resent course se¬lective program Scholarship applicationsare now available in Ad¬ministration 201. The dead¬line for filing an applica¬tion is May 2.UC receives $8.5 millionVol. 74-No. 47 The University of Chicago Tuesday, April 19, 1966Curriculum reform votedby Dinah EsralMajor steps were taken by the College Council at a meeting last week toward the imple¬mentation of the New College program. The two measures which were passed unanimouslyapprove:• The recommended program ofthe Biological Collegiate Divisionfor its contribution to the commonyear and a revised program forstudents majoring in that area.• A change in the degrees whichwill be awarded to physics majorswith the replacement of the pres¬ent SB degree by a new AB withhonors degree.Both changes will directly affect by John BealUC has received a grant of $8.5 million from the FordFoundation to strengthen and expand programs in interna¬tional studies.The grant will be used to finance four programs:Ford Foundation Grantnext fall’s entering class. None ofthe revisions are retroactive.THE NEW BIOLOGY PRO¬GRAM designates the division’scontribution to the common yearas the present Biology 111-112sequence, with the third quarterelected by the student from achoice of ten courses. (The commonyear is comprised of four generaleducation requirements for all en-Mass democracy and liberal educationexamined Friday nite by Meyer atSpeaking on “The’ place of liberal education in a massdemocracy” at Hillel House last Friday, professor of economicsGerhard Meyer discussed the problems that confront a massdemocracy and the role that liberal education can play in help¬ing to solve them.“Can one trust democratic ma- jjtfMB J® ® I iijorities?” Meyer asked, and he ^® \proceeded to apply classical and k^® jjfmodern concepts to answer thisquestion. He contended that two *theories — what the majority ^® _ . >wants and what the will of the peo- fl| .pie as determined by wise men is Y2 M %— are relevant in democracy. BH v Jj|“Nothing can be fully good,” he |HI | III;commented, “unless it has the willof the majority.” He stated that B■ imt Mthe best way the will of the people ^ ^f^®®could be realized was through a |® * *liberal 'education program encom- £passing all.In citing the problems of a mass jjjBdemocracy, Meyer emphasized thedangers of extremism in both the ^H®|aristocratic and populist move- V, ^®®®ments. The dangers of an aristo- ^HHBBcratic movement, he said, can be a IHfflBBHweakening of ruling elites and a V jggggggjdecline in civil liberties; the dan-gers of a populist movement can G«rhard Meyerpave the way for undemocraticmovements such as McCarthyism. ' * ''' ' -ANOTHER PROBLEM Meyer way of expressing the will. Thusmentioned is that modern contem- interaction must exist between theporary democracy has become lessliberal than it formerly was. Hecited the disappearance of peace,the greater complexity and in¬ people and the government.The second theory, similar to thefirst, advocates horizontal and ver¬tical discussion in the governmen-crease in the functions and powers tal process. Horizontal discussionof the government, and the weak- occurs when citizens talk to eachening of independent groups and other about political matters; thissocial plurism as reasons for the promotes a better understandingchange. Yet, modern democracy,he stated, as compared with alter¬natives, was “pretty good and sta¬ble.” among people.Vertical discussion occurs whenthe government can determine thewill of the people and when theMeyer proposed two alternative Pe°P^e know what the governmenttheories of democracy. The first P*ans and why.concerns the process of give and cited the civil rights move-take between the representative ment as aQ example of verticalpolitician and the citizen. The es- communication between the publicsence of democracy, according to anc* Sovernment in which thethis theory, is the creation and Pe°Ple expressed their will and the°xpression of the general will. The government acted upon it. Meyeritv of the politician is to find a (Continued on page six) tering students, one designated byeach of the following divisions:biology, physical sciences, humani¬ties, and social sciences.) RayKoppelman, master of the BiologyCollegiate division and associateprofessor of biochemistry, calls thechange “minimal,” in regard togen ed biology requirements butnotes that thequence and thewill undergo some revision.Divisional-wide coursesAnother major change in the biol¬ogy program will be a reorganiza¬tion of 200 level courses along divi¬sional-wide lines, rather than thepresent organization within strictdisciplinary areas. The proposalapproved by the College Councilstates that instead of courses suchas plant biology, animal biology,etc., the new courses will be, forexample, ceil biology, and geneticsand population.JOHN L. HUBBY, assistant pro¬fessor of biology and a member ofthe curriculum committee of theCollege Council terms the new or¬ganizational plan “excellent.” Heexplains that the strict department¬al interpretation now has littlemeaning within the biologysciences, as professors in the divi¬sion now have a “Forte” such asgenetics, or evolution, rather thana strict area of work such as bot¬any. “In this new program,” Hubbycomments, “people doing similarwork throughout the division willbe involved in many of thecourses.”In addition, the new requirementsfor biology majors calls for a year¬long senior tutorial course “withextensive interdivisional facultyparticipation.” This is in accord¬ance with a major tenant of thenew College which places strongemphasis on the development ofsuch programs.Koppelman comments that thenew program depends on the de¬velopment of courses within theother collegiate divisions, such asa remedial writing course and theorganization of a language center,but he is “optimistic” about theoverall plan.The new program calls for biolo¬gy majors spending an increasedamount of time in general educa¬tion. Yet, Koppelman states thatthis change does not forfeit thecompetence which the students willachieve in the new program,explaining that achievement is notdependent only upon the amount oftime spent in specialized coursework.THE SECOND MAJOR CHANGEwhich was passed by the CollegeCouncil approves the proposal pre-(Continued on page three) • The creation of 15 faculty po¬sitions in international studies.• The establishment of an insti¬tute for international studies andthe construction of a new buildingon campus to house it.• The strengthening and expansion of certain existing programsinvolving international studies andthe creation of new ones.• The development of libraryresources to support these pro¬grams. from all areas of the University,but it will not grant degrees.One million dollars of the grantFIVE MILLION DOLLARS otthe grant will be used to supportthe new faculty positions. Fivefessorships will be completely en¬dowed, four will be partially fund¬ed, and six positions will receiveten year support.The annual money for some ofthe positions, particularly the tenyear grants, may be divided to paytwo young people instead of onefull professor. The appointmentswill be in a wide range of areas in¬cluding law, art, history, linguist¬ics, and economics.The men for these positions arenow being sought and the positionswill be filled as soon as people ofsufficiently high calibre are found,according to Charles U. Daly, UCvice-president for public affairs.THE INSTITUTE for internation¬al studies will coordinate all Uni¬versity activities concerned withinternational studies. Chauncy D.Harris, professor of geography,has been named director of the in¬stitute.Harris said that the institute willhave its own progrems, with par¬ticipating faculty members drawnNef to consider beauty'splace in a material worldJohn U. Nef, professor of historyand economies, will present a se¬ries of lectures on “Beauty and theconquest of the material world.”The first lecture will be this aft¬ernoon and the second on Thurs¬day. The remaining lectures willbe on April 22, 26, and 28.All lectures will be in Soc. Sci.122 at 4:30 pm, followed by a seminar at 5:30. Admission is withoutticket and without charge.The series is sponsored by thecommittee on social thought, an in¬terdisciplinary committee for grad¬uate study which Nef founded andchaired from 1942 to 1964.Nef is now chairman of the cen¬ter for human understanding, a UCsponsored international associationof scholars, diplomats, and busi¬nessmen which is located in Wash¬ington, DC. Chauncy D. Harrise. -vwill go toward the construction ofthe new building for ihe institute.This will not cover all the con¬struction costs, however, and therest will come from other Univer¬sity fund sources.The eight existing programswhich will be strengthened are inlaw and trade, economics, politicalscience, and education.IN THE LAW SCHOOL, for ex¬ample, there will be two new pro¬fessors, a substantial number ofnew post graduate fellowships inforeign law, and additional fundswith which to increase book pur¬chases and clerical help.Library materials will be ob¬tained in all areas to facilitate re¬search and the