VOL. 74-No. 45 The University of Chicago Tuesday, April 12, 1966 Rosenberg discusses artas affecting mass mediaby John BealThe human intellect is the most powerful force at man’sdisposal, and mobilized by artists and art critics to maintainthe place of the fine arts in this age of the growing massmedia, declared Harold Rosenberg, internationally renownedwriter and art critic, at the 234thSG members, NSA delegates to be chosenVoting begins tomorrow William Vaughn Moody lecture.Speaking Thursday night inBreasted Hall on “Art and the Me¬dia” Rosenberg discussed the grow¬ing interplay between the fine artsand mass culture, and its implica-Elections for representatives to Student Government and for UC’s delegation to the Na- said that traditionally art hastional Student Association (NSA) will begin tomorrow. The elections will continue through been distinguished from the mass12:30 pm Friday. All registered students are eligible to vote.Also on the ballots will be a referendum on housing, a constitutional amendment seek¬ing to abolish SG, and an amend- —ment relating to the filling of va¬cancies in the SG Assembly. Fulltexts of the referendum andamendments appear elsewhere inthis issue of th Maroon.FOURTY-NINE REPRESENTA¬TIVES to the SG assembly are tobe elected, thirty-five from thegraduate divisions, eight from Col¬lege residential units, and six fromthe College at-large.UC’s USA delegation will consistof five delegates and five alter¬nates. In past years the delegatesand alternates were elected sepa¬rately, but this year the fiveNSA candidates who receive thehighest number of votes will bedelegates and the next highest fivewill be alternates to the nationalcongress.NSA is a confederation of over300 college and university studentgovernments representing morethan a million students. NSA’s 19thannual national congress will beheld during the last two weeks ofAugust this year at the Universityof Illinois at Champaign-Urbana.THE SUMMER CONGRESSfunctions as NSA’s legislative body.It provides leadership training formember school representatives. Inaddition, NSA helps memberschools in such areas as communi¬ty involvement, tutorials, studentdiscount programs, academic free¬dom issues, and campus interna¬tional programming.NSA is financed primarily byfoundation and government grants.Since SPAC decided not to run aslate of candidates for SG thisyear, there is little contest for SGseats. Although there is some inde¬pendent opposition, GNOSIS is as¬sured a majority of the SG seatsunless there are massive write-incampaigns.THE ONE AREA in which theremay be a real contest is NSA. Thestudent - faculty - administrationcourt met last night to decide ifthe SPAC NSA slate may appearon the ballot. Time to decide who will fill seats in Rosenwald 2 for next year.had rejected all late candidacy pe¬titions.Also, three independent candi¬dates for SG in the College at-large. Jerry Lipsch, Jeff Blum,and Ed Birnbaum, and PierceTower independent Peter Ratnerfiled after the deadline. The SFAcourt ruling determines their eligi¬bility to appear on the ballot.THE CANDIDATES involved onthe SPAC NSA slate are Joe Lube-now, David Satter, Bruce Mann,Rusti Woods, Ed Birnbaum, Dave Stameshkin, Jerry Lipsch and JoanPhillips.SPAC chairman Lipsch declaredthat in the event that the SFAcourt rules not to allow the late fil¬ers on the ballot, SPAC will launcha write-in campaign. He statedthat anyone interested in helpingwith a write-in campaign shouldcontact him a 363-3292.Danny Boggs, chairman of theelection and rules committee, an¬nounced that anyone interested inpoll-watching should contact himat X3274 or 493-7806.Most profs must publish-but teaching counts, tooLATE BULLETINThe SFA Court ruled latelast night that the eightSPAC candidates and oneGNOSIS candidate for theUC National Student Associa¬tion (NSA) delegation, thethree independents runningfor SG from the college at-large, and the independentcandidate for SG from PierceTower, who filed for theApril 13-15 elections withinhours of the deadline, willbe allowed to appear on theofficial ballot.The Court further ruledthat the action of the SGexec in extending the dead¬line for petitions was uncon¬stitutional and thereforeDonald Garrick and Larry-Silver, two candidates whofiled petitions Wednesday,April 6 and Friday, April 8,could not appear on the bal¬lot.The members of the. Courtstressed that this was not thefull and final decision andadded that a complete re¬port will follow. Collegiate Press ServiceIt has been suggested in the pastthat the supposed great emphasison publishing as a ground for pro¬motions is really true only at a rel¬atively few of the nation’s collegesand universities.In a representative sampling offaculty members in all types of in¬stitutions, it was found that almostthe same percentage thoughtteaching was the primary factor indetermining promotion as thosewho thought the major emphasiswas on publishing.There were 1,800 respondentsfrom degree-granting colleges anduniversities, and 1.200 from juniorcolleges.Approximately one in four (25.9 The size and type of the institu¬tion also seems to influence facultybeliefs about promotion. For exam¬ple, faculty members from smalland from non-public institutionstend to think that teaching carriesgreater weight than do those fromlarge public institutions. The re¬sponses from junior college facultymembers indicate that the criteriafor promotion in their institutionsmay be significantly different fromthe criteria used in four-year col¬leges and universities.Less than one in five of the jun¬ior college faculty members whoresponded thought publishing had amajor effect on promotion. Indeed,the vast majority (97.7 per cent)per cent) of these faculty members ,r'Ported ‘hat publishing carried* . Iirrlo or nn u/oirrhf or thoir inotun.think that publishing has morebearing on promotion than teach¬ing ability has; more than one inthree (34.2 per cent) believe thatteaching ability has more bearing;and the rest indicated that publish¬ing and teaching ability are ofequal importance.Comparison of the answers of little or no weight at their institu¬tions. media by virtue of art history. Theartist has been aware of the histor¬ical developments in his field andhas had “an eye on the museum,”while the mass media have beenconcerned with popular entertain¬ment.HE INDICATED that this dis¬tinction is no longer sufficient andthat the mass media are encroach¬ing on and destroying the artists’association with the past. Mu¬seums, he said, are no longer “cu¬rators of history,” but have be¬come “impressario’s of novelties.”Museums are adjusting so as topresent art to the public as it hascome <o expect it from the massmedia.Rosenberg stated that the bridgebetween art and the media is popart. This, he said, has been bothbeneficial and harmful.Among the positive effects havebeen the increase in the numbersof people who have learned to ap¬preciate art, and the developmentof new valid forms of art such asfilms, certain types of cartoons,and some of the new styles inpainting, he explained.On the other hand, many peoplehave come to appreciate art, or topretend to, because it is the thingBlackfriars alreadyset several firstsBesides its title problems,Blackfiars 1966 has already,three weeks before the open¬ing curtain, established an un¬precedented number of firsts.The sets for the show, designedby David Katzive, are completelyfinished.The music, written by Carol Gut-stein, is all in working order.The posters for the show, de¬signed by Mike Merritt, are al¬ready dazzling the eyes of passers-by.And last, but not least, the actingis taking shape.Why are all these things firsts?The answer is simple. Along withBlackfriars’ tradition of originalmusical comedy, there is theequally strong tradition of perva¬sive (but lovable) disorganization.The result in the past has alwaysbeen a show that came together atthe last minute- But this year, asdirector Bob Reiser says, “Polishis the thing, and we can’t get thatunless we prepare well in ad¬vance.”Tickets for this polished, novelmasterwork, entitled “Hey Manny,Get This!—There’s This Guy, See,And This Girl, See. . go on salein the Mandel Hall box office thisMonday.The show will run for two week¬ends—April 29 and 30, and May 6and 7. Prices are $2 and $1.50, witha 50c discount to students.SG asks bus service for South ShoreStudent Government (SG) hascalled upon the University toextend campus bus service toSouth Shore, according to Davefaculty members in such fields as Rosenberg, chairman of the SGthe humanities, the social sciences, consultant board on housing.Although the SPAC slate wasfiled within an hour after the offi¬cial deadline, the SG executivecommittee voted to accept theslate and so over-ruled the SGelection and rules committee whicb the natural sciences, and mathe¬matics with the answers of facultymembers in commerce, industry,and agriculture indicates that pro¬motion policies may often be a de¬partmental matter rather than aninstitutional one.For example, those teaching inthe humanities are more likelythan those in the other fields tothink that teaching ability is theprimary consideration in their col¬leges and universities. In an open letter to Dean of Stu¬dents Warner A. Wick, Rosenbergpointed out that “increased enroll¬ment and scarcity of housing inHyde Park will make South Shorea prime location for off-campushousing facilities. Over 500 stu¬dents are already living in SouthShore. The results of the SG stu¬dent housing questionnaire haveshown that the greatest drawbackto South Shore is the lack of con-vanipnt transportation facilities to take students to and from cam¬pus.”Rosenberg added that “in orderto allow students living in SouthShore to participate fully in cam¬pus activities, the bus service mustbe in effect at least until the li¬brary closes.”Wick has requested SG to recom¬mend a route for the South Shorebus, and to make a recommenda¬tion as to its frequency and time ofservice, Rosenberg stated. Rosen¬berg expressed confidence that busservice to South Shore would be areality by the fall. “This is a stepwhich SG has advocated for thepast two years,” he consluded. Harold Rosenbergto do, and commercialism has be¬come so rampant that it is oftenhard to know where to go to findart truly worth considering, hesaid.ALSO, Rosenberg continued, to¬day’s styles have become trulyglobal, with local schools beingeliminated and art entering intothe world wide media system.