rr:"'^n UC prepares to reportclass ranks for draft useby David E. GumpertPresent UC policy with regard to the draft entails report¬ing all information desired by Selective Service boards unlessotherwise instructed by individual students.According to Maxine Sullivan, UC registrar, “We will sendas much information as a student —wants, excluding partial tran¬scripts.”Starting next academic year, astudent’s rank in class in compari¬son to other males and accordingto his year in school will be usedby Selective Service boards, in ad¬dition to previously required infor¬mation, to determine eligibility forstudent deferments VOL. 74-No. 46boards.” The University of Chicago Friday, April 15, 1966Faculty senate debating secretly Wick supports bid for permanent committeeThe whole question of what UC’s 1position should continue to be ispresently being considered by theUniversity Faculty Senate. Thesenate consists of all tenure mem¬bers of the faculty, and electsmembers of the council of the sen- Social rules group backedby Mike SeidmanDean of students Warner A. Wick has announced his support for the creation of ain addition, the student’s score *Je, who in turn elect members of permanent student-faculty committee on social life and rules. Such a body was first proposedI the Selective Service college ®committee S<i$a presum- last May in the report of the ad hoc student-faculty committee on social rules.ably considering such questions Wick made clear, however, in his long-promised memorandum on the ad hoc commit-as the possibility of withholding tee’s report, that he envisions a —fi ve^Serviee^Jr^erhaps^doiifg^away permanent committee with consid- availability of facilities that we do Wick’s position, ason the Selective Service collegequalification test will be consideredalong with class rank, and which¬ever is better will take precedence.MRS. SULLIVAN REPORTEDthat tabulation of rank will takeplace immediately after spring with grades all together. According erab>,y !es* u^eJ than reCOm' n°^ha^”Scholarship a p p 1 i c a-tions are now availablein Administration 201.The deadline for filing anapplication is May 2.quarter ends, based only on gradesreceived in this academic year.Tn the student deferment state¬ment released March 25, GeneralIlershey, director of the SelectiveService system, set the followingstandards as generally acceptablefor student deferments: first-yearstudents must be in the upper halfof their class or have achieved ascore of 70 or more on the drafttest: second-year students must bein the upper two-thirds of theirclass or have achieved a score of70 on the test; third-year studentsmust be in the uoper three-fourthsof their class and have achieved ascore of 70 on the test; fourth-yearstudent; who require a fifth yearmust also be in the upper three-fourths of their class and haveachieved a score of 70; and grad¬uate students must have been inthe upper one-fourth of their lastyear’s undergraduate class as awhole or have achieved a score of80 or mor"* on the test.TWO PR03LEMS ARISE asconcerns the power of the localboards and the advisability ofwithholding information from theboards. According to the commis¬sion on federal relations of theAmerican Council on Education,the principal spokesman for highereducation, “It is not mandatorythat local boards defer studentswho meet the advisory criteria.Nevertheless, it seems probablethat the more complete, prompt,and precise the information fur¬nished, the better served w ill be theinterests of students and the local to the committee’s spokesman,professor of law Walter Blum,“Council meetings are closed andminutes are confidential. I don’tknow when and if any statementwill be forthcoming.” mended by the ad hoc group.The memorandum expressessupport for the ad hoc committee’saims and many of the committee’sgeneral proposals, but it maintainsthat several of its specific rec-On April 8, UC SDS came out in ommendations are impractical,a policy statement against Univer- "I FIND these ‘proposals for ac-sity compliance with the new Se- tion’ quite desirable in the ab-lective Service recommendations. It stract,” states Wick in the memo-said, in part, that, “The University randum, “but if ‘action’ entails themust realize that by complying choice of what is in our power,with the demands of the Selective they are practicable only to a lim-(Continued on page two) it emergesfrom his 17-page memorandum.Specifically, Wick concedes the appears to be one of compromise,need to improve dormitory living On the creation of an all-Collegeconditions, but argues that some of committee on social life and rules,the committee’s proposals would —what many consider to be therequire major new construction crucial issue — he seems willing towhich the University cannot now establish the body itself, but un¬begin. The ad hoc committee’s re- willing to give it the pervasive in¬port called for co-educational dor- fluence in establishing rulesmitories with no more than 60 stu- planned for it by the ad hoc corn-dents in a house and no more than mittee.eight students for every five rooms. "WHILE I believe such an all-Rathskeller delay College committee would be use-Wick also indicates that with the ful,” he states, “I cannot under-Voting ends todayited degree Many depend upon the re°PeninS of^Hutchinson Commons stand how such a committee could° “ and the building of a lounge in in fact be ‘responsible for the over-Cobb Hall, implementation of the all maintenance of the community*committee’s proposal for a “Rath¬skeller” in Ida Noyes Hall willhave to be delayed. While admit¬ting that the new commons areasdo not solve the problem of anight-time meeting and eatingplace, he states that the question ... If the committee were to thinkof itself primarily as a legislativebody or a grievance committee, Ibelieve it would die an earlydeath. . .”On other issues, Wick appears, ,. , ..... , TJ to admit many of the University’sof eating faculties at Ida Noyes re- failings described in the ad hoc\/A UP/i QPAlinH “ra ofiun nrinritinc’' . . ...volved around “relative prioritiesand would have to be studiedfurther. committee’s report, but seems tofeel that much of the responsibility, , for changing such conditions restsON THE issue of curfews and res- wilh the student bodyidency requirements, the memorandum points out that a numberof the committee’s recommenda¬tions have already been impliment-ed. Since the report was issued,third and fourth-year women’shours have been eliminated, sec¬ond-year women’s residency re¬quirements have been substantiallyliberalized, and the central timeclock in Woodward Court has beeneliminated. These changes roughlyfollow the suggestions made in thecommittee’s report.Privacy not unlimitedWick says in the memorandumthat he is sympathetic towards For example, he observes in hismemorandum, “It is odd that in aUniversity noted for academic in¬tensity, attempts to enlist studentand faculty in informal discussionsof the curriculum have never en¬joyed much vitality.”In particular, Wick feels that ac¬tion towards the creation of stu¬dent-faculty committees to run thehouses, as recommended in the adhoc report, must come from stu¬dents. He applauds the initiative ofShorey House in beginning such acommittee, and indicates that suchaction, as well as the improvementDanny Boggs, chairman of SG's election and rules committee, esti¬mated that about 1500 students had voted by yesterday afternoon.All those interested in counting ballots in Reynolds Club northlounge at 7:30 tonight should contact Boggs at the SG office, sec¬ond floor Ida Noyes, X3273. further such reforms proposed by °f student-faculty relations, cannotbe dictated by the administration.Last Stage playhouse also endangeredSchool expansion threat to businessesby Jeff KutaControversy over Hyde Park’s new high schDol is not yet dead.Several small businessmen are fighting a re:ent Board of Education decision to acquireDroperty on which their establishments are located in an expansion of the site for the new scholarship. We must do better or of a group called American Writthe various house councils, but henevertheless insists that a stu¬dent’s right to privacy is not un¬limited.