bibliographic staffwill be increased, including the ap¬pointment of a senior bibliographerfor international source material.Richard F. O’Brien, UC vice-president for planning and develop¬ment, said that the grant (which isin addition to the $25 million inthree to one matching funds given(Continued on page six)The spring quarter edi- ?tion of the Maroon Maga¬zine will be publishedon Friday of the seventh |week. All interested stu- |dents and faculty shouldsubmit articles to the *Maroon office before Fri- 14day of the fifth week. For ifurther information callthe Maroon office or *David Satter (FA 4-5844)or Peter Rabinowitz (285- <mmSC retained by 3-to-2 marginby Joan PhillipsThe campus voted last week to save Student Government as the referendum to abolish*SG was defeated, by a vote of 1342 to 789.At the same time, the referendum calling upon the UC Administration to build apartmentsfor students passed 1810-250, and the constitutional amendment providing that vacancies inthe assembly must be filled by astudent in the electoral unit inwhich the vacancy exists passed1193-665.Of the 49 Assembly seats, GNO¬SIS won 27, only three of which arein the College. The remaining elev¬en College seats went to independ¬ents.Independents also won seven ofthe 35 graduate seats and the LawSchool Party won all three law school seats. A write-in candidatewith three votes, Andrew Johnson,won the one SG seat in the grad¬uate library school.UC'S DELEGATION to the Na¬tional Student Association (NSA)summer congress will consist offi\e members of SPAC, threemembers of GNOSIS, a member ofPRAXIS, and one independent.The five NSA delegates are Dave Stameshkin (SPAC), HowardAbrams (GNOSIS), David Aiken(GNOSIS), Ken Shelton (Ind.) andJerry Lipsch (SPAC). The fiveNSA alternates are Tom Heagy(GNOSIS), David Satter (SPAC),Ed Birnbaum (SPAC), Rusti Woods(SPAC) and Guy Mahaffey(PRAXIS).Approximately 33 per cent of thecampus, or 2200 students, voted in last week’s election. However,more than 50 per cent of the Col¬lege voted, while only 20 per centof the graduate students voted.Last year, 1964 students voted inthe SG-NSA elections. This was ap¬proximately 34 per cent of thecampus. Fifty-four per cent of theCollege voted last year, and 16 percent of the graduate divisions vot¬ed.In spring 1962, a referendum toabolish SG gained the support of 38per cent of the voters. This year’ssimilar proposal was supported by37 per cent of the voters.COMMENTING on this year’sabolition attempt, SG presidentBernie Grofman said that this“was the most incredible smearcampaign I’ve seen in four yearsof SG elections.”“If the campaign had not beencarried on on such a low level, I’msure the government would havereceived an even greater vote ofconfidence,” he stated. Grofman also pointed out that“the overwhelming support for thehousing referendum clearly indi¬cates student recognition of theneed for immediate and massiveUniversity action to ease the pre¬sent housing crisis.”Discussing the newly elected 20thAssembly, Grofman predicted thatit’s main emphasis will probablybe in areas such as obtaining de¬cent student housing and seekingto remedy the many defects of thebookstore.“I am confident that the newgovernment will be an effectiveone,” he declared.(Con)inued on page three)There will be a meetingof the new Student Govern¬ment assembly tomorrow at8 pm in Business East 106.EDITORIALA year of change may be ahead for SCThe results of the SG and NS Aelections indicate the possibility of ayear of change and action for UC’soften moribund Student Govern¬ment. The student body’s affirmationof SG, reasonably impressive in lightof the depressing state of the govern¬ment this past year and the aggres¬sive, rather underhanded campaignfor abolition staged by PRAXIS,raises the hope that some studentsjust may care what happens to Stu¬dent Government. If those within thegovernment are willing to changetheir approach to campus problemsand utilize these nongovernmentpeople, SG could take on some need¬ed vigor. The officers of SG justmay, for a change, actively seek thehelp of these “outside” concerned students, for the abolition movementhas brought home forcefully to theSG elite just how alienated studentsare from “their” government. Theabolition movement may have beenjust what the government needed toforce it to make the changes neces¬sary to revitalize it.One of these changes is beingforced on SG by the passage of Ref¬erendum No. 3, the sleeper of thecampaign. No one ever mentioned itbefore the voting, but now this con¬stitutional amendment, which endsthe practice of filling vacated grad¬uate seats in SG with eager Collegestudents, is being called the “screwCollege” amendment. No longer canthe College offset the numerical ma¬jority of the graduate schools and divisions in SG by this replacementprocess. SG must face up to the factthat one man—one vote may not bethe best method of representationfor a student government that ismore concerned with undergraduatestudents than the graduate schoolsand divisions. This emphasis on theproblems of the College is justified,for graduate students at this Univer¬sity have a much closer contact withthose who control their educationthan do undergraduates. While SG isuseful to graduate students, it is vitalto undergraduates. The governmentwill have to face squarely this prob¬lem and deal with it in the comingyear.Certainly the strongest mandatefor SG action to come out of the elec¬ tion was that on student housingThe student body overwhelminglysupported SG’s call for the Universe rty to buy apartment buildings mstudent use. Such an administrator tilpolicy is necessary if UC is to be pre thvented from having a combination o °a dormitory College and a diffus*graduate student body with its me;is<£-9bers living miles from campus. But,as with the other necessary changesin SG brought out in this year's elec¬tion, the extent of SG pressure onthe administration to deal with thehousing crisis will depend onwillingness of next year’s SG reiresentatives and officers to act for<fully. The challenge is there; per-jhaps this year SG will meet it.irtioWhig Society presidentsteps into the sandboxTO THE EDITOR:I have heard student governmentcalled the sandbox, and it seems to me a good name for the placewhere the young devotees of poli¬tics can practice flinging muck ateach other. It is unfortunate thatthese novices confuse frames ofreference. Thus in his letter of thetwelfth of April Mr. Birnbaum con-The Emily Talbott Fund PresentsRosalyn Tureckin a Lecture-Demonstration entitled"Bach Performance in our Time'Law School Auditorium at 8:00 P.M.Thursday, April 21Admission by ticketavailable ofInformation Deok, Reynolds |Clvb Desk, Musk Dept. s?p fuses the question of “to sandboxor not to sandbox” with all thegraver issues of American politicallife. And as much as I dislike play¬ing the game, I guess I will haveto step (for a moment only, I hope)into the sandbox in order to dis¬cuss one of the unfortunate impli¬cations of Mr. Birnbaum’s letter.The particular implication I havein mind is Mr. Birnbaum’s hintthat somehow the right-wing-know-nothing plot to take away his sand¬box is also anti-Semitic. He impliesthat it is the know-nothing, dispos¬sessed lumpen bourgeoisie’s (inDwight MacDonald’s ptuase) frus¬tration working itself out in ananti-Semitic attack agains the lib¬eral Eastcoast Jews who, becausethey are the chief occupants of thesandbox, are seen as displacingthem, the Ken Sheltons and GuyMahaffeys.Many Jews have abandoned To¬rah as the essence of Judaism, andhave come to identify Judaismwith secular, Messianic liberalism.Thus many Jews interpret an at¬tack on the ideas and aims of lib¬eralism as an attack on Judaismand therefore as anti-Semitic. Butthis is simply a modern myth. Ju¬daism is not necessarily equivalentto liberalism (indeed, there are as¬pects of liberalism which seem tome quite incompatible with Torah).Moreover, in this case there isabsolutely no empirical ground forthe belief that the Whig Society orany of its members is anti-Semitic.There are many Jewish membersin the Whig Society. In fact, theclub has chosen a Jewish presidentat no little cost in inconveniencebecause he happens to be relative¬ly Orthodox. It is unfortunate thatMr. Birnbaum felt it necessary tobring up such an issue and couldn’thave confined himself to more ger¬mane arguments about the meritsof Student Government (perhapsthe fact that commercial airlinesnow charge less than the charterflights tempted him away fromthis course). But the former isprobably as little to be expected asthe latter. (one less place for flinging thiskind of muck), it may also be con¬strued the other way. If we look atGenesis 8, 21, we find that “the in¬clination of man’s heart is evilfrom his youth.” Though mostbrands of liberal orthodoxy denythis, I think it true and the best ex¬planation for the kind of attackMr. Birnbaum has made on theWhig Society. But if it is true, per¬haps we had better put up with oursandbox: better to suffer evils weknow than fly to those we know not—better to endure mischief in asandbox than turn its inhabitantsloose