“Continuity with the past is be¬ing lost,” he said. “References tothe past are increasingly contrivedfor affecting present values.”He also felt that the distinctionbetween fine art and commercialart is being destroyed and that artitself is seen by many as a mediawhich is lagging in terms of to¬day’s technology.HE ASSERTED that the answerto these problems and criticisms isto view art as an attempt at com¬munication or understanding be¬tween two individuals, while themass media involves an attemptby one person to feed a system.Art is not well suited to technol¬ogical advances and its mode ofproduction and consumption is ter¬ribly inefficient, in scientificterms. “Art may survive as an ex¬ample of the natural irreconcilibili-ty of the human organism and themachine,” he said.There are now two means of ac¬tions for artists and critics in theface of the mass media, Rosenbergasserted.ONE IS ‘inattention”—to ignorethe mass media and be concernedonly with true art. This he charac¬terized as “Waldensian” and im¬practical. The other means he sug¬gested is, since the media areturning art into a media, for artto turn the media, or parts thereof,into art.He said that the maximum pow¬er and action of the human mind(e.g. the minds of artists and crit¬ics) “must be used to keep themedia in their place. In the face ofthe media, criticism is more indis¬pensable than ever before.”Fanny Lou Hamerto speak at UCFanny Lou Hamer of the Missis¬sippi Freedom Democratic Partywill discuss. “Civil Rights inAmerica. 1966” in the north Irrsgoof the Reynolds Club at 7:30 pmtonight.Mrs. Hamer is being soonsoredby the UC Friends of SNCC andwill speak on new approaches incivil rights tactics, both in theSouth and in the North.Mrs. Hamer was elected to Con¬gress in 1964 in the mock electionheld by the Mississippi FreedomDemocratic Party but was refuseda seat in Congress when the Houseof Representatives voted in 1965 toseat the regular Mississippi dele¬gation. Mrs. Hamer was one of thefounders of the Freedom Demo¬cratic Party in Mississippi and ispresently serving as that organiza¬tion’s vice chairman.EDITORIALUC's SC—an organization worth sayingThere seems to be something inthe very nature of student govern¬ments that invites resentment. Per¬haps it’s the idea that the membersof these governments are “studentleaders” or the fact that student gov¬ernments have the authority to dis¬burse a limited amount of funds in¬variably taken from universityfunds. But whatever the reasons, thistraditional resentment is a very im¬portant factor, and it is playing itspart in the current campaign to abol¬ish student government at UC, nowentering its final days.The question that has to be consid¬ered before voting either to abolishor to save SG is to what extent thisresentment is justified both with ref¬erence to our own student govern¬ment and with reference to the con¬cept of student government in gener¬al.A dispassionate evaluation seemsto indicate that although SG has notbeen perfect in the past and un¬doubtedly will not be perfect in thefuture (if indeed it exists in the fu¬ture) there is still substantial reasonfor maintaining it.First of all, an elected body, nomatter how tenuous its claim to beingtruly representative, will alwayscommand more attention for whatit’s trying to do than any ad hoc com¬mittee or other pressure group. Theimportance of this fact should not be overlooked. There will be issues thatstudents will want to call to the at¬tention of the administration, andthe potential effectiveness of a cam¬pus-wide representative body inbringing about change is really quiteenormous. If student government isabolished at UC, administrators canalways say (and with some justifica¬tion) that the students had an organi¬zation whose purpose it was to pro¬mote their interests and they abol¬ished it—apparently indicating thatthey have faith in the administra¬tion's ability and desire to look afterthem.Not only is the elective nature ofStudent Government important in itsability to speak for the students butalso Student Government, unlike anynew organization that might develop,has the facilities and resources forimplementing its ideas and pro¬grams. The difficulty of startingfrom scratch must not be underesti¬mated. A new group would be with¬out funds. It could hardly expectCORSO to appropriate money fromthe student activities budget on thebasis of its say-so alone. As such, anynew group would be a shoe stringoperation as a matter of necessity.SG, bv the way of contrast, because ithas the facilities for implementingprograms, encourages their creation.Another advantage in retainingStudent Government lies in the fact that SG is an important source of in¬formation for the student body atlarge. Without such a source of in¬formation, students would always bein the position of protesting adminis¬tration decisions after they had hap¬pened.It has become the peculiar fortuneof SG representatives at UC to be in¬cluded in administration plans forthe campus before they are imple¬mented. This provides the studentbody with an advantage well worthkeeping.Finally, and perhaps most ob¬viously, Student Government, ifabolished, will eventually have to bereinstituted. There is a need on anycampus for an organization that rep¬resents the interests of students,both from the point of view of ad¬ministrators, who very often want toknow how the students feel, andfrom the point of view of students,who want to have some say in the de¬cisions that importantly affect theirlives.If Student Government is abol¬ished and reinstituted after a periodmarked by general inconvenience forall concerned, there will be no gainfor the student body. It is unlikely toexpect that even a new “completelyrestructured” government will beany better than the old one. A newgovernment would still have to dealwith all the same problems that so often made our present SG seemfoolish—and in many cases, unfairlyso. v *The sad truth is that any organiza¬tion, let alone any part-time studentorganization, is going to be plaguedby inadequacies and will sometimesmake embarrassing mistakes. Butthe total abolition of an organization ron this basis is not a very construc¬tive approach. It would be wiser andfar more advantageous to keep thepresent structure and try to improveit. And the most obvious way to im¬prove SG is to try to elect the bestpossible people to serve.It seems to us that those peoplewho directed so much of their ener¬gies toward the abolition of studentgovernment would have contributedfar more by putting together a slateof candidates that would be effective,hard working, and representative oftheir interests.The alternative is really no alter¬native at all. Abolition will, it is true,be a dramatic censure of those whoare now serving in student govern¬ment and it will give the studentbody an opportunity to take out theirresentment and frustration againstan organization that they resent andfind frustrating, but it will do noth¬ing to solve the greater problem ofeffective student representation andthe question of the role of the stu¬dent in the University today.EDITORIALMAROON endorsments for SCThe abolition movement hasdemonstrated graphically justhow alienated from SG manyUC students feel. The onlvway this situation can be remediedis through the election of candi¬dates who combine interest in SGand experience on campus with agrasp of the urgent need for build¬ing up true student rapport withSG. Such SG representatives can tbe elected by voting a party slate—SPAC isn’t slating for SG (thoughsome of its members are runningas independents), and GNOSIS hasnothing approaching a consensus ofparty philosophy, Rather, evenmore than in the immediate past SGelections, students must vote forcandidates on their individual quali¬fications. Only in this way canthere be a chance of having thebetter SC that UC students need inorder to deal with problems inhousing, curriculum reform, andother areas. Congresses, did undergraduatewrork at the University of Michiganand was chairman of NSA’s Michi¬gan region, was the former chair¬man of the Congress Steering Com¬mittee and a former member ofthe National Advisory Board, andis a present member of the In¬ternational Advisory Board. Heis far and away the most quali¬fied of all the NSA candidates—amust for the UC delegation! wiiere he proved to be a capableand enthusiastic speaker-Pierce TowerFor