITOR Pater RabinowitzASSOCIATE MUSIC EOITOH Ed ChihofthyPOLITICAL EDITOR Broca FreedSTAFF: Mih« Sairtman. Bob Hertz,Ken Simonson, Jaff Kuta, NancySteakiey, John Baal, Karan Edward*,Beverly Smith, Joe Luhenow, FredMelcher, Gary Chiistiana PenelopeForan, Ellie Kaplan, Tam Heafy.Michael Nemeroff. Paul Satter. PaulBurstein, Ellis Levin, MahonriYoung, Monica Raymond, SladeLander, Dory Solinger.Charter member ef .UK Btudent PressAssociation, publisher* of CollegiatiPress Service.>, Wt. -Ut mmmStudents who will be outof town for the entire peri¬od of the SG election mayvote by absentee ballot bycoming to the SG office,presenting their ID card,swearing that they will beout of town, and designat¬ing an address to whichtheir ballot should be mail¬ed. Bellots returned by Fri¬day, April 15, at 1:30 pmwill be counted, If other-CHICAGO MAROON • April 8, 1966Protest administration interferenceRoosevelt Torch suspends publication Calendar of eventst ■ ,, \ JrFriday, April 8by Jeff KutaRoosevelt University’s student newspaper, the Torch, hassuspended publication in a protest against what its editorJohn Douard called “becoming too responsible to the admin¬istration.” April 15, when it will consider thenewspaper’s demands.This action was touched off whenadministrative officials called inChicago police to evict underthreat of arrest several staff mem¬bers working in the newspaper of¬fice late at night on March 25.Douard had asked for permissionto remain in the office until pro¬duction work on the March 28 issueof the Torch was completed, butwas refused.IF THE administration does notmeet demands listed in the finalTorch issue of March 28, the news¬paper staff intends to establish anindependent publication, the Torchin Exile, reminiscent of last year’sFree Press which folded becauseof lack of funds. The present Torchwould cease publication perma¬nently, Douard said in a Marooninterview. «Last year’s Free Press was estab¬lished after Roosevelt’s Student Activities Board (SAB) fired theold Torch's editorial board over astory saying that former presidentRobert J. Pitchell had been “unof¬ficially fired.” Financial difficul¬ties, caused by a lack of advertis¬ing subscriptions, resulted in itsdiscontinuation last April 5.The SAB is comprised of six fac¬ulty members and six studentselected by the faculty and studentsenates, respectively."WE REALLY don’t think theadministration will meet our de¬mands,” said Douard, who antici¬pates publication of the Torch inExile at the beginning of nextyear. He emphasized that the deci¬sion to suspend publication wasmade unanimously by the staff.At a meeting last Friday theSAB approved limited newsgather¬ing activities by the Torch until “I think that some of the de¬mands are quite beyond what theUniversity can meet, but the situa¬tion still remains fluid,” saidGeorge H. Watson, Roosevelt’sdean of students.Foremost among the Torchstaff’s demands, which were print¬ed together with a list of griev¬ances against the administration,is that the Torch become “com¬pletely autonomous from the Uni¬versity through incorporation.” DISCUSSION: “Vietnam; A JewishPerspective,” Hillel House. 8:30 pm.TRYOUTS: University Theatre will holdtryouts for its third “Tonight at 8:30”production, 3-one act plays, ReynoldsClub Theatre, 7 pm.DINNER: Koinonia, Chapel House, 6pm.SERV'ICE: Good Friday Service. BondChapel, 8 pm.DRAMA: “Ghost Sonata.” by Strindbergdirected by Jim O'Reilly, presented byUniversity Theatre and the College Hu¬manities Department, 50c, Mandel Hall,8:30 pm.CONCERT: The Hitchcock Trio, MandelHall, 12:30 pm.Saturday, April 9 UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE:“The Redemptive Power of God," Rev¬erend E. Spencer Parsons, dean of theChapel Rockefeller Chapel, 11 am.DINNER-DISCUSSION: United Chris¬tian Fellowship, “Student Need in Indiaand Pakistan,” Chapel House, dinner5:30, discussion following.Monday, April 11SEMINAR: An Introduction to Non-Viol¬ence; Philosophy and Practice, Leader:Carl Zietlow, AFSC, Calvert House, 4:30pm.LECTURE: “The Intellectual Life ofEast Africa,” Rajat Neoge, editor ofTransition (published in Compalla,Uganda), Soc Sci tea room, 5 pm.MOVIE: “The Mouse That Roared,’presented by SNCC, 75c, Soc Sci 122,7:30 and 9:15 pm.DOUARD commented, “TheTorch is supposed to be a semr-au-tonomous body under the control ofthe SAB, but it is becoming tooresponsible to the administration.” RECITAL: Musical Society Song Reci¬tal, N. Pilgrim, soprano; C. Van Tassel,baritone, music by Schubert, Strauss,Ives, Purcell, Handel, Ida Noyes Li¬brary, 8:30 pm.WORKCAMP: at farm for inner-citychildren, all day, call John Zurbrigg at684-2820, U f C Friends of InternationalVoluntary Service. VISA will hold a brunchtomorrow at 10:30 am at1453 E. 56th st. for peoplewho are working in VISAor are interested in it.Sunday, April 10The Torch also demanded that,until its corporation as an autono¬mous body, it have the right toelect its own editorial board, whichis now appointed by the Rooseveltadministration; access to all ad¬ministrative and faculty commit¬tees and University documents;and control over its composingequipment. SERVICE: Sun Rise Service, sponsoredby Ecumenical Student Cuncil, Rocke¬feller Chapel, 5 am. -HIGH/SCOPEcoed camp for capableyouth, 11-16Intellectual challenge and self-development.Non-sectarian, inter-racial.David Weikart1305 Sherman, Ypsilanti, Mich.Cap & Gown— YEARBOOK —Fill oui the information belowSend this coupon along with either cash ora check for $5.00to:CAP AND GOWN1212 E. 59th St.Chicago, IllinoisCap and Gown conies out af the end ofSpring QuarterNAMEADDRESSDATEAND SEE WHAT YOU GETDeadline —May 6 HEY MANNYGET THISA NEW MUSICALpresented byBLACKFRIARSApril 29-30 — May 6-78:30 P.M.Tickets $2.00 - $1.50Students $.50 DiscountMail Orders Tickets Available April 18th5706 University Ave. Mi 3-0800 X-3721There’s no limit to the good aman can accomplish throughreliance on God. But it takeshumility and a deep spiritualcommitment. You learn to de¬pend on the divine Love thatmakes possible every worth¬while act. You're invited to hearthis subject explored further ata one-hour public lecture byWilliam Henry Alton of TheChristian Science Board ofLectureship. The lecture title is*'Man Unlimited." Everyone iswelcome to come and listen.IcimaiaiaaeBctieciiireThursday, April 14th 4 pmBreasted Hall,Oriental InstituteSponsored byChristian Science Organization ATTENTION5 YEARS-50,000 MILES WARRANTYCHRYSLER MOTORS CORP. ©Sunbeams: Alpine Tiger, Sedan, imp, and Simca 1,000SIMCABOOTESDIVISIONDo You Want32 Miles per Gal.?50 hp Engine?Adjustable Bucket Seats?Exceptional Heating?Transferable Warranty? Overseas DeliveryAny European CountryArrange Leasing,Insurance andReturn to U.S.TEST DRIVE ALL MODELSHYDE PARK AUTO IMPORTS. INC SALESSERVICEPARTS6130 COTTAGE GROVE Ml 3-6100 EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Parle 3-8372Student and Faculty Discountthey’reamust!Don't get caught without yourWHITE LEVI'S—they’re the pantsto wear—unless you’re squarelYou’ll like their long, lean lines—and tha way they wear-and wear.WHITE LEVI’S in popular off-whiteand smart sportswear colors.COTTON $4.50STAPREST COTTON $5.98DURAWALE CORD $5.98COHN & STERN, Inc.TOWN & CAMPUS SHOPTHE STORE FOR MENin the New Hyde ParkShopping Center1502-06 E. 55th ST.Phone 752-8100Ap’il A JT66 • CHICAGO MAROON • 8Athan.L |ccueMikvaTushes youth issue N. Carolina students fight speaker ban;fourteen file suit for repeal of state lawCollegiate Press Serviceby Dorie Solinger to get businessmen to testify be- qiAPEL HILL, N.C.—Student leaders at the UniversityState Representative Abner J. Mikva called Sunday for the of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have filed suit in Greensboromodification of the seniority system in the US House of onsfratjon 0f their patriotism.” Federal District Court asking that the North Carolina speakerRepresentatives and for greater freedom for the individual Many, including Clarence B. Ran- restrictions governing state-supported institutions be declaredcongressman to speak his mind unhampered, “to sound-off dall, ^^“mau of In-when he thinks it right to sound-off because his freedom comesfrom his election by the people,rather than from his selectionthrough seniority.”Mikva, a candidate for the Dem¬ocratic nomination for the Housefrom the second congressional dis¬trict, spoke before a voter registra¬tion meeting sponsored by theCampus Independent Voters of Illi¬nois (IVI) and the Young Demo¬crats.IN INTRODUCING his theme ofyouthful aggressiveness versusseniority, Mikva pointed out thatmany of the most vigorous and ac¬tive congressmen are second andthird termers. He recalled thatduring his own first term in the II-lionis Legislature, he had the op¬portunity to introduce the first fairhousing bill ever to pass the state In his recent probe of the actionshouse. of the American business commu-In contrast, Mikva cited the role nity in South Africa, Mikva de-played by his opponent for the dared, O'Hara had not acted in aDemocratic nomination, incumbent manner designed to check the sub¬ invalid.and assistant to Presidents Eisen¬hower and Kennedy, declined totestify, he noted.FREEDOM for Congressmen,Mikva declared, is won through avigorous primary fight, such as hehad obtained as a result of his 1956 House Un-American Activitieselection to the state legislature Committee, be allowed to speak onover the opposition of the regularDemocratic organization. Such avictory leaves the individual free THE COMPLAINT names 1Their action came less than 30 qiiest 0f North Carolina Gov. Dan.minutes after acting chancellor J. k. Moore.Carlyle Sitterson denied a request School officials then succeeded inthat Communist Herbert Aptheker having the trustees delegate theand Frank Wilkinson, a leader of authority for speaker decision tothe Committee to Abolish the the chancellors on each of theschool’s four campuses.IN A letter to Paul Dickson, thestudent body president, ChancellorSitterson said that the original de-Candidate Mikvavears of seniority nas oeen pres- iumva in.ii.tu mat uuuu pw- , .. .... . . „ ,sured in his policy-making both by sure from both the Johnson and ! ^en who can flght ™un‘at P!rr.ty’ r . n p .City Daley administrations O'Hara had th* f^ Ku Kh,x K,an Grand Dragon Robthe AdministrationHall he said. and by r * .. .. . . v . • *•## i cision he made on March 2 that thefrom any obligation, to the organ., plaintiff including Aptheker and kers could „„zation, and thus able to speak and Wilkinson themselves. Included campus would stand. He had beenact as his reason indicates, he said. were the president of the student asked to reconsider by the studentThe “big question,” Mikva held, body, the student body president- leaders,is related to the things. Congress e,ect the of the student Sitterson said he hoped thiswill do for and to us. This de- ’ would end the matter ‘‘for thispends upon the election of compe- newspaper, the presidents of the academic year -• He said he hopedtent Congressmen from the big cit- YMCA and the YWCA, the chair- his decjsion <*do€S not preciudeies who know city problems and man of the Carolina Political Un- later consideration of either orupon how many of these must first ion, and leaders in the campus both of these individuals or anycheck with City Hall, he stated. chapter of the Students for a Dem- other proposed invitation by anyIf the Democratic study group in ocratic Society. authorized student group.”the House, which he intends to Meanwhile, in Raleigh, chancel- Spoke off-campusenea m rnccK me suu- ^°*n.’ ?anno* at *east modify the lor John T. Caldwell of North Sitterson noted that both Apthek-Drivate individuals of pen^r'ty system so as to combine Carolina Slate College—a branch rr gnd Wilkinson spoke in Chapelp it until mnpii iiiirim aam iif itmc—QtinnimppH that hf h ~ d tni dates for which theyeven though they, allowed to speak on theand North Carolina campusHe said that since students hadAn invitation has been extended crJ J°nes to speak on the State beard the speakers this spring “noto Congressman O’Hara and Rep- campus. additional education purpose wouldresentative Mikva by Campus IVI Speaker law amended be served by having them on theand the Young Democrats to par- The seemingly contradictory in- campi's.”ticipate together in a discussion of terpretations of the state’s restric- SITTERSON noted that alreadythe issues of the campaign at an tions on “subversive speakers” at under the existing regulations twoon-campus meeting either April 29 state-supported colleges and uni- speakers who would have beenor May 13. versities was made possible by an banned under the unamended lawThe letter sent to both candi- amendment to the state’s speaker have been invited to UNC. Theydates noted that thus far in the ban law that was passed last No- are Dr. Vladimir Alexandrov andcampaign, there har been no face- vember. Dr. Hanus Papousek. Both mento-face contact between the two That amendment placed the final are scholars from Communistmen. Mikva and O’Hara had been authority for making decisions on countries.scheduled to appear on the same speaker invitations in the hands of Observers are uncertain as toplatform at a meeting sponsored the trustees of each school. After what the next chapter will be inby the Kenwood-Shoesmith PTA on the amendment passed, an invita- the three-year-old speaker ban con-March 17, but O’Hara at the last tion to Aptheker and Wi)1 ■'son was troversy in North Carolina. Theminute was unable to attend and issued by UNC students, but was most general fear is that the con-had to send a substitute. denied by the trustees at the re- tinued difficulty will serve to dolasting harm to the reputation andthe quality of the university, longregarded as one of the nation’sbetter state universities.failed to u?e his power of subpoenaLENSINEby MURINE TAPE RECORDERSPortable and non-portablefor rental and sales.Rent a recorder for 3 daysor a month at theTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 SOUTH ELLIS AVENUEEXCLUSIVE!Free removable carryingcase! Provides hygienic,convenient carefor yourlenses. STUDENTS!how adventuresomeare you? Come with us and discover theStudent's world of Eest end WestEurope — the lure of unknown Africa— the fascinating Middle East!Travel withSTUDENTS INTERNATIONALA TRAVEL CENTER FOR YOUTH OF ALL NATIONS203 North Wabash Avenue • Chicago, Illinois 00001This one solutiondoes all three!1. WETS. Lensine’s special propertiesassure a smoother, non-irritating lenssurface when inserting your "contacts.”Just a drop will do it.2. CLEANS. When used for cleaning,Lensine’s unique formula helps retardbuildup of contaminants and foreigndeposits on lenses.3. SOAKS. Lensine is self-sterilizing andantiseptic. Ideal for wet storage or "soak¬ing” of lenses. Reduces harmful bacteriacontamination.# • •CARRYING CASI. Exclusive removablecarrying case free with every bottle ofLensine. The sclentMc-and convenient—way to protect your contacts.LENSINE fromThe Morins Company, Ino.M.*r* mt* *cr 70 yMft LOUIE'S BARBER SHOP1303 E. 53 StreetFor a PERSONALITY haircut3 Chairs —No WaitingFA 4-3878Expert for Oriental Haircutting...Sun Life is one of the world'sgreat life Insurance companies and Isowned entirely by its policyholders.As a local Sun Ufa representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUNyd* Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, litFAirfox 4-0800 — FR 2-2390Office Hour* 9 to I Mondays A Friday*SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA' A MUTUAL COMPANY TAhSAM-YfcNCHINKS! . AMKtlCANRKSTAURANTCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPIN MAILTVI AM. Be 9*5 PMORDERS TO TAXI OUTISIS h* 48*4 ft. MU 4-1042EUROPE51 Student Tours21 to 70 DaysBy Jet, Ship orYour Student Flight,also special toursby Bicycles, etc.Call Your Campus Rep.HANS ENDLERFA 4-8200 - Ext. 7534 • IN ICAO O MAROON • April I, 1964Student protests limited to small groupsITS tells convention of women deansWASHINGTON (CPS)—Unrest among the nation’s collegestudents may not be as widespread as some believe, an officialof the Education Testing Service of Princeton, N J., toldwomen deans and counselors in convention here last week.Richard E. Peterson, an asso- -elate research psychologist, con- students involved in the studenteluded from a nationwide study left and the size of certain pro-that despite the teach-ins, march- tests, such as those directedes, sit-ins, lie-ins, riots, and draft against US policy in Vietnam. Dorm students want apartment livingcard burnings, the nation’s collegestudents are not a bunch of “red¬eyed social reformers.”THE FACT is, he said, that cam- ALTHOUGH noting that “rela¬tively few students were engaged”in direct protest, Peterson said“there obviously are substantialpus food ranked second only to civ- numbers of students willing to11 rights as a trigger to student make known publicly their antag-protests in 1964-65. Demonstrations onism to existing situations—against US policy in Vietnam bare- especially those situations wherely beat out organized complaints there is a perceived moral con-against dress regulations as the tradiction or hypocrisy.”third most frequent cause of stu- He said there is “every evi¬dent demonstrations. dence” that the “number of stu-Peterson’s findings were based dent activists have been multiply-on a return of questionnaires from ing in the past five years” and850 deans at the nation’s 1000 ac- called the “current surge of stu-credited four-year colleges and dent unrest and active pro¬universities. The deans were asked test’s among the most significantto indicate the extent of organized developments in higher education,student protest for each of 27 edu- perhaps in American society, ofcational, social, and political is- the mid-1960’s.”sues. Visiting rules studyMajority report protests Dr. Prem S. Dua, assistant deanPeterson said a majority of of women at the Pennsylvaniadeans did report some form of or- State University, reported to theganized protest on their campus deans conference on a study on theduring 1964-65, but that students Penn State campus of student atti-protesting a single issue represent- tildes toward the university’s rulesed a very small percentage of their forbidding women from visitingstudent bodies. No school reported men’s apartments and making• protest that included more than both men and women liable foreight per cent of the student popu- discipline if the rule is broken,lation, and that top figure involved In a random sampling of admin-dormitory or other living arrange- istrators, parents, and students,ments. Dr. Dua found that parents and ad-Among the colleges and universi- ministrators generally agree thatties surveyed, 38 per cent reported the responsibility in deciding whomprotests over civil rights. Yet these and where the student may visit isdemonstrations involved only 6 per a function of the university rathercent of the students. Next came than one individual student. Onlythe food protests (25 per cent), 22 per cent of the parents and 16with only about 7 per cent of the per cent of the administratorsstudents complaining. thought the students should havePROTEST in the South over civil the right to make these decisionsrights during the summer of 1964 for themselves.OF THE students tested, 60 percent said the students themselvestions. But Southern civil rights should be able to make these deci-work attracted only half—about 4 sions.per cent—of the students as did the Dean Dua concluded than anyprotests over dorm rules and con- change in the Penn State rules wasditions. not warranted as “both parentsVietnam demonstrations were re- and faculty administrators haveported at 21 per cent of the col- indicated faith in the university’sleges—but less than 5 per cent of larger awareness of the contem-tied for third with dormitory regu¬lations at 28 per cent of the institu- (Continued from page one)Thesis upheldApartments were least appealingto third- and fourth-year students.According to David Rosenberg,chairman of the SG consultantboard on housing, this bears outthe thesis that students who re¬main in the dormitory system aftertheir second year do so out ofchoice, not necessity.Only 35 per cent of the womenv/ho indicated that they would pre¬fer an apartment to their presentdormitory accommodations, as com¬pared with 77 per cent of the men,indicated that they actually expect¬ed to move out of the dormitorysystem at the end of this year.Rosenberg sees this difference inexpectation between men and wom¬en as the result of the second-year women’s residence require¬ment which had not been modifiedat the time first-year women filledcut the questionnaire.