on a larger domain.HARRY EPSTEINPRESIDENT, WHIG SOCIETY tually impeded the abolition movement?Now, at last, our conspiracy ly.reached fruition, and all may t*revealed. It is too late for even theStudent - Faculty - Administrationcourt to introduce new candidateson the ballots.Under cover of the abolitionmovement, we have infiltrated ikeparties so thoroughly that, howeverthe election goes, at least ton ofour members will be elected. Ifmore than ten are elected, the sur¬plus representatives will resign;we, like SPAC, have no wish ^Birnbaum sees only partof plot—despite chutzpaThough Mr. Birnbaum’s actionsmay indeed give rise to a good ar¬gument for abolishing the sandbox TO THE EDITOR:When I started reading Mr. Birn¬baum’s letter in the April 12th Ma¬roon, I feared that the great WhigPlot had been unmasked, but, as Iread on, I realized that Mr.Birnbaum had seen no deeper thanthe first layer of deception. Inspite of his great perspicacity andample supply of chutzpa, he didnot realize that the abolition move¬ment, so ably figureheaded byShelton, Mahaffey, etal., was onlya smokescreen for our real plan toseize control of the University.With his knowledge of the deepintricacies of the Whig Society(gained, I doubt not, at the risk ofhis life, as a double agent withinour ranks), Mr. Birnbaum mustsurely have wondered why wewere using only our most openmembers in the fight for abolition.Did he not realize that, while suchsecret members of the Whig Socie¬ty as Miss Woods and Mr. Grof-man had indeed rendered consid¬erable services to the abolitionmovement, they had not been usedas effectively as they might havebeen had our true object in¬deed been abolition, and that othersecret agents, such as Mr. Abramsand Mr. Lipsch, had at times ac- waste talented agents in petty buireaucracyOne by one, as the year goes by,the other representatives will dropout, as they did this year, until, inthe winter quarter of 1967, as inthe winter quarter of 1966. only 19of the original 50 will remain. Tenof them will be our gallant, if cxjfc t;hausted, agents. When the hour of| dour triumph arrives, we will seizecontrol of the Assembly, to trans¬act our Final Business. The chair¬man will move the repeal of thecom law's. The motion will pass,ten to nine. The chairman ^move reconsideration of the suf¬frage acts of 1832, 1867, and 1880.After some debate, the acts of 1867and 1880 will be repealed. Thebody will then nominate BarryGoldvvater for president, drink atoast to Charles, King and Martyr fiVliPof his people, transfer the Studer?) qGovernment budget to the JohnBirch Society, and dissolve itselfpermanently.DAVID FRIEDMANMEMBER, THE WHIG SOCIETYChicago MaroonKEYPUNCHING500 CARDS OR MOREFAST TURN AROUNDFOR ESTIMATI CALLSHEILA ILIXT 332-4701R. SKIRMONT A ASSOCIATES, INC.S8 NORTH USALUE STR«TCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 40402COMPUTN APPLICATION CONSULTANTS EDITOR-IN-CHI El1 ... Denle* Hertjbe'IBUSINESS MANAGER Edwerd Gn'to*MANAGING EDITOR Diruh EtrilNEWS EDITOR David SetterASSISTANT NEWS EDITORDavid E. GumpetASSISTANTS TO TNI EDITORDevid L. AiktnSharon GeldnniflJoan pnillip*|CORY EDITOR Eve H«cnvtf<CULTURE EDITOR Mat* Ro5‘EDITOR, CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWDev id RichieASSOCIATE EDITOR, CHICAGOLITERARY REVIEW .... Rich RollsaMUSIC EDITOR Refer RebinowiHASSOCIATE MUSIC EDITOR Ed ChiKofshYPOLITICAL EDITOR Bruce Frtti 1STAFF: Mike Seidman. Bob Hertz .Ken Simonson, Jeff Kuta, NancySteakley, John Beal, Karen Edwards,Beverly Smith, Joe Lubenow. FredMelcher, Gary Christiana, PenelopeForan, Elite Kaplan, Tem Hea*y,Michaei Nemerotf, Paul Setter, PaufBurstein, Elite Levin, MahpnnYoun*. Monica Raymond. Slao*Lender. Dorj SoOinft.CharterAssociation, publisher*Press Service. •t «yt Etedent i*e» * CeH«Election* for neit year’seditor-in-chief will to® toeldFriday, April 28, »t 40°pm. An Kne staff m*m-toon art required ta attendI • CHICAGO MAROON • Apt# It, 1944Complete SC and(Continued from page one)The following are the results inthe SG elections which were heldlast week. All winner’s names areshown in boldface. The number ofrepresentatives elected from eachunit is designated after the nameof the unit. An asterisk indicatesthat a recount is taking place inthat electoral unit at the request ofcandidates in that division.ReferendaHousing (passed)Tes: 1810 (88%)No: 230 (12%)Abolition (failed)Yes: 789 (37%)No: 1342 (63%)Filling vacancies (passed)Yes: 1193 (64%)vNo: 665 (36%) AlternatesTom Heagy (GNOSIS) 671David Satter (SPAC) 630Ed Birnbaum (SPAC) 627Rusti Woods (SPAC) 623Guy Mahaffey (PRAXIS) 601John Bremner (GNOSIS) 565Jonathan Still (GNOSIS) 531Ellis Levin (GNOSIS) 529Joan Phillips (SPAC) 475Patrick Hanlon (GNOSIS) 409Irving Wladawsky (GNOSIS) 395Joe Lubenow (SPAC) 383Bruce Mann (SPAC) 378Steve Livernash (GNOSIS) 368Paula Meinetz (GNOSIS) 352 Snell-Hitchcock (1)David Lukoff (Ind.) 36Steven Genden (GNOSIS) 33Fraternities (1)Ken Shelton (Ind.) 28Donald Weinberg (Ind.) 22Pierce Tower (2)Peter Ratner (Ind.) 143Larry Silver (Ind.) 107Ted Krontiris (GNOSIS) 70Ken Levin (GNOSIS) 62National Student Association(5 delegates and 5 alternateselected) Burton-Judson (1)Timothy Naylor (Ind.) 65Gary Midkiff (GNOSIS) 51Dave Stameshkin (SPAC) 788Howard Abrams (GNOSIS) 758bavid Aiken (GNOSIS) 704ten Shelton (Ind.) 686lerry Lipsch (SPAC) 683 Woodward Court (3)Alan Bloom (Ind.) 298Judy Van Herik (Ind.) 152Steven Hanikoff (Ind.) 126Sydney Unger (Ind.) 97 College-at-Large (6)Jeffrey Blum (Ind.) 194Jerry Lipsch (Ind.) 194Ed. Birnbaum (Ind.) 191Tom Heagy (GNOSIS) 166David Aiken (GNOSIS) 158Todd Capp (GNOSIS) 135Margaret Olson (Ind.) 123Jonathan Still (GNOSIS) 117Ellis Levin (GNOSIS) 109Charles Russell Twist (Ind.) 96Alfred (Sandy) Lewy (GNOSIS) 89Bio Sci (2)Edward Louis Stern (Ind.) 32Thomas Green (GNOSIS) 15Frank Seydcl (GNOSIS) 8Med. School (2)Daniel Blumenthal (Ind.) 42Richard Sohn (Ind.) 37Timothy Lindquist (GNOSIS) 13Hugh Hazenfeld (GNOSIS) 12Education (1)Mark Joseph (Ind. ) 13Nancy Wilson (GNOSIS) 2 Social Sciences (9)Jerry Hyman (GNOSIS) 87Warren L. Coats (GNOSIS) 66Renee Hirschon (GNOSIS) 60Paula Meinetz (GNOSIS) 60Arleen Freeman (GNOSIS) 59Peter Richmond (Ind.) 53Steven Silver (GNOSIS) 53Peter James Sharfman(GNOSIS) 51Wyatt Mankin (GNOSIS) 50Charles Horner (Ind.) 49 Chuck Marvin(Law School Party) 132Sue Oakes (Law School Party) 125Divinity School (2)R. Douglas Spangler (GNOSIS) 9Gaylon Lee (GNOSIS) 6SSA (2)Virginia Kaiser (GNOSIS) 10Richard Leroy Edwards(GNOSIS) 5Physical Sciences (4)John Harper (GNOSIS) 59Zalman Gaibel (Ind.) 54Leon Glass (GNOSIS) 54Irving Wladawsky (GNOSIS) 53David B’riedman (GNOSIS) 50 Humanities (5)David Richter (GNOSIS) 33Peter Gran (GNOSIS) 24Merrill Nusbaum (GNOSIS) 24Ed Tenner (GNOSIS) 20Business School (4)Michael Yesner (Ind.)33Bernie Katz (GNOSIS) 70Stephen Livernash (GNOSIS) 52Mike Baldigo (GNOSIS) 51Graduate Library School (1)Andrew Johnson (write-in) 3Kenney Schowalter (GNOSIS) 1Alex Panshin (write-in) 1Law School (3)Danny Boggs(Law School Party) 134 Student Government will con¬tinue the student-faculty dinnerprogram. Subsidy remains $1.25for dinner and $.50 for light re¬freshments per guest. Studentswishing to invite faculty (orvice versa) should submit aguest list to SG. The number ofsubsidized guests per gatheringis limited to ten. For further in¬formation, contact SG, ext. 3274.burse change approved(Continued from page one)ented by the physical sciences di-ision, whereby the SB (bachelor oficience) degree will no longer beward to physics majors, but in-tcad a new degree designatedAB with honors” will now besed. The present AB degree inhysics will continue to be award-d, with minimal changes made inlat program.Robert L. Platzman, master ofic physical sciences collegiate di-ision and professor of physics andhemistry, explains that the SB de-ree has not been abolished, butlat physics will instead use thisew degree. ,Physics under CollegeThe significance of this change islanifold. Whereas in the past, theB degree was under the jurisdic-on of both the physical scienpesivision and the College, the newB with honors degree is ultimate-r under the authority of the Col-ge, thus binding students in therogram to the general education:quirements specified for all stu-ents in the College.Platzman states, “The change inle name of the degree is signifi-int. It expresses the fact that ourraduates are not from technical:hools which award SB degrees,it in addition to their specializedlowledge, have liberal educationhich the AB degree expresses.1'e believes that the level of attain-ient in the AB with honors pro- ance during this time determin¬ing his admittance into the honorsprogram. It is expected that notmore than one-half of the studentswho complete the first two yearswork will be admitted into the pro¬gram.It is anticipated that the otherfour departments within the physi¬cal sciences collegiate divisionwhich award undergraduate de¬grees will soon follow the lead ofthe physics department in chang¬ing the degrees awarded. Thesedepartments are chemistry, math¬ematics, geophysical sciences, andstatistics.Koppelman states that such