National Student Associationrepresentatives, UC should contin¬ue to send the high calibre-delega¬tion to the NSA National Congressthat in the past has made the Uni¬versity an important liberal in¬fluence in NSA. In light of this re¬quirement, we very strongly urgethat if the Student-Faculty-Admin-isration court rules the SPAC NSAslate off the ballot, students writein this highly qualified slate whenthey vote.With the needs of the studentbody and the University in mind,the Maroon makes these endorse¬ments, based in part on voluntarycandidate interviews with Marooneditors, for NSA and SG.National Student AssociationDavid L. Aiken (GNOSIS),fourth-year stu-dent in the College,has attended the past two NSA Na¬tional Congresses and several re¬gional conventions and is extreme¬ly interested and well informed onproblems of education. A naturalpolitician.Howard B. Abrams (GNOSIS), athird-year student in the lawschool, has attended four National David Satter (SPAC) is a second-year student in the College. A tal¬ented writer and capable speaker,Satter is actively interested in ur¬ban problems.jerry Lipsch (SPAC) — second-year student in the College, nowchairs SPAC. Experienced in stu¬dent politics, he is a truly en¬thusiastic and caoable leader.Joan Phillies (SPAC), third-yearstudent in the College, attendedboth NSA regional meetings thisye?r, and has been actively in¬volved in student politics, includingmembership on the SPAC steeringcommittee. Very enthusiastic aboutNSA. Ken Levin (GNOSIS) empha¬sizes the need for better relationsbetween the newly created Inter¬house Council and SG, an areawhich must be considered in thecoming year. Experienced in cam¬pus activities during his years atUC, he is familiar with the prob¬lems facing the Tower, and can beexpected to look after the interestsof the Pierce residents.Rustj Woods (SPAC), third-yearstudent in the College, attended theNSA National Congress last sum¬mer. Miss Woods is an enthusiasticmember of the student left, and afiery speaker, as well as formerSPAC chairman, adding up to anexperienced politician and leader.Joe Lubenow (SPAC), a second-year graduate student in philoso¬phy, who w'as SG’s NSA coordina¬tor this year and attended bothNSA regional meetings this year.An eloauent speaker w'ho knowswhat he’s talking about, he is a ca¬pable politician.Dave Stameshkin (SPAC), athird-year student in the College,attended the NSA National Con¬gress last year. Stameshkin Is apersonable and hard working poli¬tician, and was secretary of theliberal caucus at last year’s Con¬gress.Bruce Mann (SPAC), third-yearstudent in the College, became in¬terested in NSA this year and at¬tended the second regional meeting Burton-JudsonGary Midkiff (GNOSIS) as thenew chairman of his party pre¬sents both SG experience and agood outlook as qualifications forhis election. He stresses the impor¬tance of student involvement inUniversity decision-making, andcan be expected to bring SG closerto undergraduates in B-J andthroughout the College.New DormsAlan B I o o m (Independent)should be elected on the basis ofhis work for SG in the court thispast year, alone. His experienceand excellent communication withNew Dorms residents by means ofa newsletter indicates true interestboth in the government and in thestudents, and he hopes next year tobroaden his viewpoint and work onhousing problems in general.Bloom is a mandatory re-election.College-at-largeTom Heagy (GNOSIS) has longexperience in student affairsthrough w'ork in the Assembly,Academic Forum, and the Maroon.He has demonstrated concern forcurriculum reform and more stu¬dent participation in College plan¬ning. A hard worker.David Aiken (GNOSIS) is skilledin navigating through the highwaysand by-ways of the administrationbureaucracy. He has a first handacquaintance with student prob¬lems and is well versed in commu¬nity affairs. Indefatigable.Todd Capp (GNOSIS) Is out tosave off-campus housing for thestudents. Capp will try to prove tothe administration that off-campus housing construction is cheaperthan dorms. He has proven hisability as station manager ofWUCB.Jerry Lipsch (Independent) isconcerned with getting students in¬volved in campus issues, thus end¬ing SG’s current practice of acting“in a vacuum” without studentsupport. He has served in the As¬sembly and as head of the recentfaculty-student dinner program.Lipsch is full of ideas, and is amust for SG.Jeff Blum (Independent) is con¬cerned with off-campus events,especially the draft He is an As¬sembly member and was active inthe liberal arts conference. Hasreal potential.Ed Birnbaum (Independent),second year student in the College,was chairman of the SG LibraryConsultant Board this year andchairman of the Ad Hoc Commit¬tee to Save SG. He favors morerapport between SG and the stu¬dents, and believes in mobilizingstudents through seminars. An ex¬tremely willing worker dedicatedto making SG truly representative.Biological SciencesEd Stern (Independent) w’ants SGto do more for graduate students.He know's the campus well, hasworked on Particle, FOTA. Plansto canvass his constituents periodi¬cally.EducationMark Joseph (Independent) pre¬sents five years of residency atUC, a co-chairmanship of the SGacademic affairs committee, and agenuine knowledge of the campusand its problems as qualificationsfor his re-election. Stressing theproblems of communication be¬tween SG and UC students, andhousing, he will be an asset to thefuture Assembly in both experienceand initiative. NSAand still enthusiastic and dedicat¬ed.Steve Silver (GNOSIS) is thechairman of the SG Bookstore Con- jsultant Board, and largely respon¬sible for the bookstore question¬naire. He believes in the use ofquestionnaires and other means ofdata collection to determine stu¬dent opinion, and has been a mem¬ber of the SG assembly this yearwith a better-than-average attend- ’ante record.Law SchoolDanny J. Boggs (Law SchoolParty) was a member of the SGassembly this year, and recentlyelected chairman of the electionand rules committee. Dedicated toplaying political games, but play¬ing them by the rules, Boggs be¬lieves he can best serve his consti¬tuents by expanding SG services.An articulate speaker for the ultraconservative viewpoint and astrong civil libertarian.HumanitiesDavid Richter (GNOSIS) willraise the literary level of the As¬sembly. With long experience inthe campus, he has demonstratedan admirable capacity for work ;iseditor of the Chicago Literary Re¬view.I ihirago MaroonEDITOR IN-CHIEF Daniel Hertzbe flBUSINESS MANAGER .... Edwr'd GlasgowMANAGING EDITOR Dinah EsralNEWS EDITOR David SatterASSISTANT NEWS EDITORDavid E. GumpertASSISTANTS TO THE EDITORDavid L. AikenSharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsCOPY EDITOR Eve HochwaidCULTURE EDITOR Mark RosinEDITOR, CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWDavid RichterASSOCIATE EDITOR, CHICAGOLITERARY REVIEW Rick PollackMUSIC EDITOR Peler RabinowtiASSOCIATE MUSIC EDITOR .Ed ChikofskyPOLITICAL EDITOR Bruce FreedSocial SciencesJerry Hyman (GNOSIS) hasbeen at UC for six years and anactive member of SG for threeyears. A former SG vice-president,he is presently a member of COR¬SO a widely respected “elderstatesman” of student politics, andan outstanding speaker, tactful, STAFF: Mike Seidman, Bob Hertz,Ken Simonson, Jeff Kuta, NancySteakley, John Beal, Karen Edwards.Beverly Smith, Joe Lubenow, FredMelcher, Gary Christiana PenelopeForan, Elite Kaplan, Tom Heagy.Michael Nemeroff, Paul Satter, PaulBurstein, Ellis Levin, MahonnYoung, Monica Raymond, SladeLander, Dory Soiinger.Charter member ot US Student PJJJJAssociation, publisher# of CollegiatePress Service.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 12, 1966v: !t^ ;Texts of the three referendum issuesI • > ? *<**'' ■■ ■ ■Referendum No. 1FACT: There is a serious shortage of housing for students. Unlessmajor action is initiated by the University, this shortage will con¬tinue to grow more acute.MANDATE: The University of Chicago Student Government,shall, in the name of the student body, urge the University tobuild apartment buildings, conveniently located, and to rent themto students (both graduate and undergraduate) at rates below orcomparable to dorm rates. Students in these apartment buildingsshall not be subject to social regulations.YES....NO...Referendum No. 2At noon of the 14th day following the passage of this referen¬dum (interim excluded), the Student Government at the Universi¬ty of Chicago shall cease to exist and its constitution shall be re¬voked. Within this 14-day period, Student Government shall holdat least two meetings. All those members present shall constitutea quorum at each of these meetings. After the passage of this ref¬erendum, no new members shall be appointed to the Student Gov¬ernment Assembly, nor shall any members be removed there¬from. For a period of 21 days after Student Government hasceased to exist (interim excluded) the membership of the formerExecutive Committee of Student Government shall function as aninterim committee to transfer Student Government’s duties to oth¬er organizations. At noon of the 35th day following the passage ofthis referendum (interim excluded), the interim committee shallcease to exist. Student Government financial services such asCharter Flights (but excluding CORSO) shall be performed by theStudent Cooperative or such new organization(s) as the interimcommittee shall establish. No