“In any university with our as¬pirations,” he states, “it is es¬sential that each student have aplace where he can read, write,and think without interruption andwithout inconveniencing others. Healso ought to have a place, howev¬er small, that he can call his ownand ‘fix up’ to suit his taste.”"OUR FACILITIES have beengetting worse in this respect, andit is ironic that we nevertheless Anti-war poets setMandel Hall read-inFourteen poets will readtheir own protests against theVietnam war in Mandel Hall at6:30 tomorrow evening underthe sponsorship of the Chicago Re¬view as part of the UC Festival ofprofess our dedication to the val- *be ^rts (FOTA) program,ues of independent inquiry and The fourteen poets are members>chool. None of the additional land was incluled in the original plans for the school which lower our sights.”Sexual experimentationwere approved January 26 by theboard. elude Cirals’ House of Tiki, theTENANTS of this property in- Last Stage playhouse, the Pizza Platter, a Standard Oil service sta¬tion, Clark and Clark Bookstore,and a National Tea Company su¬permarket.Originally chosen as the site forthe new high school was property “However I suspect,” Wickwrites, “that some students mayinterpret this recognition of thevalue of privacy as a euphemismfor University-sponsored sexual ex- ers Against the Vietnam War, or¬ganized last March and co-ordinat¬ed by David Ray, a former editorof Chicago Review, and RobertBly, a poet and editor.A UNIFIED protest over a politi¬cal issue by a body of Americanperimentation. If so, they are sadly literary men, although not unprec-The Last Stage playhouse (left, above supermarket) and Ciral'sHouse of Tiki restaurant (right) are among the spots familiar to theUniversity community that are threatened by a new land requestby the Chicago Board of Education. immediately south and east of the deluded. The University will nei- edented, is unusual enough to elicitther sponsor nor tacitly condone it; interest as far away as the officeand anyone bent upon such activity of the New York Times.The attending poets include re¬cipients of some of the major na-< tional awards for fiction. Among: the poets present will be William1 Stafford and W. D. Snodgrass, win-| ners of the National Book Award,| Peter Simpson, a Pulitzer PrizeOf winner, Chicago poet Paul Carroll,| and James Wright, author of “The| Branch Will Not Break”,f The read-in at UC follows similardemonstrations over the last yearIf at Reed College and Portland State1 College, and is one of the steps ona tour planned by the poets’ organ-1 ization which will lead them toQueens College, Cornell University,Yale University, and Oberlin Colege later this spring.Kenwood School at Blackstone ave.and 50th st. This land, already des¬ignated for school use, is to beconveyed to the board by the De¬partment of Urban Renewal(DUR) as part of the Hyde Park-Kenwood urban renewal projectbegun in the early 1950’s.Now, however, Superintendent ofSchools Benjamin C. Willis,through a resolution he sent to theboard which was approved March23, is authorized to purchase threeparcels of land extending south ofthe original site to Hyde Parkblvd.Contained on the first parcel, onHyde Park blvd. between Black-stone and Harper ave., are twothree-story apartment buildings, a(Continued on page three) must make his own arrangementson his own responsibility.”Quote of the Day“I wonder if Dean Wickcould tell us at what ageour sex life ceases to be‘experimentation’.”—A student member ofthe ad hoc social rulescommittee commentingon Dean Wick’s memo¬randum.gammv- mrnm mmmm mmsmm mmmmmCalendar of eventsFriday, April 15L.ECTl'RE: "Activism and the Judici¬ary,” Victor Rosenblum, professor ofolitical science and law. Northwesternpolitical science and law. Northwestern *, - _ ”'University, sponsored by the political t-iuo /.<wpm.FILM: "The cranes are flying.” spon¬sored by Russian films. Law school au¬ditorium, 7:30 and 10 pm.FOLK SING: John Ylvisaker, Reynoldsscience association, Soc S'ci 302, 3:30m.ECTLRE: "The history of Bengali lit¬erature until the coming of the Brit¬ish,” Jyotirmoy Datta, poet, journalist,and critic. Foster lounge, 4 pm.DINNER-DISCUSSION: United Chris¬tian fellowship, dinner 5:30, Chapelhouse.FILMS: “Orpheus” by Cocteau and•'Stravinsky”, sponsored by doc films,Mandel Hall, 8 pm.PARTY: "Screw Ball ” with the noble¬men, Henderson house. Pierce Tower,8:30 pm.PARTY: "The trip.” with the knights ofgoul. house of Thompson, Pierce Tower,8:30 pm.LECTURE: "The place of liberal edu¬cation in mass democracy,” GerhardMeyer, professor of economics, HillelHouse, 5(15 Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.Saturday, April 16POETRY READ-IN: "Ports against theWar.” sponsored by the Chicago Reviewand FOTA. Mandel Hall, 6:30 pm.NEW BOOKS BYCAMPUS AUTHORSAuthority in the Churchby John L. McKenzie $3.95Area Studies and the Libraryedited by Tsuen-Hsuen Tsienand Howard Winger $4.50The Language of Lifeby George &Muriel Beadle $5.95THE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. ELLIS AVE. FILM: “Ghetto pillow, the Warsaw pil¬low. and Night and fog.” Hillel founda¬tion, 5715 Woodlawn, 8 pm.Sunday, April 17RADIO PROGRAM: Bertram Beck, ex-ecutive director, mobilization for Youth,New York City, speaking on "A new so¬cial work model.’' and Ernst Michanek.Secretary-General of the Swedish agen¬cy for international welfare, speakingon “Social welfare in Sweden,” 100.3me., 7:00 am.RELIGIOUS SERVICE: "The church intoday’s world,” sermon, by Rev. AlfredW. Kurzavva, Baptist Church House.Warsaw, Poland, Rockefeller Chapel, 11am.ART SHOW: FOTA art show openingand reception, Lexington studio. 3 to 5pm.FOLK SONG SERVICE: John Ylvisak¬er, conductor, Rockefeller Chapel, 3:30pm.LECTURE: "The holocaust of Euro¬pean Jewry,” Elie Wiese!, author andsurvivor of Auschwitz, Breasted Hall, 8pm.CONCERT: varied works by 57th streetchorale, Christopher Moore, director,First Unitarian church 57th and Wood¬lawn, 8:30 pm.Monday, April 18FILM "Panther and Panchali,” Tndianciv. course, adm. by ticket from Gates-Blake 430. Soc Sci 122. 7:30.CLINICOPATHOLOGIC CONFER¬ENCE "Diabetes, chirrhosis, multipletransfusions, and cancer," Billings hos¬pital, P-117, 5 pm.LECTURE John F. Powers, author,reading from his works, WilliamVaughn Moody lecture. Law School au¬ditorium, 8 pm.AUDITIONSfor 5 male and 3 female rolesIWh Century FarceTODAY 4-6 PMREYNOLDS CLUB THEATREJimmy’sand the University RoomRISERVBD EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTMJFrfty-FWtfc Mid Wtedlewa Aw.DR. AARON ZIMBLER. OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 t. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS PUUD CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent end Faculty DiscountCAMPUS PACSfor men & womenFree with $3.00 purchase or secure yoursfor a 30c service charge.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. ELLIS AVE.75th ANNIVERSARYCommemorative souvenirs celebrating the University ofChicago's 75th year of growth.Custom designed Placqu-Tray of mellow polished brass. May be used as awall plaque, paper weight, or ash tray. $3.95 eaSparkling crystal glassware with platinum rims . $1.00 eaSet of 8 $6.95Set of 12 $9.95Black or White Mugs $3.25 ea.Black Ash Tray $1.25 ea.Black Piggy Bank $1.25 ea.White Piggy Bank $1.75 eaTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. ELLIS AVE.Library Duplicate & Discard SaleMANY TITLES REMAIN25* 61 upTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. ELLIS AVE. May urge non-compliance or grade abolitionFaculty ponders draft, grade question(Continued from page one)Service—by providing transcripts,rankings, etc.—it is in fact destroy¬ing what it stands for.“It must see that by doing 60 itis aiding in a determination of whoshall live and who shall die, basedon achievement in school. It is say¬ing tacitly that it will allow the‘poorer’ students to die, and the‘better’ ones to live.”‘‘We ask whether the Universityhas a right to make such God likedecisions, or even to aid in themaking of them.”THE FACULTY COUNCIL of theUniversity of Iowa voted to ad¬vise the administration on March28 not to furnish grade transcriptsor information on class standing ofstudents to local draft boards ofSelective Service officials unlessrequested to do so by individualstudents. This is actually a techni¬cal reversal of UC’s policy, whichis to furnish information unless re¬quested not to by individual stu¬dents.MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBlood Typing ft Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICEComplete tab. EKG & BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3 2000 Wick and Booth commentWhen asked about the possibilityof the University's refusing tosend class rank or grade reports todraft boards, dean of students War¬ner Wick said, “I think it is gener¬ally agreed that as long as theUniversity is giving grades for itsown purpose, it could not refuse astudent’s request to report them towhomever he wanted them report¬ed to. The lawyers have even saidthat if we tried to withhold gradeswe were supposed to send, a stu¬dent could go to court and force usto do so.”The reaction of dean of the Col¬lege Wayne Booth to this samepossibility was, ‘‘Confusion. Bothmoral and practical confusion. Idon’t see any pure moral positionthat doesn't lead me to questionthe deferment of students in thefirst place.”