achange may also be forthcoming inthe biological sciences, but thatwhen it is made the entire divisionwill take action and that all de¬partments will act concurrently. BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentreComplete Re poireAnd ServiceFor All Popular Import*Midway 5-45016052 So. Cottage Grove HONDA SOUTH & SOUTH EASTSEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES - SERVICE - PARTSe PICK UP & DELIVERYe EASY FINANCINGe LOW INSURANCE RATESMl 3-4500CHICAGO'S LARGEST &JUST AROUND THE CORNERSea the MAROON classified for your campus sales representativeBOB NELSON MOTORS4136 S COTTAGE GROVETAhSAM-V&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYII AM la 9)45 PALORDERS TO TAKE OUT1S1I EoNfSrdSC. MU 4-1062 THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:Old Fashioned Sauerkraut& Frankfurters 49cEvery Tuesday Night You can have a steaktoo, or the biggeststeakburger in town.Now—A Parade of Piano Artists for Your Pleasure and Dancing'am will be such that the studentsill be better trained and equippedith a better degree.DEAN OF THE COLLEGErayne Booth regards the changedegree as “a sign of trust in the:w college,11 as the degree will>w be awarded by the Collegeid is under its jurisdiction.The approved change calls for1 physics students to take essenti-ly the same courses in the firstm years, with student’s perform-THRILLING CANOE TRIPS• the Quatico-Suporior wlldorftoat.ily $7.00 por day. For information,•ita: Bill Rom, CANOE COUNTRYJTFITTERS, Ely, Minnoaota.LOUIE'S BARBER SHOP1303 I. S3 StreetFor a PERSONALITY Haircut3 Chairs— No WaitingFA 4-3878Expfrt for Orlontal Haircutting HEYMANNY THIS!BLACKFRIARSNEW MUSICAL PRODUCTION IS RAPIDLY APPROACHING ?lRfljiAnd Tickat* for April 29-30 - May 6-7 at 8:30 P.M. areON SALE NOWSTUDENT DISCOUNT S -SOHANDEL HALL CORRIDOR Daily 10-4 Phone Ext. 3271ArHiia.ru* • cmicaoo maboon • a. a :t c < i f krPoets ini Vietnam 'read-in' at Mandel HallFourteen American poets staged a three hour “read-in”against the war in Vietnam last Saturday night in MandelHall. Approximately 300 people attended.In what was described by moderator Robert Bly as “aweird and strange evening,” poetsread everything from works by .Ferlinghetti. It was read by JamesWalt Whitman and Carl Sandburg Wright and has been published into those by E. E. Cummings and Broadsides magazine.Lawrence Ferlinghetti^ from a Alderman Peter Simpson of St.speech by Abraham-* Lincoln tb' atr tLouis read a poetic eulogy to Pres-obscene joke about President John- ident Kennedy which he had writ-son; and from a description of the ten. “When Lilacs Last in thebombing of Hiroshima to'a de- Dooryard Bloomed,” by Walt Whit-scription of President Johnson as man, was also read.“a cross between lago and Billy Lucien Stryk read his “Return toGraham.” All the poets also read Hiroshima,” a poem describing thefrom their own works. American bombing of that city.There was rto doctrinaire position In the *kst Pa^ of r*a^*In»taken by the group. However, all Poets read selections which theythe poets believed that their pres- had chosen. In the second half theyence at the read-in constituted a read *n response to requests from nation of American writers againstthe Vietnam war.“For twenty years there hasbeen pressure for poets and writ¬ers to take no stand in politicalmatters,” said Bly. “This genera¬tion is rejecting the new criticalideas and strengthening Americanpoetry so that it can take on a po¬litical mood.” Since its formation the grouphas given readings at the Universi¬ty of Portland, Reed College, theUniversity of Washington, and theUniversity of Wisconsin. Duringthe first ten days of May they willgive read-ins at Harvard, Princeton,Oberlin, Columbia, and other ma¬jor colleges in New York City. Thelargest read-in will be given May 8 at Philadelphia featuring a specialreading by Alan Gindsberg.The poets reading last Saturdaywere Robert Bly, Paul CarrollRobert Creely, Donal Hall, WilliamHunt, Galway Kinnell, John Logan,-*Mark Perlberg, Dennis Schmoltt’Peter Simpson, Lucien Stryk, andJames Wright. All read withoutfees.testimonial against the present pol¬icy on Vietnam.THE PURPOSE of the read-inwas not to gain converts to a polit¬ical position but rather to expressthe feelings of the people protest-*ing the war in Vietnam which theythemselves cannot express, saidBly. “There is a joy in expressingthat which cannot be expressed,”he said. “Tonight we will partakeof that joy.”The poets’ selections rangedfrom poems specifically dealingwith Vietnam, to those concernedwith war in general, to poemsdealing with political personalities,and finally to unrelated selections.Three major Rhemes throughoutthe read-in were the ridiculing ofPresident Johnson, the eulogizingof President Kennedy and previouspresidents, and a general ab-horance of war.A REPRESENTATION of theridicule of President Johnson was“Where is Vietnam?,” by Lawrance the audience.The read-in was presented by theAmerican Writers Against the Warin Vietnam and was sponsored bythe Chicago Review and the Festi¬val of the Arts (FOTA) as part ofthis year’s festival. In sponsoringthe read-in neither the Review norFOTA took a political position.American Writers Against theWar in Vietnam was formed lastMarch because of the rising indig-'* *The Chess Club is hold¬ing a tournament Satur¬day open to all registeredUC students. All interest¬ed students can registerby calling the studentactivities office, X3591. BUY NOW.SAVE NOW.PAY LATER.Built-To-LastCHECKERSedan* • Station Wagon*LimousinesCHECKER TOWNE SOUTH INC.3967 SOUTH ARCHER AVENUE247-1400 Sales A ServiceA Valuable Gift for Male and FemaleStudents of the University of Chicago.Campus Pac offer extended toApril 23For Men:an assortment of fine, nationally-advertised productstesy of famous manufacturers. cour-You will receive such products as these:Brylcreem, Macleans Tooth Paste, Alka-Seltzer, Absorbine Jr.Old Spice Lime After Shave Lot^n, and Halo Shampoo.For Women:You will receive such products as these:Pond's Dreamflower Talc, Angel Face Compact Make-Up, AngelFaue 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 valuable array of product* coma* Is you with tho compliment* ofthe manufacturer*. CAMPUS PAC is yours — only while the aupply lest* . . .exclusively atThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 EHit Av*. Want to go > L50/50 on aIf you’re under 22,join theTWA 50/50 Cluband fly forhalf fare.You can get 50% off the regular Jet Coach fare when you fly TWAin the U.S. If you’re between 12 and 22, fill out the form below andtake it with proof of age to any TWA office. Buy your membershipcard for $3-and the sky’s the limit. You fly on a stand-by basis -except for the few days listed below. Note: if you have an ID cardfrom another airline, we’ll honor that, too.And remember, even though you’re going for half fare, youalways get full service-meals and all. Questions? Call your nearestTWA office. We’re your kind of airline. *i TWA CLUB Present this application to any TWA office. Or mail to:P. 0. Box 700, Times Square Station, New York, N. Y. 10036Mr.Mrs.1. Miss-3. Home Address. .City. .2. Date of Birth.—.... State . Zip Code.4. School or Occupation. .Class of.5. PROOF OF AGE Check type of proof submitted with this application. Send photostat, not original, with mailedapplication. □ Birth Certificate □ Driver's License 0 Draft Card □ School Record O PassportOther KnpnM6. Color of hair. .7. Color of eyes.8. Enclose $3,001 □ Check □ Money Order (Not refundable. DO NOT MAIL CASH.)Make check or Money Order payable to Tran* World Airline*, ln«.9. Sigm #*#♦*# §n TWA *TWA SO; SO Club trev«i II net tveiiafclt en April 7, No.ameer u, 27. G«<*mtoar It ihrcufh 24, mt, an* January 2 through 4, mi.4 CHICAGO MAROON • April 19, 1964Music review"...lions let loose."Whatever else you say about him, Jean Martinon deservesrecognition as one of the world’s foremost quick-change artists.Although he has done his act innumerable times, it neverceases to amaze. Last week was a most confounding demon¬stration. , —:—— :During th« first half of the con-- *, . , ... i-ntremont• soft tone was Der-cert, he conducted auavely, with hon. . „«„*i * t- ^"u.nn.tt,.. . .Korn rnfinlf haP* * shade too gentle for bis sar-sophistication, a sharp refined wit, *castic role otherwise, it was anand a keen sense of underplay. ,* f,th* niun.r Falla’* un»mp«*chable reading. It ambled,True, the opener, Falla s Home- caj0ie<jj punctured, and laughed"* 7' 11 p hnJ ^.UCh where so many pianists are apt tow-ork with. But he made the most clatter, Yet ^ the exhubcrant fi.of its impressionistic colors, and nales to the outer movements hehad his orchestral balances perfect- whipped up the kind of excitemently nuanced. The opening brass fan- that brings down the house—entire-fare truly rang out, it didn t blare jy through deftness, however, with--a sign that the orchestra was in out the sughtest trace of vulgarity.Martinon, meanwhile, contributedsurprisingly subtle support, keep¬ing the accompaniment sparkling,but never brilliant.Suddenly, during intermission,came the Transformation—fromProkofieff Purified to SchumannSchlonged. Of course, Martinon hasalways been on better terms withthe French and Russians than withthe Germans, but even so, his as¬sault on Schumann’s Fourth Sym¬phony was something special.HI CLEARLY hasn’t learned tocope with Schumann’s notoriousorchestration, for his performancewas unbalanced and murky, withsecondary parts obstreperouslyclaiming precedence over the mainlines. Not that the first threemovements were impossible: inthe more subdued passages (suchas the introduction to the first Barratt O’Hara still young at heartby Dori* Solingor the most fruitful work he’d done in“The young dedicated liberals in Congress tell me that the Congress was his action, as Chair-older you get, the more liberal you get," said Congressman man ?