organization established by StudentGovernment or the interim committee shall constitute a studentgovernment. This referendum shall not affect the University ofChicago’s affiliation with the USNSA. Elections for the Universityof Chicago delegation to NSA shall be held within the first monthof the Spring Quarter of each year, in accordance with those rulesof the present Election By-laws as Student Government shall stip¬ulate within 14 days after the passage of this referendum (interimexcluded >. The elections for NSA shall be supervised by the out¬going NSA delegation.YES...NO...All students may vote on the following proposition; the provisionsof the prevailing section shall become effective only if the mainproposition passes. Vote for either ‘A’ or ‘B’ below:A. The duties of CORSO with regard to the disbursement of fundsshall revert to the Dean of Students’ Office. The Student ActivitiesOffice shall continue to recognize student organizations in accord¬ance with the provisions of the present Student Code.ORB. CORSO shall continue to function as it does under the presentStudent Government Constitution, except that the five studentmembers shall be elected by the student body in elections super¬vised by a committee of five students, appointed by the three fac¬ulty members on CORSO.Referendum No. 3ADD TO ARTICLE VII F OF CONSTITUTION‘■The student filling such vacancy must fulfill all requirementsthat would be necessary lor him to be a candidate from the elec¬toral unit in which the vacancy exists, except the Grade Point Av¬erage and length of residence requirement.”So that the entire section would read:Vacancies in representation to the Assembly shall be filled bythe Executive Council, except that the Assembly may direct theExecutive Council, in the filling of a specific vacancy, by a two-thirds vote. The student filling such vacancy must fulfill all re¬quirements that would be necessary for him to be a candidatefrom the electoral unit in which the vacancy exists, except theGrade Point Average and length of residence requirement.YES NOWe invite your aural perusal of ourrecently arrived shipment to A.D.C.speakers and cartridges. TOAD HALL,1444 E. 57th ST. BU 8-4500.MORE THAN ACADEMICWo have an image problem. People persist in thinking theUniversity ol Minnesota is strictly an academic institution. Ac¬tually, it's one of the largest employers in the state with apayroll of more than 15,000. And only 4,000 of them arefaculty members.We have professional employees in many nonteaching posi¬tions. These jobs include the opportunity to study in Minne¬sota's prestigious graduate programs.PERSONNEL REPRESENTATIVES—We don't lock our staff in an interviewbooth all day. Our dynamic personnel program givos you tho dsancoto perform the whole range of personnel services. Degree with majoror minor in industrial rolatoins, psychology or related field required.Experience or graduate work preferred. Starting salary ever $500; ex¬cellent promotional possibilities.RESEARCH SCIENTISTS—Our finest fringe benefit is the quality of our re¬search. Our scientists work closely with the University's famous re¬searchers. Bachelor's or master's degree in chemistry, biology or medi¬cal technology required. We also have openings for experienced re¬search personnel. Salary depends on qualifications.SPACE ANALYST—Solving space problems for University departments llthe prime concern in this job, open to a new college graduate. Degreein business, engineering, educational administration or related fieldrequired. Starting salary over $500.lend resume to: Personnel Office, University of Minnesota,Room 4, Morrill Hall, Minneapolis, Minn. 55455.UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA•n equal opportunity employer SC, NSA election schedule ,,WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13 '8:30 am-12:30 pm 12:30 pm-4:30pm 4:30 rm-6:30 pmBusiness East Soc Sci lobby Piercel Law School Bookstore Harper SurfMandel corridor Med School lounge BlackstoneEckbart Mandel corridor New DormsKent New Dorms International houseTHURSDAY, APRIL 148:30 am-T2:30 pm 12:30 pm-4:30 pm 4:3# pm-6:30 pmBusiness East Judd Burton-JudsonLaw School New Dorms (12:30-2:00) New DormsMaodel Corridor Soc Sci (2-4:30) PierceSSA Mandel Corridor HitchcockSwift Anatomy Greenwood/ RyersonFRIDAY, APRIL 158:30 em-T2:30 pm Note: All ballots will b# counted in thoBookstore Reynolds Club lounge starting at 7:30 pmSoc Sci Friday. SG officials predict that initial re-Mandel Corridor suits should be determined by 10:30 pm,Ryerson although final validation ef tho electionsClassics will require the weekend. The lounge willbe open to students during the tabulation.Rabbi discusses Jewish Vietnam viewThere is no one Jewish position on the Vietnam situa¬tion as set by Jewish tradition, said Rabbi Daniel Leifer atHillel last Friday night.However, he said, a Jew in forming his position onVietnam must take into account - — —his Jewish tradition.Speaking on the topic. “Vietnam:A Jewish Perspective,” Rabbi Lei¬fer stressed that he did not feel theactions of the United States gov¬ernment comparable to Germany sactions against the Jews in theSecond World War, but he indicat¬ed they were approaching thisrealm.A Jew must use “selective ap¬propriation” in selecting what as¬pect of his tradition to foliowT informing his opinion he said. First,because there is no clear state¬ment within the tradition whichcan be applied to this situation;and second, because within tradi¬ tion and especially the Bible thereare conflicting views on war. Thusa Jew must select which aspects ofthe religion seem most importantwithin the tradition.Though the Jewish legal codedoes allow certain types of war,Leifer emphasized that the non-le-gal Rabinic tradition has restraintswhich can be applied to the pres¬ent situation.First, he said, there is a restrainupon the ruling classes which is inopposition to the present presiden¬tial usurpation of power.Second, there is a restrain againpseudo-Messianic beliefs whichmay be applied against the Ameri¬ can belief that it is destine to de¬liver the world from Communism.Third, there is a restrain againstbeing obsessed with evil which isopposed to the United States atti¬tude to China.Rabbi Leifer pointed out alsothat figures known as great war¬riors in the Bible are generallyknown for other virtues in the ra¬binic tradition.HIGH/SCOPEcoed camp for capableyouth, 11-16Intellectual challenge and self-development.Non-sectarian, inter-racial.David Weikcrt1305 Sherman, Ypsilanti, Mich.'CHEAPER CHARTER FLIGHTS!'Did you know the CharterFlights make a substantialprofit? Why? To finance SG'slosses everywhere else!Abolish SG! LOUIE'S BARBER SHOP1303 E. 53 StreetFor a PERSONALITY haircut3 Chairs —No WaitingFA 4-3878Expert for Oriental Haircutting TAh5AM-\£NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising laCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAtLY11 A.M. «e 9 :45 PM.^ ^ORDERS TO TAKE <f0T1318 Ecu* 43rd St. MU 4-1052Book SaleLIBRARY DUPLICATES & DISCARDSOver 2,000 volumes with newtitles added daily.25c & up5 DAYS ONLYApr. 12-15 8 5Apr. 16 8:30-12:30The University of Chicago Bookstore’ 5802 S. Ellis Av*. TOYOTA1 yr. fra* maintenance1900 C.C. Sports Car Action.Auto. Tram. Avail.*1714 90 H.P.100 M.P.H.SALES - SERVICE - PARTS247-1400 - 3967 S. Archer » •April 12, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Linking y. ndes to drafthas "neosllve eFctls”TO THE EDITOR:A number of members of the fac¬ulty at the University of Chicagoand other institutions have ex¬pressed concern over the negativeeffects on the educational enter¬prise of having the draft boardssolicit grade and rank in class in¬formation for use in determiningdraft status.One can distinguish two kinds ofnegative effects. There is first thekind of poisoning of the academicatmosphere when both the teacherand the student are aware that thegrade assigned will be used to de¬termine whether or not the studentwill be required to render militaryservice.Second, (here is the effect uponapplications to the academic insti¬tutions. There is the real dangerthat unless there is a change inpolicy high quality academic insti¬tutions are going to lose high quali¬ty applicants.It has been announced that draftboards will consider both the re¬sults of the test and grade records(with rank in class). This presum¬ably is to be a corrective for thefact that standards vary from in¬stitution to institution.