“Now that the second-year resi¬dence requirement is eased,” Ro¬senberg says, “I expect that alarge number of first-year womenwill be moving out.”MANY OF the students whowould move out of the dorms ifthere were suitable apartment fa¬cilities open to them, Rosenbergdeclares, “do not now expect to doso because of the housing short¬age.”Half to leaveOf the students who were theneligible to leave the dorm system,54 per cent planned to do so andmore were uncertain of theirplans.The percentage expecting toleave the dormitory system washighest among second-year stu¬dents.Sixty-five per cent of second-yearNew Dorms women expect to leavethe dormitory system, while only25 per cent of third-year womenexpect to leave.Sixty-five per cent of first-yearPierce men expect to move out,whil1 65 per cent of Pierce second-year men and only 14 per cent ofthird-year men plan to do so.STUDENTS were also asked inthe SG questionnaire to rate fouroptions: unfurnished apartments,furnished doubles, furnished sin¬gles, and townhouses. In all op¬tions except for furnished doubles students were asked to assumethat there would be private bed¬rooms.Sixty-six to 71 per cent of thestudents preferred townhouses toany other single option, with menand women being almost equallypro-townhouse.Second to townhouses in popular¬ity were furnished singles andthird by only a few percentagepoints were unfurnished apart¬ments. Unfurnished apartmentswith private bedrooms were pre¬ferred to furnished doubles bearingout a stated requirement of 70 percent of the women and 60 per centof the men for a private bedroomwere they to rent an apartment.Extra food costsStudents were asked to specifytheir supplementary weekly foodcosts. The average weekly cost forPierce residents 20-meal contractwas $5.90; for New Dorms women(14-meal contract) it was $5.00.The average weekly food cost thesurvey indicated, rises the longerone stays in the dorms. First-yearPierce men spent an average of$4.60 weekly, second-year men$5.25, and third-year men $6.70.First-year New Dorm womenspent an average of $4.50 weekly,second-year women $5 and third-year women $5.60.A SPECIAL series of questionswas asked only to those studentswho expressed preference for anapartment. Of those expressing aninterest in apartment living, bothmen and women indicated a will¬ingness to share an apartment withan average of three other stu¬dents, provided that each studenthad a private bedroom.Twelve-month leaseAlthough only 16 per cent of thestudents indicated that they wouldbe living in the University areaduring the summer, 92 per cent ofthe women and 89 per cent of themen were willing to sign a twelve-month lease for an apartment,provided that it included an optionto sublet.Noting that this sample includedonly dormitory students, Rosen¬berg claimed that students wholive in apartments are more likelyto remain in Chicago over the sum¬mer than are students who wouldhave to make special arrangementsfor summer accommodations.On the average women were willing to spend $58 per month fora suitable apartment and men $62.THE STUDENTS polled saw themost desirable living area aroundthe University as extending from55th st. to 59th st., Woodlawn Ave.to Stoney Island. Next most desira¬ble was 55th to 59th, Woodlawn toCottage Grove.The least desirable area wasSouth Shore. Eighty-four per centof the men and 81 per cent of thewomen listed South Shore as theirlast choice.Woodlawn over South ShoreAlthough a majority of studentsrated Woodlawn rather low, it wasseen as a far more desirablechoice than South Shore. Seventyper cent of the men and 75 percent of the women would live inWoodlawn were the campus policeto expand its patrol in the area;while only 31 per cent of the menand 25 per cent of the womenwould consider living in SouthShore, even if the campus buswere to extend service to thatarea.GROFMAN SAYS that the ques¬tionnaire “was designed to answera number of questions about stu¬dent preferences in order to aidthe University in determiningplans for fall, 1966.“Student preference for town-houses expressed in the question¬naires,” he states, “was a majorfactor in convincing the Universityto acquire townhouses.” In the lightof student distaste for living inSouth Shore and willingness to livein Woodlawn, SG is compiling alist of available housing in goodcondition in the northern part ofWoodlawn.“It is clear from this,” Grofmanadds, “that a large number of stu¬dents would like to live in apart¬ments. Those apartments are notnow available, and the scarcity ofhousing available to students con¬tinues to grow more acute.”“Only a major effort by the Uni¬versity can alleviate the shortage.The University must build newapartment buildings and rent themto students at reasonable rates,”Grofman states.“Until the University does this,UC students will be living in theHyde Park YMCA and in SouthShore. The next step is up to theUniversity,” he asserts.the students participated.Vietnam top issuePeterson predicted that in theImmediate future Vietnam will bethe top protest issue.In a related note, Peterson saidthe “organized student left” proba¬bly accounts for “less than 1 percent of the total student popula¬tion.” He added that there was acorrelation between the number of porary scene and respect for itsprofessional judgment in the mat¬ter.”SAMUEL A. BELLIMR Wrmm l«TSI NCI 192#S. ImImNKtnw—4 8-1150 You won't heve to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youceil uc today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12C55 S. Defy Ava.<44-4411 B Chicago's most complete record store — Every label in our huge inventory always at a discount —■Every Record factory fresh and fully guaranteed — Large selection of import end hard to get records.STUDENTSDISCOUNT RECORDS, INC.201 N. LaSalle (Corner Lake)OPEN MON. & THURS. 10 AM-8 PM, DAILY INCLUDING SAT. 9 AM-6 PMMl 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the rest, foreign car hospitalPHOTOGRAPHYWhat a beautiful season fortaking color pictures.You may secure the properfilm and fastest service atTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 SOUTH ELLIS AVENUR GOOD FOR 38r<o OFF Regularly$5.794.793.79 NOW$3.592.972.35ON ANY ONE TIME PURCHASE from our LARGE INVENTORYClassical - Jazz • Folk Music • Spoken • Show Tunes, Etc.BUY ONE OR A HUNDREDSome labelsincluded:COLUMBIALONDONFOLKWAYSELEKTRARCAPHILLIPSEPICRIVERSIDETRADITIONKAPP, etc. THIS COUPON GOOD FOROFF* ON ANYlX%0NE TIME RecordA# W /w PURCHASE ATdiscount records, inc.201 N. LaSalle (corner Lake)CE 6-2187Good until Ma*' 1st, 1966VWAW.VY.VV.YAVY.V.V.V; Some labelsincluded:ANGELDeutsche-GrammaphoneBACH GUILDVERVEVANGUARDPRESTIGEARCHIVEMERCURYATLANTICCAPITOL, etc.MONO or STEREOJUST BRING THIS COUPON!!BROWSE OUR BUDGET BINSDiscounts from 50% to 60%labels as VOX - RIVERSIDE - PRESTIGE - SCALA - ETERNAMGM CLASSICS - PERIOD - URANIA - MONITORASCO - TAP - COUNTERPOINT - EVERESTCONCERT DISC - PRESTIGE FOLK MUSIC• Sorry, duo to manufeeturer'e prico policy imported IP'* cannot bo allowed In thi* offer.April 8, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON *Inter-House Council elects officers,appoints committee at first meeting ■r • •> VAVV . •Classified adsPERSONALSThe Inter-House Council (IHC) elected its first officersand appointed its first permanent committees at its organi¬zational meeting March 31.Richard Stone, president of Chamberlain House and thehead of the committee which -wrote the IHC constitution, was ion to the University departmentelected president of the new body, of residence halls and commons,The vice-president-elect is Randall and will investigate such mattersBovbjerg, president of Thompson as room and board rates and quali-House; and Paul Burstein, presi- In¬dent of Henderson House, is thenew secretary-treasurer. A second committee, on commu¬nity life in the houses, will beTHE IHC is a new all-campus (.faired by Burstein. It will consid-body intended to give dormitory ...... ... ...students a voice of their own in the er student-faculty relations, withUniversity community. It consists the possible goal of institutingof one representative from each campus-wide faculty-fellow andmember house, except Wallace and speaker programs, and house lifeRickert, which have two because an(j social rules,of their size. _ . , ...Twenty-one of the 23 houses are *° *mPIeme"t *««« Pr°Srams’members; only Shorey and Lower the IHC has sent to all house presi-Flint have yet to ratify the IHC dents the material for conductingconstitution. The representative an °Pini°n P°d as to student pref-from each house is usually the pres- eren,cets. f°r open-house hours andident of the house, though some- regulations. The poll is being con-times it is another upperclass student living in the house. ducted on an individual interviewbasis, usually by house presidents,Two other committees were alsoestablished at the March 31 meet-At the IHC meeting Bovbjerg an?> the Council hopes that de-was elected chairman of the com- *aie<^ results repiesenting the opin-mittee on living conditions, which m?ns at least 80 per cent of dor-will be advising the University’s mit°ry students will be in by theBlum committee on housing on the next IHC meeting,planning of the new high-rise dor¬mitory next to Pierce Tower.It was reported at the meeting ing: an organizational relationsthat autumn, 1968, has been set as committee and a by-laws commit-the tentative completion for the tee. The organizational relationsnew tower, which will cost much committee will deal with publicitymore than any dormitory built on and with other student groups,campus in recent years. The pres- such as the women’s clubs, Studentent estimate is that the facilities Government, and fraternities,for each resident in the new tower BECAUSE THE HOUSES, indi¬will cost twice as much as in the vidually and collectively, will havepresent Pierce, over $14,200 per much more influence in the run-student, as compared with $7,300. ning of Orientation Week this year,THE COMMITTEE on living it was decided at a previous IHCconditions will also act as an outlet meeting that a group be estab-for the expression of student opin- lished which would coordinate the/ Ifrom our University ShopOUR CLASSIC LIGHTWEIGHTODD JACKETS AND TROUSERS(shown) New Vycron® Polyester-and-CottonJackets in Light Blue or Bright Olive, $42.50}in Brick Red Dacron® Polyester-and-Flax, $45Cotton India Madras Jackets, $42.50New Double-Breasted Blazer oj NavyOrion® Acrylic-and-Wool, $60jSingle-Breasted in Navy, Green or Tan, $55Cotton Seersucker Odd Jackets, $31.50Odd Trousers in Tropical Worsted, $22.50}Dacron®-and-Cottoti, $15} Cotton Chino, $ 10.50A Iso Bermuda Shorts and Sport Shirts,ISTAILISHIO ISISMtns 9°y*'furnishings, Hats *$ho*s74 E. MADISON,NR. MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO, ILL. 60602NEW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • L08 ANGELES ♦ SAN FRANCISCO activities of the individual housesduring O-week.This group would be responsiblefor implementing and coordinatingthe O-week programs establishedby the new overall faculty-studentorientation committee and by theindividual houses. It was proposedthat the body be composed of“chief student housing assistants(SHA’s)’’ selected from withineach house.Since the constitutional purposeof the IHC is to provide “an experi¬enced and respected assembly forthe consideration and resolution ofquestions of interest” to the resi¬dents in the housing system, it canonly suggest to the houses how toselect chief SHA’s.The suggestions will be cir¬culated in the form of a resolu¬tion offered by Stone to the effectthat each head SHA should havelived in his house for at least ayear, that he be returning to thesame house the following year,that he be a student in good stand¬ing interested in his house andjudged capable for the post by hishouse council.The suggested method of selec¬tion was that interested housemembers apply to their house coun¬cil with the council selecting theslate of qualified applicants. Theslate of nominees will be presentedto the entire house, which willelect its head SHA from the list ofnominees.Sources of funds for the IHC arenow being investigated. The nextmeeting of the IHC was tentativelyset for April 17.Brogan to talk hereSir Denis Brogan, British socialand political analyst, will delivertwo more public lectures on “TheState of Political Democracy in theTwentieth Century” at BreastedHall at 8:30 pm.The dates and titles of the lec¬tures:• April 12, “The Triumph andDefeat of Classical Democracy.”