‘‘As yet, I don’t see any clearway for the University to make thecase to the Selective Service thatthe use of grades is educationallyharmful. I do believe using gradesis anti-education, but 1 haven’tworked out yet what I could dopersonally about it or what anycollege might do.”ON THE POSSIBILITY of doingaway with grades completely,Wick referred to what he felt to beboth the impracticality and opposi¬tion to the manpower managementprinciple. "I think that the idea ofabolishing grades completely is avery unlikely solution,” Wick said,“simply because both students andfaculty have lots of other reasonsfor wanting to have grades.”KEYPUNCHING500 CARDS OR MOREFAST TURN AROUNDFOR ESTIMATE CALLSHEILA BLIXT 332-4708R. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.33 NORTH USALLE STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60602COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS"If, as MANY THINK, the UN it dyingbe/or* eur ay*!, the coronet's ver-dict may well be: Killed with kind¬ness. A meaaianic optimism said thatthis organization was the only hopelor settling world problems; it must,therefore, be preserved at all costs.But the cost ol preserving the greatproblem-solver has been, ironically,to insulate it from all contact withproblems that might cause it to tail.It has becomeitself one of theproblems need¬ing solution.” for a free copy of thacurrant inue of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writato Dept. CP-1, 150 E.35 St., N. Y. 16, N. Y. BOOKSSTATIONERYGREETING (ARDS•k k k k k kTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student DiscountBe Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweat¬shirts, "Levis," rain parkas,tennis shoes, underwear, jack¬ets, camping equipment, washpants, etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 24744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Student discount with ad PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledheir stylists ot9242 Hyde Perk Bird.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710% Student DiscountHONDA SOUTH & SOUTH EASTSEE ALL MODELS /»50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES • SERVICE - PARTS• PICK UP A DELIVERY• EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESMl 3-4500BOB NELSON MOTORS CHICAGO'S LARGEST 8.«m s. cottage OROVI jusT AROUND THE CORNERlee the MAROON classified far yeur camp us salsa representative “If you get back to principle rea¬son for student deferments, it isthat the nation should use its man¬power in the most advantageous. _way. . .that it’s somehow in thenational interest to use peoplesservices in these ways.”WICK ALSO POINTED to thesimilarities and differences be-ween the present situation regard¬ing the draft and grades and thatduring the Korean conflict. He*said, “The Korean War is a goodexample of how things really hap¬pened, and this University wasvery little affected by the KoreanWar.“The problem probably boilsdown to the fact that this is atasteless conflict. The difference *between 1951 and now is that com¬petition for grades has grown loget into graduate school. I thinkthat’s unfortunate, but I don’t thinkyou can blame it on the draft. Aslong as you keep deciding thingson grades, you're going to haveconflict on whether we decide to «,send things to draft boards or not.’wamm “is msm *Ellis Levin was incor¬rectly listed in the S(ielection schedule as it ap¬peared in last Friday'sMaroon as a candidatefrom the fraternities. Heshould have been listed asa candidate from Collegeat-large (GNOSIS).Note these FOTA Changes:APRIL 30 - Eisenstein Film bio¬graphy is cancelled.MAY 4 - Film Trilogy by Marko-poulos "Du Sang de la Volu-pte et de la Mort," Soc. Sci.122, 7:30 & 9:30Eighth WeekSPONONO"I would not Itava missed it far thtworld! "—Christensen, Dally News"A Small Miracle.”—Gianna Syat. Sun Tima*500 E. 67thFOR RESERVATIONS CALL334-3*##Special Student RataTOYOTA LAND CRUISER“World's Toughest 4-Whaal Driva"A-Cyf. 133-H.P. Engine ES M.P.H.HARDTOP AND STA. WAGONS247-1400 3967 S. ARCHERTHRILLING CANOE TRIPSinto tha Quetico-Superior wilderness.Only $7.00 per day. For information,write: Bill Rom. CANOE COUNTRYOUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota.BOB NELSON MOTORSImport Centre6052 So. Cott»g§ Grov#3 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 15, 1966Face problem of relocationFight to save businesses(Continued from page one)parking lot and empty buildingformerly occupied by a Kroger su¬permarket. and a parking lot“'owned by the University. Residentsof the cooperative apartment build¬ings have already voted to accepta reasonable bid for the propertyby the board.THE SECOND parcel is the onewhose acquisition is being contest¬ed. Bounded in a triangle by HydePark blvd. and Harper and LakePark ave., it contains the twobuildings and service station whosetenants are fighting the Board ofEducation decision.Grant Dazev, manager of thebuilding that fronts on Hyde Park.blvd.. said that its owner would sellto the board if a price couldbe agreed on. but according to TedCirals. owner of the House of Tiki,the building’s owner also said thatif he did not sell he would remodeland install a parking lot on landwhich is the board’s third parcel.In the latter case, the StandardOil Company would construct anew. enlarged service station onthe location of the old one in thetriangle, extending into this par¬cel north of the parking lot. Bothmoves have been approved byDUR. but final permission is beingheld up as a result of the board’saction.Because the land comprising thethird parcel was cleared under theurban renewal plan, a change inits use must be approved by theConservation Community Council(CCC), which is expected to con¬sider the matter within a fewweeks.THUS, THE Board of Educa¬tion’s plan calls for the acquisitionof all land bounded by the Ken¬wood school on the north, Black¬wood ave. on the east, Hyde Parkblvd. on the south, and—when con¬struction is completed—the newLake Park ave. adjoining the Illi¬nois Central tracks on the east, fora total of more than ten acres.In a letter printed by the HydePark Herald on March 30, Ciralsaccused the board of attempting a‘ land grab”, which he called un¬necessary, if it intends to honor itsagreement for a 2500-pupil school.‘‘They are asking for more*landEUROPE51 Student Tours21 to 70 DoysBy Jet, Ship orYour Student Flight.also special toursby Bicycles, etc.Call Your Campus Rep.HANS ENDLERFA 4-8200 - Ext 753THE HOLOCAUST OFEUROPEAN JEWRYELIE WIESEL, Survivor of Auschwitz, NovelistI of The Holocaust. Author of| Night, Dawn, The Accident, TheTown Beyond the Wall and TheGates at the Forest.Sunday, April 17 8:00 pmBreasted Hall 1155 I. 58th St.Admission Hillel affiliates? freeStudentst $1.000thers» $1.50 for this amount of students thanwe can find any other school inChicago has,” Cirals later told theMaroon.According to the Board of Edu¬cation, the additional land wouldpermit development of the newschool site with advantages suchas an auditorium available forcommunity use, more green space,more parking for faculty and staff,and more convenient athletic facil¬ities.EDWARD PALMER, director ofthe Hyde Park-Kenwood Communi¬ty Conference (HPKCC), which hasbeen working with the board on de¬velopment of the site, said thatfailure to acquire the larger areawould make it a necessity to con¬struct a single five- or six-storybuilding on the original land.Cirals claimed that the first par¬cel of land, between Blackstoneand Harper aves., would be suffi¬cient to accommodate the board’splans for additional facilities.And Joseph Gould, owner of thePizza Platter, pointed out in a let¬ter printed by the Herald on April6 that even if the first parcel ofland is not enough, the board caneasily acquire a large tract on thenorthwest corner of 50th st. andBlackstone ave., adjacent to theKenwood School, to take the placeof the triangle.Gould also argued that, with theconstruction of 1000 housing unitsalong 47th st. and Lake Park ave.as part of the urban renewal proj¬ect, and the elimination of thecommercial land at Hyde ParkBlvd. and Blackstone ave.. ‘‘theneed to save the triangle becomeseven more important.”"THERE IS no other location inHyde Park where commercialproperty could be made availableto the small businessman at com¬parable or moderate rentals,” headded.Assistant superintendent ofschools Francis B. McKeag told theMaroon that “it would not be advis¬ able” to substitute the tract ofland adjacent to the KenwoodSchool for the triangle property.