*» However, the wise student willjquickly come to realize that even a high score on the test may boom¬erang and resuit in his being draft¬ed. Consider the student who hasgotten a high score on the test. Letu 5 then say that he comes to a“tough” school, where high gradesare hard to get, and where there iskeen competition for grades. Sup¬pose that his grades are not good—say, in the lower half of the fresh¬man class, which General Hersheyhas suggested as the cutting point.A draft board member may theninterpret the discrepancy betweenthe test score and the grade levelas indicative of academic indo¬lence! And certainly he would bemore inclined to draft a studentwho is academically indolent.Thus, high test score or low testscore, what is important is gradeaverage! How can one guarantee ahigh grade average, especially ifone is reasonably bright? Clearly,go to a college where standardsare lower than a college like thatcl the University of Chicago. Onecan reasonably predict that if thepolicy remains as it is for anylength of time the quality of thestudents at the University of Chi¬cago will decline. For many of thestudents we would like to havehere will choose to go to otherplaces where they can be morecertain of getting good grades.They will reason that it is better toget an inferior education than in-by MURJNEIXCLUSlVt:Free removable carryingCase! Provides hygienic,convenient carefor yourlenses. * VThis 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 CASE. Exclusive removablecarrying case free with every bottle ofLensine. The scientific—and convenient—way to protect your contacts.LENSINE fromThe Murine Company, Inc....oyo care specialist for 70 yeara crease the risk of getting none atall.DAVID BAKANPROFESSOR OF PSYCHOLOGYAdministration must actto save student housingTO THE EDITOR:SG placed on the ballot a ref¬erendum on student housing, whichcalls upon the University to buildconveniently located apartment buildings, free of social regula¬tions, and rent them to studentsand faculty at reasonable rates.We did so in order to present over¬whelming proof to the Universitythat students recognize the needfor University action to ease thepresent housing crisis which con¬tinues to grow more acute.As a result of the research thatmy committee did, we concludedthat without University action, thenumber of apartments in HydePark available to students wouldcontinue to shrink to the vanishingpoint. It is only the University’s reluc¬tance to act that is holding up con"struction of apartments. If SG hadnot lobbied with the University, theUniversity would never have ac¬quired townhouses this year. If stu¬dents (both graduate and under¬graduate) want to be able to livein Hyde Park, I urge them to voteyes on the Housing Referendum.DAVE ROSENBERGCHAIRMANSG CONSULTANTBOARD ON HOUSING(Continued on page five)Text of the GNOSBS platformGNOSIS believes that Student Gov¬ernment should concern itself withcampus issues. There is a place oncampus for organizations whose prin¬cipal concerns are with politics andsocial action. However, an effectivestudent government cannot functionas a debating society for a broadspectrum of social and political is¬sues. It should concentrate its effortsin the areas in which it can be mosteffective—those concerning the need-,and desires of the student body oncampus issues. Above all. StudentGovernment must be aware of andaccurately represent the views andinterests of the student body.Student participation in decision makingStudent Housing: If SG had not lob¬bied vigorously with the administration,the University would never have pur¬chased townhouses and rented them tostudents. SG is now lobbying to con¬vince the University to build conven¬iently located and reasonably pricedapartment buildings and rent the apart¬ments to students and faculty. We urgeyou to support the GNOSIS-introducedreferendum on Housing. It is only theUniversity’s reluctance to act that ispreventing them from building apart¬ments.Social Rules: Without SG there wouldhave been no Social Rules CommitteeSEMINARS - SPRINGQUARTER 1966I. THE FREEDOM REVOLUTION ANDTHE CHURCHESAn examination of the civil rightsstruggle with reference to the roleand responsibility of the churches.Leader: Dr. Robert SpikeFormer Director, Commission onReligion and Race, National Coun¬cil of Churches; presently Directorof the Doctor of Ministry Program,Divinity School, University ofChicago.Wednesday, April 13—4:30 pm.Calvert House (basement)5735 S. UniversityThe seminar will meet each weekfor five weeks.II. CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN JEW-ISH-CHRISTIAN RELATIONSLeaders: Rabbi Max TicktinRabbi Daniel LeiferRev. Harold WalkerFirst Meeting: Wednesday, April 133:30 pmChapel House, 5810 S. WoodlawnThis seminar will meet each weekfor four weeks. (all of whose student members SG ap¬pointed). Had the Social Rules Commit¬tee (six faculty and six students) notmade its recommendations, the changesmade this year in Social Rules wouldnot have occurred,1) no more hours for third and fourthyear women2) moving time clocks in New Dorms,so as to allow girls to remain in thecentral unit until 3 am3) an end to both room checks and arequired open door policy4) the virtual elimination of the sec¬ond year of women's residence require¬ment.WUCB-FM: Had SG not written itswidely circulated six-page memoran¬dum, detailing how legal and adminis¬trative difficulties in allowing WUCB togo FM could be overcome, and had thenew CORSO with ils budgetary powersnot come into being, the Universitywould not have okayed WUCB’s applica¬tion to the FCC for an FM license, ap¬proval for w'hich is now pending.Student Activities Budget: Controlover the $32,500 budget for student ac¬tivities has been removed from theDean of Student's Office and placed inthe hands of a representative student-faculty committee whose members SGelects. Budget allocations are no longersecret, as they were when the budgetwas in the hands of the Dean’s Office.Consultant Boards: A GNOSIS SG es-tab'ished functioning consultant boardsin the areas of undergraduale admis¬sions and aid, library facilities, studenthousing and bookstore policy. Theseboards circulated a large number ofquestionnaires to ascertain student opin¬ion and garnered ideas and suggestionsfor improvements and intends to usethese as guidelines for action in therespective areas. Among the sugges¬tions arising out of the questionnairesare:1) an all night study facility2) allocation of space in the bookstoreto books and not brassieres3) the acquisition by the University oftownhouses and apartments to be madeavailable to students and faculty4) expand campus bus service toWho Represents You?There are only 19 membersin SG now who were electedlast Spring. Do the other 31represent YOU? Abolish SG!OR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty DiscountPOWER YOUR PlAY PIZZA PLATTER1508 Hyde Park Blvd.KE 6-6606 KE 6-3891Delivery 25TABLE SERVICEPIZZA AND ITALIAN FOODSANDWICHESVi FRIED CHICKENFRENCH FRIES COLE SLAWROLL l BUTTER$1.50ASHAWAY PROOUCTS, INC., Ashaway, Rhode Island EUROPE51 Student Tours21 to 70 DaysBy Jet, Ship orYour Student Flight.also special toursby Bicycles, etc.Call Your Campus Rep.HANS ENDLERFA 4-8200-Ext. 753 South Shore (500 students now live InSouth Shore)5) the appointment of an ombudsman,whose job would be to help student:, cutthrough University red tape.Student servicesCharter Flights: 1200 students and fac¬ulty go on SG charter fligats eachye^r. It is one of the four largest pro¬grams in the country and one of themost efficiently run, saving students$150,000 yearly.Otf-Campus Housing File: SG tookover the file in 1R63 when the Universityrefused to operate it on a non-disctimi-natory basis. The file is now maintainedmore current and its listings are moreextensive than when it was run by theUniversity. Over 250 students 'foundhousing through the file last summerorchestra Hall Ticket Service: UK)students per quarter purchase studentdiscount tickets to Chicago Symphonyconcert® and other Orchestra Hallevents.Student Loan Service: There is nowalmost $2000 out in loans, borrowed byone hundred students.Speakers’ Program: The William B.Ogden Memorial Lecture Series, con¬ceived of and run by SG. has in the pasttwo years brought to campus MartinLuther King. Senator Wayne Morse,James Farmer, and Senator EventtDirksen, among others. In addition SGhas sponsored lectures by Felix Greeneand Myra Roper on China, Steven Caryon Vietnam. Art Linkletter on entertain¬ers and politics. Congressman RichardBoling on legislative reapporii inment, asymposium on the lole of grades featur¬ing Wayne Booth, a forum on tne t. t ofHyde Park High School, etc.Student-Faculty dinners: It was atSG's suggestion that stude nt faculty din¬ners were made a part of the LiberalArts Conference. Praising SG for its ini¬tiation and successful running of thedinner program, Wayne Booth recentlyannounced that he will provide SG withthe funds to continue the program. OvertiOO students and over 80 faculty mem¬bers have participated in the 70 dinnersso far.Student Discount list: Last year SGcompiled and recently updated a list ofalmost 100 Chicago area merchants whooffer student discounts.s>G publications: SG officers have pre¬pared a number of useful guides tocampus living including a synopsis ofthe most important sections of Chica¬go's Building Code, a 12 page entertain¬ment and recreational guide to Chicago(which American Airlines deemed val¬uable enough to publish 50,000 copies forcirculation), and the soon to be released10-page “Student’s Guide to the Univer¬sity Bureaucracy.” an invaluablecompendium of useful information abouthow the University runs.GNOSIS believes that the ideal uni¬versity is one in which students take ailactive part in the making of all majordecisions which directly affect them.GNOSIS believes that universities arefor students. Under GNOSIS, SG hassignificantly increased student partic¬ipation in University decision makingin a number of key areas. In addition,under GNOSIS, S6 has expanded thescope, effectiveness and number ofservices which SG provides for the stu¬dent body. This platform is a list of con¬crete SG achievements.Had you ever heard of an SGservice before last week (ex¬cept for the charter flightsand the "loan service.")