• April 19, “The New Tides.”The lectures will be sponsored bythe collegiate division of the socialsciences of the University. Theyare part of the University’s 75thanniversary observance.Admission is without ticket andwithout charge. OMNILITERATUREInfinate books of all kinds. Our shelvesrunneth over. Worship this week at theBOOK EXCHANGE. Collection box open10-4 wkdays in Reynolds Club Base¬ment. A family that reads togetherbreeds together.ORIENTATION Board meeting for oldand prospective members; Sunday,April 10, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Ecumenical Easter Vigil—before dawnSunday 5 am Rockefeller Chapel.Vote GNOSIS—for action not words.BRUNCH at Hillel this Sun. Informaldiscussion. Bagels & Coffee. Affiliates25c non-affiliates 50c; 11:30 am.SG off-campus housing file, listingsavailable whenever Ida Noyes is open.Attention Girls—trim down those legsthis summer. Bicycle tours through Eu¬rope (men invited too.) Call your cam¬pus representative Hans Endler—FA 4-8200, X753.PUTSG. books in the bookstore. Support"OUR MISERABLE AMERICANS" Anew approach to poverty 64 page book¬let 30c plus 10c stamped envelope. Box172, Gilbertsville. New York.Yes, we have no potatoes.WRITER S Workshop (PL 2-8377)Kamelot Restaurant, 2160 E.10% discount for UC students. 71st St.Vote. SGweek. elections April 13-15. NextA free wuffle in a free market or a freeman in a free fall.Co-ed SELF DEFENSE class meetsFrl, April 8, 4,30. Dance Room INHIS GOD dead? No h<Tjoined "the HUNT.Take a trip with the Knights of Soul.EXHIBITexhibit of graphics, "The EmancipatedJew a? Artist, Through May 10th. Hil¬lel House 5715 Woodlawn, open daytimeand evenings. Mon.-Fri. & Sun.dig the fancy plaster ceilings coffee andcookies 2-7 daily ida noyes coffee eve¬ningsRIDERS WANTED: Cleveland lv.contact Howard . . .493-4329.UNIVERSITIESGNOSIS.LASER for sale. HUNT info MM 7-4947.Take a Acuity member home to dinnerSG will provide partial subsidy for stu¬dent-faculty dinners in student or facul-t;£JKts- Contact Jerry Lipsch SG office,X3274.WHOHQ. bombed GWB? Contact HUNT"TAKE A FACULTY MEMBERHOME TO SUPPER"buttons available in SG officeJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPING■XPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS7*42 1 55th HY S-9259 ' <l\ . . ; „ • }dent activities funds, student servicesetc. Support SG. Vote NO on the abolishSG referendum.Pretty clever the "Save SG” addsi'whi)do you think pays for them?JOBS OFFEREDHY-PK. Unitarian Co-op Nursery School,'Kenwood-Ellis) 5650 Woodlawn EX.PANDING. Needs nursery school teach.ers. LI 8-0414 Mrs. Rissman.4 Students wanted to operate experimen-tal day camp. St. Thomas CommunityCenter, 1843 E. 77th St. If you areskilled in rythm band, arts & crafts, rec.reation or drama please call RE 4-7777.Salary.WANTED Sect’ry. Assistant for growingloop Adult Ed. Develop / ProgrammingOrg. College Grad/type, dictaphone,lit. bkpg. & ability to organize oft. pro.cedures desir; some irreg. hrs. poss;salary—open. Inter-University CenterFI 6-4291.The Courthouse Restaurant in HarperCourt has openings for waiters & wait*resses. Must be over 21. Please see orcall Hans Morsbach NO 7-4008.TEACHERS WANTEDSouthwest, entire W'est & Alaska. Sal*aries $5,400 up—Free Registration.Southwest Teachers Agency. 1303 Cen-tral Ave. N.E. Albuquerque, New Mexi-co.APTS. WANTEDFAMILY of four desires large basementor Eng. basement in Hy. Pk. or So. Sh.363-7391.MARRIED Harvard Law student seek*furnished apt. for summer. 3-4 rmi.Write D. Roston, 19 Everett, Cam*bridge. Mass.Wish to sublet rm. or small apt. fromMay 1-June 15. Steve Ltvernash.(DO 3-4376.)University Prof, wants to rent or buy(reas. terms), modem 6 rm. apt. Begin-ning July 1. . .493-6783._____FOR SALE21" MahoganyNO 7-2424, after 6. console TV. Call4/15are for students-vote Zenith 19” TV, mahogany cabinet. AM-FM Radio, Record Player, Records (43volumes) Gilbert & Sullivan operettas.Exc. cond. $100 complete or Zeiss bin¬oculars in trade. RA 6-8757 or BA 1-2891.’ 60 RAMBLER wagon. auto, trans.,pwr. equip.. 45000 miles. Exc. per cond.6500/or best offer. Cali Don at X4393 or667-2735.1960 Rambler American, stick-shift, faircondition, $100. PL 2-656^SCANDINAVIAN-Imports : the homeof MULTIFORM. WHOLESALE WARE¬HOUSE: SALEM Call for appt. to see at1725 S. Michigan Ave. 939-4993. All salescash.Weekend Tour by chartered bus to Ni¬agara Falls, Detroit. Lv. I-House Frimght May 6th. return late May 8th. Satsleepover. Bus fare $28. I-House Assoc.FA 4-8200.VOTE SG Elections. April 13-15, nextweek. Scott 342521-0460 solid state receiver. $24?.MOTORCYCLE, 1965 Honda 305cCDream, mint condition, only 2.000 miles,many extras, priced to sell. CallPL 2-8767.LOST & FOUND“The graduate school elections are ut¬terly farcical " Rusti Woods at the lastassembly meeting.Vote no on the abolish SG referendum.The representation you save may beyour own.Chartered Bus to Stratford Theatre Fes-tival. Canada. Wkends July 15-17, Aug.12-14, tickets to all plays, concerts, re¬served, sleeping accom. reserved. Busfare $20. I-House Assoc. FA 4-8200.For Townhouses, liberalized socialrules charter flights, WUCB-FM speak-ers program, student control over stu- LOST*—Prescription sun-glasses in tancase, on campus this week. Reward.NO 7-2424. aft. 6.LOST—Mans gold ring. Reward.David Cooke. 363-6080. after 7. CallRMS. & APTS. FOR RENTHOTEL SHOR ELANDSpecial student rates Hotel rms. withprivate baths. 2 students/rm. $46 stu¬dent per mo. Complete Hotel Service.Ask for Mr. N. T. Norbert, 5454 S. ShoreDrive.FREETENANT REFERRAL SERVICEReasonable Rentals Desir. Apts. 8 min.to U of C by 1C. Elf. $20 00; 1 bdrm.$90.00 & up. Also large Deluxe Apts.Furn. & unfurn. NO 7-7620.6 LARGE rooms, natural woodburningfireplace, 4 big closets, bookcases, pan¬try. Suitable for business or profession,al people. Garage $10 extra. MU 4-8222.3900 SOUTH CRANDON- ave. DeluxeHighrise 1 bdrm. apts. from $120; par¬quet floor, see Mrs. Haley receiving rm.or security guard. MU 4-7964.For rent with option to buy. 4 Lg. rms.Co-op. 3rd floor, furn., 69th 4r Crandon,will decorate, stove/refrig. 221-7257 orCE 6-3300.5 rms., 2 bedrooms, large living/diningrm., furnished summer sublet with op¬tion to lease in fail, 5032 Woodlawn.$135/mo. Call Penelope, wkdays,MI 3-0800 X3265.V. W. OWNERS ARISE!Contrary to Popular Belief,there are other Garages to Service your BugTRYHYDE PARK AUTO SERVICE(In South Shore)7647 S. Stony IslandJIM HARTMAN RE 4-6393CHICAGO MAROON • April 8, 1966Roland essay"What Knowledge is Most Worth Having?"This synopsis hy Jon Roland of hisessay on 'What Knowledge Is MostWorth Having?” is the concludingoffering in the Maroon series of prize-v inning essays from the liberal artsconference.All learning may be said to haveits proper material, and to consistof the distinct operations of analy¬sis, interpretation, criticism, andexposition. No formal study iscomplete which neglects any ofthese, or neglects to treat each asitself a proper object of study.Our question of what knowledgeis most worth having can be re¬duced to four: how to divideknowledge, how to evaluate the im¬portance of knowledge relative toour aims, how to choose a cutoffvalue determining what shall belearned and what ignored, and howto learn. Our answers to the firstthree must properly depend uponour answer to the fourth.KNOWLEDGE may be dividedinto knowing of, knowing that,knowing how, and feeling. It maybe divided according to the materi¬al studied, the questions asked ofit, the assumptions made concern¬ing it, the options offered as an¬swers to those questions, and thecriteria for choosing among the op¬tions.Knowledge may be evaluated ac¬cording to three prinoiple modes:the liboral, the paternal, and theprofessional. According to the firstmode, the question of what knowl-edge is most worth having is an¬swered individually by the student.According to the second, it is an¬swered individually or collectivelyfor the student. According to thethird, it is answered not in regardto the student but for the work tobe done. A modern university maybe regarded as a ground for the in¬terplay of these modes.Having evaluated and dividedknowledge, our choice of a cutoffvalue will depend upon the bound¬ary conditions of time, money, fa¬cilities, methods, personnel, andthe range of performance whichmay be expected of students andinstructors.THERE remains the question ofHow to loarn. In this context a hu-|„man being may be regarded as acoherenc e-seeking agent—onewhich seeks a consistent and inclu¬sive internal representation of onone hand the world of the past rep¬resented in memory, of the presentrepresented in awareness, and ofthe future represented in imagina¬tion, and on the other hand of theself represented in emotion. Hemay be regarded as programmedto prevail and to promote the prev-elance of the objects for which hecares, and therefore to seek securi¬ty and stimulus, so that he may besaid to learn for the sake of sereni¬ty and for the sake of joy.Consistent with the picture ofman as a security-seeking animal,vve may define freedom as the feel¬ing a person has about the deci¬sions he feels he must make whenhe is not sure of how he is going to make them, and responsibility asthe feeling a person has about thedecisions he feels he must makewhen he cares very much how theyare made. Inquiry arises out of thetension between these two states offeeling. For this purpose, serenitymay be regarded as the way a per¬son feels about the decisions hefeels he must make when he knowsexactly how he is going to makethem and is satisfied with thatstate of affairs.NOW THERE is an importantsense in which knowledge is notsomething which a person can besaid to have except insofar as itplays a continuing role in hisawareness. Similarly, general edu¬cation is of doubtful value insofaras it may occur during a brief peri¬od only and not throughout a per¬son’s life. I therefore suggest thatthere is a more interesting ques¬tion than what shall we learn. Thequestion is how can we make whatwe learn more meaningful. Now tobe meaningful an act of learningshould be an intense and lastingemotional experience, preceded bydeep commitment and followed bydeep satisfaction. If we can regardappreciation as part of the knowl¬edge we seek, then I propose thatthe Knowledge Most Worth Havingis th« knowledge of how to learn,and I mean by that not just how tolearn in general but also how to in¬quire into any matter once we canrelate it to what we know. Thisknowledge can in part be conveyedthrough instruction and example,but for the most part it can only beacquired through practice.Now learning may be said toconsist of stimulus and response.No system of education can be ef¬fective which guides stimulus onlyand does not also guide response.The ideal method of educationwould be one which presented ma¬terial rapidly, evoked responsesand disciplined them, suited itselfto the individual, and yet retainedthe dramatic character of originaldiscovery. The great frontier ineducation lies not in the area ofthe more efficient presentation ofmaterial, but in the area of directattack upon the natural inefficien¬cy of the student.I HAVE several ideas for meth¬ods which might provide studentswith an ultimately more effectiveeducation. The methods includeprogrammed and controlled-flowtutoring and discussion. Space doesnot permit explaining them here,except