‘‘There is no excess of laud interms of what the board has ap¬proved for acquisition, and theland west of the Kenwood Schoolis not contiguous to the originalsite,” he explained.According to Bill Bezdek, ownerof the Last Stage playhouse, thecrux of the businessmen's problemis relocation. “If the board uses theland at 50th st. and Blackstoneave., it will have all the land itneeds for a really first-rate school.But by taking the triangle proper¬ty, it will be making it impossiblefor an independent group like ourown, or for small merchants, tooperate in Hyde Park. The rentalsare just too high,” he protested.THE LAST Stage, whose per¬formers have been associated withthe University Theatre, is the onlyworkshop of its kind in Hyde Park.Two thirds of its productions arenew translations of foreign-lan¬guage plays, original plays neverbefore performed, or US premieresof European plays.Cirals emphasized that appear¬ance could be no excuse lor theboard’s insistence on the triangleas part of its site, because eventhough both buildings are sound,their owners are willing to makeimprovements, including newfronts.He said that in the triangle, rent¬al of a heated store averagesabout $100 per month. “Even ifthis sum were doubled, most of ourtenants agree that it would beworth it because total rental costwould still be less than for anynon-subsidized new construction.”EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Parle 3-8372Student and Faculty Discount UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK**« strong bank9*NEW CAR LOANSas low as$ 375~ hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C.A FOLK-SONG SERVICEANDSERMON IN SONGRockefeller Memorial ChapelSUNDAY: APRIL! 7: 3:30 PMFOLK-SING ON ASATURDAY NIGHTREYNOLDS CLUBSATURDAY, APRIL 167:30 pmFOTAJOHN YLVISAKER“20th Century Troubadour"sings his original compositionsplus...protest . . .traditional folk . . .norwegian ft german vefc . , ,amarican negro . . .guthrie I loadbotter , . ,english ballad* . . »shaker songs . • •rounds & canon* , . ,gospel tong* . • ,pep folk . . .rounds & cannon* * • •A FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS PRESENTATIONsponsored byTHE ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN PROGRAM Students barred from faculty draft talks“You’re not welcome here.”So spoke Warner Wick, dean of students, when SteveKindred and three students tried to enter a meeting of thecouncil of the UC faculty senate Tuesday.Steve Kindred, Ron Tabor, andEstelle Rogers, all members of thecampus chapter of Students for aDemocratic Society, had hoped toparticipate in the council’s discus¬sion of the draft.On April 7, they spoke to profes¬sor of law Walter Blum, a spokes¬man for the committee of thecouncil, in hopes of receiving aninvitation to the council meeting.“No institution can conduct itsactivities solely in a fishbowl,” theSDS group quotes Blum as stating,referring not to Woodward Courtbut to the council’s right to haveclosed meetings.“The by-laws of the council statethat we can invite guest speakers,”Blum continued, but he added thatthis provision was rarely exercisedand it was inconceivable that stu¬dents would be invited to thismeeting, the three said.Believing that “it was our livesthey would be discussing,” thethree students decided to try andattend the meeting anyway. They were met at the door by DeanWick.In a brief conversation, Wickmade it clear that students “cannot be here.” Leaving immediate¬ly, the students made dear theirrejection of Wick’s reliance on theby-laws to exclude them from themeeting.A spokesman for the studentssaid, “I regret the lack of com¬munication between the studentsand administration on the draft is¬sue, and fear that confidence andunity in the University among allgroups will be hampered.”0-Board wants youMeeting 3 pm April 17 |in Ida Noyes for everyone |interested in planning |and participating in nextfall's O-Week.News in the Sporting World—The Golfby LONDON FOG1On or off the green, the Golf has sporting dash and styleand keeps you at ease in all kinds of weather. In exclusiveCalibre Cloth® (65% Dacron polyester*/35% cotton)it wards off wind, sheds rain, and is completely wash andwear. With zip-front, double-lined yoke, and convertibleEnglish collar. Sizes 34-46 Regular and 36-46 Long.In natural, gray, olive, burgundy, navy, black/red, ivory, sageor mica.*Du Pont's reg. t.m.G>An Sfety,MCQtattm $c (Eampua £t)opTHE STORE FOR MENin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th Sf. Phone 752-8100April 15, 1*v6 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3GADFLYSPAC chairman questions Maroon editorialYour editorial entitled “SPAC Exits” (Maroon, April 8) reflects a serious misunderstand¬ing of the reasons for SPAC’s withdrawal from the SG race. The remark that we “have bet¬ter things to do” was not an assertion that campus issues are “trivial,” unimportant, or un¬worthy of our “precious” attention. A brief review of the government’s history in the lastfew years may help clarify what ' ~ ——that remark was referring to.About three years ago, when theboycott of the bookstore, the Co-opbookstore, and the ad hoc effort tokeep Hutchinson Commons openhad failed—it was clear that what¬ever action students might take inthe future would be ineffectual solong as the administration was notopen to discussion and had rela¬tively little respect for students’views. During the next few yearsthe effort of the government wasaimed at building such communi¬cation. This effort, to my mind, the Assembly became, more thanever, a de facto illegitimate body,discussing issues in vacuum andpassing meaningless resolutions—meaningless because they reflectedonly generally a vague, lifeless,and dubious apparition of studentconcern. Concurrently, the execu¬tive personnel, talking with the ad¬ministration, became most impor¬tant, especially those executiveswho, by virtue of their articulate¬ness, apparent “maturity,” and ex¬perience seemed to the administra¬tion to be “reasonable young men.” in asserting that SPAC was asmuch responsible as anyone for thefailure to undertake that effort.But the practice of merely talkingto administrators was perpetuatedby many factors, of which most ofus were, unfortunately, uncon¬scious.I can suggest a few of these fac¬tors. First, because we had almosttotally lost anything like broad stu¬dent concern, the job of “takingthe issue to the student body”seemed an awesome task, especialhas been largely successful, or at officers of the government of jy compare(j to our illusory successleast has gone about as far as itcan fruitfully go.IN THE years this w»as going onSG’s relationship to the campushad changed. While the studentbody never wras vitally involved incampus issues en masse, whatever“spirit” was present soon deteri¬orated. The government, busy de¬veloping discourse with the pow-ers-that-be, largely ignored thetask cf building and maintainingstudents’ concern.As the student body graduallybecame detached and apathetic,BLACKFRIARSAnnounceTICKETS FOR THE 1966 necessity, became pamaliy coopted“junior bureaucrats” always will¬ing to discuss, always able to un¬derstand that absolutely nothing isblack and white and everything isperennially complex. All this for thesake of communication—and per¬haps rightly so, in its time. Hence,the Assembly became a meaning¬less group of passively elected del¬egates who were largely uncon¬nected to anything real—detachedfrom the student "will” becausethere was none, excluded from thelocus of negotiation because of theexigencies of that approach.THE LEADERS of the govern¬ment, nevertheless, considered thecontinued development of student-administration communicationmost important. This past yearwas to have been the end of thatapproach and the beginning of at¬tempts to revitalize general stu¬dent involvement.Your editorial was quite correct with the administration. CORSO,liberalizations in social rules,“townhouses,” and the hopefulpromise of a “Wick Memorandum”establishing a student-faculty so¬cial rules committee (which nevercame) gave us reason to believe, ifonly by habit, that the way tochange w'as through negotiationwith administrators. Second,though SPAC did have a majorityin the Assembly, the more asser¬tive and experienced executiveswere members of the GNOSIS tra¬dition of negotiation ad nausium.Newcomers to the government,like myself, looked to these peopleto teach them “all about SG.” Wesoon became coopted ourselves andreinforced, with only occasionalwhimperings, the mentality of end¬less negotiation which had charac¬terized the government for the lastfew years. The “style” of thisyear's president was firmly rootedin that tradition, and perhaps un¬Musical ComedyProductionHEY MANNY! Gel this! There’s this guy see and this girl see...SHALL BE AVAILABLE INTHE MANDEL HALL CORRIDORDAILY 10 AM-4 PM$2.00— $1.50Student Discount $.50 Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1142 L 55th HY J-9259Five 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 stamp Jout blind dates. So mail me my questionnaire. Quick! JNam* School *Address City State Zip Cod* Ms fOperation MatchCompatability Research, Inc. !75 East Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois *«■ ....J