?ABOLISH SG!THRILLING CANOE TRIPSinto the Quctico-Superior wildernaii.Only $7.00 per day. For information,write: Bill Rom, CANOE COUNTRYOUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 12, 1966(Continued from page four)Defects of present SGdo not warrant abolitionTO THE EDITOR:I am not now, nor have I everbeen a member of Student Govern¬ment on this campus. But, I wasthe president of the student senateon another campus and have con¬sequently followed with interest thepresent debate over the continuedexistence of SG at UC. I do notknow all the details of the currentinfighting but I do feel qualified tomake a few general observations.The critics of SG have over andover again emphasized the failingsand banglings of the current SGadministration. Such criticismsmay be valid. What is not valid isthe reasoning that says that be¬cause the current SG administra¬tion is a good deal less than per¬fect the whole structure of SGshould be abolished. Unless the crit¬ics are anarchists, the proper rem¬edy is to elect more efficient andreliable representatives.I always have great misgivingsabout those people who say aboutsome facet of student affairs, “Allis hopeless, let’s throw in the tow¬el.” I am reminded at such timesof Adlai Stevenson’s comment inhis eulogy of Mrs. Roosevelt, ‘‘Shewould rather light a candle than curse the darkness.” It seems thatthe critics of SG would rather dothe latter than the former. At atime when students all over thecountry are seeking greater partic¬ipation in the decisions that affectthem on their campuses, it is dis¬heartening to see some studentsweaken that cause on this campusby showing their immaturity whenthey come up against frustration.To my way of thinking, those peo¬ple who are truly concerned withthe welfare of the students on thiscampus, should be working tostrengthen and improve SG ratherthan engaging in a childish cam¬paign of pique and rancor.STEPHEN TALLACKSONDoubts motives of thosewho want to abolish SGTO THE EDITOR:Why have a number of people'been devoting so much time andeffort to the abolition of SG? Theyhave suggested a number of verypious personal motives, such asIn spite of SPAC's recent sup¬port for our program, we stillurge you to ABOLISH SG!—PRAXISValuable GIFT formale students ofTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOAPRIL 11 THROUGH APRIL 16 "1fdC... an assortment of fine, nationally-advertisedproducts —courtesy of famous manufacturers.You will receive such products as these:Brylcreem, Macleans Tooth Paste, Alka-Seltzer, Absorbine Jr, OldSpice Lime After Shave Lotion, and Halo Shampoo.These Campus Pacs are Free with any purchase or purchasestotaling $3.00 or more. Show sales receipt dated April 11 orlater and sign the register.If you prefer you may secure your Campus Pac for a servicecharge of 30 cents after you sign the register.Sorry, but only one Campus Pac to a customer.This valuable array of products comes to you withthe compliments of the manufacturers. CAMPUSPAC is yours~only while the supply lasts • • •exclusively atThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. their desire to spare the campusthe burden of SG’s wearisome andfruitless Assembly meetings,which, they proudly own, theyhave faithfully attended.'' They de¬cry the Assembly’s legalisticmeanderings, although Ken Sheltonhas complained bitterly about theAssembly’s failure to go throughimpeachment proceedings againstsomeone who had already resignedhis post."While I note a lack of consisten¬cy between their avowed motivesand their observed behavior, I donot have the chutipa4 to call themliars. To solve this dilemma, then,we need to find an additional mo¬tive which explains their abolition¬ist fervor, and this is suggested bythe association ot Shelton, Mahaf-fey, Giraldi, and Taylor with theYoung Republicans, which es¬pouses the Goldwater and Buckleybrand of Republicanism. Sincerightists hate liberals, and eventhe more conservative SG party5has tended to be filled with East-Coast Jewish Liberals—well, whatdoes this suggest to you?Now, Shelton and Mahaffey, hav¬ ing apparently found even YR's re¬publicanism too modern, havejoined the “Whig Society.” Sincemost of the campus is probably notin step with Edmund Burke andHenry Clay, they have chosen tobring the government down oncharges of fraud, inefficiency, etc.,rather than on ideological grounds.As for Mr. Hergert, even thoughhe detests SG protest resolutions,his past activities suggest that hesimply loves a rollicking-good pro¬test. Last year, he protested Victor(The Prune) Bass’s 48-hourshower® in New Dorms, completewith a retinue of pickets and allthe fixin’s.This time, however, the conse¬quences may be more serious. Atthe very least, if they are success¬ful, there will be no more charterflights or housing file or loan fundsThe representation you savewas never your own!Abolish SG! BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroM. G.HondaTriumphComplete Rope If*And ServicePer AN Popular ImportsMidway 1-45016052 So. Cottage GroveValuable GIFT forfemale students ofTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOAPRIL 11 THROUGH APRIL 16M.faC... an assortment of fine, nationally-advertisedproducts —courtesy of famous manufacturers.You will receive such products as these:Pond's Dreamflower Talc, Angel Face Compact Make-Up, AngelFace Cream Make-Up, and Fresh Start. Macleans Tooth Paste,Luster Creme Shampoo, Neutrogena Soap, Confidet's SanitaryNapkins, Deep Magic Moisture Cream, and Alka-Seltzer.These Campus Pacs are Free with any purchase or purchasestotaling $3.00 or more. Show sales receipt dated April 11 orlater and sign the register.If you prefer you may secure your Campus Pac for a servicecharge of 30 cents after you sign the register.Sorry, but only one Campus Pac to a customer.This valuablo array of products comet to you wfththe compliments of the manufacturers. CAMPUSPAC ti youri—only while the supply foils . . •exclusively ofThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. —even to steal from—unless, ofcourse, the Whig Society can legit¬imize itself as the new govern¬ment and run these services. Iwould suggest, however, that thesepeople bear too strong a resem¬blance to the Whigs of old: likeHenry Clay, they are too “Right”to be president, and like the Whigsof 1856, they are know-nothings.1. Shelton, Mahaffey, Hergert, Tay¬lor, and Giraldi2. Maroon, April 1.3. Maroon, March 4.4 Nerve.5. Gnosis.6. A new record.ED B1RNBAUMBUY NOW.SAVE NOW.PAY LATER.Built-To-LastCHECKER ylluixUmSedans • Station WagonsLimousinesCHECKER TOWNE SOUTH INC.3967 SOUTH ARCHER AVENUE247-1400 Sales & ServiceThere’s no limit io 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.'CDtisiian Science leciurel'Thursday, April 14th 4 pmBreasted Hall,Oriental InstituteSponsored byChristian Science Orqjniz.-MionApril 12, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • fWhy did all but 19 SG mem¬bers elected last springquit? Abolish the Farce! Pretty clever those expen¬sive "save SG" posters.Who do you think pays forthem?‘‘Unless we are prepared to fighta general war... in all of SoutheastAsia, we have no alternative but toseek a general accommodation.”—Senator J. William Fulbright,on the Senate floor, March 1,1966A new approach to peace inAsia- based on hard factsand nonpartisan sanity -prepared for the AmericanFriends Service Committee“You Americans don't understand. You are makingbeggars rf our children, prostitutes of our women,and Communists of our men.”An American soldier was handing out candy toa bunch of kids. The man who unexpectedlyspat these words out at him was not a NorthVietnamese or a member of the Vietcong. liewas a South Vietnamese schoolteacher—andwhether or not his accusations are true, theydo reveal South Vietnamese emotions, andfacts about the war most Americans tend toignore.The time for ignoring the facts about Vietnamis over. Believing this, the American FriendsService Committee set up a “working party"to search for alternatives to military force.Their report does not claim to be the definitiveanswer to the problem of Vietnam. It does pro¬vide a comprehensive historical background tothe war; it does provide paths of action whichcan halt the war’s expansion and open the wayto peace. There are eight carefully documentedchapters — each one written by an expert inthe field of history or foreign affairs, and anappendix which includes the full texts of the1954 Geneva Agreements on Vietnam, and theprogram of the National Liberation Front ofSouth Vietnam. If you want facts rather thanplatitudes about Vietnam...if you are chieflyconcerned not with past wrongs and old griev¬ances but with the possibilities for peace now—and with the constructive changes that canredeem a decade of mistakes — then this im¬portant, nonpartisan document is indispen¬sable reading for you. PEACE IN VIETNAMis more than history, analysis, and a fresh ap¬proach. It is an eleventh-hour appeal to sanity.Now available at bookstores, $3.00(Paperback, 95^)AMERICAN FRIENDS SERVICE COMMITTEE Working PartyforPeawin Vietnam, which prepared this vitally important book: BRONSONP. CLARK, Vice-President of Guilford Instrument Laboratories inOberlin, Ohio; a former Director of the AFSC Algerian RefugeeProgram. WOODRUFF J. EMLEN, an investment counselor, formerMarketing economist for Economic Cooperation Administration(now AID), and one of 3 members of the AFSC exploratory missionto Vietnam in 1966. DOROTHY HUTCHINSON. InternationalChairman of the Women’s International League for Peace and Free¬dom and a writer and lecturer on international relations. GEORGEMcT. KAHIN, Professor of Government at Cornell University, direc¬tor of Cornell’s Southeast Asia program, and author of four booksin the field. JONATHAN MIRSKY, Instructor in the Oriental Stud¬ies Department at the University of Pennsylvania, and. an authorityon China, who spent the summer of 1965 in South Vietnam. A. J.MUSTE, Executive Secretary of Fellowship of Reconciliation from1940 to 1963, an Associate Editor of the Presbyterian Tribune anathe author of Nonviolence in an Aggressive World. W ALLYNRICKETT, Associate Professor of Chinese Studies at the Universityof Pennsylvania and the author of numerous books. CLARENCE H..YARROW, Secretary of the International Affairs Division of AFSC,a former college professor of political science and Review Officer ofthe War Labor Boardk TENTH ANNIVERSARYHILL & WANG141 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y10010 Calendar of Events^ V' M - - ' . ' ' ILECTURE: ’’Limitations on liberty.”Marshall Cohen, associate professor ofphilosophy, Thompson House lounge,7:30.LECTURE: The contemporary relev¬ance of Buddhism,” William Gilbert,president. American Buddhist 'associa¬tion. 1174 E. 57th. 7:30 pm.MEETING: SDS chapter meeting, IdaNoyes. 