to suggest how they are dif¬ferent from the way things aredone now. These methods wouldachieve a clean separation ofacademic and professional workfrom private activity. Such thingsas homework, home study, and theaccumulation by the student ofbooks and notes of his own wouldno longer be a part of formal edu¬ cation. So far as possible, educa¬tion would occur through the per¬formance by the student of definitetasks at definite places during def¬inite periods of time, leaving thestudent’s private life free of aca¬demic pressure so that he coulduse it for his private study if he wished. He would proceed at hisown rate on subjects of his ownchoice and in a manner of his ownchoosing, but having chosen hewould have to stick to it.My final point is that one of thethings which makes us most trulyhuman is our capacity to communi¬ cate with one another, and thisdoes not in the end depend somuch upon our being familiar withthe same bodies of material asupon our sharing a deep wonderfor what we do know, and a capac¬ity to make what we know knowntoothers. Jon RolandKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 TOYOTA LAND CRUISER"World'* Toughest 4-Wheal Drive"6-Cyl. 135-H.P. Engine 85 M.P.H.HARDTOP AND STA. WAGONS2471400 3967 S. ARCHERYou#re "In" in aU of C Sweat Shirt"Surf" style short sleeve sweat shirtwith contrasting white trim in wonder¬fully smooth Kodel end cotton.Klaret $3.95Standard raglan sleeve sweat shirt ofsoft, comfortable fleece.Loden—White—BurgundyBlack—Navy—Powder Blue$2.95New V-necked, short sleeve sweatshirt with white knit trim.Nu-BIu only $2.95THE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE8802 8. ELLIS AVI. MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBlood Typing 8 Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICEComplete Lab. EKG 8 BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM • 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3 2000PIERRE ANDREfoci flatteringParisian chicten akltfedhotr gtyitota atn4t Hyde Park BtvA Jfltl R. Ttet St. MDO 1-0717 ***10% Student Ditcount Want to go50/50 on aIf you’re under 22,join theTWA 50/50 Cluband fly forhalf fare.You can get 50% off the regular Jet Coach fare when you fly TWAin the U.S. If you’re between 12 and 22, fill out the form below andtake it with proof of age to any TWA office. Buy your membershipcard for $3-and the sky’s the limit. You fly on a stand-by basis—except for the few days listed below. Note: if you have an ID cardfrom another airline, we’ll honor that, too.And remember, even though you’re going for half fare, youalways get full service-meals and all. Questions? Call your nearestTWA office. We’re your kind of airline.TWA^CLUB Present this application to any TWA office. Or mail toiP. 0. Box 700, Times Square Station, New York, N. Y. 10038Mr.Mrs.1. Miss.3. Home Address. .City. .2. Date of Birth..State. ,2fp Code.4. School or Occupation. .Class of.8. PROOF OF AGE Check type of proof submitted with this application. Send photostat, not original, with mailedapplication. O Birth Certificate O Driver’s license O Draft Card □ School Record O PassportOther -6. Color of hair. .7. Color of eyes.B. Enclose $3,00. D Check □ Money Order (Not refundable. DO NOT MAIL CASH.)I Make check or Money Order payable to Trans World Airlines, Inaft AHtlonwljftip* fitfWABQjCO Club trivl t* net available en April?, November 23, NeywnjjerjT, December m through 24, J8ee, and Jinuery 2 through 8 lttA,April a, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON ••Theater reviewSouth African story of life in an unjust societySpononoby Alan Paton and Krishna Shahat the Hull House Parkway Theater500 East 67 StreetDirected by Michael MillerSponono ..Principal ..WalterSpikeHa’Penny .Elizabeth . runs the reformatory. In the endhe is destroyed by Sponono, be¬cause each unavoidably betraysthe other’s trust.The Parkway Theater’s pro¬duction of Alan Paton’s Spono¬no overflows with exciting the¬atrical acitivity. The HullHouse Skyloft Players avoid thetired blood that plaques semi-professional theater and in occa¬sional flashes of brilliant actingstartle the spectator with theirpotential power.A South African boy’s reformato¬ry provides the setting for a com¬plex series of incidents connectedwith the delinquent Sponono’schoice of a way to live in an unjustsociety. While the adolescent hasacute moral perceptions, he alsohas grand self-delusions. His ac¬tions and their consequences rever¬berate against the other charac¬ters, particularly against the prin¬cipal, a fatherly white man who DRAMATIC interest is main¬tained throughout two naturalisticacts and a third act dream se¬quence—a projection of Sponono’smind where he judges the actionsof himself and those who in¬fluenced him. But in spite of thetechnical interest in the hero’spredicament, problems arise fromPaton's treatment of Sponono andthe Principal. Both are ambig¬uously conceived. As the lonewhite character and a man whopresents one ethical extreme in theplay, the Principal needs enoughdramatic weight to balance awhole cast of adolescent Africandelinquents bursting with energy.Leonard Kraft interprets the roleas a mild, restrained adminis¬trator. His acting is fair, but theplay demands a more vital charac¬ter in place of this flabby man,else Sponono’s choice and self¬destructive delusion is not tragic,but pathetic.Sponono himself Is well acted,although perhaps a bit too mature-I’m not feeling veryfolksy tonight. 2. You got those low-down,feelin’ poorly, out-of¬sorts blues?I wouldn’t get sopoetic about it.3. Why not sing out your woes?Let the world hear yourtroubles. 4. Music of the peopleprovide a catharsis.Look, singing has nothingto do with it. I’ve beenthinking about the kind ofwork I want to do whenI graduate. I don’t need one.5. Shout your story to the hills,% the sands, the far-away seas.* And listen for an answer fromthe winds.I doubt if the winds willtell me where I can get achallenging job with goodpay and plenty ofopportunity to move up. 6. Oh, if that’s what you’reconcerned about, why notget in touch with Equitable.They’re looking for collegemen who have demonstrated apotential for above-averageachievement. I’m sure you’dbe happy in one of the specialdevelopment programs because >the work is fascinating, thesalary excellent, and theopportunities unlimited.Say, how about a medleyJohn Henry, Rock IslandI.ine and Michael, Row theBoat Ashore.For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, oroppor ^ ___ twrite to Patrick Scollard, Manpower Development Division.Thf SSeletTftf the UnffeTSBir*Homo Officei 1283 Ave, of the Americas, New York, N. Y. 10019 C Equitable 196JAn Equal Opportunity Employer ly for the type of situation hefaces. Paton has written a part foran exceptionally precocious youth—if he is too old, his wisdom is nolonger interesting.SOME OP these problems un¬doubtedly originate with the play¬wright, rather than with this par¬ticular cast. The novelist Paton hastaken three short stories out of hisTales from a Troubled Land andwith the help of the director Krish¬na Shah entwined them into a sin¬gle play. The actions of each storymesh well enough, but in movingfrom the narrative to the dramaticmode Sponono and the Principalsuffer. The interpretations and in¬terpolations that gave Spononodepth in prose are denied the au¬thor on stage. Unfortunately Pa¬ton finds no dramatic equivalentfor narrative comment, and the re¬sult is confusion.Straight characters are better. Inthis production three of them con¬sistently steal the show. Walterembodies extreme evil in the play—malevolent, perverse, a murder¬er and a pederast. Alan Smith isbrilliant in the part. Although hisspeech is occasionally garbled, hismeaning never is, and his dancing(together with that of Jo-AnnBoyd) does more for the play thanany other single element.ELIZABETH and Spike rep¬resent a conventional goodness,showing what would happen if Spo¬ nono chose the Principal’s ethic.But the play’s morality is notblack and white, for Spike is mur¬dered by Walter’s gang. These en¬chanting characters leave no doubtabout the author’s sympathies.However, Mary Ann Smith playsElizabeth as the perfect bride—justmore than a girl, yet just less thana woman. She attracts attention byher natural grace and control,even when playing against thevery commendable acting of herpartner Spike (Leonard Norris).The production’s ornaments givereal stimulation for here the spe¬cial talents of the Hull HouseCompany are used to best effect.The native dancing, chants andchorus give the play much needed life. John Bracy’s drums are partliularly fine.Semi-professional companies likThe Hull House group face nproblem achieving moments cquality work, but have troublmaintaining a professional produ(tion for the whole run. These pecpie have a more vital atmospherthan any southside theater I havseen. If they can add a consisteneto their brilliance and a control ttheir vigor they will produce the;ter matching the best Chicago camuster. In Sponono they havgreat momenta of such theater-and these moments make the ev<ning well spent.Edward HearnZetesis to sponsor informal seminar;Small, informal seminars of un¬dergraduates and graduate stu¬dents are being formed under thetitle “Zetesis” to discuss topics inmathematics; the biological, physi¬cal, and social sciences; and thehumanities.Students may sign up for theproposed seminars, or invent theirown, at the Mandel Hall bulletinboard. Questions about Zetesi3may be directed to Paul Becker,Greenwood; Jeffrey Blum, 363- 2540; Peter Livingston, 228-6957; oLinda Spaet, x3777 or 363-3636.CareersL iv.v aRecruiting representatives of the foaticBATTERED BOOK SALE!SOILED AND SHOPWORN BOOKS FROM STOCKONE-THIRD AND MORE REDUCTIONFOUR DAYS ONLYThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. ELLIS AVE. lowing organizations will visit the offnof career counseling and placement dming the week of April 11. Interview atpointments for 1966 graduates may barranged through L. S. Calvin, rooi200, Reynolds Club, extension 3284.April 11State (arm Insurance CompanieBloomington. Illinois — will Intervieboth men and women receiving degreifrom any department for managemeidevelopment program. Prospective grauates with good mathematics bac!grounds wiU also be considered for actarial or data processing positions.April 13State of Wisconsin, Department <Public Welfare — will interview grauates in any discipline for positionssocial work or rehabilitation counselinjBOB NELS0B MOTORSImport ControMMvwr 1-43016052 So. Cottage GroveFive ideal dates.Three dollars($3) *Join in the most adventurous experiment of our time. Opera¬tion Match. Let the IBM 7090 Computer (the world’s most perfectmatchmaker) stamp out blind dates for you.Two Harvard juniors started it. 100,000 students have done it.Now you and 3,400,000 college students in 1500 colleges in 50cities can sign up and join in!Just send us the coupon. We’ll send you the Operation MatchQuantitative Personality Projection Test pronto!Then return the questionnaire with $3.00. What you’re likeand what you like will be translated into our 7090’s memory file.It will scan the qualifications of every member of the opposite sexfrom this geographic area. Then it will select the five or morematches best for you.You’ll receive your names, addresses and telephone numberswithin three weeks. You’ll be what your date is looking for. Yourdate will be what you are looking for. In other words: the matcheswill be mutual. ;#Dear IBM 7090,I am 17 or over (and 27 or under) and I want to help stampout blind dates. So mail me my questionnaire. Quick!