/. the Hou®f African Sl^b‘Barratt 0 Hara, and I guess that S a fact. imum amount of aid being given tobeing givenO’Hara addressed a meeting sponsored by the newly Africa for military assistance.formed Students for O’Hara in the — During the question period,Africa work* fruitful O’Hara was asked about his posi-O’Hara said that what might bt (Continued on page six)good shape and under strict control. All in all, an off-beat horsd'oeuvre paving the way for, buthardly matching, the superlativeProkofieff to come.ALTHOUGH A POPULAR work,Prokofieff’s Third Piano Concertois usually mangled by aggressiveinterpreters. For once, however,the humor prevailed. Martinon andsoloist Philippe Entermont under¬stand that it is not Liszt, onlymock-Liszt—that the fireworks areintentional duds and that the soar¬ing lyricism is let loose only to beshot down.Chamber operasslated for weekendTwo chamber operas—onebased on a comedy by Chek- movement) he conjured up a shim-hov and one on a nightmarish mering atmosphere. But elsewhereit was competently dull.But the finale? Apparently some¬one substituted the parts for a Con¬certo for Two Trumpets and Band,and all hysteria broke loose. Marti-non, as frequently happens,reached maximum intensity half¬way through, leaving himself no¬where to go. In addition, the trum¬pets blasted and screeched merci¬lessly, demanding to be heardabove the din and, unfortunately,succeeding. The horns, in a newposition behind everyone else, wereout of earshot, but the trombones,perhaps proud of their appropriate¬ly round tone, evened it up bydoing more than their share. Andwhen they chimed in to build upthose magnificent pillars of tone,everything was thrown hopelesslyout of kilter by the second trom¬bone, who selfishly hogged the dec¬ibels.It was like the Roman CarnivalOverture—with the lions let loose.Peter Rabinowitzplay by Yeats—will be pre¬sented in Mandcl Hall at 8:30 pmFriday and Saturday.They will be performed by theContemporary Chamber Playersunder the direction of assistantprofessor of music Ralph Shapey.The stage director will be JamesO’Reilly of University Theatre.The performances will be part ofthe University's 75th Anniversarycelebration.The chamber operas are TheBrute by Lawrence Moss and Pur¬gatory by Hugo Weisgall. Singerswill be Neva Pilgrim, Charles VanTassel, Thomas MacBone, andMichael Cousins.Admission to Friday’s perform¬ance is $3 for reserved seats ($1for students). Tickets for the Sat¬urday performance are $2 and $1.They may be purchased at the con¬cert office, 5802 South Woodlawnave. MI 3-0800, extension 3886.The libretto of The Brute is byEric Bentley, critic and play¬wright. It is based on a comedy byAnton Chekhov, and is set in oldRussia. The plot involves a pistolduel between a young widow and agentleman farmer, which quicklychanges into a romance.Purgatory is based on the lastplay of the Irish poet William But¬ler Yeats. The text is unchanged.An old man revisiting a ruinedhouse in which he had murderedhis father sees the ghosts of hismother and father re-enact theirbridal night. The old man kills hisown son with the same knife heused to slay his father in a vain ef¬fort to exercise the spirits. Ida Noyes Library, Thursday aft¬ernoon. He was introduced byBruce Sagan, publisher of theHyde Park Herald.O’Hara recalled that his firstcampaign for the House was basedon a rebuttal of Richard Nixon’scharge that the University of Chi¬cago was a home of Communists.“You get into these fights forthings you believe in . ... and younever quit them,” he said. O'Haracited his sixteen year battle againstthe House Un-American ActivitiesCommittee, as an example.Support* organizationO’Hara stressed his belief in thegood of organization as a means ofachieving common ends of a groupof similarly-minded individuals. Hestated that the Democratic Organ¬ization today is “pretty much of across-section.”Another belief referred to byO’Hara was an “unwaivering, un¬swerving dedication to what I thinkour government stands for”. Inthis context, he upheld the two-year Congressional term as a cor¬nerstone of government of, for, andby the people.Turning to his own accomplish¬ments as a legislator, O’Hara men¬tioned his vote for the PowellAmendment of the Housing Act of1949. O’Hara was one of the au¬thors of the Housing Act and heexplained his vote on the amend¬ment as the result of a promise hehad made himself always to voteagainst any bill favoring discrimi¬nation. Calendar of eventsTuesday Aoril 19 al freedom.” Eugene Gendlin, assistant.EMIN**: "R.I'c.L 'Lolo.y in «»making," Dr. Thomas Ogletree, leader, pm- ‘MEETING:TOYOTA1 yr. free maintenance1900 C.C. Sports Car Action.Auto. Trans. Avail.*1714 90 H P.100 M.P.H.SALE'S - SERVICE - PARTS247-1400 - 3967 S. ArcherDEPARTMENT 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, studentMANDEL HALL - 8:30 P.M.Tickets at Concert Office, 5802 Woodlawn, or at Mandel Hall box office onevening of concert.The University symphonyorchestra has openings forviolinists. Any interested stu¬dent should leave his nameat the music department, orcall ext. 3885. The programfor the spring quarter in¬cludes compositions by Mo¬zart, Riegger, and Berlioz.CongratulationstoDavidE.Cumpert 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 employerWhy not havo your roommate tap* your locturo for you?Then you can listen to the soothing drone of a loved mentorwhile you lie in comfort under your electric blanket. Rent atape recorder fromTOAD HALL1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500 Chapel House, 9810 Woodlawn, 4:30 p.m.LECTURE: "A new breed of mortals?”John Nef, chairman, center for humanunderstanding, Soc Sci 122, 4:30 pm.FILM: “Thunderbolt,” sponsored byDoc films, Soc Sci 12t, 7:13 and 9:16pm.MEETING: Christian Science organize-tipn, Thorndike Hilton Chapel, 1190 E.38, 7:13 pm.FOLK DANCING: International house,8 pm.CONCERT: “A recital for organ andbrass," Richard Vikstrom, conductor,Edward MondeUo, organist, members ofthe Chicago Symphony brasa section,Rockefeller Chapel, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: “The new tides,” Sir DenisBrogan, professor of poliUcal. science,Cambridge University, Breasted Hall,8:30 pm.W«dn«*day, April 20SEMINAR: “Contemporary issues inJewlsh-Chrlstian relations. Rabbi MaxTicktin. Rabbi Daniel Leifer, and Rev.Harold Walker, leaders, Chapel house,3:30 pm.SEMINAR: “The freedom revolutionand the churches,” Dr. Robert Spikeleader, Calvert house, 4:30 pm.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robbing.University carillonnuer, Rockefelleripel, 5 pm..MS: ,rS\v SDS chapter meeting. IdaNoyes Hall, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: "Twentieth century Italianart,” Denis Sohneider, Classics 10, <pm.FOLK DANCING: country dance socie¬ty, Ida Noyes HaU, 8 pm.STUDENT PERFORMANCE: "Soundand light,” a performance of the Proph¬et Books of William Blake, C-shop roof,8:30 pm. ■,Thursday, April 21LECTURE: "Art and the hope for hu¬man improvement,” John Nef, chair¬man, center for human understanding,Soc Sci 122. 4:30 pm.FILM AND TALK: “Freud” by JohnHuston followed by discussion led byDr. Harry Trosman, associate professorof psychiatry. Billings hospital, room P117, 7:30 pm. $.75.MEETING: discussion of Martin LutherKing's union to end slums on the westside, with Jimmy Collier of the SCLCside with Jimmy Collistaff, Ida Noyes 7:30 pnFOLK DANCING: HilleI lei house, instruc¬tion 7:30, general dancing 9 pm.LECTURE: "Bach performance in ourtime,” Rosalyn Tureck, a lecture withpiano and harpsichord, admission byticket only, law school auditorium, 8Chapel, 5 pm. pm.FILMS: ,TS\vain” by Markopoulos and LECTURE: "Recent trends in Chines#“Narcissus,” sponsored by underground foreign policy.” Morton H. Halperin. de¬cinema, Soc Sci 122, 7 and. 9 pm. partment of government and center forLECTURE: "An existential perspective international affairs. Harvard Universi¬on the historical development of person- ty, Breasted Hall, 8:30.LEHSINEby MURJNEThis 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.1. 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 frtRiTbo Mwifif Company, I no....