7:30.LECTURE: "Counter-revolution in mod¬ern France,” Sir Denis Brogan. Cam¬bridge University, sponsored by the his¬tory club Ida Noyes, 8 pm.FOLK DANCING: Country dance socie¬ty. Ida Noyes. 8 pm.LECTURE: "Numismatic approachesto the reign of TYajan,” Tom Jones,University of Minnesota. Breasted Hall,8 * 30VOTING FOR STUDENT GOVERN¬MENT ELECTIONS: 8:30 am to 6:30 LECTURE: “Man Unlimited,” WilliamHenry Alton Board of Lectureship.First Church of Christ, Scientist. Bos¬ton. Breated Hall. 4 pm.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: HillelHouse, Instruction 7:30, general dancing9 pm.VOTING FOR STUDENT GOVERN.MEXT ELECTIONS: 8:30 am to 6 30pm.ij/' i <4? K'.vAk.. ii.:... ,1 Flutist Patrick Pursweil willgive a recital in Mandel Hall tonight at 8:30.Included on the program willbe the Bach Sonata No. 4 in C,‘Johnston’s Duo for Fluto and« mm * i i mTuesday, April 12VARSITY GOLF MATCH: Rooseveltand DePaul Universities (and MANi.Glencoe country club. 1:30.FILM: "Dawn Patrol," Documentaryfilm group, Soc Sci 122, 7:15 and 9: ISpm.LECTURE: "Civil rights in America.1966.” Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer. Missis¬sippi Freedom Democratic party vicechairman Reynolds club lounge, 57thand University Ave.. 7:30.FOLK DANCING: International House,8 pm.LECTURE: "The triumph and defeat ofclassical democracy." Sir Denis Bro¬gan, professor of political science, Cam¬bridge University. 8:30.CONCERT: Contemporary ChamberPlayers. Mandel Hall. 8:30.DEBATE: "Should SG be saved?”, Jer¬ry Lipsch and Jerry Hyman vs. KenShelton and Guy Mahaffey: DanielHertzberg impartial moderator. PierceTower. 8:30 pm.Wednesday, April 13LECTURE: “Urbanization in the devel¬oping world." David Owen, executivechairman, technical assistance board.United Nations. Law School auditorium.10:30 am.FILM: ”Upt>er US.” by Nameth: “DiesIrea.” by Dessenger others. Experi¬mental cinema, $.75. Soc Sci 122, 7 and9 pm. pm.Thursday, April 14ART SHOW: Opening of the festival ofthe arts art show. Lexington Gallery. 3pm.MEETING: Barrett O’Hara. US Con¬gressman. sponsored by students forO’Hara. Ida Noyes. 3:30 pmLECTURE: Jeremy Azrael, associateprofessor of political science, speakingon his recent trip to the Soviet Unionand recent intellectual developments,sponsored by the Russian club, refresh¬ments, Foster lounge, 4 pm. §j Double Bass, Debussy’s SonataIfotr Fluto, Viola, and Harp, Oliv-fferos’ Trio for Fluto, Piano, andI Pago Turnor, and Purswell’sown Composition for Solo Flute.Assisting Purswel! will beJoan Pursweil, piano; Irving fi¬rmer, viola; William Koneey,cello; Alan Goldman, bass; andEdward Druzinsky, harp.There is no admission charge.z i m r&^m> -r ss « * ..Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restTheMonterey Instituteof Foreign Studies10 Week Summer SessionJUNE 20 TO AUGUST 277 Week Sessionfor Graduates OnlyJULY 11 TO AUGUST 27LANGUAGES AND CIVILIZATIONS ofChina, France, Germany, Italy, Japan,Russia and Spain (native instructors).Elementary and intermediate courses,16 units. Intermediate and advancedcourses, 12 units. Upper divisioncourses, 12 units. Graduate courses,8 units.POLITICAL ARTS. Comprehensive programs combining fundamental courseswith area studies on Western Europe,Russia and Eastern Europe, Far East,Near 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, 1967 toMay 27, 1967.Accredited by the Western Associationof Schools and Colleges as a LiberalArts Institution.For Information write to:Office of AdmissionsTHEMONTEREY INSTITUTEOF FOREIGN STUDIESPost Office Box 710MONTEREY, CALIFORNIA, 93942Telephone (408) 373-4779John 0. (ordwell, architect and cily plannerwill speak on ’’Beauty and Vitality in the City”Friday, April 15 at 3:30 pm in Breasted HailUNIVERSITY AND 58th ST.The Interfarth Committee of the University of Chicago issponsoring Mr. Cordwell as part of a total program on "TheUrban Aesthetic" for The Festival of the Arts.Other events in the Interfaith program on "The UrbanAesthetic' include a continuous film program from 10 am to3 pm at Breasted Hall, Friday, April 15, showing: "No TimeFor Ugliness," "The Second U.S.A.," "The New Age ofArchitecture," "Form, Design and the City" and "LewisMumford on the City."The program is open to the public and without charge.The Student Religious Liberalsinvite you to hearWilliam GilbertPresident of theAmerican Buddhist Association"The ContemporaryRelevance of Buddhism"Unitarian Church Parlor Wed., Apr. 13th1174 E. 57th Street 7:30 P.M.Vote For A Left-RightnikIn tin put, the U of C do legation to the National Student Association Coo-gross has consisted largely of various assortments of dishwater leftists — rang¬ing from the limp gray of Bernie Grofman to the somewhat move striking,though muddled, gray of Rusti Woods. When these met the other dishwaterleftists and dishwater rightists at the Congress a dialogue ensued which con-*****^ of *he repetition of platitudes and resembled the mixing of dishwater.That the covering of oo*y grease which has for so long coated discussions atthe Congress may bo removed, I would like to see a little detergent in the formof a member of the new right added to the grime. That I am willing to tossmyself In among so much dishwater Is sheer heroism. But protected by theunassailable virtue of my position, I will throw it, and myself as well, into thezinc. I will stand in the Congress and announce to the appleuse of the left thatI favor civil liberties, pro-martial sex, the legalization of narcotics and LSD, andthe ebolution of HUAC. Then to the horror of the right, I will declare myselfone of their number and admit that I favor private enterprise, federalism, therepeal of the graduated income tax, the sale of the Post Office, and theabolution of the federal government’s anti-consumer buikwarks of privatemonopoly, the FCC, ICC, and CAB. If this fails to make the intellectual sparksfly and to initiate a meaningful dialogue between left and right, than I amRusti Woods. But regardless of the effect of my presence on the Congress at awhole, It would at least make the U of C delegation sparkle with unorthodoxyand radicalism it has not possessed for many years.It la time that one of the tired establishment radicals who have for so longpeopled U of C NSA delegation was replaced by me, a member of the newlibertatarian right. To achieve this worthwhile substitution, I solicit your voteKenneth Shelton■HS?^BgBjgaqww Classified advertisementsPersonals ' f?Z;:What has SG ever done for YOU? ..Drive my car to Berkeley, will acceptanywhere in Calif. As soon as poss. 667-7875 or 752-7416, before 8:30 am.MINORITY Maroon OPINION strong¬ly endorses Peter Ratner (Independent)for SG from Pierce.COED SELF DEFENSE class meetsMon. & Fri., 4:30, Dance Room, INH.SOUTHERN BAPTISTS!You are invited to attend services atCornell Ave. Baptist Church, 8210 S'.Cornell . . . phone SA 1-6070.Do you want a townhouse? Support SG.Welcome back from the sunny South,Nancy.The new issue of LEFT & RIGHT is atthe Bookstore nowl 85c.No more SG, no more charter flights!It's in your best interest to retain SG.CLASSICYes we have it! The famous, lovable,11th edition of the Encyclopaedia Britan-nica (1910) including such all time fa¬vorites as Algeron Charles Swinburn,Sir Arthur Eddington, Alfred NorthWhitehead and Doris Day. Here! Now!Ridiculous low price for this collector'sitem. Be the last on your block to ownone. BOOK EXCHANGE.UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor EXHIBITExhibit oi graphics, •'The EmancipatedJew as Artist,” Through May 10th. Hil-lel House 5715 Woodlawn, open daytimeand evenings. Mon-Fri. &. Sun.Charter flights, housing file, loans,rides, ticket service, student-faculty din¬ners. The services you save will be yourown. Support SG.