• FS SchoolAddreaa w State Zip CodeOperation Match1 Compatability Research, Inc.5 East Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois < ij;- nv-'jChicago maroon *—April a, miMusic reviewGimpel, Ozawa no April fools Einarson appointed Edward Olson profProfessor of Greek Benedict S. Since 1956 he has served as anEinarson has been appointed the associate editor of Classical Philol-Last Friday was Busoni’s hundredth birthday, and like the other 99, it fell on April Fool’s Edward 01s0n Professor of Greek o9y. He has published papers onDay. Thus, although Chicago celebrated with the year’s most gala assortment of music, it at the University- The appointment the mathematical terms in Aristo-was combined with a joke of the crudest sort. Not only was Busoni’s music ignored —his 1S effectlve July 1966- tle’s logic and on the structure ofname wasn’t even mentioned. But beyond this tasteless jest, it was one of those days when t fjT0"/8 th! ,0,urth pers0" ,‘° '"e has ‘instated theeverything goes well and a Chicago ho,d the °lson Professorship. The treatise On the Sublime, and hasmusic critic has to scramble for unA si , . chair dates {rom September 18, been one of two editors and trans-his thesaurus to refresh the laudi- n C *er communion wi marc es quietly but relentlessly isgo, and provides a link with the lators of Volumes VII and XIV ofthe proper notes, it would have throughout oblivion. to th* met nt ~.. .. .„ . .the Loebintory segment of his vocabulary lI,e pr°Per no^es’ would have throughout, oblivious to the rest of o]d University of Chicago, which Plutarch’s Moralia,which has atrophied from lack of been unimpeachable. the orchestra which finally sinks was established in 1856 and closed Classical Library,use. The program also included some into silence. in so,,,.,, , - . in 18®°- Among his other publications arewas able not only to . ,. -a, . r.When funds were being raised to emendations of the text of HermesOZAWAThe major campus event, after well-rendered Chopin and a perforDaniel Robins spectacular dese- niance of the Schubert Sonata in B- keep everyone together a aualitv Wfleioration of Rockefeller Chapel with ^ had much grace and for which the oreh'stra has not of " “* PreSCnt Universit5r' Trismegistus and elucidations «fflags, flares, cymbals, and Sousa eutsies<-ness , . , , , , , , ..’ . alumni of the old University con- Plato, Philip of Opus, Aristotle,was Jakob Gimpel s Mandel Hall gutsiessness. late, been noted—but also to elimi- n,* n upiano recital, which featured Skry. THE CHICAGO Symphony, how- nate their usual uninvolved ineffi- ‘b ePd” a cha;rt,n “eI'a8er' Catullus. Horace, PI*abine's Fifth Sonata. ever, was not to be outdone. Re- ciency. True, the brass was even ™m°ry, ? 01son' of' , tarch' *"d Galen’SKRYABINE, like Janacek and cently announced program revi- blarier than usual in the second UaSS • 18?3' 01son’ President of He has just finished a study onMahler, reached maturity at the sions suggest a ]ast.ditch effort to movement-but they were olaving ?* University of Dakota> died in * the origin and development of th®» turn of the century, as romanti- _ , , ., , „ , .. . y p K fire in 1889. ninhaW and cnmnipiin*cism reached its outer limits and compensate for the dullness of the band music and their ungentleman- If™ alphabet and is completingbegan to break up. These were fer- first two-thirds of the Seventy-Fifth liness was smashingly appropriate. Einarson was born in Chicago, the first critical editions of the Dotile conditions for the development Anniversary. Whether or not this Elsewhere, it was like listening to He received his BA (1926), MA Causis Plantarum of Theophrastusof an individual idiom; and since succeeds guest conductor Seiji a new orchestra; there was no hint (1928), and PhD (1932)Skry.biM had l» major protagees Ozawa , the |ast , a„ °fas‘“S^* s“g*K?1if.*'from the University of Chicagohis music remains nearly as fresh imacinatjve and imnressive start f°. 1 the "V*8* dlfflcult scoreas 1. was 50 years ago. T,* .S"" fineAt UC. of course, his name has electrifying performance of Ives’ performance of the Mozart Lina degrees and of the Da Natura Hominls ofNemesius, Bishop of Emesa.been on everyone’s lips since the Fourth Symphony, the local pre- Symphony and an invigorating onpSkryabine baseball team of 1962, miere. The work is built primarily 0f the Dvorak Violin Concerto inbut his music has been on few pi- on opposition: not only consecutive which Ozawa’s contribution faranos. Gimpel s performance, there- opposition (the uproariously com- outweighed that of Isaac Stern. Butfore, while far from perfect, was a plex Cacaphony of the second an in aUt deSpite the Busoni anni-major cultural service. movement is followed by the naive versarv it was Ives’ dav" ThH^in?hL(Tnm/rnf1Chisndl-lLSr simPlicity of the third>- but simul* And Ozawa’s orchestra. Unfortu-mystical than some of his later taneous opposition as well. Theand best scores) was written when second movement (based on aSkryabine was shedding the Liszt movement of the S«cond Sonata) isinfluence and groping toward his an avalanche of sound in differentown opiatic style. Its difficulty keys, times, and styles, all rau-springs not only from virtuoso de- Cously competing for attention,mands, but even more from the gut despite the impossibility of^rapid alternation between a sug- unscrambling it, Ives keeps it fromgestively seductive lushness and a degenerating into the drab unintel-stoel-like stark severity. ligibility characteristic of too manyIf the primary ingredient of of today’s intellectual scores. HeSkryabine’s music is ecstasy, then always gives his audience some-Gimpel’s interpretation was per- thing to hold on to—in this case,fectly attuned. He worked from a familiar folk tunes and marchessmoky beginning to a flaming cli- which form the basis of the com-** max, planning his performance so plex fabric. In addition, there isthat the work as a whole continued Ives’ insatiable sense of humor,to build despite the repeated throb More subdued, but no less star-of tension and relaxation of each tling, are the overlapping worlds ofindividual section. If his fingers the last movement, liie percussion nately, only for a week.Peter Rabinowitz DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 t. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3 6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS PILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty DiscountHONDA SOUTH & SOUTH EASTSEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES • SERVICE - PARTS• PICK UP A DELIVERYo EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESMl 3-4500BOB NELSON MOTORS CHICAGO'S LARGEST &413* s COTTAGE grove JUST AROUND THE CORNERSaa tha MAROON classified far your campus sales raprasantativaAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN A ZENITH -- NEW A USED -Salas and Sarvica on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETapa Racordars — Phonos — AmplifiersNaadlas and Cartridges — Tubas — Batteries10% discount to students with ID tardaSERVICE CALLS - $1 STEREO HI-FI COMPONENTSTV, FM RADIOS, CLOCK RADIOSTAPE RECORDERSTYPEWRITERSReasonable Rates, Courteous Service, Quality EquipmentRENT OR BUYReasonable Terms Can Be ArrangedWE REPAIR ANYTHING WE SELL (ALSO ANYTHING ANYONE ELSE SOLD)TOAD HALL1444 E. 55th ST. BU 84500KEYPUNCHING• 500 CARDS OR MORE •• FAST TURN AROUND •FOR ESTIMATE CALLSHEILA BLIXT 332-4708R. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.33 NORTH USALLE STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60602COMPUTiR APPLICATION CONSULTANTS THE ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRYand theECUMENICAL STUDENT COUNCILsponsor anEASTERSEN RISE SERVICEROCKEFELLER CHAPEL5 AM ... -April i, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON •Theater reviewAmateurs admirable in Irish uprising portrayalThe sky is filling with clouds rumbling like heartburn, and Ireland prepares herself forthe Big Wind, the 50th anniversary of the Easter Week uprising against British rule. It willbe an occasion rank with that variety of inflammatory, flamboyant oratorical defecation as¬sociated with bulging, bloodshot patriotism at which even the greenest of Irish blush.IF ALL the men who turn up atIRA reunions today to claim recog- js a Spiendid play and it is given hallucinatory half-trance.nition for valiant service hadturned out to serve in 1916, Britan¬nia’s huns would have been driveninto the sea with sticks, providedthe Irish hordes could all be per¬suaded to run in the same direc¬tion. For in fact, until the Britishexecuted the leaders of the rising,the Irish people had been apatheticif not downright antagonistic to¬wards the rebels, and even after a a lovely airing at the Last Stage.NOT THAT director Sid Passin’sproduction has filled out the play—amateur theater always wears asuit many times too big; but, assomeone recently remarked to me,the most one can ask of amateurtheater is that it show what theplay could be, and in this respect A PINT of stout and twentyWoodbines for Thomas Conley,whose Fluther Good is not O’Ca¬sey’s, but anyway a lily. He is notO’Casey’s battered, bewildered,simple man of limited and un¬steady perception but sound intui¬tion; he is here a sharper, strongercharacter who, though sympatheticto the rebel cause, maintains anequilibrium through the scepticalMr. Passin and his cast have sue-decade of guerilla war against the ceeded and occasionally exceeded. eonvicti<m“tha“/rffe'necessityTaTls!special forces of the British army, Their approach is introspective wm n quietly and that onethe^arbarous macJ and Tans^Ire- rat!Mr than 1spec!tabular, wd where; needn,t gQ 1(£king for it. The waris happening to Dublin, the uni¬land could only settle down to Civil as there is no consistent “styleWar. A railroad was under con- to the direction, something admira-struction in the USA, from theEast by immigrants from CountyDonegal, from the West by Kerrymen, and wrhen the long-laboringcrews finally joined up. it took thestate militia three days to breakup the riot.In The Plough and the StarsSean O’Casey explores, sans causalspeculation or sanctimonious par-sonizing, the celebrated Celticloneliness, the Irishman’s cripplingincapacity to contain his individ¬uality in collective action, to rea¬son in the abstract, to get together. ble is achieved by the conceptionand presentation of character insuch a way that the theme be¬comes accessible to the theater au¬dience. Ambiguity of character re¬flects ambiguity of theme, andeven the distinction between char¬acter and theme grows vague. Twoself-righteous females fight over apram to loot war-wracked