•ytnri specialist far 70 yearsChina exoert to soeak at Academy hereMorton H. Halperin, of thedepartment of government andcenter for international affairsat Harvard University, willspeak on ?cer.t Trends in Chi¬nese Foreign Policy” on Thursday,April 21. at 8:30 pm in BreastedHall.Halperin’s speech will be part ofthe second monthly meeting of therecently established UC academyfor policy study. This year theacademy is studying mainlandChina, bringing to campus eachmonth an expert on some aspect ofChina.Halperin has written extensivelyon Chinese political and militaryaffairs. Among his books are IsChina Turning In?, China and theBomb, and Limited War in the Nu¬clear Age. He is an expert in Chi¬nese nuclear capability.On March 18. Halperin testifiedbefore the US Senate Committeeon Foreign Relations. He said thatChina may be turning its attentionfrom participation in world affairsto concentration on domestic is¬sues. This, he indicated, is largelybecause of recent failures in Chi¬nese foreign policy, which are due,in turn, to Mao Tse-Tung's unreal¬istic views of conditions in the un¬derdeveloped nations.The Chinese leaders may try “topreserve China as a pufe island of1. What kind of hat are youwearing today?Forest ranger.3. Wouldn’t you be better offusing some of the thingsyou’ve learned in school?You mean like TheTheory and Fundamentalsof Bookbinding? 2. What happened to thepith helmet?Deep down, I’vealways dreamed ofbeing a ranger.4.1 mean something you’requalified for—like math.I’m looking for a jobwhere I can find dramaand excitement—to saynothing of a decentstandard of living. • ... w ntrue Marxism-Leninism,” he stat¬ed.Halperin’s itinerary at UC in¬cludes a faculty luncheon, a semi¬nar with selected students, and adinner with the Fellows of theacademy, as well as his publicspeech.The following session of theacademy for policy study will be onMay 20, when A. Doak Barnett ofColombia University will come toUC. He is an expert in Chinesedomestic affairs and also testifiedbefore the Fulbright committee.UC receives $3.5 milliongi;! from Ford Foundation(Continued from page one)by Ford last fall) is a “vote of con¬fidence in and endorsement of theUC programs in international stud¬ies.”O'BRIEN STATED that thisbrings to over $52.5 million the to¬tal funds that have been raised andannounced toward the $160 milliondollar three year drive.He explained that this specificprogram had not been included inthe initial fund drive description,but “we change with the sources ofour funds and as the direction ofscholarship in the Universitychanges.” Classified adseel: i & rs v. ::t r « * av* & -hPersonalsUNDERGROUND CINEMA“Swain” by Markopoulos, “Narcissus’’bv Maas. WEDNESDAY, April 20, Soc.Sci. 122 7&9 pm. 75c.John ABT. noted lawyer against theSmith and McCarren Acts speaks for Du-Bois, April 24. 7:30 Breasted.ATTENTION Girls—trim down thoselegs this summer Bicycle tours throughEurope (men invited too.) Call yourcampus representative Hans Endler —FA 4-8200, X753.Israel Independence Day barbeque par¬ty at Hillel. Sun., April 24, 6 pm.V\ uffle goest the 20th Assembly?EVERYBODY MUST GET STONED. week or evenings and earn room andboard for the year. Work in Loop orHyde Park. Interested? Contact StudentCo-op, Reynolds basement. Office workat all levels of skill available. 1.65, hourlowest rate.Can a Rabbi from a small Hasidic townfind happiness as a folk-singer? Comeand see; Saturday night.VOLUNTEE R SLARE NEEDEDin an after-school center in a housingproject on the near Southside. Ind. proj¬ect & grp. work w/children, conductedin a 6 rm. building, Mon.-Thurs. after¬noons from 3:305 pm and on Tues.eves, from 6-7 pm. The project s super¬vised by Gayle Janowitz. Transp. isavail, and a regular commitment oftime once a week is requested. Call Mr.Ohatterjee at 288-4609 for further infor¬mation.George Bernard Shaw's DON JUAN INHELL Sunday, April 24, 8 pm. FirstUnitarian Church. $1.00.“You can dish it out but you can't takeit"—Little Ceasar—Sat. & Sun.FINMAN WANTS POTATOES!Mushroom Man meets Finman. 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.For 2-3 students, 4 rms„ $90 mo. 5339Greenwood, furn. 303-5797.Furnished apt. for 34 students—Cornell& 54th—$500 flat rate for summer288 5432._____House for rentAPARTMENTS & RMS. WANTEDResponsible female wishes to babysit inexchange for room & board this sum¬mer. Call BU 8-6610. Rm. 2204Family of four desires large basementor Eng. basement in Hy. Pk. or So. Sh.363-7391.EXHIBITExhibit of graphics. "The Emancipated FLAME ON at the Spring Fling. 8:30-?,Jew as Artist.” Through May 10th. Ilil-/ Friday, at Pierce Tower. Music by thelei House, 5715 Woodlawn, open daytime KNIGHTS OF SOUL.ande evenings. Mon-Fri. & Sun.Prove your virtue—nr improveKarate Club. Mon. 7 pm. Wed.INH. Call 684-3993. it. UC8 pm. Edward G Robinson as Little Caesar.Sat. 7:30, 9:30, Sun. 2:00, 5th FloorPierce 50c.Leave your unwanted textbooks and pa¬perbacks with the Student Co-op BOOKEXCHANGE (Reynolds Club Basement tthis summer and have a wad of cashwaiting for you this fall. General ed.books especially welcome when pricedto sell.And ifberries. the leaf is holly, so are theISRAEL’S 18th YEAR OF INDEPEND¬ENCE.Celebration Sunday. April 2tth. 8:45pm.. College of Jewish Studies. 72 Eastlllh Street. Program of Readings, Mu¬sic. and Dance. Refreshments. Admis¬sion free.Balmy spring weather—a trip to thePoint—do you know Karate?WRITERTS~WORKSHOpTPL 2-83777)KAMELOT Restaurant72160 E. 71st St.10*o discount for UC students.Jobs-Jobs-Jobs. Summer and regularemployment. Work only two days a 1 took my shoe off and my toes weresurprised. “Keep Rt. on Painting.”Do CARLEBACH's songs really have apurpose or is he a Rebbe without acause? Saturday night.K.K. No apple pie but we can give youdelicious homemade cookies at Wednes¬day’s Blackstone Coffee Hour. •The graduate women of 53th & Ellis.Blackstone & Harper Surf, want YOU!Want you to come to a Spring Party atIda Noyes this Friday. 8:30 pm. that is.You might as well come—you havenothing to lose but your mid-quarterboredom.SG~Ts~savedVNow WUFFLE?Summer sublets6 rms.. 3 bdrms., 2 porches. $135 mo.55th Sc Woodlawn: completely furnished.June 15-Oct. 1. 684-7545. after 5 pm.53rd Unfurnished 5 rm. house. Avail. May i.transportation exc., nr. U of C. Will rentit to employed couple. Call 288-6128, aft¬er 6.Jobs offeredFree rm. & board in return for babysit¬ting, etc. 643-7807.Young men wanted to work in our creditdept. See Mr. Green. 6344 S. CottageGr.WANTED MENwith imagination. S. Shore Social workagency has openings for undergrads orgrad students on summer day campcounsellor's staff. 6 wk. or 8 wk season,full time or 3 days wk. Call Mrs. JoyJohnson. RE 1-6969.Rms. & apts. for rentStudio Apt. 6832 S. Crandon. 2 blocksfrom IC. crptg., and drapes. $90/mo.unfurn., 363-9137.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.Shore Drive.5 rmsCall Leiza & University Furnished.BU 8-6610. rm. 3428. 6 LARGE rooms, natural woodburningfireplace. 4 big closets, bookcases, pan-trv. Suitable for business or profession,ai people, garage $10 extra MU 4 8222.For sale21” Mahogany console TV. $30. CallNO 7-2424. after 6.Beautiful 3 4 size German base, asking$120 . . . 752-9615. phone Steve.SI Tempest Sports Coupe, exc. eond .SS00. MI 3-3116. daysSCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS: the homeof MULTIFORM WHOLESALE WARE¬HOUSE SALE! Call for apnt. to see at1725 S. Michigan ave. 939-4993. All salescash.Interchange of ideas needed-Meyer(Continued from page one)expressed regret that so much hor¬izontal and vertical discussion wasleft to chance.LIBERAL education could bene¬fit horizontal and vertical discus¬sion, Meyer said, and thus aid indetermining the will of the people.Experts as leaders are needed inand out of government, he stated,to help the public recognize thegeneral will.The separated intellectual aris¬tocracy and the lay public mu¬tually complement each other inbringing about this recognition. Hecarefully stresses that the intel¬lectual aristocracy was not a socialone. “No one should be denied edu¬cational opportunities . . . but thathow high a person climbs dependsupon himself.”Both political experts and non-political experts must be able tocommunicate within their ownsphere, said Meyer, in citing anexample of horizontal discussion.Ideas must be effectively inter¬ changed within each group to pro¬vide meaningful results.He expressed his desire for theseparation of nonpolitical institu¬tions, such as universities, frompolitical ones. Each could functionbest apart from the other, but ver¬tical and horizontal communicationbetween them should be main¬ tained.Meyer criticized the Berkeleyadministration for not giving thestudents there enough chance atupward vertical communicationand for treating them as less thanhuman. “The outbursts at Berkeleyare not only justifiable, but under¬standable," he said.O'Hara supports Johnson on VietnamMl 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospital5. Have you considered 0. At Equitable, they have ainsurance? whole range of jobs that offerchallenge. Actuarial scienceDo they need forest and meeting. Systems andrangers? operations research.Securities analysis andinsurance operations.I could alwaysspend my vacationsin the woods.For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, orEto Patrick SooUard, Manpower Development Division.Eoumtau Lift Anunnct Society of Hht United State# <,i OAoet IMS Ave. of the Anmtoac. Now To*.'NT. 1001$ © EquiUbl® IMSAi% &f«tl grocerytr j«—,i m, —li4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April It, 1M4 EUROPE51 Student Tours21 to 70 DoysBy Jot, Ship orYour Student Flight.