consciously brought newcomersinto it.AT THE time of the SPAC cau¬cus, our dissatisfaction with thatapproach was just coming into itsown. Perhaps we did not recognizeit earlier beacuse we saw for our¬selves another role in governmentas well—that of representing stu¬dent opinion on off-campus issues.But the Vietnam referendum (fi¬nally by April) led us to recognizethat students, at least at this point,did not want that role for SG. Hav¬ing shed that purpose, we cameface to face with our personal nau¬sea over the practice of endless ne¬gotiation. This dissatisfaction man¬ifests itself in a wholesale rejectionof the government, because in oureyes the government stood clearlyin the tradition we were rebellingagainst.The feeling was that being in thegovernment meant dealing withcampus problems by a method thathad proved lifeless, demoralizing,illusory, and ineffectual (with theexception of a few token “bits” tothe masses to keep them pacified).However dubious the notion thatsomething “inherent” in the gov¬ernment reinforces the “coopted”mentality, one thing must be madeclear. The SPAC withdrawal fromthe government was not, in theview of its members—as your edi¬torial assumed—a denunciation ofthe importance of campus issues;rather it was a rejection of themethod of dealing with these prob¬lems for which SG had stood forthe preceding four years*I, for one disagree with theview that there is something in¬herent in the government that per¬petuates that approach. The gov¬ernment is what people make it.But it is fallacious to assume thatto resign from governmsnt meansto resign from concern over campu$issues.1 would argue, however, that ifthe government continues to takethe approach it has in the past, itwill remain as lifeless, undemocrat¬ic, ineffective, and detached fromstudents as before, however “legit¬imate” de jures.MUCH AS they seem to want tochange the government’s ap¬proach, many GNOSIS leaders tendto the traditional and fallacious be¬lief that the solution to the problemof student participation is moreand more democratic politicalforms. My argument is not againstcommittee or constitutional struc¬tures by any means. These, or something like them, would even¬tually have to be established any.way in response to general studentconcern. But the formation of th*s« rbodies is peripheral to the realproblem and diverts attention fromit. Without a student “culture ofconcern,” these structures, like theAssembly, become meaningless.Or, more generally, democratic po¬litical forms become irrelevant jnso far as they fail to be respond*to end generate democracy as •social phenomenon (i.e. "commu¬nity").If the government as a demo¬cratic institution is meaninglesswithout a real constituency and ifthat consituency does not exist,why have the government now?There are several reasons why,despite its de facto illegitimacy',the government should be upheld!First, from a negative standpoint,the existence of the governmentand even being in it does not ham¬per those who wish to develop sm-dent involvement. Second, morepositively, the government offersseveral advantages: (1) its legit¬imacy, however s uperficial,makes its appeals to the adminis¬tration, from their point of view,more worthy of attention thanthose of the leaders of ad hoc pres¬sure groups; (2) it commands re¬sources which could be useful tobuilding student concern—re¬sources which no ad hoc “unoffi¬cial” group could obtain; and (3)most important, it has developedsufficient commnuication with theadministration to be useful in thatregard. Without a source of infor¬mation, students would always beprotesting decisions after-the-fact,when these decisions had alreadybeen concretized into buildings,projects, rules, contracts, etc. (1do admit, however, that as studentconcern grew the doors of corn-mu n i c a t i o n might close—thatwould at least be interesting towratch!).The government has some im¬portant advantages to offer. Butthese, as I have said, remain of lit¬tle value so long as the gap be¬tween the students and their “gov¬ernment” persists.In any case, contrary to youreditorial criticism, the SPAC with¬drawal was not an abdication ofresponsibility for campus issues,but, paradoxically, an affirmationof it.Jerry Lipschchairman of SPACAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH --NEW l USED-Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETap* Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes — Batteries10% discount to ftwdant* with ID «ardaSERVICE CALLS - $3... Sun Life Is one of the world’sgreat life insurance companies and isowned entirely by its policyholders.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyda Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4 6800 - FR 2-2390Offica Hour* 9 to 5 Monday* A Friday*SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY4 • CHICAGO MAPOON • April! 5, 1966Music review Music review"Siam... zorch...Once again this quarter, it was time for some more fun inthe Contemporary Chamber Players’ “Wonderful World ofAdventure in the Music of the Future”. Tuesday evening wasflutist Patrick Pursewell’s turn for a recital with assistingperformers, and he turned in a vir-tuoso performance to do himself breaUiing, but is barren, stagnant,proud. His program, of course, left an(j ugly. Not that ugly music issomething to be desired musically, necessarily bad music, but Johns-but then, this is saying nothing ton does not even inspire nausea,more than that it was the kind of just apathy. The devices he em-program to satisfy even the most p;0yS just never come off and hisideas show no development or con¬tinuity. Most of these same criti- Bach chorus, audience poorDespite the loud acclaim from the gallery, last Thursday’srendition of Bach’s Passion According to Saint John by theChicago Symphony Chorus and Orchestra was simply medi¬ocre. The bravos—carelessly exuberant and thoroughly un¬merited—served to remind one ofthe provincialism characteristic ofChicago music audiences.The Chicago Symphony Chorus isan oversized, poorly cast, and sev-erly unwieldly instrument for the ance and simple lack of trainingwere not as conspicuous in the cho¬rales, where rhythms, dynamicsand range are not excessively de¬blood-thirsty CCP die-hard.But don’t let my criticism of themusic in any way detract from thequality of Pursewell’s musicianshipand level of performance. When cisms can be used with regard toPauline Oliveros’ Trio for Flute,Piano, and Page-turner, except purposes of oratorio music. Indeed, manding. In the full choruses, how-it is poorly cast for any choral mu- ever, the lack of sophistication andsic at all—but its faults become musicianship became painfully evi-especially clear where orchestra- dent.the music gave him an opportuni- that this piece was slightly morety, he played with a wonderfully palatable due to its excess of gim-pure and singing tone and illustrat- mickry.ed a command of his instrument BUT WHERE Johnston saysindicative of a polished instru- nothing, Pierre Boulez, in his Sona- tion is light, the complexity of vo¬cal line is starkly apparent, andwhere the role of the chorus as a Of the soloists, Judith Raskinand Ernst Haefliger sang well.„ . ....... . , Miss Raskin has a fresh voice, and«... her first a™ was sung with anand literary dialectic of the orato- ease and personal warmth thatmental technicianAMONG THE MORE conserva¬tive items presented was Debus¬sy’s Sonata for Flute, Viola, andHarp which, for all its archaic “to- tine for Flute and Piano, saysmuch that is intellectually ab¬struse. There seems to be a wallthat Boulez has placed betweenhimself and his listener and one portanc^8 *° ^ *>aramoun^ *m' was refreshing. Haefliger is a vet-IT IS STUDDED with voiceswhich are gauky, untempered, andunclear. The bass section soundslike a chorus of foghorns and the eran lyric tenor with a finelytrained voice. Although advancingage has decreased both the sizeand flexibility of his voice, he sangthe role of the evangelist with astrength of the soparnos rests on delicate clarity and a studied un-nality”, was utterly dazzling in must struggle through his carefully their thin, grating tone. In sum, it derstanding of the inflections andterms of sheer coruscating sound,as solo instruments blended andplayed each other off so delicately.The performance was equallysparkling as Pursewell, CCP violistIrving Ilmer. and Chicago Sympho¬ny harpist Edward Druzinsky had constructed smoke-screen to get tothe essence of his thought. Eventhough this work was supposed tobe Pursewell’s show, it was the pi¬ano part that captured one’s atten¬tion. Here was the dynamism andthe brutality of the work clearly lacks clarity, precision, and re- the style peculiar to this role. Thetheir balances worked out to abso- delineated even though in an over¬lute perfection. ly repetitious fashion.But, there