Dublinwith; a man who braves bullet-puckered air to find a lost woman verse to man, but Fluther remainsthe wry street-singer of detach¬ment, expressing a quiet defianceof everything that is not Fluther.By asserting himself he is fortifiedagainst the shocks that disorientthe others; Mr. Conley, like Fluth¬er, is the backbone of the play,against which everything elseleans. He is also bloody funny.Russel Bruzek, as the equivocat¬ing, weak-minded Covey, is not ee-or a doctor for a sick child joins centr*c his interpretation, nor isTHRILLING CANOE TRIPSInto th» Ouatico-Supcrior wilderness.Only $7.00 per day. For information,write: Bill Rom, CANOE COUNTRYOUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota. not the rebels but the looting of apublic house; a rabid Socialist useshis doctrine to avoid involvementin the struggle and the advances ofa prostitute; and Jack Clitheroe,who left the Irish Citizen’s Army ina fit of temper over a coveted pro¬motion passed, rejoins upon beingappointed a Commandant, dies inthe street fighting, leaving his wifeNora to retreat into an hysterical,TheTransformations of ManSunday mornings at elevenJack A. Kent, ministerTransformation of Death April 10THE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCHOF CHICAGO5650 South Woodlawn AvenueFAirfax 4-4100 he responsible for as much signifi¬cance as Mr. Corey. But his per¬formance is professional, polished,and. unlike most amateur efforts,there all the time. Every time hedishes out gratuitous helpings ofpseudo-radical, arrogant abuse,one is enabled to see through tothe other side of the character, torealize that he can’t take it. Yethis malice is so childish that onesees fear behind it, senses some¬how that this man is well-meaning,guilty only of weakness. Mr. Bruz¬ek, like Mr. Conley, presents hisentire character from the very mo¬ment of his entrance, and thereaft¬er never reacts but with the wholecharacter.MARSHALL Richey is PeterUNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK*M rtfWf battle*MEW CAR LOAMSas low as*3«-1354 EAST 55tfc STREETMU 4-1200FJMjC.Volvo is a compact car made in Sweden. It will go faster in every speed rangethan any other popular priced compact car. It gets over 25 miles per gallon ofgasoline — even with an automatic transmission and Volvos are virtually inde¬structible. They last an average of 11 years in Sweden where the summers aregreat but the winters are pretty grim and the traffic moves right along. Wherethere are no speed limits on the highways and 70,000 miles of the roads areunpaved.VOLVO-FIATGEORGE W. BOWERS COMPANY6120 SOUTH WESTERN AVENUE ACROSS THE STREET FROM SEARSGrove Hill 6-2487 and 2488we SELL the best & SERVICE the rest!Come in for your FREE John Fitzgerald Kennedy'* "A Memorial Album*CHICAGO MAROON • April 8f 1966 Flynn, pompously peacocked in therococo habit of the Citizen’s Armylike a mini-Musketeer, who hidesunder the bed when the paraderuns into a war. Mr. Richey tendsat times to overact desperately asthough he thinks he has lost his au¬dience or left his fly open. But heis always alive, dynamic to thepoint of giddiness sometimes, andvivid, so that we sort of shrug andgo wherever he wants, even if thatshould be against our better judg¬ment. When he’s on stage, he’s theboss, and no one cares whether heloses his lines or his pants. Themost profoundly tragic moment inthe play is Flynn's pathetic reali¬zation of his own cowardice when,in the midst of the British bom¬bardment of the city, he is beggedof for shelter by a woman lost andterrified, and suddenly confrontingthe indifference of the universe,shrinks from the necessity of justi¬fying himself by moral self-asser¬tion in a moral void. O’Caseyseems to have envisioned a morecynical, less pathetic Flynn, butMr. Richey’s portrayal is consis¬tent and furthermore necessarybecause the director has not calledupon everyone to bring each char¬acter into full bloom with regard totragic potential, but has chosenrather to embody the theme inparticular characters and particu¬lar actions (the inevitability ofNora’s withdrawal is never felt,nor are we made aware of Jack’stragic weakness). Given thisresponsibility and this opportunity.Mr. Richey brings a passage ofsurpassing power and beauty tothe play. He cannot steal thescene, for he collaborates in thismoment with Karen Hodgson,whose appearance as the woman isbrilliant as it is brief.AS LONG as Conley, Bruzek, andRichey are on the stage, the playpursues and enraptures the imag¬ination, and they are on most ofthe time. Judith Pownall as BessieBurgess and Helen Mullins as Mrs.Gogan are effective, if limited andsuggestive of potential, though theynever lose sight of the thematicfunctions; Miss Pownall rangesthrough a spectrum of characteri¬zations, never settling on one,though playing all well; Miss Mul¬lins relies on a stereotyped sketchof character, a temptation quiteseductive when dealing with Behanor O’Casey, or the Irish folk play¬wrights. Marjorie Stark has all thefrailty but none of the strength andslum-fostered determination toreach refinement and the good lifeof Nora Clitheroe, while JamesMutt reauiug foranyone who wantsto know what Amer¬ican Communistsreally think—notwhat others saythey think.128 pp. Price 95cf-5c postageSpecie! discounts onquantity ordersNbw Outlook Distributor!}2 Union Sq. E., Rm. 801New York, N. Y. 10003Please print clearlyI enclose $ ... for.Copies of NEW PROGRAM.NameAddressCity, State Miller projects the strength biwants the weakness behind JacClitheroe’s devotion to the Revolition. His brutal vilification of Norfor embarrassing him by hrexpression of devotion, set in coutterpoint with the agonized groarof a comrade losing life and eitrails through a hole in his stonach, is merely gruesome. Car\Mathews as a prostitute is ncchallenged by O’Casey’s pedestriaconcept of the “woman of easy viitue.” F. Kim Hodgson has severafine, guilty moments as CaptaiBrennan, and Charles Gerace aLangon, mortally wounded, agonizes with pain that doesn’t comout of a bottle.Mr. Passin has chosen to seelthe meaningful individual perfoimance somewhat at the expense othe integrated theatrical experence for the audience. Each chaiacter has vitality and excites sympathy, while the blocking is not always imaginative and occasional!;crude. The sets, designed by Ka?dailis, are clever, but incompleteand missing altogether was thtenement-touch, the squalor of ;dead nobility. No attempt has beeimade to reproduce the distinctiveDublin twang, which has alwayseemed to me a necessity. Butcould be wrong, because even oishaky brogues, the company aThe Last Stage has done a remarkable job with a play at least onedenizen of the Cultic Twa-ledoubted had a chance againstbunch of Yanks.Richard EmSG candidates(Continued from page one)Divinity School (2)R. Douglas Spangler (GNOSISiGaylon Lee (GNOSIS)SSA (2)Richard Leroy Edwards (GNOSIS)Virginia Kaiser (GNOSIS)Humanities (5)David Richter (GNOSIS)Ed Tenner (GNOSIS)Clifford Adelman (GNOSIS)Merrill Nusbaum (GNOSIS)Peter Gran (GNOSIS) JThose candidates marked with inasterisk (*) are being challenged ontheir eligibility to appear on the offi¬cial ballot.TheMonterey Instituteof Foreign Studies10 Week Summer SessionJUNE 20 TO AUGUST 277 Week Sessionfor Graduates OnlyJULY 1 1 TO AUGUST 27LANGUAGES AND CIVILIZATIONS ofChina, France, Germany, Italy, Japan,Russia and Spain (native instructors).Elementary and intermediate courses,16 units. Intermediate and advanceocourses, 12 units. Upper divisioncourses, 12 units. Graduate courses,8 units.POLITICAL ARTS. Comprehensive pro¬grams combining fundamental courseswith area studies on Western Europe, IRussia and Eastern Europe, Far Eat'^lNear East, and Latin America.Bachelor of Arts and Master of Artsin languages and civilizations in polit¬ical arts.1966-67 Academic YearFall Semester: September 26, 1966 toJanuary 28, 1967.Spring Semester: February 6, 1967May 27, 1967.Accreditad by the Western Associationof Schools and College* at a t'ber*1Art* Institution.For Information write totOffice of Admission* TTHEMONTEREY INSTITUTEOF FOREIGN STUDIESPost Office Box 710MONTEREY, CALIFORNIA, 93942Telephone (408) 373-4779e: Vvv' - if ■If- ••$MAR OO N~W I¥ KEN D GUIDEmam.JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHUTZ ON TAPNOW THAT GODIS OBSOLETE10< bookUt by Tha Secular Societydenounces supernaturalism, offersguidance and membership.Box 3294, Stamford, Conn. James Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS-LINENS-TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. Card JESSELSOTSSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER SO YEARSWITH THE VERT REST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2970, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 93rdOTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingItn E5MR. HY 14)02 GOLD CITY INN"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD .5228 HARPERHY 3-2559Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of the follow¬ing: sweatshirts, "Levis," rainparkas, tennis shoes, underwear,jackets, camping equipment,wash pants, etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PI 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Student dhcounf with ed A YOUNG LONELY GIRL-A LOST YOUNG MANA house on a deserted beach—this was tha beginningTIME MAGAZINE "THE BLAZING PATRICIA GOZZIhardly makes a move that does net registeron the heart. Tha actors play their roles superbly/*N.Y. Herald Trlb. "Miss GozzI is marvelous. Shehas an extraordinary Insight Into character."N. Y. DAILY NEWS "MISS GOZZI STUNS US.Her acting Is a special kind thathas almost become a lost art today"THE STORY OF THE AWAKENING OF LOVEIN THE HEART AND MIND OF A YOUNG GIRLDEAN STOCKWELL. A BEAUTIFUL LOVE STORYMELVYN DOUGLAS-PATRICIA GOZZI’RAPTURE1CINEMA THEATER-Chicago at MichiganATTENTION CHICAGO STUDENTS $1.00 WITH THIS ADGood every day but Saturday. Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. 6 Sun. open 1:3#THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde Park Waiter SunJ.auayPARTY ATSMEDLEY’SOPEN 1 PMHOIS D’OEUVRES - PRIZES SURPRISESAfternoon and Nightly RalliesWINFree Egg Machinesand othervaluable necessitiesTHE PUB SPECIAL:IOld Fashioned Sauerkrautit Frankfurters 49cEvery Tuesday Night You can have a steaktoo, or the biggeststeakburger In town.Now—A Parade of Piano Artists for Your Pleasure and Dancing THE MUSICAL SOCIETYTODAYNOON CONCERT—12:30. Mendel HellITHE HITCHCOCK TRIO - Haydn, etc.TOMORROWSaturday Evening 8:30- IDA NOYES LIBRARY -NEVA PILGRIM-CHARLES VAN TASSELA PROGRAM OF SONGSALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yakt,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.After dinner don’t miss the newplays at the Last Stage. Join usfor cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.iCIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST it HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 1-7585 V-\ . VV. '. 