•I$e special tour*by Blcyclas, ate.Call Your Campus Rap.HANS ENDLERFA 4-8200 - Ext, 753 (Continued from page five)tion on Vietnam. He explained thathe had originally hoped that actionbe taken by the United Nations. Hecited his vote against sharing ouratomic secrets with the Allies, andhis contribution to the Disarma¬ment Agency as evidence of his op¬position to war.Although he admitted that “Iwant to get out of there”, O’Haraadded that the “President has doneas much as any man can humanlydo.”We have a responsibility there,which keeps us from leaving, hesaid. O’Hara noted that he was oneof the members of the House whorecommended that the bombing ofNorth Vietnam not be continued.Concerning the recent hearingsabout the United States economicinvestment in South Africa, O’Haratold a questioner that they hadbeen “conducted objectively.”O’Hara said that he believes a leg¬islative committee should not beused for exposure, but merely tobring out the facts.In answer to a query as to whyhe had voted against the withhold¬ing of federal funds to Chicagopublic schools last fall when theywere charged with de facto segre¬gation, O’Hara replied: "That’smy job. Chicago’s my baby.”Cites Ryan's supportThe Congressman concluded his talk by informing his listeners thatWilliam Fitts Ryan, a liberal Con¬gressman from New York, was sointent upon O’Hara’s staying iuWashington that he was ready tocome to the Second CongressionalDistrict in Chicago to campaign forhim.John Muller, second year lawstudent and precinct captain forthe Fifth Ward Regular Democrat¬ic Organization, is chairman of Stu¬dents for O’Hara. He can be con¬tacted at International House,The weekly WoodwardCourt coffee hour will beheld tonight in the CloisterClub of Ida Noyes, instead oftomorrow night in one of theWoodward housa lounges.The coffee hour will be heldfrom 8:30 • 10:30 pm, with anadmission charge of 15c formen. Women may enter freeof charge. The event is opento UC students by ID card,who may bring one guest ifthey show an identificationcard from some university.Food will be served in theSWAP spot, formerly knownas the Hangout. ShelleyWaldmen, president of Wal¬lace house, explains thatthese arrangements havebeen made to determine ifthis format would be feasibleon a permanent basis nextquarter.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THINEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERt, 1510 K. 55th St.40 3-7444 DO 3-6564IYI IXAMINATIONSf^CRIFTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYUNO IN NAMESStudent end faculty PleccuMStarts Today for coo week only. Great savings on volumesOriginally Published at S2.95 to $30.00 - Now $1.00 to $14J5SOULE’S DICTIONARY OF ENG¬LISH SYNONYMS. Revised &Enlarged Edition. Ed. by Alfred D.Sheffield. Foreword by Edw.Weeks. This long-famous book isunsurpassed in completeness, sim¬plicity of arrangement and in therapidity with which the right wordcan be found. Over 600 pages.Orig. Pub. at $6.00 New, completeed. Only 2.98A PICTORIAL HISTORY OF PER¬FORMING HORSES. By Chas.Philip Fox. Hundreds of illustra¬tions. From earliest recordedtimes to the present, a history oftrained horses in Wild West andRodeo shows, circus acts, horseshows, baggage stock, etc. Size 8V2x 11. Orig. Pub. at $10.95 New,complete ed. Only 3.95THE FINE ART OF CHINESECOOKING. By Dr. Lee Su Jan.Over 200 recipes in practical termsfor the American kitchen withmenus, buying of ingredients, withemphasis on beauty, taste, textureand health—the philosophy and artof 2200 centuries of Oriental cook¬ing. Orig. Pub. at $3.95 New, com¬plete ed. Only 1.00THE HOUSE BEAUTIFULTREASURY OF CONTEMPORARYAMERICAN HOMES. By Jo¬seph Barry. With 150 true-to-lifefull color photos. 32 excellent ex¬amples of contemporary Americanarchitecture as it is used in bigand small homes. A strikinglybeautiful book enhanced withdrawings and 25 floor plans. Size11 x 14. Pub. at $12.95 Only 5.95Korean War: THIS KIND OFWAR. By T. R. Fehrenbach. With89 photos & 26 maps. An immense,dramatic, authoritative and hard¬hitting account of the Korean Warbased largely on the narratives ofthe men who served there withsource material from operationsjournals, the successes and blun¬ders of our strategy, political back¬ground, etc. 700 pages. Pub. at$10.00 Only 3.95GREAT PAINTINGS FROMTHE KU'NSTHISTORISCHESMUSEUM, VIENNA. By V. Ob-erhammer, Director. With 122illus., 100 hand-tipped in FullColor. Handsome volume, 11 x13, with authoritative and infor¬mative text and beautiful illus¬trations of the treasures in thisgreat gallery - not only themagnificent creations of Rem¬brandt, Durer, Titian, Breughel,Rubens, Tintorgetto, and Velas¬quez, but a roster of names notoften seen in reproduction, suchas Parmigianino, Antonello,Lotto, Bordone, Van Eyck, Vander Weyden, Memling, andmany others.Pub. at $25.00 Only 14.95MASTERPIECES OF MURDER. ATrue Crime Reader by EdmundPearson. Ed. by Gerald Gross. 21splendid selections, accounts ofclassic crimes noted for their fi¬nesse and deception as told by thatmaster-essayist and teller of truetales, Edmund Pearson. Orig. Pub.at $5.95 New, complete ed.Only 1.69THIS WAS RAILROADING. ByGeo. B. AbdiU. With 452 rare pho¬tos. True accounts of the tracks,trains, builders and trainmen ofthe Pacific Northwest includingNorthern California and Canadacovering a period of 100 years.Fascinating pictures of engines,bridges, construction, wrecks, etc.Size 8xh x 11. Orig. Pub. at $10.00New, complete ed. Only 3.95EROTIC POETRY: AN UNINHIB¬ITED TREASURY. Edited, with• running commentary by LouisUntermeyer. The world’s greatesterotica in verse ranging from theBible to the present day—a freshcollection of the most renownedpoets from Ovid to Swinburne, Chaucer to e. e. cummings, QueenElizabeth to Emily Dickinson—theoutspoken sensuality of lust andthe earthy celebration of carnalpleasure, in more than 600 poems.Pub. at $7.50 Only 3.95THE STARS: The PersonalitiesWho Made the Movies. By RichardSchickel & Allen Hurlburt. A beau¬tiful album of 400 pictures and 60,-000 words depicting the personal aswell as public lives of the greatscreen stars from the days of Wm.S. Hart to the present—Mary Pick-ford, Douglas Fairbanks, Valenti¬no, Garbo, Chaplin, Keaton, W.C.Fields, Bogart, Gable, Cooper,Marilyn Monroe, Harlow, andmore. 9V4 x 12t4. Pub. at $12.50.Only 4.95TIIE ANTIQUES BOOK. Ed. byAlice Winchester & the Staff of An¬tiques Magazine. Profusely illus¬trated. Outstanding authoritativearticles on ceramics, furniture,glass, silver, pewter, architecture,prints and other collecting inter¬ests. Orig. Pub. at $6.00 New, com¬plete ed. Only 3.49Oistrakh Plays WORLD’SGREATEST VIOLIN CONCER¬TOS. The lush, lyrical sounds ofthe 4 most melodic violin mas¬terpieces — the Beethoven,Brahms, Mendelssohn andTchaikovsky concertos - playedby world’s foremost virtuoso,David Oistrakh. Arranged in se¬quence for automatic recordchangers. Records originallysold separately at $14.95.S-2760 Stereo 3 record setOnly 3.98M-2759 Mono 3 record setO n I y 3.98A Study in American IndianMythology: THE TRICKSTER. ByPaul Radin. With Commentariesby C. G. Jung & Karl Kerenyi. TheTrickster myth is one of the mostimaginative narratives known toman - a grotesque individual withenormous digestive and sexual or¬gans who unites in himself thetraits of a god, an animal and ahuman being - cruel, obscene witha voracious appetite - in variousinterpretations of different Indiantribes.Orig. Pub. at $6.00 New, completeed. Only 1.98THE BEACH BOOK. By G. Stein-em. Intro, by J. K. Galbraith. Il¬lustrated with photos and drawings.Have fun on the beach with thisbig treasury of stories, songs,jokes, cartoons, games and prob¬lems, miscellany of information -even the jacket is a sun reflectorto help you tan faster. 