was much more in the Not to be outdone, Pursewellcontributed an opus of his own, hisComposition for Solo Flute, acreepy little morsel that exploredthe extreme ranges of his instru-First off, there was this number ment, his breath control, and hisbv one Ben Johnston, his Duo for listener’s credulity. Really, fellow,way of normal CCP fare played,and it was this which threw upbarriers which this listener foundinsurmountable.Flute and Double Bass. I’m sorry,but I find it extremely difficult tomake head or tail of: “Blam. . .zorch . . . ploink . . . kapowee . . .boing . . .” punctuated and spicedup with several glissandos sound¬ing suspiciously like moans of ver¬tigo. Johnston seems to have losthis touch with reality and is beingcontrived simply for the sake ofbeing confusing.It is not music that is alive and how much “blam . . . zorch . . .kapowee” must one put up with???Ed ChikofskyHAPPENING'KEEP RIGHT ON PAINTING"art axistential (ketch of the nudeP.O.T.A.APRIL 28 & 29James Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS - LINENS - TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. CardDEPARTMENT OF MUSICTHE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERS OF THE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGORALPH SHAPEY, Music DirectorTWO CHAMBER OPERASStaged by James O'ReillyPURGATORY (W. B. Yeats) by Hugo WeisgallTHE BRUTE (based on a Chekhov play) by Lawrence MossFriday, April 22, 1966 Saturday, April 23, 1966Adm: $3, UC student, $1 $2, general; $1, studantMANDEL HALL - 8:30 P.M.Tickets at Concert Office, 5802 Woodlawn, or at Mandel Hall box office onevening of concert.3,000 STRINGS ARE BEING TUNED FOR THEINTERNATIONAL GUITAR FESTIVALLAKE GENEVA, WISCONSIN JUNE 10-11-12For information or reservations and auditions call 743-2621}evenings 642-2385 or write 6001 North Clark.Professional Careers in Aero ChartingCIVILIAN EMPLOYMENT with the U.S. AIR FORCEMinimum 120 semester hours college credit Including 24 hoursof subjects pertinent to charting such as math, geography, geolo¬gy, and physics. Equivalent experience acceptable.Training program. Openings for men and women.Application and further Information forwarded on request.WRITE: College Relations (ACPCR)Hq Aeronautical Chart & Information Center,8900 S. Broadway, St. Louis, Missouri 63125An equal opportunity employer sponsiveness, and has the profes-sionality and local color of a Ro-tarian glee club.The problems of size, color, bal- remaining artists were distin¬guished more by their faults thanby their promise.HAVING ASSEMBLED 145 sing¬ ers to perform a work beyond themastery of most or them, Martinonlogically chose to compound the er¬ror with an appropriately large (75piece) orchestra. It is a common¬place of oratorio criticism that thesize of performing groups hasgrown grotesquely large in orderto satisfy the simple-minded whimsof modern audiences. Martinon isnot far from Montovani. His con¬ducting seems more intended toplease the audience than to informthe performers.Whatever the faults of the per¬formance, the judgment of the un¬discriminating audience was unani¬mous enthusiasm. But then, theChicago music public is notoriousfor being satisfied with trash andenthralled with mediocrity. (Thisis particularly noticeable in theOpera House, where on the barestprovocation, a bravo from one nuo-vo-affecionato will initiate a domi¬no effect throughout the house).Apparently they got what theywanted—and they deserved it. .L. R.JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Dory Ay*.646-4411 n |Our 1955 Triumph cost us about2500 Dollars to set up for raceingbut we could do a really elegantTune up on yours for about $30°°.HYDE PARK AUTO SERVICE(in South Shore)7646 S. Stony Island RE 4-6393JIM HARTMANCOME DOWN TOTOAD HALL1444 E. 57th ST. BU 8-4500AND SEE THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A HIPPOPOTAMUS ANDA RHINOCEROS.IF YOU DON'T ALREADY KNOW WE WILL PROVIDE A TAC¬TILE DEMONSTRATION.HI-FI, TYPEWRITER & TAPE RECORDERRENTALS, REPAIRS A SALESReasonable Rates, Courteous Service, Quality Equipment V '/April 15, 11*6 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Theater review6 • CHICAGO MAROON • AprillS, 1966RIM’s... CONQUER THE BIG CITY... and never leave home!Come to Mount Sinai Hospital—and New York City is yours! Like so many f ‘bright, attractive nurses who have made Mount Sinai their home, you Iwill have more benefits including a high starting salary, more pleasure, {more meaningful experience. Nowhere else in the world will you have jmore opportunities for friendship, for education and for advancement, iNowhere else will you have such attention paid to all your relocation }needs. Just a few examples: you will receive help with education including Jfree tuition, planned social events, detailed orientation. New York Statelicensure; and you will live at such low cost in temporary or permanentluxury apartments located like the hospital itself—right in the heart offabulous New York City.The battle is half won when you decide on Mount Sinai... the rest islip to you! Learn about Mount Sinai for yourself... Write for our colorbrochure describing the whole wonderful world of Nursing at Mount Sinai Personnel Administrator—Professional Nursing iTHE MOUNT SINAI HOSPITALFifth Ave. and 100th St.New York, N.Y. 100-29 C-10 !Please send me your brochure about nursingat Mount Sinai.NAME.y~IlII ADDRESS.CITY. .STATE.*0NEW YORK S MOUNT SINAI HOSPITAL IN THE HEART OF THE CITY foreign cor hospitalTheMonterey 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 instructor*).Elementary and Intermediate courses,16 units. Intermediate and advancedcourses, 12 units. Upper divisioncourses, 12 units. Graduate courses,8 units.POLITICAL ARTS. Comprehensive pro¬grams 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.Accraditad by tha Western Associationof Schools and CoHeges at a LiberalArta Institution.For Information write MiOffice of AdmissionsTHEMONTEREY INSTITUTEOF FOREIGN STUDIESPost Office Box 710MONTEREY, CALIFORNIA, 93942Ttlephon. (408) 373-4779Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restGoodman Theatre's Wilder is wildly modernWilder a go-go? That’s what it looks like at the GoodmanTheatre, where until April 18, they’re doing The Skin of OurTeeth with a wildly modern approach. Not that the play needsmuch updating: apart from a few references to the SecondWorld War and a few antiquatedexpletives, the play exists in itsown time-dimension, and is equallyat home in the age of Vietnam asin the age of German facism.But director Patrick Henry hasseen fit to up-date it all. and theproduction makes a clever andlively use of pop-art themes inscenery and costuming. Conse¬quently the Antrobus home is agiant box of crackers; Mr. Antro¬bus appears in a Superman cape;Act II is performed on a giganticmonopoly board; and that wickedwoman Sabina appears in a cos¬tume made entirely out of Ameri¬can flags (what will the DAR. haveCoJBEAUTY SALON:xpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingV350 E. 53rd S». HY 3-8302 to say about that?).THERE ARE film clips whichuse the “animated’* still technique,and there is catchy music, and evena rock and roll number. All this isgreat fun and entirely in keepingwith the surrealist nature of theplay; in fact, the production at theGoodman is technically quitesplendid.More importantly, the directionis so confident and briskly efficientthat the special effects don’t turninto a mindless series of gimmickyaudience pleasers, but are related,for the most part, to the play's in¬tellectual content. .And this is a play particularlyheavy writh “message". At times itis overbearing didactic, and Wild¬er’s characteristic direct appeals to the audience sometimes look asthough he were afraid his “points"would go by unnoticed unless heunderlined them. The last act, sup¬posedly the most serious of thethree, and certainly with Its themeof wrar the most relevant, can bequite dull and slow moving if youdon’t feel particularly sympatheticwith Wilder’s determined “affir¬mation" of mankind, particularlyAmerican mankind.UNFORTUNATELY, the actorstend to get submerged in the intel¬lectual and physical content of theplay. Who can seriously competewith a baby mammoth, a baby di¬nosaur, an ice age, a deluge and agaudy Sodom and Gomorrah atAtlantic city? It was surely not theintention of the playwright to makethe competition so hard; Mr. An¬trobus and his typical Americanfamily represent the indomitablespirit of mankind, with all its eviland good, muddling through all ad¬versity. But it is hard to be a con¬stant symbol of humanity with somany diversions going on around you.Mr. Antrobus, as played by Ed¬ward Binns, a renegade televisionactor, is alternately a loud¬mouthed vulgarian, the typicallodge member, and the type of thecreative intellectual; he is