5 ... University Theatre &College Humanities DepartmentPRESENT STRINBERG'SSONATATheatre First production directedby Jim O'ReillyFRIDAY, APRIL 8, 8:30 PMMANDEL HALL - 50*TICKETS ON SALE AT THE DO©8 ONLYAPRIL 14toMAY 7 Advertisement Advertisement AdvertisementFOTA '66: THE ARTS TODAY APRIL 1toMAY 1THE TWELFTH annual Festi¬val of the Arts will bt hold thisquarter at UC. The Festival isthe focal point of the springquarter. FOTA (The Festival ofthe Arts) will run from April14 to May 7.The Festival is an opportunityfor many kinds of activitiesdealing with the arts to bebrought together on the univer¬sity campus. In the past, lec¬tures, concerts, readings exhib¬its, dance programs, and infor¬mal events have made up theagenda of the Festival.The Festival has brought such personalities as James Baldwin,Norman Mailer, John CroweRansom, John Read, CorneliaOtis Skinner, Sir Tyrone Guthrieand Stephen Spender. It hasbeen host to numerous dancegroups, to the Bach Society, andhas sponsored its own art ex¬hibit and concert.This year, the Festival's at¬tention focuses on art as it ex¬ists today. A film maker willdemonstrate the methods of thenew cinema; a composer of theFrench avant-garde will illus¬trate the theory of electronicmusic; a phalanx of noted poets will read their poems express,ing their feelings on the mostcurrent of topics—the war inVietnam. The offerings of var¬ious student groups will alsocarry the keynote of Art Today.There will be a happening in thevenerable third floor theatre ofIda Noyes; UT will stage stu¬dent directed drama; and, ofcourse, the Strolling Playerswill once more put old wine innew bottles. Watch for forth¬coming Maroons and look outfor posters—FOTA's cornucopiacontains much more than youmight expect.Talbott Fund Brings Rosalyn TureckA lecture-demonstration entitled “Bach Performance inYoung Cinepoet Exhibits Films Our Time” will be presented by Rosalyn Tureck at 8 PMon April 21st in the Law School Auditorium. Miss Tureckwill illuminate her comments on Bach interpretation withdemonstrations on the piano andharpsichord. first woman to conduct the NewFOTA and the Documentary Film Group feel extremelyfortunate to present film-maker GREGORY MARKOPOULOSof the now well-established “New American Cinema.” Mr.Markopoulos’ work heralds a fresh trend in experimental filmtechnique. The Festival will pay The noted pianist is an authority York Philharmonic and has sinceon Bach and is the author of a then conducted major orchestrasthree-volume work entitled "An In- on four continents. She has been ontroduction to the Performance of the faculty of the Julliard School ofBach." In 1958 she became the Music and of Columbia University.The London Times has called herFourteen Poetstribute to his new art form with a der josef von Sternberg. He is thecomprehensive survey of his films, recipient of a grant in film fromplus a special lecture-demonstration by Mr. Markopoulos himself.Using cuttings from The Iliac the Ingram Merrill Foundation. Inaddition to the Prix Lambert, Mar¬kopoulos has won the Silver Award "the greatest scholar and inter¬preter of Bach in the world today.”Admission is by ticket; ticketsare free and may be picked up atthe Administration Building Infor-At 6:30 on April 16th Mandel Hall mation Desk, the Reynolds Clubwill be host to fourteen poets who Desk and the Music Department,have been invited to read theirAgainst the WarPassion, a film now in the mak- and the Pioneer Award for Twiceing. Mr. Markopoulos will illus¬trate his innovations. This lecture A Man as the film which “mostadvanced film-making as an art.”will be held at 8 pm in the Inter- Both awards were received at thenational House on Thursday, April Chicago International Film Festi-28th. val, 1965.Markopoulos’ film, Twice A Man,will be shown in Social Sciences jtiflHBB122 on April 27th at 7 and 9 pm.Twice A Man won the Prix Lam-bert at the 1964 International Ex- ^^Bperimental Film Competition inBrussels. Markopoulos will be pres- P1Bent to introduce the film. On May *4th, the artist’s widely acclaimedfilm triology, Du Sang, de la Vol- ^upte et da la Mort, will be fea- n|tured in Social Sciences 122 at * ^■pew7 and 9. - JkMarkopoulos’ appearance prom- ^BJses to be of great importance to / V |Bthose interested in the significant, / >^Bbut often confusing, trends which / ®film techniques are taking today. BThe artist speaks of his work as “a Bnew narrative film form created JB Bby the fusion of classic montage B *technique and a more abstract film JBy Bsystem involving the uses of short Bfilm phrases that evoke thought Wimages.” These film phrases ar- f Brest the spectator’s attention and 4 f ^Bcause his subsequent “participa- 1 'tion in both narrative and intro- •,~ Ji I Biliftspection.” m IMarkopoulos studied at the Uni-versity of Southern California un- UT, Last StageGet Into the ActClassic FilmsTo Be ScreenedAn impressive collection of mov¬ie masterpieces has been broughttogether for this year’s Festival.On Friday, April 15th, Doc Filmswill show Orpheus by Cocteau inMandel at 7:30 and 9:30 pm. Rus¬sian Films will run The Cranes areFlying in the comfy Law Schoolauditorium on the following night,Saturday, April 16th, at 7:30and 10.On Saturday evening, April 30th,Russian Films will show Eisen-stein, the excellent film biographyof the Russian master. The follow¬ing night has two classic cinemastudies of Joan of Arc, one by CarlDreyer and the other by RobertBresson. This double bill, spon¬sored by the Inter-Faith Commit¬tee, will begin at 7:30 in Mandel onSunday, May 1st.An evening of films by Canadianabstractionist Norman McClaren isoffered in Judd Hall at 8 pm onMonday, April 25th. And don’t missthe Gregory Markopoulos festwhich you’ve read about elsewhereon this page. own works by the Festival of theArts and the Chicago Review.Many of them have been inspiredby the Vietnam conflict. Thosepresent will be a goodly sample ofcurrent talent. Several have not 1° wake the soul by tender strokesonly won awards but are also rep- of art.resented in such collections as the To raise the genius and to mendPenguin Book of Contemporary the heart;American Verse and New Poets of To make mankind in conscious vir-England and America. The editor tue bold.of the latter collection, DonaldHall, will be present as will RobertBly, editor of The 60's magazine.Others who will be coming areJames Wright (The Branch Will Thus POPE did Drama’s humantask unfold.Alexander PopeMelpomene will be proud. InNot Break), Robert Curley (For honor of- and in conjunction withLove 1950-1960), John Logan the Festlval of the Arts, University(Spring of the Thief), Peter Simp- Theatre will present three one actson, Donald Justice (Lemont Poet- P13^5 in Mandel Hall on the secondry Award), and Galway Kinnel. of Ma^ The trio exhibits three dif-Six poets from the Chicago area ferent strata of Playwright. Ten-will participate: Paul Carroll, Lu- nessee Williams, doyen of Ameri-cien Strich, Dennis Schmitz, Mark can Theatre, is represented by IPerlberg, Richard Stern, and Bill ImaginiImagine Tomorrow, recently published in Esquire. The WilHams’ play will be directed b;Wayne Tignor. Jack CunninghamWisp of the Wind, directed by AHarris, will also be staged. Curningham, a young writer from nortof the border, won last year-Canadian Drama Critics Award foyoung playwrights. Richard Vertclanother talented young author, ryet not widely known, has contriliuted Six Hours to Leib which wilbe staged by Marc Cogan. The curtain goes up at 8:30 and the admission is fifty cents.The Last Stage, also participating in FOTA. will produce a dramatic reading of Shaw’s Don Ju?iin Hell on Sunday, April 24th, athe Unitarian Church, 57th amV/oodlavvn. James Redfield will direct the reading, which will begiiat 8 pm. Admission is $1.00.Hunt.This unique poetry recital cer¬tainly promises to be one of theFestival’s liveliest events. Composer Pousseur Explains Electronic MusicThe Festival of the Arts, in con- ment, presents Henri Pousseurjunction with the Music Depart- French avant-garde theorist amA MUSICAL OFFERING composer of electronic music. II<will give a lecture on his mediunusing examples from his work aBreasted Hall on May 2nd at 8:01Chicago’s Contemporary Cham- April 23rd in Mandel Hall at 8:30ber Players, directed by Ralph pm. The Friday performance is pm- 11 is fortunate that studentShapey, will participate in this part of this season’s Chamber Mu- wiU have an opportunity to meeyear’s FOTA with performances of sic Series. with a theorist of the most contemtwo modern American operas; The Hugo Weisgall and Lawrence P°rary trends of music.Brute by Lawrence Moss, and Pur- Moss, the composers of the operas, Pousseur’s music falls into whagatory by Hugo Weisgall. The will be present at the concerts. On is termed the “Ultra-Moderrperformances will take place on the afternoon of Saturday, April School.”Friday, April 22nd and Saturday, 23rd, they will participate in a Mr. Pousseur is spending thiSymposium On Contemporary Op¬era in Breasted Hall at 3:00 pm.Others taking part in the symposi¬um wils be James O’Reilly,! Strolling Players!! Return! year as visiting professor of musicat the University of Buffalo. Hi:music was most recently perYes! That's right! They're Back!The Strolling Players, that lovablebunch of zanies, will return with anentirely new show on April 25ththru 28th! Leading off in the mainring will be ADAM (or the Fall ofMan) a pertinent drama of ele¬mental conflicts! Robert Swan asGod! Theodore Heald as Adam!and Lynda Laird as Eve, the lus¬cious temptress!Then, to a roll of drums and aclash of cymbals comes EGLAN¬TINE! The play, a 14th centurymorality play delving deeply into Charles van Tassel, and Richard formed in New York City where iStern. aroused intense critical interest.Cash Prizes in Festival Art ShowThe Ari Show of this year’s Fes- are still two days left for student:tival will go on display at various to submit their works for the showlocation around the campus o^ which offers cash prizes. Art wortMay 14th. The opening reception is will be judged by Virgil Burnetscheduled for 3:00 pm on Sunday, Ray Martin, and Theodore HawkApril 17, at Lexington Studio. There ins. Photography will be judged bvArthur Siegel, Joe Jachna, anc/Aifh I PffllTP Ken Josephson. There is no on-LDMW LuLIUlU trance fee for uc students wheJ. F. Powers, author of Morte wish to submit their work,the traumas encountered by a poor D'Urban, will read one of his short Other art exhibits scheduled dui'peasant girl when rudely embraced stories in the Law School Auditori- ing the Festival are; The Renais-by her wicked Seigneur, is a wow- um on April 18th at 8 pm. Mr. sance Society "Contemporary Hahser. Powers’ first novel won the Nation- an Painters” opening April I7thmThe Players will be back at their al Book Award; this year he Goodspeea; Hillel House ,liold stand next to the C-shop and served that contest in the capacity Emancipated Jew As Artist” opc>1-Rockefeller Chapel. of Fiction Judge. Presently he is ing April 1th at Hillel; Seventh An-Directed, of course, by Robert professor of English at Smith Col- nual Contemporary Religious ArtJaffa.WATCH THIS SPACE FOR FUR¬THER ANNOUNCEMENTS! lege. Mr. Power’s appearance will Show opening April 17th at 18be the 235th in the William Vaughn Baptist Graduate Center, 4901 ElhgMoody Lecture series. Avenue.