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.Help needed by Save-SG Committee to¬day for ads & buttons. We are poor butwe are honest—and we are in debt. Callor send to SG Office.WRITER'S Workshop (PL 2-8377). George a GO-GO complete with GoGogirls. Friday April 15. Cloister ClubINH, Bloakes 50c Birds 25c, 8:30 pm.To whom it may concern: for yet a lit¬tle while, you are offered bond cham-pagne. W.Put a (whiskey) STILL in Student Gov-emment. Once that's installed, betterput in a JON (a than), too.Jonathan Still for SG and NSA.Townhouses. liberalized social rules,WUCB-FM, student control over studentfunds. The representation you save willbe your own. Support SG.A huffle-puffle is but a Truffle.EXPERIMENTAL CINEMA‘‘Upper U.S." by Nameth, "Dies Irae”be Dessinger, films by Panic, Hyell andPallozolio. WEDNESDAY. April 13, Soc.Sci. 122, 7 and 9 pm. 75c.“Vote for me—I need votes bad.”Tom Heagy vote gNOsis—for action not words.Kamelot Restaurant. 2160 E.10 7 discount for UC students. 71st St.SG is a bunch of nudniks. So what! Iwant to go to Europe. Support SG. JHC.voteforalf/ft-rightnik.We are pleased to announce the firstAmerican campus showing of MikhailKalatozov's award-winning motion pic¬ture CRANES ARE FLYING, this Sat¬urday night. Probably the most cele¬brated soviet film since Einsenstein’s“Alexander Nevsky,” CRANES won theCannes Grand Prix in 1957 and is pre¬sented by the Festival of the Arts andRFF as a highlight of (he mo-nth. Show¬ings will be held at 7:30 and 9:30 in theLaw School auditorium (1111 E. 60thSt.). Please arrive early to secureseats, as we anticipate a large turn-outand hope to begin on schedule. Students75c.Put books not bras in the Bookstore.Vote gNOsis. Support SG.ELIE WIESEL. survivor of Auschwitz,novelist of the Holocaust, will speak atBreasted Hall on Sunday, April 17th,8:00 pm. Admission free.vote gNOsis__For all the world's a cage, & the menand women on it merely wuffles. Get Moving!—Vote for STILL.TOMORROW NIGHTCannes award-winning motion picture.THE CRANES ARE FLYING, present¬ed by the Festival of the Arts and RFF.Best picture, best director, best actressof 1957, long witheld from circulation:this is the first American campus show¬ing. Law School auditorium, 7:30 and9:30 (1111 E. 60th st), students $.75.Come early.Your car will shine. Make the scene ina car that's clean. Be wise! Economize!The South Shore YMCA, 1833 E. 71st St.Girl’s Junior Leader’s are presenting agroovy CAR WASH. April 16th, 10:00-3:00, April 17, 10-3. Only one (1) Dollar.You’ll go off your rocker when you seehow clean we get your car. (Don’t be achump—this car wash is officially en¬dorsed by the Maroon editorial board.) Vote for MUSHROOM MAN!he wants potatoes.LostLost brown folder containing Lithuaniannotes. Reward 324-3261.Lost man’s gold ring. Reward, call 363-6080 after 7 pm.For saleSCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS: the homeof MULTIFORM. WHOLESALEWAREHOUSE SALE!! Call for appt.to see at 1725 S. Michigan Ave. 939-4993.All sales cash.Motor bike. Honda ”90”, 1964. Low mile¬age, like new. Priced to sell. BU 8-3751.60 RAMBLER wagon, auto, trans.,pwr. equip., 45000 miles. Exc. per cond.$500/or best offer. Call Don at X4393 or667-2735.Zenith 19” TV, mahogany cabinet. AM-FM Radio, Record Player. Records (45volumes) Gilbert & Sullivan operettas.Exc. cond. $100 complete or Zeiss binoc¬ulars in trade. RA 6-8757 or BA 12891.Webcor portable phonograph $18; call521-0460. private baths. 2 students-rm. $45 stu¬dent per mo. Complete Hotel Service.Ask for Mr. N. T. Norbert, 5454 S. ShoreDrive.FREE *TENANT REFERRAL SERVICEReasonable Rentals. Desir. Apts. 8 min.to U of C by IC. Eff. $80.00; 1 bdrm.$90.00 & up. Also large Deluxe Apts.Furn. or unfurn. NO 7-7620.6 LARGE rooms, natural woodburningfireplace, 4 big closets,bookcases, pan¬try. Suitable for business or professionalpeople. Garage $10 extra. MU 4-8222.Apts, to sublet5l2 rms., 2 bdrms. Superb location (54th& Harper) on campus bus rte., nr. Co¬op. Smedley’s first floor. Furn. withoutcharge. Take over lease for summerAlso avail, in fall. $150/mo. 643-3181eves.5 rms., 2 bedrooms, large living/diningrm., furnished summer sublet with op¬tion to lease in fall, 5032 Woodlawn.$135/mo. Call Penelope, wkd-ays,MI 3-0800 X3265.Jobs offeredApartment wantedUniversity Prof, wants to rent or buy(reas. terms) modern 6 rm. apt. Begin¬ning July 1. . . 493-6783.Roommates wantedShare apt. 54th & Greenwood w/2 stu¬dents, $40/mo., own rm., 493-9623.Rms. & apts. for rentHOTEL SHORELANDSpecial student rates. Hotel rms. with CASHIERNeat, 3 eves/wk. from 5-9 pm. contactMr. Gordon in afternoon PL 2-9251, Gor¬don’s Restaurant 1321 E. 57th St.Man wanted for part time repair work.Must have electronics background, spe-c i f i c a 1 1 y tape-recorder experience.BU 8-4500.WANTED MENwith imagination. S. Shore Social workagency has openings for undergrads orgrad students on summer clay campcounsellor's staff. 6 wk. or 8 wk. season,full time or 3 days/wk. Call Mrs. JoyJohnson. RE 1-6969.STUDENTS!how adventuresomeare you? Come with us and discover theStudent’s world of East and 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 60601HONDABOB NELSON MOTORS6136 S COTTAGE GROVE SEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES - SERVICE - PARTSo PICK UP & DELIVERYo EASY FINANCINGo LOW INSURANCE RATESMl 3-4500CHICAGO'S LARGEST &JUST AROUND THE CORNER THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:Old Fashioned SauerkrautA Frankfurters 49cEvery Tuesday NightSee the MAROON classified for your campus sales representative Now—A Parade of Piano Artists for Your Pleasure and DancingYou can have a steaktoo, or the biggeststeakburger in town.“SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT"PHILLIPS JEWELRY COMPANY'50% OFF CN ALL DIAMOND##ENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS67 t. Madison Room 1101 DE 2-6501Campus Representative: E. GLASGOW — Ext. 3265 or 624-4512KEYPUNCHING• 500 CARDS OR MORE •• FAST TURN AROUND •FOR ESTIMATE CALLSHEILA BLIXT 332-4708R. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.33 NORTH LaSALLI STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60602COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS Five 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!Nam# SchoolAddress' City State Zip CodeOperation Match! Compatability Research, Inc.* 76 East Wacker Drive, Chicago, IllinoisApril 12, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • fFOTA’66:THEARTSTODAYCALENDARSunday,April17SeventhAnnualReligiousCon-temp.ArtShow2-5pm.Open¬ing:Bapt.Grad.Center,4901EllisAve.FolkSongService,RockefellerChapel3:30pmJohnYlvisa-ker,conductor57thSt.Chorale,ChrisMoore,cond.,1stUnitarianChurch,8:30pm.Sunday,April24RockefellerChapelService,R.H.Holcum,11:30am.ArtShowContemporaryItalianPainting,RenaissanceSociety,GoodspeedHall.DramaticReading:DonJuaninHell,LastStageplayers,Uni¬tarianChurch,8:00pm,$1.00Adm.J.Redfield,Dir.(Inter-faithCouncil)Sunday,May1JoancfArc,2filmstudiesbyBresson-Dreyer,LeonMandelHall,7:30pm.(Inter-FaithComm.)Monday,April18JohnF.Powers,novelist,LawSchoolAuditorium8:00pm(WilliamVaughnMoodyLec¬ture)Monday,April25TheStrollingPlayers1:00pmattheC-shop.FilmsbyNormanMcLaren,JuddHall,50cAdm.(InterfaithCouncil)Monday,May2UniversityTheatre,OriginalStu¬dentandoneactplays,LeonMandelHall,8:30pm.50cTuesday,April19Concert:EdwardMondelloandmembersoftheChicagoSym-phonyBrass.RockefellerChapel8:30pm.Tuesday,April26TheStrollingPlayers1:00pmattheC-shop.UniversityofIllinoisConcertChoir,RockefellerChapel,8:00pm(ChapelSociety)Tuesday,May3LecturePerformance:HenriPous-seur,composerandmusictheorist,BreastedHall,8:00pm.(MusicDept.)Wednesday,April27TheStrollingPlayers,3:00pmbehindRockefellerChapelPoetryReading,JohnFrederickNimms,SwiftCoffeeShop,8:00pm(InterfaithCouncil)Film—(TwiceAMan)GregoryMarkopoulos—Int.House8:00pm.Wednesday,May4StudentPoetryReading—SwiftCoffeeShop,8:00pm.(Inter-FaithComm.)DuSangdelaVolupteetdelaMort,Soc.Sci.122,7:30-9:30.Thursday,April14FOTAArtShowondisplayatLexingtonStudiosthruMay7.Exhibit:"TheEmancipatedJewasArtist"HillelHousethruMay10.Thursday,April21RosalynTureck,Lecture-Demon¬stration(EmilyTalbotFund)"BachPerformanceinOurTime"—LawSchl.Aud.8:00pm.Adm.bytkt.availableatInf.Desk,ReynoldsClubDesk,MusicDept.Thursday,April28StrollingPlayers,3:00pm.RockefellerChapel.Lecture/Demonstration:GregoryMarkopoulos—InternationalHouse,8:00pm.Happening:"KeepRightonPainting",IdaNoyesTheatre,8:30pm,LeaguePlayers(In¬ter-FaithComm.)Thursday,May5FilmTrilogybyMarkopoulos,Soc.Sci.122,7:30-9:30.Friday,April15TheUrbanEstheticMorning:FilmsAfternoon:SpeakersBreastedHall.(InterfaithCouncil)Film—OrpheebyJeanCocteau(1949)LMH7:30and9:30pm(DocFilms)Friday,April22PoetryReadingContest(HarrietMonroeFund)preliminaries,BondChapel,3:00pm.ContemporaryOperaCCP,LMH,8:30pm.TheBrutebyMossPurgatorybyWeisgall.Friday,April29PoetryContest,(HarrietMonroeFund)Final,BondChapel,3:30pm.Blackfriars'—"HeyManny!"musicalcomedy8:30pm,MandelHalladm.Happening:"KeepRightonPainting",IdaNoyesTheatre,8:30pm,LeaguePlayers(In¬ter-FaithComm.)Friday,May6ChamberMusicConcert,IdaNoyesLibrary.Blackfriars'"HeyManny!"musi¬calcomedy,8:30pm,LeonMandelHall.Saturday,April16JohnYlvisaker,FolkSinger,CloisterClub7:30pm(Inter¬faithCouncil)Film—TheCranesareFlying,LawSchoolAuditorium7:30&10pm(RussianFilms)Saturday,April23ContemporaryOpera(SeeFridayListing)SymposiumonContemporaryOpera,BreastedHall,3:00pm(MusicDepartment)ShlomoCarlbach,HasidicFolk-singer,CloisterClub,IdaNoyesHall,8:15pm.Saturday,April30Film—Eisenstein:FilmBio¬graphy,JuddHall,8:00pm.(RussianFilms)Blackfriars'—"HeyManny!"musicalcomedy8:30pm,MandelHall,adm.Saturday,May7CollegiumMusicum,HowardBrown,director,BondChapel,8:30pm.Blackfriars'—"HeyManny!''musicalcomedy,8:30pm.LeonMandelHall.TEAROUTONTHEDOTTEDLINEANDSAVE!