Adam,Noah, Romulus, Superman, Mr.Average American, and anthropo*all at once. Mr. Binns plays eachrole wdth uniform confidence.As Mrs. Antrobus—Eve, Mary,Mother Earth—Beverly Younger isa frowsy, overprotective, typicalAmerican mother. She is also theeternal club woman: a most un¬pleasant character whom MissYounger plays as the mother of usall.SABINA the temptress is thebest role in the play; it is the partthat Tallulah Bankhead made fam¬ous, and requires a pretty dynamicactress. Gordana Alward, althoughshe seemed to start cold, effective¬ly filled the role as the play pro¬gressed. Her portrayal expandedwith the part, and she made temp¬tation seem entirely believeable byCocteau’s ORPHEUS (the dream)Koenig and Kroiter’s STRAVINSKY (the reality)D{gf FOTA — | 8:00 pm | — Mandel Hall — Tonight the second act.The veteran actress EugenieLeontovich took the small role ofthe fortune teller and played itwith verve: a real finger-snappinggrandma, even if her voice wasn’tentirely audible for several mo¬ments. As for the other minorparts, they were generally handledwith competence.The Goodman has done a finejob on another old play. Althoughthe production has its weak spots,its general vigor and imaginationmore than compensate for itsflaws.Gerry FisherWorld University Servicesopens campus fund driveA campaign for World UniversityServices is presently being con¬ducted at UC to raise $3000 foruniversity projects in India andPakistan.The drive, originally scheduledto be held until Sunday, is beingextended another week. It is theonly drive the administration al¬lows to go door to door on thiscampus.All University residence unitswill be canvassed by WUS collec¬tors recruited irom the dormitoriesand married student apartmentbuildings.John Wright, research associatein chemistry and chairman of thisyear's WUS campaign, discussedthe program of WUS in India andPakistan. “The funds we providewill be used to erect much neededstudent health centers and cafe¬terias for students, and to furnishtext books for the students. Thiscampaign is part of a world-widoeffort of WUS to provide the basicrequirements for stable studentlife in underdeveloped countries."Maroon Weekend GuideFor the Convenience and Needs of the University . . .KING RENT A CAR1330 E. 53rd ST.DAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYAS LOW AS $4.95 PER DAYIf you require a rental car for business, pleasure, or while yourcar is being repaired call us atMl 3-1715SAMUEL A. BELL•Iwy 8koU From B«U"St NCI 19264701 S. Dorchester AnKInwood 8-11 SO Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 THE PUBIN THENew Shot eland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting P:a:e in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIALSouthern Fried Chickenin a Basket. . . .$1.50Generous Order Every Sunday Night You can have a steaktoo, or the biggeststeakburger in town.New—A Parade of Piano Artists for Your Pleasure and DancingALOHA 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 Yaki,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.(IRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST A HARPERFood oorvod 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchon closed Wad. CHICAGOREVIEWPresentsPOETS AGAINSTTHE WAR IN VIETNAMRobert BlyPaul CarrollRobert Creeley Donald HallWilliam HuntGalway KinneliJohn Logan Mark PerlbergDennis SchmitzPeter SimpsonRichard Stern Lucien StrykJames WrightAND OTHERS ;iLI 1-7585 Saturday, April 16, - 6:30 p.m. Mandel HallRANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPKR AVENUE FA 4-2007AJr-CondSt»©nh* — Opm 8vonln«« — Btttte Twgi—e,HAVE YOU TRIEDSmedley’sonHarper ?PLEASE DO!I have a wife, four kidsand aSt. Bernard named Irvingthat really eats.Mort B. «-5239 S. Harper Ave. NO 7-5546 John D. Cord well, architect and city planner, willspeak on “Beauty and Vitality in the City” Friday,April 15, at 3:30 pm in Breasted Hall, Universityand 58th St. The Interfaith Committee of the Uni¬versity of Chicago is sponsoring Mr. Cordwell aspart of a total program on “The Urban Aesthetic’*for the Festival of the Arts. Mr. Cordwell’s firm,L. R. Solomon, J. D. Cordwell & Associates Inc.did the design and development of Carl SandburgVillage, a $42,000,000 residential redevelopmentproject in Chicago, and Juneau Village, a $40,000,-000 residential redevelopment project in Milwau¬kee.Other events in the Interfaith program on “The Urban Aesthetic” includea continuous film program from 10 am to 3 pm at Breasted Hall, Friday,April 15, showing: “No Time For Ugliness,” “The Second U.S.A.,” “TheNew Age of Architecture,” “Form, Design and the City” and “Lewis Mum-ford on the City.” The program is open to the public and without charge.There will also be a photo exhibit on “The Urban Aesthetic” at ReynoldsClub, South Lounge, 57th and University, from April 15 to April 23 withphotos from the Chicago Chapter, A.I.A. and the Municipal Reference Li¬brary.April 15, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7mm :>: . "vrw»s*Mi?s isifHa *v ■■- - ^ " '*"*"*' * ,■ * -«^ % .-.Classified advertisementsApt. for sale■ PANORAMIC view7 of lakeCo-op. 6 luxurious rms. 2 cer. baths.Air cond., mod. kitchen, all appls.,carptg . drapes, doorman-security, gar¬age. Monthly asses. $183. Liberal taxdeduction. 643-5112.Rms. & apts. wantedWant to subleTfor summer. 2-3 bdrmsfurn. Call X3546. Janna, or 363-9431eves.Family of four desires large basementor Eng. basement in Hy. Pk. or So. So.363-7391.Responsible female wishes to babysit inexchange for room & board this sum¬mer. Call BU 8-6610. Rm. 2204.Wish to sublet rm. or small apt. fromMay 1-June 15. Steve Livernash. (DO 3-4376). 5 rms., $130/mo. avail. June 1. SShore. 7411 S. Chappell. Call 224-1351.6 LARGE rooms natural woodburningfireplace, 4 big closets, bookcases, pan¬try. Suitable for business or profession¬al people. Garage $10 extra. MU 4-8222^WantedUsed three speed bicycle in good condi¬tion. Call FA 4-5844, leave message.PersonalsFor sale*61 Tempest Sports Coupe, exc. cond.,$500. MI 3-3116, days.SCANDINAVIAN” IMPORTS: the homeof MULTIFORM. WHOLESALE WARE¬HOUSE SALE! Call for appt. to see at1725 S. Michigan Ave. 939-4993. All salescash.Scott 342 solid state receiver. $245. 521-0460.Childcraft-15 vols. 7± price. $75. 752-4828.Motor bike. Honda "90’’. 1954. Low mile¬age. like new, priced to sell. BU 8-3751.27' Cutter, tapered spar, auxiliary, ex¬tra sails & gear, dingy, mooring. Readyto launch. 643-6778.Help wantedHelp Wanted: Waiter, full or part time,also student summer help, waiter orwaitress. Apply Smedley's, 5239 Harper.667-5546.'WANTED MENwith imagination. S. Shore Social workagency has openings for undergrads orgrad students on summer day campcounsellor's staff. 6 vvk. or 8 vvk. season,full time or 3 days/wk. Call Mrs. JoyJohnson. RE 1-6969.IEACHERS WANTEDSouthwest, entire West & Alaska. Sala¬ries $5,400 up—Free Registration. Sou.h-Ave. N.E. Albuquerque, New Mexico.Ad space salesman, perm, pos., for lo¬cal and regional publications, $150 sal¬ary + bonus. Average man earn. $14,-000. Co. Benefits. 372-5914._CASHIERNeat, 3 eves/wk. from 5-9 pm, contactMr. Gordon in afternoon PL 2-9251, Gor-don's Restaurant. 1321 E. 57th St,Summer sublets The motorcycle men of Death held atbay by Eurydice! Astounding revela¬tions of lives of genius! Chicago pre¬mier of N.F.D.C.'s feature documentarySTRAVINSKY and long awaited show¬ing of Cocteau’s Orpheus. Doc Films,Mandel Hall, 8:00 tonight. 75c/students,$l/general.Attention SPAC people. You do have achoice. Vote SPAC NSA.ELIE WIESEL, survivor of Auschwitz,novelist of the Holocaust, will speak atBreasted Hall on Sunday, April 17th,8:00 pm. Admission free.YOUR car will shine. Make the scene ina car that’s clean. Be wise! Economize!The South Shore YMCA, 1833 E. 71st st.Girls Junior Leaders are presenting agroovy CAR WASH. April 16th, 10:00-3:00, April 12, 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.)OPEN HOUSE-HARPER SURF8-12 pm. April 15th, 5426 Harper Ave.IF >'ou sat alone in the Law School lastWed. night hoping to see THE CRANESARE FLYING, sorry, Maroon error. Doattend this Saturday though, the film isworth two trips.TOMORROW NIGHTCannes award-winning motion picture.1 HE CRANES ARE FLYING, present¬ed by the Festival of the Arts and RFF.Best oicture, best director, best actressof 1957, long withheld from circulation:this L the first American campus show¬ing. Law School auditorium 7:30 and9:30 (1111 E. 60th st.), students $.75.Come early.KARATE...the knowledge most worthhaving Mon. 7 pm.. Wed. 8 pm., INH.Call 634-3993. Also Summers.ATTENTION Cirls—trim down thoselegs this summer. Bicycle tours throughEurope (men invited too.) Call youreampis renresentative Hans Endler—FA 4-8200. X753.TEDDY Poo: FOTA is coming!WANT to buv first half of SG EuropeCHARTER FLIGHT leaving June 18,634-0174, ask for Chris.SCREW the SCREWBALL!3*2 rm. apt. in Boston's Back Bay areato sublet this summer or exchange forapt. in Hyde Park. $90/mo. Write C.Dashe 107 Ave. Louis Pasteur. Boston^Wanted: two men to sublet 2/3 of 5 rm.apt., w/option to lease apt. in October.Own bdrms, only $38.33 a piece. 