8*6 x IOV2.Pub. at $8.50 Only 2.98THE LETTERS OF OSCARWILDE. Ed. by Rupert Hart-Dav-is. With 38 illus. In this extra-ordi¬nary collection of 1,098 letters tonearly 300 correspondents, mostpublished here for the first time,O. Wilde reveals his heart andmind from his youth in Oxford tothe decline of his health and for¬tune in Paris. His genius, gaiety,travels, marriage, indiscretionsand imprisonment; his self dissec¬tion and indictment of Lord AlfredDouglas are revealed here withmoving honesty. Nearly 1000pages.Pub. at $15.00 Only 5.95PORTRAIT: The Emergence ofJOHN F. KENNEDY. By JacquesLowe. A large pictorial, intimatechronicle of the late President andhis family - his childhood, studentdays, service in the Navy, politicsand public office, his marriage andinauguration to the Presidency. Abook of superb photographs totreasure through the years. Size 894x 1114.Orig. Pub. at $8.93 New, completeed. Ofty 2.91 WHOLLY CATS. By Faith McNulty& E. Keiffer. Illus. by Peggy Ba¬con. A witty and authoritative bookon cats from their history to theirpsychology - including their feed¬ing, grooming, care and ailments,breeding, etc.Orig. Pub. at $3.50 New, completeed. OnlyT.OOPORTRAIT OF MOSCOW. Glo¬rious, Full Color presentation ofthe ancient, beautiful, history-ladencity. The extraordinary color pho¬tos of the architecture, the art andthe life of Moscow virtually leapfrom every page. De luxe 10 x 12format. Only 5.95THE EATING-IN-BED COOK¬BOOK. By Barbara Ninde Byfield.Over 100 unusual recipes to en¬hance one’s time in bed (the bath¬tub too) together with some otherinteresting bits of advice containedin a beautiful 10 x 7 Vi volume.Pub. at $3.95 Only 1.69A PRACTICAL DICTIONARY OFRHYMES. By L. Holofcener. Anew method of arranging words bysound rather than spelling. A use¬ful aid for song writers, poets andrhymesters of all kinds. Containsmuch practical information onrhyme and lyric construction,songwriting and the markets andbusiness of songwriting.Orig. Pub. at $3.95 New, completeed. Only 1.00MICHELANGELO’S THEORY OFART. By Robt. J. Clements. Illus.with 21 plates. A unified view ofMichelangelo’s thoughts, opinionsand seeming contradictions on allthe arts he practiced so vigorouslyand brilliantly. His artistic biases,personality and temperament arebrought into sharp focus in thishandsomely illustrated volume, 471pages, annotated with bibliogra¬phy.Orig. Pub. at $10.00 New, completeed. Only 4.95THE ANNOTATED SNARK. Irtrod. & Notes by Martin Gardner.The full text of LEWIS CAR¬ROLL’S great nonsense epic andthe original illustrations by HenryHoliday. A delightful volume incontent and design. 6 x 10.Pub. at 3.95 Only 1.69TREASURY OF SCIENTIFICPROSE. Ed. by Howard MumfordJones & I. B. Cohan. Treasury ofBritish scientific writing during the19th century presents selectionsfrom a rich library of scientificprose. Includes the work of suchmen as Darwin, Faraday, Paley,Davy, and many others.Pub. at $6.75 Only 2.98THE LONDON SHAKES¬PEARE. A New Annotated andCritical Edition of The CompleteWorks in Six Volumes. Ed. byJohn Munro. The famous, beau¬tifully bound and printed setcontaining all of the plays andpoems with much valuable ma¬terial including a bibliographyand glossary. Each vol. size 6 x9, all 6 vols. in a handsome box.Pub. at $36.00The set of 6, boxed 14.95MAN & BEAST A Visual History.Text by Jacques Boudet. With 40full page color plates and hundredsof drawings, paintings and photosin color and monochrome. A beau¬tiful pictorial account of the rela¬tionship of men and animals fromprimitive times to the present inmythology, war, hunting, science,medicine, sport, ete. A magnificent994 X 12 volume of art, curiouslore, anecdotes and information.Pub. at $15.00 Only 7.91 A Finder’s Guide to Antiques:HIDDEN TREASURE. ByJeanne Horn. With 39 illus. in¬cluding 6 in color. This remark¬able book describes thousandsof items worth from $10 topriceless treasures, known to bemissing • their histories, possi¬ble location - silverware, clocks,toys and dolls, autographs, firsteditions, figureheads, glas¬sware, rugs, screens, coins,stamps, precious stones, reli¬gious treasures, etc.Orig. Pub. at $5.95 New, com¬plete ed. Only 2.98 THE OLD MASTERS. By C.Lorgues-Lapouge. 131 Plates in Col¬or & 65 Drawings in Two Tones.Magnificent panorama of pricelesspaintings and drawings from the6th to the 18th centuries: Byzan¬tine, Gothic, Renaissance, Ba¬roque. Sumptuously printed in Ita¬ly. 9% x 13.Pub. at $12.50 Only 7.95BIRD: THE LEGEND OF CHAR¬LIE PARKER. By Robt. GeorgeReisner. Over 50 pictures. The fa¬bulous story of America s greatestjazz artist, told by the musicianshe played with, his family andclose friends.Pub. at $4.95 Only 2.98THE YOGA SYSTEM OF HEALTHAND RELIEF FROM TENSION.By Yogi Vithaldas. Illus. with 29photos. The yogi principles of phys¬ical exercise, mental and physicaldisciplines, breathing and food ispresented here in brief and simpleform.Pub. at $2.95 New, complete ed.Only 1.90PICTORIAL HISTORY OF PHI¬LOSOPHY. By Dagobert D. Runes.With nearly 1,000 photos, portraits,facsimiles, archaeological illus.Here, in vivid pictures and illumi¬nating text are more than 3,000years of world philosophy from So¬crates to Suzuki, from the Upan-ishads to Existentialism, fromMoses to Einstein - the majorschools of philosophy, books of wis¬dom and major thinkers of Eastand West. Size 8Vfe x 11.Orig. Pub. at $15.00 New, completeed. Only 3.95STRANGE AND BEAUTIFULBIRDS. By Joseph Seget. 80 Illus.,25 in Full Color. Here, describedby a distinguished naturalist andillustrated in beautiful photo¬graphs, are some of the most cu¬rious members of the bird world,providing a unique collection forthe nature-lover. Special, Only 1.98Rise and Fall of Fascist Italy:THE DAY OF THE LION. By RoyMacGregor-Hastie. Illus. with 35Photos. An exploration into thebroader aspects and an attempt toexplain Italy’s long and violentterm under Fascist domination.Pub. at $6.95 Only 2.98 STRONG MEN ARMED. TheU.S. Marines Against Japan. ByRobert Leckie. Over 50 photosplus 14 maps. TTie account ofthe relentless Marine driveacross the Pacific from Guadal¬canal to Okinawa: the jungleordeal of Bougainville, the attri¬tion of Guadalcanal, monsoonsand hurricanes, the sweep ofGuam, Iwo, Mount Suribachi,and all the other battles in allbut three of which the Japanesefought to their annihilation.Orig. Pub. at $7.95 New, com-lete ed. Only 3.95SHERLOCK HOLMES OF BAKERSTREET: A Life of the World’sFirst Consulting Detective. By W.S. Baring-Gould. The definitive ac¬count of the life of one of theworld’s most extra ordinary menassembled from twenty years re¬search. Includes whole story ofHolmes’s running battle with Pro¬fessor Moriarty, his dangerousbrush with Jack the Ripper, etc.Orig. Pub. at $5.00 Only 1.98F.D.R. Text by Roger Butterfield.More than 400 photos selected byRobt. D. Graff A Robt. E. Ginna.A memorable photographic recordof the remarkable career of FDRfrom sheltered childhood in HydePark to his death, with recollec¬tions of government leaders,friends, staff and family. Size 894 xliy*.Pub. At $10.00 Only IN Collection of Bawdy Folksongs, An¬cient & Modern: THE MERRYMUSES OF CALEDONIA. By Rob¬ert Burns. Ed. by J. Barke & S. G.Smith. This is the first unexpurgat¬ed, most authentic edition ofBurns’ tests available - delightful,amusing, important literary contri¬bution and scholarly accurate.Orig. Pub. at $5.00 New, completeed. Only 1.98A PICTORIAL HISTORY OFAMERICAN CRIME. By AllenChurchill. Over 230 photos. Here inpictures and text are the most fas¬cinating frauds, swindles, scandalsand murders from Garfield’s as¬sassination to the exploits of the*gangs of the Capone era, includingJesse James, Lizzie Borden, theHall-Mills case, Teapot Dome, andHollywood scandals, etc. Size 8’,4 x11V5.Orig. Pub. at $6.95 New, completeed. Only 2.98THE SONNETS OF MICHELAN¬GELO. Definitive edition of the 77sonnets and their alternate read¬ings in the renowned translationwith intro, and notes by John A.Symonds and 10 drawings in detailby Michelangelo.Orig. Pub. at $2.95 New, completeed. Only 1.00TULLY FILMUS. Intro, by AlfredWerner. 100 Reproductions, 12 inColor. Handsome volume, 914 x12l/4, containing the representativeworks of this distinguished contem¬porary painter - canvases alivewith simplicity and grandeur incolor and line.Pub. at $12.50 Only 6.95A Pictorial History of The Thir¬ties: THE DESPERATE YEARS.By James D. Horan. 500 illustra¬tions with lively text depict the^colorful thirties from the stock'market crash to World War II.Orig. Pub. at $7.95 New, completeed. Only 2.98THE UNDERGROUND SKETCH¬BOOK. By Tomi Uhgerer. Brilliantcartoon sketches and satires by theman who has been called the“Wunderkind” and considered bymany as the most original talentsince Steinberg, 'Pub. at $3.93 Only $1.00THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. ELLIS AVE. Clife ifniversity on the make[or how MSU helped arm Madame Nhu]8 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 19, 1966 301 Broadway, San Francisco, Calif. 94133,Dept. C-3Gentlemen:Please send me six months of Ramparts, begin¬ning with the issue of Michigan State University,at the special trial rate of only $2.67 (regularprice $4.50 on newsstands).If I enclose a check to save you the bother ofbilling me, you will make it seven issues for$2.67. OK?Name.Address.City....,,., State Zip□ $2.67 enclosed - so send me seven issue*□ Bill me $2.67 for six months□ I prefer 12 months for $5 (Regular price $7)Ramparts documents what happenswhen any major university puts itsacademic credentials on lend-lease to American foreign policy.I In the same issue: A home-study course on Marshall McLuhan by Howard Gossage; Felix Greene's Chinain color; A survey of LSD and beyond; Camilo Torres, the Guerrilla Priest; and more.l The study of a sellout. The Aprilissue of Ramparts chronicles howand why Michigan State Universityabdicated its integrity in acalculated search for gold andglory in Vietnam; how it hired copsand CIA agents and gave themprofessorial status; why it boughttear gas, guns, grenades forNgo Dinh Diem.Subscribe below; then read thisspecial report and look around you.CIA agents are all right in their place,but they make damn poor teachers.