5343 S.Woodlawn. Call David Richter atMI 3-9326.2 huge airy furnished clean rms. to sub¬let. 2 prvt. porches, lrg. ktchn., Ivg.rm., ideal. Women call 288-5639.Apt. $110/mo. for 3, 5654 Drexel. Mayalso need male roommate next fall. CallE. Griess 752-5383.For rent June first, 4 rms. unfurn. apt.53rd & Kenwood, $110/mo. perfect tortwo students. Option to renew lease infall. Days call Maureen, e*t. 2815, eves.643-6273.Lost EXHIBTTexhibit of graphics. "The EmancipatedJew as Artist." Through May 10th. Hil-lel House. 5715 Woodlawn. open daytimeand evenings. Mon.-Fri. & Sun.ONE naked bosy better than a thousandstatues 'st. "Keep Rt. on Painting"EXCITING things happen to those whoknow KARATETHE G'egarious Gregorians will cele¬brate a Fo'k Song Mass at St. Gregoryof Nyssa Lutheran Campus Parish atG-aham Tavlor Chanel (CTSt, 53th &University this Sunday at 10:00 am.ELLIS' LEVIN is a candidate fromCOLLEGE-AT-LARGE. Please vote forhim!LOST: brown folder containing Lithuan¬ian notes. Reward 324-3261.LOST: Man’s gold ring. Reward,D A. Cook. 363-6080. aft. 7. callLost: Necklace, ornate and antique withblack stones, pearls on a flat gold chain,call 1403x Pierce.Rms. & apts. for rent JOHN Yivisaker will had the Gregar¬ious G'egorians in this Sunday’s FolkSong Mass at Graham Taylor Chapel(CTS) at 10 am.A TTKNTION sTm.—MO OOOOSTUDENTS of Reform Jewish Back¬grounds are invited to attend an eve¬ning of dinner and conversation at Tem¬ple Sinai, 5353 S. Shore Dr., Sundav.April 17, at 5:00 pm. Contact Rm. 434B-J, MI 3-6000.5 rms. nr. 56th & Maryland. Sun parlorand enclosed porch. Call Albert H.Johnson Realty Co. 732 E. 75th.HU 3-1470,For rent with option to buy. 4 lg. rms.Co-op, 3rd floor, furn.. 69th & Crandon,Will decorate, stove/refrig. 221-7257 crCE 6-3300.HOTEL SHORELANDSpecial student rates Hotel rms. withprivate baths. 2 students/rm. $45 stu¬dent per mo. Complete Hotel Service.Ask for Mr. N.T. Norbert. 5454 S. ShoreDrive.ROOMMATE WANTED: apt. 54th &Greenwood, to share w/2 students.$40/mo., own room. 493-9623. THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMOUNTING; MATTING;NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESBe Sure toAsk for Weekly SpecialDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111MORE THAN ACADEMICWe have an image problem. People persist in thinking theUniversity of 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 ell day. Our dynamic personnel program gives you the chanceto perform the whole range of personnel services. Degree with majoror minor in industrial relatoins, psychology or related field required.Experience or graduate v-ork preferred. Starting salary over $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 isthe prime concern in this job, open to a new college graduate. Degreein business, engineering, educational administration or related fieldrequired. Starting salary over $500.Send resume to: Personnel Office, University of Minnesota,Room 4, Morrill Hall, Minneapolis, Minn. 55455.UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTAan equal opportunity employer8 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 15, 1966 WUFFLE’SClub.JACK Schults, UC folk guitarist, willaccompany Sunday’s Folk Song Mass atSt. Gregory of Nyssa (CTS) 10 am.HAPPENINGS just happen—April 28 8c29B.C. 8c THE CAVEMENLIVE GO-GO GIRLS— who could resistvanquished...UC Karate GLAD to be back. I missed you. NancyEVER dance with a Go Go girl? Theyare waiting for you at George A Go Go.Fri.. April 15, 8:30. Blokes 50c, BridsFree, INH.TOM Koch will be a lawyer. He is al¬ready deacon-at-the Mass. SG, Sunday,CTS, 10 am.REFORM Sabbath Eve Service. EveryFriday at 7:30 pm. at Hillel House.SCREW BALL8:30 Tonight—Pierce Commons—Come!IS it true that there will be real in¬cense at St. Gregory's on Sunday? At aFolk Song Mass? Yes, 'Tis true.WEEKEND Tour by chartered bus toNiagara Falls, Detroit. Lv. I-House, Fri.night May 6th, return late May 8th. Sat.sleepover. Bus fare $28. I-House Assoc.Call eves. SU 7-2055. FA 4-8200. COED SELF DEFENSE class meetiMon. 8c Fri., 4:30, Dance Room, INHKAMELOT Restaurant, 2160 E.10% discount for UC students. 71st St.HE, hi. ho, hum, Darkness becomes asun? Then blood a moon.TO the Business Student I met at thePierce Party; Meet me at George A GOGO on Fri.MINNESINGERS’ Ed Lawrence andLinda Brust will join John Yivisakerand Jack Schultz Sunday morning at 10,Folk Song Mass at S.G. (St. Gregory—not student government, UC!).WHAT are Noble Men doing at theSCREW BALL? Come see. CHARTERED Bus to Stratford TheatreFestival. Canada Wkends July 1517Aug. 12-14,tickets to all plays, concerts’reserved, sleeping accom. reserved Bustare $20. I-House Assoc, call eves SU 7.2055 FA 4-8200.IT’S not too late to abolish SG—poll*close at 12:30 today!REMEMBER Mushroom Man wantspotatoes!HOW much money do you spend havingyour papers typed? You can get 50 re¬ports done and typed (on almost anysubject)—all free! Impossible? Ask yourGB campus rep. 643-3412 morns, or eves.Special offers for teachers too.WRITER’S Workshop (PL 2-8377) fev for NSA—polls close at Guy12:30 today!GET ACQUAINTED WITH . . 4AT LOWE'S RECORD SHOP . . . hyde park shopping centerCARMJNA BURANADVORA K Symphony No. 5NEW WORLD'KAREL ANCERLcundurtin* themiiHAKimsiroftiftiixnuBARBER OF ^SEVILLEAND OTHER ROSSINI,OPERAOVERTlM•1•••• #•••• •••persuasivei •••••••• polkas^A***LOWESLOWPRICE•Available in Stereo PER RECORDMONO or STEREO (Partial catalogua listing)M PLP-101 □ DVORAK: New World Sym.-C.P.O./TalichM PLP-104 □ MOZART: Violin Cto. In D ;r4;Cto. for Bassoon and OrchestraM PLP-105* □ BEETHOVEN: Sym. 36 in E.''Pastorale''—C.P.O./SeirsaM PL P-115 □ RICHARD STRAUSS: Rosenkava-lier Waltzes, Till EulenspiegelM PLP-116 □ STRAUSS WALTZESM PLP-117 □ BEETHOVEN: ' Moonlight", "Ap-passionata" SonatasM PLP-118 □ DAVID OISTRAKH VIOLIN RE¬CITALM PLP-119 □ THIS IS RUMANIAM PLP-120* Q TCHAIKOVSKY: Piano Cto. tt\—RichterM PLP-122 □ PROKOFIEV: Sym. #7—C.P.O./AnosovM PLP-123 □ VIENNA BY STARLIGHTM PLP-125 □ THIS IS HUGARYM PLP-126* □ LIST: Les Preludes; TassoM PLP-128* □ SOVIET ARMY CHORUS ANDBANDM PLP-129* □ BEETHOVEN: Sym »3—"Eroi-ca"—C.P.O./von MatacicM PLP-132* □ PROKOFIEV: Romeo and Juliet—C.P.O./AnceriM PLP-139 □ DVORAK: Cello Cto—Aostropo-vich, C.P.O./TalichM PLP-140 Q ORCHESTRAL SWEETSM PLP-141 □ SCHUBERT: Sym. jr6— ShcerchenM PLP-142 □ MENDELSSOHN: , Sym. r3Scotch”—KempeM PLP-145* □ TCHAIKOVSKY: 1812 Overture,MENDELSSHON: MidsummerNight's Dream Overture;BRAHMS: Tragic Overture;SMETANA; Bartered Bride Overture.M PLP-146 □ HANDEL: Water Mjsic — BrnoState/FerencsikM PLP-147* Q BEETHOVEN: Piano Concerto r5"Emperor"—Rauch, piar.o, C.P.O./Se|naM PLP-148 □ SIBELIUS: Violin Clo. in d. Op.47 — Sitkovecky; Valse Triste;Swan of Tuonela—Prague Sym./SmetacekM PLP-152 □ ITALIAN OPERA OVERTURESM PLP-153* WAGNER OVERTURESM PLP-157 □ KHACHATURIAN: MasqueradeSuite, Gayne Suite (excerpts);PROKOFIEV: Classical Sym¬phony; DEBUSSY; Afternoon of aFaunM PLP-158* □ fHIS IS RUSSIAM PLP-159 □ CHOPIN FAVORITES — Fou Ts'OngM PLP-160* □ GRIEG: Peer Gynt Suites 1 8. 2;Lyric Suite—P.S.O./NeumannM PLP-161' □ ORFF: Carolina Burana—C.P.O.,Czech Singers Choir/SmetacekM PLP-163* □ MOZART: "Eine Kleine Nacht-musik;'' Divertimento in D; Adag¬io 8, Fugue in c-Czech ChamberOrch./VlachM PLP-166* □ JANACEK: Taras Bulba; Sinfon-ietta—C.P.O./AncerlM PLP-174* □ SAINT-SAENS: Sym. #3— Eibner,organ, Vienna Phil. Sym./Swarcw-skyM PLP-175’ □ TCHAIKOVSKY: Sym. +2, "LittleRussian"—Vienna Phil. Sym.SwarowskyM PLP-176* □ ROSSINI • RESPIGHI: La Bouti¬que Fantasque (Compleie ballet)—London Phil./LebiowitzM PLP-177* □ OFFENBACH: Gaite Parisienne—London Phil./LeibowitzM PLP-300* □ BACH: English Suite in a; MOZ¬ART: Sonata in D—Josef Fidel-man, pianoM PLP-601 '□ BRAHMS: Concerto For Violin, Cel¬lo and Orch. Op. 102 Josef Suk;Violin, Andre Navarra; Cello.BRAHMS: Tragic Overture. Op. 81—C.P.O./AncerlM PLP-602* O BARTOK: Concerto For Orchestra—C.P.O./AncerlM PLP-603* 0 OVERTURES: SIBELIUS: TheStorm, TCHAIKOVSKY: Romeoand Juliet, SMETANA: Macbethand the Witches, BERLIOZ;KingLear—P.S.O./SmetackeM PL P-604* □ STRAVINSKY: Le Sacre Du Prin-temps—C.P.O./AncerlTWO RECORD SETSM PLP-111/20 SMETANA: Ma Vlast—C.P.O./Ta-lichM PLP-138/2Q BEETHOVEN: Piano Cto. #1 8.#2—Gilels. Leningrad. Phil./San-derlingM PLP- VERDI: Requiem - Moscow Phil./154/2‘Q Markevilch with the State Aca¬demic Chorus, Vishnevskaya, Isa¬kova, Ivanovsky Petrov.LOWE'S RECORDSHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1538 E. 55th ST. — MU 4-1505OPEN 9:30 to 6 00 MON.,-WED. THURS. & FRI. TILL 9:30 SUNDAY 1200-5:00